Archives For 30/11/1999

Every Friday Jobs at DOC will take you behind the scenes and into the jobs, the challenges, the highlights, and the personalities of the people who work at the Department of Conservation.

Today we profile Senior Statutory Bodies Officer Martin Gembitsky.

My wife Janine, me, and our just born grandson, Hunter

At work…

Name: Martin Gembitsky

Position: Senior Statutory Bodies Officer (Fish & Game), Policy Group, National Office.

What kind of things do you do in your role? 

I have been involved in managing the Department’s national relationship with the New Zealand Fish & Game Council since 1990. I also represent the Director-General at the New Zealand Fish & Game Council bi-monthly meetings and I liaise with CEOs and staff of the 12 regional Fish & Game Councils. There are lots of briefings and Fish & Game ministerials that I am involved with.

In my role I focus on statutory, policy, technical and relationship matters with Fish & Game, helping the national relationship with DOC to run smoothly and with the Minister and Director-General. 

In addition to my Fish & Game work, I have been responsible for organising and servicing bi-monthly NGO/DOC National Office forum meetings since 2003 . And finally,  for the last two years I have serviced the Minister of Conservation’s Loder Cup Committee and have arranged for the annual winner of the Loder Cup to be presented with it by the Minister.  

What is the best part about your job?

With some of my workmates at the Conservation Week DOC associates function, 2002

The friendships and quality working relationships I have with my colleagues in National Office, the Taupo Sports Fishery team and throughout DOC and also with Fish & Game Council colleagues.

What led you to your role in DOC?

I started in DOC when it was established in 1987, working with my then manager Marcus Simons on national freshwater fisheries matters. I came over to DOC from Internal Affairs/Wildlife Service (where I started my public service career in 1969). My career in the Wildlife Service was mainly focussed on trout hatchery management, so when the opportunity came in 1987 to have a role working on national freshwater fish matters in the newly formed DOC, it was an amazing thing.  

What was the highlight of your month just gone?

The Christmas period of course – family time, BBQs, relaxing, and sharing (with many colleagues) the wait finally over concerning the outcome from this current review on our individual situations. For me it will be finishing my career with DOC at the end of January and I will be leaving with many great memories.

The rule of three…

Three loves

  1. My home and family (my wife, my children and pets – two siamese cats, two turtles, tropical fish and my plants).
  2. Dry, calm, warm weather – great for growing my collection of pawpaws and bananas. 
  3. Playing my congas and bongo drums.

My hybrid pawpaws

Three pet peeves

  1. Wellington’s train problems. 
  2. Loud neighbours with barking dogs.
  3. The wind in Wellington. 

Three favourite foods

  1. Tomato and hot chilli sauce.
  2. Grilled lamb chops.
  3. Home-cooked stirfry with mushrooms, zucchinis and rice.

Three favourite places in New Zealand

  1. Little Barrier Island – incredible geology with razor volcanic ridges, native birds, kauri trees, and Boulder Beach.
  2. Wainuiomata valley (including Baring Head) – raised beaches, township, river and trout fishing, and the Rimutaka Forest Park.
  3. Takahe Valley, Murchison mountains – takahe and kea of course, and an incredible U-shaped glaciated valley with a lake and limestone cliffs and caves.

Favourite movie, album, book

  • Movie – Invitation to Hell –  1982  Directed by Wes Craven. It’s sort of Sci-fi, about a husband winning a deadly fight for the souls of his family.
  • Album – Supernatural – Santana (great conga playing).
  • Book – Gem of the Wanderer– Bob Maddux. It’s a rare, small book (fiction) and is Sci-fi with a hidden Christian theme.

    Playing the congas

Deep and meaningful…

What piece of advice would you tell your 18 year old self?

There is a lot more to karate than you think you know, and do quit smoking.

Martin doing a karate tile breaking demo

Who or what inspires you and why?

My parents instilled deep Christian values into my upbringing. I enjoy playing percussion/conga drums to contemporary Christian music at my church.

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

A teacher of nature study.

If you could be any New Zealand native species for a day, what would you be and why?

A forest gecko or a green gecko – in my childhood years they were mysterious critters that I spent hours searching for, and they were so well hidden.

Martin stripping a Tarawera rainbow trout in 1984

What piece of advice or message would you want to give to New Zealanders when it comes to conservation? 

Get involved in conservation – it is a very wise thing to do for the future of New Zealand.

Every Friday Jobs at DOC will take you behind the scenes and into the jobs, the challenges, the highlights, and the personalities of the people who work at the Department of Conservation.

