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Native Pink Hyacinth-Orchid (Dipodium rose)
National Tree Day 2025

Councillor Anthony Marsh, Mayor Mornington Peninsula Shire has selected Sunshine Reserve Group as his beneficiary (Briars Ward) at the annual Mayoral Fundraising Event on 17 May 2025.
This year each Shire Councillor (11 in total) will choose a community organisation from within their ward and all proceeds from the event will be distributed back into the community. We are thrilled.
For further information https://maydaycruise.com.au/
Save the Dates and Stay Connected 2025
Sunday Working Bees @ Sunshine
Sunday 27 April / Sunday 25 May / Sunday 29 June.
Join us the last Sunday of each month (9am) for a couple of hours of collaboration and community, caring for our beautiful Reserve.
Remember hats, water, long pants, sunscreen and boots. Watch our socials or txt Pia 0437 299 847 for registration details and updates where to meet each month.

National Tree Day 2025
Our July working bee will be replaced by this event on Sunday 27 July @ 9 am Cnr Hall Road/McLeod Street, Mount Martha.



Ecologist and environmental photographer Alison Pouliot's superb new book Funga Obscura has been published (newsouthbooks.com.au.) Known to many of us through her specialist fungi workshops on the Mornington Peninsula, this book is a 'love letter to fungi.' Following is a recent review by Jeanette Miller ...
"Referencing the camera obscura of times past, Funga Obscura is an ingeniously apt title for Alison Pouliot’s latest book.
Through the dual lenses of science and art; combining her deep knowledge and love of fungi with the skilled eye of a sensitive photographer, Alison brings these extraordinary, weird and wonderful life forms out of obscurity and onto the page.
Though scaffolded with informative and thought-provoking text, it is the captivating, dramatic photographic images which are the hero of this book. More coffee table book than field guide, the text nevertheless takes us on a journey of discovery, gleaned from years of fungal foraying and research across both northern and southern hemispheres.
The evocative images were all taken in situ in natural light, so that we can almost feel the quiet stillness and smell the damp muskiness of their surroundings. They are an invitation to slow down: to be drawn down to the forest floor and to take time to look more closely…to pause and ponder…to be astounded at the intriguing beauty of diverse form and function, and to wonder about fungal relationships within the web of life…and our relationships with them, now and into the future.
And so Alison’s newly- published work is many things: a gallery of exquisite photographic artworks; a celebration of the diversity, eccentricity, beauty and resilience of fungi; a meditation on relationships between all living things, and an invitation to wonder about our own place in the natural world."
Behind the scenes





