Warwick Today - 16th September 2021

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Thursday, 16 September, 2021

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All the action and fun of the Leyburn Sprints

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Students get look at world

Tributes flow for Jeremy

With mere weeks between now and graduation, a group of Warwick State High School students are preparing for the ‘real world’ in an unconventional way. The school’s special education program has recently received a Virtual Reality simulator from disability service provider Endeavour Foundation, and is using it to develop driving skills and confidence in students. Full story – Page 3

The passing of former Warwick/Stanthorpe Today editor Jeremy Sollars has devastated the Southern Downs community and prompted tributes from friends and industry peers. Member for Southern Downs James Lister said Jeremy “burned for the public good” and the region would not be the same without him. For the full tribute, see pages 4-5

Amnesty call A leading Warwick firearm dealer has backed the Crime Stoppers Queensland Illicit Firearms Campaign, joining forces to reduce the threat of illicit firearms falling into the wrong hands. Crime Stoppers has partnered with Downs Guns and Ammo to promote a permanent national firearms amnesty, visiting Warwick on Thursday, September 9, as part of a state-wide regional road trip. While Australia has some of the toughest gun controls in the world, regional and rural property owners can be at an increased risk of their unsecured firearms being stolen and used in criminal activity. Full story – Page 8

Dragway gears up It was all hands on deck at Warwick Dragway this week, with upgrades to the facility’s 1/8 mile track finally underway after decades of advocacy. The beloved club was awarded $1.9 million in federal and state funding late last year to extend its track at Morgan Park to the national standard 1/4 mile.

The funding will also allow the club to extend the dragstrip’s existing braking area and return road, construct pit lanes, upgrade the staging area to national level, and install a new grandstand for spectators. Warwick Dragway president Chris Loy said it was “unbelievable” to see the club’s plans come to fruition and fresh concrete poured at

the Dragway on Monday 13 September. “It’s been 25 years in the making to go to the 1/4 mile,” Mr Loy said. “It’ll allow us to have a lot bigger events, faster cars, and hopefully it’ll bring more people to town.” Mr Loy said the new track will be completed and ready for racing in the new year, opening

the club up to host national events and thousands of spectators. With about 90 per cent of competitors at the club’s meetings from out of town, and an average of 1000 spectators, the upgrade is likely to provide a significant economic boost for Warwick and the Southern Downs. Full story – Page 3

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LETTERS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

TV GUIDE .............................pages 19-22

Emu Swamp Dam

PUZZLES ................................... page 23

Several things I can’t understand is the amount of time and money being spent on Emu Swamp Dam, if the money that has been spent since the first negative report was spent on the excellent site Marika McNichol pointed in her letter to the editor we might be well and truly on the way to drought proofing not only the Granite Belt but a large slice of country watered by Glen Lyon dam as well, furthermore this alternate site has two other benefits it would help mitigate the flood risk for Texas through to Goondiwindi, given the massive amount of water that flows through this area it could deliver a lot of much needed clean green power. I am led to believe that the site Marika pointed out is very close to the site that was suggested for flood mitigation for Texas. Climate change is supposed to see larger and more severe drought, heat waves and other weather extremities, it has been said that Emu Swamp Dam won’t supply water for drought lasting more than three years, as a person with little formal education but several degrees from the University of Hard Knocks I know it would make sense to build a dam that would at least drought proof the district for now and well into the future. One thing for certain is that the first Environmental Impact Statement was a dud it missed out a lot of plants and animals as others have pointed out, but the mere fact it missed what may have been Queensland’s first Uranium mine surely must jeopardise the whole project, just using the precautionary principle any educated person should have said enough is enough and closed the Emu Swamp project down. John Salata, Glen Aplin

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Dam thoughts As a ratepayer I am not interested in the childish to and fro that has been going on, just the following: 1. Why is SDRC investing in a primarily private enterprise project? 2. Who are the “hidden” people involved? 3. What is the cost to all Southern Downs ratepayers? Straight forward questions, should deserve

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Get in touch with us... Warwick Today and Stanthorpe Today are always seeking news leads directly from our readers and the community – whether it’s a human interest story, an upcoming community event or fundraiser, or an anonymous tip about an issue of local concern. Feel free to contact our editorial team, including after-hours. Sources of confidential information will always be protected. Letters to the editor are also welcomed. The editorial team holds the right to edit or withhold letters.

no spin, straight forward answers from SDRC! Denis Kenny, Warwick

Don’t be POWty Dear POWters, Mr Morison and Mr Thornton (not anonymous), We’re sensing some anger in your responses. Good! For 30 years lots of money has been poured into this project from Government and Private Investors. Are they angry? You bet they are when small groups continually attack them, or hold things up selfishly. Mr Thornton demands the list of investors? For what means? Is it to attack these people? Harass them personally? Still you add no substance to your arguments. Are you the best the POWters have to offer? Most probably. The Community still awaits all your professional credentials. Do you realise? No you don’t... “COUNCIL WON’T OWN THE DAM.” They are customers only. So how will they be paying over run costs which won’t happen anyway? You cry about sarcasm, but you deserve nothing more for your constant attacks on anyone who shares a differing opinion to you or anyone that has facts. Remember who was the sarcastic one that came up with “Emu Swamp Dam Brigade?” Mr Morrison continually quotes from the Ghd report but still fails to acknowledge the Jacob’s report which is considerably more detailed by a long shot. And yet he also screams of a supposed political agenda. The new Council voted in support of ESD. Even Councillors who previously didn’t have now. Was it a change of leadership? Contact us at: Warwick/Stanthorpe Today, 94 Palmerin Street, Warwick QLD 4370 Tel – 4661 9800

