
Jim Fyfe's wild life
Jim Fyfe, pictured at Tomahawk Beach, has spent the past 26 years working with sea lions and coastal communities. Photo: Gregor Richardson
Department of Conservation ranger Jim Fyfe was used to dealing with all sorts of issues but a seal in a G-string at Lover's Leap? He couldn't have made it up.
Fyfe had been in the job 13 years when he was called to a coastal arch on Otago Peninsula where a young fur seal had been seen with an object around its neck.
Guided by moonlight, he and a colleague scrambled down a steep, greasy bank and removed the skimpy item of clothing.
A couple of days later, he was questioned by an Otago Daily Times reporter about whether it was a thong or a G-string, then it made international news, he says.
While British tabloid The Daily Mirror gushed about a frisky couple leaving underwear at a local beauty spot and environmentalist magazine Grist declared losing your bikini bottoms in the ocean wasn't just "sexy/embarrassing", it was a potential ecological hazard, DOC staff formulated a plan.
Keen to make the most of the publicity, they decided to auction the item; the proceeds would be used to help eradicate mice from the Antipodes Islands.
"So it got more media," he says. "Then someone got hold of a photo of this bunch of fabric touted as a G-string and said they thought it was part of a hat that had deteriorated."
"[Comedian] Te Radar said he felt sorry for the wives of the poor rangers in Dunedin who couldn't tell a G-string from a hat. And the auction fell quite flat at that point.
"The hazards of working with marine mammals," he says, with a laugh.
At 59, Jim Fyfe has been at the forefront of conservation along Otago's coast for more than two decades. A recipient of the Wild Dunedin Hero Award, he is best-known for his work monitoring and advocating for the threatened New Zealand sea lion. Although he recently retired from the Department of Conservation, he plans to continue to work in coastal and marine conservation.
When the Otago Daily Times caught up with him, he was in his "new habitat", the Dunedin villa that he has lived in since 1999 but is learning to share on a more full-time basis with wife Kuini.
At the back of the house, a recently-completed deck doesn't overlook the sea, as you might expect, but apple trees, quince trees, figs and feijoas.
"The feijoas are a touch of Northland, which is where I'm from," he says. "They were so common there they became missiles [for play fights] on the way home from school."
Fyfe was born just south of Whangārei, but his love of snorkelling and sailing began at a bach on the coast at Whananaki.
"Growing up in a rural area gives you a sense of being part of a community and of service to the community," he says, adding he was aware from a young age of the great divide in Northland between the haves and have-nots.
Coastal Otago biodiversity ranger Jim Fyfe with the St Clair sculpture of "Mum" the sealion, after receiving the Wild Dunedin Hero Award in 2023. Rangers Fyfe and Jojo Jackson cut fishing net from a 2-year-old fur seal at Moeraki in 2007. Fyfe accompanies a rare spade-toothed whale as it is removed from Taieri Mouth beach last year. Fyfe moves a sun-loving fur seal from Portobello Rd. Photos: Peter McIntosh, Stephen Jaquiery, DOC
Despite the financial disparity, almost everyone had access to the coast because baches were on leasehold land and relatively affordable.
It's an ideal that has been front of mind during his 20 years of voluntary involvement with Quarantine Island/Kamau Taurua, a public recreation reserve in Otago harbour: "In a city, you can lose that connection with environment."
Raised by a rural vet and a science teacher, Fyfe developed "strong ethics in terms of animal welfare, an interest in ecology and natural environments, and a sense of injustice when other people weren't valuing those things."
For a brief period, he entertained the idea of being an "educated beach bum". But, watching The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau on television, he was captivated by the field of marine science.
Back inside the house, he picks up a piece of driftwood he found on a beach in south Westland. Shaped by water and wind, it looks remarkably like an outline of a New Zealand sea lion/pakake. He discovered it in 1987 — before any female sea lions were on the mainland — and says it was a tohu or sign.
Once widespread along the New Zealand coastline, there was scant evidence of surviving sea lion populations by the time Europeans arrived.
The species clung to existence in the subantarctic, where more than 90% of breeding still occurs; Fyfe has spent time tagging animals on the Auckland Islands and Campbell Islands as well as Port Pegasus on Stewart Island/Rakiura.
But in 1993, a lone female came ashore at Taieri Mouth and gave birth to the first pup born on the mainland in more than 200 years. Known as Mum, she produced pups on the Otago coast until 2010 — establishing seven generations of sea lions and a dynasty of breeding females that today numbers about 40.
