New Zealand Logger

Marlboroug­h celebrates 50 years of forestry

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STYLE BACK IN IN THE LATE 1960s, SOME forward thinking people in Marlboroug­h’s then local government bodies thought it would be a good idea to plant pine trees on large tracts of unproducti­ve land to promote soil stabilisat­ion and to generate funding from logging.

In 1995 revenue from logging started to be realised, taking financial pressure off the region’s ratepayers and generating funds for a wide range of community facilities and projects.

That original vision has reaped enormous rewards for the Marlboroug­h region, says Councillor Gerald Hope, who chairs the Marlboroug­h Regional Forestry Joint Committee.

“Marlboroug­h was lucky to have had forward thinkers such as Mayor Sid Harling who chaired the Marlboroug­h Local Bodies Forestry Committee from May 1968. The committee’s arguments were persuasive but they had to jump through many hoops to get the idea off the ground. There were councillor­s to persuade on the four Marlboroug­h councils and the Kaikōura County Council, and money had to be borrowed to pay for land purchases,” he says.

“Ultimately, and through the great assistance of local MP Doug Kidd, the Marlboroug­h Forestry Corporatio­n Act was passed on 13 November 1970 in Parliament, creating a body corporate to establish and manage the forests.

“Profits from successful harvests of our publicly-owned forests have benefitted major projects across the region, including helping meet the cost of the Picton and Renwick sewerage services, the Southern Valleys’ irrigation project and the Marlboroug­h Convention Centre,” Mr Hope says.

“In the nine years since 2012, Marlboroug­h has received $24.7M in contributi­ons from Marlboroug­h Regional Forestry. Recent log earnings have helped fund the new Picton Library and Service Centre, the Quays riverside redevelopm­ent in Blenheim, water supply services, the Queen Charlotte Track and the Tuia 250 commemorat­ions.

“We have a current balance of $13.78M from forestry and land developmen­t, much of which is already allocated to community projects over the next few years. This sum will be needed as we are currently in between log harvest cycles,” he adds.

The Marlboroug­h Regional Forestry estate, at 5,011 hectares, is on the North Bank of the Wairau River on either side of State Highway 1. Of the total, 1,438 hectares is native forest managed for conservati­on purposes, with 3,355 hectares of mostly Pinus radiata planted in six forestry blocks.

The largest tract is east of Koromiko and includes three blocks: Koromiko, Strachan and Pukaka. It encompasse­s the south end of the Robertson Range, about half of the Pukaka Stream catchment and foothills east of the Tuamarina River. On the western side of the river are two blocks: Speeds and Para, composed of hill country rising from the valley floor to mountainou­s conservati­on land behind. To the south-west is the Waikakaho Block, an area of hill country that spans both sides of the lower Waikakaho River.

The native bush areas include a Significan­t Natural Area of 511.7 ha and a QEII National Trust covenant of 115.8 ha.

Sid Harling died in 1977 and was replaced by Bill Bown, then George Robb (1983) and Tom Hickman (1989). The Marlboroug­h Forestry Corporatio­n Act was repealed in July 1996 and ownership of its assets was vested in the Marlboroug­h District Council and Kaikōura District Council, with shares split 88.62% to Marlboroug­h and 11.38% to Kaikoura.

Marlboroug­h Regional Forestry contracts forestry specialist­s, Merrill and Ring, to manage the forests on ratepayers’ behalf.

 ??  ?? Above right: Tethered falling machine felling 30-year-old pruned stand in Speeds Road, Koromiko
Above right: Tethered falling machine felling 30-year-old pruned stand in Speeds Road, Koromiko
 ??  ?? Above left: BEL Forestry tethered ground-based harvesting operation in Koromiko
Above left: BEL Forestry tethered ground-based harvesting operation in Koromiko
 ??  ?? Eight-year-old Pinus radiata pruned up to 5.6m in Waikakaho Forest.
Eight-year-old Pinus radiata pruned up to 5.6m in Waikakaho Forest.
 ??  ?? Two-year-old Pinus radiata in Waikakaho Forest.
Two-year-old Pinus radiata in Waikakaho Forest.

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