• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Donald Knowler

Dancing on the Edge of the World

  • Home
  • About
  • On The Wing
  • Tasmania’s Endemic Birds
  • New Nature Writing
  • Blog
  • Contact

A patch of paradise

September 24, 2023 Don Knowler

The frequent sightings of platypus in the Hobart Rivulet Park is drawing attention to the semi-wild places that nature-lovers call “patches”.
The folk of South Hobart are responding as never before to initiatives to clean up the once neglected and polluted waterway to make it a safe environment for both wildlife and people.
The focus on the rivulet follows a recent ABC documentary on the “platypus whisperer”, local resident Peter Walsh and his efforts to publicise the plight of Hobart’s urban platypus. The program, however, has also put a focus on preserving patches.
We all have our favourite patch where we go to chill out and bond with nature. It might be our garden, a river-side walk or a city park.
The subject of patches came up during Science Week last month when adult education conservationist Bob Holderness-Roddam delivered a lecture at the University of Tasmania, “Protecting Your Patch”.
He described a patch as any space with natural values. It could be a balcony with pots, a garden, a beach, a wetland or a river. The conservationist then went on to emphasise the importance of these areas in all their guises as vital for not only biodiversity but human mental and physical wellbeing.
The three-kilometre linear Hobart Rivulet Park stretching from the CBD to the Cascade Brewery has all the qualities, attributes and challenges to meet the patch criteria but, as Holderness-Roddam pointed out, the great thing about patches is you can pick and choose different locations and environments, as with my recent focus on the Hobart Rivulet.
Although I often walk the route from South Hobart to the CBD, I’ve never viewed it as a patch as such, worthy of my citizen science projects like recording the abundance of flora and fauna at different times of the year for the Waterworks Landcare group.
I may have neglected the Waterworks recently in favour of the rivulet and watching the platypus there but I have not been distracted from my beloved birds, which are found in abundance along the water course, including species only found in Tasmania, the biggest of the honeyeaters, the yellow wattlebird among them.
Bob Holderness-Roddam not only covered the ecological importance of these precious open spaces in his lecture. He had advice on what we can all do to protect them, even simple things like rubbish removal. And he gave examples where volunteers had made a difference, among these a group called the Willow Warriors involved in clearing invasive crack willows hampering fly fishermen along the Tyenna River, a tributary of the Derwent.
Holderness-Roddam is working on an extensive guide to patches and their conservation and hopes to publish it in due course. It will be a must for all those trying to make a difference of their own when it comes to preserving the wonder of nature for future generations.

On The Wing

Primary Sidebar

PUBLISHED BOOKS

The Shy Mountain

shy mountain

Silent and brooding, the Shy Mountain does not have to speak her name. We know she’s there, watching … [Read More...]

The Falconer of Central Park

Although written more than 30 years ago, The Falconer of Central Park has remained popular ever … [Read More...]

Riding the Devil’s Highway

Tasmania might be known internationally as the home of the Hollywood cartoon character, Taz, based … [Read More...]

Dancing on the Edge of the World

Dancing on the edge of the World by Donald Knowler

Dancing on the Edge of the World is a collection of essays that had their genesis in the “On the … [Read More...]

Search the archives

Recent Posts

  • A skylark rises to musical heights
  • Song of Smelter Robins echoes from the past
  • Lovely honeyeater flies beneath the radar
  • Ancient beacon of hope for urban wildlife
  • Solitary grebe rides the waves
  • Heron makes a meal of science
  • Crescent honeyeaters emerge from the shadows
  • The seasons are a-changing
  • Magpies separate friend from foe
  • Life’s a beach for ‘odd couple’

© Donald Knowler . All rights reserved.