A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

The vision is that by 2050 the Southern Port Hills has a thriving and resilient indigenous forest supporting an abundance of native birds and invertebrates. The area will be a taonga for the Ōtautahi / greater Christchurch and adjoining communities to value, protect and engage with.

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

The vision is that by 2050 the Southern Port Hills has a thriving and resilient indigenous forest supporting an abundance of native birds and invertebrates. The area will be a taonga for the Ōtautahi / greater Christchurch and adjoining communities to value, protect and engage with.

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

The vision is that by 2050 the Southern Port Hills has a thriving and resilient indigenous forest supporting an abundance of native birds and invertebrates. The area will be a taonga for the Ōtautahi / greater Christchurch and adjoining communities to value, protect and engage with.

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

The vision is that by 2050 the Southern Port Hills has a thriving and resilient indigenous forest supporting an abundance of native birds and invertebrates. The area will be a taonga for the Ōtautahi / greater Christchurch and adjoining communities to value, protect and engage with.

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

A vision for Te Kākahu Kahukura

The vision is that by 2050 the Southern Port Hills has a thriving and resilient indigenous forest supporting an abundance of native birds and invertebrates. The area will be a taonga for the Ōtautahi / greater Christchurch and adjoining communities to value, protect and engage with.

WHAT IS TE KĀKAHU KAHUKURA?

Te Kākahu Kahukura is part of the overarching 2050 Ecological Vision for Banks Peninsula/Te Pātaka o Rākaihautū – see http://www.bpct.org.nz/bpct-2050-ecologicial-vision . While all 8 Goals of the Vision are relevant and interrelated, Te Kākahu Kahukura particularly supports Goal 4 which is to protect four core areas of indigenous forest of more than 1000 ha each.

This is a voluntary landowner and community driven initiative.  It includes a range of private landowners, agencies, councils and organisations. It aims to facilitate and co-ordinate native forest revegetation and restoration on the Southern Port Hills. Around the core area of regenerating forest, landowners are encouraged to plant native plants and do pest and weed control in a way which supports a thriving indigenous forest plant community and allows native birds and other native fauna to move through the landscape.

WHAT DOES TE KĀKAHU KAHUKURA MEAN?

Kākahu means to dress or clothe as well as being a generic name for clothing and garments. It references the actions of Tāne Mahuta in clothing his mother Papatūānuku following the separation from his father Ranginui.

Kahukura is a significant atua known in Ngāi Tahu traditions as being responsible for cloaking the wreckage of Te Waka o Aoraki with plants, forests and swamps, and populating these places with all the varieties of indigenous birds that dwell there.

Kahukura is particularly important to the creation of the forests of Te Pātaka o Rākaihautū/Banks Peninsula and is remembered through the naming of a number of prominent peaks of the Port Hills including Te Tihi o Kahukura (Castle Rock) and Te Heru o Kahukura (Sugarloaf).

Kahukura is also known to take the celestial form of a rainbow and was central in local rituals and karakia. Kahukura is also a name for the native red admiral butterfly and literally means a cloak coloured with red ochre – another connection to the volcanic nature of the Port Hills.

Te Hapū o Ngāti Wheke and Te Taumutu Rūnanga provided the name for the project and support its use.

WHY THIS PART OF THE PORT HILLS?

The focus of Te Kākahu Kahukura is south of Victoria Park/ Rāpaki, extending towards Gebbies Pass, from the plains to Whakaraupō / Lyttelton Harbour, including Ōtamahua/Quail Island.

The Southern Port Hills and Ōtamahua/Quail Island provide a unique opportunity for a large forested area on the doorstep of metropolitan Christchurch and its surrounding townships.

While a substantial area on the Port Hills was affected by catastrophic fires in February 2017, the development of Te Kākahu Kahukura allows us to build on the collaborative projects that developed after the fire, as well as the substantial biodiversity work that is already underway, to plan for the regeneration and revegetation of the fire affected areas.

The project area already contains significant areas of existing and regenerating native forest and shrublands within reserves administered under the Reserves Act and private land under covenants.

There are no hard and fast boundaries to the project – anyone is invited to participate, but the core area has been chosen as a matter of practicality and because it already contains significant areas of existing and regenerating native forest.

WHAT’S INVOLVED?

Involvement with the project is voluntary. The key elements are:

  • Protecting and enhancing existing native biodiversity on your land.
  • Encouraging natural regeneration of native trees and plants.
  • Monitoring of birds and plants, focussing on both existing areas of native vegetation and new areas that are being planted.
  • Pest control, as part of the Pest Free Banks Peninsula initiative.
  • Weed control within remaining remnants of native habitat as these sites are key sources for native seed dispersal into surrounding areas.
  • Targeted native tree and vegetation planting to enhance connectivity between key areas of existing native habitat.
  • Targeted ‘enrichment planting’ of native regenerating forests with original podocarp tree species that are now rare in the area (such as tōtara, mataī, kahikatea, and tītoki).

BENEFITS OF TE KĀKAHU KAHUKURA

Te Kākahu Kahukura will contribute to the social, cultural and economic, as well as environ-mental, wellbeing of the community of Ōtautahi/greater Christchurch - a community that is connected, resilient and healthy.

Regenerating native forest and other native plants will contribute to hillside stabilisation and reducing sedimentation so the quality of our streams and the harbour is improved; and help restore an area for both passive and active recreation.

The biodiversity gains in attracting and growing populations of native birds such as Tūi, ruru (morepork), kereru, and pīwakawaka (fantail) in a regenerating native forest on the Port Hills all contribute to creating a native taonga for the people of Ōtautahi/greater Christchurch, and visitors to the area.

For more information see our Frequently Asked Questions.