Experts hope the annual breeding season in Otago could help halt the decline of what is the world's rarest sea lion species. But the mammals have returned to an environment very different to the one in which they evolved. The Otago coast is now lined with roads and houses, bustling with vehicles and humans.
In recent years, they have taken up residence at a local golf course, wandered across busy roads, disrupted a football match and frolicked in the St Clair saltwater pool. Determined to find safe places to give birth and to hide from amorous males, the females often push inland.
In the past 10 years, breeding has ramped up to the point rangers know "responsive work" will be needed over summer, Fyfe says. In 2015, 11 pups were born but most were still on Otago peninsula.
"Now we expect three times the number of pups and at least 10 of those to be in public areas."
Late last year, he guided a pregnant sea lion named Mikah from a backyard near the Dunedin Ice Stadium to the shelter of a local park. But instead of giving birth there, the animal did so on a front lawn in Normandy St and later lay across the bike track in a nearby playground.
"We went and put up cones," he says, adding with a laugh that expecting sea lions on roads could be seen as training for Dunedin's future drivers.
Segregating the mammals from human activity is not easy, so as increasing numbers appear in urban areas, people will need to adapt their behaviour to accommodate them and education will be key.
While many Otago residents support conservation efforts, interactions between humans and sea lions are not always friendly. The animals have been harassed by dogs and struck by cars while crossing roads. Six have been shot and another was stabbed to death.
Taieri Beach School pupils plant pīkao with coastal biodiversity ranger Jim Fyfe. Fyfe helps fellow ranger Graeme Loh and Dunedin vet Tony Malthus check the health of a 4-month old sea lion that had suffered a broken jaw. Fyfe and fellow DOC worker Claudia Babirat release a Fiordland crested penguin at Sandfly Bay. Jim Fyfe with one of the road signs now common around the South's coastal roads. Photos: Craig Baxter, Gregor Richardson, Linda Robertson, Peter McIntosh
Fyfe recalls talking to locals after one such incident and realising it was considered "cool" to joke about killing seals or sea lions because they ate too many fish.
"I feel quite angry at an adult community that makes a joke out of irresponsible behaviour and that doesn't set appropriate standards for our young people coming through . . . "
It's exciting to see the steady increase in the number of breeding females and, hence, the number of pups being born, in Otago, he says. However, 30 pups a year is still a small number for a species whose threat status was recently escalated to "nationally endangered", the second-to-last step before extinction. The main breeding population in the Subantarctic Islands is declining and the adult population is thought to have fallen below 5000.
"Fishing and climate change may be impacting directly or indirectly, reducing food and therefore increasing competition."
Of course, it's not only sea lions that Fyfe has been involved with.
About 100 whales and dolphins have stranded on the Otago coast in the past 25 years. When they need to be disposed of, DOC ensures both cultural and research interests are accommodated.
Last July, a 5m-long spade-toothed whale washed ashore near Taieri Mouth. Only six specimens had ever been documented and it was the first time one was able to be dissected: "It was so exciting to have this much-anticipated rare whale turn up on my watch and to be in a position where we could work in partnership with Ōtākou Rūnaka to learn so much about it."
Other species, such as the yellow-eyed penguin/hoiho, need intensive management and the help of the Dunedin Wildlife Hospital to ensure they survive.
"Often it feels like we're the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff," he says.
"We're working hard at the local coal face when what's happening at sea is probably more significant . . . Obviously, we need to be doing more to stop runaway climate change but that's a long-term project and in the shorter term, it's reconsidering how we use the ocean's resources."
Resource management and community partnerships have been recurring themes since Fyfe took up a two-year contract with DOC in 1990. He returned in 1999 after completing his masters in marine science and eventually became a coastal Otago biodiversity ranger.
One of his first roles was helping to implement the Kāi Tahu claims settlement, which included working with Kāti Huirapa Rūnaka ki Puketeraki as land on Huriawa Peninsula near Karitane was returned to the iwi.
Then, when the rūnaka established a committee to manage the East Otago Taiāpure — a local fishery of special significance to Māori — DOC was invited to advise on conservation interests in the area.
He also looked at marine reserve options for Otago, feeling disappointed when a proposed reserve at Nugget Point did not happen but optimistic about a new approach that could result in a regional network of reserves.
