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Stories & Feature Articles

Don’t worry bee happy: tips to attract bees to your garden

In our feature article this edition, Revive explores the importance of bees in WA. Keeping with that theme, Heather Dowling shares some handy tips for keeping our bee friends happy and healthy in our home gardens.

Plant a native garden

Attract bees to your yard with a native garden that flowers all year round. Not only will your garden look amazing, it’ll save water too.

Many native plants will flower over a few different seasons, or even all year. Try Bottlebrush, flowering Gum Trees, Woolly Bush, Wattle, Hibiscus or Lilies. Make sure you prepare the soil to your plants’ needs by clearing weeds and, if possible, installing trickle irrigation, so you don’t over or under water.

If you’re close to Perth, visit Kings Park’s Backyard Botanical Garden. It’s full of native plants that are easy to grow at home. Kings Park also run monthly Dig it With Coffee workshops, where you can chat with a horticulturalist about your native garden. If Kings Park is too far for you to visit, check out the Friends of Kings Park website for a wealth of gardening information, including a great searchable native plant database in their Plant Sales section. Visit friendsofkingspark.com.au.

Build a bee hotel

Native bees love a good Bee Hotel! With native bushland being cleared more and more, our lodger bees may find it difficult to find places to nest.

Lodger bees love to nest in existing holes and there are lots of different species that you can help to find a home. For the curious minds, Bee Hotels are a great way to learn more about native bees and observe their behaviour – being careful to leave them to their own business.

Build a Bee Hotel by creating dry tunnels in wood or clay structures. This can be as simple as drilling some holes into a dry log, or as involved as building a fancy piece of art! Lengths of bamboo work well as tunnels, but avoid using chemically treated timber. Find out more about Bee Hotels and how to make one that will suit your garden at aussiebee.com.au/bee-hotel-aussie-bee-guide.html

Give them a drink

Like all of us, bees need water. Leave a few small bowls of water around the garden that bees can access throughout the day, and remember to check them every now and then to make sure they’re clean and that they haven’t evaporated or tipped over.

Avoid chemical pesticides

Chemical pesticide or insecticide not only kills bugs and insects you might want to keep off your plants, it’ll kill our lovable bee friends too! It’s also been linked to Colony Collapse Disorder, where worker bees are so stressed they will abandon a colony and leave their queen and her young behind. Colony Collapse Disorder is currently not affecting Australian bees, and nor would we want it to.

While bee-friendly pesticides are being developed, it’s best to steer clear from chemicals in the garden, especially around the home. If pesticides must be used, don’t spray near water supplies, or directly onto flowering plants. Also, spray late in the evening after bees have finished their work for the day. This will give the chemicals a bit of time to dry up before the bees come back in the morning.

Categories
Social Impact

Faith Leaders unite for climate action in response to budget

Faith leaders from different traditions in Western Australia have responded to the Federal Government’s Budget by calling for stronger, co-ordinated action on climate change from both Federal and State Governments, as well as industry and the community.

Leaders from more than five religious traditions met in Perth today following the handing down of the Federal Budget, to say that the Budget, as a statement of our national priorities, does not adequately address the climate emergency we are facing.

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News & Announcements

Uniting Church 2019 Budget response

The President of the Uniting Church in Australia, Dr Deidre Palmer, has encouraged Australians to put the urgent needs of others ahead of short-term self-interest, after the Federal Government delivered its 2019 Budget.

The Budget has promised, all going to plan, $158 billion in income tax cuts over a decade on the back of projected Budget surpluses.

Despite the positive projections though, the foreign aid budget has again been cut, and there is no improvement for Australians relying on welfare payments, particularly the Newstart allowance.

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Stories & Feature Articles

Kids grow with KCO

This year’s theme for Uniting Generations’ annual Kids’ Camp Out (KCO) was ‘Grow’. Held from Friday 22 to Sunday 24 March at Advent Park in Maida Vale, campers, junior leaders and camp  leaders came together for a weekend of fun, food, sharing and growth. Together they explored the theme, including looking back at photos from previous camps – which many of the kids had been part of.

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Stories & Feature Articles

Match Factory focuses on life after fire

In a devastating blow for the Busselton and Nannup communities, most of the premises of the Match Factory was destroyed by fire on Saturday 16 March. Match Factory is an op-shop and low cost food centre run by Busselton Uniting Church, but it is so much more than that to the many people involved.

Match Factory also provide emergency hampers of food, bedding and clothing to people in need, as well as an important network for both clients and volunteers.

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News & Announcements

Uniting Church joins National Redress Scheme

The Federal Minister for Families and Social Services, the Hon Paul Fletcher MP has notified the Uniting Church in Australia that the church has met the requirements to commence participation in the National Redress Scheme for people who experienced institutional child sexual abuse.

The scheme, operated by the Commonwealth Government, allows survivors to apply for counselling, a Redress payment of up to $150 000 and a direct personal response from the institution involved. Information on who can apply is set out on the National Redress Scheme website.