Karioi Project news
Karioi Project has expanded to meet demand and offer their trapping services to local landowners and residential customers. Using the knowledge they’ve built up during a decade of predator control, this service acts as a social enterprise to create jobs within our community. All profits are returned to conservation on the maunga and around the coastline.
Over the years, their educational programmes at Raglan Area School have created a resource of skilled graduates, ready for emerging jobs in the environmental sector. So far they’ve provided paid employment to three graduate students from the Manaaki Ao programme, as well as a team of five rangers, currently creating a track network for predator control on the eastern slopes of Karioi.
“Allowing school leavers to tackle environmental issues such as invasive predators on Karioi and around Whaingaroa does more than just remove rats and possums. It empowers youth and local people in the community,” says Ranger Duncan who leads the work on the ground and at Raglan Area School.
Intensive predator control on the maunga has kept their rangers busy cutting tracks to areas previously only accessed by helicopter and aerial 1080 operations. “This season we’re controlling rats and possums with double tap bait in bait stations. This reduces impacts on native birds and other non target animals such as wild pigs. We continue to use traps for stoat control and to trial the effectiveness of new products such as pheromone based lures.” says Ranger Duncan.
If you have a pest problem around your house, farm, or bush block, call them on 0274276242 for a free quote. All proceeds go to employing local, skilled staff (and Manaaki Ao graduates) and to funding ongoing multi-species predator control on Karioi.