Thursday, July 27, 2023

The birds are nesting

Always a harbinger of seasonal change, birds going about their nesting procedures means that spring is only just around the corner – be welcome won’t it?

The little Brown Thornbill builds a dome-shaped nest, generally low down in a thicket of understory. The rather untidy nest is built with grasses, strips of bark, fern fronds and cobweb. It is lined with fur and feathers. The female Brown Thornbill incubates the eggs which hatch after about 2-3 weeks. The young fledge about a fortnight later.

A Brown Thornbill at Garfield collecting animal fur to line its nest

Ravens build a rough bowl-shaped nest of twigs and sticks. They line the nest with soft grasses, wool and fur. Australian Ravens – ‘aah-aah-aah-aaaahhhhh’ – usually select a site high in the canopy. The more common Little Raven – ‘ah-ah-ah-ah’ – often builds its nest lower down, even on the ground in some places.

A Raven in Cranbourne collecting nesting material

The ubiquitous Grey Fantail Builds a beautiful little cup-shaped ‘wine glass’ nest of fine shreds of bark and grasses interwoven with cobweb. It is nearly always placed low down in the fork of a thin branch (to deter approaching heavy predators?). Fantail nests are built with coloured materials that blend them into their surroundings for camouflage.

Grey Fantail on its nest at Longwarry North




 

 

Sunday, July 23, 2023

Another way to save trees …

… use eco-friendly toilet paper.

Apparently, someone has done the research and the average Australian uses 675km of toilet paper per year. The average Brit: 950km. The average American: a whopping 1020km. It is estimated that it takes more than 31 million trees to supply the USA with one year’s worth of toilet rolls.

‘Experts’ say that one tree can provide 1,500 toilet rolls. In Australia, we use 2.24 billion rolls of toilet paper per year to wipe … That is equivalent to about one and half million trees.

So, if you haven’t already, switching to eco-friendly toilet paper will help to save some trees. And anyway, the medical profession states that it is much healthier to use just WATER!

If you have ever wondered how toilet paper is made, take 10 minutes to watch this video LINK.

Saturday, July 15, 2023

From pits to paradise?

The Great Latrobe Park is a voluntary community movement that envisages repurposing the Latrobe Valley open cut coal mines into a linked parkland of forests, parks, wetlands, grasslands and gardens that would become a valuable environmental and community asset.

The Great Latrobe Park group point out the many benefits of rehabilitating industrial wastelands and that there are many precedents worldwide.

A Google Earth capture of the three open cut mines 230713

The group’s website has links to four articles that cover: the geology of the Latrobe Valley, the impacts from mining, stable conditions after mining ceases and the limitations for solving the complex problems of rehabilitation.

The Hazelwood coal mine at Morwell closed in 2017. Yallourn and Loy Yang mines are due to close in 2032 and 2048 respectively.

Readers might like to explore further …

Great Latrobe Park website LINK

Great Latrobe Park Facebook LINK