Eprapah, the Charles S. Snow Scout Environment Training Centre, at
Victoria Point, near
Brisbane
Brisbane ( ) is the capital and most populous city of the states and territories of Australia, Australian state of Queensland, and the list of cities in Australia by population, third-most populous city in Australia and Oceania, with a populati ...
,
Queensland
)
, nickname = Sunshine State
, image_map = Queensland in Australia.svg
, map_caption = Location of Queensland in Australia
, subdivision_type = Country
, subdivision_name = Australia
, established_title = Before federation
, established_ ...
, Australia, is a noted ecological area within
Redland City. Owned and managed by the
Scout Association of Australia
Scouts Australia is a trading name of The Scout Association of Australia, which is the largest scouting organisation in Australia, with an estimated 55,038 youth participants in 2021, and a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movemen ...
,
Queensland Branch, the 39 hectares (96 acres) is home to a variety of habitats along
Eprapah Creek
Eprapah Creek (longitude 153.30º East, latitude -27.567º South) is a sub-tropical stream located in Redland City close to Brisbane in South East Queensland, Australia.
It rises on the north-eastern slopes of Mount Cotton and flows directly to ...
to its north.
Its value is recognised as a declared environmental reserve by the local city council, and designated as a Scout Centre of Excellence for Nature and Environment (SCENES) site. It is possibly the only Scout campsite in the world devoted principally to environmental education.
Located at the intersection of Colburn Avenue, and Cleveland-Redland Bay Road, Victoria Point, the property was named for the creek travelling through its bounds. The name Eprapah is believed to be a corrupted form of the Biblical word ''
Ephratah
Ephrath or Ephrathah or Ephratah ( he, אֶפְרָת \ אֶפְרָתָה) is a Bible, biblically-referenced former name of Bethlehem, meaning "fruitful". It is also a personal name.
Biblical place
A very old tradition is that Ephrath refers to B ...
'' or 'fruitful land'.
Environmental aspects

The area is one of several areas of preserving environmental importance in
Redland City, including
Venman Bushland National Park
Venman Bushland is a national park in Queensland, Australia, 22 km southeast of Brisbane.
History
Jack Venman purchased 255 acres of land on West Mount Cotton Road in the Shire of Redland
Redland City, better known as the Redlands ...
and the nearby
Girl Guide-run Kindilan Outdoor Education and Conference Centre.
Additional to its indigenous, European, and Scouting heritage, Eprapah is home to
koala
The koala or, inaccurately, koala bear (''Phascolarctos cinereus''), is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia. It is the only extant representative of the family Phascolarctidae and its closest living relatives are the ...
s, together with a variety of ecosystems (
riparian
A riparian zone or riparian area is the interface between land and a river or stream. Riparian is also the proper nomenclature for one of the terrestrial biomes of the Earth. Plant habitats and communities along the river margins and banks a ...
,
estuarine,
rainforest
Rainforests are characterized by a closed and continuous tree canopy, moisture-dependent vegetation, the presence of epiphytes and lianas and the absence of wildfire. Rainforest can be classified as tropical rainforest or temperate rainfores ...
). The site is bounded to the north by Eprapah Creek, and forms a wildlife corridor from
Mount Cotton
Mount Cotton is a rural locality in the City of Redland, Queensland, Australia. In the , Mount Cotton had a population of 6,835 people.
The area was colonised by Germans in the late 1860s after possible frontier wars with First Nations peop ...
. It is estimated the area is frequented by 120 species of plants, 125 birds, 24
mammal
Mammals () are a group of vertebrate animals constituting the class (biology), class Mammalia (), characterized by the presence of mammary glands which in Female#Mammalian female, females produce milk for feeding (nursing) their young, a ...
s, 50 fish and other aquatic animals, 21 reptiles, and at least 60 species of insects.
Eprapah and the creek have been subject to scientific research including hydrological surveys and koala tracking studies.
Catchment areas
With the increase in
urban density from agriculture to residential areas, Eprapah supports and complements the creek and area's ecological importance. Coast-side of the property is the Victoria Point Environmental Precinct, going to the edge of the
Moreton Bay Marine Park.
