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Waiheke Island is on the “urban fringe” of Auckland. It is a thriving tourist destination and a growing reputation as the “island of wine”. The 2 are entwined. It is also growing as a residential area It is Accessible from Auckland by ferry. It is 26km long, 19km across, 230m high. Population clustered at Western end in “ribbon” development. Half of visitors go to the beach, third to vineyards. Site: the land on which settlement stands. Auckland is built on an isthmus of Waitemata sandstone. Situation: where it is relative to things around it. Auckland is where the N Island narrows, between Waitemata and Manukau harbours. Form: the shape of the settlement. The Auckland Region stretches from Wellsford to Pukekohe and covers approx. 500,000 hectares. The current population is 1.4 million people. This number increases by 49 people every day. Functions of Auckland : business, residential, entertainment, recreation, transport, etc. Today 1960’s Pre-European Maori settlement eg Cox’s Bay Recreation and tourism eg Rainbows End in Manukau, vineyards and restaurants on Waiheke Early Europeans eg Hobson Suburbanisation eg to the North shore, south, west and later east Growth of Agriculture to feed growing population eg Mangere market gardens Industry eg Southdown meat works and transport networks eg harbour bridge 1959 • Originally called “Te Motu Arai Roa” the long sheltered island. No one is sure where Waiheke came from. • Settled 1200’s by Toi The Navigator from Hawaii. • 1300’s called Te Motonui-o-Kaha after Chief Kahu(Te Arawa) • 1600’s invaded by Ngati Awa and 1700’s by Ngati Paoa. • Ist European was Capt Cook 1769 and during 1850’s timber(kauri) was cleared and European occupation began. Population • 1901-162 1945 -835 1986 -4,5001996 -6522 2001 -7449 2006 -8000 2010 -9000 plus 3,400 who have holiday homes.(92.8% European) Today 2,000 of permanent residents commute the 17.7 kms to Auckland to work each day. 35 mins. 1986 Quick Cat introduced. Summer population swells to 30,000. Every year 500,000 to 750,000 visitors, mostly day trippers. Auckland International Airport only 1hr away for exporting wine and tourist arrivals. N Sunshine hrs more than Auckland 2000hrs plus Auckland university trains viticulturists. Residential area supplies workers for vineyards, cafes and tourist services. SW winds bring rain but Goldwater is sheltered by a ridge Soils fertile, free draining contain manganese nodules good for grape and olive growing Passenger ferry 30mins Auckland brings tourists to buy. Vehicle ferry from Half Moon Bay, 1hr, for supply of bottles etc and export of wine. Slopes means soils drain easily Other vineyards, like Te Whau share workers, machinery and Attract more visitors. 1. Aucklands population growing to 1.4m. Shortage of housing on mainland-move to gulf Island with transport. Close enough to Auckland (17.7km) to commute. 2. 19.3km from E to W with 40km of attractive beaches. 3. 27 vineyards including Goldwater, 16 sell at cellar door, 10 offer food, 4 wedding venues. Hilly but not high (max 231m) with temperate climate Weather important in growth of tourism and viticulture. • Tourism is New Zealand’s single largest export industry, surpassing the dairy industry in earnings. • In the year ended December 2005, New Zealand welcomed 2.38 million international visitors. Our largest markets – Australia, the UK, the USA and Japan – are all showing growth and overall visitor expenditure is also increasing. China is our 2nd largest supplier of tourists. PROCESS 3 DEVELOPMENT OF VITICULTURE IN NZ • New Zealand's first vines were planted in Northland in 1819 Early Auckland vineyards planted by settlers Eg: Yugoslavians in West Auckland – Corban’s Winery. • 1990’s wine was sold in supermarkets / changes in Nz’ers tastes, grew in popularity • Popularity and reputation grew overseas – esp for Sauvignon Blanc (NZ well suited for growing). • Colleges started to offer courses (esp in Gisborne and Hawkes Bay) • Vines planted on Waiheke 1998 • Viticulture is one of NZ’s fastest growing farming types i.e: over last decade growing from 6,000 to 30,000 ha dedicated to grape growing! 