Fifteen volunteers from the Te Ara Kaha programme put their school holiday to good use by learning how to protect sand dunes at Marine Parade Reserve in Mount Maunganui.
The programme is an outdoor adventure-based programme run by the Bay of Plenty Youth Development Trust.
Coast Care restoration co-ordinator Ashley Robertson said students loved getting their hands dirty with weeding and removing grasses and daisies, as well as replacing pest plants with natives like spinifex.
Spinifex roots can grow to two metres and play a vital role in keeping the dunes stable so they become a buffer between the ocean and the land.
Robertson said winter is a good time to plant spinifex: “It’s cool enough that they’re going to get well-established before we get our hot, dry summers.”