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THE GREEN EDITION
Our sustainability DUBBO’S Sustainability Expo and Science Festival is on this Saturday, August 25, between 10am and 2pm, at the Western Plains Cultural Centre. To coincide with the event, this week is Dubbo Photo News’ annual Green Edition where we highlight some of the many ways we’re already living sustainably – but more importantly you’ll read lots of suggestions on how we can all do better.
The environmental cost of technology WITH only one per cent of smartphones being recycled and the ecological cost of consumer technology expected to quadruple by 2040, tech-hungry Australians still have a long way to go to be truly environmentally-friendly. Problem areas identified in a report titled “How Smartphones are heating up the planet” include the mining of materials needed for tech, and the rapidity of tech turnover – we’re all being urged to upgrade to the latest smartphone as often as possible, and that’s proving to be destructive to our environment.
FULL STORY p7 ❱❱
Full support for our farming communities MONDAY’S Farm Aid Telethon hosted by Channel 9 at the Dubbo Showground was one of the latest demonstrations of support for Australia’s farming communities. The telethon has raised more than $7.6 million, and it’s just one of many fund-raising and support-raising efforts being backed by Australians far and wide. Vinnies launched its appeal for Drought-Afflicted NSW earlier this month, supported by Sydney’s Sunday Telegraph. The fact that two of Australia’s biggest media outlets – the Tele and Channel 9 – are now highlighting the plight of farmers on dry land is a sure sign
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that our city cousins are finally aware of the drought, and that’s mustering their support in all sorts of ways. We as a community shouldn’t overlook the enormity of the support being provided by State and Federal Governments, with that tally well past the $1 billion mark. Kelly Morgan, who helps look after Vinnies’ in our region, said the people working in their country stores are witnessing first-hand what farmers are facing. Here in Dubbo, staff at our local Vinnie’s store are working overtime to do what they can. Anne Hughes (pictured left) has been at Vinnies for 29 years
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❱❱ INSIDE ❱❱ Farm Aid Telethon, plus more Drought News
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and Robyn Duncan for nine years. The ladies wanted to say that, right now, they need buyers as well as quality donations. They wanted Dubbo Photo News readers to know that they have some awesome bric-a-brac in the store as well as clothing. The more people who come to the store and buy things, the more money Vinnies have to buy food, blankets, and so on, they said. “There are some beautiful kids’ books starting from 50 cents, too.”
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*Your pharmacist will advise you whether this preparation is suitable for your condition. Always read the label. Use only as directed. If symptoms persist see your healthcare professional. Limit 1 per customer. **Vitamins may only be of assistance if dietary intake is inadequate. The pharmacist reserves the right not to supply when contrary to our professional and ethical obligation. Retail quantities only. Limits Apply. 6 or less. «Breast milk is best for most Babies. Retail quantities only. Limits Apply. †The save prices listed in this catalogue are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and when no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. All products may not be available from all Chemist Warehouse stores. ^Free gifts subject to availability while stocks last. Free gift is an in-store promotion and not always available online. Not all products or promotions featured in this catalogue are available online. We beat everyone’s prices! At Chemist Warehouse if you find a cheaper price on the exact same item at another Australian Retail Store, we will match it and give you 10% off the difference! (Excludes ‘online only’ offers) Exact same item means exact same product, with the same packaging and where the product on offer at the other retail store is not clearance or run out stock. All products subject to Manufacturers Availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
WEEKENDER ❱❱ THE NEW BIN: IS DUBBO DISCOVERING IT’S EASY BEING GREEN?
PhotoNews Photo News DUBBO
AUGUST 23-29, 2018 | LOCALLY OWNED & INDEPENDENT | FREE!
THE GREEN EDITION
No bees, no trees
Wellington-based, second generation beekeeper Andrew Gay produces Manuka honey, but his bees are feeling the effects of drought conditions and he has had to move his bees to the coast to keep them producing. PHOTO: WENDY MERRICK.
FULL STORY:
INSIDE ❱❱
Australia has one of the best newspaper recycling rates in the world. More than 70 per cent of newsprint in Australia is recovered and reused. Keep up the good work! CALL US with your news ideas 6885 4433 | EMAIL photos@dubbophotonews.com.au | VISIT US at 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
DUBBO CITY LIFE Comment by YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY TH E GREEN EDITIO
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Welcome to The Green Edition of your local paper
DUBBO’S Sustainability Expo and Science Festival is on this Saturday, August 25, between 10am and 2pm, at the Western Plains Cultural Centre. Residents are invited to attend the free event, get inspired over ways you can live more sustainably and, for the kids, there are loads of activities which are fun and educational. This week’s edition of Dubbo Photo News celebrates the community effort to ensure the waterways, land, air and food here is fresh and uncontaminated for generations to come. It’s what makes living in regional Australia so unique because the quality of the lifestyle here is second-to-none for a clean, sustainable environment. Probably a highlight in our office this week was to look over a list of local restaurants and cafes buying local produce, which revealed the city is self-sustaining on many fronts when it comes to the food we’re buying when we eat out. Not that it’s a new thing. When Dubbo was emerging as a village and town, if you needed something, you grew it or built it yourself, 90 per cent of the time. These days we have/buy/own much more than we actually need but finally there are glimmers of hope from the biggest polluters of all, the corporate manufacturers. The supermarkets, for example, though they still have a long way to go, have to be applauded for banning the plastic bag in what essentially has been a consumer-driven decision. As the majority, we have incredible in-
Clarification Riverdale Woolworths’ sales assistant Dipika Thapahahi demonstrates the collection point for soft plastics located at the front of the store where shoppers can deposit their soft plastics which is recycled into hard furniture. Coles also has similar collection points. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
fluence which is making change for the better. The megacorps are catching on. Woolworths has large receptacles now at the front of their stores where you can drop off your soft plastics for recycling. Melbourne company REDcycle developed the recovery initiative and has teamed up with Coles, Woolworths and other brands to keep soft plastics out of the ground. The message here is twofold. First, we – you – need to take responsibility for your rubbish. Cut back, reuse and recycle where possible. Set up a system at home that separates your rubbish then get it to the right collection point and stick with the program.
Do we really want the next generation to look back at this one and think of us not as quaint and old fashioned, but in slightly more colourful and less complimentary terms, while picking plastic particles from their food? So, soft plastics. This is relatively new. REDcycle says if you can scrunch it, it can go into their collection points. (If you’d like a comprehensive list of what soft plastics are welcomed, contact Dubbo Photo News and we’d be happy to email it to you.) REDcycle asks they be as dry and empty as possible. From the collection points, soft plastics are sent to Victoria to manufacturer “Replas� where they’re turned into fitness cir-
In last week’s Dubbo Photo News we carried a Q&A with Labor Candidate Stephen Lawrence as part of our early coverage of next year’s state election. One of the questions put to Mr Lawrence referred to claims that he was using his position as a Dubbo Regional Councillor to campaign for the state election. That claim was attributed Mathew Dickerson in the question, rather than in the answer, which may have led some readers to believe that Dubbo Photo News was making the claim. We’re not aware of any public statement by Mr Dickerson to that effect. The claim was in fact Mr Lawrence’s, who told Dubbo Photo News he believed Mr Dickerson had made that comment in a number of conversations. Because that part of the Q&A was the result of a more detailed discussion between Mr Lawrence and this newspaper, it had been condensed to the few paragraphs printed.
Advertorial
DROUGHT SUPPORT
Specsavers support Buy A Bale By Darcee Nixon Last weekend the Specsavers store in Dubbo Square took part in Specsavers’ national movement to support our Aussie farmers doing it tough in the current drought crisis. Specsavers donated $5 from the sale of every pair of glasses on Saturday and Sunday, August 18 and 19, to the drought assistance charity ‘Buy a Bale’. The friendly team at Specsavers’ Dubbo store were dressed up in jeans and D Ă DQQLH DV WKH\ KDQGHG RXW EDOORRQV
c cuits, sturdy outdoor furniture, bollards, s signage, and more. There’s a manufacturing idea worth inv vesting in locally! While all of this is good, the less we inv vite into our world, the less chances the b bulk of it doesn’t end up in landfill or end u in our waterways and oceans. up The great news is it’s easy and doable. Woolworths has also pledged that, by the end of this year, all stores within the Group in Australia and New Zealand will no longer sell plastic straws – saving 134 million plastic straws from going into circulation each year. It’s hard to imagine that 30 or 40 years ago, when these ideas began to circulate, the powers that be bent over backwards to discredit those calling for conservation and sustainability as losers and fringe-dwellers, when in fact they were ground-breakers. Now everyone can be a ground breaker and keep Dubbo clean and healthy. feedback@dubbophotonews.com.au
lollies and other merchandise to raise awareness of our primary producers’ current plight. Specsavers provide bulk billed, comprehensive eye exams that include all necessary health checks for glaucoma, diabetes and macular degeneration. They also offer free Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), which is 3D optical photography. So, you didn’t realise buying a pair of glasses could have directly helped farmers? Should have gone to Specsavers!
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018 LITTER REDUCTION
PAGE 3 PROFILE Lexi Mawbey, owner of Little Grey Hare Hair Salon I’m a new business owner. This is my first time owning a shop. I’ve managed twice before, but this shop is totally mine. Everything I do, all the products and the colours, are vegan. Everything contains certified organic ingredients so they’re as clean and healthy for you as they can possibly be, which I’ve noticed Dubbo doesn’t really have in hair care. My family live in Dubbo so I moved back here. I lived in Melbourne for about 12 years. In Melbourne healthy living is a huge movement, everyone is going sulphate- and ammonia-free and in a few years that will be what it is everywhere. I think we need to have a greener approach to hair – healthy happy hair, with no testing on animals. Natural hair care is a passion that I’ve always had. I really got serious when I discovered that I was celiac. I was doing everything right with my diet, but I was still feeling uncomfortable and I realised that there was wheat protein in my shampoo. I was putting that straight into my blood stream by applying it to my scalp, so all the hard work was being undone every time I washed my hair. When people would come in and get their hair done I was touching all the chemicals with my hands every day, and I just thought, “Why am I doing this?” I also had to breathe all the chemicals in every day. Hairdressers get cancer from doing this job and I just thought that there had to be alternatives out there, so I started out with smaller brands which were more natural. There’s a whole lot out there, but in my research DNA Organics was the only one that was Australian made, cruelty- and gluten-free, vegan certified organic with all the nasties gone. My sister has Lupus and it’s the only colour that I can put on her head that she doesn’t have a reaction to. My other sister and her kids have psoriasis and it works for them as well. I’m passionate about it because it affects me and my family, but it also affects everyone around us. Self-care is a big thing that’s happening now. People know and care what their toxicity levels are these days and I think it’s good that people are getting healthier. Is there a big difference after using natural products? People are so used to feeling silicon in their hair that they don’t remember what their hair actually feels like when it’s just their hair. People notice the distinct difference in the softness of their hair. One lady said, “Is that my hair? My hair hasn’t felt like this since I was eight.” It’s amazing, people don’t believe me when they first sit down after always using chemicals. It’s such a good feeling. The biggest challenge I have faced is people’s misconception that, because it’s vegan and certified organic, that it must be expensive, but it’s not. I’m extremely com-
VOTED
TH E GREEN EDITIO
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Tossers on report By NATALIE HOLMES
NSW has achieved a remarkable reduction in litter volume in 2017-18, which is the baseline year for the Premier’s Priority of reducing litter by 40 per cent by 2020. The EPA’s “Don’t Be a Tosser!” campaign, and the Report to EPA system which allows people to report littering as it happens, has led to a massive increase in littering fines. Since the Report to EPA campaign started in FebBY THE ruary 2015, there has NUMBERS been an average of 8600 fines a year, compared to 8600 the 500 issued in 2014. Tossers have been hit The average number with more than $8.3 milof littering fines each lion in fines and the NSW year since 2015, well EPA has handed out over up from the 500 is29,000 penalty notices sued in 2014. to people littering from 67 per cent motor vehicles thanks to the increased public of containers supreporting. plied into NSW are The latest EPA research being returned via reveals the message is Return and Earn sinking in, with 75 per 560 million cent of the NSW population aware they will be The number of confined if they are caught tainers processed throwing litter from their by Return and Earn motor vehicle. so far The NSW Government has committed $50 million in funding from 2012-2021 to reduce litter and littering behaviour through the EPA’s Waste Less, Recycle More initiative. Takeaway container litter has reduced by 19 per cent from 2016-17; print and advertising litter has reduced by 35 per cent.
Return and Earn is impacting
petitive and a lot of people have commented that my products are the same price or cheaper than other salons. If it’s good for you and it costs the same, why wouldn’t you do it? What I like the most about doing hair is that I love making people over. People come in and feel like rubbish, then they sit in the chair and say, “I don’t even care anymore, just do anything,” and I just revive that pas-
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sion for themselves. They have this total rejuvenation of themselves. I’m pulling out that person on the inside. How your hair looks affects everything. I love making people look good and feel nice. Sometimes I get people to close their eyes in front of the mirror and they can’t look until I’m finished. - Interview & photo by Wendy Merrick
NSW Litter has dropped by 37 per cent since 2013 and Return and Earn is responsible for one third of the reduction in its type of drink container litter. Return and Earn’s (R&E) impact is shown by looking at the scheme coordinator’s figures for the three months from March to May 2018, which shows it collected around 67 per cent of all containers supplied into NSW in that period. Overall, there has been a 33 per cent drop in Return and Earn eligible drink containers in the litter stream since November 2017 – the month before the scheme was introduced. On average, three million containers a day are being collected at return points. More than 560 million containers have been processed by R&E so far, and as more collection points become available, these results can only increase and the amount of litter will decrease.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
ENVIRONMENT
DROUGHT TIMES
Region’s farmers updated on funding for conservation By JOHN RYAN
DUBBO played host to the state’s Biodiversity Conservation Trust (BCT) Board and Executive members at Lazy River Estate and there were plenty of locals in attendance to meet and greet as well as find out how they can get involved in the Trust’s programs. In March, NSW Environment Minister Gabrielle Upton and the BCT Board Chair launched the Trust’s Business Plan and announced the first tranche of BCT programs. The board and executives were in town to meet directly with key stakeholders to understand their interests and gain perspective. Former federal senator Robert Hill is the BCT chairman. He said it was an opportunity to meet with constituents including local farmers and graziers who would be interested in the products they’re offering. “We haven’t even finished our first year, so we’re still beginning, but we’ve got in place now a range of different programs which offer public money to farmers who want to conserve endangered biodiversity, (including those) who would like to but feel they are
constrained financially from doing so. We can help them in that regard,” Mr Hill said. “That’s our mission and, in our first year, I think we’ve achieved more than I was expecting. We’ve been able to expend over $13 million which is money going in to private land owners to help them conserve the biodiversity values which we say are important to all Australians.” Mr Hill has been part of a group which had been talking about this for 20 years. Now it’s building up more momentum, he said it’s a pleasure to be associated with it. “I don’t want to be disrespectful but I think the agricultural community is learning – we’re all learning – that natural solutions are often better solutions than more chemicals or the imposed solutions,” Mr Hill said. “I’m not just talking about Australia, I’m talking about globally. We’ve degraded a lot of our soils across the world through traditional western farming methods – they’ve been hugely successful, delivered great productivity, but now they’re starting to be equated in terms of their cost to soil health and so forth. “The natural solutions that re-
TH E GREEN EDITIO
Robert Hill is a former senator and now the Biodiversity Conservation Trust’s chairman. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
turn more carbon to the soil, and that encourage the microbes and so forth to do their business, can actually lead to a better, longer term outcome,” he added. Mr Hill said there’s an increasing trend amongst farmers to look
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ahead 50 years or 100 years and d try to predict what effect continued use of traditional methods would have on our soils. He’s encouraged by those who are seriously looking at ways to conserve the biodiversity assets that our country holds, and recognised those are the farmers who are most interested in working with BCT now. He said a major concern was incorrect perceptions amongst many in the farming community, but that things were gradually changing, with increasing number of landholders wanting to come on board. It’s still small, but ever-growing, he said. “There’s still a lot of suspicion in some ways that we’re going to impose restrictions or regulation. “We don’t have any such powers, we’re sort of the flip side, we’re the side where the government has said that there are conservation values that are important, and the custodians are the farmers, but it’s the farmers who need to be financially supported to meet that mission.”
Public schools to remain fully staffed in drought THE NSW Department of Education has agreed to suspend forced teacher transfers in parts of the state affected by drought in order to support schools and help the community to cope with the impacts of the drier weather. NSW Teachers Federation senior vice president Henry Rajendra said public schools in rural and remote communities across NSW are suffering the consequences of the drought. Mr Rajendra said teachers from rural and regional areas had sought a moratorium on forced transfers to ensure drought-affected schools could properly cope with the crisis and the NSW Department of Education had agreed.
BURNING ISSUE
Firewood permits to close early due to bushfire risk FROM September 1 no further firewood permits will be issued in 2018 for NSW State Forests around Dubbo, Narrabri, Gunnedah, Coonabarabran, Gilgandra, Forbes, Parkes, Narrandera, Mudgee, Kandos, Rylstone and Gulgong. Unseasonably warm and dry conditions have prompted Forestry Corporation of NSW to end the firewood collection permit season early. “Firewood permits will be available again through our website around April 2019 as we move into the winter again,” a spokesperson said during the week.
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Come and see the difference theacademy.nsw.edu.au
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018 TECH OR TRADITION
WHERE ON GOOGLE EARTH ?
Newspapers v phones: Which has the greater environmental impact?
Where in our area is shown in this satellite image? Clues: Shares a name with a western Scotland peninsula; Wings sang about it in 1977. Lifestyle living.
By NATALIE HOLMES WITH only one per cent of smartphones being recycled and their impact on the environment set to quadruple by 2040, there’s a lot to be said for traditional modes of communication. In a report by Lotfi Belkhir, titled “How Smartphones are heating up the planet� published in the Journal of Cleaner Production, the effect of technology on the environment is revealed: including the mining of materials, the rapidity of tech turnover and the data centres of manufacturing. “We found that the relative contribution of ICT (informaAt work inside Norske Skog’s tion and communications techAustralian recycling plant, where the nology) to the total global footpaper that Dubbo Photo News is printprint is expected to grow from ed on is produced. PHOTO: SUPPLIED. about one per cent in 2007 to 3.5 per cent by 2020 and reaching 14 per cent by 2040.� – from three mills located at Al- recovery rate of 74 per cent is at According to Belkhir, that’s bury NSW, Boyer in Tasmania, world’s best practice.� more than half the relative con- and Tasman in New Zealand. Mr Leonard said the company tribution of the entire transporThe manufacturer opened is also working towards further tation sector worldwide, there- Australia’s first large-scale certification to ensure the onby shifting the idealised view newsprint and paper recycling going sustainability and regenthat ICT will help reduce the plant in 1993 and continues eration capacity of their forest global carbon footprint by sub- today with 40 per cent of the sources. stituting physical activities with newsprint produced coming “Forest management certitheir virtual counterparts. fication and Chain of Custofrom recycled paper. “Our study also highlights the Its recovered paper comes dy support the achievement of contribution of smart phones, from two main sources: sustainable forestry, provide and shows that by 2020, the pre-consumers such as publish- transparency and ensure good footprint of smart ers and printers stewardship. Over 50 per cent phones alone would and post-consum- of Norske Skog’s wood supplies surpass the individers such as through are already certified. ual contribution of “There is an ongoing prokerbside collection. k desktops, laptops Once received, it gram to increase certification O and displays.� is i pulped for recy- and within four years, the aim The lion’s share cling. The recycled is to achieve 75 per cent certic of this footprint pulp is then mixed fication,� he told Dubbo Photo p (85 to 95 per cent) with fresh pine News. w will be caused by pulp to manufacp Norske Skog’s recycling plant device production. ture tu newsprint. at Albury is the largest in the TH E GREE N EDITION “We predict the “The bulk of the southern hemisphere and recombined footfibre for the paper is cycles 160,000 tonnes of old fi print of data centres and com- sourced from sustainable soft- newspapers and magazines munications networks will wood plantations,� Norske Skog each year. grow from 215 megatons of C02 Australasia Regional Business “Norske Skog and it’s Australequivalent a year in 2007 to 764 Support Manager Kym Leonard ian publisher customers have by 2020, with data centres ac- said, “although both Albury and worked together through the counting for about two thirds of Boyer also use recycled fibre Publisher’s National Environthe total contribution.� from old newspapers and mag- ment Bureau for many years to By comparison, the Norske azines recovered from through- maximise newspaper and magSkog Paper Mill supplies the out Australia. azine recycling,� Mr Leonard “Australia is a major collector said. vast majority of Australia and New Zealand’s newsprint needs and recycler of old newspapers “The key to sustainability is to – including Dubbo Photo News and magazines and Australia’s maximise paper recovery rates
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GREEN EDITION
Dubbo Sustainable City Expo on this Saturday RESIDENTS are invited to join the fun at the free Dubbo Sustainable City Expo at the Western Plains Cultural Centre this Saturday, August 25, from 10am to 2pm. Organisers say there will be lots of activities for kids including hands-on science experiments, a Fizzics Education science show at 11.30am, and slime, sherbert and bubbles workshops at 10am and 12.45pm. Taronga Western Plains Zoo will be bringing some native animals to meet, Siding Springs Observatory will have a solar telescope to look at the sun through, and Macquarie Regional Library will host a Storytime at 11am, plus much more. See more details in this edition of Dubbo Photo News.
and use fibre from both sustainably managed forest resources and waste sources.� Australasian mills have also achieved a 25 per cent reduction in greenhouse gases emissions per tonne of production since 1990.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
DROUGHT SUPPORT
Telethon urges Aussies to ‘dig deep, donate and help our farmers’ By DARCEE NIXON
IT was ‘lights camera action’ at the Dubbo Showground on Monday, August 20, as Channel Nine held a live Farm Aid Telethon to support Australia’s drought-stricken famers. Starting at 5.30am with a special edition of TODAY, the television hosts met the heroes of the land, chatted with the community, interviewed those doing it tough and presented special reports. Celebrity guests included actor Rodger Corser, comedian Magda Szubanski, croc wrangler Matt Wright, and live performanc-
es from Shannon Noll, Mental As Anything, Dragon, and Wendy Matthews. The community was invited to join the fun, and many community organisations were on hand to raise awareness of the services that they offer to those doing it tough on the land.
Students from St Pius X Catholic Primary School Dubbo
Individuals and families from smaller rural communities across NSW attended the event and told Dubbo Photo News how wonderful it is for people that live in cities to become aware of their struggle, and that they are very grateful for all the support that they have received.
Dubbo Farmers Anthony and James Gemmell and Quambone farmer Stephen Perry. “In my area, we’ve had less rainfall this year than any other year on record, and I am a sixth-generation farmer. I got my last load of hay last week from South Australia. My sheep and cattle are worthless at the moment, they are not in good enough condition to sell,” Mr Perry told Dubbo Photo News. “We are all in the same boat aren’t we. We just cross our fingers for rain. The community has been so kind with their donations, thank you,” Mr Gemmell said.
Linden and Lucy Hall, farmers from the Parkes area. “I think it is fabulous that they have brought it (the TODAY Show) out into the county to enlighten people in the cities about just how bad it is. We are now in uncharted territory, we have lightened our cattle numbers by about half,” Mr Hall told Dubbo Photo News. Barry and Annette Turner, farmers from White Cliffs. Mrs Turner is the State President of the Country Women’s Association (CWA) of NSW. “It is really great they are here and supporting farmers. It is important that smaller communities are coming together and being supported by other organisations,” Mrs Turner said. “Thank you to everyone that has supported all of the organisations offering drought relief. Through the generosity of other organisations, the CWA is currently providing $100,000 a week in grants to eligible applicants. Every cent of donations made to the CWA of NSW goes to the farmers, we have no administration fees or anything like that. Thank you also to the new members that are joining the CWA of NSW,” Mrs Turner added.
TODAY Show presenters Karl Stefanovic, Georgie Gardner and Tim Gilbert with guest speaker from Coonamble Pod Phillips. Mr Phillips brought down one of the ‘best ever homemade pies’ from Coonamble for host Tim Gilbert.
TRIVIA TEST 1
What is the name of the ancient Roman short-sword?
2
What bird has a “warbling carol” heard across Australia every day?
3
The motion picture “The Blind Side” is based around what US sport?
4
The Ebola Virus usually kills what percentage of those it infects?
5
What is the name of Kylie Minogue’s lingerie line?
6
What are the names of the four Ninja Turtles?
7
The beer brand Guinness is from which country originally?
8
Who wrote the classic children’s novel “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz”?
9
How many blank tiles are in the game of Scrabble?
10 True or false: 43 is a prime number? TQ435. SEE THE TV+ GUIDE FOR ANSWERS.
IN BRIEF
Free reusable library bags available for limited time
Michelle and William Graham from Mother Clucker Eggs Dubbo. “The drought affects all levels of the farming community. Grain prices are going up by about 60 per cent, which will obviously affect our production,” Ms Graham told Dubbo Photo News. “It is great that the TODAY Show are here. Eventually the drought will affect everyone, not just farmers. It is important for each community at their level to support local farmers and local businesses,” Ms Graham added.
MACQUARIE Regional Library has started offering free reusable library bags to the community when they borrow from any branch of the library. The offer coincides with the region’s major retailers and supermarkets e l i m i n a ting single-use plastic bags. The giveaway is limited to one library bag per library member while stocks last. “Each library member is eligi- THE GREEN EDITION ble to receive the free reusable library bag which can double as eco-friendly shopping bags. We hope this initiative will encourage more members of the community to visit their local library. It is also a way to say thank you to our regular borrowers,” Macquarie Regional Library manager Kathryn McAlister said.
Some public housing tenants to pay bond
Representatives from Moorambilla Voices performed at the event. The group of about 350 kids from regional NSW finished their two-week camp the day before the telethon.
TENANTS who damage public housing and those convicted of rental fraud will face new sanctions and eviction under a Bill passed last week by the NSW Government. Member for Dubbo Troy Grant and Minister for Social Housing Pru Goward said the Bill, which amends the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 and Housing Act 2001, would lead to a fairer, safer and more financially sustainable social housing system. The Bill also gives the Government the power to make tenants who have caused significant damage to their public housing property pay a rental bond. This will not apply to tenants who do the right thing.
Sunday 2 September From 12 noon
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9
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
A COMMITTED RETIREMENT FAMILY When the Oak Tree Group was founded a decade ago, the motivation behind the brand was not to be the biggest, but TCVJGT VJG DGUV KP VJG ƒGNF QH independent senior living.
The Group set up with a mandate to provide quality and affordable retirement living options which would offer an easier, maintenance free way of life for seniors, while still remaining within the financial reach of the average Australian home owner. They also realised a unique and under supplied opportunity in the market in regional towns, made this their focus, and charged forward on what they describe as being a busy, but deeply gratifying journey. Now, with 30 Retirement Villages spanning the east coast of Australia, Managing Director, Mark Bindon, shares their passion and commitment to continued improvement and growth.
“Staying true to our intentions and what is important, but growing and learning along the way has put us in good stead,” he said. “All too often seniors are forced to relocate to bigger, metro cities to get the support they need because regional towns lack the infrastructure. “This not only breaks down a community, but puts unnecessary stress on the lives of our seniors who would rather stay in the places they love and know to be home,” said Mr Bindon. “We have built our reputation around being personable, approachable yet professional and focus our energies on the end product – our Villages and our residents’ comfort and happiness. “We pride ourselves on the fact that we invest our personal time at Village level – it is not uncommon to see myself or other Senior Management immersed in the activities at our Villages and this is quite unheard of in other organisations.
Call Village Manager Joanne Wodson to learn more about joining the Oak Tree Retirement Community.
Call 1300 367 155 22 Peel Place, Dubbo (Opening Soon)
“Being at Village level is the best way for us to learn, and improve our product and our service taking on board every piece of resident feedback to continually be better at what we do. “It also helps us build up a comradery with our residents and reminds all of us, that we are real people, building real homes and communities, for real residents with real lifestyle benefits. We consider our residents an extension of our family. “Twelve years later and we are still as committed and passionate as ever to give seniors the opportunity to enjoy an easier way of life throughout their retirement with the support they deserve.“
If you are ready to embark on a new retirement journey, call Oak Tree for a private appointment 1300 367 155 or visit oaktreegroup.com.au
S E LS TAG E LIN 1 GN OW
10
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
GOING GREEN
IN BRIEF
Family leads sustainable lifestyle the green bin as well, and I try to get away from anything with packaging in the supermarket. We do whatever we can do not to consume too many plastics. We also reuse plastic bags, they always get used a couple of times!” It’s highly likely that Mrs Linehan inherited some of her commitment to sustainability from her parents Suzie and Ian Lumby, who are also dedicated to the practice. “We’ve got chooks and feed them all the scraps, we recycle everything we can and we don’t waste anything,” Mr Lumby said. “We do use the three bins, the green bin is usually filled with grass and rose cuttings. “We also grow our own vegies.” Mr Lumby also economises in the home. “We don’t waste electricity, it is very expensive and we are pensioners so we watch our money.” Mr Lumby aims to continue sustainable living to contribute to a greener future for his grandchildren. “I’m very keen on looking after the environment, the environment is very important to us. Our grandkids are very important to us and their future is dependent on things being done now and contributing to a cleaner environment.”
By NATALIE HOLMES
IF the family that recycles together stays together, then the Linehans are on the right track. Mum Jo Linehan said they are doing their part for the environment and she and husband Paul are encouraging their two young daughters Molly and Matilda to follow suit. “We do all the things we can,” she told Dubbo Photo News. “We have chooks and we give them our scraps so as not to have waste. “And we love getting their fresh eggs every day.” Mrs Linehan says her children enjoy getting involved in the process of caring for and collecting from the hens. The family also has their own vegetable garden which gives them regular fresh produce, especially during the summer months. “Our youngest daughter loves feeding them and getting the eggs. It’s good for the kids, it’s showing them and gives them an understanding of where food comes from. It’s a lot nicer as well, when it comes from your own garden and it’s chemical-free.” Mrs Linehan says “we recycle everything we can”. “We do composting and use
Plus, gift ideas for Dad...
THE GRE EN EDITIO
N
Four new bus shelters to cater for disabled FOUR new bus shelters will be delivered to the Dubbo Regional Council area, with a further four shelters in the area upgraded to meet disability access standards, thanks to more than $65,000 from the NSW Government’s 2017-19 Country Passenger Transport Infrastructure Grants Scheme (CPTIGS). The scheme is for local councils to improve public transport infrastructure in their local area. “The primary focus of the CPTIGS is to improve accessibility, including the installation of guidance tools for customers with vision impairment and wheelchairs,” said Member for Dubbo Troy Grant. Narromine Shire Council and Trangie Central School are also recipients of funding.
Top 10 movies on iTunes this week
Ian Lumby pictured with his laying hens and the home-grown pumpkins he harvested in April this year. Mr Lumby is part of three generations in his family who do their best to live sustainable lifestyles. PHOTO: DARCEE NIXON.
In a hardware store not so far away...
1. Life of the Party (2018) 2. I Feel Pretty 3. Avengers: Infinity War 4. The Mountain Between Us (pictured) 5. Breath (2017) 6. Ready Player One 7. The Greatest Showman 8. Rampage (2018) 9. Marauders 10. A Quiet Place
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11
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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THIS WEEK’S USED CAR SPECIALS 2014 TOYOTA CAMRY ALTISE 4D SEDAN, AUTO, 102,052 KMS.
2015 TOYOTA COROLLA ASCENT 4D SEDAN, AUTO, 103,286KMS.
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2012 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE OVERLAND (4X4) 4D WAGON, AUTO, 101,150KMS. REGO: CQT34P, VIN: 1C4RJFGMXDC527046, SN22508
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2015 TOYOTA HILUX SR5 (4X4) DUAL CAB 2015 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER PRADO GXL UTILITY, AUTO, 105,162KMS, TURBO DIESEL. (4X4), TURBO DIESEL, AUTO 97,297KMS. REGO: 105,162, VIN: MR0HA3CD300373387, SN22678. REGO: CZG06S, VIN:JTEBR3FJ20K005734, SN:22622
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2014 TOYOTA RAV4 GXL (2WD) 4D WAGON, 85,506KMS, AUTO.
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2014 FORD RANGER XLT 3.2 (4X4) DUAL CAB, TURBO DIESEL, AUTO, 91,040KMS.
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2015 FORD EVEREST AMBIENTE 4D WAGON, AUTO, 42,163KMS, TURBO DIESEL.
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2015 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER WORKMATE (4X4) C/CHAS, AUTO, 62,203 KMS, DIESEL. REGO: CE93TG, VIN:JTELV71J600035488, SN:22720
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2015 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER GXL (4X4) DOUBLE C/CHAS, MANUAL, DIESEL TURBO, 91,566 KMS.
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Due to newspaper deadlines, some vehicles may be sold at the time of publication, we apologise for any inconvenience.
