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Special Stories and Songlines of Life, Land and Larder

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Special Stories and Songlines of Life, Land and Larder

Gnamma Holes are natural depressions or rock-holes hollowed out through chemical weathering processes in granite domes or other hard rock surfaces. They allow pools of fresh rainwater to form and have been an important and sometimes sacred feature for Aboriginal people for over 60,000 years.  Gnamma holes created critical water supplies for the Aborigines, influencing their annual migration patterns or songlines across the western half of Australia.

In a similar fashion to gnamma holes, this site serves as a place where special stories of life, land and larder are gathered and pooled. The Gnamma Hole is repository of special places, people, and experiences that refresh, restore and enrich us along our life journeys – whoever and wherever we are in the world.

We hope this site inspires you to go out and explore new places, experiences and to share them with others on social media.


If you have a special story to tell, email us for our consideration (all contributing authors fully acknowledged).

Shirin Yuko - Japanese Forest Bathing

Shirin Yuko - Japanese Forest Bathing

A belief that nature is good for you may sound like common sense, but in Japan researchers have taken the idea to the laboratory and produced evidence that a walk in the woods can help prevent cancer, fight obesity and reduce stress and depression. The Japanese have coined the term “shinrin-yoku”, or forest bathing, to codify the practice of exposing yourself to nature (particularly trees). The government has invested millions in both research and “forest therapy trails” - there are now 60 of them in Japan- where the forests have the sufficient density and trails are of sufficient length to provide the benefits of foresting bathing. The concept is to take a “bath” in the forest by letting nature enter all five sense. Qing Li, associate professor at the Nippon Medical School in Tokyo and president of the Japanese Society of Forest Medicine, argues that the sense of smell is most important. “The effect of forest bathing is the total effect, but the biggest effect is from the olfactory, smell, we call them phytoncides. Also people call them essential oil, aroma.” Li’s research has shown that trees’ aromas, known as phytoncides, boost our body’s NK (natural killer) cells which help fight tumors and virus-infected cells. Phytoncides are the medical equivalent of essential oils; the most effective aroma is Japanese Cypress.

Original story from Kirsten Dirksen: https://faircompanies.com/videos/science-of-forest-bathing-less-sickness-more-well-being/

Shinrin-Yoku: The Art and Science of Forest Bathing, by Dr Qing Li of Nippon Medical School. Penguin Life, 320 pp. April 2018 release, online  https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/308285/shinrin-yoku/#LSl0zvwxsg8xMxtM.99

   

The Largest Intact Temperate Woodland on Earth

The Largest Intact Temperate Woodland on Earth

Harris Tweed

Harris Tweed

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