BUSHTRACKS 21/06/2024
Looking both ways
In our partnership with Mimal Land Management, we reflect on outcomes from the past and plan for the future.
Read MoreWe respectfully engage with Traditional Custodians, and recognise Aboriginal culture, connection to Country and traditional knowledge.
Working together and applying two-way knowledge leads to greater understanding and better conservation outcomes.
Our work with Aboriginal people and communities is central to our values and conservation success.
We work in partnership with Aboriginal groups on their land and sea country and collaborate through meaningful engagement with Traditional Custodians on the reserves we manage for conservation.
While some organisations adopt a Reconciliation Action Plan to drive practical actions towards reconciliation, Bush Heritage has opted for a Cultural Competency Framework to suit our unique vision.
With such a significant portion of our conservation work done in partnership with Aboriginal people, this framework is an essential document. It outlines the tools and support systems necessary to create and maintain strong and healthy relationships with Aboriginal people and communities.
Cultural Competency Framework
(6mb PDF)
BUSHTRACKS 21/06/2024
In our partnership with Mimal Land Management, we reflect on outcomes from the past and plan for the future.
Read More26/09/2023 26/09/2023
It didn’t take long before evidence of a rich cultural history was found. Ancient stone tools, rock art and the connecting of storylines and songlines characterised the first Bidjara cultural heritage survey in August.
Read More19/07/2023 19/07/2023
Brogo Reserve is on Yuin Country – so every visit is an opportunity to get to know the lands and waters that my Ancestors knew like the backs of their hands. I'm based in Sydney - it's hard for me to live so far away from Yuin Country. This is something that Aboriginal people feel deep in their spirit and blood, like something tugging you back in that direction, back where you belong.
Read More06/07/2023 06/07/2023
This NAIDOC Week, we were lucky enough to hear directly from Elders themselves, as well as Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people who sent in powerful words from their ancestral homelands. Their wise reflections spoke to this year’s theme ‘For our Elders’, touching on the importance of listening, keeping language alive and how traditional cultural practices and knowledge can help address environmental challenges.
Read More06/07/2023
Join our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff as they have a yarn about this year's NAIDOC Week theme 'For Our Elders'.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 13/06/2023
In Western Australia's Southwest Botanical Province, when Badimia, Bimarra and Barna come together, great things happen.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 13/06/2023
The ‘Climate Futures’ project helps us stay one step ahead of the climate curve. It's a long-term analysis of how the climate is likely to change in our priority landscapes and the expected impacts.
Read MoreBLOG 02/06/2023
In May 2023, six indigenous ranger groups travelled to Pullen Pullen Reserve, Maiawali Country, in Western Queensland. It's here that the Night Parrot was rediscovered in 2013, after it was thought to have gone extinct. Bush Heritage purchased the property in 2016 and have been working tirelessly to protect the mysterious bird.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 13/01/2023
A long-awaited return to sacred water sites on Karajarri Country provides Elders and rangers with the chance to preserve knowledge and protect country for future generations.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 13/01/2023
“I think to read and write in Garawa out in the bush is everything,” says Nancy. “You’re on the land to learn about your culture.”
Read MoreBLOG 01/12/2022
Knowledge exchanges with other ranger groups and Aboriginal Corporations has been a focus for the Birriliburu Rangers in 2022. Every opportunity has been taken to strengthen ranger networks and learn from others.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 17/10/2022
After four days of sharing knowledge, time and culture at Garma Festival, the team reflects on what it taught them - for the future and for Country.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 14/06/2022
A new fee-for-service model between Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation and Bush Heritage is supporting conservation at Fish River Station in the Northern Territory.
Read MoreBLOG 18/05/2022
During the Easter holidays, a Budjiti Cultural Camp saw 20 Budjiti people on country. A trip to the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies also marked a significant step towards reviving language and culture.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 25/03/2022
Rembarrnga and Dalabon Elders in central Arnhem Land are leading a community-wide effort to keep language and culture strong by documenting their seasonal calendar.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 14/01/2022
A new Indigenous tourism venture in the Kimberley is opening doors for Balanggarra people to keep their country healthy, and in their hands.
Read MoreBLOG 22/11/2021
Several Noongar women enjoyed two days on country exploring Red Moort Reserve and soaking up the view from the field station.
Read MoreBLOG 06/07/2021
Today, I want to talk to you about the resilience of country and how we as a community, live, work and engage in this space and I want to talk about healing country.
Read MoreBLOG 02/07/2021
This NAIDOC Week we celebrate the flow and connectedness of People and Country, highlighting the relationship Bush Heritage holds with the Badimia Traditional Owners of the Midwest-Gascoyne region in Western Australia.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 18/06/2021
In 2016, a desire to keep culture alive and maintain a strong connection to country led the Waanyi Garawa rangers to organise an annual biodiversity survey and culture camp. Five years on, the camps bring together over 100 participants and have a strong focus on the next generation
Read MoreBLOG 15/06/2021
The Mawonga IPA declaration realises long held dreams of managing ngurrampaa (country).
Read MoreBLOG 26/05/2021
Our work with Aboriginal people and communities is central to our values, vision, purpose and conservation success.
Read MoreBLOG 22/04/2021
At Hamelin Station Reserve in mid-west Western Australia, Malgana Rangers are hard at work restoring the land.
Read MoreBLOG 26/03/2021
A new report published last week highlights 19 ecosystems on land and sea country that are unravelling due to pressures from climate change and human impacts. The Georgina Gidgee woodlands of central Australia is one of them.
Read MoreBLOG 17/12/2020
The University of Melbourne and Bush Heritage Australia have been awarded a significant grant of $1.2 million by The Ian Potter Foundation to build an open-source Conservation Knowledge System. This online platform will combine First Nations' knowledge and Western science for the benefit of all, to guide land management and conservation policies and actions, and to strengthen biodiversity and environmental protection.
