Gardens are not made by singing ‘Oh, how beautiful,’ and sitting in the shade.

Rudyard Kipling

About Okiwi Passion

Nestled in the fertile Okiwi Basin is a plot of land with some of the richest soil on Great Barrier Island – black, friable, deep soil that is every gardener’s dream. Land that called to be husbanded. Thirteen years ago Gerald and Caity Endt responded to that call, and so Okiwi Passion was born. Over the years, many gracious hands have worked the soil, made the compost, planted the seedlings and harvested the vibrant produce to fulfil the vision of feeding the Island community

Caity and Gerald
The Endterprising Gardeners

Gerald Endt

Gerald has lived horticulture all his life, particularly growing up and working with tree crops at Landsendt in Oratia, in west Auckland. Through his family, he’s had a lifelong association with Great Barrier Island. He came here as a boy to spend summers fishing and hunting with his cousins, the Mabeys, on their farm at Whangapoua. 

Then his parents, Dick and Annemarie Endt, established the Okiwi Babaco Company with Helen and Murray Mabey, purchasing a large piece of farmland in Okiwi, later split after the partnership dissolved. By then Gerald had studied horticulture at Lincoln University and overseas, including internships at Longwood, a premier horticultural display garden in the States, and Lotusland, a botanical garden in California. He then managed the Endt operation on the Barrier, growing tamarillos and cherimoya for 5 years. Here he grew to value food autonomy – the ability to forage and hunt for one’s own food, prepare it and eat it. After returning to Oratia at age 30 to manage Landsend, where he had grown up, he missed the freedom and beauty of the island and was determined to eventually return to live. Two years later he met Caity, who had a dream to grow organic vegetables…

Caity Endt

Caity has always been a keen gardener and nature lover, spending endless hours in the garden with her father as a child and eventually studying botany and ecology. She was especially inspired later in life working at the medicinal herb gardens of Weleda in Hawkes Bay, and at Daniel Bridler’s market garden, Parau Gardens. Here the seeds were sown for her vision of growing organic produce on an ecologically diverse farm – preferably a long way from the madding crowd!

After marrying Gerald, the seeds fell on the fertile soil of Great Barrier Island, and Okiwi Passion was born.

Caity now has part time role as Food Resilience Co-Ordinator on Aotea encorganing, teaching and supporting individuals to grow more local food!

Our Team

Gerald

Director & Operator

Grower and tree man, fixer of all things, fruit lover, expert harvester, happiest on a tractor or boat

Speckles

Son of Pip and Pumba

Eater of broken eggs, fish lover, herder of chooks, rabbit hunter

Caity

Director & Operator

Grower of plants and ideas, teacher, compost and worm enthusiast, incredible baker

Pip R.I.P.

The Friendliest dog in the Souther Hemisphere

This lovely girl still lives on in our memories

Our Partners

Okiwi Passion is proud to collaborate with other local growers, makers and creators of Aotea

Gray's Coastal Gardens

Darren Gray, Owner & Operator

Darren is a 5th generation Barrier- ite growing the most delicious potatoes, kumara and cupola squash in the sandy soil of his family land on Aotea. He uses sustainable and soil friendly practices to keep his soil productive, using homemade liquid fish and seaweed fertilizer, cow manure and mulching the soil with tagasaste and flax stalks.

His potatoes are making a welcome addition to our range of produce in our boxes, and are also available as an extra item you can add to your order from our Produce Shop!

Jacques Honey

Owner & Operator

Now here is a “sweet” man, whose philosophy mirrors our own! Jacques is a passionate beekeeper who loves and respects his bees. That is why he harvests less honey than he could, to leave enough food for his bees’ wellbeing. The result is the bees have their own honey to live on through the winter and are never fed sugar water as a cheap substitute.

As a keen gardener he is constantly planting nectar and pollen plants on his property to sustain bee and bird life. He maintains the entire property without a drop of herbicide.

We are proud to offer Jacques’ honey in our Produce Shop!

Island Gin

Andi Ross, Owner & Operator

We first connected with Andi as a produce box customer several years ago. When Andi first started musing about producing gin on the Island, she approached us about growing some botanicals for her. We have developed a delightful connection with Andi and now there is a bit of Okiwi Passion in Island Gin!

Our Farm and Our Practices

Okiwi Passion operates on an amazing eight or so acres in the small northern settlement of Okiwi on the east coast of Great Barrier Island. We are very fortunate to have incredibly fertile alluvial soil with excellent structure, created by millennia of soil building in the Okiwi basin, and a very warm microclimate assisted by 30 year old bamboo shelterbelts (essential for the extraordinary winds we can get).

We started growing here in 2007. Over the years we have developed extensive gardens and have planted around 80 fruit trees (pip, citrus and stonefruit) which are now bearing. There are also  established plantations of bananas, feijoa and cherimoya. We keep a small crew of around 30 free range hens helping us out scratching out weeds, gobbling bugs, depositing their lovely rich droppings, and laying golden yolked eggs.

Being able to grow high-quality, nutritious food in a mindful way that respects nature and feeds and protects the soil upon which we all depend, is a vital service in today’s world where “agri-business” is becoming more and more mindless. We see the soil as a treasure to be guarded. We minimise cultivation, using human scale tools: broadforks, rakes, and Eliott Coleman’s tilther for soil prep; tarps and hoeing for weed control; feeding the soil with farm-made compost, green manures, droppings from the chickens and a lot of banna grass and bamboo mulch that we make on-site. The mulch keeps weeds down and moisture in, and feeds the soil over time. We are one of the few organic gardens not using plastic film to plant in to.  We also use certified organic mineral fertilisers, liquid foliar fertilisers and biological inoculants, and practice rotation of our crops. We promote biodiversity for its ecological value by having a widely diverse range of crops, fruit trees and wild flower strips to attract beneficial insects.

We grow all our own seedlings for planting out. Our plant nursery grew alongside the gardens, and it’s now a thriving part of our business, growing high quality organically raised vegetable, herb and flower seedlings, and larger ornamentals, such as roses (for the soul!). We raise all our plants using certified organic potting mix enriched with extra organic fertilisers and beneficial microbial inoculants.

The Island

Aotea/Great Barrier Island is the fourth largest island of New Zealand, proudly defending the Hauraki Gulf against the powerful Pacific Ocean and the blasting salt-laden gales that roar over from the Pacific. It is wild and rugged, with steep bush-clad terrain of spectacular topography, mostly under DOC management. The beaches are stunning, with crystal clear water, and pristine estuaries. Numerous small islands make the coastline extremely beautiful.

We are part of a small community of self-reliant individuals, who pull together in moments of need but also value their independence and isolation. The population swells over the summer to several thousand – camping, boating, baching, renting, – all sharing a slice of paradise and bringing much-needed revenue to the island.

The entire island is off the grid – we all make our electricity from solar power with backup generators. There are no traffic lights! And no nighttime light pollution.

Our extraordinary night skies are brilliant with stars and have earned our island International  Dark Sky Sanctuary status. We are the third such sanctuary in the world.

If ever you come to Great Barrier Island, do contact us, take a walk around the gardens, and order a produce box before coming over!