Part ofthe Matuku Reserve A Iioing egacy In 1992 Mary and Bill Cole from West Auckland died within 4 few Nature Heritage Fund, were used tO purchase an additional adjoining months of each other: Both were longstanding members of Forest 20 hectares of native forest and wetland The enhanced reserve IS and Bird. They shared a keen love of the outdoors and, in particular; of significant ecological value. School groups, scientists, branch of the native forests of the Waitakere members and others all frequent the trails developed in the reserve Ranges. and enjoy today the native forests and birds Bill and Mary had cared for SO passionately: In their will, the Coles F Reeer 05 made 2 generous bequest Their legacy lives on beyond Matuku, howevec: The Sociery' 5 to Forest and Bird to assist Auckland branches formed a committee in 1993 to determine the the Society' $ conservation best way tO allocate the remainder of the bequest funds. A memo work in the Auckland area calling for project proposals from the Society' S then northern They requested that the conservation officer; Jacqui Barrington (who has since died, leaving enhancement of Forest and Bird' S Matuku Reserve in the Waitakeres Forest and Bird her own bequest) , noted it waS the Coles wish that be one of the projects funded by the bequest: the money be spent wisely on conservation projects benefiting nature in the Auckland area Enthusiastic supporters of the branch S Matuku Reserve project, the Coles had watched it grow from the original 50 hectares of goat- Since then the Cole bequest has helped fund the purchase of infested native forest and wetland alongside the Waitakere River; Whakanewha Reserve on Waiheke Island, now a regional park purchased in 1979. Led by John Staniland, the branch further managed by the Auckland Regional Council Other Cole Bequest extended the reserve and actively managed it for conservation. The projects have included fencing of the Colin Kerr Taylor Reserve in goats were removed, possums trapped and invasive weeds Waitakere and the initiation of the proposed Te Matuku Marine eradicated Reserve at Waiheke Island. The Coles and other branch members enjoyed the spectacular Bill and Mary = Cole have indeed left a living legacy that has made regeneration of native plants and the flourishing of native wildlife. a significant and lasting contribution to the protection of the native Funds from the Cole Bequest, supplemented by 835,000 from the plants and wildlife that had enriched their lives. You too can leave a living legacy by remembering Forest and Bird in your will To receive a bequest pack contact: Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society PO Box 631, Wellington New Zealand phone: 04-385 7374 fax: 04-385 7373 email: office@wn forest-bird.org: nz Lut Htciland Fortine Bint FOREST Branchanmbi Ipg # ma & BIRD Jop n Khe Mararay Raene
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/FORBI20021101.2.43.1
Bibliographic details
Forest and Bird, Issue 306, 1 November 2002, Unnumbered Page
Word Count
467Unnumbered Page Advertisement 1 Forest and Bird, Issue 306, 1 November 2002, Unnumbered Page
Using This Item
For material that is still in copyright, Forest & Bird have made it available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC 4.0). This periodical is not available for commercial use without the consent of Forest & Bird. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this magazine please refer to our copyright guide.
Forest & Bird has made best efforts to contact all third-party copyright holders. If you are the rights holder of any material published in Forest & Bird's magazine and would like to discuss this, please contact Forest & Bird at editor@forestandbird.org.nz