Gunyang and Biderap

When Lauren Branch walks along the Merri Creek in the hot, dry seasons of Gunyang (kangaroo apple season) and Biderang (hot and dry), there are usually around 20 pairs of little feet following close behind. As a teacher at Coburg’s Barry Beckett Children’s Centre (which enjoys a location just five minutes’ walk from the Merri) Lauren sees the creek as the perfect setting for place-based learning.

“Interacting with the creek gives opportunities for STEM (Science, Technology, English and Mathematics) as well as environment and wellbeing,” she says.

One of the concepts that Lauren enjoys exploring with her four- and five-year old kinder students is the changing of seasons according to what they are noticing in front of them, guided by the Wurundjeri seasonal calendar.

“At the beginning of the season, everything's quite green at the creek,” says Lauren. “You see more flowers out this time of year, but it will start to dry out very soon – even on the ground. The eucalyptus trees present in these really beautiful colours, all the way from yellows and reds, to pinks and greens, muted yellows and browns, even into purply colours.”

d8205039 b039 4551 81d4 90e5e7c3dbf6Students from Barry Beckett Children's Centre, with MCMC's Julia Cirillo.

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Happy International Volunteers Week!

Here at Merri Creek Management Committee, we celebrated the incredible commitment of volunteers the world over, on International Volunteers Day in December as well as year-round. Thank you!

Volunteers like you achieve so much for the Merri Creek: cleaning up litter, serving on committees to ensure the work of volunteer groups is effective, sharing a connection to nature with others, testing water-quality, planting trees, weeding and monitoring birds and other species. Happy International Volunteers’ Day to all our wonderful volunteers!

Hear from our WaterWatch and Litter Clean-up Coordinator, Julia Cirillo, together with some of the wonderful volunteers from the Merri Platypus Paddle Group about why volunteering makes so much of an impact – for us and for those who do it – in this video.

MCMC's Julia Cirillo with Colin Abbott, Heather Harris and Helena Kelada from the Merri Platypus Paddle Group talk about the joys of volunteering. 

Find out more about volunteering with the Friends of Merri Creek or the Merri Creek Management Committee.

Video kindly shared by the Department of Energy, Environment, and Climate Action. 

Charting change: how vegetation mapping guides our restoration work

As Harry White spent the day walking along a long stretch of the Merri Creek lined with big, old red gums and listening to the trickle of water over rocks, he reflected on the joys of working on Wurundjeri Country.

“We were searching for weeds like Chilean Needle Grass, but as we walked, we spotted some Growling Grass Frogs – which hadn’t been seen in that part of the creek for several years – and a Sacred Kingfisher. It was really special.”

At the time, Harry was a Melbourne University student, fulfilling the work placement requirements of his Masters of Ecosystem Management and Conservation at Melbourne University, under the guidance of MCMC’s Ecological Restoration Program Coordinator Chris Geary.

Harry WhiteHarry White, MCMC Ecological Restoration Team and former Melbourne University student.

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My Place: Fiona Taylor

Fiona Taylor is a Humanities and Geography teacher at Coburg High School, a local resident and a member of the Merri Birdies, one of the WaterWatch groups along the Merri Creek.

What’s your favourite spot on the Merri Creek?
There are too many to choose! One I love is where we do the Merri Birdies and WaterWatch monitoring with our Coburg High students, opposite De Chene Reserve. It’s quite enclosed under the trees, and the sound of water flowing over the rocks is so peaceful. I also love riding along the track, especially in drizzly rain. I always arrive in the best mood after riding along the creek.

Favourite time of year?
I love spring – the cygnets and ducklings and the wattle and eucalypts flowering, seeing deep into the creek, inspecting the fish and creek bed.

Fiona TaylorFiona Taylor, member of WaterWatch group the Merri Birdies and teacher at Coburg High School.

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Merri Mayflies: citizen scientists of Merri Creek

If you’ve ever taken a Sunday stroll along the Merri Creek and noticed a group of people clutching clipboards and buckets, gathering water samples along the bank, there’s a good chance it was one of the nine WaterWatch groups currently active along the Merri and Darebin creeks and tributaries.

WaterWatch is a Victoria-wide citizen-science program dedicated to monitoring waterway health. In the Merri Creek catchment, the program is hosted and supported by MCMC. Through a range of practical, hands-on activities with volunteers and school groups, the program engages local communities to foster understanding and ownership of local water-quality issues.

WaterWatch volunteers the Merri MayfliesWaterWatch volunteers the Merri Mayflies

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Volunteers needed for our WaterWatch group near Growling Grass Frog habitat

Do you live near the Merri Creek close to the Fawkner area? Are you from a Culturally and Linguistically Diverse or Indigenous Australian background? Do you want to help populations of Growling Grass Frog living near you?

Merri Creek Management Committee is seeking volunteers for a new WaterWatch group, to collect important information about what these precious frogs need to survive and thrive.

Growling Grass Frog photo by Anna LaniganGrowling Grass Frog (Litoria raniformis), photograph by Anna Lanigan.

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More Articles …

  1. Golden hour: a surprise visitor to Merri Creek
  2. MCMC winner in the Victorian Landcare 2023/24 awards
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