News Of The Area
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Local Community News ~ Proudly Independent Friday, 22 April 2022
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Bart Remembers ANZAC Day March 1947
Great Green Wall of Bowraville
Women for Women of the Big Wet IN the wake of the recent North Coast flood devastation we have seen so many inspiring examples of the great Aussie spirit where we help our mates in need. Mid North Coast musician, the beautifully unique Heather Rose, has taken that spirit to the next level by coming up with a very special way to help. Heather desperately wanted to do something for flood victims however found going to the affected areas was not practical and donating to a faceless charity was also an
SPORT
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By Mick BIRTLES
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Klezmer Comes To The Valley
Page 20
Round One! q Heather Rose has put together a unique event that will raise funds and awareness in the wake of the floods.
unappealing option. In the knowledge that older women of a certain age are the highest growing homeless population in the country she decided she would find one woman who had lost everything in the floods and raise funds to help them using the gift of music. Once Heather had identified a very worthy recipient in the town of Coraki she approached some other female Mid North Coast musicians to assist her. News Of The Area spoke to Heather Rose who said, “I asked some of my professional female musician friends if they would be interested in being part of this show, and before I even told them any of the details, their immediate response was yes.” Heather added, “The Music Station Macksville is the only
Race Heats Up By Andrew VIVIAN
CONTINUED Page 2
Cowper candidates continue social media stoush THE contest for the Federal electorate of Cowper is
heating up on social media, with sitting Member Pat
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NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
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REPORTERS
NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
News Of The Area, team of REPORTERS Susan KONTIC 0451 990 247 susan@newsofthearea.com.au
Mick BIRTLES 0408 167 891 birtles@newsofthearea.com.au
Karen GRIBBIN 0421 652 184 karen@newsofthearea.com.au
Andrea FERRARI 0410 067 966 andrea@newsofthearea.com.au
David WIGLEY 0407 132 074 wigley@newsofthearea.com.au
Rachel McGREGOR-ALLEN 0466 877 179 rachel@newsofthearea.com.au
Doug CONNOR 0431 487 679 doug@newsofthearea.com.au EDITOR
NEWS: media@newsofthearea.com.au ADVERTISING: ads@newsofthearea.com.au FLIPBOOK ONLINE: www.newsofthearea.com.au SOCIAL: facebook.com/nambuccaNOTA
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Cowper race heats up as candidates clash over social media posts FROM Page 1
campaign page on Sunday, which was seen to be critical of Prime Minister Scott Morrison and the Coalition Government. The social media stoush between the two candidates began in late March, when Ms Heise expressed her disappointment about a post from a Facebook Page called ‘Coffs Harbour Nationals’, which she believed painted her as a puppet of the ‘Evil Far Left’. At the time, Mr Conaghan said the offending Facebook post was not shared by an authorised National Party page. On Sunday, the Caz 4 Cowper Facebook page shared a post with the title ‘Poem of the day!’ with an image of a poem that read, “I loathe a Scott burned country, a land devoid of brains. Of lying rorting bastards ignoring drought and flooding rains”. Mr Conaghan has branded the post “hypocritical”. “For a political campaign that leads with the words ‘Fairness, Honesty and Respect’, I find these tactics both disappointing and extremely hypocritical,” he said. Ms Heise said the post had been shared to her Facebook page from an external source by a team member who thought it was funny. She said she ordered the post to be taken down as soon as she saw it. “I sincerely apologise to anyone who was upset by the post,” Ms Heise said. “It was not directed at supporters of the Nationals but I do accept that the line ‘Of lying rorting bastards ignoring drought
and flooding rains’ may have been triggering for those members of Parliament who have repeatedly denied the science and refused to take real action on climate change. “It was not a post made by my team and it is not in my voice. “I would never use those words. “That many people gave it a tick of approval reflects what I’m hearing across Cowper - that people are frustrated at why this government won’t take real action on climate. “I sincerely apologise to anyone who was upset by the post,” Ms Heise said. Mr Conaghan believes Ms Heise’s campaign has been disrespectful to Liberal/National Party members and their supporters. “It’s become apparent that ‘Fairness, Honesty and Respect’ are not to be shown to myself or the population of Cowper who voted for me to represent them. “Ms Heise uses the word ‘Conservative’ as though it’s an insult. “As though those who identify as conservative are idiots who deserve to be mocked and patronised.” Mr Conaghan said he would be releasing details of major projects that impact Cowper over the coming weeks. “From the Coffs Bypass to the Port Macquarie Tidal Pool, from record investment in clean technology to environmental policies both new and existing,” he said.
q The controversial poem, which has gathered more than 10,000 likes in various forms on social media. Photo: supplied.
Women for Women of the Big Wet - A Unique Fundraiser coming to the Music Station Macksville from Hello World Travel Nambucca FROM Page 1
venue with its own piano at the moment and owner Rob Torelli has kindly offered his venue for free and is doing sound and lights with lots of fiddly behind the scenes things.” Heather Rose will share the stage with the massively popular Wild Women of Anywhere Beach, some beautiful classical guitar
from Karin Braidwood and an appearance by renowned cellist Georgie Ostenfeld. The two hour feast of music will be called ‘Women for Women of the Big Wet’ and will take place at the Music Station in Princes Street, Macksville from 2:00 pm until 4:00 pm on Sunday 1 May. Tickets are $20 with 100 percent of the proceeds going to Heather’s chosen lady and can be purchased
Heads, Music Station Macksville or online at www.eventbrite.com.au. Heather concluded by saying, “We will also be running a raffle with ten fabulous prizes from generous Nambucca Valley businesses who have opened their hearts.” Raffle tickets can be purchased at the event or before the event at The Music Station Macksville or Hello World Travel Nambucca Heads.
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Friday, 22 April 2022
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Bart remembers Anzac Day march 1947
SEVENTY five years ago, on Anzac Day, Bowraville boy Bart Scrivener marched in the annual commemorative parade with his cadet chums from the local Coffs Harbour High School brigade. And he has the photo to prove it – seen here. Chatting with his friends at Club Scotts in Scotts Head where Bart is a valued life member, he finds that some of them were also marching in that same parade all those years ago and could pick
themselves out in the photo. Letting his eye wander across the photo takes Bart down memory lane, with crystal clear details of that Anzac Day in 1947. “We marched from our school down by the Jetty to the old cenotaph,” Bart told News Of The Area. The straight route into town took the parade past Brelsford Park, as seen in the photo. “You can see Brelsford Park in the background; there was one old house you can see in the centre of the photo and hardly any other buildings from the jetty to ‘top town’ as we used to call it…but there was lots of
By Andrea FERRARI
q Bart Scrivener, right of centre behind Colonel Patterson, with his Coffs Harbour High School cadet mates.
lantana,” he laughed. Seen leading the parade, in a suit, is Colonel Patterson. “He was a Colonel in the army and had just come back from WWII and become a high school teacher at Coffs High School and he also trained us in the cadets.” In uniform at the front is Harvey Wilson, Captain of the Cadets, with Jim Wright, the 2IC of the platoon, seen third from the right in the photo. Then come the flag and wreath bearers, followed by the platoon of cadets. Bart is in the front row of marching cadets; as leader he’s marching on the right hand
side of his section. “To get into that march you had to be spot on – there were plenty who didn’t make it. “If you were good enough you got promoted up the ranks of the platoon. “Behind the cadets were the general public, bringing up the parade to the service as the cenotaph.” Thinking about his school mates, Bart shared another old photo of the cadets, with Colonel Patterson seen front and centre. Also in the front row are the fifth form Coffs Harbour High School lads, aged q Reminiscing about Anzac Day seventeen and eighteen, with 1947, Bart Scrivener today, aged 89. the back row third year boys
Battles fought and won AS the youngest of eight children, Shandra Ralph was always behind her older siblings when it came to family lore, but in the past few years she’s been doing some research and is amazed at the courage of her soldier father, and of his mother. She knew her father, William Ralph, had been born in Nambucca in 1893 and lived there until he enlisted, that he’d fought in France and Belgium during the First World War and he’d played rugby in an army
team. “My father would never talk about the war, so we didn’t know many details,” says Shandra, “it was off-limits to us kids, and because it happened before any of us were born, we didn’t think about it.” In the 1930s and early 1940s William was a top-rated axeman and the family travelled with him from their Sydney home to Nambucca and Coffs Harbour for work and country shows where wood-chopping events were big drawcards. “I have vague memories of my Grandmother Annie, who died when I was ten, and also of
some cousins. “Dad was always Billy to his family,” Shandra recalls. Then, in one of those twists that life sometimes throws up, more than 70 years after her grandmother died, Shandra bought a home near Urunga and soon started to look for clues about her Ralph family. The day she walked into the Nambucca Museum and saw the photo of her father in his army uniform is a day she’ll always remember. “I couldn’t believe it, and I called out ‘That’s my father!’. “Then I read the story with the photo and all the little bits
STUARTS Point And District Community Organisation (Spadco) have been approved $34,800 in funding through the Preparing Australian Communities Program, to improve the area’s resilience to natural disasters. The Preparing Australian Communities Program – Local stream is the first tranche of the Preparing Australia Program, an investment by the Australian Government of $600 million over six years. Spadco’s funding will allow for consultant investigations of an alternative egress for evacuations, and the production of guidelines for future development to reduce flooding. The project also includes a workshop to describe and understand the difference between hazard reduction burning and Indigenous
cultural burning practices, and explanations of climate change impacts. The funding will also provide fire information signage to be displayed around Stuarts Point hub and signage to clearly identify the Safer Place. CB radios and batteries will also be purchased with funding, and improvements to the local community hall are expected, including shower facilities and a roof sprinkler. “I think the funding might mean a more prepared community when facing fire and flooding. “The more prepared the community is, the better they will be able to deal mentally and physically with the events,” said concerned resident Mary-Lou Lewis. Member for Cowper Pat Conaghan said, “We know communities are best placed
to understand their unique needs and how they can best improve their resilience and reduce their level of risk to natural disasters that’s why these projects have been assessed to be so important to Cowper. “Disasters currently cost Australian taxpayers $18.2 billion per year and this has been forecast to rise to $39 billion per year by 2050, even without increased frequency and intensity of weather events due to climate change,” Mr Conaghan said. For more information and a full list of projects funded under Round One of the Preparing Australian Communities Program – Local stream visit: https:// recovery.gov.au/disasterrisk-reduction/preparingaustralia-program
By Susan KONTIC
$34,800 to improve disaster resilience in Stuarts Point
Friday, 22 April 2022
q Bart Scrivener marches in the Coffs Harbour High School Anzac Day parade in 1947.
of memories fell into place.” The story Shandra refers to commemorated the Armistice Day Centenary in 2018 and was written by Mick Birtles DSC, now a reporter with News Of The Area. Birtles recounts how in 1915 William travelled to Sydney with his mother, Annie, to enlist in the army. However, Annie was furious when the Department of Public Instruction decided the ten Indigenous children at the local school could no longer attend, saying she wouldn’t allow her son to fight for king and country if her children couldn’t be educated in public schools. She withdrew her consent for William and he was discharged, but he was determined to join the army and less than a year later travelled to Lismore and enlisted. Wounded in action in
aged fourteen and fifteen. “That’s me in the centre of the back row, aged fourteen.” There are a lot of surnames in that group which Coffs Harbour people would remember, said Bart. “Dickie Pearce had the engineering business down by the jetty. “The Gerrards had the picture theatre at the jetty. “The Cunninghams had a shop selling plumbing gear, alongside the old police station site. “And we’re all familiar with the name Hogbin and Tolhurst, and there’s Wilf Bailey and Noel Amos, all family names that have made their mark in Coffs Harbour,” said Bart.
q Indigenous Nambucca ANZAC William Ralph on the far right fought with the 15th Battalion AIF in France and Belgium.
Belgium in 1917, William stayed at the front. William and another soldier, Private Wheeler, returned to Nambucca Heads in September 1919 to a hero’s
welcome. Mick Birtles brings history to life as he tells a fascinating tale and it’s well worth a trip to Nambucca Museum to read the full story.
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NAMBUCCA Valley based aged care to study at our NV College in Macksville. The Australian Aged Care Collaboration’s “But the aged care industry in general is organisation NVC Group are calling for the (AACC) election campaign It’s Time to Care aged care sector to be a main focus of the suffering from severe workforce shortages About Aged Care calls on all parties and and now is the time to let our politicians Federal Election. independent candidates running in Cowper NVC Group Chairman Janine Reed said know our industry and its people matter, by and across the nation to commit to three main workforce pressures in aged care had been signing our industry’s petition.” actions: building for decades and the 1. A Workforce Partnership q NVC Group staff member Liz Spry, signing the Australian COVID-19 pandemic had stretched Supplement for providers to spend Aged Care Collaboration’s Care About Aged Care petition. staff shortages even further. immediately on increasing wages, “Now is the time for residents training, minutes of care, 24-hour and aged care providers like NVC nursing and COVID-19 prevention and Group to show their support for workforce retention costs. aged care because we want older 2. A minimum wage increase for Australians to get the quality care aged care workers by funding the Fair they deserve,” she said. Work Commission Work Value Case, and “Staff at NVC Group have gone award wage increases from July 2022. above and beyond to deliver care 3. And a commitment to a to residents during the most multidisciplinary workforce by challenging of circumstances putting in place an allied health needs and they deserve better pay and assessment and funding model by July career certainty. 2024. “We are now one year on from Residents wishing to pledge their the Royal Commission into Aged support for the It’s Time to Care About Care Quality and Safety and yet we Aged Care campaign can visit NVC have not seen its key workforce Group’s office in 23 Princess Street, recommendations implemented. Macksville, and sign a petition or visit “NVC Group is just managing the AACC’s website at https://www. to maintain its workforce due to a careaboutagedcare.org.au/. workforce development plan that The petition is also available at NVC promotes a ‘grow your own’ ethos. Group’s Coffs Harbour office and at cafes “This includes a graduate year near its aged care facilities in Macksville Registered Nurse program and and Nambucca Heads. attracting youth and job-changers
Concerns Over Postal Vote Applications
By Andrew VIVIAN
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INDEPENDENT Candidate for Cowper, Carolyn Heise, is one of a number of people urging residents to be wary of political parties sending them postal vote applications. “A lot of people have been asking me this week why they were receiving unsolicited postal vote application material in the mail,” said Ms Heise. “This is nothing more than a data mining exercise by the main parties, because, while the postal vote application is legal and official, the return address sends the document with all your personal information to one of the major parties. “They will then extract your personal
information and enter it into their data bank before forwarding your postal vote application to the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). “Once the major parties have your personal information they will target you with party political information to entice you to vote for their candidate. “It is not an act of generosity. “It is a tactic to get your personal information for them to use for their party
political benefit.” Ms Heise says people who want to apply for a postal vote should contact the AEC directly. The AEC agrees, telling people via social media that while the political parties are not breaking the law, it would prefer that voters contact it directly for postal vote applications. The Electoral Commissioner, Tom Rogers, has said that the practice is misleading, and is encouraging the major parties to stop. q The AEC has tweeted that it is less than happy about major parties soliciting postal vote applications
www.nambucca.nsw.gov.au
WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITY CLOSURE ANZAC DAY 2022 Council advises that the Waste Management Facility at Old Coast Road Nambucca Heads will be closed on the ANZAC DAY Monday 25 April 2022. The facility will reopen Tuesday 26 April 2022 at the usual times 8.00am – 4.00pm. There will be no change to the kerbside waste collection day. ENQUIRIES TO: Kelly Pacey, Executive Assistant (02) 6568 0230.
