10,000 trees planted - in just three hours
News release
16 August 2010
10,000 trees planted -
in just three hours
Planting 10,000 native plants
seems daunting but yesterday at Queen Elizabeth Park
volunteers from around the region proved that many hands
make light work, completing the task in just three
hours.
The massive planting event was organised to
celebrate 10 years of Greater Wellington’s ecological
restoration programme Take Care.
It was a great
effort from all involved, says Robyn Smith, Greater
Wellington’s Community Environmental Projects team
leader.
“We were thrilled that so many people –
about 270 in all – came to help out. It’s a testament to
the support of our Take Care volunteers and to the wider
community for ecological restoration.”
The Take
Care programme commenced in 2000 and since then 64 groups
have been involved, with 36 groups currently funded through
the programme - working alongside streams and rivers, in
wetlands, coastal dunes and escarpments, and
estuaries.
“Our Take Care volunteers are doing an
excellent job,” Robyn says. They’ve planted over a half
a million trees since 2000 and if their contribution is put
in monetary terms, the gains are
astonishing.
“The Take Care Programme costs about
$275,000 annually but Greater Wellington and volunteers
deliver the ecological benefits of over $930,000 worth of
restoration effort.
“It was great to see so many
people at our 10 year celebration but we need more people to
get involved and be part of one of the care groups making
such an incredible difference to our
region.”
Find out how you can help -
www.gw.govt.nz/takecare
ends