Key takeaway
From 14–15 November, Cooktown community members came together for a free Climate Intelligence Workshop hosted by the Hope Vale Foundation. Regional Soil Coordinator Dhiraj Gajera and SATSIE Program Senior Research Officer Dr Abner Yalu attended the hands-on workshop, designed to challenge and expand the way participants think about food production and sustainability.
Across two days, local farmers, students, business owners and industry partners learned innovative techniques for creating resilient food systems, blending the principles of agriculture, aquaculture, hydroponics and syntropic farming.
Guided by Rodney Ingersoll from Redclaw Consultancy who brings more than 25 years of experience working alongside First Nations communities, participants gained hands-on training in areas such as:
Each presentation and activity emphasised reuse of household materials, showing that sustainability can be affordable, practical and environmentally responsible.
Both Dhiraj and Abner used the workshop as an opportunity to connect with farmers and build local understanding of soil health and water rights across the region.
Dhiraj agreed that building regional skills and capability is essential for a sustainable and profitable future. Using soil samples brought in by farmers, he demonstrated simple soil-health tests and provided assessments on soil pH, microbe activity and soil texture.
The workshop’s collaborative, community-driven approach highlighted the power of local solutions in building climate-smart, resilient futures for northern Australia.