PhotoNews Photo News
CALL US with your news 6885 4433 | EMAIL photos@dubbophotonews.com.au | www.facebook.com/dubbophotonews
DUBBO
Can’t wait for lockdown to end! | | OCTOBER 7-13, 2021 LOCALLY OWNED & INDEPENDENT FREE!
New brooms, clean sweep for state pollies A WEEK is a long time in politics, and this week was a doozy in that OTHER Macquarie Street, with a changing of the guard at the helm of the NSW Coalition Government. The Liberals have a new boss in the form of Dominic Perrottet, whose colleagues gave him a convincing nod, electing him by 39 votes (his age, coincidentally) to challenger Rob Stokes’ five. The former treasurer was officially sworn in as the 46th Premier of NSW on Tuesday when he took the reins from Gladys Berejiklian who stepped down suddenly last week after it was revealed she is facing an ICAC investigation. Hot on her heels out the parliamentary door was Deputy Premier John Barilaro who shocked almost everyone by announcing just three days later that he too would ride off into the political sunset in search of “a new career”. The Monaro MP said that with his forthcoming half century birthday in November, the decision to bail out of Macquarie Street “may be a bit of a midlife crisis” but that it was a move he had been considering for some time. ❱〉 PAGE 6
A LEMON OF A PET OCTOBER iis P Pets t M Month th att Dubbo Photo News, and while dogs and cats are the order of the day in many local households, there are some more unusual animals making their way onto our pet pages this year, including Lemon, our “covergirl” for this edition, pictured with Chelsea Potter. Lemon is a python with a difference and to find out exactly what that is you’ll have to check out our story inside. If you have a pet that’s cute, weird, large, small, frantic, chilled or downright crazy, we want to know about it so we can bring locals a bit of cheery news as the Covid-19 lockdowns hopefully begin to lift during the course of this month. There’s also plenty of pet prizes to be won throughout October and you have to be in it to win it!
MORE ABOUT LEMON ❱❱ PAGE 9
BEAUTY T ’S BIGGEST
SALE!
SALE ENDS: 13TH OCTOBER 2021
CHEMIST WAREHOUSE DUBBO 6882 3410 FROM OUR HOUSE TO YOURS FOR YOUR NEAREST STORE CALL 1300
734 876
FREE FAST DELIVERY
*
LIMITED TIME - ORDERS OVER $30
*CONTACTLESS DELIVERY WITHIN 24 HOURS POWERED BY DOORDASH EXCLUDES PRESCRIPTONS, PHARMACIST ONLY MEDICATION & PHARMACY MEDICINE. PARTICIPATING STORES ONLY.
chemistwarehouse.com.au
POWERED BY
2
BIGGEST SALE!
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
BEAUTY T ’S YOU PAY
140 SPRAYS!
$29.99 EACH
Hayfever relief
#AFTER $7 CASHBACK
$
$
22
99
Hayfever relief
Hayfever relief
280 SPRAYS!
$
Telfast 180mg 70 Tablets #See in store for details
2899
Nasonex Allergy 140 Sprays
30 TABLETS! Hayfever relief
$
1599
200 SPRAYS!
1949
$
1099
Hayfever relief
Nasonex Allergy 280 Sprays
Telfast 180mg 30 Tablets
Beconase Allergy & Hayfever 200 Sprays
5ML!
30 TABLETS! Hayfever relief
$
1599
$ 80 TABLETS!
TEE* MONEY BACK GUARAN
10 TABLETS!
7
$ 99
$
30 TABLETS!
$
6ML!
1099
$
1499
Hayfever relief
22
99
1899
Azep Nasal Spray 5ml Eye 6ml 5 l or Eyezep E E Drops D 6 l
Telfast 120mg 30 Tablets
150ML!
$
140 SPRAYS!
999
$
LOVE IT OR YOUR MONEY BACK* Always read the label. Follow the directions for use. If symptoms persist, talk to your health professional. *T&Cs apply, see www.demazin.com.au. Open to AU res 18+. Purchase Period:12:01am AEST 1/8/21 to 11:59pm AEDST 31/12/21. Claim Period: 12:01am AEST 4/8/21 to 11:59pm AEDST31/1/22 (no sooner than 72hrs after purchase). Limit 1 claim p/household. Refund amount p/product capped. Retain receipt. Eligible Products: Demazin Allergy and Hayfever Relief Tablets 10s; 30s; 60s; & 80s. Promoter:iNova Pharmaceuticals (Australia) Pty Ltd (ABN 13 617 871 539).
Hayfever relief Telfast Kids Oral Liquid 150ml
Hayfever relief
Demazin Allergy + Hayfever Relief 10 Tablets, 30 Tablets or 80 Tablets
Telnasal Allergy Spray 140 Metered Sprays
$3.51 OFF RRP†
15ML!
$
899
$
FROM
$ Nasal Decongestant
699
1399
NEW!
Spray-Tish Nasal Decongestant Spray 15ml
Otrivin Breathe Clean Seawater & Aloe Vera 100ml
250ML!
$ Relieves chest congestion
1399
$2.30 OFF RRP†
899
$
Cough relief li f
569 25%
ORRFFP
Robitussin Chesty Cough Forte or Cough & Chest Congestion 250ml
Strepsils Plus or Extra Lozenges 16 Pack Assorted Variants
These medicines may not be right for you. Read the label before purchase. Follow the directions for use. If symptoms persist, talk to your health professional.
PRESERVATIVE FREE
100% AUSTRALIAN OWNED
Always read the label. Follow the directions for use. If symptoms persist talk to your health professional.
Flo Range
CHEMIST WAREHOUSE DUBBO 6882 3410 FROM OUR HOUSE TO YOURS FOR YOUR NEAREST STORE CALL 1300
734 876
FREE FAST DELIVERY
*
LIMITED TIME - ORDERS OVER $30 *CONTACTLESS DELIVERY WITHIN 24 HOURS POWERED BY DOORDASH EXCLUDES PRESCRIPTONS, PHARMACIST ONLY MEDICATION & PHARMACY MEDICINE. PARTICIPATING STORES ONLY.
chemistwarehouse.com.au
†The save prices listed are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and where no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. ɽ The save price advertised is off our EDLP (Everyday Low Price) at the time of printing. All products subject to manufacturers availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
POWERED BY
SALE ENDS: 13 TH OCTOBER 2021
3
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
COUNCIL WATCH
LET THE SUN SHINE IN With spring in the air and a few blue skies overhead, there should be plenty of electricity being generated from the giant solar farm situated just on the northern outskirts of Wellington. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/EMY LOU
Murray Wood.
Wood appointed as Council CEO By NATALIE LEWIS
Your view wanted for play precinct By NATALIE LEWIS PLANS for the Victoria Park Playground Redevelopment now include a two-week community consultation to allow for feedback about Dubbo Regional Council’s (DRC) proposed relocation of the Livvi’s Place play area. A notice of motion at the September ordinary meeting approved a public exhibition period and possible design modifications of the playground precinct upgrade to meet community needs. Cr Jane Diffey spoke about the playground’s significance for the people of Dubbo and visitors to the city, including her own family. She described Livvi’s Place as a special place for a lot of people, providing a space that is fun and inclusive.
Community consultation is now open to allow for feedback about Dubbo Regional Council’s proposed relocation of the Livvi’s Place play area in Victoria Park. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/KEN SMITH
“I think we need to get a grasp of what the community values in a community play space,” she said. “We can always do better in what the community values in community spaces.” Changes to the park lay-
out are planned as part of the Victoria Park Masterplan, with relocation of the play space to align with the Dubbo Aquatic Leisure Centre’s Pool Deck Kiosk. However, safety concerns have been expressed
by community members who have started a petition to have the new play area fenced. Livvi’s Place was installed in 2011 as a joint project of Dubbo City Council and the Touched by Olivia Foundation.
The design concept was about enabling children and parents of all abilities and ages to play side-by-side on the same equipment, ensuring integration of children and families with special needs. It is now deemed to have reached the end of its recommended lifespan. The proposed new play space will have defined youth and junior play areas including an explorer dome, a “we hopper” seesaw, along with musical play elements and games to improve gross motor skills along with custom climbing unit, balance ring and in-ground trampolines for older kids. Residents now have until 5pm on October 14 to have their say on the playground upgrade. Visit dubbo.nsw.gov.au for more information.
HALlOWEeN
LONG-TERM Local Government employee Murray Wood has been appointed as the permanent CEO of Dubbo Regional Council. Mr Wood started working with the former Dubbo City Council in the Parks and Landcare division in 2003 and moved up the ranks to be its director in 2011. Mr Wood then worked as the Transition Project Leader during the amalgamation of Wellington and Dubbo councils, before leading the Community and Recreation division. Mr Wood left Council in 2018 to work for the Department of Premier and Cabinet, then the Department of Regional NSW before taking the role of DRC CEO in a temporary capacity in June. He was successful in being appointed to the role permanently this week, with the role taking effect on Monday. The selection panel for the CEO recruitment process was Mayor Stephen Lawrence, Deputy Mayor Anne Jones, Councillor Jane Diffey, and an independent third party appointed by Local Government NSW. Mr Wood was one of two candidates shortlisted for the role, with councillors deliberating at length about the recruitment at an extraordinary meeting held last week.
$5.95 ea or 6 for $29.95
Perfect for dressing up cup cakes or an office morning tea cake
In store Now! 101 BRISBANE ST, DUBBO • P: 6883 5218 • ORDER ONLINE AVAILABLE: WWW.BENFURNEY.COM/SHOP/
4
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Fresh as a Daisy dog
TRIVIA TEST
Contributed by PHOEBE FARRELL I ADOPTED Daisy from the Dubbo Animal Shelter when she was nine months old. She’d already been surrendered three times by the time we met her, so I had to practically beg Mum to let me take her. As we were leaving, the worker told us Daisy was only $80 which convinced Mum enough to let me take Daisy home. As soon as we got her home, we started to understand why she was surrendered three times by the ripe old age of nine months... she tore the washing down, dug holes and barked and jumped like crazy! After a year of having her, we moved houses with my Nan and Pop. Clearly it was a concern that Daisy would jump on them and accidentally hurt them, so we sectioned off an area of the yard just in case. To our surprise, as soon as she met Nan and Pop, she was a whole new dog. It was almost as if she knew she had to be gentle and calm and that’s the way she has been ever since. One day, Nan was in the pool and Daisy was barking like crazy. Mum went to check what was wrong with Daisy and saw that she was pacing from the pool to the house, that’s when Mum realised that Nan was waving her arms in the pool and in need of help. Daisy saved Nan from drowning that day and we couldn’t thank her enough. Daisy is eight years old now, and the three people who surrendered her as a puppy would be absolutely kicking themselves if they could see her now. We couldn’t have asked for a better dog. Daisy at the Japanese Gardens, where she loves smelling the flowers and watching the fish. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
Suicide stats drop as more reach out DESPITE fears of an upward trend during the challenging times of Covid-19, there has actually been an overall downturn in the number of people to have died by suicide in Australia since 2019. The decrease of 5.4 per cent is welcome news, but Lifeline Australia chairman John Brogden is reminding us that 3139 people still took their own lives in 2020. That fewer Australians died by suicide even in the midst of Covid-19 is a pleasing statistic, however Lifeline points out that the aftermath of the bushfires and the impact of the ongoing pandemic has had a dramatic impact on many people’s mental health.
Calls to Lifeline rose significantly during 2020, with daily figures reaching a high of 3326 calls every day, and Mr Brogden says the downturn in suicides is a reflection of the impact of the life-saving services provided by Lifeline and other organisations and professionals, and of the fact that those who need support are reaching out for, and getting it. The fact that people’s worst fears of increased suicide deaths during the pandemic have not been realised is reason to commend extra government attention and spending commitments for mental health support, however this must be maintained accord-
ing to Lifeline. It says the challenge is to maintain and build on these levels of spending, and to “ensure people at risk continue to be supported”. “Over the past two years we have demonstrated to even more people that we are here to help them. Now we have to ensure that level of service is there for them into the future, so that everyone who needs support has access to it.” Mr Brogden also called on the community to reach out to each other, especially during lockdowns and as the Christmas holiday season approaches. “We all have the power to make
a positive difference. If you know someone is having a difficult time or who might be alone, please reach out to them. “By checking in with someone to make sure they’re doing okay, you can show you care. That can make all the difference.” z Anyone who needs support can call Lifeline at any time on 13 11 14. Next week in News Extra, we talk to Dubbo’s Cate Whiteley from Lifeline Central West who gives a glimpse into the important work she and her team do in helping those in need of support.
1 2 3 4
A mint julep is a type of what?
5 6
Sapodilla is a type of which food?
7 8
A nashi is a type of which fruit?
9
In which state is Charles Sturt University?
What is a baby kangaroo called? Essendon Airport is in which city? What does the colloquial term “fiddle-faddle” mean?
What is the presiding officer in the House of Representatives called?
Who trained the racehorses Tulloch, Gunsynd and Kingston Town?
meat called 10 The chevon comes from which animal? TQ604. SEE THE TV+ GUIDE FOR ANSWERS
New program brings paddock to classroom LEARNING about where our food and fibre comes from should be part of every Aussie kid’s education, and now students will be able to get a “hands-on” farm experience from right there in their classrooms thanks to an innovative program. NSW Farmers is launching what it calls “Ag Packs” as part of the popular Kids to Farms Program, which aims to give every child in the state two educational interactions with the agricultural sector before they turn 12. Producers across the state will provide a diverse range of farm experiences for primary school students, bringing the paddock into the classroom. According to NSW Farmers, 59 per cent of what students know about food and fibre production comes from their teachers, so any move to engage kids with the industry is welcome. The Ag Packs, which cater for all ages and abilities, will be available for free to all the state’s primary schools, and will contain everything needed to run several experiments or activities, including pots, seeds, and soil samples.
Timbrebongie House Aged Care Services and Respite Care
EXCELLENT
facilities and service at half the cost of other providers • We have single rooms with ensuite available • Each room has its own courtyard or garden access • Fully accredited 134 -138 Cathundril Street, NARROMINE • Located near public health facilities • Located in a friendly rural community • Not for profit and owned by the community Email:admin@timbrebongie.com.au • We are proud of our home-like and friendly environment Call and speak to our caring staff and discuss our very affordable fees
5
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
AUCTION REMINDER
169 Brisbane Street, Dubbo The Westbury: Extraordinary Lifestyle or Investment Opportunity This unique offering provides a rare opportunity for the astute investor or owner occupier to secure a landmark property in the heart RI 'XEER &%' 7KH PDJQL¿FHQW IUHH VWDQGLQJ EXLOGLQJ RQ DSSUR[ 670sqm is zoned B3 Commercial Core and boasts dual street IURQWDJH DQG ÀH[LEOH VSDFHV ZLWKLQ • Iconic freestanding building, B3 Commercial Core in Dubbo CBD )OH[LEOH ÀRRUSODQ EHG EDWKURRPV VHDW UHVWDXUDQW • Features: high ornate ceilings, decorative plasterwork • Paved courtyards, water features, private leafy gardens
670 SQM Auction Online Thursday 14th October at 1pm
View 7KXUVGD\V SP 6DWXUGD\V SP By Prearranged Appointment
Monica Henley | Dubbo 0410 615 505 Steven Chen | Sydney 0412 959 959 theagency.com.au
6
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Clean sweep at top of state politics: two new leaders From page 1
The Nationals gathered behind closed party room doors on Wednesday morning to anoint a new captain, with Roads Minister and Bathurst MP Paul Toole emerging victorious over seasoned Nationals campaigner, Water Minister Melinda Pavey. Mr Toole served for three years as deputy leader of the Nationals which he said made him a natural understudy and the best choice for the job as Mr Barilaro’s successor and the state’s Deputy Premier. Minister for Mental Health, Regional Health and Women, Bronnie Taylor, who sits in the state’s upper house, moves up the pecking order to become deputy leader of the Nationals. Meanwhile, Dubbo MP Dugald Saunders paid tribute to outgoing NSW Deputy Premier John Barilaro. Mr Saunders said Barilaro had shown strong values and leadership during the drought, mice plague and the global pandemic. “John’s passion for regional and rural areas has been unwavering, and his ability to deliver programs and grants for the regions has been unbelievable. “I have enjoyed working closely with John on a number of major projects and events for the Dubbo electorate, and I thank him for the support and trust he showed me. “The legacy John leaves is a stronger and more prosperous regional NSW, and I wish him all the best for the future,” he said.
Where’s Wally in Dubbo? By JOHN RYAN WALLY has begun making himself known around Dubbo, keeping local youngsters on their toes during the locked-down school holidays, when taking walks with family was one of the few outlets open to them to burn off excess energy. The brainchild of local mum Alex Baltins, the Dubbo mum set up the school holiday competition because lockdown has been so difficult for the kids. “I noticed Orange did a “Where’s Wally?” hunt and I thought it might be something we could easily implement here in Dubbo, even with current restrictions,” she told Dubbo Photo News. Alex organised various prizes including a dessert box from the Establishment Bar, a bath bomb sprinkle in bubblegum flavour donated by Lenmar, a lolly jar and coffee vouchers. Parkside Dental Surgery donated an Oral-B electric toothbrush to brush away all the sugary goodness from the other prizes because, as Alex reminds us, “dental hygiene matters”. She says it’s testament to the generosity of local businesses that they would try to provide some joy for local kids despite the financial distress and problems they’ve experienced during lockdowns. “It is wonderful to see businesses get involved and donate prizes to engage children and families.
Emily, Seb and Harry Baltins were happy to pose with Wally at an undisclosed Dubbo location. “We found Wally!” they told Dubbo Photo News. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
“I hope this re-engages people with local businesses that are essential and promotes exercise. It’s extremely important for children to feel connected to the community, especially under the current lockdown. “I hope this encourages people to get out and reconnect with
local businesses that are open. I also hope it brings back a sense of belonging to the community in general.” Alex says it’s a shame kids were not able to gather together groups of friends to go hunting for Wally, but people needed to make the best of things within
TIME TO GET
Grooming PAMPER YOUR
Pooch
OPENING OUR DOORS
11TH OCTOBER 123 Erskine Street, Dubbo
6884 1522 | 6884 0222
the current Public Health Order regulations. “This was created purely for fun. I hope that after the competition ends, we can continue it for a while. Last year, during Covid restrictions, there was a teddy bear hunt. That was also part of my inspiration to begin this.”
7
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
Start your reading at No #1
Get hooked on a great NEW SERIES
CLICK & COLLECT
Due to the current COVID-19 situation in NSW, our store will be closed to the public until restrictions are lifted. Orders can be placed by phone, website or email. Click and Collect and mail service is available.
The Book Connection 178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS ͻ ;ϬϮͿ ϲϴϴϮ ϯϯϭϭ ͻ ǁǁǁ͘ŬĐŽŶŶĞĐƟŽŶ͘ĐŽŵ͘ĂƵ
ĨĂĐĞŬ͘ĐŽŵͬĚƉŬĐŽŶŶĞĐƟŽŶ tĞ ŵĂŝů ŽƌĚĞƌƐ ƚŽ ĐƵƐƚŽŵĞƌƐ ĂĐƌŽƐƐ ƚŚĞ ĐŽƵŶƚƌLJ ĞĂĐŚ ǁĞĞŬĚĂLJ͘ ^ŝŵƉůLJ ƉŚŽŶĞ ƵƐ ;ϬϮͿ ϲϴϴϮ ϯϯϭϭ͕ ĞŵĂŝů Ăƚ ŽƌĚĞƌƐΛŬĐŽŶŶĞĐƟŽŶ͘ĐŽŵ͘ĂƵ͕ ƵƐĞ ŽƵƌ ǁĞďƐŝƚĞ ǁǁǁ͘ŬĐŽŶŶĞĐƟŽŶ͘ĐŽŵ͘ĂƵ Žƌ ŵĂŝů ƵƐ Ăƚ W K Ždž ϱϴϯ͕ ƵďďŽ ϮϴϯϬ͘
8
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Dogs, mud, fitness... By JOHN RYAN LOCAL fitness guru and Titan Macquarie Mud Run (TMMR) founder Rod Fardell is all about exercise, open spaces and community and as Dubbo Photo News launches its annual Pet Month, he’s keen to promote the advantages pet owners have when it comes to keeping fit and healthy. He says his Husky, Baxter, is the best friend any human could wish for to enjoy. “It’s the most unconditional form of love on the planet,” he said. “Pets increase your happiness and health by just their mere presence. “Of course they love exercise, hugs and food just as humans do and in Covid-19 times they have really been a saviour to many.” With Covid-19 restrictions set to ease in coming weeks and months, Mr Fardell was keen to promote group exercise therapy which he says also provides amazing mental nourishment, as well as short and long term benefits for the soul. And he says there are big plans for the mud run to supercharge its role when it comes to helping build that community participation and resilience. “TMMR is all about community and for the past nine years we have been working hard with Dubbo Regional Council (DRC) to create recreational facilities and infrastructure to promote better health for everyone,” Mr Fardell told Dubbo Photo News. “TMMR believes that a large amount of future projects to be instrumental in developing Dubbo as a hub for recreation-
Above: The Titan Macquarie Mud Run has captured the local imagination, with thousands of previous participants desperate to put the spectre of the Covid event-cancelling pandemic behind them so they can get down and dirty along the banks of the mighty Macquarie. Right: Rod Fardell says his Husky is not just his best mate, but that Baxter also helps him motivate himself in all sorts of ways, including exercising outdoors. PHOTOS: SUPPLIED
al facilities include a lake, a new pathway through to Dundullimal from Regand Park, the development of a healing centre in the Sensory Garden and a large platform overlooking the Macquarie River from Sir Roden Cutler Park.” But wait, that’s not all! “A concrete one-sided tennis court set-up like at Newcastle Beach, a sand training facility
and a large flying fox from the top of Sir Roden Cutler Park,” he said. “While these are just pure ideas for comment, our mission has always been to bring better health to our community via working with DRC to create ideas that become projects to work towards happier healthier communities. We can’t wait to bring you our event in March 2022.”
Where there’s smoke there’s fire hazard reduction IF you see smoke on the Dubbo horizon this coming weekend, don’t panic – it’s all in a good cause. Weather permitting on Saturday 9 and Sunday 10, the NSW Rural Fire Service (NSWRFS) will be conducting a scheduled hazard reduction burn at Mugga Downs near Dubbo. Should the weather conditions turn out to be unsuitable on those dates, the burn will PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/KEN SMITH/FILEtake place on October 23 and 24.
Some 30 NSW RFS members will take part in the hazard reduction operation, which is due to start at 8.30am and finish by 5pm on each day. Hazard reduction plays a vital role in helping to reduce the intensity of bush fires. The controlled burns will help protect properties and assets around the Mugga Downs area and will also help firefighters to control future grass fires in this area.
Covid roadmap to where? COMMENT By JOHN RYAN AMID plenty of confusion about the roadmap out of Covid-19, at this stage Dubbo Regional Council LGA looks set to come out of lockdown (the stay-athome orders) this Monday, October 11. The lifting of the lockdown should make travel possible across much of the state in the short term, with people able to visit friends in their homes and eat out at restaurants, amid other freedoms. A new factor has been thrown into the mix, with newly-elected NSW premier Dominic Perrottet not ruling out changes to the roadmap. One thing is clear: many people who’ve contacted Dubbo Photo News seeking clarity on current and future regulations believe the road ahead will be complex and contradictory, which is in line with the difficulties of interpreting the often quick-moving, ever-changing regulations during the past 18 months of the global pandemic. There’s also plenty of confusion when it comes to being vaxxed or unvaxxed, with prime me minister Scott Morrison main-taining no-onee will be forced to o be vaccinated, yett many governmentt departments and d private business-es are telling peo-ple they need to bee vaccinated if theyy want to keep theirr jobs. This shifting off the onus onto busi-nesses to operatee as the compliance arm of government is causing plenty of angst in the community, which has sparked protests across the nation, including in Dubbo. As Dubbo Photo News was going to print, the latest figures from Western NSW Local Health District (WNSWLHD), which cover the 24 hours up to 8pm on Tuesday, October 5, showed eight new cases of Covid-19 in the district: Orange (3), Cowra (2), Wellington (1), Narromine (1) and Bathurst (1). On October 4 it was reported that a man in his 70s had died at Dubbo Hospital. He’d received one dose of the vaccine and had significant underlying health issues. In the 24 hours up to our print deadline yesterday afternoon, no changes had been made to stay-at-home orders imposed on areas of WNSWLHD where ongoing concerns regarding community transmission have been identified.
COME JOIN US AT SOUTH
NOW ACCEPTING Kindergarten Enrolments for 2022/23 Please contact the school for an enrolment package and to have a chat about your child.
Dubbo South Public School Fitzroy Street, Dubbo NSW |Phone: 68822529 www.dubbosouth-p.schools.nsw.edu.au Email: dubbosouth-p.school@det.nsw.edu.au
9
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
A python is a perfect pet By NATALIE LEWIS
RAISING a Darwin carpet python might not be everyone’s bag, but for Chelsea Potter, she’s the perfect pet. Chelsea has had Lemon since she hatched two years ago, and loves her “girl”. “They are a bit different but I grew up breeding snakes. My uncle and Dad had them. I had inland pythons as a kid.” To be a responsible reptile owner, Chelsea has done a lot of research and also holds a licence to keep non-venomous snakes. She says they make fantastic pets, as they are low maintenance and only need to be fed once a week. Chelsea said snakes like a fairly quiet place to live and don’t like noise or vibrations. They also need to be contained as they tend to be explorers. “You have to be careful and always lock them up, snakes are the best escape artists!” she laughed. According to Chelsea, pythons will also grow according to their diet and surroundings. “They grow depending on the size of their environment
and how much you feed them.” Lemon is now about 1.82m in length but has the potential to grow to twice that size. She eats rats bought from the pet shop, loves to cuddle and prefers her enclosure to have high humidity. “She has a heat mat,” Chelsea explained. “In winter, she’s pretty chill. She loves attention, she’s a really placid snake. She had lots of attention as a baby.” Lemon also has albinism which explains her unusual colouring, as her skin lacks melanin which gives snakes of her breed their black and brown pigmentation. Chelsea highly recommends them as pets, but her advice to potential snake owners is to be aware of temperature in the enclosure and to always show respect. “I’ve (encouraged) a lot of friends to get snakes too,” she said. “Sometimes people are scared when they come over, some want to pat her. “Owning a snake is a lot more common than people think, there’s a lot more people than you think who have them.”
Bloody good cause
WE’VE been told so often over the past 18 months to “roll up our sleeves” for a jab, but this time they’re calling for blood! Dubbo Blood Donor Centre is on the hunt for 80 plasma donations every week throughout October because the need for this life-saving part of blood has reached record levels. Almost 1000 Dubbo locals have stepped up to donate during the pandemic, helping to ensure hundreds of clinically vulnerable patients continue to receive the plasma and plasma-derived medications they need. Plasma is considered a modern medical miracle because it’s “the last line of defence” for many health conditions, and demand for the liquid gold has risen nationally by 10 per cent in the past year and that need is growing. It’s a simple process to donate – you just sit back and relax for 45 minutes. To make an appointment, call 13 14 95 or visit lifeblood.com. au
Lemon the Darwin carpet python. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/EMY LOU
...inspiring locals
UPA Western Region Aged Care Services s e t i Unilabl a Av Now
UPA Oxley Village has highly desirable units
AVAILABLE NOW
• • • • • •
Prime Central South Dubbo Location Spacious architect designed unit options Some units with private deck views to Macquarie River Attached garages on all units Maintenance FREE lifestyle Open parkland feel with manicured lawns & gardens
• Public transport access
Call for your obligation free information pack & book your private inspection today! Don’t Know Where to Start?
1800 872 669
• Friendly community atmosphere with Community Centre & active social commmittee • Co-located with Bracken House Aged Care & UPA Home Care & Nursing Services - to provide in home/unit help • Onsite manager • Fair & transparent entry, exit & maintenace costs
7KH QRW IRU SURȴW GLHUHQFH Note: You may have to pay a departure fee when you leave this village
10
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Dubbo’s Queensland bubble
The Penrith Panther’s extended, very extended, family. Zoe Warwick said it’s been the chance of a lifetime ime to spend so much time with the families of the other players, with everyone so grateful they’ve had this opportunity in 2021. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
Dubbo’s Zoe Warwick spent her 21st birthday in isolation but she doesn’t regret that one bit. Her boyfriend is man-of-the-NRL-moment Matt Burton, and Zoe says the experience of being with her partner during such an exciting time in his football career has been overwhelmingly positive. Zoe spoke with JOHN RYAN about the past few months. ••• Tell us about life in the Queensland NRL bubble. It has been such an amazing experience. We are so grateful that we have been given the opportunity to come up here and support our boys on their climb to get that premiership. I have made so many friendships, Queensland weather is beautiful and to still be able to watch the boys play has been something I and I'm sure everyone else has looked forward to every week. You celebrated your 21st birthday in isolation. How was that and was it worth it? It was very different to what I was expecting, however, a birthday is just a day and can be celebrated whenever. I'm sure I'll be able to celebrate with my friends and family once we are back. This experience has been every bit worth it and I couldn't have asked for a better birthday. It's one I will always remember. How important to Australia is it that the NRL season was able to be staged in Queensland? For people in those states in lockdown had the distraction of football to
help them through this crisis? It is so important that the boys could continue to do what they love and give Australia something to look forward to every week. The boys adapted so well and gave Australia a season they will always remember. How proud have you been of Matt, the way he's conducted himself and the way he's played this season? I'm extremely proud of everything Matt has achieved this year. To think this is his first year of playing nearly every game in the NRL and winning Centre of the Year and the premiership is just such a dream. I can’t even explain how proud his family and friends and I are. His determination and hard work is admirable and we are just so proud of him. How did you feel when he a) scored the first try of the game and b) when he dragged a Rabbitohs' player over the sideline towards the end of the Grand Final? I had no words, just pure excitement. The atmosphere was unreal. When he scored that try, I was just holding back tears. Not many people
can do that in an NRL Grand Final and he did. When he dragged the Rabbitohs player over the sideline it just showed his determination and how much he wanted to get this win. It's a dream of his that he has achieved at such an early stage of his career. A Dubbo girl at the Dally Ms, how was that? It was another experience that was amazing. To go to my first Dally M appearance and for Matt to win, I was just so happy I couldn’t wipe the smile off my face. Once again, his family and I are just so proud of him. Has this whole thing been the e experience of a lifetime? It is an experience I am so d grateful for and I have loved every minute of it. However, we both miss our families and friends so much and d we can't wait to get home to them. Right top: Matt and Zoe after the 21-year-old did a lap of the field after playing a starring rolee in Penrith Panther’s nail-biting Grand Final victory over the South Sydney Rabbitohs. Right: Dubbo girl at the Dally M’s - Zoe glams it up on the night the player’s partners shine, although Zoe did mention that Matt was awarded thee Centre of the Year, an incredible achievement as he grew up playing five-eighth. PHOTO:
DPN flying off the stands during lockdown By JOHN RYAN
DUBBO Photo News would like to thank all our loyal readers during such a difficult time in the city’s history. Despite many people not being able to leave their homes, friends and neighbours doing their shopping have picked up the paper and delivered it to them. While out covering a news story last Thursday, a neighbour on his way to Orana Mall walked past the person being interviewed and yelled out “I’ll pick up a Photo News for you!”. Our paper stands have begun each week stacked to the brim and despite a number of refills during the next few days, they all seem to end up empty. It’s one thing we’re really proud of at Dubbo Photo News – people value what we do enough to pick up the paper each week.
BELIEVE IT... OR NOT ÓÓÓ Plotting a course to your Scottish plot... With every bottle of Laphroaig whisky, you’re entitled to a lifetime lease on a one-square-foot plot of land on the Scottish island of Islay, as part of Laphroaig’s loyalty program “Friends of Laphroaig”.
SUPPLIED
• FOR ALL YOUR WINDOW TREATMENTS • TO INSULATE – CUT HEATING & COOLING COSTS • NEW HOMES – BRING IN YOUR PLANS FOR A QUOTE • RENOVATING, NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL • BUILDERS & COMMERCIAL WORK MOST WELCOME NOW DOING FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY!
CUSTOM MADE CURTAINS, BLINDS, SHUTTERS & AWNINGS TO MATCH YOUR LIFESTYLE
KOOLTREND
98 Erskine St, Dubbo T: 6882 5790 www.kooltrenddubbo.com.au
11
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
Zoo keen to open its gates
Agriculture visa on the way
THE Australian Government is developing the Australian agriculture visa to address workforce shortages in the agriculture sector. The visa is designed to support Australia’s primary industries and will be available to skilled, semi-skilled and low-skilled workers across a broad range of agricultural industries, including meat processing and the fishery and forestry sectors. Details on application eligibility requirements will be established through the program design process in consultation with the Australian agriculture sector. More information will be made available on the DFAT website (www.dfat.gov.au/ agriculturevisa) as details are finalised.
