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Home / The Country

Tomorrow's farmers help improve habitat and water quality from mountains to sea

Waikato Herald
21 Jul, 2021 07:08 PM3 mins to read

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Te Poi School, near Matamata, is an Enviroschool that has been planting wetlands on the neighbouring farm since 2013. Photo / Supplied

Te Poi School, near Matamata, is an Enviroschool that has been planting wetlands on the neighbouring farm since 2013. Photo / Supplied

It takes a community to improve a catchment, as evidenced at a planting day for a Waikato Regional Council shovel ready project.

Te Poi School students, teachers and families planted 500 plants in a wetland on a neighbouring farm as part of the Upper Waiomou Stream restoration project, which has $1.74 million in funding from the Jobs for Nature programme and $74,500 from Fonterra's environmental partnerships programme.

The Upper Waiomou Stream restoration project is one of 17 shovel ready projects for which Waikato Regional Council received government funding in the wake of Covid-19 to stimulate the construction and environmental industries and economy, be of public or regional benefit, and create jobs.

The project is about removing and managing overgrown willow and poplar trees along the upper Waiomou Stream and tributaries Rapurapu Stream and Tukutapere Stream, which are causing the banks to erode, and planting a native corridor instead.

Te Poi School students, teachers and families planted 500 plants in a wetland on a neighbouring farm as part of the Upper Waiomou Stream restoration project. Photo / Supplied
Te Poi School students, teachers and families planted 500 plants in a wetland on a neighbouring farm as part of the Upper Waiomou Stream restoration project. Photo / Supplied
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Over four years, 48km of riparian margin will be retired and planted out with 128,000 native plants. The council is working with seven landowners to deliver year one of this project.

Principal of Te Poi School, near Matamata, Linda Larsen said the Enviroschool had been planting wetlands on the farm since 2013.

"A lot of the kids come from farming families, and they will be the farmers here in the future. Supporting any one programme builds movement in the rest of the community, and benefits everyone. The planting we're doing is normalising that for them."

Upper Waiomou Stream project leader Aniwa Tawa told the students: "Little by little, with riparian planting being done up in the Kaimai Range and in the Hauraki Plains, we're creating one big corridor from the mountains to the sea, improving habitat and water quality."

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The willow and pest plant clearing, preparation of riparian margins and planting are being done by Wairere Mahi Limited, a local labour hire crew started by Ngāti Hinerangi and born out of the effects of the Covid-19 lockdown.

Site manager Tim Oake said a team of up to 13 had been working on the Upper Waiomou Stream project.

"Reconnecting with the land is the biggest thing for us. Water is our life source, so we try to make it better for everyone. This is our awa, this is what we are doing to improve it, and then we pass it on to the next generation to carry on with this work."

Fonterra regional head Waikato, Debra Kells, said catchment restoration was accelerated by connecting and empowering farmers, communities and businesses to achieve their environmental aspirations.

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"Through our Sustainable Catchments programme, we fund work that has wide benefits to a catchment but is beyond the scale of individual farmers."

Jobs for Nature is a $1.219 billion programme that manages funding across multiple government agencies to benefit the environment, people and the regions.

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