Today we profile Motueka ranger Tom Young…

At work…

Taking in the spectacular scenery in Milford Sounds

Name: Tom Young

Position: Ranger, Visitor/Historic, Motueka Area Office

What kind of things do you do in your role?

My role is pretty varied, with about 70% office and 30% field work. I am involved in a wide variety of work. I manage the Asset Management Information System (AMIS) database for the Motueka Area Office which keeps me pretty busy, and I also have several capital projects to manage each year. Back in March, we moved an old Forest Service six-bunk hut from the Right Branch Wairoa to Porters Creek in the Red Hills of Mt Richmond Forest Park—that was a challenge and great fun!

I also manage the area’s historic assets—from 1870’s gold workings in the Wangapeka, to Heritage Buildings in the centre of Nelson. I am busy with signage projects across the area and complete regular data and photo monitoring as part of the visitor monitoring (numbers and impacts) across the area. As well as all that, I enjoy getting out in the backcountry assisting the track team on track and hut maintenance projects.

What is the best part about your job?

What does it for me is the whole variety of work and the different places I get to go within the area. I get out and about a fair bit, from the very popular Abel Tasman Coast and its tens of thousands of visitors, to the relative remoteness of Mt Richmond Forest Park. It really is the variety and blend of work that does it for me. 

Crossing Big River with Steve Bagley returning from Kahurangi Point

What is the hardest part about your job?

I wouldn’t say any part was harder than the rest, it’s just different. Coordinating work, logistics and getting on with colleagues, contractors and staff is sometimes challenging. I believe the key is to manage your work and time, to be there for others and to not over-commit yourself.

What led you to your role in DOC?

I’ve been with the Department for just over eight years now. Before that, I was a Ranger in Scotland for 11 years, and some time before that I served 12 and a half years in the British Navy (much of that time in the Submarine Service). Once the Cold War was over, they gave me a medal and the Admiralty said, “Thanks, you’ve saved us from the Soviets but we don’t need you any longer”, so I decided to pursue a career as a Ranger. I went to College/Polytech for two years, and then picked up some seasonal Ranger work in central Scotland, before getting my first full time Ranger position in 1992.

HMS Torbay, my last sea posting

My family and I came to New Zealand for a month’s holiday and to stay with a friend in Nelson back in December 2000. We came back for 12 months in April 2002 while my wife completed a Commonwealth Teacher Exchange, then later in 2003 I applied for and got offered my first position with DOC at Nelson Lakes (I’m sure what swung the job for me was the fact that in Scotland I had been using an Asset Management System called CAMS, and at that time the Department’s system was called VAMS. Similar name, but quite different!). I took the job at Nelson Lakes with the idea that we might go back to Scotland after a couple of years or so, but here I am eight years later—I’m now in the Motueka Area Office—and still enjoying it.

What was the highlight of your month just gone?

I spent Christmas with my family and friends in Richmond, worked only a couple of days between Christmas and New Year and joined other friends for New Year at their bach in Kaiteriteri. I enjoyed the awesome firework display from the beach at midnight and a walk to Hardwoods’ Hole on the 1st of January. I spent four days last week cycling the 160km Central Otago Rail trail with my wife Fiona, youngest son Findlay and a couple of good friends. That was great—lots of stops on the way for coffee, refreshments, Jimmy’s pies, photographs and even a  revitalising dip in the Manuheriki River, as well as some exercise and lots of fresh air. A great time was had by all. 

Pedal pushing on the Otago Rail Trail

The rule of three…

Three loves

  1. Family, of course. I have two boys aged eighteen and eleven years. It’s great to see them grow up and develop, and support them through school and sport and whatever interests them. And of course my wife, Fiona.
  2. Coffee. Yes, I know it’s a drug. But I like it.
  3. Scotland/Caledonia/Alba/Ecosse—whatever you want to call it. It’s in my tartan blood/genes/history.

Pet peeves

  1. Some of the leucocratic nonsense we have to go through, not only in work, but also in our everyday life. Life’s complicated enough, keep it simple!   
  2. Umbrellas. They are fine if there is nobody else within four or five metres of you, but (maybe it’s because I’m tall) there’s always the danger of being skewered by one of the pointy bits or worse, getting your eye poked out. If you’re in a busy place with lots of people and want to keep the rain off, leave the brolly behind and get a good jacket with a hood!

Three things always in your fridge

Always in my fridge? Probably the usual stuff—milk, cheese, the shelves and the little light that comes on when you open the door. Oops, that’s four things!

