ngadjonji...tree climbing
Tree Climbing
Ngadjonji History of
the Rainforest People
Note: this site
contains images of aboriginal people now
deceased

Tommy Wright in Malanda Jungle. c.1930
Photo. Cairns Historical Society
Lumholtz, describing the method
of tree climbing used by the
Ngadjonji:
....if he has to climb a high tree, he first goes into the scrub to
fetch a piece of the Australian calamus, which he partly bites, partly
breaks off; ....at the end of it he makes a knot, the other he leaves
as it is. This implement, which is usually sixteen to eighteen feet
long, is called a kamin ( gamin ). After wiping his hands in the grass
so as to remove all moisture .. throws the kamin around the big
tree-trunk, and tries to catch the other end in his right hand.....he
winds this end a few times around the right arm and thus gets a secure
hold. The right foot is planted against the tree, the arms are extended
directly in front of him, the body is bent back, so that it is kept as
far as possible away from the tree, and then the ascent begins. He
keeps throwing the kamin up the tree, and at the same time he himself
ascends about as easily as a sailor uses an accommodation ladder.....
he takes his tomahawk in his mouth, and when he wants to use it removes
the kamin from his right arm and winds it around his right thigh,
whereupon with his free hand he cuts the next niche or two in the bark
of the tree....no tree is too high or too smooth for the Australian
native to climb, provided it's circumference is not too great.
Lumholtz (1889) p.98