Showing posts with label Glebe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glebe. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Blackwattle Bay

My youngest season plays soccer over the winter months. His home ground is Wentworth Park in Glebe. The only thing that separates our home from the park is Blackwattle Bay and Anzac Bridge.


When the weather is fine, I like to walk to the game. 

It takes about 45mins if I go across the bridge and about an hour if I walk around the bay. 

Both are scenic and interesting and provide lots of photo opportunities! 

But I prefer the bay walk - less traffic and more greenery.


And plenty of different views of the Anzac Bridge!


Blackwattle Bay was a working harbour full of timber mills and ship-breaking yards. 


In 1969 the Glebe Society was formed to create access to the foreshore for local residents. It has taken them 40 years, but they now have four beautiful parks to their credit - Jubilee, Federal, Blackwattle Bay and Bicentennial parks.


They have kept a crane and some of the old machinery as memorials.




The old timber mills reclaimed mud flats and mangroves swamps to house their yards.
The mangrove swamps quickly became putrid - full of industrial waste and sewerage.

The current sea walls are far more lovely and make it much easier to enjoy the foreshore, but they (& the earlier pollution) have changed the ecosystem of the bay tremendously.

Two years ago, Sydney Uni devised a flowerpot system on the seawalls to encourage rockpool activity once again in the area. See my original post here.


The project has been so successful in re-introducing 28 species of marine life back into the bay, that they have continued the scheme around more Sydney seawalls, including those in Farm Cove and Elizabeth Bay.

Near the Blackwattle campus of Sydney Secondary College, they're also working to re-establish some saltwater mangrove trees. Eco-engineering is the new growth industry around the foreshore!



The Glebe foreshore is also trialling a new bee pollinator habitat.






This post is part of Saturday Snapshot

Saturday, 25 October 2014

Glebe Foreshore Walk Opening

Today was the opening for the newest section of the Glebe Foreshore Walk. 
It consists of a 300m section in front of our eldest's highschool - from Bridge St, Glebe to The Boathouse (which houses Sydney Uni Rowing Club & the restaurant.)

The highschool arranged a BBQ fundraiser, which we helped out on for a while.

We then enjoyed a lovely stroll along the new section. 
There was music by Hot Potato Band and the obligatory pesky seagulls!

Blackwattle Bay is still a working bay - with cement works, a marina & fish markets.

Sydney Uni is also conducting research into marine diversity in this area.
According to their blog, 50% of Sydney Harbour's original foreshore has been replaced by seawalls.
Traditional seawalls don't contain enough crevices, holes & boulders to encourage & sustain a wide range of sea life.

The Flowerpot Project aims to redesign seawalls and other artifical structures to encourage marine life.
One way of doing this is to install 'flowerpots' on the seawalls.
At high tide they are submerged. At low tide they retain water thereby creating an artifical rockpool.
In just 7 months, 21 new species are living in the pots.

This new section of the Glebe Foreshore walk has had 20 flowerpots installed along its seawalls.
10 near The Boathouse and 10 on the sandstone wall at the end of Glebe Point Rd.
Great idea!

Great views of the ANZAC Bridge occur at regular intervals.



Beginning of the new section
New boardwalk in front of Glebe Rowing Club
Ofiicial Opening by Clover Moore

The Hot Potato Band grooving our Saturday morning

Awwwkkkkkk!

Pesky seagulls trying to scanvenge a sausage from the school BBQ!
The new Blackwattle Bay section of the walkway now joins Bridge Rd to the parks around Johnstons Bay.
I haven't participated in Saturday Snapshot for quite some time thanks to a slightly crazy schedule.

I'm hoping to get back into a proper blogging groove soon.
I miss it.