Yandina Community Gardens

41 Farrell street, Yandina

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You are here: Home / Archives for Workshops

Composting and Worm Farming an Easy Way To Build Healthy Soil

14/03/2018 By

Using compost in your garden is one of the best ways to put nutrients back into the soil. Rich soil increases yield, improves plant health and reduces the need for artificial fertilisers.

Composting and worm farming at home

  • Kitchen scraps and garden waste makes up almost half of the domestic rubbish produced by a household. Most of this material can be composted, to reduce the amount of rubbish that goes to landfill.
  • Using grass cuttings on the garden as mulch saves water, fertiliser and money.
  • Residents can reduce their waste to landfill by careful meal planning and shopping. One third of the food bought on the Sunshine Coast is wasted.
  • Composting and worm farming are two simple ways to minimise waste.
  • Composting creates a nutrient-rich soil conditioner that can be reused in the garden. It provides nutrition for plants, flowers and vegetables and helps to prevent moisture loss when used as surface mulch.

Worm farming is a way to recycle organic materials like kitchen scraps. Compost worms are nature’s own recyclers, converting kitchen scraps and garden waste for free, while also creating nutrient-rich plant food perfect for the garden or potted plants.

Sandie Johnston, one of the Sunshine Coast’s premier waste educators, takes you on a journey – from learning how to choose the right system and setting it up to maintenance and troubleshooting.

To help residents, council has produced instructional videos, compost, worm farms and everything in-between.

Read more about composting and worm farming in council’s organic waste fact sheet

Article courtesy of Sunshine Coast Council

YCG will be hosting a workshop with Sandie Johnston, who will assist you to turn waste into a resource by working with nature in your own backyard. Organics make up more than 50% of our waste on the Sunshine Coast and this workshop will show you just how easy it is to recycle with composting, worm farming and everything in between.

Sandie Johnston is the Sunshine Coast Council’s Waste 2 Resource Education Coordinator and she will give troubleshooting tips and advice on creating an efficient, hassle free system to recycle your organic waste. This workshop is great for all types of keen gardeners, so whether you’re new to the composting game or maybe struggling with your system come along and get the answers.

Click here to book

 

Filed Under: Composting, Sustainable Living, Workshops Tagged With: Abundant produce, composting, Health Soil, Healthy body, sustainable living, Workshop, Yandina community Gardens

Workshop – Saturday, 24 March, 9 – 11 am – Frogs & Frog Ponds With Sean Morrow

14/03/2018 By

Frog pondSean Morrow has over 27 years experience in the Landscaping industry and has owned and operated One Earth Landscaping for over 18 years (a licensed landscaping company based on the Sunshine Coast with a creative, organic approach). Sean prefers to work with natural materials, and his passions include timber and stone construction, water features and frog ponds, organic home food production, bio-dynamics and Permaculture as well as the creation of native bird, frog and reptile habitats.

Sean has run workshops for the past 10 years at the Queensland Home Garden Expo in Nambour, as well as across the sunshine coast library network, through the local council, Landcare Pomona, the dreaming festival at Woodfordia and at other local garden groups and community gardens.   Sean also runs workshops at his 6.5 Acre property in Pomona which he has opened through ‘Open Gardens Australia’. Somewhat of a kids celebrity, Shaun has also presented on two occasions for the kids’ television show- ‘Totally Wild’.

Come and join Sean for an inspirational workshop on all things frogs. Click here to book

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: frog ponds, frogs, sustainable living, Workshop, Yandina community Gardens

The Decline Of Australian Frogs

10/02/2018 By

Australia has many different frog species, with over 200 described and probably more to be discovered. However, Australia’s frog populations are declining, as are populations worldwide, for reasons that are as yet unknown. This is a disturbing trend because the presence of frogs is a good indication of a healthy environment. Read more…

Yandina Community Gardens will be hosting a frog and frog pond workshop. Book here

To get involved with frog conservation become a member of the Queensland frog society

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: frog ponds, frogs, Learning, Living sustainably, Shaun Morrow, Workshop, Yandina Community Garden

Native Solitary Bees Extreme Pollinators

18/01/2018 By

Origins

Bees made their appearance about 120 million years ago. There are currently many thousands of bee species documented worldwide and Australia is home to about 2,000 of them. In addition to the native species, 6 species of bee have been introduced into Australia, this includes the European honeybee. Like most bees in the world, Australian native bees have a range of sizes, colours, nesting requirements, behaviours and complex social interaction. Australian native bees have evolved into 7 families all with their own behaviours, colours and traits. Of the 7 families of bees, one of those families only occur in Australia and nowhere else in the world. There is currently a lot of interest in the Australian Native stingless bee that is being used with great success to pollinate crops, increasing the yields by as much as 600%. Less is talked about the solitary native bees that by all accounts are even better at pollination than both the honeybee and native stingless bee.

Diversity & Importance

Apart from the varying colours of native bees they also build their nests in different places using different building material. Other differences include how they accumulate or carry pollen. Some bees have pollen sacs that they use to collect pollen, others cover their entire body with pollen, and others carry pollen in their crops. There is one species of bee (Persoonia bees) that only feed on the flowers of one plant and that plant can only be pollinated by this bee, no other. Thus there is a co-dependence between bee and plant for survival.

When it comes to nesting there are many differences. Some bees nest in mud on the ground. Others build a nest made from leaf cuttings or inhabit cracks or holes in pieces of wood. The way that bees behave when visiting a plant also differs: some are what are termed buzz pollinators, they vibrate their entire body when visiting flowers thus ensuring pollen all over their bodies and in the air. Tomatoes are a good example of a plant that requires buzz pollination to produce fruit. Some bees are parasitic and lay their eggs in the provisioned cells of other bee species.

