NZ Life & Leisure

KAITIAKITA­NGA

A NELSON-TASMAN CONSERVATI­ON GROUP ENCOURAGES ITS YOUNGEST GENERATION TO LOVE AND PROTECT A 120-KILOMETRE COASTLINE

- WORDS CARI JOHNSON

Conservati­on in the Nelson-Tasman district

TYRES, SOILED T-SHIRTS, waste oil containers and broken wine bottles littered the seafloor at Abel Tasman National Park. In one day in 2013, Stew Robertson and a team of divers found debris more fitting of a revelrous party than a world-famous coastline, pulling up 750 kilogramme­s of rubbish.

That got Stew (owner of Abel Tasman Eco Tours) thinking: “The world is starting to realize its resources are finite. It’s starting to reach a tipping point; if we don’t start looking after it, there will be nothing left,” he says.

In 2017, Stew and a group of friends launched the Tasman Bay Guardians as a not-for-profit extension of the tour company. He already felt passionate about protecting Tasman Bay, the 120-kilometre stretch of coastline on the northern tip of the South Island. The charity trust was his way of inspiring others to feel - and do - the same.

“There are environmen­tal issues that detract from the health of Tasman Bay,” he says. “I started thinking about how we could remediate those issues and work with the community positively.”

The Tasman Bay Guardians are now able to use three aquatic strategies, developed by the Mountains to Sea Conservati­on Trust in Northland, with students in their Nelson-Tasman region. The national hands-on programmes teach children about marine, freshwater and stormwater conservati­on.

Students learn while getting their hands dirty; they splish-splash in streams, collect freshwater samples and snorkel in marine reserves. When a child notices the lack of fish in the ocean or tests the pH of a local stream, says Stew, it can initiate a domino effect for their community.

“Getting kids to do something tangible gives them a passion for marine life. The idea is for children to bring those values back to their families.”

Stew hopes that children learn to love and protect the entire 4000 square kilometres of Tasman Bay, just as he has. “I’ve always been captivated by the sea. When I started studying marine biology, it blew my mind how fragile the ocean is. It made me more thoughtful about what we can do to turn things around.”

The “guardians” have also supported more than 45 beach clean-ups along Tasman Bay. Last year, one such event attracted 65 volunteers through word-ofmouth alone. And Stew’s latest project, the Abel Tasman Tree Collective, has funded a native plant nursery and seen more than 2500 native trees planted in and around the national park.

For Stew, there’s much more work to be done. His mental checklist for Tasman Bay includes a call for more marine reserves, restoring the seafloor and changing the local relationsh­ip with the ocean. “Imagine if people got enjoyment from life in the sea, rather than what they take from the sea,” he says.

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 ??  ?? Stew Robertson.
Stew Robertson.

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