Join Us

What can we do?

Friends of DieHappy Forest is a community group of all ages and experience committed to preventing the destruction of this precious wild refuge. If you’d like to help, fill in the form below and we’ll be in touch. Thank you so much! 


    Lobby the politicians

    Contact the Premier | NSW Government

    Contact the Minister for Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Heritage | NSW Government

    Contact the Special Minister of State, and Minister for Roads, Arts, Music, Night-time Economy, Jobs and Tourism | NSW Government

    Contact the Minister for Agriculture, Regional NSW and Western NSW | NSW Government

    Contact the Minister for Water, Housing, Homelessness, Mental Health, Youth and the North Coast | NSW Government


    Contact Forestry Corporation of NSW

    and lodge your opposition to the planned logging of DieHappy State Forest.

    Forestry Corporation


    Join our Citizen Science survey teams

    By surveying a forest before it has been logged, you can help identify threatened species and expose planned illegal logging. Identifying these breaches of approval conditions is one of the most effective ways you can stop logging across NSW. Through measures as simple as comparing forestry harvest plans with threatened species lists, you can see logging stopped, fines handed out, and changes made to harvest plans. We will put you in touch with local teams.

    Breach Watch


    Buy a T-shirt!

    DieHappy – Friend of the Forest

    *All proceeds go to protecting DieHappy Forest from the threat of logging


    We pay our respects to Gumbaynggirr Elders of the past, present and emerging

    Friends of DieHappy deeply acknowledge the traditional owners, the Gumbaynggirr people who have lived and cared for this land for thousands of years.

    DieHappy lies on unceded country and we acknowledge the Gumbaynggirr people’s deep history, wisdom, culture and connection to this extraordinary place, to the forest, the creeks and all beings who call DieHappy home.

    Always was, always will, be Aboriginal land.