NZ Life & Leisure

OUT ON A LIMB

A COUPLE, SEEING THE WOOD WITHIN THE TREES, SET OUT WITH A LONG-TERM VISION FOR A NEW HOME AND AN ALTERNATIV­E FORESTRY INDUSTRY

- WORDS EMMA RAWSON P HOTOGRAPHS SIMON YOUNG

It took two years to construct Gabrielle and Andrew Walton’s stylish Rangataua Bay home. But considerin­g the time it took them to grow their own timber, the build was more like decades

TIGER COUNTRY IS what David Blackley called the steep, toothy parts of his Bay of Plenty farm, with its thick jungle of gorse, pampas and woolly nightshade shrubs as tall as pongas. In the early years of Summerhill, a 400-hectare sheep and beef farm, anyone who braved the hairy parts of the terrain emerged scratched to hell and with stinging calf muscles.

In 1958, David and his wife Cloie bought the property, from which one can peer down on Papamoa and Mt Maunganui. Today, these are among the fastest-growing suburbs in New Zealand, but back then there was just a sprinkle of baches near the beach.

Summerhill’s mineral-deficient farmland, which caused bush sickness in cattle, was transforme­d into prime pasture with aerial cobalt topdressin­g in the 1940s. But scrub and erosion remained a problem. To tame the tiger, David and Cloie initially planted pine on the steepest and most remote slopes.

In 1984, their daughter Gabrielle Walton, fresh out of Lincoln University with a post-graduate diploma in landscape architectu­re and a head full of ideas, convinced them to diversify into specialty timber species. Later, Gabrielle and her husband Andrew formed a joint venture with David and Cloie and planted second-rotation pine and more specialty trees.

Summerhill now has more than 100 hectares in mixed species including Cupressus lusitanica (cypress), Acacia melanoxylo­n (tasmanian blackwood), Eucalyptus regnans (victorian ash) and Eucalyptus saligna (sydney blue gum) — many now coming into maturity — as well as poplar, alder, the fast-growing Chinese native paulownia and the forest behemoth, redwood. Would there be a market for the timber of these exotics when they were ready to be harvested decades down the track? Gabrielle wasn’t certain but the Blackley/Walton team was determined.

“It was a gamble, but we didn’t want to put all our eggs in one basket and to plant only pine [which forms 90 per cent of the country’s commercial plantings],” Gabrielle says. “I really believed there was a future in specialty timber.

“New Zealand has what I call a ‘pine mentality’. In the search for a quick-growing, easy cash crop, we had forgotten about all these other beautiful, high-value timbers with so much potential.”

It took 35 years for “tiger country” to earn its stripes. The first plantation­s of cypress, victorian ash and eucalyptus are now being selectivel­y harvested, dried and milled and are ready for sale. Gabrielle and Andrew launched their wholesale business Summerhill Timbers in August 2018.

Specialty timber is a lot more work than standard pine, says Gabrielle. Some species grow more slowly and require a lot more pruning. But they fetch a higher price. “Acacia [tasmanian blackwood] is a pig to grow because it’s a tree that really wants to be a bush with lots of branches. Yet it has rich, dark and extremely hard timber, so it’s worth the effort.”

Many varieties of specialty timber planted in the 1980s, when alternativ­e timbers were being promoted by the government to replace the dwindling native timber supply, are now reaching maturity. As more are used in new builds, demand grows.

“People are becoming more aware of issues such as traceabili­ty and a product’s origin. Instead of choosing imported cedar, customers are looking for wood grown in New Zealand. It’s like the garden-totable movement except it’s more like from forest-tofeature wall.”

Gabrielle and Andrew’s new home in Tauranga’s Rangataua Bay smells of sap and sunshine. The house, built on the site of a former mandarin orchard, is a nine-kilometre drive from Summerhill farm. It is the beautiful articulati­on of all those decades of hard yakka. The house is constructe­d entirely from timber grown at Summerhill — the only exceptions being redwood sourced from an 80-year-old plantation in the Waikato and some ply behind the redwood cladding for waterproof­ing.

Gabrielle says growing the timber for a house is akin to the satisfacti­on a gardener might feel growing vegetables — multiplied by a couple of thousand.

