- Peter Hardwick
Peter Hardwick (born 1958) is an
Australian food horticulturist and environmentalist, recognized as an early pioneer of the Australianbushfood industry. He publicly challenged the established belief that native Australian food plants were not suitable for cropping; conceived the commercial strategy of processing strong flavored native food plants; and, developed the use of wild and seedling genetic diversity to overcome the lack of domesticated varieties previously considered a limitation with Australian native food plants. [Cribb, A.B.,& Cribb, J.W. "Wild Food in Australia", 1974, p16]In 1977 Hardwick started researching native food plants for their
culinary and cropping potential to highlight the economic importance of conservingrainforest . [Bio, ERDA Institute [http://www.earthwise.org.au/bushfoods.html] ] In 1978, he studied at Ryde School Horticulture, and investigated potential crops likeDavidsonia ,riberry ,bunya nut and plum pine (Illawarra plum ).During the 1980s Hardwick worked for NSW Agriculture. In 1988 he founded Wilderness Foods Ltd, a
bushfood company which pioneered the selection and production of aromaticAustralian spices ; planted mixed species cultivation trials; and worked with local Aboriginal communities on developing native food enterprise. In cooperation with the Essential Oils Unit, Wollongbar Agricultural Institute, Hardwick screened nativeessential oil plants for potential asAustralian spices in the developing bushfood market. This includedriberry ,lemon myrtle ,aniseed myrtle ,Cinnamon Myrtle , Lemon Ironbark, andDorrigo Pepper .Hardwick has authored several papers on native food plants. He currently lectures on the production of Australian native foods in regenerated ecosystems.
References
Notes
Bibliography
* Bruneteau, Jean-Paul, "Tukka, Real Australian Food", ISBN 0-207-18966-8.
External links
* CSIRO, industry profile [http://www.cse.csiro.au/research/nativefoods/industryprofile/regions.htm]
* Article [http://tweedrichmond.organicproducers.org.au/library/farmplan/bushfood.htm]
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