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Early olive harvest expected this year

Organisers are hopeful for a good olive harvest this year, despite setbacks in previous years. Abbi Maidment reports.

Mt Victoria’s annual olive harvest could be underway soon, thanks to olive trees in Mt Victoria ripening early this year.

That’s despite the event being cancelled in previous years due to members of the public over-picking the fruit before ripe.

Photo: Colin Kelly

Mt Victoria community hub coordinator and harvest organiser Joel Cosgrove said the harvest usually happened between May and June and took  10 to 20 volunteers an afternoon to strip 100 to 200 kg of fresh olives from the trees.

“People can come from all different paths of life, and then just for this afternoon, you're all unified by your desire to try these olives.

“I think people love working with their hands, you know, like doing something practical where you can see the fruits of your labour.”

The olives are commercially crushed in the Wairarapa, yielding around 10–20 litres of oil.

All volunteers received a small bottle of oil to take home, and the rest was used for the community dinners held every few months, which host about 70 people.  

“Each batch is different because the earlier you pick them or the later you pick them, that has a massive influence on the taste of them, so the one we got last year came through really nice and smooth. Tasted really good with bread.”

Colin Kelly, a former executive of the Wairarapa Olive Association, who helped set up and now coordinates the harvest, said there had been some years when they could not harvest because locals got to them first.

“There have been a couple of years when the crops looked quite good, but we think a small number of individuals have gone round and fairly systematically stripped the olives, so there have been a couple of years we haven't harvested.”

He suspected that these individuals used the olives for pickling rather than oil, as younger olives were used for brining.  

Wellington City Council first planted the trees in the 1980s, along the pavements of Austin Street and Queen Street in Mount Victoria, and Wakefield Street in Te Aro.  

Colin said the olive trees chosen by the council at the time were Tuscan and Greek varieties, which were very good for oil production.

According to the Wellington Council website, the olives were first pressed into oil in 2002, when Graeme Harris of Kapiti Olives Ltd and council staff harvested and pressed them, naming the oil ‘Suprema a Situ’ after Wellington’s coat of arms motto. 
'Suprema a Situ' was entered in the Los Angeles County Fair in the United States, where it won a gold medal, and was gifted by WCC to visiting dignitaries.

After the council stopped harvesting the olives, the Mount Victoria community took on the job.

Joel said that the trees were a great example of good community building and planning.

“These trees were planted in the 80s, that you know, in the 2020s we’re still engaging with.

“The community can keep collecting the olive oil for the shared joy of collecting the olives and making it into oil and are less worried about the time taken to do it.”

 

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NEWS BRIEFS – June

No pedestrians allowed

Mt Victoria walkers may be surprised to learn they are no longer welcome on one of the pedestrian islands in the middle of Kent and Cambridge Terraces.

Recently stickers have appeared indicating pedestrians are not permitted on what is formally known as the canal reserve, at a spot that many Mt Victoria residents use to cross the road.

A spokesperson for the Wellington City Council says the move is for safety reasons, related to the new crossing further down the road that is not open for pedestrian use.

“While the independent review into the Golden Mile project is underway, these temporary pavement signs have been installed for safety reasons until the new crossing is activated. The planters were placed there as a precautionary measure too. The site is being monitored as public safety is a priority.”

The crossing near the Embassy was built on the assumption that the Courtenay Place realignment would go ahead. The Golden Mile project is under review, with findings to be presented to the council on 25 June.

Most Mt Vic heritage owners happy with status quo

Most Mt Victoria owners of heritage houses wish them to remain that way.

Owners of heritage-listed buildings and buildings in heritage areas throughout the city were surveyed by the Wellington City Council in March to find out their attitudes towards their heritage status.

Owners of 61 schedule 1 heritage buildings - including six in Mt Victoria - told surveyors they wanted to remove their heritage listing,

Within heritage areas, those that wished to be removed included one out of nine owners in Armour Avenue, four out of 46 in Porritt Avenue, and one out of 55 in the Doctors Common heritage areas.  Many more owners said they preferred to keep the designation.

Councillors at the City Strategy and Delivery committee meeting in May noted the report and agreed that council should advocate for “a fair process and/or law changes within the new planning system that will provide owners of heritage listed properties a chance to challenge their categorisation”.

Mt Victoria olive harvest

Around 20 people helped out with the Mt Victoria olive harvest this year.

Hub coordinator Joel Cosgrove said it was a good harvest, in terms of volume and also quality. "Apparently our olives were riper than Wairarapa's this year! That's a win for Mt Vic."

The oil will be used for our community dinners and local community fundraising.

Nature Baby moves

Nature Baby is moving from Jessie Street to College Street, bringing another Kiwi-owned business to the street.

Sandwiched between Wallace Cotton and Trinity apartments, the two-storeyed building at 25 College St is undergoing extensive renovation. The new premises has had many lives, including as a bakery, a barbeque restaurant, and a gym.

Nature Baby manager, George Lane is excited about the new premises and what it will offer the neighbourhood. “We will have multiple community spaces that people can come to and commune with other parents,” she says.

The store is expected to open by October.

 

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