Monday, 22 July 2019

Deep Creek

We’re in sight of the airport when the big white bus turns left through a tight entrance gate, along a looping road then down, down, to drop us 200 metres from our destination. Deep Creek. We’re at a bend where the creek has carved its way through larva to leave cliffs of polished rock. 



It feels like we’re actually inside the lava flow. Here at the bottom there are stands of red gum and sweet bursaria, and pools of standing water, fresh not stagnant, so water must be moving. Early winter and the rains not yet come, but the creek is fed by water seeping out from the rock all along its length.
 


Deep Creek starts on the north side of the Macedon Range, in the dip between the Central Macedon massif and the granites of the Cobaw Range. It winds its way east, east to the north of Lancefield, then south through the volcanic plain, in serpentine loops, slowly, taking its time. You can’t see it from the Lancefield Road, which travels on the flat high country, but drive a couple of kilometres east and the road will suddenly drop into the valley. Down here are remnants of the ecosystems that got established as the creek worked its way down through the lava flow. Damaged by grazing, where the sheep and cattle have been kept out, those ecosystems are recovering.

We’re here to see what the owner has done to bring back the vegetation along the creek. Dean Platt, a freelance ecologist working on contract to Melbourne Water’s Stream Frontage Program, has set up a day visiting five sites along Deep Creek. He has called the trip ‘The Red Gum Valleys of the Maribyrnong’. Manna gum likes the wetter valleys of the Macedon Range, but in the steep-sided valleys of Deep Creek and its tributaries, it’s the red gum that thrives. You’ll see it too out on the plain, coping with a more exposed position, and Dean thinks that as the climate dries, the red gum will move slowly north up the valleys.


Modern times, human time, creek time, geological time: here they intersect and get tangled up. In the sands to the side of the creek I find the shell of a large freshwater mussel. How long since the creek grew mussels this big, big enough for a good feed? The Wurundjeri are still around, but they’re not eating mussels out of Deep Creek any more.

In a thousand years, who will be living around here? Another plane lumbers its way into the sky, headed for Singapore or Dubai.




Looking back up the slope of the hill we’ve come down, the serrated tussock gleams metallic in the afternoon light. It looks like it grew up here, but it’s a weed that has displaced the native grasses, colonising country cleared for sheep. Lines of shrubs and trees have been planted into the contour, in hopes of a slow shading out of the tussock, and indeed under the remnant gums, the native ground cover hangs on. Another plane takes off.

We’re all people who are looking after our own bit of creek. This is a chance to see what others are doing, to feel encouraged by their progress, and to understand more about what works and what doesn’t. With us for the day are the small band of agency staff who know this country well and who look after it as much as funding and the voracious demands of a growing city will allow.

As we move from site to site, the bus is a hum of conversation. We live scattered through this country, so this is a rare opportunity to meet others, to learn from them and to share aloud the frustrations and pleasures of caring for the land.



We’re either stupid or brave to be thinking about protecting the natural systems of these valleys, but when I walk along the creek bottom, with the red gums dense and the bursaria shedding seed, it feels like a good thing to do, and despite the imponderables of a drying climate, the right thing to do. 
 
Ross Colliver, Riddells Creek Landcare

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