 |

Ann Parks
Interviewee:
Ann Parks, born 1934
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 22 Aug 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
The
year 2001 marks Anne Park’s 25th year as a bush care volunteer in the
Shire. Originally from Canada she settled in the Shire in the 1970’s and
is a foundation member of the Shire’s Bushland Conservation committee.
We bought
this block of land here in Carlingford in 1976 and there were car bodies
in the creek line and pampas grass and privet and all sorts of things
so we worked by ourselves. Then a few of the neighbours got interested
in what we were doing and helped us out. I also joined the Society for
Growing Australian Plants and so I went along to their volunteer groups
as well. Here and around Darling Mills volunteering really got going once
the Water Board came in to repair the damage that having put the sewers
down through Darling Mills creek had caused, and I was supervising the
team. I got my team of workers mainly from the volunteers who were working
around the area and from SGAP the Society for Growing Australian Plants,
which is now APS (Australian Plant Society) they had very much the volunteering
side of it as part of their make-up and so everywhere that we worked around
the catchment we would talk to people and try to organise volunteer groups
which we supported by working with them on Saturdays as volunteers ourselves.
So we actually organised 9 groups working around Darling Mills.
The volunteers
that we organised in nine different groups would meet once a month – you’d
have about six or eight would turn up. But that was enough. Half a dozen
people working three hours one day a month was turning the tide. We were
a bit dismayed in ’95 when the M2 went through, right over the top of
our best area - a really nice little creek line that we had worked on
for so long, so we were a bit disillusioned then and we changed our tack
and got more involved with plant rescue, so I had publicised days and
volunteers came along and helped us do plant rescue, digging up all sorts
of liliacae plants and collecting seed and so on and these were all kept
at the community nursery which is at Ted Horwood reserve.
Did
the bush care groups receive much help from the residents and the community
in general?
Yes they
did. Whenever we managed to publicise something, a lot of people came
along and helped plant and they really enjoyed themselves. They said they
would come along to other things of this nature if it were organised.
So there is a lot of support in the Baulkham Hills shire.
| |
Bushcare training in cutting Lantana 2002
| Looking
after the bushland is never ending. We did, in subsequent years, finish
weeding the area up to the M2. A couple of times a year now we have a
team going in there and having a look but we’re part of the urban area
and you are always going to get weed invasion. So it’s not something that
you can just say it’s done and walk away from.
Did
you have any contact with the Forestry Commission also?
Yes I did.
They were quite supportive. Early on, before we had help from Baulkham
Hills Council, the Forestry Commission did supply us with tools and herbicide
but they wouldn’t help us to propagate plants. So we went to Nurragingy,
the other side of Blacktown, to a Greening Australia nursery to grow our
plants because by this time we wanted to be able to put some of the native
plants back into the bush from the seed that we had collected and the
cuttings and so on. So for a few years we grew things at Nurragingy and
I’ve got to know Steve Dunesky a bit better and said to him why do we
have to go to the other side of Blacktown to grow plants for Baulkham
Hills Council and he did set us up a nursery. That’s been ongoing now
for some ten years and it’s really very good.
What’s
your biggest challenge in bush care?
(Laughs)...Vines...
Honeysuckle I suppose I could say.
So
what is being a volunteer meant to you?
Well it means
that I can go out and so something that I enjoy doing. The bush is very
sensitive and you need to know what you’re doing and not open up too much
of an area at one time and be prepared to do follow up, and plant, and
be sensitive to how the bush is reacting to what you are doing for it.
It’s quite a science, bush care. I’ve always been very positive about
what I expect of the future and I really expect great things with Baulkham
Hills Shire. With their new Council officers that we’re getting now that
are environmentally aware and they are doing a great deal of planning
and they are getting out there and supporting volunteer groups and I do
expect that in the future, Baulkham Hills Shire’s bush land is going to
be looked after quite well.
|