Recent research shows canopy cover in Wellington is 47.5%, compared to 39% for Auckland and 21.9% for Christchurch* (three shots of forest canopy at Otari-Wilton’s Bush are attached).
Councillor Peter Gilberd, Wellington City Council’s Natural Environment Portfolio Leader, says we should be proud of this result as trees benefit the Capital City in many ways.
“Trees look beautiful, and are habitat for native birds, geckos, weta and plenty of other life. But trees also hold carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and produce oxygen – a mature tree can produce as much oxygen in a season as 10 people inhale in a year.
Cr Gilberd is urging Wellingtonians to get out and plant a native tree in their backyards in the next few weeks. “There’s a good reason Arbor Day is celebrated in New Zealand in early June – it’s the best time of the year in which to plant trees.”
The Council’s Arboriculture Team Manager, Will Melville, says trees have also been proven to add to the liveability of a city, improve mental health, increase property value, hold banks together, block wind and provide shade, and act as giant coolers – deflecting or absorbing radiant energy from the sun.
Arbor Day falls on 5 June every year, coinciding with World Environment Day, and in Wellington marks the start of the revegetation planting season. City Council staff will be working with community groups and schools to plant thousands of native plants in the next few weeks.
Planting hotspots this winter will include the Town Belt on Mt Victoria, Seton Nossiter Park in Newlands, the Stebbings Valley at Churton Park and many coastal sites.
Learning how to plant a tree correctly is important business, so in preparation for Arbor Day we made a short video featuring three ‘Planting Ninjas’ demonstrating the five steps on how to plant a native New Zealand tree. The video was produced in conjunction with Trees That Count – the group committed to planting as many trees as there are New Zealanders in 2017 – in other words about 4.7 million trees.
Meanwhile, the Two Million Trees project sees Council staff working with community groups to plant 100,000 trees every year, moving towards a target of two million by 2020.
Special City Council-supported events scheduled in the next week or so to mark Arbor Day include:
- A native tree giveaway this Sunday 4 June at the Harbourside Market on the Wellington waterfront
- Wednesday 7 June – treeplanting by schoolchildren at Paekawakawa Reserve, Island Bay, 9.30am to 10.30am will be ‘peak planting time’
- Friday 9 June – Conservation Volunteers NZ and the Rotary Club of Wellington will plant 2500 native plants on the Mt Victoria Town Belt, 9.30am-2pm