Te Waimate Mission manager Alex Bell was reported last week as hoping to propagate cuttings from New Zealand's oldest oak tree, which succumbed to wind a week ago on Sunday, but he might not have to bother.
Malcolm Matthews, a great-grandson of Kaitaia mission founder Rev Joseph Matthews said it was almost certain that two oaks at Kaitaia Primary School were descended from that tree, and there is at least one other, a further generation on.
The Waimate North oak was planted at Paihia in 1824 by missionary Richard Davis, who arrived in the Bay of Islands with a number of acorns from his family farm, Goat Hill, in Dorset. He subsequently grew a number of trees, but only one survived a fire when they were little more than saplings.
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NZs oldest oak tree succumbs to the wind after 194 years
He took the survivor to to Waimate North in about 1830, where it reached magnificent proportions, and was admired by Charles Darwin in 1835.