Dubbo City Toyota
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:DUUHQ 5G *LOJDQGUD T (02) 6847 2106
Servco Australia Dubbo Pty Ltd ABN 41 124 473 454 Dealer Licence No MD20520
Servco Australia Dubbo Pty Ltd ABN 41 124 473 454 Dealer Licence No MD20520
dubbocitytoyota.com.au
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12
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
WHAT KIDS SAY
GREEN COVER STORY
No bees, no trees By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY
Mary Estens, 4 Favourite song? Elsa Favourite colour? Orange, red, pink, blue Favourite game? Duck duck goose Who is your best friend? Chloe What makes you laugh? Jokes What makes you sad? When I fall over What are you afraid of? The dark If you could change your name, what would it be? Lalaloopsy What are you really good at? Umm... Hanging upside down with my foot on the monkey bar Do you have any jokes to tell me? Knock knock, (who’s there?), boo hoo, (boo hoo who?), don’t cry, it’s just a joke! What is your favourite thing to eat for lunch? Cheese sticks What is your favourite fruit? Watermelon What do you want to be when you grow up? I like princesses How old is grown up? 30
IT’S a message beekeeper Andrew Gay from Wellington knows only too well – no bees, no trees. As the drought has progressed, so too has his need to uproot his hives and move them to the coast – at great expense – so the bees have enough plant life to produce their liquid gold. “They’re all up the coast at the moment. There’s nothing out here, but in the last six weeks it’s started to get dry over there too. My bees are near Coffs Harbour so they’re not getting the real cold weather like we’ve had here, but further south they’ve had frosts, which is unheard of in the coast, so it’s not green anymore,” he told Dubbo Photo News. “I’m leasing space in the National Park up there. I went up p to the Coffs Harbour bees the other ther day and it’s costing me to get the honey off, get back ack here and extract it – close to $1000.” Mr Gay has around 400 hives. “I’ve got about 60 or 70 there that are going good, butt the rest are stuffed. d. They’ve been knocked ed around by the cold weather. There can be millions in a hive, so you’ve got Buckley’s trying to count them,” he said. The honey he does produce is Ma-
nuka honey, said to have great medicinal properties. “It’s tested. Horse people know. They’ve always used honey to fix wounds on their horses because it doesn’t leave a scar and they want their horses to look good. They don’t have feelings in the bottom part of their legs, so they can cut themselves and not know. “You can buy it at the chemist now, it’s called Medihoney. It’s like an antiseptic cream,” he said. Mr Gay is a second-generation beekeeper and has seen many changes. “It’s gotten worse over time. Getting enough protein for them is getting harder with the dry conditions. “The weather impacts the quality of the honey, or rather how much rain the tre tree gets, or the ground flora. A lot of times we rely on tthe ground flora to pr produce the pollen beccause the trees don’t p produce the pollen, which has the protein and the nutrients the bee needs to b breed with and the h honey is the ‘sugar’. ““If we don’t have that, we d don’t have bees. If we don’t h have bees, we don’t have anything else. If this drought keeps going it’s eventually going to impact on hive strength and keeping them alive.”
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13
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
YOUR STARS
TH E GREE N EDITIO
N
Wellington beekeeper Andrew Gay has had to move his bees away from drought conditions to ensure their longevity. PHOTOS: WENDY MERRICK
ARIES: Your phone will be ringing off the hook this week. If you need to leave someone a voicemail, expect them to take their precious time getting back to you. TAURUS: You need to eat healthier if you want to start feeling like yourself again. A radical lifestyle change is the only way to put the spring back into your step. GEMINI: Your newest friends will introduce you to a world of adventure beyond your wildest dreams. You might get in touch with your spiritual side. At work, your professional network keeps expanding. CANCER: You’ll ďŹ nd sudden success at work. This will be a pleasant surprise at ďŹ rst, but then the added stress will start to become quite clear. Rest and relaxation are your greatest allies. You’ll hit your stride soon. LEO: Your thirst for knowledge is unquenchable. This great intellectual curiosity will lead you to the solu-
tion to one or more problems. Keep digging and you’ll ďŹ nd the answers you seek. VIRGO: New clothes, a new hairstyle and maybe even a new car will make you feel like less of an imposter at your new job. Fake it until you make it, as they say. LIBRA: You might face unexpected disciplinary action at work. Your job is safe; some of your colleagues won’t be so lucky. Be ready to take on new responsibilities at the drop of a hat. SCORPIO: If you have the opportunity to work overtime this week, think twice before committing to it. Is this job really worth it? Will your hard work pay off in the form of a better future for yourself? SAGITTARIUS: You’ll ďŹ nd yourself in an excel-
lent position to land a big contract at work. You may even become someone’s personal hero this week, even if it’s simply by lending an attentive ear. CAPRICORN: You might drastically change your lifestyle this week. Perhaps you’ll ďŹ nally decide to become vegetarian. Your health will force you to take a hard look at your habits, but the future is bright. AQUARIUS: Either for business or for pleasure, you’ll ďŹ nd yourself in a position to communicate with numerous people this week. Your network of contacts will grow exponentially. PISCES: If you’ve recently started the process to obtain ďŹ nancing to start your own business, expect to get some good news this week. Your life is about to change for the better. The luckiest signs this week: Gemini, Cancer and Leo.
IN BRIEF
IN BRIEF
Animal suspected of killing 44 sheep in the Eugowra area
Golf day this Sunday to raise funds for firies championship
FORTY-FOUR sheep have been killed in the Eugowra area recently, found with significant injuries and police believe they may have been attacked by another animal. The owner of a Nangar Road property reported two rams killed on Monday last week, then last Saturday, August 18, a Nobles Road property owner reported 42 sheep had been found dead with another six injured. Central West Police District officers and Cabonne Shire Council attended both incidents. Police urging any witnesses or anyone with information to contact Forbes Police on (02) 6853 9999, Parkes Police on (02) 6862 9999, or Crime Stoppers.
FIRE Rescue NSW Dubbo 280 Retained crew are busy making sure their fundraising golf day tees off without a hitch this Sunday, August 26, from 11am. All are welcome to sign up. The four person Ambrose event is $45 per person (handicaps or club membership are not a requirement). The charge covers your green fees, a barbecue lunch, tea and coffee and of course a little bit goes towards the State Firefighter Championships which are being held in Dubbo in October. There are numerous prizes up for grabs on the day. Book in person or over the phone at the Golf Club Pro Shop on 6882 2201.
Advertorial
Every day starts and ends with a smile It’s impossible to imagine anyone could walk out of Free Choice & Giftware East Dubbo Orana Mall, without a smile on their face. Owners John Colwell and Tony Campbell are not only larrikins at heart, they’re best mates since childhood who have a special knack of drawing you in to the candid connection they share, as if you’re a long lost mate too. “They just have a great rDpSort with customers, and it’s genuine,â€? Free Choice manager Amanda Harris says. Amanda was part of the Free Choice team before John and Tony took over 12 years ago, though they’ll gladly tell you she’s the boss. With a laugh in her voice she’ll warn you not to believe half the things they say. “They love stirring the rest of the staff. They leave me alone but there’s payback if you stir them up too much,â€? she says with a smile. ,W LV XQLTXH WR Ë‹QG IULHQGV DV EXVLQHVV SDUWQHUV DQG the fun John and Tony bring to their store is key to their ongoing success. “We sat down and talked about it from day dot (and that reminds me, he still owes me $20, but that’s another story),â€? Tony said. “We just don’t worry too much. It’s not a complicated game running a business. You’ve just got to do it right, make it fun, and we like a laugh,â€? he said. John’s originally a Coonamble boy and Tony’s from Trundle (his dad’s the mayor, John said‌). It was on the cricket pitch however, playing for the South Dubbo Hornets in Dubbo, which seems to have cemented their friendship, both making a bit of a name for themselves back in the day. “John was known as the Master Blaster. He was a batsmen that terrorised a lot of bowlers. He could have gone anywhere with cricket, but he liked the country life,â€? Tony said. Ȥ7RQ\ HQGHG XS SOD\LQJ Ë‹UVW JUDGH LQ 1HZFDVWOH +H was one of the best bowlers ever,â€? John said.
They are also both Dads and as you can imagine, the novelty Father’s Day gifts available in store are right at home under their roof. From the ‘men’s name’ enamel mug range, for example the “Johnâ€? mug’s tagline reads, “Legendary: the original master of the Universeâ€?, and the “Tonyâ€? mug reads, “Expert in Everything.â€? Without a doubt, these friends are in life for a good time, and in business to make their customers’ lives just as good. Their extensive range of giftware will certainly put a smile on any Dad’s face especially LI WKH\ȢYH JRW D SDVVLRQ IRU 15/ RU WKH DXWRPRWLYH world. Their huge range of Diecast model cars include the best replicas of modern and vintage vehiles. 1HZ LQ VWRUH DUH +DUOH\ 'DYLGVRQ PRWRUELNHV $PHUican classics and Mustangs, and cars from a variety of
movies. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s plenty of motor racing memorabilia with over 160 varieties of racing cars such as the 1982 Holden Commodore VH Brock #05 and the Ford Falcon FG X 2017 Canto, Winterbottom #5. ,I 'DGȢV DQ 15/ IDQ DOO WHDPV DUH UHSUHVHQWHG IURP the Eels (Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s team) to the Dragons (Tonyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s team) plus everything in between. Merchandise ranges from shot glasses, barbecue aprons and long neck holders to car seat or steering wheel covers, face towels and travel mugs. <RX DUH VXUH WR Ë&#x2039;QG VRPHWKLQJ IRU 'DG WKLV )DWKHUȢV Day, and John and Tony are the blokes to ensure youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll walk out the door with a smile on your face and the perfect gift from Free Choice & Giftware East Dubbo Orana Mall.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
TALENT
Gravity-defying display of skill By NATALIE HOLMES THEY’RE a bona fide circus troupe but there’s not a ringmaster or clown in sight. That is the unique appeal of Gravity and Other Myths (GOM) who rely on skill and artistry to wow their audience. “One of the things is that they skip all the artifice,” GOM general manager Craig Harrison said. “There’s no trickery, no costumes, no effects. It’s just pure and raw incredible acrobats doing incredible things with their bodies. “The audience is also literally one metre away from them so you have a real sense of intimacy. You really feel that connection, its palpable and you can invest in that.” The performers were en route from Ireland to Germany at the time of writing and have enjoyed enormous international success since their inception. Including the upcoming Lost Lands Festival in Melbourne, Wellington will only be the fourth Australian venue where GOM has performed. “Kim Kiss from Wellington Arts contacted us and told us about this little festival and asked if it was possible (for us to be a part of it),” Mr Harrison told Dubbo Photo News. “We were just in the pro-
Gravity and Other Myths will present their show “A Simple Space” at Hermitage Hill Resort for this year’s Wellington Arts and Sculpture Festival. PHOTO: CHRIS HERZFELD
cess of forming our second company because we were so much in demand that we couldn’t keep up with the invitations. “The company was established in 2009 with seven members, all from Adelaide,” Mr Harrison explained. “They have now expanded to 26 members. “They have been doing their show ‘A Simple Space’
for five years, performing in 26 countries around the world. Two years ago, they started Backbone. The work itself is still very honest and DIY.” Some of the troupe have circus backgrounds, while others are natural acrobats. “They all come from different backgrounds like youth circus. A couple started as gymnasts and got sick of the
regimental training involved. They love the freedom of this and the expression.”
WHAT WHERE WHEN z Gravity and Other Myths z Wellington Arts and Sculpture Festival, Hermitage Hill Resort, Wellington z September 1, 7.30pm (gates open at 6pm)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
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Aug 23: Vera Miles, US actress, 89. Barbara Eden, US actress, I Dream of Jeannie, 87. Rowena Wallace, actress, 71. Gil Tucker, Cop Shop actor, 71. Rick Springfield, singer, actor, 69. Shelley Long, US actress, 69. Brett and Josh Morris, twin footy players, both 32. Aug 24: David Ireland, author, 91. Julie Anthony, entertainer, 69. Stephen Fry, British actor/writer, 61. Marlee Matlin, US actress, 53. Jon Sieben, swimmer, 52. Rachael Carpani, McLeod’s Daughters actress, 38. Rupert Grint, English actor, 30. Manu Ma’u, footy player, 30. Joel Thompson, footy player, 30. Aug 25: Sean Connery, actor, 88. Frederick Forsyth, novelist, 80. Gene Simmons, from rock band KISS, 69. Martin Amis, writer, 69. Elvis Costello, singer/songwriter, 64. Tim Burton, film director, 60. Billy Ray Cyrus, US singer, Miley’s dad, 57. Claudia Schiffer, German model, 48. John Ibrahim, Sydney identity, 48. Aaron Jeffery, actor, 48. Petria Thomas, swimmer, 43. Rachel Bilson, US actress, 37. Blake Lively, US actress, 31. Aug 26: Delvene Delaney, TV personality, 67. General David John Hurley, NSW Governor, 65. Shirley Manson, singer with Garbage, 52. Macaulay Culkin, US actor, 38. Chris Pine, actor, 38. Jesse Martin, sailor, 37. Aug 27: Daryl Dragon, of US duo The Captain and Tennille, 76. Kerry O’Brien, TV journalist, 73. Barbara Bach, former Bond girl, 71. Bernhard Langer, German golfer, 61. Andy Bichel, cricketer, 48. Sarah Chalke, US actress, 42. Carlos Moya, Spanish tennis player, 42. Mark Webber, Formula One racer, 42. Aaron Paul, US actor, 39. Megan Dunn, Dubbo-born cycling champ, 27. Aug 28: David Soul, Hutch on TV’s Starsky & Hutch, 75. Daniel Stern, US actor, 61. Sonia Kruger, TV personality, 53. Shania Twain, US singer, 53. Jason Priestley, US actor, 49. Jack Black, US actor-singer, 49. LeAnn Rimes, US country singer, 36. Florence Welch, British singer, 32. Simon Mannering, NRL player, 32. Andrej Pejic, model, 27. Aug 29: Elliott Gould, US actor, 80. Rebecca De Mornay, US actress, 59. Charlie Pickering, The Weekly host (pictured), 41.
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News IN BRIEF
EARLY CHILDCARE
The wheels on this bus go round and round... to Gowrie! By DARCEE NIXON
THE staff at Gowrie NSW Early Education and Care Dubbo are almost as excited as the children are about the centre’s new bus. “We now have a bus, so we can now take before school care, after school care and vacation care for children ages 5-12. Before and after school care is available now and vacation care will be available from the next school holidays,” Centre Manager Gemma Lavelle told Dubbo Photo News. “We were just a childcare centre for 0- to 5-year-olds and now we are able to take children from 0 to 12 years old. We use the bus for excursions, particularly with the older children; but we are now starting to take younger children. We can transport children from six months old,” Ms Lavelle added. The Gowrie childcare providers take kids to the library quite often to borrow books. This week, they are going to the zoo to learn all about beetles and bugs, and in a few weeks they will be off to Woolies at Delroy Park to have a tour of the supermarket. “With before and after school care and vacation care there will be 10 places available each day and we will have the ability to go and collect the children from school and bring them over to the centre,” Ms Lavelle said.
STEM grants open for inspiring students FROM creating robots to attending space camps and events like the International Science and Engineering Fair, students in Dubbo now have the chance to live their science dreams. The latest round of the Australian Government’s Sponsorship Grants is now open to primary and high school students to participate in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) events. This includes STEM conferences, competitions and other events in Australia and internationally. Applications can be submitted online by a primary or secondary school, or an incorporated not for profit organisation via www.business.gov.au.
Relay For Life Early bird registration closes soon
Amelia, Daniel, Elijah, Allegra, Harrison and Chace can’t wait to go on more excursions in Gowrie NSW Education and Care Dubbo’s new bus. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
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EARLY bird registration for the Orana Relay For Life is only $15, a saving of 25 per cent on normal registration – but the early bird offer closes this Sunday, August 26. Registrations are however open all the way up until the relay on Saturday and Sunday, October 20 and 21. Funds raised support local programs for cancer patients, survivors and carers, and help roll out prevention programs aimed at beating cancer. To register visit www.relayforlife.org.au/orana. Enter ‘oranaearlybird’ to receive the discounted rate. An information night will be held on Tuesday, September 4, at 6pm at the Commercial Hotel, Dubbo.
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
EMERGENCY ISSUES
The Dubbo Photo News page dedicated to the hard work of our emergency services personnel.
News analysis by JOHN RYAN
River chase POLICE spent hours searching for a man after he assaulted a female probationary constable on Tuesday afternoon about 4.30. Police said officers stopped a 29-year-old man near the railway bridge below the library to speak to him but he went to run. The female officer attempted to restrain him and got a smack in the face for her troubles. Police launched a major manhunt as far as Lazy River looking for the individual, who is known to them. The search included senior management which shows the troops that the bosses won’t let people get away with assaulting one of their officers.
Real on-ground cooperation
THERE’S been a lot in the news lately about the dysfunction and disconnect between the Rural Fire Service (RFS) and NSW Fire and Rescue, particularly down on the south coast. I’ve seen this sort of thing firsthand over many years and thankfully around Dubbo cooperation between the two services has been good to excellent for most of the past 20 or so years. But it’s always great to see people pointing out just how good it really is. Here’s a comment from a bush firie to the Narromine Fire and Rescue guys: To the 401 Crew... Hey 401, I’d like to most sincerely thank you for your response to the flu/ceiling fire at Morris Road on Saturday. That place is my mother’s house, and I’ve just been out to visit her to assist with the insurance and provide her some support. I’m a volunteer with Bungendore RFS, and I must say I’m very impressed with the work you did on saving that house! Stopping the fire extension in the roof space after the flu without it starting something in one of the rooms is no small feat. Some very impressive work by you guys and the local RFS that turned up! Thanks again! Pete Morris This fire occurred at 3.30pm last Saturday west of the town’s aerodrome, and Narromine’s 401 crew weren’t the only emergency services involved, they were backed
Burnt dry grass: The aftermath of Sunday afternoon’s grass fire near Huckle Street. Strong winds at the time made the job for firefighters a lot more difficult. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
up by one Dubbo 280 pumper and a HAZMAT unit, as well as six RFS tankers, police and Essential Energy staff. There were no injuries to the elderly woman or firefighters. The fire appears to have started in the kitchen and there was extensive damage to the roof as well as smoke and water damage to much of the house and its contents.
Counter terrorism in Dubbo DUBBO local Mick Willing, now an assistant commissioner in charge of counter terrorism and special tactics for NSW Police, was in Dubbo this week for one of six forums as part of the NSW Police Force’s Crowded Places strategy. The commonwealth government last year released its national strategy regarding protected places and the Dubbo forum aims to inform local governments, businesses and event organisers on how they can help protect crowded spaces by making them more resilient when it comes to terrorism. Some issues which will be cov-
ered include threats posed by: • Active armed offenders; • Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) • Hostile vehicle mitigation. Assistant Commissioner Willing said it’s all about keeping crowded spaces safe, and he believes a whole of community response is the best way to make that happen. Mick Willing has a track record when it comes to holistic responses – he was heavily involved in the whole-of-government approach which was first used to combat the massive social and crime issues which used to plague Dubbo when he was the police crime manager for Orana.
Huckle Street grass fire CREWS from Dubbo, Delroy and the RFS were kept busy on Sunday afternoon when strong winds fanned a grassfire and sent embers flying in all directions on the riverbank near Huckle Street in South Dubbo. Three Dubbo appliances and five Rural Fire Service (FRS) tankers put in the hard yards to combat the blaze. The cause is undetermined but
it’s believed it may have begun from a campfire. Firies are urging anyone who lights up in the open to be aware that the landscape and vegetation is tinder dry, and any fires can send burning embers great distances which means a small fire can turn into several big fires in a very short space of time.
Dubbo bandit arrested EARLIER this month a couple of Dubbo business were allegedly terrorised by a tomahawk-wielding bandit who stole an amount of cash from a Cobra Street business after threatening a staff member, then a few days later did the same thing at a Victoria Street business but fled without any cash. Investigations by Orana Mid Western Police quickly linked both robberies and identified a 41-year-old as a suspect for these offences. The suspect has been located and arrested by Bathurst Police and charged with a number of other offences along with the Dubbo robberies. A 42-year-old Brewarrina man had bail refused at Bathurst Local Court to re-appear on October 15. A big thanks to the Bathurst cops for their assistance.
Alleged home invader arrested NSW Police supplied this image of the arrest of a man in relation to an alleged home invasion last Thursday.
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A 43-YEAR-OLD Dubbo man got the shock of his life last Thursday, August 16, when he allegedly opened the door to his residence after someone knocked on it. Police say he was immediately
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Silly season IN this digital Big Brother age of cameras everywhere, one couple has received more than their 15 minutes of fame. Last Wednesday a male and female were captured on CCTV footage allegedly shoplifting from a retail store in Macquarie Street. Police were told and supplied with a DVD of that footage. Among the items stolen was a black long-sleeved Oakley Jumper and a dark grey long-sleeve Oakley hoodie. At 10pm on the same date a 38-year-old Dubbo male presented at Dubbo Police Station on unrelated matters and an eagle-eyed officer noticed the male who attended the station also matched the CCTV footage of the stealing incident that had been provided to police – to top things off he was actually wearing the black longsleeved Oakley jumper. He was arrested, interviewed and charged in relation to receiving stolen goods, goods in personal custody suspected of being stolen and breach of conditional bail. He was bail refused until November 9 when he will appear at Dubbo Local Court. z Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best
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attacked by a number of offenders who were armed with metal bars. They allege the attack lasted several minutes before the offenders fled, stealing some property as they went. The victim was taken to Dubbo Base Hospital and treated for a number of wounds before being released. A police investigation identified a 32-year-old Dubbo man as a suspect. He was located by police at a local caravan park and arrested, charged with Aggravated Break and Enter and Commit Serious Indictable Offence; Armed with Intent; Robbery whilst Armed with Offensive Weapon cause Wounding. The man has been bail refused by police and at court and will next appear at Dubbo Local Court on October 17. Inquiries are continuing into the co-offenders. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Dubbo Police Station on 6883 1599 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
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IN BRIEF
Newell Highway Strategy receives $2 million fund for development study THE Coalition Government has announced funding of $2 million for the development of a Newell Highway Corridor Strategy. Dubbo-based Assistant Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment, Mark Coulton, said the study will provide valuable insights to pave the way for Newell Highway upgrades. “This study will investigate opportunities to better coordinate the highway with rail operations, building on the far-reaching social and economic benefits of Inland Rail,” Mr Coulton said. “As a local MP, I am excited about the local job creation and investment opportunities Inland Rail will provide, including to farmers and regional businesses.”
Can you, in eight moves, turn the top word into the bottom one? You may alter only one letter at a time to make another word. We have entered the centre word to keep you on the right track.
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LOVE YOUR WORK Georgie Age: 19 Status: Single pringle What’s your job? Team Leader at Oliver’s Real Food Dubbo Best part of your job? Being in such a happy environment Best advice your mother gave you? She literally sends me quotes and advice everyday, God love her, so TBH I couldn’t pick just one thing If you could be invisible for one day, what would you do? Defs annoy and scare my brother and Dad Favourite quote/saying? Work hard, play hard Something you can’t live without? My phone Naughtiest thing you did when you were a child? I used to sneak my dog inside with me to sleep when it would rain Three words to describe me are... funny, confident, puppies
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PHOTO: DARCEE NIXON
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COUNCIL SNAPSHOT AUGUST 25
Dubbo Sustainable City Expo & Science Festival
DUBBO SUSTAINABLE DUBBO REGION CITY EXPO AND SCIENCE SPORTS AWARDS FESTIVAL - SAT 25 NOMINATIONS OPEN. AUGUST 2018 Nomination forms available online, Featuring hands on science exhibits, native animal encounters, electric bikes & cars plus a chance to learn tips to save energy, water & reduce waste.
nominations close September 28 2018. The awards night will be held on Friday 23 November 2018, 6pm at the Dubbo RSL Auditorium.
From 10am – 2pm
NEWS & UPDATES / WHAT’S ON / HAVE YOUR SAY / PAY YOUR RATES / POSITIONS VACANT
COUNCIL OFFERS FREE WATER TO ELIBLE RESIDENTS Eligible rural customers can access up to 10,000 litres of water per application from stand pipes across the region. For eligibility and application forms visit Council website.
At the Western Plains Cultural Centre AUGUST 27
Council Meeting AUGUST 31
Council rates due
DUBBO.NSW.GOV.AU CUSTOMER SERVICE TEAM 6801 4000
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
OPINION, ANALYSIS, FEATURES, DEPTH. ENERGY
Sun shines brightly on renewable project
This array of solar panels sits on 55 hectares of land to the east of Dubbo. This site and its sister site near Narromine generate a total of approximately 61,000 megawatt hours of renewable energy each year. PHOTO: NEOEN
By NATALIE HOLMES WITH the Orana region’s abundant sunshine, it comes as no surprise that the Dubbo Solar Hub Project is a local success story. Completed in 2017 by French company Neoen, with sites in Dubbo and Narromine, the Dubbo Solar Hub is a 28.7MWdc renewable electricity project consisting of almost 90 hectares of ground solar panels. “The project consists of 180 solar panels installed on 55 hectares of land to the east of Dubbo, and 30 hectares of land to the
north of Narromine,” Neoen managing di- alent to either taking 16,000 cars off the rector Franck Woitiez explained. road or planting 80,000 trees, producing enough electricity to power approximateDescribed on its website as ly 9000 homes with renewable “environmentally and economenergy,” Mr Woitiez told Dubbo ically sound”, the solar farm Photo News. has the capacity to generate apThe Dubbo Solar Hub is one proximately 61,000 megawatt o of 12 large-scale solar PV prohours (MWh) of renewable enjjects supported by the Australergy into the national power i ian Renewable Energy Agency grid each year. ( (ARENA). “Making a major contribution The electricity generated from to Australia’s greenhouse gas TH E GREE N EDITION th the Dubbo plant is transmitted reductions, this will be equiv-
underground to the Dubbo South Essential Energy substation, located approximately 2 kilometres to the west of the site, while the Narromine plant is connected directly to an adjacent 22kV line, also owned by Essential Energy. The Dubbo Solar Hub site was chosen for its superior solar resources and proximity to an electricity network along with connection capacity. There is an adequate local electricity load with potential for growth, and landholders in the area have been supportive of the project, Neoen said
ORGANICS RECYCLING
The new bin: It’s easy being green By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY
FOR the last six weeks, the organics processing plant in Dubbo has been turning your food scraps into mulch and compost. While the contents of your green bin may currently be small, when the weather improves and spring comes around, grass clippings and garden pruning will increase the green waste collection significantly. In the meantime, Dubbo Photo News asked Dubbo residents how they’re adjusting to sorting their green waste from their general. Shane Clarke: So far we have deposited one bag in the bin – what a waste for our house. If we as residents have to have three different bins, why is it that, when you look around town, Council still only has the one
green bin everywhere and not separate recycling bins like we have. Should they not be leading by example? And yes, I know there is some duel bins like out the front of Coles and Riverdale. Susie Wade: Every house and lifestyle are different. Most of our green waste goes into our compost bin or to the chooks. Heather Middleton: Well, I do use the green bags. Lyndal Cook: The new bin system along with watching ‘War on Waste’ (on ABC-TV) has changed things in our house for the good. We’re already recycling. All food scraps are now going to the green bin for composting as well as garden waste. The new system is great, but the way it was implemented was NOT! This has turned people off which is a HUGE shame as it is such a great
thing for our planet. Ali Jones: A fantastic initiative, what a great way to help communities as a whole start thinking about ways to reduce, reuse and recycle. Now to start a campaign on soft plastic recycling and we will nearly have zero landfill waste each week. Come on Dubbo, get on board! Emma Lyons: Woollies accept most soft plastics. They definitely need a campaign to promote it. I know that they are slowly implementing strategies to encourage people to return plastic/reusable bags in return for rewards points, but I have noticed that not many people are aware of the plastic return. Little steps I guess, people are so reluctant to change! Alexandra Caldin: It is brilliant. We now use no plastic bin bags as the few things going in
our landfill bin don’t need one. I really like the fact that the green bin can also be used for greasy paper and cardboard too. We take our soft plastics to Woollies to be recycled. We could easily manage a fortnightly collection for our red bin as it is never full (which is amazing!). We are a family of six with one still in nappies. It does take a little more effort, but not much, and it quickly becomes habit. We human beings need to make this effort together to make a change. Ros Roche: I love the idea. It’s great. My boys have even got the hang of using it correctly and it will be so much easier over summer for lawn clippings. Louise Lehane: Our green bin would be lucky to be a quarter full, if that. Will start freezing and put it out when we need.
Young Dubbo residents Jayden and Brody Roche have got the recycling of their organics waste down to a fine art. Good job, boys! PHOTO: DARCEE NIXON.
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
LOCAL NEWS
Empowering indigenous youth at high school Wellington initiative recognises the need for unique life skills education for girls
The Miimi Girls Program will run at Wellington High School during Term 3. Some of the girls are pictured during the launch event in Wellington last week. PHOTO: TARA LEE PHOTOGRAPHY, WELLINGTON
AN initiative aimed at helping educate young local Indigenous women has been launched thanks to an historic partnership between Wellington Aboriginal Corporation Health Services (WACHS) and Wellington High School. The Miimi Girls Program will be run during term three. The project’s aim is to empower, support and ensure self-pride in all areas of life for the young participants through a range of awareness-raising points including personal hygiene, mental health, culture and mentoring support. WACHS CEO Darren Ah-See said his organisation is committed to working in the local community and in particular with women. “The Miimi Program will allow the girls to see that they can make better choices and be better educated on the options available to them and their families,” Mr Ah See said. “We are excited to have ‘Our
Miimi Program’ start at Wellington High School. “We recognised that there’s a need for a unique girls’ program within our community where our young girls can come to school, and feel safe, connected and supported, all while learning basic life skills (from) the Indigenous support staff,” he said. The Indigenous Support Team from Wellington High School is also keen to have many inspirational women and elders from the community on board to help guide and mentor the girls throughout the program. Teachers from the unit believe community involvement is crucial for the passing down of invaluable knowledge and to help the girls build positive connections within our community. Participants will undertake significant components of the program including social media, presentation and make up, leadership, sexual health, resume writing, culture, drugs and alcohol.
STATE ELECTION 2019 Candidate Q&A
Mathew Dickerson, Independent In the second of Dubbo Photo News’ series of Q&As with the candidates for the 2019 NSW State Election, we meet Independent candidate Mr Mathew Dickerson. What are three main things about you that should get voters to support you? What aspects of your life are you most proud of? I am a self-made businessman having started six businesses in Dubbo over the last 29 years. These businesses have all been created by me by listening to the community and creating a business that addressed the identified needs. They have all been successful businesses employing local people and many have won local, State, National and International awards. After having developed a range of business skills and being involved in a range of community projects, I wanted to contribute more to the community. I stood for Council in 2004 and found that my business skills could translate to being an effective Councillor and then, eventually in 2011, a very effective Mayor. From 2011 to 2016, the group of Councillors and Council staff helped Dubbo progress at unprecedented levels and I still receive very positive feedback related to my time as Mayor. I am a fourth generation Dubbo electorate local and my wife is a fifth generation Dubbo electorate local. I have grown up in Dubbo and built my businesses in Dubbo (although some have expanded outside Dubbo) and raised my four children in Dubbo. I am passionate about this region and want to use
my skills and experience to deliver the best possible outcomes for residents in this region. What is your preferred way to relax? I like to stay fit and relax at the same time by riding and racing Mountain Bikes as a Member of the local Dubbo Mountain Bike Club. I like to keep my brain active by writing and learning and reciting poetry and then performing poetry at various events or for various groups. In long Mountain Bike races, I combine both by reciting poetry while I race to try and forget about how much pain I am in! Can you briefly list your ten most passionate policy positions – the ones you will not budge on. Representation, representation, representation. One of the greatest issues people have spoken to me about during my current listening tour is that individuals feel that they are not listened to by major parties and they don’t feel like they are being truly represented. If elected, my job will be to listen to the views and concerns of people in the electorate and represent those views in our Government. My personal opinion on various issues is largely irrelevant as I have to ignore my personal views to represent the views of the electorate. My view is that I shouldn’t dictate my views to the electorate but instead I should represent the views of the electorate. Please answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the following: Do you support Coal Seam Gas (CSG) extraction in NSW? Would you support reductions for penalty rates for NSW government workers? Would you support the privatisation of any services at Dubbo and Mudgee
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Hospitals, including to non-clinical services? Are you supportive of the privatisation of the poles and wires carried out by the current NSW government? Would you support the decriminalisation of the possession of small amounts of cannabis? The result of the state election is very much up in the air, but if the ALP wins power do you think the unions will have too much power? Once again my role is to listen to the electorate and represent the views of the electorate. After I finish my listening tour I will develop a paper that identifies the issues in the electorate. These will involve the points you mention here and many others, but it would be premature of me to rattle off a list of Yes and No answers to questions when I am still actively engaged in listening to how all ends of the electorate wish to be represented. The next two questions go to integrity, and they’re asked in the context of recent scandals involving state politicians across the board. Do you have any skeletons in your closet which would diminish you in the voters’ eyes? No. Have you ever used undue influence related to any elected positions
you may have held to bestow favours on friends or family, etc? No Prior to and since you announced your candidacy you ramped up the advertising spend for your telco business in Mudgee and Dubbo. Clearly your business has significantly increased its advertising spend recently, including featuring your image and the word “trust”. Are you claiming these ads as business deductions and do you believe this practise is legal, ethical and moral? I started my first business when I was in Year 7 at school. The first business name I used was M.A.D. Screen Printing after the initials of my name. My next business was named M.A.D. Industries – again using the initials of my name. During the formation of my businesses, using my personal brand was very important to help develop those businesses and give people confidence in those businesses as they had trust in my integrity and prior performance. For the five years I was Mayor, I withdrew my personal branding from my businesses as I didn’t want to use my position in the public arena to promote my personal
interests. After the amalgamation I was no longer the Mayor of the city and held no public position, so I had no moral issue with again using my personal brand to help promote my business. After focusing solely on the City for five years there was no doubt that my businesses had suffered and needed some reinvigorating. If elected to State Parliament, I will again do as I did when I was Mayor and not use my public position to promote any of my businesses. Being on Council or in Government does not preclude an individual from owning a business and I spoke with the former Mayor of Orange about this exact issue. John Davis was Mayor of Orange for 12 years and also owned a business called John Davis Motors in Orange. There was no requirement for him to rename his business or sell his business while he was Mayor of Orange. ••• z The Nationals are due to confirm their nomination for the State Election this weekend. Dubbo Photo News will offer a similar Q&A to that candidate and publish their responses here as soon as possible.
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
LOCAL NEWS CAREERS
HEAR OUR HEART
Uni students seeing their futures in agriculture
How is your child’s hearing? By DARCEE NIXON The Hear Our Heart Ear Bus is continuing its great work, doing free community hearing testing for children of all ages and visiting all schools in the Dubbo region. If you would like to make an appointment for your child, be sure to drop into their office at 24 Erskine Street Dubbo or phone 6884 8751. Pictured are, back, volunteer audiologist from Sydney Karen Campbell, Alyssa Davis, front, Lauren Hawkins from Hear Our Heart.
