Monthly Archive for September, 2009

19 September 2009: Lookout Launch, Clayton Bay

Clayton Bay Community Celebrates the Jones Lookout

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Saturday, September 19. What a glorious day for the launch of the Jones Lookout at Clayton Bay! The 150 strong crowd who had gathered on the wind swept cliff were ready to celebrate the many achievements of the remarkable Jones family and to take pride in their role in the completion of the first piece of public art in Clayton.

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The ceremony began with a moving welcome to country by Ngarrindjeri elder Mrs Eileen McHughes delivered in Ngarrindjeri and then translated into English. Aunty Eileen’s message was one of the strength of standing together and that was exactly what the Clayton community was doing.

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As Suzy Rex, project co-ordinator, thanked those who had made the Lookout possible, it was obvious that Clayton Bay is a community of great resourcefulness, tenacity and above all generosity. To be sure there was institutional support from the Alexandrina Council, the Regional Arts Fund of Country Arts SA, SA Water and the Clayton Bay Community Association, contributions from Councillors Rob Potter and Barry Featherston, and the Commodore of the Clayton Bay Boat Club, Andre Botha, but the energy and vision was that of local people.

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The stones for the Lookout came from the now crumbling century old cheese and butter factory of the Yellands on Pt Sturt. The stone masonry of Mick Connolly and Craig Ashton is a tribute to their craftsmanship. The beautiful mosaic by artist Michael Tye captures the spirit of the place. Green Corps’ plantings and Travis Hestor landscaping complete the site.

Suzy Rex reminded us that in 1969 when Clayton Bay was subdivided, it was an over-grazed treeless area. The rich country that Eileen McHughes ancestors knew had been transformed. With “Clayton Bay Estate” came the water tower on the headland where the Lookout now stands. The old water tower, built by what was then the Engineering and Water Supply Department and later managed by the Alexandrina Council, came down on 29th April 2008.

As Suzy Rex said, “The water tower was for many over the years a ‘way point’ for those on the water and a ‘we’re here’ for those arriving by road, in short a known landmark. The very beautiful structure we now have in its place will, I hope, provide a similar sense of arrival for both residents and visitors.”

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In officially launching the Lookout, Adrian Pederick, Member for Hammond, regaled the gathering with stories of the Jones who settled in 1961 in Old Clayton and set up shop at what is now the Fish Factory. Many at the launch had enjoyed Henry’s catch of the day at Yabby City, which opened as a Jones family business in 1972 and quickly developed an international reputation as THE place to eat. In 1986 came the Community Hall, another Jones family vision. They raised $42,000 to have it built and it opened debt free.

Henry was the first chief of the CFS and daughters, Christine, Susan and Julie were inaugural members. Henry is still on call and makes appearance at Christmas in truck. All three girls were educated locally and Gloria, amongst many other things, drove the school bus.

The list of Jones contributions is long and Adrian Pederick could only provide some highlights. Susan in her teens was President of Community Hall, young citizen of the year in 1987 and produced the first edition of the Clayton Chronicle. It is still going. Christine joined police force and now teaches at Milang Primary where she is known for her extra-ordinary work in saving the turtles. Julie, with her mother, created SAWIN, the South Australian Women’s Industry Network, which grew to a national organisation that was instrumental in the Fishing Industry adopting environmental management and that Gloria represented in Washington DC, USA, in 1998.

Henry, coached Milang Football team to premiership success, is and has been a member of numerous influential committees at local state and national level. His advocacy for the River, Lakes and Coorong is passionate and draws on an extraordinary depth of local knowledge. In 2008, Henry Jones was awarded the “Pride of Australia Media”. As Adrian Pederick said, “Henry is the stuff of legends, an all round true blue good fellow.”

In responding, Henry Jones added some stories of his own. “There were two families here when Gloria and I arrived in 1961: a man who lived in a cave with twenty cats and Bottle and his wife who lived in an old World War Two army ambulance with a white ferret. Not long after our arrival they left. Too many people.” “Gloria was the driving force,” Henry added. “She would make things happen and she was the centre of the community. People came to her with their joys and woes.”

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As Mayor Kym McHugh reflected on the Lookout and associated stories, he admitted he had not been fully aware of the depth and breadth of the community involvement in the project and added that he hoped this would will not be the last piece of public art in Clayton Bay.

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After Suzy Rex and Adrian Pederick had unveiled the plaque commemorating the occasion, all that was left was for Henry and Adrian to cut the “ribbon” with a fine pair of kitchen scissors. The crowd was then able to walk through the lookout, admire the mosaic, note the swamp hen footprints in the concrete edging, stroll around the perimetre, steady children as they balanced on the fine masonry, and lean on the stone wall while exchanging more stories of the growth of Clayton Bay.

The Clayton community certainly knew how to take advantage of this piece of public art and showed their appreciation for Suzy Rex who perseverance and community spirit ensured the Lookout would be completed and the ceremony would be memorable.