To the east is the
egret colony wetlands. Bounded by houses, the
paperbark tea-tree-fringed lowlands are the avian home to egrets, magpie geese,
osprey,
whistling kites, all varieties of
ibis. It is also the roosting area for a
bat colony. Accessed from along Egret Drive, via Point O'Halloran Road, there are no established tracks for visitors. Redland City Council is the custodian of this rare site, and it is maintained by the community bushcare volunteers.
To the north-east, the Point Halloran Conservation Area is accessed from Orana Street, via Point O'Halloran Road.
[The point and conservation area are Port Halloran, while the road is Point O'Halloran. The name Halloran was in use prior to the 1930s, but appears the name was interchangeable.] Purchased in 1990, and opened in 1995, with a car park, and raised wet weather shelter, there are two walking circuits, and was billed as a 'koala
ecotourism
Ecotourism is a form of tourism involving responsible travel (using sustainable transport) to natural areas, conserving the environment, and improving the well-being of the local people. Its purpose may be to educate the traveler, to provide fund ...
sanctuary'. A raised
boardwalk takes visitors through freshwater reed vegetation, towards Aspect Drive (parts of the boardwalk are closed for repair by March 2015). The second walk of is signposted to explain the changing vegetations of swamp she-oak (''
Casuarina'' sp.) forest and mixed woodland, to the edge of mangrove tidal mudflats. The area is well populated with large arboreal
termite mounds, reflecting the waterlogged soils.
A bushlands refuge also exists upstream of Eprapah, on a southern tributary of Eprapah Creek, on Elysian Street, Victoria Point. Further upstream is the Sandy Creek Conservation Area beside Double Jump Road, Mount Cotton.
Geography

Eprapah is predominantly flat as it tends to the coastal edge of a water course that commences in the nearby weathered
granitic outcrop of the tall
Mount Cotton
Mount Cotton is a rural locality in the City of Redland, Queensland, Australia. In the , Mount Cotton had a population of 6,835 people.
The area was colonised by Germans in the late 1860s after possible frontier wars with First Nations peop ...
. Soils are reflective of an area forming the creek entrance to a bay, including
gleyed clays, alluvial deposits, and across the majority of the site, podsoiled loam.
Characterised by a short-lived freshwater flushing, and little or no dry season flow, the
Eprapah Creek
Eprapah Creek (longitude 153.30º East, latitude -27.567º South) is a sub-tropical stream located in Redland City close to Brisbane in South East Queensland, Australia.
It rises on the north-eastern slopes of Mount Cotton and flows directly to ...
's
estuarine zone to the north east is classified as wet and dry tropical/subtropical. A sewage treatment plant also discharges into the creek.
The development of the Victoria Point Shopping Centre area in the vicinity has greatly increased water run-off through the site. With roofs and bitumen-covered car parks, the non-porous surfaces has seen periods of rainfall turn the sedate riverlet to Eprapah Creek turn into a torrent, with an associated increase in
jetsam
In maritime law, flotsam'','' jetsam'','' lagan'','' and derelict are specific kinds of shipwreck. The words have specific nautical meanings, with legal consequences in the law of admiralty and marine salvage. A shipwreck is defined as the remai ...
.
Given the various ecosystems existing in a small area, surrounded by increasing pressures of urbanisation, results in Eprapah having great environmental interest and local value.
Vegetation
With sandy ridges of low
sclerophyll forest, there are also other vegetation types present of rainforest remnants, sheoak or ''
Casuarina'' sp. forest stands, ''
Melaleuca
''Melaleuca'' () is a genus of nearly 300 species of plants in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, commonly known as paperbarks, honey-myrtles or tea-trees (although the last name is also applied to species of '' Leptospermum''). They range in size ...
'' swamps, salt meadows, and mangrove stands.
The site hosts one of the important food trees of the
koala
The koala or, inaccurately, koala bear (''Phascolarctos cinereus''), is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia. It is the only extant representative of the family Phascolarctidae and its closest living relatives are the ...
, Queensland's faunal
emblem
An emblem is an abstract or representational pictorial image that represents a concept, like a moral truth, or an allegory, or a person, like a king or saint.
Emblems vs. symbols
Although the words ''emblem'' and ''symbol'' are often used in ...
