Showing 19 items matching "indigenous grass"
-
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus ArchivesBooklet - Study, Investigation of a Possible Role For Herbicides in Management of Indigenous Grass Swards, 1989
... Investigation of a Possible Role For Herbicides in Management of Indigenous Grass Swards...Investigation of a Possible Role For Herbicides in Management of Indigenous Grass Swards Booklet Study Neil Boag ...herbicides, grass swards, study, vcah, victorian college of agriculture & horticulture -
Eltham District Historical Society IncPhotograph, Liz Pidgeon, Heritage Excursion; Eltham Lower Park Walk and Talk, 1 July 2017, 1 July 2017
... ...indigenous grass...Plaque explaining "Indigenous grasses of Nillumbik" from the Shire of Nillumbik Newsletter No., 234, June 2017 Heritage Excursion - Saturday 1st July - Eltham Lower Park - Walk and Talk Eltham Lower Park has played an important part in the history of our area since the early days of European settlement when it was used by local residents as an informal racecourse. ...(Melway ref 21 H 10). heritage excursion activities eltham district historical society eltham lower park information board indigenous grass indigenous plants Born Digital Heritage Excursion; Eltham Lower Park Walk and Talk, 1 July 2017 Photograph Photograph Liz Pidgeon ...Plaque explaining "Indigenous grasses of Nillumbik" from the Shire of Nillumbik Newsletter No., 234, June 2017 Heritage Excursion - Saturday 1st July - Eltham Lower Park - Walk and Talk Eltham Lower Park has played an important part in the history of our area since the early days of European settlement when it was used by local residents as an informal racecourse. Prior to that its location at the junction of the Diamond Creek and the Yarra River made it an important meeting place for the Wurundjeri people. The park combines formal elements and sporting facilities with remnant bushland that is of environmental significance. It is home to sporting and horse riding clubs, popular play spaces and the Diamond Valley Miniature Railway, which attracts large numbers of visitors. The park will be the venue for our July excursion which will comprise a walk of about 3.5 km around the park and adjacent areas. Along the way we will discuss the history and natural history of the area. The path along the creek and the river provides a pleasant and scenic walk. This walk on Saturday 1st July is about 3.5 km in length and will take 2 to 2.5 hours. It will start at 2pm at the Main Road car park at the front of the park. (Melway ref 21 H 10). Born Digitalheritage excursion, activities, eltham district historical society, eltham lower park, information board, indigenous grass, indigenous plants -
Merri-bek City CouncilSculpture - Brick and indigenous grasses (Common Tussock grass (Poa labillardierei), Penny Algar, Remnants, 1998
... Brick and indigenous grasses (Common Tussock grass (Poa labillardierei)...Merri-bek City Council 233 Sydney Road Brunswick melbourne Merri-bek Public Art Collection Remnants Sculpture Brick and indigenous grasses (Common Tussock grass (Poa labillardierei) Penny Algar ...'Remnants' was commissioned in 1998. It was designed as a nature play space for children. The work comprises three brick sculptural elements set amongst 3000 Common Tussock grasses. merri-bek public art collection -
Eltham District Historical Society IncJournal - Newsletter, Nillumbik Shire Council, Nillumbik News, October 2000
... ...indigenous grass...October 2000 articles include: Safer roads for the Shire Eltham Festival program announced Commercial Place design released 2000-2003 Council Plan Released National Reconciliation Framework Living and Learning Centres More Playgrounds Susan St Pavilion completed Study to plan for BMX/skate track Wattle Glen Township Strategy Community Weed Control Program Count Koala Day Environment Centre proposed for Edendale Farm Open Space Strategy findings Neighbourhood Character Study and Residential Design Guidelines Friends groups Clean Drains – Living Creeks, National Water Week Nillumbik Shire Council Cultural Plan 2000-2005 adopted 2001 Alan Marshall Short Story Award Artists’ Open Studios program Kangaroo Ground Tower Advisory Committee Environment leaders at Eltham North primary Dollars saved by regular road maintenance Regional Road upgrades Rural roads grading program Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary update Council Newsletters Nillumbik News Nillumbik Shire Council Council Plan 2000–2003 Municipal Road Safety Strategy Infrastructure services Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary review Rates Sustainable agriculture rebate Capital works program road maintenance Better Roads Victorian program eltham - yarra glen road Warrandyte - Kangaroo Ground Road Rural roads grading program Commercial Place Public space public infrastructrue meals on wheels Eltham Living and Learning Centre Living and Learning Centre adult community education volunteer programs Australia Day Awards community groups environmental protection sustainability Community weed control landcare koalas Drainage works waterway protection indigenous grass environmental education Open Space public parkland playgrounds bike trail Adventure Playground community reserves Kangaroo Ground Tower reserve Cultural plan Eltham festival Artists Open Studios cultural tourism Alan Marshall Short Story Award Montsalvat community arts program garden walks Eltham Fun Run community market mudbrick tours CERES Environmental Education Centre Nillumbik Tourism Association Food and Wine trail Yarra Valley Tourism campaign road safety Adrian Cully Alan Marshall Andrew Port Anne Connor Catherine Dale Chris Wallace-Crabbe Claire Harris David Scott David Yencken Dean Stewart Deb Ganderton Debra Wilkinson Denis Ward drew gregory Daryl Taylor Fiona Austin Frank Butters Frank Nolan Gavin Jordan Glen Jameson Grace Mitchell Greg Scott Harry Gilham Helen Ash Jane Annois jane viola Jan Kelly Jenneke Korteweg Jenni Mitchell Jessica Davison Jill Forrest john hewish Jules Burns Julius Peiker kay steventon Kayte Nunn Lesley Shuttleworth leslie Avril Louise Heathcote Marg Jeffery Margaret Jennings Martin Wright Mathew Hodsnesse Maurice Stabb Megan McCarthy Mervyn Hannan Michael Jansz michael skewes Mick Woiwod nel ten wolde Nicholas Pelling Ona Henderson Peter Burn Piers Bateman reg cox Reg Evans Robert Boyle Robert Hay Robert Theobald shan shnookal Sigmund Jorgensen Stuart Menzies Steven White Vonnie Frazer Eltham District Historical Society Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation Eltham North Primary School Wattle Glen Primary School Eltham Arts Council Churinga Arts Harvey World Travel (Eltham) Eltham Little Book Shop Do Lunch Cafe Volumes Cafe Grovedale Cottage Lovegrove Winery Cottles Bridge Yarrambat Golf Club Eltham Football Club Eltham Rugby Football Club Lower Eltham Cricket Club Susan Street Oval Syd Tunn Jack Rasterhoff A4. monotone print, double stapled, 4 pages Nillumbik News Journal Newsletter Nillumbik Shire Council ...The newsletter outlines local government initiatives, community events, environmental programs, infrastructure projects, and cultural activities occurring in the Nillumbik Shire around October–November 2000. It highlights council plans, community