Fri, 31 Oct, 9:00am - 3:00pm AEDT
Add to Google CalendarHartley School and Community Hall
This event is part of the Mulloon Institute’s Water Stewardship Program, a bold initiative supported by WaterNSW and The Ian Potter Foundation. The program empowers communities in the Sydney Drinking Water Catchment to restore local water cycles, improve water quality, and build resilience to climate change through nature-based solutions.
Learn how to read water processes to interpret landscape health. Discover the strategies that deliver results. This introductory Landscape Rehydration Field Day supported by Lithgow Oberon Landcare Association and presented by Mulloon Institute provides a foundational understanding of a farm's water cycle and our approaches to rehydrating rural landscapes.
Explore a range of strategies including natural structures that can optimise a farm's water cycle and improve landscape function.
The Lithgow Oberon Landcare Association (LOLA) assists with the co-ordination and ongoing development of Landcare and natural resource management strategies and activities including revegetation works, bushland regeneration, and sustainable agriculture farming across the Lithgow and Oberon Local Government Areas.
This field day also celebrates the launch of a Landscape Rehydration Community of Practice and Demonstration Site in the Kerosene Creek Catchment – an exciting opportunity for local landholders from Hartley Vale and surrounds to connect, learn, and collaborate on regenerative water and land management.
Mulloon Institute is a leading research, education and advocacy organisation helping to build resilient regional communities by supporting the long-term, sustainable growth of Australian agriculture.
This event received funding from WaterNSW and The Ian Potter Foundation