Then off to the Boat Club for cake and champagne and of course, more story telling. Henry had the last word: “Then there was Bottle. He’d ridden his bike into Milang and returned with a flagon of port and one of sherry. There he was, standing at 45 degrees into the wind. When I came back an hour later, he was still there.” Has Clayton Bay changed? Well it certainly has its share of characters.

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14 September 2009: Water and no water

Remember to pass the cursor over the photograph to see the caption. Click on the photograph for full size.

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There are two sides to the Clayton Bay Dam/Regulator. On the Goolwa side boats that have been high and dry for well over a year and now washed by the rising water.

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On the Lake Alexandrina side, boats remain high and dry.

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At Milang, the winter rains raised the Lake levels but boats are still stranded. (Note the lush regrowth on what was dry cracked soil. Note the lake has not acidified. Note the water has diluted not mobilised the acids.)

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The Dam/Regulators at Clayton Bay and on the Currency Creek are creating new hydrological and aquatic niches.   At the Clayton Bay, the plume of pumped water is pushing against the retaining mud skirt, while the wind is whipping the water back against the Dam/Regulator. The pelicans are loving the new complex of water flows on the Goolwa side of the Clayton Bay structure.

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The birds are busy at the inflow point to Snug Cove on the Lake Alexandrina side of the Dam.

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But the only water that is reaching Dunn’s Lagoon is being driven by wind. The levels vary dramatically and this once raucous ecological hot spot, now that it is cut off from the fresh water from the tributaries, has fallen silent.

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The water either side of the Currency Creek Dam/Regulator is also of a different quality. Today, on the upstream side the salinity level is lower (11,640 EC) than on the down stream side (13,500 EC), indicating that the salinity from the Goolwa Channel is reaching into the tributaries and not being mixed as it would have been before the closure of the Clayton Bay structure. On the other hand the water currently being pumped from Lake Alexandrina has been refreshed by winter rains and may help lower the salinity for a short period of time.

The force of fresh water coming down the Finniss River is still sufficient to keep the readings lower (7996 EC at Clayton Beacon 60) but the reading at the other end of the Goolwa Lake at the Hindmarsh Island Bridge was 16,841 EC this morning. The wild winds of the weekend have stirred the waters and we might expect to see the salinity within the new Goolwa Lake begin to even out and rise.

Readings taken on the weekend indicate that pH levels in the Lake and tributaries, on the up and down stream sides of the dams are close to or above neutral. The once cracked soils are saturated. The water bodies have not acidified. The shores are covered with lush new growth. There is no emergency.

So, what is happening at the Finniss River Dam/Regulator site? The access road is built. A construction work area has been cleared but the Dam/Regulator is on hold. One story from within the SA Government states that there is no longer any need for the structure. The hot spots have been managed with strategic liming, the acid sulfate soils (ASS) are saturated,  the winter rains have diluted rather than mobilised the acid. Another story states that come summer, the danger posed by the ASS will be even greater and once the current flows has slowed, construction will begin.

NB. The reason given by the SA Government for the “Regulators” on the Currency Creek and Finniss River was to catch the “first flush” of water after the winter rains. It was asserted this “first flush” would pick up the acid from the dry cracked ASS and overwhelm the water in the Goolwa Channel.  But the Currency Creek “Regulator” was not closed until September 8, long after the “first flush” had roared down the tributaries. The Finniss River “Regulator” is yet to be built. Where is the emergency?

11 September, 2009: Priming the pumps

The big pumps are now in place on the Clayton Bay Dam/Regulator and testing has begun.

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Their design flow is 150 ML a day but, according to DWLBC, they are running at approximately 180 ML a day. If the full 27.5 GL of “environmental water” allocated by Minister Maywald is pumped into the newly created Goolwa Lake, the pumps should run for about 60 days.

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How long before the pumps start drawing in silt from the Lake Alexandrina the way they did at Narrung?

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8 September, 2009: Currency Creek closes

The 750 metre long Dam/Regulator on the Currency Creek closed today. The water flowing down the Currency is now trapped behind a 1-1.5 metre high dam wall of sand and rubble. A lower section, approximately 30 metres long, at the northern end of the structure, will allow water to pass over the Dam/Regulator when the water reaches above approximately 0.0 m AHD.

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Note the displaced mud, similar to that at Clayton Bay. Imagine what the mud waves will look like if the weir at Pomanda Island is built.

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7 September, 2009: Better for whom vigil?

Please join the VIGIL AT GOOLWA

MONDAY September 7, 2009 at 1.15pm to 2pm.
“Better Than Ever”    …for Whom ?

The Alexandrina Council is promoting the return of water to Goolwa by an “Its Better Than Ever” Campaign.

This campaign ignores and devalues the rest of the people in the council area and it ignores the environmental destruction that is an integral part of the government’s plans for the area.

