June 18, 2026

A free community afternoon exploring the remarkable landscapes of the Coffs Coast, from ancient forests to subtropical seas

PEOPLE on the Coffs Coast tend to love it to pieces, and there are a lot of pieces to love. 

Ancient rainforest, koala country, subtropical ocean, living reef, all within a few kilometres of each other, connected in ways that are only becoming clearer the more closely we look.

The Whispers of Wilderness series has spent the past several months showing what those pieces look like when you hold them together.

Whispers of Wilderness is a free community events program run by the National Parks Association of NSW, Coffs Coast Branch, bringing together scientists, conservationists, and community members to explore the landscapes of the Coffs Coast.

This is the fourth and final event of the 2026 series, coming to Woolgoolga on Saturday 20 June at 2pm.

Three speakers will take the audience from the forests above the escarpment to the ocean floor, weaving together the stories of the Great Koala National Park, the Solitary Islands Marine Park, and the subtropical marine world that makes this stretch of coast unlike anywhere else in Australia.

Dr Grahame Douglas AM will open the afternoon with an update on the progress of the Great Koala National Park.

Grahame has been at the heart of the campaign for many years, brings a PhD in the implications of climate change on bushfire protection in NSW, and is President of the NPA Coffs Coast Branch.

He will speak to the relationship between the park, bushfire management, and the role this landscape plays as a climate refugium for koalas and the broader ecosystems of the Coffs Coast hinterland.

Professor Kirsten Benkendorff, marine biologist at the National Marine Science Centre at Southern Cross University, will follow with an exploration of the subtropical marine biodiversity of the Coffs Coast, from the coral communities at the southern limit of tropical distribution to the kelp forests facing pressure from warming seas, and what the changes she is observing mean for the future of this remarkable marine environment.

The afternoon will also see the launch of a report on the Solitary Islands Marine Park, commissioned by the NPA Coffs Coast Branch with support from a City of Coffs Harbour Environmental Levy grant program.

You can help your local paper.

Make a small once-off, or (if you can) a regular donation.

We are an independent family owned business and our newspapers are free to collect and our news stories are free online.

Help support us into the future.

TAKE OUR SURVEY

To help us continue improving and delivering the content you value, we’d love to hear from you.