Thanks @vignouse for asking about a general view - this drone video is already old, August last year and the thousands of younger trees have grown significantly but it still gives you a good idea.
You can also check out the history page I am slowly compiling on my website that shows the property 7-8 years ago when there were only a few mature trees. http://koalagardens.net.au/history.html
I hope you find this interesting :)
I have just read your history of Koala gardens and found you have wholeheartedly given body and soul to this enormous project despite how your own personal life left you to battle it all on your own .Your project , care and protection of this Australian species is admirable and may the Koalas of Australia will be saved from extinction !!! :)
Thank you so much for this - I was (and still am) in tears as I read the story of your dedication interwoven with the loss of your beloved husband Chris. It's folk like you that make me believe that maybe mankind still has a chance... may God Bless you and the work that you are doing - the rest of us should feel very humble.
Your video is amazing and your story inspirational. You have achieved so much for our dear koalas despite your own heartache. As I became so "attached" to my one resident koala, I understand your commitment to helping this wondrous native animal and wish you a successful and rewarding future. Hopefully one day I will get to visit you and this beautiful garden :) fav
@rickster549 what the drone doesn't show well because it is high is that the entire property is on a hill and so it is sloped and it all goes up and down quite a lot (not steep but like a rumpled sheet). it looks quite flat in the video which is it not :)
@vignouse Richard thank you for requesting this. I actually have a drone arriving hopefully during December, so next year hope to get some good video showing the actual lay of the land which this does not show well
I'm truly just an ordinary person thrown into an extraordinary situation. thanks again for your very kind words
@gilbertwood it is very hard not to become 'attached'. I had a wonderful koala here in the early days, Clinger, and when he just disappeared it was heart wrenching indeed. I'm glad now there are quite a number of them and I can view them as a colony rather than just one or two individuals. loss is hard to take!
@hjbenson thanks Harry :) and I see you just found me on fb too, how lovely, lots of 365ers are there with me! I've just come back from my daily spotting and have done some general photos trying to show some of the lay of the land. So many photos to take and process, so little time!
I'm truly just an ordinary person thrown into an extraordinary situation. thanks again for your very kind words