The Australian Bite - Home

The Australian Bite

Posts Tagged ‘ Western Australia’

Wildlife, dongas & the first ever map of AustraliaListen and Downlaod

3 February 2011

Listen and download: MP3

This week on the Australian Bite, we hear of a new campaign to to bring home an important part of Australia’s cultural heritage – the first map to use the name Australia. We get an insight into a different kind of life when resources worker Trent Hope shows us around his donga – or portable cabin – in the remote pilbara region of Western Australia. And city kids come face to face with nature at the Wangat wildlife refuge.

Read More >

Swimming with crocodiles & Aboriginal SydneyListen and Downlaod

16 December 2010

Listen and download: MP3

This week on the Australian Bite,  Kaitlyn Sawrey goes crocodile catching  in Australia’s tropical north.  We take a look at the newly revised edition of  the guidebook Aboriginal Sydney.  And we meet Melbourne author Maryanne Harris, who has written a children’s book about disability with a strong positive message.  

Read More >

Eyesight, truffles and a school in East TimorListen and Downlaod

9 September 2010

Listen and download: MP3

 This week on the Australian Bite, Jennifer Gersbeck, the CEO of Vision 2020 Australia tells us about the importance of eye health, and what Australian organisations are doing to help reduce avoidable blindness in the region. We take a trip to a remote mountain village in East Timor, where a team of Brisbane high school boys have been helping build a primary school.  And truffles – they’re an expensive delicacy that’s highly valued in international cuisine, but did you know they’re being grown in Western Australia?

Read More >

Connecting with culture & counting koalasListen and Downlaod

1 July 2010

Listen and download: MP3

On the Australian Bite this week we travel to remote Western Australia where a local initiative called the Yiriman Project is making a big difference to the indigenous community. We hear how sexual harassment is unfortunately alive and well in Australian workplaces. And we meet one of the people behind a new website that allows the public to plot koala sightings by simply clicking on a map.

Read More >

Follow us on Twitter