St Kilda, South Australia Explained

Type:suburb
St Kilda
City:Adelaide
Map Type:state
State:SA
Image Upright:0.95
Lga:City of Salisbury
Postcode:5110
Est:1893
Stategov:Port Adelaide
Fedgov:Spence
Maxtemp:22.7
Mintemp:11.1
Rainfall:430.1
Near-Nw:Barker Inlet
Near-N:Buckland Park
Near-Ne:Waterloo Corner
Near-W:Barker Inlet
Near-E:Waterloo Corner
Bolivar
Near-Sw:Barker Inlet
Near-S:Bolivar
Near-Se:Bolivar
Dist1:22
Location1:Adelaide city centre
Footnotes:Climate[1]
Adjoining suburbs[2]

St Kilda is a coastal township, now classed as a suburb, 21abbr=offNaNabbr=off north-north-west of the centre of Adelaide, capital city of South Australia. With a population below 100 and a sole 4km (02miles) road connecting to the nearest highway, its natural and built resources have remained relatively undisturbed. The seafront, containing a large area of mangroves, faces the Barker Inlet, which is part of the Port River estuarine area. St Kilda is an internationally recognised bird-watching area: more than 100 species[3] of birds feed in and around the mudflats, salt lagoons, mangroves and seagrass beds.[4]

The inhabited section of the suburb occupies less than along the seafront. The remainder of the land was formerly used for extensive salt evaporation ponds, although now they are much fewer in number. The settlement ponds of the Bolivar Waste Water Treatment Plant occupy some of the southern end of the suburb. St Kilda is bordered by Buckland Park to the north, Waterloo Corner to the east-north-east, Bolivar to the south and south-east, and Gulf St Vincent to the west.

The suburb is home to a number of tourist attractions, including an adventure playground, tram museum, mangrove forest walk and an abundance of birdlife.

History

Pre-colonial

Before the 1836 British colonisation of South Australia, the area was inhabited by the Kaurna people, who occupied the land from what is now Cape Jervis in the south, up the western side of the Fleurieu Peninsula, to Crystal Brook in the north, east to the Mount Lofty Ranges, across to Gulf Saint Vincent, including the Adelaide Plains and city of Adelaide.[5] [6] They called the Port River region and estuary Yerta Bulti, meaning "land of sleep or death".[7]

The Kaurna people made much use of the estuarine area for hunting and gathering food and for materials which they made into artefacts and tools. They made use of the natural resources; for example, they would trap and spear fish (kuya), lobsters (ngaultaltya) and birds (parriparu), and gathered bird's eggs, black river mussels (kakirra, species Alathyria jacksoni),[8] periwinkle (kulutunumi), river crawfish (kunggurla – probably common yabby),[9] clams, native mud oysters and blue swimmer crabs.[10] However, they did not kill the black swans, as this was taboo. The reeds, blue flax lily and rushes (probably Juncus kraussii, the salt marsh rush)[11] were used for weaving baskets and nets – the latter used for not only fish, but game such as kangaroo and emu. Dolphins were known as yambo.[7]

After European settlement

The "official" town of Saint Kilda was surveyed by T. Evans and proclaimed on 31 July 1873.[12] Settler fishermen had established huts on three low-lying islands, covered in shell grit and saltbush and surrounded by mangrove and samphire swamps by 1865. By 1873, 13 huts and a boathouse were recorded. By the 1890s, people who lived in Adelaide were visiting the islands, attracted to the supposedly curative properties of the mangrove mud and using the beach for bathing and fishing for crabs.[13] 80 in 2002;[4] 70 (11 of whom were in families) in 2016;[20] and 88 (18 of whom were in families) in 57 private dwellings in 2021.[21] Many of the dwellings are insubstantial.

Attractions and facilities

Adventure playground

The St Kilda adventure playground, which covers 4ha at the seafront, has been voted by children as the best adventure park in South Australia. It has a "pirate" shipwreck, three-storey castle, tunnelled slides on a hill, flying foxes, a "bouncy boomerang" and numerous other pieces of play equipment. Shaded equipment and a small maze are enjoyed by younger children.[4] Barbecue facilities, basketball courts and a dog-friendly exercise area are also provided.

