#NaturePact: Connecting with Country

#NaturePact: Connecting with Country

Many people call Australia ‘the lucky country,’ but ‘luck’ is an inadequate word for how fortunate we truly are to belong to this amazing place. Consider this astonishing geophysical fact: Australia is made of the oldest continental crust on Earth, some 4.4 billion years old.  Not only that, the oldest fossil evidence of life on land anywhere in the planet has been discovered embedded in rocks in Western Australia’s Pilbara region.  

And then there are the innumerable, powerful stories of human and ancestral connection. We’re sharing lands that are home to the oldest continuous living cultures in the world; lands that have been shaped by millennia of connectedness, custodianship and care by Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. 

That custodianship and care today remain as precious and essential as they have ever been. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, care of Country is not just about being physically close to the land or oceans. For many, ‘they are their country in the sense that humans are a critical component of ecological relationships.’* 

Much of the Koala Eco range (developed and made on Gadigal land of the Eora Nation) takes inspiration from traditional bush medicines of the Australian Aboriginal pharmacopoeia. So we are really proud to be partnering with People and Parks Foundation’s 2022 #NaturePact campaign, which invites us to explore and experience a deeper relationship with and respect for nature. 

Though non-Indigenous Australians can never be as deeply culturally and ancestrally entwined with the lands, skies and waters as Australia’s first peoples, we are all nonetheless part of nature, and we all play a role in caring for it. Nature connects us all.

And we can strengthen these connections.  This week, maybe use your #NaturePact time to start finding out more about the language groups and cultural practices of the Traditional Custodians of the places where you live. Take the opportunity to grow and affirm your respect and appreciation for this extraordinary country, and also for the people who have looked after it for more than 60,000 years.  

Koala Eco is the principal partner and supporter for the People and Parks Foundation’s 2022 #NaturePact campaign, which aims to encourage as many people as possible to spend more time connecting with the outdoor world during September.  To sign up, or find out more go to: https://peopleandparks.org/nature-pact/

*This is from a June 2016 paper called ‘A Landscape Architecture of Fire: Cultural Emergence and Ecological Pyrodiversity in Australia’s Western Desert’ by Deborah Bird, Rebecca Bliege Bird, Brian Codding, and Ngalangka Nola Taylor, which appeared in Current Anthropology. It focuses on the fire management practices of the Martu language groups of remote Western Australia, and its authors note: ‘Many traditionally oriented Martu … do not perceive of themselves as having a spiritual connection that makes them “closer to the land” … they insist that they are their country in the sense that humans are a critical component of ecological relationships.’

← Older Post Newer Post →

When the needs of the planet are the needs of the person

When the needs of the planet are the needs of the person

Digging into the roots of ecopsychology  ‘In search of a greater sanity, [ecopsychology] begins where many might say sanity leaves off: at the threshold of...

Read more
Dissolving Into Nature: A Moment with Bianca Spender

Dissolving Into Nature: A Moment with Bianca Spender

At Koala Eco, we believe that time in nature is more than restorative—it’s essential to our well-being. Our Hour in Nature series invites thoughtful creatives...

Read more
Fresh Season, Fresh Space

Fresh Season, Fresh Space

As the cooler months draw to a close, why not take a cue from the season? A time of renewal and rejuvenation, spring gives us...

Read more
Made in and by the lucky country

Made in and by the lucky country

How we’re inspired by Australia  Why is Australia sometimes called ‘the lucky country’? It was the title of a book written by Donald Horne in...

Read more
How to reap the full benefits of your fruit and vegetables

How to reap the full benefits of your fruit and vegetables

Aside from the longer days, warmer weather, and ability to spend more time in nature, one of the best things about spring is the return...

Read more
Rethinking Green: A Perspective

Rethinking Green: A Perspective

‘I cannot meet the spring unmoved –’[1] wrote poet Emily Dickinson (1830–1886). She called spring an ‘Experiment in Green.’[2] We agree! It’s impossible not to...

Read more