THINK The Siamang monkeys are getting ready to welcome hordes of tourists back to watch them play.
What have I got to lose?
PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/EMY-LOU FILE
By JOHN RYAN TARONGA Western Plains Zoo Dubbo is champing at the bit to open its giant front gates to visitors and tourists on Monday, October 18 after being forced to close temporarily close to the public because of the Covid-18 outbreak. In line with NSW Health advice, the zoo will be open to guests aged 16 years and over who are fully vaccinated, and all young people aged under 16. The zoo says the health and
safety of guests, staff, animals and of course the broader community remains Taronga’s top priority and preparations are underway to ensure the zoo is ready to reopen safely, with the site “proudly” Covid-safe and determined to comply with all NSW Government Health orders. Ahead of the official reopening the zoo will be taking a staggered approach by welcoming back volunteers and Zoo Friends for a few select days to allow time for the animals to readjust to having
guests back on site. The zoo’s popular accommodation options are also set to reopen, with Zoofari Lodge opening to coincide with the zoo’s opening on October 18, while the Savannah Cabins and Billabong Camp will open from early November. Taronga CEO Cameron Kerr said being able to open again is welcome news for the team in Dubbo. “We look forward to welcoming guests back to visit the amazing animals in our care and stay at our variety of
accommodation on offer,” Mr Kerr said. While the zoo has been temporarily closed to the public, staff have continued to take care of the animals to ensure their welfare and safety remains at the highest possible standard while also continuing vital conservation work. Updated information about the safety measures in place for reopening will be available on the zoo’s website and tickets to the zoo will be available to purchase online at: www.taronga.org.au
Get Connected, Get Protected 11 Rosulyn Street Dubbo
1300-854-727 www.massecurity.com.au
Master Lic: 000101277
Feel the warmth of friendship Enjoy the comfort of living in your own home within our welcoming independent seniors rental community. Take a virtual tour today or call our friendly Community Manager Pip on 6881 6333 and discover why our residents feel so secure and connected.
TAKE A VIRTUAL TOUR NOW
490 WHEELERS LANE, DUBBO ingeniagardens.com.au
12
WHAT KIDS SAY
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
As the crow pigeon flies By JOHN RYAN
Harvey Redfern Age: 5 Favourite TV show? Izzy’s Koala World Favourite game? Fishing board game What do you like to get up to most? Ride dirt bikes What makes you happy? Cuddles and riding dirt bikes If you could be a superhero, who would you be? Captain America What is the naughtiest thing you’ve done? Don’t listen What would you do if you were the boss at home? Boss everyone around What is your favourite food? Meat and salad wraps What do you want to be when you grow up? Policeman PHOTO: CONTRIBUTED
PAUL Martin has been interested in birds from the time he can first remember and says breeding and racing pigeons has become a lifetime passion he tried to give away, but couldn’t. He says the pigeons, each of which has a personality, make great mates. “I was interested in birds from when I was five or six years old and as I got older I used to climb trees looking for bird nests and that sort of thing. When I was about 15, Harold Ottley used to be in the butcher shop, he started me off in racing pigeons,” Mr Martin told Dubbo Photo News. “I raced from when I was 15 until I was 70 then I gave it away in 2002. Then my wife died and everyone was telling me to get a dog but I didn’t want a dog so I got back into pigeons and started racing again.” Mr Martin says animals are great for humans, especially when they can provide enjoyment as a hobby as well as companionship. “Your pets are your mates,
like your dog – if you’re cruel to a dog it won’t have anything to do with you but if you look after it and talk to it every day, they know what you’re talking about and they become real friends. They’re your mates and pigeons are the same. His pigeons look sleek, wellfed and incredibly healthy, more like elite Olympic track athletes than pet birds in a suburban Dubbo backyard, and they need that training and conditioning because when they’re up in the air, they’re not mucking around in the competitions they thrive on.
“Last year I flew from Olary (South Australia) – it was 840 kilometres back to Dubbo. The pigeons were liberated at 7 o’clock and I clocked mine in later that afternoon at a quarter to six, so 11 and three-quar-
Here at Kintyre Living we know how important a family pet can be We know how much joy a furry, finned or feathered friend can bring, and we also know that pets can be a valuable part of maintaining good physical health and wellbeing. That’s why Kintyre is a pet-friendly place to live and, with the prior consent of management, we welcome your pets as part of our extended family. We protect our other residents – and our native wildlife – by asking that cats wear a bell and be kept inside at night, and for dogs to always be on a leash when they’re out and about in common areas. We have such beautiful grounds and gardens, that we encourage residents to take their pet with them to get some exercise while they explore around the village. Walking your dog – or even your cat! – can also be a great conversation starter, and many a friendship has been forged at Kintyre Living through the happy connection pets can bring. For many of our residents, being able to bring their much-loved furry family member with them has made for an easier transition to living at Kintyre. The love and companionship of a pet can be such a comfort when making such a big move, and many of our residents not only continue to enjoy that companionship, but share it with others. It’s all part of Kintyre’s friendly, supportive and caring environment.
ter hours on the wing,” Mr Martin said. When it comes to Dubbo Photo News’ Pet Month, or any month for that matter, Mr Martin says he has just one simple message that’s stood him in
ADVERTORIAL
Mickey and CheChe
Lola and her brother Lance
L o la
Want to know more? Contact us and find out how you can be part of the Kintyre community – phone 6884 2500 or visit www.kintyredubbo.com.au
Kintyre Living | 6884 2500 | 2 Glenabbey Drive, Dubbo
KintyreDubbo.com.au
13
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
4 4 4
YOUR STARS ARIES: You’ll be handed all the urgent problems at work. At home, you’ll have to trust other family members with the housework. Your great strength is to bring loved ones together and lighten the mood with your smile. TAURUS: Before you get started on a new project, it’s important to acquire all the necessary information. Even if you don’t have a romantic weekend planned, you won’t be able to resist temptation if the occasion presents itself. GEMINI: A few changes are needed if you want to experience growth or stability at work. Be bold enough to sign up for training that will lead to a more interesting position. Any changes will be good for you right now. CANCER: It’s all about the details. How you dress and present yourself will have a significant impact on how your career unfolds. You have a tendency to spoil yourself, and your friends will be quick to encourage you.
LEO: In terms of your health, you should receive some excellent news. You’ll finally find the right treatment or medication to suit your needs and improve your quality of life. At work, the emergencies always fall on your desk. VIRGO: Your powers of seduction will increase exponentially, and very interesting people will be attracted to you. You’ll easily expand your client base, to the delight of your boss, whose turnover could double thanks to your interpersonal skills. LIBRA: You’ll discover that you’re an exceptional and irreplaceable person in the eyes of your boss. This could increase your salary and allow you to imagine a better future. In your love life, the scope of your plans will match the depth of your feelings. SCORPIO: You’ll turn long days at work into moments of happiness. You’ll burn off some excess energy by having dynamic conversations with loved ones. You always have the best ideas to improve discus-
sions with others. SAGITTARIUS: Whether it’s to settle a precarious financial situation or make a major purchase, you’ll successfully negotiate a loan that will provide you with a better quality of life. As for matters of the heart, a more sustained demonstration of love would be welcome. CAPRICORN: When it comes to matters of the heart, you may have to adjust your goals with your significant other. In your relationship, and elsewhere, be careful not to hog the blankets and always look for ways to share. At work, keep an eye on the details. AQUARIUS: Avoid missing out on sleep this week. If you’re tired, your concentration will wane and your health will be more fragile. You’ll be struck by creativity, and you’re sure to complete a great masterpiece. PISCES: You’ll spend a lot of time on social media, and many friends will try to connect with you. A family obligation will get you back on track. You’ll discover a new art form that completely captivates you. The luckiest signs this week: Aries, Aquarius and Pisces.
Safety first for whatever floats your boat
good stead during his lifetime: “Make a friend of your pet and when you do, look after them and be kind and you’ll make a mate for life. Treat them the way you treat your kids, they’re part of your life.”
WITH Burrendong Dam full to the brim, the end of lockdown in sight and summer just around the corner, many Dubbo water-lovers will be polishing up the waterskis and dusting off the fishing rods, ready to take to the region’s waterways. But be warned – it’s safety first always when it comes to messing about in boats, and making sure your equipment is up to scratch is vital, particularly when many boats have been sitting idle during the Covid-19
Above: Paul Martin says his pigeons give him so much joy in life. He believes the animal world has many lessons for humans on how to live a full life. Inset: For years Paul made his white pigeons available for weddings, funerals and other events. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
BEAUTY T ’S PRICE OFF SUKIN RANGE! RRP
son presumed drowned been wearing a life jacket. In NSW you must service inflatable lifejackets once a year or in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. Remember to check them every time before you get on the water. And while we’re all keen to get out from under the stay-athome orders, remember that rules relating to outdoor gatherings still apply to boating activities.
BIGGEST SALE! HELLO GORGEOUS!
EXCLUSIVE!
GET GLOWING! AND FEEL THE LOVE WITH THIS
8
$ 49 VA LU E D AT OV E R
WIN
lockdowns. Last weekend – a long one – was the start of the state’s boating season, and the season ahead is likely to be among the biggest on record, so knowing the rules is vital to ensure a day out on the water doesn’t end in tragedy. Lifejackets are the most important safety equipment. Sadly, of the 131 lives lost during recreational boating incidents in the past ten years, 79 could have been avoided had the per-
$ 100 10 0
^
FRE E 3 4 PIECE BEAUTY BAG
Total prize pool valued at
$10,000
1 of 2 all inclusive 2-night wellness retreats at Royal Pines Resort for you and a friend! TO ENTER: Purchase any Sukin product & enter via chemistwarehouse.com.au/competitions/sukin-retreat CONDITIONS APPLY: AU res. 18+. *Starts: 30/9/21. Ends 11:59pm AEST 27/10/21. Max 1 entry per transaction. Retain receipts. For full T&C’s visit www.chemistwarehouse.com.au/competitions/sukin-retreat
Sukin Signature Foaming Facial Cleanser Pump, Hydrating Mist Toner or Facial Moisturiser Pump 250ml ^Excludes Travel & Gift Sets
^FREE with ANY $60 Facial, Skincare, Haircare or Cosmetic purchase made in the one transaction. Excludes Hair Loss, Anti-Dandruff & Headlice purchases. In-store purchase promotion only. Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. Strictly while stocks last. Stock may differ per bag.
CHEMIST WAREHOUSE DUBBO 6882 3410 FROM OUR HOUSE TO YOURS FOR YOUR NEAREST STORE CALL 1300
734 876
FREE FAST DELIVERY
*
LIMITED TIME - ORDERS OVER $30
*CONTACTLESS DELIVERY WITHIN 24 HOURS POWERED BY DOORDASH EXCLUDES PRESCRIPTONS, PHARMACIST ONLY MEDICATION & PHARMACY MEDICINE. PARTICIPATING STORES ONLY.
chemistwarehouse.com.au
POWERED BY
†The save prices listed are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and where 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 subject to manufacturers availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
SALE END: 13TH OCTOBER 2021
14
Watch out, snakes are about By NATALIE LEWIS IT’S spring, so that means snake season, with our slithering friends expected to be well-nourished as the weather warms up this year. Local snake catcher Kyle Lundholm has been fully trained and licenced to catch and release reptiles for the past 12 months. He said snakes tend to take it easy during the cooler months, but are now back in action. “They don’t hibernate, they slow down,” he explained. “The warm weather warms their body up and they become more active and get around a lot more. It also brings on breeding season so there will definitely be more males and females out and about.” Mr Lundholm said feasting on mice in recent months means snakes will be in tip-top condition this spring. “I don’t know if there will be more snakes around, but they will be big and healthy. I expect we will have big, busy snakes,” he said. Mr Lundholm said snakes tend to stay in the same area if they are comfortable in their habi-
tat, and advised residents to ensure their yards are kept clear of debris if they don’t want to share them with snakes. “Be more vigilant, take care of your surroundings. Have a clean-up. Snakes are in full fitness mode and they are going to be around,” he pointed out. “Keep your garden clean, pick up leaf litter and wood piles and keep your distance. “Most snakes will hear your coming and try to disappear.” Mr Lundholm said the Eastern brown, red-bellied black, common death adder, mulga and king browns are all common snakes to this part of Australia. His advice is to “keep an eye out and call me if there’s a problem”. “If you are bitten, use a compression bandage, stay as still as possible and seek medical assistance. The more you move, the more the venom moves around your muscles as well as your blood. And if you can, have a description of the snake to help with identification and treatment.” Remember, most wild animals are more afraid of humans than we are of them.
Snake catcher Kyle Lundholm has advised residents to be alert as snake season begins. Photo supplied. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
● O
Oct 7: Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace Prize winner, 90. Thomas Keneally, novelist, 86. John Mellencamp, US singer, 70. Graham Yallop, cricketer, 69. Vladimir Putin, Russian President, 69. David Gonski, businessman, 67. Jayne Torvill, British skating champion, 64. Simon Cowell, British TV judge, 62. Tim Minchin, musician-comedian, 46. Trent Merrin, footy player, 32. Oct 8: Neil Harvey, cricketer, 93. Fred Stolle, tennis legend, 83. Paul Hogan, comedian-actor, 81. Jesse Jackson, US civil rights leader, 80. Chevy Chase, US comedian-actor, 78. R.L. Stine, US author, 78. Warren Truss, former Deputy Prime Minister, 73. Sigourney Weaver, US actress, 72. Jon Stevens, singer, 60. Matt Damon, US actor, 51. Nick Cannon, US actor, 41. Bruno Mars, US singer-songwriter, 36. Angus T Jones, Jake in TV’s Two and a Half Men, 28. Oct 9: Jackson Browne, US singer, 73. Sharon Osbourne, TV personality, wife of Ozzy, 69. David Cameron, former British PM, 55. Sarah Vandenbergh, Lauren Carpenter in Neighbours, 49. Sean Lennon, US singer, 46. Mark Viduka, soccer player, 46. Todd Kelly, racing driver, 42. Chris O’Dowd, Irish actor, 42. Oct 10: Bruce Devlin, golfer, 84. Midge Ure, singer-musician, 68. David Lee Roth, US singer, 67. Wendy Harmer, comedian, author, 66. Mya, singer, 42. Gabriella Cilmi, singer, 30. Oct 11: Barry Jones, Labor Party stalwart, 89. Sir Bobby Charlton, English footballer, 84. Daryl Hall, US singer-musician, 75. Paul Kelly, journalist-author, 74. Dawn French, British actress-comedian, 63. Wayne Gardner, motorcycling champ, 62. Joan Cusack, US actress, 59. Juanita Phillips, ABC-TV News presenter, 58. Marcus Graham, actor, 58. Luke Perry, US actor, 55. Beau Brady, Home & Away actor, 40. Michelle Trachtenberg, US actress, 36. Oct 12: Charles Wooley, 60 Minutes reporter, 73. Trevor Chappell, cricketer, 69. Hugh Jackman, actor, 53. Paul Harragon, rugby league identity, 53. Baden Cooke, cyclist, 43. Josh Hutcherson, US actor, 29. Oct 13: Nana Mouskouri, Greek singer, 87. Paul Simon, US singer, 80. Sammy Hagar, rocker, 74. Marie Osmond, entertainer, 62. Nancy Kerrigan, US figure skater, 51. Sacha Baron Cohen, actor, 50. Ian Thorpe, swimmer, 41. Ashanti, US singer, 41. Paul Hogan
VOLUNTEER OF THE MONTH CREATIVE SPIRIT AND A KIND HEART A strong faith and a belief in sharing her creative skills has led to a focus on volunteering for Dubbo’s Anna Marshall. She gives her time as secretary of the Outback Writers’ Centre, and has helped two local schools and faith-based communities for the past decade. “I am also starting to volunteer for Creative Assembly, an advocacy group for the arts in the area,” she explained. Her life as a volunteer has grown over time and Anna’s generous nature started when she was a child. She has also overcome illness and her belief in God has helped shape her character. “I have questioned doing things for money and how strong this is for a lot of people for a long time,” she said. “I have put off what I could have asked for money-wise. “I got into this mainly and in essence, through my faith in God firstly. This brings the moving of my spirit out to be consistently generous and loving.” Anna says giving her time and energy to others “enlarges the heart”. “It does grow me and others I see to be acting and doing a lot of good work simply from the
Sponsored by
heart, not for monetary or other values,” she said. “The good, creative aims myself and others go through and can envision for the future are great, worth it and so rewarding.” Anna says being a volunteer has many advantages, including being a valued member of the community and meeting new people. “Coming forward into the community brings many benefits. Though I am quiet, I do have a heart to bring people together (not just socially), though that means different things for different contexts. “Those who volunteer seem to get to meet many extremely interesting and different people and get to know them on different levels. I love people and am genuinely interested.” Anna says volunteering is worthwhile in many more ways too. “In the harder times, when you are not seeing as many beneficial things come through in the community, or don’t hear about them - this grows you too. To see good things happening in the communities around as people meet together, this is something I strongly recommend.”
Anna Marshall’s generosity began as a child and her life as a volunteer has grown over time. Photo supplied.
131 008
15
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
A Dog’s Life
Fun animal facts
SINCE it’s Pets Month, here are a few fun facts from the amazing animal kingdom. A flea can jump 350 times its own body length Hummingbirds are the only birds that can fly backwards Crocodiles cannot stick their tongues out Starfish do not have a brain Slugs have four noses Only female mosquitoes bite Polar bear skin is black! The only mammal capable of flight is the bat Kangaroos can’t fart Snails can sleep for three years Elephants are the only animals that can’t jump Koala fingerprints are so like ours that they’ve sometimes caused confusion at crime scenes!
Q&A with Ted Name: Ted Lewis AKA: Teddles, Teddy, Edward Breed: Miniature fox terrier Residence: I was born in Condobolin and moved to Dubbo last year Age: 15 months Job: Guarding the house and yard, protecting my family, barking at stray cats and birds Favourite place: Sitting on Dad’s lap at the firepit, anywhere Mum goes (I’m her shadow!) Favourite hobby: Playing with Bob the cat and going for walks, eating random things, chasing the chickens (this pastime is forbidden, but I do try to get in to their yard!) Favourite food: Meat and bones (I love bones, especially hiding them in the garden!) Significant moments: My first birthday on July 4, going to the vets to get vaccinated, riding in the car, meeting other dogs in the neighbourhood and at the dog park Best trick: Slipping my collar or harness while out walking, making sure to be the boss of the neighbourhood dogs Best part of lockdown: Tummy rubs, more time with Mum, Dad and the kids, going for even more walks than usual! Worst part of lockdown: Everyone is always around, so less time for sneaking into the chicken yard! Advice for others: Get vaccinated like me so that you can play with your friends!
Western Plains windows & glass Bradnam’s windows Shower screens Mirrors Security doors All glass replacement Wardrobe doors Commercial shop fronts FREE MEASURE & QUOTE
6884 8818
OR 1300 0 GLASS PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/NATALIE LEWIS
23 Douglas Mawson Dr, DUBBO rhonda@wpwg.com.au
Dubbo Public School Now accepting Kindergarten enrolments for 2022 Excellence in a dynamic, inclusive and innovative environment About us: At Dubbo Public School we believe that every child should be known, valued, cared for and enriched. We teach a differentiated curriculum with specialised classes underpinned by high expectations and a growth mindset. We care and strive to enhance the cognitive, emotional, social, physical and spiritual wellbeing of our students. We enrich by providing a range of co-curricular opportunities along with streamed maths classes and enrichment classes in every stage.
Call us today to see if you are eligible to join our school community.
Phone: 6882 2399
181 Darling Street Website: https://dubbo-p.schools.nsw.gov.au Email: dubbo-p.school@det.nsw.edu.au
16
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Because the Dubbo Region is the best place to build your career DUBBO WORKS is highlighting the excellent career and learning opportunities the Dubbo region offers. DUBBO WORKS is a community-building initiative brought to you by Fletcher International Exports and Dubbo Photo News. To contribute ideas, email dubboworks@dubbophotonews.com.au phone 6885 4433.
FREE TO WORK
Career not in lockdown By JOHN RYAN
Bridget Kaitler grew up in Victoria but is happy to say she’s found a great home here in Dubbo as a zookeeper who loves her work and the local lifestyle. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
BRIDGET Kaitler has spent five years as a zookeeper at Taronga Western Plains Zoo and can’t imagine doing anything else. In fact, Bridget told Dubbo Photo News she’s always wanted to work with animals. “After completing the Captive Animal Certificate through Taronga Training Institute and being a volunteer keeper at Taronga Western Plains Zoo, I jumped at the opportunity to be a keeper here,” she said. “In my first few years I was lucky enough to work with many of the zoo’s teams and species such as elephants, rhinos, primates, small carnivores and Australian natives, I also worked at the zoo’s accommodation as a cleaner and tour guide.” It’s a daily thrill to work with so many “passionate and headstrong people”, Bridget says. “Everyone is doing their bit for the animals in their care and the projects they are passionate about out in the wild. It is great learning from senior keepers, taking in their knowledge and experiences and mixing it with what I know and have learned. “We do socialise together outside of work. Being in Dubbo and being a zookeeper, we work most weekends so meeting people outside of the zoo can be difficult. But I am lucky to have a great group of friends from the zoo family and even live with two of them!” Dubbo’s zoo may be just out of town but Bridget says it’s a long way from being an average
workplace. The eclectic mix in the workplace with people from across the globe all working together, and the strict emphasis on workplace and animal safety make for a workplace that’s unusual in the region. “It brings other perspectives to the workforce and creates a more inclusive and encouraging environment, with people willing to share and take on others’ ideas,” she said of the internationalised collaboration. Work, Health and Safety culture is crucial, she says. “It’s important because we work with dangerous and endangered animals. The safety of the animals and the people who work with them is critical. We want the best for the animals and working with them safely ensures the best for us also.” The zoo is an unusual organisation in that there are multiple strands operating at the same time including welfare and husbandry of animals, research in collaborative projects with other zoos around the world, the reef coral project and attracting tourists to raise awareness as well as create revenue to fund some of these activities. Diversity of intent creates a personally fulfilling workplace according to Bridget. “I really enjoy hearing the achievements and progress each team is making. I’ve recently worked on Taronga’s breed and release programs for Plains-Wanderer, Regent Honeyeater and Greater Bilby,” she said. “All these programs are quite
new and are becoming very successful, with the release of bilbies to Sturt National Park last year and future releases for Plains-Wanderers and Regent Honeyeaters. “To play a role in helping animals in our own backyard is very fulfilling. We are also contributing to the species’ population and research and education. That’s what the zoo is about, showing the public a glimpse of the amazing animals of the world and how to help them stay wild – fortunately, my role hasn’t been affected by Covid-19, although it’s very strange not having any visitors at the zoo.” Into the future Bridget hopes to be able to expand her skill base and make the most of any career opportunities that come her way. Last year she completed a rotation at Taronga Zoo in Sydney and said it was great to have the chance to work at Dubbo’s sister zoo. “Here in Dubbo I have a leadership role with the Education Centre and Tasmanian Devil section, overseeing the breeding program, husbandry and general working of the round,” she said. “I’m interested in exhibit design, so it would be great to be zoo keeping and be involved with exhibit projects.” Asked to nominate her proudest moment at work, she says: “The first time I held a Tasmanian Devil joey. The breeding program for this species has been a great success with zoos across Australia working together.”
Harvest jobs can be cream of the crop By JOHN RYAN
IF you’re chasing seasonal work or looking for a change with the prospect of a new career, Fletcher International has vacancies for about 30 casual workers to start on its grain operations for the upcoming predicted bumper harvest according to HR manager Maddy Herbert. “Jobs include weigh bridge operators, machinery operators and grain handlers,” Ms Herbert told Dubbo Photo News. “There’s absolutely no experience required and heaps of opportunity for over time. We even supply your work boots and uniforms. “It’s a great place to work. I came here for “a couple of months”...five years ago!” she said. Ms Herbert says it’s a common theme for Fletchers employees, with so many people looking at the grain terminal or abattoir as a temporary job to tide them over only to then end up happily spending decades at the plant.
Joe Masters with last year's huge grain receivals at the Fletcher International terminal on the northern outskirts of Dubbo. Dozens of workers were needed to turn around the trucks and trains last year and the company says they'll be needing more people on the ground to make it happen in 2021. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS
17
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
To contribute ideas: email dubboworks@dubbophotonews.com.au phone 6885 4433 txt 0429 452 245 PET GROOMING
Pampering for pooches By NATALIE LEWIS
Dog groomer Elaine and her furry friend Alfie. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/EMY LOU
BECOMING a dog groomer was a natural progression for Elaine whose passion has become her profession. “I’ve always been a dog lover,” she laughed. “Who’s not a dog lover? I’d always thought about doing it, I thought it looked like fun then the opportunity came up in Sydney, then I moved to Dubbo. “I always thought, that looks like fun. I enjoyed it when I started and it went on from there.” Elaine mainly works with small breeds but can groom dogs of any size, and even cats, with the job usually encompassing a bath and blow dry, nails, ears and a haircut. She said spring is a busy period when owners get their dogs clipped before summer. “This is the time of year it goes a bit crazy. Long-haired dogs are a lot of work and burrs can become problematic; dogs can get matted. During Covid, we are doing welfare clips. I do a lot of ‘short back and sides.”
Elaine gets a lot of return clients but says every dog is different, with all ages and personalities. “There’s a lot of styles you can do, it’s like a sculpture.” According to Elaine, dog grooming is something you learn as you go. “It’s not something anyone can teach. There’s a few technicalities around managing the animal and learning how to control them so it’s safe. She said it’s a job that requires “an extraordinary amount of patience” and like most groomers, has been bitten before. “It would be rare to have a groomer that hasn’t been bitten.” Elaine likes working with her canine clients one on one for the animal’s benefit. “It comes down to dignity and respect. I want to get it done quickly and get them back to their families. It’s nice to see the owners happy as dogs are part of their family.” As a dog groomer of 20 years, it’s clear Elaine loves her work. “If you love dogs, it’s a great thing to do.”
# DUBBO JOBS COUNTER
LOVE YOUR WORK
384 The number of Dubbo region jobs being advertised this week on seek.com.au
OPPORTUNITY OF THE WEEK
Service advisor – Dubbo Mowers and Chainsaws THIS company is a locally owned Dubbo business that has been leading the way in the outdoor power equipment industry since 1948. Dubbo Mowers and Chainsaws has a full-time position available for a service advisor to join its service team. You will be the critical link between the company’s loyal customers and the experienced service team. The successful applicant will: z Have the ability to communicate effectively
z Possess basic computer literacy skills z Be self-motivated and able to work as part of a successful service team z Preferably have mechanical knowledge z Have a forklift licence or be willing for us to assist you to obtain one z Be looking for a career, not just a job If you believe you fit the bill and would like to join our experienced service team, please submit your application to admin@dubbomowers.com or call David on (02) 6882 3122.
JOIN THE MISSION
DUBBO WORKS wants you! ou! If you have a unique orr interesting job, a career opportunity or a fascinating nating learning option you’d like to share, are, get in touch with Dubbo Photo oto News now. To contribute ideas, eas, email dubboworks@ dubbophotonews.com. m. au or phone 6885 4433 or visit us at 89 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo. ubbo
Melissa Smede Where do you work? Pegasus Conveyancing and Property Law What’s your job? Director and Licensed Conveyancer Best part of your job? I love helping people with the legal side of buying or selling what’s likely to be their biggest asset and giving them a really positive experience during what can be a stressful and emo-
tional time. When clients are happy, I’m happy! If you could work with a celebrity, who would it be and why? Carl Hedin, the Swedish dressage rider. He’s so inspirational and shows that you can achieve anything as long as you are willing to put in the work. Something you can’t live without? My partner, Graeme. He is always there for me, helping me out,
and is my biggest supporter and best friend. When you were child, what did you want to grow up to be? A vet, or a job working with animals. Most embarrassing/funny moment at work? When I was on a Zoom video call with a client, and my cat jumped onto the desk and mooned the camera. Luckily the client had a sense of humour!
18
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
‘Round Australia dodging Covid
More changes to stay at home orders STAY-AT-HOME orders are changing in a number of local government areas (LGAs) in regional NSW due to the ongoing Covid-19 public health risk. Stay-at-home orders have been introduced for the Gunnedah LGA due to recent transmission of Covid-19, in place until October 11. These stay-at-home orders also apply to anyone who has been in the Gunnedah LGA since September 27. Everyone in this area must stay at home unless it is for an essential reason, which includes shopping for food, medical care, getting vaccinated, compassionate needs, exercise and work or tertiary education if you can’t work or study at home. Stay-at-home orders have also been lifted for Cowra and Port Macquarie LGAs. NSW Health will continue to closely monitor the evolving situation with Covid-19 and will update advice to protect the health and wellbeing of NSW residents. Come forward for testing if you have any symptoms, get vaccinated and stay safe. Lyndal Powderly has inadvertently timed her round-Australia trip to perfection. She’s pictured diving on D the Barrier Reef. PHOTOS: SUPPLIED
By JOHN RYAN THE dream of so many Australians is to embark on that trip around our island continent. While many have enjoyed a national lap of honour in their retirement, others find time’s passed them by and life gets in the way, preventing that trip of a lifetime from coming true. So Dubbo’s Lyndal Powderly couldn’t have chosen a more opportune time to embark on her great adventure. “(Earlier) in 2021, I took a year’s leave from work and fulfilled my dream of circumnavigating on Highway One around Australia,” she told Dubbo Photo News. “This has been a 30-year long dream following my parents’ footsteps when they did this trip in the 1990s. This solo trip has truly been the trip of a lifetime traveling in a 4WD and camper trailer.” Lyndal is now on to her last state – Queensland – after travelling through NSW to Victoria in January and February. She spent March in Tasmania (“amazing”), April in Victoria,
May in South Australia, June and July in Western Australia, August in the Northern Territory and
now she’s exploring Queensland. “There have been so many highlights along the way and a couple
of tyre blowouts, but I highlyy recommend taking the highway way – bitumen all the way around this wide brown land. It’s enormous!” us!” she said. Australia’s Highway 1 is a network of highways that circumnavigate the country, connecting all the mainland state capitals as well as Darwin. The total length of the route is about 14,500 kilometres, making it the longest national highway in the world, ahead of the Trans-Siberian and Trans-Canada Highways. “I have followed all the news back home including Dugald Saunders’ daily addresses and feel for everyone back home and across the world. “Queensland is where I am at the moment. Following three weeks of rainy, squally, windy, overcast weather, it has finally shown its true colours with the last three being bluebird days!
Extend your reach.
GROW YOUR CLIENTELE.
RECREATION ROOM
IT’S A RECORD! Three-year-old Lou is a black and tan coonhound. She’s a sweet, sassy, smart and now record-breaking pup. She has set the record for the longest ears on a dog (living) with each ear measuring 34cm. It was love at first sight for her owner Paige Olsen (USA). She simply could not say no to adopting her! Paige has always joked that Lou’s ears are “extravagantly long”. However, it wasn’t until sheltering in place during the pandemic that she decided to measure them. Lou’s achievement has now earned her a spot in the new Guinness World Records 2022 book.
CLADDING SPECIALS
5m x 2.5m
Based on an average 80m2 home
* $10,500 *Conditions apply
*Conditions apply
$8500*
$ Advertising with us will grow your sales!
6m x 3m Patio SUPPLIED AND ERECTED
$4750* *Conditions apply
02 6885 4433
6884 9620
www.panelspan.com.au Showroom opposite Aldi 183 Talbragar St, Dubbo
PICTON BROS BL83737C
19
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
EMERGENCY REPORT
The Dubbo Photo News column dedicated to the hard work of our emergency services personnel.
NEWS OPINION AND ANALYSIS by JOHN RYAN
Rural firies volunteer to fight Covid RURAL Fire Service (RFS) personnel from across the state who are assisting NSW Health in the Covid-19 response have been undertaking training in infection control, personal protective clothing and Covid-19 testing techniques at Orana Fire Control Centre in Dubbo and after that training, being deployed to remote communities in western NSW. It’s a great testament to the endless opportunities and training if you sign up as an RFS volunteer, and a great way to give back to the community.
