Waikato Herald

Planting boosts gully project

Nature in the City aims to help bush regenerati­on

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The Fairfield community is on a mission to restore the Kukutāruhe gully and has already planted more than 20,000 trees along this area which also contribute­s to Hamilton City Council’s Nature in the City programme.

HCC’S Nature in the City programme aims to increase native vegetation in Hamilton from 2 per cent to 10 per cent by 2050 and the Fairfield Project, as the communityl­ed initiative is called, has already taken some steps to help achieve this goal.

Chair of Kukutaaruh­e Education Trust, Vic Arcus, says: “We estimate those [20,000] trees are now pulling 94 tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere every year, and they’ll continue to do so for 50 years.”

The Fairfield Project started in 2013 when Fairfield College had about 12 hectares of land they didn’t need, and an idea to sell it for some extra funding for the school.

“There was a community meeting to discuss that proposal and at that meeting, a new idea was put forward — what if we kept the land and turned it into an environmen­tal education centre that would have way more than just a financial benefit?”

At the heart of the project are the core principles of education, restoratio­n and community building. The project hosts community planting days and regular working bees and has a relationsh­ip with more than 20 other schools in the area.

All Year 9 students at Fairfield College and Waikato Diocesan School for Girls replant a section of the Kukutāruhe gully as part of a science project.

“The idea is that this becomes a place where kids from all these schools can come to take part in the restoratio­n and have an educationa­l experience,” Arcus says.

The stream that runs through the gully is home to native species including longfin eel and giant kō puku. Both are endemic to New Zealand and categorise­d as “at risk — declining”.

“Niwa has been studying the giant kōpuku for years, and have made some pretty amazing discoverie­s about them, right here in this stream.”

The Fairfield Project also has a

community garden, where anyone can make a plot. The local Tongan community, for example, has banded together to cultivate a huge patch of kū mara.

“We have people from all different walks of life coming together and sharing stories, sharing knowledge, and getting to know each other. It’s wonderful to see.”

For HCC, groups like the Fairfield Project are critical to reaching the 10 per cent native vegetation cover.

Senior manager of the Nature in the City programme, Luke Archbold, says: “These organisati­ons, with their passion and expertise, are an essential part of restoring nature in Kirikiriro­a. We are currently in talks with the Fairfield Project about how council’s Nature in the City programme can best support them.”

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? The local Tongan community has banded together to cultivate a huge patch of ku¯ mara at the Fairfield Project community garden.
Photo / Supplied The local Tongan community has banded together to cultivate a huge patch of ku¯ mara at the Fairfield Project community garden.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? The Fairfield Project's vision is to restore the Kukuta¯ ruhe gully to its former glory.
Photo / Supplied The Fairfield Project's vision is to restore the Kukuta¯ ruhe gully to its former glory.

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