
Wetland wins $50k boost for education
Recent visitors from Taieri College volunteer at Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands, which has had a boost of almost $50,000. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
Clutha Eco-attraction Sinclair Wetlands has just received a $49,800 top up to help manage its growing stream of visitors.
The wildlife swamp-sanctuary, formally known as Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands, was a successful shortlister for this year's Otago Regional Council (ORC) Eco Fund.
"The grant will be to used to help with our education programme," Sinclair Wetlands chairman Ian Bryant said.
"We have several schools and volunteer groups already visiting, our aim is to increase the number of schools coming to the wetlands and create a resource to cover our history and restoration, and the role of wetlands, birdlife, aquatic life, native plantings, pests and predators and weeds."
He said the resource would likely be a photographic guidebook-style publication — tailor-made for accessibility — and the funds would also help establish a regular, dedicated guide-person role to add to the volunteers promoting and working for the wetland reserve.
As well as schools, more businesses and community organisations were scheduling time for staff to volunteer at the marshland, learning how to plant appropriate flora properly and raise awareness of pest control and the environmental value of swamps.
"Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands once encompassed the whole Taieri Plain from Mosgiel to Waihola and beyond," Mr Bryant said.
"Over the years stop-banks have gone up and pumps have gone in and and it's been drained.
"Most importantly, they filter sediment, then they provide a healthy food-chain base and environment for whitebait spawning, eels and a wide variety of fish and aquatic bird life, and enable that biodiversity to thrive and spread."
He said education on kai gathering, from whitebaiting to duck-shooting was also enabled by the flourishing fenland.
"We're very grateful to the council as well as the volunteers, schools and business who come and do so much and Ngai Tahu, who lease us the land."
Sinclair Wetlands has received Eco Funding in the past and My Bryant said he found the application process straightforward.
"[This] proved to be a worthy community-led environmental project which has been through [our] rigorous selection process," ORC's manager environmental delivery, Libby Caldwell said.

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Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Wetland wins $50k boost for education
Recent visitors from Taieri College volunteer at Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands, which has had a boost of almost $50,000. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Clutha Eco-attraction Sinclair Wetlands has just received a $49,800 top up to help manage its growing stream of visitors. The wildlife swamp-sanctuary, formally known as Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands, was a successful shortlister for this year's Otago Regional Council (ORC) Eco Fund. "The grant will be to used to help with our education programme," Sinclair Wetlands chairman Ian Bryant said. "We have several schools and volunteer groups already visiting, our aim is to increase the number of schools coming to the wetlands and create a resource to cover our history and restoration, and the role of wetlands, birdlife, aquatic life, native plantings, pests and predators and weeds." He said the resource would likely be a photographic guidebook-style publication — tailor-made for accessibility — and the funds would also help establish a regular, dedicated guide-person role to add to the volunteers promoting and working for the wetland reserve. As well as schools, more businesses and community organisations were scheduling time for staff to volunteer at the marshland, learning how to plant appropriate flora properly and raise awareness of pest control and the environmental value of swamps. "Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands once encompassed the whole Taieri Plain from Mosgiel to Waihola and beyond," Mr Bryant said. "Over the years stop-banks have gone up and pumps have gone in and and it's been drained. "Most importantly, they filter sediment, then they provide a healthy food-chain base and environment for whitebait spawning, eels and a wide variety of fish and aquatic bird life, and enable that biodiversity to thrive and spread." He said education on kai gathering, from whitebaiting to duck-shooting was also enabled by the flourishing fenland. "We're very grateful to the council as well as the volunteers, schools and business who come and do so much and Ngai Tahu, who lease us the land." Sinclair Wetlands has received Eco Funding in the past and My Bryant said he found the application process straightforward. "[This] proved to be a worthy community-led environmental project which has been through [our] rigorous selection process," ORC's manager environmental delivery, Libby Caldwell said.


Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
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Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Funding ‘game-changer' for nursery
The recent announcement of funding support from both Otago Regional Council and Dunedin City Council is a "game changer" for the Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust nursery and native planting projects. Nursery manager Dr Nicole Bezemer is ecstatic that the trust has been granted $48,200 over the next two years in this year's Otago Regional Council (ORC) Eco Fund grants round, as well as being granted $15,000 per year in the Dunedin City Council 9 Year Plan process. "Receiving this funding is an absolute game changer for us — it gives us a really solid base for our work moving forward," Dr Bezemer said. Having been forced by funding constraints to scale back its activities in the first half of this year, the grants meant Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust could "ramp up" to support more volunteer days at the trust's nursery. "It will be wonderful for our volunteers, who can have more opportunities to be included — and we can really pick up the pace again," she said. "It is going to be especially meaningful for local disability service providers and young people wanting to complete their community service hours." The Eco Fund grant was tagged for the Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust's work on enhancing sealion habitat, which was becoming an increasing focus for the organisation. "We have growing numbers of sealion mums giving birth in the Smaills Beach area, including the pup who was in residence at our nursery over the summer. "Also, sealion mums who have given birth at other locations have been bringing their pups to this area as a kind of pre-creche — we have had about one-third of the pups born in Dunedin brought here this season." Another reason for the increasing numbers was that some families of sealion females had been coming to Smaills Beach for generations. "So, as the generations grow, we get more and more sealion pups here, which is just wonderful," Dr Bezemer said. In recent years, the Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust has been increasing its plantings to help create habitat, shelter and safe places for sealions away from local roads. "Sealion mums like to take the pups off the beach and into coastal forest, and some mums go a long way inland to give birth," she said. At Smaills Beach there are quite large areas of marram grass and thickets of taupata, which did not provide good shelter for birthing sealions, and the trust was keen to work on re-establishing coastal forest species. These included ngaio and slow-growing podocarps like totara. Dr Bezemer said the Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust was also working closely with the Ecotago team on riparian planting at lagoon creek, which fed into Tomahawk Lagoon. Local landowner Warren Matheson had been "extremely supportive" of the work and had offered to fence off a paddock near the Tautuku Fishing Club to open up a whole new planting area for sealion habitat. Dr Bezemer said the recent donation of tools from the Green Island Shed had also been very welcome. "We are very thankful for all the support we have had," she said. Work on potting up seedlings will continue at the trust nursery throughout winter to help build up a supply of native trees and plants ready for planting in spring. "From July, we are looking forward to announcing more volunteer days at the nursery," Dr Bezemer said. For more information, email beachcare@ • Another major recipient of funding through the ORC Eco Fund was Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands, which was granted $49,800 to help manage its growing stream of visitors. Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands trust chairman Ian Bryant said the wetlands, which formed a 315ha portion of the Waihola-Waipori wetland complex, south of Dunedin, already welcomed visits from several schools and volunteer groups. "Our aim is to increase the number of schools coming to the wetlands and to create a resource to cover our history and restoration, and the role of wetlands, birdlife, aquatic life, native plantings, pests and predators and weeds," Mr Bryant said. The resource would likely be a photographic guidebook-style publication and the funds would also help establish a regular, dedicated guide-person role to add to the volunteers promoting and working for the wetland reserve. ECO FUND GRANTS Otago regional councillors granted $1,059,178 to 28 community-led environmental projects across Otago from its annual Eco Fund disbursement. Eco Fund assessment panel chairman Cr Alan Somerville said the funding supported community-driven projects which protected, enhanced and promoted Otago's environment. Recipients in the Dunedin-Coastal Otago area include: Yellow-eyed Penguin Trust ($44,528), Te Nohoaka o Tukiauau — Sinclair Wetlands ($49,800), Tomahawk-Smaills Beachcare Trust (48,200), Dunedin Environment Centre Trust ($2985), Sutton Creek Trust ($9757), Reid Family Trust ($15,000), Matai Hill Trust ($15,000), Waitati Beach Reserve Society ($15,000), Makarara Farm ($15,000), Otokia Creek and March Habitat Trust ($15,000) and Deborah Bay Residents' Association ($16,020).