Otago Daily Times

Tree removal ‘souldestro­ying’

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

IT was ‘‘souldestro­ying’’ for a retired Dunedin couple who had spent years beautifyin­g a picnic spot at Shag Point to discover the trees they had planted — and paid for with their pensions — removed.

Lynette Bates’ grandmothe­r had a house close to where HampdenPal­merston Rd (State Highway 1) passes the northern end of Shag Point. She grew up at the beach there, and has returned many times as an adult.

Because the site had been ‘‘overgrown with blackberry’’, she and her husband John spent hours clearing the area and had planted a row of nonnative ‘‘shelter belt trees’’ as well as ake ake, rata and kowhai.

After attending her cousin’s funeral nearby, she stopped into the spot for the first time this winter and 17 trees, up to 180cm tall, and the nets and stakes that were protecting them, were gone — ‘‘stolen’’.

‘‘It was just souldestro­ying, because we had spent so many hours up here just volunteeri­ng, doing it all, and trying to make it nice. And that someone could just rip it out in one fell swoop was just overwhelmi­ng, really.

‘‘I’m probably never going to find them, but someone must know where they’ve gone, because you don’t take that many trees home and just plant them in the front yard with nobody noticing.’’

She did not plan to fund a replanting with her pension.

‘‘If somebody had some spare natives, I’d certainly put them in.’’

A spokeswoma­n for the NZ Transport Agency, which owns the land, said the plants were not removed by the agency.

 ?? PHOTO: HAMISH MACLEAN ?? Undone . . . Lynette and John Bates, of Dunedin, have been beautifyin­g a picnic spot beside State Highway 1 for the past five years at Shag Point, where Mrs Bates’ grandmothe­r once had a house and she spent her childhood. Last week, the Bates arrived to find 17 trees they had planted had been removed.
PHOTO: HAMISH MACLEAN Undone . . . Lynette and John Bates, of Dunedin, have been beautifyin­g a picnic spot beside State Highway 1 for the past five years at Shag Point, where Mrs Bates’ grandmothe­r once had a house and she spent her childhood. Last week, the Bates arrived to find 17 trees they had planted had been removed.

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