Operation October Long Weekend THE October long weekend saw much lighter traffic on the roads than pre-Covid public holidays but the region’s police were still kept busy, focusing on the 4Ds contributing to road trauma: Dangerous Driving, Drink Driving, Drugged Driving and Distractions such a mobile phones. Operation October Long Weekend 2021 began at 12.01am on Friday, October 1 and concluded at 11.59pm on Monday, October 4. Here’s a summary of some of the alleged offences: z 63-year-old female arrested Gilgandra – 0.198 High Range PCA z 36-year-old male arrested Narromine – Dangerous Riding, exceed speed >45km/h z 26-year-old male arrested Dubbo – 0.073 Mid Range PCA, Dangerous Driving z 17-year-old female arrested Wellington – 0.017 Special Range PCA z 23-year-old male arrested North Street Dubbo – 0.158 High Range PCA z 18-year-old female arrested Mitchell Highway Trangie – 0.058 Low Range PCA z 69-year-old male arrested Bandulla St Mendooran – 0.077 Low Range PCA z 61-year-old female arrested Chester St Warren – 0.071 Low Range PCA Across the state, police have praised motorists for their behaviour on the long weekend roads. In the Western Region police clocked up 130 speeding infringements, six seatbelt offences, four mobile phones and they conducted 2318 breath tests.
These Rural Fire Service volunteers from across the state have spent time training in infection control at Dubbo’s Fire Control Centre so they can help people in some of the state’s most isolated and disadvantaged communities. PHOTOS: SUPPLIED
Teenage pillion passenger killed in Narromine motorbike crash VERY sad news in Narromine after a motorbike left the roadway and crashed into a tree on Cornucopia Road at about 2:30am on October 4. Police say the 17-year-old female pillion passenger died at the scene. The rider – a 17-year-old boy – sustained serious leg and pelvis injuries and he was treated at the scene by paramedics, before being transported to Dubbo Base Hospital. Local police and the Crash Investigation Unit established a crime scene and commenced inquiries into the circumstances surrounding the incident. As investigations continue, police are urging anyone with information, or dash-cam footage, to come forward. A report will be prepared for the information of the Coroner.
Woman killed in crash IT’S been a bad period in the region for road fatalities involving trees. Around 3am on October 4, not long after the Narromine motorbike crash, emergency services were called to Henry Lawson Drive about 8km south of Gulgong following reports a Ford Falcon sedan had left the road and hit a tree. The driver and sole occupant of the sedan, a 47-year-old woman, died at the scene. Police attended and established a crime scene, an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the crash is underway and a report will be prepared for the information of the coroner.
Prison ‘upgrade’ NOW I’ve seen it all. “Major boost” screams the headline on a press release detailing a $38 million refurbishment program for Wellington Correctional Centre, yet I’d say some people will interpret this “boost” as
a multi-million dollar stuff-up to have the prison so poorly designed that a mouse plague could cause its evacuation in the first place, and then spark a spend of many millions of taxpayer dollars to ensure it won’t happen again. The processes normal people have to go through to satisfy the grant of government money and the almost total absence of any risk is mind-blowing, and yet governments of all persuasions seem to be able to get away with murdering our taxpayer dollars. Anyway, here’s the official spiel, or spin: The NSW Government is overseeing a $38 million refurbishment project in the greater Dubbo region, tasking local contractors with repairing Wellington Correctional Centre after it was damaged in Western NSW’s mice plague earlier this year. Minister for Counter Terrorism and Corrections Anthony Roberts said one of the project’s main priorities was to ensure the upgrade focused on providing employment opportunities for the local community. “Corrective Services NSW is a proud employer in the region so it’s a fantastic result to be able to engage local contractors and suppliers for the project,” he said. “$38 million is being injected back into the community by hiring locally and giving something back to a region that has long supported us.” A Dubbo-based contractor will oversee the complex task of refurbishing the centre, after damage was caused by mice chewing through internal wiring and destroying ceiling and wall panels. Apparently 11 priority areas have been targeted for works – including the gate and control room, which houses the main security system – as well as the main administration area. A major refurbishment to the Corrective Services Industries area, including the bakery, will
also be prioritised, as well as accommodation areas to improve living standards for inmates. Corrective Services said they’re not only repairing damage and reinforcing the perimeter of the complex as the first line of defence against future plagues, they’re “actively improving existing infrastructure to better help us work towards our goal of reducing reoffending.” Hmmm, that sounds impressive. Another part of the press release actually boasts about how Corrective Services oversaw the successful relocation of up to 200 staff and 420 inmates to other prisons due to the ongoing effects of the mouse plague. It would have been much better if that monumental stuff-up hadn’t occurred in the first place.
$104,000 fraud POLICE have arrested and charged a 59-year-old woman following an ongoing investigation into the alleged defrauding of a 71-year-old man from Tomingley. In July last year local police commenced an investigation after reports the elderly man had been defrauded on several occasions. The woman was arrested by investigators at Dubbo Police Sta-
tion and a subsequent search warrant was executed at a home on Tomingley West Road, Tomingley, about 12.30pm the same day. Detectives seized documentation relevant to the investigation, which will undergo further examination and the woman was charged with 17 counts of dishonestly obtain financial advantage by deception. Police will allege in court that the woman stole more than $104,000 via multiple transactions between October 2019 and June 2020, while acting as his trustee. She was granted conditional bail to appear at Dubbo Local Court on November 10.
Reclaim the Line
DUBBO Photo News has been sent a photograph of a local Reclaim the Line protest in the city, apparently last Friday, where we’ve been told about 30 people were in attendance who were objecting to mandatory Covid-19 vaccinations in the workplace. We asked the police about it and the only incident they were aware of was when they were patrolling Macquarie Street last Friday and saw four people allegedly protesting while not wearing masks, so the protest march seems low-key when it comes to its organisation. Police allege a person from the group ran away as officers approached – they spoke with the remaining three women, who were unable to provide a permitted excuse for not wearing a mask. Further action is expected to be taken, including inquiries into the identity of the person who ran from police. z Send your news tips to john.ryan@panscott.com.au or 0429 452 245 txt is best
Teachers and frontline workers attended the nation-wide #ReclaimTheLine rally in Dubbo on Friday against vaccine mandates. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
SIGN UP TO AN UPSTREAM P R I VAT E P O W E R A G R E E M E N T AND RECEIVE UP TO
$10,000
IN COVID RECOVERY GRANTS. upstreamenergy.com.au/dubbo
20
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
AUSSIE ARTIST ALBUMS CHART
THIS WEEK | LAST WEEK | TITLE | ARTIST 1 NEW Been Doin’ It For a Bit 2
RUBY FIELDS (pictured)
2 F Love (Over You) THE KID LAROI
3 NEW Darlinghurst
DARLINGHURST
4
1 The Wait
5
- Falling & Flying
6
4 T. R. U. T. H.
VIKA & LINDA 360
CROWING ABOUT WEATHER NOT IN VANE NOT all pets are organic and this rooster weather vane is just one example of how an inanimate pet can brighten up human lives, unlike the Sydney Roosters who bombed out early in this year’s NRL final series. Paul Martin reckons he has made about 50 of these over the years, he built one for himself and the orders from friends just kept flowing in.
GUY SEBASTIAN
7 NEW Firebird
NATALIE IMBRUGLIA
8 10 The Very Best 9
INXS
7 The Best Of Cold Chisel: All For You COLD CHISEL
10 8 The Gurrumul Story GURRUMUL
QUOTE ME “Life means progress, and progress means suffering.” – Hendrik Willem Van Loon, Dutchborn journalist and lecturer “It is better to debate an important matter without settling it than to settle it without debating it” – Anonymous
Our advertisers stay a step above the competition. PRESENT THIS AD TO RECEIVE FREE DELIVERY IN THE DUBBO AREA FOR ORDERS OVER $150
Begin with the letters in the first column and match them up to the letters in the second and third columns. eg AST-RON-AUT
OFFER ENDS 30/11/21
Theme: Occupations
AST CAM WIGM LA SHO CON GOL HER
AK BOU CIE DSM ERAM BAL RON PGI
OPEN TO TRADE & THE PUBLIC 6 DAYS A WEEK
RL ITH AUT IST RGE ER RER AN
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE.
02 6885 4433 © australianwordgames.com.au 313
CALL IN TODAY to check out our range & either load up your trailer or we can deliver it to you on site. Dowton Dr. (off River St) North Dubbo
PH: 0488 467 001 Mon – Fri 7am to 4.30pm // Sat 7am to 12pm www.activeearth.net.au
Open Garden Day
Opening Night Cocktail Party
21ST NOVEMBER
20TH NOVEMBER
tickets $40
WE STOCK: a wide range of organic soils, sands, gravels, mulches and firewood.
Tickets available via 123 TIX 40 Colony Crescent Dubbo
$5 entry - Morning tea & lunch available to purchase
Entry forms for the Art Prize still available. Email - hollandopengarden@gmail.com Laura Holland Artist • Mudgee Art House • Bunnings Dubbo • Grumley Family • Damien and Rachel Mahon
21
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
WELLINGTON NEWS
WE WELCOME YOUR NEWS, IDEAS & PHOTOS email wellingtonnews@panscott.com.au phone 6885 4433
WACHS works on dosing Wello By JOHN RYAN JAY Forrester heads up the Healthy 4 Life Team at WACH’s Wellington Clinic and in the midst of the current Covid-19 crisis in the town, was keen to let locals know about the vaccination program that’s already been undertaken by employees working at the clinic. “WACHS received AstraZeneca in late March and all clinic staff were given evidence-based information from GPs and clinicians,” he said. “The approach was to consider vulnerable patients that WACHS provides primary health care services to and for individual and family protection. “The clinic team understands its vital role in Wellington. Once staff had vaccinations it allowed a patient’s experience and vaccination side effects to be told verbally rather from social media or government perspectives.” He said the current Covid-19 uncertainty makes it imperative for front-line health staff to be dou-
ble-vaccinated to protect not only the workers themselves, but the clients they’re looking after. “This assists to potentially reduce disruption to Primary Health Care (PHC) service delivery. If WACHS becomes exposed it would have a ripple effect for other GP services or Wellington District Hospital,” he said. “With the recent increase in cases in Dubbo and Wellington, it’s even more important to get vaccinated.” Despite the recent news about WACHS being placed into special administration, Mr Forrester told Dubbo Photo News that clinical work is continuing as it always has. "Yes, we will continue to provide the community with the best health service possible during the lockdown and ongoing,” he said, mentioning some of the other vital on-ground service delivery being currently performed by the organisation. “We’ve had the pop-up clinic to provide Pfizer to all of Wellington community for the past three weeks and now we are administering the
second doses. “WACHS contacts patients to attend Pfizer clinic on a daily basis to ensure high rates are achieved and we have been supporting stakeholder engagement meetings for Wellington and Nanima.” Mr Forrester says WACHS staff in Wellington need to be applauded for their efforts throughout the Covid-19 crisis so far, having played an integral role in delivery of health services. “Wellington community members have rolled up their sleeves in good numbers to get the jabs.” So far the total number of doses delivered by WACHS into the local community is 5249, with 2000 first doses of Pfizer and 2101 second doses. With AstraZeneca, 534 first and 534 second doses have been delivered. WACHS has extended its Pfizer clinics through to November 2021 and AstraZeneca will continue long term as part of normal clinical services.
WACHS' staff say their clients can rest easy knowing that everyone they come into contact with at the Wellington clinic are double-vaxxed, meaning there's far less likelihood of them catching the virus while they receive their jabs. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
Help at hand for those in isolation By LAURIE ROUSE NSW Health has set up at Wellington Civic Centre to provide food hampers to those who are in isolation due to Covid-19. Items include food, bottled water, nappies and cleaning products. Paula Kalah
Kenneth Rich
Jody Chester
Melissa Butler, Leisa O’Grady, Christie Bradford, Melissa Redding and Warren Baker
Lance Kerr, Local Aboriginal Lands Council Megan Humphries
Help is close at hand. Gamble Aware. 1800 858 858. gambleaware.nsw.gov.au
Erin Goldhagen
www: wellingtonsoldiers.com.au
22
NEWS EXTRA
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
OPINION, ANALYSIS, FEATURES, DEPTH.
Unmasked in a global pandemic COMMENT By BRYR ALTHEN I GREW up in a small country town where the average population included one Indigenous family, a few Filipinos and everyone else was white. I was part of this latter majority. My parents were your typical Aussie battlers. They were hard working, we weren't rich, but we weren't bad off either. So I guess you could say I grew up with what, nowadays, some would call “white privilege”. My life experience, however, has shown me what being in a minority means too. I was the fat kid that was bullied at school. My parents eventually pulled me out and home-schooled me, and I then became the “home-school kid” with big glasses and no dress sense. In my late teens/20s, I was the “Christian kid” in the midst of the sex, party and drinking culture. I've done aid work in East Africa (‘cause that's what home-schooled kids end up doing, right?) where English and white were certainly NOT the majority. If I'm completely honest, while all the former were challenging, that last example I found really daunting, and it gave me a window into what some must go through coming to our country. Aside from these experiences, I have had many and varied employment opportunities, literally around the world. Taxi driving being one – has to be tried! These jobs have allowed me to work with an incredibly diverse range of people and I've had the privilege of glimpsing their stories too. I'm very thankful for the experiences I've had and the people I've met along the way. While that is a snapshot of my history, here again, in the midst of the pandemic, I now find myself in a minority – the minority of the “unmasked” – and I wanted to share what that is like for me. I am seven and a half months pregnant. I have an adorable and incredibly active 16.5 month old, and I have various health issues that mean I am exempt from wearing a face mask in public places, as in my case, the risk of the mask outweighs the benefit. This is perfectly legal and legitimate, and falls within the NSW Covid Safe guidelines. I carry a letter at all times from a medical professional which explains this. Unfortunately for me, and others in a similar situation, not everyone knows the NSW Covid Safe guidelines. Aside from feeling like everyone is looking at me thinking “the plague, the plague!”, here's some of what it is like to be in this minority group. I was shopping in pre-lockdown, toddler in the trolley, waiting for my hubby to finish up with something when a police officer and a store manager started walking towards me. I'm a law-abiding citizen and actually hadn't clicked to the fact that they were coming for me. I was then confronted about the reason I wasn't wearing
Bryr Althen, with 16-month-old son Judah, holding an exemption letter from The Centre Midwifery – excusing Bryr from wearing a mask because of acute bronchial asthma. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/STEVE COWLEY
a mask. When I explained why, there were no dramas, but I must admit, it makes me anxious about going into town. Am I going to be treated and seen as a criminal every time I'm out in public? I've been to a doctor's office and although I was able to see the doctor, I was asked to wait outside the surgery until I could be seen. I've been almost refused access to pathology. I was questioned abruptly regarding a mask at the local pharmacy and then asked if I was there for something essential. I have a mask exemption, I have health issues, I was there for a script! Thankfully now, the guard at the pharmacy knows me and there is no 'grilling' on the way through. Don't misunderstand me, I know these people are doing their jobs, but for me, with anxiety, among other things, I dread having to perform the weekly necessities of my life, if it involves being in public. My most recent experience, however, was the most confronting and traumatic I've had. I went to do my weekly grocery shop, as I always do, at the same grocery shop I always use – I’ve shopped there for years. I get my trolley, go to the door, only to be told by security that I wasn't al-
lowed to shop. Let me just recap this, I am seven and a half months pregnant, have a very active toddler, health issues and I’m exhausted. Going into town already makes me feel anxious. My hormones at this point in time are not my friends...and then I’m told I cannot buy food for my family. I was so shocked and distressed by this it triggered anxiety, anxiety triggered breathing issues, and by the time I got to my car I was vomiting in the gutter, really not the best feeling in the world. Thank God I had a friend in my Covid Safe Bubble who could take my list and get my groceries for me. I certainly didn't feel like driving all over town and finding out if I was going to get the same treatment at all supermarkets. While this is not only wrong, but illegal, I want to step away from that and ask you a question: what if it was someone who didn't have friends or family nearby, they didn't have someone to do their shopping for them? Alternatively, I've worked with semi-independent young people who have had either Autism or Down Syndrome. What if it was them? It's easy to think, “Man, how would THEY have reacted?”, but what about, “How would it have
affected them?”. What if it was someone who didn't know the law and didn't know how to ask for help? For clear reference's sake, the action of this supermarket is not only against NSW Covid Safe guidelines, it's against federal law and has heavy penalties associated. I, nor others in a similar situation to me, cannot be refused entry to a public premises. While there is an obvious need for education in this circumstance, I'm not really interested in spouting law and suing people. Someone is assisting me in amicably rectifying this situation at the supermarket, and I am very grateful. What I am interested in right now, is going about my daily life without being harassed and discriminated against. I'm also well aware there are two sides to every coin, and people are being ill-treated at both ends of the scale: both actions are wrong. I would say that one of the biggest killers in this epidemic is not Covid-19, but fear. Fear is not rapidly eroding our culture and our humanity, it is destroying it. In saying this, please don't think I'm diminishing the loss of life Covid-19 has caused. Any loss is painful, once again, I know
what that is like, but that's another story. One of the biggest things I learned in my work in the rural villages of East Africa is that there is no “them and us”. The only difference between “them” and “me”, is the countries in which we were born. Mine afforded me the privilege of free health care and a private education, and that is what made such a vast difference in our circumstances. It however, made absolutely no difference in who we are. We are ALL human, we all deserve respect and dignity. What ever happened to the qualities of “mateship”, “live and let live”? To quote Rick Warren, the ability to “walk side by side without seeing eye to eye”, to “everyone deserves a fair go”? There are no vaxxed and unvaxxed, masked and unmasked. Everyone has circumstances they can't control. We all make reasoned decisions and our conclusions can be opposing. That does not mean we don't each deserve the dignity and respect that should be afforded to all. C'mon, Australia! I hope this helps create awareness and perhaps put a different perspective out there if these circumstances or thoughts have not crossed your path.
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
WHO’S HUNGRY? b2222222d •OCTOBER 14•
Dessert X Day NATIONAL
N
Hanoi Corner - Dubbo Royal India Restobar Rose Garden Thai Restaurant Four Seas Restaurant Matilda Motor Inn Lime Thai Restaurant Manera Cafe Thai Oz & Continental Haldiindian Restaurant Burger Urge Jimmys Kitchen Burgie's Burger Bar & Café
Pizza Cravings Hing Wah Restaurant Amazing Thai @Dubbo Down The Lane Dubbo Taronga Western Plains Zoo Wylde Bean Thai Café Tanoshi Sushi Zen Dubbo The Vietnamese House Western Star Hotel Dubbo Railway Junction Hotel Club Dubbo
Dubbo Memorial Club Resort Devil's Hollow Brewery Garden Hotel Pty Ltd South Dubbo Tavern Macquarie Club Chinese Restaurant Castlereagh Hotel Dubbo Westside Hotel Pastoral Hotel, Dubbo The Monkey Bar Lions Pride Restaurant Dubbo Old Bank Restaurant Commercial Hotel Dubbo The Amaroo Hotel Cattlemans Restaurant The Establishment Bar Dubbo Dubbo Rhino Lodge
Veldt Restaurant Quality Inn Dubbo Lazy River Estate Dubbo Village Bakehouse Dubbo Local Coffee Co Cakes By Amy Rutherford Wilay Cafe Press Dubbo The Auctioneer Dubbo Outback Trek Cafe Short Street Store Creo Cafe Relish Salad Bar & Takeaway The Cross Coffee House Farmers Bakehouse The Cross Coffee House Devil's Hollow Cafe Dubbo Regional Airport
Cafe & Bar Taronga Western Plains Zoo - Waterhole Cafe Coffee Club Dubbo Tempt Sweet & Savoury Csc Dubbo Magnolia Café Russo's Coffee Quarters The Sand Goanna Short Street Store Alchemy On Victoria Lotus Cafe Dubbo Russos Coffee Bar Dun Lah Nursery Cafe Delissio Dahab Café The Def Chef Coffee & Tea Exchange Kidzoo The Grape Vine Café
THE FOOD YOU WANT. DELIVERED. Menulog now delivering from over 50 restaurant partners in Dubbo.
23
24
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
NEWS EXTRA
Remembering little lives By JEN COWLEY EVERY year in Australia, thousands of families face the devastating loss of a precious infant. Each day across our nation six babies are stillborn, while another two die within 28 days after birth* and countless other little lives are lost before they reach full term, but it’s only in recent years that society has come to recognise the loss, the pain, the grief is real. It’s a pain Rochelle Olsen knows and feels all too well. Five years ago, her first child, Edward, died just seven hours after he was born. When he left this world, he forever changed it for his mum and his dad Robert. Rochelle now uses her own experience to help others, having left a successful career and business as a pharmacist to set up a consultancy called The Baby Loss Mentor – filling a unique niche in a sadly enormous market. October is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month, with the 15th marking the particular day of remembrance of all those little lives lost, and Rochelle has made it her mission since Edward’s death to shine a light on what has until relatively recently been a borderline taboo subject. The reason this year’s commemoration is so special according to Rochelle, is that for the first time, the day is being officially recognised by the Australian parliament as a national day. After initially volunteering with NALAG (National Association for Loss and Grief), Rochelle used her own lived experience to help others before taking the initiative to set up her own consultancy. “I realised I could do even more to support women in rural and remote areas who had experienced a pregnancy or infant loss,” Rochelle says, adding that NALAG has for many years held a remembrance event on October 15 for Pregnancy and Infant Loss, but that she just upped the ante. She arranged to have the clocktower in Dubbo’s Macquarie Street (now The Exchange) lit up in hues of blue and pink as part of the international “Wave of Light” held each year in memory of little lives lost.
Roch R och chel elle el le Ols lsen en wit ith h on onee off her threee sons, Flynn (16 (1 6 mo m nt nths ths hs)), and “Ed Ed’s ’s Tedd dy” which honou o rs her fi firstb tbor tb orrn so son on, Edw dwar ard, ar d d, who died at just seven h urrs old ho ld. Roch hell he llee no now w usess her lived exper e ience to hellp othe theer bab by-loss l mums, and d is preparing t mark Pregnancyy and to d In nfant Loss Awareness Day wiith t events for which s e is partnering sh g wi with th NA N A ALA LAG LA G. PHOTO: DU D BBO
PH PHO HOTO NEWS/S / TEVE COWLLEY /S Y
“I did that to open the conversation, to crack it wide open actually, and it certainly drew attention. It was attended by more than 100 people from baby loss families,” she says. Given that one in four women will be affected by pregnancy or infant loss, Rochelle rightly points to the perversity of the fact that until recently, it hasn’t been a loss that has been widely recognised. “It’s been a taboo subject, not talked about, but the grief of losing a baby or pregnancy can last generations. “We have a small community of baby loss mums here – “The Blossums” – and they range from people who have lost babies only this year, through to those whose babies were lost 25 or 30 years ago. “So it’s nice to be able to have a ceremony that will recognise all
those losses all in the same light, because a huge part of my philosophy is that we don’t compare our losses – we just be there for each other.” Not a day goes past that Rochelle and her husband don’t remember their first-born son Edward, but October 15 is a day to come together with others to share and acknowledge his little life, and their enormous loss. “I’ll be going along to the picnic in the park (details below), I’ll be lighting a candle with everyone else and joining with the ceremony. It’s about being a part of the day and being present on the day. “I like to say that I parent Edward through being present in this life and doing what I do to help other mums now. “How do you parent from afar? All the things I do, I do in his
COUNCIL SNAPSHOT
honour.” Although Rochelle’s professional practice is geared towards baby loss mums, she’s eager to stress that the loss of a baby is felt by the whole family. “My mentoring is with mums. That’s my zone because I am one. “But there are so many families and dads, siblings, grandparents, extended family that are impacted by the loss. “That’s why we encourage families to be involved with the October events and remember the little life; remember the grandchild, the niece, the nephew... be there for their family and share with those children who are living.” For those feeling sad and isolated in the wake of a recent loss or from a loss many years ago, Rochelle has this simple message: “You are not alone – please
reach out. Your grief and your sadness are valid. Do not compare your loss to that of others. Your loss is the worst loss for you.” ••• IN more than 40 years in the grief and loss space, NALAG has always recognised that pregnancy and infant loss is significant. Part of that recognition, says CEO Debbie Todkill, is the Babies Garden, a peaceful corner of the garden at the organisation’s Dubbo headquarters which was established in remembrance of babies over generations. “It’s a physical space where people can come to acknowledge their baby’s life and loss. It gives them a space in which to remember that child and acknowledge that loss,” she says, adding that NALAG’s work with pregnancy and infant loss is important because it’s
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE: 6801 4000
DUBBO.NSW.GOV.AU AVAILABLE NOW FOR ADOPTION
PLAY SPACE FEEDBACK
HERITAGE FUNDING APPLICATIONS
KERBSIDE COLLECTION
Dubbo Regional Council is calling for community input on our exciting new playground, in Victoria Park Dubbo!
Council has extended the application period for owners of heritage-listed buildings to apply for funding. The Local Heritage Fund has been established by Council with assistance from the NSW Heritage Office to provide assistance for conservation and remediation works.
Kerbside bulky waste collection will commence in Wellington on Monday 18 October, 2021. The service is available to residents within the 2 & 3 bin service areas of Dubbo Regional Council.
The existing Livvi’s Place equipment has reached the end of its recommended lifespan, and requires replacement. To view the plans for the new play and fitness areas and to complete the online survey visit dubbo.nsw.gov.au/vicparkplay.
Applications close Monday 1 November, 2021 and can be found on Council’s website.
Wellington residents must place their waste on the kerbside before Sunday 17 October, to ensure collection of their items.
Female, 12 months I love a good chat and I’m very friendly I’ve lived with other cats and I’m fully litter trained $275 desexed, microchipped, vaccinated, flea and worm treated
PH: 0493 093 423 @awlnswdubbo
Rehoming number: R251000222
Prrrrr! I’m Panda
25
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
INFANT LOSS
lost such a shared experience across so many families. “We have the baby’s name engraved on a small rock, if that’s the family’s wish. We can also place the baby’s ashes there, again if the family wishes.” NALAG also has a long-standing and close partnership with the birthing unit at Dubbo Base Hospital in helping families through what is a most distressing time. “We can arrange to have the bub cremated and bring the ashes back to the family – the birthing unit often contacts us, with the family’s consent, to assist with arrangements. We can also arrange resources and give support and information for the team at the hospital to pass on to the families.” That pregnancy and infant loss is so much more recognised these days is a marked improvement, says Deb. “In the past, the grief often went unrecognised, which added to the distress. “Going back generations, you just didn’t discuss that kind of loss, which meant the family couldn’t go through the usual grieving processes. “It became a very silent vigil for the mum, and the dad was
I like to say I parent Edward through being present in this life and doing what I do to help other mums now... often completely isolated as well. “Now, we encourage people to acknowledge that loss, even if it was 50 years ago you can still acknowledge that child and honour their memory.” Occasions like the Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day are very important in validating people’s loss, according to Deb. “Those rituals and days are all very important because it’s validation that your baby existed and that even though he or she isn’t physically in the world, you are still that child’s parent.” •••
Picnic in Victoria Park for Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day COVID-19 restrictions have made this year’s commemorations a little tricky, but like so many others, Rochelle and NALAG have adjusted to ensure Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month and day are still recognised and inclusive. There will be two particular events to which people are encouraged to join – a picnic in Victoria Park on Friday, October 15, at 10am, with Covid-safe rules to apply.
“Bring your own everything,” says Rochelle. “It’s a relaxed day to catch up with other loss mums.” Rochelle has also collaborated with NALAG to put together an online event that will be held live through Facebook. “There will be a ceremony conducted by celebrant, Pippa Moore, and then there’s a video that includes the lighting of candles, special music and vision of NALAG’s Babies’ Garden, so that we can be at home and participate in the international ‘Wave of Light’ that happens between 7-9pm.” Those not able to access social media are able to follow on the websites, both Rochelle’s – www.rowellbeing.com – and NALAG – www.nalag.org.au If you have a family member or someone you’re supporting through pregnancy or infant loss, there are a number of resources available through NALAG to help you – go to the website, or phone 6882 9222. *Source: Australian Institute of Health and Welfare report, Stillbirth and Neonatal Deaths in Australia, 2018 Disclosure: Jen Cowley sits in a voluntary capacity on the board of NALAG.
The Babies Garden at NALAG, which was established many years ago as a place of remembrance for little lives lost. PHOTO: SUPPLIED/NALAG
Mark COULTON MP FEDERAL MEMBER FOR PARKES
WESTERN CANCER CENTRE OPEN TO PATIENTS After years of campaigning, I’m absolutely delighted that the state-of-the-art Western Cancer Centre in Dubbo is now open to patients. This is one of my proudest achievements as the Member for Parkes; the Western Cancer Centre is something I’ve fought tooth and nail for and I’m thrilled to see this critical project become a reality. This $35 million facility will allow cancer patients to stay closer to their loved ones during treatment, providing the quality care and support that regional people need and deserve. It will not only benefit families throughout the western region but will be utilised by people right across regional NSW who will no longer have to travel to the city to access treatment.
VISIT MY WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION: www.markcoulton.com.au/western-cancer-centre Dubbo
02 6882 0999 Moree
02 6751 1251 Broken Hill
08 8087 7649
mark.coulton.mp@aph.gov.au
Authorised by M Coulton MP, National Party of Australia, Shop 3, 153 Brisbane St, Dubbo NSW 2830.
markcoulton.com.au
MarkCoultonMP
26
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
NEWS EXTRA
HAVE YOUR SAY: feedback@dubbophotonews.com.au or 89 Wingewarra St, Dubbo NSW 2830.
LETTERS & FEEDBACK Choice the first casualty of a mandate The Editor, There have been many casualties from the past 18 months and sadly many deaths, with certain categories being well reported, lots not so much. There have been many other types of casualties from the path chosen by our governments and not all are measurable by a number count or are immediately apparent. Public Health Orders and mandates have far-reaching and blanket-like consequences for the people they are imposed on and the right to “choice” becomes the casualty. There are multiple areas in our state and commonwealth laws where our right to privacy, informed consent and to choose what happens to our body is placed as paramount and should never be undermined. The Commonwealth Constitution 1900 and the Australia Act (Constitution) 1986 s.51(xxiiiA) prohibits civil conscription in medical services and the Privacy Act 1988 is in place to protect our sensitive personal information such as religion, sexuality and medical history. There are excellent reasons why these laws were created. The Public Health Order currently in place for multiple frontline employment sectors has indeed created conscription to an experimental medical treatment and has thrown medical consent without coercion for a six, clear out of the window and to the boundary.
“Have the jab or you don’t have a job” rings of coercion to me, and what “informed free choice” would many people be able to make when faced with that ultimatum? Our sensitive medical information is now expected to be on display, we are required to declare our vaccination status to whomever asks in order to move around freely – where is the privacy in that? What’s next? Many things we as Australians have enjoyed as fundamentals for a democratic life have been lost. Choice has now been added to the list of extinction. Name & address withheld z Dubbo Photo News has verified the identity and employment status of the writer of this letter, but has agreed to a request to withhold the name for fear of reprisal.
