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Phil Foster, president of the Blue Mountains branch of Australia’s National Parks Association, has set up an exotic flowering plant nursery at Springwood, to allow him to work in the shadow of his beloved forest. “Many residents,” he says, “take the mountains for granted. They say it (the park) has always been there, and it is a great place to dump rubbish.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19880129.2.93.1.1

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Press, 29 January 1988, Page 17

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62

Phil Foster, president of the Blue Mountains branch of Australia’s National Parks Association, has set up an exotic flowering plant nursery at Springwood, to allow him to work in the shadow of his beloved forest. “Many residents,” he says, “take the mountains for granted. They say it (the park) has always been there, and it is a great place to dump rubbish.” Press, 29 January 1988, Page 17

Phil Foster, president of the Blue Mountains branch of Australia’s National Parks Association, has set up an exotic flowering plant nursery at Springwood, to allow him to work in the shadow of his beloved forest. “Many residents,” he says, “take the mountains for granted. They say it (the park) has always been there, and it is a great place to dump rubbish.” Press, 29 January 1988, Page 17