SECOND CENTENARY FOR TARRA BULGA NATIONAL PARK: TRIBUTE TO VICTORIA S FIRST WOMAN RANGER

Similar documents
and led Jimmy to the prison office. There Jimmy was given an important He had been sent to prison to stay for four years.

Earthwatch Annual Dinner Fiona Wild, Vice President Environment and Climate Change, BHP Billiton Melbourne, 17 September 2014

JULIET AND THE FALL FESTIVAL Hal Ames

Michael and Gillian Carrucan's Visit to Australia, December 2008

Characters list (and Narrator) Scene 1 1. Spiderella 2. First Ladybug 3. Second Ladybug 4. Narrator. Scene 4

A Bridge to the Past: The Euharlee Covered Bridge Written By Amanda Closs Edited for web application by Judi Irvine

Chapter One Alex watched a cricket creep along the baseboard and disappear. He didn t feel strong enough to go after it. Not today. Besides, why try?

A short story by Leo Schoof, Kelmscott, Western Australia. The Sexton s Wife

Kangaroo Island Koalas and Conservation

The characters in the story

Research Station a fortuitous event

August 24-27, 2017 Mirabeau Meadows in the Spokane Valley

Pioneer Fashioned Home from Glade Park Cave

Travels to Cuba Kim Westerman Broer

Carers Trust. Who We Are, How We Help

OUTDOOR RECREATION IN GRAZUTE REGIONAL PARK

TRAIN TO MOSCOW HAL AMES

MY FIRST TRIP Hal Ames

Pick a Box Game 1. a green I see story as. at be and story number and. green a number at as see. and story as green be I. I see be and at number

August 24-27, 2017 Mirabeau Meadows in the Spokane Valley

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

The Explorers: Amelia Earhart

Sebastian Vizcaiňo

California Explorer Series

remembered that time very clearly. The people of Tawanga had collected money and had given his father a fridge. Digger always refused to accept money

Chapter 1 From Fiji to Christchurch

Ira Hartley died of consumption in October 1929 before his

1 Listen to Chapters 1 and 2 on your CD/download and decide if these sentences are true or false. Can you correct the false ones?

some The funeral ser vice Burial Expenses Where can the ser vice take place? Who transports your baby? HE2319

Personal History. Curiosity Creek on the end of Jenal Road in 2003 (USF) Curiosity Creek in 2003 (USF)

The Storm. (looking at a photo of a boat) Very nice, Dad! Bye! See you at the picnic. My friends are waiting for me. I m late.

Community Wildlife Conservation Award for 2006

Uncle Robert Glasheen,Cork Ireland

Section 1: Vocabulary. Be able to determine if the word in bold is used correctly in a sentence.

Read the text then answer the questions:-

3861 PRIVATE C. A. JENNINGS 32ND BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 22ND MARCH,

AFTER DINNER ENTERTAINMENT.

Passport Name: Passport No:

(Consulting fitness tracker device) I ve completed ninety-nine thousand, six hundred and seventy-eight steps since Tuesday!

Brigitte Schaper LITTLE HERBERT

Warriston Cemetery, Edinburgh, Scotland, War Graves

18 March THE VIGNACOURT PROJECT July 2014 YOUTH EMBASSY VISIT TO AUSTRALIA

BÀI TẬP TRẮC NGHIỆM VỀ CÁC THÌ TRONG TIẾNG ANH. A-am attending B-attend C-was attending D-attended

Student Activities. Dead Man s Folly. Part 1 (Chapters 1 3) 3 Vocabulary Match the words on the left with their definitions on the right.

