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bush tucker

Indigenous Interlude

by Robbo on September 3, 2011

in Indigenous Interlude

Here are the kids from Galiwinku community school singing with Shellie Morris & Lloyd Garrawitja (who also wrote the song) on the importance of bush tucker keeping you strong, both physically and mentally.

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Indigenous News Update

by Robbo on August 21, 2009

in Indigenous News

News

  • 150 Ampilatwatja residents walked out from community & still camping bush as sewerage leaks through town http://bit.ly/j6p5U
  • Ampilatwatja residents accuse rebel MLA Alison Anderson of ignoring their plight & withdraw support for her http://bit.ly/4RTNI
  • Illegal in South Australia Tas & Victoria to kill & eat cat. traditional bush tucker in north of South Australia http://bit.ly/THCYY
  • Aboriginal comedy, Stone Bros, receives MA15+ due to a scene that is not included in the movie! http://bit.ly/amk2v
  • Call to offer tax concessions to professionals who work out bush http://bit.ly/JshWW – I am all for it!
  • Lhere Artepe wants debate on remote alcohol sales. Canteens stop drink driving deaths? http://bit.ly/1HsRA – what about endemic violence?
  • Cultural excuses for overcrowding in houses had to stop http://bit.ly/12L6s0

The Indigenous News Updates are sourced from news and other articles from around the country that I have posted on Twitter.

If you like this post and what else you see on the blog please subscribe by RSS feed (the orange button) or by email. Visit my subscription page.

The Indigenous News Updates are sourced from news and other articles from around the country that I have posted on Twitter.

If you like this post and what else you see on the blog please subscribe by RSS feed (the orange button) or by email. Visit my subscription page.

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“A diet richer in kangaroo, emu, seafood and bush tucker, such as bush pears and yams, would help cut the burden of heart disease and diabetes in some Aboriginal communities” reports the West Australian newspaper. The co-ordinator of Aboriginal programs for the Heart Foundation (Western Australia), Lyn Dimer says messages to eat five serves of vegies and two of fruit each day were not being heard in remote communities. Also the storage capacity of fresh foods, availability and prohibitive costs were limiting factors.

I can vouch for the cost of fresh fruit. With deliveries perhaps held up by bad weather, the fresh produce does not always look so flash when it reaches us. And sometimes I wonder if these and the frozen meats that are sent out to us as they might not be the best quality, but we are too far away to complain and our need so much we cannot send it back. Perhaps not – but I wonder.

Bush Tucker is still an important part of the diet out here and to supplement it ‘roo tails from kangaroos shot in NSW make their way to us in the freezer truck. Lyn is encouraging aboriginal people in rural and remote communities to maintain their bush foods as it is healthy tucker. However there can be limitations on where they can hunt and some foods including plants, are becoming extinct.

Perentie

Perentie

In desert country where there are now large cattle stations and a traditionally nomadic people are limited to a small part of their traditional country it may be difficult to find sufficient bush tucker without depleting the resource.

Witchetty Grubs

Also not to be overlooked is the benefits of collecting your food. Digging a two foot hole for your feed of witchetty (or bardee) grubs or tracking a kangaroo or Perentie (a lizard that may grow to more than 2.5 metres) for kilometres is also beneficial for reducing your blood sugar levels.

But none of this is nothing really new. There is a booklet available titled “Bush Tucker in Kidney Failure and Diabetes” that lists traditional bush foods from around Australia. It lists the taxonomic name, common name, a breakdown of energy, protein, fat, water, carbohydrates and minerals, with room for you to write the local name of the foodstuff. It also tells you what part of the plant or food you eat. In some cases it may be the leaf, fruit or animal organ.

Now this is one detailed breakdown. Look at the Bogong Moth. The booklet gives a breakdown of nutrients for the abdomen and the wings seperately, but also a breakdown of nutrient value for the whole moth. Now that’s detail you gotta love.

The booklet can be ordered or downloaded from the Kidney Health Australia Website

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