What's On at Zealandia


 

Interview with Alison Russell-French 1 December 2016

Interview with Alison Russell-French

We had a chat to the President of Canberra's Woodlands and Wetlands Trust.

Our sister sanctuary in Australia is Mulligans Flat Woodland Sanctuary. Located in Canberra, Mulligans Flat is home to native Australian bandicoots, bettongs, mice, a variety of birds and other wildlife. They have a fence similar to that of ZEALANDIA's, except it is designed especially to keep cats, rabbits and foxes at bay. 

Find out from Alison Russell-French, President of the Trust, about the challenges and successes of this very different, yet very similar, wildlife sanctuary. 

Zealandia’s eye-in-the-sky Alfie Kākā catches up with cousin Sirocco Kākāpō 17 August 2015

Zealandia’s eye-in-the-sky Alfie Kākā catches up with cousin Sirocco Kākāpō

Alfie: Hey Cuz! Awesome to have you back “couch-surfing” at Zealandia again. I always have room for my favourite relatives.

Sirocco: Skraaarrk! It’s great to be back Alf. Despite my busy schedule of climbing trees and international superstardom I love coming back to see my mates here at Zealandia and meeting all my fans. 

20 Years of Conservation in the Capital 11 August 2015

20 Years of Conservation in the Capital

Wellington resident Jim Lynch, QSM, who from 1990 – 1995, managed to sell his dream of a fenced, urban sanctuary, and see it evolve into ZEALANDIA, Wellington’s pride. Jim, now retired and living in Waikanae, remains humble about his achievement. He’s adamant that he was just a small cog within a much larger group effort. “I feel so lucky to have been a part of this project. There was a lot of worry in the first few years, and it’s only in the last 5 years that it’s started to feel safe. It hasn’t been easy, but it’s been worth it.

Saddie the Saddleback 19 March 2015

Saddie the Saddleback

Tucked away in a quiet corner of Karori is a house with a special attraction… Diana and Geoff have a regular visitor who taps insistently on their window – a saddleback (tīeke) they’ve named Saddie.

World Wetlands Day – what can you do? 2 February 2015

World Wetlands Day – what can you do?

Swamps, marshes, fens and bogs.  These are our wetland areas, crucial buffer zones at the boundaries between land and water. Wetlands act as giant sponges in the landscape, soaking up rainfall which helps prevent flooding during storms. They also help protect rivers and lakes from runoff from the land during heavy rain by trapping sediment that can choke a stream and absorbing surplus nutrients like nitrogen that can lead to the explosion of algal blooms.  Wetlands are a toxin sink, storing environmental pollutants as well as nitrogen and carbon in its wet, airless soil and in the deep roots of the plants that grow there.

Fuchsia – an attractive, bird-friendly solution for your damp gully 31 March 2014

Fuchsia – an attractive, bird-friendly solution for your damp gully

Alfie here! Today I’m chatting to Eleanor Burton about bird friendly native plants, and especially our native fuchsia. Eleanor is in charge of the collections database at Otari, and is also an arborist, botanist, and botanical illustrator.

Ti kouka: a feast for birds big and small 6 December 2013

Ti kouka: a feast for birds big and small

Alfie here, and today I’m talking about another bird-friendly plant in Wellington, and interviewing long time Zealandia volunteer guide, and conservationist, Des Smith.  I flew up to meet him in his garden in Ngaio, in a bush-lined street, full of native trees.  Here’s the transcript, from my ‘Stoatskine’ reporter’s notebook.

Alfie, Sirocco and a not so bird-brained philosophy 27 August 2013

Alfie, Sirocco and a not so bird-brained philosophy

Alfie here; I’ve just caught up again with Sirocco for a photo shoot and interview just before he began another evening’s round of parties at his plush Zealandia hotel (he’s only at Zealandia for another week before he heads down south to Orokunu).

Siroccolandia: return of the kākāpō, with Alfie Kākā 19 May 2013

Siroccolandia: return of the kākāpō, with Alfie Kākā

I recently had the opportunity to talk to two of my favourite Zealandia conservation staff – Raewyn Empson and Matu Booth – about our impending visit from Sirocco the kākāpō.

Sweet-beaked kākā find tree-sap irresistible 15 May 2013

Sweet-beaked kākā find tree-sap irresistible

Skraaaark.  Alfie Kākā here, interviewing Kerry Charles, who has just completed her thesis Urban human-wildlife conflict: North Island kākā (Nestor meridionalis septentrionalis) in Wellington City.

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