The Returned Services Leagues, have requested approval for the temporary closure of streets in Macksville, Nambucca Heads and Bowraville for the purpose of ANZAC Day Dawn Service and Marches. The closures are proposed for Monday 25 April 2022 at the times and locations detailed below: Macksville - Princess and Wallace Street, Wallace Lane and River Street between Station and Mckay Streets between 0500 to 1200 hours And Cooper Street between Ferry and Partridge Streets – from 1030 to 1130 hours; Bowraville - High Street between Bowra and Young Streets – from 0900 to 1100 hours; Nambucca Heads - Bowra and Nelson Streets between Rosedale Street and Riverside Drive from 0815 to 0915 hours. ENQUIRIES TO: Manager Technical Services Phone (02) 6568 0237 PO BOX 177 MACKSVILLE NSW 2447 Emergency Calls (After Hours) 1800 26 27 28
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TEMPORARY ROAD CLOSURES – ANZAC DAY MACKSVILLE, BOWRAVILLE AND NAMBUCCA HEADS
Friday, 22 April 2022
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Bowraville named as Top Tourism Towns Finalist BOWRAVILLE has been announced by the NSW Tourism Industry Council as a finalist for the 2022 NSW Top Tourism Town Awards. “The NSW Top Tourism Town Awards provide communities, business chambers, visitor centres and local governments the chance to show how their town encourages tourism development, increases visitation and drives the visitor economy for our state,” said NSW Tourism Industry Council Executive Manager, Greg Binskin. “It’s a real testament to the resilience of these towns that we have an incredible 30 finalists in three categories: those with populations over
5,000 residents, those under 5,000 residents and tiny towns with a population fewer than 1,500 residents.” Bowraville is contesting the ‘Top Tourism Town fewer than 1,500 residents’ category; competing with Karuah, Broke, Carcoar, Huskisson, Kangaroo Valley, Khancoban, Milparinka and Moulamein. “These Awards are all about community and business collaboration coming together to showcase their town as a leading NSW tourism destination highlighting those special places, experiences, cultural attractions and the allimportant locally produced food and beverages driving the visitor economy and delivering the social and economic outcomes for the community. “The process was highly competitive with inspiring editorial, images and video content
Voting At The Federal Election
accompanied by a compelling itinerary essential to be a Top Tourism Town finalist,” Mr Binskin said. “Once again, it is great to see such a strong response from NSW towns in engaging with the Top Tourism Town Awards. “Regional towns are critical to achieving the State’s ambitions as a visitor destination and the efforts these towns have made in support of their local economies, in the face of significant and ongoing challenges, is inspiring. “The quality of entries and the depth of experience these towns offer, is a testament
to their local businesses and communities,” said NSW Tourism Industry Council President, Simon Spellicy. It is the second year in a row that Bowraville has been selected as a finalist. “How exciting is this?” said Gaille Smith, Visit Bowraville. “Two years in a row as a finalist, so let's make it two times a charm and take home the award. “Stage two is public voting and all votes help with bringing home the trophy,” Gaille said. Now it’s time for the public to cast their vote with voting now open until 5pm
Wednesday 27 April 2022. The winners will be announced at the Local Government NSW Destination and Visitor Economy Conference, 17-19 May 2022. Winners in each category will go on to represent NSW at Australia’s Top Tourism Town Awards to be held later in the year. “Get voting now and share the love for these communities and give them a much-needed boost after the past couple of challenging years!,” Mr Spellicy said. To vote visit: https://www. b u s i n e s s n s w. c o m / m e d i a centre/top-tourism-townawards-2022-nsw/bowravillefinalist
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By Marian SAMPSON
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a development application has been received by Nambucca Valley Council. The proposed development is defined as “Integrated Development” under Section 4.46 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 as approval is required from the NSW Rural Fire Service under Section 100B of the Rural Fires Act. Applicant: DA/File No: Property Description: Proposal: Consent Authority:
Buildcert Planning DA 2022/99 Lot: 3 DP: 507931, 5 Hall Road Eungai Creek 15 Lot Torrens Title Subdivision NAMBUCCA VALLEY COUNCIL
The development application may be inspected at Council’s Administration Centre, Princess Street, Macksville, during office hours being 8.30 am to 4.00 pm weekdays from 22 April 2022 until 23 May 2022. Documents relating to the proposal may also be viewed at www.nambucca.nsw.gov.au – DAs Online. Please note that when searching for a DA in DAs Online the application number is entered first, then the year, eg DA 2015/072 would be entered as 72/2015. Any person may make written submissions or objections in respect of the proposal which should be lodged with the undersigned no later than 23 May 2022. Submissions must be addressed to the General Manager, Nambucca Valley Council, PO Box 177, Macksville NSW 2447 or sent by email to council@nambucca.nsw.gov.au. It is requested that submissions in support or objection list reasons. The provision of a name, address and contact telephone number will enable Council to inform you about the progress and outcome of the matter. Please note that any submission may be incorporated in a Council business paper or otherwise publicly disclosed. Note: Your attention is drawn to Section 10.4 of the Environmental Planning & Assessment Act 1979 which requires those making a submission to disclose all “reportable political donations and gifts”. All submissions will be acknowledged following Council’s determination of the application. For further information regards this proposal, please contact Daniel Walsh on 6568 0259. PO BOX 177, MACKSVILLE NSW 2447, (02) 6568.2555, www.nambucca.nsw.gov.au
DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL
(Notice of Application for Integrated Development pursuant to Schedule 1, Environmental Planning and Assessment Act, 1979) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a development application has been received by Nambucca Valley Council. The proposed development is defined as “Integrated Development” under Section 4.46 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 as approval is required from the NSW Rural Fire Service under Section 100B of the Rural Fires Act. C NOTA Graphic Ref: NAMBUCCAISLANDGOLFCLUB_M21_1672021_NEINA
WITH the Federal Election called for 21 May 2022, it is time to make sure that you understand your voting obligations. All Australian citizens aged over eighteen years are expected to take part in this compulsory voting process. Pre-polling will open two weeks before the May 21 election date – but Australians must have an acceptable reason to vote early, Australian Electoral Commissioner Tom Rogers warned. Most voting happens in-person on the day of the election, at polling booths across the country. However you can apply for a postal vote directly through the AEC website at www.aec. gov.au/pva. “While elections are in-person community events and we expect voters to turn out, Australians who won’t be able to make it inperson can now apply for a postal vote,” Mr Rogers said. "Political parties can send postal vote applications in the mail or you might get a text message linking you back to a party website – it’s legal and the applications will get to us. “However, the quickest and easiest option is to do it directly at aec.gov.au.” Given the prevalence of COVID-19 infections in the community the Federal Government has amended voting legislation to ensure that those in isolation are still able to vote. The legislation states, “If the Electoral Commissioner is satisfied on reasonable grounds that it is necessary or conducive to ensure the due conduct of a general election, Senate election or by-election, the Electoral Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, determine that a secure telephone voting method prescribed for the purposes of subsection 202AB(1B) may be used by individuals in Australia.”
DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL
(Notice of Application for Integrated Development pursuant to Schedule 1, Environmental Planning and Assessment Act, 1979)
Applicant: Oak Tree Retirement Village Nambucca Heads Pty Ltd DA/File No: DA 2022/109 Property Description: Lot: 19 DP: 1273809, 13 Janggal Janggal Road Nambucca Heads Proposal: Seniors Housing Development comprising sixty (60) independent living units with a central village centre and swimming pool. Consent Authority: NAMBUCCA VALLEY COUNCIL The development application may be inspected at Council’s Administration Centre, Princess Street, Macksville, during office hours being 8.30 am to 4.00 pm weekdays from 22 April 2022 until 23 May 2022 Documents relating to the proposal may also be viewed at www.nambucca.nsw.gov.au – DAs Online. Please note that when searching for a DA in DAs Online the application number is entered first, then the year, eg DA 2022/109 would be entered as 109/2022. Any person may make written submissions or objections in respect of the proposal which should be lodged with the undersigned no later than 23 May 2022. Submissions must be addressed to the General Manager, Nambucca Valley Council, PO Box 177, Macksville NSW 2447 or sent by email to council@nambucca.nsw.gov.au. It is requested that submissions in support or objection list reasons. The provision of a name, address and contact telephone number will enable Council to inform you about the progress and outcome of the matter. Please note that any submission may be incorporated in a Council business paper or otherwise publicly disclosed. Note: Your attention is drawn to Section 10.4 of the Environmental Planning & Assessment Act 1979 which requires those making a submission to disclose all “reportable political donations and gifts”. All submissions will be acknowledged following Council’s determination of the application. For further information regards this proposal, please contact Daniel Walsh on 6568 0259 . PO BOX 177, MACKSVILLE NSW 2447, (02) 6568.2555, www.nambucca.nsw.gov.au Emergency Calls (After Hours) 1800 26 27 28
Friday, 22 April 2022
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NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
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NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
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The great green wall of Bowraville By Karen GRIBBIN NEWS Of The Area was
on hand for the opening of the great green wall of Bowraville on Tuesday 5 April. Thanks to the innovative ideas of Bowraville Central School teacher Lynden Briggs and a Sustainable Schools Grant, the school now has a green wall garden, in place of an unsightly wall that used to bake in the hot afternoon sun. “Before the garden wall it used to be a temptation for passing students to bounce balls off it, distracting those inside,” said Megan Cochrane, BCS Community Liaison Officer. Water from an already situated drinking bubbler has now been diverted to the wall to keep the plants healthy and growing, plus saving water that used to just run down the drain. The plants act as a cooling method for this room, hence reducing the need to run expensive air conditioning equipment, saving the school on electricity costs. The wall has dual benefits
as many of the plants are edible; making fresh herbs and bush tucker readily accessible to the nearby Food Technology room and canteen.
Native plants are among what has been planted, with students involved in the designing and measuring out of the wall garden. More than 300 pots have
been planted. “This was a combined idea of both myself and Megan, we work well together in our thinking,” said Mr Briggs.
“We do things with passion, allowing our students to have a voice.” “The project was halted by Covid, but is now complete and growing more lush every
day,” said Megan. To finish off the project, part of Bowraville Central School’s vision statement, ‘Together We Grow’, has been installed above the garden.
q BCS Executive Principal David Taylor and BCS teacher Mr Lynden Briggs join students in cutting the ribbon and opening the green wall.
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Friday, 22 April 2022
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Lib Dems launch for Copwer and Page By Andrea FERRARI
LIBERAL Democrat candidate for Cowper, Simon Chaseling, and Page Liberal Democrat candidate, Thomas Searles, launched their Federal Election campaigns on Monday, 18 April. The pair were guest speakers at a community gathering at a filled Boambee Hall, along with One Nation candidate for Cowper, Faye Aspiotis, and Australian Federation Party candidate for Page, Heather Smith. Mr Chaseling is a professional builder living and running his business on the Coffs Coast and Mr Searles is a surveyor and farmer living in Grafton and working across the Northern Rivers. Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles spoke about their commitment to representing all Australians who value freedom, fairness and personal sovereignty over their choices. Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles told News Of The Area, “Traditionally in Australia we have a clearly defined split in politics, a two party system where one party holds government and the other holds the government to account through a healthy opposition. “The principles of personal sovereignty, medical ethics, and human rights were generally agreed to be pivotal to Australian culture and available to be discussed in healthy debate. “Some of these principles are legislated, such as the Australian constitutional prohibition on government ‘civil conscription’, meaning that in the context of public healthcare the government cannot force medical decisions on either patients or doctors.” Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles said they are “strong proponents of a well funded, world class health care system and medical advancement”, but not at the expense of “informed consent and basic human rights”. “The basic underpinnings of medical ethics and
government restraint should be upheld. “Other basic human rights and freedoms are less defined in law but deeply embedded in our culture and considered sacred by most due to the tremendous price paid by our forefathers in defending freedom against totalitarianism.” The candidates say they have been shocked by what they see as the “bullying” of people who have opposed recent vaccine mandates. “As Australians we have been absolutely shocked by the callous bullying that has gone on over the past several months, seeing professionals such as teachers and nurses, generally revered and valued, slandered and sacked if they do not immediately follow the dictates of a government regarding their private health decisions.” Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles said that free speech had been “openly suppressed by government and unions”. “In some cases, they were threatened with imprisonment if they spoke out about the rampant corruption and conflict of interest during the pandemic, not to mention the obvious ineffectiveness and safety concerns of the experimental drugs being forced on them.” The pair also spoke out against workers losing their jobs due to vaccine mandates. “Tens of thousands of medical professionals, along with educated teachers, have
had their careers ended brutally, their livelihoods and employment stripped, without any respect or concern by our local politicians. “This has effectively crippled our already strained education and healthcare systems and done nothing to restrain the spread of Covid.” Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles cited people having a range of “widespread and unprecedented adverse reactions” to the vaccines, including “heart attacks, strokes, Bell’s Palsy and neurological damage; side effects that many distinguished doctors and medical researchers warned of in advance”. Both Liberal Democrat candidates have issues with the management of the Covid-19 pandemic by State and Federal Governments. “This last two years has been the greatest wealth transfer in the history of humanity from the working class to the ruling class. “Our community has lost the right to free speech, the right to travel." The candidates say the public has also lost the
right to say no to a vaccine they describe as "forcing Australians into medical experimentation". Mr Chaseling and Mr Searles say the “freedom loving minor parties” can make a difference on election day. “The only hope for these parties to make a difference is for ordinary citizens to preference these parties, above the major parties, and nominate their senators. “This will mean that these parties have some hope
q Faye Aspiotis, One Nation candidate for Cowper at Monday evening’s community gathering.
q Liberal Democrat candidate for Page, Thomas Searles, believes in personal sovereignty, medical ethics and human rights for all.
q Thomas Searles, Liberal Democrat candidate for Page.
of forming an opposition to the unbridled agendas of the Liberal and Labor parties, which at present are almost indistinguishable and antithetical to traditional Australian freedom. “The range of (people representing) freedom minor parties is as broad as Australia, with candidates ranging from doctors and university professors to pastors, teachers, tradies and farmers. “Many are not career politicians and are making a sacrifice personally to run.”
q Simon Chaseling, Liberal Democrat candidate for Cowper.
q Heather Smith, standing for Page for the Australian Federation party.
q Simon Chaseling, Liberal Democrat candidate for Cowper addresses Coffs Coast residents on Monday evening - 18 April.
Your voice for Cowper in Canberra! I’m Caz. As a nurse, health administrator, Master of Business and mum, I am deeply committed to: Real action on climate change Restoring integrity in politics Growing economies and healthy communities Always acting with respect and honesty
Authorised by Carolyn Heise, Independent Cowper Pty Ltd. 65 Hickory Street, Dorrigo, NSW 2453
Friday, 22 April 2022
Visit www.caz4cowper.com.au www.newsofthearea.com.au
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NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
Community inspired by local heroes ON March 18, over 300 young people, families and Nambucca Valley community members enjoyed the premiere screening of the feature documentary, ‘Inspire U: Stories from the Valley’. Held at Nambucca Heads High School, the free film premiere event gave attendees a special program of inspiring stories of local people who overcame challenges to achieve success in different and meaningful ways. The idea for the documentary came from local young people themselves who wanted to see the achievements of people like them, understand their journeys to triumph, and get advice on facing hurdles and setbacks. Inspire U: Stories from the Valley is part of Becoming U, a unique initiative whose mission is to empower young people to unleash their potential and use
q Nambucca Heads High School Captain Will McKinney hosting the film premiere. Photo: Becoming U.
it to thrive by working side-byside with young people, rather than for them. The documentary is now available to watch online at becoming.org.au Becoming U is proudly supported by Uniting NSW.ACT and has formed a wonderful partnership with Nambucca Heads High School staff and students who collaborated and worked hard to make the event special. School Captain Will McKinney hosted the film screening and Kyiesha CohenSiemsen delivered the Welcome to Country before Cass Wilson, Becoming U’s Community Impact Coordinator, and Deputy Principal Jo Marshall introduced the film. Cass said, “It’s important to highlight and celebrate our young people and those from Nambucca Valley who have made a difference.
