When: 10am - 12:30pm, Saturday 30th May
Come and help us enhance the local biodiversity at Bracken Creek by planting indigenous wildflowers as part of the ‘Connecting up Communities’ grant project. There’ll be a BBQ too!

In the face of increasing development throughout Melbourne’s northern growth corridor threatening the natural environment and ancient landscapes, an alliance of groups has formed, seeking State Government commitment to an extensive regional park focused on the waterways of the upper Merri Creek catchment.
The Merri Creek Management Committee, along with the Wallan Environment Group, Friends of Merri Creek and BEAM Mitchell Environment Group, are banding together to form the wallan wallan Regional Parkland Alliance. With support from other environmental and community-focussed groups, we are asking the State government to provide the essential natural framework that will help to ameliorate the impacts of the substantial growth and help new communities to thrive.
View from Green Hill overlooking Mt Fraser and Herne’s Swamp. Image by Claire Weekley.
As the busyness of nearby shops increase to a Christmas-time fever, we at Merri Creek Management Committee encourage you to find reprieve in a walk on the Merri in Gunyang season. Gunyang is a time during which Wurundjeri people bring attention to the grass seed ripening, the characteristic flutter of male Golden Sun Moths, and skinks and lizards basking in the sun. (Perhaps you could also hear the call of the Growling Grass Frog in the evenings?)
Image by DesignByNature.
As 2025 reaches its close, we at Merri Creek Management Committee thank you for your wonderful support this year. We can only do the important work we do for the Merri Creek – and its lifegiving landscapes – thanks to your support. We invite you to celebrate our shared achievements by reading our 2024–2025 Annual Report here.
Image by Annette Ruzicka.
On 13 November 2025, as Buath Gurru (grass-flowering season) brought warm rains to the Merri, Victoria marked an historic first.
The First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan, members of the Victorian Cabinet and the Governor of Victoria gathered at Government House to sign Australia’s first Treaty between First Peoples and a state government. Merri Creek Management Committee (MCMC) acknowledges the significance of this moment in the very season when Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Country is flourishing.
The signing formalises a renewed relationship between the Victorian Government and First Peoples, recognising those communities as ongoing decision-makers on the lands and waters they have cared for over tens of thousands of years. On the Merri Merri – rocky creek Country long tended by Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people – this care is embedded in living practice and deep ecological knowledge.

As founder of the Friends of Bracken Creek, Melanie del Monaco dreams of creating a bird and wildlife corridor along a stretch of Bracken Creek, a small tributary which flows through parts of Thornbury and Northcote and into the Merri.
Image by Melanie Del Monaco.
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