At the edge of the eucalypt-stippled savanna near Lansdowne, Northern Territory, a single morning with Manuel Pamkal turns raw timber into sound. The Didjeridoo making workshop at Gorge View Bush Retreat (1635 Gorge Rd, Lansdowne NT 0850, Australia) is a hands-on session where people carve and hollow pre-collected didjeridoo logs to make a playable instrument. If you’re visiting the Top End and want a tactile connection to Aboriginal craft, this three-hour class offers a direct line to technique, material, and story.
Participants meet by 9:45am and begin with Manuel’s short introduction to how and why the logs were collected, then move into the work: sharing tools, removing bark, hollowing cores, and shaping exterior profiles. The logs are authentic; the methods aim to respect traditional practices while adapting to public workshop safety. The session suits curious beginners and makers who want an approachable introduction to instrument construction. There’s time set aside for finishing touches after the group portion, and you leave with your own didjeridoo to continue refining at home or to play straight away.
The setting matters. Gorge View Bush Retreat sits among open eucalypt woodland and offers wide views over a low rocky creek and red earth that typify this part of the Top End. That landscape informs the experience—the timber’s grain, the sun-washed workbench, the call of cockatoos overhead. Manuel’s guidance is practical and patient; he balances instruction on tool technique with cultural context about the instrument’s place in local Aboriginal traditions.
What makes this workshop stand out is the combination of authenticity and accessibility. You’re using genuine logs and traditional shaping approaches, but in a controlled, supportive environment that welcomes total novices. It’s a tactile cultural exchange as much as a craft class: you learn about materials’ provenance, the sounds that different lengths and bore shapes produce, and how didjeridoo-making connects to community practice.
Practicalities: groups max out at 20 participants, sessions run about three hours, and English instruction is provided. Bring closed-toe shoes and sun protection; wear clothes you don’t mind smudging with wood dust. For visitors based in Katherine or staying in local lodges, the workshop is an easy morning excursion that pairs well with nearby walking tracks or a late-afternoon river cruise.
Whether you want a unique souvenir, a new hands-on skill, or a meaningful cultural encounter in the Top End, the Didjeridoo making workshop with Manuel Pamkal at Gorge View Bush Retreat offers a focused, memorable way to make something that sings. The workshop also suits travelers who value slow, craft-based learning; expect to leave with dust on your hands, a deeper sense of technique, and a didjeridoo whose voice will remind you of this place for years to come, plus local stories.