LOW FOOD MILES
Buying local is a key ingredient to help us through this drought By DARCEE NIXON THE current drought catastrophe has, ironically, brought out the best in many Australians. Our primary producers, the backbone of our country, are experiencing a harsh low in production, but help is at hand. Rural communities, townships and our city cousins have united to help a mate out. Many individuals and businesses have thrown their support behind the drought relief cause by fundraising and donating to charities such as Supporting the regional food economy: Paul Coon, holding apples that Aussie Helpers and Buy a Bale. were grown at Borenore, and Mick Coon, holding mandarins that were The major effort of Channel grown at Mildura. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS Nine with their Farm Aid TelHowever, it is crucial to re- Veg is just one of the Dubbo ethon, broadcast from Dubbo on Monday this week, was a member that raising aware- region’s local producers and significant reassurance to ru- ness and making donations they also retail the products ral NSW that we are not being are not the only ways that we of other local growers. “We grow brassicas all year left to battle it out alone, and can be supporting our famthose 23 truckloads of donat- ers during drought. Farming round, which include cabbaged hay from Western Austral- is a business and locals need es, broccoli and other greens. ia that arrived in Condobolin to be supporting local busi- In season we grow stone fruit, last Friday by convoy have ness by buying locally-grown heavy veggies, watermelon, peaches and much more,” Paul been a godsend to more than produce. Mick and Paul’s Fruit and Coon told Dubbo Photo News. 200 drought-affected farmers.
The family business has 100 acres on the Bell River flats just out of Wellington as well as 4500 fruit trees near the Troy bridge in Dubbo. They buy in stock from other local producers to retail, including from Little Big Dairy Co at Rawsonville, Farmer Brown’s Eggs at Spicer’s Creek, Canobolas Eggs at Molong and oranges from Mumble Peg Citrus at Narromine. The Dubbo Farmer’s Markets, held on the first and third Saturday of each month at the Macquarie Lions Park, are a fantastic opportunity to meet our local growers and buy fresh, local produce. A morning at the Farmer’s Markets is the best way to spend the early hours of your Saturday – be sure to bring the whole family along! Rural townships are greatly affected by the success or failure of farming seasons; and when money is spent locally, the local economy and the whole community benefits.
Fletcher International staff at the University of New England's Farming Futures career expo included Claudia Bright, Forbes Corby, Maddy Herbert, Courtney Power, Jess Fearnley, Meg Rice and Emily-Jo Copeland. PHOTO: SUPPLIED.
By JOHN RYAN IN the midst of what’s been labelled the worst drought in living memory, Fletchers International workers are doing their bit to create exciting career pathways for university students looking to move into jobs in agriculture. A number of staff attended the Careers Fair at Armidale’s University of New England and, according to Farming Futures Executive Committee fair coordinators Forbes Corby and Maxwell Laurie, their engagement with the students was a huge success. "I would like to sincerely thank (the Fletcher's team) for your sponsorship and involvement in the Careers Fair at the University of New Eng-
land, Armidale. It’s with these additional funds that you provide that we’re able to create the event that Farming Futures is today," Mr Laurie said. “From our perspective the event was a huge success with fantastic feedback from all involved. It was estimated that over 400 students, both secondary and tertiary, attended the event. “Fletchers’ attendance contributed to the record number of companies to ever attend our Careers Fair, with a total of 38 booths,” he said. The Farming Futures event enabled students to experience a diverse range of companies and discover the many career opportunities within today’s agricultural sector, Mr Laurie added.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
7 DAYS • ANALYSIS OF THE WEEK’S NEWS
Telethon tally approx $8m and counting John Ryan ❚ OPINION & ANALYSIS Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best
MALE models from Mudgee mingled with brekky show hosts, farmer reps and locals at Dubbo Showground on Monday to kick off a telethon to raise money for drought-affected farmers and communities, with the total raised close to $8 million and climbing. Dubbo Photo News snapped Doctor Doctor star Roger Corser slipping a quick 50 to the mechanical bull operator in the hopes he’d take it slow. He pulled a hamstring playing Aussies Rules in Round 3 and was looking for a gentle ride. That didn’t pay off, the actor got tossed after less than 20 seconds but luckily he didn’t require the services of a real doctor (not the acting variety). That short ride did raise thousands for the drought relief charity. For a bloke who grew up in Melbourne, he says he’s got a great affinity with farmers and dry times.
Doctor Doctor star Roger Corser having a quiet word with the mechanical bull operator, hoping to get an easier ride. PHOTOS: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
“My mum’s family are wheat/ sheep farmers in Wedderburn, north west Victoria, so I spent a lot of school holidays up at the farm as a kid,” Mr Corser said. “In my acting career I’ve had a couple of shows set in the country, three years on McLeod’s Daughters which was shot outside Adelaide in Gawler, and now obviously with Doctor Doctor we get to head to Mudgee and we love it, and the people of Mudgee have
really adopted us their own,” he said. For visitors to Mudgee, who saw verdant green hills in the wet winter of 2016, this long dry has been a huge shock. “It’s beautiful country no matter what, but it’s vastly different to when we first started shooting there and you feel for the people – that’s their livelihood,” Mr Corser said. “We’ve become very close to the
The Walkabout Barber with the Today Show’s Karl Stefanovic
people of the town. They’re not complaining at all because that’s not what people do out this way, but it has been tough because of the weather and it’s heartbreaking because it’s no-one’s fault – you’re at the mercy of Mother Nature and we just hope that it can turn around. “When the offer was given to come out here to Dubbo I just jumped at the chance. I have an affinity with the local area – it’s great to get the message out to
the greater community in Australia and I think it’s good to connect the people from the country with people from the city so they know that they’re not alone.” THERE was plenty going on during the Telethon and orchestrating behind the scenes was Sophie Upcroft, a local girl who’s been a senior producer at the Today Show for a few years now. She’s just scored an on-the-road reporting gig in Brisbane but was
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
7 DAYS • ANALYSIS OF THE WEEK’S NEWS enticed back to help run the Dubbo roadshow, running from one part of the outside broadcast to another, clipboard in hand, just like a scene out of a movie. Another familiar face was an old cameraman of mine, Sam Reynolds. He’s been with Channel 9 for 16 years and is head camo for the presenters there now. ANOTHER semi-local was singer Shannon Noll who threw in a few live performances. A Condo boy, he said his hometown is struggling because when farmers don’t have harvests, they don’t make any money and that seasonal work for locals in country towns just disappears. “Mate, this is at absolute crisis point – we need some rain now, we need some more rain after that and then some more rain after that,” Mr Noll said. “I don’t think a lot of people understand that even if it rains now it will be three months before we get a good feed out of it. “Dire times at the moment mate, rain’s the only solution but at least everyone is digging deep for them,” he said, just before jumping on the mechanical bull to raise some much-needed cash for the appeal. ONE of the hits of the day was the attention given to Brian Dowd, the Walkabout Barber. You don’t often equate a haircut with mental health initiatives, but this mobile barber shop specialises in helping people to open up. “The chairs become magi-
cal, a lot of the farmers who’re coming through, it gives them an opportunity to sit down and when they start to speak they start sharing their story and what’s happening on the land,” Mr Dowd said. “I’ve actually got a post-graduate degree in trauma and recovery, I don’t tell the guys in the chair that. “I’m working away behind-the-scenes so I know I’ve done my best – give them an opportunity not only to think more positively but feel a lot lighter on the inside,” he said. He was bankrupt at 26, and at 27 he tried to take his own life, so he’s got plenty of lived experience when it comes to empathising with people who stand Singer Shannon Noll on the mechanical bull. to lose everything, and the pressures that plactirement to help out during Mones on their mental processing. day’s telethon. He’s also involved “I’m 46 now, I’m a survivor, and with the very active Mudgee racnow I know what it takes to sur- ing crew and they’re planning vive and I want to give other peo- something different to help farmple those tools,” Mr Dowd said. ing families. “We run three-hour trauma and “September second, the whole recovery workshops so we take aim of it is to have the farmers and people through and then hopeful- their families come to one of the ly they can pass those tools on to best race meetings of the year for their clients.” the Mudgee Race Club. “Entry is free for them, we’ll FORMER Channel 9 sports pre- take them to a marquee, all wined senter Ken Sutcliffe came out of re- and dined, free of charge, there
will be make-up artists and hairdressers there to pamper the ladies, the kids are going to have a lot of fun on the jumping castles and things like that, and there’s a truckload of seafood being donated. “There’s no fundraising on the day, we just want farmers and their families to get away from dusty paddocks, to get away from starving stock, to get away from crops that have failed; for a few hours, take a break, let the mind and the brain rest a little bit, and mingle with one another and have a chat – it’s so important, we believe communication is the key to these people getting through what is a terribly difficult time, “ he said. NATIONAL Farmers Federation (NFF) chief executive Tony Mahar was up from his Canberra headquarters to help raise awareness of the issues brought on by the lack of rain. “Channel 9, Rotary and NFF established a donations campaign to try and raise money for drought-affected farmers and their families, so it gives us an opportunity to come and help communicate that and also have a discussion about how drought’s affecting farmers, their families and regional com-
munities,” Mr Mahar said. “There’s clearly some people that are really hurting out there and so that’s the immediate focus – how can people help them.” When asked should the federal government start buying and shipping boatloads of Western Australian grain to the eastern states, he said a huge challenge was the fact that there’s so much happening in this space. “I’ve taken lots of phone calls on lots of good ideas but you’ve got to try and be practical and realistic about how difficult they are to implement and what impact some of those decisions are going to make,” Mr Mahar said. “You can’t just intervene into the market and expect nothing to happen, there’s going to be flowon impacts and there’s going to be people who have prepared and have got business structures based around existing markets, so if you start toying with the market you just have to be aware of any potential consequences,” he added. “We’re having discussions with state governments, the commonwealth government, charities, farmer organisations, lots of chats, just trying to do the right thing,” he said. z Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best z Additional reporting by Dubbo Photo News staff. Note: John Ryan is also a councillor on Dubbo Regional Council, and is also employed part-time by Landcare. He writes here in his capacity as a journalist.
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
NEWS PROFILE
Dubbo student joins world youth at United Nations Dubbo student Marcello Davis featured in last week’s Dubbo Photo News, sharing his experience attending the Global Young Leadership Conference in the USA. For this week's edition we've interviewed another local student, Phoenix Aubusson-Foley, who also attended the conference. Phoenix shares some adventures and insights from his trip in this Q&A with Dubbo Photo News on his trip of a lifetime, although from the sounds of things he’s been bitten by the travel bug. Tell us about the trip, what was it all about? The idea of the trip was to send “scholars” from all corners of the globe to participate in a global summit, aka a United Nations meeting for youth. Where did you go and for how long? We went to Washington, DC and New York City for 13 days. Most of our time in Washington was spent in country groups and I was allocated to “South Africa”. We had to research current social issues within that country and think of resolutions. How many other students were on the trip? There were 380 students from
around the world including Ecuador, Italy, Greece, Nigeria and Trinidad. Tell us about some friendships you made. My best friend John Michael was from Texas – we were in the same country group. Also Siu from Trinidad & Tobago who was a bundle of energy, and Ingrid from Norway who was the most political out of all us. That’s just a few. We’re all still in touch on social media. Tell us about your hosts. Envision is the company that runs youth activities like the Global Young Leadership Conference I was on. They plan everything and make sure we follow it to the let-
Phoenix Aubusson-Foley (back row, centre) at the United Nations in New York solving the world's problems as part of the Global Young Leaders conference. PHOTO: SUPPLIED.
ter, and make sure we have fun. What was the highlight for you? Times Square (in New York City) because it was honestly the most magnificent, busy, jumbled place and it had everything. What were the most important things you learnt over there? How to negotiate world issues and the goals to resolve them. What were the most important things you learnt about yourself during the trip? Independence. How was it when it came time to say goodbye and come back home? I want to say painful, but it’s not going to be forever until I see them again. It was unpleasant
though. How did you raise money for the trip? Kerry Condon from Darcy’s Old Wares in Lucknow really surprised me early on with a very generous donation which I am unbelievably grateful for. Dubbo Regional Council were also very supportive along with family and friends. I also got a job which helped a lot. There is no way I could have got there though without the support of businesses like Darcy’s, and everyone else. Anything you’d like to add? If anyone gets the opportunity to go to an event like this, you’d be crazy to turn it down.
EVERY SINGLE DAY ❚ By KIM MACRAE THERE’S an old song lyric that goes: “Some days are diamonds, some days are stone.” It’s true... that’s how it is and it’s not going to change. But there are ways we can make the diamond days glitter even more brilliantly and lighten the days of stone. For many years I was a high school teacher. I tried to make my classes interesting and at least a bit of fun. Of course, my students, being teenagers, pushed the boundaries – but more often than not, they responded positively: Firstly, because I was strict. I expected them to do their best and they appreciated that. And secondly because I treated them like nice people. That approach worked then, and it works now. Each day – diamond or stone – let’s make a genuine effort to be the best us – but always with the guideline of treating other people the way we want to be treated. The thing is, we all know WE want to be treated nicely, but it can be easy to overlook the fact that other people feel that need as well. Why? Because most of the time when we’re interacting with those “other” people they have their “game face” on – they’re acting so confident, or scary, or like they just don’t care. But you know that voice we all have inside? The critic who’s forever ready to point out our faults and failings, reminding us we’re too old, too young, not smart enough, too whatever. Everybody has that critic – we all suffer times of self-doubt, of feeling
Darcy's Old Wares Lucknow owner Kerry Condon lent support to Phoenix on his quest to attend the Global Young Leaders conference in the USA.
“not good enough”, but at the same time we all want to be seen and respected as good people. So remember, do our best for ourselves, but take into account those we come in contact with – not just because it’s the right, respectful and responsible thing to do, but also because, when we do, mostly ‘they’ will do the same back. Win win, diamond or stone. And here’s a thought – diamonds come from the commonest of stones, coal, that have been put under pressure. THOSE of you who know me are aware that I’m normally a confident and positive person – or at least behave that way. But like most of us, that’s not always the case inside my head. To write this new weekly column in Dubbo Photo News, I’ll be drawing on some of the pieces I started writing about six years ago, when I was going through a challenging time. By challenging I mean physically, mentally, financially, and with family. Luckily, I have a wonderful, supportive wife and some great friends who were there for me. But I did come to realise there was only one person who could get me back on track. So, I started writing reminders and thoughts regularly as a way of forcing myself to focus on the ‘positives’ rather than the ‘negatives’. I’m sure some of you can relate to those times when it’s hard to find something to be happy about. Each week, I’ll be writing a short piece inspired by the song “Every Single Day”. It’s got an uplifting beat, some cool guitar played by awesome local muso Wez Thompson, and lyrics which list some of the many simple choices we can make – to make our lives better. Every Single Day. z Kim Macrae is the Dubbo-based founder of iKiFit
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
COUNCIL WATCH Green bin keeping tonnes of waste from landfill
Dubbo Photo News’s independent reporting on and analysis of Dubbo Regional Council activities
By YVETTE AUBUSSON-FOLEY IT’S an eye-opener standing in front of just six weeks’ worth of Dubbo, Wellington, Narromine and Mudgee’s collected food scraps piled high in the sun, because it can only be described as a small mountain. It resembles and thankfully smells like dirt, and is the first tangible benefit of the Dubbo Regional Organics Processing Plant (DROPP) which is keeping thousands of kilos of methane-producing waste out of landfill. The second benefit is the repurposing of organic waste into mulch and compost. “It’s of enormous benefit to keep this out of landfill. We want people to understand that. It’s for the benefit of everyone. We can’t just keep throwing stuff out where it’s entombed forever,” Dubbo Regional Council’s Solid Waste manager Mark Giebel told Dubbo Photo News. The very first load of material collected with the new three bin system introduced on July 2, is currently maturing in the sun, after being processed in sheds, called ‘tunnels’, for 14 days which controls moisture and temperature to reach above 60 degrees to pasteurise weed seeds and other nasties. “That’s a big component. After it’s finished in there it’s taken up on to the maturation pad where it continues to break down. If you dug your hand into that there’d still be quite a lot of heat in it,” Mr Giebel said. From start to finish the process takes about three months. “Once it goes into the maturation pad, it’ll be screened using a big trammel, which sorts it into two sizes; under 16mm and over 16mm. The two streams make for a course mulch or a fine compost,” J.R. Richards and Sons regional manager for north western NSW Shane Fuller said. J.R. Richards will sell the mulch and compost back to the community and councils by the trailer load. “Each of those products can be used for gardens, for digging into a vegetable patch or as mulch to keep the moisture in. Once we get enough product, which will take
NOT WANTED: A plastic bag and plastic soft drink bottle incorrectly binned by a resident
NOT WANTED: Treated timber is regarded as contaminant in the organics processing.
Dubbo Regional Council’s Solid Waste manager Mark Giebel stands beside just six weeks’ worth of the region’s processed organic waste, collected since the three-bin system began, all being kept from landfill and being turned into mulch and compost. PHOTOS: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
some time, you’ll be able to buy it bags then you haven’t got a verat the DROPP or from our facility min problem. on Fitzroy Street,” Mr Fuller said. “We understand it takes people Dubbo Regional Council’s Parks a little while to get the message. and Gardens staff are already One of the positive things we are looking forward to it. seeing is the green liner bags is“They currently get materi- sue. You can see them easily in al produced at the Orange facili- amongst the materials, so people ty, so what they use in the future are using them,” Mr Giebel said. will soon be local. The other counAs garbage collection trucks decils will also be able to get it for liver to the facility, any contamitheir operations as well,” Mr Gie- nants like plastic bags have to be bel said. removed by hand by staff, which You won’t, however, be able to causes delays in the process. At buy the mulch or compost in plas- the moment four cubic metre bins tic bags, a conscious choice by J.R. of general waste are still being Richards and one that the compa- separated out from the organics ny’s DROPP manager Ken Mathe- waste collection service, every son fully supports. one to two days. “Plastic is the big curse,” he said, “All you need is one organics bin pointing to a full bag of mouldy with general waste in it to go into bread on the facility floor, which a a truck picking up 300 bins, and it resident has thrown into their or- can spoil the lot,” said Mr Fuller. ganics waste bin still in its “It’s highly common to find plastic packaging. food scraps in the “They’ve done that kitchen caddy green rather than taking bag, but it’s still in b it out of the plastic its plastic packagi bag and putting the ing,” Mr Matheson i bread into kitchen said. “You’ll find s caddy green bag or the plastic cups and t straight into the orstraws from fast food s ganics bin, which chains. We should all c you can do. Even if be b up in arms about it went in raw into their tops and their th TH E GREE N EDITION one of the green straws. I remember st
COUNCIL NEWS... IN BRIEF Feedback sought on rail project’s environmental impact CLIMATE change and sustainability are factors included in an environmental review of a proposed train maintenance facility for Dubbo, and which is on public display to allow residents to raise any concerns through a submission process. The train manufacturing facility would be accessed from Wingewarra Street and open 24 hours a day.
Other environmental factors under review include traffic and transport movement, noise and vibration, Aboriginal heritage, biodiversity, contamination, flooding and water quality and air quality. Residents can read the review, or summaries of it, in the Dubbo Regional Council foyer or Macquarie Regional Library.
Ticket booking fees at DRTCC set to drop for some COUNCIL proposes to introduce a scaled ticket booking fee for community, not-forprofit, schools and charities holding functions or performances at the Dubbo Regional Theatre and Convention Centres. The current cost stands at $5.50 per
NOT WANTED: This bag is not organic and cannot be processed.
when they used polystyrene and everyone kicked up a big stink and they changed it,” he said. Plastic, however, isn’t the only thing mistakenly finding its way into the organics bins. “Probably the most common but unusual thing I get is women’s bras and shoes. I don’t know what that’s about, but they’re coming in every load, and they’re pairs of shoes,” he said. “You’ll find anything that’s in the backyard. Clothes pegs, dog blankets, dog chains, anything that you’ll see in a backyard has been ending up in the organics. I can’t explain it.” Treated or painted timber is another thing that can not be processed with organic waste, but pizza boxes can. “Previously we didn’t want pizza boxes in the recycling because of the food waste in it and the grease, and so forth. Now we’re seeing a lot of pizza boxes, paper towels, tissues; all that type of paper-based material that used to just go into the garbage can now go into the green bin. It’s just basically paper so it breaks down.” Mr Fuller summed up the process by saying the product at the end is only as good as the product that goes in.
ticket, regardless of ticket price, but proposed amendments will reduce fees in accordance to ticket prices down to between $2.50 and $4.00 per ticket sold. In the same fees and charges review the use of the courtyard at the Western Plains Cultural Centre and hosting of workshops there have previously been charged by negotiation. Proposed changes include cost plus 130 per cent (for workshop admission fees) and $20 per hour with a minimum of three hours for courtyard hire. Sporting clubs hiring permanent storage from council will have their annual $15 per square metre charge reduced to $2 per square metre, if amendments are approved.
“We’d like to see zero contamination, to get rid of the nappies, remove the bags, the plastic. It all slows down the process. Whatever was alive or ever lived can go into the green bin. The collection deposit scheme has more than enough options. “The more we can impress on people the good side of this war on waste, and to adjust what they’re doing and let them know what we’re trying to do, all the better,” Mr Matheson said. Another issue which laying out organic waste in a large facility reveals is just how much food waste is occurring. A whole cabbage head here, potatoes there, fruit and vegetable. “Last week we got a full cut up pig, quartered,” said Mr Matheson. It was still a bit frozen. It didn’t smell or look rough. It would have been 40 kilos of meat. And there were two full turkeys. Still frozen in the bag,” he said. Australian’s allegedly throw away 3.1 million tonnes of edible food a year. The war on waste is clearly not over. z For practical tips on how not to waste food, visit www.foodwise.com. au.
QUESTIONS FOR COUNCIL Do you have a question for Dubbo Regional Council? Send it to Dubbo Photo News and we will put your question to council then publish their response here. Email feedback@dubbophotonews.com.au, post to our office, or phone Dubbo Photo News on 6885 4433 •••
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
OPINION & ANALYSIS
Dubbo, your return and earn data is off the charts Yvette AubussononFoley ❚ OPINION
THE figures are a little staggering but clearly show Dubbo residents have adapted exceptionally well to the introduction of the Return and Earn scheme. A spokesperson from the NSW Environment Protection Authority told Dubbo Photo News this week that between the reverse vending machines at Delroy Park Shopping Centre and Victoria Park, 8 million containers have been collected so far At 10 cents a pop, that equates to $800,000 coming back into the community or which has been donated to charity partners. “As well as helping the environment, Return and Earn, also offers a great opportunity to local Dubbo schools, charity, community or sporting groups can apply to become a local donation partner on the reverse vending machines,” the EPA said.
Right now, NSW residents can donate their return and earn refunds to “Buy a Bale” for example, to help NSW farmers and rural communities crippled by drought. In Dubbo the reverse vending machines include the Taronga Western Plains Zoo as the local donation partner, as well as three statewide donation partners: Australian Red Cross, Take 3 for the Sea, and Wires. The donation partners will change at the end of August. To breakdown those figures: Delroy Park Shops clocked 3,627,817 containers collected and 4,631,394 have been collected at Victoria Park. That explains why the machines are always full! Who can complain though, considering the scheme has had a great impact on reducing litter with a 33 per cent reduction in eligible drink container litter volume since November 2017 (the month before Return and Earn began), according to the latest NSW National Litter Index figures from Keep Australia Beautiful. For Dubbo’s 8 million returned drink contain-
$ †
THE TOONS’ VIEWS TH E GREE N EDITIO
ers though, that means 2,640,000 of them – yes, two million, six hundred and forty thousand of them – have been kept out of landfill or worse from our gutters/ streams/rivers, where their toxic makeup can break down into the environment. However, the past average of bottles not getting recycled has been 40 per cent, so there’s still a 7 per cent shortfall or a whopping 560,000 bottles – just in our patch alone – which have cut loose and are still out there. There’s too many reasons to go into here on why that’s so, so bad. To make one litre of bottled water, it requires three to seven litres of additional water and one litre of oil. In 2015, Australia drank out of the equivalent number of bottles which used 460,000 BARRELS of oil to be made. To put that into perspective, the oil used to make bottles globally could fill a million cars for a year. China’s appetite for bottled water has grown from 19 billion litres in 2010 to 37 billion litres in 2015 which could explain, in part, why the biggest source of plastic
N
pollution entering the sea is the Yangste River. So while we can congratulate ourselves for doing the right thing, industry and governments have a lot to answer for. We may not be able to change their marketing pitches and promises but as a collective we have enormous influence. What if we said, “You know what, no thank you, tap water in this country is safe to drink and something like 500 times cheaper than bottled water, without an environmental crisis attached.” In NSW the 660 Return And Earn points average a rate of three million containers a day. Are you prepared to stem the tide? You know the oil companies, plastic manufacturers, drink brands and any government who profits from them are not likely to lead the charge. Just like everything else we’re warned against that’s bad for our health, when it comes to plastic water bottles, just say no. z To become a Return and Earn donation partner, visit www.returnandearn.org.au for information including eligibility.
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*Your pharmacist will advise you whether this preparation is suitable for your condition. Always read the label. Use only as directed. If symptoms persist see your healthcare professional. Limit 1 per customer. **Vitamins may only be of assistance if dietary intake is inadequate. The pharmacist reserves the right not to supply when contrary to our professional and ethical obligation. Retail quantities only. Limits Apply. 6 or less. «Breast milk is best for most Babies. Retail quantities only. Limits Apply. †The save prices listed in this catalogue are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and when no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. All products may not be available from all Chemist Warehouse stores. ^Free gifts subject to availability while stocks last. Free gift is an in-store promotion and not always available online. Not all products or promotions featured in this catalogue are available online. We beat everyone’s prices! At Chemist Warehouse if you find a cheaper price on the exact same item at another Australian Retail Store, we will match it and give you 10% off the difference! (Excludes ‘online only’ offers) Exact same item means exact same product, with the same packaging and where the product on offer at the other retail store is not clearance or run out stock. All products subject to Manufacturers Availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
SALE ENDS: 2 ND SEPT 2018
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
Four great reasons to advertise
IN YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER
Want your business to get noticed? Whether itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to promote your services or to recruit new employees, your local paper can help! Here are four great reasons to advertise in your locally-owned and locally-loved newspaper.
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Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll save money We truly believe advertising in Dubbo Photo News provides more â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;bang for your buckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;. If you advertise on TV for instance, you should analyse the costHÇş HFWLYHQHVV ZLOO SHRSOH who see your ad in Bathurst and Lithgow really travel dozens of kilometres to visit your store here? By advertising in your local paper, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll reach your target audience directly â&#x20AC;&#x201D; without breaking the bank!
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OWNED BY LOCALS â&#x20AC;˘ LOVED BY LOCALS ADVERTISING OR STORY ENQUIRIES 6885 4433 \\ sales@panscott.com.au \\ www.dubbophotonews.com.au
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
IN FOCUS THE THUMBS Thumbs up to Dr Kapour at & Dubbo Base Hospital. He would have to be the kindest, most caring and polite doctor I have ever met. God bless you Dr Kapour, don’t ever change.
Thumbs up to the very kind & gentlemen who helped two senior
ladies with a lawnmower at the Aldi store.
Thumbs up to Langley’s & Coaches for the lovely Riversmart Tour. Fabulous food at the Wetlands Centre and well organised guided tours by three locals.
YOUR PHOTOS, YOUR NEWS, YOUR OPINION & FEEDBACK send your contributions to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au mail 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo NSW 2830 phone 6885 4433 fax 6885 4434
Mel turns 70 but remains young at heart Contributed by SIMONE BENNETT MEL celebrated 70 years with a spit roast at the Dubbo City Bowling Club on July 7. Despite the weather friends and family enjoyed themselves, with the birthday boy celebrating until early hours of the morning. Thank you to the Chef “Sparrow” and to cake maker “Dee”.
A family photo
Thumbs up to the Garden & Hotel for the amazing service,
friendly staff, great food and fabulous venue in the “Old Bar” for a family birthday dinner on Saturday, August 4.
Thumbs up to Ben at Pittstop & Auto for awesome customer service, going above and beyond to make his customers happy!
'
Thumbs down to my neighbours’ blind roosters (plural!) who are just guessing the sun rises at 4am, every day. While they’re having a red hot go at a-cappella singing (with what sounds like boots lodged in their feathered throats) their owners might like to remind them, roast chickens possibly start life the same way. Thumbs up to the Team & Rubicon team who came to my
rescue and fixed a leaking pipe in my paddock. They were a very professional and friendly group who couldn’t do enough for me. Thanks guys and gals for amazing work in our area. (Ed’s note: Ellie Dean who is a member of Team Rubicon featured in Dubbo Photo News last week. The organisation “unites the skills and experiences of Australian Defence Force veterans with first responders to rapidly deploy emergency response teams around the globe”.)
)
•••
Send your Thumbs up or Thumbs Down via email to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au, mail to 89 Wingewarra Street Dubbo NSW 2830, phone 6885 4433 or fax 6885 4434.
The cake by Dee
Ronnie & Mel
Spot, Mel & JJ
Out Here on the Droughty Plains! MAGGIE GORDON emailed this poem she wrote in light of the drought conditions currently being endured by most parts of NSW outside Sydney.
Hardenbergia in flower
Can you hear the gum trees sighing... Out here on the droughty plains; Can you see the dams and rivers drying For the lack of flooding rains?
THE cold, sub-zero mornings have continued this week, and most of Dubbo is wondering when Spring will start. But DPN reader Hanley Armstrong is already seeing some early signs of the colourful season ahead. “This plant thinks it is spring,” Hanley emailed to day. “It was purchased as a pot plant from Brennan’s Mitre 10 about this time last year. It has two colours of flowers on one plant.”
Can you feel the sun rays burning The feed for the starving stock; Can you see the farmers turning From the sight of a failing crop? Can you know a farm hands knowing His future is looking grim; Can you see the farm debt growing With no income coming in? Can you watch lambs weakly dozing As crows come swooping down; Can you see the shop doors closing In all those little country towns? Yet if you should dwell in a city In such a different way of life; You will be so far away from it: The outback stress and strife.
Photo specs: A technical note for photo contributors
Only catching fleeting glimpses In the paper or on a screen; And turning to something brighter To forget that morbid scene.
%
We welcome your photos via email for publication. Please send each photo as a high-resolution jpeg image – at least 1MB per photo. Don’t let your Operating System/Windows/ iOS/phone etc downsize the image before emailing because these images are usually too small to print.
Managing Editor Tim Pankhurst
Sales Manager Frances Rowley
Chief Journalist Yvette Aubusson -Foley
Sales Consultant Donna Falconer
Then you’ll not feel our spirits tiring While we wait for flooding rains; For you’ll not see our country dying Out here on the droughty plains! – Maggie Gordon, Trangie, NSW
Journalist John Ryan
Photographer Wendy Merrick
Journalist Natalie Holmes
Wellington Photographer Colin Rouse
Sports “Mann” Geoff Mann
Designer Danielle Crum
Sports Photographer Mel Pocknall
Designer/ Sales Consultant Sophie Uren
Reception/Photographer Darcee Nixon
Designer Brett Phillips
Published by Panscott Media Pty Ltd (ABN 94 080 152 021) General disclaimer: The publisher accepts no responsibility for letters, notices and other material contributed for publication. The submitter accepts full responsibility for material, warrants that it is accurate, and indemnifies the publisher against any claim or action that may arise from its publication. All advertisers, including those placing display, classified or advertorial material, warrant that such material is true and accurate and meets all applicable laws and indemnifies the publisher against all liabilities that may arise from the publication of such material. Whilst every care is taken in preparing this publication, we cannot be held responsible for errors or omissions. Opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the publisher. The editor, Tim Pankhurst, accepts responsibility for election comment. Articles contain information of a general nature – readers should always seek professional advice relevant to their particular circumstances. Complaints: Panscott Media has a policy of correcting mistakes promptly. If you have a complaint about published material, contact us in writing. If the matter remains unresolved, you may wish to contact the Australian Press Council.
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
WELLINGTON NEWS Wellington Eisteddfod: Solo Dance Photos by COLIN ROUSE/RSVP OUR feature photos this week show Solo Dance competitors at the 42nd Annual Wellington Eisteddfod. Colin Rouse and the team from RSVP Rouse Studio of Video & Photography are photographing this year’s event. For reprints of photos featured here, contact RSVP on 0407 820 314 or rsvpdubbo@hotmail.com.
MORE PHOTOS ❱❱ NEXT PAGE
Think: About your choices. Call Gambling Help 1800 6343 636.
www: wellingtonsoldiers.com.au
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
Wellington Eisteddfod: Solo Dance
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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Wellington Eisteddfod: Solo Dance
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
The Book Connection
THE PLAY PAGE PHOTO NEWS SUDOKU
178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS
CROSSWORD TIME ACROSS
HOW TO PLAY: Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box GRID664 contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: You must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column, or 3x3 box.
FIND THE WORDS
1. Heated 4. Throb 8. Lug 12. Confusion 13. Clothmaking device 14. Branding tool 15. Seasonal beverage 16. Meek one 17. Lack 18. Plummet 20. Leaks 22. Astern 24. Elegant 28. Tales 32. Marry in haste 33. Cost an arm and a ... 34. Fixes text 36. Legislative act
37. Merits 39. Countries 41. Garland 43. Youngster 44. Bank feature 46. Cast off 50. Pelt 53. Capacity 55. Cherry-tree chopper 56. Shaped like an egg 57. Band instrument 58. Edge out 59. Sports sites 60. Tree abode 61. Pig’s place
DOWN 1. Round of applause 2. ...-eaters, for
your shoes 3. Fast-food order 4. Entirely 5. Went without power 6. Where you live 7. Implant 8. Christmas trimming 9. Mineral source 10. Sock part 11. Outcome 19. Normal 21. Magic word 23. Celebration 25. One-person song 26. Reach 27. Some evergreens 28. Large number
CONCEPTIS HITORI
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 15 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
29. Sign of sorrow 30. Fairy-tale baddie 31. Preacher’s subject 35. Skin designs 38. Bellybuttons 40. ... a boy! 42. A North American Great Lake 45. Earring’s place 47. Commands to Trigger 48. Way out 49. Disallow 50. Swine 51. Climbing plant 52. Burrendong or Keepit 54. Assembled PUZZ932
WUMO
by Wulff & Morgenthaler
Each puzzle consists of a square grid with numbers appearing in all squares. The object is to shade squares so:
Amusements
] No number appears in a row or column more than once. ] Shaded (black) squares do not touch each other vertically or horizontally. ] When completed, all un-shaded (white) squares create a single continuous area.
