Central West Parks

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  5. Central West Parks

Campaign for the Central West Parks

In October 2010, Wombat Forestcare launched a campaign for Park status for the Wombat State Forest

In association with the Victorian National Parks Association, Wombat Forestcare also campaigned for a Victorian Environment Assessment Council (VEAC) investigation into the Wombat/Macedon area, Mt Cole/Pyrenees area and the Wellsford Forest in Bendigo.

In March 2017, the Hon Lily D’Ambrosio, the then Minister for Energy, Environment and Climate Change (DEECA), requested that VEAC undertake a Central West Investigation into these areas of public land.

VEAC is a well-respected independent council that conducts investigations and assessments to provide advice to the Victorian Government on the protection and ecologically sustainable management of public land and natural resources. These assessments can include advice on changes to land tenure, including the creation of national parks.

A draft proposal paper was published in August 2018.

The final report on VEAC’s Central West Investigation was publicly released on 21 June 2019. www.veac.vic.gov.au/investigations-assessments/current-
investigations/investigation/central-west-investigation

The Government response to the recommendations was tabled in Parliament on 24 June 2021.
www.forestsandreserves.vic.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0030/537069/Victorian-Government-Response-to-Assessment-of-Victorias-Coastal-Reserves.pdf

The government has undertaken to create three new national parks: Wombat-Lerderderg, Mt Buangor and Pyrenees National Parks, a series of conservation and regional parks and nature reserves.

Despite written undertakings by the Minister for the Environment, the Hon. Steve Dimopoulos, to present the Bills for the legislation for the parks to Parliament, we are still waiting.

Make WoMbat Forest a state Park PROTECT IT ForeVer

Legislation for the Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Our community is celebrating the tabling of the bill to create the new Wombat-Lerderderg National Park. 24,000 hectares of the Wombat Forest will be conserved for our amazing animals, plants and fungi and for future generations to enjoy.

Wombat Forestcare congratulates the State Government for creating this national park and the Mt Buangor and Pyrenees National Parks, all incredibly important habitat for endangered creatures and plants. The creation of the Hepburn and Cobaw Conservation Parks will safeguard these ecologically important areas. The Wellsford State Forest, with its wonderful range of wildflowers, will be included in the Bendigo Regional Park.

Gayle Osborne said “Wombat Forestcare members and supporters, together with the Victorian National Parks Association, have campaigned for many years for the protection of our unique forest and its inhabitants. We are delighted that the parks will be legislated, and look forward to the legislation of the promised regional parks and bushland reserves in the central west region”

The Wombat Forest provides habitat for so many wonderful creatures including the magnificent Greater Glider. This beautiful creature, the size of a domestic cat, is covered with thick fur, with a bushy tail that is half a metre long and used as a rudder. They can glide an amazing 90 metres between trees. Once considered a very common forest animal they are now listed as endangered. It is exciting that most of our Wombat Forest population will now be protected in the new national park.

The Wombat Forest is home to the critically endangered Wombat Leafless Bossiaea. There are only five known plants in the wild and they are all in the Wombat Forest.

Powerful Owls successfully breed in the Wombat Forest. This is a great indicator of forest health as the owls need a steady supply of food such as ringtail possums to sustain themselves and their chicks.

Gayle Osborne said “Our community has worked so hard to have the Wombat recognised for its incredible wildlife. For more than the 14 years that Wombat Forestcare has campaigned for ‘Park’ status for our forest, so many people have attended protest events, written letters to politicians and supported the campaign in so many ways.”

Top photo © Sandy Scheltema

UPDATES

New National Parks for the central west of Victoria

New National Parks for the central west of Victoria

Media Release

Environment groups are celebrating the creation of three new national parks and two conservation parks by the state government in Victoria’s central west

 

Legislation passed the Legislative Council on the evening of the 18th November to create the Wombat-Lerderderg, Mount Buangor and Pyrenees national parks along with the Hepburn and Cobaw conservation parks. The Wellsford State Forest has been reclassified as a regional park.

Members of Wombat Forestcare have been campaigning for greater protection of Wombat Forest for fifteen years, and park status is a recognition of the very high conservation and catchment values of the forest.

Over many years, Wombat Forestcare, working with the Victorian National Parks Association, has lobbied the state government to protect these forests in parks.

