Just like the book, our film A Year at Yumburra is structured around the seasons and the associated activities on Yumburra farm, a property in south-east Gippsland where Bruce Pascoe and his partner, Lyn Harwood, run the enterprise Black Duck Foods. The farm is Pascoe’s attempt to bring to life a vision for growing traditional food on Country in a manner that benefits both the land and Aboriginal people. It is a deliberate project designed to test, extend and materialise some of the ideas put forward in his ground-breaking book Dark Emu. The film chronicles the passage of time through the various seasons and routines on Yumburra. Bruce Pascoe serves as the gentle narrator.
“Audrey Of The Alps” was director Grace McKenzie’s first feature documentary. It won the
Australian Directors Guild award for a documentary feature and the Australian International
Documentary Conference Best documentary Award. Grace has been an assistant editor
in Melbourne on feature films, has edited short documentaries and music programs and
worked as a production assistant and second unit camera on various television series.
Her work includes photographic portraiture for which she has had solo exhibitions and
cinematography for the feature documentary “No One Eats Alone”. Grace rode her bicycle
to Georgia from Australia and found temporary accommodation in the little village of
Argokhi at the foot of the mountains. She met the farmer Jimmy and his family and many
others in the village who are occupied solely as subsistence farmers. There she made her
documentary “In the Land of Wolves”. More recently Grace has been studying horticulture
and begun significant research on the life a