Angourie Regeneration Post Bushfire

Jacob Cameron-Clarke, Bush Regeneration Officer with Clarence Valley Council talks about the work being undertaken by council staff and volunteers from Angourie Community Coastcare to regenerate the landscape after the 2019 fires.

Above: Stories shared from bush-hardy community members during the 2019–20 bushfire season, the worst NSW has recorded.

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Over 10,000 hectares burned in the Shark Creek 2 fire that threatened Angourie and Wooloweyah in the 2019 bushfires.

No strangers to bushfire, the two small villages of Angourie and Wooloweyah nestled within the Yuraygir National Park have enacted their fire plans several times over the years. The villages are approximately 7km south of Yamba and 2km apart, with Angourie bordered by the Pacific Ocean and Wooloweyah bordered by Lake Wooloweyah that joins to the Clarence River.

For Angourie locals, it was the first time they had found themselves directly in the line of fire and having to defend their homes. More vulnerably positioned further south and set within taller trees, Wooloweyah has evaded catastrophe on several previous occasions. Gratefully for locals, 2019 was another such occasion, as being early in the fire season, the villages were defended by the full force of the NSW Rural Fire Service.

Location: Wooloweyah, NSW

-34.452669667561125º S 150.35342500178305º E

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WE PAY OUR RESPECTS TO THE TRADITIONAL CUSTODIANS OF THE YAEGL, BUNDJALUNG AND GUMBAYNGGIRR NATIONS AND ACKNOWLEDGE THEIR CONTINUED CONNECTION TO COUNTRY AND CULTURE.