Jeepers, be hard to sign documents if that was your name. Tony.
From: Denise Goodfellow
Sent: 25 January 2017 08:59
To: Michael Hunter
Cc: Tony Russell; birding-aus
Subject: names
There is a choice (depending, I guess, on which one you can pronounce most
easily).
Galarawidwid; Kurraguyangguyang (meaning "long-leg"). These are names given
to me back in the 1980s by different Kunwinjku elders.
Denise
On 25 Jan 2017, at 7:31 am, Michael Hunter <> wrote:
So what is the Aboriginal name for " Jacana " ? Petit Djagana ?
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Russell
Sent: Tuesday, 24 January 2017 2:00 PM
To: 'Denise Goodfellow'; 'michael hunter'
Cc: 'birding-aus'
Subject: names
Well I reckon we should call it DJAGANA then. Surely no other bird in the
world has that name. I'm changing my birdlist now.
-----Original Message-----
From: Birding-Aus On Behalf Of
Denise Goodfellow
Sent: 24 January 2017 02:05
To: michael hunter
Cc: birding-aus
Subject: names
When I asked the question on Facebook most replied that they called the bird
'Jabiru' even though some were aware of the official name. A Bininj
grandson in Gunbalanya wrote "Yeah at top end area we called it jabiru big
name but aboriginal name its DJAGANA". And he's right, as far as Kunwinjku
and related peoples are concerned - in my experience they all use 'Jabiru',
as do most of the people I guided over thirty years.
Much of Australia's avifauna (and other fauna) is known by European names,
although there is no close taxonomic association. And 'Bandicoot' is the
common name of a genus of Asian rodents. I don't see anyone calling for
these names to be changed.
Denise Lawungkurr Goodfellow
PO Box 71
Darwin River, NT, Australia 0841
043 8650 835
On 23 Jan 2017, at 3:56 pm, michael hunter <> wrote:
Once again a few academics, mostly not Australian, if not
Un-Australian,
are foisting otherworldly names onto us Aussie birders.
Common names , NOT ENGLISH names, for Australian birds are names
commonly
used by about 99% of Australian birdwatchers for our birds. It is appalling
that colourless English names like Black-necked Stork have been inflicted on
us by a few pseudo-academics who are presumably incapable of memorising
Scientific names. Jabiru may be the common name of a South American Stork,
but changing the official "common" name for any birdwatcher witless enough
to confuse the two in the field was an amazing arrogance. One justification
was that people reading birdguides will be confused in not justified.
These people are meddling with our Australian common names, which
are ,
or were, spontaneous non-scientific vernacular.
Among many examples, "Jabiru" and "Torres Straits Pigeon" had
romantic
(in the broad sense folks) connotations lost in the bland generics we are
told to use instead. As a youth my first sighting of the legendary Jabiru
was very exciting, and stimulated a life-long interest in Birding. Seeing a
Black-necked Stork would not have.
"Willy Fantail" They must be joking.
Resist.
Michael
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