, is the blue gum (''
Eucalyptus tereticornis''). Other species around include the scribbly gum (''
Eucalyptus signata'').
The beautiful golden-flowering Eprapah wattle (''Acacia fimbriata'' var ''perangusta'') was previously considered to be a species in its own right, but is now considered to be an extreme form of another species, the
Brisbane golden wattle or fringed wattle. It can be distinguished by the dimensions of the phyllodes, gland position, and the flower colour.
Certain patches of the site have had specific plantings where weeds have been removed.
Representative of the local area, the site has battled overgrowths of non-native plant pests such as ''
Lantana camara'' and groundsel (''
Baccharis halimifolia
''Baccharis halimifolia'' is a North American species of shrubs in the family Asteraceae. It is native to Nova Scotia, the eastern and southern United States (from Massachusetts south to Florida and west to Texas and Oklahoma), eastern Mexico (Nu ...
''), as well as
mosquitoes and
ticks. The site committee has an eradication plan removing from site invaders such as
Camphor laurel trees,
Asparagus fern Asparagus fern is a common name given to several plants in the genus ''Asparagus''. It may refer to:
*''Asparagus aethiopicus''
*''Asparagus densiflorus''
*'' Asparagus plumosus''
*''Asparagus setaceus''
*'' Asparagus virgatus''
{{Plant common nam ...
, and plants not native to the area. Much propagation of ornamental plant species is occurring through the birds having eaten the fruits from surrounding areas. There are some issues caused by
illegal dumping on the property's peripheral.
Fauna

The Eprapah link
wildlife corridor from
Mount Cotton
Mount Cotton is a rural locality in the City of Redland, Queensland, Australia. In the , Mount Cotton had a population of 6,835 people.
The area was colonised by Germans in the late 1860s after possible frontier wars with First Nations peop ...
along Eprapah Creek allows the relative unencumbered movement of fauna, and encouraging
biodiversity
Biodiversity or biological diversity is the variety and variability of life on Earth. Biodiversity is a measure of variation at the genetic ('' genetic variability''), species ('' species diversity''), and ecosystem ('' ecosystem diversity' ...
within the Redlands. Established in 1990 in a joint venture between Scouts and the shire council, it also includes another Scout property, ''Karingal''. Eprapah itself is home to
koala
The koala or, inaccurately, koala bear (''Phascolarctos cinereus''), is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia. It is the only extant representative of the family Phascolarctidae and its closest living relatives are the ...
s (''Phascolarctos cinereus''),
bandicoots (''Isodon macrourus''), black-tailed
swamp wallabies (''Wallabia bicolor''), grey
kangaroos (''Macropus giganteus''),
kookaburras, large arboreal
termite mounds, and a sea eagle.
Koala
The koala or, inaccurately, koala bear (''Phascolarctos cinereus''), is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia. It is the only extant representative of the family Phascolarctidae and its closest living relatives are the ...
s in eastern Australia are being classified as
vulnerable
Vulnerable may refer to:
General
* Vulnerability
* Vulnerability (computing)
* Vulnerable adult
* Vulnerable species
Music
Albums
* ''Vulnerable'' (Marvin Gaye album), 1997
* ''Vulnerable'' (Tricky album), 2003
* ''Vulnerable'' (The Used album) ...
and added to the
threatened species list. Numbers have dropped by forty percent in Queensland and by a third in New South Wales over the past twenty years. Subject to increasing pressures brought about by
urbanisation (such as roads, dogs) causing
habitat fragmentation, overcrowding at Eprapah has seen a drop in the population due to loss of or over-eating of available food trees. They have also become susceptible to various diseases including
chlamydia.
Habitat research has also occurred on the site over the years. For example, koalas have been captured, their health checked, and radio collars fitted.
The freshwater area is also home to the near-threatened
tusked frog (''Adelotus brevis''). The only Australian frog where the male is larger than the female of the species, they have a distinctive 'tok-tok' clucking sound. Habitat encroachment, introduced fish, and a fatal skin disease fungus have contributed to their vulnerability.
The
platypus (''Ornithorhynchus anatinus'') once resided in the creek pond near Cleveland-Redland Bay Road, but increased turbidity and lessening water quality has meant the animal has not been sighted for some years.