Thumbs Down to shirt thief The Editor, Thumbs Down to the thief who stole my hard-earned Australian Masters Cycling Road Race Champions riding shirt, a blue skivvy and a pair of cycling socks from the clothes line in Bultje Street. Fortunately I’ve got a later date shirt won a few years later for the same ACF event. I hope the thief enjoys living a lie if it’s worn. You may even turn into a 70-year-old male. Evan Elliott, Dubbo
Murky waters under bridge and over roads The Editor, The announcement last week of the state government taking con-
OPINION & ANALYSIS
THE TOONS’ VIEWS trol of the Tomingley to Eumungerie road shows exactly where its allegiances lie, and it’s not with Dubbo. In the 2018 council poll, Dubbo residents’ preferred option was for a Newell Highway bypass and high-level bridge at Troy. The state government promptly ignored that, while quietly proceeding with its backroom deals with Narromine Shire and large national mining interests. The state government’s cosy relationship with Narromine Shire was exposed when Narromine slipped the amalgamation noose in 2015. Narromine has always been a conservative stronghold, posing no threat to the Coalition, unlike Wellington which had long been an incubator for Country Labor. The beneficiaries of the River Street bridge remain unknown, but it’s crystal clear who’s scooping the cream from the Tomingley-Eumungerie road. One of Australia’s largest mining corporations has for some time been acquiring land along the Tomingley to Narromine road to exploit the area’s gold and copper resources. What a coincidence then that the main access road to these mines is going to be upgraded to highway standard. This all ties in neatly with the inland rail line, which conveniently passes right by these new mining operations; what a stroke of luck for them. Before I go any further, I must say I’m not opposed to mining or any development that brings jobs into our region. I applaud it, because blue-collar workers who want to work hard deserve the
right to share in the region’s riches. What I don’t like is the underhanded way governments, at all levels, ride roughshod over local communities and treat the public with utter disdain. Politicians often refer to their profession as a game, and that’s the problem. They might think it’s a game, but they are playing with people’s lives and their decisions often cause irreparable harm. Unfortunately, there appears to be no escape from the system of government we live in. Western democracy is broken, and those responsible for breaking it hold all the power to block reform. Democracy today is such that we have the choice to vote for the person or party we think will do us the least amount of harm. Evidence of this was demonstrated some years ago by the coalition coward Christopher Pyne when he shamelessly boasted that we had to
vote for them, because the alternative (Labor) was so much worse. I’m sure I’ll be condemned for my comments by those who will label me a conspiracy theorist, crackpot and crank. That’s how these gold medal gas-lighters work, by ridiculing and debasing anyone who dares call out their nefarious behaviour. In closing, I must say, Gladys Berejiklian was the best Liberal leader NSW ever had, but she agreed to the River Street bridge, regardless of the impact that decision had on local residents. Gladys’ decision, I suspect, was part of the political game. Whatever the deals were regarding River Street, we will still have it foisted on us and a Troy bypass will be blocked even if council wanted to build it themselves, that’s the power of the forces against us. Steve Hodder, Dubbo
Commentary blinded by the light of Gladys Greg Smart ❚ OPINION THE news of the resignation of NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian revealed the depths that the media and public discourse around politics has sunk to in this country. The notion of the alleged corruption was lost in the cacophony of praise for Berejiklian and heated criticism of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC). “Gladys Berejiklian was invincible as Premier until a ‘stuff up’ in her personal life brought her undone” was the headline on the ABC website. Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Peta Credlin claimed “something is wrong with politics” when the best Premier has to resign while the worst Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews still has a job “despite a litany of failures”. “‘Lynch mob’ takes down yet another political career” railed Shari Markson in The Australian, equating the body set up to investigate corrupt public sector behaviour to a lawless, justice-seeking mob. Berejiklian was painted as a lovelorn victim of a manipulating man, while under the burden of carrying NSW through the trials of drought, bushfire and Covid-19. Journalistic integrity was conspicuous by its absence, but this absence was to be expected, coming after months of puff pieces in the obedient Murdoch media
about Berejiklian being the woman who saved Australia from Covid-19 and economic ruin by resisting shutting down NSW. Social media of course was no better; heaping praise on a great Premier who did so much for the state and attacking the forces who brought her down. Many commenters claimed Berejiklian’s resignation set back the cause of getting more women into politics. And of course, ICAC was attacked for the timing of their announcement, picking up on Berejiklian’s veiled swipe at ICAC during her resignation press conference. People were leaving flowers at Berejiklian’s office, and the Sydney radio airwaves were full of people praising her as a politician who helped the community. It was like she had died. And the less said about former PM Tony Abbott’s statement telling everyone in NSW to be grateful for her service to “freedom” the better. Even Labor politicians got in on the beatification of Berejiklian, lauding her service to the state and forgetting the reason for her resignation. The reporters, commentators, politicians of all persuasions and the keyboard warriors all failed to grasp that ICAC didn’t force Berejiklian to resign the Premiership or from parliament; Berejiklian resigned because she failed the character test. Berejiklian drew the attention of ICAC via the activities of her then secret boyfriend, Wagga Wagga Liberal MP Daryl Maguire, who went on to admit to ICAC he was trying to monetise his office.
mind. In 2015 as NSW Treasurer, Berejiklian oversaw the sale of the Vales Point Power Station at Lake Macquarie to Sunset Power International for a fire sale price of $1 million. Within two years the power station is re-valued at $730 million, and its shareholders have a contract to supply electricity to the NSW government and pocket $40 million via a share buyback scheme. In 2020 a NSW parliamentary enquiry investigating the Stronger Communities Fund found not only were more than 90 per cent of grants given to councils in Coalition-held seats, but the notes used by Berejiklian’s office in allocating $141 million were shredded and electronic data destroyed in contravention of usual record keeping practices. In 2019 Berejiklian headed the project to demolish and rebuild the Sydney Football Stadium for at least $730 million. The stadium was found to have access and safety non-compliance issues, which a report by Asset Technologies Pacific for the Sydney Cricket and Sportsground (SCG) Trust suggested could be rectified for just over $18 million. The trust is heavy with Coalition luminaries such as Alan Jones, ex-Premier Barry O’Farrell, ` Rather than holding and Gerry Harvey’s wife. power to account, the Berejiklian said demolition and compliant media picked rebuilding presented better value up and ran with the for the people of NSW. ‘Gladys is the victim’ angle, So, perhaps her resignation was aiding the reframing of overdue. As for the attacks on ICAC, the alleged corruption as poor judgement...... a attackers want to have it both ways, cheerleading for ICAC when
He was attempting to profit from brokering land deals in Western Sydney. Berejiklian was involved in awarding grants to Maguire’s favoured community projects in Wagga Wagga. Projects from which Maguire and his business partners intended to profit. Her knowledge of Maguire’s wrongdoing was revealed in taped conversations played to ICAC 12 months ago. When discussing a payment for re-zoning Western Sydney land, Berejiklian can be heard saying “I don’t need to know about that bit”. In a failure of integrity and character, Berejiklian did not report this corruption to ICAC as required by parliamentary standards. When given a second chance to show some character and leadership during the ICAC hearing last October, she played the innocent woman wronged narrative. Rather than holding power to account, the compliant media picked up and ran with the ‘Gladys is the victim’ angle, aiding the reframing of alleged corruption as poor judgement. Three further examples of Berejiklian’s poor judgement come to
it is investigating Labor politicians Eddie Obeid and Ian McDonald and calling ICAC an affront to democracy when it investigates one of their own. The pesky ideals of accountability for public funds and transparency in decision making are apparently a hindrance to exercising power – hence the lack of a federal anti-corruption body. As for ICAC destroying careers, give thoughts and prayers to exPremiers Nick Greiner and Barry O’Farrell, who went on to be board members and chairs of multiple companies, consultancies and sporting organisations before landing gigs as the Consul-General for Australia in New York and Australian High Commissioner to India respectively. Also ponder Consul-General Greiner hosting an intimate dinner recently for PM Morrison as soon as he arrived in New York. The only other attendees – Murdoch lieutenant and Newscorp CEO Robert Thomson and US Ambassador Arthur Sinodinos. Sinodinos’ resume includes being an ex-senator and assistant treasurer, chief of staff for PM John Howard, key Liberal Party powerbroker and a person of interest in two ICAC investigations regarding dodgy political donations and questionable government contracts. We should assume journalistic integrity and public accountability were not topics of dinner table discussion. z Greg Smart lives and works in Dubbo, and is a keen observer of current affairs.
27
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
IN FOCUS Drought resistant gardens for Dubbo’s climate 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
THE THUMBS
Thumbs Up to Russo’s Coffee Bar for consistently providing outstanding service and going Thumbs Up to Emma at Reading Cinema. We all miss you. See you soon!
above and beyond during the lockdown period. Thank you for your amazing coffee and selection of treats, and for remembering my name.
Thumbs Up to Diamond Dog Pest Control. Their service goes above and beyond expectations. Their professional expertise and friendly manner made them a pleasure to have at my home. Give these guys a go – you won’t be disappointed.
Thumbs Up to the lady who alerted me to a flat tyre as I was crossing the Serisier Bridge on Monday afternoon.
Thumbs Down to all the members of parliament deserting a sinking ship after you caused it to sink in the first place. You should all lose your generous taxpayer-funded pensions.
Thumbs Down to the two women who conned $90 out of an elderly gentleman with hard luck stories and a false promise to repay later the same day. How could you exploit someone’s kindness so heartlessly? Just return the money.
Thumbs Up to Gladys Berejiklian. I thought she’s done a superb job and will be heart-broken if the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) finds against her. The timing of this is obscene.
Thumbs Up to the act of kindness from a lady who paid for my groceries at Riverdale on Monday, September 27. Her generosity I will cherish. Blessings from an 85-year-old pensioner.
Thumbs Down to the lady who turned up to the RTA centre and demanded she didn’t have to wear her mask because she had a medical certificate. She didn’t have her medical certificate on her.
Thumbs Up to Dubbo Good Nature News on Facebook. It’s good to see some positivity on Facebook. Looking forward to watching this group grow!
Thumbs Up to the Dubbo and Wellington NRL players in the weekend’s grand final, you did us proud.
Thumbs Up to Kerry in the Click-and-Collect section at Delroy Woolworths. You are to be commended for exceeding customer expectations with my order on Sunday. Professional and super friendly offering a fantastic and efficient service. I appreciate the busy little bees you all are during these Covid-19 times.
Thumbs Up to random acts of kindness. A young man recently offered me his seat while waiting for the supermarket to open. Random acts of kindness make the heart smile.
Thumbs Up to a beautiful friend who made me an amazing sponge cake and gave me some sweet-smelling sweet peas.
Thumbs Up the couple walking across LH Ford bridge on Friday collecting rubbish. Hubby picking it up and wifey putting it in a bag. Much appreciated!
WHILST disappointed that due to Covid-19 delays there have been disruptions to Rivercare’s usual activities along the river, two of the organisation’s key members, President Daryl and Team Leader Libby, have tackled their own gardens with such vim and vigour they have decided to share with readers some of the creativity and knowledge they have applied to their garden projects. This offers an opportunity to learn from these local examples and perhaps whip down to your local nursery with a list of native plants that you know will not let you down in this region – a short-cut to glory for your own Spring garden makeover! After getting sick of water restrictions during the drought, Daryl has bitten the bullet and converted his front garden from lawn to natives. Firstly, he killed the existing lawn with a grass killer, then loosely determined the layout, installed drip lines and finally laid down the mulch. Among the native plants he has chosen for his garden are the ground covers Myoporum (Myoporum parvifolium ) and Kidney Weed (Dichondra repens) and shrubs of Lomandra (Lomandra longifolia), Spider Flowers (Grevillea sp), Mint Bushes (Prostanthera spp), Spiny Saltbush (Rhagodia spinescens), Ruby Saltbush (Enchylena tomentosa), Climbing Saltbush (Einadia nutans), Bottlebrush (Callistemon sp), Grass Trees (Xanthorrhoea sp.), Western Rosemary (Westringia sp.) and Wattle (Acacia sp). The very classy finishing touch is to be a sculpture, hopefully a stylised grass tree. All plants chosen by Daryl are hardy and suitable for our climate. All were obtained locally, with some grown from cuttings and others purchased from local nurseries or commercial suppliers. Daryl’s switch from lawn to native plants is well-consid-
Libby's front garden is covered with native plants. PHOTO: SUPPLIED
ered and totally in line with saving water and providing for native bird life. “With our greater understanding of climate change, erratic temperatures and water shortages, and with the increasing availability of different native plants with the most pleasing foliage and flowers”, he said. “Surely the way forward for enthusiastic Australian gardeners is to embrace our native plants. Why not have a go yourself? You will enjoy the challenge, prob-
Company Director Tim Pankhurst
Sales Consultant Donna Falconer
Sales Consultant Sally Young
Features Consultant Yvette Aubusson -Foley
News Editor John Ryan
Editorial Consultant Jen Cowley
Journalist Natalie Lewis
Social Media Guy Ken Smith
Sports “Mann” Geoff Mann
Sports Photographer Mel Pocknall
Wellington Photographer Colin Rouse
Designer Danielle Crum
Reception/Photographer Sophia Redfern
Designer Brett Phillips
Dubbo Photo News is bound by the Standards of Practice of the Australian Press Council. If you believe the standards may have been breached, you may approach this newspaper directly, or contact the Council by email info@presscouncil.org.au or by phone (02) 9261 1930. For further information, see presscouncil.org.au.
ably delight your neighbours and passers-by, and make a valuable contribution to our environment.” Like Daryl, Libby and her family had a similar aim but are further advanced in their native garden. Libby explains: “We had grass and one large dominant tree in our front garden with our aim to not have to mow and water lawns. We removed the invasive exotic tree to stop it stealing moisture and to provide more sun for
the natives we would plant. We wanted to use less water, have bird/bee/butterfly attracting plants, a variety of plants that encourage birds to nest and to enjoy drought resistant plants and different seasonal floral displays. Natives are best for our climate and suited to our region. "We chose as the front hedge a native widely seen in more arid areas, Eremophila oppositifolia and Happy Wanderer vine (Hardenbergia violacea). Ground covers include Myoporum (Myoporum parvifolium), Kalbarri carpet (Eremophila glabra), and Ruby saltbush (Enchylena tomentosa). "Other natives to give height, shape and colour include Lomandra (Lomandra longifolia), Blue Flax Lily (Dianella revoluta), Bottlebrushes, (Callistemon sp), Blackthorn (Bursaria spinosa), Western Rosemary (Westringsia sp), Weeping Boree wattle (Acacia vestita), Everlasting Paper Daisies (Bracteantha sp). Garden edges are Lomandra Blue Ridge (Lomandra glauca). Along the fence is a Teatree called Leptospermum Tickled Pink and one medium eucalypt – a West Australian Silver Princess (Eucalyptus caesia) great for smaller gardens, a Hakea (Hakea sp) and Grevillea Winpara Gem. "It is a mix and at times a challenge to choose the right species, but the different colours, foliage and flowering times makes it a lovely place to be and has improved the number of native birds and pollinators that come to visit us. Of course, plenty of room is left out the back for the essential veggie patch. Libby added that she “is currently enjoying watching each day for the small changes that are already arriving as the weather warms into Spring”. Contact: dubborivercare@ gmail.com or find them on Facebook.
Our Dubbo office 89 Wingewarra Street Dubbo Photo News is a member of Country Press NSW which has been representing the state’s regional newspapers for more than 125 years. We are also a member of Country Press Australia.
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. © Copyright 2021 Panscott Media Pty Ltd. Copyright in all material – including photographs and advertisements – is held by Panscott Media Pty Ltd or its providers and must not be reproduced in any form without prior written permission from the Publisher. Printed for the publisher by News Ltd, 26-52 Hume Highway, Chullora, 2190.
We would like to acknowledge and pay our respects to the Traditional Custodians of the land we operate on, the Wiradjuri people.
Australia has one of the best newspaper recycling rates in the world. More than 75 per cent of our newsprint is recovered and reused. Here’s how you can help: when you’ve finished reading this week’s Dubbo Photo News, be a champion and share it with a friend, or Do The Right Thing by recycling.
&
28
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Dubb Pets M nth!
COLOUR IN TO WIN!
Simply colour in this page and ask mum or dad to send a photo of you and your entry to myentry@panscott.com.au. (Don’t forget your name and age!) Entries will be judged by age groups
Under 5 years | 5-7 years | 8-10 years
For your chance to win one of three, $100 shopping vouchers!
HOME SWEET HOME
Entries Close 22nd October 2021.
Winners will be announced in the 28th October 2021 edition of Dubbo Photo News! Keep the kids entertained thanks to our friends at Bob Berry Real Estate
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
Dubb Pets M nth!
$2000
WORTH OF
Prizes
UP FOR GRABS JUST BY SUBMITTING A PHOTO OF YOUR PET THAT MAKES YOU SMILE! Each week we will publish your entries, along with great hints and tips for pet ownership,
thanks to and all our participating sponsors.
ONE PHOTO per pet
ii TO ENTER SEND YOUR ENTRIES TO MYENTRY@PANSCOTT.COM.AU Include your name, address, daytime phone number, your pet’s name & breed, along with a caption for your photo // One photo per pet // Make sure your photo isn’t too small!
ii
ii Entries close: Friday 22 October 2021 at 4pm // Winners published: Thursday 28 October 2021, in the Dubbo Photo News.
ii FOR MORE INFO CONTACT DUBBO PHOTO NEWS ON 6885 4433
29
30
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
PETS MONTH PHOTO COMPETITION It’s Dubbo Pets Month!
A time to celebrate all things finned, fanged, furry and feathered. Dubbo Photo News staff and sponsors are excited to feature 30 days worth of cuddly, courageous and crazy critters, who will no doubt make you laugh out loud with their antics and swoon at their cuteness.
These two just had a bath and were supposed to be outside. Found their brothers’ blanket and both were not moving! We promised mum we will be good! Contributed by Gemma Walsh
This adorable pile of fluffy limbs is my old girl Bella. She’s the best because she keeps me company when my health leaves me stuck in bed far more than I’d like. Contributed by Kimberly Matthews
Rosie the chihuahua taking a nap in the corner of the lounge. Too tired for TV today! Contributed by Joanne Pearson
Ruby the blue heeler shows off her playfulness.“Here I am!” .Contributed by Ian Graham
Daytona the quarter horse gets cheeky! Contributed by Millah Frost
Meet “Lockdown Lolly”. She is our “homeschool hero” who has provided much love and joy to my girls Annie and Laura. Contributed by Jane Davis
Zaara, Australian Mist. “Princess”. Contributed by Carmel Cross
Zeek BOSTEN Terrier. “Did someone say, real pet food dinner!” Contributed by Jackie Tildesley
ii TO ENTER SEND YOUR ENTRIES TO MYENTRY@PANSCOTT.COM.AU Include your name, address, daytime phone number, your pet’s name & breed, along with a caption for your photo // One photo per pet // Make sure your photo isn’t too small!
ii
ii Entries close: Friday 22 October 2021 at 4pm // Winners published: Thursday 28 October 2021, in the Dubbo Photo News.
ii FOR MORE INFO CONTACT DUBBO PHOTO NEWS ON 6885 4433
Prizes Priz 31
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
Monty and Jack Downey “thinking about doing some Mitty BOSTEN Terrier. “Winner winner, real pet food dinner!” Contributed by Jackie Tildesley
Ziggy the pug. “Only 1 boss here”. Contributed by Jackie Tildesley
Sven (like from Frozen the movie) Contributed by Ladine Caspersonn
This is Sail & Muc. Muc is our real life puppy surprise. Sail had been with us for a month when I took her to Newcastle to meet my family. She was acting strangely and wouldn’t stop howling on a long walk around the University. When we arrived home, my Mum heard a noise and to my shock, discovered that Sail had become a mum! Two for one deal! They are a beautiful mother and son duo. Contributed by Amy Mead
Ella, pug x sharpei. “So where is my dinner?” Contributed by Sarah Murray
THANK YOU to the Pets Month Sponsors
exercise on the riverwalk”. Maltese And blue cattle dog. Contributed by Pip Downey
Brutus - Aussie Bulldog Smiling watching his cousin play Saturday Soccer. Contributed by Georgia Morris
Check out that duck over there brother“.
Reggie is a French Mastiff. “Mum
Sheldon and Alfred the German Shepherd
I have made my bed, can I go play
and duck. Contributed by Cassidy Gillette
now?” Contributed by Karen Allen
Leif, Black Labrador Retriever. Leif is feeling smart today. Contributed by Nathan Batten
32
October 7-13, 2021 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 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.
GRID827
FIND THE WORDS
1. Astern 4. Tiers 8. Inky stain 12. Body of water 13. Hero’s tale 14. Theme-park feature 15. Lantern fuel 17. Kitchen cooker 18. Not pro 19. Most up-to-date 21. Memo taker 24. Basks in the sun 25. WWII craft: hyph. 26. Four-footed friend 27. Metal container
30. Heavenly body 31. Defective firecracker 32. Vein of ore 33. Risk money 34. With it 35. Recurring event 36. Weeding implements 38. Enjoyed 39. Help 41. Forbid 42. Sheep’s hair 43. Necessitate 48. Feeble, as an excuse 49. Walk aimlessly 50. Currently 51. Drove too quickly 52. Small flaps 53. Hue
DOWN
1. Solicit 2. Doctor’s charge 3. Pave 4. Lizard Island, e.g. 5. Sincere 6. Take first place 7. Perfumed 8. Colour of chocolate 9. Farm animals 10. Keats poems 11. Camping item 16. Arctic or Pacific 20. Consume 21. Lacking sensation 22. Wind instrument 23. Appetising
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 14 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
26. Baby beagle 28. Unoccupied 29. Require 31. Warp 32. Stretching the truth 34. He is 35. Alleges 37. Greased 39. Holepunching tools 40. Detergent 41. Tell a secret 44. Tropical serpent 45. Additionally 46. Doll or kite 47. Grazier’s charge PUZZ102
WUMO
by Wulff & Morgenthaler
Each puzzle consists of a square grid with numbers appearing in all squares. The object is to shade squares so:
Modes of transport
] 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
SNOWFLAKES
balloon boat Bristol bus Celica Citroen coach Colt Commodore Corolla Daihatsu Daimler
Fairlane Fargo ferry Gallant Golf Holden Honda hydrofoil Jaguar Kenworth Kingswood KTM
Lancer Lancia launch Mack Mercedes MG monorail Morgan Nissan Opel Peugeot
Porsche Scania Statesman Suzuki taxi Torana Toyota train yacht Yamaha
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 1185
BAKER’S DOZEN TRIVIA TEST
Superman comic
1. GEOGRAPHY: What is the second largest island in the Hawaiian Islands? 2. TELEVISION: Which popular 1980s-90s sitcom featured characters named Sophia, Dorothy, Rose and Blanche? 3. HISTORY: Which country hosted the first modern Olympics? 4. MUSIC: Who was the first African-American singer/song-
writer to win a Grammy for Album of the Year? 5. MOVIES: Which 1990s film featured a twist contest at a restaurant called Jack Rabbit Slim’s? 6. COMICS: What was the name of the Daily Planet editor in “Superman” comics? 7. CHEMISTRY: Which English chemist is credited with discovering hydrogen? 8. LITERATURE: Hamlet (by
Shakespeare) was the prince of which country? 9. GAMES: According to the official MCC rules, how much does a cricket ball weigh when new? 10. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What kind of animal is used to hunt truffles?
11. FLASHBACK: Name the first Top 20 hit in Australia by English rock band Yes. 12. SPORT: Camp Nou is the popular name for the home stadium of what European football club? 13. LYRICS: What song contains
this lyric: “What are we gonna tell your mama, What are we gonna tell your pa, What are we gonna tell our friends when they say ooh-la-la”? SOLUTIONS FOR ALL are in the TV+ Guide
Let their imaginations run wild Give a kid a pile of books and you’re giving him a whole world to explore
The Book Connection 178 Macquarie Street, Dubbo • OPEN 7 DAYS
33
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
60 years of happiness By JOHN RYAN Photos by KEN SMITH IT was a fabulous night for Don and Loretta Hawke when they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary and they were both most excited to receive a letter from HRH Elizabeth R (The Queen) congratulating them on their milestone. The happy couple also received letters from the Prime Minister, the Governor General, NSW Premier and Mark Coulton, Federal member for Parkes just to name a few. A number of Don and Loretta’s family were unable to attend due
the Covid-19 lockdowns so their son Roy and his family, Don and Loretta’s siblings and a number of their grandchildren attended via Zoom. The technology that allowed so many family members to ensure they were part of the milestone celebrations would have seemed like something out of a science fiction movie at the time Don and Loretta were married 60 years ago, but the ability of this digital communication revolution to unite so many family members was appreciated by all. Pre-recorded messages were sent through for the couple and their grandchildren played an amazing
Tara, Barry-John, Marjorie, Loretta and Don and Tammy
Colleen, Loretta and Don and Donna
Lorisha, Loretta and Don
Arty, Loretta and Don and Nicky
role via Zoom, organising a party game in true Loretta style as she had done many times over her 54-year career at her Tupperware parties. Don pulled the pin after all the speeches and formalities were concluded – he was about to turn into a pumpkin as he was two hours past his bed time. Loretta, however, partied into the night after everyone went home, her great niece and nephew kept her company and by all accounts she lead them astray. Congratulations to the happy couple from everyone at Dubbo Photo News.
Don and Loretta Hawke celebrated a lovely 60th wedding anniversary recently, with many family members attending via Zoom because of Covid-19 travel restrictions.
Don, Faye McKechnie (bridesmaid) and Loretta
Lee – Anne, Don and Loretta and Donna
Don and Loretta Hawke, Hayley, Stephanie and Chris Osborne
34
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
classifieds P O S I T I O N S VA C A N T
6885 4433 classies@dubbophotonews.com.au
P O S I T I O N S VA C A N T
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLOSES AT MIDDAY EACH TUESDAY
TRADES & SERVICES
TRADES & SERVICES
!
" # $
Servicing Dubbo and Narromine
% # # & " '
() ) ) )
! " # $ % $ # &
'
(!) *&& + ! , - . / / + ,
POSITION VACANT Business Development and Sales: We have a great opportunity for an energetic Advertising Sales Executive at our independent newspaper-media company. You’ll be managing clients and developing new business. Attractive salary package. To apply or for more info, email opportunity@narrominestar.com.au or call Lucy Peart 0421 220 388.
PUBLIC NOTICES *' + , , - & . / *0.1)
Why are we in lockdown? See imoparty.com
D E AT H N O T I C E
Elaine Margaret Druce
85 Victoria St Dubbo
6882 2000
sales@poolhut.com.au visit us at www.poolhut.com.au
Joan Therese Burt Passed away 28th September 2021 Aged 80 years Late of Dubbo Dearly loved wife of Bob (dec). Loving mother of Pat (dec), Vicki and Judy. Adored grandmother & great grandmother. Cherished sister. A private family funeral shall be held for Joan in Dubbo.
Isobel Morgan
Funeral arrangements are in the care of; The Abbey Funeral Home Dubbo 02 6881 8988.
FOR SALE
! " ! "
STS AUTO ELECTRICS
AND COMMUNICATIONS Improve your mobile phone coverage with a cel-fi go signal booster. We supply & install.
DOG GROOMING
! # !% # '
!!
# $%&' '() *++ , - . /$ +/+ +%/ &*$
! " # $ %&' !# " #( # ( ) ! * ! ! ! '
D E AT H N O T I C E
Passed away 20th September 2021 Aged 94 years. Late of Dubbo Grove. Dearly loved wife of John (dec). Loving mother & mother-in-law of Andrew & Margaret, Michelle & Garry Langley, David & Allison. Cherished grandmother & great grandmother to her family. A life well lived. A private cremation for Isobel shall be held in Dubbo. Funeral arrangements are in the care of; The Abbey Funeral Home Dubbo 02 6881 8988.
Monday – Friday 8am – 5pm Saturday 9am – 12noon
40 COBRA ST
Lic no: MVRL48964 • RTA no: AU32536
ALL RXU &ODVVLÀHG DGV DOVR DSSHDU LQ RXU FREE RQOLQH (GLWLRQ
!" !## $$% & ' ( ) &
STOP! DON’T MAKE A MOVE UNTIL YOU CALL NICK RYAN REMOVALS DUBBO • Affordable prices • Cartons for sale • Trading 7 days • Local and interstate
0448 878 320
C. J. Honeysett
Plumber, Drainer & Roofer Commercial & Residential
Roofing & Gutter ter Replacementt
Maintenance Specialists
6884 7772 72
Email: cjhplumb@hotmail.com
nickryanremovals@hotmail.com
SAVE 50% WHEN YOU BOOK A 12 WEEK CAMPAIGN
Got something to sell? Sell it here.
35
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
TRADES & SERVICES
TRADES & SERVICES
STOVE R E PA I R S
Hot Water Repairs
Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
FRIDGE R E PA I R S
Need to sell it?
Licensed ELECTRICIAN Lic: 33208C
TRADES & SERVICES
HRG
Plumbing & Gas Fitting
Peter “Pistol” Edwards
0488 263 012
• All commercial and residential jobs • No jobs too small • Special pensioner rate • Servicing Dubbo and surrounding areas
TRADES & SERVICES Layton Allen
Sprinkler Systems 0419 150 051 laytonallenss@outlook.com
FOR ALL YOUR WATERING NEEDS ABN: 338 971 049 01
License no. 275861C
Advertise here
Doug Propert Electrical FREE quotes
Dubbo: 0419 628 941
!
"# $ % & &
ORANA HEADSTONES & MONUMENTS SERVICING THE CENTRAL WEST
Full graves & lawn cemeteries. Accessories & Plaques. Free Quotes. Restoration work. Competitive Pricing. Ph/Fax 6888 1015 Mob 0439 881 014
“Operating out of Dubbo”
ƵďďŽ WŚŽƚŽ EĞǁƐ ǁŝůů ƐƟůů ďĞ available to pick up like normal EVERY THURSDAY!
36
THE DIARY EVENT
Dubbo Prostate Cancer Support Group: Meeting has been cancelled for October.
THURSDAY Croquet: 8.15am, Thursday. New players of all ages welcome. Muller Park Tennis and Croquet courts, Brisbane Street, North Dubbo. Tricia 0428 876 204 or Margaret 0427 018 946. Dubbo CWA: 9:30am to 11:00am FIRST Thursday of the month at Oaktree Retirement Village Peel Street, Dubbo. New members welcome Marion 6884 2957. CWA Wongarbon: 10am, FIRST Thursday of the month, at Wongarbon CWA rooms. Marjorie 6884 5558. CWA Wongarbon Handicraft: SECOND Thursday of the month. Enquiries to Chris 6884 1179. Coffee, Craft and Chat: 9.45am-12pm, at the Gospel Hall, Cnr of Boundary and Taylor Road. Contact Anne 0428 425 958. Coffee, Craft and Chat: 9.45am-12pm, at the Gospel Hall, Cnr of Boundary and Taylor Road. Contact Anne 0428 425 958. Line Dancing: 9.30am to 12 noon, at David Palmer Centre, Cobbora Road. Kathy 6888 5287 or Lynn 6888 5263. Coffee, Craft and Chat: 9.45am-12pm, at the Gospel Hall, Cnr of Boundary and Taylor Road. Contact Anne 0428 425 958. Coffee, Craft and Chat: Starting Thursday, March 11. 9.45am-12pm, at the Gospel Hall, Cnr of Boundary and Taylor Road. Contact Anne 0428 425 958. Wellington Arts and Crafts: Meets weekly from 10am-3pm at Small Hall in the Anglican Church grounds, Wellington. Variety of crafts, activities and workshops offered. Contact Lynne 6845 4454. Dubbo Anglican Church Trinity Kids Playgroup: 10am-12pm at Church Hall, 158 Brisbane Street during School terms. Contact 6884 4990. Sugarcraft: 10am-1pm, FIRST and THIRD Thursdays of the month, at Dubbo Arts and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Shirley 6887 3150. Dubbo Orana RSL Day Club: Is cancelled until further notice. South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed Bingo: 111am-12.30pm, West Dubbo Bowling Club. New players welcome. Contact Barry 0439 344 349. Dubbo Community Men’s Shed Inc: Open Mon 9am to 1pm and Thu/Sat 1pm to 5pm. Small joining fee after three visits. “All men are welcome” Kevin 0427 253 445. Conversational English in Dubbo: 2pm-3pm, FIRST and THIRD Thursday of the month during the school term, at Wesley Community Hall, corner of Church St and Carrington Ave. Is free. Chris 6884 0407. Outback Dragons Dubbo: 5.45pm (in summer), EVERY Thursday at Sandy Beach amenities block. Come and try dragon boating, your first five paddles are Free. Newcomers always welcome. Email
info@outbackdragons.com.au or call Robyn 0427462504. Woodturning and Carving Evening: 6pm-9pm, at Art and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street Dubbo. Phil 6887 3257. Above Board Gamers: 6pm, every SECOND Thursday of the month South Dubbo Men’s Shed, Palmer St. Take part in the fastest growing hobby in Australia. Alan 0432 278 235. Dubbo Bridge Club: 7pm, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Libby 0428 254 324. Dubbo Anglican Church DNA Youth Group: 7-9pm at Church Hall, 158 Brisbane Street during School terms. Macquarie Masons Dubbo: Every SECOND Thursday of the month. All visitors welcome. John O’Brien 0405 051 896.
