Teaching the cultural story of the environment in Taranaki | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

Te Ara Taiao, a Taranaki-based education programme teaching school children about the environment and culture around them has scaled up its work contributing to the nature ecology and mauri of the Taranaki Maunga landscape in the last few years with the support of the Department of Conservation (DOC).

Patuha maunga (known as Kaitake), one of the maunga that students learn about

In 2023, through the Taranaki Maunga Collective Redress Bill, the Crown recognised Taranaki Maunga as being a living being, and recognised the work done by Ngā Iwi o Taranaki in recent years to reactivate and strengthen their connections to their ancestral mountains. The work of Te Ara Taiao directly relates to this.

As the bill states:

“For generations, Taranaki Maunga and its surrounding ranges have been the central pillar for the iwi, hapū, and whānau of Taranaki. These maunga have long been honoured ancestors, a source of physical, cultural, and spiritual sustenance, and final resting places.”

Tane Manukonga, who works for Sustainable Taranaki – the organisation that houses the Te Ara Taiao – programme explains the programme originated when kaumatua from the Ngā Mahanga a Tairi hapū were given an opportunity to create an education programme that enabled tamariki who lived in Taranaki and on the Taranaki Maunga (mountain) landscape to know and understand from a cultural perspective the environment around them.

Tane says; “The name Te Ara Taiao means the environment pathway, they wanted tamariki to have a pathway to know and understand the environment but also it’s this connection piece that identifies a career pathway.”

Tamariki in the outdoor classroom at Omata School

Tane worked with the schools in the area of the hapū to ensure students at the local schools understood the pepeha (introduction) they were using, “That’s where I started with the schools, so that tamariki at the schools knew about the maunga, they knew about the awa (river). Some of the schools I worked with they use the awa in their pepeha but never went to see the awa. The connection with place and the connection with purpose is something you can’t do in a school classroom.”

“This is where the understanding for our cultural landscape came from that our kaumatua wanted our tamariki, Māori, Pakeha, anyone who lived on our landscape to understand. The pepeha was a no brainer to start,” says Tane.

The work to understand the cultural landscape also sits alongside initiatives to care for and understand the environment by way of activities based around a maramataka (Māori lunar calendar).

Tane says; “For instance in summer we’ve been growing a lot of kai; I’ve been teaching tamariki about kumara, we also do a lot of water testing, in autumn we’re doing seed collection, we’re doing a bit of propagation. In winter we are still testing water so we have those comparisons, we’re planting rakau (trees) in winter as well, come spring we’re back again we’re planting seeds and planting kumara tipu (runners) again.”

Seeing a kiwi footprint was a favourite talking point for Tamariki as it was discovered it after kiwi were reintroduced to the Maunga after predator species had eradicated them

Taranaki is a biodiversity hotspot which means there is a lot for students to learn about. Activities have included releasing kiwi – and learning about how to care for them in the environment by tracking them with telemetry gear – plant propagation, learning which berries manu (birds) eat, learning about the health of the water through water testing, learning about what riparian protection looks like, how artificial fertilizer can affect the waterways, and then down to the marine landscape learning about the health of the marine ecosystem.

Telemetry set used to track monitored kiwi

The boost to the programme from DOC through Jobs for Nature funding has enabled the team leading the work with tamariki and schools to grow, so more hapū are sharing their local narratives. The programme now employs five educators who each work with a different hapū or iwi to bring their knowledge of the environment to primary school aged tamariki.

Tane says; “This has been a real privilege for me personally to be able to facilitate that between schools and hapū.”

 “Our project is, in my view, the start of intergenerational behaviour change toward the environment. Our project is really a conduit of the community where they can see themselves contribute back to the health and wellbeing of the land and the people and our unique landscape.”

Te Ara Taiao works in a collaborative way bringing different groups together to facilitate learning.  Tane says; “Te Ara Taiao is just a conduit, stringing in everyone to make the spider web bright. The implementation is key, doing things together, don’t do stuff in silos.”  

On the success of the programme he says: “It’s somewhere where the hapū can see themselves now, in the environment, they can see themselves back on the landscapes, the schools know now that how they are contributing to the local community is a beautiful thing. Tamariki can now see themselves working in the environment. When I was at school, no one ever wanted to be a marine biologist, …but these opportunities that tamariki have in school now are the first step to the environment pathway.”

Water testing kit

What’s next after Jobs for Nature funding concludes?

