New School Trip
This year we had a new school come for educational tours as part of their camp program. The Katherine school called the Casuarina Street Primary School visited us in mid July for a week with eighty students and eight teachers from years five and six. This is the first time we’ve hosted students this young, but they were very attentive, very taken by the animals we have here, they were all really well behaved and listened to all the interesting facts they were given about our specimens in the clinic and life here at The Sanctuary. We had four days of group visits that went smoothly and even the teachers asked questions about The Sanctuary. Unfortunately due to the closure of Lake Bennett we were unable to host our annual academic visitors, the O’Loughlin Catholic College. We hope that they’re able to find appropriate lodgings next year and we’ll see them back again. We hope to see both schools come back in 2025 as having access to children, being able to show them our native animals, most living free in their natural environment and the other animals recovering from injuries or older animals living safely in their aviaries we think has more of an impact on children than learning about them in the classroom from a text book. Our intention is to instil a deep rooted commitment in at least a few of the children to be active stakeholders in future generations of conservation careers and employment, anything to do with the environment and sustainability to save what’s left of our native flora and fauna.
As most of our members would know sadly Australia has undeniably the worst extinction rate in the world since the arrival of white people to Australia. We’ve lost almost all but a handful of bilbies, also quolls, mallee fowl, hopping mice, plains rats, koalas, cassowaries, dingoes and of course the iconic Tasmanian Tiger, but to name a few animals either extinct or on the endangered list. Flora loss is even higher than our fauna loss, the Norfolk Island kurrajong, at least 50 species of orchids from many states all over the country, Christmas Island fern, Mount Coolum sheoak, several species of wattles and the list continues. We need to keep sharing our knowledge of conservation with as many children as we can to get them interested and excited about working in the conservation fields of tomorrow. Bottom middle photos is of children being shown the one thing that they had heard most about on the bus before they could re-enter the park and get on to camp! We’ll sign off now, leaving you with our second edition of ‘The Carer Diaries’ which we hope you enjoy. We’ll have one more newsletter for you before the end of the year.




