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Chenry Chronicles 8
Last Edition volume 1 number 8 August 2005 The Chenry Chronicle By Christopher and Heather Henry USS Blue Ridge Chris and the US Counsel General who is stationed in A model of the USS Blue Ridge. Sydney. Chris received an invitation in the mail from Kendo the US Counsel General and the Seventh Fleet Chris has taken up Kendo while here in to attend the reception on the USS Blue Ridge Toowoomba, Australia. Kendo is one of the ship. What an experience! It started at 6:30pm many arts of the Samurai, Kendo is the sport. in Brisbane near the sugar bulk dock. The ship Kendo is an old gentlemen’s, sport. There are had been on an exercise for three weeks with several related arts, but Kendo is a contact sport the Australian Navy. The ship just docked and where armor is worn and bamboo sticks are had a huge reception inviting many Australian used in the place of real swords. Chris dresses dignitaries and a few Americans. We were up in amour every week to give it a go. To the probably one of just a few Americans invited. untrained eye, it looks like a bunch of men There was a ceremony and the National trying to hit each other on the head with a stick, Anthem was played. It has been a long time but it is a very difficult sport to learn because since we have heard that song. The US of the many intricacies and traditions. They Counsel General and the Admiral cut the huge meet on Sunday morning and Monday sheet cake with a sword. -
East Kimberley Impact Assessment Project
East Kimberley Impact Assessment Project HISTORICAL NOTES RELEVANT TO IMPACT STORIES OF THE EAST KIMBERLEY Cathie Clement* East Kimberley Working Paper No. 29 ISBN O 86740 357 8 ISSN 0816...,6323 A Joint Project Of The: Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies Australian National University Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Anthropology Department University of Western Australia Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia The aims of the project are as follows: 1. To compile a comprehensive profile of the contemporary social environment of the East Kimberley region utilising both existing information sources and limited fieldwork. 2. Develop and utilise appropriate methodological approaches to social impact assessment within a multi-disciplinary framework. 3. Assess the social impact of major public and private developments of the East Kimberley region's resources (physical, mineral and environmental) on resident Aboriginal communities. Attempt to identify problems/issues which, while possibly dormant at present, are likely to have implications that will affect communities at some stage in the future. 4. Establish a framework to allow the dissemination of research results to Aboriginal communities so as to enable them to develop their own strategies for dealing with social impact issues. 5. To identify in consultation with Governments and regional interests issues and problems which may be susceptible to further research. Views expressed in the Projecfs publications are the views of the authors, and are not necessarily shared by the sponsoring organisations. Address correspondence to: The Executive Officer East Kimberley Project CRES, ANU GPO Box4 Canberra City, ACT 2601 HISTORICAL NOTES RELEVANT TO IMPACT STORIES OF THE EAST KIMBERLEY Cathie Clement* East Kimberley Working Paper No. -
Northern Territory
NORTHERN TERRITORY BAYVIEW 0820 CHARLES DARWIN 0820 COONAWARRA 0820 CULLEN BAY 0820 DARWIN INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT 0820 EAST POINT 0820 EATON 0820 FANNIE BAY 0820 LARRAKEYAH 0820 LUDMILLA 0820 PARAP 0820 RAAF BASE DARWIN 0820 STUART PARK 0820 THE GARDENS 0820 THE NARROWS 0820 WINNELLIE 0820 WOOLNER 0820 BAGOT 0820 DARWIN DC 0820 DARWIN MC 0820 WINNELLIE 0821 ACACIA HILLS 0822 ANGURUGU 0822 ANINDILYAKWA 0822 ANNIE RIVER 0822 BEES CREEK 0822 BELYUEN 0822 BLACK JUNGLE 0822 BLACKMORE 0822 BORDER STORE 0822 BURRUNDIE 0822 BYNOE 0822 BYNOE HARBOUR 0822 CAMP CREEK 0822 CHANNEL ISLAND 0822 CHARLES DARWIN 0822 CHARLOTTE 0822 CLARAVALE 0822 COBOURG 0822 COLLETT CREEK 0822 COOMALIE CREEK 0822 COX PENINSULA 