For
migratory birds, the property is also within the
East Asian–Australasian Flyway, and the Moreton Bay
Ramsar wetlands. Within east of Eprapah is an egret colony wetlands at Victoria Point.
The standing pond, supplied and flushed with rains, contains a variety of aquatic life include ''
Gambusia'' fish and other species,
whirligig beetles,
backswimmers
Notonectidae is a cosmopolitan family of aquatic insects in the order Hemiptera, commonly called backswimmers because they swim "upside down" (inverted). They are all predators and typically range from in length. They are similar in appearance t ...
,
dragonfly nymphs, and
mayfly
Mayflies (also known as shadflies or fishflies in Canada and the upper Midwestern United States, as Canadian soldiers in the American Great Lakes region, and as up-winged flies in the United Kingdom) are aquatic insects belonging to the ord ...
nymphs.
The tidal part of Eprapah Creek of course is home to fish, molluscs, and crabs.
Indigenous heritage
The home of the Quandamooka, Noonoccal, Koobenpul tribe and part of the
Jagera/Yagera/Yugembeh language group people, Eprapah was part of their range from
Redland Bay (''Talwarrapin'', or cotton wood tree that was endemic to the area) to the
Brisbane River
The Brisbane River is the longest river in South East Queensland, Australia, and flows through the city of Brisbane, before emptying into Moreton Bay on the Coral Sea. John Oxley, the first European to explore the river, named it after the G ...
(''Mairwar'').
Victoria Point's Aboriginal name of ''Warra Warra'' possibly means mussels, while ''
Coochiemudlo'' refers to the red rock that forms the small island.
A midden was discovered on-site but its location has since been lost.
Many plants at Eprapah were used by the Aboriginal people, including the red ash or soap tree (''
Alphitonia excelsa'') as a poison, the edible and crunchy small fruit of the lillypilly (''
Syzygium smithii
''Syzygium smithii'' (formerly ''Acmena smithii'') is a summer-flowering, winter-fruiting evergreen tree, belonging to the myrtle family Myrtaceae. It shares the common name "lilly pilly" with several other plants.It is planted as shrubs or hed ...
''), black bean or Moreton Bay chestnut (''
Castanospermum australe'') as a food source (after long treatment), and the paper bark (''
Melaleuca
''Melaleuca'' () is a genus of nearly 300 species of plants in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, commonly known as paperbarks, honey-myrtles or tea-trees (although the last name is also applied to species of '' Leptospermum''). They range in size ...
'' sp.) for carrying containers amongst other uses. A native food garden has been established at the south-west corner of the property, near the Mungara visitor centre.
European presence
The area including Eprapah, prior to Queensland becoming its own colony in 1859, was used for stocking cattle.
Victoria Point was named in the 1840s, surveyed in 1859, with 'Eprapah Creek' becoming a post office at Holzapfel's store in 1890.
The Colburn family,
[Daniel William Colburn has also been reported with a surname of Colbourn.] giving their name to the road now acting as the southern border of the property, settled in the 1860s.
Mostly farmers, other activities in the area included timber-getting. Nearby Link Road served as the
log rafting
Timber rafting is a method of transporting felled tree trunks by tying them together to make rafts, which are then drifted or pulled downriver, or across a lake or other body of water. It is arguably, after log driving, the second cheapest me ...
area, to be floated to the mills at
Cleveland
Cleveland ( ), officially the City of Cleveland, is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County. Located in the northeastern part of the state, it is situated along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across the U ...
and
Wellington Point.
Sugar
Sugar is the generic name for sweet-tasting, soluble carbohydrates, many of which are used in food. Simple sugars, also called monosaccharides, include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Compound sugars, also called disaccharides or doubl ...
plantations,
custard apples,
grapes,
passion fruit,
pawpaws,
pineapple,
tomatoes,
cabbages,
cucumbers constituted some of the farming activities.
The market gardens supplied the Sydney and Melbourne with fresh seasonal pineapples.
As the divide between the
Tingalpa and
Cleveland
Cleveland ( ), officially the City of Cleveland, is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County. Located in the northeastern part of the state, it is situated along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across the U ...
local government divisions, financial debates commenced in 1898 about the construction of a road bridge over Eprapah Creek. The bridge was later improved in 1924.