Tane wants to future-proof the project. “There is an aspiration for people to be doing work on the maunga to eradicate the pests and to re-establish the biodiversity and to reintroduce taonga species but there is a gap where there’s no real pathway in Taranaki for tamariki to do that. What’s next for the project is going from what we’re doing in (primary) schools to high schools to universities and maintain that support for our tamariki to be the next DOC rangers. I’ve also got this aspiration that we’re going to produce environmental policy writers, that we’re going to have the next environmental lawyers… and to continue to inspire tamariki to want to work in environmental jobs.”

Tamariki gather round a fire at a Puanga celebration at Omata school where taiao korero is shared to enrich the understanding and importance of the celebration at this time of year. Puanga is celebrated around the same time as Matariki in Taranaki, as the stars of Matariki are not able to be seen.

Find out more about the Jobs for Nature – Mahi mō te Taiao, which has helped revitalise communities through nature-based employment and stimulate the economy post COVID-19.

Hokitika project receives major boost from Jobs for Nature | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

A collaborative environmental project on Hokitika’s doorstep is a legacy project for Jobs for Nature.

Planting and channel creation activities in progress at Wadeson Island. Photo: Westland District Council

“Every town has a wasteland beside it where people have gone and dumped their rubbish and dumped their weeds and tear round on their motorbikes.”

Tim Shaw is a senior ranger in the Hokitika District Office and he’s talking about Wadeson Island, which lies adjacent to the township of Hokitika in the Hokitika River and is the largest greenspace area that is available for the public to use in the area.

Tim says Jobs for Nature was set up to leave legacies and the legacy for Hokitika was to look after this spot better.

The Hokitika river is a place of significance to mana whenua and the wider Hokitika community. Over the years Wadeson Island has been the site of grazing, wharf areas, whitebaiting, pubs / drinking, rubbish dumping, gravel extraction, rugby league and even a cricket reserve.

Since work first started at the site, around 2000, the project has been driven by individuals and groups identifying opportunities and funding to move things forward one step at a time.

Over the past couple of years, through Jobs for Nature, Wadeson Island has enjoyed a major boost to this effort. Two Jobs for Nature project teams have been responsible, the Sustainable Whitebait Fisheries Project managed here by Conservation Volunteers NZ and the Weed Free Tai Poutini Project with a contracted team from MBC Environmental.

The two teams have torn through the site removing weeds, which were suppressing the native foliage, and rubbish, of which there was plenty. Channels were dug to create habitat for whitebait in a failed sports field and this was followed by planting, with thousands of cardboard plant protectors covering the area, and well as thousands of transferred native seedlings from nearby forestry areas.

“Jobs for Nature led the way. Once people saw success they got motivated and involved,” Tim says.

The work going on inspired others to get on board. As well as the work done through Jobs for Nature, a new section of trail has been built by Westland Milk Products, which takes people through an area of lowland forest that people didn’t even realise was there.

Local contractors also pitched in, retiring an old gravel storage area and providing top soil from a nearby work area to create a suitable area for planting. Westland District Council also upgraded the existing section of track with the end result being a great amenity area for Hokitika residents and a place where nature could re-establish itself.

There’s still another season of weed control left for the project to undertake, and by this time the new native plantings should be tall enough to evade being strangled by weeds.

As the vegetation grows it will shade the new channels and hopefully provide good habitat for native fish.

“What was previously just a big willow and blackberry infested spot will be looked after a lot better” says Tim.

Southern Lakes Sanctuary’s mission | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

Queenstown tourism workers were hard hit by COVID-19. In 2021, Southern Lakes Sanctuary received Jobs for Nature funding to employ staff, such as ex-tourism worker and trapping volunteer Philip Green.

The AJ Hackett Bungy base in Queenstown is where you’ll find the office of GSD Workforce Ltd, and the GSD office is where you’ll find the engine room of the large-scale restoration project Southern Lakes Sanctuary.

Twenty-four months ago, this office was a storeroom and AJ Hackett Bungy staff were staring down the barrel of a tourist-free Queenstown thanks to the arrival of COVID-19. That is until an ambitious group of people, led by the Whakatipu Wildlife Trust, made a successful bid for Jobs for Nature funding and got the ball rolling on a large-scale predator control project.

Wendy Johnston, Katie Herries, Amber Stewart and Daniel Soares taking a break while deploying traps at Wye Creek. Photo: Philip Green

The mission

Southern Lakes Sanctuary’s long-term goal is to eradicate introduced mammalian predators across the catchments of Lake Whakatipu and Lake Wānaka. The Trust that oversees this project is a consortium of six local groups that collectively represent approximately 84 community groups, landowners, and businesses that have been working for many years to protect and restore biodiversity.