participation opportunities, and local developments aimed at improving quality of life in the region. October 2000 articles include: Safer roads for the Shire Eltham Festival program announced Commercial Place design released 2000-2003 Council Plan Released National Reconciliation Framework Living and Learning Centres More Playgrounds Susan St Pavilion completed Study to plan for BMX/skate track Wattle Glen Township Strategy Community Weed Control Program Count Koala Day Environment Centre proposed for Edendale Farm Open Space Strategy findings Neighbourhood Character Study and Residential Design Guidelines Friends groups Clean Drains – Living Creeks, National Water Week Nillumbik Shire Council Cultural Plan 2000-2005 adopted 2001 Alan Marshall Short Story Award Artists’ Open Studios program Kangaroo Ground Tower Advisory Committee Environment leaders at Eltham North primary Dollars saved by regular road maintenance Regional Road upgrades Rural roads grading program Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary update council newsletters, nillumbik news, nillumbik shire council, council plan 2000–2003, municipal road safety strategy, infrastructure services, stormwater management plan, locality boundary review, rates, sustainable agriculture rebate, capital works program, road maintenance, better roads victorian program, eltham - yarra glen road, warrandyte - kangaroo ground road, rural roads grading program, commercial place, public space, public infrastructrue, meals on wheels, eltham living and learning centre, living and learning centre, adult community education, volunteer programs, australia day awards, community groups, environmental protection, sustainability, community weed control, landcare, koalas, drainage works, waterway protection, indigenous grass, environmental education, open space, public parkland, playgrounds, bike trail, adventure playground, community reserves, kangaroo ground tower reserve, cultural plan, eltham festival, artists open studios, cultural tourism, alan marshall short story award, montsalvat, community arts program, garden walks, eltham fun run, community market, mudbrick tours, ceres environmental education centre, nillumbik tourism association, food and wine trail, yarra valley tourism campaign, road safety, adrian cully, alan marshall, andrew port, anne connor, catherine dale, chris wallace-crabbe, claire harris, david scott, david yencken, dean stewart, deb ganderton, debra wilkinson, denis ward, drew gregory, daryl taylor, fiona austin, frank butters, frank nolan, gavin jordan, glen jameson, grace mitchell, greg scott, harry gilham, helen ash, jane annois, jane viola, jan kelly, jenneke korteweg, jenni mitchell, jessica davison, jill forrest, john hewish, jules burns, julius peiker, kay steventon, kayte nunn, lesley shuttleworth, leslie avril, louise heathcote, marg jeffery, margaret jennings, martin wright, mathew hodsnesse, maurice stabb, megan mccarthy, mervyn hannan, michael jansz, michael skewes, mick woiwod, nel ten wolde, nicholas pelling, ona henderson, peter burn, piers bateman, reg cox, reg evans, robert boyle, robert hay, robert theobald, shan shnookal, sigmund jorgensen, stuart menzies, steven white, vonnie frazer, eltham district historical society, council for aboriginal reconciliation, eltham north primary school, wattle glen primary school, eltham arts council, churinga arts, harvey world travel (eltham), eltham little book shop, do lunch cafe, volumes cafe, grovedale cottage, lovegrove winery cottles bridge, yarrambat golf club, eltham football club, eltham rugby football club, lower eltham cricket club, susan street oval, syd tunn, jack rasterhoff -
Eltham District Historical Society IncJournal - Newsletter, Nillumbik Shire Council, Nillumbik News, October 2000
... ...indigenous grass...October 2000 articles include: Safer roads for the Shire Eltham Festival program announced Commercial Place design released 2000-2003 Council Plan Released National Reconciliation Framework Living and Learning Centres More Playgrounds Susan St Pavilion completed Study to plan for BMX/skate track Wattle Glen Township Strategy Community Weed Control Program Count Koala Day Environment Centre proposed for Edendale Farm Open Space Strategy findings Neighbourhood Character Study and Residential Design Guidelines Friends groups Clean Drains – Living Creeks, National Water Week Nillumbik Shire Council Cultural Plan 2000-2005 adopted 2001 Alan Marshall Short Story Award Artists’ Open Studios program Kangaroo Ground Tower Advisory Committee Environment leaders at Eltham North primary Dollars saved by regular road maintenance Regional Road upgrades Rural roads grading program Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary update Council Newsletters Nillumbik News Nillumbik Shire Council Council Plan 2000–2003 Municipal Road Safety Strategy Infrastructure services Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary review Rates Sustainable agriculture rebate Capital works program road maintenance Better Roads Victorian program eltham - yarra glen road Warrandyte - Kangaroo Ground Road Rural roads grading program Commercial Place Public space public infrastructrue meals on wheels Eltham Living and Learning Centre Living and Learning Centre adult community education volunteer programs Australia Day Awards community groups environmental protection sustainability Community weed control landcare koalas Drainage works waterway protection indigenous grass environmental education Open Space public parkland playgrounds bike trail Adventure Playground community reserves Kangaroo Ground Tower reserve Cultural plan Eltham festival Artists Open Studios cultural tourism Alan Marshall Short Story Award Montsalvat community arts program garden walks Eltham Fun Run community market mudbrick tours CERES Environmental Education Centre Nillumbik Tourism Association Food and Wine trail Yarra Valley Tourism campaign road safety Adrian Cully Alan Marshall Andrew Port Anne Connor Catherine Dale Chris Wallace-Crabbe Claire Harris David Scott David Yencken Dean Stewart Deb Ganderton Debra Wilkinson Denis Ward drew gregory Daryl Taylor Fiona Austin Frank Butters Frank Nolan Gavin Jordan Glen Jameson Grace Mitchell Greg Scott Harry Gilham Helen Ash Jane Annois jane viola Jan Kelly Jenneke Korteweg Jenni Mitchell Jessica Davison Jill Forrest john hewish Jules Burns Julius Peiker kay steventon Kayte Nunn Lesley Shuttleworth leslie Avril Louise Heathcote Marg Jeffery Margaret Jennings Martin Wright Mathew Hodsnesse Maurice Stabb Megan McCarthy Mervyn Hannan Michael Jansz michael skewes Mick Woiwod nel ten wolde Nicholas Pelling Ona Henderson Peter Burn Piers Bateman reg cox Reg Evans Robert Boyle Robert Hay Robert Theobald shan shnookal Sigmund Jorgensen Stuart Menzies Steven White Vonnie Frazer Eltham District Historical Society Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation Eltham North Primary School Wattle Glen Primary School Eltham Arts Council Churinga Arts Harvey World Travel (Eltham) Eltham Little Book Shop Do Lunch Cafe Volumes Cafe Grovedale Cottage Lovegrove Winery Cottles Bridge Yarrambat Golf Club Eltham Football Club Eltham Rugby Football Club Lower Eltham Cricket Club Susan Street Oval Syd Tunn Jack Rasterhoff A4. two colour