Eprapah continued to be used as a district name until about 1915. The 1930s continued to see
Victoria Point as a popular holiday destination, with trips to
Coochiemudlo Island.
Farming and tourism continued as the main post-World War II activities, when in the 1970s, crop farming progressed to flower growing. Throughout this period, Eprapah remained intact as a bushland property.
Scouting heritage

In April 1928, the property of Eprapah was purchased with money from the Bob Monteith Memorial Fund trust. Robert Henry Monteith (born 1892) was killed in action at the
Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin, France, on 2 September 1918.
[Born in Brisbane in 1891, Bob Monteith was the only son of Henry Monteith (1862–1930) and Katie Rose Waldie (1867–1954). After studying at the Brisbane Grammar School in 1906, he became a stockbroker, residing at his father's Ironside Estate, Toowong, before enlisting on 31 May 1915, aged 23. Serving with the army service corps at Gallipoli, he then went with the 26th Battalion to France, and was mentioned in dispatches for his leadership. He is buried in Peronne, Somme, France. Henry Monteith in June 1924, as chairman of the directors of the Brisbane Newspapers and involved in Scouting administration, gave £5000 to the Boy Scouts' Association, as a memorial to their son.] His father was involved in the
Scouting movement and the parents created the deed in trust remembering their son.
The thirty-nine hectare site hosts a separate local Scouting entity, the Victoria Point Scout Group. The current group was formed in 1969 and group operates from a former
World War II
World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
military hut which originally served as a hospital at
Greenslopes
Greenslopes is a suburb in the City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. In the , Greenslopes had a population of 8,936 people.
It is by road south-east of the Brisbane GPO and is mostly residential with some commercial and light industrial ...
.
Additional to a warden's cottage and local Scout den, the three main structures are the sleeping shelter ('bunkhouse'), the 1974 Grey Owl activity shelter and associated 1976 Biolab study shelter, and the 1993 Mungara visitor museum. Mungara is a restored on-site hand-made brick whitewashed cottage, now fulfilling the functions of meeting room, educational facility, and site museum. The name itself is the local indigenous word for the Queensland
Blue Gum
Blue gum is a common name for subspecies or the species in ''Eucalyptus globulus'' complex, and also a number of other species of ''Eucalyptus'' in Australia. In Queensland it usually refers to '' Eucalyptus tereticornis'', which is known elsewh ...
tree. The Grey Owl shelter was destroyed by fire in January 2019.
The former Westpac Bank of the 1982
Australian Scout
Jamboree
In Scouting, a jamboree is a large gathering of Scouting, Scouts who rally at a national or international level.
History
The 1st World Scout Jamboree was held in 1920, and was hosted by the United Kingdom. Since then, there have been twenty-thre ...
held at
Collingwood Park, Queensland became the site's warden's cottage. It was the residence of several on-site caretakers. After falling into a state of disrepair, the building was demolished 1 July 2015.
Its present purpose is encompassed by aspects of the generally universal Scout Promise and
Law,
* A Scout is a friend to animals (the Australian 6th of 10 laws; c. 1910-).
* A Scout cares for natural resources (the Australian 8th of 9 laws; 1973-)
* A Scout cares for the environment (the Australian 10th law, 1990s)
The Australian Scout Environment Charter sets out eight positions on how a scout can care for the environment, including: Taking part in activities and projects that encourage education ''through'' nature and the environment, learning ''about'' nature and the environment, and action ''for'' nature and the environment.
The
Scouting movement's founder,
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell
Lieutenant-general (United Kingdom), Lieutenant-General Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, ( ; (Commonly pronounced by others as ) 22 February 1857 – 8 January 1941) was a British Army officer, writer, foun ...
,
wrote
Writing is a medium of human communication which involves the representation of a language through a system of physically inscribed, mechanically transferred, or digitally represented symbols.
Writing systems do not themselves constitute h ...
many references to the importance of the environment and the education value of the environment:
* For those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, the forest is at once a laboratory, a club and a temple.
