Saturday, February 28, 2026

Uncontrolled dogs and free roaming cats

An apology - with the print and electronic media today full of crime, politics, wars, money, and sport, plus the AI generated entertainment, fake news and conspiracy theories on social media (so I’m told), the basic tenet of this blog is to present hopefully educative and positive articles about the wonderous and incredibly valuable natural environment we live in, but today we are having a whinge – sorry about that.

Dogs are basically carnivorous predators. It is part of their nature. They are hard wired to at least be inquisitive of that rustling in the understory or at worst to impact the source of that rustling with a mortal attack. Uncontrolled dogs – dogs off-lead – can be responsible for the death, physical harm or at the least, the harassment and stress of wildlife. Dog (and cat) excrement can spread disease to wildlife.

Baw Baw Shire has provided off-leash areas for dog owners to exercise their pets ‘free range’. At all other times, the dog must be securely confined to the owner’s property or properly controlled on-leash. The penalty for a ‘dog at large’ in the day is $305 and $407 at night.

It is worth noting that in Drouin, around the lake at Alex Goudie Park, Golden Whistler Reserve in McGlone Rd, behind the oval at Bellbird Park, McNeilly Park, Thornell’s Reserve, et al, are NOT designated off-leash zones.

The Invasive Species Council states, Collectively, roaming pet cats kill 546 million animals per year in Australia. As such the management of cats has major implications for Australia’s wildlife and ecosystems.’ Now that is just PET cats, the household moggy. Add in the number of animals that FERAL cats kill – estimated 1-3 billion – and it isn’t hard to see that that cats, pet and feral, have a devastating effect on this entire country’s biodiversity.

We have posted on this topic before – you know the drill – Baw Baw Shire Council has a 24 hour cat curfew – your pet cat must be contained on your property 24 hours a day – penalty for a cat at large is $102.

That feels better! (Contributed by a dog/cat lover)

Friday, February 20, 2026

The enigmatic Cherry Ballart

The Cherry Ballart, or Wild Cherry, or Native Cherry, is an attractive common, endemic native tree found in the drier woodlands and forests throughout eastern Australia. It is a pyramid-shaped tree with drooping, cypress-like foliage.

Its leaves are reduced to tiny triangular scales, it is hemiparasitic, you almost need a microscope to see its flowers, and it is difficult to propagate.

Perhaps though, a clue to its more mysterious feature is in its genus scientific epithet, Exocarpos cupressiformis, where Exo = outside, carpos = fruit, (cupress = cypress, and formis = form or like). Thus, it is a cypress-like tree where the fruit – a nut containing the seed – is attached outside the fleshy, red or yellow ‘cherry’ – which is actually a swollen stalk.

Although the so-called leaves are green and the tree gains some nutrient like most trees, via photosynthesis, early in its life, the Cherry Ballart relies on parasitism of a nearby host tree for some of its resources. The modified roots invade the roots of its host – nearly always a eucalypt but sometimes an acacia or a casuarina.

Despite preferring to grow in shallow soils on the drier slopes, like many eucs, the Cherry Ballart is regarded as a long-lived species. Its relatively dense canopy often provides an ideal micro-climate for wildlife to enjoy. Raptors and owls can sometimes be seen roosting in their shady canopy (even koalas), and kangaroos will seek out their shade on hot days too.

The wood is frequently used for turning and historically was used for furniture, rifle stocks and tool handles.

The Cherry Ballart is an often overlooked, attractive, and fascinating small tree.

 

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The bloomin' fics are ...

… blooming!

For many years in Drouin, the months of February and March have been known as ‘ficifolia time’.

The Princes Way avenue of ficifolias was planted by Drouin Primary School students as part of Arbor Day celebrations in 1936 and are heritage listed. These trees are well documented with an informative citation in the Shire’s significant trees register interactive map.

It is not hard to see why Corymbia ficifolia, or Red Flowering Gum, is one of the most widely cultivated eucalypts both in Australia and in many other countries: it is relatively long-lived, not too enormous, very shady, environmentally valuable, tolerant of a variety of conditions, and easy on the eye.

Although the Corymbia ficifolia only grows naturally in a tiny corner of southern WA, it is not a listed threatened species, probably because it is so widely cultivated. A ‘corymb’ is a flower cluster whose lower stalks are proportionally longer so that the flowers form a flat or slightly convex head, and ‘ficifolia’ means fig-like leaves.

The (in)famous Ferdinand von Mueller was first to describe the tree in 1860, and he named it Eucalyptus ficifolia. After much research and argument, in 1995, the species was listed as Corymbia ficifolia. Corymbia (100+ species) and Angophera (10+ species), are very closely related to Eucalyptus (700+ species), and all three are regarded as eucalypts.

A number of medium-sized (dwarf) cultivars of ficifolia have been developed recently, and there is now a ficifolia that will fit adequately the tiny gardens of today.

Now, if we can only get those powerlines underground!