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A Safe Place
 
 

A sanctuary is a place where endangered animals and plants live. There they can be safe from predators, pollution, and hunters. A sanctuary can be big or small. It can be in the middle of a city or in the wilderness, a long way from anywhere.

  The entrance to the sanctuary  
  2 photos-one showing the 5 mile fence, the other showing the gate people have to go through to enter the sanctuary
  Sanctuary in the city  
    Karori Wildlife Sanctuary is in the middle of Wellington City. It's as big as four hundred football fields. It has been built to protect plants and animals that are threatened.

The sanctuary is surrounded by a fence that is 8 kilometres long. The fence is the most important part of the sanctuary. It was built to keep out pests - including people! It's 2 metres high, and is dug 40 centimetres into the ground. This is to stop animals such as rats or rabbits from digging or burrowing into the sanctuary.

The fence is made from strong wire mesh. It has a metal cap that hangs over the top to keep animals from climbing over. There are no trees growing by the fence. They were cut down to keep pests from jumping into the sanctuary from overhanging branches.
 
      2 photos- one showing the fence and it's metal cap, the other is a closeup of the wire mesh. A diagram showing the fence is 8 feet high above the ground, 15 inches below the ground with wire mesh and a metal cap attached to the wooden posts
         
  Pests    
    Once the fence was built, the area inside it had to be made safe. Pests such as cats, dogs, rats, mice, pigs, and rabbits were taken away. This work is done by volunteers. So far, eleven different kinds of pests have been removed.
Birds that live in the sanctuary: Kiwi, Saddleback, and Takahe
    Pests-Cats, dogs, pigs, and mice
Birds like the kiwi, the saddleback, and the takahe can live safely in the Karori Wildlife Sanctuary.  
         
         
  Rules   Visitors touring the sanctuary
    Karori Wildlife Sanctuary has strict rules for people. No one can go into the sanctuary on their own. All visitors tour the sanctuary with a staff member, and no pets are allowed.

Visitors have to keep to the tracks. They can't touch any of the plants or animals or take anything out of the sanctuary. They should be quiet when they are in the sanctuary. The animals shouldn't even know they have visitors.
      Visitors have to keep on the trails
 
         
    Now, the animals and plants that the sanctuary was built for can live and grow in peace, without the danger of being eaten or damaged.    
         
       
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