INSANITY STREAK
by Tony Lopes
HEX-A-NUMBER
aces authors backgammon bingo bridge canasta casino checkers chess cool darts
dibs dice dominoes euchre faro fish gin rummy hearts home jacks keno leapfrog
ludo mah-jong marbles memory odds out partner pieces pig poker
roulette scrabble sevens strategy tag tests tiddlywinks whist
There are 13 black hexagons in the puzzle. Place the numbers 1 to 6 around each of them. No number can be repeated in any partial hexagon shape along the border of the puzzle.
OUT ON A LIMB
by Gary Kopervas
© AUSTRALIANWORDGAMES.COM.AU 1022
BAKER’S DOZEN TRIVIA TEST
Mary Tyler Moore in “Ordinary People”
1. LITERATURE: What are the four houses at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry? 2. GEOGRAPHY: Which of the six states in Australia is the largest in land area? 3. CHEMISTRY: What is the first element on the periodic table? 4. TELEVISION: Which long-running TV show features a business called Duff Brewery? 5. HISTORY: When did the
Space Age begin? 6. CURRENCY: John Flynn appears on the reverse of the Australian $20 note. Who appears on the front? 7. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: On which continent did the potato originate? 8. FOOD & DRINK: What is sushi usually wrapped in? 9. MOVIES: Who won Best Director in 1980 for the movie
“Ordinary People”? 10. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What is a baby whale called? 11. FLASHBACK: What do the films “Chariots of Fire”, “Blade Runner” and “1492: Conquest of Paradise” have in common? 12. SPORT: Name two of the
three male tennis players who have won the Australian Open singles title six times. 13. LYRICS: Name the song that contains this lyric: “I can see the love shining in your eyes, And it comes as such a sweet surprise, If seeing’s believing it’s worth
the wait, So hold me and tell me it’s not too late.” SOLUTIONS FOR ALL... are in the TV+ Guide
SURPRISE!
I can’t wait to find out how it ends...
The Book Connection 178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
PAPARAZZI
email your photos to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au instagram dubbophotonews facebook.com/dubbophotonews
Of droughts and flooding plains... The Barwon River at Walgett is one waterway showing the detrimental effects of the current drought. Photographer Steve Pearson has provided these photos showing the stark contrast between too much water and too little. Steve explained: “The dry river bed shots were taken earlier this month by Kerrie Burke, a friend at Walgett, after I showed her the ‘big river’ shot at the Barwon Inn that I took in the late ‘60s. All in the same location.” A golden oldie: This absolute beauty was at the 2018 Dubbo Golden Oldies Truck, Tractor & Quilt Show the weekend before last in Dubbo. Photographer Peter Woodward explained: “It is an old Mack truck, I think probably early 1960s, with immaculate paintwork but I am sure one of the readers would be able to identify it better than I can.” If any of our readers can help, please get in touch with Dubbo Photo News.
Labour of love: Peter’s eye was also caught by this stunning quilt on display at the 2018 Dubbo Golden Oldies Truck, Tractor and Quilt Show. “I can’t imagine how many hours have gone into creating this,” he said.
Rugged up and ready: Dubbo Photo News sport-shooter Mel Pocknall spotted this race-loving fan at Dubbo Harness Racing on Sunday. “It wasn’t Siberia,” Mel reported, “although it felt like it!”
5 STARS FOR ADVENTURE!
We have a wide range of tours, that suit every taste! “Absolutely brilliant way to see the sights of Dubbo, Peter has heaps of information ^Y VV cY_ SX YX ._LLY”. KARYN & PETER GLOVER, 5 STAR FACEBOOK REVIEW
FOR MORE INFORMATION PHONE PETER: 1300 874 537
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HATCHES
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
Photos by Wendy Merrick Photography Dubbo | www.wendymphotography.com.au Contribute your baby photo to photos@dubbophotonews.com.au
Leila Stacey DUBOIS Born 16/08/18 Weight 4250g Parents Malak and Sean Dubois of Dubbo Siblings First child Grandparents Stacey Morgan, Zahra Mahde and Haissam Noun
Avayah Kate SARGENT Born 16/08/18 Weight 4610g Parents Anastasia and Ezekiel Sargent of Dubbo Siblings Elijah (5yrs), Myah (3yrs), Logan (1yr) Grandparents Kerren Hutchison, Peter Hutchison, Tony and Michelle Sargent, all of Dubbo
Olivia Louise HAYMAN Born 15/08/18 Weight 3400g Parents Hayley and Troy Hayman of Bourke Siblings First child Grandparents Troy and Shirley Hayman of Bourke, Barry and Mandy Smith of Coonamble
Jackson Thomas MERRICK Born 15/08/18 Weight 3540g Parents Melissa and Todd Merrick of Dubbo Grandparents Lance and Linda Merrick of Scone, Lorene Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien of Dubbo
Jyemarri Robert James BOLT Born 16/08/18 Weight 3360g Parents Alana Hammond and Jye Bolt Siblings First child Grandparents Debbie Hammond and Robert Brown
Amelia Grace VEER Born 16/08/18 Weight 3400g Parents Nicole and Dan Veer of Yeoval Siblings Hannah (7yrs), Ryan (4yrs), Lucy (2yrs)
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER FOR OVER 15 YEARS PH: 0421 634 096 wendymphotography.com.au FAIRY PORTRAITS, COMMERCIAL, REAL ESTATE, PORTRAITS, SPORTS & TEAMS
IS AN ONLINE DIRECTORY OF CENTRAL WEST WEDDING SUPPLIERS F O R I N S P I R AT I O N + F R E E R E S O U R C E S V I S I T
THEBRIDESAVENUE.COM.AU
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
HATCHES
Violet Elizabeth Bell MURPHY Born 13/08/18 Weight 3780g Parents Rowan Murphy and Emily Blackwell of Dubbo Siblings Hudson (1yr), Edward (1yr) Grandparents Frances and George Blackwell, Helen and Philip Murphy
Finnley Jasper Patterson Born: 6/08/2018 Weight: 3780g Parents: Ben & Tiffany Patterson (Dubbo) Siblings: Piper Joy Patterson (3 yrs - a proud big sister) Grandparents: Alan & Jenny Wells (Narrabeen NSW), Pam Patterson (Woody Point QLD) Sending a big thank you to everyone at Dubbo Base Hospital Maternity & Special Care Nursery for all their amazing support.
(baby boy) HITCHCOCK Born 15/08/18 Weight 4340g Parents Johanna and Sam Hitchcock of Trangie Siblings Chevvy (3yrs), Alfie (18mths)
PHOTO: CONTRIBUTED BY BEN & TIFFANY PATTERSON
(baby girl and baby boy) SOO Born 13/08/18 Weight 2220g and 2240g Parents Nini and James Soo of Dubbo Siblings Zoey (2 1/2yrs)
Ryder John CARROLL Born 14/08/18 Weight 3300g Parents Amy Leggatt and Reece Carroll of Dubbo Siblings Mia-Grace (10yrs), Chloe (7yrs) Grandparents Vicky and Ron Leggatt, Julie and Mick Smith, John Carroll, all of Dubbo
“
Dubbo Photo News provides excellent customer service and is always open for change. The Photo News team offers great advice on trying new ad styles. I would recommend Dubbo Photo News as it is read by all ages and everyone loves to see their photo in the paper. As a local business, the Furney family also like to support other local businesses.
WestWords Fest2018 Rebooting the Romance of Writing WESTERN PLAINS CULTURAL CENTRE Friday, Saturday & Sunday, September, 14, 15 & 16
”
TICKETS
123tix.com.au
BELINDA PENGILLEY SARAH JANE FINE FOODS
Writing and Marketing workshops for all ages and stages with Wanda Wiltshire, David Reiter & Karen Tyrell Agent & Publisher Consultations with Alex Adsett and David Reiter
OUTBACKWRITERS@GMAIL.COM
F REE, EV ERY T H U RS DAY
With Thanks To:
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
LOVIN’ LOCAL
Shopping News | Business News | Deals | Discounts | Discoveries To feature here phone 6885 4433
Go Green! Local Dubbo Dub businesses are making it easyy for you to go green! Here are some awesome me environm environmentally-friendly products to help you get started.
TH E
GRE
EN E
DITI
ON
1. 5.
4.
6.
3.
2.
1) Woven Bags and Baskets, prices ranging from $35-$40, Yummy Yarn and Co 2) Oasis Food Flask, $19.95, Dubbo Culinary & Homewares 3) RetroKitchen Biodegradable Dishcloths, $6.95, Dubbo Culinary & Homewares 4) Slimline Garden Solar Lights, $9.49, Brennan’s Mitre 10 5) Eco Solelife Dinner Plates, $8.00, Aussie Disposals 6) Freelec solar power, Bluetooth and light Kit, $149.95, Aussie Disposals Stockists: Yummy Yarn and Co, Rear 138 Macquarie Street (entry via Myer carpark), Dubbo, 0431 754 909. Dubbo Culinary & Homewares,139 Talbragar St, Dubbo, 6884 4468. Brennan’s Mitre 10, 64-70 Macquarie St, Dubbo, 6882 6133, mitre10.com.au Aussie Disposals, 108 Macquarie St, Dubbo, 6884 1713
To feature your weekly specials here, call DUBBO PHOTO NEWS on 02 6885 4433
W E E K LY S P E C I A L S 38-40 Victoria Street, West Dubbo Tel: 02 6882 3466 Specials available Thursday 23.08.2018 until Wednesday 29.08.2018
EVENING TAKEAWAY DEALS
All Chicken or Beef dishes
1 dish + Large fried/steamed rice $18.90 2 dish + Large fried/steamed rice $29.90 3 dish + Large fried/steamed rice $39.90 4 dish + Large fried/steamed rice $48.90
Under New
management
12 pkt Uncle Tobys Oats Quick Sachets - Varieties
2
$ .99
Each
$1.24 PER 100GM
1.1kg Nestle Milo
11
$
.00
Each
$1.00 PER 100GM
SPECIALS ONLY AVAILABLE AT YOUR IGA WEST DUBBO
Delivery available 5.30pm-8.30pm . See full menu in store
6882 4978 28 Wingewarra Street
Mon-Fri 10am-2pm & 5-9pm • Saturday 5-9pm Offer ends 31/08/18. JIMMY’S DEALS SMILE!
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
MEET THE BOSS
TH E G
Jo Campbell, Daily Scoop at Majo’s Position: Owner/operator I got involved in business... three years ago because I wanted to offer something unique to the Dubbo and wider communities. Our business is known for... its uniqueness, cleanliness and friendly helpful staff. We are also known for finding hard to source products. Our bestselling product is... Veggie chips, Chocolate coated macadamia balls, nut butters and the freshest raw and roasted nuts. We have so many best sellers.
My role in the business is... Jack of all trades. Everything from serving/assisting customers (the best role), book keeping, data entry, social media, cooking, cleaning... the list goes on. I manage... to get up each day with a smile on my face. According to my staff, working for me is... relaxed and calm but exciting. I spend my down time... reading health articles, listening to podcasts on health or low toxic lifestyle, cooking and walking, spending time with family. I’m inspired by... people who look after themselves and people who help others.
On my beside table is... too much. Books, lamp, phone charger, magnesium oil, etc, etc, nothing exciting. In my opinion, the biggest issue facing small businesses is... getting and keeping customers coming through your door. My secret to success is... treating customers with respect (as you should treat everyone). And working hard (no-one got anywhere from being lazy) I’m most proud of... my children and family. Having and raising children is one of the hardest jobs you will ever have to do but one of the most rewarding. Second, I am proud of the
RE E N
E DIT
ION
business my husband Adam and I have built. If I could, I’d tell my 20-year-old self that... you should look after your health. Without your health you have nothing. Also listen more than you speak. The best piece of career advice I can offer is... take a chance – you don’t want to die wondering, but make sure you do your research. And if I wasn’t in my current role, I’d... probably be still teaching (which I still do occasionally). I’d like to be helping/teaching in remote areas. PHOTO: WENDY MERRICK
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
David and Shereeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wedding reception By DARCEE NIXON NEWLYWEDS David and Sheree Rainbow held their wedding reception on Saturday, August 18, at the Dubbo RSL Rooftop Terrace. The couple were surrounded by their closest friends and family and everyone had a fantastic night. The Tildesley family
Kasey and Josh Darlington
Peter and Nancy Moore
Cousins
Krystle and Matthew SpringďŹ eld
Ken Whitla and Donna Pilon
Mother and father of the bride Yvonne and Gary Tildesley
Newlyweds David and Sheree Rainbow
Pauline Jackson, Loni Moore, Lindsay Hibbert and Jessica Rozyn
Ashley Rainbow, Ashley Wyatt, Nikki Rainbow, Ian Rainbow and Vicki Rainbow
Jaimee and Harley Darlington
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
National Tree Day at Dubbo Christian School Contributed by DUBBO CITY TOYOTA THE team at Dubbo City Toyota participated in National Tree Day with the Dubbo Christian School earlier this month and the kids (as well as all the adults) had so much fun! Not only did they enjoy getting their hands dirty, but they also understood the importance of planting the trees. National Tree Day started in 1996 and since then more than 3.8 million people have planted 24 million trees and plants and it’s still growing. The Toyota Team and the Christian School are super proud to have been a part of the grow-
TH E GREE N ED
ing numbers for 2018. “This is the fifth year Dubbo City Toyota has taken part in National Tree Day, and Toyota Australia have been involved for many more. It’s so important for us to get involved in events like this around the community, especially when it involves helping educate kids on why this day is so important,” General Manager of Dubbo City Toyota Ben Thompson said. “We would like to say a huge thank you to the teachers and students of the Dubbo Christian School who participated in National Tree Day. It was a great success, and we look forward to next year!”
ITION
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
Jake and Mitch turn 18 By DARCEE NIXON FRIENDS and family of Jake and Mitch Conte celebrated the twinsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 18th birthday with a party on Saturday, August 11, at the Conte house. Everyone had an enjoyable night hanging out with mates. Lisa, Mitch, James and Jake Conte
Back, Sophie Everingham, Harry Richardson, front, Mitch Conte, Sue Fuller and Jake Conte
Mitchell Spittles, Jacob Taylor, Jake Conte, Harry Richardson and Callum Hosking
Ashton Conte and Harry Richardson
Brianna Duncan and Mitch Conte
Mitch, Thomas, Samantha and Jake Conte
Mitch Conte and Mitchell Gough
Tom Dowell and Samantha Conte
Back, Jake, Nick and Mitch Conte, front, Caitlin, Michelle and Ethan Conte
Isabella, Daniella, Ashton and Joseph Conte
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
Dinner at Club Dubbo By DARCEE NIXON PATRONS at Club Dubbo were enjoying a night out on Saturday, August 11. Many were visitors to the Dubbo region and told Dubbo Photo News the food and service at Club Dubbo’s Riverview Bistro was excellent.
Wendy and Peter Lawson
Hayley Singleton and Robyn Wheeler
Barry and Yvonne O’Mara
Garry and Heather Newman
Chance Schmatloch and Julie Chougui
David and Nathan Singleton
Saturday night at Reflections Restaurant By DARCEE NIXON DINERS at Reflections Restaurant were enjoying the contemporary cuisine and sophisticated atmosphere on Saturday night, August 11. Some had come from out of town for the Golden Oldies Truck Tractor and Quilt Show that was held earlier on in the day.
Frank and Lyn Dapozzo
Peter Baker and Nadine Mulholland
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
You can bank on a good time at this restaurant and bar By DARCEE NIXON GOOD food, good music and good times were had at Old Bank Restaurant and Bar on Saturday night, August 11. Dinners and bar-goers were having a highly enjoyable night as they caught up with friends and celebrated the weekend.
Jarrod Sunderland, Tina Sayers, Benaiah Simpson and Kaz Allen
Gloria Picton, Mick Picton, Michael McMillan and Shane Saff y
Shane Saff y, Paul â&#x20AC;&#x153;Irishâ&#x20AC;? McMillan and Arthur Guinness
Jack Richards, Katrina Richards, Michelle Marchant and Rena Figueredo
Dan Poulter and Di Cameron
Jorge Figueredo and Nick Marchant
Nerida Powell and Bruce Cameron
Scott and Shane Burn
Karen Tunbridge, Bob Suker, Paul York and Richard Thompson
Matt Singh and Sarah Granger
Jules Marshall and Bruce Jones
A night out with friends
Phillip Sweeney, Adam Russo and Sean Merchant
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
Dubbo and District Junior Rugby League Presentation By DARCEE NIXON THE annual award night and dinner for Dubbo and District Junior Rugby League was held in a Starlight Room of the Dubbo RSL on Saturday, August 18. It was a great social event for everyone to catch up off the field and to recognise some very deserving award recipients.
Back, Brad Tomlinson, front, Tony Groves, Sam Lincoln, Libby Woll and Sally Cox
Miranda Richardson, Richie Richardson and Neil Millgate
Janine and John Herring
Shane Waters, Mel Christie and John Solomons
Simone Knight and Chris Brown
Lorraine Redden, Neil Millgate, Carene Smith and Milissa Mcguire Krystal Gleeson, Melissa Mulholland, Peter Gleeson and Mick Mulholland
Katherine and Angus Barclay, Perry and Amanda Brien
Emma and Graeme Barton
Glen Healey, Teighan Healey, Michelle Lindsay and Tony Lindsay
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
classiďŹ eds P O S I T I O N S VA C A N T
6885 4433 classies@dubbophotonews.com.au CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLOSES AT MIDDAY EACH TUESDAY
P O S I T I O N S VA C A N T
Patient Transfer Drivers The Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia (RFDS) is seeking applications from service-orientated team players to join our Patient Transfer team in the position of Patient Transfer Driver at Dubbo. $V D 3DWLHQW 7UDQVIHU 'ULYHU \RX ZLOO GULYH D VSHFLÂżFDOO\ ÂżWWHG RXW ORQJ ZKHHO EDVHG Mercedes Sprinter Patient Transfer vehicle, and will work with nurses, doctors, pilots and other staff to safely and professionally transport patients between rural health service SURYLGHUV DQG DLUSRUWV <RX PXVW KDYH D FDULQJ Ă&#x20AC;H[LEOH DQG WHDP RULHQWDWHG DSSURDFK to your work, and be comfortable with current computer technology, including the use of smart phones, GPS and map tracking systems, MS Outlook and Ipad use. (PSOR\PHQW ZLOO EH RQ D FDVXDO EDVLV ,Q UHWXUQ WKH 5)'6 RIIHUV H[FHSWLRQDO SURIHVVLRQDO satisfaction, a positive team culture and above award conditions, including a weekly retention allowance.
GARAGE SALE
TRADES & SERVICES
SATURDAY 25TH & SUNDAY 26TH AUGUST
HOCKING IRRIGATION & TRENCHING
Cnr Aspen and Maple St, Dubbo Starting 8:30am Moving sale - everything must go!
â&#x20AC;˘ Domestic and rural pump repairs, new pump installations including solar pumps â&#x20AC;˘ Domestic and rural irrigation systems including stock water and garden sprinkler systems â&#x20AC;˘ Trenching and post hole digging â&#x20AC;˘ Free quotes
Terry: 0428 816 577 | ABN 90 797 749 250
MASSAGE
7R DSSO\ SOHDVH YLVLW KWWSV ZZZ Ă&#x20AC;\LQJGRFWRU RUJ DX FDUHHUV MRE SDWLHQW WUDQVIHU GULYHU
Applications close Thursday 30 August 2018 The Royal Flying Doctor Service is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
CARPENTERS
(LICENCED) Continuous sub-contract work Building patios, glass rooms, carports, cladding etc. Excellent rates - potentially $2,000 p/wk Phone Brent 6884 9620
PUBLIC NOTICES
FOR SALE
$20 BARGAINS!
Big On Style
Isabell McCauleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Massage Remedial Massage Therapist â&#x20AC;˘ Pregnancy Hot Stone Therapy â&#x20AC;˘ Reiki â&#x20AC;˘ Relaxation â&#x20AC;˘ Deep Tissue
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0459 224 388 Cert. IV Reiki 2, ATMS-27541
PETS & LIVESTOCK dĆ&#x152;Ä&#x201A;ĹśĆ?Ä?Ä&#x17E;ĹśÄ&#x161;Ä&#x17E;ĹśĆ&#x161;Ä&#x201A;ĹŻ DÄ&#x17E;Ä&#x161;Ĺ?Ć&#x161;Ä&#x201A;Ć&#x;ŽŜ ^Ĺ?ĹľĆ&#x2030;ĹŻÄ&#x17E;Í&#x2022; EÄ&#x201A;Ć&#x161;ĆľĆ&#x152;Ä&#x201A;ĹŻÍ&#x2022; ÄŤĹ˝Ć&#x152;Ć&#x161;ĹŻÄ&#x17E;Ć?Ć?Í&#x2DC; Ç&#x20AC;Ĺ?Ä&#x161;Ä&#x17E;ĹśÄ?Ä&#x17E;ͲÄ?Ä&#x201A;Ć?Ä&#x17E;Ä&#x161; Ä&#x17E;ĹśÄ&#x17E;ÄŽĆ&#x161;Ć?Í&#x2DC; David McLennan Accredited TM Teacher Free Introductory Talks
0424 252 834
www.tm.org.au/dubbo
GARAGE SALE?
LEARNERS ON LEAD
FORGOT TO ADVERTISE?
0428 822 826
CALL US BY TUESDAY 10AM FOR OUR THURSDAY PAPER!
DOG SPORTS AND PET DOG TRAINING
2U Ă&#x20AC;QG XV RQ )DFHERRN
Enquiries to Mark, ph: 0419 610 566
BUSINESS FOR SALE DUBBO CITY NEWSAGENCY $90,000 WIWO Prime CBD location. Next to Dubbo Square Shopping Centre. Busy Lotto Agency. No deliveries. 6.5 Days Trading. For more information call Greg on
02 6884 8421 or 0408 401 404
90 Victoria St Dubbo
6885 4753
sales@poolhut.com.au visit us at www.poolhut.com.au
HRG
Plumbing & Gas Fitting
Peter â&#x20AC;&#x153;Pistolâ&#x20AC;? Edwards
0488 263 012
â&#x20AC;˘ All commercial and residential jobs â&#x20AC;˘ No jobs too small â&#x20AC;˘ Special pensioner rate â&#x20AC;˘ Servicing Dubbo and surrounding areas
License no. 275861C
TRADES & SERVICES
Hay, Grain and Water Cartage
30,000 litre tank
PCYC Dubbo Annual General Meeting The AGM for the Dubbo PCYC will be held at the PCYC, Darling Street, at 6pm on the 30th August. Any persons wishing to apply to be on the committee need to have a nomination form to the Club Manager by Friday, 24th August.
Monday â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Friday 9am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5pm Saturday 9am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 12noon
Lyndon Edwards - 0447 400 155
SALE!
FENCING. Colour bond fencing and pool, cheap rates. Seniors discounts. Free quotes. LIC NO 210608C. Ph 0427 849 660
Big On Style GARAGE SALE SATURDAY 25TH AUGUST Dubbo Uniting Church Drought Relief Sale
Wesley Community Centre, cnr Carrington Ave & Church St, Dubbo, 8am - 1pm Household goods, office furniture, books, plants and barbecue
Great service! Best picture!
Ian Brooks
Marks Budget Tree Service
TV Antenna Services AVAILABLE 7 DAYS - WILL TRAVEL Digital Antenna Installs Meter Testing & Tuning TV Wall Mounting 27 Doncaster Ave
Boosters & Accessories Extra Outlets Cable Concealing
0427 487 768
Stump Grinding | Tree Removal Mulching Cherry Picker Will travel | Qualified Insured | Free Quotes Pensioner-Rates
Rob 0435 956 877
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
TRADES & SERVICES
TRADES & SERVICES
Dubbo Booms & Scissors Lifts P/L
STOP! DON’T MAKE A MOVE UNTIL YOU CALL
Contact Snoopy 0427 820 098 Access Equipment for Hire Scissors Lifts 6, 8, 10, 12 & 15 mtr height Boom Lifts 10, 16, 22, 28 & 42 mtr high Tilt Tray, 8 wheeler, 8.5 mtr tray, legal 12 tonne Oversize haulage, Step Decks long/wide Cranes for Hire, mobiles 3, 55, 85 ton available 20 tonne Frannas, Concrete Pumps to 32/38 mtr Cole for Cranes Contact Stuart 0418 672 554
DAVE ALLAN’S ELECTRICAL SERVICE HOT WATER REPAIRS 0418 636 155 daveallanelectrical@bigpond.com ABN: 75 463 168 378
NICK RYAN REMOVALS DUBBO • Affordable prices • Cartons for sale • Trading 7 days • Local and interstate
TRADES & SERVICES ORANA HEADSTONES & MONUMENTS SERVICING THE CENTRAL WEST
0448 878 320
nickryanremovals@hotmail.com
Full graves & lawn cemeteries. Accessories & Plaques. Free Quotes. Restoration work. Competitive Pricing.
TRADES & SERVICES CURTAIN MAKING BY SUE GRISINGER ~ All soft furnishings and blinds ~ 20 years experience ~ Workroom is in my home in Dubbo ~ Professional free quotes
Phone 0428 880 439
Ph/Fax 6888 1015 Mob 0439 881 014
“Operating out of Dubbo”
OUTBACK VAC GUTTER CLEANING OutBack Vac specialises in gutter cleaning, the removal of Cellulose Insulation and cleaning of Roof Cavities.
STS AUTO ELECTRICS
AND COMMUNICATIONS
CALL NOW to discuss your needs with Mick on 0448 680 845
Improve your mobile phone coverage with a cel-fi go signal booster. We supply & install.
Mobile: 0418 638 299 Fax: 6884 7334 Email: cowboy46@bigpond.com
LOCALLY OWNED Servicing Dubbo and Narromine
40 COBRA ST Lic no: MVRL48964 • RTA no: AU32536
Layton Allen
Sprinkler Systems 0419 150 051 laytonallenss@outlook.com
FOR ALL YOUR WATERING NEEDS ABN: 338 971 049 01
STOVE R E PA I R S Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
FRIDGE R E PA I R S Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
Hot Water Repairs Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
Garage Sale? Forgot to Advertise? Book your classified by 10am Tuesday for that week’s publication classies@dubbophotonews.com.au or 6885 4433
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
THE DIARY EVENT Coffee, Craft and Conversation This group will meet from 9:30am-12pm at the Gospel Chapel, corner of Boundary Road and Taylor Street on Thursday, August 23. A couple of young mothers will share a few hints and ideas before a light luncheon. All ladies welcome. Enquiries to Beth on 6885 3153. Daffodil Day Stall Daffodil Day merchandise and flowers will be sold from 8am on Friday, August 24, outside the Talbragar Street Post Office. Enquiries to Yvonne on 0427 851 490. Drought Relief Garage Sale Dubbo Uniting Church will be holding a garage sale for drought relief in the Western area on Saturday, August 25, 8am to 1pm at the Wesley Community Centre, corner Carrington Avenue and Church Street, Dubbo. Household goods, office furniture, books, plants and barbecue. Enquiries to 6885 4200. Dubbo Film Society Two films will be screened on Sunday, August 26, at Dubbo Regional Theatre, Darling Street, Dubbo. The first film will screen at 4pm, followed by intermission with supper provided and drinks available from the theatre bar. Nonmembers of the film society may attend the screening and will be charged $20 for two films. More information is available from www.dubbofilmsociety.com and the Dubbo Film Society Facebook page. Films are Phantom Thread, about a controlling fashion designer and The Death of Stalin, a comedy from England. Gollan CWA Annual Craft Day Gollan CWA is holding their annual craft day on Wednesday, August 29, starting 10am at the Gollan Hall. Plenty of demonstrations, displays, raffle and lucky door. $12 p/p for day covering entry, morning/afternoon tea and lunch. Contact Lisa on 0488 527 167. Orana Writer’s Hub The next meeting of the Orana Writers’ Hub, the Saturday group of the Outback Writers’ Centre, will be held on Saturday, September 1, at 10am in the Board Room of the WPCC. Bring 10-12 copies of your own writing or come to discuss the work of others. 300 word challenge is Great Discoveries or Philosophy. The AGM of the OWC will also be included. Morning tea with gold coin donation. Plenty of parking and coffee shop as well. New members and visitors welcome. Talbragar CWA Meeting The next meeting of the Talbragar CWA will be held on Saturday, September 1, at the CWA Hall Boothenba Road, commencing 2pm. Guest speaker will be a staff member from the Primary Health Network regarding My Health Records, ways to opt in or ways to opt out. Members are reminded to bring family and friends to hear this guest. More details available from Rhonda on 6888 5231 or Linda on 6882 7351. Diners Club Women on their own are welcome to enjoy dining out in a friendly atmosphere. We will meet at 7pm on Saturday, September 1, at Lions Pride, in Countryman’s Motel, Cobra Street. Contact Chris on 6884 1179. Orana Country Music Association Concert The Orana Country Music Association will be staging a four hour concert at the Wellington RSL Club Auditorium at 1pm on Sunday, September 2. Entry for adults is $5 and children are free. We welcome new members. For further information, please ring Barry on 0439 344 349. Laurel Club Will have their next meeting and luncheon on Monday, September 3, 11:45am at the RSL Club. All widows of ex-servicemen are very welcome.
Send your community event info to diary@dubbophotonews.com.au or phone 6885 4433
For catering purposes, please call Mary on 6882 5636. NALAG Centre Walk Towards Hope The NALAG Centre will be holding its annual Walk Towards Hope on Saturday, September 8. Please join us to promote Suicide Awareness, Prevention and Support. The walk commences at Bob Jane T-Mart at 11:30am and ends at the Lions Park in West Dubbo where we share a short ceremony followed by a BBQ lunch. Limited free t-shirts available from 11am on the day. Please join us. Contact NALAG on 6882 9222 for further information. St Mary’s Anglican Church Narromine Spring Flower Show St Mary’s Anglican Church Narromine will be holding their Spring Flower Show and luncheon on Friday, September 14, in the Parish Hall, Dandaloo Street. Luncheon from 12 noon cost $14 per person. For further details, contact Marj Kelly on 6889 1985 or Anne Harmer on 0417 458 015. Central West Working Horse Association AGM Will be held on Friday, September 14, 6pm at Westside Hotel Dubbo. Any enquiries contact Melissa Garland at secretary.cwwha@bigpond.com. Orana Gardens Village Annual Spring Fair Will be held on Saturday, September 15, at Orana Gardens Retirement Village, corner of Coronation Drive and Charles Crescent. Doors open 11am. Cost $10 per person or $5 for students, includes tea, coffee and afternoon tea. Live entertainment by “Our Village People” and a fashion parade by Big On Style. There will be crafts and home baked goods for sale. Lucky door prizes and raffles to be won. NALAG Blue Healers Education Program NALAG will be holding the Blue Healers Education Program to assist people with mild to moderate Depression, Stress and Anxiety. The program will be held in Dubbo over the weekend on Saturday, September 15 and Sunday, September 16. Come along and learn coping strategies so you can get back to enjoying life. This program is free to suitable applicants. Contact NALAG on 6882 9222 to register today. Bereaved through Suicide – Program and Support Group Many people who have been bereaved through suicide find comfort and support in knowing they can share their loss and grief with others bereaved through suicide, and realise you are not alone. This program supports those in the community who have been close to someone who has taken their own life – a relative, friend, child, partner or close connection. Contact with a group can be engaged by the program, fortnightly support meetings, monthly newsletter, information flyers and suicide bereavement resources. We would like to invite you through these most difficult times. If we share the journey, hopefully you may find a little ease. Contact Neami National Suicide Prevention Worker, CJ on 0434 331 299, phone (02) 6826 5200 or email cassandra.wills@neaminational.org.au.
THURSDAY Walking Group 8am, meet corner Macquarie and Tamworth Streets. Contact: May, 6882 4371. Dubbo CWA 9.30am for 10am, FIRST Thursday of the month, at Sporties, Erskine Street. New members welcome. Contact: Marion, 6884 2957. CWA Wongarbon 10am, FIRST Thursday of the month, at Wongarbon CWA rooms. Contact: Marjorie, 6884 5558.
Diary entries need to be 40 words or less (approximately three lines), and placement will be at the editor’s discretion subject to content availability. Please include your daytime phone number and/or address. Entries close 10am Tuesday for that Thursday’s edition.
Sugarcraft 10am-1pm, FIRST and THIRD Thursdays of the month, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Classes also Sunday and Monday. See day listings below. Contact: Shirley, 6887 3150. Dubbo Orana RSL Day Club 10am-2pm, at the Country Club. $5 includes morning tea, card playing, games and light lunch followed by Bingo. Transport can be arranged for $2. Contact: Ailsa, 6882 0036. Wellington Arts and Crafts Meets weekly from 10am-3pm at the Old Police Station, Maughan Street, Wellington. Variety of crafts, activities and workshops offered. Craft items for sale. Phone 6845 3260 for more information. Dubbo War Widows Guild Meet at 11am on the FOURTH Thursday of the month at the Dubbo RSL. South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed Bingo 11am-12.30pm, West Dubbo Bowling Club. New players welcome. Contact: Barry, 0439 344 349. Dubbo Community Men’s Shed 1pm-5pm. Small joining fee and annual membership fee after three visits. “All men are welcome”. Also open Monday and Saturdays. Contact: 6881 6987. Seniors Strengthening Exercise Group 1.30pm-2.30pm at St Brigid’s Hall. Usual arrangements, $2 donation. Contact: Richard and Elva, 6888 5656. Conversational English in Dubbo 2pm-3pm, at Wesley Community Hall, corner of Church St and Carrington Ave. Attendance is free. All welcome. Contact: Chris, 6884 0407. Woodturning and Carving Evening 6pm-9pm, at Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Phil, 6887 3257. Line Dancing 6.30pm-9pm, at Carrington Ave RSL Hall Clubhouse. Contact: Kathy, 6888 5287. Dubbo Bridge Club 7pm, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Contact: Libby 0428 254 324.