Lunch with Visitor Asset Managers after meeting at Kahurangi Point Keepers House

Three favourite places in New Zealand

  1. Without having been everywhere it’s pretty hard to say. I do enjoy being in the mountains and above the bush line—on a fine day! I love the vastness of the country and the alpine vegetation, the snow tussock, speargrass, Spaniard, mountain buttercups and daisies and many other mountain herbs.
  2. I also love the wild West Coast beaches such as Wharariki in Golden Bay—the wind, the eroded sandstone arches, the changing sands and the relatively unspoilt wildness of it all.   
  3. I do like Nelson as an area. A great climate, a great variety of places to go—coast, mountains, plains, city etc., good mountain biking trails, great cafes and lots of friends to visit.

Favourite movie, album, book

It’s too hard to pick just one.

  • Movie: The Usual Suspects with Kevin Spacey, As Good as it Gets with Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt, and for a side-splitting laugh, Mr Bean’s Holiday with Rowan Atkinson as Mr Bean.   
  • Book: I do enjoy a good historical conspiracy theory with a bit of drama. The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown was pretty damn good, but again, there are so, so many contenders.
  • Album: I’d have to choose between Exile on Main Street by the Rolling Stones or Blood on the Tracks by Bob Dylan. But there are so many great albums out there.

Deep and meaningful…

What piece of advice would you tell your 18 year old self?

With Stu Houston, installing new shelter at Holyoake's Clearing, Abel Tasman Inland Track

Enjoy what you do, and do what you enjoy! Think before you speak, its easier to bite your lip than to repair damaged relationships. Respect others.

Who or what inspires you and why?

I have recently been inspired by the British particle physicist Professor Brian Cox. He is a brilliant public and science presenter/broadcaster. To me, he is starting out on the path of doing for physics what David Attenborough has done for natural history. In plain, easy to follow language he uses the media to bring an understanding of science to the masses. In addition to his programmes Wonders of the Solar System and Wonders of the Universe, and the comedy radio programme The Infinite Monkey Cage, Brian has worked on the ATLAS experiment on the Large Hadron Particle Collider in Switzerland and on modifying Newton’s law on gravity.

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

Mmmmm… that was a long, long time ago! I did want to travel and see the world, and I guess that in part led me to my time in the Royal Navy, where I spent most of my time deep down under the sea (how deep is a secret).

And now, if you weren’t working at DOC, what would you want to be?

I really enjoyed my Ranger job in Scotland. I would like to think that there would still be a role there for me, and that I could contribute to the conservation and countryside management back there. As a Ranger in the UK, I did a load more environmental education, public access work and management of reserves close to urban and populated areas, which I really enjoyed. I could do that again. 

If you could be any New Zealand native species for a day, what would you be and why?

With my love for the mountains (on a good day), I’d be a Chequered Alpine Snout Moth. I’d check out the alpine passes, breath in the cool mountain air, enjoy the vista and miss the wild, wet, cold and snowy winter, (because they only live from November to February). 

What piece of advice or message would you want to give to New Zealanders when it comes to conservation? 

Enjoy, appreciate and conserve what we currently have. It’s not just the fauna and flora, the landscape, the huts and tracks, the forest, the lakes and rivers and the ocean—it’s everything, including the smells and the sounds, the wind and the warmth, the time, the energy and the space. I believe many New Zealanders generally don’t really appreciate how fortunate we are and what we have in our own back yards. Too often it’s only when it’s gone that we realise what we have lost—and then it’s too late.

Every Friday Jobs at DOC will take you behind the scenes and into the jobs, the challenges, the highlights, and the personalities of the people who work at the Department of Conservation.

Today we profile Opotiki ranger James (Hemi) Barsdell…

James with a kiwi at Otamatuna - Te Urewera Mainland Island

At work…

Name: James (Hemi) Barsdell

Position: Biodiversity Assets Ranger (with a bit of other stuff too!). 

What kind of things do you do in your role?

Monitor weka, enhance shorebird breeding, work with the many dedicated community groups in the eastern Bay of Plenty, compliance work, fire fighting and whatever else needs doing.

What is the best part about your job?

The people and the environment.

What is the hardest part about your job?

Although I haven’t done this for a wee while now (as my increasing waist line can attest), lumping loads of gear throughout the hills. Oh and dealing with irate whitebaiters.

What was your highlight from the month just gone?

An acknowledgement for the ‘Volunteer Smoko’ I helped organise with the local and regional councils to thank the eastern Bay of Plenty conservation volunteers for their great efforts in the past year. The event gave each group a chance to show case what they do and to network with each other. From the feedback we received it sounds like it might become an annual event!

