24 July 2020

Far South Coast Indigenous fire practitioners for hire on private land

| Elka Wood
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Aboriginal elder Uncle Les Simon conducting a traditional burn on private land in Meringo.

Aboriginal elder Uncle Les Simon conducts a traditional burn on private land at Meringo. Photo: Supplied.

The South Coast NSW Aboriginal Elders association (SCAE) and Batemans Bay Local Aboriginal Land Council recently conducted the first traditional burn on private land since the past summer’s bushfires. The burn took place in early July on the Meringo property owned by Mark and Julie Mills.

SCAE’s business manager Prue Bartlett says people are worried about fuel loads post-bushfires and have been wondering whether they can hire crews to put knowledge into action on private land.

Cultural burning is proven to reduce the intensity of bushfires over time.

“This is kind of a new thing; no-one has ever done it before,” says Prue. “Finding consistent funding to do cultural burns is difficult and has historically employed crews casually. We hope to have two or three crews working consistently, burning not just on private land but on council land and in national parks as well.”

Tall grass burnt lightly across the hillside with thin white smoke drifting up towards nearby trees, while local Aboriginal elders, landholders and friends watched on in safety.

“This is the way it is supposed to be,” enthuses Walbanja elder and traditional owner Uncle Les Simon.

Uncle Les and Owen Carriage started SCAE in response to the need for more cultural burning – the ancient Aboriginal method of regenerating country – they say.

The plan is for the crew – which includes Andy White from Batemans Bay Aboriginal Land Council, and Dan Morgan and Noel Webster from Local Land Services – to carry out a long-term controlled burn, starting with the open grassland they burnt last week and moving to coastal eucalyptus forest on the same property at a later date.

South Coast Aboriginal Elders association cultural burning crew at Meringo. From left: Les Simon, Andrew Stewart, James Thomas, Andy White, Dan Morgan, Noel Webster, Aldo Webster.

The South Coast Aboriginal Elders association cultural burning crew at Meringo. From left: Les Simon, Andrew Stewart, James Thomas, Andy White, Dan Morgan, Noel Webster and Aldo Webster. Photo: Supplied.

“This area is being burned first because that was what the conditions called for,” says Uncle Les. “Or to be more poetic and use a more Indigenous phrase, this is what country wants.”

The crew considers every aspect of the land before burning, from vegetation cover – in this case, native Themeda grasslands – to wind direction, slope of the land, soil moisture content and the time of year.

“When the conditions are right, the forest floor will get its turn to burn in this gentle way, too,” says Uncle Les.

Cultural burns are much cooler than hazard reduction burns and operate according to the deliberate use of natural mosaic patterns in nature, making them easier to control and allowing fauna to relocate and survive. Such burns not only remove leaf litter, restoring the conditions under which native grasses can flourish, they also trigger the seedbank.

“Using fire as a tool controls weeds, reduces thick shrubs and fuel, and triggers the plant species that prefer this relatively ‘cold’ fire – the ones that became adapted to it over countless generations of Aboriginal tending to and caring for country,” explains Uncle Les.

Hot burns – such as an out-of-control bushfire or hazard reduction burn – become a vicious cycle as plants which prefer hot burns prevail and devastating bushfires actually become more likely, according to Les.

SCAE is dedicated to promoting the safe use of fire to regenerate bushland and farms, but the elders also have a bigger vision in mind. They are developing a business model for cultural burning on private properties and see it as a stepping stone to a renewal of cultural traditions.

The association hopes to secure funding to create employment for elders and the youth they train, incorporating sustainable business models to offer traditional burning to the wider community.

In time, they hope this will also include guided walks on country, a local rangers program and cultural campsites that could be used to revitalise Aboriginal ceremony as well as provide for ecotourism possibilities and more education, training and employment opportunities, not only for Aboriginal people but also the wider community.

If you are a private landholder with native vegetation and wish to engage a cultural burning team to manage your land, you can contact Prue Bartlett on 0427 825 273.

To donate to the SCAE GoFundMe campaign and support local cultural burning, visit here.

You can also follow the South Coast NSW Aboriginal Elders association on Facebook.

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Frances Perkins3:42 pm 24 Jul 20

Great program. It should get lots of community and government support

Nienke Haantjens9:49 am 24 Jul 20

great article. we will contact Prue at some stage

It is a no-brainer. When this country was settled by Europeans, they had no clue about fire management at all and endured several disasters of epic proportions. All they needed to do was to take account of the vegetation that existed here and the abundant and healthy fauna. Both plants and animals had been in the custody of Aboriginal peoples for somewhere between 40 000 and 60 000 years. Whatever they did, and for whatever reasons, it worked, and it worked well. Two and a half centuries of fire “management” by Europeans has almost spelled the death knell for much of the vegetation and many species of animals. Unless we return to traditional cultural burning techniques, we the people of the 2020s, can kiss much of our ecological values goodbye because what we are doing is not working very well at all and it is hastening the demise of many species.

There is one irrevocable certainty in Australia. If you want to keep intense fire out then you must put some gentle fire in

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