Bellevue Homestead

Bellevue Homestead Heritage listed homestead dating from the 1850s to 1903..

14/03/2026

From pirates to peers – a feast of comic opera.
Be there when the curtain rises on captivating
costumes, and music to take you into the world of
bumbling pirates, love-sick maidens and eccentric
officials with the quick-witted wordplay and
sparkling music. 🎎🏴‍☠️⛵️🧚‍♀️💘
supported by Somerset Civic Centre

21/02/2026

A tree that outlived the dinosaurs just did something in an English backyard that no one thought was possible.
Ninety million years ago, while T. rex shook the earth, a quiet species of tree was already ancient. The Wollemi pine had been growing on this planet long before any creature we'd recognize walked it. Then, somewhere along the way, it vanished from the fossil record. Scientists assumed it had gone extinct alongside the dinosaurs.
For millions of years, no one questioned that assumption.
Then in 1994, deep inside a hidden gorge in Australia's Blue Mountains, a park ranger named David Noble rappelled into a canyon and spotted something he couldn't identify. The trees growing in that isolated ravine turned out to be Wollemi pines — alive, breathing, and utterly impossible. It was like finding a living dinosaur hiding in plain sight. Fewer than 100 mature trees existed, tucked away in a secret location the Australian government still refuses to publicly disclose.
The discovery shook the botanical world. But the Wollemi pine had a problem: reproducing. The species struggled to produce both male and female cones simultaneously, making natural seed production extraordinarily rare. Most new trees were cloned from cuttings. The species was alive, but barely holding on.
Then came Pamela and Alistair Thompson.
In 2010, this retired couple from Worcestershire, England, paid £70 for an 18-inch Wollemi pine sapling. They planted it in their garden and began what would become a 15-year labor of love. Year after year, they tended to a tree from another era, nurturing it through English winters that were nothing like the Australian gorge where its ancestors had survived in secret.
Most people would have given up. The Thompsons didn't.
In August 2025, Pamela walked into the garden and noticed something extraordinary. Five large cones had formed. Both male and female cones had appeared at the same time, something exceptionally rare for this species. When she gently touched a cone, hundreds of seeds cascaded into her cupped hands.
She stood there holding the future of a 90-million-year-old species in her palms.
The tree had done what many scientists doubted was possible in a private garden outside Australia. It had naturally reproduced. Each seed, worth up to £10, represented not just monetary value but a lifeline for one of the most endangered trees on Earth. The couple plans to distribute the seeds to botanical gardens and conservation programs, giving this prehistoric survivor new footholds around the world.
Alistair joked that it proves money really can grow on trees. But what it truly proves is something far more powerful: that patience, dedication, and a little bit of love can help bring even the most ancient life back from the brink.
Sometimes the greatest acts of conservation don't happen in laboratories or national parks. Sometimes they happen in an ordinary backyard, with two extraordinary people who refused to give up on a tree the rest of the world had already written off.

~Weird Wonders and Facts

Merry Christmas!
25/12/2025

Merry Christmas!

First tour of 2026 scheduled for the 7th of February at 9.30 am! $30 per person including tea and scones. Gift vouchers ...
08/12/2025

First tour of 2026 scheduled for the 7th of February at 9.30 am! $30 per person including tea and scones. Gift vouchers available for Christmas presents! Discounts available for pensioners and locals. Please email (or phone) to book.

Always adding new items to the homestead - this looks elegant in one of the breezeways. Originally used for early 1900s ...
28/10/2025

Always adding new items to the homestead - this looks elegant in one of the breezeways. Originally used for early 1900s ladies to sit and wait for their hair to be done in Ipswich!

https://somersetciviccentre.com.au/brisbane-valley-history-expo-2025/
08/10/2025

https://somersetciviccentre.com.au/brisbane-valley-history-expo-2025/

Enjoy exploring the history of the Brisbane Valley at the Brisbane Valley History EXPO. Explore the rich tapestry of our regions history all in one place, featuring 26 history groups and a lineup of engaging keynote speakers. TICKETS | Entry is FREE DATE | Saturday 25 October TIMES | 9am to 3pm VENU...

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CKNpN13GV/
14/07/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CKNpN13GV/

Look what's coming in December!!
Mark your diary to keep the date for the Christmas concert of Esk Community choir.
We know you'll have a fabulous afternoon of musical delights!!

Address

1 West Road
Coominya, QLD
4311

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Bellevue Homestead posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Bellevue Homestead:

Share