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Do you look out at the beautiful landscape around you and wonder who is looking after this land?
There are nine landscape boards across South Australia who work with communities to look after our natural and productive landscapes.
Forty-eight community-led projects across the Hills and Fleurieu region will benefit in a share of $265,000 through the third round of the Hills and Fleurieu Landscape Board’s Grassroots Grants program.
Landscapes Hills and Fleurieu is calling on landholders to be on the front foot to help control the highly invasive bridal creeper, and the control method is not what you think.
This year’s Nature Festival is just around the corner, and Landscapes Hills and Fleurieu is excited to be co-presenting four unique events across the region. Bandicoots, swamps, hooded plovers and coastal gardens, there is something for everyone.
Habitat loss, feral predators, bushfires, climate change – South Australia’s native animals have faced plenty of challenges, and sadly some are no longer with us. But it’s not all bad news when it comes to threatened species. Around the state, landscape boards are helping to protect and preserve our fauna, whether they’re furry or feathered, scaly or submerged.
Landscape levies collected by Green Adelaide in the Adelaide metropolitan area and redistributed to South Australia’s regional landscape boards are enabling investment in priority landscape-scale projects across the state.
Landscapes Hills and Fleurieu is seeing a groundswell of landholders who are interested in connecting with First Nations to better understand cultural heritage, provide Aboriginal people access to Country via their properties, and work together in caring for land, water and nature across the region.
Landscapes Hills and Fleurieu joined forces with Greening Australia, WOMADelaide and the local community for a very special planting day at Deep Creek National Park in July.The revegetation has multiple and unique benefits, not only helping to reduce the immediate extinction risks and improve the long-term viability of threatened species, through the board’s ‘Back from the Brink’ project, but also helping offset the iconic WOMADelaide festival’s carbon emissions.