Advocacy & Support
Have you been following us and wondering if you can do more to help from home?
People power is how we will stop the giant machines tearing down our native forests, destroying critical wildlife habitat, our water catchments and precious carbon sinks.
Write a letter, post a video, make a banner, make movies, write to your local news networks and people in power.
Browse the links below, and please reach out to learn how you can be part of this amazing grassroots movement!
Click here:
A Beacon of Hope for the Bulga Greater Glider
Citizen Scientists enthralled in the discovery of greater gliders and their dens, 2023.
Immerse yourself in nature and make a real difference by collecting valuable data to protect endangered species. Your future self will thank you by spending a few hours/days helping save this extraordinary creature.
By seeing a glider you can save a glider!
Victoria’s exit from native forest logging is welcome & long overdue
By the end of the year, Victoria’s trouble-plagued native forest industry will end – six years ahead of schedule. The state’s iconic mountain ash forests and endangered wildlife will at last be safe from chainsaws. And there will be no shortage of wood – there’s more than enough plantation timber to fill the gap.
Vote for me
Vote for Me
World Wildlife Day
A Greater Glider, Quoll, Masked Owl, Yellow-bellied Glider, Pygmy Possum, Glossy Black Cockatoo and Koala will be in town on World Wildlife Day asking for help to find new homes. They have been displaced since their forest homes were destroyed by giant logging machines, sent in by the NSW Government.
WEBINAR VIDEO – HOW TO HELP IN THE FOREST OR FROM HOME
Important Info: SAVING BULGA FOREST & BEYOND – WATCH THE VIDEO
Values of Native Forests
Download the guide here
Advocacy and Support
Download the guide here
How to run a public meeting
Download the guide here
How to run an info stall
Download the guide here
ADVOCACY & SUPPORT
We pay our deepest respects to the Biripi people, the traditional custodians of Bulga Forest. We recognise the Biripi people’s continuing connection to land, water and culture and recognise sovereignty was never ceded.