Noosa News
Aboriginal farmer sees native bush food as pathway to connect with troubled youth

Deep in the dry soil of a country property, an Aboriginal farmer is sowing the seeds for a new opportunity to connect with troubled youth through native bush food cultivation.
Key points:
- Dominic Smith aims to create an initiative with a focus on “connection back to the land”
- The South Australian farmer says growers can’t keep up with the demand for bushfoods
- He says a lot of culture has been lost but can be regained through teaching and sharing knowledge
Dominic Smith began farming native bush foods for commercial consumption three years ago, after previously growing vegetables at his property in Monash in South Australia’s Riverland region.
He grows bush tomatoes, quandongs, wattle seed, rosella and river mint.
“One of the reasons I wanted…
-
General23 hours ago
State in crisis as it heads to another poll. Tasmania’s winter of discontent
-
General22 hours ago
Footscray man dies after alleged assault by released immigration detainee
-
General22 hours ago
NRL live updates: Warriors vs Panthers, Dolphins vs Knights, Rabbitohs vs Storm — blog, scores and stats
-
General19 hours ago
Grandfather pens letter to PM after death in custody