23

Feb

Indigenous Walk Print E-mail

Indigenous Walk

Today everyone had an awesome lesson in the aboriginal culture. We learnt about some of the native plants and which plants you can eat when they are ripe. Michael tried an unripe pigface (berry) and spat it out within seconds. “They tasted horrible.” The people who came down here to share their culture were Kylie and Susan. Kylie and Susan showed us a native plant which they used for soap. They showed us what they used to catch river eels and fish. They placed rocks around a funnel sort of shape and scared all the fish into a basket which is an ingenious idea. They did this by scaring all the fish and eels into the basket while they were splashing the water and making noises. Their funnel took over 10 years to make out of strong native plants because they selected them from different places. They told us the quickest way of making the funnel was to do it while they were sitting down at the camp fire and everyone would take turns making it. The girls told us which foods they’d eat at a ceremony. The Aborigines would’ve eaten abalone, eel, crayfish and mussels.  They told us about how different boomerang were used for different types of hunting, the long boomerangs were used to kill birds and come down from the tree. Everyone had a great time and enjoyed listening to Kylie and Susan and looking at the tools, basket, funnel and clap sticks.

By Michael - Wonthaggi SC and Annika - Swifts Creek School

 

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School For Student Leadership

School for Student Leadership is a Victorian Department of Education and Training (DET) initiative offering a unique residential education experience for year nine students. The curriculum focuses on personal development and team learning projects sourced from students' home regions. There are four campuses in iconic locations across Victoria. The Alpine School Campus is located at Dinner Plain in the Victorian Alps. Snowy River Campus is near the mouth of the Snowy River at Marlo in east Gippsland. The third site is adjacent to Mount Noorat near Camperdown in Victoria’s Western District, and is called Gnurad-Gundidj. After consultation with the local aboriginal community, this name represents both the indigenous name of the local area and an interpretation of the statement "belonging to this place". Our fourth and newest campus, currently known as the Don Valley Campus is located at Don Valley, Yarra Ranges.
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Our school community acknowledges the Gunaikurnai and Monero-Ngarigo people as the traditional custodians of the land upon which our school campus is built. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, their Elders past and present, and especially whose children attend our school.