0822 DALY 0822 DALY RIVER 0822 DARWIN RIVER DAM 0822 DELISSAVILLE 0822 DOUGLAS-DALY 0822 EAST ARM 0822 EAST ARNHEM 0822 ELRUNDIE 0822 EVA VALLEY 0822 FINNISS VALLEY 0822 FLEMING 0822 FLY CREEK 0822 FREDS PASS 0822 GALIWINKU 0822 GLYDE POINT 0822 GUNBALANYA 0822 GUNN POINT 0822 HAYES CREEK 0822 HIDDEN VALLEY 0822 HOTHAM 0822 HUGHES 0822 KAKADU 0822 KOOLPINYAH 0822 LAKE BENNETT 0822 LAMBELLS LAGOON 0822 LITCHFIELD PARK 0822 LIVINGSTONE 0822 LLOYD CREEK 0822 MANDORAH 0822 MANINGRIDA 0822 MAPURU 0822 MARANUNGA 0822 MARGARET RIVER 0822 MARRAKAI 0822 MCMINNS LAGOON 0822 MICKETT CREEK 0822 MIDDLE POINT 0822 MILIKAPITI 0822 MILINGIMBI 0822 MILYAKBURRA 0822 MINJILANG 0822 MOUNT BUNDEY 0822 MURRUMUJUK 0822 NAUIYU 0822 NEMARLUK 0822 NGANMARRIYANGA 0822 NUMBULWAR 0822 NUMBURINDI 0822 OENPELLI 0822 PALUMPA 0822 PEPPIMENARTI 0822 PIRLANGIMPI 0822 POINT STUART -
Powering Community Development CLP.CONNECT #009 SEP, 2019
CLP.CONNECT #009 SEP, 2019 Powering Community Development CLP.CONNECT #009 SEP, 2019 Powering Community Development Dear colleagues, It’s been an unsettling summer and a testing time for Hong Kong. It is also very disheartening to see what is going on. Having adopted Hong Kong as my home and lived here for more than 25 years I know what a special place this is. As a parent it’s heartbreaking to see the despair in our city’s young people. But I believe the people of Hong Kong have a strong resilience and I hope the city’s Lion Rock Spirit can pull everyone together through this difficult period. Over more than a century CLP has grown with Hong Kong through thick and thin. We are a proud member of this community and care deeply about our home. That’s why we have made “Caring for the Community” one of CLP’s core values and put a spotlight on our community initiatives in this issue of CLP.CONNECT. The Kadoorie family have been Asia’s philanthropic leaders for generations. Their value has not only helped millions of people, but also inspired CLP to contribute to the communities in which we live and work. The cover story takes you back to the 19th century to look at how the Kadoorie family’s charitable tradition touched many lives in old Hong Kong. This year marks the 25th anniversary of our CLP Volunteer Team in Hong Kong. What started out as a frontline staff-initiated volunteer ▲The CLP Volunteer Team has been serving Hong group providing free rewiring services to underprivileged elderly Kong for 25 years. -
Impact Assessment Project
East Kimberley Impact Assessment Project COMMUNITY SOCIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT A CUMULATIVE STUDY IN THE TURKEY CREEK AREA, WESTERN AUSTRALIA Helen Ross East Kimberley Working Paper No.27 ISBN O 86740 355 1 ISSN 0816-6323 A Joint Project Of The: Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies Australian National University Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Anthropology Department University of Western Australia Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia The aims of the project are as follows: 1. To compile a comprehensive profile of the contemporary social environment of the East Kimberley region utilising both existing information sources and limited fieldwork. 2. Develop and utilise appropriate methodological approaches to social impact assessment within a multi-disciplinary framework. 3. Assess the social impact of major public and private developments of the East Kimberley region's resources (physical, mineral and environmental) on resident Aboriginal communities. Attempt to identify problems/issues which, while possibly dormant at present, are likely to have implications that will affect communities at some stage in the future. 4. Establish a framework to allow the dissemination of research results to Aboriginal communities so as to enable them to develop their own strategies for dealing with social impact issues. 5. To identify in consultation with Governments and regional interests issues and problems which may be susceptible to further research. Views expressed in the Projecfs publications are the views of the authors, and -
Songs from the Stations: Wajarra As Performed by Ronnie Wavehill
