Anna and Nicholas Head bought land in Banks Peninsula, Canterbury just for the purposes of growing nature. In this video, they talk about their experience of restoring the land with native trees.

Bringing back the forest

Before people arrived, Banks Peninsula was covered in podocarp and broadleaf forest. The forest mainly consisted of tōtara and mataī. Over time, most of this forest was cleared for farming and human settlement. Only small patches survived in gullies and places where animals couldn’t reach.

A new beginning

Five years ago, Nicholas Head and Anna Cameron bought a block of land in Little River on Banks Peninsula. They had one goal: to let nature recover. The couple loved the block’s natural attributes. They could see the potential to connect it with other recovering areas nearby.

Anna says: “We bought this land approximately 5 years ago just for the purposes of growing nature, essentially. It felt like a good thing and the right thing to do about purchasing this property and supporting it to let the whenua regenerate back to what it wants to be.”

Letting nature lead

The first step was simple: remove the 6 cattle and handful of sheep eating native seedlings. 

“All we had to do really was take away the feral cattle that were here and a few feral sheep and it's really incredible, the regeneration is remarkable,” Nick says.

Nick and Anna took a “less-is-more” approach, letting the land heal itself. They made one exception to the hands-off approach. They planted a grove of 5 rare broad-leaved cabbage trees (Cordyline indivisa), which are now uncommon on the peninsula. The plantings will help bring back a seed source for the future.

“As long as you've got seed sources, enough rainfall, you can just walk away from it and the native trees will just come back"

Anna

Watching the land recover

Thanks to sufficient seed sources and rainfall, the native trees are returning across the property.

Anna says the valleys are already full of healthy, dense bush. The middle areas are a mix of grassland, gorse, and early native species like kānuka and mānuka. On the hilltops, exotic grasses still dominate. These areas will be the next frontier for regeneration.

“As long as you've got seed sources, enough rainfall, you can just walk away from it and the native trees will just come back and that's exactly what's happening here,” Anna says.

Intergenerational rewards

Anna says access to native biodiversity is important for people.

“It's a wellbeing thing, isn't it? You know, you feel good about that. There's this huge amount of knowledge and evidence out there around the importance that biodiversity, native biodiversity and being in it, and how important it is for you as a person, as a human to connect with nature.”

And she’s seeing the benefits of that connection up close with her children.

“Watching my family grow here will be really special. The girls, they’re already so involved here. And they just turn into little toe-rags when they’re running around here and it’s just because they’re so happy.”

“It's about ensuring that nature has a place to recover and thrive.”

Nick

The payback

Nick says the restoration of their property proves that native forest will come back if you remove pests and let nature take control.

“If we really want to improve and protect our indigenous biodiversity, we need to go further than just protecting the last little bits that remain. You don't have to do much to get the native forest back.”

Anna says the health and the wellbeing of the property is increasing all the time. “And so the hope is when we look here in 10 years, 50 years, 150 years, that the property has just continued to regenerate.”

The couple say their special property is now part of the local community. It forms part of a contiguous tract of Banks Peninsula land that's recovering. The parcels of land span a mixture of private, Crown, and local government ownership. Collectively, they create a valuable corridor of regeneration. Nick and Anna have plans to allow public access to their property. They want others to see nature recovering up close.

“It's about ensuring that nature has a place to recover and thrive,” Nick says, “and my family can be part of that.”

Here’s why regenerating land might make sense for you

  • Restore and protect native forest for future generations.
  • Grow native forest where little remains – it’s not enough to protect what’s left.
  • Connect the land to a wider corridor of native bush.
  • Earn extra income through the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) if eligible.
  • See how easy it is to do – remove pests, plant any rare species you want, and let nature take over.

“Properties like this, and the work that Nick and I are doing here, it is actually really achievable,” Anna says. “It would be a great thing to see more private ownership for the purposes of native reforestation.” 

More information

Learn more about native restoration techniques.

Find out about native reversion and the Emissions Trading Scheme.