print (orange/blue), double stapled, 16 pages Nillumbik News Journal Newsletter Nillumbik Shire Council ...The newsletter outlines local government initiatives, community events, environmental programs, infrastructure projects, and cultural activities occurring in the Nillumbik Shire around October–November 2000. It highlights council plans, community participation opportunities, and local developments aimed at improving quality of life in the region. October 2000 articles include: Safer roads for the Shire Eltham Festival program announced Commercial Place design released 2000-2003 Council Plan Released National Reconciliation Framework Living and Learning Centres More Playgrounds Susan St Pavilion completed Study to plan for BMX/skate track Wattle Glen Township Strategy Community Weed Control Program Count Koala Day Environment Centre proposed for Edendale Farm Open Space Strategy findings Neighbourhood Character Study and Residential Design Guidelines Friends groups Clean Drains – Living Creeks, National Water Week Nillumbik Shire Council Cultural Plan 2000-2005 adopted 2001 Alan Marshall Short Story Award Artists’ Open Studios program Kangaroo Ground Tower Advisory Committee Environment leaders at Eltham North primary Dollars saved by regular road maintenance Regional Road upgrades Rural roads grading program Stormwater Management Plan Locality boundary update council newsletters, nillumbik news, nillumbik shire council, council plan 2000–2003, municipal road safety strategy, infrastructure services, stormwater management plan, locality boundary review, rates, sustainable agriculture rebate, capital works program, road maintenance, better roads victorian program, eltham - yarra glen road, warrandyte - kangaroo ground road, rural roads grading program, commercial place, public space, public infrastructrue, meals on wheels, eltham living and learning centre, living and learning centre, adult community education, volunteer programs, australia day awards, community groups, environmental protection, sustainability, community weed control, landcare, koalas, drainage works, waterway protection, indigenous grass, environmental education, open space, public parkland, playgrounds, bike trail, adventure playground, community reserves, kangaroo ground tower reserve, cultural plan, eltham festival, artists open studios, cultural tourism, alan marshall short story award, montsalvat, community arts program, garden walks, eltham fun run, community market, mudbrick tours, ceres environmental education centre, nillumbik tourism association, food and wine trail, yarra valley tourism campaign, road safety, adrian cully, alan marshall, andrew port, anne connor, catherine dale, chris wallace-crabbe, claire harris, david scott, david yencken, dean stewart, deb ganderton, debra wilkinson, denis ward, drew gregory, daryl taylor, fiona austin, frank butters, frank nolan, gavin jordan, glen jameson, grace mitchell, greg scott, harry gilham, helen ash, jane annois, jane viola, jan kelly, jenneke korteweg, jenni mitchell, jessica davison, jill forrest, john hewish, jules burns, julius peiker, kay steventon, kayte nunn, lesley shuttleworth, leslie avril, louise heathcote, marg jeffery, margaret jennings, martin wright, mathew hodsnesse, maurice stabb, megan mccarthy, mervyn hannan, michael jansz, michael skewes, mick woiwod, nel ten wolde, nicholas pelling, ona henderson, peter burn, piers bateman, reg cox, reg evans, robert boyle, robert hay, robert theobald, shan shnookal, sigmund jorgensen, stuart menzies, steven white, vonnie frazer, eltham district historical society, council for aboriginal reconciliation, eltham north primary school, wattle glen primary school, eltham arts council, churinga arts, harvey world travel (eltham), eltham little book shop, do lunch cafe, volumes cafe, grovedale cottage, lovegrove winery cottles bridge, yarrambat golf club, eltham football club, eltham rugby football club, lower eltham cricket club, susan street oval, syd tunn, jack rasterhoff -
Nillumbik Shire CouncilPublic Art: Helen BODYCOMB (b.1964, South Australia) and Enver CAMDAL (Lives and works Turkey), Enver Camdal et al, Nest (Location: Roundabout, Main and Luck Street, Eltham), 1997
... The nest shape has been created out of stiff, coarse indigenous grass, periodically trimmed so the view is not obstructed. ...The nest shape has been created out of stiff, coarse indigenous grass, periodically trimmed so the view is not obstructed. ...Commissioned by Nillumbik Shire Council - 1997 The selection panel in the commissioning process to this 'extraordinary acquisition' was Rhonda Noble, Director of La Trobe University Museum of Art, Jeph Neale, Eltham Roundabout Advisory Group, Chris Marks, NSC Curator of Collections, Geoff Glynn, NSC Manager of Infrastructure Development.'Nest' highlights the indigenous flora and fauna of the Shire. The stiff, coarse grass used to create the nest is indigenous to the area and the eggs are like those of the spotted quail thrush, a ground-nesting bird of the Shire. The circular flow or placement of the eggs recalls the revolution of the seasons and nesting cycles. There is a tall light pole above the eggs, shining down at night. The effect is of a giant incubator. Enrichment and nurturing of the larger environment can be associated with this sculpture. This work resembles a large bird's nest, with three egg-like forms of fibreglass covered in a pebble render, set on sand. The nest is positioned within the paved boundary of the roundabout. The nest shape has been created out of stiff, coarse indigenous grass, periodically trimmed so the view is not obstructed. The eggs are a brown-speckled, creamy yellow colour. The three eggs are arranged in a ring, with the narrow end of each pointing to the large end of the next, in a circle that mimics the flow of traffic. N/Apublic art, nest, eggs, eltham, ekphrasis2017, mosaic, pebbles, roundabout, spotted quail thrush -
Warrnambool Art GalleryPooneed-ke (child carrier), c. 1890-1920
... A flat circular mat made from native Australian grasses. Indigenous Australians would use this as a baby-carrier on the back. ...She was a supporter of women's suffrage and also the first woman editor of The Age. aboriginal indigenous child carrier mat native grasses reverend andrew rule osborn annie osborn women mothers A flat circular mat made from native Australian grasses. ...This mat was donated to the Museum by the Rev. Andrew Rule Osborn. Reverend Osborn donated several artefacts including Aboriginal artefacts, Zulu and Pacific Islander objects. The Reverend came over from Tasmania to serve here in Warrnambool. His wife Annie was a fantastic author and wrote children's literature which was serialised in the newspapers. She was a supporter of women's suffrage and also the first woman editor of The Age.A flat circular mat made from native Australian grasses. Indigenous Australians would use this as a baby-carrier on the back. One band would be placed around the lower back and mat and two higher up. The child would be placed between the back and the mat. It was also sometimes used as a sun shade or something to sit on. It is a spiral form with grasses woven around to bind it together.aboriginal, indigenous, child carrier, mat, native grasses, reverend andrew rule osborn, annie osborn, women, mothers -