FRIDAY Narromine Food Barn: Open EVERY Friday, 9-11am. Providing low-cost groceries and FREE fruit, vegetables and bread with any purchase to people in need. Contact Ken Rumble on 0414 477 365. CPSA (Combined Pensioners and Superannuants Association) meets on the second Friday each month at Dubbo RSL Club. 10 am start. Come and discuss issues facing seniors in Dubbo and listen to a Guest Speaker on local topics. Dubbo Anglican Church Communion Service: 10am in the chapel in Brotherhood House, 158 Brisbane Street. CWA Narromine: 10am, FIRST Friday of the month, at the USMC. Current and new members are welcome. Contact Carolyn 0427 747 478. Tai Chi at U3A: 10am, at the Community Arts Centre, Western Plains Cultural Centre, 76 Wingewarra Street. Richard 6888 5656. Spinning and Weaving: 10am, at Dubbo Arts and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Jo 6885 6875. Ex-Rail Employees: 10.30am, THIRD Friday of each month, at Little Darling Café, Cnr Bishop and Darling St. For coffee and a chat. All are welcome. Western Plains Trefoil Guild: 10.30am, SECOND Friday of each month, at Dubbo West Guide Hall. Everyone welcome. Please confirm meeting will be on. Dorothy 6884 6646. Dubbo Parkinson’s Support Group: 10.30am, FIRST Friday of each month, David Palmer Centre, Old Lourdes. People with Parkinson’s and their carers welcome. Lorna 0416 240 626. Central West Makers Place: 12 noon6pm, 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. Adam 0431 038 866. Dubbo Anglican Church Lunchtime Prayer Group: 1-2pm in Brotherhood House, 158 Brisbane Street. All Welcome. Bring your lunch. Urban Tribe: 2pm EVERY Friday with dancing, music, singing, caring and sharing. Everyone welcome and let’s do it. 0459 762 702.
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
Send your community event info to diary@dubbophotonews.com.au or phone 6885 4433
Alzheimers & Dementia Support Group: 2pm, THIRD Friday of the month. Anne or Jeanie 6881 3704. Community Kitchen: Will now be takeaway meals only. Pick up from the Holy Trinity Hall 6.30pm-7.30pm. Dubbo Nepalese Christian Fellowship: Every Friday, 6.30-8pm. Contact Cyrel on 0416 826 701 or Kabita 0452 406 234. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings: Dubbo AA meetings are temporarily suspended due to Covid and current lockdown. Please contact 1300 222 222 or www. aa.org.au for info on Zoom meetings. Phone Dee 0417 422 750.
SATURDAY Dubbo Parkrun: 8am every week, FREE timed (with barcode) 5km run, jog or walk. Starts and finishes at Sandy Beach; following a section of the Tracker Riley Walkway and Cycle Path along the Macquarie River. Parkrun can be whatever you want it to be, whether it’s for fun or as part of a training program. Bring your dog and/or pram. Email dubbohelpers@parkrun.com to help! Croquet: 8.15am, Saturday. New players of all ages welcome. Muller Park Tennis and Croquet courts, Brisbane Street, North Dubbo. Tricia 0428 876 204 or Margaret 0427 018 946. 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. Hilda 6847 1270. Dubbo Patchwork and Quilters Group: 9am, SECOND and LAST Saturday of the month, at the Dubbo Pipe Band Hall, Corner of Darling and Wingewarra Streets, Dubbo. New members are always welcome, and we happily support anyone wanting to learn. Further enquiries to Charlene on 0408 825 180. Seventh-day Adventist Church: 9.30am, small group bible study (Sabbath School) and children’s/youth Sabbath School. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. dubbo.adventist.org.au Outback Writers Centre: Covid-19 has changed the Outback Writers’ Centre meetings. Please contact outbackwriters@gmail.com for the latest details. Seventh-day Adventist Church: 11am, Divine Service. Corner Cobra and Sterling Streets. dubbo.adventist.org.au RSL Tennis Club: 12.45pm, RSL Park Street courts for enjoyable social tennis. All welcome. 0428 825 480. Dubbo Community Men’s Shed Inc: Open Mon 9am to 1pm and Thu/Sat 1pm to 5pm. Small joining fee after three visits. “All men are welcome” Kevin 0427 253 445. Dubbo Bridge Club: 1pm until approximately 4.30pm, Bultje Street. $7 members, $9 non-members. Libby 0428 254 324. Climate Change Action Group: 2pm EVERY Saturday. Everyone is welcome. 0459 762 702. Dubbo Slot Car Racing Club: Seniors (15+) 4pm, FIRST and THIRD Saturday of
Diary entries need to be 40 words or less (approximately three lines). Placement will be at the editor’s discretion and subject to space availability – because Diary listings are free! Please include your daytime phone number and/or address when submitting details. Entries close 10am Tuesday for that Thursday’s edition.
the month, at 147 Birch Avenue. Terry 0408 260 965. Dubbo Anglican Church Vigil Communion Service: 6pm, 158 Brisbane Street. Contact 6884 4990.
SUNDAY Dubbo Anglican Church Traditional Communion Service: 8am, 158 Brisbane Street. 6884 4990 Bicycle User Group Social Ride: 9am, at Wahroonga Park. Mick 0437 136 169 or Andrew 0476 764 659; dubbobug.org.au. Orana Pistol Club: 9am, Hyandra Lane, Dubbo. 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. 0429 872 241 or 6887 2241. Orana K9 Training Club INC: 9.45am for a 10am start, at Katrina Gibbs Field, Macleay Street, Dubbo. Dog Obedience training must have current vaccinations certificate plus treats. $15.00 membership, $5 per session. Reg 0428 849 877, or Dianne 0429 847 380.. Dubbo Baptist Church: 9.30am, at 251 Cobra Street (next to Spotlight). Everyone is welcome. 6884 2320. Dubbo Anglican Church: 10am Family Communion service with Trinity Kids Sunday School. Australian Kiteflyers Society: 10am, SECOND Sunday of the month at Jubilee Oval. All welcome to come along and see how to build and fly modern (and old) kites. David 0476 223 342. Dubbo Pistol Club: 12.30pm, 143L Old Dubbo Road. 6882 0007. Sugarcraft: 1pm-4pm, FIRST Sunday of every month, Dubbo Arts and Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Shirley 6887 3150. Dubbo Acoustic Musicjam: SECOND Sunday of the month, 2pm to 5pm. DAMjam (Dubbo Acoustic Musicjam), Milestone Hotel, upstairs. All welcome. Join us for this acoustic session other musicians or just listen. Peter 0457 787 143. Transcendental Meditation (TM): Due to Covid restrictions Dubbo Transcendental Meditation Centre is now offering free introductory talks available on the website www.tm.org.au. Maharishi Foundation Australia scientifically proven benefits of TM. Contact David 0424 252 834 for more information. Dubbo Baptist Church: 6pm, at 251 Cobra Street (next to Spotlight), during school terms. Come along and discover if church is still relevant in 2019. Everyone is welcome. 6884 2320. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings: Dubbo AA meetings are temporarily suspended due to Covid and current lockdown. Please contact 1300 222 222 or www. aa.org.au for info on Zoom meetings. Phone Jack 0418 605 041.
MONDAY
Dubbo Community Men’s Shed Inc: Open Mon 9am to 1pm and Thu/Sat 1pm to 5pm. Small joining fee after three visits. “All men are welcome” Kevin 0427 253 445. Dubbo Multicultural Women’s Group: 10am, THIRD Monday of the month, at Saint Brigid’s Meeting Room in Brisbane Street. Women of all backgrounds are invited. 1 800 319 551. Cake Decorating: 10am, FIRST Monday of the month, at Dubbo Arts & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Shirley 6887 3150. Old Time Dance: POSTPONED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE DUE TO THE VIRUS. 10am-12pm, FIRST Monday of the month at Orana Gardens Country Club. Come and enjoy some old-time dance. Jean 6882 8867. Dubbo Bridge Club: 10am until approxi mately 1pm, FOURTH Monday of the month, Bultje Street. $7 members, $9 non-members. Libby 0428 254 324. Dubbo Macquarie Mixed Probus: Is cancelled until further notice. Sugarcraft: 10am-1pm, FOURTH Monday of the month, at Dubbo Arts & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Shirley 6887 3150. Patchwork: 10am-3pm, at Dubbo Arts & Craft Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. June 6882 4677. Alcoholics Anonymous (Beginners Meeting): Dubbo AA meetings are temporarily suspended due to Covid and current lockdown. Macquarie Women’s Bowling Club Card Afternoon: On 12th April and every SECOND Monday of the month. $5 per person includes two lucky door prizes and afternoon tea. Contact Rosslyn 6882 4989. Tai Chi 10 Form: 2:30-3:30pm during school terms at U3A, Community Arts Centre, WPCC, 76 Wingewarra Street Dubbo. Beginners are welcome. Laney 6882 4680 or laneyluk@gmail.com. RFDS Support Group: 5pm, FIRST Monday of the month, (except P/H) RFDS Visitor Experience Centre, Dubbo Airport Precinct. Cecelia HutchinsonParsons 0408 665 023. Amnesty International Dubbo: 5.30-6.30pm, SECOND Monday of the month, at St Brigid’s meeting room. The group will provide a platform for people passionate about human rights and social justice to discuss these issues and take positive action in their local community. Contact Sandra Lindeman amnesty.dubbo@gmail.com or 0419 167 574. Anglican Women’s Association: 5.30pm, at Holy Trinity. Dorothy 6884 4990. 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. Rotary Club of Dubbo: 6pm-8pm, at the Westside Hotel, Whylandra Street, West Dubbo. Contact Lyn Wicks on 0428 342 374, Carla Pittman on 0418 294 438 or
email dubborotaryclub@hotmail.com. Sing Australia Dubbo Choir: 7-9pm, at Bridge Club, Bultje Street. NO auditions, no requirements to read music and no singing experience necessary. Contact Michele Peak 0428 680 775.
TUESDAY Croquet: 8.15am, Tuesday. New players of all ages welcome. Muller Park Tennis and Croquet courts, Brisbane Street, North Dubbo. Tricia 0428 876 204 or Margaret 0427 018 946. South Dubbo Veteran’s & Community Men’s Shed: 9am – 12pm, at Cnr of High and Palmer Street. New members welcome. Dubbo Embroiderers: 9.30am-3pm, SECOND and FOURTH Tuesday of the month, Dubbo Bridge Club, Elston Park. All welcome. Saturday group 10am3pm, at the Macquarie Regional Library. Information on both groups Ruth 0422 777 323. Walkabout Ministry Aboriginal Elders Group: 9.30am-2pm in Holy Trinity Church Hall, 158 Brisbane Street. AllAbilitiesDanz: 9.45am, at Dubbo RSL Club. Classes are low impact, work on heart health, flexibility, mobility, coordination and strength. Tracy 0416 010 748 for a free trial or to join the free class. Dubbo Men’s Probus: Cancelled until further notice. Dubbo City Ladies Probus: Cancelled until further notice. NALAG Centre: Cancelled until further notice. Depression Recovery Group: 10.30am, at the Catholic Parish Meeting Room, Brisbane Street. Norm 6882 6081 or Bill 6882 9826. Rotary Club of Dubbo Macquarie: Meets 12.30pm-2pm, at Westside Hotel. Peter McInnes 0417 140 149. Heart Support Walking Group: 12.30pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays, meet at Ollie Robbins Oval, cnr of Bligh Street. Supports gentle exercise promoting healthy hearts. Ray 0437 541 942. Orana Physical Culture: 4pm onwards, starting with the 2-4 years Sparkles class in the Auditorium at St Mary’s Primary School. New members always welcome. For other class times and information see the Orana Physical Culture Facebook page. Smart Recovery (Behaviour Change Support Group): 5pm EVERY Tuesday online or in person. To book in call Rob on 0417 497 187. Dubbo City Physie and Dance: 5.15pm-7.30pm (classes vary), Monday and Tuesday, South Dubbo High School Hall. Physie is fun and affordable dance for girls and ladies, 4 years and up, of all fitness levels. 0438 582 015. Rotary Club of Dubbo South: 6pm, at South Dubbo Tavern. Girls Brigade: 6-8pm, 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. Julie 6882 4369.
Youth and Family Support 7KLV LV D IUHH HDUO\ LQWHUYHQWLRQ SURJUDP WR JLYH DGYLFH DQG VXSSRUW WR \RXQJ SHRSOH DJHG \HDUV DQG WKHLU IDPLO\ ZKR PD\ EH GLVHQJDJHG IURP VFKRRO RU H[SHULHQFLQJ FRQIOLFW DQG GLVUXSWLRQ ZLWKLQ WKH IDPLO\ DQG FRPPXQLW\ Youth and Family Support VHUYLFHV LQFOXGH • Advice and support • Casework DQG \RXWK PHQWRULQJ • 6XSSRUWLQJ WKH \RXWK WR UHFRJQLVH DQG RYHUFRPH EDUULHUV DQG FUHDWH VWUDWHJLHV WR DFKLHYH WKHLU JRDOV • Specialist referral pathways LQFOXGLQJ FRXQVHOOLQJ • <RXWK 'URS LQ &HQWUH :HGQHVGD\V IURP SP <RXWK 'URS LQ FHQWUH QRW RSHUDWLQJ GXULQJ VWD\ DW KRPH RUGHUV
Call DQG DVN IRU -HVVH RQ 1800 319 551
37
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
GO FIGURE
PUZZLE EXTRA
Fun stuff to do while hanging out at home! Material for your weekly game page
Q:
big flower What did the flower? tle lit e th say to
Q:
What dinosaur ha the best vocabula d ry?
Q:
Why are ghosts bad liars?
A: You can see right through them.
Dubbo Woodturning & Woodcraft Club: 8am-12pm, at rear of Arts and Crafts Cottage, 137 Cobra Street. Newcomers welcome. Paul 6882 1485. Dubbo Community Garden: 9am-12pm, at 4 Palmer Street. A time to garden with others, learn more skills and grow friendships. All welcome. Contact Denise 0433 623 842 or Julie 0428 821 829. Geurie Craft Group: 9am-2pm, Geurie Bowling Club. Everyone welcome. Thelma 6887 1103. Walter T. Grant Seniors Social Club: 9am-2pm, at Number 1 Oval Club House. $5 per day. Please bring your own lunch. Cards and games are played before lunch, after lunch is Bingo. New members welcome. Enquires to Jan Miller 0418 255 217. Dubbo Bridge Club: 9.45am for a 10am start, until approximately 1pm, Bultje Street, Dubbo. $7 members, $9 non-members. Libby 0428 254 324. Friendship Group: 10am, THIRD Wednesday of the month. Anne or Jeanie 6881 3704. Dubbo Bobbin Lacemakers: Meets THIRD Wednesday of the month 10am-3pm, Arts & Crafts Soc. Cottage and Craft Shop. 137 Cobra St. Visitors, new members very welcome. Contact Judy 6882 5776. (COVID-19 rules and restrictions apply at the Cottage.) Breast Cancer Support Group: 10am, FOURTH Wednesday of every month at the Baptist Church, Palmer Street. Community Health 5853 2545. South Dubbo Veteran’s and Community Men’s Shed: 10am12pm, WEEKLY Bric-a-brac sale at Corner of Palmer and High Streets. Contact Barry on 0439 344 349. Dundullimal Dubbo Support Crew Inc: 10am, FOURTH Wednesday of each month, Dundullimal Homestead. We support
Kid’s Play Corner
A: The thesaurus.
WEDNESDAY
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: All garden gatherings have been postponed until further notice. Coffee, Craft & Chat: 10am-12pm, FORTNIGHTLY at the Gospel Chapel on Boundary Road. Contact Anne 0428 425 958. Dubbo Arts and Craft Cottage: 10am-4pm, at 137 Cobra Street. A large range of hand-crafted gifts made by members available. 6881 6410. AllAbilitiesDanz: 10.30am, West Dubbo Primary Community Centre. KIDS 0 to 5, an interactive class, music, props and movement. Gold coin donation per family. Akela Playgroup: 10.30am and Thursdays 9.30am, Scout Hall, 4 Akela St. Sharna 0438 693 789. Blood Cancer Support Group: 10.30am-12pm, FIRST Wednesday of each month. Venue changes each month. Louise or Emma 0412 706 785. Dubbo Electric Vehicle Interest, Owners, Users & Supporters (DEVIOUS) group: 12pm to 1pm, FIRST Wednesday of each month at the Western Plains Cultural Centre café. Anyone interested in learning about EV’s is welcome to join. Chris 0409 321 470. 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. Gold coin donation per family. Macquarie Intermediate Band: 6pm, Wednesday during school terms in the Band Hall, Boundary Rd. Players of all ages wanted for the concert band. Conservatorium 6884 6686 or info@macqcon.org.au or Dubbo District Band on 0422 194 059 or email at dubboband@gmail.com. West Dubbo Rotary: 6pm, at Club Dubbo, Whylandra Street West Dubbo. Gamblers Anonymous: 6pm, Baptist Church, Dubbo. Victor 0407 799 139. Line Dancing: 6.30pm to 9pm, David Palmer Centre, Cobbora Rd. Kathy 6888 5287 or Lynn 6888 5263. Dubbo Ratepayers and Residents Association: 6.30pm, every SECOND Wednesday of the month at the RSL Coffee Shop. Jenny 6884 4214 or Merilyn 0458 035 323. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings: Dubbo AA meetings are temporarily suspended due to Covid and current lockdown. Please contact 1300 222 222 or www.aa.org.au for info on Zoom meetings. Phone Sally 0427 829 807. Masonic Lodge Narromine: Every FOURTH Wednesday of the month at the Masonic Hall. Visitors welcome. Tony 0417 064 784.
A: Hi, bud.
Dubbo Lions Club INC: 6.30pm, FIRST and THIRD Tuesday of the month, at Club Dubbo. Reg 0407 491 302 or Hugh 0429 151 348. Dubbo and District Computer Club: 7pm, Akela Place Hall. Daryl 0408 284 300. Dubbo RSL Euchre Club: 7pm for a 7.30pm start, every Tuesday night at the Dubbo RSL. Glen 0419 179 985 or Doreen 6882 6163. Dubbo Chess Club: 7pm-9pm, at Dubbo RSL. Juniors welcome. Don 0431 460 584 or Sandy 0408 200 564. 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. Sharon Allan 0408 156 015 or email sallan@rhdubbo.com.au. Badminton: 7.30-9.30pm, 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. Chris 6887 3413.
DRAW THE MIRROR IMAGE OF THE PICTURE YOU SEE
MEGA MAZE
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
38
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Friday October 8 ABC TV
PRIME7
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Q+A. (R) 11.05 Grand Designs: The Street. (R) (Final) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 1.30 That Pacific Sports Show. (R) (Final) 2.00 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 Escape From The City. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 The Drum. Alternating hosts Julia Baird and Ellen Fanning provide an analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories and events as they unfold, with comprehensive analysis and reporting. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Costa Georgiadis makes garlands. Jane Edmanson gives beginner tips. Millie Ross finds a rare plant. 8.30 Miniseries: Des. (M) Part 3 of 3. Jay and Brian reflect on their involvement in the investigation. 9.20 Miniseries: Capital. (M, R) Part 3 of 4. The Kamal household prepares for a visit from their dominating matriarch. 10.10 Talking Heads. (M) (New Series) A woman dashes off letters with her trusty fountain pen, complaining about the failures of others.
10.45 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.00 The Vaccine. (R) 11.15 Question Everything. (R) (Final) 11.45 Frayed. (M, R) 12.30 Rage. (MA15+)
ABC TV PLUS 6.00 Children’s Programs. 10.00 Emma! 10.15 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Dino Dana. (R) 7.15 Odd Squad. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Infinitely Polar Bear. (M) (2014) 9.55 Gruen. (PG, R) 10.35 Doctor Who. 11.15 Art Works. 11.45 Brush With Fame. 12.15 Live At The Apollo. 1.00 QI. 1.30 30 Rock. 1.50 30 Rock. 2.15 Reno 911! 2.35 Friday Night Dinner. (Final) 3.00 Rosehaven. 3.30 Rosehaven. (Final) 3.55 News Update. 4.00 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 School Of Rock. (PG, R) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (PG, R) 6.00 Dwight In Shining Armour. (PG, R) 6.25 BTN Newsbreak. 6.30 Are You Tougher Than Your Ancestors? (R) 7.00 MOVIE: Bruno & Boots: This Can’t Be Happening At Macdonald Hall. (PG, R) (2017) 8.30 Good Game Spawn Point. (R) 8.50 Sword Art Online. (PG, R) 9.10 Radiant. (PG, R) 9.40 Close.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 2.00 ABC News Day. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Afternoon Briefing. 4.30 Friday Briefing. 5.00 ABC News Hour. 6.00 ABC Evening News. 7.00 ABC National News. 7.45 The Vaccine. 8.00 ABC News Tonight. 8.30 7.30. 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 Close Of Business. 10.00 The World. 11.00 The Drum. (R) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.15 The Vaccine. (R) 12.30 7.30. (R) 1.00 ABC Late News. 1.15 Late Programs.
NINE
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
TEN
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PG, R) 1.15 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (PG, R) 1.30 Driving Test. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.
6.00 Soccer. FIFA World Cup Qualifier. AFC Third Round. Australia v Oman. Continued. 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PG, R) 1.00 The Living Room. (PG, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 WorldWatch. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 America: News. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.05 The Story Of The Songs. (PG, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (PG, R) 3.40 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.10 Walking Britain’s Lost Railways. (R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. Johanna Griggs catches up with Peter Rush, an artist who makes sculptures from driftwood. Melissa King visits Lambley Gardens. Karen Martini makes saffron scones with middle eastern citrus and date jam. 8.30 MOVIE: Pearl Harbor. (M, R) (2001) Two childhood friends grow up to be US Army pilots stationed at Pearl Harbor, where they fall in love with the same woman before coming under surprise attack by the Japanese. Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Country House Hunters Australia. Catriona Rowntree helps a couple who are looking to buy their forever home in the Barossa Valley. 8.30 MOVIE: Downton Abbey. (PG, R) (2019) The Crawley family, the owners of Downton Abbey, a large estate in the English countryside, deal with all the drama of a visit by King George V and Queen Mary during a royal tour of the region. Michelle Dockery, Maggie Smith, Hugh Bonneville. 10.55 MOVIE: Elizabeth. (M, R) (1998) Having assumed the throne, Queen Elizabeth I of England learns what is necessary to be a monarch. Cate Blanchett, Geoffrey Rush, Joseph Fiennes.
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 The Living Room. The team takes a look back at 10 years of The Living Room with Dr Chris Brown and Miguel Maestre embarking on an adrenaline-charged trip to Glenworth Valley to celebrate. 8.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 Rhys Nicholson: Live At Darlinghurst Theatre. (MA15+, R) A performance of Rhys Nicholson’s 2016 show, Bona Fide, at Sydney’s Eternity Playhouse.
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) In the final round, the four reigning champions from this cycle battle it out to progress to the semi-finals. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Legends Of The Pharaohs: Egypt’s First Pyramid. (New Series) Takes a look at the secrets behind the iconic monuments raised by the pharaohs of ancient Egypt. 8.30 Endurance: The Hunt For Shackleton’s Ice Ship. Follows an expedition searching for the wreck of Sir Ernest Shackleton’s lost ship, the Endurance. 10.05 SBS World News Late. 10.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) Hosted by Jimmy Carr. 11.25 The Eagle. (M) Two bodies are found in a park.
12.30 Home Shopping.
1.15 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (PG, R) A tribute to Princess Diana. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 4.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R)
12.00 The Project. (R) 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Infomercials. (PG, R)
12.35 The Eagle. (M) 3.50 Huang’s World. (M, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour Down Under Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. The Morning Show. (PG) Seven Morning News. MOVIE: Who Killed JonBenét? (M, R) (2016) Eion Bailey. House Of Wellness. (PG) A look at locations that highlight living well. The Chase. (R) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. Seven News At 4. The Chase Australia.
7TWO
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 2.00 Better Homes. (R) 3.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R) 4.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Border Security: Int. (PG, R) 8.30 Martin Clunes: Islands Of America. (PG, R) 9.30 Billy Connolly’s Tracks Across America. (PG, R) 10.30 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. (PG, R) 11.40 Super Garden. (PG) (New Series) 12.20 Late Programs.
7MATE
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. (PG) 1.00 Airwolf. (PG, R) 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. (PG, R) 3.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 3.30 The Nanny. (PG, R) 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 4.30 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 5.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 6.00 MOVIE: Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over. (PG, R) (2003) 7.30 MOVIE: Sherlock Holmes. (M, R) (2009) 10.05 MOVIE: Due Date. (MA15+, R) (2010) 12.00 Urbex: Enter At Your Own Risk. (M, R) 1.00 Late Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 America’s Game. (R) 11.00 A Football Life. (PG, R) 12.00 Mega Marine Machines. (PG, R) 1.00 Storage Wars Canada. (PG, R) 2.00 Barter Kings. (PG, R) 2.55 Lost In Transmission. (PG, R) 3.55 Timbersports. (PG, R) 4.25 MOVIE: Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment. (PG, R) (1985) 6.15 MOVIE: Green Lantern. (PG, R) (2011) 8.30 MOVIE: Die Hard. (M, R) (1988) Bruce Willis. 11.15 MOVIE: Beowulf. (M, R) (2007) 1.30 Late Programs.
7FLIX
6.00 Shopping. (R) 7.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 8.00 Mega Mechanics. (R) 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 10.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 Truck Hunters. (PG, R) 1.00 NCIS. (M, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. (M, R) 11.30 CSI. (MA15+, R) 12.30 Shopping. (R) 1.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 1.30 Shopping. (R) 2.00 Sherlock Holmes: Elementary. (M, R) 3.00 JAG. (PG, R) 4.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. (R) 12.00 MOVIE: The Maggie. (R) (1954) 2.00 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.55 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 3.30 MOVIE: The Last Days Of Dolwyn. (R) (1949) 5.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. (PG, R) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 7.30 Secrets Of The National Trust. 8.30 MOVIE: Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves. (M, R) (1991) Kevin Costner. 11.25 Heartbeat. (M) 12.25 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 11.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 12.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 1.00 Becker. (PG, R) 1.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R) 2.30 The Unicorn. (PG, R) 3.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 Becker. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Friends. (PG, R) 7.30 Friends. (R) 8.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 8.30 The Big Bang Theory. (M, R) 9.00 The Big Bang Theory. (PG, R) 9.30 Movie Night In: Viewer’s Choice. 11.30 Big Bang. (M, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 Kitchen Hero. (PG, R) 2.00 Cooks Cape Town. (R) 2.30 Let’s Brunch. (R) 3.00 Food Lover’s Guide. (R) 3.30 Lidia’s Kitchen. (PG) 4.00 Secret Meat Business. (R) 4.30 Middle East Feast With Shane Delia. (R) 5.00 Food Safari. (R) 5.30 Cook And The Chef. (R) 6.00 Nigella Bites. (R) 7.00 The Cook Up. (PG) 7.30 River Cottage Aust. (PG, R) 8.30 Jamie’s Chef. (PG) 9.30 Greater Mekong. (R) 10.00 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV
10 SHAKE
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 The Vanilla Ice Project. (R) 12.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 1.00 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 2.00 Bargain Mansions. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R) 4.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 5.00 Flip Or Flop. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG) 8.30 Barnwood Builders. 9.30 Building Off The Grid. (PG, R) 10.30 Lakefront Bargain Hunt. (R) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 RocKwiz. (M, R) 12.50 Black Lives Matter: A Global Reckoning. (M, R) 1.40 How To Rob A Bank. (M, R) 2.25 Curse Of Oak Island. (PG, R) 3.55 WorldWatch. 5.20 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. (PG, R) 5.45 Shortland Street. (PG) 6.15 Forged In Fire. (PG) 7.00 Jeopardy! (PG, R) 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) 8.30 Hoarders. (M) 9.15 Monica And Sex. (MA15+) 10.15 Hunters. (M, R) 11.05 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD
10 PEACH
9LIFE
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.30 Natural Living With Tegan Martin. (PG, R) 9.00 Shopping. (R) 10.30 House Rules. (PG, R) 12.00 God Friended Me. (PG, R) 3.05 Jabba’s School Holiday Movies. (PG, R) 3.35 Futurama. (PG, R) 4.05 American Dad! (PG, R) 4.35 Simpsons. (PG, R) 5.05 MOVIE: Tom And Jerry: The Movie. (R) (1992) 6.50 MOVIE: Ice Age: Continental Drift. (PG, R) (2012) 8.30 MOVIE: Made Of Honor. (M, R) (2008) Patrick Dempsey. 10.40 MOVIE: Frantic. (M, R) (1988) 1.15 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
10 BOLD
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Blaze And The Monster Machines. (R) 12.00 Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. (R) 1.00 PAW Patrol. (R) 3.00 Bunsen Is A Beast. (PG, R) 3.30 The Loud House. (R) 4.00 SpongeBob. (R) 4.30 Haunted Hathaways. 5.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 6.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 7.30 The Office. (PG, R) 8.30 South Park. (M, R) 9.00 South Park. (MA15+, R) 10.00 South Park. (M, R) 10.30 South Park. (MA15+, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.50 Ralph. (PG, R) 2.00 Intune 08. (R) 3.00 Wapos Bay. (R) 3.25 Bushwhacked! (PG, R) 3.50 Bino And Fino. (R) 4.00 Mustangs FC. (R) 4.30 Grace Beside Me. (PG, R) 5.00 Shortland Street. (PG, R) 5.30 Chefs’ Line. (R) 6.00 Toa Hunter Gatherer. (PG, R) 6.30 Foreign Flavours. (PG, R) 7.00 NITV News: Nula. (R) 7.30 MOVIE: Tia And Piujuq. (R) (2018) 8.55 Bedtime Stories. (R) 9.05 Dust And Bones. (PG, R) 10.05 Naa Muru Gurung. (PG, R) 11.25 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.
5(6&+('8/(' '$7(
CONCERT
CONCERT
7+856'$< 0$5&+ 30 '$1&( 8UEDQ 5XVK (QWHUWDLQPHQW
52&.$5,$ 7+( (/O (;3(5,(1&( $ FDSWLYDWLQJ OLYH FRQFHUW WKDW UHFUHDWHV WKH XQIRUJHWWDEOH VRXQG RI -HII /\QQHV 7KH (OHFWULF /LJKW 2UFKHVWUD ZLWK FODVVLF KLWV LQFOXGLQJ
(YLO :RPDQ /LYLQJ 7KLQJ +ROG 2Q 7LJKW SOXV PDQ\ PRUH
5(6&+('8/(' '$7(
CONCERT
7+856'$< 0$< 30
7+856'$< 2&72%(5 30
5RNLW] (QWHUWDLQPHQW
The Music Group
:25/' 2) 086,&$/6
7KH :RUOG RI 0XVLFDOV EULQJV WKH YHU\ EHVW RI 0XVLFDO 7KHDWUH WR OLIH LQ DQ LQFUHGLEOH QHZ SURGXFWLRQ ZLWK KLWV IURP KXJH QDPHV VXFK DV 5RJHUV DQG +DPPHUVWHLQ *LOEHUW DQG 6XOOLYDQ 6WHSKHQ 6RQGKHLP /HRQDUG %HUQVWHLQ DQG PDQ\ PRUH
DRTCC: 155 Darling St, Dubbo, (02) 6801 4378 %R[ RI´FH KRXUV 0RQGD\ )ULGD\ DP SP DQG KRXU SULRU WR WKH VKRZ %DU RSHQ EHIRUH GXULQJ LQWHUYDO PRVW VKRZV
%-251 $*$,1 ¨ 0$00$ 0,$ :( $5( %$&. $*$,1 TOUR 'XVW RII WKRVH µDUHV SODWIRUP VKRHV DQG VDWLQV DQG JHW UHDG\ WR VLQJ GDQFH DQG KDYH WKH WLPH RI \RXU OLIH RQ %MRUQ $JDLQV 0DPPD 0LD :H $UH %DFN $JDLQ 7RXU.
39
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
TV+
Saturday October 9 ABC TV 6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 10.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Midsomer Murders. (PG, R) 2.00 Restoration Australia: Holowiliena, South Australia. (R) 2.55 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG, R) 4.00 Dream Gardens. (PG, R) 4.30 Landline. 5.10 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (PG, R)
PRIME7
NINE
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
TEN
6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) Highlights from the past week. 12.00 Horse Racing. Spring Champion Stakes Day. From Randwick Racecourse, Sydney. Caulfield Guineas Day. From Caulfield Racecourse, Melbourne. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) Narrated by Grant Bowler.