VÉâÇàÜç VÄâu `tçéü May 2014 Newsletter Edited by Lee Bakewell

July 31, 2012 So this year there were seven of us who met and stayed at the Holiday Inn Express in Matthews, NC. Photos 1 & 2

MACMILLAN READERS PRE-INTERMEDIATE LEVEL ROBERT CAMPBELL. Owl Hall. From an original idea by Robert Campbell and Lindsay Clandfield MACMILLAN

India. Tiger Tracks and Camera Traps. 11 Days. t: e: w:

11 January Dear Public Consultations Team of the White Paper Task Force,

TRANSFER ALL YOUR ANSWERS TO YOUR ANSWER SHEET

My Child Still Won t Eat. A guide for parents and health care professionals SAMPLE COPY

A Twisted Mind. By Richard Kelly

AXE WORKSHOP WOODSMOKE COURSE REVIEW. By Danny Reid The Bushcraft Journal

My Life Since Brymore June 2014

Volunteer who s been there helps Portland s homeless vets

chapter Profile: Steelmantown Cemetery, Upper Township, N.J. by Thomas A. Parmalee executive editor, Kates-Boylston Publications

Heaven s Shelter House in Mitchell s Plain (Südafrika)

My dad encouraged me to find a job where I could get paid for doing something I love, Ethan said.

Phillip Island Nature Park Education programs. Based on the VELS curriculum

Reports. Big Elephants Afraid of Bees

The Forest School Training Co. OCN accredited training

Lewis & Clark Return Home

LANGPORTS ENGLISH + VOLUNTEERING PROGRAMS

Changing Hollywood. Most movies were made about men by men with only a few women in supporting roles. This

As part of the Canberra Centenary celebrations, the Canberra Region

January-February 2017 Newsletter

3. The word enthusiastically tells you. 4. Which of these words is

Down Under. Leggi e ascolta.

Charlotte found a wild horse whilst living near some moor lands. The horse would gallop away every time Charlotte would walk toward him.

Bon Portage Island Conservation Campaign

Neila in the Neighborhood

From Die Laughing (The BIT'N Files Series), by T. L. Wolfe, 2005, Austin, TX: PRO-ED. Copyright 2005 by PRO-ED, Inc. BIT N File One. Thadd L.

Camp Kesem. UC Irvine: Camp Kesem at UC Irvine served

Pray for Mildmay. October April 2019

THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE ARCHIVES NAME OF COLLECTION ACCESSION NO CATEGORY ACTIVITY DATE RANGE SIZE OF COLLECTION

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS By Laurie Allen Copyright 1998

AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND & SOUTH PACIFIC

The Night Train at Deoli (1988) By Ruskin Bond (India)

LANGPORTS ENGLISH + VOLUNTEERING PROGRAMS

Bright Futures Patient Handout 9 and 10 Year Visits

Queensland s Commitment to the World Heritage Convention

THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE ARCHIVES NAME OF COLLECTION ACCESSION NO CATEGORY ACTIVITY DATE RANGE SIZE OF COLLECTION

1 Chapter 17 Consumer Protection and Making a

Discover. Ashhurst Domain. Nature s Playground

Planes, lanes and automobiles!

Hello, Thank you for taking the time to learn about us and the life we can offer your child.

THE HOUSE OF ATREUS ZEUS TANTALUS PELOPS NIOBE = AMPHION ATREUS THYESTES 14 CHILDREN 2 CHILDREN MENELAUS= HELEN AGAMEMNON = CLYTEMNESTRA AEGISTHUS

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number:

Little Red-Cap (Little Red Riding Hood, Grimms' Version)

CASSILIS HYDRO-ELECTRIC SCHEME

Homeleigh Cottage La Villette St Martin Guernsey GY4 6QA

Mrs. Moore. Titanic Tribute

Geographies of missing people: processes, experiences, responses

GERALD DURRELL S CORFU 2014!

A FOREST WITH NO TREES. written by. Scott Nelson

The Frenchman s Cabin on Commonwealth Creek: One of the Lost Lodges at Snoqualmie Pass

Plan, host and run an event to remember. It s easy at Elmore Events Centre.

No. 23. Milling Around. Motor Mill Historic Site Newsletter. Larry Stone. Clayton County Conservation Board Osborne Rd.