Federation University Historical CollectionDocument, Mount Helen Campus Arboretum, c1992
... grass trees (Xanthorrhea australis) that grow on the campus behind accommodation. In 2018 2000 native trees planted by State Library Victoria and Federation University in the Arboretum .Planted with the help of locals, students, and kindergarten children as part of the joint project the plantings included indigenous trees, shrubs and grasses native to Ballarat. ...grass trees (Xanthorrhea australis) that grow on the campus behind accommodation. In 2018 2000 native trees planted by State Library Victoria and Federation University in the Arboretum .Planted with the help of locals, students, and kindergarten children as part of the joint project the plantings included indigenous trees, shrubs and grasses native to Ballarat. ...A trail travels through the Arboretum where you may see resting kangaroos and wallabies, crosses a creek that holds a vulnerable colony of frogs commonly known as Victorian Smooth Froglet (Geocrinia victoriana), and admire the grass trees (Xanthorrhea australis) that grow on the campus behind accommodation. In 2018 2000 native trees planted by State Library Victoria and Federation University in the Arboretum .Planted with the help of locals, students, and kindergarten children as part of the joint project the plantings included indigenous trees, shrubs and grasses native to Ballarat. Federation University student Clancy Meaney is managing the tree planting project as part of her studies. “The arboretum is a fantastic resource that is used extensively by Federation University students as an outdoor classroom,” Ms Meaney said. “Being situated in between two main forests, our campus is also an important connection for native animals. These new trees will help migrating wildlife to move from one forest to the other.” State Library Victoria Project Management Office Director, Sarah Slade said the project was a wonderful opportunity to work with Mount Helen residents and the University to help protect the native landscape. “We’re thrilled to be able to give back to students, local residents and native flora and fauna through this valuable environmental initiative,” Ms Slade said. The tree planting project is a result of State Library Victoria’s ongoing partnership with Federation University. Construction of the Library’s second state-of-the-art storage facility, BOSS2 (Ballarat off-site store 2), is currently underway on the Federation University site. The existing storage facility at the Mount Helen Campus already holds more than half of the State Library’s collection, including newspapers, books, journals, textiles, paintings, architectural drawings, furniture and photographic glass plate negatives. In addition to State Library collection, BOSS2 will also provide two dedicated storage areas for the University’s collection. When completed, BOSS2 will provide additional storage of 25-30 linear kilometres, the equivalent of driving from Ballarat to Clunes or running 175 lengths of the MCG. The Mount Helen Campus Arboretum was established c1992.arboretum, mt helen campus arboretum, graeme ambrose, mt helen campus -
Orbost & District Historical Societybasket, Solomon, Tiny (Mrs), 1900
... This item is an example of an Indigenous style hand woven item of the very early 20th century. basket aboriginal weaving handcraft A shallow hand-woven grass basket. ...This basket was hand-made by Mrs Tiny Solomon, an Aboriginal woman, in Orbost.This item is an example of an Indigenous style hand woven item of the very early 20th century. A shallow hand-woven grass basket. It has a flat bottom and a handle across the top.basket aboriginal weaving handcraft -
Eltham District Historical Society IncPhotograph - Digital Photograph, Alan King, Alistair Knox Park, Eltham, 2008
... Informal plantings of Australian indigenous and native species in open and undulating grassed settings blend with the natural landscape of the Diamond Creek to the west. ...Informal plantings of Australian indigenous and native species in open and undulating grassed settings blend with the natural landscape of the Diamond Creek to the west. ...Alistair Knox Park, an oasis of peace and beauty. Covered under National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Landscape Significance and Heritage Overlay, Nillumbik Planning Scheme. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p173 It is hard to imagine that the Alistair Knox Park, an oasis of peace and beauty beside busy Main Road, Eltham, was once the township’s rubbish dump. It was only in the 1970s that the tip was transformed into this beautiful six hectare space, which later earned it a National Trust Landscape classification. Before its life as a dump, the area was used for small farms. Thanks largely to the foresight and efforts of local environmental builder Alistair Knox, the park was designed sympathetically with the character of the wider Eltham landscape. Then, appropriately, the park was named after Knox, who was an Eltham Shire Councillor from 1971 to 1975 and Shire President in 1975. The park designers were four major forces in the urban bush landscape garden –Knox, landscape designer Gordon Ford, artist Peter Glass and landscaper Ivan Stranger. The National Trust citation for the park, originally called Eltham Town Park, includes the Eltham railway trestle bridge and the Shillinglaw Cottage. The citation states ‘the semi-natural setting of the parkland provides a landscape which is evocative of the history of the area’. Manna Gums (Eucalyptus viminalis) and Candlebarks (Eucalyptus rubida) are significant features. Most of the park’s construction was directed by Bob Grant, Superintendent of the Parks and Gardens Department for the Eltham Shire Council. First plantings occurred in Arbour Week in 1973, then the lake and botanic area were completed in 1975, with Federal Government funding, and the toilet block in 1978. Bounded by the Eltham railway line, Panther Place, Main Road, Bridge and Susan Streets, the park is in a valley about a kilometre wide overlooked by steep hills at the east and west. The Diamond Creek flows through it and the picturesque historic timber trestle railway bridge edges the north. Informal plantings of Australian indigenous and native species in open and undulating grassed settings blend with the natural landscape of the Diamond Creek to the west. The bush-style plants, particularly around the creek, balance with open lawns, paths and a cascade flowing from a small lake to another below. A footbridge over the creek leads to the park’s west. The park includes an adventure playground and barbecue areas. The park stands on part of the land bought from the Crown in 1851 by Josiah Holloway, who subdivided it into allotments and which he called Little Eltham. Most of the land was subdivided into residential lots, but the creek valley, on which the park stands, was subdivided into farm-size lots, used mainly for orchards and grazing. One of the earliest owners was John Hicks Petty, who in 1874 bought a plot from Holloway. Other families who owned properties in that area, included Rees, Clark, Waterfall, Graham, Hill and Morant. In 1901 the railway was built through the area. Jock Read, an Eltham resident since around 1920, remembers several farms in the 1920s and ’30s that occupied the site of today’s park. A poultry farm, which extended from present day Panther Place, was owned by the Gahan family. Next to that farm was another for grazing cattle owned by Jack Carrucan. Beside this was land owned by John Lyon. A doctor lived beside this, and at the north-west corner of Bridge Street and Main Road stood a memorial to the soldiers who died in World War One, which was later moved to the RSL site. Mr Read also remembers other farms and orchards west of the creek In the early 1960s the Eltham Council began buying these farms and in the late 1960s turned the areas east of the Diamond Creek into a garbage tip. When this was filled above the creek’s flood plain, the tip was moved to the west of the creek.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, alistair knox park, eltham -
