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Welcome to our new look newsletter and logo and an upgraded website (coming soon) to continue to inform and engage our valued members, volunteers, partners and friends of Sunshine.
Sunshine Reserve Ballern Ballern is an important bio link that is integral to Mount Martha and its landscape. These bushland reserves are significant reminders of the original landscapes and how they once were.
As a committee, together with our valued members and volunteers, our work removing the weedy species to make room for the indigenous flora is a priority when managing bushland and habitat value.
Monthly working bees (our Habitat Restoration Projects) are practical ways the community can get involved and better understand nature’s way to sustainability and wonder.
For our next working bees, we will meet Lower Sunshine at the foot bridge (McLeod Rd side fire track) last Sunday of the month @ 9am-11am.
Next bee Sunday 27 November 2022.
As it is ground flora season we will identify areas of diversity that require a little TLC for optimum growth. These field activities include plant ID, historical references, practical weed control methods and general conservation education.
The Peninsula hosts a rich source of educational conservation resources: our friends at Western Port Biosphere Foundation featured the beautiful Yam Daisy (traditional name Mourning) in an article recently. Peter Aldenhoven, CEO, Willum Warrain Bush Nursery said, “Endless plains of golden yellow daisies stretched westwards from Melbourne to South Australian border. They were tended by Aboriginal women over millenia. They were just not a staple food source but highly valued as an ancestor plant of great cultural significance. Sheep ate them out between 1870 and 1880, and here on the Mornington Peninsula only a few small precious pockets remain.” He shows us it is crucial to always obtain, cultivate and harvest the correct species from the correct source, “…You are engaging in edible reconciliation.” (The Biosphere Connector: Issue 35, 2022)
Residents can also actively help protect our Reserve by not dumping rubbish/green waste in the reserve; think about what you are planting in your gardens; keeping fence lines contained; know your fence line (Do you have WONS Weeds of National significance on your fence line?); ensuring your dogs are on leads and always pick up after your dog.
Pia Spreen
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