Our history

The Story

1997 The Original Concept


The ErinEarth concept was presented to the Wagga Wagga Presentation Sisters in 1997. The idea of ErinEarth was born in early 1996. Two Catholic Sisters belonging to a group called the Presentation Sisters, Kaye Bryan & Carmel Wallis, dreamt of a place that would both model and teach practical skills for a more sustainable lifestyle and be a gathering place for reflecting on & developing a spirituality more closely linked with the earth.

Kaye and Carmel presented the dream to the Sisters who were preparing for their Chapter to be held in October 1997. This forum gathers to make major decisions regarding the direction of the Presentation Congregation every six years. At this Chapter the Presentation Sisters supported the establishment of a centre since it fitted in well with the direction in which the Presentation Sisters were moving with regard to ecological justice. Kaye and Carmel were given a mandate to set up a centre and provided with seed finance, office space, a utility and a vacant piece of land on the Mount Erin Convent site. Much networking & consultation began.

1999 Grassroots Dreaming


A Task Force from members of various local community groups was formed to help clarify the nature of the proposed centre. Part of this clarification included a dinner & workshop for 60 people from diverse groups such as the City Council, Dept of Land & Water Conservation, Greening Australia, The Civic Trust, welfare groups & education groups. These gathered to determine what the centre would look like. By the end of a long evening the following picture emerged:

  • The Centre, to be initially called an ecological justice resource centre, was to educate for practical skills, ethics & spirituality of living sustainably, with a focus on salinity, a major concern for Wagga Wagga and many other dryland towns on the western slopes of New South Wales.
  • The Centre's built environment was to be a three bedroom home with features of the average backyard so that the urban dweller could identify with it. All features to be as sustainable as possible.
  • The ageing pine and sugar gum trees along the railway be removed and replaced with mainly local native trees and understorey. Some parts of the extensive lawns also be replanted with local vegetation to lessen seepage into groundwater.


1999 Interim Centre

While finance was being sourced and more consultation taking place it was decided to set up an interim centre. Local groups such as Rotary, TAFE & school students helped set up an interim vegetable garden in the boarding school clothesline area. Life became very busy: composting, vegetable growing, stone walling, propagating plants, removal of weedy plants & dangerous trees and replanting local trees, shrubs and grasses. A very steep learning curve!

2003 to present

The garden you see began life in 2003. Heavy equipment formed the basic design and the rest was done by a team of volunteers supported by generous businesses. For a photo show of the progress of the garden, click here.