Glen Eira Historical SocietyArticle - Vegetation
... indigenous vegetation. Contains three black-and-white photographs of portraying three species of said vegetation – the swamp gum, the Kangaroo Apple and Poa grass. 3/An article from the Southern Cross, dated 13/05/1992, pertaining to Caulfield’s indigenous vegetation, and the efforts of groups and individuals such as the Caulfield Environment Group (CEG) to preserve it. ...indigenous vegetation. Contains three black-and-white photographs of portraying three species of said vegetation – the swamp gum, the Kangaroo Apple and Poa grass. 3/An article from the Southern Cross, dated 13/05/1992, pertaining to Caulfield’s indigenous vegetation, and the efforts of groups and individuals such as the Caulfield Environment Group (CEG) to preserve it. ...Four items pertaining to vegetation within Caulfield: 1/2 copies of a booklet produced by the Caulfield City Council (undated) offering residents advice on the planting and care of trees within the district. Contains seven black-and-white photographs portraying various spots of vegetation within the district, plus nine black-and-white cartoons portraying the steps involved in correctly planting a tree. 2/An article from the Caulfield Contact, dated 04/1992, pertaining to Caulfield’s indigenous vegetation. Contains three black-and-white photographs of portraying three species of said vegetation – the swamp gum, the Kangaroo Apple and Poa grass. 3/An article from the Southern Cross, dated 13/05/1992, pertaining to Caulfield’s indigenous vegetation, and the efforts of groups and individuals such as the Caulfield Environment Group (CEG) to preserve it. Contains a black-and-white photograph of CEG member Paul Cain with a Red River Gum and large tussock grass, part of a re-vegetation program in a Murrumbeena linear park. 4/ A clipping from the Southern Cross, dated 20/05/1992, pertaining to the presence of Murray River red gum at Elsternwick primary school. Contains a black-and-white photograph of two pupils of the school, Craig and Emelia (surnames unmentioned), planting saplings.caulfield, plants, trees, caulfield city council, gardening, horticulture, landscape planning, caulfield contact, outer circle parklands, caulfield environment group, cain paul, smith colin, joint effort community house, outer circle railway, conservation of natural resources, murrumbeena, parks, minister for conservation, pullen barry, glenhuntly neighbourhood house, primary schools, elsternwick primary school, murphy street, mcinerney peter, elster canal -
Glen Eira Historical SocietyArticle - Glen Eira Parks and Gardens
... This file contains four items. 1/ An article in the Glen Eira News reporting on a new park with indigenous planting and an interpretive walk being developed to link Duncan McKinnon Reserve and Packer Park in Murrumbeena, dated September 2000. 2/ An article from the Glen Eira Leader on the converting of sports grounds from cool season to warm season grasses, as well as the installation of subsurface drip irrigation at Princes Park, Caulfield South, dated March 2012. 3/ An article from the Caulfield/Port Phillip leader reporting Caulfield RSL military historian Carl Johnson’s appeal to have a “lone pine” in Caulfield Park designated as a war memorial, dated 11/9/2012 4/ An article from the Glen Eira/Port Phillip Leader reporting on the Friends of Caulfield Park organising the first band stand concert in over twenty years with the City of Glen Eira Band, dated 6/11/2012...Glen Eira Historical Society 965 Glen Huntly Rd Caulfield VIC 3162 melbourne This file contains four items. 1/ An article in the Glen Eira News reporting on a new park with indigenous planting and an interpretive walk being developed to link Duncan McKinnon Reserve and Packer Park in Murrumbeena, dated September 2000. 2/ An article from the Glen Eira Leader on the converting of sports grounds from cool season to warm season grasses, as well as the installation of subsurface drip irrigation at Princes Park, Caulfield South, dated March 2012. 3/ An article from the Caulfield/Port Phillip leader reporting Caulfield RSL military historian Carl Johnson’s appeal to have a “lone pine” in Caulfield Park designated as a war memorial, dated 11/9/2012 4/ An article from the Glen Eira/Port Phillip Leader reporting on the Friends of Caulfield Park organising the first band stand concert in over twenty years with the City of Glen Eira Band, dated 6/11/2012 Glen Eira Council Hawthorn Rd Caulfield Glen Eira Rd Caulfield Glen Eira Caulfield Parks Reserves Leila Rd Caulfield Glen Eira City Council Landscaping Memorial Park Kooyong Rd Caulfield North Caulfield Recreation Tennis Club Murrumbeena Rd Caulfield Churchill Green housing estate North Rd Caulfield Boake Street Caulfield Exservices organisation RSL Clubs Sporting Clubs Recreations Sportsgrounds Clubs Tennis Clubs Associations Leisure Cultural Events Cultural Activities Sports Establishments Recreations Establishments Irrigation Water Conservation Conservation of Natural Resources Water Supply Ovals Playing fields Tennis Courts Murrumbeena Park School Concerts Musical Activities Musical Events Glen Eira Artists society DiMarco Lisa St. ...This file contains four items. 1/ An article in the Glen Eira News reporting on a new park with indigenous planting and an interpretive walk being developed to link Duncan McKinnon Reserve and Packer Park in Murrumbeena, dated September 2000. 2/ An article from the Glen Eira Leader on the converting of sports grounds from cool season to warm season grasses, as well as the installation of subsurface drip irrigation at Princes Park, Caulfield South, dated March 2012. 