Monday 8 September 2014

See a Need...Fill a Need!


A major plumbing disaster last term required our main entrance garden to be sacrificed in order to access drainage pipes. Now that spring was upon us it was time to plant it up into something more welcoming...

Luckily we had an enthusiastic team of 6, Year eights who had been itching to tidy up our front gardens since Term 1. We also had our fantastic Tui products from our award winning School Challenge prize...and all the native seedlings we had planted up late last year with Natasha from DOC...sourced from the front Gardens!
We were also fortunate enough to have just picked up 6 more native shrubs courtesy of the National "Paper 4 Trees" initiative, we also had the 6 scleranthus ground covers we qualified for last year on hand.
 
 
A HUGE thank you to Holcim who have kindly sponsored the "paper 4 Trees" in the Buller region.
We're not just a coal town, we also have very pure limestone deposits that Holcim make into cement for use around our great country.
 
Every year we look forward to exchanging our waste paper for trees
 
 So it was with much enthusiasm that our team of 6 got stuck into preparing and planting up our main entrance...
Once the soil had been enriched with a trailer load of compost, it was time to lay out our native plant selection:
 
Magenta tea trees & Lancewoods for the back row
Assorted flaxes in magenta and soft green for the middle ground
Ringaringa lilies toward the front
Mounding ground cover in the form of scleranthus for a nice velvety tactile front row (these are going to receive a lot of friendly exploratory  pats from our students)
 
Much was learnt about composition, grouping our selection in 3's, and tallest to the back and shortest to the front!

Holes were dug, prepared with our great Tui products, planted and  watered well.
I wonder how many holes were dug in total?
Starting to look really good team...


Time for some weed matting and the application of mulch...do you like our cunning method of protecting the plants while we barrowed the mulch?
 
Thanks to the major regional storm at Easter we have an abundant supply of mulch on site here at school and quite a bit more natural light coming in along our Northern boundary.All the beautiful phohutukawa we lost have just moved form the back field to the front garden in a different form!
A final tidy up of our work site and it was time to revel...
 

...all our great work to our class mates and School Principal.

Looking stunning Team...
...nice use of the school colours in your plantings...
 ...a bit of active growth over the summer and this garden will be really flying the magenta North School flag, to welcome all into our great school!
 Great work Team, its amazing what 6 students can achieve in just 2 and a half hours!
Well Done!

Tuesday 2 September 2014

Pottering around with DOC

 Just before School finished for the year we were very fortunate to have the lovely Natasha our Local DOC (Department of Conservation) Community Ranger spend the afternoon with us in our school gardens.
 Our Garden Warrior mission was to rescue all the self sown native seedlings in our front gardens, and learn about identifying our native trees in the process...
 Books were consulted for confirmation and advice on growing habitats...
 Pesky wilding Cherry trees were given the heave ho!
Our beautiful Kereru Native Pigeons absolutely adore the berries and new shoots in the spring...thus in the process spreading their favourite spring time food source all around our district!
 We all became rather expert at spotting native seedlings, and were amazed at how many different species had decided to sprout in our gardens...
 Seed sizes, shapes, textures and methods of dispersal were discussed, and seeds were collected for growing!
Remember the easy rule: sow your seeds no more than twice the depth of the size of the seeds (i.e. tiny poppy seeds stay on the surface, bean seeds need to be pushed in to the seed raising mix at least their length in depth!
 
Our seedling foraging complete, it was back to the garden area with our bucket loads of treasure for potting up to grow on!

 Our Tui products, part of our prize package for winning the National Tui School Garden Challenge were put to good use. Natasha showed us the very important tip of drowning our collected seedlings in a buckets of water while they awaited their turn to be potted...keeping those roots saturated and out of the sun and wind is critical to the seedlings on going survival!
 Re-cycled pots form our Garden Gnomes own home gardening efforts were pretty much completely used up...
 Everything got a good soaking as we were going against the grain potting up with the onset of summer ahead of us, we had to keep our potted efforts watered twice a week over the summer break...
 Now that we had potted up over 60 individual seedlings...we needed somewhere out of the heat of summer sun for them to reside...
A HUGE effort Garden Warriors!
THANK YOU Natasha for spending a VERY informative afternoon with us, we all learnt a lot. Some of the native seedlings we found included:
 
Assorted small flax
Ringaringa lilies
Totara trees
Rimu or Kahikatea trees
Cabbage trees
 
As it turns out we really needed these seedlings after the Easter storm, and we plan to collect and pot up another batch this month for on growing...