Motuweka Havelock Community Pathway
Havelock Community Association held a planting day in September 2023, with over 500 native species flanking the recently completed section of the Motuweka Havelock Community Pathway. It was years in the making to complete this section near Slogan Street that leads to the wider Link Pathway.
There was a lot of collaboration involved to get to this point, said Don Pointon, who is a member of the Havelock Community Association and on the working group for Te Hoiere Project.
“The final step for us was to beautify the area and get the community involved. This is something that you could say a few years or even a generation from now ‘Hey I helped plant that tree,’” he said.
Department of Conservation owns this land and had to first eradicate an invasive rainbow skink before the Link Pathway Trust could build this final piece of the community pathway. Upon its completion, Havelock Community Association purchased native plants, while Te Hoiere Project has supported site preparation, planting, and maintenance during the plants’ establishment.
Shortly after the planting, Havelock schoolchildren decorated plant guards and worked alongside Mears Contracting to install them.
Photos above show the growth of the trees just one year after planting in August 2024, as well as photos of the planting in September 2023.
Photos: Havelock Community Association and Te Hoiere Project