Thursday 7 October 2021

One mystery solved

7th October

Our Landcare group has made good progress in clearing the gorse and bluebell creeper from the northern corner of Barrm Birrm. Surrounded by property owners who are letting these two weeds run loose on their properties, this is a holding operation that will need attention yearly, but it’s a joy to be out in the Spring, doing something useful instead of fretting about the state of the world.

The Booths cutting and painting gorse regrowth

The acacias are finished, but now it is time for the Slender Bitter-pea (Daviesia leptophylla), yellow and orange flowers spreading across the mid slopes on a nondescript plant that is suddenly everywhere and vibrant with colour. And the Love Creeper is winding its tendrils up around anything it can find and blooming a soft blue.

Slender Bitter Pea in bloom on the mid slopes of Barrm Birrm

The gates put up by Council on the public roads into Barrm Birrm seem to be working! If you know the terrain, it’s easy enough to drive in on other tracks, but the gates are slowing the tide of opportunistic 4WDs.

It is a constant source of bewilderment to visitors that this bushland is actually private land, subdivided in the 1880s (in an office in London I’ve been told!) into 165 allotments ranging in size from 0.3 hectares to 5.2 hectares. The land was sold off in the 1970s to people who hoped one day to be able to build. That won’t happen: the land can’t handle 165 septic systems, and the bush is now a rare and wonderful place to enjoy the natural world.

The Shire has named Barrm Birrm a valued asset in its Biodiversity Strategy, and the land has recently been listed by the Catchment Management Authority in its prospectus of worthwhile projects awaiting government funding.

Just how Barrm Birrm will be returned to public ownership remains a mystery, but at least another mystery has been solved. Last Clean Up Australia day, as we scoured the hillside for rubbish, the favoured party places of Barrm Birrm were miraculously clear of broken bottles and cans. We wondered at the sudden change: had the party boys somehow turned responsible?

Slim pickings at 2021 Clean Up Australia day


Now another explanation has appeared. A dancer staying at my place has been up there, clearing the ground in order to dance freely in the middle of the bush, on those big cleared areas. One mystery solved.

You’ll be dancing too, if make your way to Barrm Birrm and find the chocolate lilies and dianella, coming into bloom in late October.

Ross Colliver, Riddells Creek Landcare, ross.colliver@bigpond.com