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Coastal Restoration Trust wins Green Ribbon Award

From our chair…

 I am standing in front of the microphone at the Green Ribbon Awards. My heart is racing, I am very nervous. I am accepting the award on behalf of the Coastal Restoration Trust. I am feeling proud to be there and proud to be representing all the coastal communities who take on restoring their dunelands. This is a big deal and well deserved. I realise I am standing there with the support & aroha from all of you who are passionate about your beach and those pioneers of the Coastal Dune Vegetation Network who took the chance to change the paradigm of dune restoration. I make a speech which I have loosely reproduced here:

 Early settlers came to New Zealand with their assortment of browsing mammals. The beaches became the first roads, very quickly the dune vegetation was eaten and large areas of sand mobilised. The response was to plant marram and then lupin with Government funded schemes. Most of this stabilised land is today’s pine plantations. Kikuyu grass became the norm at coastal reserves and within a short generation we collectively lost the memory of what New Zealand dunes should look like. The coastal landscape was so modified that dunelands are New Zealand’s most degraded ecosystems, even more than wetlands which receive a lot of the press and precious funding.

 Over the last 20 years the science of restoring dunes has been well researched and this information is in our handbook and available on our website. Many dune projects involve schools and a new generation is seeing pingao and kowhangatara (spinifex) shaping the dunes into their natural coastal landscapes, as they should be.

 The Matariki storm that hit Wellington last year has shown us what the effects of a storm can do to our coastline. The warnings have been issued regarding the effects of climate change – more frequent intense storms coupled with rising sea levels. The importance of well managed dunes in comparison to the cost of maintaining coastal infrastructure is being realised around the country. We know that a foredune planted in kowhangatara is best for a quick recovery after a storm. We understand that the coast is a dynamic landscape subject to seasonal and decadal changes.

 Winning the Green Ribbon Award provides the Trust with two things: kudos and opportunity. Kudos gives us credibility and mana. Opportunity is there to leverage this and cement the Trust at the forefront of coastal management. 

 Cheers

Pingao workshop in Pirinoa attracts people from across NZ

On Saturday, June 28th, staff from Victoria and Lincoln Universities ran a one-day workshop entitled “Pīngao: Weaving the Connections” at Kohunui Marae in Pirinoa, North Island, that was hosted by Ngāti Hinewaka.

This workshop brought together about 40 people interested in the restoration, biology, ecology, weaving and pīngao tikanga. Attendees came to the conference from across the north and south Islands for the day. 

Knowledge sharing on these aspects occurred during informal discussion, talks, and presentations as well as an afternoon field trip to three sites on the South Wairarapa coast. We visited a natural remnant pīngao population, a restored pīngao population and a site without pīngao that contained rare sand dune vegetation. 

New connections were made among local attendees, particularly those interested in restoration and weaving, which will hopefully result in greater local community engagement in pīngao restoration and other dune restoration efforts in the South Wairarapa area.

A South Island Workshop is planned for early September - Contact Hannah.Buckley@lincoln.ac.nz for more information 

More information on the project here: http://pingao.wordpress.com/

Over 50 people attend Kapiti Coast day out

Susie Mills was so inspired by the Golden Bay/Farewall Spit field trip at the recent Coastal Restoration Trust conference, she decided to organise a local day out for her own, and other, Coast Care groups along the Kapiti Coast. 

She pitched the idea to Rob Cross at Kapiti Coast District Council who was immediately on-board coming up with funds towards the cost of hiring a bus.  Community response was equally positive and the 30 seater bus soon turned into 54 with Greater Wellington chipping in the remaining cost.  Groups from up and down the coast jumped on along with staff from DOC, local and regional council. 

Starting at Paraparaumu the group travelled down the coast stopping and talking about different projects including the Waikanae Estuary and Boating Club foredunes, two propagation facilities, Rangiuru Groups South Otaki Beach foreshore restoration, and a ‘gem’ where Hariata Ropata Tangnahoe and Len Taylor were in the process of carving Tangaroa (God of the sea) looking out towards Kapiti Island from the remains of a foreshore macrocarpa tree stump. The day finished off at the  Waimeha Estuary Waikanae.

Thanks to Mike Odey for providing information for this article and congratulations to the  Field Way Dunes Group for organising such a great event. 

Backdunes project firmly planted in year two

A winter of planting, weeding and now measuring has seen the Coastal Restoration Trust collaborative backdune biodiversity project firmly establish in its second year.

Thanks to the generous support of Councils, the Department of Conservation, the Ministry for the Environment and hundreds of volunteers with spades and clip-boards throughout the country, thousands of backdune plants have gone into the ground in the past two months - many of which are in demonstration plots or monitoring sites.

Seedlings were measured in each monitoring site and will be recorded again in 12 months to assess growth rates and survival by species and site. Each site is different depending on factors such as location, local climatic conditions, and existing species present so the results we obtain will really help at a local level.

Read the latest newsletter or find out more about the project.

 

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