The rule of three…

Three loves

Hunting

  1. Family
  2. Hunting
  3. Seafood

Three pet peeves

  1. Being late
  2. Forgetting stuff
  3. “Gonnas” (if you don’t know what this means, someone else will)

Three things always in your fridge

Not very exciting here…

  1. Milk
  2. Butter
  3. The one year old half-eaten jar of pickles

Three favourite places in New Zealand

  1. Maungapohatu
  2. The South Island high country
  3. The Bay of Plenty

Maungapohatu - a special placeHunting

Favourite movie, album, book

  • Movie – The Shawshank Redemption
  • Album – The Eagles –  Hell Freezes Over
  • Book – Pack and Rifle by Phillip Holden

Deep and meaningful…

What piece of advice would you tell your 18 year old self?

Think smart and slow down. Faster is not necessarily better.

Who or what inspires you and why?

People who, against all odds, become successful or break the mould; and sunset or sunrise viewed from on top of a high hill.

Rafting the Motu river

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

A helicopter pilot.

And now, if you weren’t working at DOC, what would you want to be?

A surveyor.

If you could be any New Zealand native species for a day, what would you be and why?

A New Zealand falcon, so I could enjoy the rush of tearing through the air at unbelievable speeds chasing prey.

What piece of advice or message would you want to give to New Zealanders when it comes to conservation?

Get active and get involved. New Zealand’s native flora and fauna is a big part of what sets us apart from other countries—it is part of our identity. We need to ensure we maintain our heritage for the future.

Every Friday Jobs at DOC will take you behind the scenes and into the jobs, the challenges, the highlights, and the personalities of the people who work at the Department of Conservation.

Today we profile Programme Manager, Barry Lawrence, who died at home last Wednesday after a short battle with cancer. Never one to blow his own trumpet, we decided to do it for him…

Barry in the field with the mōhua he worked so hard to protect

An active member of the Wakatipu Environmental Society since the 1980s, two-term councillor with the Queenstown Lakes District Council, mayoral candidate, school teacher, dry stone dyker, shearer, DOC volunteer and most recently DOC Biodiversity Programme Manager, Barry’s contribution to the community and conservation over the last 30 years has been enormous.

As a councillor, he drew up the provisions of the 1995 District Plan controlling subdivision and protecting local landscape values. Out of the office he became a staunch protector of these values, spending countless voluntary hours preparing submissions and appearing at the Environment Court.

The importance of this work and the regard that Barry was held in was recognised in 2008, when he was awarded the Queen Service Medal for services ‘to local body affairs and the environment’.

Barry was a great teacher, shown here teaching colleagues how to mist net

The 1990s saw Barry unleash his passion for species and habitat protection, firstly by developing and staffing the first DOC volunteer mōhua and bat survey projects in the Dart and the Caples. Subsequently employed full time as Programme Manager Bio-Assets in 2002, Barry grew this work into much larger-scale pest tracking, trapping, treatment and bird monitoring programmes, the results of which we all enjoy today.

Barry and Ray Molloy at a local 1080 operation

Great examples of Barry’s relentless pursuit of restoring and maintaining the natural environment in the Wakatipu include protecting mōhua; saving bat habitat from development proposals in the Routeburn; getting a local power company to get on board with falcon research; demonstrating the importance of farm shrublands to falcon habitat; working with a local jet boat operator to fund research into black-fronted terns in the Dart and the Rees; and most recently developing a host of sites for kōwhai plantings.

Barry in his element – an evening filled with friends, stories, food and drink (and a giant haggis!)

In addition to all of Barry’s species and habitat protection, he also led the Area’s RMA advocacy work. With his considerable prior knowledge and skill in this field he was able to secure all manner of gains, large and small, through the process. The recent agreement with a Queenstown property developer to remove a 50 hectare block of mature wilding pines seeding the upper Shotover is a great example of Barry both seeing, and more importantly, seizing the opportunity.

A happy Barry – post beer and looking a bit woolly

Despite all of this work, it is many of Barry’s other more personal attributes that friends and family will remember him by – his ability to cut to the nub of complex issues (1080 being one), his big laugh, long hours in the field, a love of whiskey, beer, cider and Jimmies mutton pies, the DOC staff pig farming collective and his all together far too animated story telling (while driving) on dodgy trips up to Macetown, are just some of the many things we’ll all miss!

Put really simply, as Barry liked things put, he was good fun to be around. He is survived by his wife Pauline and daughters Rebecca and Meg and will be greatly missed.

Check out Barry on YouTube in this Shrublands Foodstore for NZ Falcon clip.

Jobs at DOC has moved to Friday! Every Friday Jobs at DOC will take you behind the scenes and into the jobs, the challenges, the highlights, and the personalities of the people who work at the Department of Conservation.