THE WOOD LIFE

Building with specialty timbers can be rewarding, but it has its challenges. Gabrielle says the Building Code sets minimum performanc­e standards for wood, but largely references only radiata pine and douglas fir. In many cases, a build using an unlisted timber requires permission from a local council (called an Alternativ­e Solution). This is to demonstrat­e the timber will comply with the code and is fit for purpose. Gabrielle and Andrew had to use data sourced from Australia to prove that eucalyptus intended for their framing timber was suitable. Gabrielle is a member of the Farm Forestry Associatio­n, encouragin­g the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) to look at including more specialty timbers in the Building Code. Architects shouldn’t be deterred from designing houses for constructi­on with specialty varieties, she says. “Attaining the Alternativ­e Solution was straightfo­rward for us in the end. The joiner and builders who worked on our home found the project rewarding. Our joiner fell in love with redwood timber and said he’d sworn off imported cedar for good.” Other advantages include the natural strength, durability and versatilit­y of woods such as cypress, which is not treated with chromated copper arsenate (CCA) and can be used for structural parts such as beams and rafters. summerhill­timbers.co.nz

“We measure the trees as they grow every year and it always amazes me how big they get. The felling of a tree is as exciting as growing it.”

There are five different timbers used in the house and sleep-out, including poplar and eucalyptus from a shelterbel­t on the internal walls, redwood joinery and exterior cladding and cypress structural beams. Gabrielle selected the timber, scrutinizi­ng it for knots, nicks and discoloura­tion.

Every. Single. Plank. “Every time I saw a knot in the wood, I thought about how we’d pruned the branches of the tree and if we could have done anything differentl­y.”

Some moments of the build were nerve-racking for Andrew. Would there be enough of the deep brown tasmanian blackwood to finish the flooring?

“It’s not like you can run into Bunnings and buy extra wood off the shelf. We’d reached the final corner, and it was looking like we were about to run out.” That explains the streak of sapwood (the outside layer of the timber closer to the bark) running through a plank in the kitchen flooring, a piece Gabrielle had at first rejected.

“I didn’t want to use that piece of timber but the man who did our flooring was a skilled craftsman and worked it in extremely well,” she says.

“I’ve grown to like it. The whites of the line emphasize the curve of the tree. It’s now a feature I point out to people.”

The Walton’s Tauranga architect John Henderson won a prize in the NZIA Waikato/Bay of Plenty Architectu­re Awards, and a highly commended in the 2018 NZ Wood Resene Timber Design Awards. The judges praised how New Zealand-grown timber was showcased and heroed in the build.

The first 10 years of a forest plantation are the hardest. Planting the slopes is a feat in itself, then the trees are pruned and thinned. There’s an ongoing battle to keep weeds at bay. “Everything grows well in the Bay of Plenty, including weeds. It’s a huge issue,” says Gabrielle.

Over the years, Gabrielle and Andrew’s four children, Rebecca, Hamish, Sam and Tim, all now in their 20s, helped with planting and pruning. “They’ll tell you only too willingly just how many trees they have planted,” says Gabrielle. “The boys even had small businesses selling firewood while they were at school.”

Before they had the Rangataua Bay house, the Waltons lived in Mt Maunganui closer to Andrew’s former accounting practice (he’s since begun working full-time on Summerhill Timber). When holiday-goers flocked to the Mount for the beach, the family headed for the hills.

“We built a cabin as we wanted the kids to grow up appreciati­ng the forest. In Japan, they call the idea of enjoying trees ‘forest bathing’. Often our kids would bring their friends to the forest, and at first they would stick close to the cabin, but eventually, they’d become more confident and go exploring.”

In the 30-year lifecycle of a plantation forest, Andrew’s favourite stages are when the seedlings are establishe­d (and shooting up triumphant over the weeds) and years later when the mature canopy has grown. “At that time, we’ve done all the hard work, and the trees have had their final prune. The trees are big, and you can walk beneath them. It’s a special feeling.”

Intergener­ational forestry is popular in parts of Europe. In some villages, one generation plants seedlings for the next generation to harvest decades later. Andrew and Gabrielle say their children are probably daunted by the idea of taking over the forest in the future, “the finances are hard to get your head around when you’re in your 20s. It’s a lot of money up front and a 30-year wait for pay-off,” says Andrew. But they are jointly applying for grants through the government’s One Billion Trees programme. “We’ll do all the hard work of course, but it’s nice to think of the forest carrying on,” he says.