The Southern Lakes Sanctuary project now has 22 staff working on it. Various ex-tourism workers are using their ecology degrees, while others on the team are learning about ecology for the first time.

Southern Lakes Sanctuary is on track to achieve its Jobs for Nature funding agreement predator control target of 130,200 hectares. They’ve also been doing extensive predator and native species research and monitoring. They’ve provided their member groups with much-needed resourcing for traps and other equipment and supported them to expand where applicable.

They facilitate informative events for their member group volunteers. They already receive funding additional to Jobs for Nature and are actively seeking more funding so that they can continue long after their Jobs for Nature term ends in July 2024.

Wye Creek trap deployment. Daniel Soares, Wendy Johnston, Amber Stewart, and Philip Green. Photo: Katie Herries

Philip Green’s winding road to conservation

One of the 22 staff now working with Southern Lakes Sanctuary is ex-tourism worker Philip Green. Philip has had an interesting journey to becoming their Technical and Field Advisor. He started life in the North Island, where he completed a Bachelor of Science degree in physics and maths at Auckland University, before hightailing overseas, discovering a passion for climbing, the environment and the outdoors. He spent time, amongst other things, as a Systems Engineer in Sydney and London, and a taxi driver in Sydney. Eventually, he and his partner Wendy moved to Christchurch.

In 1999, after looking longingly towards the mountainous country of the south for a few years, Philip and Wendy moved to Queenstown and started a wine tour business.

Philip joined the Queenstown Climbing Club committee and become their conservation officer after deploying predator traps in the popular climbing area Wye Creek. This is part of the Southern Lakes Sanctuary project area and is home to endangered birds such as kea, potentially rock wren, and native lizards. Philip was also involved in founding the Whakatipu Wildlife Trust, which is a consortium member group of Southern Lakes Sanctuary.

Two of the Wye Creek DOC200 traps are located at 2100 metres above sea level. Philip has a plausible claim that these are New Zealand’s highest permanent traps. And they catch stoats.

McCanns skink in the Wye Creek area. Photo: Philip Green

A mix of old-school and new-school techniques

As Technical and Field Advisor, Philip provides trapping advice to Southern Lakes Sanctuary and leads specific projects, primarily trap line expansion and research in the Whakatipu basin. He also does a fair amount of trap installation, trap servicing, and monitoring. With a solid understanding of health and safety management, he ensures their trap builders and field workers are signed off and competent to do their jobs. And he’s put his Information Technology skills to good use overseeing some of Southern Lakes Sanctuary’s data systems.

While working at the Southern Lakes Sanctuary HQ, Philip is surrounded by AT220 automated self-resetting traps in various stages of undress. With their sturdy plastic tops and wire mesh undersides these traps have the look of a solid, number 8 wire approach to trap development. But take off that plastic cover and there’s a bunch of efficient tech lurking in there. Southern Lakes Sanctuary have been using AT220 traps across their project area for six months or so now and they’ve been super impressed with this trap’s possum dispatching powers.

Southern Lakes Sanctuary has teamed up with technology company FTP Solutions. Philip is working with FTP to implement a remote monitoring system to eventually arm and disarm the trap, which includes installing cameras gathering information for Artificial Intelligence and machine learning to identify species. This means the trap would only be triggered to go off if there’s a target species, such as a possum, moseying up the entrance ramp. And non-target species such as kea would be safe to climb all over the trap to their heart’s content. This will be a very exciting development, as it means AT220s will be able to be deployed in kea habitat.

AJ Hackett Bungy has been amazing in their support of GSD and Southern Lakes Sanctuary. They’ve provided snug office space along with robust four-wheel drive vehicles for the team to get to rugged places. And GSD is supported by Bungy’s excellent administrative and safety systems.

Philip’s experience and interests are a good fit for Southern Lakes Sanctuary, and his passion for conservation has been obvious in the way he talks about the projects and people he works with.

“It’s an incredible environment to work in and a fantastic team,” he says of his Southern Lakes Sanctuary colleagues.

Follow Southern Lakes Sanctuary on: Facebook, Instagram or LinkedIn.


Find out more about the Jobs for Nature – Mahi mō te Taiao, which helps revitalise communities through nature-based employment and stimulate the economy post COVID-19.