6.00 Animal Tales. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Rivals. 12.30 Destination WA. (PG) 1.00 Good Food Kitchen. (New Series) 1.30 Animal Embassy. (PG, R) 2.00 The Block. (PG, R) 4.30 The Garden Gurus. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. (PG)
6.00 Reel Action. (R) 6.30 Leading The Way. 7.00 Healthy Homes Aust. (R) 7.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 8.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 9.00 Taste Of Australia. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 The Living Room. (R) 1.00 The Dog House. (PG, R) 2.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 2.30 My Market Kitchen. (R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. (R) 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 WorldWatch. 7.00 BBC News. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 America: News. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Motorcycle Racing. FIM Superbike World Championship. Round 11. Highlights. 3.00 Cycling. UCI Europe Tour. CRO Race. Highlights. 4.00 Going Places. (PG, R) 4.30 Five Billion Pound Super Sewer. (R) 5.40 The Buildings That Fought Hitler. (PG, R)
6.10 The Repair Shop. (R) Resident ceramic expert Kirsten Ramsay restores a majolica vase which has met with several accidents. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories and events as they unfold, with comprehensive analysis and reporting. 7.30 Grantchester. (PG) Will and Geordie negotiate a complex family dispute that may be connected to a murder. 8.20 Shetland. (M, R) A horrifying discovery at the Hayes’ house changes the course of the investigation. 9.15 Fires. (M, R) Dairy farmers must deal with the aftermath of the fire and the destruction of their homestead. 10.15 Miniseries: Mrs Wilson. (M, R) Part 2 of 3. Alison’s search for answers about her late husband sends her on a difficult journey.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 MOVIE: Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets. (PG, R) (2002) Having spent summer with his family, boy wizard Harry Potter returns to Hogwarts against magical advice. The situation takes a terrifying twist, however, after something starts attacking residents of the school. Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint. 10.15 MOVIE: X2: X-Men United. (M, R) (2003) As public concern over the existence of mutants grows, a renegade military officer uses the attempted assassination of the US president to justify his plan to eradicate people with special abilities. Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen.
6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 MOVIE: Bohemian Rhapsody. (M, R) (2018) Charts the life of Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of the popular rock band, Queen. Amid the band’s meteoric rise in the 1970s, Mercury had to grapple with his ego, sexuality and illness. Rami Malek, Lucy Boynton, Gwilym Lee. 10.15 The Show Must Go On: The Queen + Adam Lambert Story. (M, R) Traces the rise of singer-songwriter Adam Lambert and him joining the band Queen. Features footage and interviews with Adam Lambert, his parents Leila and Eber, Brian May, Roger Taylor, Simon Cowell, Bohemian Rhapsody star Rami Malek and the Foo Fighters’ Taylor Hawkins.
6.00 Making It Australia. The six remaining makers are asked to create a welldesigned invention, device or gadget which needs to solve a problem in their life or in the lives of a loved one. Hosted by Susie Youssef and Harley Breen. 7.00 The Dog House. (PG, R) Follows a team of devoted matchmakers as they pair homeless dogs with hopeful companions. 8.00 Ambulance. (M) With a spike in staff illness due to COVID-19, the ambulance service calls on the military for help. However, before the recruits can be deployed they must undergo three days of intensive training. 10.00 To Be Advised.
6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. Celebrities include Aaron Chen, Alex Lee and Matt Okine are joined by special guest Carlo Ritchie. 8.35 Battle Of Britain: 3 Days To Save The UK. (M) Part 3 of 3. Documents the events of 15 September 1940, the day known as Battle of Britain Day, that saw the Luftwaffe dispatch over 1500 aircraft in hopes of forcing the RAF into a decisive battle. 9.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) Game show, featuring contestants tackling a words and numbers quiz. Hosted by Jimmy Carr. 11.15 MOVIE: Molly’s Game. (M, R) (2017) A young woman running an underground poker empire becomes the target of an FBI investigation. Jessica Chastain, Kevin Costner, Idris Elba.
11.10 Rage. (MA15+) A diverse range of music video clips chosen by special guest programmers.
1.00 Home Shopping.
ABC TV PLUS
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. (PG, R) (Final) 8.30 Live At The Apollo. (M, R) 9.15 The Stand Up Sketch Show. (MA15+) 9.40 Sammy J. (PG, R) 9.45 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. (PG, R) 10.25 Ghosts. 10.50 This Time With Alan Partridge. 11.25 Would I Lie To You? 11.55 Unprotected Sets. 12.20 Fresh Blood Pilot Season. 12.50 Escape From The City. 1.45 Review With Myles Barlow. 2.15 News Update. 2.20 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 3.35 Voltron: Legendary Defender. (PG, R) 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 School Of Rock. (PG, R) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.00 Dwight In Shining Armour. (PG, R) 6.25 Welcome To Earth. 6.30 Top Jobs For Dogs. (R) 7.00 Horrible Histories. (PG, R) 7.30 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.35 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 8.20 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.55 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.20 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.45 Close.
ABC NEWS 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.15 The Vaccine. (R) 1.30 7.30. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 Landline. (R) 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 To Be Advised. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 Q+A Highlights. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 7.30. (R) 6.00 ABC Evening News. 6.30 ABC News Regional. (R) 7.00 ABC National News. 7.30 Aust Story. (R) 8.00 ABC News Tonight. 8.15 Four Corners. (R) 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 Crocodile Territory: Protecting A Predator. (R) 10.00 News. 10.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Creek To Coast. (R) 12.30 Sydney Weekender. (R) 1.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 2.00 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. (PG, R) 3.00 MOVIE: Oh, God! Book II. (R) (1980) 5.00 Horse Racing. Spring Champion Stakes Day and Caulfield Guineas Day. 6.00 Border Security: Int. (PG, R) 6.30 Crufts Dog Show. (PG) (New Series) 7.30 The Yorkshire Vet. (PG, R) 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Super Garden. (PG) 12.00 Late Programs.
7MATE 6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Garage 41. (PG, R) 12.30 Timbersports. (PG, R) 1.00 Blokesworld. (PG, R) 1.30 Dipper’s Backyard BBQ Wars. (PG) 2.00 Boating. UIM Class 1 World Powerboat C’ship. St Pete Grand Prix. 3.00 Rides Down Under. (PG, R) 4.00 Storage Wars Canada. (PG, R) 5.00 Lost In Transmission. (PG, R) 6.00 Dirty Rotten Survival. (PG) 7.00 Cricket. Women’s Twenty20 International Series. Aust v Ind. 10.30 MOVIE: The Losers. (M, R) (2010) 12.30 Late Programs.
7FLIX 6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 Weekender. (R) 10.00 Splitting Up Together. (PG, R) 11.00 Natural Living With Tegan Martin. (PG) 11.30 Game Of Clones. (PG) 1.00 America’s Got Talent. (PG, R) 2.45 MOVIE: Tom And Jerry: The Movie. (R) (1992) 4.30 MOVIE: The Fault In Our Stars. (PG, R) (2014) 7.00 MOVIE: The Theory Of Everything. (PG, R) (2014) 9.30 MOVIE: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot. (MA15+, R) (2016) 11.45 MOVIE: Mr. Right. (MA15+, R) (2015) 1.45 Late Programs.
12.00 Pearson. (M) 1.00 Rivals. (R) 1.30 A Current Affair. (R) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG)
9GO! 6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. (PG, R) 12.30 Beyblade Burst Surge. (PG, R) 1.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. (PG) 1.30 Clarence. (PG, R) 1.40 Malcolm. (PG, R) 2.10 Liquid Science. (PG, R) 3.10 MOVIE: Comet Kids. (PG, R) (2017) 5.00 MOVIE: The Spiderwick Chronicles. (PG, R) (2008) 7.00 MOVIE: Jurassic Park. (PG, R) (1993) 9.30 MOVIE: Hanna. (M, R) (2011) 11.40 Malcolm. (PG, R) 12.10 Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. (MA15+, R) 1.10 Late Programs.
9GEM 6.00 Newstyle Direct. (R) 6.30 TV Shop. (R) 10.00 Avengers. (PG, R) 11.10 Edgar Wallace Mysteries. (PG, R) 12.30 MOVIE: Isn’t Life Wonderful! (R) (1954) 2.15 MOVIE: Dunkirk. (PG, R) (1958) 5.00 MOVIE: Operation Petticoat. (R) (1959) 7.30 MOVIE: Escape From Alcatraz. (M, R) (1979) Clint Eastwood, Patrick McGoohan. 9.50 MOVIE: The Gauntlet. (MA15+, R) (1977) Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke. 12.05 Embarrassing Bodies. (MA15+, R) 1.00 TV Shop. (R)
9LIFE 6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Find Me A Dream Home Australia. (R) 12.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 1.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 2.00 House Hunters. (R) 2.30 Barnwood Builders. (R) 3.30 Lakefront Bargain Hunt. (R) 4.30 Building Off The Grid. (PG, R) 5.30 Maine Cabin Masters. (PG, R) 6.30 Log Cabin Living. (R) 7.30 Escape To The Chateau. (R) 8.30 House Hunters. 9.30 House Hunters Int. 10.30 House Hunters Reno. (R) 11.30 House Hunters. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
12.00 1.00 1.30 2.30 5.00
To Be Advised. Home Shopping. (R) Infomercials. (PG, R) Home Shopping. (R) Hour Of Power. Religious program.
1.50 MOVIE: A Monster Calls. (PG, R) (2016) 3.50 Huang’s World. (M, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour Down Under Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
SBS VICELAND
10 BOLD 6.00 Shopping. (R) 6.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 8.00 Shopping. (R) 9.00 Soccer. FIFA World Cup Qualifier. AFC Third Round. Australia v Oman. Replay. 12.00 JAG. (PG, R) 1.00 The Doctors. (PG, R) 2.00 One Strange Rock. (PG, R) 3.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 4.00 Truck Hunters. (PG, R) 4.30 I Fish. (R) 5.00 Reel Action. 5.30 Scorpion. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. (M, R) 10.20 MacGyver. (M) (Series return) 11.20 CSI. (MA15+, R) 1.10 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Letterkenny. (M, R) 1.25 Stacey Dooley: Russia’s War On Women. (M, R) 2.25 Munchies Guide To Basque Country. (PG, R) 3.10 Yokayi Footy. 4.10 WorldWatch. 5.35 Celebrity Mastermind. (PG, R) 6.40 The Bee Whisperer. (PG) 7.40 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (PG, R) 8.30 The X-Files. (MA15+, R) 11.00 Dateline. (R) 11.30 Insight. (R) 12.30 MOVIE: Being Flynn. (MA15+, R) (2012) 2.25 France 24. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD
10 PEACH 6.00 Stephen Colbert. (PG, R) 7.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 8.00 Becker. (PG, R) 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 10.30 The Masked Singer Australia. (PG, R) 12.55 The Masked Singer Australia. (R) (Final) 2.05 The Neighborhood. (PG, R) 3.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 9.45 2 Broke Girls. (M, R) 10.45 The Conners. (PG, R) 11.45 Big Bang. (M, R) 12.10 Shopping. (R) 1.10 Infomercials. (PG, R) 1.40 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. (M, R) (Final) 2.35 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Cooks Cape Town. (R) 1.30 Nadia’s Family Feasts. (R) 2.30 Rhodes Across Italy. (R) 3.30 No Passport Required. (PG, R) 4.35 Gourmet Express. (R) 5.30 How To Cook. (R) 6.00 Cheese Slices. (PG, R) 7.00 Born To Cook. (R) 7.30 Hairy Bikers’ Asian Adventure. (PG, R) 8.35 Ainsley’s Food We Love. (PG) 9.30 Bourdain: Parts Unknown. (PG, R) 10.30 Bourdain: Parts Unknown. (PG, R) 11.30 Mystery Diners. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
NITV
10 SHAKE 6.00 Morning Programs. 7.30 PAW Patrol. (R) 8.30 The Loud House. (R) 9.30 SpongeBob. (R) 10.30 Sanjay And Craig. (PG, R) 11.30 Shimmer & Shine. (R) 12.00 Haunted Hathaways. (R) 12.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 1.00 Big Time Rush. (R) 2.00 I Am Frankie. (R) 3.00 Victorious. (R) 4.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.00 The Thundermans. (R) 6.00 MOVIE: Cats & Dogs. (PG, R) (2001) 7.45 MOVIE: Five Feet Apart. (M) (2019) 10.05 Tosh.0. (MA15+) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 MOVIE: Tia And Piujuq. (R) (2018) 11.25 Naa Muru Gurung. (PG, R) 12.45 Nuuca. (PG, R) 1.00 Rugby League. Queensland Murri Carnival. 2.00 Cricket. (R) 5.00 Indian Country Today. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 NITV News: Nula. (R) 6.30 Going Places. (PG, R) 7.30 News. 7.40 Through The Wormhole. (R) 8.30 MOVIE: Spiders. (2013) 10.10 MOVIE: Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins. (2008) 12.10 Ngumpin Kartiya. (PG, R) 12.30 Bamay. (R) 1.00 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.
Family Owned & Operated | Available 24hrs • Funeral Services • Cremations • Graveside Services • Monuments • Bereavement Care & Support • Chapel & Function Room Available • Pre-arranged & Prepaid Funeral Plans
52 Talbragar Street Dubbo • 6882 3199 Email: info@wlarcombeandson.com.au | www.wlarcombeandson.com.au
A Tradition of Caring
40
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Sunday October 10 ABC TV
PRIME7
NINE
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
TEN
6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 The World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R) 11.30 Songs Of Praise. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Australia. (R) 2.30 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (PG, R) 3.30 Todd Sampson’s Life On The Line. (PG, R) 4.00 Secrets Of The Museum. (R) 5.00 Art Works. (PG, R) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow.
6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Beach Cops. (PG, R) 1.30 Border Security: America’s Front Line. (PG, R) 2.00 MOVIE: The Maltese Falcon. (PG, R) (1941) 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. (R) 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Sydney Weekender.
6.00 Animal Tales. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 11.00 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 11.30 Fishing Australia. 12.00 Ultimate Rush. (PG, R) 12.30 Explore. (R) 12.40 MOVIE: Curse Of The Pink Panther. (PG, R) (1983) 3.00 The Block. (PG, R) 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 RBT. (PG, R)
6.00 Mass. 6.30 Hillsong. 7.00 Leading The Way. (PG, R) 7.30 Tomorrow’s World. (PG) 8.00 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 8.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PG, R) 9.00 Destination Dessert. 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.00 Three Veg And Meat. (R) 1.30 Healthy Homes Aust. 2.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 2.30 My Market Kitchen. (R) 3.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. (R) 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. 4.00 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PG) 4.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 WorldWatch. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 France 24 English News Second Edition. 1.00 Speedweek. 3.00 FIFA World Cup 2022 Magazine. 3.30 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Roubaix. Women’s race. Highlights. 4.35 Cycling. UCI World Tour. ParisRoubaix. Men’s race. Highlights. 5.40 The Buildings That Fought Hitler. (PG)
6.30 Back Roads: Burketown, Queensland. (R) Paul West explores Burketown. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Restoration Australia: Airlie. (PG) Anthony Burke meets a couple who bought a huge rundown Victorian mansion in Milton, NSW. 8.40 Fires. (M) Tash and Mott join the firefighting efforts in a beachside community on the south coast of NSW. 9.35 We Hunt Together. (M) Freddy and Baba flee the city with victim number three in the boot of the car. 10.25 Les Norton. (M, R) Dolores pushes Les to his limits. 11.15 Talking Heads. (M, R) A woman dashes off letters. 11.50 Silent Witness. (MA15+, R) (Final) The team is brought together by a tragedy.
6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Hey Hey We’re 50. (PG) A celebration of the 50th anniversary of the launch of Hey Hey It’s Saturday. 8.50 Miniseries: Manhunt: The Night Stalker. (M) Part 4 of 4. DCI Sutton and the team continue their nightly surveillance operation. Having located a possible suspect, they must find out if they have their man without giving away the dragnet’s existence. 9.50 The Real Manhunter: The Night Stalker Delroy Grant. (M) Former police officer Colin Sutton looks back at the case of Delroy Grant. 11.50 The Blacklist. (MA15+) Red tries desperately to rescue an old friend. Liz and Townsend conduct an interrogation.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 The Block. (PG) The judges deliver their verdicts on the hallway, laundry and powder room renovations. 8.30 60 Minutes. Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. 9.30 Nine News Late. Takes a look at the latest news and events from Australia and around the world. 10.00 The First 48: Murder In Treme. (M) Takes a look at the 2014 murder of 58-year-old Fannie Campbell in Treme, New Orleans. 11.00 Cold Case: New Leads Wanted: Do Trieu. (PG, R) Takes a look at the 2008 disappearance and murder of Wellington taxi driver Do Trieu. 11.50 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now: Pregnancy. (MA15+) Patients are treated for a variety of conditions.
6.30 The Sunday Project. Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 7.30 Celebrity MasterChef Australia. (Series return) From Olympians to award-winning fashion designers and Gold Logie winners, 10 celebrities flex their culinary skills as they try to impress judges Melissa Leong, Andy Allen and Jock Zonfrillo. 9.00 CSI: Vegas. (New Series) Gil Grissom and Sara Sidle help a team of Las Vegas-based CSI agents who are facing an existential threat that could lead to the release thousands of convicted killers back onto the streets. 10.00 FBI. (M) The team must stop a hacker who is disabling life-saving equipment in several New York City hospitals.
6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Inside Central Station: Man Falls In Train. (M) The anniversary of Australia’s worst rail disaster that claimed the lives of 84 people is marked. 8.30 Australia Uncovered: The Department. (MA15+) Takes a look inside the NSW child protection system by following caseworkers across the state as they navigate the complexities of keeping children safe in families experiencing all manner of issues. 10.10 Life Of Earth From Space. (R) Part 1 of 2. A history of the Earth featuring high resolution imagery from the International Space Station. 11.05 How Mad Are You? (M, R) Part 1 of 2. A re-creation of a 1972 experiment searching for differences between the mentally ill and supposedly sane.
12.50 The Show Must Go On. (M, R) 1.45 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 2.30 Rage. (MA15+) 4.00 Horror Movie: A Low-Budget Nightmare. (M, R) 5.00 Insiders. (R)
1.00 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. Takes a look at the latest news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
12.40 The Garden Gurus. (R) 1.05 Ultimate Rush. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
12.00 FBI. (M, R) A woman is abducted. 1.00 The Sunday Project. (R) A look at the day’s news. 2.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
12.05 24 Hours In Emergency. (M, R) 1.00 MOVIE: Backtrack Boys. (MA15+, R) (2018) 2.55 Cocaine: Living With The Cartels. (MA15+, R) 3.50 Sinkholes. (M) 4.45 Destination Flavour. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle.
ABC TV PLUS
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Grace’s Amazing Machines. (R) 7.15 Sir Mouse. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.00 Compass. (PG, R) 8.30 Louis Theroux: Miami Mega Jail. (M, R) 9.30 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG, R) 10.30 MOVIE: The Trip To Spain. (2017) 12.15 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 1.05 Harry Seidler: Modernist. 2.05 Unprotected Sets. 2.30 Review With Myles Barlow. 2.55 News Update. 3.00 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. (PG, R) 11.30 Caravan & Camping WA. (PG) 12.00 The Yorkshire Vet. (PG, R) 1.00 My Road To Adventure. (PG, R) 1.30 DVine Living. (PG) 2.00 Escape To The Country. (R) 3.00 To Be Advised. 7.00 Border Security. (PG, R) 8.30 Chris Tarrant’s Extreme Railway Journeys. (PG) 9.30 Mighty Trains. (PG) 10.30 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. (PG, R) 11.30 Britain’s Busiest Airport: Heathrow. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
7MATE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.30 School Of Rock. (PG, R) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.00 Mikki Vs The World. (R) 6.25 Welcome To Earth. 6.30 Mindful Earth. (New Series) 6.45 Mimi On A Mission. (PG) (New Series) 7.05 Sol. (PG) 7.35 Goodbye Home. (PG) 7.45 Operation Ouch! The Life Fix. (PG, R) 8.15 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.35 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.50 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.15 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.40 Rage. (PG) 10.40 Close.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 Q+A Highlights. (R) 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 Aust Story. (R) 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 Offsiders. (R) 4.00 Landline. (R) 5.00 News. 5.30 World This Week. (R) 6.00 ABC Evening News. 6.30 Crocodile Territory: Protecting A Predator. (R) 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 The Bright Side. (New Series) 8.00 Insiders. (R) 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 Aust Story. (R) 10.00 News. 10.30 Q+A Highlights. (R) 11.00 ABC Late News. 11.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. (PG, R) 12.30 Beyblade Burst Surge. (PG, R) 1.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. (PG) 1.30 Rivals. (R) 2.00 Peaking. (PG, R) 2.40 Soapbox Racing. Red Bull Series. Round 5. Replay. 3.40 Race Across The World. (PG, R) 5.00 MOVIE: Nutty Professor II: The Klumps. (PG, R) (2000) 7.00 MOVIE: The Phantom. (PG, R) (1996) 9.00 MOVIE: Transformers: The Last Knight. (M, R) (2017) 12.00 Race Across The World. (PG, R) 1.20 Late Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 River To Reef: Retro. (PG) 11.30 Step Outside. (PG) 12.00 The Fishing Show By AFN. (PG) 1.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. (PG) 2.00 Merv Hughes Fishing. (PG, R) 3.00 Fishing Addiction. (PG) (Series return) 4.00 Ultimate Fishing. (PG, R) 5.00 Lost In Transmission. (PG, R) 6.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 7.00 Cricket. Women’s Twenty20 International Series. Game 3. Australia v India. 10.30 MOVIE: Batman & Robin. (PG, R) (1997) 1.05 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 News Of The Wild. (R) 9.00 Kiss Bang Love. (PG, R) 11.30 Behave Yourself. (PG, R) 12.30 The Goldbergs. (PG, R) 1.00 MOVIE: The Prince & Me 3: A Royal Honeymoon. (PG, R) (2008) 3.00 MOVIE: The Prince & Me 4: The Elephant Adventure. (PG, R) (2010) 5.00 MOVIE: Richie Rich. (PG, R) (1994) 7.00 The Voice US. (PG) 9.00 MOVIE: The Hangover Part II. (MA15+, R) (2011) Bradley Cooper. 11.10 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. (M, R) 12.10 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 Snap Happy. 9.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 10.00 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 10.30 The Doctors. (PG, R) 11.30 Scorpion. (PG, R) 1.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 2.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. (R) 3.00 All 4 Adventure. (PG, R) 4.00 Truck Hunters. (PG, R) 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. (R) 5.00 I Fish. 5.30 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 6.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 9.25 Star Trek: Discovery. (M) (New Series) 11.10 NCIS: LA. (M, R) 12.05 Late Programs.
10 PEACH
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. (R) 10.30 MOVIE: Johnny You’re Wanted. (R) (1956) 12.00 Getaway. (PG, R) 12.30 Avengers. (PG, R) 1.30 MOVIE: Scott Of The Antarctic. (R) (1948) 3.45 MOVIE: Revolt At Fort Laramie. (PG, R) (1957) 5.15 MOVIE: Johnny Guitar. (PG, R) (1954) 7.30 Agatha Raisin. (PG, R) 8.30 Coroner. (MA15+) 9.30 Chicago P.D. (MA15+) 10.30 Chicago Fire. (MA15+) 11.30 Chicago Med. (M, R) 12.30 Late Programs.
9LIFE
7FLIX
ABC NEWS
10 BOLD
SBS FOOD
6.00 Seatbelt Psychic. (PG, R) 7.00 The Neighborhood. (PG, R) 8.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 9.00 Neighbours. (PG, R) 11.00 To Be Advised. 1.30 The Dog House. (PG, R) 2.30 The Conners. (PG, R) 3.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 7.40 Big Bang. (M, R) 8.05 Big Bang. (PG, R) 8.30 The Neighborhood. (PG) 9.30 MOVIE: The Wheel. (M) (2019) David Arquette. 11.20 Mom. (M, R) 11.50 Shopping. (PG, R) 12.20 Infomercials. (PG, R) 12.50 Shopping. (PG, R) 1.20 Late Programs.
10 SHAKE
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 House Hunters Reno. (R) 12.00 Worst To First. (R) 1.00 Explore TV Viking. (R) 1.30 Find Me A Dream Home Australia. (R) 2.00 Good Food Kitchen. (R) 2.30 Renovate Or Rebuild. (R) 3.30 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 5.30 House Hunters. (R) 6.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.30 Good Bones. (PG, R) 8.30 A Sale Of Two Cities. (R) 9.30 My Lottery Dream Home. (PG) 10.30 Fixer To Fabulous. (R) 11.30 House Hunters. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Danny’s House. (M, R) 1.05 Ancient Aliens. (M, R) 2.45 Insight. (R) 3.45 WorldWatch. 4.15 The Point. (R) 4.45 What’s The Catch With Matthew Evans. (PG, R) 5.45 Underground Worlds. (R) 6.40 Planet Expedition. (R) 7.40 The UnXplained. (M) 8.30 Women On Death Row. (M, R) 9.30 Criminal Planet. (M, R) 10.20 Dark Side Of The Ring Confidential. (M) (New Series) 11.30 I Was A Teenage Felon. (MA15+) 12.20 Peach. (M, R) 12.30 Cycling. Paris-Tours. 2.10 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 Bourdain: Parts Unknown. (PG, R) 12.30 Spencer’s Holiday BBQ. (PG) 1.30 Let’s Brunch. (R) 2.00 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.30 Cook And The Chef. (R) 6.00 Heart And Soul. (R) 6.30 Adam & Poh’s Malaysia In Australia. (PG, R) 7.00 India Unplated. (PG, R) 7.30 Weekend Breaks With Gregg Wallace. (PG, R) 8.30 Rick Stein’s Far Eastern Odyssey. (R) 9.40 Bourdain: Parts Unknown. (PG, R) 11.30 Adam & Poh’s Malaysia In Australia. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
NITV
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.30 SpongeBob. (R) 10.30 Sanjay And Craig. (PG, R) 11.30 Shimmer & Shine. (R) 12.00 Haunted Hathaways. (R) 12.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 1.00 Big Time Rush. (R) 2.00 I Am Frankie. (R) 3.00 Victorious. (R) 4.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.00 The Thundermans. (R) 6.00 MOVIE: Cats & Dogs 2: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore. (R) (2010) 7.45 To Be Advised. 8.45 Kinne Tonight. (M, R) 9.45 To Be Advised. 10.45 Dating: #NoFilter. (M, R) 11.45 Ridiculousness. (M) 12.15 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.05 Kagagi. (PG, R) 9.30 Bushwhacked! (PG, R) 10.00 Football. WKFL Women’s. 11.15 Football. WKFL Women’s. 12.45 Motor Racing. Dakar Rally. Highlights. 1.15 Soccer. Serie A. Highlights. 3.00 Football. NTFL. 4.30 Softball. SA Premier League. 6.00 NITV News: Nula. (R) 6.30 Artefact. (R) 7.30 News. (R) 7.40 First Australians. (PG, R) 8.40 Totem And Ore. (PG, R) 10.25 Sunny And The Dark Horse. (PG, R) 11.55 Other Side Of The Rock. (R) 12.00 Going Places. (R) 1.00 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.
Music for all
FAMILY SPECIAL #5
PRESENT THIS VOUCHER TO RECEIVE: 2 CHICKEN BURGERS 2 HAMBURGERS CHIPS 5 NUGGETS +/ Ob\mhkbZ Lmk^^m% P^lm =n[[h M^] l Fbed[Zk /11+ 0122
$
.00
35
DID YOU KNOW? You can even rent! Come in and ask us how it works! Old Bank Music Shop 78 Macquarie St, Dubbo Ph: 02 6885 5665 www.oldbankmusic.com.au
>QIBK>L ,* H<MH;>K +)+*
LOCALLY OWNED & INDEPENDENT CLINIC
FREE HEARING AIDS & SERVICES
for eligible Pensioners and Veterans Private Clients welcome! WorkCover NSW provider All fittings are provided with a 30 day trial and money back guarantee.
CALL US TO BOOK AN APPOINTMENT
6882 9555 2/153 Brisbane St, Dubbo, NSW W: www.dubbohearingcentre.com.au E: admin@dubbohearingcentre.com.au
41
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
TV+
Monday October 11 ABC TV
PRIME7
NINE
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. (R) 11.00 Restoration Australia. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Grantchester. (PG, R) 2.00 Miniseries: Des. (M, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Escape From The City. (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (R) Presented by Peter Maddison.
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Australian Story. Australians tell personal stories. 8.30 Four Corners. Investigative journalism program that leads national debate and confronting issues that matter. 9.15 Media Watch. (PG) Paul Barry takes a look at the latest issues affecting media consumers. 9.35 China Tonight. A look at current affairs from China. 10.05 Road To Now: Globalisation. (PG, R) Hosted by Chris Bath. 11.05 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.20 The Business. (R) 11.35 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG, R)
6.00 6.30 7.00 7.30
PRIME7 News. Seven News. Home And Away. (PG) SAS Australia. (M) Recruits are pushed beyond their physical limits on a merciless assault course, while a grim test of the heart leads to an outpouring of emotion. 8.30 MOVIE: Deadpool 2. (MA15+, R) (2018) Deadpool, a former special forces operative-turned-mutant-mercenary, recruits a team to protect a young boy who is being targeted by a time travelling cyborg who blames him for the death of his family. Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, Josh Brolin. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 Station 19. (M) (Final) The crew takes matters into their own hands when they are faced with a life-or-death moment.
12.35 We Hunt Together. (M, R) Freddy and Baba flee the city. 1.20 Midsomer Murders. (PG, R) 2.50 Rage. (MA15+) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. Takes a look at the latest news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
ABC TV PLUS 6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 6.40 Andy’s Safari Adventures. (R) 7.00 Dino Dana. (R) 7.15 Odd Squad. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.00 QI. (M, R) 8.30 Life That Glows. (R) 9.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 10.20 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 11.05 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 11.45 How To Live Younger. 12.45 Escape From The City. 1.40 QI. (Final) 2.15 30 Rock. 2.35 30 Rock. 2.55 Reno 911! 3.20 ABC News Update. 3.25 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 Holly Hobbie. (New Series) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.05 Mikki Vs The World. (R) 6.25 BTN Newsbreak. 6.30 Mindful Earth. 6.45 Mimi On A Mission. (PG) 7.05 The Mindfulness Tool Kit. (R) 7.15 MY:24. (R) 7.30 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.35 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 8.20 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.55 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.20 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.50 Rage. (PG, R) 10.50 Close.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 2.00 ABC News Day. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Afternoon Briefing. 5.00 ABC News Hour. 6.00 ABC Evening News. 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC News Tonight. 8.45 The Business. 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 7.30. (R) 10.00 The World. 11.00 The Drum. (R) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.15 The Business. (R) 12.30 Q+A Highlights. (R) 1.00 ABC Late News. 1.15 7.30. (R) 1.45 The Beautiful Bush. (R) 2.00 Late Programs.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. The Morning Show. (PG) Seven Morning News. MOVIE: Hidden Intentions. (M) (2018) Paige Searcy. The Real Manhunter: The Murder Of Bridie Skehan. (M, R) Details the murder of Bridget “Bridie” Skehan. The Chase. Seven News At 4. The Chase Australia.
7TWO
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.30
7MATE
Today. Today Extra. (PG) Morning News. The Block. (PG, R) Getaway. (PG, R) The team visits ancient wonders. Pointless. (PG) Tipping Point. (PG) Afternoon News. Millionaire Hot Seat. WIN News.
6.00 The Talk. (PG) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 France 24 English News First Edition. 6.30 This Week. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 America: News. 1.00 Al Jazeera. 2.00 Inside Central Station. (M, R) 3.00 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.35 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 4.05 The Supervet. (PG) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PG) The contestants start backyard week with big plans for their landscaping and entertainment areas. 8.45 Love Island Australia. (M) (Series return) Aussie singles head to a luxurious villa in northern NSW where they hope to find a match and stay together while withstanding the temptation of new potential partners. Hosted by Sophie Monk. 10.15 To Be Advised. 11.15 Nine News Late. Takes a look at the latest news and events from Australia and around the world. 11.45 The Arrangement. (M) Megan comes to a decision about her relationship with Kyle. Kyle makes a move that could upend his life.
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Celebrity MasterChef Australia. The celebrities continue to flex their culinary skills as they try to impress the judges and claim the title. 8.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? (M) Celebrity panelists compete to see who can remember the most about events of the week. 9.30 Just For Laughs Uncut. Bill Burr, Liza Treyger, Drew Lynch and Sommore showcase some of their most raunchy material. 10.00 Just For Laughs. (MA15+, R) Standup comedy performances from Becky Lucas, Peter Helliar and Al Del Bene. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events.
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) The semifinalists step into the spotlight for their chance to earn a place in the Grand Final. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Deepwater Horizon: Ten Mistakes. (M) A look at the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. 8.30 Saved By A Stranger. (M) Part 1 of 4. Takes a look at the personal stories of ordinary people caught up in the biggest events in living memory. 9.35 24 Hours In Emergency: Everybody Needs Somebody. (M) A 56-year-old is rushed to St George’s with an open ankle fracture after falling in her garden. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Bosch. (MA15+) (Series return) A fire breaks out on New Year’s Eve. 11.45 An Ordinary Woman. (M) (Series return) Marina goes into labour.
