Fox Road is an unsealed dirt road. It is graded only every 18 months
at best — often considerably longer — and within weeks of each grade
deep potholes reform in the same places. In several stretches the
failures span the full width of the road, leaving drivers nowhere
to steer around them. These are not random failures: certain
sections are structurally undermined, so every grading is a
cosmetic reset on top of a problem that needs proper engineering
attention.
As of May 2026, our local mail driver has informed residents he
can no longer deliver to Fox and Maso Roads because of the road
condition — a tangible measure of how far things have slipped.
Vehicle damage
Pothole strikes routinely cause buckled rims, blown tyres, bent
suspension components and cracked alloy wheels. A single severe
hit can run into thousands of dollars in repairs — costs residents
are bearing privately while the road remains unrepaired.
Safety hazard
Drivers swerve across the road to dodge holes, putting cyclists,
pedestrians and oncoming traffic at risk. After rain the holes
fill with water and become invisible. Loose gravel adds a second
hazard. Motorcyclists are especially exposed: a missed pothole
can mean a serious crash.
Traffic & access
Vehicles slow to walking pace through the worst stretches.
Emergency services, delivery vans and school buses all share
this road. Each grading restores access only briefly before the
same sections fail again.
Structural undermining
The worst potholes return in the exact same locations every
cycle, often within weeks of grading — evidence that the road's
underlying base has failed in those spots. No amount of surface
grading will fix this. Documenting each cycle here builds the
case for proper sub-base reconstruction.