"Conserving what is special in coastal and marine areas, used by so many for so many different reasons, requires knowledge, communication, compromise and patience," he says. "We become so familiar with the places we visit and appreciate that we might not stop to consider what they may have been like, or how they could be managed differently to restore values."
For management, a particular challenge is "resourcing engagement at a meaningful scale".
Fyfe was at university when the Resource Management Act was first being discussed. Recently, it has been criticised for delaying projects but community engagement takes time and the legislation has sparked some important conversations, he says.
Department of Conservation community relations officer Claudia Babirat and ranger Jim Fyfe weigh an 8-day-old sea lion pup on Waldronville beach in 2011. Photo: Jane Dawber
For example, when he first arrived in Dunedin, sewage was discharged into the sea at Lawyer's Head and encountering panty shields and condoms was "part of the pleasure of walking along Tomahawk Beach".
As a volunteer, the father of two has fostered children's interest in nature through the Kiwi Conservation Club, helped restore natural habitats and shared environmental practices with thousands of people visiting Quarantine Island.
Working with people in coastal areas has been a privilege, he says.
"There was a colleague who left some years ago who said, 'There's no substitute for time in the field', which I completely agree with . . . But my message would be, conservation happens with our communities."
As he has got older, he has struggled with bureaucracy. But he will continue to work in conservation and hopes to find ways to "make it work" financially.
"I want to have a wider focus than what working within a government department will allow.
"I've got good networks with coastal communities that are doing really good work so there are opportunities to have more freedom to follow my own interests."
An "active relaxer", he also plans to spend more time camping, tramping, swimming and running. Overseas travel beckons and for the first time in many years, he and his wife will be able to take an extended summer holiday.
Some people leave their jobs with stained coffee cups and tattered notebooks. Fyfe's "mementoes" are more lasting.
There's a 5cm scar from the time he was cut by a broken branch while searching for penguin nests, and four more from handling hoiho — "none of them serious, but concentrated on my left wrist, which might make one wonder if I was keeping some sort of tally".
Seventeen years ago, he required seven stitches in his left forearm after a sea lion named Honey was being fitted with a satellite tracker and her pup, Lena, got involved.
"Normally, as you come in with a net, all the other sea lions are scattering so you end up just with the mother and it's quite an easy process. But as I'm coming down with the net on to Honey, here's Lena coming up with her mouth."
As well as recognising each other through sound and smell, sea lions have long memories so it's possible they recall the people involved in the tagging, he says.
"There's a couple of females that are more suspicious and a bit more grumpy to see us than others ...
"I'm never quite sure what they're saying. But I'm sure it's something like, 'Bloody DOC b....... again. Can't they just leave us alone?'."
When he came across Lena in the days leading up to his retirement, then, he had some news to share.
"I told her, 'You'll be pleased to know that I'm leaving DOC'."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
an hour ago
- Scoop
1st NZSAS Regiment Marks 70th Anniversary
Press Release – New Zealand Defence Force From its humble beginnings the NZSAS has since grown to become a full Regiment that gives the Government of the day a range of high-readiness, highly effective military options to advance and protect its interests. For 70 years the New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS) has been deployed on some of the most complex, challenging and dangerous missions faced by the New Zealand Defence Force, with the ultimate goal always being to protect New Zealand, its people and interests. The NZSAS was raised as a response to a strategic dilemma in the 1950s, when the New Zealand Government wanted to support the British in defending Malaya against the threat of communist expansion, whilst recognizing our comparatively small Defence Force and resources. As a result, a single NZSAS Squadron was raised and deployed to give New Zealand a credible impact across both military and political circles. From its humble beginnings the NZSAS has since grown to become a full Regiment that gives the Government of the day a range of high-readiness, highly effective military options to advance and protect its interests. Chief of Army Major General Rose King says NZSAS operators have played a pivotal role in a number of significant engagements over the course of the unit's existence. 'Our Special Forces personnel are among the best in the world at what they do. They deploy into places that others can't, they can achieve things that larger conventional units simply couldn't. Their sense of service over self is second to none, and their will to succeed and achieve their mission is extraordinary,' Major General Rose King said. Throughout its history, members of the NZSAS have been deployed throughout South East Asia and the Pacific, from Malaya to Timor Leste, Thailand to Papua New Guinea. The Unit has also contributed to global peace keeping and peace monitoring missions, with NZSAS operators later being heavily involved in the Middle East, including reconnaissance operations and partnering with Special Police Forces in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan campaign was bookended with a NZSAS team leading the ground evacuation of nearly 400 people to safety following the Taliban's return to power in 2021. The Commanding Officer of 1st New Zealand Special Air Service Regiment says the Regiment can only succeed with the support and sustainment of a world-class army and Defence Force. 