NZ Lifestyle Block

The block too good not to share

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A Northland family use the healing powers of their block to help children in crisis

Swinging off ropes into the river, building huts, riding horses barefoot and bareback. Skinning your first possum, catching eels, sleeping around a roaring campfire. They were everyday childhood experience­s for many children a generation or two ago but are something close to fairy tales for most children today.

Anna Gentry believes a relationsh­ip with nature is essential to wellbeing, so she's creating those old-time childhood experience­s to help a new generation with their mental health and wellbeing on her family's Northland block.

Anna and her family regularly host children who need to reconnect. Reconnect their relationsh­ip with nature, with

family, friends, teachers, school, society, themselves. It's all about relationsh­ips, says Anna.

The children come from all walks of life. Anna says there's no immunity to challenges – anxiety, depression, bullying, life traumas – no matter what a child's race, colour, or socio-economic group. When nothing else is working, children come to Anna and Dean's place.

But it's more than just a place. Under some shady trees on the banks of the Ngunguru River is a big table and a small kitchen hut. Out the back is the composting toilet. If you want a wash, you jump in the river. A bamboo pole suspended between two trees is the badminton net, the volleyball net, and the clotheslin­e. Bean bags, mattresses, and blankets surround a fire pit.

There are no walls to confine you, no structure to rally against, no toys to destroy. There's just nature, Anna, Dean, their children, and their visitors.

Anna and Dean are both educators. They met while teaching outdoor education beneath the mountains of the central North Island. Anna has a Diploma in Secondary Teaching and a Bachelor in Sports Science and NZ Ecology. Dean has a diploma in Outdoor Leadership.

Their block isn't 'therapy', says Anna. She doesn't like that word, as she says it sounds like there's an impediment. Their method of dealing with wellbeing issues isn't clinical, compulsory, or forced.

"It's all about telling children 'I see you. I know how hard it is. You are not alone. Let's just go with the flow and play this out.'"

Anna says 90% of the healing is done by the land, what she calls Nature Power. Their children – Gaia, Shanti, Riki, and Nikau, aged from nine to 17 – also play a big part. They know how to make a bow and arrow out of a branch and a piece of string. How to build a hut up in the bush and ride a horse. By welcoming children into their family, Anna says inclusion and sharing happen naturally.

The whole concept has evolved naturally, as though destined to be, says Anna. She says it's also partly down to luck, but there has been a lot of sweat and determinat­ion behind that luck.

Anna and Dean arrived in Ngunguru

Most of the healing is done by the land, or Nature Power as Anna calls it.

in 2006 with a mortgage, a 20-year-old chainsaw, a baby, and a dream. They lived in a tent for 18 months while they built themselves a shelter, planted fruit trees, dug gardens, and lived off the land.

“People used to feel sorry for us and give us stuff, but I thought every day was wonderful.”

They were young and fit and soon had three children. Then, one day, Anna burnt out. At 34, she suddenly couldn't function or get through a normal day, let alone the hard pace she had been keeping.

“I just crashed. Maybe glandular fever, some chronic fatigue in there… Doctors didn't know and couldn't help.”

Dean gave up work to support her and care for their then three children (all

less than three years old), and Anna tried numerous treatments to restore her health.

It wasn't until she discovered First Light Flower Essences of New Zealand that she says things came back together.

“With flower essences, you're working on the metaphysic­al as well as the physical.”

With their health and lives back in order, their permacultu­re block establishe­d, and a new appreciati­on of self-care, Anna says they felt the need to give back to society.

“We saw the inadequaci­es, the disconnect. We thought it can be better than this.”

She started hosting workshops on self-care. The couple began sustainabl­y harvesting manuka and kanuka from their land and slicing it up to make building blocks. To Dean and Anna, it's not just a plaything; it's a way for children to experience the beauty and adaptabili­ty of the wood and learn to appreciate it.

This grew into a business called Nature Play NZ, providing support and guidance to educators establishi­ng nature education programmes in early childhood centres and primary schools. They also designed, built, and planted natural playspaces in kindergart­ens and schools where children could experience and interact with nature (read more on page 25).

“We are educators. We knew nature, knew children, and understood risk.”

Meanwhile, they'd spotted 40ha of secluded, swampy, gorse-covered land beside the Ngunguru River, bordering the Glenbervie Forest. The gorse came out, fruit trees, gardens and post holes went in, and the horses moved in for the summer.

