Left: Among glacial moraines known as the Mounds of Misery beside the Cox River there are small islands which have escaped the worst effects of a century of grazing and burning. They still host threatened plants such as Armstrong's hebe (Inset). In the wild this species is now confined to the Waimakariri River basin, although it is possibly the most widely cultivated whipcord hebe. Photo: G McSweeney
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/FORBI19880501.2.19.2
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Forest and Bird, Volume 19, Issue 2, 1 May 1988, Page 21
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67Left: Among glacial moraines known as the Mounds of Misery beside the Cox River there are small islands which have escaped the worst effects of a century of grazing and burning. They still host threatened plants such as Armstrong's hebe (Inset). In the wild this species is now confined to the Waimakariri River basin, although it is possibly the most widely cultivated whipcord hebe. Photo: G McSweeney Forest and Bird, Volume 19, Issue 2, 1 May 1988, Page 21
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