“Young people wanted to see more real people doing real things to feel more hopeful and have more self-belief.” Jo added, “We’re really grateful and fortunate to have this partnership. “If Becoming U is making a difference, one kid at a time, that’s really important.” Kyiesha is featured in the story alongside Kiarra, Kythera and Luwarna Cohen-Siemsen. Others who share their stories are Chris Edwards, Jacinta Shackleton, Oliver Gadbsy, Caitlin Hockey, Indi Lievas, Andrew and Maia Holmes, Leah Benson, and Jane Mottley. Ex-Nambucca Heads High student Courtney Jarrett said, “Hearing everyone’s life experience was amazing! “Especially hearing from Chris, I never knew half the things he talked about and I’ve known him practically my whole life. “Also, the girls at the end, hearing them talk about Aunty Valla made me tear up because I fully understand where they’re coming from.” Current student Lily, part of the school’s Youth Force team and an event volunteer said, “I am so pleased I was able to be a part of such a spectacular evening. “It was awesome to meet so many people and bring the community together.”
At the event, everyone enjoyed a free meal from local food trucks and great music from Nambucca Heads High School band playing live for the first time in two years, and captured memories at the photo booth. Member for Oxley Melinda Pavey attended and mingled with Nambucca
WHEN Bowraville Central School staff members Megan Cochrane and Mr Briggs had the innovative idea to turn an inadequate stair access into an open deck area, The Deck Café
was born. The Deck Café was created to give Cert II hospitality and food technology students access to hands-on experience, and was the staging point for the school’s Young Archies portrait display on Tuesday 5
q Sierra Martin, Miyah Hoffman and Cara Wiebenga.
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NOTA Graphics - Ref: TBL_110222
T I C L I B L A X L A N D L AW Y E R S
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April. The BCS students prepared and served food and refreshments to parents, carers and community members who had come to view the student’s artworks. Lori Wilson, a Hospitality
q Nambucca Heads High School Principal Dot Panaretos, teacher Gary Cattanach and Member for Oxley Melinda Pavey. Photo: Nambucca Heads High School.
Heads High School Principal Dot Panaretos and the crowd. You can learn more and watch the documentary online at becoming.org. au and follow Becoming U on social media to get the latest news and hear about upcoming events.
q Cass Wilson, Becoming U's Community Impact Coordinator addresses the crowd. Photo: Chris Hewgill, Hewysurf Photography.
Hands on experience at The Deck Café By Karen GRIBBIN
www.newsofthearea.com.au
Teacher at Bowraville Central School, was there to oversee students putting their skills into practice. “The Deck Café gives students a real-world experience in working in the
hospitality industry,” said Lori. The Deck Café will now be used for special occasions at the school and for the use of Year 12 students and staff. There are plans in the works for shade cover to be put over the decking to finish the project. Students can access
fresh herbs and bush tucker from the green wall next to the food and technology classroom. “The Café is an extra for Year 12 students and staff as an alternative to the canteen,” said Megan Cochrane, BCS Community Liaison Officer. q
The Deck Café.
q Hospitality students Ben Tysoe and Michala Nash with Lori Wilson, BCS Hospitality Teacher.
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Friday, 22 April 2022
NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
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Klezmer Comes to the Valley IN 2017, the Australian Chamber Orchestra (ACO) Collective toured to Bellingen to celebrate a ten-year partnership with the Bellingen Youth Orchestra (BYO). On that tour was a young violinist by the name of Ben Adler. As a member of the ACO Collective, he’d had many memorable experiences, but none quite compared to that night in Bellingen Memorial Hall. The ACO Collective was joined on stage by dozens of students from the BYO and, side-by-side, they played ‘Nimrod’ from Elgar’s ‘Enigma Variations’. “It was one of the most moving concert experiences of my life,” Ben recalls, “it was so beautiful and fulfilling to make music with the next generation of passionate string players.” Inspired by the warmth of the community, Ben vowed to
return to the region. Five years later, and as leader of the klezmer band CHUTNEY, that dream has become a reality. On Friday 6 May, CHUTNEY will run a klezmer workshop at Bellingen High School. That night, they will perform a family-friendly concert at Valla Public Hall
featuring members of the BYO Sinfonia playing CHUTNEY's own music. So what is klezmer? Once used to refer to a musician who played a specific type of Jewish celebratory music in Eastern Europe, ‘klezmer’ now describes a style that is fun, emotionally evocative and designed to get people dancing. As Ben explains, “CHUTNEY started out as a few mates who thought it would be fun to play this kind of music.
“Over time we grew in size and started to fuse klezmer with our many disparate musical and personal influences.” This blending is how CHUTNEY got its name, the band describing themselves as a fusion of sweet and spicy ingredients – a world music band with a modern twist! Even for those who know klezmer, CHUTNEY is a new experience. It’s why the band is so excited to be touring the regions. Stuck in Sydney for two years because of
q Klezmer’ now describes a style that is fun, emotionally evocative and designed to get people dancing. Photo: Live Photography.
Rockin at Nambucca A WEEKEND of rock and roll dance, classic cars and lively music comes to Nambucca Heads RSL Club on the weekend of April 29, 30 and May 1. Rock and roll returns to Nambucca Heads in April, with a bustling program of things to see and opportunities to hear outstanding musicians and dance your heart out at ‘Rockin at Nambucca’. Let’s Dance Rock and Roll Nambucca and Nambucca Heads RSL Club presents a weekend of rock and roll dance
in the auditorium of the RSL Club, all in accordance with State Government and RSL Club protocols. This year will see the return of the classic cars, muscle cars, hotrods and the motorbike Show and Shine; following the hiatus last year due to Covid. “Come and see the pride and joys of motoring enthusiasts from local and surrounding areas on Saturday morning in the RSL Club carpark,” said Brian Dwyer, Let’s Dance Rock and Roll Nambucca.
q Klezmer band CHUTNEY is coming to Valla Public Hall. Photo: Live Photography.
q On Sunday morning those who are enthusiastic about dance can participate in a rock and roll/partner dance workshop.
“Expectations are that there will be plenty of variety in vehicles on display as there have been very few car shows in the last two years. “For anyone interested in participating, there is no need to be a member of a car or bike club, just bring your classic or muscle vehicle to the carpark around 10.00am and join other like minded enthusiasts.” A limited number of tickets are still available for the Saturday night’s dance featuring the ‘Rave On’ band from the Central Coast. Bookings and tickets are available by contacting Helen on 0417 646 424. There are no ticket sales at the door. Rock and roll weekend schedule Kicking off on Friday night, there are five events to attend over the weekend. Friday, April 29: The DriveIns are a very popular local 50s and 60s rock and roll band who will take the stage from 7.30pm until 11.00pm. Tables for this night can only be reserved through the Nambucca RSL Club on (02) 65
q The classic, muscle car, hotrod and bike show will be held in the carpark of Nambucca RSL Club from 10.30am until 1.00pm.
C NOTA GRAPHIC_REF:MACKSVILLE_NAMBUCCA_M24_14122022_NEINA
COMING...
Evenings: May 20, 27 & 28 Dinner Show: Seated at 6pm Curtain @7pm Matinees: May 21, 22 & 29 Lunch Show: Seated 1pm Curtain 2pm
Tickets available at the club Lunch & Dinner Bookings Essential
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Monday 10.30am Tuesday 5.30pm Friday 10.30am
Thursday tickets on sale from 6pm Friday tickets on sale from 5.30pm Sunday tickets on sale from12.30pm
Wednesday 9.00am
RYAN PARSONS
DIANE COOMBES
BARRY NOBLE
Friday 22nd
Saturday 23rd
Sunday 24th
16 Cooper St, Macksville 02 6568 1344 Friday, 22 April 2022
COVID-19, CHUTNEY can’t wait to hit the road and bring their dancing rhythms and jazzy, funky, samba-y flavours to new audiences. They are especially looking forward to their collaboration with BYO for the delight that’s found in music-making with talented young players. It is sure to be a mutually enriching experience!
686-288. Saturday, April 30: 10.30am: The classic, muscle car, hotrod and bike show will be held in the carpark of Nambucca RSL Club from 10.30am until 1.00pm. 7.00pm-11.00pm: Saturday night features Sydney’s 50s and 60s rock and roll band, Rave On. Sunday, May 1 11.00am: On Sunday morning those who are enthusiastic about dance can participate in a rock and roll/ partner dance workshop. Let’s Dance Rock and Roll will treat you to one hour of their expertise to help you learn
a medium level rock and roll move and a new partner dance. Just rock up to this event, no need to book. 1.00pm: Sunday afternoon from 1pm until 4pm will complete the 50s and 60s weekend with John Curtin, a favourite talented local oneman entertainer. No need to book for this one. The Nambucca RSL Club and the Nambucca Let’s Dance Rock and Roll Social Club wish to thank everyone for their support of ‘Rockin at Nambucca’.
ANZAC DAY 2022
Sunday 24th 5.30pm War Memorial
KAPYONG SUNSET SERVICE Stew and Damper afterwards at the Macksville Ex-Services Club
Monday 25th 5.30am War Memorial
DAWN SERVICE There will be a short silent March, leaving from the cnr Princess & McKay Streets at 5.20am. Breakfast at the Macksville Ex-Services Club afterwards
Monday 25th CEMETERY SERVICE 8.30am Service for the Unknown Soldiers Macksville Cemetery Monday 25th 11.00am War Memorial
MARCH will be forming up in Princess Street near the Mandarin Motel, departing at 10.50am. Lunch at the Macksville Ex-Services Club afterwards ($15 per person). If you would like to attend the lunch, please advise the Club directly (call 645681344) to book.
For any further information, please call Lyn 0491 149 927.
www.macksvilleexservices.com.au
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NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
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NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
Volunteer for the Bello Show By Andrea FERRARI
LEND a hand, give your time and get involved with the Bello Show as a volunteer. With just one month to go, The Bellinger River Agricultural Show Committee is encouraging people to hop on board and sign up to help make this traditional show the smooth-running crowd-puller it is famous for. Get your diaries out and get the dates in: Bellingen Show takes place on Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 May. Bellinger River Agricultural Society President Gillian Anderson said, “The Bellingen Show provides something for everyone, for residents and visitors, exhibitors and competitors; it is a special opportunity to be part of a truly community-based event. “However, it is only with the support of our volunteers that the Show runs year after
year. “This year the Bellingen Show coincides with National Volunteers Week (16-22 May), there’s a delightful sense of serendipity in being able to
celebrate our volunteers at the very time they are helping bring the Show to life,” she said. On Saturday May 1, the Show Committee holds their annual Volunteers Day at the
q
touring routes and activating interesting new venues. For this tour, celebrated guitarist Andrew Blanch and harpist Emily Granger will pair up for ‘Suite mágica’, where the extraordinary combination of guitar and harp will be applied to a selection of works that display the energy, versatility and beauty of these muchloved instruments. Suite mágica will showcase Blanch and Granger sharing some of the finest music from their explorations, including exciting new commissions by
Australia’s leading composers, arrangements of popular favourites, and more. In addition to ticketed concert performances, MitR will co-host several community events, including an invitation only performance for the Bowraville Rural Fire Service. Speaking about the tour, Emily Granger said, “Andrew and I are delighted to join forces with Music in the Regions to bring the unique sounds of the classical harp and guitar to regional NSW.
“If you’ve ever wondered how lead lighting is done, the talented Wendy Tanner will be there to show you. “Needle felting will be displayed, and Charlotte and Jac, printmakers extraordinaire, will be showing you everything you wanted to know about printmaking and lino cuts. “The enthusiasm for this new space has been so exciting - with support like this from the community, the Artisan Tent can be a Bellingen Show regular.” Throughout the weekend there will be live demonstrations and displays as well as short talks from makers and producers. Bellingen artist Fiona McAuley is one of the many artisans, creatives and makers in the spotlight in the Artisan Tent. Her vibrant mosaics can be seen around Bellingen. Fi will showcase some of her mosaics in a display of her work and invites you to get involved in a fun taster mosaic project of your own at the show. Fi primarily uses reclaimed and recycled material in her creative practice (encompassing drawing, painting, mosaic, and sculpture) and as an arts
educator loves to see the joy and sense of achievement that mosaic making brings to participants. The Artisan Tent adds to the Show’s creative program which includes the extensive crafts competition on display in the Pavilion as well as the long running EJ Mantova Memorial Art competition. Known to locals as ‘The Mantova’, the art competition pays homage to Ernest John Mantova, Bellingen’s first recognised professional artist. The art competition invites submissions across a variety of mediums including landscape/ seascape, water colour, open, drawing and sculpture. The Bellingen Show takes
Artisan Tent comes to Bello Show By Andrea FERRARI
ARTISANS, selling their handmade wares and demonstrating their skills, are the feature of a new attraction to the Bellinger River Agricultural Show, which will run on 21 and 22 May, 2022 at Bellingen Showground. The new Artisan Tent is an added attraction that befits the local rural show in a town where regular markets are filled with homemade and hand-made goods. Bellinger River Agricultural Society President Gillian Anderson said the Artisan Tent is shaping up to be a great new addition which the committee hopes will broaden the appeal of the show and inspire visitors to linger a little longer. Gillian told News Of The Area, “We have a wonderful selection of local artisans, makers and growers and the list is still growing. “Potters will gather together with a wonderful display of their works plus they will be showing how the potter’s wheel works and how to throw a pot, while kids get creative and make their own masterpiece in clay.
10 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
Bellingen Showgrounds. Volunteer Coordinator Lydia Bezeruk explained, “Volunteering brings people together and it builds communities. “Our Volunteers Day is a chance for volunteers and the show committee to come
together over lunch to hear what’s in store for the 2022 Show. “We’re always delighted to have new volunteers come on board, it’s an excellent way to meet people and get involved in everything from planning the event, to setting up the
Join the jolly volunteers at the Bellinger River Agricultural Show.
Music in the Regions AFTER a successful inaugural tour across the Central West and Southern Tablelands, new touring organisation Music in the Regions (MitR) will continue to bring high quality classical music performances to regional NSW audiences; coming to Nambucca Heads on Tuesday, 17 May. MitR has been seed funded by Create NSW to extend the reach of classical music into regional areas, and to create opportunities for musicians and audiences while developing new
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“We are both passionate about getting out of the urban centres to bring Sydney Opera House standards to regional community halls. MitR Executive Director Janine Collins said, “We are thrilled to bring this exceptionally talented duo to a range of unusual venues in spectacular locations along the NSW Mid North Coast such as a heritage community hall, an historic church and even a golf club. “We are confident audiences who experience the magic of Blanch and Granger will similarly be captivated by the exceptional quality of their
place on Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 May. Bellingen Show schedules and entry forms are available from local businesses or from the Bellingen Show website. For Artisan Tent enquiries email President Gillian Anderson on president@ bellingenshow.com.au or phone 0419124368. For more information about the EJ Mantova Memorial Art competition visit www. b e l l i n g e n s h o w. c o m . a u / entries/mantova/. The closing date for entries is Friday 29 April with the exhibition opening on Saturday 14 May, 2022 at 3pm. For further information about the show visit www. b e l l i n g e n s h o w. c o m . a u or www.facebook.com/ TheBellingenShow.
q Mosaics by Fiona McAuley will be seen at the Bello Show Artisan Tent.
