FOCUS On Burnside - the news hub

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WELCOME.

This is our media hub of all things Burnside.

A hub for local news about people, businesses and happenings in our community.

You will see some beautiful photos of Wyfield Reserve, one of Burnside's biodiversity sites, at the top right of this page.



WELCOME.

This is our media hub of all things Burnside.

A hub for local news about people, businesses and happenings in our community.

You will see some beautiful photos of Wyfield Reserve, one of Burnside's biodiversity sites, at the top right of this page.


  • A yultu called Anura in Kensington Wama

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    The winner of the 'Name the Yultu*' competition was announced today at the official opening of the Kensington Gardens Project by Mayor Monceaux today.

    A judging panel that included artist Alan Sumner, Mayor Anne Monceaux and Council Member Grant Piggott chose 'Anura' from 15 entries.

    The competition encouraged children under 12 years old that live or attend school in Burnside to suggest a name for the yultu that features in the Kensington Wama nature play space.

    The winning name was submitted by Narayan, 9, of Kensington Park, and a student at Pembroke School.

    Narayan was inspired by the naming competition held for Tili - the lizard that features in Constable Hyde Memorial Gardens. Tili is short for Tiliqua, the genus name for sleepy lizard. Narayan researched the scientific name for frog, which is Anura.

    Narayan is fascinated by nature and has started the invertebrate rescue agency in his school.

    A frog is any member of a diverse and largely carnivorous group of short-bodied, tailless amphibians composing the order Anura (literally ‘without tail' in Ancient Greek).

    Artist Alan Sumner created the yultu to feature in the new Kensington Wama nature play space. The sculpture uses wood from trees that were removed as part of the creation of the new wetland.

    *yultu is the Kaurna name for frog.

  • Artist in Residence -Zhuo Wei Krstic

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    Come and chat with Wei Krstic while she paints at the Civic Centre.

    Wei's stunning works of art will be on display in the Cloisters area of the Burnside Civic Centre from Thursday 13 January to Friday 4 February 2022.

    You will also be able to visit Wei, watch her work and ask her any questions you may have every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 9.30 am - 1.30 pm throughout her residency.

    "Upon completion of my formal arts training under tutelage of famed Landscape Artist Li Runbei (former Vice President of the Chinese Painting and Calligraphy Institute), I was awarded my Fine Arts Degree in the People's Republic of China," Wei says. "As well as skills in portraiture, my main interests include Calligraphy and Watercolour painting, in both the Traditional (guóhuà) and Western styles.

    "I am a member of the Royal South Australian Society of Arts and had my works exhibited in the Society's 2021 'Portrait Prize'. For several years I have also enjoyed teaching these Chinese Arts to students ranging from the very youngest, through to those in their well-deserved retirement, at various venues around Adelaide."

  • Horse tram on Glen Osmond Road

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    From July 1883, horse trams travelled the Marryatville route into Burnside as far as the old police station on the corner of Greenhill and Burnside (now Glynburn) Road. From 1909, electric trams replaced horse trams and in the late 1930s, electric trolley buses and diesel buses were introduced. The tram service in Burnside ceased in 1952.

    The @tramway Museum – St Kilda, South Australia has a useful interactive map that tracks the old tram routes.

    Access the map here: Museum


  • Glen Osmond Road Toll House

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    A 1903 photo of the Glen Osmond Road Toll House, which ceased to be a collection point in 1847.

    A resident recently donated this wonderful photo to the Local History Collection. If you have historic photographs or documents relating to the Burnside area, please consider donating a copy to the Burnside Library History Collection. To contact the Historical and Cultural Officer visit Historical Cultural Officer


  • Wildlife in Your Garden

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    The City of Burnside is a beautiful place. Part of what makes Burnside beautiful and distinctive is the local wildlife. We interact with it every day. There are unmistakable sounds like the singing of Australian Magpies, the double hoots of Boobook Owls and the ‘bonks’ of Pobblebonk Frogs. There are unmistakable sights, too, like colourful Lorikeets and Rosellas, or iconic Koalas and Echidnas in the suburbs.

    If you have a garden in Burnside, you have local native wildlife visiting it. If you’d like to attract more wildlife to your garden, birds and butterflies are a great place to start. Here are a few tips:

    1. Grow some structure into your garden. Including some different layers of vegetation is particularly important for smaller birds. For a large garden, you should include trees, tall shrubs, small shrubs, native grasses and groundcovers. For a small garden, be sure to include shrubs of different sizes and some groundcovers. A garden with good vegetation structure will attract smaller birds like New-Holland Honeyeaters and Silvereyes. If you live closer to the hills, you might also attract Pardalotes and Superb Fairy-Wrens.
    2. Grow indigenous plants. The plants found naturally in Burnside will naturally help attract the local wildlife. A variety of colourful flowers will attract butterflies and provide nectar for them. Beautiful local flowers will help, like purple Native Lilac and Kangaroo-Apples, yellow Wattles or Goodineas and white Native Hollyhock or Rice-flowers. You could plant local Dianella instead of Agapanthus. If you desire a sculptural element in your garden, a Xanthorrhoea grass tree might do the trick.
    3. Don’t deter the wildlife. Adding structure and colour to your garden will attract beautiful birds and butterflies to your garden. Make sure you don’t spoil the place for wildlife. Keep cats inside and avoiding the use of pesticides and herbicides.

