Bay of Plenty Times

New hub for budding young horticultu­ralists

- Rebecca Mauger

An ongoing fundraisin­g campaign has come to fruition and Katikati’s horticultu­ral centre is ready to take root.

It’s been a long time coming, says Katikati Innovative Horticultu­re Project manager Hilary Johnson, but the intended centre has a start date and the first sod will be turned on September 12.

The centre will be a purpose-built horticultu­ral facility on Katikati College grounds where budding horticultu­rists can learn all aspects of the industry.

The idea sprouted years ago, Hilary says.

”We are right in the middle of horticultu­re country and so for a very long time we thought this would be a great way to educate kids.

“There so many opportunit­ies in the workforce for them and at a higher level . . . we should be making our kids part of this community and not have them all leave.

”The industry is crying out for people, and skilled people because the rest can be replaced by automation eventually so what we have done over the last four-and-a-half years has turned horticultu­re from being basically a low-level gardening programme to a multi-functional, cross-curricular course that kids can take pathways into jobs, or on to polytech, university or internship­s.”

There are 115 senior students enrolled in horticultu­re this year, compared to 12 to 15 about four years ago, she says.

Horticultu­re is now an attractive option and principal Louise Buckley says horticultu­re at Katikati College is more than just gardening.

“The skills that they are learning are right across the board. Yesterday I saw students learning how to do tissue cultures of orchids. Students go on field trips, they learn about agribusine­ss, robotics, plant science as well as marketing and logistics to name a few . . . and the skills they are learning are really transferab­le.”

Already the old potting shed has been demolished.

An old classroom that cannot be repurposed will be demolished, and a small shed and a few garden beds will make way for building.

The facility will be 240sq m with a 60sq m covered balcony as an outdoor area.

The open-plan build includes laboratori­es, a multi-purpose space, kitchen, toilets, office and small group work area “so it’s really flexible because

We are right in the middle of horticultu­re country and so for a very long time we thought this would be a great way to educate kids.

Hilary Johnson

what we do in horticultu­re is based around student choice — what they choose to learn so there’s lots of flexible grouping”.

The centre has been a long-held vision for the project’s trust and it has been pitching to businesses and the community, including the erection of a sign with a thermomete­r showing funds raised.

Its aim was $615,000 and it has hit that target.

Hilary says everyone kept on giving throughout lockdowns which was a real credit to the local community.

Costs have gone up since fundraisin­g began though, so the trust needs to continue, she says.

 ?? Photo / Rebecca Mauger ?? Louise Buckley (left) and Hilary Johnson within the area where the new horticultu­ral facility will be.
Photo / Rebecca Mauger Louise Buckley (left) and Hilary Johnson within the area where the new horticultu­ral facility will be.

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