Kamis, 30 Juli 2020

Late satirist John Clarke's family donates 'magical' Phillip Island property to conservation - ABC News

The late satirist, John Clarke, has left another lasting legacy — this time, to conservation.

The much-loved performer, who was also an avid birdwatcher and nature-lover, died while bushwalking in Victoria in 2017, at the age of 68.

His family has donated an eight-hectare section of Ramsar-listed, globally significant wetland on Phillip Island to the conservation organisation, Trust for Nature.

John Clarke was born in New Zealand but made his name as a comedian and satirist in Australia after arriving in the 1970s.

For 27 years he appeared on Australian television conducting mock interviews and skewering politicians with his comedy partner, Bryan Dawe.

A child and adult stand in a green field with young trees planted near a lake.
John Clarke's family had many tree-planting sessions on the property at Rhyll.(Supplied: Lorin Clarke)

His daughter, Lorin Clarke, told ABC Radio Melbourne it was "a lovely thing to have happen, especially because it was Dad's birthday yesterday, so we feel there is a nice celebratory element to it as well".

She said her parents bought the property on the Rhyll peninsula in 1999 as a conservation project, and spent many years planting trees, weeding and birdwatching on what used to be farmland, with group tree-planting days that would often take place around this time of the year.

"We built up this area with vegetation and we wanted that to continue," she said.

A child and adult stand in a green field with young trees planted near a lake.
John Clarke pictured during a visit to the property with his granddaughter.(Supplied: Lorin Clarke)

Property hosts migratory birds, native grasslands

"It's quite an incredible area, Western Port Bay, and my mum and dad were quite involved, they ended up learning quite a lot about that area and why it's particularly special and needs to be protected," she said.

"We spent a lot of time on the beach and walking through the bush saying 'look at that bird, no look closely, see that yellow beak, that means it's the yellow spotted whatever'," she said.

Lorin Clarke said her family would continue to visit the area, where they always felt a bit closer to her father.

"We all love it dearly, it'll always be a really important part of our family and hopefully it'll be important in a sort of grander sense now too."

Trust for Nature Port Phillip and Westernport Manager Ben Cullen said John Clarke and his wife Helen McDonald had been "fantastic custodians".

"The way they've done the revegetation is fantastic," he said.

John Clarke watering a newly-planted tree with a hose
The land includes forested areas and fields of native grasses.(Supplied: Lorin Clarke)

"They protected it and now it's got to the stage where it's functioning as a forest, and it's got animals there that never visited before."

The area hosts migratory birds from all over the world, including Latham's snipe, which breed in Japan and Russia during the northern hemisphere Summer.

Ben Cullen said the land would now be used for education and conservation purposes, in consultation with the Bunurong Land Council.

"There's fields of native grasses and orchids and it's magical to walk through, and it's magical because of the work they did," he said.

A group of ducklings swim on the water.
A photo of ducklings in the wetlands taken by John Clarke, who was an avid birdwatcher.(Supplied: John Clarke via Trust for Nature)

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2020-07-30 06:01:00Z
CAIiEPOxOsSN_nwj_tEnB7TZmK8qFggEKg4IACoGCAow3vI9MPeaCDDc2g4

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