Arboriculture is about more than managing trees. When done well, it’s about understanding the land those trees grow from, the communities that live alongside them and the knowledge systems that have shaped the landscape for thousands of years. In Australia, that means making space for Aboriginal cultural learning in how we plan, manage and carry out arboriculture projects.
Listening to Country
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have been reading this land far longer than modern arboriculture has existed. Their understanding of native species, seasonal patterns, fire and soil isn’t theoretical — it’s lived, inherited and practical. When we engage genuinely with that knowledge, we make better decisions: about which trees belong where, how ecosystems function and what it actually means to care for a place rather than just maintain it.
Sustainability That Goes Deeper
A lot of projects talk about sustainability. But Indigenous land management has been practising it across generations. Techniques like working with native organic matter, prioritising biodiversity and reading the land before intervening — these aren’t new ideas. They’re old ones and they work. Blending that wisdom with contemporary arboriculture methods produces outcomes you can’t get from either approach alone.
What Teams Take Away
There’s also something that happens to the people doing the work. When a team understands the stories, the practices and the connections tied to the land they’re working on, they show up differently. The project becomes less transactional. Stewardship starts to mean something.
The Bigger Picture
Every arboriculture project is an opportunity — not just to plant and maintain trees, but to do right by the land and the communities connected to it. That’s what honouring Country looks like in practice.
Get in Touch
To explore how Aboriginal cultural learning and sustainable practices can be woven into your next arboriculture project, contact:
Rolly Bellingham | Arborist Manager
T +61 437 210 844
E roland.bellingham@murumittigar.com.au
Wayne Cornish | Executive Officer
T +61 417 662 094
E wayne.cornish@murumittigar.com.au
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the land on which we live and work. We acknowledge the Elders, both past and present. Our organisation, in partnership with the Traditional Owners of NSW, is working to place First Peoples living cultures and histories at the core of our practice.
21 Guntawong Road Rouse Hill NSW 2155
Get In Touch
info@murumittigar.com.au
111 Henry Street, Penrith NSW 2750
Make an Appointment
communityteam@murumittigar.com.au
128B Terrybrook Road Llandilo NSW 2747
Get In Touch
info@murumittigar.com.au
111 Henry Street, Penrith NSW 2750
info@murumittigar.com.au
(02) 47 300 400