Open SpaceTM magazine
Check out the QEII Open Space magazine, March 2010 (PDF 2.5MB)
Download March 2010 articles:
Gisborne: Fencing a water catchment
Tararua: Replacing ineffective fencing
Covenants protecting Olearia shrubland and moths dependent on Olearia shrubs
Forest fragments: Objectives of restoration and management
Kaharoa Kokako: Amplifying New Zealand's original song
Find out more about Open Space magazine ....
Next issue: Late July 2010
Khan’s initiative protects habitat of the threatened peripatus
In 2006, students at Weber School in the Tararua District completed a research project with the help of an adult mentor.
Khan Coleman’s project involved researching the protection of an area of bush in Wimbledon with a QEII covenant.
The landowner, Brian Hales, supported him in reaching his goal.
During Khan’s field research, he made an amazing discovery; he found two specimens of the rare peripatus.
At the age of 12, Khan won first equal place in the 2006 YHA Young Conservationist Awards for finding these caterpillar-like creatures and for his efforts in protecting their habitat.
In January, 0.3ha of primary podocarp-broadleaved forest named Khans Bush was protected by Brian with a QEII covenant.
Above: Khan Coleman and Brian Hales at Khans Bush, protected in perpetuity with a QEII covenant. The fence was constructed with contributions from the landowner, Horizons Regional Council and QEII. Photo: Bill Wallace
Students from Weber School laid the fence line and on each post is a nameplate of the child who laid it.
There are also a number of carved totara guardians around the covenant, representing those involved with protecting the bush including QEII and Horizons.
Left: Khan and Brian with Khan’s carved totara guardian.
‘It is awesome that protecting this bush as a habitat for peripatus was Khan’s initiative,’ says Brian.
‘It’s all about a young boy making a discovery which created a need to protect the habitat forever.
'The children from Weber School will be able to come back in seventy years time and still find the bush here.’
Above: The threatened peripatus (ngaokeoke, velvet worm) is an ancient forest creature in the Onychophora order, a sister group to the arthropods.
Found only in the southern hemisphere, peripatus is nocturnal and lives in leaf litter and rotten logs. Photo: Bill Wallace
You may have a special area on your farm that you wish to safeguard forever. Contact your local QEII representative ...
Open SpaceTM Magazine No. 73, July 2008 © QEII National Trust
Support QEII Trust
What's New
- Sir Brian Lochore thanks Nelson and Tasman covenantors
- 2010 QEII Athol Patterson Bursary awarded
- Landcare Research - your input requested on pest management
- New brochure: Protecting wetlands with QEII covenants
- Carbon credits
Kiwi at Tui Glen

Looking after kiwi at Tui Glen farm near Whangarei.
Find out more about this covenant.
Brochures
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Frequently asked questions about open space covenants |
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Assisting landowners to protect special features on their land Download PDF, 222KB |
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QEII covenants: Protecting and enhancing wetlands on private land |




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