Projects
DoC Workdays
Wednesday August 25 2010 – Activity to be confirmed
Saturday October 2 2010 – Activity to be confirmed
A note of thanks from DoC
DoC’s Alan Lee reports:
Over the past couple of years, the Napier Tramping Club and individual club members have assisted the Department of Conservation with a number of conservation tasks in local reserves.
The first of these was planting kakabeak in the upper part of Boundary Stream Mainland Island. There are only two wild kakabeak populations in the vicinity of Boundary Stream, totalling only four adult plants, so the establishment of small ‘plantations’ close to these sites to protect genetic material is considered important. An enthusiastic team of carried plants and a roll of netting along the walkway before planting and surrounded them with neatly fabricated cages of chicken wire to protect them from the depredations of the local hares. The quality of the planting and the cages must have been excellent, because the survival rate has so far been high.

GPS training at Waipatiki, with Alison Greer, Ted Angove, Paul Exeter and DoC's Alan Lee
Somewhere along the way, a group spent a few hours on the fringes of lake Tutira cutting young willows from the southern end. The intention had been for me to stand on the bank and direct the weeders (or was that supposed to be waders?) out into the deeper waters but I ended up as wet as anyone – obviously, I need to work on my supervision skills!
In winter 2009, we were back for more kakabeak planting, this time on the way in to Shine Falls. Twelve NTC members again carried plants and netting and placed 40 seedling kakabeak in small groups alongside the track. The job was finished by about lunchtime, the only negative aspect being a group of half a dozen goats watching the planting and licking their lips in anticipation as the last of the seedlings went in. Kakabeak are one of the most palatable of our native plants so they may prove quite a temptation to our smelly friends; hopefully the cages will work until we can get up there to sort out the goats more permanently.
On August 26, a couple of weeks after an evening training session with GPS units around the playing fields of the Port School, a group of eight split into pairs to search the upper slopes of Waipatiki Scenic Reserve for a variety of weed species. Each pair was assigned a block to search, with a GPS and instructions that if it all turned to custard, heading uphill would get them back to the road. By the end of the day a number of previously unknown weed sites had been found, mapped and the weeds removed or killed. Despite some of the GPS tracks looking as though a paralytic spider dragging an ink pad had been wandering the map, there appeared to be good coverage of each block, though there were a few cases of cross border poaching noted. Alison and Ted’s claim to have managed the straightest lines was later found to have been fraudulent. Due to a different setting on the GPS (they had one set up for Kaweka deer shooting, with track points only registering at about 80 metre intervals) it only appeared their lines were straight!
I think most must have enjoyed the days out as many have come back for seconds or thirds. As well as the structured days, many members have assisted with other DoC work around the Ahuriri Estuary and elsewhere. Many hours have been put in, resulting in a whole lot of work being done that would not otherwise have happened. I and the Department greatly appreciate the effort that the tramping club has put in and hope you will keep coming back!
