The Gold Coast Bulletin

WHAT LIES BENEATH, OUR CITY’S DISGRACE

- TALISA ELEY tali.eley@news.com.au

BENEATH the surface of one of the Gold Coast’s most popular lakes lies a disturbing hidden world that environmen­talists fear could choke the city’s tourism.

Everything from drowned birds entangled in fishing gear, to nearnew bikes dumped in the picturesqu­e Lake Orr in Varsity Lakes, and one woman has made it her mission to clean it up.

“What a horrible way to go for a bird to become entangled in a crab pot, with your wings trapped before you slowly drown,” Two Llamas Environmen­tal and Social Projects founder Chantal Clarke said.

“It’s not acceptable that this is allowed to happen.”

Ms Clarke now spends “every day” cleaning up lakes around Varsity Lakes and Robina, and hosts public events with a handful of dedicated volunteers most weeks.

Lake Orr is the Coast’s worst, she said.

Armed with paddleboar­ds and spotters on dry land, the group use extendible claws to collect rubbish below the surface.

The details of what is found is entered into a nationwide database, to help with government policymaki­ng on environmen­tal issues.

Cigarette butts, bottles and cans are the most common finds, though plastic bags are much more rare since the bag ban was introduced.

Mobikes were also a common discovery when the public bikes were available on the Coast, Ms Clarke said.

There is a lot of work that happens behind the scenes, from avoiding bull sharks to sterilisin­g equipment to prevent crossconta­mination in local lakes.

But the climate change scientist said without the hard labour, the city would be suffocated by rubbish.

“I know what’s happening in the world because I’ve done the modelling and I’ve run the scenarios and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t terrified,” she said.

“It’s just going to get worse and worse and we’re going to lose our tourism revenue and our jobs if it keeps going like this.

“It’s embarrassi­ng and disgracefu­l how much trash there is, you cannot walk a metre without seeing something on the ground in a lot of suburbs. People will stop coming, there won’t be anything left to see.”

Ms Clarke said often she saw the same people dumping their rubbish week after week.

“It’s so frustratin­g to see people who deliberate­ly trash the environmen­t, it’s almost a rebellious thing, they do it on purpose,” she said.

“There’s also a lot of smokers, who for them it’s a habit to flick their cigarette butts, I can tell it’s the same person by the brand who week after week leaves them lying around in the same spot.”

Locals can register to help either on the water or dry land, through the Two Llamas Facebook page.

 ??  ?? Chantal Clarke (inset) is appalled and embarrasse­d at the level or rubbish in our lakes, including this crab pot that proved fatal for a diving bird, and a dumped bicycle.
Pictures: Two Llamas Environmen­tal & Social Projects
Chantal Clarke (inset) is appalled and embarrasse­d at the level or rubbish in our lakes, including this crab pot that proved fatal for a diving bird, and a dumped bicycle. Pictures: Two Llamas Environmen­tal & Social Projects

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