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Article

Southland Farm Becomes Greener With Every Tree Planted

What began as one mother’s vision for a bare Southland block is now a multi-decade planting and fencing project – one creek, one paddock, one tree and one generation at a time.

For Eastern Bush farmers Peter and Lynley Cassels, planting and fencing isn’t just about ticking regulatory boxes. It’s a legacy that has been woven into the fabric of the farm since 1986.

Their 488-hectare property is predominantly flat, with 40ha of hill country adding contour and character to the landscape.

Peter winters 1600 ewes, grazes about 380 heifers and plants 130ha of feed cereals, 40ha of winter brassicas, and 40ha of cover crop that is planted after autumn barley each year.

When the Cassels family bought the farm in 1986, the land was virtually bare.

But it was Peter’s mother, Barbara, who saw its potential. “She had a love of gardening and trees, and that passion spilled out into the wider farm,” Lynley said.

Long before environmental regulations came into play, the family was fencing waterways and planting for erosion control, biodiversity and shelter.

Since 2008 they have received funding for this work through a habitat enhancement agreement (HEA) with the Waiau Fisheries and Wildlife Habitat Enhancement Trust, a charitable trust working to improve recreational access and ecosystem health across the Waiau catchment.

Under the HEA, the Cassels have access to funding to support fencing, wetland restoration, fish passage and habitat work, and vegetation management.

Depending on the ecological value of the site, grants are generally in the vicinity of 25% to 50% of project costs.

The trust also partners with QEII and currently supports about 100 projects in the region. This model boosts the percentage of funding available, covering project costs of up to 75%.

Peter said that ongoing commitment has put the family in a strong position ahead of the compliance curve, as freshwater compliance standards continue to evolve.

Besides aesthetics and stewardship, there were practical benefits too.

“One block of native bush was fenced and placed under a QEII covenant in the early 2000s when I was in partnership with my mother and brother,” Peter said.

That move not only protected the land but also made stock handling easier, as sheep could no longer vanish into the bush while being moved.

Lynley recalls that when she and Peter first met, she and her children would help him by spending weekends planting young trees.

“Every tree is part of a plan. We think carefully about the layout, the types we plant. We think about function in addition to a mature look.”

With most creeks now protected and many native areas restored, the couple is looking to the future. A duck pond might be the next addition, or perhaps that will be left for the next generation.

The trust can also help, with a constructed wetland concept being developed by the Waiau trust to detain hill runoff and provide enhanced fine sediment retention.

Posted: 11 August 2025

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“Nature is not a drag on growth. Its protection is an unavoidable prerequisite for sustaining economic development.”
Tony Juniper, sustainability and environment adviser

Waiau Fisheries and Wildlife Habitat Enhancement Trust
PO Box 159
Invercargill 9840
New Zealand

03 215 9117

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