    If you are trying to attract new birds and butterflies to your garden, be sure to let your neighbours know. The better the habitat in surrounding gardens, the more successful you will be at attracting these beautiful local wildlife to your garden.

    The Council typically conducts a native plant giveaway in autumn – further details will be in the autumn edition of Focus (March 2022).

    Below: a boobok owl and a honey eater



  • What is Biodiversity?

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    Biodiversity comes from bio, meaning life and diversity, meaning variability. Biodiversity is the variety of all living things, the different plants, animals and microorganisms, the genetic information they contain and the ecosystems they form.

    Levels of biodiversity

    Biodiversity is usually explored at three levels which work together to create the complexity of life on Earth.

    Genetic diversity

    Each species is made up of individuals that have their own particular genetic composition. To conserve genetic diversity, different populations of a species must be conserved. Genes are the basic units of all life on Earth. They are responsible for both the similarities and the differences between organisms.

    Species diversity

    Species diversity is the variety of species within a habitat or a region. In Australia, more than 80 per cent of plant and animal species are endemic, which means that they only occur naturally in Australia. No other country has as many endemic flowering plant families as Australia.

    Invertebrates - animals without backbones - make up about 99 per cent of all animal species, and most of these are insects. Insects fill many vital roles in ecosystems as pollinators, recyclers of nutrients, scavengers and food for others. While we may mostly notice mammals, they actually make up less than 1 per cent of all animal species.

    Ecosystem diversity

    Ecosystem diversity is the variety of ecosystems in a given place. An ecosystem is a community of organisms and their physical environment interacting together. An ecosystem may be as large as the Great Barrier Reef or as small as the back of a spider crab's shell, which provides a home for plants and other animals, such as sponges, algae and worms.


    Michael Perry Reserve - an example of Biodiversity.

  • Our Natural Environment - Michael Perry Reserve

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    On the banks of Second Creek, tucked away in Stonyfell, is a very special place, sometimes called ‘the hidden gem of Burnside’.

    Michael Perry Botanic Reserve is a small wonderland, a place we have been working hard to restore to its former glory.

    Once choked with weeds, the creek is now lined by indigenous species of plants. Reeds, rushes and silky tea trees provide habitat for small birds like superb fairy wrens. The waters abound with frogs and yabbies, food for resident kookaburras, cormorants and white-faced herons.

    On the hillside, the indigenous woodland is being restored and native wildflowers flourish, reminiscent of the times when the area was managed by the Kaurna First Nation’s people.

    In this sheltered valley there is an historic garden, which was once part of the Clifton Estate, the original house can still be seen high on the hill.

    Plantings of exotic trees, some dating from the 1870s, form the backbone of the garden. Exotic palms, pines, araucarias, oaks and cypress tower above the valley.

    However in recent times the garden fell into disrepair with woody weeds and other feral species taking over, while many of the stately trees are reaching the end of their natural lives.

    In 2019 Council produced an ‘Historic Garden Adaptation Plan’ to guide the revitalisation of the garden and retain its character as a botanically significant collection.

    Volunteers toiled on garden beds and pathways, weeds were cleared and over 250 species of specimen trees and plants were planted.

    These plantings will ensure that the garden and its unique environment continues to grow and retain its status as a very special place in Burnside.

    If you haven’t been there for a while, take a stroll along the Second Creek walking trail and discover Burnside’s hidden gem.

  • Windback Wednesday - Flight Sergeant William Dean

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    This Christmas card was released by the RAAF in 1944.

    Flight Sergeant William Dean (1920 - 2011), served in the RAAF during World War II and collected this card in 1944. The three planes pictured are Consolidated PBY Catalina flying boats, which Dean’s Squadron flew out of Darwin during the war.

    During his retirement, William Dean was a long-serving volunteer at the City of Burnside and enthusiastically gave his time to helping the community.

    His family donated this card, along with other items relating to the Dean family to the Local History Collection.

    Also pictured: Flight Sergeant William Dean, circa 1944.

  • Instagram Photo Competition Winners

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    We are excited to reveal our three Instagram Photo Competition winners for this year (@ccceee00, Mr Chuck, Dachshund, @xanderfotos). Thank you so much to everyone for your entries, we really loved seeing what Burnside meant to you and the variety of aspects that make up the community.

  • Burnside Highlights 15 December 2021

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    What a year we've had at Council! Here is the final Burnside Highlights of 2021, thank you all for your support! We hope you have a very Merry Christmas and a safe and happy 2022.

    Summary:
    ✅ Christmas Card Competition winners announced
    ✅ 0% rate rise this financial year
    ✅ Completion of the Pikurna Wirra/Peter Bennett/Laurel Avenue Organic Community Garden
    ✅ Completion of the Kensington Wama/Kensington Gardens Reserve project
    ✅ New sculpture in Constable Hyde Gardens
    ✅ Burnside named a Tree City of the World for the second year in a row
    ✅ First ever Environment Awards and Business Awards
    ✅ Commenced work on Magill Village Project and Tusmore Wading Pool redevelopment.

    This is just a summary of some of the key decisions and things happening in Burnside. You can read the minutes in full at https://bit.ly/BurnsideAgendaMinutes

Page last updated: 01 Nov 2024, 10:52 AM