* As a Scout, you are the guardian of the woods. A Scout never damages a tree by hacking it with his knife or axe. It does not take long to fell a tree, but it takes many years to grow one, so a Scout cuts down a tree for a good reason only – not just for the sake of using his axe. For every tree felled, two should be planted.
* Travel and reading and Nature study are all part of self-education.
* By continually watching animals in their natural state one gets to like them too well to shoot them. The whole sport of hunting animals lies in the woodcraft of stalking them, not in the killing.
1928 to 1953

The centre was the State's
leader training centre although youth member camping was permitted. Leader training was conducted in other locations in Queensland too, but Eprapah was the principal establishment.
The first training course was on 4 June 1928. Leaders would draw their rations from an area now known as the Beaver Shelter, and also marked by the stumps of the cook's table, and a dining seat area.
Youth member activities included training patrol leaders for emergency responses, constructing bridges, rafting, Scouts' own (religious observance), and water fights.
Baden-Powell visited Queensland in May 1912, March 1931, and briefly in December 1934. It was on his second visit on 26 March 1931 that his shoe print was immortalised in concrete at Eprapah. A copy is now in place, with the original held at the Scout Museum at Baden-Powell Park,
Samford, Queensland.
The State's governor, Sir
Leslie Orme Wilson
Sir Leslie Orme Wilson, (1 August 1876 – 29 September 1955) was a Royal Marines officer, Conservative politician, and colonial governor. He served as Governor of Bombay from 1923 to 1926 and as Governor of Queensland from 1932 to 1946.
Per ...
, also visited the site as the Chief Scout of Queensland through the 1930s.
The first of the site's two
totem poles, the pole and notice board, an owl was carved during a November 1931 training course, and at its foot, B.-P.'s boot print.
The chapel area was fenced off to stop wandering cattle. A large buttress stump was capped in concrete and the Scout badge with 'Old Scouts' set within (today, the concrete cap remains).
Various teams continued their improvements to the training ground, engaging in building construction and pioneering works. 'By 1933, '
between times of clearing lantana and carrying out the preliminary surveys for the draining of swamps, the Rovers and Men Scouts
f Brisbane
F, or f, is the sixth letter in the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is ''ef'' (pronounced ), and the plural is ''efs''.
Hist ...
have been busy on the erection of a gate of typically Scouty design at the entrance of their section of Eprapah. Above the lintel of the gate will be the figure of a crocodile, carved out of a log of wood. A forked end will represent the paws, in which pointed pegs will appear as fearsome teeth. A swishing branch will serve as a tail to the wooden 'monster'.'
An old scout hall was moved from Redland Bay to Eprapah in 1934.

In 1937, the campfire circle was accentuated by an eagle
totem pole.
Rover Scouts from Sandgate spent two years carving a life-sized eagle with a body was from local bloodwood, and wings of beech. The eagle, painted in bronze, stood wide and on top of a totem pole. Light from the fire reflected off the eagle.

Various Scouting personalities would later lend their names to various structures on the property, as well as to Scouting locations and events in Queensland, including:
* Charles Smethurt 'Chief' Snow ( – ). A watchmaker and jeweller, Snow became a scoutmaster with one of the first four Brisbane troops in 1908. He was elected the first chief scoutmaster for Queensland (today, 'chief commissioner'), and encouraged the purchase of Eprapah. His name is also attached to a Scout district in north Brisbane, and the leader training centre at
Samford.
* Kenneth Alexander '
Kauri' Boyd (1905–1976 (aged 71)). The straight-standing Boyd was an optometrist, starting as a scoutmaster at
Buranda continued to become an assistant international commissioner.
* Thomas 'Grey Owl' Gloster (1855 – 13 January 1941 (aged 86)). A Cleveland identity, Gloster was a soldier in the
Royal Munster Fusiliers.
* John Victor 'Running Stag' Marquis-Kyle ( – 1981 (aged 83)). Marquis-Kyle's contributions to Eprapah included carving the poles for the
Providore, and the owl
totem pole.
* Louis Varsey '
Beaver' Masters (1885 – 15 May 1964 (aged 78)). A Scout district on the Sunshine Coast. Beaver Masters is interred at the then
Sir Leslie Wilson campsite at Florence Bay,
Magnetic Island,
Townsville.
