-
Recent Posts
Tags
- Adelaide
- archaeology
- artefacts
- Baker's Flat
- belonging
- cataloguing
- ceramics
- Clare
- copper mine
- dog tags
- excavation
- fairies
- fairy trees
- field trips
- fieldwork
- Field work
- Flies and fly nets
- Flinders University
- folklore
- folk traditions
- food for the field
- fruit
- fungi
- getting organised
- Gladstone
- Halloween
- Hiberno-English
- hot
- Ireland
- Irish
- Irish folk traditions
- Irishness
- Jordan
- Kapunda
- leaving places
- migration
- Museum of Economic Botany
- museums
- newspaper reports
- Petra
- raggy trees
- Samhain
- shovels
- sieving
- significance of plants
- St Johns
- tales
- Turnip carving
- turnip lamp
- Writing
Blogroll
Tag Archives: Flies and fly nets
Remembering one’s shovel
Back after excavating for a week at St Johns near Kapunda. This site is being researched by a Flinders University PhD archaeology student, and is about five kilometres from my own research area of Baker’s Flat. St Johns was one of … Continue reading
Posted in Baker's Flat, Excavation, Field work, Kapunda
Tagged excavation, Flies and fly nets, food for the field, shovels, St Johns
Comments Off on Remembering one’s shovel