3/ An article from the Caulfield/Port Phillip leader reporting Caulfield RSL military historian Carl Johnson’s appeal to have a “lone pine” in Caulfield Park designated as a war memorial, dated 11/9/2012 4/ An article from the Glen Eira/Port Phillip Leader reporting on the Friends of Caulfield Park organising the first band stand concert in over twenty years with the City of Glen Eira Band, dated 6/11/2012glen eira council, hawthorn rd caulfield, glen eira rd caulfield, glen eira, caulfield, parks, reserves, leila rd caulfield, glen eira city council, landscaping, memorial park, kooyong rd caulfield north, caulfield recreation tennis club, murrumbeena rd caulfield, churchill green housing estate, north rd caulfield, boake street caulfield, exservices organisation, rsl clubs, sporting clubs, recreations, sportsgrounds, clubs, tennis clubs, associations, leisure, cultural events, cultural activities, sports establishments, recreations establishments, irrigation, water conservation, conservation of natural resources, water supply, ovals, playing fields, tennis courts, murrumbeena park, school concerts, musical activities, musical events, glen eira artists society, dimarco lisa, st. aloysius college, band rotundas, entertainment structures, musical ensembles, city of glen eira band, bands, the friends of caulfield park, gallipoli lone pine, princes park, packer park, duncan mckinnon reserve, king george reserve, caulfield park, glenhuntly park, glen huntly park, bentleigh reserve, victory park, schools, education establishments, recycling, water disposal, cultural structures, cultural establishments, caulfield rsl, johnson carl, war memorials, monuments, memorials, avenue of honour, “lone pine”, glen eira leader, glen eira news, caulfield/port phillip leader, glen eira leader -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural CollectionPrint, Portland is for Everyone, 1983
... Three indigenous women stand before trees and grass trees. The fgiure on the far left is wearing traditional clothing, and the two figures on the right wear Victorian period dresses. ...Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection History House Cliff Street Portland great-ocean-road CEMA Art Collection Part of "A Community View" 150 years in Portland Screenprint Exhibition Part of Angela Gee Residency 1983 and 1984 Front: 41/60 (lower left) Angela Gee '83 (lower right) (pencil) Back: (no inscriptions) Three indigenous women stand before trees and grass trees. The fgiure on the far left is wearing traditional clothing, and the two figures on the right wear Victorian period dresses. ...CEMA Art Collection Part of "A Community View" 150 years in Portland Screenprint Exhibition Part of Angela Gee Residency 1983 and 1984Three indigenous women stand before trees and grass trees. The fgiure on the far left is wearing traditional clothing, and the two figures on the right wear Victorian period dresses. The background depicts abstract patterning. At the top of the print are the words "Portland is for Everyone". The bottom of the image includes the words "Thanks to the Aboriginal Cultural Centre, Heywood, and the Portland Historical Society." Background is mauve and colours include green, blue, yellow, orange and tan. Mounted in dark cream matt in an ornate gold-detailed wooden frame.Front: 41/60 (lower left) Angela Gee '83 (lower right) (pencil) Back: (no inscriptions) -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and VillageInstrument - Optical, Binoculars, 1878 (estimated)
... grass and shrubs and gave her brandy to revive her. She sank into exhausted unconsciousness. Tom then scrambled to the top of the high cliff and after walking for some time he stumbled upon workers from Glenample Homestead. They rode back to the homestead for help but Tom insisted on returning to Eva. When Eva awoke she found herself alone, "cold, weak and terrified with the wild waves before me, and caves and cliffs around me" and upon hearing strange noises, which she imagined to be made by the local indigenous...grass and shrubs and gave her brandy to revive her. She sank into exhausted unconsciousness. Tom then scrambled to the top of the high cliff and after walking for some time he stumbled upon workers from Glenample Homestead. They rode back to the homestead for help but Tom insisted on returning to Eva. When Eva awoke she found herself alone, "cold, weak and terrified with the wild waves before me, and caves and cliffs around me" and upon hearing strange noises, which she imagined to be made by the local indigenous ...This pair of brass binoculars was presented to Tom Pearce in recognition of his heroic efforts at the wrecking of the Loch Ard and saving Eva Carmichael. They were presented to him by the Lady Mayoress of Sydney on 27th July 1878 on behalf of the colonists of New South Wales "In recognition of his gallant conduct on the occasion of the wreck of the Loch Ard". Tom (Thomas) Pearce was born in Ireland in 1859 and arrived in Melbourne two years later; he considered himself as Australian. Before sailing on the Loch Ard he had been at sea for three years as an apprentice sailor and had already experienced one shipwreck. Tom was on the deck of the Loch Ard with Captain Gibb throughout the night of May 31st 1878. It was mistakenly thought they were 150 miles (240 km) southwest of Cape Otway. By 2:00 am on June 1st, the wind was blowing "pretty fresh" but a thick haze remained and, when it eventually cleared, the land was so close the unsuccessful battle to save the Loch Ard began. After the ship struck Mutton Bird Island Tom and five others were sent to the lifeboats. Conditions were very dangerous as waves broke over the decks and they were all washed away. Tom found himself in the stormy waters and under a lifeboat, which had also been washed into the sea. After being swept into the gorge Tom left the boat and swam into shore; he was alone. Eva Carmichael, a passenger on the ship, had been snatched from her bed just before dawn and into the chaos, confusion and terror of the shipwreck, with rigging and rocks raining down. Thrown into the sea, she afterwards said: "God taught me to swim in my distressful plight, for I never swam before". Clinging to a spar, she was swept into the gorge and saw Tom Pearce walking along the beach. Upon hearing the cries of Eva, Tom swam out and with great difficulty brought her to the shore and placed her safely in a cave where he made a bed of grass and shrubs and gave her brandy to revive her. She sank into exhausted unconsciousness. Tom then scrambled to the top of the high cliff and after walking for some time he stumbled upon workers from Glenample Homestead. They rode back to the homestead for help but Tom insisted on returning to Eva. When Eva awoke she found herself alone, "cold, weak and terrified with the wild waves before me, and caves and cliffs around me" and upon hearing strange noises, which she imagined to be made by the local indigenous people, she hid. The noises were made by the rescue party from Glenample Homestead. After eventually discovering Eva they hauled her up the cliff in the darkness of night, “a work of great difficulty and danger” and took her to Glenample. Sadly, Tom and Eva were the only survivors of the 54 people on board the Loch Ard. Tom’s rewards for his bravery included the Gold Medal of the Humane Society, a gold watch and £1000 from the Victorian Government, a set of nautical instruments, (which included the binoculars) from the people of Sydney and £60 from the people of Warrnambool. He was also presented with a Bible by a “Friend of the Loyal Orange Institution of Victoria, Protestant Hall Melbourne” in August 1878. Coleman Jacobs composed the music "The Young Hero Schottische" and dedicated it, by permission, to Mr Thomas R. (Tom) Pearce. The sheet music was published in 1878 by Mr Roberts, professor of dancing and was on sale for 3/- (3 shillings) in aid of the "Loch Ard" fund. Tom Pearce went on to join the Loch Sunart