* James Alfred 'Nebo' Manderson ( – ). Manderson was a
signwriter,
Rotarian
Rotary International is one of the largest service organizations in the world. Its stated mission is to "provide service to others, promote integrity, and advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through hefellowship of business, profe ...
, Wolf Cub leader, and a known story-telling character.
* David Thain '
Kiwi' Weir ( – 1973 (aged 83)). With his trademark tobacco pipe, Weir rose to be the central Queensland region field commissioner, akela leader, and deputy camp chief (leader trainer roles). Since 1946, each Easter Scouts from
Nambour to
Bundaberg compete for the Kiwi Woggle (a huge animal's vertebra as the
woggle on a standard Queensland scout scarf).
1954 to 1972
In late 1953, the Queensland Boy Scouts' Association purchased a camping property to be called Baden-Powell Park, on Cash Avenue,
Samford. The Kulgun training ground was established for scout leaders. As a result, Gilwell training ceased at Eprapah, and items were transferred to B.-P. Park, such as the Eagle totem pole in 1955.
Apart from its hiatus as a regular scouting activity site, a big fire went through the property scarring many trees and destroying structures. Part of the west side of the property was probably resumed to road development as the Cleveland-Redland Bay Road was widened.
1973 to present

In 1973 the property was resurrected for
conservation field studies by the Scouting organisation. This resulted in the rezoning of Eprapah in 1975 by the
Redland Shire Council
Redland City, better known as the Redlands and formerly known as Redland Shire, is a local government area and a part of the Brisbane metropolitan area in South East Queensland. With a population of 156,863 in June 2018, the city is spread alon ...
for special purposes.
Charles Smethurst Snow was the first chief commissioner of the
League of Boy Scouts in Queensland, a primary instigator for the property purchase, a conservationist, and the scouting centre's name honours his memory.
Site management has varied post-1973, and several Scouting formations influence its care and direction:
* Branch commissioners. The leaders are responsible for Queensland-wide delivery of the Scouting programme in specific fields, in this instance, the environment. The inaugural BC was Dr Bernard Stone
OAM OAM may refer to:
*Oamaru Aerodrome, New Zealand
* Object access method
*Observatorio Astronómico de Mallorca, an observatory in Spain
*U.S. Office of Alternative Medicine, whose duties have been taken over by the National Center for Complementary ...
( – ), Branch Commissioner for Conservation (1973-), together with his wife Anne Beatrice (OAM). Stone was a scientist with the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) is an Australian Government agency responsible for scientific research.
CSIRO works with leading organisations around the world. From its headquarters in Canberra, CSIRO ...
(CSIRO), and Scouting's National Advisor on Environmental Education for almost twenty years. Anne (1928–2010) was the daughter of 'Chief' Snow;
* Friends of Eprapah;
* Eprapah Scout Fellowship (in 2005, the Friends of Eprapah Scout Fellowship); and
* State site committee.
The outline still exists of a wooden
suspension bridge
A suspension bridge is a type of bridge in which the deck (bridge), deck is hung below suspension wire rope, cables on vertical suspenders. The first modern examples of this type of bridge were built in the early 1800s. Simple suspension bridg ...
built by the Manatunga
Rover Crew
Rover Scouts, Rovers, Rover Scouting or Rovering is a program associated with some Scouting organizations for adult men and women. A group of Rovers is called a 'Rover Crew'.
Rovers was originated by The Scout Association, The Boy Scouts Assoc ...
(from Morningside, Brisbane) and Australian Army Reserve. The bridge was opened on 4 June 1978.
Declared a Scout Centre of Excellence for Nature and Environment (SCENES) site prior to 1985, for a long time it was one of thirteen in the world, and the only one in the Southern Hemisphere.
[
The Scout Association hosted the September 1985 week-long live-in Asia/Pacific Environmental Conservation Seminar ('APECS 85') for 33 Scouting and Guiding delegates from many countries. Presenters included Dr Bernard Stone ( CSIRO), Dr Graham Saunders (Director, Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service), Dr Angela Arthington (School of Environmental Studies, Griffith University), and Dr Bob Johnson ( Queensland Herbarium).
