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Lower Oreti Catchment Group

Lower Oreti Catchment Group

Southland has over 28 Catchment Groups, forming a network covering over 85% of the Southland region, and this network is expanding rapidly.


Lower Oreti Catchment Group


The Lower Oreti Catchment Group covers the lower reaches of the Oreti River catchment, from Spar Bush in the north down to Ferry Road in the South, and borders the Waimatuku catchment in the West and the Hedgehope-Makarewa catchment in the East.  


Topography: flat to gently undulating alluvial terraces in the lower reaches of the Oreti River and Makarewa River catchments.


Main surface water catchments: Lower Oreti River and Makarewa River, with Waianiwa Stream, Waikiwi Stream and the Tomoporakau Creek.


Who we are 


The Lower Oreti Catchment Group has been formed with the goal to help farmers and our local community: 

  • Better understand the challenges we face around balancing farm production with sustainable land use, and improvement of water quality and biodiversity 
  • Identify opportunities and drive farmer-led, grassroots action in our local area 
  • Respond to changing environmental policies and shifting consumer behaviours. 

Numbers of members in the CG 


Six keen locals have been attending events run by New Zealand Landcare Trust, Thriving Southland and other Southland Catchment Groups since 2019, and decided in March 2021 to start their group with a Wintering Field Day in June which 50 people came along to! 


Date the Catchment Group started


Official start date was the 29th June 2021 with the first Lower Oreti Catchment Group event.


Types of people in the group 


The dream is to have a diverse group of people from different backgrounds and land uses, with a passion for improving the environment and the health of the waterways found in the Lower Oreti area. 

Everyone is welcome. 

Projects completed


Our first event was a Wintering Field Day in June, where over 50 people visited two farms with different wintering systems.

The first farm had a focus on a block feeding kale system, buffer zones and a sediment trap, and the second was a generational wintering barn system.

We talked about how to manage environmental risks around wintering, and learnt some top tips for fencing and portable watering troughs.

Environment Southland Land Sustainability staff got people thinking about good management practices for wintering, and the benefits of sediment traps, and Ewen Mathieson from the Pourakino Catchment Group, talked about his experience with Catchment Groups and how they can benefit our farms, businesses and the local community.

This was followed by an excellent BBQ and a few yarns.



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