Bush beauty

Like other orchids the Pink Hyacinth Orchid relies on decaying leaf litter for nutrients and native bees for pollination. To give these plants the best chance of reseeding, NEVER remove […]

Interesting Tambo Bluff specimen

The St Andrews Cross spider creates a circular web with a zig-zag pattern [resembling a doily]. The cross takes shape as the spider matures. Flies, moths, bugs and bees are […]

Two tiny Bluff residents

Just as an aside: prior to disposing of plant cuttings please check ladybirds are not caught in the foliage. Australia hosts more than 500 ladybird species, most of which predate […]

Knows no boundaries

This cat repeatedly trawls the Wallaby Creek Walking Track, goodness knows what was on today’s menu. On average, each roaming pet cat kills 186 birds, mammals and reptiles every year, […]

Fairy petticoats (Blueberry Ash)

Why not try this native beauty in your garden? It makes an excellent hedging plant or as a focal specimen tree. They occur naturally along the east coast of Australia. […]

All Go Go

Pemar Path received a well deserved haircut and the area known to us as ‘The Bollards‘ had some of the protective guards removed and others lifted higher due to grazing […]

Two years on

November saw the culmination of two years of research on Tambo Bluff by a team of naturalists, ecologists and botanists from Wildlife Unlimited. They have been assessing the health of […]

Magpie magic

This fledgling was dozing and was exposed to attack by predators, when its mother, with continual prodding and poking, encouraged it to move to the safety of the bushes.

Track maintenance

Maintaining the Wallaby Creek Walking Track is ongoing for our TBLC volunteers. Our primary tasks this time were pruning, weeding invasive species, mowing and removing guards as needed. Several protective […]