National Trust Heritage Awards 2018

THE TONGUE-CUT SPARROW. A tale from Japan

Transcription:

SECOND CENTENARY FOR TARRA BULGA NATIONAL PARK: TRIBUTE TO VICTORIA S FIRST WOMAN RANGER Tarra Bulga National Park is one of Victoria s earliest National Parks, having first been set aside in the early 1900 s. Originally, it was two parks Bulga Park reserved in 1904, and Tarra Valley established in 1909 but it wasn t until 1986 that they merged to become one park known as Tarra Bulga National Park. Today the Park is just over 2,000 hectares in size, a far cry from its modest beginnings as 50 acres or 20 hectares (Bulga) and 155 acres or 63 hectares (Tarra Valley). In 2004 the Centenary of Bulga Park, and the origin of the current National Park, was celebrated through a range of events: a Heritage Picnic Day, Centenary Day & launch of a booklet describing the history of the Park, and a special BBQ to celebrate the 10 th Anniversary of the Friends of Tarra Bulga National Park Inc., as well as the close of the Centenary Year. When it came to the Centenary of Tarra Valley some five years later, it was felt that rather than having a range of big events that a focus on the people who were part of the Park would be more appropriate. In particular, it was felt that due recognition needed to be given to the life and work of Kara Healey who lived and worked in Tarra Valley, providing a very strong lead in the life and understanding of the Park. Kara is also recognised as Victoria s first woman ranger and an outstanding naturalist in her own right. Nothing more fitting could be seen as appropriate for the second Centenary celebration in the life of Tarra Bulga National Park. Exactly 100 years to the day when Tarra Valley was set aside, many of Kara s descendants gathered to unveil an information panel to recognise her life and work. This article has been written to pay tribute to the achievements of this early ranger and further encourage each of us in our enthusiasm for continuing the work of our pioneers in environmental conservation. For 10 years across the 1950 s, one lady s name became forever attached to the then Tarra Valley National Park. That woman was Karamoana (Kara) Healey park ranger from 1952 1963. Kara s passion for the forest she cared for was reflected in the scientific collecting activities she immersed herself in alongside her more routine work as a park ranger. Her abundant correspondence is a record of the vital role she played as a field collector for the CSIRO and others throughout this period. Kara knew her park like no other. In part, her work today is reflected in the fact that Tarra Bulga has one of the most comprehensive species records of any national park in Victoria. Allied closely to this legacy is the native forest homestead that she all but gave away in order to protect it from logging when she left the valley in 1963. Today this plot contains some very fine stands of old growth forest protected in Tarra Bulga National Park. Kara was born Karamoana Elizabeth Vernon on 23 rd June 1904 to Mary and William Vernon who were Australians working in New Zealand. Her name Karamoana is in honour of her Maori nurse,