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world class performance, reinforcing our belief that people living in regional settings are hungry for rich cultural experiences close to home. “We are also firmly committed to facilitating unique performance opportunities for emerging and established classical musicians and chamber orchestras, especially after the significant impact to the music industry over the past two years caused by the pandemic.” In a model that will be repeated in future programs across NSW, the musicians
stalls, marshaling the mongrel dogs or scanning tickets at the gate. “There’s such wonderful enthusiasm from our volunteers which brings the show to life, it’s contagious.” To get involved, contact Bellingen Show Volunteer Coordinator Lydia Bezeruk at volunteers@bellingenshow. com.au. The full suite of Bellingen Show categories and competitions are on the Bellingen Show website at www.bellingenshow.com.au/. Show schedules for cattle, horses, poultry and the Pavilion classes are now available online, and print copies are available at various points around town including the Post Office, Norco, Bellingen Pet Shop, Bellingen Newsagency and the Bellingen Sweet Shop. Contact Bellingen Show President Gillian Anderson at president@bellingenshow. com.au. More info at www.facebook. com/TheBellingenShow.
involved in 2022 will return to these same communities every year for the next three years. This will help strengthen relationships with audiences, extend opportunities for local artists and open the door for other musicians by establishing new touring routes throughout the state. Andrew Blanch and Emily Granger will perform Suite mágica at Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club, Tuesday 17 May at 7pm. To book tickets and for more information about Suite mágica and MitR please visit www.musicintheregions.com.
q Mosaic artist Fiona McAuley will display her works at Bello Show.
q Clare Danby will show her ceramic wares in the new Artisan Tent at Bello Show.
Friday, 22 April 2022
NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
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Remaining vigilant for Japanese encephalitis virus STATE and federal biosecurity authorities are alerting pig and horse owners to be vigilant for Japanese encephalitis virus. The virus is spread by mosquitoes and can infect people and animals. Already this year, three people have died from the virus and there are more than
60 piggeries with infected herds across New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia. To date there have been no official reports of the disease in horses, but the threat remains while mosquito numbers are high due to recent rain and flooding.
Australian Chief Veterinary Officer Dr Mark Schipp said governments and industry were working together to contain the virus. “The best course of action is to try and avoid mosquito bites to yourself and your animals,” Dr Schipp said. “And part of that means
THE Coalition Government has announced an investment of more than $5 million for the Kalang Road Reconstruction and Upgrade, under the Remote Roads Upgrade Program (RRUP). Upgrades to Kalang Road are set to include more than six kilometres of widening and rehabilitation works to sections that are narrow, dangerous and
deteriorated. There will also be close to twelve kilometres of widening and sealing works undertaken to sections that are currently unsealed and hazardous. In addition, Knights Bridge, Tysons Bridge, Hopsons Bridge and Youngs Bridge - four old timber bridges built in the sixties - will be upgraded to new flood resistant concrete bridges.
Federal Member for Cowper Pat Conaghan said The Nationals understand the importance of reliable roads in the bush. “I’m proud that our government is investing more in regional roads than ever before as part of a record $120 billion ten-year infrastructure investment program.
“These investments are made possible by the Coalition’s strong economic management,” Mr Conaghan said. “Remote roads are out of sight for most people, but they are crucial links for members of regional communities,” Mr Conaghan said. “This funding will keep locals moving from A to B, getting them to their destination sooner and safely. “These projects will also create new jobs, supporting
By Grumpy’s CORNER
way into the semis with Joe Francks, Chris D'Elboux and John ‘Rowdy’ Reynolds winning all three games convincingly. The other semi-finalists were decided in some instances by the very last bowl with some fancied sides being beaten and other less fancied teams taking their places. In the semi's over three ends Joe's side defeated Steve Carr, Neil Duffus and Margret Duffus in what was a fine performance by them. In the other semi, Peter ‘Golden Arm’ McRitchie, Jeff Thorne and Phil Hall, all exNambucca player's, defeated Graham ‘the Good Brother, Good Bowler and after a few early morning fishing trips
now The Better Fisherman’, Cosi and Bruce ‘Macadamia’ Mason. Phil's team then advanced to the final. A good crowd were cheering on the local lads and in the gathering darkness and rain Phil's side emerged victorious to claim the $1,500 1st prize. Joe's team received $900, and the beaten semi-finalists received $300 each. Not bad for a $20 entry fee. Three games of bowl's, a great lunch provided by our new caterers and the chance to win some good money. Keep the date free for next year and come along and join in the fun.
You might even get the chance to claim the wrong bias record. A raffle was held after the presentation with the rabbit warren winning a chocolate bunny in Souths colours. A big well done to the organisers but not the weatherman who, if he was tipping horse races, you would never back them. The Minor Single's start on Saturday and Sunday and marker's will be needed but it’s a good way to watch a match up close. Get your tickets now for the Final on the verandah as a big crowd will be expected for this game. There are some big events coming up.
Despite everything against them, we were able to run competitions every day for those super keen golfers and holidaymakers. This week’s featured sponsor was North Coast Boating Centre at Urunga – we certainly could have used their products last week to get across the causeway – thank you for your sponsorship. We had 24 players for a Medley Stableford on Tuesday 12 April – five did not finish, some getting caught in a heavy shower around lunchtime. With Sawtell closed due to the big wet, Graham Montgomery and Gregory Hay ventured out on our soggy track with Graham (9) scoring 41 points to win from Gregory (19) with 37 points
on a countback from Matthew O’Brien (Urunga). Others to win a ball were Nate Beverley 36, Jeffrey Vanderwyk 35, and Adrian Aldabet (Branxton) 34. The Ladies scheduled American Foursomes was changed to a Single Stableford on Wednesday 13 April – 25 starters, eight cards not returned- I wonder why. Lisa Urquhart (27) and Bryony Brownlie (43) both did very well in the wet conditions to score 41 points each, Lisa winning the countback. Dianne O’Leary scored 38 points, Judith Boyle and Jenny Thorne both had 35 and Angela Paton 34, all getting a ball in the rundown. Thursday 14 April was changed from an Aggregate Stableford to a Single due
to a very reduced field of 15 players attempting in the most difficult of conditions. This didn’t worry Lee Fewings (33) who managed to score a very good 41 points to win the day. Ball run down to Greg McCoy 38, Paul Maxwell 36 and Philip Rose (Mackksville) 35 points. Following a course inspection on Thursday, it was clear that there was no way that we would be able to get the course back to a suitable condition to hold our Annual Easter Bowl 36 Hole event over Saturday and Sunday, and the decision was taken to defer the event until the weekend of 9 and 10 July, immediately following the Veteran’s Week of Golf. For
to gain medals and personal bests. Some of the events had 200 swimmers and there were very close races. Swimming North Coast sported sixteen swimmers at this meet in 43 events. Bailey Whitton, Macksville, 16 years, was placed 8th in the
100 fly final and placed 14th in the B final of the 50 fly in his age group. Swimmers from Macksville club Bailey Whitton, 16: 13th 200 fly, 24th 100 free and 30th 50 free. Lilly Barlow, 14: 42nd 200 free and 24th 400 free.
Leah Pickvance, 15: 49th 100 free, 40th 50 free and 29th 50 fly. Kiera Hetherington, 15: 55th 200 free and 26th 50 breast. Jaxon White, 14: 103rd 50 free in his first nationals.
Remote Road Upgrade
reducing mosquito infestations. “We have developed a guide on how to control mosquitoes around piggeries and we are currently developing a similar guide that can be used for horses. “The key things to help prevent mosquito bites on horses is to put a hooded rug on
Nambucca Heads Bowling Club ON Easter Saturday at The Easter Shootout we saw a new club record set by an unnamed Lady Skip who totalled four wrong biases in a twelve-end match easily eclipsing our previous record of three. When interviewed, in a Scomo style statement she said that whilst technically not her fault it was still good to hold a club record, but thought with the quality of the bowlers we have it likely won’t stand for long. The Shoot Out was a big success with 22 teams playing three games of two bowls triples over twelve ends per game. One team led all the
Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club By Geoffrey MCCANN
THE week started off with a few sunny days, and our golfers were itching at the bit to get back out on the golf course as soon as possible. Our greens staff had made a start on getting the fairways mowed, but it was impossible for machinery to enter the rough due to the very soft conditions, and the bunkers remained unplayable. To facilitate the wishes of our ambitious golfers wanting to have a hit, we allowed golf carts back strictly on the cart paths, with preferred lies and tee-ups through the green, but unfortunately, many balls were reported lost, either plugged on the fairways or hidden in the long grass.
Australian Age Swimming Championships By Faye ROWLES
THE Australian Age Swimming Championships were held at Adelaide Aquatic Centre from 11 to 18 April. This is a big event on the swimming calendar, with many swimmers from all over Australia trying out their stuff
Friday, 22 April 2022
www.newsofthearea.com.au
them, a fly mask and apply an insect repellent. “Stabling horses overnight can also help.” The disease causes encephalitis (brain swelling) in horses. In pigs it results in production losses including abortions and stillbirths, and
our economic recovery and generating new opportunities across Cowper. “I will continue to fight for desperately need upgrades to rural roads such as Spooners Avenue and Eastern Dorrigo Way which are a vital link for our communities,” Mr Conaghan said. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development Barnaby Joyce said the roads targeted through
The Marquis Pairs is on 26 April with a 12.15pm kick off but be early to sign in and for the call of the cards. This event is sponsored by Marquis Macadamia, and they are delicious. Just ask the 18 out of 20 side's that got a prize last month. We now have 24 sides, but you can go on the reserves list and take somebody's place if they are silly enough and pull out. See Bruce Mason for further details. The 44th Ken Howard Carnival is on during the June long weekend, and we will need volunteers to do a few jobs during its running. Nothing too strenuous so if you can help, see Grumpy. This would go a long way to cheering him up and
those still wishing to slosh around, Medley Stableford events were substituted for the Easter weekend. The Bowl’s sponsor, Toyota Genuine Service, remains on board for the new date - thank you. It was great to see the sun return on Good Friday at long last – just in time for the Easter Holidays. With the back nine holes unplayable, unwalkable and undrivable, we have come up with a 9 Hole composite course which has a limited amount of water and least amount of rough – this will allow us to continue to be able to offer an 18 Hole Par 58 competition for those interested, until normal conditions are restored. Saturday 16 April’s Medley Stableford saw 37 starters including eleven visitors from Gunnedah to Campbelltown
infertility in adult pigs. Japanese encephalitis is a nationally notifiable disease which means it must be reported to a veterinarian or the Emergency Animal Disease Watch Hotline on 1800 675 888. More information is available at outbreak.gov.au.
this program have been neglected for years. “Our government believes regional Australians deserve the same standard of living and opportunities as people living in capital cities,” the Deputy Prime Minister said. “That’s why we’re delivering much-needed upgrades to some of Australia’s neglected roads. “Families living on farms shouldn’t face barriers to getting their kids to school or visiting the grocery store.”
SPORT
guarantee a successful event. The Programme for next week is Minor Singles Saturday and Sunday commencing with 12.45pm roll-ups, Sunday Morning Mixed Bowls ably run by Peter Fredricks, thank you Pete (9.00am for a 9.30 start), Women’s Championships on Tuesday 8.30am for 9.00 am start (I hope I got that right Ladies), Mixed Club Selected matches on Wednesday 1.00 pm, Ladies Social Bowls on Thursday and a Friday 1.00pm start for the Men's Triples. That's it for another week punters, so do as Grumpy does and what the weatherman should do and look out the window in the morning to see what the weather is going to be. Grumpy
and places in between. With a fantastic score of 49 points, Petron Macarounas (36) visiting from Gunnedah made good use of his two shots every hole to easily win the event from Chris Lucas (30) with 42 points on countback from Trevor Peter. Other good scores from Robert Else (Wingham), Lee Fewings and Andy Bagust 41, Nate Beverly and Ben Venner 40, Andy and Jenny Johnston 39, all in the Ball Rundown. A small field competed for a Medley Stableford on Easter Sunday 17 April, with Rodney Boyd (34) winning with 46 points. Ball rundown to Scott Brown 38, Denise Paluch 36 and Garry Johnstone 34 on c/b. Weather permitting, I hope to see you on the Island.
Advertising and Marketing works for your business. Call or email Gaye Conway
0436 355 564
gaye@newsofthearea.com.au NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
11
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HYPOTHETICAL Taking a Legal Look
OPINION & LETTERS
Dorin’s Draws
NAMBUCCA VALLEYNews Of The Area
By Paul DORIN with Jasminda
n the O Couch
Email Jasminda: media@newsofthearea.com.au
Dear Jasminda,
By Manny WOOD
I get quite peeved when people top up my bin with their rubbish. My aim is to have as little waste as possible, and yet when I go to check the bin to see if it has been emptied, it is full of all sorts of items that I wouldn't buy due to their excess packaging. What can I do?
Caught Sneaking DAVID was very excited when he decided to start his own business, being a retro sneakers shop. He found a property that was previously an architect's office located next to several cafés and retail stores with plenty of foot traffic. David signed a three year lease with option to renew. The lease required him to pay the legal costs of the preparation of the lease. After two months of trading, David noticed that the shelving was falling off the walls and that skirting boards were lifting. David rearranged the shop to deal with the damage; reducing his retail space. David contacted the lessor but was told to read the lease carefully as the lease had terms to the effect that he was responsible for building maintenance and repair. David, an avid googler, researched his rights under a commercial lease and concluded that in fact the lessor was correct; under a commercial lease, the lessee is generally bound by the specified terms of the lease. As time moved on, so did the shelves and soon David could no longer effectively operate in the shop. David called his tradie who advised him the walls needed major structural repairs, costing upwards of $200,000. At this stage, David sought legal advice. David's lawyer informed him that although he signed a commercial lease, in fact the premises was a retail shop, covered by the Retail Leases Act. David was advised that as the building required significant structural repair and sections of the building were unusable, the Act implied terms into the lease, allowing David to proportionally reduce the rent payable to the lessor, based on the available use of the shop, and to recover overpaid rent until the shop is repaired. Further, under the Act, the lessor is not permitted to charge the lessee the legal costs of preparing the lease. David was very pumped as he left the lawyers office in his uber cool sneakers. Thank you to Anthony Fogarty for his assistance with this column. If YOU would like a particular issue addressed, please email me at manny@ tblaw.net.au or call me on (02) 66 487 487.
Spring starts in autumn
Brian S. Dear Brian,
Streets Of Our Town
DEAR News Of The Area,
AS a resident of Nambucca for over 30 years I was dismayed when I recently walked the length of the main street to see how dirty and dingy it has become. There is a buildup of dirt where shop fronts meet the footpath and many of the windows
Regards, Val HAMBLION, Nambucca.
What grows well now for winter? It helps with getting used to using what you grow. Plus there's no motivation to do the daily check-in for food you don't know or don't like. Easy to grow here for winter • Broadbeans; eat the beans in Sept / Oct and the leaves anytime • Snowpeas; and peas if you're in a colder patch • Radish; including daikon • Silverbeet and chard. • Kale; you kale lovers will be pleased to hear this stuff is so hardy it would survive a nuclear winter. • Cabbage; may be a challenge for beginners but the leaves are edible even if you don't get a
By Fiona MORGAN
HELLO to any new food gardeners. Welcome to the family! A bit of housekeeping to begin... Please, stop planting corn! And for that matter, please stop planting pumpkin, tomato, capsicum, eggplant, zucchini, chilli, beans, okra and basil. These are all warm season plants. If you have these seeds, congratulations, you are all set for spring. They won't grow and feed you now. Welcome to seasonal, local food. You can plant potatoes now and through June and after that it will be too hot f or them as they attempt to mature. If you get Italian garlic in right away you should be alright, before April 25 is best. Russian garlic can go in two weeks later. You might get away with cherry tomato seedlings, not the big tomatoes. There are self sown ones going bonkers in my garden right now. They won't produce once winter really hits ie from mid June. q What are you What to plant now? growing for winter? Plant what you like to eat!
q Take your pick from the hundreds of brightly coloured spring-flowering bulbs. Photo: iBulb.
