Fairy Creek is located south of Sydney in Wollongong New South Wales. It is classed as a creek with an intermittently closed/open entrance.
Fairy Creek
Our water quality monitoring program has shown Fairy Creek to have fair water quality. Find out more about the estuary and its unique features.
Water quality
As part of our water quality monitoring program we assess the water quality and ecosystem health of an estuary using a range of relevant indicators. We sample a subset of the estuaries between Wollongong and the Victorian border every 3 years. The most recent sampling in Fairy Creek was completed over the 2021–22 summer when 2 sites were sampled on a monthly basis.
This report card represents 2 water quality indicators that we routinely measure: the amount of algae present and water clarity. Low levels of these 2 indicators equate with good water quality.
The report card shows the condition of the estuary was fair with:
- algae abundance graded fair (C)
- water clarity graded poor (D)
- overall estuary health graded fair (C).
Find out more about our estuary report cards and what each grade means. Read our sampling, data analysis and reporting protocols and find out how we calculate these grades.
We have monitored water quality in Fairy Creek since 2007. This table shows the water quality grades for this estuary over that time.
Grades for algae, water clarity and overall are represented as:
- A – excellent
- B – good
- C – fair
- D – poor
- E – very poor.
Physical characteristics
Estuary type: Creek
Entrance location |
Latitude (ºS) | –34.41 |
---|---|---|
Longitude (ºE) | 150.9 | |
Catchment area (km2) | 20.6 | |
Estuary area (km2) | 0.1 | |
Estuary volume (ML) | 42.4 | |
Average depth (m) | 0.4 |
Water depth and survey data
Bathymetric and coastal topography data for this estuary are available in our data portal.
Land use
Fairy Creek receives runoff from a highly disturbed catchment. Urban and industrial areas make up 70% of the land use in the catchment and about 25% remains forested. The towns of Fairy Meadow, Mount Ousley and Balgownie, to the north of Wollongong, are in this catchment.
National and marine parks
- The Illawarra Escarpment State Conservation Area is the largest conservation area in the Fairy Creek catchment.
- There is no marine park associated with this estuary.
Other features
- Fairy Creek Bridge, also known as Bodes Bridge, is of local heritage significance.
Community involvement
- There are over 60 bushcare groups in the Wollongong area. Bushcare volunteers help regenerate and care for local bushland.
Local government management
Local councils manage estuaries within their area unless the estuary is attached to a marine park.
Wollongong City Council manage the Fairy Creek estuary.