12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
12.30 An Ordinary Woman. (M) 1.25 Deep State. (MA15+, R) 3.25 Huang’s World. (M, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle.
2.00 3.00 4.00 4.30 5.30
12.40 New Amsterdam. (M, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
10 BOLD
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Supergirl. (M) (New Series) 1.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 4.00 Adv Time. (PG, R) 5.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 6.00 The Nanny. (PG, R) 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 7.00 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 7.30 RBT. (M, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Flight. (MA15+, R) (2012) 11.15 World’s Worst Flights. (M, R) 12.15 State Of Affairs. (M) 1.10 Westside. (MA15+, R) 2.10 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 4.00 Pokémon. (R) 4.30 Late Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 A Football Life. (PG, R) 12.30 Weird, True And Freaky. (PG, R) 1.30 So You Think You’d Survive? (PG, R) 2.30 Caught On Dashcam. (M, R) 3.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 3.30 Lost In Transmission. (PG, R) 4.30 7th Gear. (PG) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 7.30 American Pickers. (PG) 8.30 MOVIE: Die Hard 2. (M, R) (1990) Bruce Willis. 11.00 MOVIE: The Dead Pool. (MA15+, R) (1988) 1.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Match It. (R) 7.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. (R) 8.00 Flushed. (R) 9.00 Shopping. (R) 10.30 House Rules. (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: Richie Rich. (PG, R) (1994) 2.00 God Friended Me. (PG, R) 3.00 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R) 4.30 MOVIE: The Pagemaster. (R) (1994) 6.00 Futurama. (PG, R) 6.30 Simpsons. (PG, R) 7.30 The Voice US. (PG) 8.30 MOVIE: Men In Black. (M, R) (1997) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. 10.30 MOVIE: Spawn. (M, R) (1997) 12.35 Bones. (MA15+, R) 3.30 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND
6.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 7.30 Shopping. (PG, R) 8.00 The Doctors. (PG, R) 9.00 Demolition Down Under. (R) 10.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 SEAL Team. (M, R) 1.00 NCIS. (M, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 10.20 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 16. Turkish Grand Prix. Highlights. 11.20 Blue Bloods. (M, R) 12.15 Infomercials. (PG, R) 12.45 Shopping. (PG, R) 2.15 48 Hours. (MA15+, R) 3.15 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 4.10 Late Programs.
10 PEACH
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Agatha Raisin. (PG, R) 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 1.55 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 2.50 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 3.30 MOVIE: The Ship That Died Of Shame. (PG, R) (1955) 5.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. (PG, R) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 7.30 Poirot. (M, R) 8.40 Agatha Christie’s Marple. (PG, R) 10.40 Law & Order: Criminal Intent. (M) 11.40 The Enemy Within. (M, R) 12.35 Late Programs.
9LIFE
7FLIX
SBS
TEN
9GO!
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 9.30 NBC Today. (R) 10.30 My Road To Adventure. (PG, R) 11.00 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: Conspiracy Theory. (M, R) (1997) 3.00 Sydney Weekender. (R) 3.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R) 4.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. (PG, R) 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. (M, R) 10.30 Cold Case. (M, R) 12.30 Late Programs.
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS FOOD
6.00 The Conners. (PG, R) 7.00 Friends. (PG, R) 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.30 The Unicorn. (PG, R) 11.00 The Neighborhood. (PG, R) 12.00 A Million Little Things. (M) 1.00 Nancy Drew. (M, R) 3.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 Becker. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG) 7.00 Friends. (PG, R) 8.00 Big Bang. (M, R) 8.30 The Big Bang Theory. (PG, R) 9.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R) 11.00 The Unicorn. (PG, R) 11.30 The Conners. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
10 SHAKE
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Postcards. (PG) 11.30 Find Me A Dream Home Australia. (R) 12.00 Good Bones. (PG, R) 1.00 A Sale Of Two Cities. (R) 2.00 My Lottery Dream Home. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R) 4.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 5.00 Good Bones. (PG, R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 8.30 Renovate Or Rebuild. 9.30 Boise Boys. (R) 10.30 Selling The Big Easy. 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Gymnastics. 2020 American Cup FIG Individual All-Around World Cup. Highlights. 1.30 A House Divided: Trump And Obama. 2.45 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 2.55 Munchies Guide To Oaxaca. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.05 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 RocKwiz. (M) 7.00 Jeopardy! (PG) 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M) 8.30 Taskmaster. (M, R) 9.20 Hypothetical. (M) 10.10 Lost For Words. (M) 11.10 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Heart And Soul. 1.30 Kitchen Hero. 2.00 Miguel’s Tropical Kitchen. 2.30 Great Aust. Cookbook. 3.00 Food Lover’s Guide. 3.30 Lidia’s Kitchen. (PG) 4.00 Secret Meat Business. 4.30 Cook Like An Italian. (PG) 5.00 Food Safari. 5.30 Cook And The Chef. 6.00 Bake With Anna. (PG) 6.30 Nigella Feasts. (R) 7.00 The Cook Up. (PG) 7.30 Food Fight Club. (PG) 8.30 Rick Stein’s Cornwall. (PG, R) 9.30 Greater Mekong. (R) 10.00 The Cook Up. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Blaze And The Monster Machines. (R) 12.00 Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. (R) 1.00 PAW Patrol. (R) 3.00 Bunsen Is A Beast. (PG, R) 3.30 The Loud House. (R) 4.00 SpongeBob. (R) 4.30 Haunted Hathaways. 5.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 6.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 7.30 The Office. (PG, R) 8.30 True Life Crime. (M) (New Series) 9.30 The Twilight Zone. (M) (New Series) 10.30 South Park. (MA15+, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.45 Artefact. 2.45 Bamay. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! (PG) 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. (PG) 5.00 Shortland Street. (PG) 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 The 77 Percent. 6.30 Foreign Flavours. 7.00 Our Stories. (PG) 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. (PG) 7.20 News. 7.30 Road Open. (R) 7.40 Through The Wormhole. (R) 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. (PG) 9.00 Neighbours. 10.00 News. 10.10 Te Ao With Moana. 10.40 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.
6x4 DIGITAL PRINTS NEW customers receive 5 bottles
FREE Enjoy Neverfail Springwater delivered directly to your door.
Call us now on
6884 3004
* On initial delivery. Neverfail Springwater limited is a wholly-owned. Subsidary of Coca-Cola amatil. Neverfail is a registered trademark of The Coca-Cola Company.
Think Property
WOODKELL PTY LTD LIC NO. 15 86373
Think Orana Conveyancing
Ph
s "UYING s 3ELLING s 2ESIDENTIAL ,AND s 6ACANT ,AND s 2URAL ,AND s #OMMERCIAL 0REMISES s 3UBDIVISIONS
6882 1133
Suite 6, 173 Darling St admin@oranaconveyancing.com.au
11¢ EVERYDAY
. VIP Club memb ers only. Conditions Apply
SEDAN SPECIAL
209
Inc WHEN YOU PRESENT GST THIS VOUCHER
253
Inc WHEN YOU PRESENT GST THIS VOUCHER
$
7 SEATER SPECIAL $
Supports Newtown Cricket – a Cricket, family, friendly club.
GIFT VOUCHERS AVAILABLE
Wash & polish • Vacuum • Motor • Windows
67 River St, Dubbo
6884 1235
233 Cobra Street
6826 8800
42
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Tuesday October 12 ABC TV
PRIME7
NINE
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
TEN
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Four Corners. (R) 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Shetland. (M, R) 2.00 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 Escape From The City. (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.05 The Greek Islands With Julia Bradbury: Corfu. Julia Bradbury visits the lush Ionian island of Corfu, often called the least Greek of all the Greek islands. 8.30 Step Into Paradise. (M) The story of iconic Australian fashion designers Jenny Kee and Linda Jackson. 9.55 Gatwick: The Last Chance Hotel. (M, R) A look at the Gatwick Private Hotel. 10.55 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.10 The Business. (R) The day’s business and finance news. 11.25 Q+A. (R) Interactive public affairs program.
6.00 6.30 7.00 7.30
PRIME7 News. Seven News. Home And Away. (PG) SAS Australia. (M) Recruits undertake physical and psychological challenges inspired by the SAS selection process. 8.50 Inside Chernobyl. (PG, R) Ben Fogle spends a week living alone inside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, gaining access to the doomed Control Room 4 where the disaster first began to unfold. 10.25 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 S.W.A.T. (M) Deacon’s second job working private security at a high-profile boxing match places the team in the middle of a kidnapping case when a prizefighter’s wife is abducted.
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PG) The contestants must present their homes to 150 potential buyers while continuing work on their backyards. 8.40 Love Island Australia. (M) The adventurous singles continue their quest to find a romantic match in northern NSW. 9.40 Travel Guides. (PG, R) Ordinary Australians become travel critics when they go on holiday to Wanaka, New Zealand. 10.40 Nine News Late. Takes a look at the latest news and events from Australia and around the world. 11.10 Reverie. (M) Mara’s personal tragedy comes to a head, as she considers whether she has a future with Onira-Tech.
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 The Dog House Australia. (PG) (New Series) Follow the staff at the Animal Welfare League as they match dogs to their new families. 8.30 The Cheap Seats. (M) From major news stories to entertainment and viral videos, presenters Melanie Bracewell and Tim McDonald take a look at the week that was. 9.25 NCIS: Los Angeles. (Series return) The NCIS team must track down an informant whose life is in danger. Callen suspects Hetty of keeping secrets about his past. Joelle resurfaces in her ongoing quest to capture Katya. 11.25 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics.
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Jennifer Byrne. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great Canadian Railway Journeys: Skagway To Vancouver. (PG, R) Hosted by Michael Portillo. 8.30 Insight. Takes a look at how emotional eating affect people’s health and when it should be considered a problem. 9.30 Dateline. From Edinburgh to the Highlands, take a look at the Scottish nationalists pushing for independence. 10.00 The Feed. Explores the dark side of photo filters and how it is prompting teens to seek plastic surgery. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) Hosted by John Paul Janke. 11.30 Cacciatore: The Hunter. (MA15+) (Final) Brusca seems to have secured his victory.
12.30 China Tonight. (R) 1.00 Manolo: The Boy Who Made Shoes For Lizards. (M, R) 2.30 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 3.15 Rage. (MA15+) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
12.00 4.00 5.00 5.30
12.00 1.00 1.30 4.00 5.00 5.30
12.25 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
12.40 The A Word. (M, R) Joe notices he is different from other kids. 4.10 Huang’s World: Hawaii. (M, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
ABC TV PLUS 6.00 Children’s Programs. 7.00 Dino Dana. (R) 7.15 Odd Squad. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.00 Spicks And Specks. (R) 8.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 9.10 Ghosts. (M) 9.40 This Time With Alan Partridge. (M) 10.10 Frayed. (M, R) 11.00 Doctor Who. 11.45 In The Long Run. 12.05 Superwog. (Final) 12.30 Please Like Me. 12.55 W1A. 1.30 The Stand Up Sketch Show. 1.50 30 Rock. 2.35 Reno 911! 3.00 Squinters. 3.25 ABC News Update. 3.30 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME 6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 Holly Hobbie. (PG) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.00 Mikki Vs The World. (R) 6.25 BTN Newsbreak. 6.30 Mindful Earth. 6.45 Mimi On A Mission. (PG) 7.10 The Mindfulness Tool Kit. (R) 7.15 MY:24. (PG, R) 7.30 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.35 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 8.20 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 9.00 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.20 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.50 Rage. (PG, R) 10.50 Close.
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 2.00 ABC News Day. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Afternoon Briefing. 5.00 ABC News Hour. 6.00 ABC Evening News. 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 China Tonight. (R) 8.30 ABC News Tonight. 8.45 The Business. 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.25 7.30. (R) 10.00 The World. 11.00 The Drum. (R) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.15 The Business. (R) 12.30 Aust Story. (R) 1.00 ABC Late News. 1.15 7.30. (R) 1.50 Late Programs.
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. The Morning Show. (PG) Seven Morning News. MOVIE: Honor Student. (M, R) (2014) Josie Loren. The Real Manhunter: The Dream City Cinema Fire. (M, R) Revisits the Dream City Cinema fire. The Chase. Seven News At 4. The Chase Australia.
Home Shopping. (R) NBC Today. News and current affairs. Seven Early News. Sunrise. Takes a look at the latest news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
7TWO
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.30 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.30 5.30
Today. Today Extra. (PG) Morning News. The Block. (PG, R) Driving Test. (PG, R) A look at people learning to drive in Darwin. Pointless. (PG) Tipping Point. (PG) Afternoon News. Millionaire Hot Seat. WIN News.
Tipping Point. (PG, R) A Current Affair. (R) TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) Take Two. (R) News Early Edition. Today.
9GO!
6.00 Shopping. 7.00 My Greek Odyssey. (PG, R) 8.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 9.30 NBC Today. (R) 12.00 MOVIE: Proof Of Life. (M, R) (2000) 3.00 Creek To Coast. (R) 3.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R) 4.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. (PG, R) 8.30 Lewis. (M, R) 10.30 Without A Trace. (M, R) 12.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 1.30 The Real Seachange. (R) 2.00 Escape To The Country. (R) 3.00 Late Programs.
7MATE
10 BOLD
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Supergirl. (M) 1.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 3.30 The Nanny. (PG, R) 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 4.30 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 5.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 6.00 The Nanny. (PG, R) 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 7.00 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 7.30 MOVIE: Heat. (M, R) (1995) 11.00 World’s Worst Flights. (M, R) 12.00 State Of Affairs. (M) 1.00 Westside. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.50 Late Programs.
9GEM
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Weird, True And Freaky. (PG, R) 1.00 So You Think You’d Survive? (PG, R) 2.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 2.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG, R) 3.00 Storage Wars Canada. (PG, R) 3.30 Fish’n With Mates. (PG, R) 4.00 The Mike & Cole Show. (PG) 4.30 Down East Dickering. (PG) (New Series) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 7.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, R) 8.30 Aussie Salvage Squad. (PG) 10.30 Outback Truckers. (PG, R) 11.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.30 Pointless. (PG, R) 11.30 My Favorite Martian. (R) 12.00 Poirot. (M, R) 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.05 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 3.30 MOVIE: The House In Nightmare Park. (PG, R) (1973) 5.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. (PG, R) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 7.30 New Tricks. (M, R) 8.40 The Closer. (M, R) 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. (M, R) 10.40 Law & Order: Criminal Intent. (M) 11.40 Chicago Justice. (M, R) 12.35 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Flushed. (R) 9.00 Shopping. (R) 10.30 House Rules. (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: The Pagemaster. (R) (1994) 1.30 God Friended Me. (PG, R) 3.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R) 4.30 Futurama. (PG, R) 5.00 Simpsons. (PG, R) 6.00 Futurama. (PG, R) 6.30 Simpsons. (PG, R) 7.30 Family Guy. (M, R) 8.00 American Dad! (M, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Men In Black II. (PG, R) (2002) Tommy Lee Jones. 10.20 MOVIE: Grown Ups 2. (PG, R) (2013) 12.20 Late Programs.
6.00 Shopping. (PG, R) 7.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 8.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 8.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PG, R) 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 10.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 1.00 NCIS. (M, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 8.30 Soccer. FIFA World Cup Qualifier. AFC Third Round. Japan v Australia. From Saitama Stadium, Japan. 11.30 NCIS: New Orleans. (M, R) 12.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 1.00 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Gymnastics. FIG World Challenge Cup. Highlights. 1.30 Fubar: The Age Of The Computer. (M, R) 2.00 How To Rob A Bank. (M, R) 2.50 Munchies Guide To Berlin. (PG, R) 3.40 WorldWatch. 5.05 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. (PG, R) 5.30 Shortland Street. (PG) 6.00 RocKwiz. (M, R) 7.00 Jeopardy! (PG, R) 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) 8.30 Alone. (M) 9.40 Unknown Amazon. (PG, R) 10.30 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD
6.00 Stephen Colbert. (PG, R) 7.00 Seinfeld. (PG, R) 8.00 Becker. (PG, R) 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 11.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 12.00 A Million Little Things. (M) 1.00 Big Bang. (M, R) 1.30 Seinfeld. (PG, R) 3.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 Becker. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG) 7.00 Friends. (PG, R) 8.00 Big Bang. (M, R) 8.30 The Big Bang Theory. (PG, R) 9.30 Mom. (M, R) 11.35 Frasier. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
10 SHAKE
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 House Hunters. (R) 1.00 Selling The Big Easy. (R) 2.00 Renovate Or Rebuild. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R) 4.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 5.00 Boise Boys. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Escape To The Chateau. (R) 8.30 Restoration Man. (PG, R) 9.30 Building Off The Grid. (PG) 10.30 Beachfront Bargain Hunt. (R) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 France 24 English News First Edition. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.00 BBC News. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 America: News. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 The Story Of The Songs. (PG, R) 2.55 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 3.25 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 3.55 Remarkable Places To Eat. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
SBS VICELAND
10 PEACH
9LIFE
7FLIX
6.00 The Talk. (PG) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Bake With Anna. 1.30 Kitchen Hero. 2.00 Miguel’s Tropical Kitchen. 2.30 Great Aust. Cookbook. 3.00 Food Lover’s Guide. 3.30 Lidia’s Kitchen. 4.00 Secret Meat Business. 4.30 Cook Like An Italian. 5.00 Food Safari. 5.30 Cook And The Chef. 6.00 Bake With Anna. 6.30 Nigella Feasts. 7.00 The Cook Up. 7.30 Giada Entertains. 8.00 David Rocco’s Dolce Africa. 8.30 John Torode’s Korean Food Tour. (PG) 9.30 Greater Mekong. 10.00 The Cook Up. 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 Blaze And The Monster Machines. (R) 12.00 Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. (R) 1.00 PAW Patrol. (R) 3.00 Bunsen Is A Beast. (PG, R) 3.30 The Loud House. (R) 4.00 SpongeBob. (R) 4.30 Haunted Hathaways. 5.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 6.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 7.30 The Office. (PG, R) 8.30 MOVIE: 3 Days To Kill. (M, R) (2014) Kevin Costner. 10.50 Just Tattoo Of Us USA. (MA15+) 11.20 James Corden. (M) 12.20 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Pacific Lockdown: Sea Of Resilience. 2.00 Emptying The Tank. 2.10 Transcendent. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! (PG) 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. (PG) 5.00 Shortland Street. (PG) 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Toa Hunter Gatherer. (PG) 6.30 African American: Many Rivers To Cross. (PG) 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Living Black. (R) 9.00 42 To 1. (PG, R) 10.00 MOVIE: The Fade. (M) (2012) 11.00 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.
THE FUN PANEL
CROSSWORD TIME PUZZ102
PLAY PAGE SUDOKU GRID827
Baker’s Dozen Trivia Test 1. Maui 2. “The Golden Girls” 3. Greece, in 1896 4. Stevie Wonder was the first in 1974. 5. “Pulp Fiction” 6. Perry White 7. Henry Cavendish 8. Denmark 9. Not less than 5.5 ounces/155.9 grams, and no more than 5.75 ounces/163 grams. 10. Pigs SUDOKU EXTRA
11. “Owner of a Lonely Heart”, which reached No.14 in 1983. 12. FC Barcelona. 13. “Wake Up Little Susie”, by the Everly Brothers in 1957. The song was a hit, even though it had been banned by many radio stations for having suggestive lyrics. Simon and Garfunkel released a cover years later.
Find the Words solution 1185 How to get around GO FIGURE
SOLUTIONS & ANSWERS TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS #604 1 alcoholic drink, 2 joey, 3 Melbourne, 4 nonsense, 5 fruit, 6 the Speaker, 7 pear, 8 T.J. Smith, 9 NSW, 10 goat.
Build-a-Word solution 313 Astronaut, cameraman, wigmaker, labourer, shopgirl, concierge, goldsmith, herbalist. Snowflakes
HITORI
problem solved!
43
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
TV+
Wednesday October 13 ABC TV
PRIME7
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Don’t Stop The Music. (R) 11.00 The Repair Shop. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.35 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Escape From The City. (PG, R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (R)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) Presented by Tom Gleeson. 8.30 Gruen. (Series return) Wil Anderson and a team of experts analyse the advertising industry and consumerism. 9.05 Frayed. (M) Sammy is confronted by Lenny, who wants to return to Australia to support Abby. 9.50 Back. (MA15+, R) Andrew feels weighed down. 10.15 To Be Advised. 11.00 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.15 The Business. (R) The day’s business and finance news. 11.30 Four Corners. (R) Investigative journalism program.
6.00 6.30 7.00 7.30 8.45
PRIME7 News. Seven News. Home And Away. (PG) SAS Australia. (M) (Final) America’s Got Talent. (PG) (Series return) A variety of acts perform in front of a panel of celebrity judges, including Simon Cowell, Heidi Klum, Howie Mandel and Sofia Vergara, hoping to prove they have what it takes to become a star. Hosted by Terry Crews. 10.45 The Latest: Seven News. 11.15 Chicago Fire. (M) A series of suspicious fires sends 51 on a search for the cause. Casey continues down a troubling path. Mouch is looking to make his longawaited dream come true.
12.15 Media Watch. (PG, R) 12.30 Silent Witness. (MA15+, R) (Final) 1.35 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 2.20 To Be Advised. 3.00 Rage. (MA15+) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. Takes a look at the latest news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
ABC TV PLUS
2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00
Sunrise. The Morning Show. (PG) Seven Morning News. MOVIE: Mom Wars. (M) (2017) Jessica Blackmore. The Real Manhunter: The Murder Of Christopher Donovan. (M, R) Hosted by Colin Sutton. The Chase. (R) Seven News At 4. The Chase Australia.
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.10 Hey Duggee. (R) 6.20 Bluey. (R) 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 6.40 Andy’s Safari Adventures. (R) 7.00 Dino Dana. (R) 7.15 Odd Squad. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.00 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R) 8.30 Art Works. (PG) 9.00 ABC News Update. (PG) 10.00 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 10.50 Restoration Australia. 11.50 Louis Theroux: Miami Mega Jail. (Final) 12.50 30 Rock. 1.35 Reno 911! 1.55 Squinters. 2.20 News Update. 2.25 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME
6.00 Shopping. 7.00 My Greek Odyssey. (PG, R) 8.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 9.30 NBC Today. (R) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 MOVIE: This Is Where I Leave You. (M, R) (2014) 3.00 DVine Living. (PG, R) 3.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R) 4.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Vicar Of Dibley. (PG, R) 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. (M, R) 10.40 Bones. (M, R) 2.00 Shopping.
7MATE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 Holly Hobbie. (PG) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.00 Mikki Vs The World. (R) 6.25 BTN Newsbreak. 6.30 Mindful Earth. 6.45 Mimi On A Mission. (PG) 7.05 The Mindfulness Tool Kit. (R) 7.15 MY:24. (PG, R) 7.30 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.35 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 8.20 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.55 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.20 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.45 Rage. (PG, R) 10.45 Close.
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Hard Knocks. (M) (Series return) 1.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG, R) 2.00 7th Gear. (PG, R) 3.00 Storage Wars Canada. (PG, R) 3.30 Blokesworld. (PG, R) 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. (PG, R) 4.30 Down East Dickering. (PG) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 8.30 Fat Pizza: Back In Business. (MA15+) 9.10 MOVIE: Superbad. (MA15+, R) (2007) 11.40 MOVIE: Rush Hour. (M, R) (1998) 1.45 Late Programs.
7FLIX
ABC NEWS 6.00 News. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Press Club. 1.35 ABC News Day. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Afternoon Briefing. 5.00 ABC News Hour. 6.00 ABC Evening News. 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC News Tonight. 8.45 The Business. 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 7.30. (R) 10.00 The World. 11.00 The Drum. (R) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.15 The Business. (R) 12.30 China Tonight. (R) 1.00 ABC Late News. 1.15 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Flushed. (R) 9.00 Shopping. (R) 10.30 House Rules. (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: Demolition Man. (M, R) (1993) 2.25 God Friended Me. (PG, R) 3.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R) 4.30 Futurama. (PG, R) 5.00 Simpsons. (PG, R) 6.00 Futurama. (PG, R) 6.30 American Dad! (PG, R) 7.00 Simpsons. (PG, R) 7.30 Family Guy. (M, R) 8.00 American Dad! (M, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Men In Black III. (M, R) (2012) Will Smith. 10.40 MOVIE: Fire Down Below. (M, R) (1997) 12.50 Late Programs.
NINE 6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.00
TEN
Today. Today Extra. (PG) Morning News. The Block. (PG, R) Desperate Housewives. (M, R) Susan starts a new job. Pointless. (PG) Tipping Point. (PG) Afternoon News. Millionaire Hot Seat. WIN News.
Dubbo’s TV Guide
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
6.00 France 24 English News First Edition. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.00 BBC News. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Dateline. (R) 2.30 Insight. (R) 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.00 Remarkable Places To Eat. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PG) The contestants realise Kirsty and Jesse’s house could be a huge threat on auction day. 8.40 Love Island Australia. (M) The adventurous singles continue their quest to find a romantic match in northern NSW. 9.40 Botched. (MA15+) A Southern belle who wants to look like Dolly Parton hopes to change the shape of her breasts. 10.40 Nine News Late. Takes a look at the latest news and events from Australia and around the world. 11.10 Confessions Of A Serial Killer With Piers Morgan: Bernard Giles. (M, R) Piers Morgan interviews Bernard Giles, who is serving life in prison for killing five female hitchhikers.
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 The Graham Norton Show. Graham Norton chats with Dave Grohl, Kadeena Cox, Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Greg Davies. Music from Jack Savoretti and Nile Rodgers, who perform Who’s Hurting Who, from Jack’s album. 8.30 Bull. (Series return) After Bull’s daughter is kidnapped by someone he suspects is connected to his past, he and the TAC team must call on all their collective experience to find her. 11.30 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics.
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Jennifer Byrne. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Australia’s Health Revolution. (M) Part 1 of 3. Dr Michael Mosley and Ray Kelly help eight Australians reverse their type 2 diabetes. 8.35 24 Hours In Emergency: Into The Light. (M) An 11-year-old is rushed to St George’s after being struck by a car and hitting the windscreen. A 60-year-old woman suffers a serious ankle fracture after tripping over her cat and falling down the stairs. 9.30 Miniseries: New Gold Mountain. (M) Part 1 of 4. A Chinese headman stumbles across a valuable new gold seam on the Victorian goldfields. 10.35 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Atlantic Crossing. (PG) Märtha is placed under enormous pressure.
12.05 Pearson. (M) 1.00 A Current Affair. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
12.05 The Killing. (M, R) Sarah finds the chaplain. 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (M, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
2.00 3.00 4.00 4.30 5.30
9GO!
10 BOLD
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Supergirl. (M) 1.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 3.30 The Nanny. (PG, R) 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 4.30 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 5.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 6.00 The Nanny. (PG, R) 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 7.00 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 7.30 MOVIE: War Of The Worlds. (M, R) (2005) 9.45 MOVIE: Super 8. (M, R) (2011) 12.00 State Of Affairs. (MA15+) 1.00 Westside. (MA15+, R) 2.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.50 Late Programs.
9GEM 6.00 TV Shop. (R) 7.00 Creflo. (PG) 7.30 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Pointless. (PG, R) 11.30 My Favorite Martian. (R) 12.00 New Tricks. (M, R) 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.05 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 3.30 MOVIE: The Pure Hell Of St Trinian’s. (R) (1960) 5.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. (PG, R) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 7.30 As Time Goes By. (R) 8.50 Midsomer Murders. (M, R) 10.50 Aaron Hernandez Uncovered. (M, R) 12.30 Late Programs.
9LIFE 6.00 Morning Programs. 11.30 Beachfront Bargain Hunt. (R) 12.30 Building Off The Grid. (PG, R) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 2.00 Restoration Man. (PG, R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R) 4.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 5.00 Escape To The Chateau. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 Masters Of Flip. (R) 8.30 Home Town. (R) 9.30 Beachfront Bargain Hunt: Renovation. (R) 10.30 Island Life. 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 8.00 Destination Dessert. (R) 8.30 Snap Happy. (R) 9.00 One Strange Rock. (PG, R) 10.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 1.00 NCIS. (M, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. (M, R) 11.15 SEAL Team. (M, R) 12.10 Shopping. (PG, R) 1.40 Infomercials. (PG, R) 2.10 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 16. Turkish Grand Prix. Highlights. 3.10 Late Programs.
10 PEACH 6.00 Morning Programs. 8.00 Becker. (PG, R) 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 11.00 Friends. (PG, R) 11.30 Friends. (R) 12.00 A Million Little Things. (M) 1.00 2 Broke Girls. (M, R) 2.00 Mom. (M, R) 3.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 Becker. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG) 7.00 Friends. (PG, R) 8.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 8.55 The Big Bang Theory. (M, R) 9.20 2 Broke Girls. (M, R) 11.35 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
10 SHAKE 6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Butterbean’s Cafe. 10.30 Shimmer & Shine. (R) 11.00 Blaze And The Monster Machines. (R) 12.00 Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. (R) 1.00 PAW Patrol. (R) 3.00 Bunsen Is A Beast. (PG, R) 3.30 The Loud House. (R) 4.00 SpongeBob. (R) 4.30 Haunted Hathaways. 5.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 6.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 7.30 The Office. (PG, R) 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.30 Catfish: The TV Show. (M) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND 6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Counter Space. (PG) 1.30 Fubar: The Age Of The Computer. (M) 1.55 Rise Up. (M) 2.45 Munchies Guide To Bohemia. (PG) 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. (PG) 5.30 Shortland Street. (PG) 6.00 RocKwiz. (PG, R) 7.00 Jeopardy! (PG, R) 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) 8.30 MOVIE: Crusaders: Ex Jehovah’s Witnesses Speak. (MA15+) (2021) 10.05 Australia Uncovered: The Department. (MA15+, R) 11.45 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Bake With Anna. 1.30 Kitchen Hero. 2.00 Miguel’s Tropical Kitchen. 2.30 Great Aust. Cookbook. 3.00 Food Lover’s Guide. 3.30 Lidia’s Kitchen. 4.00 Secret Meat Business. 4.30 Cook Like An Italian. 5.00 Food Safari. 5.30 Cook And The Chef. 6.00 Bake With Anna. (PG) 6.30 Nigella Feasts. 7.00 The Cook Up. (PG) 7.30 License To Grill. (PG) 8.30 Tom Kerridge’s Barbeque. (PG) 9.00 Food Safari Fire. (R) 9.30 Greater Mekong. 10.00 The Cook Up. (PG) 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.30 The Dream Of Love. 2.00 Twelve Canoes. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Toa Hunter Gatherer. 6.30 Foreign Flavours. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Welcome To Country. (PG) 7.25 News. 7.35 The Casketeers. (M) 8.05 Wellington Paranormal. (M) 8.35 Living Black. 9.05 Red Earth Uncovered. (PG) 9.35 News. 9.45 Skindigenous. (PG) 10.45 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.
Pegasus Conveyancing & Property Law Your stress free conveyancing solution www.pegasusconveyancing.com.au
We specialise in helping people buying & selling: House & Land packages • Investment Properties Residential Land • Vacant Land • Industrial/Commercial Premises • Farm/Lifestyle Blocks
Contact Melissa: 0419 950 180 PegasusConveyancing@gmail.com MASGMA Pty Ltd Lic No 05014344
Support our local shops The local businesses that advertise in Dubbo Photo News help make this paper free to pick up and enjoy each week. We encourage you to support them with your shopping dollars.
www.colourcopyshop.com.au
6884 5577 | 270 Macquarie Street, Dubbo
44
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
TV+
Thursday October 14 ABC TV
PRIME7
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Australian Story. (R) 10.30 The Greek Islands With Julia Bradbury. (R) 11.00 Harry Seidler: Modernist. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 How Extra. (PG) 2.00 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.10 Escape From The City. (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00
NINE
Sunrise. The Morning Show. (PG) Seven Morning News. MOVIE: Stranger At The Door. (M, R) (2004) Kochie’s Business Builders. Border Security: America’s Frontline. (PG, R) The Chase. (R) Seven News At 4. The Chase Australia.
6.00 9.00 11.30 12.00 1.00
6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 6.55 Sammy J. (PG) Presented by Sammy J. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) A group of East Timorese returns home. 8.30 Q+A. Interactive public affairs program featuring a panel of experts and commentators answering questions. 9.35 Secrets Of The Museum: Bacchus Vase/Minton. (PG) A Victorian-era vase gets a chance to shine. 10.25 You Can’t Ask That: Wheelchair Users. (M, R) An insight into people’s lives. 10.40 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 10.55 The Business. (R) 11.15 Big Weather (And How To Survive It) Summer Is Coming. (R)
6.00 6.30 7.00 7.30
PRIME7 News. Seven News. Home And Away. (PG) Cricket. Women’s Big Bash League. Game 1. Sydney Sixers v Melbourne Stars. From Blundstone Arena, Hobart. 10.30 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 To Be Advised.
