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Eager Rotarians (from the left) Roger Colls, John Gallienne and Chris Major getting ready to help at the Saturday morning working bee.
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More than 40 community volunteers and Rotarians planting native grasses in the Indigenous Art Garden at Rotary Park in Warragul
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Busy wheel barrowing mulch for the native grass planting at the Indigenous Art Garden are (from the left) Darold Klindworth (community volunteer), Caroline Hammond (Latrobe Catchment Landcare Facilitator) and Fleur Craig (Warragul Rotary).
More than 40 volunteers recently gathered at Rotary Park in Warragul to plant native grasses along path borders to the indigenous art garden.
The new indigenous art garden was created by the Warragul Rotary Club as a project to celebrate more than 100 years of Rotary service in Australian and New Zealand and as a gift to the Warragul community.
Representatives from GJ Gardner Homes helped to lay weed mat to assist with the planting of the grasses while a team from the Warragul Scout Group was on hand to plant and water the new garden.
Rotarians, friends of Rotary and volunteers from the Warragul Uniting Church finished off the job by loading barrow loads of mulch onto the garden.
Warragul Rotary president Chris Drenen was heartened by the effort of volunteers.
"So many people from different organisations attended and the teamwork was inspirational," he said. "Thank you to everyone who organised, attended, prepared morning tea – without your efforts, the park would not be what it is."
The project was inspired by a painting by local Kurnai artist, Dr Aunty Eileen Harrison, called Art From the Air. The club purchased the painting from Dr Harrison and it is now on permanent display at the West Gippsland Art Centre.
Mr Drenen encouraged community members to go and experience the new garden.
"Visit the park in Latrobe St to experience the garden that creates a likeness of the original painting in the landscape. Meander the pathways to the central meeting place to marvel at the tall timber totems carved with animals and access the QR codes to hear Kurnai stories," Mr Drenan said.