the name meaning rippling waters. Kara was the third of seven children. At age two her parents returned to Australia her father continuing in the trade as a blacksmith. While growing up in Mysia (northern Victoria) she gained a scholarship to Bendigo High School boarding at the YMCA there for her later school years. On completion of school Kara accepted a position as teaching assistant at Stuart Mill State School near Clunes. Here she met and married William Stanley (Stan) McGreevy in 1925. Together they had eight children Dawn, Victor, Wilma, Freda and Gillian, with another 3 who did not survive past infancy (William, Thomas & Evelyn). After the end of World War 2, in which her husband served for a number of years, Kara and the children moved to Toora in south Gippsland, the war years taking a toll on Stan and the relationship. They were divorced in 1948, with Stan dying later in 1958. While living at Toora Kara worked at the shoe factory there, later moving to Yarram to take up work at the Hospital as a cook and some time visitor to the many patients. Here she met James Michael (Jim) Healey who was a patient at the hospital. Jim was the caretaker (ranger) at Tarra Valley. On their marriage (22/2/1949) Kara moved to live at the park joining in the work of Jim in caring for the park. The house had split paling walls covered by an iron roof. Flattened 4 gallon kerosene tins and hessian made up the inner walls, which were then lined with old newspapers, some of which dated back to 1901. With continuing ill health, Jim decided to retire from his work, and Kara s son, Victor McGreevy, took over the work as caretaker for 18 months from May 1950 to October 1951. Victor decided to go into the priesthood at this time, but was to die in 1960 at the age of 28. On the departure of Victor, Kara then took on the role of caretaker at Tarra Valley Park, a position she held until May 1963, a period of some 12 years. Unfortunately, Jim passed away suddenly in 1952, and, while saddened, Kara decided to continue living on in the somewhat primitive farm house and continue in the work she described as the love of her life. I keep myself too busy to brood...i am at home in the bush and I know that there is nothing to fear. That s more than I could say for the city. It s there that I really feel nervous, she once said. As such, Kara became known as the first woman appointed in Victoria to the position of park caretaker (ranger). Her resourcefulness, learnt from years observing her father in his work in the Blacksmith s trade, toiling through the years of the depression (the family moved and travelled throughout northern Victoria and southern New South Wales continually looking for work), years of caring for the children while Stan was at war (making their own clothes and special gifts of rag dolls), a volunteer at the Military Canteen & visiting patients at the Military Hospital, and part of the Wives & Parents Club, and then growing potatoes and milking cows while at Toora, Kara put to use this same ingenuity in her work as caretaker. Kara s main duties included looking after visitors to the park, collecting parking fees (approximately 10 cents in today s terms) and lighting the fire in the picnic shelter. She was also kept busy sweeping the paths clear of debris left by lyrebirds scratching through the forest undergrowth. When the official work was done, Kara spent most of the rest of her time collecting specimens of insects, spiders, ferns, grasses, mosses, lichens and fungi. Specimens were sent to many people and organisations, including the Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), the National Museum of Victoria, the University of Melbourne and the National Herbarium. Her work with the CSIRO began in response to an advertisement for voluntary collectors of fungi across Australia to aid them in their research work. By 1961 Kara had collected some 160 different types of fungi for this program. Two were of significance a previously unidentified fungus that caused yellow straw rot on Mountain Ash that the CSIRO named after her Poria healeyi, and another named Lambertella healeyi (in her honour) which was growing on another fungus (Cyttaria gunnii). These 2

specimens brought her scientific immortality in many ways, and while the fungal world was her real passion, Kara s interests extended across all aspects of the Park s flora and fauna. In total she collected over 500 specimens, notably the fungi as well as some 80 different types of mosses. Neville Walters, one of the CSIRO scientists who received her many specimens, described her as easily the best of the 150 or more collectors he had Australia wide. Neville also commented that she knew every lyrebird in the park as well as many of the pilot birds, crimson rosellas and yellow robins. She wasn t frightened of the snakes, insects and numerous mammals nor were they frightened of her. In 1961 Kara wrote: I had a visitor the other day at home a little Copperhead snake. He came in the front door and went out the back. He just looked at me. I d been making jam. I saw the movement and thought it was a bird flying through they often do. You ve got to learn to adapt yourself to the conditions you live in. If I think, oh, there s a snake I can t live there, I must kill it, I d be worried out of my mind if I tried to kill it and failed. I know some snakes only give you half an hour s grace. But I m not frightened to die. Another story tells of how one night she disturbed a gang of hoons larking about in the picnic shelter. She crept down the hillside in the dark and yelled I ve got a gun, if you lads don t get out, I ll shoot they went. Following her retirement Kara turned down lucrative offers from timber companies wishing to buy her 115 acre (46ha) Tarra Valley property, offering 1,000 or more, instead selling it to the Bird Observer s Club for a song in order that the property be donated to the park, which occurred in 1962. After meeting Thomas McKean, Kara decided to move into Yarram on her marriage to him in 1963, giving up her work as caretaker. Kara learned to drive at the age of 56, planning to regularly visit the Park. Unfortunately, with little knowledge of engines when the car broke down Kara was unable to visit as she had planned. Thomas became sick, requiring a leg operation in 1983 that left him in a wheelchair (Kara became his carer) and eventually he died in 1986. Kara continued to pursue her other interests: visiting patients at the hospital, a life member of the Yarram Hospital, a life member of the Save the Children s Fund, a member of the Blind Auxiliary, Red Cross, Uniting Church Fellowship and an Elder of the Uniting Church. With failing health herself, Kara moved into the Heytesbury Lodge Nursing Home in Cobden, in 1995, near to some other members of her family. She last visited the park in 1996, spending time with the current ranger, Craig Campbell, reminiscing about her time at the Park. Craig commented through her work at Tarra Valley, Kara became acquainted with most of the state s leading naturalists of the day, including former State Governor John Landy, Crosbie Morrison, Ros Garnet, and James Willis, who all corresponded with her and came to visit her on several occasions. She herself became something of a celebrity through several newspaper articles written about her and her work as a ranger at Tarra Valley. On the occasion of her 100 th birthday in 2004 (some 4 weeks before the [first] Centenary of Tarra Bulga National Park), John Landy, Governor of Victoria at that time, wrote in congratulating her on her own Centenary: I remember you very fondly from the days when you were the Ranger in charge of Tarra Valley National Park. I recall spending many hours with you, learning about the trees, the shrubs, the ferns

