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All activities, programs and initiatives reported on this web site
are carried out and managed solely by volunteers of the Friends of Oolong. The Oolong Sanctuary is our volunteer-run
wildlife refuge in remnant bushland on private land in southern NSW,
Australia.
The Friends of Oolong is registered on the NSW Landcare Online database
and is part of the NSW landcare network.
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| Oolong Sanctuary
has 38 Projects that need your support!

A beautiful naturally developed hollow. Unfortunately there are
not many left!
There are no natural hollows on young trees! They have to be at least
100 years old to have natural hollows for wildlife to nest in.
The Friends of Oolong have temporarily resolved this problem
by stacking branches of woody weeds in small heaps. Birds, insects and
other species nest and breed in them! See Project 31 on the Projects page.
A nocturnal bird peeks out of its hollow.
We are trying our
best to restore the birds' habitat through the construction, setting
and monitoring of artificial nests. They are coming back but we need
more volunteers to continue this program.See Project 13 on the Projects
page.
Information for schools
Our fully illustrated inventory on Fauna and Flora is a major environmental
educational tool.
Teachers and students in south-east NSW and the ACT can participate
in the development of our program and a syllabus on education in
the environment. This involves putting students in direct contact with
our bush to develop awareness and concern for the environment. For details
go to Education IN The Environment.
A Campus at Oolong!
We are planning a campus with three portable rooms: 1) toilet and shower
facilities 2) lecture room/office and 3) kitchenette and sleeping quarters
for four people. This will accommodate overseas, interstate and local
volunteers; Green Corp teams; specialist groups involved in our projects;
and volunteers being trained by our specialists. It will also provide
space for community lectures.
Schools from SE NSW and the ACT will work on projects in the field and
on assignments in the premises. We are seeking funds to cover costs
of this very important part of the whole program for schools and volunteers.
Wildlife Carers Group
We support the Wildlife Carers Group and if you wish to know more about
the group please click the logo and/or link to: www.geocities.com/wildlife_carers_group

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How valuable is our bushland?
Dragon Fly and Pollution
"The most advanced flying machine, a masterpiece of nature, the dragonfly,
but if water is polluted it is the first to disappear" G.W.D'Addario
(photo: M.Hines, Oolong)
The Oolong Challenge 
The Oolong Challenge with the native seed bank is under the patronage
of the Hon Katrina Hodgkinson MP State Member for Burrinjuck, Shadow
Minister for Community Services.
To see how the Challenge is progressing go to Project 16 on the
Projects page.
Establishing Wildlife Corridors
The Friends of Oolong support the following plans with contributions
to communities to reforest private land, and incentives to landholders.
- The Southern Wilderness Protection Plan 2005
- The Lachlan Action Plan of the Lachlan Catchment Management Authority
- The Grassy Box Woodlands as Bush Heritage Anchor Region
- The Grassy Box Woodlands Conservation Management Network
- The State and Federal plan for a 2800 km coastal wildlife corridor.
- The recognition of native vegetation remnants as nature reserves
To read more about these major developments click
here Habitat/remnants as nature reserves
and crown roads as links on private land
To read more about this development click
here and browse to "Developing wildlife corridors within private
properties".
A statement by our patron
"All over the world, human activity is destroying irreplaceable habitats
and causing a major crisis of species extinction. Human beings remain
dependent on nature to cleanse, create and replenish air, water and
soil and to capture sunlight. We are biological creatures whose need
for these services of nature cannot be replaced by economic or technological
activity. Therefore, at this critical stage in human development, we
have to protect every ecosystem and species we possibly can if our children
and their children are to have the richness of health and opportunity
their forebearers had. Australia's unique landscape is under heavy attack
and it's fragile ecosystems threatened as never before. Will Australians
think beyond the deadlines dictated by economic and political pressures
and opt for action that will sustain future generations? I believe they
will. I acknowledge the need for research towards the understanding
of habitat/remnants linked by corridors and support the Oolong Sanctuary
programs and Friends of Oolong long-term committment to conservation."
David Suzuki
(The transcript of the latest interview (october 18 2006)
by Dr Suzuki in Australia is in: http://news.sbs.com.au
)
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