Twenty-three schools share NRC environmental awards
Projects including farm fertiliser runoff monitoring and a stoat and rat trapping programme to boost kiwi numbers are
among 24 school initiatives to share $20,000 in this year’s Northland Regional Council Environmental Curriculum Awards
(ECAs).
The annual awards aim to foster excellence in environmental education, with schools eligible for up to $2000 each for
their efforts to educate children ‘in, about and for’ the region’s environment.
This year 23 recipients will receive between $230 and $1550 each for their 24 projects. (SUBS: Tinopai School is being funded for two projects).
Regional council chairman Bill Shepherd and Councillor Craig Brown – who selected this year’s winners – were once again
impressed by the scope and quality of projects which will see the enthusiastic involvement of hundreds of people across
entire school communities.
Councillor Shepherd says the ECAs recognise and support the environmental education efforts put in by about 2000
students in 112 classes and/or school student environmental groups.
Councillor Brown says he’s pleased to see a good geographic spread among the winners, with seven winning schools based
in the Far North, 12 in the Whangarei district and four in Kaipara.
Projects include $720 to Northland College for specialised chemistry equipment to measure waterway fertiliser run-off
and $950 to Whangarei Heads School towards a stoat and rat trapping programmeto boost local kiwi numbers).
A full list of the winning schools and the funding for their (GST exclusive) projects is:
Glenbervie School
Project: School Orchard
Funding: $500
Contact: Oliver Tattersfield (09) 437 5812
Funding towards: creating a schoolground orchard. Students will be involved in planning, creating and maintaining it,
with enterprise encouraged in the use of orchard harvests. This project involves 60 students aged seven to 11.
Kaikohe East School
Project: Sustainable Orchard
Funding: $1440
Contact: Ceridwen Mason (09) 401 1532
Funding towards: developing a schoolground orchard, the benefits of which include alignment with the school's
kaitiakitanga value teaching and learning plus principles of sustainability such as growing and eating locally produced
food. This whole school project involves 241 students aged five to 11.
Kamo Intermediate
Project: Islands of Life (2015)
Funding: $400
Contact: Jan O'Connor (09) 435 0343
Funding towards: helping replenish/boost its long term Islands of Life (IOL) project. IOL (2015) receives funding
towards renovating and further developing the school's worm farm headquarters and further schoolground plantings. One
class of 34 Year Seven and Eight students and the school’s 30-strong student envirogroup will take part.
Kerikeri High School
Project: Food for Thought - Edible Garden
Funding: $1400
Contact: Ria Bright (09) 407 8916
Funding towards: creating an edible garden to provide food which is in turn cooked/prepared by the school's culinary and
hospitality departments. Gardening, sustainable living and entrepreneurial skills will be among project benefits along
with principles of kaitiakitanga, hauora and whanaungatanga. Sixty students in two classes are involved.
Maungatapere School
Project: You Can Grow It
Funding: $1200
Contact: Scott Martin/Dan Tissink (09) 434 6743
Funding towards: expanding its gardening enterprise with a shadehouse to grow seedlings and propagate, and garden tools
for garden maintenance. The school's garden group (15 students aged eight to 12) is involved.
Ngunguru School
Project: Restoring Food Chains
Funding: $900
Contact: Loren Hope (09) 434 3805
Funding towards: pest trapping and other restoration work to further improve the health of a large schoolground bush
block. Students will be rat trapping and monitoring accompanying simple pest tracking tunnels, their efforts working to
restore native animal and bird food chains. The whole 240-student school's involved.
Northland College
Project: Northland College Waiora
Funding: $720
Contact: Jenni Edwards (09) 401 3200
Funding towards: specialised chemistry equipment for measuring waterway fertiliser run-off. The senior secondary project
will measure run-off resulting from using different fertiliser types and application rates on the school's 400 hectare
farm to make fertiliser recommendations to the school farm committee and community. This programme, at the head of the
Hokianga Harbour catchment, is part of a nationally groundbreaking, innovative programme where highly integrated
multi-level NCEA studies work to restore waterway health local waterways' wairua. All the school's 306 students will be
involved in the Northland College Waiora project at some point in their time at Northland College.
Okaihau College
Project: Ara Rongo
Funding: $1200
Contact: Karen Paraone on (09) 401 9030
Funding towards: a 300 metre multi-sensory path for school special needs students. The pathway features perspex icons of
native creatures including fish such as kokopu, mini pohutukawa, native flaxes and grasses, mirror pieces, a Maori pou
and wind chimes to assist the visually impaired to travel around the school. Fifteen students aged 11 - 18 are involved.
One Tree Point School
Project: Butterfly Habitat Stage One
Funding: $1200
Contact: Pam Weir (09) 432 7891
Funding towards: creating a butterfly garden to assist with the insect's food source and migration. This project for
monarch and other types of butterflies is part of the school's mission statement which includes fostering values of
environmental care, ecological awareness and sustainability. It grew out of student concern about butterfly habitat
loss. The project involves 38 six and seven-year-old students.