The Mungara building had an extension that was officially opened on 19 December 2001. Additionally, a historic 'small silver plate in memory of Jimmy Tabau, Darnley Island's first Australian Native Scouter, was formally returned to Mungara by Branch Heritage Coordinator Tom Roberts. This plate survived Eprapah bushfires in the early 1960s, later was resurrected from ash and displayed at Samford for 16 years.'
The 2011–2012 period saw the installation of a fauna exclusion fence, a high fence with smooth metal sheeting at the top, along the property perimeter, to prevent wildlife from leaving the property and entering public roads and endangerment.
A heritage walk was opened in 2014, and signage marks the various historic Scouting features of Eprapah.
The Scout's State Environment Education Team regularly conducts field day or weekend programmes for members of the Scout and Guide movements. The ]curriculum
In education, a curriculum (; plural, : curricula or curriculums) is broadly defined as the totality of student experiences that occur in the educational process. The term often refers specifically to a planned sequence of instruction, or to ...
is based around the World Scout Environment Programme (formerly the World Conservation Badge) and other scout merit badgework. The activities include examining various aspects of the site's many ecosystems, pond dipping, removal of stands of weeds and area regeneration through tree planting, and night-time spotlighting.
For both accessibility, and diversity exploration and appreciation, there are various tracks (generally identified by a colour) and board walks, including:
* Koala Glade, covering a riverlet riparian zone to open forest;
* Brown Trail, around the chapel area;
* Green Trail, following Eprapah Creek; and
* Blue Trail, from a riverlet riparian zone, along a raised boardwalk through the mangrove
A mangrove is a shrub or tree that grows in coastal saline or brackish water. The term is also used for tropical coastal vegetation consisting of such species. Mangroves are taxonomically diverse, as a result of convergent evolution in several ...
s and salt marsh habitats.
Several trails have numbered posts for points of interest, corresponding to information in a visitation booklet. Near the corner of Colburn Avenue and Cleveland-Redland Bay Road, there are also two activity areas of interest:
* senses trail circuit, with plants of various textures; and
* native plants arboretum
An arboretum (plural: arboreta) in a general sense is a botanical collection composed exclusively of trees of a variety of species. Originally mostly created as a section in a larger garden or park for specimens of mostly non-local species, m ...
of wild foods, medicinal, and endangered plants (established 2001).
Facilities today include a Scout camping area and a pack holiday shelter with bunk accommodation for over fifteen persons. Various non-Scouting groups have hired the facilities including artists weekends.
The environmental reserve is maintained by members of the Scout Fellowship, persons undertaking community service as part of a judicial correction order, and other interested persons. Members of the community can join the fellowship, and also consider involvement in the site committee.
Gallery
File:Au-Q-Eprapah Cleveland-Redland Bay Road.JPG, Looking south from the north-east corner, showing traffic density and dangers to wildlife
File:Au-Q-Eprapah Mungara.jpg, Mungara visitor centre, the original caretaker's cottage
File:Au-Q-Eprapah site map.jpg, Eprapah site map
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_freshwater pond.jpg, Freshwater pond, with Cleveland-Redland Bay Road in background
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_Koala Glade riverlet.jpg, Koala Glade stream
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_Koala Glade trail.jpg, Koala Glade trail
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_mangrove zone.jpg, Boardwalk along the edge of the Eprapah Creek in the mangrove tidal zone
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_Eagle campfire circle.jpg, Eagle Campfire Circle
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_Kiwi campground.jpg, Kiwi camp ground and bunkhouse
File:Au-Q-Eprapah_Baden-Powell footprint 1931.jpg, Reproduction of Baden-Powell's shoeprint
Footprints are the impressions or images left behind by a person walking or running. Hoofprints and pawprints are those left by animals with hooves or paws rather than feet, while "shoeprints" is the specific term for prints made by shoes. ...
from March 1931
File:Au-Q-VictoriaPointScoutDen.jpg, Victoria Point Scout Den
See also
* Brisbane native plants
* Redland City
Notes
References
{{Reflist
External links
Facebook geolocation
Department of National Parks, Recreation, Sport and Racing.
Redland Museum
Scouts Queensland
Environment of Queensland
History of Queensland
Nature reserves in Queensland
Redland City
Scouting and Guiding in Australia