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Barefoot Botanist

<p>Original Found <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/Epicure/Barefoot-botanist/2005/02/07/1107625102374.html%C2%A0">here</a>:</p>        <p>The Age, February 8, 2005  </p><p><strong>Glenn Wightman is on a mission to prevent the extinction of the Top   End's traditional food knowledge. Necia Wilden reports.</strong></p>  <p>Glenn Wightman, "the barefoot botanist", is talking about mangrove worms, a   native food found widely across northern Australia. "They look repulsive," he   says enthusiastically. "Like a long strip of mucus.</p>  <p>"Most people are disgusted by them when they first eat them. But the taste is   excellent - a bit like muddy oysters. I prefer them to oysters, actually.</p>  <p>"And they have powerful health properties. They're said to be rich in iron   and are good for your heart, good for coughs and colds."</p>  <p>They're also relatively easy to come by - if you're handy with an axe. The   worms live inside dead mangrove wood. "Or you can get them out by hand if you   know what you're doing," Wightman advises.</p> <p>As with all the foods he has spent the past two decades discovering and   documenting, mangrove worms are not commercially available.</p>  <p>That may be about to change, however, if his unique vision of gastronomic and   economic sustainability bears fruit.</p>  <p>As one of the few non-Aboriginal Australians with a deep understanding of   northern Australia's traditional plant and animal knowledge, ethnobotanist   Wightman is on a rescue mission.</p>  <p>Working closely with Aboriginals, most of them elderly and living in remote   areas, he is helping save the legacy of thousands of years of knowledge -   knowledge that is facing imminent extinction as elders die, oral traditions fade   and habitats and lifestyles inexorably change.</p>  <p>To date, the Darwin-based Wightman has co-ordinated 16 books - each from a   clan of a different language - that use Western scientific classification   systems to identify hundreds of species of endangered plants and animals.</p>  <p>The books, published in accordance with the wishes of the elders, are aimed   primarily at "countrymen" - as Wightman calls Aboriginals - within the relevant   communities, but are also bought by white people, usually tourists interested in   traditional culture.</p>  <p>Several other books are in the pipeline - some based in the Kimberley and the   rest in the Northern Territory.</p>  <p>"We are talking about languages that won't be spoken in five years' time,   that are literally dying out," he says. "And so the food knowledge will also be   lost.</p>  <p>"A lot of these foods have not been harvested for the past 30 or 40 years   because we are going through a massive knowledge extinction phase."</p>  <p>Now, Wightman's project, endorsed by the Northern Territory Plants and   Wildlife Commission, is about to move to another level. Within the next few   months, some of the wild-harvested foods from the Daly River region, a former   Catholic mission about 250km south-west of Darwin and home to the Nauiyu   community, will be made available for sale.</p>  <p>"It's just a small production to begin with," Wightman says. "The people just   want to start slowly. We'll start within the community and see how it goes, then   we might expand to Darwin and Katherine and from there, maybe elsewhere in   Australia."</p>  <p>Some of the foods to be sold include black plum (Vitex glabrata), sweet and   sour leaf (Bauhinia malabarica), Chinese plum (Grewia asiatica) and red lotus   lily (Nelumbo nucifera) seeds.</p>  <p>It's the first step in a bid to make native, sustainably harvested foods   commercially viable through a system that returns the profits - cultural as well   as financial - to the people responsible for locating those foods. In this the   project shares similarities with the global non-profit food brand Fairtrade,   which delivers above-market prices to Third World growers for the benefit of   their livelihoods and communities.</p>  <p>Born into a farming family in Leongatha and educated at Monash University,   Wightman, 43, was in 2003 honoured by Slow Food, the international   eco-gastronomy organisation, for his work (he has conducted similar ethnobotany   projects in Java and Samoa) in defence of biodiversity.</p>  <p>A modest man who chooses not to have his work published in scientific   journals on the basis that it belongs to the communities, he is an unlikely   entrant into the bush tucker business.</p>  <p>"To tell you the truth, I'm nervous about bringing money into the equation,"   he says. "The thing that's driven (this project) is respect for people that are   dead and those who are still alive.</p>  <p>"It's not about money, it's not about land rights, it's not about egos; it's   all been about recording knowledge.</p>  <p>"But in another way, it's the logical next step. Countrymen should be able to   use traditional knowledge to make money."</p>  <p>While Wightman welcomes white Australia's interest in bush tucker generally,   he has little time for most of the mainstream products - mainly herbs and spices   - available in supermarkets.</p>  <p>"Countrymen are making such poor rates out of it that it's not worth their   while," he says. "We are looking at it differently; value-adding to   communities."</p>  <p>And while he is investigating the economic viability of every food identified   in the bush, he is also sensitive to its cultural and medicinal significance. He   talks about the yellow kapok, for example, a common plant eaten for its   flowers.</p>  <p>Native communities connect the kapok with crocodiles, as the plant's   flowering coincides with the reptiles' egg-laying season.</p>  <p>"So when the people see the kapok in flower, they know it's time to go and   look for the crocodile eggs (to eat). And they're beautiful," Wightman says.</p>  <p>Bush tealeaf (Ocimum tenuiflorum), which is made into a beverage drunk like   tea, is a strong herb that smells like cloves and is valued as a treatment for   respiratory problems. Related to basil, it can also be used in cooking.</p>  <p>"We added it to a spaghetti bolognese at a tasting dinner and the rangers   loved it," Wightman says.</p>  <p>For whites, especially for southerners like us, obviously the prospect that   we might one day be able to buy and eat foods such as this, through a project   such as this, is exciting.</p>  <p>But it's when Wightman talks about a generation of Aboriginals who have no   knowledge of bush ways that the importance of his work resonates the most.</p>  <p>"I hear a lot of bullshit about blackfellas. People think they all know about   the bush and it's not true. Even in the languages themselves, the vocabularies   are getting smaller because kids just aren't going out bush.</p>  <p>"There are old people who grew up traditionally, who can remember when they   first set eyes on white man. They learnt in a very different way from the way   young people are learning."</p>  <p>And even among the old people, he says, many of the native foods have not   been eaten since their childhood. "Sometimes when I show them to the elders,   they start to cry because of the memories."</p>

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