Read More20/11/2020
Take a deep dive on Aboriginal Partnerships and right-way science in this 50-minute webinar with Cissy Gore-Birch.
Read MoreBLOG 26/01/2020
Bush Heritage Australia is proud to support the Uluru Statement from the Heart as an historic mandate to create a fuller expression of Australia’s nationhood. We hear the call for the establishment of a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution and for a referendum to amend the Constitution accordingly; and we hear the call for a Makarrata Commission to supervise a process of agreement-making between governments and First Nations and truth-telling about our history.
Read MoreBLOG 13/06/2019
Bush Heritage staff and Badimia Bandi Barna Aboriginal Corporation directors gathered together in the shearing shed to discuss current and planned activities on Charles Darwin Reserve, Badimia aspirations and cultural heritage site management on the reserve.
Read MoreBLOG 16/04/2019
Recently the West team had the privilege of spending two days with Whadjuk Traditional Owners Karen Jacobs and Murray Yarran from Indigenous Economic Solutions, to undertake cross-cultural awareness training in Perth. From the importance of Welcome to Country, to Aboriginal spirituality, native title and bush foods, the team learnt about the Traditional Owners of this land and the 68,000-year history of the world's oldest living culture.
Read MoreBLOG 24/12/2018
One of the highlights of this year was attending a native title consent determination for a claim by the Nanda people. Many different Nanda families attended, and it felt significant to have everyone from elders of the community to the young children be present at this historic event. The setting was truly appropriate on the banks of the Murchison River as it flows into the Indian Ocean at Kalbarri, in the heart of Nanda country.
Read MoreBLOG 19/12/2018
December 4th marked a great celebration for Malgana people with the consent determination of Native Title in the Shark Bay area including Bush Heritage's Hamelin Reserve and the surrounding World Heritage Area. The Federal Court session was held on the foreshore in Denham at the request of Malgana Traditional Owners and as a sign of respect to the achievement of native title after a long 20-year legal process.
Read MoreBLOG 24/08/2018
The Waanyi people of the Gulf of Carpentaria have long known of the existence of endangered Gulf Snapping Turtle, but it was unknown to science until 1986 when it was 'discovered' as a 25,000 year old fossil at Riversleigh Fossil fields of Queensland.
Read MoreBLOG 26/04/2018
Last Tuesday, around 30 members of the Budjiti community travelled to our Naree Reserve in New South Wales to return a collection of cultural artefacts back on country.
Read MoreBLOG 24/11/2017
This experience made my week! We had rangers Vaughan Lane and Lindsey Callow, both Badimaya men from the Midwest Aboriginal Ranger Program who are working in partnership with the Northern Agricultural Catchments Council and Western Mulga, out at Charles Darwin Reserve in Western Australia recently to clear out a rock hole. What happened next was just extraordinary.
Read MoreBLOG 10/08/2017
Bush Heritage, Waanyi and Garawa rangers, Traditional Owners and the Northern Land Council came together for a week long Biodiversity and Culture Camp on Siegel Creek, deep within the China Wall (Mindibirrina) Ranges in the Gulf Region of the Northern Territory. This was an exciting and happy week with more than 40 people coming together to strengthen culture and survey wildlife.
Read MoreBLOG 03/07/2017
We're proud to celebrate this year's NAIDOC week with the theme 'Our Languages Matter' that highlights how important it is to keep languages alive and the vital role they have in culture, identity, spirituality and the passing on of cultural knowledge among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 23/03/2017
Gloved fingers point at a collection of maps lying on a 4WD bonnet. The group of Dja Dja Wurrung Traditional Custodians and Bush Heritage staff are here to survey the Nardoo Hills reserves in central Victoria for their cultural values.
Read MoreBLOG 20/06/2016
Forty nine thousand years is old by anyone's measure. The Bunuba people were proudly in the national spotlight recently when the Australian National University published its carbon dating of a Bunuba polished stone axe. The discovery pushes the development of axe technology back to between 45,000 and 49,000 years ago, coinciding with the arrival of people in Australia. The fragment is 10,000 years older than the previous oldest known axe fragments found in northern Australia in 2010.
Read MoreBLOG 20/05/2016
Last Friday marked ten years since the sad passing of Rick Farley. Farley was an environmental leader, a passionate advocate for Aboriginal land rights and management. He was the co-founder of the Landcare volunteer movement and fostered environmental partnerships between different interest groups towards a sustainable future for Australia.
Read MoreBUSHTRACKS 21/12/2015
In West Arnhem Land, we are working with the Nawarddeken people whose Indigenous Protected Area covers 1.4 million hectares of natural and cultural treasures. A biodiversity survey was conducted over 10 days in Baby Dreaming Country, a significant cultural site in the northern region of the Warddeken Indigenous Protected Area (IPA), a full day’s drive from Darwin.
Read MoreBLOG 09/07/2015
The Adnyamathanha people are the Traditional Owners of the lands extending from the far north Flinders Ranges in South Australia to Boolcoomatta Station Reserve near Broken Hill. In 1998 the Nantawarrina Indigenous Protected Area (IPA), which covers 58,000 hectares of their land, was the first indigenous protected area to be declared in the country.
Read MoreBLOG 03/07/2015
The Traditional Custodians of Naree Station are the Budjiti People. Their ancestral lands along the Paroo River span two states – far western NSW and over the border into Queensland. Last Tuesday was a momentous day as the Budjiti, or Paroo River People, celebrated their native title determination in Queensland over 11,000 square kilometres southwest of Cunnamulla.
Read More