Our projects

Many of our projects are aimed at restoring our waterways and farmlands so that they are great for stock, great for wildlife and great for people too.  Scientific evidence and the experience of pioneering local land managers like John Weatherstone show that a property with around 30% of its area planted to trees can be more productive than just bare paddocks.  We want to do all we can to promote and implement ways of revegetating our landscapes to make them more productive, biodiverse and beautiful.

Better Water: Better Life

We have received funding from Landcare Australia to assist us to improve the health and water quality of our waterways and dams.  Our main emphasis is on showing how we can markedly improve the quality of our water by using native plants which are the cheapest and most effective water filters we will ever find.  We will be organising a number of field days with guest speakers who will show us how we can rehabilitate these areas.  Participants may also be able to take some plants home.

Southern Pygmy Perch and Yellow-spotted Bell Frog Recovery Plan

Some of our funding will be used to develop a recovery plan for the Southern Pygmy Perch and Yellow-spotted Bell Frog.  Three eminent retired CSIRO/academia fish scientists [known to us as “The Three Wise Men”] have agreed to help us develop this plan.  Plans of this sort are not new but they tend to cover a wider region.  Ours will be, we believe, the first ever local recovery plan developed.  As well as sharpening up our current efforts and giving us a clear action plan for the future, the recovery plan will be a big advantage in attracting the substantial funding we think will be essential to achieve a major turnaround in the fortunes of the fishes, frogs and our local environment.

Oolong Creek, Dalton

We have been working with the Dalton Community Association to remove woody weeds and replace them with native plants.  During this work two local youngsters found two fish which they rightly believed to be a previously undiscovered remnant population of Southern Pygmy Perch – only the fourth population known!  While this very small population is under great stress, it is a very hopeful and inspiring find for us. We will continue to maintain and improve this area

Dalton School Bush Block

Dalton Public School, its P&C Association, GDL and Greening Australia are protecting and enhancing the Endangered Yellow Box Community that adjoins the school.  Guided walks with interpretative signage will make this significant bush block an ideal Outdoor Education Centre.

Gunning Village

We have begun working with Gunning Primary School to further develop local kids' understanding and interaction with their local environment.  GDL also has riparian plantings around Barbour Park and Meadow Creek, including the Bruce Bray Riparian Walk with interpretative signage.  We hope to realise the potential offered by these sites, together with others such as the Golf Club, to be linked and enhanced to the benefit of the community and the local environment.

Making the Gunning District a “No Go” Zone for the Feral Fox

There are some 10,000 feral foxes in the wider Gunning district.  They are huge environmental and economic menace.  While individuals and authorities have been battling the fox for years, these efforts have been patchy and only partially successful.

GDL wants to have a real impact on this problem and have set ourselves the ambitious but achievable goal of reducing fox numbers by at least 90%.   We have been working with South East Local Land Services to develop a sustained and strategic attack on fox numbers across the district and surrounding areas.  Foxes will always be with us but we know that if neighbors work together to eradicate foxes over a wide area then we can have a really significant impact on their numbers.  

We have established a network of group organisers and will be undertaking at least two major baiting programs each year.  Our first group baiting was a huge success with over 5,400 baits going out over the district.  Action on this scale has to make a difference.  If your property is 10ha or larger, we ask you to consider joining us.

We offer free training so you can use the necessary 1080 baits safely, ethically and effectively.

While 1080, used strategically, is an essential element of our campaign against the fox it is not the only one,  We will be adopting other control techniques over time.  And there are other feral pests damaging our environment which we cannot ignore.  But we must start somewhere and the feral fox is our no 1 priority for now.  We are confident that, working together in a concerted and persistent way, we can eliminate the fox as a serious environmental problem in our district.  And maybe see a return of some native animals which the fox has driven to near extinction.



The Hunt for the Mundoonen Koala

In 2005 a local landcare member made the first confirmed sighting of a koala in the Mundoonen Nature Reserve.  This was an occasion for great delight.  Are koalas still there now?  Some of us have been helping  NPWS Rangers to undertake surveys to see if we can find evidence of their presence. These surveys will be he held from time to time and members are invited to join the search groups. We have also heard accounts of koala traces being seen in the Bellmount Forest area and want to pursue this further.