Bush tucker

Fresh barra, water buffalo and wild pig cooked using hot rocks, paper bark and gum leaves…

Barra, water buffulo, and wild pig

Patsy lived the first 25 or so years of her life in the traditional way – living in a paperbark shelter made by her dad, and following the seasons around Arnham land and learning how to live with the land. As do all her people, she married someone not from her country, and so she now lives in Kakadu with her husband who manages a water buffalo farm. She now lives in a house but still keeps her traditions alive by showing others the skills she learnt growing up. For eight years now she has guided whitefellahs like me on a bush tucker tour around the farm, which is within Kakadu national park.

When the park was formed in 1978 there were still many blackfellahs living in the bush in the way they always have – well, more or less. They used to get turtles and molluscs, and seeds from lilys, and many other things from the waters and mud of the billabongs until the water buffalo arrived – introduced by white man. Water buffalo thrived in the wetlands and proceeded to destroy the habitat and food source of the local people. But they soon learnt to use the water buffulo for food, which they came to depend on over a few generations.

Water buffulo

When the National Parks wanted to cull the buffalo from Kakadu, it was essential to seek the agreement of the traditional owners about the way this should be done. It was agreed to create a buffalo farm within the park so that the food source of buffalo would still be available. This worked for a while, until the short lived agreement with the government expired and the funding for running the farm dried up. The elders met and came up with a plan to try to keep the farm open by running tours to show the traditional bush skills of the Bininj people – which is how these tours began. And since then Patsy has never had a day off from taking the tour on the days that there are tourists who want to go.

So, enough of background. Our first stop was to collect tubers, called bush carrots, but more like parsnips in colour and taste. Pasty showed me and others a few times how to spot the thin vine that shows where to dig for this tucker. But I didn’t find one for myself, despite them being plentiful in the area – but Patsy colelcted enough to cook up later for so we could all try some for taste

Next she showed us how to cut the top off a livingstonia palm and get the moist heart to eat right there – I reckon its similar to the centre of a pineapple, but not so sweet. Maybe a cross between a carrot and pineapple centre.

When you are a nomad you need baskest to carry bush tucker in so we also collected some palm fronds to later learn how to make string, which is then used to make baskets.

Green ants. If you ever walked in the top end you will have met the green tree ants – as you brush past their tree dozens will crawl onto you and bite just to let you know they’re there. Have you seen the nests they make by pulling the leaves together and glueing them together with a sticky web? Patsy took one of these containing thousands of ants and larvae and crushed it in her hand. She removed the leaves and continued to crush the ants and larvae in her until she had a ball of ants.

She chuckled and encouraged us to smell this ball – I would describe it as astringent vinegar lemon. Then she challenged us to eat some… maybe a teaspoon of it.

By a small stretch of imagination it could be lemon sherbert or lemonade – but then there’s nothing like it after chewing a bit and all thats left is the legs – but it would insult her to spit them out so I pressed on…

Used for as a bush medicine than a regular snack or tasty morsel. A passenger on another tour had a raging headache – enough to be convinced to try bush medicine. His headache left in a few minutes after having a big handful of Patsy’s green ant crush.

Patsy getting lilypad buds

Crocs are common here but even so Patsy has a sense of where they are and when its safe to collect bush tucker from the water’s edge. Not many lily pad seed pods at this time of the year – the fat magpie geese have eaten most of them – but she collects enough for us to taste the seeds. Bland soft seeds about the size of peppercorns.

Lily pad seed pod

When they are plentiful she would collect them and grind them up to make a paste, or dough which is used for damper – bread cooked in the coals. But today we have damper made from wheat.

… more later

The Top End

Mindil Beach Sunset

Mindil Beach Mob

Mindil Beach Fireworks

I arrived in Darwin on cracker night – a freedom that most other state governments the world over have thought too risky to allow their minions to choose. For this one day of the year families can have their cracker night, and on Mindil beach there’s a big mob of revellers, and a stunning tropical sunset.

Wangi waterhole

While I have a coffee and wait to be picked up for a bush tucker tour I have a few hours and the chance to put up some news. I’m in Kakadu national park and have been camping in the remote north of Australia with my sister and family, and their friends for the past week.

Wangi Waterfall

This is Wangi waterfall again – close up and with my mob…

And here is Ian and Janelle and the girls crossing the Reynolds River, in Litchfield National Park.

Reyolds River

Vipassana

I’m back from meditation boot camp! Who would ever have thought sitting doing nothing could be so tough.

No wonder they keep checking at every opportunity before you actually move in – are you sure you want to do this?

Only two didn’t finish and I got the impression it can often be many more who don’t make it.

The vipasssana meditations which start about day three are the toughest. Three each day for an hour each. Sit without opening hands, legs or eyes.

I’ve decided to spend one day each week on work, and the others on boat projects or other interesting things. I think I could enjoy this – it means that this week I’ve been able to some more boat projects.

99cents for a recumbent bike… sounds like a good deal huh. I’m selling my bent bike on ebay, starting at 99 cents, so I sure hope someone bids more than that! It cost me $4250 so I’m hoping for much much more. The auction will start on Tuesday 15th May and go for 10 days. So if you know anyone wanting such a bike, let them know.

Back to painting…

Chris

[later. a few years later. since that time i have become more aware of feeling my body and its clear to me now that vipassana is not helpful. it requires that you sit in an uncomfortable position and ignore the pain and other messages of discomfort that your body is trying to tell you. this just makes the disconnect from our bodies even stronger. I now know that contentment comes with connecting your body and taken notice of what it is saying.  your body is a sacred place and should be treated with love and respect and the vipassana meditation is far from this. its quite deliberate in setting out as a purpose that you ignore the pain and discomfort that your body is in, seeking to somehow “rise above” the carnal state. this creates disharmony between body and soul and you can just feel that that is not a good purpose.

i have found that 15 minutes of gentle breath meditation a few times a day is all that is needed to form a strong connection with the innermost. there is no need for ascetic practises.]