Gayle Osborne, convenor, Wombat Forestcare said that

“These forests exist in a landscape that has been highly cleared of native vegetation and represent incredibly
important habitat for the persistence of very many threatened plants, animals and fungi.”

“This is a massive step for the protection of the amazing and wonderful plants, animals and fungi that inhabit our forests.”

“We congratulate the state government for legislating these parks. National parks are the cornerstone of biodiversity conservation in Australia, and the creation of these parks will ensure that these forests are safeguarded for future generations.”

The Wombat Forest is a ‘stronghold’ for the protection of many threatened native species including the Greater Glider, Powerful Owl, Brush-tailed Phascogale and the endemic Wombat Leafless Bossiaea.

The park will also protect the Wombat Forest as a water catchment with the headwaters of seven major river systems contained in the forest, and the value the forest provides in terms of ecosystem services and carbon sequestration.

Gayle Osborne said

“The national parks are only part of the undertaking by the government for the central west. There are regional parks, and bushland reserves still to be legislated, and we hope that these can be created before the end of the year.”

Wombat Forestcare is quite disappointed that the government has decided to allow recreational deer hunting in parts of the new Wombat-Lerderderg National Park. This is not an appropriate activity in a national park and will not substantially reduce deer numbers. Parks Victoria engage professional shooters to carry out their pest control
programs.

Photo: Wombat Forestcare members campaigning for the national park. © Sandy Scheltema.

Legislation for the Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Legislation for the Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Media Release

Legislation for the Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Our community is celebrating the tabling of the bill to create the new Wombat-Lerderderg National Park. 24,000 hectares of the Wombat Forest will be conserved for our amazing animals, plants and fungi and for future generations to enjoy.

Wombat Forestcare congratulates the State Government for creating this national park and the Mt Buangor and Pyrenees National Parks, all incredibly important habitat for endangered creatures and plants. The creation of the Hepburn and Cobaw Conservation Parks will safeguard these ecologically important areas. The Wellsford State Forest, with its wonderful range of wildflowers, will be included in the Bendigo Regional Park.

Gayle Osborne said “Wombat Forestcare members and supporters, together with the Victorian National Parks Association, have campaigned for many years for the protection of our unique forest and its inhabitants. We are delighted that the parks will be legislated, and look forward to the legislation of the promised regional parks and bushland reserves in the central west region”

The Wombat Forest provides habitat for so many wonderful creatures including the magnificent Greater Glider. This beautiful creature, the size of a domestic cat, is covered with thick fur, with a bushy tail that is half a metre long and used as a rudder. They can glide an amazing 90 metres between trees. Once considered a very common forest animal they are now listed as endangered. It is exciting that most of our Wombat Forest population will now be protected in the new national park.

The Wombat Forest is home to the critically endangered Wombat Leafless Bossiaea. There are only five known plants in the wild and they are all in the Wombat Forest.

Powerful Owls successfully breed in the Wombat Forest. This is a great indicator of forest health as the owls need a steady supply of food such as ringtail possums to sustain themselves and their chicks.

Gayle Osborne said “Our community has worked so hard to have the Wombat recognised for its incredible wildlife. For more than the 14 years that Wombat Forestcare has campaigned for ‘Park’ status for our forest, so many people have attended protest events, written letters to politicians and supported the campaign in so many ways.”

Campaign for Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Campaign for Wombat-Lerderderg National Park

Members and supporters of Wombat Forestcare expressed their disappointment in the failure of the Victorian government to present the Bill to create the Wombat-Lerderderg and Mount Buangor National Parks to the Victorian Parliament last year as promised.

The Environment Minister, the Hon. Steve Dimopoulos, has now informed Wombat Forestcare members that all the Victorian Environment Assessment Council recommendations that were accepted by his government will be legislated later this year.

 

Greater Gliders need a new national park in the Wombat Forest

Greater Gliders need a new national park in the Wombat Forest

The Wombat Forest, near Daylesford, is a vital refuge for the Greater Glider, Australia’s largest flying mammal. A new report suggests that a new national park here would secure long-term protection for this species that is in decline across the state.

At least a quarter of Greater Glider habitat has been impacted by the unprecedented fires in the east of Victoria. The Wombat Forest is one of the forests in the west of Victoria that has been recommended by VEAC to be protected in the national parks system.

 

Wombat Forest A greater Refuge for Greater Gliders

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