








"This was old kauri country, with none left."
"My views are my trees..."
"...two sides will remain open space"
"...since this is an arboretum, vareity - diversity
- is part of the rationale"
"...the fine 70 year old kauri and 40 year old rimu
right alongside a 70 year old Pinus..."
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Updated
05 February 2008
Bio/History
Thirty-two
years fashioning a landscape
Three Streams is a
lifestyle, a, a commitment, a payment of dues for
all that life and the earth have given me.
Teenage Enthusiasm
It started back in the 1930s, a
teenager in Australia rebelling against the absurdities of the Depression (poverty amidst plenty)
and discovering himself as an eloquent activist for reforms which came to include
both
economics and ecology. A decade later, in New Zealand, I published a socio-political
journal
including features on soil and health - not then populist issues -
and my
reading included Sir Albert
Howard’s “Agricultural Testament” and Lord
Northbourne’s “Look to the Land”. I travelled a lot, stayed and
worked on farms, talked with those who loved the land, and planted my
own trees in Hutt Valley (Wellington) which were
left behind when in the late 50’s I moved to Auckland.
Several needs came together.
Land for trees; an interesting landscape,
with
water; a place to expend lots of energy, indulge in some creativity, protect
against invasive “development”, and good accessibility from Auckland City
where I worked
at a book business and as Director of MOTAT, the Museum of
Transport and Technology.
This is the
place....
I named it, suitably, Three Streams. 3.7 hectares,
purchased in 1969, it was an abandoned pine
plantation and poultry farm, on the then main highway North. I could
take a long lunch-break from the City in the middle of the day and get a lot
of healthy exercise before returning . As the
possibilities unfolded
it
became a rewarding obsession . This was old kauri country, with few left.
If I had bought remnant kauri forest there would have been little to do but
watch it grow. Replacing exotic pines with native species was much
more interesting and worth while.
When my wife died in 1971, I
moved, with three children, to a North Shore beachside, a few miles
away . In 1978, the children grown, it was
time to live on the property to adequately maintain and extend all that had
been done. Fourteen
Pinus
radiata
and
Pinus
pinaster felled on a hilltop provided
the space and timber for a simple – and durable - house. Enough for me. My views are my trees – growing all around – scores of
different foliage forms and shades of green, and so many birds. The sea is only ten minutes away.
Designation
In 1974 the Minister of Lands designated it a
Private Scenic Reserve, and I then vested it in a Three Streams Conservation
Trust. By 1990, to ensure permanent protection
and responsible management, it was vested in the QE11 National Trust, who share the vision of its future as a community asset and educational facility.
Now an Urban Amenity
In the past ten years there has
been an explosion of development in the Albany basin, with
residential subdivision right up to one
boundary, a new City Centre and Massey University campus only a mile away,
and some light industry. From the
Northern boundary, alongside my house,
is
a new Council Reserve (in which I have been planting for several years)
including, upstream, a number of mature kauris, one of which is 6m in
circumference and probably over 300 years old .
Less than a mile further, at the top of Albany hill, is the boundary of
Rodney District, extending from coast to coast. So this is the beginning of
the green belt, the first range of hills heading
North from Auckland. We’ll guard it.
Some Details
There are now well over 4000
trees that I have planted, or tended after they sprang up
by
themselves, with whose life story I am familiar. Perhaps I can show them to
you some day. And many thousands of smaller plants.
Not all come from local sources. I respect those
who focus strongly on the importance of local sourcing, but it is
often not very practical in urban areas
surrounded by exotic and random plantings spread by wind and birds for
generations. And since this is an arboretum, variety – diversity – is
part
of the rationale. How can I know where the
welcome self-sown kauris, rimus,
totaras, kahikateas, nikaus
etc. on ground I have cleared or prepared actually come from? Certainly an
increasing number are progeny of parents brought in earlier from other areas
– second generation immigrants. Because the pines that dominated thirty
years ago suppressed many species.
500 kauris came from the Forest
Service nurseries at Sweetwater in the Far North in 1984. Although many were
rootbound, nearly 90% survived and are doing
well. The first dozen kauris, I brought from the phased out
Waipoua Forest nursery in 1971 and planted
around the only sizeable ricker on Three
Streams, now the back lawn of the house. I knew nothing about proper
treatment for kauris then, and the soil here was inhospitable
podsolised hardpan, but nine of them are
now my daily companions
and
right now – in November – their bright green Spring tips are glowing in the
sun.
In another thirty years they
will overtop the senior resident. That’s what compost and
mulch
can do even on the poorest ground.
Many Sources
Some
totaras, rimus,
rewa rewa,
lancewoods and miros came from the
King Country in Central North Island, and most of the
nikau palms now handsomely dominating the stream valleys came from a
grove on Whangaparaoa Peninsula, 20 miles North.
The grove has long since disappeared under development.
Some kowhais also came
from that lost oasis, and maybe ancestors of the native pigeons that feast
on them dined on the kowhais’ parents. A dozen or more beautiful
pukateas are seedlings from below the gnarled
old guardians of the steps down to Bridal Veil falls
near Raglan. I did not plant the fine 70 year old kauri and 40 year
old rimu right alongside a much bigger 70 year
old pine tree just 20 metres from my house (on another property}. But
look closely and see that the pine is dying from the top and will eventually
be eaten by the long-lived natives. Did you think they could not
grow
happily
together for the pine’s lifespan? Tell that to the birds who dropped the
seeds.
Redwoods and Swamp Cypress from USA
The grand, landscape-lifting Sequoia
sempervirens that have quickly
replaced some of the pines removed from ridges were from California, (the
frequent suckers at their base will root easily when removed and potted) and
the Taxodium
distichum whose foliage clearly
announces Spring and Autumn and which will eventually tower above the
highway had its origins in the Florida Everglades.
These and many other features I
want to share with you, and will add to them from time to time on this
website. Perhaps you have related stories or special information to
tell. We’ll have space for it.

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