By Susan KONTIC
AUTUMN is the perfect time to plant bulbs for a bright and beautiful spring garden. Take your pick from the hundreds of brightly coloured spring-flowering bulbs available now for planting in your garden – daffodil, tulip, crocus, hyacinth and many more. Plant them now, and you’ll see them peeping up in your garden even before winter ends. Whether you’re a seasoned gardener or just a budding green thumb, spring bulbs are easy to grow and will bring life
are not cleaned. This can't be a very welcoming sight to visitors and residents to our town.
and colour to any garden. Here on the Mid North Coast, the best time to plant spring-flowering bulbs is between April and May as the temperature and soil cool down, allowing the dormant bulbs to bloom when the
12 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
weather warms up again. Bulbs need to be in good condition so check them carefully before you plant them, particularly if they’ve been stored for any length of time. Make sure they feel firm
and heavy and toss away any that feel soft, withered or show traces of disease or mould. Bulbs don’t like heavy or poorly drained soil so raised garden beds are ideal for creating the extra drainage they need. Bulbs also do well in pots
Perish the thought -- pun intended -- that someone would stoop so low as to take up the spare space in your bin with their inferior waste. I'd call that a rubbish act, Brian, and a sad metaphor for the detritus of modern society in general. What absolute rot that they are unable to limit their discarded items to the very substantial space allocated in their weekly red and fortnightly yellow bins. Your neighbours sound like inconsiderate riff raff dumping on you in this way. I would suggest that you take your bins down right before the arrival time of the rubbish collection service. You may have to hide behind a bush for a few hours if the time is inconsistent, but it seems worth it to maintain your current level of ethical bin use. There should be an award for people like you, Brian. In fact there probably is. Keep up the good fight in your waste reduction efforts. Carpe diem, Jasminda proper cabbage head • Asian greens; pak choy, bok choy, gai choy, choy sum, wombok, Chinese broccoli, Japanese spinach • Rocket • Lettuce; all kinds, butter, mustards, wasabi, tatsoi • Spring onion, chives; way easier and way quicker than onions • Coriander; this is the best time of year for it! Not for beginners Most of the chunky fruiting vegetables are just harder to grow well than the leafy ones. You can give these a go, it's their season over the cool months, but don't expect store bought quality: Cauliflower, broccoli, carrot, parsnip, leeks, turnips, onion, beetroot. For more detail go to www.wherefishsing. com and look under Bello Food Gardening. Supported by Bellingen Shire Council via the Bellingen Shire Disaster Recovery and Resilience Grant Program Funding
or containers provided they bulb/corm/tuber. Tip: always are placed in a quality bulb refer to the directions on the potting mix and watered package. regularly. 2. Plant the flower bulb in Here’s how to plant flower the hole with its ‘nose’ pointing bulbs: up and its ‘beard’ pointing 1. Dig a hole in the ground down. that is about three times as 3. Cover the flower bulbs deep as the thickness of the with the soil dug from the hole. q No garden? Plant them in a q Tulips are a classic choice container on the terrace or balcony: for any garden. Photo: iBulb. they’ll like it there, too. Photo: iBulb.
media@newsofthearea.com.au
Friday, 22 April 2022
PUZZLES Goldstar Crossword 1
2
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA Classic Sudoku
17509
3
4
5
6
7 8 9
10 11
13
12
14 15
16
17
18
Across
Down
1 Sea-mammal
1 Dance
4 Leap 7 Indifferent
2 Ratchet 3 Guided
8 Satiated
4 Bondman
9 Gentle breeze 11 Geometrical figure
5 Unfasten 6 Saunter
13 Overture
10 Stops
15 Urges forward
12 Spare time
18 Seethes
13 Soft colour
19 Plentiful 20 Cotton thread 21 Discharges
14 Insecure 16 Service chaplain 17 Situations
6 7 1 8 2
6 4 7
7 1 2 1 3
8
9 3
21
Explorawords
4
3 5 9 4 2 5 2
19
20
055
To solve the puzzle, all the blank cells must be filled in using numbers from 1 to 9. Each number can only appear once in each row, column and in the nine 3x3 blocks.
Stepdowns palindrome
Palindrome Puzzle palindrome A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
By Sean Kennedy
Complete these three palindromes to find three relatives
Group 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
01 02 03 04 05 06 07
1
D
2
U
3
S
© 2006 Sean Kennedy 1001 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solutions
Solution: Dad, Mum, Sis
palindrome 4 9 8 2 1 6 3 5 7
5 1 2 8 7 3 4 9 6
6 7 3 9 4 5 2 1 8
7 3 4 6 5 9 8 2 1
1 2 6 4 3 8 5 7 9
9 8 5 7 2 1 6 4 3
2 6 1 5 8 7 9 3 4
8 5 7 3 9 4 1 6 2
3 4 9 1 6 2 7 8 5
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
This palindrome commences a letter to a fool
Three palindromes 1. a doctrine 2. a ring on a harness 3. a set used for testing
2 3
T T
T
T
EXPLORAWORDS 1. Flat tyre 2. High flyer
1
STEPDOWNS Reports, porter, toper, poet, top, to, t.
,
CLASSIC SUDOKU 1002 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
146
Solution: To idiot,
T
T
1003 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solution: 1 tenet
palindrome
GOLDSTAR CROSSWORD Across: 1. Walrus, 4. Vault, 7. Listless, 8. Sated, 9. Zephyr, 11. Ellipse, 13. Prelude, 15. Impels, 18. Stews, 19. Abundant, 20. Lisle, 21. Egests.
O
PALINDROME PUZZLE Dad, Mum, Sis
O
Puzzle Play
Down: 1. Waltz, 2. Ratch, 3. Steered, 4. Vassal, 5. Unstaple, 6. Toddle, 10. Prevents, 12. Leisure, 13. Pastel, 14. Unsafe, 16. Padre, 17. Sites.
palindrome
Puzzles and pagination © Auspac Media
2 terret
3 test set
palindrome
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
The gifted actor received this palindromic advice from his dentist
Finding one too many red dots, this palindrome describes how Todd fixes the problem
R
O
T
A
T
O
R
R
D
D
1004 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solution: Rot can rob a born actor
T
1005 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solution: Todd erases a red dot
palindrome
palindrome
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
A word, phrase or sentence that reads the same backward or forward e.g. A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
Described in this palindrome Enid and Edna had dinner
When asked her name by the gentleman, Iris gave this palindromic answer
ANSWERS: SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: 1. The bolt is missing from the jetty post. 2. The sole is missing from the boy’s shoe. 3. The fishing reel handle is different. 4. The small cloud is a different shape. 5. A piece of seaweed is missing. CODE BREAKER: An animal that talks your head off. A
N
D
N
,
E
1006 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solution:
M
Enid and Edna dine
NAMBUCCA VALLEY
TIDES 1007 © 2006 Sean Kennedy www.auspacmedia.com.au
Solution: Sir, I m Iris
NEWS OF THE AREA
Graph and Times are for
Sydney Fort Denison
THE RIGHT TABLE SHOW TIDAL VARIATIONS AT SEVERAL LOCATIONS The time variation should be added to the corresponding Fort Denison time.
TIDE CHART - 7 DAYS
FRI
SAT
SUN MON TUE WED THU
In view of the variations caused by local conditions and meteorological effects, these times are approximate and must be considered as a guide only. They are not to be relied on for critical depth calculations for safe navigation. Actual times of High and Low Water may occur before or after the times indicated.
Friday, 22 April 2022
c
NOTA Graphics - Ref: NOTA_240817
www.newsofthearea.com.au
NAMBUCCA RIVER Watts Creek Macksville
(high) 1hr 1hr 30m
(low)
KALANG RIVER Uranga Bridge
1hr 20m
1hr 40m
BELLENGER RIVER Mylestom Raleigh Bellingen
30m 1hr 1hr 40m
1hr 1hr 30m 2hr 10m
COFFS HARBOUR
0 to 15m
0 to 15m
2hrs 10m
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
13
NAMBUCCA VALLEY
NEWS OF THE AREA
LOCALClassifieds Unless you are unable to, we require you to submit your classified ad by email or through our website. Send us the exact
HOW TO PLACE YOUR NOTICE: wording and we will return a visual proof of the advert for you to see, as well as a price and payment options. DEADLINE: 12noon WEDNESDAYS PH: 02 49818882 (phone open Mon, Tue & Wed, 10am-12noon) EMAIL: ads@newsofthearea.com.au WEB: www.newsofthearea.com.au
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Care, Compassion & Quality Service Pre-paid funeral plans available Modern well appointed chapel Peaceful, beautifully maintained gardens
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The Multicultural Disability Advocacy Association or MDAA is hiring advocates to work with people with disability from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds and support them with their issues such as with housing, NDIS, pensions etc. Applications close on 6 May 2022. If you are interested to apply please go to http://mdaa.org. au/jobs/capacity-building-and-support-officermultiple-locations-across-regional-nsw/ for a copy of the position description and reply contact details. e290422
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Stadium Drive, Coffs Harbour For Genuine Savings 6652 6652 For Genuine Savings 6652 2822
2822
SIMPLE & SINCERE FUNERALS ALLIED FUNERAL HOME
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Lady Cameo Funerals affordable & dignified funerals secure funeral plans available
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NOTA Graphics - Ref:AFLCF_040920
a large variety of timber & environmentally friendly cardboard coffins
6651 2363 or 6651 4155 124 West High Street, Coffs Harbour
The Multicultural Disability Advocacy Association or MDAA is now funded by the NSW Department of Communities and Justice (DCJ) to provide advocacy support to people from Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) communities and nonEnglish speaking backgrounds (NESB) with disabilities in the whole NSW. For more than 25 years, we have worked hard to ensure that people with disabilities from CALD communities and NESB have fair and open access to government and non-government services. We provide FREE advocacy services, activities and projects that help increase the capacity and skills of people with disabilities to exercise their rights and improve their participation in the wider community. We will soon open our regional offices. If you are a person with disability or care for one, and need support with various issues, please call MDAA on 1800 629 072 / (02) 9891 6400 or email mdaa@mdaa.org.au. To know more about what we do, please visit our website – www.mdaa.org.au. We invite you to visit our office once we are established and we hope you will welcome us in your community. e290422
Clairvoyant
For Sale
For Sale
Boats
TAHLLIA clairvoyant TV, Radio and national columnist. Readings for worldwide famous people. Readings will be done in Coffs Habour, Nambucca Heads and surrounding areas. To avoid disappointment phone and book appointment on 0401 370 844
CARAVAN/CAMPER cupboard hinges & push button door openers. Will sell seperately or $25 the lot. New. 22 hinges, 5 push buttons. 0415 981 605
GUITARS - Montaray Bass, nylon coated strings, A1 condition $299. Onyx Les Paul with tremolo arm $399 Ph 0419 212 863
VEGETABLE Garden/ Planter, colourbond. Sits on ground. Grey. 120L x 750W, new. $16. 0415 981 605
HOT air brush, wrong item bought, new still in box, never used. $40 Ph 6568 2323
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e220422
Pets CAT neutered and microchipped 5yo female. Free to good home and must be only house cat affectionate and friendly Ph: 0490 317 230 f220422
Found BUDGIE pied white and blue male budgie found in Kings Point area of Macksville on 26/03/22 Ph: 0468 910 827 F080422
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For Sale BEADS, sequins, swarovski crystals various sizes & colours perfect for dance costumes, jewellery making & craft, from $1 0415 981 605 F220422
CABINET catches for caravan, x 8, $18 Stainless steel push button opener, round x 8, $18. Oval push button openers, x 8, $18. 0415 981 605. F220422
CAVITY door, timber never used, brass coloured, inset handle. Pantry size (52 x 204cm). $30. 6653 8337
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CLOTHING steamer Progress brand, commercial, steams over beads and swarovski to perfection Manual included. $275 0415 981 605 e130522
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DANCE shoes, eg ballroom, size 6 and 7 high and low heels, from $5 - $50. 0415 981 605
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LAPTOP hard drive cloning kit $30. 6649 2967 CLASSIFIEDS in the News Of The Area
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NEW Car / Caravan bike rack D holds L three bicycles $90 SO 0415 981 605 Ph: F180322
VAST satellite Dish + Altech HD receiver + recording hard drive $100 Ph 0451 935 883 F080422
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EXHAUST and muffler for Kawaski 110KLX 2013. As new. $95. 0419 166 688
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Motors
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E-BIKE Merida 300EQ 2019, as new.LWomens D small. Fully SOequipped inc. lights, security lock $2200 Ph 0422 524 120
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HOLDEN Rodeo 2 wheel drive, V6, farm ute $1400. 6653 7595 Re100921
SUZUKI swift 2011 10 months rego 111,680kms Auto, great little fuel saver $9500 RGY350 . 0419 212 863 ReS061022
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FRIDGE/FREEZER, 2 door Whirlpool, 640 Ltr auto moisture control ice maker, water and ice dispenser (filtered), SS body. Perfect condition and as new. $500 Firm Ph 66537771
ALLY Craft 355 Arrow 15 HP Marina O/B mesh floor, life jackets LD seats, oars, SO anchors etc Break down trailer year rego both $2000 0457 471 956 e250322
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Caravans
TRAILER Sailer Hutton 24 registered. Trailer & boat ready to go. $7500. 0427034446 Re230421
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2000 Regent Parklane Caravan - 19’. Exc cond LD throughout SO. Annex & roll out awning $22,500 0427 572 348 E241221
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Caravans
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Email the exact words and a pic if you wish too. We will email you back a Price & Proof
Regent Caravan, Excellent Condition has been parked in Garage. Ideal for a home so as to stop paying rent. New Awning 12 months rego stove fridge micro wave also an Annex giving you a extra room $15,000 Tony 0427891725 Re290722
Pre-Planning a Funeral A Thoughtful Decision © NOTA Graphics - Ref: KEITHLOGUE_3172020_NENIA
As unique as them
LifeLife is is a precious gift.gift. a precious
14 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
KEITH LOGUE & SONS Family Owned Funeral & Cremation Directors Since 1967 42 Park Avenue, Coffs Harbour 6652 1999
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Friday, 22 April 2022
TRADES&Services
HOW TO PLACE YOUR TRADES & SERVICES AD: CONTACT: Gaye Conway EMAIL: gaye@newsofthearea.com.au
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A sacrificial anode is a vital part of your water system, and having it inspected can be the difference between an efficiently working system and a costly replacement. Manufacturers recommend that you maintain the anode in your system in order to prevent damage from rust + corrosion. After its 5th birthday – warranty expires.
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Nambucca Valley News Of The Area
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NAMBUCCA VALLEY
tv listings
NEWS OF THE AREA
ON THE Box
BEST ON THE BOX TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THE GOOD DOCTOR
PRIME7, 9pm
SUNDAY
1917
PRIME7, 8.50pm
This WW I epic is an acute exercise in tension, reinforced by the ingenuity of its real-time premise. The plot revolves around two British soldiers, Will (George MacKay, above) and Tom (Dean-Charles Chapman), who are assigned the critical task of delivering a life-saving message to another unit which is preparing to launch a potentially disastrous assault on enemy positions. Supported by the work of legendary cinematographer Roger Deakins, director Sam Mendes (American Beauty) engineers a heart-stopping film.