The playground, opened in 1982 and upgraded in 2016, was initiated by the Lions Club of Salisbury and funded through club fund-raising activities, City of Salisbury council matching funding, and government employment schemes.[22]

Tramway museum

See main article: Tramway Museum, St Kilda.

Adelaide's tram museum is located at St Kilda on the site of the former primary school. It holds 24 electric trams, 2 horse trams and 5 trolleybuses that were used or built in Adelaide; most are restored and operational. The museum, which is open on Sundays and most public holidays from noon to 5 pm,[23] is one of very few transport museums in the world to hold at least one example of every principal tram type to have been in service on a city street system.[24] The entrance fee gives access to unlimited free rides on an electric tram along a 1.6abbr=offNaNabbr=off line that runs between the museum and the adventure playground.

Mangrove trail and interpretative centre

St Kilda is sited on a mangrove forest that borders Barker Inlet, part of the largest tidal estuary of Gulf St Vincent. Late in the 19th century, embankments were constructed through the mangroves to reclaim land for pasture. Subsequently, once the banks of the adjacent saltfields had been built, maintenance of the embankments ceased and the mangroves began to reclaim them. On one of the embankments is the Interpretative Centre, which gives insights into the flora, fauna and processes within the mangrove forest. From there, a 1.7km (01.1miles) trail begins through a flooded mangrove forest, most of it on an elevated boardwalk.[4] The trail meanders through tidal samphire saltmarsh flats, mangroves and seagrass channels to a lookout that provides elevated views across the Barker Inlet.[25]

Boating and fishing

A marina with floating moorings for about 75 boats, some more than 10m (30feet) long, and two boat ramps, is connected by a long sheltered channel to the Barker Inlet. Home to the long-established St Kilda Boat Club,[26] it provides secure parking, slipping facilities and an electric mobility hoist for boarding boats.[27]

The breakwater is popular for recreational fishing, especially for salmon trout, whiting (including King George whiting) and bream.[28]

Geography and environment

St Kilda is a flat, low-lying locality, mostly less than 2m (07feet) above sea level. Although once dominated by extensive salt crystallisation lagoons, many of the saltfields have closed, and land and water rehabilitation has been undertaken. Extensive treatment ponds of SA Water's Bolivar waste water treatment plant lie to the south.

Saltfields

The coast side of the mangroves is bounded by extensive salt evaporation ponds leased for industrial use by the South Australian Government. Today, most of these saltfields are no longer used. The Department of the Premier and Cabinet is responsible for regulating the saltfields under the Mining Act 1972, which includes a requirement for environment protection and rehabilitation.[29]

ICI Australia Ltd began salt production at Dry Creek in 1940 and an associated soda ash plant at nearby Osborne. The company sold the operations to Penrice Soda Products in 1989. In 2006, when more saltfields were in production than now, they were described as covering about 4000ha. Salt water was pumped from the sea at two pumping stations, 20km (10miles) and 30km (20miles) north along the coast from the final crystallising area. Harvested salt was redissolved and pumped as brine to Osborne for manufacture of soda ash by the Solvay process. Production in 1999 was 391000t.[30] Penrice Soda Products ceased operations at its Osborne chemical plant in 2014 when it went into receivership.[31]

In 2020, a South Australian government inspection observed that significant areas of mangrove had died off and that brine had recently been pumped into the saltfields by plant management company, Buckland Dry Creek Pty Ltd. The pumping occurred after six years in which the lagoons had been allowed to dry out., a conclusion had not been reached about the cause, and a senior departmental official noted that the pumping occurred downstream from where the dieback occurred.[32]

Flora and fauna

Flora

The mangroves found on the coastline of St Kilda consist of a single species, Avicennia marina var resinifera. In the upper intertidal zone, mangroves become smaller the closer they are to land. They give way to a variety of samphire species, including beaded glasswort (Tecticornia flabelliformis) and blackseed glasswort (Tecticornia pergranulata) as well as saltbush on the saltflats of the supratidal zone. Nitre bush grows on the highest parts of the seawall and the abundant summer fruits provide food for birds.

Fauna

St Kilda is part of a nursery area for many of the commercially important fish and crustaceans in South Australia, including King George whiting, western king prawns and blue swimmer crabs.[33] There are brown snakes and skinks in dense bushes along the top of the embankments.

