Art · Artworks · Attachment to place · Australian Army · Australian History · Camden · Camden Story · Collective Memory · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cultural Heritage · Cultural Landscape · Cultural memory · Cultural Symbols · culture · Ecology · Heritage · History · History of Emotion · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Little Sandy Footbridge · Living History · Local History · Local Studies · Memorial · Memory · Murals · Myths · Nepean River · Nostalgia · Place making · Placemaking · Public art · Social History · Stereotypes · Stories · Storytelling · Symbolism · Urban history

Exploring Little Sandy: Camden’s Hidden Gem

Little Sandy, a cherished location on the Nepean River in Camden, is celebrated for its rich community history and the memories it holds for locals. Enhanced by the Camden Weir, it features a modern footbridge and Aboriginal-inspired artwork, symbolizing its cultural significance as a site of gatherings, swimming, and personal milestones.

Attachment to place · Camden · Community identity · Cumberland Plain · Cumberland Plain Woodland · Ecology · Gardening · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Living History · Local History · Local Studies · Native flora · Place making · Placemaking · Plants · Sense of place · Studley Park · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Urban growth · Urban Planning · urban sprawl · Urbanism

Spiked Rice-flower – a little plant causing a big fuss

A little plant causing a big fuss in the Camden area is the Spiked Rice Flower - Pimelea Spicata - adjacent to a proposed redevelopment of Studley Park House