Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020

Page 42

Save Henley Dunes – coastal ecology Alison Harvey

I moved to Henley South in 1987, and although I have a long family history in the area, I did not know anyone. I met families at the Henley Community Kindergarten and Henley Beach Primary School and began to make social connections. Within a few years, I joined the Henley and Grange Residents’ Association, the Henley and Grange Arts Society, the Henley and Grange Historical Society, and the newly formed Henley Dunes Care Group. The Henley Dunes Care Group was formed by community members in 1992. As a longtime Trees for Life grower with an interest in gardening and native plants, I became a founding member. The dunes of West Beach, Henley South, Henley Beach and Grange had been created as a result of sand-drift fencing placement by the council over the previous 20 years. These dunes were weed infested, had very low plant diversity, had too many access tracks resulting in trampled bare sand patches, and contained minimal native vegetation. Instigated by Henley and Grange Council’s Environment Officer Damian Moroney, this small group of dedicated volunteers worked on vegetation surveys, weed control, foot traffic control, plant propagation, revegetation, and production of educational pamphlets and interpretive signage. Our first planting day was held in June 1993 on the then bare dunes directly north of the Grange Jetty. Unable to purchase endemic dune plant seedlings, we collected seeds from the remnant Tennyson Dunes and established a plant propagation nursery in the south-eastern corner of the Henley Memorial Oval complex. We then propagated and introduced thousands of native seedlings into the dunes from Grange to West Beach over the next ten years. After the amalgamation of Henley and Grange Council into the City of Charles Sturt in 1997, we shared the plant nursery with the Tennyson Dunes Group and Semaphore Dunes Group, and met as combined groups to plan projects, propagation, plantings and community education publications. My short stints working as SA Regional Coast Care Facilitator in 1997, 2000 and 2003 gave me insight into the kinds of issues being tackled by coastal communities from Willunga to Whyalla, and provided me with information, skills and strategies to share with the dune care groups and Henley and Grange Residents’ Association. In 1997, we were successful in gaining a Coastcare grant to produce a series of coastal interpretive signs to be installed along our coast. We combined with the Marine Discovery Centre at Henley Beach to complete this project of eight initial signs. This association continued on, with more than twenty coastal interpretive signs being installed along the City of Charles Sturt coastline over the years. Subsequent Coastcare grants enabled us to undertake more fencing, revegetation and community education projects. As a dune care representative, and in conjunction with Jim Douglas from the Henley and Grange Residents’ Association, I made representation to the Torrens Catchment Management Board in favour of the removal of horses from the lower Torrens catchment and the creation of wetlands to improve the quality of stormwater flowing onto our beaches. In 1994, I spoke about the need for well vegetated stable dunes for protection

35

35


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Organisations, department names and acronyms

2min
pages 129-133

Working together for the greater good

5min
pages 122-123

Power of the community

13min
pages 124-128

Energy Friends: ‘From little things big things grow’

2min
page 118

Power to the people

6min
pages 119-121

The pool table men

2min
page 117

Social networks

2min
page 113

Being part of the community

4min
pages 111-112

WACRA’s history in images

2min
page 110

Henley Community Garden

6min
pages 105-108

Poles Apart 2016-17

1min
page 102

Mosaic Stepping Stones 2009

1min
page 101

The Wake following Telstra tower being built

1min
page 96

Telstra tower, Henley Beach 2016-17

6min
pages 93-95

Saving old Grange Primary School

6min
pages 87-89

Saving Estcourt House

2min
page 86

Community Alliance SA

3min
pages 84-85

High-rise construction of the Baju/H2O developments

4min
pages 82-83

Paid parking meters in Henley Square

2min
pages 72-73

Greening Henley and Grange

2min
page 62

Earth Hour

3min
pages 65-66

Saving Menkens Reserve

2min
page 61

Dredging Outer Harbor

3min
pages 59-60

River Torrens – Breakout Creek (Karrawirra Pari

2min
page 58

Ban shark fishing

2min
page 48

Wara Wayingga-Tennyson Dunes Conservation Reserve

4min
pages 43-44

Save Henley Dunes – coastal ecology

2min
page 42

Saving Henley Dunes

7min
pages 53-55

The Coastal Pathway – unfinished business

8min
pages 45-47

Save Our Beaches – impact

5min
pages 37-38

Save Our Beaches – another perspective

6min
pages 39-41

Building healthy communities

3min
pages 27-28

Media is political

2min
page 16

Activism in an age of protest

1min
page 20

In the beginning

2min
page 11

Networking

2min
page 13

Acknowledgements

1min
page 9

What is community activism?

2min
page 12

Fundraising

2min
page 18
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020 by eurekaprinters - Issuu