• Pender Bay, Dampier Peninsula

    26–29 kwi 2024, Australia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    The Dampier Peninsula land is owned and managed by the Nyul Nyul and Bardi Jawi people and their ranger teams. We felt privileged to be welcomed as visitors to this beautiful part of the country, camping on a little cliff overlooking stunning Pender Bay, with its pristine blue waters, red cliffs, black boulders and aptly named love heart rock.

    We visited the One Arm Point community at the top of the peninsula and Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm, the home of world’s most valuable pearl (and also the home to the only swimming pool on the peninsula), but the absolute highlight of our stay was a 5 hour tour with Bolo from Southern Cross Cultural Tours. He welcomed us to his land, Lullumb, by way of a splashing ceremony in a fresh water stream and taught us about his family tribe, the significance of the land and the waters in this area, the six seasons of the year and how the bush, mangroves, beach and sea were used by his people to provide shelter, make tools and spears, source, grind and cook seasonal foods and make soap and medicines.

    Bolo also helped us to find our own food. We went mud crabbing, sought out bombshells with little slugs in them (big pointy shells that resembled ice cream cones), picked berries from the bushes and pulled bush carrots from the ground.

    Bolo introduced us to his family who helped with what they called a cook-up, but we considered a feast of mud crabs, oysters, cockle shells, bombshells and damper. Those of us not terrified of crocs went for a quick swim and then Bolo finished our tour by presenting some artefacts of his tribe and singing songs, using his boomerangs as clap sticks. His message was clear: we may all come from different places, but we can happily live in harmony together as long as we all share the responsibility of respecting and looking after the land. An exciting and moving learning experience that each of us will remember forever.
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