'From the jungles of South East Asia and the Pacific, to the deserts, mountains and alleyways of the middle east and beyond, New Zealand's Special Air Service Regiment has always stood ready for New Zealand, and always will be,' the Commanding Officer said. 'For 70 years SAS, Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD), Commando, and Special Operations enablers have delivered whenever Government has asked, and whenever the Chief of Defence Force has tasked. From its early focus on special reconnaissance and deep infiltration in the jungle, the Regiment has developed counter-terrorism, direct action and special recovery capabilities in recent decades. Commando and EOD trades have been established in order to support Police and other agencies when responding to new threats at home, with further advances across intelligence, communications, logistics, female engagement and medical specialties to provide special forces commanders with the broadest range of options and support. 'Whenever they're called upon, whatever the task, our NZSAS members are always ready to deploy at immediate notice in order to uphold the values we hold so important in New Zealand. They are a huge credit to not only Ngāti Tūmatauenga, the New Zealand Army and the wider Defence Force, but should be a source of pride for the country as a whole,' Major General King said. The Regiment's Commanding Officer says this weekend is a special occasion to reflect on what has been a significant legacy by those who went before and will be marked with a series of events for both current and former members. It included the unveiling of new pou at Papakura Military Camp's memorial area earlier this week. 'The memorial area is where the Regiment records its whakapapa. It's where we thank those who have gone before and remember those who have paid the ultimate price. It is the spiritual hub of our camp and so these new pou carry a huge significance for us,' the Commanding Officer said. 'We will reflect not just on the operational successes, but also the vigilance and dedication it takes to train and prepare at home, to maintain standards, to develop new tactics, and to 'hold the pager' for crisis response.' Major General King said a lot has changed within the Regiment over the course of its seven decades, including evolved training methods, adapting to the changing nature of warfare, the physical locations of its home base and the hundreds of personnel and staff who have supported, enabled and maintained the Regiment over the decades. 'But many things have not, and will not change; the operational experience, professionalism and the unrelenting pursuit of excellence that embodies every member of New Zealand's Special Forces.'


Scoop
2 hours ago
- Scoop
1st NZSAS Regiment Marks 70th Anniversary
For 70 years the New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS) has been deployed on some of the most complex, challenging and dangerous missions faced by the New Zealand Defence Force, with the ultimate goal always being to protect New Zealand, its people and interests. The NZSAS was raised as a response to a strategic dilemma in the 1950s, when the New Zealand Government wanted to support the British in defending Malaya against the threat of communist expansion, whilst recognizing our comparatively small Defence Force and resources. As a result, a single NZSAS Squadron was raised and deployed to give New Zealand a credible impact across both military and political circles. From its humble beginnings the NZSAS has since grown to become a full Regiment that gives the Government of the day a range of high-readiness, highly effective military options to advance and protect its interests. Chief of Army Major General Rose King says NZSAS operators have played a pivotal role in a number of significant engagements over the course of the unit's existence. 'Our Special Forces personnel are among the best in the world at what they do. They deploy into places that others can't, they can achieve things that larger conventional units simply couldn't. Their sense of service over self is second to none, and their will to succeed and achieve their mission is extraordinary,' Major General Rose King said. Throughout its history, members of the NZSAS have been deployed throughout South East Asia and the Pacific, from Malaya to Timor Leste, Thailand to Papua New Guinea. The Unit has also contributed to global peace keeping and peace monitoring missions, with NZSAS operators later being heavily involved in the Middle East, including reconnaissance operations and partnering with Special Police Forces in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan campaign was bookended with a NZSAS team leading the ground evacuation of nearly 400 people to safety following the Taliban's return to power in 2021. The Commanding Officer of 1st New Zealand Special Air Service Regiment says the Regiment can only succeed with the support and sustainment of a world-class army and Defence Force. 'From the jungles of South East Asia and the Pacific, to the deserts, mountains and alleyways of the middle east and beyond, New Zealand's Special Air Service Regiment has always stood ready for New Zealand, and always will be,' the Commanding Officer said. 