Little warriors winning in the environment
Little warriors winning in the environment
Little eco-warriors in Flaxmere are taking up the battle on behalf of the environment, and their efforts have been nationally recognised.
Morgan Educare won the Sustainable Schools Award at the Keep New Zealand Beautiful Awards last week.
While the youngsters are not so much aware of the importance of the award; there is no doubt they are aware of the environment, says centre manager Paula Mihaka. “We’ve got one young warrior who saw an adult in the park drop some litter and he called him on it. You have a 4-year-old seeing this and knowing it’s not right. That’s what education about protecting our environment is all about.”
Sustainability is “at the heart of what we do”, Mrs Mihaka said; from river clean ups and tree plantings, to recycling, vegetable growing and worm farming. The long-term goal is to become a school focussed on permaculture: sustainability and self-sufficiency. “Permaculture is about every time you touch something you try and improve it.”
To achieve that, the centre has installed solar panels, upcycled massive tractor tyres to make edible gardens; put in a worm farm to help deal with scraps and to provide a natural plant food; organised for a local pig farmer to take the scraps the worms cannot deal with; put in a compost bin; collects unwanted clothing from staff and whanau to give away at a local market, and recycles all paper products.
Next on the list is the collection of rain water from the roof into tanks, to be used for water play and garden watering. And it will not just be any old water play – the team have come up with a plan for a ‘stream’ which the children can manipulate using engineering processes; smaller but not dissimilar to the community version in the Havelock North Village Green.
The cost of the system is about $6500, and the $2000 prize money from the award will go towards it.
To
help raise the rest of the funds, the school is putting
together a book called Listen to the Taniwha, aimed at
encouraging other children to help look after the
environment. With beautiful photos and simple language, it
shows the piles of litter the children have found in public
places and cleaned up, and how upset the children are that
special places are used to dump rubbish.
Their litter
clean ups are not limited to the riverside; the youngsters
don gloves for their weekly walk to the library and pick up
litter on the streets and join primary and secondary
students for their monthly clean up in the area around the
college. “It is all about educating and raising awareness;
starting with our own tamariki who can help
spread the
message into the wider community as they grow,” said Mrs
Mihaka, before leading off a snaggle of children to water
the vege gardens.
The award was one of three for
Hastings. Havelock North won Most Beautiful Suburb, and
Hawke’s Bay Farmers’ Market won Most Sustainable
Business Project. Hastings District councillor Henare
O’Keefe as Keep New Zealand Beautiful’s 2017 Local
Hero.
Hastings acting mayor Sandra Hazlehurst said Hastings could be very proud of all of the places and projects which had been recognised.
“And these little
children, who are so aware and determined to keep our places
beautiful deserve special praise. They are truly special and
will be the leaders of caring for our environment in the
future”
ENDS