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Harrison family -
safeguarding the coast
The Harrison family has
protected two parts of Great Barrier's beautiful southern coast.
Graeme Harrison and his father, the late Bob Harrison gifted to QEII a
6.35ha headland, called Mara Point. Located at the entrance to
Tryphena Harbour, it is a well-known landmark to yachties.
Bob Harrison had earlier covenanted another
15.8ha block of virgin coastal forest on
the south coast. Accessible only by sea, this block, now owned by Graeme’s
brother John, contains large
puriri and pohutukawa growing right to the water’s edge.
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Safe haven
In June 1989, four castaways struggled onto a rocky shoreline on Great
Barrier’s southeast coast after 119 days adrift in their upturned yacht, the
Rose Noelle. They clambered up a steep bush-clad valley to an unoccupied
cottage where they gorged on grapefruit before finding help further uphill.
Still a safe haven, the rugged valley is now refuge to native plants and
animals thanks to the efforts of the Little Windy Hill Company.
The company protected 116ha under an open space covenant in 1998 and began
an ambitious conservation programme the following year. In 2002 the Windy
Hill Rosalie Bay Catchment Trust was formed to coordinate the 14
neighbouring landowners who joined the programme, bringing the total area to
450ha.
The Catchment Trust Manager, Judy Gilbert, says, "Pest control, both plant
and animal, is the focus of the ecological restoration alongside monitoring
of birds, lizards, wetas, rat densities and seedlings. But reintroducing the
North Island robin to Barrier after an absence of 140 years has been our
crowning achievement."
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The Rose Noelle crew found their way up
from the coast through pohutukawa, podocarp and broadleaf forest to the
Little Windy Hill cottage. Photo: Margaret McKee

Dean Medland and Judy Gilbert carry in rat
traps and
covers to the Little Windy Hill covenant.
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