This week we meet Wellington based print and web designer, Hannah Soult

At work…

Name: Hannah Soult

Position: Print and Web Designer

What kind of things do you do in your role?

As a member of the Publishing Team in the Communications Unit, I provide design services to any DOC office in the country who requests help from our team. Each day I could be designing anything from flags and banners to brochures, icons, advertisements, interpretation signs… the list goes on. I provide support and advice to DOC staff across the country and work with other staff producing publications. Our team also manages DOC’s identity publication tools and templates.

Here I am at my desk

What is the best part about your job?

Working with DOC staff from all parts of the country! I’m always jealous when I’m speaking to someone in a distant part of the country and they’re about to go out and check on some native bird eggs or go out to do a school visit! It’s nice being able to contribute to communications about DOC’s work and provide visitors with information about our special places.

What is the hardest part about your job?

This is a hard one… I think it would be the tight timeframes. Every day there’s a list of things that need to be completed. I find this challenging—in a good way though—and it’s always worth it when the customer gets their product and it exceeds their expectations.

Tight time-frames—the way our team manages to keep track of all the jobs!

What was the highlight of your month just gone?

Continuing to do more work on non-traditional ‘published’ products. For example, I’m currently working with the Auckland Area Office on putting together three signs for Rangitoto and Motutapu Islands, based on the celebrations and history of the islands being pest-free. It’s great to be a part of the awesome things happening out in the field—even when I sit at a desk all day in National Office!

Our Team also won a Write Group Award for ‘Best Technical Communicator’, for our Publishing Guidelines and Writing Style Guidelines, an awesome achievement.

The rule of three…

Three loves

  1. Spending time with friends, family and my partner.
  2. Travel and getting out and about in the sunshine (I went to South America last year and am going to Cambodia over summer).
  3. Food (especially curry!).

    Curry—yes, that whole tray is my meal!

Three pet peeves

  1. Walking the 188 steps back up to my house each day (good exercise though and it’s worth it for the view!).
  2. The smell that clothes get when they’ve taken too long to dry (I call it the ‘washing machine smell’).
  3. Rude people!

    The view from our house in Wellington—city living!

Three things always in your fridge

  1. Veges from the vege market.
  2. Cheese (many varieties).
  3. Leftovers that we sometimes don’t get around to eating because it’s too easy to go out for dinner when living in the city!

Three favourite places in New Zealand

  1. Halswell, Christchurch (where I lived until three years ago).
  2. Punakaiki, West Coast (where we went on family holidays).
  3. Sandy Bay, Marahau, Abel Tasman (another holiday spot—my uncle from the UK has a ‘bach’ on the hill in Sandy Bay so I usually go for a visit each summer).
  4. And I’m going to throw in a fourth—Wellington (but only on a sunny day!).

    The amazing view from my uncle's bach in Sandy Bay, Marahau, Abel Tasman

Favourite movie, album, book

  1. Movie: The first movie that springs to mind is Avatar, mostly because I was blown away by the amazing graphics, and it was the first movie I saw in 3D.
  2. Album: Michael Jackson’s Number ones—you just can’t go wrong.
  3. Book: Design books (otherwise known as ‘picture books’—they’re very inspiring and get me back into creative mode when I’m having a creative block).

Deep and meaningful…

What piece of advice would you tell your 18 year old self?

Start saving now!

In South America at the highest point on the Inca Trail

Who or what inspires you and why?

People in Christchurch, my family and friends included. Everyone’s been through so much in the last year or so, yet remain so positive.

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

I was always going to do something ‘arty’. My mum was massively into arts and crafts, I grew up sewing, making my own jewellery and going to ceramic classes etc. I sometimes wonder what I would be if I didn’t follow the natural road that led towards becoming a designer!

Amazon—a massive tree in the jungle, and an amazing frog we saw (inset). On the same walk we also saw a sloth, a hummingbird and tarantulas!

And now, if you weren’t working at DOC, what would you want to be?

If I wasn’t at DOC and money wasn’t an issue, I would probably want to be an artist. I used to paint a lot when I lived in Christchurch but just can’t find the space or time now. Being a designer in another part of the world would be awesome too.

If you could be any New Zealand native species for a day, what would you be and why?

A tui, I love that Wellington has them. They can also sing… I can’t—but wish I could! They used to hang out in the tree in front of our house until the tree got cut down recently (so disappointed!).

What piece of advice or message would you want to give to New Zealanders when it comes to conservation? 

Look after what we have! We’re so lucky that we have native species in our towns and cities, but we need to look after them and their natural habitat. I think most people take it for granted. I even saw a kākā in the Wellington Botanic Gardens last year!