Lois Wagener has lived on the Aupouri Peninsula long enough to have noticed how Houhora Harbour is changing - and she is deeply concerned that it is in the process of becoming the marine equivalent of a wasteland.
The harbour had been subjected to growing levels of pollution for a number of years, she said, but an increase in intensive cropping and orcharding had greatly accelerated that pollution over recent years. Silt levels had increased markedly within the sand layer along the foreshore, especially at the heads and on the sand banks in the middle of the harbour.
The result had been rapidly growing areas of sea grass, both along the southern shoreline at the heads and on the sand banks in the middle of the harbour.
"The sand banks where the grass is now growing are soft and silty, making it more difficult to walk over what were once firm, clean, sandy banks," Mrs Wagener said.
"Small mangroves are becoming more common on the sand banks, and indeed around the mouth of the Raio and Motutangi streams. Soft silt-laden sand is now also common in both these locations within the harbour.