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Fire

 

 

 

One of the outcomes has been handing the responsibility for a lot of land management back to the indigenous community.  This includes a return to regularly burning the countryside during the dry season. 

 

Burning
Burning the undergrowth at Kakadu

 

For tens of thousands of years, prior to the Europeans arriving, Aboriginal people used fire to clear the undergrowth for ease of travel; to herd and or kill animals for food; and to create areas of new growth to attract game.  This reduced the number and type of trees that grew to maturity and produced parkland more suitable for hunting and gathering.  It has resulted in some species predominating that actually require the smoke from fires to germinate.

The effect can clearly be seen in early pictures of Sydney that show relatively bare foreshores that are today forested with large trees. 

Regular burning certainly reduces the the combustible load so that the fires are small and contained; as opposed to the highly destructive bush fires that now periodically devastate parts of Australia.

So now in the bush around Darwin all the trees have fire-blackened trunks and small undergrowth fires dot the countryside; with whips, or palls, of smoke rising at regular intervals. 

Its not evident that people are any longer eating the game thus killed; but the birds of prey love it; as the burnt bodies of numerous small animals are simply left for the picking.  We were told by our driver to Kakadu National Park that some of these birds have even learnt to carry burning branches to start their own fire. Urban myth?

The Warradjan Cultural Centre also proclaims the benefits of regular burning. 

A Park Ranger on the Alligator River was the only person we heard cast doubt on the universal benefits of the return to frequent burning.

 

 

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Travel

Istanbul

 

 

Or coming down to earth...

 

When I was a boy, Turkey was mysterious and exotic place to me. They were not Christians there; they ate strange food; and wore strange clothes. There was something called a ‘bazaar’ where white women were kidnapped and sold into white slavery. Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, or was it Errol Flynn, got into all sorts of trouble there with blood thirsty men with curved swords. There was a song on the radio that reminded me over and over again that ‘It’s Istanbul not Constantinople Now’, sung by The Four Lads, possibly the first ‘boy band’.

 

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Fiction, Recollections & News

Egyptian Mummies

 

 

 

 

Next to Dinosaurs mummies are the museum objects most fascinating to children of all ages. 

At the British Museum in London crowds squeeze between show cases to see them.  At the Egyptian Museum in Cairo they are, or were when we visited in October 2010 just prior to the Arab Spring, by far the most popular exhibits (follow this link to see my travel notes). Almost every large natural history museum in the world has one or two mummies; or at the very least a sarcophagus in which one was once entombed.

In the 19th century there was something of a 'mummy rush' in Egypt.  Wealthy young European men on their Grand Tour, ostensibly discovering the roots of Western Civilisation, became fascinated by all things 'Oriental'.  They would pay an Egyptian fortune for a mummy or sarcophagus.  The mummy trade quickly became a lucrative commercial opportunity for enterprising Egyptian grave-robbers.  

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Opinions and Philosophy

Sum; estis; sunt

(I am; you are; they are)

 

 

What in the World am I doing here?

'Once in a while, I'm standing here, doing something.  And I think, "What in the world am I doing here?" It's a big surprise'
-   Donald Rumsfeld US Secretary of Defence - May 16, 2001, interview with the New York Times

As far as we know humans are the only species on Earth that asks this question. And we have apparently been asking it for a good part of the last 100,000 years.

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