Indigenous Music of Australia Linda Barwick, Series Editor The many forms of Australia’s Indigenous music have ancient roots, huge diversity and global reach. The Indigenous Music of Australia series aims to stimulate discussion and development of the field of Australian Indigenous music (including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander music) in both subject matter and approach. For the Sake of a Song: Wangga Songmen and Their Repertories Allan Marett, Linda Barwick and Lysbeth Ford Reflections and Voices: Exploring the Music of Yothu Yindi with Mandawuy Yunupingu Aaron Corn Songs from the Stations: Wajarra as Sung by Ronnie Wavehill Wirrpnga, Topsy Dodd Ngarnjal and Dandy Danbayarri at Kalkaringi Myfany Turpin and Felicity Meakins Wurrurrumi Kun-Borrk: Songs from Western Arnhem Land Kevin Djimar Wajarra as Sung by Ronnie Wavehill Wirrpnga, Topsy Dodd Ngarnjal and Dandy Danbayarri at Kalkaringi Myfany Turpin and Felicity Meakins, with photographs by Brenda L Croft The Gurindji knowledge in this book is the intellectual property of Gurindji people. This knowledge should only be used with written consent of the intellectual property owners and with proper attribution. © Gurindji people 2019 First published by Sydney University Press 2019 © Myfany Turpin and Felicity Meakins 2019 © Ronnie Wavehill, Topsy Dodd and Dandy Danbayarri 2019 © Sydney University Press 2019 Reproduction and Communication for other purposes Except as permitted under the Act, no part of this edition may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or communicated in any form or by any means without prior written permission. All requests for reproduction or communication should be made to Sydney University Press at the address below: Sydney University Press Fisher Library F03 University of Sydney NSW 2006 AUSTRALIA [email protected] sydney.edu.au/sup A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of Australia. -
Elsey National Park
Elsey National Park Plan of Management May 2012 PARKS AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY Elsey National Park Plan of Management Elsey National Park Plan of Management Parks and Wildlife Division of the Northern Territory, Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport PO Box 344, KATHERINE, NT, 0851 This document is available at: www.nt.gov.au/nretas/parks/manage/plans/katherine.html Published by the Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport. ISBN 978-1-920772-01-7 Elsey National Park Plan of Management Executive Summary Elsey National Park (the Park) is located in the East Central Barkly Region, close to the town of Mataranka. With around 200,000 people entering the Park each year, this is one of the Territory’s most visited Parks. The 139 km² Park contains crystal-clear spring fed waterholes, long stretches of river, scenic walking tracks and historic sites, making it ideal for those keen to relax or explore the Park through land- and water-based activities. The Park protects permanent springs, waterholes and associated riverine vegetation, along with a number of vulnerable species. The Mataranka Thermal Pool is recognised within the Northern Territory (NT) as a Site of Conservation Significance, making it a particularly important place to protect into the future. There are a number of registered sacred sites also contained within the Park which are of significance to the local Indigenous people. Traditional Owner knowledge is recognised and incorporated into management of the Park. Main priorities of the Parks management are to: • Provide for a high-quality recreational experience based on the spring fed waterholes and the river through the provision of improved facilities, as resources become available; • Maintain the springs, waterholes and riverine vegetation communities in good condition; • Protect and interpret the natural, cultural and historical values; • Engage with the tourism industry, Indigenous groups, the local community and neighbours. -
Aboriginal Australian Cowboys and the Art of Appropriation Darren Jorgensen