'For 70 years SAS, Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD), Commando, and Special Operations enablers have delivered whenever Government has asked, and whenever the Chief of Defence Force has tasked. From its early focus on special reconnaissance and deep infiltration in the jungle, the Regiment has developed counter-terrorism, direct action and special recovery capabilities in recent decades. Commando and EOD trades have been established in order to support Police and other agencies when responding to new threats at home, with further advances across intelligence, communications, logistics, female engagement and medical specialties to provide special forces commanders with the broadest range of options and support. 'Whenever they're called upon, whatever the task, our NZSAS members are always ready to deploy at immediate notice in order to uphold the values we hold so important in New Zealand. They are a huge credit to not only Ngāti Tūmatauenga, the New Zealand Army and the wider Defence Force, but should be a source of pride for the country as a whole,' Major General King said. The Regiment's Commanding Officer says this weekend is a special occasion to reflect on what has been a significant legacy by those who went before and will be marked with a series of events for both current and former members. It included the unveiling of new pou at Papakura Military Camp's memorial area earlier this week. 'The memorial area is where the Regiment records its whakapapa. It's where we thank those who have gone before and remember those who have paid the ultimate price. It is the spiritual hub of our camp and so these new pou carry a huge significance for us,' the Commanding Officer said. 'We will reflect not just on the operational successes, but also the vigilance and dedication it takes to train and prepare at home, to maintain standards, to develop new tactics, and to 'hold the pager' for crisis response.' Major General King said a lot has changed within the Regiment over the course of its seven decades, including evolved training methods, adapting to the changing nature of warfare, the physical locations of its home base and the hundreds of personnel and staff who have supported, enabled and maintained the Regiment over the decades. 'But many things have not, and will not change; the operational experience, professionalism and the unrelenting pursuit of excellence that embodies every member of New Zealand's Special Forces.'


Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
New life for British youths
Young British men gather with New Zealand high commissioner Sir James Allen (centre) at Waterloo Station, London before their emigration to New Zealand. — Otago Witness, 2.6.1925 Some 320 assisted settlers are travelling to New Zealand by the SS James Allen was among those who saw them off at Waterloo Station. Thirty boys selected under the terms of the Sheepowners' Fund, fifty boys under the auspices of the Salvation Army, and thirty-six domestic servants are included in the number. The High Commissioner spoke to a good many of the boy settlers and wished them every success in their new home. Numbers of high officials of the Salvation Army were on the platform to give an official farewell to their section of the young travellers. Before the train left the platform there were many hearty cheers. Greyhounds chase live hares The June meeting of the Dunedin Coursing Club was commenced at Forbury Park yesterday afternoon, the coursing being witnessed by a fair number of those interested in the sport. The plumton was in good order, and the hares ran well. Very few kills were recorded; the game, in almost all cases, being given plenty of grace before the dogs were slipped. Among the dogs competing were several from Canterbury and Southland. The judge was Mr R. Prebble, Mr J. Ronald acting as slipper. Two rounds of the Boyle Memorial Stake were run off. Relief funds strong to save The executive of the Shipwreck Relief Society of New Zealand, in its annual report, state that the past year was free from any shipping disaster involving loss of life. During the year the sum of £20 1 shilling was expended in relief for the crew of the launch Sunlight, and £230 in relief to the crew of the steamer Ngahere, wrecked at Greymouth. To the Union Steam Ship Co the executive is again deeply indebted for its handsome contribution to the funds during the year, the sum of £206 11s 4d having been received from entertainments hold on board the company's steamers. The causes of crime Is it possible to find any root cause of crime that can be dealt with practically? The investigation undertaken by Professor W.S. Athearn, Dean of the Boston University School of Religious Education and Social Service concluded that the cause of crime is the failure of society to teach virtue, and that the crime wave will last until society builds a system of moral and religious schools to match the public schools of the land. The implied suggestion is that the churches have too long devoted almost all their resources to preaching to the mature, and that the time has come when they must accept as their primary work the teaching of the young. Obviously the more they can agree to work in unison the more effective will their work be. A survey of the facts of juvenile crime and of the provision of moral teaching in the dominion would provide a fitting basis for drawing attention to the urgency of the problem and to the need of some whole-hearted effort to abolish the spiritual illiteracy of the child which, according to Dr Athearn, is at the basis of all crime and moral delinquency. — editorial — ODT, 6.6.1925 Compiled by Peter Dowden