1975 Kim and Jeanette Goldwater bought 35 acres on Waiheke and 1978 began planting vines on a gorse covered hillside. Planted 20 acres in red grapes, first wine made in 1981. 2009 output 2,800 cases. Location good naturally and culturally. Attracts visitors to café, restaurant, tasting room. Sell all wine from site or mail order. Issues: Still spray glyphosphate 3x pa. and noisy during harvesting. Andy Black viticulturist, 7-yr averages 1997-2003 WAIHEKE Oct Maximum Temperatu19.1C re Minimum Temperatu 11.7C re Mean Temperatu15.4C re Rainfall 82mm Humidity 76 Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr 20.2C 22.5C 24.2C 25.3C 23.9C 21.0C 12.4C 14.4C 15.2C 16.2C 15.0C 12.5C 16.3C 18.5C 19.7C 20.8C 19.5C 16.8C 96mm 76 111mm 77 57mm 76 67mm 77 83mm 82 94mm 84 • No mains water-av 140litres used p.p.per day, 78% used by residents, study showed can support 6,730 people. • Sewerage system only for Western end of island • A rise in sea levels may affect beaches, with an increase from an average of 1.7mm per year to 3mm per year in New Zealand in the past 10 to 15 years. Also March 2014 clean up collected 1,580kgs rubbish off beaches. • Median income less than Auckland yet house prices are high. • Transport around island difficult and ferries and freight costs are expensive. • Food resilience. SUSTAINABILITY of continued growth is questionable. Locals and tourists have different PERCEPTIONS of sustainability. Visitors 80% of sample coming off ferry, mostly from Auckland. (190 of 886 international: 305 stayed the night) High % of retired due to SuperGold card. ¾ on a “holiday day out” to visit wineries, restaurants, beaches, art, history. 20% named a special event. Most negative comments were directed at ferries: cost, overcrowded, lack of crowd control at Matiatia, dirty. Wine tourism is a key factor in development. 25% visited a winery. • Potential adverse affects of growth on host community. • 2 groups have different visions/perceptions of what Waiheke is and should be. • Change from marginal pasture to economic land-use welcomed by some, not others(use water-potential water shortages and salination of groundwater, spray drift,noise) • Many local/greenies don’t like commercialisation. • Problem of waste disposal and pollution from sceptic tanks • Further development is likely: constraints are ferries (costs) and buses as well 1975 Kim and Jeanette Goldwater bought 35 acres on Waiheke and 1978 began planting vines on a gorse covered hillside. Planted 20 acres in red grapes, cabsav, merlot, cab franc. 3yrs to grow, 3yrs to produce:1981. 2009 planted chardonnay, viognier and syrah. Output 2,800 cases. Location good naturally and culturally. Still spray glyphosphate 3x pa. 2 permanent staff 2/3 casual, 8 when leaf plucking. Andy Black viticulturist, 3 tractors, posts, netting at $1100 a roll, 2000+hrs of sunshine, 950mm of rain, manganese nodules in soil. 10thAug chardonnay grapes bud. Brix test for sugar content. When 16% pick grapes. Botrytis helped by netting to stop birds pecking grapes. Marlborough new area 400,000 cases. 7 tonnes grapes makes 7,500 litres wine. Waiheke Island’s climate is strongly influenced by the surrounding sea. Being situated in the Hauraki Gulf to the east of Auckland, the island is partially protected from the prevailing colder/wetter west and southwest winds, making it both drier and warmer (4*)than the Auckland isthmus. The ocean acts as both a fan and an insulator. Sea breezes moderate rising temperatures in mid-summer. The ocean moderates falling temperatures at night. In simple terms, this means that mean temperatures during the growing season are comparable to much ‘hotter’ regions but without the extremes and, critically, these moderate temperatures extend longer into the early autumn ripening period of March and April, allowing later varieties to ripen fully over an extended period. Rocks are also important : clay soils of Jurassic rock underlying weathered argillite converted to clay overlain by Aeolian silt.