Hidden Lakes
About Us
We work with schools, rural communities, and local groups across the Wairarapa to develop restoration projects and educational programmes focused on conservation and environmental heritage.

Our fundraising supports initiatives such as the Schools Behind Our River programme, the establishment of bird corridors along rivers and tributaries, and activities that inspire future generations to value and learn from the natural environment.

We aim to foster locally driven, nature-based solutions that strengthen biodiversity, support sustainable farming and business opportunities, and create lasting benefits for our communities.

Through hands-on environmental learning, we encourage students and local communities to connect with the health of their river catchment, Māori heritage, and long-term sustainability goals.

Students planting native trees

Our mission

Our mission is to encourage local school students and communities to embrace the need to protect and restore their waterways and native flora and fauna in the hope that our stories and results can be viewed as a role model and guide for other rural communities across New Zealand; protecting, restoring and nourishing the return of healthy ecosystems for future generations, including the return of native birdlife along river corridors from the mountains to the sea.

Our aim is to work with students, teachers, landowners, conservation groups, and local government to address and promote the need to halt and reverse the decline of natural wilderness and wetlands within the Wairarapa; to encourage the protection and return of birdlife and endangered fauna and flora, and help reverse the effects of climate change.

Ruamahanga River from the air at Opaki

Our values

We believe in doing good, being kind, and selflessly contributing towards the future wellbeing and health of our children, country, and our planet.

We encourage debate and awareness of environmental issues, sharing the work of like-minded individuals in other organisations or charity groups, and where possible extending our support towards their needs.

We embrace new technologies that aim to aid and assist sustainable methods of working with land and wildlife rejuvenation projects; supporting and mentoring local technology start-ups that aim to use new technologies for the purpose of restoring and protecting our ecosystems.

We encourage an understanding of our natural treasures (taonga) through the values, knowledge, and traditions of the Māori culture and local iwi; with the aim to communicate and share these stories as a means to encourage students and local communities to show respect for the land, natural waterways and surrounding ocean by restoring healthy relationships between places and people.

We recognise that our work as local stewards and guardians is to encourage charitable conservation and environmentalism philanthropy – inviting investment, scientific, educational, and technical expertise that in turn helps saves threatened sites and ensures the survival of endangered native species, including our local environments from risks associated with any further rise in global temperatures.