A weekend of tree planting at Scottsdale Reserve restores the land and soul.
The sound of constant hammering is not what most people would call beautiful, but it’s a sound that brings joy to Phil Palmer, Reserve Manager of Scottsdale Reserve on Ngunnawal and Ngarigo Country, NSW.
“I love it when the hammering gets so intense that it sounds like rain. It’s a beautiful thing,” he says as he looks out over the green hills where 20 volunteers are hammering stakes into the ground during one of Scottsdale’s regular volunteer weekends.
The stakes support recyclable green tree guards, and within the tree guards are native seedlings that will one day form a thriving woodland.
Scottsdale Reserve, 45 minutes south of Canberra, was once farming land. Around 600 hectares of the 1,328-hectare reserve was felled, which resulted in soil erosion, habitat disturbance and species loss.
Since Bush Heritage purchased the land in 2006, the site has been a hub of activity. Land managers, ecologists and volunteers have all worked hard to bring life back to the land, doing everything from survey work along the Murrumbidgee River to removing fences, tackling invasive weeds and, importantly, planting native grasses, shrubs and trees.
“To try and rebuild the ecological function and integrity, and maintain the cultural importance of this place… it all starts with putting a tree in the ground,” says Phil.
“Every plant is not only going to turn into habitat for wildlife, but will support carbon sequestration, soil health, and reintroduce genetic material – all helping to send this reserve on a trajectory of recovery.”
Affectionately known as the ‘People’s Reserve,’ Scottsdale is a testament to people power.