Rainforest Rangers

Rainforest Rangers Restoring the Earth’s rainforests.

This morning in just 90 minutes we planted 1,600 rainforest trees to help restore the Big Scrub Rainforest. Thanks to th...
22/03/2026

This morning in just 90 minutes we planted 1,600 rainforest trees to help restore the Big Scrub Rainforest. Thanks to the team at Gondwana Rainforest Trust, the 40 + volunteers and to Gregory and Alison at Cromwell Farms. 🌳🌳🌳

Also grateful to ReForest Now for the wonderful work in setting up the tree planting site and drilling all the holes. Wonderful to see collaboration in the nonprofit sector.




We are getting ready to plant 1,600 trees tomorrow at Gondwana Green Day Out 💚 If you are in the Byron Shire in northern...
21/03/2026

We are getting ready to plant 1,600 trees tomorrow at Gondwana Green Day Out 💚 If you are in the Byron Shire in northern New South Wales this event at Goonengerry is for you. Together, we’ll plant 1,600 rainforest trees helping to restore the Big Scrub Rainforest. This project will:
- Repair degraded ecosystems
- Create vital habitat for wildlife
- Improve flood and climate resilience

For more information visit - https://www.facebook.com/share/1KYS9ZXUKA/?mibextid=wwXIfr

https://www.rainforestrangers.org/gondwana-green-day-out

Please make a donation to keep our projects growing at www.rainforestranges.org

What if tourism didn’t just do less harm, but actively helped heal the places we visit? In the Daintree, regenerative to...
19/02/2026

What if tourism didn’t just do less harm, but actively helped heal the places we visit? In the Daintree, regenerative tourism is doing exactly that 🌱

From rainforest restoration to land management, every visit can now contribute to healing Country, supporting Traditional Owner leadership, and strengthening one of the world’s oldest rainforests.

This is tourism with purpose, where travel gives back more than it takes.

The Bopple Nut (Hicksbeachia pinnatifolia) is a small tree in the family Proteaceae. This species is native to subtropic...
18/02/2026

The Bopple Nut (Hicksbeachia pinnatifolia) is a small tree in the family Proteaceae. This species is native to subtropical rainforest in New South Wales and Queensland, Australia. It is listed as Threatened species.



What if restoring rainforests could also grow food, culture, and livelihoods?By planting native harvestable resources, l...
16/02/2026

What if restoring rainforests could also grow food, culture, and livelihoods?

By planting native harvestable resources, like bush foods, medicinal plants, and fibre species, restoration can go beyond trees alone. These plants are adapted to local conditions, support wildlife, honour traditional knowledge, and open the door to sustainable livelihoods alongside healthy ecosystems.

It’s restoration that feeds both Country and community.

🫐 Which native bush food would you love to see growing in restored rainforests?

📷 Warndu

How do you bring a rainforest back to life? 🌳It’s about far more than planting trees. At Rainforest Rangers, restoration...
12/02/2026

How do you bring a rainforest back to life? 🌳

It’s about far more than planting trees. At Rainforest Rangers, restoration is a science-led process, tailored to the unique needs of each landscape - letting nature lead where it can, and stepping in where it needs support.

Our work spans a full spectrum of techniques, including:

- Natural regeneration, allowing forests to heal on their own

- Assisted natural regeneration, removing invasive w**ds and protecting native regrowth

- Active revegetation, planting locally sourced native species in highly degraded areas

- Supporting wildlife, like cassowaries, whose seed dispersal helps forests rebuild themselves

Together, these approaches restore soil, water, biodiversity and long-term resilience.

Thank you for supporting rainforest restoration that works with nature and creating self-sustaining ecosystems that can thrive for generations to come 🌿

In the Daintree and across Far North Queensland, wetlands and their vegetated buffer zones act as natural filters during...
09/02/2026

In the Daintree and across Far North Queensland, wetlands and their vegetated buffer zones act as natural filters during the wet season, trapping sediment, absorbing excess nutrients, and slowing runoff before it reaches the rivers and the Great Barrier Reef.

These “hidden guardians” also create wildlife corridors, reduce flood impacts, store carbon, and support threatened species - all while benefiting surrounding farmland.

🌊🌱 Did you know wetlands play such a big role in reef health?

📷 Steven Nowakowski Panoscapes

How do you help a rainforest recover faster? Sometimes, by stepping back.Our restoration work combines targeted w**d con...
05/02/2026

How do you help a rainforest recover faster? Sometimes, by stepping back.

Our restoration work combines targeted w**d control with Assisted Natural Regeneration (ANR) - removing invasive barriers and giving native rainforest seedlings the light, space and time they need to thrive.

This photo shows the measurement of the ANR progress.

🌿 Have you noticed native plants returning once w**ds are removed?

**dcontrol

Did you know our Atherton Tablelands restoration project isn’t just about trees? By planting and reconnecting rainforest...
02/02/2026

Did you know our Atherton Tablelands restoration project isn’t just about trees? By planting and reconnecting rainforest habitat, we’re helping create a cooler, connected cloud forest that supports species like the climate-sensitive Lemuroid Ringtail Possum (Hemibelideus lemuroides) 🌳

These possums and other specialised wildlife rely on large, mature forests and connected canopies to survive, and habitat restoration makes that possible 🌱

📷 Solar Whisper Daintree River Crocodile & Wildlife Cruises

We collected these fruits of the Small-leaved Tamarind (Diploglottis campbellii) this morning. This is a rare and endang...
29/01/2026

We collected these fruits of the Small-leaved Tamarind (Diploglottis campbellii) this morning. This is a rare and endangered rainforest tree native to the coastal lowlands of northern New South Wales and southeastern Queensland. The species is listed as Endangered under both Queensland (NCA) and Commonwealth (EPBC) legislation.

Everyone, say hello to Pinky 👋🩷Melbourne fisherman Cody Stylianou stumbled upon a rare pink platypus in a quiet river in...
29/01/2026

Everyone, say hello to Pinky 👋🩷

Melbourne fisherman Cody Stylianou stumbled upon a rare pink platypus in a quiet river in East Gippsland, Melbourne. He says this is not the first encounter with the unique animal, nicknamed "Pinky", believing he spotted it several years ago when it was smaller.

Suspected to be an albino platypus, this pale-pink monotreme was spotted gliding through a remote river - a sight so rare that only around a dozen similar cases have been recorded in the past 200 years!

📷 Cody Stylianou

It’s time to put the carbon back into the trees! 🌳We’re restoring Lowland Subtropical Rainforest in Northern NSW using a...
28/01/2026

It’s time to put the carbon back into the trees! 🌳

We’re restoring Lowland Subtropical Rainforest in Northern NSW using a proven, science-backed Assisted Natural Regeneration strategy.

With your support, we are establishing 150,000 trees and rebuilding habitat for over 30 threatened species of flora and 12 threatened species of fauna.
We're also reconnecting the Big Scrub, one of Australia’s most endangered ecological communities.

All for as little as $1 a tree.

Address

Suite 4, 81-83 Burringbar Street
Mullumbimby, NSW
2482

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