Life-and-death situations are the backbone of medical dramas. When a patient’s life is in danger, the melodramatic music surges and viewers are sucked into the high-stakes emotions. In The Good Doctor, the lens is instead on the small (and big) interactions between its characters. Shaun (Freddie Highmore) is one of the most unique medicos seen in a TV series; a young surgeon with autism and savant syndrome, he struggles socially and abhors change. In ““Piece of Cake”, he is pushed to the edge. It contains the standard life-onthe-line situation, but it’s the pressure of dealing with changes to the hospital’s staff and procedures that provides the pulse.
TRAVEL GUIDES
NBN, 7.30pm
After five seasons of travel shenanigans, fans know what to expect from this offbeat series which sends a hotchpotch group of Aussies to various destinations around the world. Featuring the “bogan” Fren family, posh retirees Kevin and Janetta, and tough-as-nails country sisters Stack and Mel (above), even after years of sightseeing, there’s no real evolution in their hackneyed reviews. Scripted or not, we can almost guess how they’ll critique a location; perhaps that’s the definition of comfort viewing. Tonight, the amateur reviewers continue their tour around Australia, with the nation’s most far-flung capital city, Perth, the destination put under their microscope this week. 2204
FRIDAY, April 22 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Q+A. (R) 11.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R) 12.00 News. 1.00 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces Northern Lights Adventure. (R) 1.45 Father Brown. (Mav, R) 3.00 Grand Designs Aust. (R) 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 5.00 Movin’ To The Country. (R) 5.30 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Youth On Strike! (M) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.35 The Cook Up. (PG) 4.05 Feast To Save The Planet. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Royal Matchmaker. (2018, PG) 2.00 House Of Wellness. (PG) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. (R)
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Romance Retreat. (2019, PGa, R) 1.45 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R)
6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.15 The Living Room. (PG, R) 3.30 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Gardening Australia. 8.30 Smother. (Mal) The Aherns struggle to maintain a semblance of normality as the campaign of terror escalates. 9.25 Doctor Who. (PGh, R) The Doctor encounters one of her oldest enemies. 10.15 ABC Late News. 10.30 Invictus Games Highlights: The Hague. Coverage of the 2020 Invictus Games. 11.00 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (Final, M, R) 11.30 Tomorrow Tonight. (PG, R) 12.00 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Britain’s Secret Islands. (PG) 8.30 World’s Most Luxurious Holidays. 9.30 Secrets Of The Royal Palaces. (PG) 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.55 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.50 La Unidad. (MA15+v) 2.00 The Killing. (Mv, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, R) 4.40 Destination Flavour Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. Joh, Charlie and Adam make over the home of one of the last surviving diggers of the Kokoda Trail campaign. Karen prepares a slow-cooked pork shoulder. Graham travels to Gory’u Japanese Gardens. 8.30 To Be Advised. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R)
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 7. Brisbane Broncos v Canterbury Bulldogs. 9.55 Golden Point. Post-match NRL wrap-up. 10.35 MOVIE: Once Upon A Time In Mexico. (2003, MA15+lv, R) A Mexican vigilante is recruited by a CIA agent. Antonio Banderas. 12.35 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R)
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 The Living Room. Love is in the air as Miguel Maestre helps bring a surprise proposal to life. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.40 First Dates Australia. (R) Singles in search of love are brought together at a restaurant for a blind first date. 10.40 To Be Advised. 11.40 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.40 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R)
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7pm Dino Dana. 7.10 Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: Bright Young Things. (2003, M) 10.15 Black Mirror. 11.15 MOVIE: Angel. (2007, M) 1.10am QI. 1.45 Parks And Recreation. 2.25 Green Wing. 3.20 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Sarah & Duck. 5.15 Guess How Much I Love You. 5.25 Rita And Crocodile. 5.30 Clangers. 5.45 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Huang’s World. 12.50 VICE. 1.25 Basketball. EuroLeague. C’ship Game. Barcelona v Anadolu Efes. Replay. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.20 Atlanta. 9.50 Sexplora. 10.20 Day Of The Dead. (Final) 11.10 Instinctive Desires. Midnight Late Programs.
7TWO (62) 6am Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 All The Things. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 ICU. 5.00 Coastwatch Oz. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Railroad Australia. 8.30 Escape To The Perfect Town. 9.30 Penelope Keith’s Hidden Villages. 10.40 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.50 Garden Gurus Moments. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Colditz Story. (1955) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Escape To The Chateau. 8.30 MOVIE: Wonder. (2017, PG) 10.50 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 8.30 Reel Action. 9.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 11.00 The Love Boat. Noon Star Trek. 1.00 Jake And The Fatman. 2.00 JAG. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Shopping. 2.00 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am The Eagle Has Landed. Continued. (1976, PG) 8.00 Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 10.00 The Host. (2006, M, Korean) 12.10pm Paradise War. (2019, M) 2.45 Finding Your Feet. (2017, PG) 4.50 A Monster Calls. (2016, PG) 6.50 The Old Man And The Gun. (2018, PG) 8.30 Apocalypse Now Redux. (1979, MA15+) 12.15am Canopy. (2013, M) 1.45 Late Programs. 5.50 A Monster Calls. (2016, PG)
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. Noon Big Easy Motors. 12.30 Motorway Patrol. 1.00 Picked Off. 2.00 No Man’s Land. 3.00 Showjumping. Equestrian In The Park. 4.00 Timbersports. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 AFL: Friday Night Countdown. 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 6. GWS Giants v St Kilda. 10.30 AFL Post-Game. 11.00 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 MOVIE: Wonder Park. (2019, PG) 7.35 MOVIE: Mr Magorium’s Wonder Emporium. (2007) 9.30 MOVIE: Mortal Engines. (2018, M) Midnight Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. 1.00 Kardashians. 2.50 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Carry The Flag. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 On Country Kitchen. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Molly Of Denali. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 NITV News: Nula. 6.00 Bamay. 6.40 Undiscovered Vistas. 7.30 MOVIE: Beasts Of The Southern Wild. (2012, M) 9.30 Bedtime Stories. 9.40 NITV On The Road: Saltwater Freshwater. 11.10 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 AM Agenda. 11.00 NewsDay. Noon NewsDay. 1.00 The Rita Panahi Show. 2.00 Afternoon Agenda. 3.00 Paul Murray Live. 4.00 Afternoon Agenda. 4.30 Business Now With Ross Greenwood. 5.00 News. 6.00 Peta Credlin. 7.00 Bernardi. 8.00 The Media Show. 8.30 The Blame Game. 9.00 Hardgrave. 10.00 Full Time Live. 11.00 Late Programs.
CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat Please Note: Programs are correct at the time of print and are subject to change by the Networks.
Locations where you can find your Na Bowraville
Eungai Creek
IGA Supermarket plus liquor Bowraville Recreation Club Historic CoachHouse Bowraville Pharmacy Bowraville Ex Services Club Bowraville Hotel
Eungai Creek Post Office and General Store
Scotts Head Club Scotts Lairds Friendly Grocer a@jCafe
16 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
Tasty Bites Cafe Scotts Head Pharmacy
Stuarts Point Stuarts Point Pharmacy Friendly Grocer Supermarket Point Café Stuarts Point Bowl Club
media@newsofthearea.com.au
Matts Cafe Mid north coast Realty Taylor's Butchery
Valla Beach Valla beach café and general store Valla Beach Tavern Valla Beach House Tavern
Nambucca
Plaza main floor Nambucca Heads Newsagency Nambucca Heads Pharmacy Priceline Pharmacy Beatties Furniture Earthbound Bowra Cafe Farington Village
Friday, 22 April 2022
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
SATURDAY, April 23 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
ON THE Box NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 News. 12.30 Midsomer Murders. (Mv, R) 2.00 Father Brown. (Mav, R) 2.45 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces Snow And Ice Special. (R) 3.35 Grand Designs. (PG, R) 4.35 Landline. (R) 5.05 Tiny Oz. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Figure Skating. ISU World C’ships. 3.30 Countdown To Qatar. 4.00 The Rising. 4.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 4.35 Battle Of Crete. (PGa, R) 5.35 Cheating Hitler: Surviving The Holocaust. (PGavw, R)
6.00 Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 Morning Show. (PG) 12.00 Horse Racing. Royal Randwick Race Day, Victorian Owners and Breeders Race Day, and RN Irwin Stakes Day. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (R)
6.00 Easy Eats. (R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Destination WA. (PG, R) 12.30 The Rebound. 1.00 Great Australian Detour. 1.30 Outback & Under. (PG) 2.00 The Pet Rescuers. (PG, R) 2.30 MOVIE: Grumpier Old Men. (1995, PGls, R) 4.30 Garden Gurus. 5.00 News. 5.30 Getaway. (PG)
6.00 GCBC. (R) 6.30 Leading The Way. 7.00 Escape Fishing. (R) 7.30 To Be Advised. 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 1.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. 2.00 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 2.30 Taste Of Australia. (PG, R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 All 4 Adventure. (PGl, R) 4.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 5.00 News.
6.05 Judi Dench’s Wild Borneo Adventure. (R) 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Father Brown. (PGav) 8.20 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv) The team narrows down the suspects. 9.05 Troppo. (Final, Malv, R) Uncovering the truth about Park’s death brings little comfort for Ted and Amanda. 10.00 Call The Midwife. (Final, Ma, R) 11.30 Invictus Games Highlights: The Hague. Coverage of the 2020 Invictus Games. 12.00 Victoria. (PG, R) 12.50 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)
6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. (M) 8.30 Miniseries: The Boleyns: A Scandalous Family. 9.40 Delphine: The Secret Princess. 10.40 Greatest Hits Of The 70s. (Premiere) 11.30 MOVIE: Detroit. (2017, MA15+av, R) 2.05 MOVIE: Elle. (2016, MA15+alnsv, R) 4.25 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+adls, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour Scandinavia Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) A man from Amsterdam raises suspicions. 7.30 MOVIE: Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween. (2018, PGh) Two young friends find a magic book. Wendi McLendon-Covey, Madison Iseman. 9.30 MOVIE: The Hangover. (2009, MA15+lns, R) Three friends wake up after a buck’s night and realise the groom is missing. Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms. 11.40 Motorway Patrol. (PG, R) 12.10 MOVIE: Bad Manners. (1997, Mns, R) Saul Rubinek. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R)
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Space Invaders. (PG) A single dad of two needs help. 8.30 MOVIE: Downton Abbey. (2019, PGa, R) The Crawley family prepares for a royal tour. Michelle Dockery, Maggie Smith. 10.55 MOVIE: Victoria & Abdul. (2017, PGal, R) 1.00 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG)
6.00 Bondi Rescue. (PGl, R) With Christmas in full swing and hordes of revellers threatening to overwhelm lifeguards, Jackson must run through crowds to rescue a drunk woman in a rip. Jake racks up hundreds of rescues on his jet ski. 7.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 25. Newcastle Jets v Central Coast Mariners. From McDonald Jones Stadium, NSW. 10.00 Ambulance Australia. (Mal, R) Follows NSW Ambulance’s Sydney operations as they deal with cases involving a volatile man. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Hour Of Power. Religious program.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Shaun The Sheep. 7.20 Bluey. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Melbourne Comedy Festival: Allstars Supershow. (Final) 9.30 Sammy J. 9.35 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 10.20 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 11.05 Gavin & Stacey. 11.35 Schitt’s Creek. 11.55 Archer. 12.20am The Young Offenders. 12.55 Doctor Who. 1.40 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Hunting Hitler. 1.40 One Burning Question. 1.50 If You Are The One. 2.50 Over The Black Dot. 3.20 Yokayi Footy. 4.15 WorldWatch. 5.45 Insight. 6.45 Extreme Food Phobics. (Final) 7.35 Underground Worlds. (Return) 8.30 Secrets Of America’s Shadow Government. (Final) 9.20 Devoured. 10.15 Escorts. 11.05 Sorry For Your Loss. 11.40 Late Programs.
7TWO (62)
6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Bargain Hunt. Noon Weekender. 12.30 Creek To Coast. 1.00 House Of Wellness. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 3.30 Dog Patrol. 4.30 Inside The Crown: Secrets Of The Royals. 5.30 Dr Harry’s Animal Encounters. 6.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 I Escaped To The Country. 9.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 Speedseries. 1.30pm Rugby Union. Super W. Grand Final. 4.15 World’s Greatest Engineering Icons. 5.15 MOVIE: Johnny Guitar. (1954, PG) 7.30 Rugby Union. Super Rugby Pacific. Round 10. Hurricanes v Queensland Reds. 9.45 Super Rugby Pacific Post-Match. 10.00 MOVIE: The Man With The Iron Heart. (2017, MA15+) 12.25am Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 9.00 The Doctors. 10.00 Bondi Rescue. 11.00 The Love Boat. Noon Star Trek: The Next Generation. 2.00 Pooches At Play. 2.30 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 3.30 Buy To Build. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 Truck Hunters. 5.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 FBI. 11.20 Blue Bloods. 12.15am CSI. 1.10 48 Hours. 2.10 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am A Monster Calls. Continued. (2016, PG) 7.50 The Old Man And The Gun. (2018, PG) 9.30 Loving. (2016, PG) 11.45 Chinese Zodiac. (2012, M) 1.50pm Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 3.50 The Eagle Has Landed. (1976, PG) 6.20 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 8.30 The Big Short. (2015, M) 10.50 Interlude In Prague. (2017, M) 12.45am Django. (2017, M, French) 2.55 Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm Blokesworld. 1.30 Portland Charter Boat Wars. 2.00 Motor Racing. Austn Top Fuel C’ship. H’lights. 3.00 Rides Down Under: Workshop Wars. 4.00 Wheelburn. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 AFL Pre-Game. 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 6. Fremantle v Carlton. 10.30 AFL PostGame. 11.00 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Motor Racing. Formula E World C’ship. 2.30 Motor Racing. Formula E World C’ship. 3.30 Ultimate Rush. 4.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 5.00 To Be Advised. 7.00 MOVIE: Stargate. (1994, PG) 9.30 MOVIE: Stargate: The Ark Of Truth. (2008, M) 11.30 MOVIE: Stargate: Continuum. (2008, M) 1.20am Kardashians. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2.30pm Softball. National C’ships John Reid Shield. Grand final. 4.00 Soccer. Scottish Women’s Premier League. 5.50 Merchants Of The Wild. 6.20 First People’s Kitchen. 6.50 News. 7.00 The South Sydney Story. 7.30 Beaver Whisperer. 8.30 MOVIE: Teddy Pendergrass – If You Don’t Know Me. (2018, M) 10.20 MOVIE: Apocalypto. (2006, MA15+) 12.40am Late Programs.
6am News. 6.30 News. 7.00 Gameday Live. 8.00 Gameday Live. 9.00 News. 10.00 News. 11.00 Weekend Live. Noon News. 12.30 News. 1.00 News. 1.30 News. 2.00 News. 2.30 News. 3.00 News. 3.30 News. 4.00 News. 5.00 News. 6.00 Fox Sports News. 7.00 Bernardi. 8.00 Fox Sports News. 9.00 Fox Sports News. 10.00 Full Time Live. 11.00 Late Programs.
SUNDAY, April 24 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.30 Offsiders. (R) 11.00 Compass. (R) 11.30 Praise. (R) 12.00 News. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Aust. (R) 2.30 Golden Guitar Awards. 4.00 The Art Of Remembrance. (PG, R) 4.30 Tomorrow Tonight. (PG, R) 5.00 Art Works. (R) 5.30 The Many Days Of Anzac. (PG)
6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 Motorcycle Racing. Australian Superbike C’ship. Round 3. 4.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Roubaix. H’lights. 5.35 Cheating Hitler: Surviving The Holocaust. (PGavw, R)
6.00 Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 Morning Show. (PG) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Jabba’s School Holiday Movies. (PGhv, R) 1.30 MOVIE: Police Academy 7: Mission To Moscow. (1994, PGl, R) 3.00 Highway Cops. (PGl, R) 3.30 Border Security: Int. (PG) 4.00 Better Homes. (R) 5.00 News. 5.30 Weekender.