Aboriginal Australian Cowboys and the Art of Appropriation Darren Jorgensen IN AMERICA, THE IMAGE OF THE COWBOY configures the ideals of courage, freedom, equality, and individualism.1 As close readers of the genre of the Western have argued, the cowboy fulfills a mythical role in American popular culture, as he stands between the so-called settlement of the country and its wilderness, between an idea of civilization and the depiction of savage Indians. The Western vaulted the cowboy to iconic status, as stage shows, novels, and films encoded his virtues in narratives set on the North American frontier of the nineteenth century. He became a figure of the popular national imagination just after this frontier had been conquered.2 From the beginning, the fictional cowboy was a character who played upon the nation’s idea of itself and its history. He came to assume the status of national myth and informed America’s economic, political, and social landscape over the course of the twentieth century.3 Yet this is only one na- tion’s history of the cowboy. As America became one of the largest exporters of culture on the planet, it exported its Western imagery, genre films, and novels. These cowboys were trans- formed in the hands of other cultural producers in other countries. From East German Indi- anerfilme to Italian spaghetti Westerns and Mexican films about caudillos (military leaders), the Darren Jorgensen is an associate professor in the School of Architecture, Landscape and Visual Arts at the University of Western Australia. He researches and publishes in the area of Australian art, as well as on contemporary art, critical theory, and science fiction. -
Kleberg .. King Ranch Add up to Nearly 1 0 Millio1 of Cattle Land
Kleberg .. King Ranch • . Runl add up to nearly 10 millio1 of cattle land across our Wben historians even amass. As a pastoral spe abroad. But the black gold 51 (member of a long estab Sir Rupert is corporation Two properties, Elgin tually sit down to compile cialist Kleberg has few was risked and is helping to lished land family with large chairman today and the Downs and New Twin Hill! their list of greats for the peers, and is certainly the burn the Running W into holdings in Queensland and company has been made se were available on Ion~ 20th century, the name of most professional in the tens of thousands of cattle _the Northern Territory). nior holding group for all leaseholds from the Queens· Texas cattle baron Robert fields of range grasses, across the world. They were the aristocrats Australian operations. Capi land Government which Justus Kleberg Jr. undoubt horse and cattle genetics But before the fusing of of the country's pastoralists tal outlays so far are ac gave Kleberg a further as edly will be among them. and cattle pharmacopoeia, hot iron and beef flesh, - men Australians would knowledged to be about $15 surance that huge tracts of As reigning head of the outside universities and gov came his quest for land. It know, and through whom million. adjacent land would be family kingdom of King ernment bureaus. began in the early 1950s and they would come to know Sir Samuel Hordern died available at modest rates it Ranch Incorporated. Kle Applying this knowledge the three areas chosen to put King Ranch and what it in a car smash nine years he and I.P.L. -
98 KIMBERLEY I Have Only Once Kept a Diary in My Life and That Was
KIMBERLEY I have only once kept a diary in my life and that was during my time in Kimberley, and the extraordinary thing is that over the 50 years that have passed since that time it has remained in my possession. Keeping the diary on this one occasion was probably something to do with the stories Hedley had told me from Archibald Watson’s diaries only months before I went north. Sadly my diary makes very dull reading compared to those tales, but when I read it recently it did make my Kimberley days come alive for me again. The diary also played a part in my life many years later when I became interested in the Bradshaw paintings of Kimberley. My entries capture my reaction to meeting Aborigines for the first time and working with black people. It was not until WWII when the American army was billeted in England that most Britishers came in contact with black people. My first mass contact with a coloured race had been with the Zulu stevedores in Cape Town, when the ship had docked to load cargo on my voyage from England to Australia. The diary shows how my feelings about the Aborigines changed from fear to a paternal friendship. I read that I arrived in Perth on April 6th 1955 and stayed at the old Esplanade Hotel. What a superb old-fashioned Victorian hotel it was in those days! I am sure it has long since been pulled down; if so, what a shame! I was only in Perth long enough to meet the owner of Liveringa Station, Mr Forest, who I hoped would employ me. -