The importance of bees is well known with at least 70% of all our food requiring some type of pollination. Therefore their survival is very closely linked to ours. It is no secret that there has been a significant decline in bee populations throughout the world that is cause for great concern.

Challenges

The challenges bees face are numerous. The biggest of these being chemical. Many of the pesticides being used for crops and other plants have a detrimental effect on bee populations. Research done in the US has shown that bees have declined from 6 million hives in 1947 to 2.4 million in 2008. This is more than 60%. The number of bee colonies per hectare has declined by 90% since 1962.

The biggest culprit is the group of pesticides named neonicotinoids which is chemically related to nicotine with nicotine-like effects. As a result, in Europe and the US, these pesticides have been banned. Secondly, pests such as Verroa Mite, Hive Beetle and others plague the honeybee and our social native bees. Luckily in Australia, we do not have Verroa Mite and our honeybees and honey is sought after for its purity and quality. The third threat facing bees is the ongoing destruction of habitat and thus people are encouraged to create habitat for the dwindling bee populations.

What We Can Do to look after our bee populations:

  • We need to lobby our own government to ban the destructive chemicals that are not only harming our bee populations but all other beneficial insects as well. Landowners should be encouraged to change their cropping practices to more sustainable approaches using fewer chemicals.
  • More people should be encouraged to keep bees and manage the hives in a responsible way to keep bee pests to a minimum.
  • We should all be encouraged to create habitat and shelter for bees. Habitat creation includes planting a lot of native trees, grasses, and flowers for the bees to have an abundance of food. We should also provide shelters for bees to nest and multiply. An important aspect of a garden is to allow some of our vegetables and flowers to go to seed. Also, allow some spots in your garden to be wild with little cutting and neatening up, this is ideal habitat for bees.

Planting For Bees

Below is a list of plants that create food and habitat for bees. Please note this list is not exhaustive but indicative of the types of plants that bees like.

TREESSHRUBS/FLOWERSVEGETABLES/HERBS
Spotted GumFan flowerBasil (particularly Thai or cinnamon)
CitrusGrevilleaLavender
Broad-leafed red iron barkPigeon PeaRosemary
BlackbuttRosesSage
MelaleucaMarigoldsBorage
JacarandaGrass treeTomatoes
White bottlebrushFlax liliesBroccoli
MacadamiaSennaNasturtium
Silky oakPaper/everlasting daisyEgg Plant
Sugar gumTea treeMustard Greens

To Learn More

List of resources below

The Australian Native Bee book – Tim Heard

Valley Bees – http://mrccc.org.au/valley-bees/

Bob Luttrell – bobthebeeman.com.au

Youtube – The hidden beauty of pollination

YCG will be hosting Keith Upward in February who will teach us how to build insect hotels for native solitary bees and other beneficial insects. Click here to book.

 

Filed Under: Bees, Workshops Tagged With: bee hotels, Learning, Living sustainably, native solitary bees, planting for bees, Workshop, Yandina community Gardens

Composting & Mulching Your Way to Good Health

08/10/2017 By

There have been huge discoveries in soil science in recent years, and we now know that we have to look increasingly to Regenerative techniques to bring most of our soils back to life, and for our crops to carry the nutrition they once did. Focus on the microbiology of soils has also led to the potential to reduce our use of fertilisers while still improving the soil. The way we grow the things we eat, and the medium we grow them in, has an enormous impact on the nutrient density of the produce. This impacts directly on our health & wellbeing. Increases in our understanding have also affected inputs into traditional compost making, and new knowledge allows us to make compost that is even more valuable in our agricultural and gardening efforts. Dave will share with you many ways to increase the fertility of our soil and improve our health while reducing the amount spent at the produce store. Dave is a highly experienced Permaculturist & Permaculture teacher.

Dave has generously donated this workshop to Yandina Community Gardens.

Cost: $5 Non-Members, Gold coin for Members, Free to Regular Volunteers

Duration: 1.5-2 hours. Bookings are NOT required.

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: -Featured, composting, Good Health, Learning, Permaculture, Workshop

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Our Location & Hours

41 Farrell street, Yandina, see map
Open to Public Tuesdays and Saturdays 8.30am-12pm. Closed public holidays. (Updated 19 February 2026)

Workshops

  • Sat February 28 2026 - How To Grow Dragon Fruit

    Sat February 28 2026 – How To Grow Dragon Fruit

    Read more
  • Saturday 14 Feb - What is Permaculture?

    Saturday 14 Feb – What is Permaculture?

    Read more

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biochar chop & drop compost composting Edible Greens edible leaves edible seeds edible tubers Event food waste food waste loop ground cover insect attracting Kids event Kids program know your plants Learning Living sustainably Management Committee medicinal plants medicine member event Morag Gamble native stingless bees Nutrient Dense Food Open garden visit Permaculture Plant plants Recipe Recipes Subtropical Greens Support plants Sustainable Building sustainable living Tropical greens volunteer water plant Wax-wrap making wax-wraps Workshop workshops Worm Farming Yandina Community Garden Yandina community Gardens

Permaculture People

Elizabeth Fekonia - Permaculture Real Food
Anne Gibson - The Micro Gardener
Morag Gamble - Our Permaculture Life
Dee Humphreys - Eatin Garden Edible Garden Tours

Acknowledgement of country

Yandina Community Gardens acknowledges and pays respect to the Traditional Owners of the land, the Gubbi Gubbi (Kabi Kabi) people, past and present and emerging. We recognise and wish to learn from their spiritual and cultural connection to the land.

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