6.00 Easy Eats. (R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 11.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. (PG) 1.00 Ultimate Rush. (PGl, R) 1.30 Explore. (R) 1.40 LEGO Masters. (PG, R) 3.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 7. Penrith Panthers v Canberra Raiders.
6.00 Mass. 6.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 7.00 Joseph Prince. 7.30 Joel Osteen. 8.00 The Living Room. (R) 9.00 Luca’s Key Ingredient. 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 12.30 To Be Advised. 4.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. 5.00 10 News First.
6.30 Compass. (la, R) 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Grand Designs. (Ml) 8.30 Barons. (Premiere, Madl) 9.25 Life. (Premiere, Mal) 10.25 Harrow. (Mav, R) 11.20 Top Of The Lake: China Girl. (Final, Malnsv, R) 12.15 Victoria. (PG, R) 1.05 State Of The Union. (Ml, R) 1.25 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 2.55 Insiders. (R) 4.25 Anzac Dawn Service From Sydney. 5.30 Anzac Dawn Service From Canberra.
6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Secrets To Civilisation. (PG) 8.30 Chernobyl: The New Evidence. (PGa) 10.25 The Hunt For Shackleton’s Ice Ship. (PGal, R) 12.00 D-Day: 75 Years. (Mal, R) 1.45 Planet Expedition. (PG, R) 2.45 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 4.55 Destination Flavour Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Hey Hey It’s 100 Years. (PGasv) Hosted by Daryl Somers. 8.50 MOVIE: 1917. (2019, MA15+av) During World War I, two British soldiers are assigned the critical task of delivering a life-saving message to another unit that is preparing to launch a potentially disastrous assault on prepared enemy positions. George MacKay, Dean-Charles Chapman, Colin Firth. 11.10 The Blacklist. (Mav) Dembe’s position causes complications. 12.30 Home Shopping. 4.00 NBC Today. 4.50 Anzac Day Dawn Service.
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 LEGO Masters. (PG) 8.45 60 Minutes. Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. 9.45 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.15 Australian Crime Stories. (Ma, R) 11.20 Manhunt: The Wests. (MA15+) 12.10 Forensics: The Real CSI. (Ma, R) 1.20 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Sunday Project. Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. Amateur cooks and popular past contestants compete to impress the judges. 9.10 FBI. (Mv) FBI Special Agent Omar Adom “OA” Zidan is forced to confront one of his biggest fears when the team discovers that sarin gas, a deadly chemical weapon, may have been sold to terrorists. 11.00 The Sunday Project. (R) Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Shaun The Sheep. 7.20 Bluey. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Mothers On The Edge. 9.35 Tiny Oz. 10.35 MOVIE: Romeo & Juliet. (2021, M) 12.10am George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 1.00 MOVIE: Bright Young Things. (2003, M) 2.40 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Sarah & Duck. 5.15 Peg + Cat. 5.25 Rita And Crocodile. 5.30 Pablo. 5.45 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6.30am WorldWatch. Noon Forged In Fire. 1.30 If You Are The One. 3.30 WorldWatch. 4.00 Insight. 5.00 The Presidential Endorsement. 5.55 Speed With Guy Martin. 6.55 Lost Gold Of World War II. 7.35 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Liege-Bastogne-Liege. Women’s Race. 9.00 Sportswoman 2022. 9.30 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Liege-Bastogne-Liege. Men’s Race. 2.10am Reset. 2.40 France 24 English News. 3.00 Late Programs.
7TWO (62)
6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Shopping. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 NBC Today. Noon The Yorkshire Vet. 2.00 All The Things. 2.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 3.00 I Escaped To The Country. 4.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Motorway Patrol. 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Railroad Australia. 9.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. 10.30 Great Scenic Railway Journeys. 11.10 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am Morning Programs. 7.30 In Touch. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 The AFL Sunday Footy Show. Noon The Rebound. 12.30 Garden Gurus. 1.00 Getaway. 1.30 The Baron. 2.40 MOVIE: The Thousand Plane Raid. (1969, PG) 4.40 MOVIE: Midway. (1976, PG) 7.30 David Attenborough’s Seven Worlds, One Planet. 8.40 MOVIE: Unbroken. (2014, M) 11.25 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Shopping. 7.30 Key Of David. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Healthy Homes Aust. 9.30 Hotels By Design. 10.00 Bondi Rescue. 10.30 Reel Action. 11.00 Escape Fishing. 11.30 4x4 Adventures. 12.30pm Buy To Build. 1.00 Pooches At Play. 1.30 Scorpion. 3.30 Demolition Down Under. 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. 5.00 I Fish. 5.30 Beyond The Fire. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am Blinded By The Light. Continued. (2019, PG) 7.40 Belle And Sebastian 3. (2017, PG, French) 9.20 Orlando. (1992, PG) 11.00 Canopy. (2013, M) 12.30pm A Monster Calls. (2016, PG) 2.30 The Old Man And The Gun. (2018, PG) 4.15 Princess Caraboo. (1994, PG) 6.00 Race. (2016, PG) 8.30 Predestination. (2014, MA15+) 10.20 True Grit. (2010, M) 12.25am The Raid. (2011, MA15+, Indonesian) 2.15 Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am The Fishing Show. 7.00 Fishy Business. 8.00 Shopping. 10.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. 11.00 Fish Of The Day. 11.30 Step Outside. Noon The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Big Angry Fish. 2.00 Hook Me Up! 3.00 The ITM Fishing Show. 4.00 Fishing Addiction. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Pawn Stars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 6. Richmond v Melbourne. 10.30 AFL Post-Game. 11.00 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Speedseries. 3.30 The Break Boys. 4.00 MOVIE: The Brady Bunch Movie. (1995, PG) 5.40 MOVIE: Bridge To Terabithia. (2007, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: Arrival. (2016, M) 9.50 MOVIE: Pitch Black. (2000, M) Midnight Allegiance. 1.00 Kardashians. 2.50 Mike Tyson Mysteries. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Football. CAFL. 12.30pm W Series: Driven. 1.00 Soccer. Serie A Femminile. 2.45 Rugby League. NRL NT. First Grade Men’s Premiership League. 4.15 Football. Big Rivers AFL. Grand Final. 5.45 Power To The People. 6.15 News. 6.25 Wild New Zealand. 7.35 Ice Cowboys. 8.25 The One And Only Dick Gregory. 10.25 MOVIE: Pluto Nash. (2002, M) Midnight Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Sunday Agenda. 9.00 Outsiders. 10.00 Outsiders. 11.00 Business Weekend With Ross Greenwood. Noon News. 12.30 News. 1.00 News. 1.30 News. 2.00 News. 2.30 News. 3.00 News. 3.30 News. 4.00 News. 5.00 News. 6.00 Chris Smith Tonight. 7.00 Sharri. 8.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.30 Outsiders. 10.30 The Blame Game. 11.00 Late Programs.
CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat
ambucca Valley newspaper Guardian Pharmacy Nambucca RSL Club Nambucca Leagues & Sports Club Nambucca Heads Bowling Club IGA Nambucca Heads Nambucca Valley Art & Craft Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club Shell Service Station Nambucca Heads Library
Friday, 22 April 2022
Bookshope Café Nambucca Heads Pharmacy V-Wall Tavern Marions Red Cross Tea House Boatshed Cafe Nambucca Heads Nambucca Bakery Cafe Woolworths Supermarket Wharf Café Robertson Real Estate
LJ Hooker Real Estate Nambucca Valley Youth Centre Golden Sands Tavern
Macksville
Macksville Ex Services Club Foodworks Supermarket Woolworths Supermarket Nambucca Valley Council
www.newsofthearea.com.au
Macksville Pharmacy Fairways Gardens Macksville Country Club Wallace St Pharmacy Macksville Quality Meats Star Hotel The Bridge River Café Carpet Court BP Macksville
Nambucca River CoOP Elk on 38 Keppy's Café Roses Café Macksville Library LJ Hooker Real Estate Macksville Hotel Caltex Service station Ben & Lenys Café Ch Cha United Service Station
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
17
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
MONDAY, April 25 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
ON THE Box NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 News Breakfast On Anzac Day. 9.00 Anzac Day March Sydney. 12.00 ABC News On Anzac Day. 12.30 Gallipoli Dawn Service. 1.30 Villers-Bretonneux Dawn Service. 2.30 The Many Days Of Anzac. (PG, R) 3.45 Grand Designs Aust. (PG, R) 4.35 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 5.55 The Drum.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newshour Second Edition. 2.00 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 2.10 Citizen Soldiers: Defenders Of Australia. (PGal, R) 3.15 The Cook Up. (R) 4.15 Trains That Changed The World. (PGv, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 To Be Advised. 12.30 Football. AFL. Round 6. Hawthorn v Sydney. 3.30 To Be Advised. 4.30 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. (PG, R) 1.45 Explore. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 7. St George Illawarra Dragons v Sydney Roosters.
6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.40 Ent. Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 My Market Kitchen. (Return) 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.55 Governor-General’s Anzac Day Message. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. 8.30 Four Corners. 9.20 Media Watch. (PG) 9.35 China Tonight. 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. (R) 10.40 Q+A. (R) 11.40 Smother. (Mal, R) 12.35 Keeping Faith. (Ma, R) 1.35 State Of The Union. (Ml, R) 2.10 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Britain By Beach. (PG) 8.30 Secrets Of The Tower Of London. (PG) 9.25 24 Hours In Emergency. (M, R) 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 Beneath The Surface. (MA15+ads) 12.00 Shadowplay. (MA15+v, R) 4.20 VICE Guide To Film. (Madls, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour Scandinavia Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. (PGl) As the blind auditions continue, contestants set out to prove they have what it takes to be a singing sensation. 9.10 Code 1: Minute By Minute: Death In The Tunnel. (Ma) Takes a look at the 2007 Burnley Tunnel fire that killed three people and injured another two. 10.10 Nurses. (Ma) The therapy dog of a young woman gives a signal that she is about to have a seizure. 11.10 The Latest: Seven News. 12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 LEGO Masters. (PG) 8.50 David Attenborough’s The Mating Game. (PGa) 10.00 Nine News Late. 10.30 100% Footy. (M) 11.30 New Amsterdam. (MA15+amv, R) 12.20 Tipping Point. (PG) 1.10 Hello SA. (PG) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. Amateur cooks compete. 8.40 FBI: Most Wanted. (MA15+v) The team’s new leader, Special Agent Remy Scott, takes charge as they investigate a series of homicides linked to a case of forbidden love between a young teen and her older boyfriend. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Australia Remastered. 8.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.20 Restoration Australia. 10.20 Employable Me Australia. 11.15 State Of The Union. 11.40 QI. 12.10am Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.30 Parks And Recreation. 1.15 Green Wing. 2.05 ABC News Update. 2.10 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Sarah & Duck. 5.15 Peg + Cat. 5.25 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon My Extreme Life. 12.50 Forged In Fire. 3.20 Dead Set On Life. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Question Team. 9.25 Taskmaster. 10.20 Devilsdorp. 11.30 How Sex Changed The World. 1.10am Fear The Walking Dead. 3.00 Late Programs.
7TWO (62) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 Better Homes And Gardens. Noon Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.50 Cold Case. 11.50 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz Direct. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Explore. 12.15 MOVIE: Ice Cold In Alex. (1958, PG) 2.55 MOVIE: The Dam Busters. (1955) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Agatha Christie’s Partners In Crime. 8.40 Poirot. 10.40 Law & Order. 11.40 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 25. Newcastle Jets v Central Coast Mariners. Replay. 10.30 Bondi Rescue. Noon Star Trek. 1.00 Jake And The Fatman. 2.00 JAG. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 A-League Highlights Show. 11.20 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 4. Emilia Romagna Grand Prix. 12.15am Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am Orlando. Continued. (1992, PG) 6.20 Race. (2016, PG) 8.50 Princess Caraboo. (1994, PG) 10.40 Django. (2017, M, French) 12.50pm Tracks. (2013, M) 2.55 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 5.05 Belle And Sebastian 3. (2017, PG, French) 6.45 The Silver Brumby. (1993, PG) 8.30 Beneath Hill 60. (2010, M) 10.45 Blade Of The Immortal. (2017, MA15+, Japanese) 1.20am Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Aussie Dreamlivers Alaska. 9.00 Freesurfer. 9.30 Jabba’s School Holiday Movies. 10.00 NFL 100 Greatest. 11.00 America’s Game. Noon Picked Off. 1.00 Down East Dickering. 2.00 AFL Pre-Game. 3.00 Football. AFL. Round 6. Essendon v Collingwood. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers: Best Of. 8.30 MOVIE: The Water Diviner. (2014, M) 10.45 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Saving Private Ryan. (1998, MA15+) 11.50 Young Sheldon. 12.15am Top Chef. 1.15 Kardashians. 3.00 Bakugan: Armored Alliance. 3.30 Ninjago. 4.00 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm Shortland St. 2.30 On Country Kitchen. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Molly Of Denali. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 Bamay. 6.40 News. 6.50 Undiscovered Vistas. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Living Black. 9.00 MOVIE: The Skin Of Others. (2020, M) 10.40 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 AM Agenda. 11.00 NewsDay. Noon NewsDay. 1.00 Outsiders. 2.00 Afternoon Agenda. 3.00 Paul Murray Live. 4.00 Afternoon Agenda. 4.30 Business Now With Ross Greenwood. 5.00 News. 6.00 Peta Credlin. 7.00 Bolt Report. 8.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.30 The Rita Panahi Show. 10.30 The Front Page. 11.00 Late Programs.
TUESDAY, April 26 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 10.30 One Plus One. (l, R) 11.10 Grand Designs. (PG, R) 12.00 News. 1.00 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv, R) 2.00 Keeping Faith. (Ma, R) 3.00 Grand Designs Aust. (R) 4.05 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 4.55 Movin’ To The Country. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 A World Of Calm. (R) 2.25 How The Victorians Built Britain. (R) 3.15 Living Black. (R) 3.45 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.15 Trains That Changed The World. (PGa, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 News. 12.00 MOVIE: Paint By Murder. (2018, Mav) 2.00 Highway Cops. (PG, R) 2.30 Border Patrol. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. (PG, R) 1.20 Talking Honey. (PG) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.
6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Ent. Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 People’s Republic Of Mallacoota. (Ml) 8.30 Tiny Oz. (PG) 9.30 Dinosaurs Of The Frozen Continent. (Final) 10.20 ABC Late News. 10.35 The Business. (R) 10.55 Four Corners. (R) 11.40 Media Watch. (PG, R) 11.55 Keeping Faith. (Mv, R) 12.55 State Of The Union. (PG, R) 1.50 Meet The Mavericks. (Ml, R) 2.20 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys. (PG) 8.30 Insight. 9.30 Dateline. 10.00 The Feed. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) 11.30 Thin Blue Line. (MA15+als) 1.45 Blood. (Malv, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+anv, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. (PG) As the blind auditions continue, contestants set out to prove they have what it takes to be a singing sensation. 9.00 The Good Doctor. (Ma) The team races to save a baby, however the mother’s status as a felon complicates the situation. 10.00 The Rookie. (Madv) John and Lucy must fulfil three quests. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 The Resident. (Ma) Devon works with Trevor for the first time. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 LEGO Masters. (PG) 8.50 Matt Wright’s Wild Territory. (Premiere, Ml) 9.50 Nine News Late. 10.20 Law & Order: Organized Crime. (Return, Mdv) 11.20 Murdered By Morning. (Ma, R) 12.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.05 The Rebound. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. Adriano Zumbo returns to the kitchen. 8.40 The Cheap Seats. (Return) Presenters Melanie Bracewell and Tim McDonald take a look at the week that was. 9.40 NCIS: Los Angeles. (Mv) The NCIS team investigates the kidnapping of Master Sergeant Boomer, a military working dog. 10.40 NCIS. (Mv, R) 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 8.55 State Of The Union. 9.20 Gavin & Stacey. 9.50 Schitt’s Creek. 10.10 The Office. 10.45 Black Books. 11.10 Defending The Guilty. 11.40 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.25am Parks And Recreation. 1.05 Green Wing. 2.00 ABC News Update. 2.05 Close. 5.00 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Forged In Fire. 2.25 Game Of Bros. 2.55 Video Game Show. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Travel Man. 9.30 Back To Chernobyl. 10.35 Life After The Oasis. Midnight Dead Set. 1.00 Fear The Walking Dead. 2.40 Deutsche Welle. 3.00 Late Programs.
