• Skip to main content
  • Skip to navigation
  • Accessibility
  • Contact Us
Government of Western Australia Crest
Government of Western Australia
Government of Western Australia Crest

Additional Menu

  • Accessibility
  • Contact us
Go to WA Government search
  • About us
    • Contact us
      • Compliments, complaints and suggestions
      • Misconduct
      • Care Opinion
      • Thanks to our staff
    • Provide feedback
    • Health Service Board
    • Executive
    • Vision and Values
    • Past adoption practices
    • Strategic Planning
    • Annual Reports
    • Freedom of Information
    • Governance
  • Hospitals and Services
    • Hospitals
      • Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital
      • Osborne Park Hospital
      • King Edward Memorial Hospital
      • Graylands Hospital
      • Joondalup Health Campus
    • Mental Health
      • Community Adult Mental Health
      • Inpatient Adult Mental Health
      • Mental Health Specialties
      • State Forensic Mental Health Services
      • Community Advisory Council
    • Public Health
      • Aboriginal Health
      • DonateLife
      • Health Promotion
      • Humanitarian Entrant Health Service
      • Infection Prevention and Control
      • Boorloo Public Health Unit
      • State Head Injury Unit
      • WA Tuberculosis Control Program
    • Dental Health Services
    • Services
      • Cancer Network WA
      • Elective surgery
      • Emergency Departments
      • Maternity Services
      • Residential Care Line
      • Interpreters and Language Services
      • Video Consultation
    • Voluntary Assisted Dying
  • Patient Care
    • Safety and Quality
      • Patient safety
      • Quality of care
      • Maintaining high standards of healthcare
      • Engaging with our consumers
    • Aishwarya’s CARE Call
    • Manage My Care
    • Patient rights and responsibilities
    • Partnering with Consumers
      • Community Advisory Councils
      • Engagement
      • NMHS statement on family and domestic violence
      • Partnership Model
      • Volunteering
    • Choose Wisely
    • Disability Access and Inclusion Plan
    • Patient resources
  • Health Professionals
    • Referring Patients
    • Boorloo Public Health Unit
      • Syphilis outbreak
      • Notifying diseases
      • Immunisation support
      • Perth Public Health Officer Training Program
      • Reports, publications and resources
      • Forms
    • GP Liaison
    • Library and Information Service
    • Staff Exposures and Absences Form
    • CADD Standards
  • Research
    • About our research
    • Research ethics and governance
    • NMHS Research Strategy
    • Research news
    • Why undertake research
    • Current research
    • Research partners
  • Work with us
    • Employee benefits
    • About us
    • Staff stories
    • International and interstate recruitment
    • Nursing and Midwifery
    • Forensic Mental Health
    • Mental Health
      • Mental Health Transition to Practice Program
    • Medical
      • Interns
      • Overseas trained doctors
    • Aboriginal employment and recruitment
    • Dental
    • Graduates
      • Mental Health Transition to Practice Program
      • GradConnect
    • Vacancies
    • Career opportunities
    • Pathways to working with us
    • Diversity and inclusion
    • Volunteering
  • Latest News
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. 2022
  4. 08
  5. 10
  6. Djilba brings relief and hope

Djilba brings relief and hope

Djilba brings relief and hope

Wild flowers
01/08/2022

Though it's traditionally the coldest month of the year, August is the month of hope and relief as it leads us into the warmer days of Djilba. Represented by the colour pink for the blossoming newness it brings in September as Kings Park lights up with its burst of floral joy.

In Noongar culture, it is marked as the season of conception; probably because there is nowhere better to be during these chilly days than under the covers in a cozy embrace.

Nature's finest exhibition begins with buttery creams and the vitalising perfume and hue of sunny wattle before morphing into richer golds and tangerines and culminating in a biennale of magenta, azure and violet. By the time this eruption of colour is in our sight, we will have the warmth of the sun on our face and the promise that the coldest days are behind us.

Woodland birds will be nesting so tidings of magpies/koolbardi will be protectively swooping as they guard their chicks as will their miniature-copycat monochrome friends, the willie wagtails/djidi djidi. Though not so striking in appearance with their taupey feathers and chicken-like face, the wattle birds have the best Noongar name – chuck-a-luck – and will also make their presence felt with their cackle as they party in the flowering trees.

And then as the temperatures gently rise we will see the emergence of new life as gardens reinvigorate, the grass trees/balgas stand tall and animal parents introduce their babes to the wide world.

 

 

Wild flowersWild flowersWild flowers

Previous Next
Last Updated: 11/08/2022
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Footer menu

  • wa.gov.au
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Contact Us

Brought to you by the Department of Health, Western Australia

© Government of Western Australia 2018 to