6.00 7.00 7.30 8.30
12.10 Miniseries: Capital. (M, R) 12.55 Miniseries: Mrs Wilson. (M, R) 1.55 The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco. (M, R) (Final) 2.40 Rage. (MA15+) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)
12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. Takes a look at the latest news, sport and weather, with business and finance updates.
ABC TV PLUS
2.00 2.30 3.00 4.00 5.00
7TWO
6.00 Children’s Programs. 6.10 Hey Duggee. (R) 6.20 Bluey. (R) 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 6.40 Andy’s Safari Adventures. (R) 7.00 Dino Dana. (R) 7.15 Odd Squad. (R) 7.30 Spicks And Specks. (PG, R) 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. (PG) 9.10 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 9.40 Gruen. (R) 10.15 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 11.00 You Can’t Ask That. 11.35 Life That Glows. 12.35 MOVIE: The Trip To Spain. (2017) 2.15 30 Rock. 3.00 Reno 911! 3.25 Squinters. 3.50 Close. 5.00 Children’s Programs.
ABC ME
6.00 Shopping. 7.00 My Greek Odyssey. (PG, R) 8.00 Harry’s Practice. (R) 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 9.30 NBC Today. (R) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 MOVIE: Terminal Velocity. (M, R) (1994) 3.00 Weekender. 3.30 Medical Emergency. (PG, R) 4.30 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 5.30 Escape To The Country. (R) 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Home And Away. (PG) 8.30 Father Brown. (M, R) 9.30 Inspector Morse. (M, R) 11.50 Murdoch Mysteries. (M, R) 12.50 M*A*S*H. (PG, R) 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 11.00 A Football Life. (PG, R) 12.00 Weird, True And Freaky. (PG, R) 1.00 So You Think You’d Survive? (PG, R) 2.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 2.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG, R) 3.00 Storage Wars Canada. (PG, R) 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. (PG, R) 4.30 Down East Dickering. (PG) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. (PG) 6.00 American Pickers. (PG, R) 7.00 Pawn Stars. (PG, R) 7.30 MOVIE: True Lies. (M, R) (1994) 10.25 MOVIE: Soldier. (MA15+, R) (1998) 12.30 Late Programs.
6.00 News. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 2.00 ABC News Day. 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Afternoon Briefing. 5.00 ABC News Hour. 6.00 ABC Evening News. 7.00 ABC National News. 8.00 ABC News Tonight. 8.45 The Business. 9.00 ABC Nightly News. 9.30 7.30. (R) 10.00 The World. 11.00 The Drum. (R) 12.00 ABC Late News. 12.15 The Business. (R) 12.30 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 1.00 ABC Late News. 1.15 7.30. (R) 1.45 The Beautiful Bush. (R) 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 France 24 English News First Edition. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.00 BBC News. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 America: News. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 The Story Of The Songs. (M, R) 2.55 Where Are You Really From? (PG, R) 3.25 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 3.55 Remarkable Places To Eat. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)
Nine News. A Current Affair. To Be Advised. Love Island Australia. (M) The adventurous singles continue their quest to find a romantic match in northern NSW. 9.30 Love Island Australia Afterparty. (MA15+) (New Series) Abbie Chatfield takes a look at the latest gossip, behindthe-scenes stories and interviews. 10.00 Nine News Late. Takes a look at the latest news and events from Australia and around the world. 10.30 Reported Missing: Joshua And Katie. (M, R) Twelve-year-old Joshua disappears into the night after a row, and 13-year-old Katie walks out of home, leaving a suicide note. 11.45 The Fix. (M, R) Maya convinces an asset to wear a wire.
6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Ambulance Australia. (M, R) Good friends Mosh and Karen are called to a 35-week pregnant woman who hasn’t felt her baby move in 10 hours. 8.30 Gogglebox. 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 To Be Advised. 10.30 Blue Bloods. Tension escalates between Frank and Mayor Chase after Frank makes a public arrest that goes viral. 11.30 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics.
6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) The semifinalists step into the spotlight for their chance to earn a place in the Grand Final. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Coastal Devon & Cornwall With Michael Portillo. (New Series) Michael Portillo embarks on a pilgrimage of southwest England’s coast, travelling through Devon and Cornwall. 8.35 Back To The Titanic. (PG) Follows experts as they revisit the wreck of the RMS Titanic for the first time in almost 15 years. 9.30 Miniseries: New Gold Mountain. (MA15+) Part 2 of 4. Shing finds himself facing sudden dangers on two fronts, from both European and Chinese. 10.35 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Gomorrah. (MA15+, R) A mobster seeks revenge.
12.35 1.30 2.30 3.00 5.00 5.30
12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG) 3.30 Home Shopping. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.
12.05 Mr Mercedes. (MA15+) 2.00 The Name Of The Rose. (M, R) 3.55 Huang’s World. (M, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (PG, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
2.00 3.00 4.00 4.30 5.30
Tipping Point. (PG, R) TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) Global Shop. (R) TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) News Early Edition. Today.
10 BOLD
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Supergirl. (M) 1.00 Vanderpump Rules. (M, R) 3.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 3.30 The Nanny. (PG, R) 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 4.30 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 5.00 Malcolm. (PG, R) 6.00 The Nanny. (PG, R) 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. (PG, R) 7.00 That ’70s Show. (PG, R) 7.30 Survivor 41. (PG) 8.30 MOVIE: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. (M, R) (2014) 11.00 World’s Worst Flights. (M, R) 12.00 State Of Affairs. (MA15+, R) 1.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Shopping. (PG, R) 6.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. (R) 8.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 10.00 JAG. (PG, R) 12.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. (M, R) 1.00 NCIS. (M, R) 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. (PG, R) 5.00 JAG. (PG, R) 7.00 Bondi Rescue. (PG, R) 7.30 NCIS. (M, R) 8.30 Hawaii Five-0. (M, R) 10.30 SEAL Team. (MA15+) 11.30 MacGyver. (M, R) 12.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 1.00 Shopping. (PG, R) 2.00 Sherlock Holmes: Elementary. (M, R) 3.00 Late Programs.
10 PEACH
6.00 TV Shop. (R) 7.00 Creflo. (PG) 7.30 TV Shop. (R) 10.30 Pointless. (PG, R) 11.30 My Favorite Martian. (R) 12.00 As Time Goes By. (R) 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. (M) 2.05 The Young And The Restless. (PG) 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 3.30 MOVIE: Against The Wind. (PG, R) (1948) 5.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. (PG, R) 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 7.30 Death In Paradise. (M, R) 8.40 MOVIE: Chocolat. (M, R) (2000) Juliette Binoche. 11.10 Law & Order. (M, R) 12.05 Late Programs.
9LIFE
6.00 Match It. (R) 7.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. (R) 8.00 Flushed. (R) 9.00 Shopping. (R) 10.30 House Rules. (PG, R) 12.00 MOVIE: Jonah Hex. (M, R) (2010) 1.35 God Friended Me. (PG, R) 3.30 How I Met Your Mother. (PG, R) 4.30 Futurama. (PG, R) 5.00 American Dad! (PG, R) 5.30 Simpsons. (PG, R) 6.00 Futurama. (PG, R) 6.30 American Dad! (PG, R) 7.00 Simpsons. (PG, R) 7.30 To Be Advised. 9.55 MOVIE: The Bounty Hunter. (M, R) (2010) 12.20 Late Programs.
SBS
6.00 The Talk. (PG) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.
9GEM
7FLIX
ABC NEWS
Today. Today Extra. (PG) Morning News. The Block. (PG, R) Desperate Housewives. (M, R) Bree discovers Orson’s secret. Pointless. (PG) Tipping Point. (PG) Afternoon News. Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) WIN News.
9GO!
7MATE
6.00 Children’s Programs. 4.00 The Dengineers. (R) 4.30 Holly Hobbie. (PG) 4.55 Mystic. (PG) 5.25 Miraculous. (R) 5.50 Total DramaRama. (R) 6.00 Mikki Vs The World. (R) 6.25 BTN Newsbreak. 6.30 Mindful Earth. 6.45 Mimi On A Mission. (PG) 7.10 The Mindfulness Tool Kit. (R) 7.15 MY:24. (PG, R) 7.30 Shaun The Sheep. (R) 7.35 Doctor Who. (PG, R) 8.20 TMNT. (PG, R) 8.45 Danger Mouse. (R) 8.55 The Fairly Odd Parents. (R) 9.20 Find Me In Paris. (R) 9.45 Rage. (PG, R) 10.50 Close.
TEN
Dubbo’s TV Guide
6.00 Morning Programs. 9.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 10.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 11.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 12.00 A Million Little Things. (M) 1.00 2 Broke Girls. (M, R) 2.00 Mom. (M, R) 3.00 King Of Queens. (PG, R) 4.00 Becker. (PG, R) 5.00 Frasier. (PG, R) 6.00 Friends. (PG, R) 6.30 Neighbours. (PG) 7.00 Friends. (PG, R) 8.00 Big Bang. (PG, R) 8.30 The Big Bang Theory. (M, R) 9.00 The Big Bang Theory. (PG, R) 9.30 The Unicorn. (PG) 10.00 Seinfeld. (PG, R) 11.30 The Conners. (PG, R) 12.00 Late Programs.
10 SHAKE
6.00 Morning Programs. 12.00 Home Town. (R) 1.00 Good Food Kitchen. (R) 1.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 2.00 Island Life. (R) 3.00 The Block: Fans V Faves. (PG, R) 4.00 Log Cabin Living. (R) 4.30 Garage Gold. (PG, R) 5.00 Beachfront Bargain Hunt: Renovation. (R) 6.00 House Hunters Int. (R) 7.00 House Hunters. (R) 7.30 House Hunters Int. 8.30 Fixer Upper. (PG, R) 9.30 Bargain Mansions. (R) 10.30 Flip Or Flop. (R) 11.30 House Hunters Int. (R) 12.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Morning Programs. 10.00 Butterbean’s Cafe. 10.30 Shimmer & Shine. (R) 11.00 Blaze And The Monster Machines. (R) 12.00 Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. (R) 1.00 PAW Patrol. (R) 3.00 Bunsen Is A Beast. (PG, R) 3.30 The Loud House. (R) 4.00 SpongeBob. (R) 4.30 Haunted Hathaways. 5.00 Game Shakers. (R) 5.30 iCarly. (PG, R) 6.00 The Middle. (PG, R) 7.30 The Office. (PG, R) 8.30 South Park. (MA15+, R) 10.30 BoJack Horseman. (M, R) 11.30 James Corden. (M) 12.30 Late Programs.
SBS VICELAND 6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Figure Skating. ISU Grand Prix. Replay. 2.05 Fubar: The Age Of The Computer. (M, R) 2.35 What’s The Catch With Matthew Evans. (PG, R) 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. (PG, R) 5.30 Shortland Street. (PG) 6.00 RocKwiz. (PG, R) 7.00 Jeopardy! (PG, R) 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (M, R) 8.30 Curse Of Oak Island. (M) 10.00 Dave Gorman: Modern Life Is Goodish. (M) 10.55 The Feed. (R) 11.25 News. 11.50 Late Programs.
SBS FOOD 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Bake With Anna. 1.30 Kitchen Hero Feast. 2.00 Miguel’s Tropical Kitchen. 2.30 Great Aust. Cookbook. 3.00 Food Lover’s Guide. 3.30 Lidia’s Kitchen. 4.00 Secret Meat Business. 4.30 Cook Like An Italian. 5.00 Food Safari. 5.30 Cook And The Chef. 6.00 Bake With Anna. 6.30 Nigella Feasts. 7.00 The Cook Up. 7.30 Our Food, Our Family. 8.00 India Unplated. 8.30 Malaysia In Australia. 9.00 Barefoot Contessa. 9.30 Greater Mekong. 10.00 The Cook Up. 10.30 Late Programs.
NITV 6.00 Morning Programs. 1.00 Skindigenous. 2.00 Wild Kai Legends. 2.30 Songs From The Inside. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. (PG) 5.00 Shortland Street. (PG) 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Pete & Pio’s Kai Safari. (PG) 6.30 Foreign Flavours. (PG) 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. (PG) 7.20 News. 7.30 Going Places. (R) 8.30 MOVIE: Bedevil. (PG, R) (1993) 10.05 The Point. 10.35 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.
STRANGE BUT TRUE z The Chocolate River in the “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” was real! The production used 150,000 gallons of water, cream and chocolate. But the ingredients spoiled and smelled really bad when the movie ended. z Studies have shown that playing Tetris can curb sex, drug and food cravings. z C.S. Lewis coined the term “verbicide” to denote the killing of a word or distortion of its original meaning. z A Vietnamese man was hospitalised after drinking too much methanol. Doctors transfused 15 cans of beer into his body to revive him. The liver breaks down ethanol before methanol, which gave doctors more time to do dialysis to remove the methanol from his
ODDS, ENDS & INSPIRATION system. z The University of Oxford is older than the Aztec Empire. z Santa Claus was issued a pilot’s license from the U.S. government in 1927, along with airway maps and a promise to keep the runway lights on. z Only official members of federally accepted Native American tribes may legally possess or collect eagle feathers. z During a game, American baseball legend Babe Ruth would place a cabbage leaf under his cap to keep cool under the sun, replacing it every inning or two. z Instead of kissing his bride, Edward II of England sealed his wedding vows with a smooch to his lover, Piers Gaveston, 1st Earl of Cornwall. z A house cat could beat superstar runner Usain Bolt in the 200-metre dash.
NOW HERE’S A TIP z Keep the yolks in hard-boiled eggs from crumbling by wetting your knife between slices. z “Save plastic bags that cannot be recycled, and use them to collect food scraps that cannot be composted or flushed.” – B.M. z “I use double-stick tape to hang lighter items on my walls, since it does not leave a hole, and I am a renter. You also can use it to reduce noise from vibrations. For instance, I used it in my car to keep the carpet lying flat in the boot.” – J.T. z “To soften butter without melting it, warm a bowl that is bigger than the butter stick and invert it over the butter on a plate. It’s nice before a meal because it makes a hard stick of butter easier to spread on bread rolls, but not so soft that you use too much.” – T.G. z “To keep our carpets from giving
us static shock, we fill a water spray bottle with one part laundry softener and four parts water. Give the air and carpet a spritz, and it kills the zaps.” – A.O. z “Hard-water stains in the toilet are no match for denture tablets. Simply drop one in the toilet and let sit overnight. A quick scrub and a flush in the morning should do it.” – P.S. z Wrap the lint from your dryer in six inches of wax paper. Roll it up and squish both ends. Now you have a perfect fire-starter!” – M.K. z Here’s a great recipe for an icy treat: Freeze orange juice or apple juice in ice trays. Throw a handful in the blender for a fruit slush that can’t be beat on a hot day. z “Dried out glue? Add a little vinegar and let it set a few days.” – C.J. z Send your tips to now-heres-atip@dubbophotonews.com.au
...inspiring locals!
45
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
SPORT
Send your Sport news to geoff.mann@dubbophotonews.com.au
Sports editor
Sports photography
GEOFF MANN
MEL POCKNALL
Jess to be mentored by “Our Dawn”
Jessie Rice-Ward is at much at home in the saddle as most people her age are sitting on the lounge watching TV. She's now transitioned into an 'elite' status in her chosen sport, with Aussie swimming legend Dawn Fraser becoming her mentor. PHOTO: AUSTRALIAN JUMPING
By GEOFF MANN EQUESTRIAN jumping athlete Jessie Rice-Ward has been named an Australia Hall of Fame Scholarship (SAHOF) and Mentoring Recipient for 2022. Australian sporting legend Dawn Fraser selected the young show jumper from six athletes from the sports of Sailing, Athletics, Cycling, Wakeboarding and Skiing. “Jess is an equestrian and when I saw that she was selected, I knew I wanted to be her Mentor and be paired with her. I love horses and I’m looking forward to supporting this young champion as she strives to be the very best, she can be.” The soon-to-be 20-year-old who grew up in the central west, inherited her mother’s passion for horses. “She and her brother were both riding before they could walk,” mum Rebecca laughed. Jess’s pathway has been paved on showgrounds around the na-
tion. She has collected a treasure trove of ribbons and trophies including from the Royal Easter Show and National titles. The highly focussed jumper has represented Australia on eight occasions, five times internationally. After completing her HSC she attended university pursuing a career in interior design but says her horses and the equestrian world just kept calling her. “I am so lucky to have a family who shares my passion, so we all decided to make it a full-time business. I could not be happier”. “I’m immensely honoured to be recognised by SAHOF and equally grateful for the opportunities the Scholarship & Mentoring Program will give me. Equestrian disciplines are extremely technical and challenging sports, both physically and mentally and I know the road ahead will take plenty of hard work,” she said. Jess told me she has already spoken with Dawn but will not have the chance to meet her
in person because the sporting icon is currently locked down in Queensland. “Having the chance to have Dawn as my mentor will really benefit my career. I am so privileged to have her in my corner because she will not only encourage me in my training but help build my mental toughness. That can often be the most difficult to manage for all athletes,” Jess says. The 2016 Dubbo Junior Sportsperson is recognised as one of the sports rising stars. This prestigious award is another step in her journey towards senior Australian selection. Jessie and her mum moved to the Hawkesbury region to complete high school and open opportunities in her chosen field. Her brother and dad commuted for the past couple of years but recently the family has purchased a farm built around their love of thoroughbreds. Equestrian Australia CEO, Darren Gocher put the Award into
context. “It is a tremendous honour for Jess to be among the select group of young athletes who will receive a Tier 1 Sport Australia Hall of Fame Scholarship in 2022. The fact that Jess is just the third equestrian athlete to receive a SAHOF Scholarship since the program’s inception adds to the significance of the recognition, as does her pairing with one of our nations’ greatest sporting legends, Dawn Fraser, as her Mentor. “Jessie has firmly established herself as a rising star of equestrian sport having won numerous national and international accolades, including Victorian State Young Rider Champion for 2021 and being named Australian Junior Showjumping Champion on two consecutive occasions. “We are grateful to the SAHOF for providing Jessie with such a wonderful opportunity as she pursues her dream of representing Australia at the highest level of equestrian sport, and we look
forward to following her successful career.” The SAHOF Scholarship and Mentoring Program Tier 1 recipients each receives one-on-one personal mentoring from a Sport Australia Hall of Fame Member, $10,000 sporting expense grant and an invitation to attend an event, where they will be formally recognised. They are provided with unrivalled mentoring access and support from six of Australia’s most successful sporting greats, who will volunteer their time over 14 months. The mentors include three-time Olympic swimming gold medallist Stephanie Rice and Wallaby legend John Eales AM. Jess thanked all those who have been involved in her journey so far. “I can never repay them for their encouragement and support and the skills they have taught me. The friendships I have made through many shows will be with me for life.”
Hockey determined to bookend season By GEOFF MANN TRACEY Hardie-Jones and her Dubbo Hockey team are on a mission. "We want to finish what we started," the Australian Masters champion smiled. "This year we have made some terrific progress across the ages and grades so it would be a shame if we didn't bring it to a conclusion." Tracey says the Hockey Asso-
ciation will be innovative starting later this month, utilising mid-week time slots and daylight savings to finish off the last four weeks. “We are planning to restart around 24th October and run our grand finals on the 20th of November. We'll play 15-minute quarters to offset the expected hot temperatures and hold a Gala Weekend for Men, Women and Juniors on the 30th of October." Tracey is also excited about the
prospect of hosting the Western Masters on November 14. "The semis are in Parkes the previous Sunday so hopefully we will maintain our spot at the top of the ladder and run out on our own turf," Tracey said. Another wonderful piece of news is that Pioneer Park will host the annual Masters in the Bush Tournament in March. "That attracts players and families from all over the state so it is a great pro-motion for our city."
Tracey Hardie-Jones (right) pushing through the defence in one of the Women’s Masters match in March this year. PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/MEL POCKNALL/FILE
“I did it SPORT for Sam”
46
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
By GEOFF MANN
Matt Burton and Sam Fraser after St John’s won the 16s. PHOTO: CONTRIBUTED BY LISA BURTON
The Heavenly Fishpond was pumping! ST Peter and his mates must have wondered what had hit them when a mob of blokes in green and white rocked up on Sunday night. Sherro, TC and Mick Wilson had been hovering all day like Panthers on the prowl and when Coonabarabran-raised referee Gerard Sutton blew time in Brisbane, the penny dropped for the old Saint! “Burto and Yeoy are on a rabbit hunt,” they explained. “These blokes come from Dubbo and they can play rugby league.” The old blokes, Ron Sheridan, Tony Kelly and Mick Wilson had been some of the founding fathers of the St John’s Junior Rugby League Football Club that was formed from the original De La Salle. They all played for Dubbo CYMS and sadly, all have left this life in recent months. Matt Burton and Isaah Yeo didn’t let them down. They tackled everything that moved, took the ball up with purpose and in Burto’s case, punished the Rabbitohs’ defence, planting the ball exultantly to open the scoring. Like Dean Pay and Andrew Ryan before them, the local lads had earned their premiership rings and the right to heave the Provan Summons Trophy on a historic night at Suncorp Stadium.
MATT Burton has an extra motivation in his heart every time he runs onto the field – his best mate, Sam Fraser. When Sam drowned on a Year 10 post-school swim in the Macquarie, the heart-broken lifelong friend and St Johns teammate, Burto vowed that he would play every game to honour his mate. “I think Matt’s very lucky to have a guardian angel looking down on him when he plays footy and Sam’d be up there cheering and partying hard for him!”, mum Lisa said. “Sam’s been with Matt all the way. We reckon he was up there with the other St Johns and CYMS legends blowing Adam Reynolds conversion attempt wide,” she laughed cheekily. The bond was spoken about on the live coverage on ABC, Nine and Fox Sports when Burto crossed for the first try. “We love hearing Sam’s name. He was always part of Matt’s life and his parents and siblings are considered our family members as well. Matt’s always talking about him,” Lisa added. In fact, Matt used to wear Sam’s headgear although he has a new one these days. Lisa says he didn’t want to damage it, so it remains a constant reminder of the young bloke with whom her son had spent all his growing up
days on the cricket or football fields. “Sam is always with him. Matt says he makes him play hard all the time”. The proud mother and her daughters and extended families donned their Panthers colours and made it clear who they were shouting for on Sunday night. There were plenty around the west who were with them but arguably, just as many in red and green wearing Bunnies gear. Lisa was humbled by her son’s rise to the top but not really surprised. She knew how hard he had worked to get there. “I think we always expected Matt to do good things but to be in an NRL grand final at 21, you know, you’ve gotta pinch yourself really.” Matt is off to the Bulldogs next year to a club where former Dubbo juniors Dean Pay and Andrew Ryan had made their mark and will be joined by Panthers teammate Brent Naden from Wellington. The pair are looking forward to reuniting with former Penrith mentor Trent Barrett. “Can Matt make it back-to-back titles, albeit in Blue and White? “Absolutely!” Lisa and the entire family are counting down the days until Matt arrives home. “We haven’t seen him for months so it will be party time when he gets back to Dubbo”.
Isaah has earned respect “HE was just a skinny little fella when he first pulled on his boots,” parents Amy and Justin Yeo laughed. “Now he is a mountain of a man who has led the Panthers to a gripping 1412 NRL premiership and played lock for the Blues in a historic State of Origin win.” Isaah Yeo followed the path of Andrew Ryan, sharing the stage with co-captain Nathan Cleary to launch the Provan Summons Trophy above their heads. “We are very proud of what he has achieved. He set goals, he worked hard, he fought his way through serious injuries and now he has a premiership ring.” More than anything else, Isaah’s mum and dad are warmed by the respect he has earned on and off the field. “When people like Royce Simmons, John Farragher, Phil Gould, Trent Barrett and Ivan Cleary speak about Isaah, they are glowing in his treatment of others. They see him as a leader, as someone who doesn’t ask others to do what he is not prepared to do. We have heard so many people speak about what a wonderful, gentle man he is and that makes us both tear up,” Amy said. Isaah was slightly more effusive in his post-match comments compared to former St Johns junior, Andy ‘Bobcat’ Ryan. “We wanted this. When others wrote us off after we lost in week one of the finals they didn’t count on our determination to prove them wrong. This
Cleary and Yeo 2021; Price and Andrew Ryan 2004. PHOTO: CONTRIBUTED BY MATT LOGUE
week everyone’s been talking about our injuries and how they had disrupted our training but we didn’t care. That’s just been a part of our life for the past couple of months. We knew we could do it; we believed in ourselves and we did.” In 2004, Bobcat was full of words but
couldn’t actually find them: “Oh I can’t believe it, it’s unreal. I just can’t believe what’s just happened. It’s unbelievable,” he sputtered as he came to grips with having led Canterbury to the premiership. Two great blokes who have done Dubbo proud.
BIGGEST SALE!
Dubbo Photo News October 7-13, 2021
BEAUTY T ’S $19.00 OFF RRP†
$
45%
2199
Support general health and wellbeing
$42.51 OFF RRP†
4499
$
Supports calcium absorption in bones
$13.00 OFF RRP†
$
40%
45%
ORRFPF
ORRFPF
ORRFPF
Blackmores Total Calcium Magnesium + D3 200 Tablets
Blackmores Lyprinol 100 Capsules
$
35%
1599
$
1799
$
35%
ORRFPF
2999
$
40%
Blackmores Super Magnesium+ 100 Tablets
Blackmores Bio Magnesium 200 Tablets
$8.00 OFF EDLP
$
$
24
99
ɽ
4699
Supports healthy ealthy stress response in the body
Helps maintain healthy cholesterol & blood lipids
Blackmores Executive B Stress Formula 250 Tablets
Blackmores Vitamin E 1000 IU 100 Capsules
Supports energy production
Supports energy levels
Blackmores Mega B Complex 200 Tablets
$15.00 OFF RRP†
3999
3999
ORRFPF
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
$22.00 OFF RRP†
$
$32.50 OFF RRP†
ɽ
OFF
ORRFPF
3499
Relieves symptoms of mild arthritis
upports muscle Supports health
25%
35%
Blackmores Curcumin One-A-Day 30 Capsules
$
Blackmores Glucosamine Sulfate 1500 One-A-Day 180 Tablets
$10.00 OFF EDLP
Supports energy levels
ORRFPF
1699
Support general health and wellbeing
$11.51 OFF RRP†
Relieves inflammation
$35.00 OFF RRP†
Blackmores Vitamin D3 1000 IU 200 Capsules
$10.00 OFF RRP†
47
$5.00 OFF EDLP
$
$23.00 OFF RRP†
ɽ
3999
$
35%
Relieves symptoms of mild arthritis
40%
ORRFPF
3399
ORRFPF
Blackmores Multivitamin For Men, Women 150 Tablets or 50+ 150 Capsules
Blackmores Omega Triple Super Strength Fish Oil 150 Capsules
$30.01 OFF RRP†
$
$22.01 OFF RRP†
3699
$
Maintains healthy eyesight
2399
$
Reduces the severity and duration of 45% common cold symptoms
40%
ORRFPF
40%
ORRFPF
Blackmores Bio C 1000 150 Tablets
Blackmores Macu-Vision Plus 150 Tablets
$29.01 OFF RRP†
$
3699
$
1299
$
35%
45%
ORRFPF
Blackmores Odourless Fish Oil 1000 500 Capsules
$20.51 OFF RRP†
3749
$
2199
Supports skin health
Supports healthy foetal development
45%
ORRFPF
ORRFPF
Blackmores Women’s Energy 20 Effervescent Tablets
Blackmores Probiotics+ Daily Health 90 Capsules
2999
Maintains heart health
Maintains heart health
$35.51 OFF RRP†
Supports energy production
ORRFPF
$
ɽ
ORRFPF
$7.00 OFF RRP†
40%
2899
Blackmores Odourless Fish Oil 400 Mini Capsules
NEW!
Maintains healthy lthy eyesight
$5.00 OFF EDLP
$22.51 OFF RRP†
Blackmores Pregnancy & Breast-Feeding Gold 180 Capsules
Blackmores Evening Primrose Oil 190 Capsules
ALWAYS READ THE LABEL. FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS FOR USE. VITAMIN AND MINERAL SUPPLEMENTS SHOULD NOT REPLACE A BALANCED DIET. IF SYMPTOMS PERSIST, TALK TO YOUR HEALTH PROFESSIONAL.
CHEMIST WAREHOUSE DUBBO 6882 3410 FROM OUR HOUSE TO YOURS FOR YOUR NEAREST STORE CALL 1300
734 876
FREE FAST DELIVERY
*
LIMITED TIME - ORDERS OVER $30 *CONTACTLESS DELIVERY WITHIN 24 HOURS POWERED BY DOORDASH EXCLUDES PRESCRIPTONS, PHARMACIST ONLY MEDICATION & PHARMACY MEDICINE. PARTICIPATING STORES ONLY.
chemistwarehouse.com.au
†The save prices listed are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and where no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. ɽ The save price advertised is off our EDLP (Everyday Low Price) at the time of printing. All products subject to manufacturers availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
POWERED BY
SALE ENDS: 13 TH OCTOBER 2021
48
BIGGEST SALE!
October 7-13, 2021 Dubbo Photo News
BEAUTY T ’S 30% OFF
RRP
BOSISTO’S BODYCARE RANGE!
40% OFF
RRP
PALMOLIVE BODYCARE RANGE!
Find y your moment
FROM
$
399
$1.60 OFF RRP†
$
30%
FROM
ORRFFP
1
$ 69
Bosisto’s Banksia Flower & Lavender Hand Wash 300ml or Kakadu Plum & Lemon Myrtle Body Wash 500ml
PRICE OFF SELECTED DETTOL
RRP
339
Tom’s of Maine Natural Beauty Bar Creamy Coconut or Lavender & Shea 141g
WOW!
1
$ 99
HAND SANITISERS!
FROM
1
$ 75
Dettol Hand Sanitiser Range
UP TO
$3.50 OFF RRP†
$
Yardley Cocoa Butter, English Lavender or Shea Buttermilk Soap 120g
Palmolive Bodycare Range
649
PRICE OFF
RRP
THE BELOW PARTICIPATING BRANDS!
GREAT!
1
$ 99
*purchase any selected products for your chance to WIN!
35%
FF ORRP
Dettol ProFresh Shower Gel 950ml Assorted Variants
Radox Antibacterial Hand Wash Moisture or Replenish 250ml
40% OFF NIVEA BODYCARE RANGE! RRP
AMAZING!
$
399
$4.00 OFF RRP†
FROM
$
1
$ 99
Firms in just 10 days Nivea Body Firming Lotion Q10+ or Rich Firming Q10+ Vitamin C Body Lotion 400ml
www.chemistwarehouse.com.au/competitions/win-a-car-unilever www.epharmacy.com.au/competitions/win-a-car-unilver
Johnson’s Soft & Energise Watermelon or Soft & Nourish Almond Oil Body Wash 400ml
#?hk _nee M l < l I^kfbm Gnf[^kl oblbm ma^ p^[lbm^
30% OFF
RRP
40% OFF JERGENS RANGE!
RRP
BONDI SANDS BODYCARE RANGE!
FROM
FROM
$
899
$
FREE
^
639
MOR SENCHA VERBENA SOAP BAR!
FROM
7
$ 99
FROM
$
13
^
Bondi Sands Bodycare Range
99
FREE!
MOR Correspondence Range ^When you purchase 2 or more MOR products. Excluding soap bars. While stocks last.
Jergens Range
599
Planeta Organica Range
CHEMIST WAREHOUSE DUBBO 6882 3410 FROM OUR HOUSE TO YOURS FOR YOUR NEAREST STORE CALL 1300
734 876
FREE FAST DELIVERY
*
LIMITED TIME - ORDERS OVER $30 *CONTACTLESS DELIVERY WITHIN 24 HOURS POWERED BY DOORDASH EXCLUDES PRESCRIPTONS, PHARMACIST ONLY MEDICATION & PHARMACY MEDICINE. PARTICIPATING STORES ONLY.
chemistwarehouse.com.au
† The save prices listed are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and where no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. ^Free Gifts subject to availability while stocks last. Free Gift is an in-store promotion and may not always be available online. All products subject to manufacturers availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
POWERED BY
SALE ENDS: 13 TH OCTOBER 2021