Many of us will suffer social and material loss as a consequence of the construction of the artificial lake in the Goolwa Channel. To show your displeasure and to remind the council of their responsibilities to all ratepayers meet outside the library in Goolwa on Monday at 1.15pm ready for the council meeting at 1.30pm..

We plan to enter the council chamber and remain silent.

We will wear paper bags on our heads with the name of the place we come from .

For more info email actionturtles@gmail.com or phone 0427 226 282

4 September, 2009: Our Living Murray

Our Living Murray:  A photographic exhibit at the Royal Adelaide Show

Just inside the door of Jubilee Hall, eyes left, and there is “Our Living Murray”

Our Living Murray

Our Living Murray

The story is told in 30 panels.

The old River Murray had an erratic pulse.
Floods and droughts were common, but unpredictable.
Today ‘Our Living Murray’ is under threat.
Too much water is being taken from the Murray-Darling system.
Here we trace the effects from Lock 1 to the Lower Lakes.

The exhibit will be on display September 4-12, 2009

3 September, 2009: FYI Peter Garrett

The Federal Minister for the Environment, Peter Garrett, visited to the Lower Lakes today. Was he looking for a first-hand experience? To whom did he talk? Certainly not the people who live in Clayton Bay and who have been documenting the construction of the “regulator” and who have been seeking answers regarding the “science” on which it is based. No, the Minister paused in Clayton, had a milkshake, and motored onto Goolwa to extol the virtues of his work.

Well, the Minister has now seen at first hand the devastation caused by the Clayton Bay regulator. Will he now review his decisions to build the regulator without the need for an Environmental Impact Statement? Will he halt construction of the other regulators? Will he see the folly of proceeding with the Pomanda Weir and say no more weirs?

Had the Minister told us he was visiting, in the best tradition of our earlier meeting with the Jay Weatherill (the Minister who wasn’t there), we would have shown him what we see on a daily basis. Our message would have been both hopeful and critical.

1. The turtle project at the school at Milang. Minister, we would like you to listen to the students tell you how it is breaking their hearts as they rescue the tube-worm encrusted turtles. They did write to you, many times and your reply eventually was that turtles are not endangered species and therefore not within your jurisdiction But they are with ours. We see them dying daily. We rescue them.

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2. We would have shown you the regrowth after the very strong recent rains. At sites that were put forward at the time of your decisions on the Referral for the emergency responses of regulators, such as the Wally’s Landing on the Finniss River, you could have seen how the acidified water is now perfectly healthy, the regrowth is lush and the frogs are in full voice.

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3. We would have shown you the water coursing over the low crossing on the Finniss River and talked to you about the work that water does as it flows to the mouth and surges into Lake Alexandrina where it refreshes the increasingly saline water and is buffered by the alkaline water in the lake.

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4. We would then have shown you the regulator that you signed off on as not a “Controlled Action”. We would have told you the emergency has passed. The first flush has come down the Finniss and Currency and it has not over-whelmed the Goolwa Channel. Strategic use of liming has been critical but so has the volume of water that has saturated the acid sulfate soils and diluted the dangerous acids. We know this from sites that are above the lime barriers. They remediated without intervention. We would have shown you the silt and mud that is clogging the foreshore, explained how the regulator has filled in the deepest refuge for native fish in a drought, and how the regulator has isolated Dunn’s Lagoon, an ecological hot spot of great significance.

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But we did not have the opportunity. So here is our message in a nutshell: The River, Lakes and Coorong are a highly connected set of integrated waterways: lakes, river, tributaries, fresh, estuarine, saline, hyper saline, marine. The short-term emergency responses currently constructed and being contemplated are disconnecting the system. As the traditional owners, the Ngarrindjeri say, “All things are connected.” Please insist on an integrated, independently refereed, multi-disciplinary plan for recovery and management of the Lower Lakes.

The land is recovering.

Work with nature.

Work with local communities.

1 September 2009: Life of the Bremer River: Death of Lake Alexandrina

The Bremer River rises on the eastern side of the Mt Lofty Ranges and with the good winter rains of 2009 should be bringing refreshing water into Lake Alexandrina but the river no longer reaches the lake. It has been disconnected, not by drought, but by over-allocation

In the course of a twenty minute drive from the hamlet of Langhorne Creek on the Bremer River to the shores of Lake Alexandrina, the sad story of water use versus water needs is apparent.

Part One
The Langhorne Creek vineyards were flooded. Water coursed through the channels and lapped the road.

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Part Two

The pumps on the edge of Lake Alexandrina were quiet.
One was malfunctioning and we could hear the water gurgling onto the ground.
The regrowth was lush along the channel.
The frogs were in full voice.

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Part Three

The End of the Bremer.
The river no longer flows to Lake Alexandrina. It ends in a little sand dune.

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Part Four

Lake Alexandrina needs fresh water to survive. The Finniss River and Currency Creek have been cut off from the Lake by the dam/regulator at Clayton Bay.

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