Join us to march for the gliders, the mosses and lichen, the elusive owls, the towering eucalypts, the feisty Tasmanian devils, and the Traditional Custodians whose connection to forests go back 65,000 years.
Across New South Wales, South East Queensland and Lutruwita / Tasmania, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across Lutruwita / Tasmania, New South Wales and South East Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
A couple of us are keen to go to the Magan-djin March in March for Forests, so we thought we'd extend the invite out to anyone who cares about our native forests and all the species that live there
Across New South Wales, Lutruwita / Tasmania and Queensland, native forests continue to be logged under government licences, pushing endangered wildlife to the brink of extinction and worsening the climate crisis.
In WA, forests and woodlands are under immediate threat from mining, including the Northern Jarrah Forests, some of the most beautiful, diverse and vulnerable forests on Earth.