Wardan Boodjar

About Wardan Boodjar (Sea Country)

Wardan means ‘the sea’, so Wardan Boodjar means ‘sea country’ or the coast anywhere in the southwest.

Wardan, or sea, is of great spiritual significance to the coastal Nyungar (people).

The Aborigines along the whole line of Western coast believe that when the body dies, the spirit goes away westward through the sea to some country far away, and that there the spirit lives in much the same manner as it has lived when in the flesh … In the Swan district, Joobaitch, the last Perth man, stated that when his people died, their kaanya or spirit went away over the sea to another country, called Koorannup or Woordanung.1

Family groups used their coastal resources for subsistence, culture and trade. Cultural stories describe features of sea country. Some names and sacred sites reflect these. The family group’s identity is closely related to the coast.2

Yarn about traditional family life

Karen Jacobs, traditional owner, sits at Manjaree (Bathers Beach) and discusses with Len Collard how traditional family life would have been.

KJ: I just think that life would have been absolutely wonderful. I mean we’re talking about much smaller groups of people camping together and then sharing what they had, fishing when need be, swimming. I mean you can see the water. The colour of the water hasn’t changed much to how it would have been 200 years ago or over 200 years ago. So you’ve got Aboriginal people that enjoyed the sea life and everything that it had to offer and we’ve got so much water available to us in this area. So if it wasn’t saltwater it was fresh water and hunting and gathering and just kids playing… I can imagine kids playing around with either gumnuts and making little animals and sitting down in the dirt and then throwing skin balls at each other.

LC: Looking at the footmarks of a bird and identifying what they are, pelican or a seagull.

KJ: Look, I even do it with my kids today even if I take them for a walk along the track. The first thing I’m looking out for is for what animals have just crossed in front especially snakes. Watching out the how big is that track and I teach my kids to actually tell how big an animal is by the imprint and the width of the track that they’ve left and that’s daily and I imagine those sorts of things going on daily. Kids even climbing up the trees to get the sugar bake honey from the wild bees which we would have had plenty of. I mean you’re going to find wild bees, these native bees these days and the medicine honey and then old people sitting down and the women talking around the fires telling stories about each other or having a laugh about their men and you can just see it and to me I think life would have been absolutely wonderful … I still see glimpses of that even today and I go not so much around Perth but when I go outside of Perth and into remote regional areas I see glimpses of that. Still I don’t see the relaxed people that we should be and anyone who is in the south-west were always relaxed, were always hospitable...3

Warden Lane - story of the sea breeze and the easterly wind

The words on the plaque installed at Warden Lane, Manjaree (Bathers Beach) in Fremantle, were written by Mr Leonard Collard, Nyungar Elder and Traditional Owner, and tell the story of the sea breeze and the easterly wind chasing each other across the coast. The plaque celebrates Nyungar cultural life on the coast.

The plaque wording is provided below:

The word 'wardan' in Nyoongar language means ocean or sea.

The wardan is the place where the female wind 'yorga mar' (easterly or land breeze) meets the male wind 'maaman mar' (south westerly or sea breeze).

Nyoongar dreamtime tells us that yorga mar and maaman mar were lovers and would chase each other back and forth over the wardan and across the boodjar (land), giving Fremantle its daily easterly and south westerly breezes.

By coming down to Wardan Lane and sitting under the tall trees at the Esplanade Reserve, you can still hear the two lovers whispering to each other as the mar blows between the leaves of the trees.

The Wardan Gaba Boodjera, or the sea side, is where the Whadjuck Nyoongar people watched from high cliffs and white sandy beaches as European traders passed by on their way to Indonesia; and later, as they watched British colonists take up occupancy of this land in 1829.

Nyungar words used on this page

Swipe to see more
Nyungar English Pronunciation Audio
Boodjar Country or land
Kaanya Spirit
Koorannup  Spirit place across the sea
Manjaree Bathers Beach
Nyungar People
Wardan Sea
Wardan Gaba Boodjera Sea side
Whadjuk People of the Swan Coastal Plain
Woordanung Spirit place across the sea

References

  1. Bates, Daisy. 1985. The Native Tribes of Western Australia. Isobel White (Ed.). Canberra: National Library of Australia, p. 222, In Western Australian Planning Commission. Indigenous Heritage. 2008. Accessed November 1, 2012. 
  2. Smyth, D. Living on Saltwater Country. Review of literature about Aboriginal rights, use, management and interests in northern Australian marine environments. National Oceans Office, Hobart. Commonwealth of Australia. 2004, p.15. Accessed November 1, 2012. 
  3. Jacobs, K. Oral transcript, unpublished. Held by Laura Stocker, Curtin University & Len Collard, UWA.

Contact

Address

City of Cockburn
Whadjuk Boodjar
9 Coleville Crescent,
Spearwood 6163

PO Box 1215, Bibra Lake DC,
Western Australia, 6965

Office opening hours:
8.30am to 4.30pm
Monday to Friday (excluding public holidays)

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Cockburn Nyungar moort Beeliar boodja-k kaadadjiny. Koora, yeyi, benang baalap nidja boodja-k kaaradjiny.
Ngalak kaditj boodjar kep wer kaadidjiny kalyakool yoodaniny, wer koora wer yeyi ngalak Birdiya koota-djinanginy.

The City of Cockburn acknowledges the Nyungar people of Beeliar Boodjar. Long ago, now and in the future they care for Country.
We acknowledge a continuing connection to Land, Waters and Culture and pay our respects to Elders, past and present.