7TWO (62) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Queen Of The World. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.40 Cold Case. 12.45am Liar. 3.00 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am Morning Programs. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.50 Explore. 2.55 Antiques Roadshow. 3.25 MOVIE: Danger Within. (1959) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 A-League Highlights Show. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.25 Expect The Unexpected: Inside NBL 21. 1am Shopping. 2.30 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am Belle And Sebastian 3. Continued. (2017, PG, French) 7.05 The Silver Brumby. (1993, PG) 8.50 Playtime. (1967, PG, French) 11.10 Gundala. (2019, M, Indonesian) 1.20pm Race. (2016, PG) 3.50 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 6.00 Kundun. (1997, PG) 8.30 The Eight Hundred. (2020, MA15+, Mandarin) 11.15 Liberation. (2019, MA15+, Mandarin) 1.10am Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. Noon American Pickers: Best Of. 1.00 Million Dollar Catch. 2.00 No Man’s Land. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Motorway Patrol. 4.00 Fish’n Mates. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Wheelburn. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Outback Truckers: Best Of. 9.30 Outback Truckers. 10.30 Train Truckers. 11.30 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Sherlock Holmes: A Game Of Shadows. (2011, M) 11.05 Young Sheldon. 11.35 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm Shortland St. 2.30 On Country Kitchen. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Molly Of Denali. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Indian Country Today. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Undiscovered Vistas. 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Wellington Paranormal. 8.30 Over The Black Dot. 9.00 Letterkenny. 10.00 Gomorrah. 10.55 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 AM Agenda. 11.00 NewsDay. Noon NewsDay. 1.00 The Rita Panahi Show. 2.00 Afternoon Agenda. 3.00 Paul Murray Live. 4.00 Afternoon Agenda. 4.30 Business Now With Ross Greenwood. 5.00 News. 6.00 Peta Credlin. 7.00 Bolt Report. 8.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.30 The Rita Panahi Show. 10.30 The Front Page. 11.00 Late Programs.
CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat
SMART MARKETING
The TV Guide Pages are a great Target Audience for your business! Call or Email Gaye Conway: 0436 355 564 gaye@newsofthearea.com.au 18 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
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Friday, 22 April 2022
NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
WEDNESDAY, April 27 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
ON THE Box NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Four Corners. (R) 11.00 Scottish Vets Down Under. (PG, R) 11.30 People’s Republic Of Mallacoota. (PGl, R) 12.00 News. 12.30 Press Club. 1.40 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 Keeping Faith. (Mv, R) 3.00 Grand Designs Aust. (R) 4.05 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 5.00 Movin’ To The Country. (R) 5.30 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Dateline. (R) 2.30 Insight. (R) 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.45 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.15 Trains That Changed The World. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Wrong Crush. (2017, Mdv, R) 2.00 Highway Cops. (PGadl, R) 2.30 Border Patrol. (R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. (PG, R) 1.20 Explore. (R) 1.30 Great Australian Detour. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.
6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Ent. Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 My Market Kitchen. (PGa) 4.00 GCBC. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) 8.30 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. (Return) 9.00 Tomorrow Tonight. 9.30 QI. (PGs) 10.05 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R) 10.35 ABC Late News. 10.50 The Business. (R) 11.05 Life. (Mal, R) 12.05 Keeping Faith. (Ml, R) 1.05 Meet The Mavericks. (Ml, R) 1.35 QI. (PGs, R) 2.05 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R) 2.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Tony Robinson: Britain’s Greatest River. (PG) 8.30 MH370: The Lost Flight. (Premiere, M) 9.25 Michael Mosley: Truth About Sleep. (R) 10.30 SBS News. 11.00 Red Light. (MA15+d) 12.55 The Handmaid’s Tale. (MA15+alv, R) 2.00 The Good Fight. (Malsv, R) 3.00 The Crimson Rivers. (MA15+ad, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. (PG) Hosted by Sonia Kruger. 9.00 Britain’s Got Talent. (PG) Auditions continue as weird, wacky and wonderful acts compete in front of the celebrity judges. 10.20 The Latest: Seven News. 10.50 Outrageous Weddings. (Premiere, PGa) A look at funny wedding moments caught on camera. 11.50 Absentia. (MA15+asv) 12.50 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Travel Guides. (Return, PGl) 8.30 The Thing About Pam. (Ma) 9.30 Botched. (Malmn, R) 10.30 Nine News Late. 11.00 Damian Lewis: Spy Wars. (Mv, R) 11.50 Grand Hotel. (Ma, R) 12.40 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. Fighting for a chance at immunity, the contestants face the infamous team relay challenge. 9.30 First Dates Australia. Singles in search of love are brought together at a restaurant for a blind first date. 10.30 This Is Us. (PGa) Randall and Rebecca embark on a road trip. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Anh’s Brush With Fame. 8.00 Art Works. 8.30 MOVIE: Palazzo Di Cozzo. (2021, PG) 9.30 Golden Guitar Awards. 11.00 Ballet Now. Midnight Louis Theroux: Mothers On The Edge. 1.00 The Set. 1.40 Parks And Recreation. 2.20 Green Wing. 3.15 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Sarah & Duck. 5.15 Peg + Cat. 5.25 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Forged In Fire Latin America. 1.40 Noisey. 2.30 One Burning Question. (Final) 2.40 Child Genius. 3.40 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. 9.30 MOVIE: Destroyer. (2018, MA15+) 11.45 MOVIE: Superfly. (2018, MA15+) 1.50am Late Programs.
7TWO (62)
6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Heathrow. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 Ms Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries. 9.30 Frankie Drake Mysteries. 11.30 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.50 Explore. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Against The Wind. (1948, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 4. Emilia Romagna Grand Prix. Replay. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 FBI. 11.15 FBI: Most Wanted. 12.15am Shopping. 2.15 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am The Boy And The Beast. Continued. (2015, PG) 7.10 Kundun. (1997, PG) 9.40 Little Men. (2016, PG) 11.15 2 Autumns, 3 Winters. (2013, M, French) 12.55pm Short Term 12. (2013, M) 2.45 The Silver Brumby. (1993, PG) 4.30 Max Richter’s Sleep. (2019, PG) 6.25 Denial. (2016, PG) 8.30 All Quiet On The Western Front. (1979, PG) 11.20 Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Storage Wars: TX. 9.30 Pawn Stars. 10.00 NFL 100 Greatest. 11.00 America’s Game. Noon Train Truckers. 1.00 Graveyard Carz. 2.00 No Man’s Land. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Motorway Patrol. 4.00 Fish’n Mates. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 MOVIE: Alien. (1979, M) 11.00 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels. (1998, MA15+) 10.40 Young Sheldon. 11.05 Raymond. 11.35 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Songs From The Inside. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 On Country Kitchen. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Molly Of Denali. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Te Ao With Moana. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Undiscovered Vistas. 7.35 High Arctic Haulers. 8.30 Yokayi Footy. 9.25 The One And Only Dick Gregory. 11.25 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 AM Agenda. 11.00 NewsDay. Noon NewsDay. 1.00 The Rita Panahi Show. 2.00 Afternoon Agenda. 3.00 Paul Murray Live. 4.00 Afternoon Agenda. 4.30 Business Now With Ross Greenwood. 5.00 News. 6.00 Peta Credlin. 7.00 Bolt Report. 8.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.30 The Rita Panahi Show. 10.30 The Front Page. 11.00 Late Programs.
THURSDAY, April 28 ABC TV (2)
SBS (3)
PRIME7 (6)
NBN (8)
TEN (5)
6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Aust Story. (R) 10.30 Weird Australia. (PG, R) 11.05 Dinosaurs Of The Frozen Continent. (R) 12.00 News. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 The Weekly. (R) 2.00 Keeping Faith. (Ml, R) 3.00 Grand Designs Aust. (PG, R) 4.05 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 5.00 Movin’ To The Country. (R) 5.30 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 A World Of Calm. (R) 2.25 How The Victorians Built Britain. (R) 3.15 Going Places. (R) 3.45 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.15 Trains That Changed The World. (R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 News. 12.00 MOVIE: Am I A Serial Killer? (2019, Mv, R) 2.00 Kochie’s Business Builders. 2.30 Border Patrol. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Space Invaders. (PG, R) 1.00 Travel Guides. (PGl, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.
6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGals) 1.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGa) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 The Drum. 6.55 Sammy J. (PG) 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. 8.30 Q+A. 9.35 Barrie Cassidy’s One Plus One. (R) 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. (R) 10.40 Tiny Oz. (PG, R) 11.35 Scottish Vets Down Under. (PG, R) 12.05 Top Of The Lake: China Girl. (Final, Malnsv, R) 1.05 Meet The Mavericks. (Ml, R) 2.00 My Mother’s Lost Children. (Ml, R) 2.55 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 World’s Most Scenic River Journeys. (PG) 8.30 Ancient Invisible Cities. (R) 9.30 Miniseries: Four Lives. (M) 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Gomorrah. (MA15+v) 12.40 The Last Wave. (MA15+s, R) 3.35 Policing The Police. (Mav, R) 4.35 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+a, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. 8.30 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. (M) Gordon Ramsay helps Blend on Main, a restaurant in Manasquan, New Jersey. 9.30 Police Code Zero: Officer Under Attack. (MA15+l) Explores dangerous situations. 10.30 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 The Front Bar. (M) Takes a lighter look at all things sport. 12.00 Crazy On A Plane. (Mal, R) 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 NBN News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 8. Brisbane Broncos v Cronulla Sharks. 9.50 Thursday Night Knock Off. 10.35 Nine News Late. 11.05 New Amsterdam. (Mamv, R) 11.55 Urbex: Enter At Your Own Risk. (Mal, R) 12.45 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News. 5.30 Today.
6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. Matt Stone is in the kitchen. 8.30 Gogglebox Australia. TV fanatics open up their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows. 9.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 Blue Bloods. (Mav, R) Eddie has a gut feeling about a murder. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 10.10 QI. 10.40 Tomorrow Tonight. 11.15 Gruen. 11.50 Would I Lie To You? 12.25am Parks And Recreation. 1.05 Green Wing. 1.55 ABC News Update. 2.00 Close. 5.00 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.05 Sarah & Duck. 5.15 Peg + Cat. 5.25 Late Programs.
VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Fake Believe. 12.30 Balaraba: Escaping Boko Haram. 1.00 Most Expensivest. 2.00 Unknown Amazon. 2.50 Cyberwar. 3.40 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Roswell: The First Witness. 9.20 Behind Bars: World’s Toughest Prisons. (Final) 10.15 Late Programs.
7TWO (62)
6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 ICU. 5.00 Coastwatch Oz. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Murdoch Mysteries. 10.30 Without A Trace. 11.30 Late Programs.
9GEM (82) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.50 Explore. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Laughter In Paradise. (1951) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 Emergency. 9.30 Casualty 24/7. 10.30 Law & Order. 11.30 Late Programs.
BOLD (51) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. 8.30 NBL Slam. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.30 FBI. 12.30am Shopping. 2.00 Late Programs.
SKY NEWS (53)
SBS MOVIES (32) 6am All Quiet On The Western Front. Continued. (1979, PG) 7.00 Denial. (2016, PG) 9.05 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 11.15 The King’s Choice. (2016, M) 1.45pm Kundun. (1997, PG) 4.15 The Red Shoes. (1948, PG) 6.45 Dancing At Lughnasa. (1998, PG) 8.30 Where Hands Touch. (2018, M) 10.45 Suspiria. (2018, MA15+) 1.30am Mammoth. (2009, M) 3.50 Late Programs.
7MATE (63) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 NFL 100 Greatest. 11.00 America’s Game. Noon Pawn Stars. 1.00 Billy The Exterminator. 2.00 No Man’s Land. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Motorway Patrol. 4.00 Fish’n Mates. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: Elysium. (2013, M) 9.45 MOVIE: Hitman: Agent 47. (2015, MA15+) 11.45 Late Programs.
9GO! (83) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Survivor 42. 8.30 MOVIE: 2 Fast 2 Furious. (2003, M) 10.35 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight Top Chef. 1.00 Late Programs.
NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm Shortland St. 2.30 On Country Kitchen. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Molly Of Denali. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 The 77 Percent. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Undiscovered Vistas. 7.35 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.35 Tribal. 9.25 MOVIE: Race. (2016, PG) 11.50 Late Programs.
6am Morning Programs. 10.00 AM Agenda. 11.00 NewsDay. Noon NewsDay. 1.00 The Rita Panahi Show. 2.00 Afternoon Agenda. 3.00 Paul Murray Live. 4.00 Afternoon Agenda. 4.30 Business Now With Ross Greenwood. 5.00 News. 6.00 Peta Credlin. 7.00 Bolt Report. 8.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.00 Paul Murray Live. 9.30 The Rita Panahi Show. 10.30 The Front Page. 11.00 Late Programs.
CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat
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News SPORT Of The Area
NAMBUCCA VALLEY Friday, 22 April 2022
Round One!
Local Community News ~ Proudly Independent
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q The Group 2 Rugby League season kicks off on Sunday afternoon.
CALL TODAY Call today to have your business here Gaye Conway 0436 355 564
gaye@newsofthearea.com.au
By Aiden BURGESS
THE return of three clubs and the involvement of former NRL players shapes for what promises to be a huge Tooheys New Group 2 Rugby League season in 2022. The latest Group 2 Rugby League season kicks off on Sunday afternoon with its ANZAC Weekend round. Two clubs who had last season off make a return to the field in Round 1, when the Sawtell Panthers host the Orara Valley Axemen at Rex Hardaker Oval. The Panthers and Axemen both have former NRL players leading from the helm, with Clint Greenshields coaching his former club and former English international Sam Burgess guiding the Axemen. It will be both club’s first Group 2 game since 2019. Coffs Harbour Comets and Woolgoolga Seahorses open their season with a clash at Geoff King Motors Oval. The Comets finished second on the ladder last season, while the Seahorses will look to rise from the bottom of the ladder in 2022. The Grafton Ghosts and South Grafton Rebels play off for local bragging rights in their opening round derby this weekend. The Ghosts finished last season as minor premiers and are the last team to win the Group 2 competition in 2019. The final round also features another local derby when the Macksville Sea Eagles host the Nambucca Roosters, who are making a return to Group 2 competition for the first time since 2018. Former NRL superstar Greg Inglis will help lead the Sea Eagles pack this season in a big coup for Group 2. This season will feature eight clubs in the first grade, reserve grade, and Women’s League Tag competitions, and seven clubs in the under 18s. This year will feature a fourteen-round season with this year's finals series starting on Saturday, 6 August, with the grand final on Sunday, 28 August.
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20 NAMBUCCA VALLEY NEWS OF THE AREA
media@newsofthearea.com.au
Friday, 22 April 2022