Tree-lined path to Naturescape Come on a photographic journey as I explore this new area.
| Pink Geraldton Wax beside the pathway
| Sandhill Spider Flower Grevillea stenobotrya, found in the North West of Western Australia.
| Naturescape poster 1
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Naturescape poster 2
| Pedestrian entrance to Naturescape Rio Tinto Naturescape Kings Park covers 60,000 square metres of previously seldom utilised bushland.
| Vegetation viewed from entrance
| Massive Ironstone Pillar near "Welcome Sign"
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Map of Naturescape Naturescape comprises a series of unique zones including hidden thickets, a creek, lookouts, a cubby building area, upside-down trees and a wetland. These areas are connected by meandering paths, boardwalks and bridges which offer a feeling of immersion in the bush.
| Walkway to Conservation Area and Prickly Thicket
| Conservation area vegetation
| Bushland of Conservation Area
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Play area in Prickly Thicket A place for imaginative play activities, or sit quietly to listen to the sounds of the bush.
| Cubby House in Prickly Thicket Sticks are provided for children to place on the frame to build a Cubby House.
| Mangles Kangaroo Paw Conservation area.
| Green Mulla Mulla Ptilotus polystachyus. Conservation area.
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Green Mulla Mulla Ptilotus polystachyus. Conservation area.
| Clumps of Kangaroo Paws surrounded by invasive Freesias Freesias are not native wildflowers, they are an introduced species which have escaped domestic gardens and spread through bushland areas threatening native species.
| Mangles Kangaroo Paw Conservation area.
| The Billabong Spot tadpoles and dragonflies here.
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The Billabong Listen for Frog calls.
| Peering into the Billabong A place to look for frogs and tadpoles.
| Sunlit Woolley Bush behind Ironstone Boulder
| Ironstone near the Billabong
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Close up of Ironstone
| Where does this Ironstone come from? The ironstone you see in the site was gifted by the Eastern Guruma people to the Nyoongar community and Kings Park. The red rocks travelled on 10 trucks over 1,440km from Rio Tinto's Tom Price iron ore mine in the Pilbara.
| Ironstone from the Pilbara
| Climb a Tree Hide What can you see?
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Tall Tree Hide with view over the park
| Use this Log to cross the stream Or wet your toes in Paperbark Creek..
| Dip your toes in the shallows
| The Jetty Wetlands outdoor classroom A dedicated education zone provides school students with a number of ‘outdoor classrooms’, with tree logs for seating under shady trees, a jetty in the Water Corporation Wetland and a fire pit for evening activities around a camp fire. Kings Park Education explores the interconnected world of plants, animals and people for students from kindergarten to adulthood.
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Yellow Wattle blooms overhead
| The Jetty Wetlands
| Bridal creeper (Asparagus asparagoides) Bridal Creeper is a serious, highly invasive environmental weed, destroying large areas of the native vegetation in southern Australia. Native to Ethiopia, Swaziland and the Cape Province, Natal, Orange Free State and Transvaal regions of South Africa. This plant, currently naturalised in Australia, was introduced into the country as a garden plant during the 1870s. It proved popular in floral arrangements, in particular bridal bouquets, giving rise to its common name, and also as a plant for hanging baskets. Bridal creeper is a Weed of National Significance.
| Introduced Species, Bridal Creeper, twines over twigs Bridal creeper (Asparagus asparagoides)
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Invasive Species -- Bridal Creeper Bridal creeper (Asparagus asparagoides)is a 'Declared Plant' in Western Australia.
| A Hide for children to play in
| Entering Kulunga Gulley
| Kulunga Gulley is like a maze
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