Oruaiti School
Project: Oruaiti School Zero Waste
Funding: $230
Contact: Jan Hobbs (09) 406 0300
Funding towards: worm farms as part of its established gardening programme and contributing to the school's goal of
being zero waste. The whole 63 pupil school's involved.
Otaika Valley School
Project: Shadehouse Equipment
Funding: $750
Contact: Eden Hakaraia (09) 432 2731
Funding towards: shadehouse equipment for growing riparian plants for planting out in the local Otaika River. The
whole-school project involves 147 students aged five to 11.
Otamatea High School
Project: Paper Brick Making
Funding: $310
Contact: Klasina Sewell (09) 431 8230
Funding towards: paper brick making equipment. Recycled used school paper will be made into paper bricks for sale to the
community as fuel for fires. This is seen as a way of cutting school paper waste. One hundred students aged 11 and 12
will be involved.
Oturu School
Project: No Turf Unturned!
Funding: $500
Contact: Fraser Smith (09) 408 2050
Funding towards: horticultural equipment for large-scale produce garden extension and redevelopment as part of a
whole-school rebuild. This will enable the school to further extend its many-pronged education for sustainability
approach. This includes a commercial kitchen, producing honey and eggs and much more. This whole school project involves
162 students aged five to 13.
Parua Bay School
Project: Parua Bay School Wildlife pathway (2015)
Funding: $450
Contact: Gail Green (09) 436 5814
Funding towards: finishing the school's seven year old wildlife pathway with plants and a species identification sign.
More than 4500 plants have been planted along the pathway since the project began. The pathway links the seaside school
with its Whangarei Harbour foreshore. The whole-school project will involve 280 students aged five to 13.
Peria School
Project: Food Forest Gazebo
Funding: $450
Contact: Jarrod McClay (09) 408 5834
Funding towards: building a gazebo in the school's food forest for students to use when the weather's wet. The whole school's involved
with 51 students aged five to 12l.
Poroti School
Project: Reigning in our Chickens
Funding: $500
Contact: Pauline Johnson (09) 434 6867
Funding towards: reigning in the currently free-range school chickens with an expanded school chicken enclosure. The
whole 20-student school's involved.
Ruakaka School
Project: The Birds and the Bees
Funding: $550
Contact: Jennifer Hay (09) 432 7503
Funding towards: extending its chook run and boosting schoolground wildflower plantings for bees. The school's
envirogroup will lead the project with 20 students aged seven to 10.
Ruawai Primary School
Project: Bees VIP (Very Important Pollinators)
Funding: $700
Contact: Adele Slatter (09) 439 2307
Funding towards: boosting the school's beekeeping enterprise. The whole school's involved with 101 students aged five to 11.
Tangiteroria School
Project: Sustainable Orchard and Garden
Funding: $1100
Contact: Tina Bradshaw (09) 433 2635
Funding towards: boosting an established multi-faceted outdoor learning environment including boosting the school
orchard, harvesting honey for sale, growing plants in the school polyhouse and having chickens to complete the
garden-to-table philosophy. The whole school's involved with 52 students aged five to 13.
Te Kura o Otangarei
Project: Enviro Blitz
Funding: $1500
Contact: Ngapoko Ashford (09) 437 0623
Funding towards: boosting the school's fruit forest and planting a plant shelter belt around it. The whole school's
involved with 92 students aged five to 13.
Tinopai School
Project: Manaakitia te Kaipara (Native tree project) and Mara Kai mo to Whanau (Community Garden)
Funding: $1550
Contact: Sonya Kaihe on 431 7182
Funding towards: two schoolground projects run in conjunction with the local community. Manaakitia te Kaipara gets $1200 towards
developing a native tree project and Mara Kai mo te Whanau gets $350 towards a community garden. All students in the
small rural Kaipara Harbour school are involved – 21 students aged five to 13.
Waiotira School
Project: Agricultural Sustainability
Funding: $1500
Contact: Frances Matiu (09) 432 9804
Funding towards: a chicken-based enterprise producing eggs for the school's technology class and sale as well as
materials for having a goat to 'mow' expansive school grounds at the small rural school. The whole school will be
involved with 22 students aged five to 11.
Whangarei Heads School
Project: Room Two Trappers
Funding: $950
Contact: Denise Humphries (09) 434 0844
Funding towards: traps to use as part of a stoat and rat trapping programme involving students in a schoolground bush
block. The programme's being run by the school and is aimed at encouraging more kiwi as part of the Bream Head
community's Backyard Kiwi programme. One class of 29 students aged nine to 11 years old (Y5/Y6) will run the programme .
ENDS