Whanganui Midweek

Botanical group looks for new members

After longtime secretary departs, revitalisa­tion plans under way

- Laurel Stowell To find out more, email wbotgp@gmail.com.

Brought up in suburban Auckland, Robyn Ogle extended her interest in the natural world through 54 years of marriage to Whanganui ecologist Colin Ogle.

She was the secretary for the Whanganui Museum Botanical Group for more than 26 years, and it involved a lot of paperwork. She was also secretary for St George’s Preparator­y School for 20 years.

With Colin, she camped and explored wild places and grew native plants in their three Whanganui gardens. She resigned from her botanical group role in September for health reasons.

The group is made up of amateur and profession­al botanists and people with a general understand­ing of plants who want to know more.

The group has a 53-year history. After Robyn’s resignatio­n, it went into recess until Margi Keys agreed to take over as secretary. She plans to revitalise it and wants to attract new members.

Colin Ogle was the “guru” of the group, Keys said. But he puts it another way.

“It was always that we shared knowledge. There are always one or two that know a bit more than most of the others.”

Founding members of the group include the late Joan Liddell, Arthur Bates and Neill Simpson.

Colin and Robyn were members of the Wellington Botanical Society before arriving in Whanganui in 1989. They arrived with knowledge of native plants and learned about exotic ones from people like Vonnie

Cave, Clive and Nicki Higgie, Jim Howard, and Ian and Jocelyn Bell.

The Whanganui group had monthly meetings and field trips to places like Mt Ruapehu and Whitiau Scientific Reserve. In the Ruahine Forest Park members climbed through bush and into alpine vegetation. They explored the herb fields at the top of Taranaki coastal cliffs.

Arthur Bates wrote the group’s history on its 25th anniversar­y, and it celebrated 50 years’ existence in 2018. It has 15 paid-up members, and 63 who receive notificati­on of events.

Its life members are Neill Simpson, Colin and Robyn Ogle and Ian Bell, and Bell said the Ogles’ devotion had helped it survive. The chairman is Clive Higgie, with Lyneke Onderwater as treasurer.

These days it is one of three Whanganui organisati­ons that provide Nature Talks in the Whanganui Regional Museum lecture theatre. It also meets every two months and has social events and field trips. They might be to a wild place, or a weedy place, or a simple wander through Gonville streets to see what is growing in gardens.

The next field trip will look at plants on the true left side of the Whangaehu River estuary.

 ?? Photo / Bevan Conley ?? Robyn Ogle was secretary of the Whanganui Museum Botanical Group for more than 26 years.
Photo / Bevan Conley Robyn Ogle was secretary of the Whanganui Museum Botanical Group for more than 26 years.

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