on her return to England, only to be wrecked again off the Irish coast in January 1879. Tom left the Loch Line in 1883 and the following year married Edith Gurney Strasenbergh, the sister of his friend Robert who had died on the Loch Ard. They had three children, unfortunately, two of the male children were to die at sea. In 1895 Tom obtained his first command as Master of The Larne, a vessel with the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company. He remained with the company until he died in Southampton, England, on 14th December 1908. Tom Pearce never saw Eva Carmichael after he had fare welled her some 30 years before. Eveline Victoria Berta Carmichael was born in 1859 in Mountrath, Queens County, Ireland. After recovering from her ordeal in August 1878 Eva returned to Ireland and in 1884 married Thomas Achilles Townshend, a Civil Engineer. They had three sons, all of whom had successful military careers, and when Eva’s death notice appeared in the Melbourne Argus It read. "Townshend on 8th April 1934 aged 74 at her residence in Bedford, England, Evaline Victoria, widow of the late Thomas Archilles Townshend, C.E. of Co. Cork, Ireland. Mrs Townshend was the Eva Carmichael who, with the late Tom Pearce, were the only two survivors of the ship Loch Ard, which was wrecked near Port Campbell on June 1st 1878." The binoculars are significant for their association with the wreck of the Loch Ard and the only two surviving members of that wreck Tom Pearce and Eva Carmichael. Flagstaff Hill’s collection of artefacts from Loch Ard is significant for being one of the largest. The shipwreck of the Loch Ard is of significance for Victoria and is registered on the Victorian Heritage Register ( S 417). Flagstaff Hill has a varied collection of artefacts from Loch Ard and its collection is significant for being one of the largest accumulation of artefacts from this notable Victorian shipwreck. The collections object is to also give us a snapshot into history so we can interpret the story of this tragic event. The collection is also archaeologically significant as it represents aspects of Victoria's shipping history that allows us to interpret Victoria's social and historical themes of the time. The assemblage of items from the wreck is of historical significance in that they are associated with the worst and best-known shipwreck in Victoria's history. Pair of brass marine binoculars in a wooden box On the left hand eye piece, on the underside, is an engraved inscription and another engraved word. On the right hand eye piece there is another small inscription and on the underside there is a small green mark. The binoculars have a pattern of embossed tiny circles on the outside. Some of the patterning is very shiny due to wear and rubbing, there is a brass ring on the underside of the binoculars for the attachment of a lanyard. The wooden box has a hinged lid and on the front of the box in the centre is a lock, and at either end are two hooks and eyes. The box is split across the top for about 3/4 of the length. Marking on the left underside reads, 'Presented on behalf of the Colonists of New South Wales By the Mayoress of Sydney on 27th. July 1878 to Mr Thomas B Pearce. In recognition of his gallant conduct on the occasion of the wreck of the "Loch Ard"'. Underneath this inscription is engraved 'Sydney'. On the other eye piece is engraved what looks like 'Mac Donnell & Co' binoculars, flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, loch ard shipwreck, tom pearce, thomas r pearce, eva carmichael, mutton bird island, loch ard survivor, loch ard hero, coleman jacobs, the young hero schottische, photograph of tom pearce, glenample homestead -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage CollectionPainting - oil and acrylic on canvas, Robert Kelly, Chinaman's Creek, 2016
... grass and ripple on the surface of Chinaman’s Creek. His attention to detail serves to powerfully reimagine this important cultural site, returning it to its former pristine state, and reinvigorating its role as a key place of sustenance for the Indigenous populations of the Peninsula. ...grass and ripple on the surface of Chinaman’s Creek. His attention to detail serves to powerfully reimagine this important cultural site, returning it to its former pristine state, and reinvigorating its role as a key place of sustenance for the Indigenous populations of the Peninsula. ...Bob Kelly paints landscapes of culturally significant sites along the Mornington Peninsula and depicts these locations as he imagines they originally were before colonisation. Using traditional Western painting techniques, Kelly records the underlying spirit of the Peninsula from a Wathaurong perspective. Chinaman’s Creek in Capel Sound (Rosebud West) was an important watercourse that originally ran from Wonga (Arthur’s Seat) down through Tootgarook Swamp into Port Phillip Bay. It was a great fresh water and food source and home for many Boonwurrung people. Since settlement over 170 years ago, the creek has been drained, blocked, reconstructed and damaged. Kelly depicts a lush green landscape in which the clean creek water winds through the surrounding vegetation of spinifex grasses and gum trees, the background hills are abundant with trees, untouched from man's intervention. Using painstaking detail, Kelly records each blade of grass and ripple on the surface of Chinaman’s Creek. His attention to detail serves to powerfully reimagine this important cultural site, returning it to its former pristine state, and reinvigorating its role as a key place of sustenance for the Indigenous populations of the Peninsula. Chinaman's Creek was a finalist in the 2017 Bayside Acquisitive Art Prize.oil and acrylic on canvaslandscape, creek, trees, chinaman's creek, painting, indigenous, robert kelly, bayside acquisitive art prize, bob kelly, wathaurong, rosebud, arthur's seat, tootgarook swamp, port phillip bay, boonwurrung -
Federation University Art CollectionPainting - Artwork - painting, 'Grass Seeds' by Barbara Weir, 1999
... Indigenous Urapunta Council in 1985. Barbara’s career as an artist was inspired by the dynamic community of artists at Utopia and the work of her adopted auntie Emily Kame Kngwarreye. Highly experimental in her approach, Barabara Weir tried many mediums before travelling to Indonesia in 1994 with other artists to explore batik technique. She returned full of ideas on how to develop her own style which has since evolved to a more expressive abstract form. Grass...Indigenous Urapunta Council in 1985. Barbara’s career as an artist was inspired by the dynamic community of artists at Utopia and the work of her adopted auntie Emily Kame Kngwarreye. Highly experimental in her approach, Barabara Weir tried many mediums before travelling to Indonesia in 1994 with other artists to explore batik technique. She returned full of ideas on how to develop her own style which has since evolved to a more expressive abstract form. Grass ...Barbara Weir (b. 1945-03/01/2023) Born: In the region of Utopia, North East of Alice Springs, formerly known as Derry Downs Station Language: Anmatyerre and Alywarr Country: Atnwengerrp, Utopia Region, North East of Alice Springs, Northern Territory One of the Stolen Generation, Barbara Weir was removed from her Aboriginal family at the age of nine, and she was raised in a series of foster homes. Reuniting with her mother, Minnie Pwerle, in the 1960s, Weir eventually returned to her family territory of Utopia, 300 kilometres northeast of Alice Springs. Active in the local land rights movement of the 1970s Barbara Weir was elected the first woman president of the Indigenous Urapunta Council in 1985. Barbara’s career as an artist was inspired by the dynamic community of artists at Utopia and the work of her adopted auntie Emily Kame Kngwarreye. Highly experimental in her approach, Barabara Weir tried many mediums before travelling to Indonesia in 1994 with other artists to explore batik technique. She returned full of ideas on how to develop her own style which has since evolved to a more expressive abstract form. Grass Seed is part of her Dreamings and is associated with women’s ceremony and the activity of food gathering of local seeds, grasses, berries, potato, plum, banana, flowers and yams. