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Fire stick farming

Lucy signatureLucy Simpson

By Lucy Simpson

***TODO: CART INTEGRATION***

PRODUCT DNA

6 Preset Toast Types

The Toast Select Luxe with 6 bread settings - White, Brown, Grain, Fruit, Rye and Crumpet adjusts the toasting time for each type of bread.

2-Slice Capacity

Larger artisanal bread, thick bagels and dense pastries demand wider slots, so we answered the call.

Variable Browing Control

Toast to your ideal browness level while the LED indicates your browing progress.

Innovative Auto Features

1-Touch 'A Bit More' and 'Lift & Look' functions are derived directly from your feedback and makes for flawless toasting.

Easy Cleaning

No need to ever lift when cleaning. Just pull out the front crumb tray and tip it into the dustbin.

PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS

Dimensions (WxDxH)

34 x 20.9 x 20 cm

Warranty

2 Year Replacement Warranty

Construction Materials

Brushed stainless steel body with back-lit buttons

Capacity

2 slice toaster

Settings

NA

In Aboriginal culture, bread making has very little to do with combining flour and water. It’s about the stories and jokes shared while making it that

makes it taste good.

 

The Aboriginal connection to home is also about how we care for the land. Our traditional methods of cultivating grain are not just about the nourishment of bodies, but the nourishment of the land, too. Kangaroo and wallaby grasses have been cultivated on this ancient land for 65,000 years. They are gluten-free and grown

without irrigation and pesticides.

 

Historically and today, breaking bread is all about the connections we have with the people and places we love.

 

Dhuuyaay connects to one of the many roles of the Yuwaalaraay women as the carers for dhuuyaay (fire stick farming), a tool used in ceremonial season and in everyday life. It depicts the role of fire in shaping and sustaining country

and maintaining balance in the natural world.

For Aboriginal people the presence of native grasses across the landscape indicates the health of country, and large grasslands were maintained meticulously through cool burns or fire stick farming, which would both maintain balance and stimulate new growth. These practices were fine-tuned over many hundreds of generations, with many Aboriginal communities continuing these practices across Australia today, with a recent revival in some areas which acknowledge the sophistication of this ancient practice and its relevance today.

Fire stick farming is a sophisticated example of how the traditional Aboriginal knowledge and agricultural practices directly increased the food supply for their people and local native animals by promoting the growth of edible ground-level plants. This traditional knowledge is now being exported across the world to manage land in countries including Argentina and Namibia.

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