Image
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Vision
    • Mission
    • CPRRA Rules Of Association
    • Committee
    • History
  • Working Bees
  • Northern Development
  • News
  • Join Us
  • Links
  • Contact Us

Minutes Meeting 1 (February 2021)

Please click link

Minutes for Meeting 1-2021 Final

Iuk Eel Season (March)

Iuk (eels) are fat and ready to harvest.

Binap (Manna Gum) is flowering.

Days and nights are of equal length.

Lo-An Tuka, the Hunter, is the star Canopus, seen almost due south at sunset.

"We used to set a fishing line at night time, mostly in the lagoons. We got eels out of that… they'd go down to where Badger Creek runs into the Yarra.

If eels were running that plentiful they'd make a net and put that in." Martha Nevin, 1969.

 

Image

Waring Wombat Season (April-July)

Cool, rainy days follow misty mornings. The time of highest rainfall and lowest temperatures.

Waring (wombats) emerge to bask and graze in the sunshine.

Bulen-bulen (Superb Lyrebird) males perform their courtship displays.

Hearts of Kombadik (Soft Tree-ferns) are the major food when no fruits are available.

Days are short and nights are long.

The constellation of Sagittarius rises in the southeast after sunset, indicating the mid-point of cold weather.

'Wumangurruditj, that's wombat. Put a piece of wombat, a piece of pork and a piece of porcupine [echidna] and you can't tell the difference.' Jessie Hunter, 1999

 

Image
Image

Copyright ©2004-2022 Cape Paterson Residents & Ratepayers Association. All rights reserved.

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Vision
    • Mission
    • CPRRA Rules Of Association
    • Committee
    • History
  • Working Bees
  • Northern Development
  • News
  • Join Us
  • Links
  • Contact Us