Kauri
An ancient past
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Tides of change
Sailing ships and sawmilling
Gum-digging and land clearance
In just over 100 years...
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Gum-digging & land clearance

The plunder did not stop at timber. Wherever we kauri had grown, semi-fossilised gum lay above and beneath the ground, lasting evidence of our ancient presence.

Throughout our lifetime, we exude large quantities of this gum, sealing off damaged surfaces to slow down decay.

Kauri gum-digging in swamp land with a bucket and Skelton spade.
Kauri gum-digging in swamp land with a bucket and Skelton spade.
Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington NZ, must be obtained before any re-use of this image.

Not long after the Europeans began settling around the harbour below us, gum-diggers began regularly probing the ground for large quantities of gum to trade. At the same time as our timber was shipped offshore, our gum was sent to manufacturers of varnish in Britain and America. Soon gum-digger camps sprang up on the bleak scrubland that now grew below our ridge. Over the next 50 years we watched as teams of mainly Dalmatian immigrants transformed the search for gum from individual digging into industry. They systematically stripped away the surface of already dug-over land to extract the last gum that lay beneath. As the diggers moved on, they were replaced by farmers who converted the now desolate landscape to rough pasture for stock

In just over 100 years

Key facts

Ancestors of the kauri first appeared in the Jurassic Period 190-135 million years ago.

Kauri forests are among the most ancient in the world.

Kauri forests once covered a million hectares of the north. Now only 7455 hectares of mature forest remain.

Waipoua Forest is the largest remaining kauri forest in the world.

3/4 of Northland kauri forest were felled between 1800 and 1900.

Younger kauri trees (rickers) carry short branches up their trunks until they are 120 years old.