FRIDAY CPSA Meetings Are held SECOND Friday of each month. Join us at 10am at Sporties for a cuppa with a friendly group. Enquiries to President Ken Windsor, 0412 016 228 or Secretary Barbara O’Brien, 0427 251 121. Tai Chi at U3A 10am, at the Community Arts Centre, Western Plains Cultural Centre, 76 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo. Contact: Richard, 6888 5656. Spinning and Weaving 10am, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street, Dubbo. Contact: Jo, 6885 6875. Western Plains Trefoil Guild 10.30am, SECOND Friday of each month, at Dubbo West Guide Hall. Everyone welcome. Please confirm meeting will be on. Contact: Dorothy, 6884 6646. Dubbo Parkinson’s Support Group 10.30am, FIRST Friday of each month, at the David Palmer Centre, Old Lourdes. People with Parkinson’s and their carers welcome. Contact: Lorna, 0416 240 626. Central West Makers Place 12 noon-6pm, at South Dubbo Veterans and Community Men’s Shed, corner of Palmer and High Streets, Dubbo. Activities include 3D printing, basic electronics, robotics, silk screening and pottery. Contact: Adam, 0431 038 866. Alzheimers & Dementia Support Group 2pm, FIRST Friday of the month. Contact: Kath, 6881 3704.
Smart Recovery 3pm, Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre. Assists individuals with changing problematic behaviour, including alcohol and drugs, gambling, food, shopping, internet, and others. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings 8pm, at Dubbo Community Health Centre, corner of Cobra and Palmer Streets. Contact 1300 222 222.
SATURDAY Farmers Markets 8am, FIRST and THIRD Saturday of the month. Lions Park adjacent to Visitors Centre, Bligh Street Dubbo. www.dubbofarmersmarket.org.au. Contact: Market coordinator, 0488 685 006 or enquiries@dubbofarmersmarket.org.au. Dubbo City Croquet Club 8.15am, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. New players of all ages welcome. A game of skill and strategy where women and men compete on equal terms. Lawns are behind the City Bowling Club, Wingewarra St. Contact Jenny, 0400 645 516 or Charles, 0400 570 888. CWA Gilgandra Market 9am – 1pm, FIRST Saturday of the month. Cakes, fruit, pickles, plants and more! New stall holders welcome. $5 per stall, proceeds to CWA. Phone Hilda, 6847 1270 or Jane 0408 466 124. Dubbo Patchwork and Quilters Group Meet on the SECOND and LAST Saturdays monthly in the South Dubbo Guide Hall, Boundary Rd Dubbo from 9.00am. We welcome new members and are always ready to point novices in the right direction so if you feel you would like to give this traditional craft a try, why not contact Meg on 0427 471 868. Dubbo Patchwork and Quilters Group 9am, SECOND and LAST Saturday of the month, at the South Dubbo Guide Hall, Boundary Rd. Members are always ready to support novices if you feel you would like to give this traditional craft a try. Contact: Meg, 0427 471 868. Ladies Lawn Bowls 9.15am for 10am start, at Sporties, Dubbo. Also Saturdays. Sporties membership not required unless you wish to progress competitively. Coaching available. Contact: Bowls coordinator Dan Smith, 6884 2044. Dubbo and District Kennel Club 9.30am, obedience training at the Big Shed, Dubbo Show Ground. No puppies under 14 weeks, must bring up to date vaccination certificates, $5 to join and $5 per session. Contact: Michael, 0419 274 632. Seventh-day Adventist Church 9.30am, small group bible study (Sabbath School) and children’s / youth Sabbath School. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. Contact: http://dubbo.adventist.org.au Seventh-day Adventist Church 11am, Divine Service. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. Contact: http://dubbo.adventist.org.au Sit ‘n Knit 11am-1pm, FIRST Saturday of the month. All ages welcome. Macquarie Regional Library, Macquarie Street. Contact: 6801 4510. R.S.L. Tennis Club 12.45pm, at the RSL Park Street courts for enjoyable social tennis. All welcome. Contact: 0428 825 480. Dubbo Slot Car Racing Club Seniors (15+) 4pm, FIRST and THIRD Saturday of the month, at 147 Birch Avenue. Contact: Terry, 0408 260 965. Narcotics Anonymous 6pm, at St Brigid’s Church, in the old building, entry via Brisbane Street. Identification (ID) meeting Contact: Linda, 0419 588 086. Old Time/New Vogue Dance – Dubbo 7.30pm, SECOND Saturday of the month, at the
Aboriginal Family wellbeing & Violence prevention Family violence describes all forms of violence including physical, emotional, sexual, sociological, economic and spiritual. The core role of Aboriginal Family Wellbeing & Violence Prevention service include a mix of individual and family support, including initial crisis support, advocacy and referral to other services. Contact Jimmy on 6883 2300 or trevorf@dnc.org.au
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018 Masonic Hall in Church Street. $10. BYO supper to share, tea and coffee provided. Contact: Graham, 6888 5603. Old Time/ New Vogue Dance FIRST and THIRD Saturday of the month. Eumungerie RSL Hall, Railway Street, Eumungerie. Commencing 8.00 p.m. to 12.00 p.m. “Dancing with... Tony!” BYO supper to share, tea, coffee and milk provided. $10 per head. All Welcome. Caravan Park with powered sites for travellers across the road. Enquiries: Tony, 0427472142 or 0268472142.
SUNDAY Bicycle User Group Social Ride 9am, at Wahroonga Park. Contact: Mick, 0437 136 169 or Andrew, 0476 764 659; dubbobug.org.au. Orana Pistol Club 9am, Hyandra Lane, Dubbo. Contact, Sundays only, after 9am: 6887 3704. Traditional Catholic Latin Mass – Rawsonville 9am, SECOND Sunday of the month, at the Rawsonville Soldier’s Memorial Hall, Rawsonville Road. Contact: 0429 872 241 or 6887 2241. Orana K9 Training Club INC. 9.45am for a 10am start, at the Dubbo Showground (the big shed). Dog Obedience training, must have current vaccinations certificate plus treats. $15.00 membership, $5 per session. Contact Reg Parker, 6884 9877 or 0428 849 877. Hope Christian Fellowship Dubbo 10am, at the Girl Guides Hall, Dianne A’Beckett Place, Dubbo. Contact: 6884 6287. Dubbo Pistol Club 12:30pm, 143L Old Dubbo Road. Contact Dubbo Pistol Club: 6882 0007. Sugarcraft 1pm-4pm, FIRST Sunday of every month, at the Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Also, FOURTH Monday, FIRST and THIRD Thursday. Contact: Shirley, 6887 3150. Dubbo Bridge Club 1pm until approximately 4:30pm, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Contact: Libby 0428 254 324. Orana Country Music Association 2pm – 6pm, LAST Sunday of the month. The Orana Country Music Association holds their monthly muster on the last Sunday of the month at the Dubbo RSL. Contact Barry, 0439 344 349. Transcendental Meditation (TM) 2pm, Maharishi Foundation Australia and Dubbo Transcendental Meditation Centre provide free introductory talks on the scientifically proven benefits of TM. Contact: David, 0424 252 834 or www.tm.org.au. Dubbo Country Music Hoedown 2pm-6pm, SECOND Sunday of the month, RSL Entertainment Lounge, 2-6pm. All ages welcome. Contact: Shane, 0407 022 999. Dubbo Folk Club 2.30pm-6pm, SECOND Sunday of the month, at the Western Star Hotel. Come and enjoy an afternoon of all types of acoustic music. Pleasant surroundings and friendly people, sit and sing along or bring and instrument and join in. Contact: Dawn, 6889 4427. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings 7pm, at the Dubbo Community Health Centre, corner of Cobra and Palmer Streets. Contact: 1300 222 222.
MONDAY Dubbo Multicultural Women’s Group 10am, THIRD Monday of the month, at Saint Brigid’s Meeting Room in Brisbane Street. All women from non-English speaking backgrounds most welcome. Contact: 6882 2100. Cake Decorating 10am, FIRST Monday of the month, at the Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Shirley, 6887 3150. Dubbo Bridge Club 10am until approximately 1pm, FOURTH Monday of the month, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Contact: Libby 0428 254 324. Mixed Probus Meet on the FOURTH Monday of each month 10am at the Masonic Village Hall on Darby Close. Contact: President Glenis Isles, 6882 4489 or Secretary Shirley Stonestreet, 6882 2874. Old Time Dance 10am-12pm, FIRST Monday of the month, at Orana Gardens Country Club. Come and enjoy some old time dance. Contact: Jean, 6882 8867. Sugarcraft 10am-1pm, FIRST and THIRD Thursdays. 1pm-4pm, first Sunday of every month, first and third Thursdays of the month and the fourth Monday of the month, at the Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Contact: Shirley, 6887 3150. Patchwork 10am-3pm, at Art & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Contact: June, 6882 4677. Alcoholics Anonymous (Beginners Meeting) 12 midday, at Old St Brigid’s Catholic Church, Brisbane St. Contact: 1300 222 222. Peace and Healing Meditations 1pm – 2pm, at the Buninyong Community Centre, Myall Street, Dubbo. By donation, beginners welcome. Presented by Wellington Buddhist Centre. Contact: 6845 4661. Anglican Women’s Association 5.30pm, at Holy Trinity. Contact: Dorothy, 6884 4990. RFDS Support Group 6pm, FIRST Monday of the month, at the RFDS Base Dubbo Airport. Contact: Terry Clark, 0407 444 690 (except P/H). Australian Air Force Cadets 6pm – 9.30pm, at Army Barracks (cnr Kokoda Pl and Wingewarra St). NOW recruiting 13 to 18-year-olds prepared for a challenge and to undertake fun and rewarding activities. Come down to your local unit, 313 “City of Dubbo” Squadron. Contact: Michael, 0437 997 708. Rotary Club of Dubbo 6pm – 8pm, at the Westside Hotel, Whylandra Street, West Dubbo. Our President Sandy Birkett can be contacted on nap64@yahoo.com or 0412 158 940. Women’s Alcoholics Anonymous Meeting 6pm, at Old St Brigid’s Catholic Church, Brisbane St. Contact: 1300 222 222. Dubbo Euchre Club 6.30pm, at the Dubbo City Bowling Club. Everyone is welcome to come along. $5 entry, prizes are won throughout the night. Trivia Night 7pm, at South Dubbo Tavern. Dubbo Camera Club Hold their meetings in the shed at
PUZZLE EXTRA GO FIGURE
the rear of the Dubbo Arts and Crafts Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. The club is open to anyone who wants to improve their digital camera skills in a friendly, relaxed setting. We meet on the SECOND and FOURTH Mondays monthly at 7.30pm, so why not come along? For further details phone Col, 0429 689 158. Sing Australia Dubbo Choir 7.30-9.30pm, at Bridge Club, Bultje Street. NO auditions, no requirements to read music and no singing experience necessary. Contact: 0428 680 775.
TUESDAY South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed 9am – 12pm, at Cnr of High and Palmer Street. New members welcome. Wellington Exercises for 55 Years and Over Will be held at the Senior Citizens Hall on Swift Street, Wellington from 9am10am. Strength training for both males and females. All are welcome. For enquiries, contact Margaret, 02 6845 1918. Ladies Lawn Bowls 9.15am, Tuesday and Saturday, at Sporties Dubbo. Learn the game of bowls. Coaching is available and can be arranged by contacting the Bowls Co-ordinator, Dan Smith, 6884 2044. Experienced bowlers are also welcome to join our ranks. Dubbo Embroiderers 9.30am – 3pm, SECOND and FOURTH Tuesday of the month, at Dubbo Bridge Club, Elston Park. All welcome. Contact: Isobel Morgan, 6882 3889. For Saturday group information contact Ruth, 0422 777 323. AllAbilitiesDanz 9.45am, at Dubbo RSL Memorial Club. Classes are low impact, work on heart health, flexibility, mobility, coordination and strength. Call Tracy, 0416 010 748 for a free trial or to join the free class. Probus Mens 10am, FIRST Tuesday of the month at Masonic Village Hall, Darby Close, Dubbo. Fellowship and friendship. Morning tea and guest speaker. Contact: Ken, 6885 2676. Dubbo City Ladies Probus 10am – 12pm, at the Masonic Village Hall, Darby Close (off White Street) Dubbo. All enquires to Liz, 6885 3542 or Nora, 6882 0707. NALAG Centre 10am, MEN’S morning tea the FIRST Tuesday of the month, WOMEN’S morning tea the THIRD Wednesday of the month. Contact: 6882 9222. Depression Recovery Group 10.30am, at the Catholic Parish Meeting Room, Brisbane Street, Dubbo. Contact: Norm, 6882 6081 or Bill, 6882 9826. Rotary Club of Dubbo Macquarie Meets 12.30pm – 2pm, at Westside Hotel. Contact: Lorna, 0408 827 526. Heart Support Walking Group 12.30pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays, meet at Ollie Robbins Oval, cnr of Bligh Street. Supports gentle exercise promoting healthy hearts and friendship. All Welcome. Contact: Ray, 0437 541 942. Bingo 1.30pm-3.30pm, at Sporties. Contact: Margaret, 6882 4737 or Barb, 6882 5893. Seniors Exercise Group Exercise classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays at St Brigids Hall from
1.30pm – 2.30pm. $2 donation includes a cuppa after exercise. Contact: Richard and Elva, 6888 5656. Book Club 2pm, at Macquarie Regional Library, Macquarie St, Dubbo. Dubbo City Physie and Dance 5.15pm-7.30pm (classes vary), Monday and Tuesday, at South Dubbo High School Hall. Physie is fun and affordable dance for girls and ladies, 4 years and up, of all fitness levels. Contact: 0438 582 015. Rotary Club of Dubbo South 6pm, at South Dubbo Tavern, Cnr Boundary Rd and Fitzroy St Dubbo. Girls Brigade 6pm – 8pm, each Tuesday during school term, at Orana Baptist Church, 4 Palmer St. For all school aged girls. Enjoy craft, games, camps, stories, songs, cooking and much more. Contact: Julie, 6882 4369. Dubbo and District Computer Club 7pm, at Akela Place Hall Dubbo. Contact: Daryl, 0408 284 300. Lions Club of Dubbo Inc 7pm, at Club Dubbo. Contact: Bob, 6882 8746 or 0408 636 953 or Hugh, 0429 151 348. Toastmasters Club 7pm-9pm, FIRST and THIRD Tuesday of the month, at Dubbo RSL Club, Brisbane St. Visit the club to gain confidence in speaking and leading skills. There are club, area and district competitions to participate in. Contact Sharon Allan, 0408 156 015 or email sallan@rhdubbo.com.au. Badminton 7.30pm-9.30pm, at Delroy High School Auditorium, East Street, West Dubbo. $5 to play ($3 for school students) $22 yearly insurance ($15 for school students). All welcome, great fun and exercise. Contact: Chris, 6887 3413.
WEDNESDAY Dubbo Woodturning & Woodcraft Club 8am – 12pm, at rear of Arts and Crafts Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. New comers welcome. Contact: Paul Nolan, 6882 1485. Wellington Exercises for 55 Years and Over Will be held at the Senior Citizens Hall on Swift Street, Wellington from 9am10am. Gentle strength training for both males and females. All are welcome. For enquiries, contact Margaret, 02 6845 1918. Geurie Craft Group 9am – 2pm, at Geurie Bowling Club. Everyone welcome. Contact: Thelma, 6887 1103. Line Dancing 9.30am – 12pm and Thursdays, 6.309pm, at Carrington Ave RSL Hall Clubhouse. Contact: Kathy, 6888 5287. Card & Social Group 9am – 2pm, at the Wingewarra Community Centre. $5 includes morning tea, cuppa, bingo and raffle. Please bring own lunch. New members of all ages welcome. If you need transport call Dubbo Neighbourhood Centre. Contact: Muriel, 6882 5145 or Jan, 6884 6080. Wellington Arts and Crafts Meets weekly from 9:30am-4pm and 6pm-9pm at the Old Police Station, Maughan Street, Wellington. Variety of crafts, activities and workshops offered. Craft items for sale. Phone 6845 3260 for more information. Dubbo Bridge Club 9:45am for a 10am start, until approxi-
MEGA MAZE
mately 1pm, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Contact: Libby 0428 254 324. Secret Garden Café Mums & Bubs Playgroup 10am, at the Secret Garden Café, 10am. Group for parents and grandparents to come and socialise, meet new friends and find support from like-minded people. All welcome. Contact: 6884 4489 or find us on Facebook. Community JP Desk 10am – 12pm, Looking for a JP? Look no further than the Community JP Desk outside Coles supermarket in Dubbo Square, 177 Macquarie Street. This is a free service provided by volunteers of The NSW Justices Association. Are you a JP? We’re always looking for volunteers, contact Bruce, 0418 493 388 or Hugh, 0429 151 348 for more information. Dundullimal Dubbo Support Crew Inc 10am, FOURTH Wednesday of each month, Dundullimal Homestead. We support the operations at the Homestead, guiding, tours, gardening, helping in café. Great fun, and friendship, you learn as you go! Come to our next meeting or ring 6884 9984 or email dundullimal@nationaltrust.com.au The Dubbo Garden Club 10am, FIRST Wednesday of every month. Each month with a new garden or guest speaker. Come along and enjoy whatever is arranged. New members are most welcome with an application form available on request. Contact: Kay, 0428 821 538, Marie, 6881 6443 or Pushpa, 6882 7506. Art and Craft Cottage 10am – 4pm, at 137 Cobra Street. A large range of handcrafted gifts made by members available. Shop local and support Dubbo’s very own independent Art and Craft Cottage. Contact: 6881 6410. AllAbilitiesDanz 10.30am, at West Dubbo Primary Community Centre. KIDS 0 to 5, an interactive class with music, props and movement. Only a gold coin donation per family. Akela Playgroup 10:30am and Thursdays 9:30am, at Scout Hall, 4 Akela St. Contact: Sharna, 0438 693 789. Blood Cancer Support Group 10.30pm – 12pm, FIRST Wednesday of each month. Venue changes each month, contact Louise or Emma, 0412 706 785. Cancer Support Group 12pm, at David Palmer Centre, Lourdes Hospital. Contact: Genelle, 6841 8513. Zumba Kids 4.15pm, at West Dubbo Primary Community Centre. A FUN dynamic class that keeps young bodies active, for kids aged 5 to 12, only a gold coin donation per family. West Dubbo Rotary 6pm, at the West Dubbo Bowling Club, Whylandra Street Dubbo. Above Board Gamers 6pm, SECOND and FOURTH Wednesday of the month, at Pipe Band Hall. GET involved in the fastest growing hobby in the world, board gaming. Bring a board game or borrow from the extensive library. No experience needed. Free. Contact: Alan, 0432 278 235 or Andrew, 0400 014 342. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings 7pm, at the Junior Rugby League Clubhouse Caltex Park, Cassia Street. Contact: 1300 222 222.
SPOT THE DIFFERENCE
SUDOKU EXTRA
The idea of Go Figure is to arrive at the figures given at the bottom and right-hand columns of the diagram by following the arithmetic signs in the order they are given (that is, from left to right and top to bottom). Use only the numbers below the diagram to complete its blank squares and use each of the nine numbers only once.
Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine.
EXTRA SOLUTIONS: See the TV+ Guide
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Friday August 24 ABC
PRIME7
6.00 News Breakfast. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Grand Designs. (R, CC) 11.00 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 One Plus One. (CC) 1.30 Foreign Correspondent. (R, CC) 2.00 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 3.45 Teenage Boss. (R, CC) 4.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Think Tank. (R, CC) Hosted by Paul McDermott. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top stories. 7.30 Gardening Australia. (CC) Jane Edmanson meets Lord Howe Islandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s weed team. Jerry Coleby-Williams shows how to grow bananas. 8.30 Killing Eve. (MA15+, CC) Having survived a terrifying close call with Villanelle, Eve has the mole ensconced in a safe house. 9.15 Marcella. (M, CC) Jason gets his job back at the DTG. After Hassan is killed, his brother Mo blames the police. 10.00 Deadlock. (M, CC) (Final) Part 5 of 5. Identical twins, Ned and Jed Manos, are local legends known for their maniac stunts. 10.20 ABC Late News. (CC) Detailed coverage of the dayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s events.
6.00 6.30 7.00 8.30
PRIME7 News. (CC) PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) Better Homes And Gardens. (CC) MOVIE: Never Been Kissed. (PG, R, CC) (1999) A sub-editor at a Chicago newspaper, who has never had a serious relationship, gets the chance to relive her tumultuous adolescence when she is tasked with going undercover at her former high school. Drew Barrymore, David Arquette, Michael Vartan. 11.00 To Be Advised. 11.30 Little Big Shots. (PG, R, CC) Variety show, featuring kids aged from three to 13 demonstrating their talents. Includes Spanish flamenco dancers, a Shakespeare poet, an auctioneer, a foot archer, an inventor and a basketball trick-shooter. Hosted by Shane Jacobson.
10.50 The Business. (R, CC) Hosted by Elysse Morgan. 11.05 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. (M, R, CC) A satirical news program. 11.40 Planet America. (R, CC) 12.25 Rage. (MA15+)
12.30 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program.
ABC COMEDY 6.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 Gruen XL. (MA15+, R, CC) 9.15 Detectorists. 9.45 Tonightly With Tom Ballard: Best Of The Week. 10.15 Blackadder II. 10.50 Peep Show. 11.15 Workaholics. 11.35 Archer. 11.55 The Office. 12.20 30 Rock. 12.40 Parks And Recreation. 1.05 Tonightly With Tom Ballard: Best Of The Week. 1.35 Peep Show. 2.00 Workaholics. 2.25 The Office. 2.45 Archer. 3.05 News Update. 3.10 Close. 5.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs. 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Horrible Histories. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.25 BTN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.35 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R, CC) 7.55 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.10 Slugterra. (R, CC) 8.30 Good Game Spawn Point. (R, CC) 8.55 Voltron: Legendary Defender. (PG, R) 9.20 Sailor Moon Crystal. (PG, R, CC) 9.45 Sword Art Online. (PG, R, CC) 10.05 K-On! (PG, R, CC) 10.30 Close. (R) 5.00 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! (R, CC) 5.25 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Mornings With Joe Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 2.55 Heywire. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 6.00 ABC News Express. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC Evening News. 9.00 Planet America. 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. (CC) 11.00 ABC News Tonight. 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 The Mix. (CC) 1.00 ABC News Overnight. 1.15 The Business. (R, CC) 1.30 DW Conflict Zone. 2.00 Late Programs.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: Gone Missing. (M, R, CC) (2013) Daphne Zuniga. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the dayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)
7TWO
NINE 6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
WIN
Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) MOVIE: Suddenly 30. (PG, R, CC) (2004) A 13-year-old girl wakes up as a 30-year-old. Jennifer Garner. News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (R, CC)
7MATE 6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. (PG, R) 10.00 Cajun Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 11.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 12.00 Ink Master. (M, R) 2.00 Brandi And Jarrod: Married To The Job. (PG, R) 2.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 3.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Cajun Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 5.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 6.00 Strip Nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Rip. (PG, R) 7.00 Friday Night Countdown. (CC) 7.30 Football. (CC) AFL. Round 23. Port Adelaide v Essendon. 11.00 Hardcore Pawn. (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
7FLIX
6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (CC) 2.00 The Point. (R, CC) 3.00 NITV News Week In Review. (CC) 3.30 Classic Floyd: Floyd Around The Med. (R, CC) 4.25 The Cyber Attack That Stopped The World. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Friday Night Football Preview. (CC) Preview of the upcoming NRL match. 7.55 Rugby League. (CC) NRL. Round 24. North Queensland Cowboys v Parramatta Eels. From 1300Smiles Stadium, Queensland. 10.45 MOVIE: Timecop. (M, R, CC) (1994) In the future, a cop sets out to stop his boss from manipulating the past in order to become president. Jean-Claude Van Damme, Mia Sara, Ron Silver.
6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) 7.30 The Living Room. (CC) Barry Du Bois revamps a rundown verandah. Dr Chris Brown visits some Brumbies in the Snowy Mountains. 8.30 Dave. (PG, CC) Dave Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Neil provides an insight on his life as he juggles a comedy career and bringing up two kids. 9.00 To Be Advised. 9.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M, R, CC) A look at news, with Ed Kavalee, Sam Pang and a panel of guests, including Denise Scott, Tony Martin and Melanie Bracewell, competing to see who can remember the most about the week. Hosted by Tom Gleisner. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.00 To Be Advised. 11.30 WINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s All Australian News. (CC)
6.00 The Chefsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Line. (CC) Judge Melissa Leong goes inside the kitchen of Indian restaurant Atta, in Melbourne. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.35 Extreme Railway Journeys: The Great Japanese Train Ride. (PG, R, CC) Presenter Chris Tarrant explores some of the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most â&#x20AC;&#x153;extremeâ&#x20AC;? railway lines. 8.30 MOVIE: Trumbo. (M, CC) (2015) After he and his friends are jailed and blacklisted for their political beliefs, Hollywood screenwriter and novelist Dalton Trumbo uses his writing to expose the absurdity and injustice of McCarthyism. Bryan Cranston, Diane Lane, Helen Mirren. 10.45 SBS World News Late. (CC) 11.15 MOVIE: Fado. (MA15+, R) (2016) A young doctor travels to Lisbon in Portugal to win back his ex-girlfriend. Golo Euler, Luise Heyer, Albano JerĂłnimo.
12.45 Extra. (CC) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Filthy Rich. (M, R, CC) 3.30 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 4.00 Global Shop. 4.30 The Avengers. (PG, R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R, CC)
12.30 The Project. (R, CC) A look at the dayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) Hosted by Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Home Shopping. (R)
1.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
1.05 Ride Upon The Storm. (MA15+, R) Christian returns home from Nepal with a completely changed outlook on life. 3.15 Soccer. (CC) FIFA U-20 Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s World Cup. Final. From Stade de la Rabine, Vannes, France.
ONE
6.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Friends. (R, CC) 12.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.00 Worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs. 6.00 MOVIE: The Iron Giant. (PG, R) (1999) 7.40 MOVIE: Puss In Boots. (PG, R, CC) (2011) 9.30 MOVIE: Abduction. (M, R, CC) (2011) 11.40 WWE Smackdown. (MA15+) 12.40 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.30 Aqua Teen Hunger Force. (MA15+, R) 1.45 China, IL. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Programs.
9GEM 6.00 Morning Programs. 7.00 Creflo. (PG) 7.30 TV Shop. (R) 8.00 Morning Programs. 12.15 MOVIE: Crooks In Cloisters. (R, CC) (1964) 2.15 My Favorite Martian. (R) 2.45 Mad About You. (PG, R, CC) 3.15 Wild New Zealand. (R, CC) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 To The Manor Born. (R) 7.30 Airport Security Colombia. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Blues Brothers 2000. (PG, R, CC) (1998) 11.00 House. (M, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Tashi. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 How To Get Away With Murder. (M, R) 2.00 Resurrection. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Galavant. (PG, R) 4.15 Lab Rats: Bionic Island. (R, CC) 5.15 MOVIE: The Adventures Of Sharkboy And Lavagirl. (R) (2005) 7.00 MOVIE: Yogi Bear. (R) (2010) 8.30 MOVIE: Crimson Tide. (M, R, CC) (1995) Denzel Washington. 11.00 MOVIE: Proof Of Life. (M, R) (2000) 1.45 Late Programs.
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (PG, CC) 7.30 WINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, CC) 1.00 The Living Room. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Better Homes. (R, CC) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Practice. (R, CC) 3.30 Australiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Amazing Homes. (PG, R) 4.30 Animal Rescue. (R, CC) 5.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Border Security USA. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Border Security: Int. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Australiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Amazing Homes. (PG) 9.30 Selling Houses Aust. (PG, R, CC) 10.30 Late Programs.
Dubboâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s TV Guide
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.00 Million Dollar Rooms. (PG, R) 12.00 House Hunters Reno. (R) 1.00 Hotel Impossible. (PG, R) 2.00 Big Beach Builds. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG) 8.30 Barnwood Builders. 10.30 Lakefront Bargain Hunt Renovation. (PG) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Home Shopping. (R) 8.00 MacGyver. (PG, R) 9.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 10.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Hoganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Heroes. (R) 12.30 To Be Advised. 1.30 WINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s All Australian News. (R, CC) 2.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 3.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. (R) 5.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) A miscommunication leads to panic. 7.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) Walker goes undercover as a teacher to find the source of drugs which led to the deaths of four athletes. 11.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) A classified document is stolen. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 5.00 The Doctors. (M, CC)
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Mia And Me. (R) 7.05 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G. (R) 8.00 Baby Animals In Our World. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bernard. (R) 9.00 Littlest Pet Shop. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (PG) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Pointless. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG, CC) 7.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 8.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Charmed. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 Buffy The Vampire Slayer. (M) 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.00 James Corden. (M) 12.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 The Talk. (PG, CC) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 James Corden. (M, R) 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: Bugsy Malone. (PG, R) (1976) 1.45 Weediquette. (M, R) 2.10 A Day In Slab City. (M, R) 2.35 Awkward. (M, R) 3.00 Balls Deep. (PG, R) 3.35 Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Suppertime! (PG, R, CC) 4.00 News. 4.35 WorldWatch. 5.30 If You Are The One. (R) 6.35 Hestonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Dinner In Space. (R, CC) 7.30 Batman. (PG, R) 8.30 A Modern Mutiny: Untold Australia. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 Filthy Rich And Homeless. (M, R, CC) 10.35 King Of The Road. (MA15+) 11.25 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Barefoot Contessa. 1.30 Secret Meat Business. 2.00 Beat Bobby Flay. 2.30 Mystery Diners. 3.00 Food Lab. 3.30 Giada In Italy. 4.00 Barefoot Contessa. 4.30 Secret Meat Business. 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. 5.30 Bizarre Foods. 6.00 The Cook And The Chef. (PG, R) 7.00 Nigella Bites. (R) 7.30 Hestonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Great British Food. (PG, R) 8.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R, CC) 9.30 Chefsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Line. (R) 10.00 Bizarre Foods. (R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 2.00 Protecting Manuwangku. 2.30 Our Footprint. (PG) 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.26 Yarramundi Kids. 3.52 Finding My Magic. 3.57 Musomagic. 4.22 Grounded. 4.49 The Time Compass. 5.00 Music Voyager. (PG) 5.30 Kriol Kitchen. 6.00 Unearthed. (R) 6.30 Matauranga. (R) 7.00 Our Stories. (PG, R) 7.15 Black Soul. (R) 7.25 News. 7.30 Kaitangata Twitch. (PG, R) 9.20 NITV News Week In Review. (R) 9.50 Big Freedia: Queen Of Bounce. (M) 10.50 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
DUBBO REGIONAL THEATRE AND CONVENTION CENTRE
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55
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
TV+
Saturday August 25 ABC
PRIME7
6.00 Rage. (PG, CC) 11.10 Grand Designs Australia. (R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 Death In Paradise. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Grantchester. (M, R, CC) 2.30 Catalyst. (R, CC) 3.30 Todd Sampson’s Life On The Line. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Landline. (CC) 4.30 Tony Robinson’s Time Walks. (R, CC) 5.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC)
NINE
WIN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
6.00 Home Shopping. (R) 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. (CC) 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG, CC) 12.00 MOVIE: Turner & Hooch. (PG, R, CC) (1989) Tom Hanks. 2.00 To Be Advised. 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. (R, CC) 5.00 Seven News At 5. (CC) 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R, CC)
6.00 Ellen DeGeneres. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Weekend Today. (CC) 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG, CC) 12.00 Destination Happiness. (PG, CC) 12.30 Cybershack. (PG, CC) 1.00 Rugby League. (CC) Intrust Super Premiership. Round 24. Newtown Jets v Wests Magpies. 3.00 Airport 24/7: Miami. (PG, R, CC) 3.30 The Block. (PG, R, CC) 4.30 The Garden Gurus. (CC) 5.00 News: First At Five. (CC) 5.30 Getaway. (PG, CC)
6.00 Cook’s Pantry. (R, CC) 6.30 Reel Action. (R, CC) 7.00 RPM. (R, CC) 8.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R, CC) 9.00 Sammy And Bella’s Kitchen Rescue. (R, CC) 9.30 St10. (PG, CC) 12.00 The Living Room. (R, CC) 1.00 The 48 Hour Destination. (CC) 1.30 Comfort Food. (R, CC) 2.30 Australia By Design: Architecture. (R, CC) 3.00 Luxury Escapes. (R, CC) 3.30 Places We Go. (CC) 4.00 News. (CC) 5.00 Rugby Union. (CC) Bledisloe Cup. Game 2. New Zealand v Australia.
6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (CC) 2.00 Small Business Secrets. (R, CC) 2.30 Wild Brazil. (R, CC) 3.30 Gymnastics. (CC) FIG Trampoline World Cup Series. 5.25 The Great Human Odyssey. (R, CC)
6.00 Compass. (CC) Kumi Taguchi introduces the representatives of three charities who give their pitch for donations. 6.30 Back Roads: Thursday Island. (R, CC) Heather Ewart visits Thursday Island. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at today’s top stories and events as they unfold, with comprehensive analysis and reporting. 7.30 The Split. (M, CC) Hannah faces Christie’s ex-wife over a tricky case involving a prenuptial agreement. 8.30 DCI Banks. (M, R, CC) A landlord is kidnapped after speaking at a charity, supporting Chinese nationals who fled persecution. 9.15 Rake. (M, R, CC) Cleaver finds himself matching wits with a new nemesis as he settles into his role as a Federal senator. 10.15 The Last Post. (M, R, CC) Follows a military police unit and their families.