Each year in late summer, thousands of black swans and ducks descend on the area as the inland waterways they inhabit dry up. Waterbirds such as pelicans, cormorants, oyster catchers and terns are common, often year-round. Egrets, ibis, herons and spoonbills feed on the seagrass and fairy wrens, chats, fantails and thornbills feed on insects and plants among the samphire. Every September, stints and sandpipers arrive from the Northern Hemisphere in a spectacular display. The abundance of birdlife attracts birds of prey: swamp harriers, collared sparrowhawks, black-shouldered kites, kestrels and little falcons are all seen in the skies over St Kilda.[4]

The salt lagoons, mangroves and samphire wetlands are recognised as important areas for migratory birds by their inclusion in treaties created to protect birds and their environment: the China-Australia and Japan-Australia migratory bird agreements.[34]

Protected areas

St Kilda and its aquatic and terrestrial surrounds are exceptionally well endowed. As a result, the waters and shorelines of St Kilda are part of several overlapping protected areas:

Transport

St Kilda is badly served by public transport: the nearest bus stop (stop 63 on the Adelaide Metro 402 bus route) is 4.6abbr=offNaNabbr=off from the tramway museum and 6.3abbr=offNaNabbr=off from the playground.

Weather

The region has a Mediterranean climate, with St Kilda being slightly hotter and drier than the average climate of Adelaide. Based on past data, summer daytime temperatures may be expected to exceed 40C on four days of the year and nighttime temperatures in winter may be expected to drop below 0C on one day, although generally the winter is mild with moderate rainfall.

The following graphs show climate data for RAAF Base Edinburgh, 10km (10miles) inland from St Kilda. (Data are also available for the Bolivar Treatment Works, 5.7abbr=offNaNabbr=off to the south and 1.6abbr=offNaNabbr=off inland, but only in respect of rainfall.)[35]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monthly climate statistics: Summary statistics Edinburgh RAAF (nearest station) . Commonwealth of Australia, Bureau of Meteorology. 8 September 2016.
  2. Web site: Search result for "St Kilda (Suburb)" (Record no. SA0064364) with the following layers selected - "Suburbs and Localities", "Local government areas" and " Place names (gazetteer)" . Property Location Browser. Government of South Australia . 25 November 2020.
  3. The number of species noted in the reference is 100. On boardwalk signs the number was stated as 200, and elsewhere as 150.
  4. Book: Taylor, Edna . 2003 . The history and development of St Kilda South Australia . Lions Club of Salisbury . Salisbury, South Australia . 0646422197.
  5. Web site: Map(s) of Kaurna Country. Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi . . 26 November 2020.
  6. Web site: Tjilbruke story . Port Adelaide Enfield . 12 August 2014 . 26 November 2020.
  7. Web site: Barker Inlet and Port River Estuary. . 26 November 2020.
  8. Book: Critter Catalogue: A guide to the aquatic invertebrates of South Australian inland waters.. 28. 1876562676. June 2004. Sam. Wade. Tracey. Corbin. Linda-Marie . McDowell. Original illustrations by John Bradbury. .
  9. Delaney, Jessica . Lindhjem, Patience . Storey, Andrew . Knott, Brenton. . 2004. Is the yabby, Cherax destructor (Parastacidae) in Western Australia an ecological threat? . Freshwater Crayfish . 14 . 37–44 .
  10. Web site: Yerta Bulti (Port River and Estuary region) . . 26 August 2019 . 24 November 2020.
  11. Web site: Juncus kraussii . . 26 November 2020.
  12. Web site: A compendium of the place names of South Australia . Manning . Geoffrey H. . 2012 . . 28 March 2024.
  13. Web site: A History of South Australian Councils to 1936 . Local Government Association of South Australia . Susan . Marsden . 2012 . 27 November 2020.
  14. Book: Gunton, Eric. Tracing our towns, stories of same-named places in South Australia and the United Kingdom. November 1986. Self-published. South Australia. 0959209425.
  15. 1935 date is from Taylor, E.; PIRSA cites 1940.
  16. [Reference invoked but not defined];
  17. [Reference invoked but not defined] After floods occurred in 1948 and 1957, the three islands present since the first European settlers arrived a century earlier were extensively modified. Salisbury Council began building up the area, expanding seawalls and reclaiming additional land by dumping earth spoil.

