‘Plant Me Instead’, Northlanders Urged
Date: 05 October, 2011
‘Plant Me Instead’,
Northlanders Urged
A new
booklet urging Northlanders to abandon damaging introduced
plants in favour of similar, but harmless, native and
exotics will be released shortly.
The Northland
edition of the national Weedbusters ‘Plant Me
Instead’ booklet has been written to specifically
address pest plants plaguing the region and incorporates
dozens of species nominated by Northlanders.
The
Northland Regional Council, Department of Conservation
(DOC), Weedbusters and the region’s three district
councils last year invited Northlanders to contribute
suggestions to the rewrite and help them fight back on
behalf of native species.
Sara Brill, a Biosecurity
Officer with the regional council, says too many patches of
native bush, wetlands, lakes and other natural areas in
Northland are being strangled or taken over by garden plants
that have ‘jumped the fence’ and gone wild.
She
says the booklet identifies more than 80 common weedy
species people are likely to find in Northland gardens, with
suggestions of similar - but harmless – plants they could
use instead. A native and exotic alternative is given for
each pest plant.
Ms Brill says weedy species are
escaping from dumped garden waste as seeds carried by birds
or by wind. They can quickly gain footholds in precious
areas where it can be very costly to try to control
them.
She says every year local authorities, DOC and
voluntary groups spend large sums of money in Northland
dealing with plant pests.
Northlanders were asked to
suggest the garden escapees they thought were a problem in
the region and many of these have been incorporated into the
more than 80-page booklet, including blue morning glory,
climbing asparagus, arum lilies, agapanthus, jasmine and
ginger.
To officially launch the booklet, organisers
are having plant swaps in both Whangarei and Kerikeri this
month and plan to give away about 450 native plants plus
free copies of the booklet.
Ms Brill says numbers are
limited and conditions do apply. To qualify, people need to
bring a shopping bag full of pest plants (including the
roots) to either the Whangarei Growers Market, Water Street,
Whangarei from 7am-10am on Saturday 15 October or to the
Kerikeri Rotary Garden Safari on Saturday 29
October.
She says 300 plants (donated by Alter-Natives
Nursery and Landscaping and Tawapou Coastal Natives) and
booklets will be given away in Whangarei and another 150
plants (donated by Kerikeri Plant Production) and booklets
at Kerikeri.
Ms Brill says Northland gardeners who
take up the call to opt for less harmful species will be
helping the region in more ways than one.
“Not only
will they be attacking the seed source that’s helping
spread these pest plants, they’ll also be saving
themselves (and other ratepayers) money because every weed
we stop ‘jumping the fence’ is one less that has to be
cleared.”
Ms Brill says free copies of the booklets will be available from all Northland Regional Council and Department of Conservation offices from later this month.
More information on pests in Northland is
also available from the regional council’s website at: www.nrc.govt.nz/nasties
ends