Tangible reconciliation in Australia must happen at the local level to enable authentic decolonisation of people and places. Enabling Indigenous sovereignty via Indigenous rights to custodianship and Caring for Country is key to advancing Australia’s commitment to improving the lives of Indigenous peoples and the state of the environment. While co-management of protected areas has been the main vehicle through which governments have enacted this promise, the potential of other publicly held land and private land has not yet been explored nor realised. Co-management schemes across public and private property for improved biodiversity and culturally inclusive outcomes are particularly important in agricultural landscapes which are in need of rehabilitation and have rich potential for biodiversity recovery at the cross-property landscape scale. This research unpacks this potential in partnership with Wiradyuri and non-Indigenous landholders and community members to identify pathways for on-ground implementation of biocultural corridors and inclusive agroecology. It does this by attempting to understand how practices of Indigenous custodianship and environmental stewardship in the farming sub-culture interrelate in the Murrumbidgee (Marrambidya) region. Furthermore, it hopes to uncover practical strategies for improving cultural governance of and access to cultural sites of significance on private land. We use a participatory approach to foster conversations to identify pathways towards deeper engagement between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people Caring for Country in rural places together.