Over Christmas I visited Paengaroa Scenic Reserve, a 107ha patch of bush at Mataroa, near Taihape.
Whanganui botanist Colin Ogle introduced me to this very special place and to one of its most notable inhabitants. When you enter Paengaroa, you see a sign saying the shrub you're standing beside is a species as rare as the kākāpō.
Gardner's tree daisy (Olearia gardneri) is an unobtrusive small tree with light-green oval leaves on tangled twigs. At one point just 160 individual plants were known in the wild, making it New Zealand's third rarest native tree (there are currently 154 kākāpō, for comparison). Most of the world population of this olearia is at Paengaroa; the rest are scattered around the Wairarapa.
Botanists are worried because few of the trees were juveniles, and a combination of pasture grass and livestock was stopping seedlings from establishing.
Everything changed in 2013. A Wairarapa farmer was thinking of protecting some remnant bush on her land and approached the QEII National Trust about setting up a covenant. The QEII rep checked out the forest, and discovered a total of 374 Olearia gardneri, trebling the world population in a stroke. Many of the plants were seedlings, and these are now being planted out at suitable sites all over the Wairarapa.