    A major change to the landscape took place when construction of large salt evaporation lagoons began in 1935,[15] employing 600 workers to dig them out by hand. The company expanded the lagoons with mechanical equipment after World War II.

    St Kilda's population has never been large: 50 non-permanent residents were counted in the 1901 census; 68 (including 20 "permanent") in 1911; 30 total residents in 1933;[16]

  18. [Reference invoked but not defined]

    The St Kilda Hotel, built out of limestone obtained from the hills 15abbr=offNaNabbr=off eastwards, opened in 1898 with Matthias Lucas as the first publican. It remains the township's only hotel.[14] A school opened in 1902, where the tram museum is now sited. It closed from 1917 to 1924 and finally closed permanently in 1949. Students were then moved to Salisbury North primary school; the timber building was eventually transported to Virginia primary school.

    Together with most of the Munno Para West area, St Kilda came under the jurisdiction of the new District Council of Salisbury (later City of Salisbury) in 1933.[15]

  19. [Reference invoked but not defined] An early settler in the area was John Harvey, founder of the regional town of Salisbury, 10abbr=offNaNabbr=off inland. He gave the locality its name since it reminded him of the isolated St Kilda archipelago in the North Atlantic Ocean, which contains the westernmost islands of the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. Details of the origin of the name is here.

    In 1886, governance of St Kilda was exercised by the Munno Para West District Council, which had been founded in 1854.[13] St Kilda was proclaimed a town on 31 July 1893; sales of the first allotments occurred on the same day. [14]

  20. Web site: St Kilda (SA): 2016 census all persons QuickStats . Australian Bureau of Statistics . 30 March 2024.
  21. Web site: St Kilda (SA): 2021 census all persons QuickStats . Australian Bureau of Statistics . 30 March 2024.
  22. Web site: St Kilda: Playground . . 26 November 2020.
  23. Web site: Contact us . . 2024 . . 27 March 2024 .
  24. Web site: About us . . 2024 . The Tramway Museum St Kilda . Australian Electric Transport Museum (SA) Inc. . 24 March 2024 .
  25. Web site: St Kilda Mangrove Trail and Interpretive Centre . . 2024 . City of Salisbury . 26 March 2024 .
  26. Web site: Home page . St Kilda Boat Club . 27 March 2024.
  27. Web site: St Kilda boat club and marina. City of Salisbury. 27 March 2024.
  28. Web site: Where's the best spots to take the kids fishing in Adelaide . WeekendNotes . 20 December 2018 . Michael. Genrich . 27 March 2024.
  29. Web site: Dry Creek salt fields . Environment Protection Authority (South Australia) . Business & Industry . 7 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200607045618/https://www.epa.sa.gov.au/business_and_industry/industry-updates/dry-creek-saltfields. 7 June 2020.
  30. Web site: Salt . https://web.archive.org/web/20060919030610/http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/pages/minerals/commodity/salt.htm:sectID=245&tempID=7 . dead. 19 September 2006. Valentine . Jeff . 2006 . Pirsa minerals . Department of Primary Industries and Regions SA. 29 March 2024.
  31. News: Administrators announce closure of Penrice chemical plant. Media release. McGrathNichol Corporate Recovery. 24 June 2014. 17 July 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140725042558/http://www.penrice.com.au/pdf/1%20Update%20to%20Administration.pdf. 25 July 2014. dead.
  32. Web site: Sutton . Malcolm . Mining company ordered to cease pumping in Adelaide mangrove dieback investigation . ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) . 24 November 2020 . 26 November 2020.
  33. Web site: Barker Inlet – St Kilda Aquatic Reserve . South Australian dept of Primary Industries . 2006-12-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20061003220252/http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/byteserve/fisheries/rec_fishing/pdf/barker_inlet_st_kilda.pdf . 3 October 2006.
  34. Web site: SEA Gas Project EER/EIR. 57. Primary Industries and Resources, South Australia. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20060920013001/http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/byteserve/petrol/environmental_reg/documents/sea_gas_pipeline/2_eir_seagas_part2.pdf. 20 September 2006.
  35. Web site: Daily rainfall: Bolivar treatment works . 2024 . . 1 April 2024 .