6.00 Seven News. (CC) 7.00 Football. (CC) AFL. Round 23. Sydney v Hawthorn. From the SCG. 10.30 MOVIE: Passenger 57. (M, R, CC) (1992) After a terrorist group manages to free a prisoner aboard a flight, they take the other passengers and crew hostage. Their plan, however, hits a snag after a security expert who was hitching a ride manages to throw a spanner in the works. Wesley Snipes, Bruce Payne, Tom Sizemore.
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 Saturday Night Football Preview. (CC) Preview of the upcoming NRL match. 7.35 Rugby League. (CC) NRL. Round 24. Sydney Roosters v Brisbane Broncos. From Allianz Stadium, Sydney. 9.50 True Story With Hamish & Andy: Sarah. (PG, R, CC) Comedy duo Hamish Blake and Andy Lee meet Sarah, who shares a story about how she suspected a rival trainee of sabotaging her after starting a trial waitressing job at an upmarket restaurant. 10.20 MOVIE: The Brothers Grimsby. (MA15+, R, CC) (2016) A football hooligan and father of nine is thrust into the world of espionage and high jinks after reuniting with his long-lost brother, the world’s greatest spy. Sacha Baron Cohen, Mark Strong, Rebel Wilson.
7.30 Bring Back… Saturday Night. (CC) Host Rove McManus sets out on a mission to bring back classic Saturday night entertainment by reuniting some of Australia’s greatest acts, bands, and television faces in a live show where young performers will bring back the best of the past. 8.30 Skit Happens. (M, R, CC) Sketch comedy series featuring some of Australia’s top comedians. 9.00 To Be Advised. 9.30 To Be Advised. 10.00 To Be Advised. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.00 Motor Racing. (CC) Supercars Championship. Round 11. OTR SuperSprint – The Bend. Race 22. Highlights. From The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, South Australia.
6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys: Motherwell To Linlithgow. (R, CC) Michael Portillo takes to the tracks with a copy of George Bradshaw’s Victorianera railway guidebook. 8.05 Joanna Lumley’s Greek Odyssey. (R, CC) Part 3 of 4. Joanna Lumley continues her odyssey by exploring some of the 1400 islands which make up Greece. 9.00 Soccer. (CC) EPL. Wolverhampton v Manchester City. From Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, England. 11.50 MOVIE: The New World. (M, R, CC) (2005) After English settlers decide to establish a colony in the New World, they find themselves clashing with the locals. Colin Farrell, Q’orianka Kilcher.
11.15 Birds Of A Feather. (PG, R, CC) Sharon gets a text from her husband who she has not seen for 12 years. 11.40 Rage. (MA15+) Music videos chosen by a special guest programmer.
12.15 Grey’s Anatomy. (M, R, CC) Callie and Arizona have a chance to reflect on all the issues which have contributed to their marriage woes. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program.
12.00 MOVIE: Stolen. (M, R, CC) (2012) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Filthy Rich. (M, R, CC) 3.30 Getaway. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 5.30 Wesley Impact. (CC)
12.00 To Be Advised. 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program.
2.15 MOVIE: The Girl Who Played With Fire. (MA15+, R, CC) (2009) 4.30 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)
ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.05 Ben And Holly. (R, CC) 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R, CC) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Live At The Apollo. (M, R, CC) 9.15 Russell Howard’s Stand-Up Central. (M, CC) (Final) 9.40 Comedy Next Gen. (M, R, CC) 10.35 Comedy Up Late. 11.05 Russell Kane: Smokescreens And Castles. 12.05 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 12.50 Live At The Apollo. 1.35 The Moaning Of Life. 2.20 The IT Crowd. 2.45 News Update. 2.50 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
7TWO 6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Travel Oz. (R, CC) 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 11.30 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 12.30 Australia’s Amazing Homes. (PG, R) 1.30 Sydney Weekender. (R, CC) 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. (PG, R) 2.30 Vasili’s Garden. (R) 3.00 Rugby Union. Shute Shield. 5.00 Crash Investigation Unit. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Air Crash Investigation. (PG, R) 7.30 Mighty Cruise Ships. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Paddington Station 24/7. (PG, R) 12.30 Late Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.30 Cartoon It Up. (R) 5.35 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. (R) 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Total Wipeout. (PG, R, CC) 7.25 The Zoo. (CC) 7.35 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R, CC) 7.55 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.10 Slugterra. (R, CC) 8.30 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (R, CC) 8.55 Fangbone! (PG, R, CC) 9.05 Numb Chucks. (R, CC) 9.20 Game On. (R) 9.30 The Next Step. (R, CC) 9.50 Close. (R) 5.00 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! (R, CC) 5.25 Detentionaire. (R, CC)
7MATE
ONE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 12.30 Surfing. (CC) World League. Bali Pro. Highlights. 1.30 Children’s Programs. 5.20 MOVIE: Jetsons: The Movie. (1990) 7.00 MOVIE: My Super Ex-Girlfriend. (PG, R, CC) (2006) 9.00 MOVIE: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. (M, R, CC) (2014) 11.30 Kevin Can Wait. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Adult Swim. (MA15+, R) 12.30 Frisky Dingo. (MA15+, R) 12.45 Mary Shelley’s Frankenhole. (M, R) 1.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 3.00 Children’s Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Shopping. (R) 9.00 World Of X Games. (R) 10.00 Brandi And Jarrod: Married To The Job. (PG, R) 10.30 Ice Road Truckers. (PG, R) 11.30 Life Off Road. (PG) 12.00 Big Australia. (R, CC) 1.00 Blokesworld. (PG) 1.30 Ice Road Truckers. (PG, R) 3.30 Cajun Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 4.30 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 5.30 Beverly Hills Pawn. (PG, R) 6.30 The Kick. (CC) 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 23. Sydney v Hawthorn. 11.30 MOVIE: Blue Thunder. (M, R) (1983) 1.45 Late Programs.
7FLIX
ABC NEWS 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 Planet America. 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 Close Of Business. 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 The Breakfast Couch. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 The Drum Weekly. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 One Plus One. 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.30 The Mix. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News Weekend. 7.30 Aust Story. (R, CC) 8.00 ABC News Weekend. 8.10 Four Corners. (R, CC) 9.00 ABC News Weekend. 9.15 Matter Of Fact: This Week. (R) 10.00 ABC News. 10.15 Planet America. (R, CC) 11.00 Late Programs.
9GO!
6.00 Skippy. (R) 6.30 TV Shop. (R) 8.00 Skippy. (R) 8.30 TV Shop. (R) 10.00 Rainbow Country. (R) 10.30 MOVIE: An Elephant Called Slowly. (R, CC) (1970) 12.25 MOVIE: The Cracksman. (R, CC) (1963) 2.40 MOVIE: The Major And The Minor. (R) (1942) 4.45 MOVIE: Beau Geste. (PG, R) (1966) 7.00 MOVIE: Twister. (PG, R, CC) (1996) 9.15 MOVIE: Dante’s Peak. (M, R, CC) (1997) Pierce Brosnan. 11.25 Cold Case. (M, R, CC) 12.25 My Favorite Martian. (R) 1.00 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Kitty Is Not A Cat. (R, CC) 9.00 The Deep. (R, CC) 10.00 K.C. Undercover. (PG, R) 11.00 Lab Rats: Bionic Island. (R, CC) 12.00 Pickle & Peanut. (PG, R) 12.45 Dance Boss. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Austin & Ally. (R) 3.00 Liv And Maddie. (R) 4.00 Star Wars Rebels. (PG, R) 5.00 Once Upon A Time. (PG, CC) 7.00 MOVIE: National Treasure. (PG, R, CC) (2004) 9.40 MOVIE: Source Code. (M, R, CC) (2011) 11.40 MOVIE: Alien Abduction. (M, R) (1998) 1.40 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 11.00 Postcards. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Getaway. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Barnwood Builders. (R) 2.00 Tiny House, Big Living. (R) 3.00 Lakefront Bargain Hunt Renovation. (PG, R) 4.00 Five Day Flip. (PG, R) 5.00 You Can’t Turn That Into A House! (PG, R) 6.00 Big Beach Builds. (R) 7.00 Worst To First. (R, CC) 8.00 House Hunters. 9.00 House Hunters Int. 10.00 House Hunters Reno. 11.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND 6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Insight. (R, CC) 1.00 Front Up. (PG, R) 1.30 Room 101. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 MOVIE: Hairspray. (PG, R) (1988) 4.10 Mr Tachyon On The Edge Of Science. (PG, R, CC) 4.35 WorldWatch. 5.35 It’s Suppertime! 6.30 Tyger Takes On... (PG, R) 7.30 If You Are The One. (PG) 8.30 MOVIE: Lovelace. (MA15+, R) (2013) 10.10 Sex With Sunny Megatron. (MA15+, R) 10.40 Slutever. (MA15+, R, CC) 11.05 MOVIE: The Brothers Grimm. (M, R) (2005) 1.10 Late Programs.
6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 8.30 To Be Advised. 11.00 Industry Leaders With Janine Allis. 11.30 Fishing Edge. (PG, R) 12.00 Australia By Design: Architecture. (R, CC) 12.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 1.30 ST: Next Gen. (R) 2.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 3.30 Epic Meal Empire. (PG, R) 4.00 Reel Action. (CC) 4.30 Nature’s Great Events. (R, CC) 5.30 To Be Advised. 6.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Motor Racing. (CC) Supercars Championship. Round 11. OTR SuperSprint – The Bend. Race 22. Highlights. 9.00 Bergerac. (M) 10.10 Allo! Allo! (PG, R) 10.50 MOVIE: Once Upon A Time In America. (MA15+, R) (1984) Robert De Niro. 3.05 RPM. (R, CC) 4.05 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 4.35 The Doctors. (M, CC) 5.30 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R)
SBS FOOD
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Sam Fox: Extreme Adventures. (R, CC) 7.00 Treasure Island. (R) 7.30 Lexi And Lottie: Trusty Twin Detectives. (C, R, CC) 8.00 Kuu Kuu Harajuku. (C, CC) 8.30 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 9.05 The Loop. (PG) 11.35 Charmed. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 To Be Advised. 4.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 4.30 Raymond. (R, CC) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M, R, CC) Hosted by Tom Gleisner. 9.30 Car Crash Global: Caught On Camera. (PG, R) Takes a look at car crashes. 10.30 Robotech: Macross Saga. (M, R) 11.30 The Loop. (PG, R) 2.00 Shopping. (R) 3.00 Charmed. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 5.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC)
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 1.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 2.00 Beat Bobby Flay. (PG, R) 2.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Heston’s Great British Food. (PG, R) 4.00 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R, CC) 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 5.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Luke Nguyen’s Memories Of The Mekong. (R, CC) 8.30 Driven By Food. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 Man Vs Food: Carnivore. (PG, R) 10.30 Man Fire Food. (R) 11.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Big Freedia: Queen Of Bounce. (M, R) 2.00 Matauranga. (R) 2.30 Unearthed. (R) 3.00 On The Road. (PG, R) 4.00 Fusion. (PG, R) 5.00 Dene A Journey. (R) 6.00 Maori TV’s Native Affairs. 6.30 First Australians. (PG, R) 7.45 News. 7.50 Camels And The Pitjantjara. (PG, R) 8.35 MOVIE: Hangin’ With The Homeboys. (MA15+, R) (1991) 10.10 The Point. (M, R) 11.10 Music Voyager. (PG, R) 11.40 Happy Birthday To A Beautiful Woman. (PG, R) 12.05 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
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56
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Sunday August 26 ABC
PRIME7
NINE
WIN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
6.00 Rage. (PG, CC) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. (CC) 9.00 Insiders. (CC) 10.00 Offsiders. (CC) 10.30 The World This Week. (R, CC) 11.00 Compass. (R, CC) 11.30 Songs Of Praise. (CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 Landline. (CC) 1.30 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 2.30 Dream Gardens. (R, CC) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R, CC) 4.00 The Mix. (R, CC) 4.30 The Split. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Anh’s Brush With Fame. (R, CC)
6.00 Home Shopping. (R) 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. (CC) 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG, CC) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, CC) 1.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) Darrin searches for the missing monkey. 1.30 To Be Advised. 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. (R, CC) 5.00 Seven News At 5. (CC) 5.30 Sydney Weekender. (CC)
6.00 World’s Best Beaches. (R, CC) 7.00 Weekend Today. (CC) 10.00 Sports Sunday. (PG, CC) 11.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. (PG, CC) Reviews and previews of NRL matches. 1.00 Netball. (CC) Super Netball. Grand final. 3.30 Sunday Football Preview. (CC) A preview of the upcoming NRL match. 4.10 Rugby League. (CC) NRL. Round 24. St George Illawarra Dragons v Canterbury Bulldogs. From Jubilee Oval, Sydney.
6.00 Mass. (CC) 6.30 Hillsong. (CC) 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 Finding Answers. (CC) 8.00 Luxury Escapes. (R, CC) 8.30 The Living Room. (R, CC) 9.30 St10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R, CC) 12.30 Tales By Light. (PG, CC) 1.30 Cook’s Pantry. (R, CC) 2.00 Jamie’s Super Food. (R, CC) 3.00 Australia By Design: Architecture. (CC) 3.30 RPM. (CC) 4.00 Motor Racing. (CC) Supercars Championship. Round 11. OTR SuperSprint – The Bend. Race 23. Highlights. 5.00 News. (CC)
6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 Small Business Secrets. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Soccer. (CC) EPL. Wolverhampton v Manchester City. Replay. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Speedweek. (CC) 3.00 The Bowls Show. (CC) 4.00 InCycle. (CC) 4.30 Small Business Secrets. (R, CC) 5.05 Cycling. (CC) UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 1. Highlights. 5.35 Nazi Megastructures. (PG, CC)
6.00 Catalyst: Feeding Australia Pt 2. (R, CC) A continued look at the future of the food industry and sustainable farming practices in Australia. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. (CC) Coverage of local, national and international news, including the day’s sport and weather updates. 7.40 Grand Designs: House Of The Year. (CC) Part 4 of 4. Kevin McCloud visits some of Britain’s best minimalist homes. 8.30 Rake. (M, CC) With the US Secretary of Defense missing, Cleaver finds himself in the sights of the Secret Service. 9.25 Vera. (M, R, CC) DCI Vera Stanhope investigates the case of a murdered social worker. 10.55 Miniseries: Code Of A Killer. (M, R, CC) Part 3 of 3. 11.40 New Blood. (M, R, CC) Rash and Stefan join forces.
6.00 7.00 8.00 9.00
Seven News. (CC) Little Big Shots. (PG, CC) Sunday Night. (CC) Crime Investigation Australia: Most Infamous: Headless Body – The Kim Barry Murder. (MA15+, CC) Takes a look at the 1981 murder of Wollongong teenager Kim Barry. Her killer, former local coal miner Graham Potter, spent 15 years behind bars for the crime but ended up back inside for life for organised crime. 10.20 Autopsy USA: Casey Kasem. (M, CC) Takes a look at the death of radio legend Casey Kasem, who passed away at age 82, in 2014, from dementia. 11.20 Criminal Confessions: Gainesville. (M, CC) After a college student goes missing without a trace, police interview his friends and family.
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 The Block. (PG, CC) On the day before the reveal, three teams are having issues with their shower screens. 8.30 60 Minutes. (CC) Featuring reports from Liz Hayes, Allison Langdon, Tara Brown, Charles Wooley, Ross Coulthart and Liam Bartlett. 9.30 See No Evil: Carlesha FreelandGaither. (M, CC) Takes a look at how the abduction of Carlesha FreelandGaither was solved with the help of CCTV footage. 10.30 Las Vegas With Trevor McDonald. (M, R, CC) Part 2 of 2. Trevor McDonald looks at the secret life of Sin City, including the tourists who flock there. 11.30 Major Crimes. (M, R, CC) The team continues to gather information about the past murders and how they tie in with the present ones.
6.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) In the throes of massive swell and unpredictable weather, the Bondi lifeguards push each other to their limits in the annual lifeguard challenge. 6.30 The Sunday Project. (CC) Panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Russell Coight’s All Aussie Adventures. (PG, CC) Russell Coight is asked to personally escort two international scientists deep into the Daintree Rainforest. 8.00 To Be Advised. 10.30 Sports Tonight. (CC) Matt White, Laurie Daley and Josh Gibson provide coverage of the latest local, national and international sporting news. 11.15 Elementary. (M, CC) Sherlock and Joan retrace Sherlock’s steps after he finds himself in possession of a severed head.
6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.35 The Pharaoh In The Suburbs. (CC) Documents how the 2017 discovery of a giant statue in a Cairo suburb sent shockwaves around the world. 8.30 Egypt: What Lies Beneath? (R, CC) With the help of satellites, Dr Sarah Parcak and her team set out to create a map of ancient Egypt. The images provided by cutting-edge technology allow them to peel away layers of sand and soil to reveal, in stark contrast, outlines of structures hidden for millennia. 10.10 My Amazing Brain: Richard’s War. (CC) Follows a former soldier’s road to recovery after suffering a brain haemorrhage in 2013. 11.10 Myanmar’s Killing Fields. (CC)
12.40 Rage. (MA15+) Continuous music programming. 1.55 Vera. (M, R, CC) 3.25 Miniseries: Code Of A Killer. (M, R, CC) 4.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 Insiders. (R, CC)
12.30 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) David Koch and Samantha Armytage present the news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
12.30 Major Crimes. (M, R, CC) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.10 The Brokenwood Mysteries. (M, R, CC) 5.00 News Early Edition. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)
12.00 The Sunday Project. (R, CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC) Morning news and talk show.
12.15 I Am JFK Jr. (M, R, CC) 1.55 First Contact. (M, R, CC) 2.55 One Born Every Minute. (M, R, CC) 3.55 Lockerbie: My Brother’s Bomber. (PG, R, CC) 4.55 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle. (CC)
ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.20 Shaun The Sheep. (R, CC) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. (PG, R, CC) 8.45 Dave Gorman Live. (M, R, CC) 10.10 Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled. 10.55 Would I Lie To You? 11.25 Russell Howard’s Stand-Up Central. 11.50 Absolutely Fabulous. 12.20 Absolutely Fabulous. 12.55 Blackadder II. 1.25 Famalam. 1.45 The Inbetweeners. 2.05 Dynamo: Magician Impossible. 2.50 Troy. 3.30 News Update. 3.35 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 5.25 Total Wipeout. (PG, R, CC) 6.25 Teenage Boss. (CC) 6.55 Horrible Histories. (R, CC) 7.25 The Zoo. (CC) 7.35 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R, CC) 7.55 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.10 Slugterra. (PG, R) 8.30 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG, R, CC) 8.50 Fangbone! (R, CC) 9.05 Numb Chucks. (PG, R, CC) 9.15 Game On. (R) 9.25 The Next Step. (R, CC) 9.50 So Awkward. (R, CC) 10.15 Rage. (PG, R) 2.20 Close. (R) 5.00 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! (R, CC) 5.25 Children’s Programs.
ABC NEWS 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 The Mix. (R, CC) 2.00 ABC News. (CC) 2.30 Aust Story. (R, CC) 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 Landline. (R, CC) 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 One Plus One. (R, CC) 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 Foreign Corre. (R, CC) 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.15 Planet America. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News Hour. 8.00 Insiders. (R, CC) 9.00 National Wrap. 9.45 ABC News Weekend. 10.00 ABC News. 10.30 One Plus One. (R, CC) 11.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 11.30 Late Programs.
7TWO
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 Leading The Way. 8.00 David Jeremiah. (PG) 8.30 Shopping. (R) 9.30 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 10.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Air Crash Investigation. (PG, R) 2.00 Escape To The Country. (R) 3.00 Rugby Union. Shute Shield. 5.00 Paddington Station 24/7. (PG) 6.00 Mighty Ships. (PG, R) 7.00 Border Security: Int. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Border Security. (PG, R, CC) 10.00 To Be Advised. 10.30 Border Security. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.
ONE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 American Ninja Warrior. (PG, R, CC) 6.00 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Rambo: First Blood Part II. (M, R) (1985) 10.30 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Adult Swim. (MA15+) 12.30 Frisky Dingo. (MA15+, R) 12.45 Mary Shelley’s Frankenhole. (MA15+) 1.00 Tattoo Fixers. (MA15+, R) 2.00 MOVIE: Superman Unbound. (M) (2013) 3.30 Thunderbirds. (R) 4.30 Kate And Mim-Mim. (R) 4.50 Little Charmers. (R) 5.10 Yo-Kai. (PG, R) 5.30 Children’s Programs.
7MATE
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 AFL Game Day. (CC) 11.30 Big Smo. (PG, R) 12.00 The Fishing Show. (PG) 1.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 2.00 Beverly Hills Pawn. (PG, R) 2.30 Sunday Soapbox. (CC) 3.00 Football. (CC) AFL. Round 23. Melbourne v GWS. 6.00 Beverly Hills Pawn. (PG, R) 6.30 MOVIE: The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor. (PG, R, CC) (2008) 8.40 MOVIE: Taken. (M, R, CC) (2008) Liam Neeson. 10.40 MOVIE: Murder At 1600. (M, R) (1997) 1.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Key Of David. (PG, R) 8.30 The Incredible Journey Presents. (PG) 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. (R) 10.30 MOVIE: The Comedy Man. (PG, R, CC) (1964) 12.20 MOVIE: Pool Of London. (PG, R, CC) (1951) 2.05 Getaway. (PG, R, CC) 2.35 MOVIE: South Of Algiers. (R, CC) (1953) 4.30 MOVIE: The Heiress. (R) (1949) 7.00 Midsomer Murders. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 DCI Banks. (M, R) 10.00 Law & Order: S.V.U. (M, R, CC) 11.00 The Closer. (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
7FLIX
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 The Deep. (R, CC) 10.00 K.C. Undercover. (PG, R) 11.00 Austin & Ally. (R) 12.00 Liv And Maddie. (R) 1.00 MOVIE: Descendants. (PG, R, CC) (2015) 3.30 Good Times. (PG, R) 4.30 Diff’rent Strokes. (PG, R) 5.30 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.00 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Modern Family. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty. (PG, R) (2013) Ben Stiller. 10.45 MOVIE: Captain Ron. (M, R, CC) (1992) 1.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Lakefront Bargain Hunt Renovation. (PG, R) 11.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 11.30 House Hunters. (R) 12.30 Listed Sisters. (R) 1.30 Million Dollar Rooms. (PG, R) 2.30 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG, R) 3.30 Worst To First. (R, CC) 4.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 5.30 Flipping Out. (PG, R) 6.30 Texas Flip And Move. 7.30 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 9.30 Tiny House, Big Living. 10.30 Flipping Boston. (PG) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Rugby Union. (CC) Bledisloe Cup. Game 2. New Zealand v Australia. Replay. 10.30 Industry Leaders With Janine Allis. (R) 11.00 Fishing Edge. 11.30 Reel Action. (R, CC) 12.00 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R) 12.30 Outrun Cancer. (PG, R) 1.05 The Indestructibles. (PG, R) 1.35 Epic Meal Empire. (PG, R) 2.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Fishing Aust. (R, CC) 3.00 The Doctors. (PG, CC) 4.00 Monster Jam. (R) 5.00 Operation Repo. (PG, R) 5.30 iFish Summer. (CC) 6.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 6.30 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Nature’s Great Events. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Motor Racing. (CC) Supercars Championship. Round 11. OTR SuperSprint – The Bend. Race 23. Highlights. From The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, South Australia. 9.30 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 12. British Grand Prix. 11.00 CSI: Miami. (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Sam Fox: Extreme Adventures. (R, CC) 7.05 Kuu Kuu Harajuku. (R, CC) 7.35 Invizimals. (R) 8.05 Sanjay And Craig. (R) 9.00 TMNT. (R) 10.00 Scope. (C, CC) 10.30 The Bureau Of Magical Things. (C, CC) 11.00 Family Ties. (PG, R) 11.30 Brady Bunch. (R) 12.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 2.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 3.30 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 7.00 Everybody Loves Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Everybody Loves Raymond. (R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Pearl Harbor. (R) (2001) Friends are stationed together in Hawaii. Ben Affleck. 12.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 Frasier. (PG, R) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 Family Ties. (PG, R) 4.00 Brady Bunch. (R) 4.30 TMNT. (R) 5.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R)
6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 PopAsia TV. (PG) 10.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Insight. (R, CC) 1.00 Front Up. (PG, R) 1.30 Rise. (PG, R) 2.20 Vs Arashi. (R) 3.10 Look Me In The Eye. (PG, R, CC) 6.00 Easter Island: Mysteries Of A Lost World. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 The Crystal Maze. (CC) 8.30 The Employables. (M, R, CC) 9.30 The Girlfriend Experience. (MA15+, R, CC) 10.30 Zero Tolerance: Child Separation. 11.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 2. 2.00 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 11.30 Luke Nguyen’s Memories Of The Mekong. (R, CC) 12.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 1.00 Driven By Food. (PG, R) 2.00 Man Fire Food. (R) 2.30 Wonderful Indonesia Flavours. (R) 3.30 Brunch @ Bobby’s. (R) 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 5.30 Far Flung. (R) 7.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 8.30 Cupcake Wars. (PG, R) 9.30 Food Paradise International. (R) 10.30 Man Fire Food. (R) 11.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 2.45 Rugby League. Koori Knockout. 3.30 Rugby Union. South Australia League. 5.00 Maori TV’s Native Affairs. 5.30 Te Kaea. 6.00 Defining Moments. (PG, R) 6.30 Get Your Fish On. (PG, R) 7.00 Behind The Brush. 7.30 The Point In Review. 7.35 Who Do You Think You Are? (M, R) 8.30 Reel Injun: The Hollywood Indian. (M, R) 10.00 Venus And Serena. (M, R) 11.40 Messiah. (PG, R) 12.00 Reel Injun: The Hollywood Indian. (M, R) 1.30 Volumz. (PG, R)
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
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Ph: 6884 3334
57
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
TV+
Monday August 27 ABC
PRIME7
NINE
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Grand Designs: House Of The Year. (R, CC) 11.00 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 11.30 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 Landline. (R, CC) 2.00 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 2.55 Murder, She Wrote. (M, R, CC) 3.45 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 4.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Think Tank. (R, CC) Hosted by Paul McDermott. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Australian Story. (CC) Australians tell personal stories. 8.30 Four Corners. (CC) Host Sarah Ferguson and the team investigate issues and stories of interest to all Australians. 9.15 Media Watch. (PG, CC) Paul Barry takes a look at the latest issues affecting media consumers. 9.35 Q&A. (CC) Hosted by Tony Jones. 10.40 ABC Late News. (CC) Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.10 The Business. (R, CC) Hosted by Elysse Morgan. 11.30 Golf. (CC) PGA Tour. The Northern Trust. Highlights. From Ridgewood Country Club, Paramus, New Jersey.
6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) Tori reveals her big plans to her family. 7.30 Dance Boss. (PG, CC) In the semi-final, the top six crews perform routines to hits by Bruno Mars, Taylor Swift and Justin Timberlake. 9.00 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. (M, CC) British chef Gordon Ramsay and his team have just 24 hours to try and save the Fetch Bistro, a restaurant in Wichita, Kansas, that was designed to serve both people and dogs. After investigation and surveillance, he discovers that the business itself could use a major clean-up. 10.00 Life Sentence. (M, CC) (New Series) A woman is forced to face the long-term consequences of her decision to “live in the moment”.
12.20 Head First: Tailor Made Bodies. (M, R, CC) Part 2 of 5. 1.20 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 2.20 Rage. (MA15+) 4.45 Tractor Monkeys. (PG, R, CC) 5.15 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC)
12.00 Talking Footy. A review of the weekend’s AFL round. 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) News, sport and weather.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
ABC COMEDY
Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: Deadly Secrets. (M, R, CC) (2005) Cameron Daddo. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M, R, CC) 8.40 Josh. (M, CC) 9.10 Summer Heights High. (R) 9.35 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 10.05 Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled. 10.50 Peep Show. 11.15 Workaholics. 11.35 Archer. 11.55 The Office. 12.20 30 Rock. 12.40 Parks And Recreation. 1.00 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 1.30 Peep Show. 1.55 Workaholics. 2.15 The Office. 2.40 Archer. 3.00 News Update. 3.05 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
7MATE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Operation Ouch! (R, CC) 6.50 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.20 BTN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.30 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R) 7.50 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.05 Slugterra. (R) 8.25 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG, R, CC) 8.50 Fangbone! (R, CC) 9.00 Numb Chucks. (R, CC) 9.15 The Wild Adventures Of Blinky Bill. (R, CC) 9.25 Game On. (R) 9.35 The Next Step. (R, CC) 10.00 So Awkward. (R, CC) 10.25 Rage. (PG, R) 11.30 Close. (R) 5.00 Children’s Programs.
7FLIX
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Mornings With Joe O’Brien. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 5.55 Heywire. (PG, R, CC) 6.00 ABC News Express. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC Evening News. 9.00 ABC News Monday. 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. (CC) 11.00 ABC News Tonight. 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News Overnight. 1.15 The Business. (R, CC) 1.30 DW Focus On Europe. (R) 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 Al Jazeera. (CC) 2.00 Trepalium. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Together We Dance: Sydney Forro Dance. (PG, R, CC) 3.15 Tommy Fleming Song For A Winter’s Night. (R, CC) 4.30 Kylie Kwong: Heart And Soul. (R, CC) 5.00 Cycling. (CC) UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 2. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 The Block. (PG, CC) The five teams begin the master bedroom and walk-in robes week of the competition. 8.40 Doctor Doctor. (M, CC) Meryl and Carlito’s relationship sends shockwaves through the Knight family. Tension between Hugh and Penny puts the new cardiac clinic at risk. Matt reconnects with his old high-school crush. 9.40 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now. (M, R, CC) Dr Christian Jessen and his team treat a woman who is desperate to get pregnant. 10.40 100% Footy. (M, CC) Featuring the latest rugby league news, with exclusive insights from an expert panel. 11.40 Two And A Half Men. (PG, R, CC) Shocked by the news she has married, Charlie begins stalking Rose.
6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) A look at the day’s news. 7.30 Australian Survivor. (CC) After 25 days on the island, the castaways have made the halfway point in the competition. 8.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M, CC) Special guests include Urzila Carlson, Wil Anderson and Kitty Flanagan. 9.30 Street Smart. (PG, CC) Steve is furious when a bowl he nicked from his mum’s kitchen is sold at auction with a $1 million price tag. 10.00 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R, CC) Irish comedian Graham Norton chats with Stephen Mangan, Emilia Fox, Johnny Vegas and Jess Glynne. 11.00 Man With A Plan. (PG, CC) Andi’s parents visit them for Easter. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC)
6.00 The Chefs’ Line. (CC) Home cooks compete against chefs. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Empire Of The Tsars: Romanov Russia: Reinventing Russia. (PG, R, CC) Part 1 of 3. Lucy Worsley explores the Romanovs, who controlled Russia for more than three centuries. 8.35 The Body Coach. (CC) Part 1 of 3. Joe Wicks, also known as The Body Coach, sets out to enrol the public in his fitness revolution. 9.35 24 Hours In Emergency: The Good Fight. (M, CC) A delivery man who was knocked off his moped by a car is brought into St George’s Hospital. 10.30 SBS World News Late. (CC) 11.00 The World Game. (CC) Soccer news, features and match results. 11.30 Transfer. (MA15+) A concert pianist wants a younger body.
12.10 Two And A Half Men. (PG, R, CC) 12.35 Rizzoli & Isles. (M, R, CC) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Extra. (R, CC) 3.30 A Current Affair. (R, CC) 4.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)
12.30 The Project. (CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 2.30 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)
12.35 Transfer. (MA15+) 1.40 Modus. (M, R, CC) 3.25 Trapped. (MA15+, R, CC) 4.25 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)
1.00 1.30 3.00 4.00 5.00
ONE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Car SOS. (PG) 12.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: Fight Club. (MA15+, R) (1999) 11.50 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 12.15 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.15 Harvey Birdman, Attorney At Law. (M, R) 1.30 Aqua Teen Hunger Force. (MA15+, R) 1.45 China, IL. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Adv Time. (PG, R) 2.30 Children’s Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.20 MOVIE: The Day The Earth Caught Fire. (PG, R, CC) (1961) 2.20 My Favorite Martian. (R) 2.50 Mad About You. (PG, R, CC) 3.20 Mary Portas: Queen Of The High Street. (PG) 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 To The Manor Born. (R) 7.30 Death In Paradise. (M, R) 8.40 New Tricks. (M, R, CC) 9.50 Line Of Duty. (MA15+, R) 11.10 Real Detective. (M, CC) 12.05 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 How To Get Away With Murder. (M, R) 3.00 To Be Advised. 3.30 Diff’rent Strokes. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Dr. Ken. (PG, R) 6.00 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: One Fine Day. (PG, R) (1996) Michelle Pfeiffer. 10.45 MOVIE: Diana. (M, R, CC) (2013) 1.05 Late Programs.
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG, CC) 7.00 Entertainment Tonight. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. (PG, R) 10.00 Big Smo. (PG, R) 10.30 Beverly Hills Pawn. (PG, R) 12.00 Police Woman. (M, R) 1.00 World Of X Games. 2.00 Blokesworld. (PG, R) 2.30 Big Smo. (PG, R) 3.00 Ice Road Truckers. (PG, R) 4.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 5.00 Dogs Of War. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: Predator 2. (MA15+, CC) (1990) Danny Glover. 11.10 American Dad! (M, R) 12.10 Late Programs.
ABC NEWS
Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) Extra. (CC) Entertainment news program. The Block. (PG, R, CC) News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 Vasili’s Garden. (R) 12.00 Mighty Ships. (PG, R) 1.00 The Layover. (M) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 3.30 Auction Squad. (R, CC) 4.30 Animal Rescue. (R, CC) 5.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Doc Martin. (PG, R) 8.30 Foyle’s War. (M, R, CC) 10.30 Crimes That Shook The World. (MA15+, R, CC) 11.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.
