Monday 28 February 2011

Upcoming Events of Interest

Composting Made Easy Workshops
Hands-on workshops run by Michelle Ritchie, Organic By Design. Workshops 12 March in Mosgiel; 26 March - venue to be comfirmed. Workshops run from 1 - 5pm, maximum 12 participants, $10.00 cost per person includes afternoon tea. Regular composting, Bokashi and worm farms included. For more information contact jneilson@dcc.govt.nz

Dunedin Seaweek Coastal Cleanup - 6 March
It’s time to get your group together and join the Coastal Cleanup! Pick up free bags and gloves from DCC Service Centre or DoC Office (77 Lower Stuart St), or use your own. Bring rubbish you’ve collected, from an estuary, river mouth, beach, rocky shore, or harbour, to Hancock Park car park (beside Pirates clubrooms) corner Victoria Rd and John Wilson Dr, for disposal into the Seaweek skip bin, between 12pm and 3pm. Giveaways courtesy of NZ Marine Studies Centre & Aquarium. Please let Liz or Renee know where you’d like to clean up so that we get a good spread around the coast. You can also take bags to the special Seaweek wheelie bins at: Waikouaiti – waterfront car park, Beach St, by 1pm, Northern beaches –Warrington Reserve (behind surf club) by 1pm, Southern Beaches – Brighton Beach car park (next to surf club) by 1pm

Living Legends – Rugby World Cup restoration
Living Legends brings together rugby heritage and conservation. The project is committed to planting 5000 trees at each site in 2011, and will make a 5 year investment to plant 10,000 trees at each site by 2015. It's a joint venture between Project Crimson and The Tindall Foundation - DOC and Meridian are major sponsors.
DOC is pleased to announce that Orokonui Scenic Reserve (Orokonui Estuary at Waitati) is the chosen site for this restoration project for the Otago/North Otago rugby region. You can read about the site and the project, and register your interest at http://www.livinglegends.co.nz/. We’ll need all the help we can get for the massive planting day scheduled for Sunday 25th September. A public meeting will be held in Waitati in March for those who want to be involved or want to know more – contact Liz Sherwood for details 03 477 0677 or lsherwood@doc.govt.nz.

Bokashi Composting System: 

Bokashi buckets and Compost-Zing are available from DCC Customer Services Agencies:
15 litre bucket and one bag of Compost-Zing  $36.00
10 litre bucket and one  bag of Compost-Zing  $33.00,  Compost-Zing costs $6.00 per bag. http://www.blogger.com/www.bokashi.co.nz for more information on this highly effective, convenient method of disposing organic waste on-site.

Seaweek 2011  Feb 26 - March 6
A variety of events are being planned for Seaweek to celebrate this year's theme “Back to the future – the culture, history and traditions of the sea; Kia kaha tangata moana!”
Please get in touch if you’d like to organise your own Seaweek celebration. You’ll find info and resources on the website www.seaweek.org.nz, and event details will appear shortly.
You can follow Seaweek on Facebook (Seaweek-2011) and Twitter (@seaweek2011) or you can contact the Seaweek team at seaweek2011@gmail.com.

SEAWEEK POSTER COMPETITION
Design an A3, 2D, landscape poster that describes what Dunedin’s dune vegetation used to look like, the cultural importance and uses of some of these species, what has happened to these dune plants and why it is important to protect and restore these native plants for the future. Entries must be submitted with a completed entry form. Forms can be collected from the DCC offices or found online. For more information contact Dunedin City Council Parks Officer Renee Gordon on 477 4000 or for full details visit: http://www.blogger.com/www.dunedin.govt.nz
Run by the Dunedin City Council. In keeping with 2011’s Seaweek theme, Back to the Future, the poster competition theme is Dunedin’s Coastal Dune Vegetation – Past, Present and Future.
The competition opens on the 6th March, Children’s Day, and posters should be returned to the DCC Coastal Parks Officer by 15th April.
We will be looking for A3, 2D, landscape posters that describe
  • What Dunedin’s dune vegetation used to look like
  • The cultural importance/uses of some of these species
  • What has happened to these dune plants
  • Why is it important to protect and restore these native plants into the future

There are great prizes to be won both for the students and the schools. The winning poster will be displayed at one of the Dunedin City Council’s coastal dune reserves. The school with the greatest number of entries will receive native plants for the school grounds. An information package will be sent out to all Dunedin schools by 11 Feb. Contact the Coastal Parks Officer, Renee Gordon, rgordon@dcc.govt.nz or 03 474 3846 if you have any questions. We look forward to your entries.

Thursday 24 February 2011