Caring for Our Country Achievements Report NORTHERN and REMOTE AUSTRALIA 2008 –2013 West Macdonnell Ranges, Northern Territory
caring for our country Achievements Report NORTHERN AND REMOTE AUSTRALIA 2008 –2013 West Macdonnell Ranges, Northern Territory. Source: T. J. Baker, DSEWPaC Northern and Remote Australia Northern and Remote Australia The unique environmental, social and economic challenges faced by northern and remote Australia require a tailored approach to sustainable natural resources use and environmental protection. 3 Table of contents Introduction 5 Outcome 1 Protect important natural assets in northern and remote Australia, particularly the national reserve system (and Indigenous Protected Areas within it). 7 Case study: Warddeken Indigenous Protected Area, Northern Territory 8 Case study: West Kimberley National Heritage area, Western Australia 11 Case study: Witchelina, South Australia 12 Case study: Natural Resource Management regions in northern and remote Australia 13 Case study: Rangers helping to maintain land and sea country in the Torres Strait, Queensland 15 Outcome 2 Assist at least 30 per cent of land managers in northern and remote Australia to increase their uptake of sustainable grazing and land management practices. 17 Case study: Wangamaty (Lower Daly) Landcare Group, Northern Territory 18 Case study: Ecosystem Management Understanding, Northern Territory 19 Case study: Barkly Landcare and Conservation Association, Northern Territory 20 Working on Country 21 National strategy to reduce Indigenous disadvantage 22 Case study: Caring for Gawler Ranges rock-holes, South Australia 23 Case study: Protecting Mangarrayi traditional lands -
Managing Indigenous Pastoral Lands
case study 1 warrigundu station northern territory MANAGING INDIGENOUS PASTORAL LANDS Pub no. 14/026 McClelland Rural Services Pty Ltd warrigundu station CASESTUDY#1 northern territory Contents Human Resource Management 24 Executive Summary 3 Staff 24 Land and Property Information 8 Recruitment 24 Location 8 Staff Training 25 Traditional Owners 8 Machinery Operators (such as Grader Drivers) 26 Land Tenure 9 Informal Training 26 History 9 Diversification 26 Role of ILC 9 Map 9 List of Tables Cultural Heritage 10 Table CS1.1 Climate Average Climate 10 Annual Values 10 Land Types - Soils 11 Table CS1.2 2012 Herd Land Types – Vegetation 11 Closing Numbers 20 Property Infrastructure 11 List of Figures Business Management 13 Figure CS1.1 Location of Warrigundu Station 8 Goals and Vision 13 Day to Day Management 13 Figure CS1.2 Map of Warrigundu Station Including Strangways 10 Business Planning 13 List of Photos Ongoing Monitoring of Performance 13 Cover photo - Brahman Cattle Sources of Funds 14 Governance 14 Photo CS1.1 Warrigundu Station Graduates 7 Financial Management 15 Photo CS1.2 Warrigundu Yards 12 Markets and Marketing 16 Photo CS1.3 Drafting Weaners for Grazing Land Management 18 Gunbalanya 17 Environmental Management Plan 18 Photo CS1.4 Warrigundu Cattle Carrying Capacity 18 Committee discussing new fence line placement 18 Fire Management Regimes 19 Weeds 19 Photo CS1.5 Care is also taken of the horses 23 Feral Animals 19 Photo CS1.6 Training at Herd Management and Production 20 Warrigundu Station 24 Herd Size and Composition 20 Photo CS1.7 Yarding up at Herd Management Operations 20 Warrigundu Station 25 Breeder and Heifer Management 21 Acknowledgements Weaner Management 21 In writing this case study, the assistance of the Nutrition Management 22 Indigenous Land Corporation is acknowledged.