and particularly the fungi. Tarra Valley was a wonderland with mushrooms, toadstools, bracket fungi and coral fungi of so many shapes, colours and textures. It was a naturalist s delight and to have your expert advice was an added bonus. Kara passed away on 10 th June 2006, just short of her 102 nd birthday and before the centenary of Tarra Valley Park. Kara was buried in Yarram, close to her beloved park. Her granddaughter, Janice Cherry, speaking at her funeral remembered her this way: Gran faced many heartaches and disappointments in her life however she faced them all with an incredible courage, determination and grace and was able to get on with life and make the most of things without a complaint. Gran was not faint hearted. She also had high moral values and a strong sense of justice and fairplay. She was always ready to help anyone in need and could meet someone down on their luck and take them home for a cup of tea regardless of the fact she didn t know who they were. We are so lucky that such a special lady has blessed our lives. Her love of nature, gentleness, strength of character, kindness and devotion and love of her family has touched us all and will continue with us forever. A wise old owl sat up in an oak The more he saw the less he spoke The less he spoke the more he heard Why can t we all be like that bird (written by Kara in the autograph book of her granddaughter, Janice Cherry, in 1969) POST SCRIPT: The Information Panel outlining the work of Kara Healey, unveiled by 3 of Kara s 4 daughters on the occasion of the recent Centenary of Tarra Valley, is to be found in the Picnic Shelter at the Tarra Valley Picnic Area. The Tarra Bulga National Park Visitor s Centre at Balook houses many of the original works of Kara Healey writings, sketches and correspondence including more detailed information about her life and work. Opening hours are 10am 4pm weekends and public holidays or by arrangement with the Ranger. The Friends of Tarra Bulga National Park Inc. have named their ongoing Lyrebird Survey and Photo Monitoring programs the Kara Healey Environmental Monitoring Program in honour of Kara Healey. Written by Peter Bryant (President, Friends of Tarra Bulga National Park Inc.) with assistance from Craig Campbell, current Ranger of Tarra Bulga National Park.

Kara Healey with some of her collection. in nest (c. 1960). Kara Healey with lyrebird chick

Kara as Caretaker of Tarra Valley Park. Note the money bag for collecting parking fees, and small round metal badge worn on the jumper identifying the wearer as caretaker of the Park. Kara in her work clothes. Kara Healey on the occasion of her last visit to Tarra Bulga National Park, with current ranger Craig Campbell (February 1996).

Three of Kara Healey s daughters (left to right), Gillian Skeyhill, Wilma Gay and Dawn Reddick, at the unveiling of the information board in their mother s honour.