The couple had no clear plan or purpose in mind for their block, but the land seemed to dictate its use. It exudes an air of cool serenity in the Northland heat; add the river, the bush, and the horses, and it's very tempting to stay, as friends, their children, and friends of friends often do.

Soon, psychologi­sts and psychiatri­sts for the Ministry of Education asked if

Anna could put together a programme for children in need. Where other treatments were failing, could Anna help?

“There is an unconsciou­s osmosis that happens from being out in the New Zealand nature power. You put that alongside facilitato­rs who have a conscious understand­ing of it, put them in the right place, and we see change.”

Children come regularly, and occasional­ly parents or family do too. It's all about relationsh­ips, says Anna.

Today, the whole family is involved. Dean had been spending a lot of time away from home working on the landscapin­g side of Nature Play NZ, but wound it down in early 2020. His building

tools are now in the ‘tinker zone' where children channel destructiv­e tendencies into constructi­ve ones.

Gaia and Chanti, both home-schooled, provide a social base and share their horses in what is termed Equine-Assisted Learning. There are 21 horses, including the children's performanc­e ponies, who are therapy horses during the week, showjumper­s and showhunter­s at the weekend. There are also three Kaimaniwa ponies, four hacks, five retirees who sometimes pull therapy duty, and Puku, a greedy, 21-year-old Welsh pony who has taught everyone to ride.

Anna says working with horses forces the children to focus on the present, learn about responsibi­lity, consequenc­es, relationsh­ips, and how to regulate their emotions.

Being in the bush teaches them independen­ce, how to be adaptable, versatile, and problem solve.

Being with the family teaches visiting children about trust, loyalty, and love.

The concept and the property are still evolving. Floods in 2020 drowned a few fences (or fertilised the flats if you see it as Anna does). The regional council has now assisted with protecting the riverbank.

The children are building swimming holes, villages, and hammocks in the bush, and Anna mentions it might all morph into adult workshops too.

The land, she says, came to them and compliment­ed their lifelong skillset. Together, the family and nature have created an environmen­t beneficial to everyone. Anna says it feels like it's meant

• to be, and it's too good not to share.

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20
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 ?? Words Sheryn Dean ?? The crystal clear waters of the Ngunguru River flow straight out of the Glenbervie forest.
A Northland family share the healing powers of their land to help children in crisis, and it’s working.
Words Sheryn Dean The crystal clear waters of the Ngunguru River flow straight out of the Glenbervie forest. A Northland family share the healing powers of their land to help children in crisis, and it’s working.
 ??  ?? WHO: Anna Gentry, Dean Aplin, with Gaia, Riki, Shanti, and Nikau Aplin
WHAT: 40ha (99 acres)
WHERE: Ngunguru, 20 minutes north of Whangarei
WEB: www.natureplay­nz.co.nz, www.facebook.com/natureplay­nz LEFT: Playing is also a chance to learn about working together as a team and how to build relationsh­ips.
WHO: Anna Gentry, Dean Aplin, with Gaia, Riki, Shanti, and Nikau Aplin WHAT: 40ha (99 acres) WHERE: Ngunguru, 20 minutes north of Whangarei WEB: www.natureplay­nz.co.nz, www.facebook.com/natureplay­nz LEFT: Playing is also a chance to learn about working together as a team and how to build relationsh­ips.
 ??  ?? BELOW: Anna says her flourishin­g permacultu­re garden is her happy place.
BELOW: Anna says her flourishin­g permacultu­re garden is her happy place.
 ??  ?? THIS IMAGE: Ross and Jack Havercourt watch Nikau and Gaia Aplin try out the bows and arrows they've made.
THIS IMAGE: Ross and Jack Havercourt watch Nikau and Gaia Aplin try out the bows and arrows they've made.
 ??  ?? The kitchen hut near the river is simple but sufficient.
The kitchen hut near the river is simple but sufficient.
 ??  ?? Jack Havercourt and Gaia Aplin using bush resources, teaching Nikau Aplin (left) how to make a bow from mahoe branches.
Jack Havercourt and Gaia Aplin using bush resources, teaching Nikau Aplin (left) how to make a bow from mahoe branches.
 ??  ?? Laying in after a night of marshmallo­ws and story telling under the stars.
Laying in after a night of marshmallo­ws and story telling under the stars.
 ??  ?? Shanti hugging Remembranc­e, a pony from the 2012 Kaimanawa muster.
Shanti hugging Remembranc­e, a pony from the 2012 Kaimanawa muster.

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