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NEW NATIVE FORESTS

1 [ IF NATURE GETS A CHANCE. A resident of Ngaio (Wellington) in a letter to the Forest and Bird Protection Society, gives another reminder of Nature's willingness to re-establish Native forests on land denuded by man i if she is allowed to work in peace. “As one who landed in New Zealand 1 as far back at January. 1879, and has therefore been in this Dominion over 60 years, and who has resided in this neighbourhood especially for now going on for some 50 years (when the hills around were all covered in native bush)" the writer states, "may I be allowed to call your attention to a phase that seems to have escaped the natice of many? The grounds surrounding the old house here, which edifice was bulit by the late John Chew, and in which I and my wife live, represent, or course, a very small part of the land here (formerly called Crofton) once held by the family. But for a considerable time I have noticed in various places the springing up of native trees, principally lace-barks, ngaios, fucsias, koromikos, karamus, and many others of which I do not know the name, but which used in bygone days to be termed scrub or second growth. You will see in the hollows of the denuded hills around here (which were once thickly clad in bush) the same process going on, despite the fact of these places being unfenced and open to the inroads of cattle and sheep pasturing thereon. In one place especially on the hill opposite to the Ngaio railway station, but to the south, a good growth of Ngaios has I ! smothered out and replaced such hardy exotics as gorse and broom. I feel sure that if the hollows I have referred to were fenced off from sheep and cattle, a manifest improvement would soon bo apparent in the hills around, as regards their carrying capacity, for this protective forest would greatly save them from further denudation.” Similar new growth of native trees can be seen among the bracken and scrub on the hills of Queen Charlotte Sound. Some of this regeneration was spoilt last summer by careless fireraising. I

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19391221.2.9.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 21 December 1939, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
367

NEW NATIVE FORESTS Wairarapa Times-Age, 21 December 1939, Page 3

NEW NATIVE FORESTS Wairarapa Times-Age, 21 December 1939, Page 3

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