A hill country sheep and cattle grazing farm which benefited from the former Government's tree-planting grant programme, and is in a prime position to capitalise from a second similar funding scheme announced at the end of last year, has been placed on the market for sale.
Te Puna Station, just north of Wairoa in Hawke's Bay, is a 1594ha property with about 80ha of hillside planted in manuka — the preferred vegetation of apiarists because of the plant's appeal to bees.
The 80ha of 'manuka factor' plantings on Te Puna Station were laid down in 2016 under the then Government's Afforestation Grant Scheme (AGS) programme at a ratio of 1000 stems-per-hectare.
Te Puna's owners received $1300 per hectare under the programme – spending the one-off income injection to plant manuka, as well as on fencing maintenance and improvements.
Last year, the AGS scheme was replaced by the Government's One Billion Trees Fund, where new manuka and kanuka plantings are eligible to qualify for subsidies of up $1800 per hectare for new forested conversions of up to 300ha of dry stock or dairy farm land.