Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Canberra Times
The Canberra Times
Tim the Yowie Man

How Canberra's red pond got its vibrant colour

Rose Higgins strikes a pose at Canberra's red dam. Picture by Tim the Yowie Man

While on a recent walk in Cooleman Ridge Nature Reserve, Margitta Acker of Kambah was stopped in her tracks by the dazzling colour of a "pink lake" on the western fringe of the reserve.

"I got quite a surprise at just how pink it was," she exclaims.

For those not aware, the #pinklake tag is a popular on Instagram with some people travelling thousands of kilometres just to take selfies at Australia's pink lakes, especially in Western Australia.

More from Yowie Man this week: The stories of Canberra's aviation graveyard

No matter whether you call this 1950s dam in the outskirts of Chapman; pink, or red, when Rose Higgins of Kambah, heard of the technicolored water surface, she couldn't wait to check it out.

Regular readers may recall it was the Kambah nature-lover who beat a path to the large patch of fluoro yellow moss (Funaria hygrometrica) growing in in Namadgi National Park back in 2020 (Namadgi: From Black to Technicolor, September 19, 2020).

Depending on the light the dam's surface can appear pink or red. Picture by Margitta Acker

"I just love dressing up to accentuate the colour of nature," says Rose, who donned the same retro garb including, red umbrella and shiny red patent boots for her Chapman bush walk.

While the pink colour in the lakes in WA are mainly due to a high concentration of salt, according to Professor Fiona Dyer at the University of Canberra, the generous splash of red in this dam is Ferny Azolla (Azolla pinnata), a floating native water fern that is usually green but that when conditions are right - low phosphorus or lots of sunlight - can grow prolifically in healthy, still water bodies.

Picture supplied

If want to grab a selfie at #Canberrasredlake then beat a path to the dam, which is stop number 8 on the 2.7km Cooleman Trig Nature Trail, but don't wait too long for as Dyer warns "it'll likely die off over winter".

And before you ask, the pond on the corner of Haydon Drive and Eardley Street in Bruce where azolla has previously gained notoriety is currently nowhere near as spectacular as this Chapman Dam.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.