2026/27 Memberships now open
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
2026/27 Memberships now open
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com

Your donation will help us to continue our mission of supporting our community. Every dollar counts and will make a difference in the lives of those we serve.
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We host a variety of events throughout the year, including fundraisers, community outreach events, and educational seminars. Check out our calendar to see what's coming up.
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What a month. Across two weekends in June, 85 wonderful volunteers showed up, rolled up their sleeves, and planted 4,500 native seedlings into the soils of Perry Lakes Reserve. That brings our cumulative total to more than 20,500 plants in the ground since revegetation began — a number that would have seemed ambitious not so long ago, and one that exists entirely because of the generosity of this community. Thank you, sincerely, to every single person who came out.
And it wasn't all hard work — though there was plenty of that too. Our members truly know how to put on a morning tea, and both weekends saw volunteers spoiled for choice between savoury and sweet, tea and coffee. That time to pause, chat, and share a plate together is part of what makes PlantFest what it is: not just a planting day, but a gathering of people who care about this place.
Below you'll find the full species list for PlantFest26 — 49 native species that are now taking root across the reserve's wetland margins and dryland edges. If you'd like to get involved in future events or become a member of Friends of Perry Lakes, we'd love to have you. Perry Lakes is getting greener, one plant at a time, and it's your doing.
Wetlands like Perry Lakes are dynamic, living systems that depend on a delicate balance of water, soil, and vegetation. While the towering trees and open waters often take centre stage, it’s the understory and dryland species—the grasses, sedges, rushes, and shrubs—that play a quiet but critical role in restoring ecological function and resilience.
This is at the heart of why we plant. As part of PlantFest ’25, Friends of Perry Lakes will be planting 4,000 native seedlings, with many drawn from hardy, locally adapted dryland species. These plants are not only visually diverse and beautiful, but they also work hard: stabilising sandy soils, outcompeting invasive weeds, and creating habitat and shelter for birds, insects, and reptiles.
Among the standout species are:
These plants—and many others like them—form the ecological foundation of Perry Lakes' recovery. Over the past four years, Friends of Perry Lakes has planted more than 12,000 native plants across both East and West Lake. This sustained effort isn’t just about quantity—it’s a direct implementation of the Perry Lakes Management Plan 2021–2031, which outlines a long-term strategy to restore biodiversity, improve habitat connectivity, and build climate resilience through community-driven action.
These carefully chosen plants not only bring birdsong, frog calls, pollinators, and colour back to the landscape—they also play a vital role in rebuilding safe breeding habitats for native fauna such as the quenda (southern brown bandicoot) and the South-western snake-necked turtle. Dense understory provides crucial shelter for ground-dwelling species, while sedges and grasses along lake margins protect nesting sites and egg-laying zones. Together, these plants are transforming Perry
Lakes from a dry parkland into a functioning wetland ecosystem—alive, complex, and capable of supporting the full lifecycle of native wildlife.
Planting is conservation in action. It’s science in motion. And at Perry Lakes, it’s the community—our members, volunteers, and citizen scientists—who are making it happen.

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