Sherwood’s Beloved Festival Is Back After a Year Away, and It Needs Your Hands to Make It Happen

The Sherwood Community Festival returns to the Arboretum on Saturday 16 May 2026, marking its 30th year, and the all-volunteer committee is calling on locals to give an hour or two of their time to help bring the 4075’s biggest free community day back to life.



After the 2025 festival was cancelled due to poor ground conditions at the Arboretum, the return this May carries extra significance for a community that has rallied around this event for three decades. The festival draws up to 10,000 visitors to Sherwood Arboretum each year and runs entirely on volunteer effort, from the committee that spends twelve months planning it down to the people who set up gazebos at dawn and pack the last chair away at the end of the day.

Without enough hands on deck, an event of this scale simply cannot happen, and with 16 May now just weeks away, the team is actively looking for day-of volunteers across a range of roles.

Find Your Role on the Day

There are five volunteer roles, each suited to different interests and energy levels.

The Production Team is the crew that transforms an empty arboretum into a festival. They arrive early, put up gazebos, set out chairs, hang signage and get the whole site ready before the gates open. If you like being active and want to see an event come together from the ground up, this one is for you.

The Info Tent is the community’s first point of contact during the day. Volunteers there hand out programs, help visitors find food stalls and stages, and keep people informed about what’s on next. It is a prime viewing spot, and it suits anyone who enjoys a conversation and wants to make visitors feel genuinely welcome.

Workshop Helpers work in the Arts Hub, setting out materials for painting and hands-on crafts, giving a hand to anyone who needs it, and keeping tables tidy between sessions. It is a relaxed role well suited to anyone who enjoys a creative atmosphere and wants to help local families get into making things together.

Stage Runners are the link between performers and the stage, making sure musicians and speakers get where they need to be on time. The Arbor Green and Fig Tree stages both host local bands, schools and performing arts groups across the day, and this role puts you right in the middle of that energy.

Stewards move around the full festival site, helping people find their way and making sure the grounds stay safe and tidy for the thousands of families, children and visitors coming through. It lets you experience the whole festival atmosphere while playing a genuinely useful role.

Thirty Years of Showing Up for Each Other

The Sherwood Community Festival traces its origins to 1995, when a small group of Sherwood Road traders organised a pavement event to bring people to the shopping strip as banks and businesses began to close. That first event had a handful of stalls and a straightforward purpose: keep the community connected to its local street.

Photo Credit: Sherwood Festival

Over the following three decades it grew into a full street festival with road closures, then shifted to its current home at Sherwood Arboretum where it has expanded to more than 100 stalls, four performance spaces, free rides and face painting, an Arts Hub, food trucks and a sausage sizzle, all free to attend.

The festival has always run off the same foundation: the generosity of people willing to give a bit of their Saturday to something bigger than themselves. The committee is made up entirely of volunteers, many of whom give a few hours a week across the year to handle everything from grant applications and sponsor relationships to site logistics and entertainment programming.

On the day itself, those roles multiply and the event lives or dies on how many extra pairs of hands show up.

How to Put Your Hand Up

Volunteer registration for the Sherwood Community Festival on Saturday 16 May 2026 is open now. You can sign up for as little as an hour or two, in whichever role suits you best. To register, click here and fill out the expression of interest form. The committee will be in touch to confirm details.

The Sherwood Arboretum is at 87 Jolimont Street, Sherwood. The train station sits at the end of the street, making it easy to get to without a car.



Published 24-April-2026

100 Years of Sherwood Arboretum: Brisbane’s First Arboretum Marks a Milestone

When 72 Queensland kauri pines were planted at Sherwood Arboretum in 1925, few could have imagined the thriving botanical haven it would become. Now, a century later, this 15-hectare green space is marking its milestone with a celebration honouring its past and future.



A Century of Growth and Conservation

Founded on 21 March 1925, Sherwood Arboretum was designed to preserve Australian native trees at a time when much of Brisbane’s natural landscape was being reshaped by urban expansion. The first trees planted—72 Queensland kauri pines—lined what is now known as Sir Matthew Nathan Avenue, named after the Queensland Governor at the time. These towering trees remain a defining feature of the arboretum today.

The project brought together some of Queensland’s most influential figures of the era. Among them was William Jolly, Brisbane’s first mayor, alongside Archbishop James Duhig, Romeo Lahey, a leading conservationist, and W.D. Francis, a rainforest expert. Their shared vision helped create what would become one of Brisbane’s most significant botanical reserves.

Sherwood Arboretum in the 1940s
Sherwood Arboretum in the 1940s
Photo Credit: Friends of Sherwood Arboretum/Facebook

Sherwood Arboretum’s importance was officially recognised in 2007, when it was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register. This ensured that its collection of over 1,100 trees, representing 250 species, would continue to be protected for future generations.

More Than Just Trees: A Community Space

Beyond its scientific and historical significance, Sherwood Arboretum has long been a place for community gatherings, family outings, and quiet escapes into nature. Its facilities include walking tracks, picnic areas, barbecues, and a river boardwalk, making it a well-loved spot for locals.

Recent upgrades have made it even more inviting. A nature-inspired playground, nestled under large fig trees, has given children a space to explore while learning about native flora. Interpretive signs now guide visitors through different tree collections, showcasing highlights like the Rainforest, Fig Tree Grove, and Bottle Tree Knoll.

Sherwood Arboretum
Photo Credit: Friends of Sherwood Arboretum/Facebook

Centenary Celebrations on 23 March

To mark 100 years of Sherwood Arboretum, Brisbane residents are invited to a centenary picnic on Sunday, 23 March. The event will run from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. and feature a historical photographic display, along with live music from the Mango Jam Big Band, bringing the sounds of the 1920s and 1930s back to the park.

Ahead of the picnic, a special tree planting ceremony will take place on Friday, 21 March. Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner will join local students in planting trees along the Arbor Walk, continuing the arboretum’s legacy as a site for conservation and learning.

For those eager to explore the space, a free guided tree walk will be held at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, 23 February. Bookings can be made through Eventbrite or by calling the Brisbane City Council’s Call Centre at 3403 8888.



Looking to the Future

Sherwood Arboretum’s journey over the past century reflects Brisbane’s deepening commitment to protecting native plant species. Thanks to the continued advocacy of Friends of Sherwood Arboretum (FOSA), the park remains a treasured green space for both scientific study and public enjoyment.

Published 12-February-2025