Kaurna Cultural Experience on Country at Pinky Flat

10.02.26EventIn personNetworkingSATour

The South Australian NAWO Network is starting the year with a morning of connection and cultural learning. Join the committee and facilitators from 'Walking Together with Kaurna' at Pinky Flat on Karrawirra Parri, Redgum Forest River (Torrens River). Our hosts will share insights into the Kaurna people's deep connection to Country, and afterwards there will be opportunities to continue the conversation over coffee.

Registrations now open!

Date
10.02.26
Time
7:45AM - 9:30AM
Venue

Pinky Flat, War Memorial Dr, North Adelaide SA 5006

Organiser
NAWO SA Committee and Walking Together with Kaurna
Price
Free for NAWO Members, $15.75 for non-members
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Join us for a morning of connection and cultural learning. We’ll meet at Pinky Flat for a workshop with a local guide from Walking Together With Kaurna, who will share insights into the Kaurna people’s deep connection to Country and the cultural significance of Pinky Flat. There will be artefacts to explore and an opportunity for conversation and reflection.

We’ll meet at Pinky Flat on Karrawirra Parri, Redgum Forest River (Torrens River) where life along the parri (river) is revisited through oral histories and paintings. The effect of colonisation on Kaurna life here is starkly evident through these primary sources. After the workshop there will be the opportunity to continue the conversation over coffee.

About our hosts

Walking Together with Kaurna‘ began in 2017 when Kaurna Elder Uncle Frank Wanganeen and early childhood educator Liesl von der Borch began collaborating to create meaningful experiences for children on Country. Since then, the business has grown and evolved and now offers four on-Country workshop experiences as well as individually tailored workshops relevant for children aged 2 through to corporate PD sessions.

Today Drew and Liesl bring their individual wisdom and lived experiences to the workshops as they honour traditional cultural practices through sharing knowledge and facilitating an understanding of the past, its relevance to the present and its importance for the future.

Drew Vincent Kilner

Drew is a Kaurna, Ngarrindjeri man from Aldinga beach where he loves to fish, walk in the bush, and do anything that connects him to his Culture. He is continually broadening his involvement in Kaurna Cultural events, practices and new enterprises. He’s currently involved with the repatriation of ancestral remains, the healing of Country through revegetation projects, Cultural heritage surveys and monitoring and the Kaurna Cultural Burn (firestick farming) team being trained by Victor Steffensen.

Liesl von der Borch

Liesl is an early childhood educator passionate about place-based pedagogy and advocating for children’s awareness of the First Nations language group, history, and Culture of where they live. She regards this as crucial to the future of ‘truth telling’ and reconciliation. To this end she has developed in collaboration with Kaurna Elders and educators three workshops for young children, enabling them to experience and learn, on Country, the significance of parts of the city of Adelaide and the lower foothills. She has been conducting these excursions since 2017 with overwhelming response from the children, educators and parents involved.

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