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Barbara Weir's paintings include representations of particular plants and "dreamings". Inspired by a small grass found in Utopia called Lyaw, Munyeroo or Pigsweed, Barbara's Grass Seed paintings consist of a series of small brush strokes that overlap and weave to create a swaying effect. This Dreaming tells the story of grass seed that is part of the bush tucker found in the region of Utopia. This seed is collected, crushed to a fine powder and is then used to make a bread, very similar to damper. The people of Utopia were still using this seed as late as the 1950s. During that time the seed grew in abundance but as the years passed there were very few good seeds to be found due to bullocks roaming the land and eating the grasses. The people then began to eat a substitute that the white man provided, and today very few Aboriginal people collect these seeds. art, artwork, barbara weir, aboriginal, dreaming, stolen generation, acrylic on linen -
Nillumbik Shire CouncilPainting: Piers BATEMAN (b.1947, Perth - d.2015, NSW), Piers Bateman, Blackboys, 1989
... The ‘Grass Tree’ Xanthorrhoea johnsonii (commonly known as ‘blackboy’) is indigenous to these areas. ...Piers Bateman was a local artist, held in very high esteem by his peers and community. He was born in Perth in 1947, moving to Eltham in 1955 as a young child with his family. In 1966 Bateman moved to London for eighteen months to develop his craft. In 1969 he settled in St Andrews, where he built a studio. The St Andrews locale is said to have been a strong influence on his work. Bateman’s talent was such that he was promoted and mentored by such ilk as Charles Blackman, Clifton Pugh and Arthur Boyd, among others. Bateman’s work is an intimate dialogue with the environment, renowned for his paintings of the outback, wilderness frontiers and the sea. He spent a year in the mid-seventies sailing the Greek Islands and the French canals to Amsterdam. In 1980 Bateman and Marcus Skipper embarked on a trans-Australian venture to the red centre and across northern Australia from Cairns to Broome. In the mid-eighties Bateman returned to the Mediterranean, before returning to the Australian outback in the late-eighties. His international career continued on an upwards trajectory between the Australian outback and European seas, providing a unique contrast throughout the course of his career. Bateman's work questions our relationship with the natural world, and in particular, reconciling our colonial heritage with our indigenous past. This line of questioning and his genuine response to place is the key to Piers Bateman’s work, for which he is lauded and celebrated. On September 4th 2015, Piers Bateman died in a boating accident on the NSW coast line. Piers Bateman was an instinctive painter whose inspiration came from nature. He reworked and scraped off the paint, moving it around until forms and colours of the landscape took shape. Although Bateman lived in Spain and Italy, his time in Europe made him aware of the contrast between the two continents and the bright clear light that defined the Australian landscape. At the time of this work, Bateman was living in St. Andrews, but travelled regularly to New South Wales and South Australia on painting trips. The ‘Grass Tree’ Xanthorrhoea johnsonii (commonly known as ‘blackboy’) is indigenous to these areas. It is a uniquely Australian, slow growing plant with twenty-eight species growing within Australia. Old examples of this tree are survivors of many wild fires, which can cause their blackened trunk, of one to two metres, branch into two or more heads. These heads consist of thick, rough corky bark, surrounded by long, wiry leaves and flowers that produce seed capsules with hard black seeds. The tree’s ability to be one of the first to flower after a wild fire ensures a food source for many insects and birds.Oil on canvas painting. Detail of three grass trees resting on the side of a mountain/hill. Green and gold palette throughout depicting the colours and light of the Australian landscape. Hand written, low right in capitals: 'BATEMAN'bateman, grass trees, xanthorrhoea johnsonii, landscape -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.Article, Going native, 27/02/1991 12:00:00 AM
... An article in the Nunawading Gazette calling for new volunteers to join the Nunawading Indigenous Plants Project to plant and cultivate some of the 200 species of native trees and grasses in Nunawading reserves....Whitehorse Historical Society Inc. 2-10 Deep Creek Road Mitcham melbourne native plants nunawading indigenous plants project trees witherspoon margaret strachan janine mundell tina An article in the Nunawading Gazette calling for new volunteers to join the Nunawading Indigenous Plants Project to plant and cultivate some of the 200 species of native trees and grasses in Nunawading reserves. ...An article in the Nunawading Gazette calling for new volunteers to join the Nunawading Indigenous Plants Project to plant and cultivate some of the 200 species of native trees and grasses in Nunawading reserves.native plants, nunawading indigenous plants project, trees, witherspoon, margaret, strachan, janine, mundell, tina -
Merri-bek City CouncilSculpture - Brick, Blue-stone and indigenous plants (Drooping She-oak (Allocasuarina verticillata) and Kangaroo Grass (Themeda triandra)), Penny Algar, Temple, 1999
... Brick, Blue-stone and indigenous plants (Drooping She-oak (Allocasuarina verticillata) and Kangaroo Grass (Themeda triandra))...Merri-bek Public Art Collection Temple Sculpture Brick, Blue-stone and indigenous plants (Drooping She-oak (Allocasuarina verticillata) and Kangaroo Grass (Themeda triandra)) Penny Algar ...'Temple' was commissioned in 1998. It is located along the Moonee Ponds Creek walking and bike path very close to the Moonee Ponds Creek. Four brick sculptural elements sit within a boundary circle of Drooping She-oak trees. A swathe of Kangaroo Grasses form a smaller inner circle edged by bluestone pitchers. Cyclists and pedestrians may be enticed to pause for a moment to appreciate the surrounding landscape and listen to the gentle acoustics of wind blowing through the Drooping She-oak trees. merri-bek public art collection