ABC ME
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
WIN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 11.30 Extreme Homes. (R) 12.30 Postcards. (PG, R, CC) 1.00 Flipping Out. (PG, R) 2.00 Hotel Impossible. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Listed Sisters. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Botched. (M, R, CC) 8.30 The Real Housewives Of New Jersey. (M) 10.30 The Real Housewives Of Atlanta. (M) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Whacked Out Sports. (PG, R) 8.15 RPM. (R, CC) 8.45 Sports Tonight. (R, CC) 9.30 I Fish. (R, CC) 10.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) 1.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 3.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.30 ST: Next Gen. (R) 5.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 8.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) A delusional marine thinks he is still in Iraq. 10.30 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 13. Belgian Grand Prix. Highlights. 11.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 12. British Grand Prix. Replay. 3.30 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 The Doctors. (M, CC)
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Mia And Me. (R) 7.05 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G. (R) 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bernard. (R) 9.00 Littlest Pet Shop. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 10.30 Raymond. (R, CC) 11.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (PG) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Pointless. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG, CC) 7.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 8.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 The Flash. (M) (New Series) 10.30 Sex And The City. (M, R) 11.00 James Corden. (M) 12.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 The Talk. (PG, CC) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 James Corden. (M, R) 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: The Sea Inside. (M, R) (2004) 2.20 Awkward. (M, R) 2.45 Dead Set On Life. (PG, R) 3.10 Cyberwar. (PG, R, CC) 3.35 PopAsia TV. (PG, R) 4.40 Woman With Gloria Steinem. (PG, R) 5.35 If You Are The One. (R) 6.35 Building Giants. (R) 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Mr Tachyon On The Edge Of Science. (M, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Fruitvale Station. (M, R) (2013) 10.00 Angry Girls: The Rise Of Female Violence. (M, R) 11.00 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Food: Fact Or Fiction. (R) 2.30 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 3.00 Food Lab. (PG, R) 3.30 Giada In Italy. (R) 4.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 4.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 5.30 Bizarre Foods. (R) 6.30 Giada Entertains. (R) 7.00 Nigella Bites. (R, CC) 7.30 Texas Cake House. 8.30 Cupcake Wars. (PG) 9.30 Chefs’ Line. (R, CC) 10.00 Bizarre Foods. (R) 11.00 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 11.30 Worst Cooks. (PG, R) 12.25 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.40 Messiah. 2.00 Behind The Brush. 2.30 ReWired. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.26 Yarramundi Kids. 3.52 Finding My Magic. 3.57 Musomagic. 4.22 Grounded. 4.49 The Time Compass. 5.00 Music Voyager. 5.30 Small Business Secrets. 6.00 Surviving. 6.30 Hard Rock Medical. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.20 First Stories. (PG) 7.25 News. 7.30 First Australians. (PG) 8.25 The Collard Family Vs The State Of WA. (M) 9.35 News. 9.40 Reel Injun: The Hollywood Indian. (M) 11.10 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
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58
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Tuesday August 28 ABC
PRIME7
NINE
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Grand Designs. (R, CC) 10.55 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 11.25 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 Four Corners. (R, CC) 1.45 Media Watch. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 3.45 Mary Berry’s Absolute Favourites. (R, CC) 4.15 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Think Tank. (R, CC) Hosted by Paul McDermott. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. (CC) International current affairs program, featuring in-depth stories from a network of foreign correspondents. 8.30 Catalyst: How To Build A Time Machine. (CC) Takes a look at the science of time travel and what we need to be able to do or understand to construct a time machine. 9.30 Search For Second Earth: Second Genesis. (CC) Part 3 of 4. 10.25 ABC Late News. (CC) Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 10.55 The Business. (R, CC) The day’s business and finance news. 11.10 Q&A. (R, CC)
6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) Hunter’s future is in jeopardy after a desperate move by Christina. 7.30 Dance Boss. (PG, CC) (Final) 9.00 800 Words. (PG, CC) George and Katie test their new relationship by going on a winter camp. Arlo and Poppy grow closer while Shay struggles with Ike moving on. Big Mac has a grand plan to attract tourists to Weld. 10.00 Killer Tapes: The Murder Of Rhys Jones. (M, CC) (Final) Documents major crimes, including the 2007 murder of 11-year-old Rhys Jones. 11.00 Chicago Fire. (M, CC) Casey faces unexpected consequences after clashing with a visiting captain who is filling in for Boden.
12.20 Search For Second Earth: Second Genesis. (R, CC) Part 3 of 4. 1.15 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 2.15 Rage. (MA15+) 4.45 Tractor Monkeys. (PG, R, CC) 5.15 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC)
12.00 Cosmetic Coffee. (M, R) A look at cosmetic surgery. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) News, sport and weather.
ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 8MMM. (Final) 8.30 The IT Crowd. (PG, R, CC) 8.55 Goober. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 Summer Heights High. 9.30 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 10.00 The Inbetweeners. 10.30 Peep Show. 10.55 Workaholics. 11.15 Archer. 11.40 The Office. 12.05 30 Rock. 12.25 Parks And Recreation. 12.45 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 1.15 Peep Show. 1.40 Workaholics. 2.05 The Office. 2.25 Archer. 2.50 News Update. 2.55 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Operation Ouch! (R, CC) 6.50 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.20 BTN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.30 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R) 7.50 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.05 Slugterra. (R) 8.25 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG, R, CC) 8.50 Fangbone! (R, CC) 9.00 Numb Chucks. (R, CC) 9.15 The Wild Adventures Of Blinky Bill. (PG, R, CC) 9.25 Game On. (R) 9.35 The Next Step. (R, CC) 10.00 So Awkward. (R, CC) 10.25 Rage. (PG, R) 11.25 Close. (R) 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Mornings With Joe O’Brien. (CC) 11.55 Heywire. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 6.00 ABC News Express. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC Evening News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact With Stan Grant. (CC) 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. (CC) 11.00 ABC News Tonight. 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News Overnight. 1.15 Matter Of Fact. (R, CC) 2.00 Late Programs.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: Secrets Of Eden. (M, R, CC) (2012) John Stamos. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)
7TWO
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
WIN
Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) Doctor Doctor. (M, R, CC) Matt reconnects with his old crush. The Block. (PG, R, CC) News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)
7MATE
6.00 WorldWatch. 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS News. (CC) 2.00 Trepalium. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Kylie Kwong: My China. (R, CC) 3.30 Who Do You Think You Are? (PG, R, CC) 4.30 Kylie Kwong: Heart And Soul. (R, CC) 5.00 Cycling. (CC) UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 3. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 The Block. (PG, CC) Courtney is highly stressed about styling her massive master bedroom. 8.40 True Story With Hamish & Andy: Stephen. (PG, CC) Comedy duo Hamish and Andy meet Stephen, who shares a story about an over protective father. 9.10 Kath & Kim. (PG, R, CC) A worried Kath frets over a sinking feeling that Kel has lost interest in her. Kim plays it cool with Brett. Sharon’s doctor decides to put her on a broad-spectrum placebo for her hypochondria. 10.20 Mom. (M, CC) Christy and Bonnie rush to a sick Violet’s side, only to find out that having glandular fever is the least of her worries. 11.20 The Closer. (M, R, CC) A male adult-film star is murdered.
6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) 7.30 Australian Survivor. (CC) After a shake-up in the competition, both tribes are cautiously reforming plans and forging alliances. 9.00 Bull. (M, CC) Bull is hired to help convict a drug dealer who murdered a police officer but has managed to avoid jail for years by claiming she suffers from schizophrenia, and nobody has been able to prove otherwise. 10.00 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) As Hetty is tortured by her captors in Vietnam, Eric and Nell find a clue to her whereabouts. 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) Callen, Sam, Kensi and Deeks work with Hetty’s team from the Vietnam War on a dangerous rescue mission.
6.00 The Chefs’ Line. (CC) Watch station chef Sujan from Kepos Street Kitchen, in Sydney, goes up against three home cooks. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Great Indian Railway Journeys: Lucknow To Kolkata. (PG, CC) Part 3 of 4. 8.30 Insight. (R, CC) Presenter Jenny Brockie mediates a discussion on what it is like to work in criminal law. 9.30 Dateline. (CC) A look at the hospital train which uses the country’s railway network to deliver medical care to it’s most vulnerable people. 10.00 Rebuilding Generation War. (M, CC) A look at a hospital in Marqa, Jordan. 10.30 SBS World News Late. (CC) 11.00 The Son. (M, CC) 11.50 Chance. (MA15+, R, CC) Lucy comes to Chance’s aid.
12.15 Body Donors. (M, R, CC) 1.05 Cyndi Lauper: Still So Unusual. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Extra. (CC) 3.30 A Current Affair. (R, CC) 4.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)
12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC) 1.00 The Project. (R, CC) 2.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)
12.50 Chance. (MA15+, CC) 1.55 MOVIE: Macbeth. (MA15+, R, CC) (2015) 3.55 One Born Every Minute. (M, R, CC) 4.55 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle. (CC)
1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
ONE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: Batman Forever. (PG, R, CC) (1995) 11.30 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Bad Robots. (M, R) 12.30 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Aqua Teen Hunger Force. (MA15+, R) 1.45 China, IL. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Adv Time. (PG, R) 2.30 Children’s Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Ice Road Truckers. (PG, R) 11.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 12.00 Police Woman. (M, R) 1.00 Dogs Of War. (PG, R) 2.00 Big Smo. (PG, R) 2.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 3.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 5.00 Dogs Of War. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, CC) 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Aussie Salvage Squad. (M) 9.30 Highway Thru Hell. (PG) 10.30 Counting Cars. (PG) 12.00 Late Programs.
7FLIX
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Mary Portas: Queen Of The High Street. (PG, R) 11.35 To The Manor Born. (R) 12.15 MOVIE: Till Death Us Do Part. (PG, R) (1968) 2.20 My Favorite Martian. (R) 2.50 Mad About You. (PG, R, CC) 3.20 Find It, Fix It, Flog It. 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Good Life. (R) 7.30 New Tricks. (M, R) 8.40 Midsomer Murders. (M, R, CC) 10.40 Major Crimes. (M, R, CC) 11.40 Law & Order. (M, R, CC) 12.35 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (M, R, CC) 2.00 Resurrection. (M, R, CC) 3.00 To Be Advised. 3.30 Diff’rent Strokes. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Dr. Ken. (PG, R) 6.00 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Modern Family. (PG, R) 10.00 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R, CC) 11.45 The Real O’Neals. (M, R) 12.15 Late Programs.
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (PG, CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Mr Selfridge. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 3.30 Auction Squad. (R, CC) 4.30 Animal Rescue. (R, CC) 5.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Mrs Brown’s Boys. (M, R) 8.30 Inspector George Gently. (M, R, CC) 10.30 Air Crash Investigation. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.
Dubbo’s TV Guide
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Tiny House, Big Living. (R) 1.00 House Hunters. 2.00 Texas Flip And Move. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Five Day Flip. (PG, R) 8.30 Good Bones. (PG, R) 9.30 Hunting Vintage. (R) 10.00 To Be Advised. 10.30 Beachfront Bargain Hunt: Renovation. (R) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 MacGyver. (PG, R) 9.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 10.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) 1.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 3.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.30 ST: Next Gen. (R) 5.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) Bobbie goes undercover as a teacher. 8.30 CSI: Miami. (MA15+, R) A former professional surfer is murdered. 9.30 CSI: Miami. (M, R) Horatio foils an armoured truck robbery. 10.30 CSI: NY. (M, R) 11.30 48 Hours. (M, R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 3.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 4.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 5.00 The Doctors. (M, CC)
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Mia And Me. (R) 7.05 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G. (R) 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 8.35 Bernard. (R) 9.00 Littlest Pet Shop. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 11.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (PG) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Pointless. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG, CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R, CC) 9.30 Hughesy, We Have A Problem. (M, R, CC) 10.30 Sex And The City. (MA15+, R) 11.00 James Corden. (M) 12.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 The Talk. (PG, CC) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: The Night Clerk. (M, R) (2011) 1.55 VICE. (M, R, CC) 2.30 Awkward. (M, R) 3.00 Tough Young Teachers. (PG, R) 4.05 News. 4.35 WorldWatch. 5.35 If You Are The One. (R) 6.40 Building Giants. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Adam Ruins Everything. (PG, R) 8.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 9.30 Wellington Paranormal. (M, CC) (Final) 10.00 South Park. (MA15+, R) 10.30 F*ck That’s Delicious. (M, CC) 11.00 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 1.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 2.00 Beat Bobby Flay. (PG, R) 2.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 3.00 Food Lab. (R) 3.30 Giada In Italy. (R) 4.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 4.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 5.30 Bizarre Foods. (PG) 6.30 Giada Entertains. (R) 7.00 Nigella Bites. (R, CC) 7.30 Worst Cooks. (PG) 8.30 No Reservations. (PG, R, CC) 9.30 Chefs’ Line. (R, CC) 10.00 Bizarre Foods. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.20 Nulla Nulla. 1.30 Hard Rock Medical. 2.00 Small Business Secrets. 2.30 Surviving. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.26 Yarramundi Kids. 3.52 Finding My Magic. 3.57 Musomagic. 4.22 Grounded. 4.49 The Time Compass. 5.00 Music Voyager. 5.30 Kriol Kitchen. 6.00 Campfire. 6.30 Going Bush. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.20 First Stories. 7.25 News. 7.30 Haunted: The Other Side. 8.00 8MMM. 8.30 Over The Black Dot. 9.30 News. 9.35 Hunting Aotearoa. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
SOLUTIONS & ANSWERS
Where on Google Earth: Kintyre Country Living, on Glenabbey Drive in West Dubbo, just off the Newell Highway. Paul McCartney and Wings had a hit single in 1977 called “Mull of Kintyre”, which is the name of an area where McCartney owned property.
CROSSWORD TIME PUZZ932
PHOTO NEWS SUDOKU GRID664
Baker’s Dozen Trivia Test. 1. Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff and Slytherin 2. Western Australia 3. Hydrogen 4. “The Simpsons” 5. October 4, 1957, with the launch of Sputnik 1 6. Mary Reibey 7. South America 8. Edible seaweed 9. Robert Redford 10. A calf 11. All were films that had SUDOKU EXTRA
scores created by Vangelis. “Chariots of Fire” won an Academy Award for Best Original Score. 12. Roy Emerson, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic. 13. “Miss You Like Crazy” by Natalie Cole in 1989. The song reached No.22 on the Australian singles chart, but fared better on Cole’s homeland where it went to the top of both the adult contemporary and R&B charts.
TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS #435 1. gladius, 2. magpie, 3. American Football (NFL), 4. 50-90 per cent, 5. Love Kylie, 6. Raphael, Donatello, Leonardo & Michelangelo, 7. Ireland, 8. L. Frank Baum, 9. two, 10. true. Matchmaker solution 235 Sand, hand, land, lane, line, fine, pine, pins, pits.
HEX-ANUMBER
FIND THE WORDS solution 1022 The leisure hours GO FIGURE
HITORI
problem solved!
59
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
TV+
Wednesday August 29 ABC
PRIME7
NINE
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Grand Designs. (R, CC) 11.00 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 11.30 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 12.30 National Press Club Address. (CC) 1.30 Australian Story. (R, CC) 2.00 New Blood. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 3.45 The Cook And The Chef. (R, CC) 4.15 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Think Tank. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Anh’s Brush With Fame: Lauren Jackson. (PG, CC) Anh Do paints a portrait of Lauren Jackson. 8.30 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. (M, CC) A satirical news program exposing humorous, absurd and hypocritical stories from around the world. 9.00 You Can’t Ask That: Priests. (M, CC) (Final) Eight priests speak candidly. 9.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M, R, CC) Celebrity guest is Andy Serkis. 10.15 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, R, CC) Hosted by Tom Ballard. 10.45 ABC Late News. (CC) 11.15 The Business. (R, CC) 11.30 Four Corners. (R, CC)
6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) The teens try to fix up Marilyn and John. 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, CC) An officer witnesses a burnout. 8.00 Motorbike Cops. (PG, CC) Motorcycle cops have to deal with a van on fire as they continue their no-nonsense policing in Sydney. 8.30 9-1-1. (M, CC) The crew races to an emergency when disaster strikes at an Indian wedding. 9.30 Criminal Minds. (M, CC) The team meets in secret to investigate a man who appears to be kidnapping and photographing young women. 10.30 Deception. (M, CC) Cameron continues to focus on his brother. 11.30 Hell’s Kitchen USA. (MA15+, CC) (Final) Hosted by Gordon Ramsay.
12.20 Media Watch. (PG, R, CC) 12.35 New Blood. (M, R, CC) (Final) 1.35 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (M, R, CC) 2.20 Rage. (MA15+) 3.40 National Press Club Address. (R, CC) 4.40 Tractor Monkeys. (PG, R, CC) 5.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC)
12.30 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) David Koch and Samantha Armytage present the news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
ABC COMEDY
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: Reflections. (M, R, CC) (2008) Timothy Hutton. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Absolutely Fabulous. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 Summer Heights High. (R) 9.30 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. (M, CC) 10.00 The Moaning Of Life. 10.45 Peep Show. 11.10 Workaholics. 11.35 Archer. 11.55 The Office. 12.20 30 Rock. 12.40 Parks And Recreation. 1.05 Corey White’s Roadmap To Paradise. 1.35 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 2.05 Peep Show. 2.30 Workaholics. 2.50 The Office. 3.15 Archer. 3.35 News Update. 3.40 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 NBC Today. (R, CC) 12.00 Lovejoy. (PG, R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 3.30 Auction Squad. (R, CC) 4.30 Animal Rescue. (R, CC) 5.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Walking Through History. (PG, R) 8.30 Judge John Deed. (M, R) 10.30 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG, R) 11.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Mornings With Joe O’Brien. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 12.30 Press Club. (CC) 1.30 ABC News. (CC) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 6.00 ABC News Express. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC Evening News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact With Stan Grant. (CC) 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. (CC) 11.00 ABC News Tonight. 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News Overnight. 1.15 Matter Of Fact. (R, CC) 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 The Block. (PG, CC) The co-stars of Today, Karl Stefanovic and Georgie Gardner, visit the contestants. Norm and Jess get one step closer to building their secret weapon, provided they get one neighbours approval. 8.40 Bite Club. (M, CC) There are dire consequences in store after Stephen tampers with evidence in a murder case. Dan and Zoe investigate the killing of a predator. Zoe receives an unexpected proposal. 9.50 Truth And Lies: The Family Manson. (M, R, CC) Takes a look at Charles Manson, his devoted followers, and the murders that they carried out in Los Angeles. 11.30 Lethal Weapon. (M, R, CC)
12.30 Rizzoli & Isles. (M, R, CC) 1.30 Extra. (R, CC) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. (R) 3.30 A Current Affair. (R, CC) 4.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)
6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 9.00 MOVIE: The Long Kiss Goodnight. (MA15+, R, CC) (1996) 11.30 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Bad Robots. (M, R) 12.30 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Aqua Teen Hunger Force. (MA15+, R) 1.45 China, IL. (M, R) 2.00 Adv Time. (PG, R) 2.30 Regular Show. (PG, R) 3.00 Children’s Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Police Woman. (M, R) 1.00 Dogs Of War. (PG, R) 2.00 Highway Thru Hell. (PG, R) 3.00 Dogs Of War. (PG) 4.00 Motor Racing. Australian Off Road Championship. Highlights. 4.30 Motor Racing. World Rally Championship. Highlights. 5.30 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, CC) 7.30 The Simpsons. (PG, R) 9.30 Family Guy. (M, R) 11.00 American Dad! (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
7FLIX
ABC NEWS
1.00 1.30 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) Extra. (CC) Kevin Can Wait. (PG, CC) The Block. (PG, R, CC) News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)
9GO!
7MATE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Operation Ouch! (R, CC) 6.50 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.20 BTN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.30 Ladybug And Cat Noir. (R) (Final) 7.50 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.05 Slugterra. (PG, R) 8.25 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG, R, CC) 8.50 Fangbone! (R, CC) 9.00 Numb Chucks. (R, CC) 9.15 The Wild Adventures Of Blinky Bill. (R, CC) 9.25 Game On. (R) 9.35 The Next Step. (R, CC) 10.00 So Awkward. (R, CC) 10.25 Rage. (PG, R) 11.30 Close. (R) 5.00 Children’s Programs.
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Find It, Fix It, Flog It. (R) 11.35 The Good Life. (R) 12.15 MOVIE: Outcast Of The Islands. (PG, R, CC) (1951) 2.20 My Favorite Martian. (R) 2.50 Mad About You. (PG, R, CC) 3.20 Find It, Fix It, Flog It. 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Good Life. (R) 7.30 Poirot. (PG, R) 8.40 Agatha Christie’s Marple. (PG, R) 10.40 Cold Case. (M, R, CC) 11.40 Law & Order. (M, R, CC) 12.35 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Miles From Tomorrowland. (R, CC) 8.30 Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja. (R) 9.00 Tashi. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (M, R, CC) 2.00 Resurrection. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 3.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 4.00 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R, CC) 6.00 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Bones. (M, R, CC) 12.20 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.00 Flipping Boston. (PG, R) 12.00 Five Day Flip. (PG, R) 1.00 Good Bones. (PG, R) 2.00 Hunting Vintage. (R) 2.30 To Be Advised. 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG, R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Zombie House Flipping. (PG, R) 8.30 Big Beach Builds. 9.30 You Can’t Turn That Into A House! (PG) 11.00 Restored. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
WIN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (PG, CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)
6.00 France 24 English News. (CC) 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS News. (CC) 2.00 Trepalium. (M, R, CC) 3.00 Dateline. (R, CC) 3.30 Insight. (R, CC) 4.30 Kylie Kwong: Heart And Soul. (R, CC) 5.00 Cycling. (CC) UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 4. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)
6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) Join the hosts and guest panellists for a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 The Bachelor Australia. (CC) Sparks fly between Nick and one of the lucky bachelorettes that he picks for a romantic speedboat date. 8.30 MOVIE: Pretty Woman. (M, R, CC) (1990) In need of an escort for social events while visiting Los Angeles, a ruthless, workaholic businessman gives a prostitute a first-hand look at the lives of the rich when he hires her to be his companion for a week. Richard Gere, Julia Roberts, Hector Elizondo. 10.45 Hawaii Five-0. (M, R, CC) The death of an FBI agent leads McGarrett to round up every gang-related criminal on the island. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC)
6.00 The Chefs’ Line. (CC) Two home cooks compete against a chef. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys: Settle To Garsdale. (R, CC) Michael Portillo travels from Settle in North Yorkshire to Garsdale, in Cumbria. 8.05 Food Safari Water. (PG, CC) Maeve O’Meara takes a look at seafood snacks from cuisines around the world. 8.35 The Employables. (M, CC) Part 2 of 3. Creel Price announces the final six whose ideas may be chosen for the eventual pitch. 9.40 Deep State. (CC) Max does not know who to trust after speaking to Leyla, a member of The Section team stationed in Beirut. 10.35 SBS World News Late. (CC) 11.10 Taboo. (M, CC) A duel takes a surprising turn.
12.30 The Project. (R, CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)
12.15 MOVIE: The Girl King. (MA15+, CC) (2015) 2.10 Bosch. (M, R, CC) 3.55 One Born Every Minute UK. (M, R, CC) 4.55 Poh & Co. Bitesize. (R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle. (CC)
ONE
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 MacGyver. (PG, R) 9.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 10.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) 1.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 3.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.30 ST: Next Gen. (R) 5.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) A man dislocates his hip. 7.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) The Rangers probe a series of cop killings. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) A man breaks into Callen’s house. 11.30 CSI: NY. (M, R) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 2.00 ST: Next Gen. (R) 3.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 The Doctors. (M, CC)
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Mia And Me. (R) 7.05 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G. (R) 8.00 Totally Wild. (C, CC) 8.35 Bernard. (R) 9.00 Littlest Pet Shop. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (PG) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Pointless. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG, CC) 7.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Aeon Flux. (M, R, CC) (2005) Charlize Theron, Frances McDormand. 10.25 Sex And The City. (M, R) 11.00 James Corden. (M) 12.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 The Talk. (PG, CC) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 James Corden. (M, R) 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: We Have A Pope. (M, R) (2011) 1.55 VICE. (M, R) 2.30 Awkward. (PG, R) 3.00 Over The Black Dot. (R, CC) 4.00 News. 4.35 WorldWatch. 5.35 If You Are The One. (PG, R) 6.35 Building Giants. (R) 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 South Park. (M, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: The Thing. (MA15+, R) (1982) 10.30 Slutever. (MA15+, R, CC) 11.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 5. 2.00 News. 2.25 France 24. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 1.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 2.00 Beat Bobby Flay. (PG, R) 2.30 Mystery Diners. (R) 3.00 Food Lab. (R) 3.30 Giada In Italy. (R) 4.00 Barefoot Contessa. (R) 4.30 Secret Meat Business. (R) 5.00 The Little Paris Kitchen. (R, CC) 5.30 Bizarre Foods. (PG) 6.30 Giada Entertains. (R) 7.00 Nigella Bites. (R, CC) 7.30 Food Paradise. 8.30 Mediterranean Escapes. (R) 9.30 Chefs’ Line. (R, CC) 10.00 Bizarre Foods. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Going Bush. 2.00 East Of Arnhem. 2.30 Campfire. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.26 Yarramundi Kids. 3.52 Finding My Magic. 3.57 Musomagic. 4.22 Grounded. 4.49 The Time Compass. 5.00 Music Voyager. 5.30 Kriol Kitchen. 6.00 Desperate Measures. 6.30 Everyday Brave. (PG) 7.00 Our Stories. (PG) 7.20 First Stories. (R) 7.25 News. 7.30 The Marngrook Footy Show. 9.00 Living Black. 9.30 News. (R) 9.35 Football. NEAFL. Sydney University v NT Thunder. 11.50 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
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60
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Thursday August 30 ABC
PRIME7
NINE
6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 ABC News Mornings. (CC) 10.00 Grand Designs. (R, CC) 11.00 Gardening Australia. (R, CC) 11.30 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. (CC) 1.00 Afghanistan: Inside Australia’s War. (M, R, CC) 2.00 New Blood. (M, R, CC) (Final) 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. (PG, R, CC) 3.45 The Cook And The Chef. (R, CC) 4.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 ABC News At Five. (CC) 5.10 The Drum. (CC)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 Think Tank. (R, CC) Hosted by Paul McDermott. 6.55 Sammy J. (CC) Presented by Sammy J. 7.00 ABC News. (CC) Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. (CC) Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Grand Designs Australia. (CC) Hosted by Peter Maddison. 8.50 Loch Ness. (M, CC) (New Series) A detective and a criminal profiler join forces with the local Loch Ness constabulary to investigate a murder. 9.40 QI. (PG, R, CC) Hosted by Stephen Fry. 10.10 ABC Late News. (CC) Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 10.40 The Business. (R, CC) The day’s business and finance news. 10.55 Cuffs. (M, R, CC) Donna is held at gunpoint. 11.55 Loch Ness. (M, R, CC) A piano teacher is murdered.
6.00 PRIME7 News. (CC) 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. (CC) 7.00 Home And Away. (PG, CC) Hunter responds to Christina’s harassment allegations. Justin and Willow could be on the same page. 8.30 Mighty Cruise Ships: Ocean Endeavour. (PG, CC) Takes a look at the MS Ocean Endeavour, a small cruise ship designed for polar adventures that features an ice-strengthened hull, Zodiacs for exploration, and advanced navigation equipment. 9.30 MOVIE: The November Man. (MA15+, R, CC) (2014) An ex-CIA operative is brought back in and finds himself pitted against his former pupil in a deadly game. Pierce Brosnan, Luke Bracey, Olga Kurylenko. 11.50 Autopsy: Prince. (MA15+, R, CC) Looks into possible reasons for Prince’s death.
12.40 Miniseries: Jamaica Inn. (M, R, CC) 1.45 Rage. (MA15+) 2.45 Golf. (CC) PGA Tour. The Northern Trust. Highlights. 3.40 Cuffs. (M, R, CC) 4.40 Tractor Monkeys. (PG, R, CC) 5.10 Doctor Who. (PG, R, CC)
1.00 Home Shopping. (R) Shopping program. 5.30 Sunrise. (CC) David Koch and Samantha Armytage present the news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
ABC COMEDY 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 The Weekly. 8.30 Sammy J. (R, CC) 8.35 Famalam. (M, CC) 9.00 Summer Heights High. 9.30 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 10.00 Very Small Business. 10.25 Peep Show. 10.55 Workaholics. 11.15 Archer. 11.40 The Office. 12.00 30 Rock. 12.25 Parks And Recreation. 12.45 Tonightly With Tom Ballard. 1.15 Peep Show. 1.40 Workaholics. 2.05 The Office. 2.25 Archer. 2.50 News Update. 2.55 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 TMNT. (PG) 6.25 Operation Ouch! (PG, R, CC) 6.50 Deadly 60. (R, CC) 7.20 BTN Newsbreak. (CC) 7.30 Teenage Boss. (R, CC) 7.55 The Jungle Bunch. (R) 8.05 Slugterra. (R) (Final) 8.30 Dragons: Race To The Edge. (PG, R, CC) 8.50 Fangbone! (R, CC) 9.05 Numb Chucks. (R, CC) 9.15 The Wild Adventures Of Blinky Bill. (R, CC) 9.25 Game On. (R) 9.40 The Next Step. (R, CC) 10.00 So Awkward. (R, CC) 10.30 Rage. (PG, R) 11.30 Close. (R) 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. (CC) 9.00 Mornings With Joe O’Brien. (CC) 12.00 ABC News. (CC) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 6.00 ABC News Express. (CC) 6.10 Drum. (R, CC) 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC Evening News. 9.00 Matter Of Fact With Stan Grant. (CC) 9.45 The Business. (CC) 10.00 The World. (CC) 10.55 Heywire. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 ABC News Tonight. 12.00 ABC Late News. (CC) 12.30 7.30. (R, CC) 1.00 ABC News Overnight. 1.15 Matter Of Fact. (R, CC) 2.00 Late Programs.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. (CC) The Morning Show. (PG, CC) Seven Morning News. (CC) MOVIE: The Intruders. (M, R, CC) (2015) Miranda Cosgrove. The Daily Edition. (CC) The hottest issues from the day’s news. The Chase. (CC) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. (CC) The Chase Australia. (CC)
7TWO
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
Today. (CC) Today Extra. (PG, CC) Morning News. (CC) The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) Bite Club. (M, R, CC) Stephen tampers with evidence. The Block. (PG, R, CC) News Now. (CC) Afternoon News. (CC) Millionaire Hot Seat. (CC)
7MATE
6.00 WorldWatch. 6.30 Al Jazeera. (CC) 7.00 BBC News. (CC) 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS News. (CC) 2.00 Living Black. (R, CC) 2.30 The Marngrook Footy Show. (R, CC) 4.00 My Restaurant In India. (PG, R, CC) 4.30 Kylie Kwong: Heart And Soul. (R, CC) 5.00 Cycling. (CC) UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 5. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R, CC)
6.00 Nine News. (CC) 7.00 A Current Affair. (CC) 7.30 Thursday Night Football Preview. (CC) A preview of the upcoming NRL match. 7.50 Rugby League. (CC) NRL. Round 25. South Sydney Rabbitohs v Wests Tigers. From ANZ Stadium, Sydney. 9.45 The NRL Footy Show. (M, CC) Erin Molan, James Bracey, Andrew Johns and Ryan Girdler are joined by a panel of experts to discuss the latest rugby league news. Includes previews of upcoming matches, variety segments, and celebrity and musical guests. 11.00 The AFL Footy Show. (M, CC) Eddie McGuire, Sam Newman and the team provide the latest AFL news and match previews. Includes celebrity guests, as well as breaking news, team line-ups and entertainment segments.
6.00 WIN News. (CC) 6.30 The Project. (CC) 7.30 The Bachelor Australia. (CC) Nick takes one lucky woman for an earlymorning hot air balloon ride. 8.30 Gogglebox. (M, CC) (Series return) A diverse range of people open their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows, with the help of special, lockedoff cameras which capture every unpredictable moment. 9.30 Blue Bloods. (M, CC) Danny and Baez race to find a missing girl who will die within 72 hours without her heart medication. 10.30 Blue Bloods. (M, R, CC) Henry begins meddling when he finds himself the key witness on Danny and Baez’s case. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (CC)
6.00 The Chefs’ Line. (CC) Michael Rantissi from Kepos Street Kitchen, in Sydney, goes up against this week’s best home cook. 6.30 SBS World News. (CC) 7.35 Tony Robinson Down Under: Against The Odds. (PG, R, CC) Tony Robinson looks at the bitter struggle for survival the colony endured. With the assistance of Tim Flannery, he re-creates the celebration that was said to have taken place when women were first brought ashore. 8.35 Police Custody: Attempted Murder. (M, CC) Follows police officers in Bedfordshire, England, as they respond to an emergency in Dunstable. 9.30 Counterpart. (M, CC) Emily Prime is briefed on the mission that landed Baldwin in custody. 11.35 SBS World News Late. (CC)
12.30 Surfing. (CC) World League. Oi Rio Pro. Highlights. From Saquarema, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Extra. (CC) 3.30 A Current Affair. (R, CC) 4.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. (PG, R, CC) 5.00 News. (CC) 5.30 Today. (CC)
12.30 The Project. (R, CC) A look at the day’s news. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG, CC) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS This Morning. (CC)
1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
6.00 Children’s Programs. 11.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Total Divas. (M, R) 1.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. (PG, R, CC) 2.00 Children’s Programs. 6.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 8.00 Big Bang. (M, R, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: Wayne’s World 2. (PG, R) (1993) 10.30 Big Bang. (PG, R, CC) 11.30 Big Bang. (M, R, CC) 12.00 WWE Raw. (MA15+) 1.00 Friends. (PG, R, CC) 1.30 Aqua Teen Hunger Force. (MA15+, R) 1.45 China, IL. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Children’s Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. (PG, R) 10.00 Big Smo. (PG, R) 11.30 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 12.00 Police Woman. (M, R) 1.00 Dogs Of War. (PG, R) 2.00 Big Smo. (PG, R) 2.30 American Pickers. (PG, R) 3.30 Pawn Stars. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Storage Wars. (PG, R) 5.00 Dogs Of War. (PG) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, CC) 8.30 MOVIE: 2 Fast 2 Furious. (M, R) (2003) Paul Walker. 10.40 Ink Master. (M) 12.40 Late Programs.