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 ??  ?? Gabrielle and Andrew Walton’s home in Rangataua Bay took two years to build, but it was decades in the making considerin­g the time it took to grow the timber on their forestry farm, Summer Hill Timbers. The forest in the Papamoa hills is a 10-minute drive from home.
Gabrielle and Andrew Walton’s home in Rangataua Bay took two years to build, but it was decades in the making considerin­g the time it took to grow the timber on their forestry farm, Summer Hill Timbers. The forest in the Papamoa hills is a 10-minute drive from home.
 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: The house is built on the site of a former mandarin and avocado orchard and overlooks Mt Maunganui/Mauao. When the wind is blowing in the right direction, Gabrielle and Andrew can hear concerts playing at ASB Baypark Stadium. OPPOSITE: The outside cladding is New Zealand- grown redwood, the door is made from the same timber but is dark because it was treated with a traditiona­l Japanese charred-timber method called shou sugi ban. The door handle is a mānuka branch.
THIS PAGE: The house is built on the site of a former mandarin and avocado orchard and overlooks Mt Maunganui/Mauao. When the wind is blowing in the right direction, Gabrielle and Andrew can hear concerts playing at ASB Baypark Stadium. OPPOSITE: The outside cladding is New Zealand- grown redwood, the door is made from the same timber but is dark because it was treated with a traditiona­l Japanese charred-timber method called shou sugi ban. The door handle is a mānuka branch.
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: A two-bedroom sleep- out was built first while the main house was being constructe­d. The sleep- out features eucalyptus on the walls. OPPOSITE, CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: A leaf design was cut into ply doors on a CNC (computer numerical control) machine in a similar process to laser cutting; the en suite and bedroom into the main house open straight onto the lawn and pōhutukawa­s.
THIS PAGE: A two-bedroom sleep- out was built first while the main house was being constructe­d. The sleep- out features eucalyptus on the walls. OPPOSITE, CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: A leaf design was cut into ply doors on a CNC (computer numerical control) machine in a similar process to laser cutting; the en suite and bedroom into the main house open straight onto the lawn and pōhutukawa­s.
 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: The walls of the main house are made from poplar, which has a white-washed Scandinavi­an look. “Poplar is such an overlooked timber, but it’s not only useful on the farm for shelterbel­ts and erosion control, it makes beautiful wood,” says Gabrielle; Andrew was initially worried the contrastin­g timber colours would look chaotic but loves the result of combining dark blackwood floor, white poplar walls and ceilings, and laminated cypress beams and rafters.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: The walls of the main house are made from poplar, which has a white-washed Scandinavi­an look. “Poplar is such an overlooked timber, but it’s not only useful on the farm for shelterbel­ts and erosion control, it makes beautiful wood,” says Gabrielle; Andrew was initially worried the contrastin­g timber colours would look chaotic but loves the result of combining dark blackwood floor, white poplar walls and ceilings, and laminated cypress beams and rafters.
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: The cabinet under the television is in tasmanian blackwood timber with a streak of sapwood; Gabrielle and Andrew grow much of their food and there are 25 avocado trees growing in the former mandarin orchard; Gabrielle loves the illawarra flame tree outside the sleep- out. “It’s funny, I don’t get sentimenta­l about cutting down forestry trees, but I’d be upset if that was ever cut down.”
THIS PAGE: The cabinet under the television is in tasmanian blackwood timber with a streak of sapwood; Gabrielle and Andrew grow much of their food and there are 25 avocado trees growing in the former mandarin orchard; Gabrielle loves the illawarra flame tree outside the sleep- out. “It’s funny, I don’t get sentimenta­l about cutting down forestry trees, but I’d be upset if that was ever cut down.”
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE: Views of Tauranga harbour attracted Gabrielle’s father to the land originally; contract forestry workers Caleb Davies and Rob Brown take a break from the cypress harvest; Gabrielle and Andrew in front of recently felled 35-year- old cypress and tasmanian blackwood trees. OPPOSITE: a forest walk under canopy-stage redwood and alder.
THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE: Views of Tauranga harbour attracted Gabrielle’s father to the land originally; contract forestry workers Caleb Davies and Rob Brown take a break from the cypress harvest; Gabrielle and Andrew in front of recently felled 35-year- old cypress and tasmanian blackwood trees. OPPOSITE: a forest walk under canopy-stage redwood and alder.
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 ??  ?? A cabin near a dam in the forest was built 17 years ago. Andrew and Gabrielle liked the timber interiors of the two-bedroom cabin so much they decided to line their main house in timber also.
A cabin near a dam in the forest was built 17 years ago. Andrew and Gabrielle liked the timber interiors of the two-bedroom cabin so much they decided to line their main house in timber also.
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