7FLIX
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Find It, Fix It, Flog It. (R) 11.35 The Good Life. (R) 12.15 MOVIE: Three Hats For Lisa. (R, CC) (1966) 2.20 My Favorite Martian. (R) 2.50 Mad About You. (PG, R, CC) 3.20 Find It, Fix It, Flog It. 4.25 Heartbeat. (PG, R) 5.30 Four In A Bed. (PG, R) 6.00 Secret Dealers. (PG, R, CC) 7.00 The Good Life. (R) 7.30 MOVIE: The Hunt For Red October. (PG, R, CC) (1990) 10.15 MOVIE: The Manchurian Candidate. (MA15+, R) (2004) 1.00 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Tashi. (R, CC) 10.00 James Robison. (PG) 10.30 Travel Oz. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (M, R, CC) 2.00 Resurrection. (M, R, CC) 3.00 To Be Advised. 3.30 Diff’rent Strokes. (PG, R) 4.00 Bewitched. (R, CC) 4.30 I Dream Of Jeannie. (R, CC) 5.00 Just Shoot Me! (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Dr. Ken. (PG, R) 6.00 Married With Children. (PG, R) 6.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Criminal Minds. (M, R, CC) 11.30 American Crime. (M, CC) 12.30 Late Programs.
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG, CC) 7.00 Ent. Tonight. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 WIN’s All Australian News. (R, CC) 8.30 Studio 10. (PG, CC) 12.00 Dr Phil. (CC) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. (CC) 2.30 Neighbours. (PG, R, CC) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, CC) 3.30 Alive And Cooking. (CC) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (CC) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, CC) 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. (CC)
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Property Ladder UK Revisited. (PG, R) 1.00 Cities Of The Underworld. (PG, R) 2.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R, CC) 3.00 Harry’s Practice. (R, CC) 3.30 Auction Squad. (R, CC) 4.30 Animal Rescue. (R, CC) 5.00 Medical Emergency. (PG, R, CC) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. (PG, R) 7.30 Father Brown. (M, R) 8.30 Murdoch Mysteries. (M) 9.30 Murdoch Mysteries. 10.30 Murdoch Mysteries. (M, R) 11.30 Late Programs.
WIN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 House Hunters. (R) 11.30 Zombie House Flipping. (PG, R) 12.30 You Can’t Turn That Into A House! (PG, R) 2.00 Restored. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 Come Dine With Me UK. (PG, R) 5.00 Good Bones. (PG, R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Botched. (M, CC) 8.30 Body Bizarre. (M, CC) 9.30 Below Deck Mediterranean. (M) 10.30 Southern Charm. (M) 11.30 Shahs Of Sunset. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.
ONE 6.00 Shopping. (R) 8.00 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 13. Belgian Grand Prix. Highlights. 9.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 10.00 Scorpion. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 12.00 Hogan’s Heroes. (R) 12.30 NCIS. (M, R, CC) 1.30 WIN News. (R, CC) 2.30 MacGyver. (PG, R) 3.30 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.30 ST: Next Gen. (PG, R) 5.30 Star Trek: Voyager. (PG, R) 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R, CC) 7.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 8.30 Cops: Adults Only: Morons On Parade #5. (PG, R) Follows police officers on patrol. 9.00 MOVIE: Death Wish 3. (MA15+, R) (1985) Charles Bronson. 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R, CC) 12.00 Shopping. (R) 2.00 ST: Next Gen. (PG, R) 3.00 Cheers. (PG, R) 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 The Doctors. (PG, R, CC)
ELEVEN 6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Blazing Team. (R) 6.30 Mia And Me. (R) 7.05 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. (R) 7.35 Cardfight!! Vanguard G. (R) 8.00 Scope. (C, R, CC) 8.35 Bernard. (R) 9.00 Littlest Pet Shop. (R) 9.30 Crocamole. (P, R, CC) 10.00 Raymond. (PG, R, CC) 11.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 WIN News. (R, CC) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (PG) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Alive And Cooking. (R) 3.00 Becker. (PG, R, CC) 4.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Pointless. (CC) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG, CC) 7.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 8.00 Pointless. (PG, R, CC) 8.30 Sex And The City. (MA15+, R) 9.00 Sex And The City. (M, R) 9.30 Sex And The City. (MA15+, R) 10.00 Sex And The City. (M, R) 11.00 James Corden. (M) 12.00 Raymond. (R, CC) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.30 The Talk. (PG, CC) 2.30 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 3.30 Late Programs.
12.05 Outlander. (M, R, CC) 2.15 Bosch. (M, R, CC) 4.05 One Born Every Minute UK. (M, R, CC) 5.00 CGTN English News. (CC) 5.15 NHK World English News. (CC) 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News. (CC)
SBS VICELAND 6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 MOVIE: Restoration. (M, R) (2011) 1.55 VICE. (PG, R) 2.30 Awkward. (M, R) 3.00 Fashionista. (R, CC) 3.10 The Pizza Show. (PG, R) 3.40 The Ice Cream Show. (R) 4.05 News. 4.35 WorldWatch. 5.35 If You Are The One. (R) 6.35 Room 101. (PG, R, CC) 7.35 The Feed. 8.05 Full Frontal. (MA15+) 8.30 Spookers. (M) 10.00 Over 18. 11.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Vuelta a España. Stage 6. 2.00 News. 2.25 Deutsche Welle. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Barefoot Contessa. 1.30 Secret Meat Business. 2.00 Beat Bobby Flay. (PG) 2.30 Mystery Diners. 3.00 Food Lab. 3.30 Giada In Italy. 4.00 Barefoot Contessa. 4.30 Secret Meat Business. 5.00 Wonderful Indonesia Flavours. 5.30 Bizarre Foods. (PG) 6.30 Giada Entertains. (PG, R) 7.00 Nigella Bites. (R, CC) 7.30 Chopped. (PG) 8.30 24 Hour Restaurant Battle. (PG) 9.30 Chefs’ Line. (R, CC) 10.00 Bizarre Foods. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.45 Everyday Brave. 2.15 Living Black. 2.45 Desperate Measures. 3.00 Waabiny Time. 3.26 Yarramundi Kids. 3.52 Finding My Magic. 3.57 Musomagic. (PG) 4.22 Grounded. 4.49 The Time Compass. 5.00 Music Voyager. 5.30 Kriol Kitchen. 6.00 Our Footprint. (PG) 6.30 Africa On A Plate. (PG) 7.00 Our Stories. (PG) 7.20 First Stories. (R) 7.25 News. 7.30 Miniseries: Sunshine. (M, R) 8.30 The Point. 9.30 MOVIE: Comeback Dad. (2014) 11.05 Late Programs.
CLASSIFICATIONS: (P) For preschoolers (C) Children’s programs (G) General viewing (PG) Parental guidance (M) Mature audiences (MA15+) Mature audiences only (AV15+) Extreme violence. (R) Repeat (CC) Closed Captions. Please Note: Listings are correct at the time of print and are subject to late change by networks.
ODDS, ENDS & INSPIRATION STRANGE BUT TRUE
z The name of Alcatraz Island – famed location of a high-security z Sir Winston Churchill once said: prison that’s now a tourist attrac“A lie gets halfway around the tion at San Francisco – comes from world before the truth has a chance the Spanish “Isla de los Alcatraces”, to get its pants on.” or “Island of Pelicans”. z There are lots of sports fans out z The murre, a bird found in the there, and a lot of sports to enjoy: Arctic, actually dives into the water cricket, netball, basketball, soccer, and swims to catch the small fish footy, hockey... olive oil wrestling? that comprise its diet. Interestingly, OK, maybe there aren’t a lot of oiled its eggs aren’t like those of any wrestling events here in the Orana other bird in the world: The whites Region, but in Turkey it’s the naare blue, not white, and the yolks tional sport. Kirkpinar, as it’s known are bright red. there, has been popular since the z Those who study such things Ottoman Empire. The Turkish town claim that the oceans eventually of Edirne has been hosting the anwill dry up – in about a billion years nual tournament since 1361. or so. z If you do much printing, you z In America, aviation authorities might not be surprised to learn that banned cigarette lighters on carryif you figure out the cost by volume, on luggage between 2005 and printer ink costs far more than Dom 2007. During that time, screeners Perignon champagne or Chanel confiscated 22,978 lighters every No.5 perfume. day.
NOW HERE’S A TIP
z “I had a super-cute sock with a hole in the toe, and although I didn’t z If you often wake up in the morn- want to wear it, I wanted to keep it. ing with a neckache, try a new pilI snipped the foot portion off and low. You can get them with cooling now use it as a bottle warmer or a gel inserts, or ones designed especondensation catcher, depending cially for side sleepers or in ergoon what is in the drinking vessel. nomic shapes. There must be one It’s easy to slip on, and works like a that will help you wake up refreshed. charm.” – via email z “I save the large courier envelopes z School student’s hack: A little and other mailings to make cheap, lemon juice on a cotton swab can sturdy aprons for my children’s art help “erase” highlighter marks on projects. The material is really dura- glossy paper. ble, and it doesn’t cost me a thing, z Clean your air ducts in one fell so I can throw it away without wash- swoop by removing the grates and ing if I have a mind to.” – via email lining them up on a sheet outside. I z “It’s time to clean the window use my driveway, but you could use screens again, but this year I busted a deck or patio. Lay the sheet flat, out my small workshop vacuum to then line the grates up. Scrub with clean them without having to rea brush and soapy water, then use move the screens from the window a hose to rinse. The sheet keeps itself. It did a pretty good job and ground dirt off the grates, and the was easy to plug into power points water goes right through the sheet. Let dry and replace. around the house.” – D.L.
...inspiring locals!
61
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
SPORT
Send your Sport news to Contact our Sports photographer geoff.mann@dubbophotonews.com.au mel.pocknall@dubbophotonews.com.au
LEAGUE TAG
Indigenous round set up Westside for a boilover in the finals! By GEOFF MANN Photos by MEL POCKNALL “BECAUSE of her I can” is the theme for NAIDOC this year and with those thoughts in their minds, the Westside girls out-tagged Narromine to book an appointment with CYMS in the semis. The locals’ impressive 34-10 win was the perfect preparation for the Qualifying Final last Sunday and Colin Fuller’s team carried that momentum into their match played at Kennard Park, Wellington on Sunday.
Following two narrow losses against CYMS during the competition, the Rabbitohs were stoic, locked 12-12 with the defending premiers until a Tarlee Roberts intercept secured an 18-12 victory and an appointment with the Parkes Spacecats this Sunday. “Because of her I can” will once again ring out in the girls’ minds as they set themselves for a Grand Final berth and a chance to take their first premiership since their win in the inaugural year of Group XI League Tag in 2015.
Danielle Frail has shown she has inherited the skills of her famous dad, Rod!
Danielle Frail steps off her left foot, a real chip off the old block!
Lakeisha Hull can’t avoid the “rabbit trap”!
Representative star Tarlee Roberts demonstrated her class with two tries and three goals. She backed up with a match-winning intercept to get Westside within one win of a grand final spot.
Sabrina Fernando has been one of Westside’s best all year. She’ll be called on to keep that form going on Sunday.
Sabrina channelled the famous TV character, wiggled her nose and found herself in the clear!
Nerida Whyman ploughs through the cricket pitch on No.1 Oval as Rabbitoh Tisha Boney searches for the tag
62
August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
LAWN BOWLS
Pennants were blowing hard at West Dubbo on Sunday Action photos by MEL POCKNALL ENGADINE conquered tricky winds to claim the Bowls NSW Grade 3 Pennants title following a hard-earned win over Raymond Terrace at Club Dubbo last Sunday afternoon. According to Club Dubbo Bowls Manager, Anthony Brown, “Their gutsy 60 to 48 victory was played
in cold, 40km/h southerly winds, which made bowling difficult, even for the most skilled players.” Engadine maintained a slender lead throughout most of the match, and despite a narrowing of the gap, pulled away with a couple of multiple points ends. Raymond Terrace conceded and all bowlers retreated to the warmth of the clubhouse!
In the earlier rounds played at the Railway Bowling Club, Bathurst City went through Section 1 undefeated, downing Warilla, Singleton RSL and finally St Johns Park. Raymond Terrace took Section 2, Gunnedah stormed into the semi-finals with a last round win against Ballina, and Engadine won Section 4 after a shock loss
by Toongabbie Sports Club. In the semi-finals at Club Dubbo on Sunday morning, the first match went down to the last end when the Raymond Terrace Jets’ skip took the shot bowl to clinch a nail-biting win 59-58. Engadine ended Gunnedah’s giant-killing run in the other playoff, taking the game 64-52. Bowls NSW representative
St Johns Park
Raymond Terrace
St John’s Park
Bathurst Warilla
Warilla
Matt Goodwin was glowing in his praise to both Club Dubbo and Dubbo Railway, emphasising the professional manner in which they ran the event. “All players, officials and spectators were well looked after, and the staff and volunteers of both clubs are to be congratulated,” Matt said at the presentations.
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St Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Park/Singleton
Harrington
Raymond Terrace
Bathurst
Davistown RSL
Harrington
15-year-old Zac Nicholls from Raymond Terrace
Singleton
Tumut
St Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Park/Singleton
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
DIRT BIKES
Mac Daddy Cup raises $4000 for charity Photos by MEL POCKNALL Report contributed by BEN MORGAN 160 riders from all corners of the state descended on Dubbo at the weekend for Dubbo Dirt Bike Club’s annual Mac Daddy Cup charity race day. The Mac Daddy Cup commemorates local club member, Mitch Mackay, who passed away in 2014 after a battle with Ewing’s Sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer. Over $4000 was raised at the event, with all proceeds donated to Dubbo locals Emma Bolton and Andrew Tomlins to support them with their own battles with cancer. With some of the best riders in the state travelling from as far afield as Coffs Harbour, Sydney, Wagga and Cobar, the racing was fast and furious. In the Mac Daddy Cup feature race the old boys showed the young bucks how to do it with Jason Redding dominating all five of the shoot-out races to claim the $1000 first prize. Luke Harding wasn’t far behind in second, followed by Brad Rankmore in third, Kane Fischer in fourth, and Ryda Deveson rounding out the prize money in fifth. The highlight of the Mac Daddy Cup, though, was the mystery celebrity rider dressed as a giraffe racing Mitch Mackay’s old KX450 bike in an entertaining tribute to Mitch which thrilled the crowd.
In the Women’s Opens class Emma Bennets took the win ahead of Jayde George in second. The Girls were represented by Chloe Richards, Kolbie Berry, Kaitlyn Hall and Lou Lou Selliger. The Junior Lites class was taken out by Brock Deveson, followed by Hayden Campbell in second and Justin Harrow in third place. Justin Harrow moved to top place on the podium in the Under16’s 85cc class, with Clancy Clatworthy taking out second and Campbell Hall in third. In the Under-12’s 85cc class, Byron Dennis led the field to first place, followed by Jonty Hatton in second and Tom O’Dwyer in third. In his last practice race before heading off to the World Junior Motocross Championships at Horsham in Victoria this weekend, Jack Deveson took the win in the Under-12’s 65cc class, with Tom O’Dwyer in second and Ryan Eade in third. Jake Doyle took out first place in the Under-10’s 65cc class, followed by Asher Morse in second and Lou Lou Selliger in third position. The 50cc High Powers was taken out by Tyler Eade, with Will Cale in second and George McDonald rounding out the placings. The Harrow’s Transport Encouragement Award was won by Kyan Hatton.
Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News
HARNESS RACING
Turnbull drives five of ten winners Photos by MEL POCKNALL OUR photographer Mel Pocknall has captured the up-close action at Dubbo Harness Racing last Sunday afternoon. A large 10 Race meeting was conducted with extremely well contested fields. Well known Bathurst Driver Steve Turnbull had a great day when he drove five of the ten winners. Steve in recent times has been having his ‘kids’ drive his horses but showed he still knows how. However, as our photos show, it is Mat Rue leading the field in Race 5. All ten horses can be seen with very little between each horse and driver alike. This is the thrill of Harness Racing, and No.1 Smiling Sam leads from a good barrier draw to be able to hold the field together as seen, and then on the bend into the home straight we see the challenges coming – particularly Carinya Gold, the chestnut on the outside working wide and coming from near the rear of the field as seen in the bunched up photo. Smiling Sam was able to pull away and win comfortably by 12 metres. For the next three Sundays the excitement of Harness Racing can be seen at Dubbo. Admission is free and, with a great canteen and bar service, you are encouraged to come along and enjoy all the excitement up close.
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018 TELSTRA PREMIERSHIP – ROUND 24
TIGERS VS SEA EAGLES WARRIORS VS PANTHERS COWBOYS VS EELS RAIDERS VS RABBITOHS
2018 TIPPING CHALLENGE THE CHALLENGE IS ON!
TITANS VS STORM ROOSTERS VS BRONCOS SHARKS VS KNIGHTS DRAGONS VS BULLDOGS
Knights, Bulldogs and Raiders upset the big boys!
JOSH
HELEN H LEN
By GEOFF MANN NEWCASTLE Knights put a lance in the side of the coach-less Panthers in a Saturday night boilover then Bulldogs’ birthday boy Lachlan Lewis slotted a last-minute field goal to bury the Warriors at ANZ Stadium on Sunday afternoon and later the same day, the “60 minute Raiders” held their nerve against co-leader, the Roosters. All the beaten teams will need to regroup ahead of this week’s clash against each other. Penrith, in particular, need an injection of enthusiasm after their semi-final-headed coach was sacked 10 days ago. They were woeful on Saturday night where they coughed up ball at a monotonous rate and fell to the Newcastle Knights. The Warriors fared a similar blow against Dean Pay’s ‘Dogs. The Warriors looked likely to escape the barking Bulldogs but Lewis channelled his famous father Wally to snatch a precious victory. The one-point win kept them two points clear of the totally unwanted wooden spoon! Appropriately the Canberra Raiders delivered for or coach Ricky Stuart on a freezing afternoon in the he capital where the focus was on autism, and funds nds raised went to the Stuart Foundation. “If only” will be the mantra flying around Canberra this week. eek. “If only we’d played for 80 minutes each week we’d be in the top half of the ladder!” Must say, it was good to see the old Canterbury bury boys Deano and Ricky smiling after Sunday’s wins. ins. In other games the Storm may have paid a high price for their professional dismantling of the Eels. l Captain Cameron Smith is injured and at least two other key players are under a judiciary cloud. The Sharks and the Broncos were very impressive with big wins against the Rabbitohs and the Cowboys, while coach Paul McGregor narrowly escaped the chopping block when he reignited the Dragons hopes of staying in the top four. This week I’m out on a limb with the Tigers, Titans and Cowboys. I really hope the great Jonathon Thurston has one more special game at home. All the best tipsters, The Saint BTW Group XI and Castlereagh League finals are on this weekend and the Trundle Boomers put their Woodbridge Cup defence on the line against either Grenfell or Manildra in next week’s Grand Final.
PHIL
SHANE
AMY
GEOFF
TOSSER
SCOTT
!
GAME ON
Tigers Warriors Cowboys Rabbitohs
Storm Roosters Sharks Dragons
Tigers Warriors Cowboys Rabbitohs
Storm Roosters Sharks Dragons
Tigers Warriors Cowboys Raiders
Storm Roosters Sharks Dragons
Tigers Warriors Cowboys Raiders
Titans Roosters Sharks Bulldogs
Tigers Panthers Eels Rabbitohs
Storm Roosters Sharks Bulldogs
Tigers Warriors Cowboys Rabbitohs
Tigers Panthers Cowboys Raiders
Tigers Panthers Cowboys Rabbitohs
Titans Roosters Sharks Dragons
Storm Roosters Sharks Bulldogs
Storm Roosters Knights Dragons
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August 23-29, 2018 Dubbo Photo News CRICKET
LETTER TO THE SPORT EDITOR
Balmain Tiger reveals his passion KEN McCullough wrote to Dubbo Photo News recently and last week we published the bulk of his letter. The 66-yearold from Dunedoo has Tiger’s blood pumping through his veins after growing up in Leichhardt. His father Jack was fullback in Balmain first grade premiership wins in 1946 and ‘47 and again in Third Grade in 1949. In part two of his letter to Geoff Mann (a confirmed St George supporter), Ken reveals the depth of his passion for the Tigers and his disdain for the St George Dragons! It might be safe to say that his angst may have been raised even further on Saturday night when St George Illawarra ended the Tigers’ finals hopes and kept their own top four aspirations alive, with a 20-10 win! BALMAIN and Wests played the first match in the newly formed NSW Rugby League competition at Birchgrove Oval, Balmain in 1908. St George on the other hand didn’t enter the comp until 1921. Johnny come latelys! Balmain and West’s have 16 premierships between them, equal to St George Illawarra but no one ever mentions that! It is always St George, bloody St George! The clubs also have one title each as merged teams – Wests-Tigers (2005) and St George-Illawarra (2010). The Dragons always had the vast St George shire, all of Cronulla shire and all of the Illawarra Shire. It was a massive advantage plus they had the St George Leagues Club, the poker machine money and all those juniors. Cronulla came into the comp in 1967, the first year of the four tackle rule designed to stop the Dragon’s 11-year reign and guess what? St George got beaten. Thank God for that! I really am Balmain but love Wests equally. We had Leichhardt, Balmain, Glebe, Annandale, Pyrmont, Lewisham and Petersham. We were a tiny inner-city area but we won 12 First Grade premierships, 16 Reserve Grade, 14 Third Grade, 13 President’s Cups, five Jersey Flegg’s, three SG Ball’s and no Harold Mathews. That’s 63 premierships across seven grades plus one Wests Tigers, 2005 and a Toyota Cup in 2012. If we had the massive St George advantage, we would have won a stack more! When St George had that 11-year reign they brought everyone under secretary Frank Facer. Johnny Raper and Brian Clay were Newtown juniors, Brian Graham, Graham Langlands, Ken Maddison, Eddie Lumsden, Johnny King and Brian Pollard – country Boys, not local juniors. John Wittenberg and Elton Rasmussen were from Queensland, Robin Gourley and Dick Huddart from England, Ian
Walsh (Eugowra) and many, many more. The only local juniors I can remember were Norm Provan, Billy Smith, and Reg Gasnier at the elite First Grade level, yet you had a million juniors. Kevin Ryan was another country boy. So, St George never relied on the juniors to graduate to first grade to win the premierships but bought everyone to do it. The 1963 Western Suburbs Magpies – the other half of the current Wests-Tigers combination – grand final team had Don Parish (Dubbo), Peter Dimond (Dapto), Dennis Meaney (Manly), Noel Kelly (Qld), Jack Gibson (Easts and Newtown), Kel O’Shea (Qld) and Kevin Smyth (Parramatta and Balmain) The Balmain grand final team of 1969 was less of a “local” team: z Fullback Bob Smithies – Englishman, signed from the Illawarra competition z Winger George Ruebner – played two rugby union Tests for Australia and was signed from Randwick z Centre Alan Fitzgibbon (Goulburn) z Winger Len Killeen, South African international who came to the club via St Helens in England z Half David Bolton was an English Test player z Hooker Peter Bolton was a Grafton junior z Prop Barry McTaggart came to Balmain from Gympie, Qld z Second rower Joe Walsh followed Alan Fitzgibbon from Barmedman, near Queanbeyan z Lock and captain Peter Provan was a St George first player who signed with the Tigers in 1960 z Try-scorer Sid Williams was a Springwood boy who played all his junior football with Parramatta before signing with Balmain z Five-eighth Keith Outten, prop Garry Leo, second-rower John Spencer, whose father Jack had played in the premiership-winning 1947/48 team, and coach Leo Nosworthy were all Balmain locals Wests Tigers 2005 z Journeyman Paul Whatuira came to Wests-Tigers via Auckland Warriors, Melbourne Storm and Penrith Panthers and finished up at Parramatta z Centre Shane Elford was a Penrith junior who played for the Panthers for six years before heading to the Tigers z Winger Pat Richards was signed after four seasons with the Parramatta Eels z Five-eighth Benji Marshall is a New Zealander z Half and captain Scott Prince was brought down from the Brisbane Broncos z Anthony Laffranchi was signed from Murwillumbah but played his first six NRL seasons with the Wests Tigers. The rest of the premiership-winning pack were locals.
Australian cricket umpire to pass on skills CLAIRE Polosak, the CricketNSW Female Umpire Engagement and Umpire Educator, will be in Dubbo next Tuesday to conduct an umpiring course. The Cricket Australia Community Umpiring Course is the perfect refresher for current umpires and introduction for those who would like to take an active role in the game. It will be of special interest for those wanting to be involved with community cricket, junior cricket as well as school cricket and there is no requirement to have had previous experience of the sport. The course is open to all who wish to participate however, in an effort to encourage more girls and women to join the umpiring fraternity, CricketNSW is offering it free of charge for females. Males will pay $40 but in some instances this may be subsidised by local clubs or the Umpires Association. Claire will lead a training session which includes a mixture of the Laws of Cricket and knowledge of the game as well as match management scenarios, umpiring techniques and communication strategies. “Umpiring is everyone’s business and there are many benefits for participants coming
Claire Polosak will be in Dubbo next Tuesday to conduct an umpiring course. PHOTO: CRICKET NSW
into the umpiring environment,” the International umpire said. For further information, or any questions contact claire.polosak@cricketnsw.com.au
RUGBY LEAGUE
Wellington Cowboys one win away from Grand Final By GEOFF MANN AFTER a few years in the rugby league wilderness, the Wellington club is chasing a dream. On Sunday the locals beat the Parkes Spacemen to qualify for a major semi-final showdown with Dubbo CYMS. Wellington were in control from the start, weathering the blizzard-like conditions in front of a bumper crowd. Kennard Park favourite Justin Toomey-White once again demonstrated his class, leading the Cowboys in attack and defence. Wellington 32 defeated Parkes 10. Parkes now has an appointment in the knockout semi against Forbes in-form
Magpies. Forbes have had a terrific run into the finals and continued with a 38-0 shutout of the Macquarie Raiders. Wellington Reserves qualified for the major semi with a thrilling 16-10 victory over Macquarie, while the Under-18s played with 12 men for three-quarters of the game before scoring a last minute try to down Parkes 24-22. Parkes kept their premiership hopes going in Reserves with a 28-18 win over arch-rivals Forbes at Forbes on Saturday. The Spacemen play Macquarie in next week’s minor semi while Wellington tackles CYMS in the major game. Wellington juniors will
clash with minor premiers Forbes in the grand final qualifier of the RSL Under-18s, while CYMS play Parkes in the elimination game following their impressive 26-8 performance in the minor semi. Last year’s premiers Macquarie are now out. Meanwhile, Westside Rabbitohs League Tag team relegated CYMS to a knockout semi against Macquarie with a stunning win at home on Sunday. Westside faces minor premiers Parkes’ Spacecats who lost only one game this year – their last round match against Forbes. The Macquarie Raidettes stunned the Magpies on Saturday to keep their charge to a first grand final going.
RUGBY LEAGUE
ATHLETICS
RUGBY UNION
Castlereagh league finalists decided
Dubbo Athletes preparing for new season
Dubbo footballers’ gutsy run comes to an end
IT all came down to Round 18 in the Castlereagh league competition and Binnaway Bombshells blasted their way into the minor semi against Dunedoo. The Bombshells outpointed Cobar 46-28 to jump two clear on the ladder. Minor semi-finals will be played at Victoria Oval Dunedoo this Saturday, August 25 z 11.30 am – Youth League Gilgandra v Gulgong z League Tag – Gilgandra v Cobar z Seniors – Dunedoo Swans v Binnaway Bombshells z Major semi-finals at Billy Dunn Oval, Gulgong on Saturday, September 1 z League Tag – Baradine v Coonamble z Seniors – Gulgong Terriers v Gilgandra Panthers
MATT O’Dea, the Publicity Officer for the Dubbo Athletics Club, dropped a note to say the new 'Little A' season kicks off with two trial nights next month. “We start our official training on Friday, September 21, with a follow up on the 28th although many of our members have been training throughout the winter,” Matt said. “The first comp night is Friday, October 19.” Registration is open now at www. lansw.com.au or at Barden Park on Wednesdays, September 19 or 26, from 5.30-7.30pm. Training takes place at Barden Park on Tuesdays from 5 and Sunday from 10am.
SAM Webster and Cam Duffy played their junior rugby with the Roos before heading to Wagga for tertiary studies. The third year Vet students combined with the Wagga Ag College team on a brave run to the Southern Inland grand Final on Saturday. They lost a teammate in tragic circumstances leading into the final rounds but rallied to defeat defending premiers Leeton three times on their way to the decider. Cameron led the Aggies but despite the 52-14 loss against a very good Wagga Waratahs 15, he says the effort had been outstanding and the game was actually a lot closer than the score would indicate. Good to see Sam and Cam, two local products continuing to play the game they learned here in Dubbo.
Cam Duff y (left) and Sam Webster. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
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Dubbo Photo News August 23-29, 2018
SPORT
Send your Sport news to geoff.mann@dubbophotonews.com.au
Sports editor
Sports photography
GEOFF MANN
MEL POCKNALL
RUGBY UNION
Joey’s training camp in Dubbo reaps prestigious reward By GEOFF MANN “WE beat the Goliath on the weekend Geoff”! That was the message I received 10 days ago. Intrigued, I read on as former Dubbo Roos flyer Peter Scolari explained about St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill fortunes in the Greater Public Schools competition. “Joey’s haven’t beaten Scots in ten years but two tries in the last four minutes helped us steal a crucial match. We now have to beat Riverview on Saturday to claim our first GPS title in 11 years,” he continued excitedly. The winning try came in the very last play when Joey’s won a scrum, threw the ball wide to flying winger Liam Scolari who accelerated down the left flank then chipped across the goal mouth where one of his teammates crossed to claim a famous victory. “(The match against Riverview) will be tough but Joey’s is up for the challenge,” Pete wrote with confidence. Pete finished by saying “the Dubbo trip hopefully has played an historic part!” Check out the thrilling final play at https://youtu.be/ZKCx4c4rQdU
Update Turn the clock forward a week and this one from a Joey’s supporter arrived in my
inbox. “As a follow up to your stories on Joeys’ Rugby coming to Dubbo for their camp in May, I thought you may be interested that First XV achieved a Joint Premiership in conjunction with the Kings School whilst the Second XV finished the season as Premiers. “As you know, Joeys’ First and Seconds’ fortunes rested on their last games of the season against St Ignatius College, Riverview.” In a drama-filled day, the 2nd XV game was a 19-all draw with the game abandoned due to one of the goal posts on the Riverview Oval falling down with seven minutes to go! Repairs to the posts took some time with the normal 3.15pm start of the 1st XV game delayed for an hour. In a compelling match that saw Riverview lead 8-7 at half time, Joeys ran out winners 28-25 at full time on a rapidly darkening oval. Our correspondent continued: “The final minutes of the game were tense. With three minutes to go it looked as if the game was Joeys as they led 21-20. However, Riverview scored out wide to leap ahead 25-21. “For the second time in a week the Hunters Hill boys were looking for a miracle. It came from the ensuing kick-off, when Joeys regained the ball and with a pass to a support player on the inside, scored and converted to snatch a win for the ages by 28 to 25!” Whilst Joeys have won the most GPS Rugby titles since the competition commenced in 1892 – 55 titles compared to Liam Scolari played a pivotal role in Joey’s 2018 season. PHOTO: SUPPLIED the second highest Kings School (27) – Joeys had not won the First XV title since 2007. This was the equal longest “rugby drought” for the famous school. It was an 11-year break between drinks. InterestWITH a mixture of silverstarting their run in Secvictory last year. ingly, the last time they broke such a long backs and young apes, the onds in Dubbo in 2007. Campo and Pratto had period was in 1918 – exactly 100 years Narromine rugby club celThey were together in some familiar mature Goago. They say history repeats! ebrated back-to-back first 2009 when the club won its rillas beside them on SatThe game can be viewed at youtube. grade titles and added a bo- first Blowes Cup and played urday. Luke Brown, Craig com /watc h?feat ure=player_embednus in Seconds. in the 2010 and 2011 grand Duff and Anthony Tuck ded&v=Jvqk9B0clDU Coach Craig Campfinal losses to Bathurst Bull- were just a few who have If you don’t have time to watch the enbell and half Ryan Pratdogs and Parkes Boars rebeen in most of Narromine’s tire match, fast forward to the 2:45:00 ten earned their seventh spectively, and joined forces grand finals over a memomark and catch some of the best schoolpremiership trophy after again in the Graincorp Cup rable 12-year period. boy rugby you will ever see!
Gorillas reign supreme
The leaning goalpost! Shades of Pisa at St Ignatius College, Riverview.
MINOR SEMI-FINALS: SAT 25 AUGUST
MAJOR SEMI-FINALS: SUN 26 AUGUST
CYMS Under-18s V Parkes
CYMS First Grade V Wellington
Pioneer Oval, Parkes. LLT kick off @ 11.30am
CYMS Ladies League Tag V Macquarie
Apex Oval, Dubbo. LLT kick off @ 10.30am
CYMS Reserve Grade V Wellington
THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
NORTHSIDE SANDWICH SHOP
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SPORT
Dirt bike action Mac Daddy Cup raises $4000 for charity ❱❱ ACTION SHOTS INSIDE
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MACQUARIE ST ENDEAVOUR COURT
PROPRIETORS: ANDREW MANIOS & GARY NIPPERESS
SALE ENDS: 2 ND SEPT 2018