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You both fail to be taken seriously. At least the targeted Councillor achieved a week off from being a focus. All we see are the foot soldiers commenting. Who is the true leader of the pack? Will the real puppet master show their face? Probably not. How many of the POWters actually live on the Southern Downs and pay rates? Mr Thornton is a resident of NSW. Why does he get to make such demands? Also a disgruntled Ex Councillor seems to have become very vocal on the letters to the editor. Funny how he quickly changed his mind in support of ESD once he used it to get voted in. If you choose to attempt another run maybe don’t campaign on what you don’t plan on following through? It’s time for NEW WATER! It’s time for job security and food security for our Nation, the Granite Belt and Southern Downs. Everyone get behind this project. Don’t let the few ruin it for the many. On a final note from noisy POWter Geoffery - he he he ho ho ho ha ha ha! Real mature. The Emu Swamp Dam Brigade

The editor’s desk This past week has been an incredibly difficult one for myself and the rest of the Warwick/Stanthorpe Today team, as we struggled to come to terms with the sudden loss of our former editor Jeremy Sollars. As my first editor, Jeremy played a pivotal role in my career and in my life. I was lucky to work under him, to observe his journalistic skills, experience and character, and to receive his advice. I will take the lessons I learned while under his guidance with me as I continue to grow both professionally and personally, and extend my deepest condolences to all who knew and loved him. Jeremy was a good and kind person, and I know he is missed tremendously on the Southern Downs. I’d like to share with our readers that next week will be my final week with Warwick/Stanthorpe Today. I have loved my time living in Warwick, writing for Warwick/Stanthorpe Today, and getting to know so many lovely people in our region, but believe it is time for my next adventure. I will be moving closer to my family in Brisbane and starting with a new organisation later this month. When I arrived in Warwick in November last year, I was not expecting to fall in love with the town like I have. I will miss my colleagues, the crisp air, the quiet evenings, the busy weekends, and so many people. Thank you to everyone who has supported me since my arrival, provided comment or background for a story, and made me feel so welcome. It is an honour to have been part of the Southern Downs community.

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Dragway upgrade begins By Jess Baker It was all hands on deck at Warwick Dragway this week, with upgrades to the facility’s 1/8 mile track finally underway after decades of advocacy. The beloved club was awarded $1.9 million in federal and state funding late last year to extend its track at Morgan Park to the national standard 1/4 mile. The funding will also allow the club to extend the dragstrip’s existing braking area and return road, construct pit lanes, upgrade the staging area to national level, and install a new grandstand for spectators. Warwick Dragway president Chris Loy said it was “unbelievable” to see the club’s plans come to fruition and fresh concrete poured at the Dragway on Monday 13 September. “It’s been 25 years in the making to go to the 1/4 mile,” Mr Loy said. “it’ll allow us to have a lot bigger events, faster cars, and hopefully it’ll bring more people to town.” Mr Loy said the new track will be completed and ready for racing in the new year, opening the club up to host national events and thousands of spectators. With about 90 per cent of competitors at the club’s meetings from out of town, and an

Southern Downs CEO Dave Burges, Warwick Dragway president Chris Loy, and Southern Downs Mayor Vic Pennisi arrived at Morgan Park bright and early Monday morning to see concrete poured at the strip. Picture: JESS BAKER average of 1000 spectators, the upgrade is likely to provide a significant economic boost for Warwick and the Southern Downs. Mr Loy said he was grateful to Dragway volunteers, the local community, Southern Downs Regional Council, Mayor Vic Pennisi, CEO Dave Burges, and federal Member for Maranoa David Littleproud for supporting the project.

“It’s just great, after all this time, to see that it’s happening,” he said. Local companies like Brownlie Concretor and Southern Downs Concrete, and local labour, have been employed by the project and will continue to be used for its duration. CEO Dave Burges said creating employment opportunities was important to the council when deciding which projects to put

forward for funding. Long-term benefits of upgrading Warwick Dragway, such as increased tourism, were also taken into consideration. Mayor Vic Pennisi said the “flow-on effects” of investing in the facility would be significant. “Once this takes off, there’s potential mechanics, spare parts, tyres, fuel – all of those types of things will gravitate to these types of facilities,” Cr Pennisi said. “Making grandstands and kitchens and food and all of those things will add value to what’s already here.” Cr Pennisi said he was looking forward to attending his first drag meeting in the new year, after the 1/4 mile strip at Morgan Park is completed. Maranoa MP David Littleproud announced the jointly-funded project in December last year, saying at the time that the Australian and Queensland governments’ aim was to support local economic recovery following the 2019-20 bushfires. “The Southern Downs community has shown incredible strength and resilience through a very challenging year, so I am proud to see this funding go towards a meaningful project that will attract visitors to the region and boost the local economy,” Mr Littleproud said.

Technology gives Warwick students taste of the world By Jess Baker With mere weeks between now and graduation, a group of Warwick State High School students are preparing for the ‘real world’ in an unconventional way. The school’s special education program has recently received a Virtual Reality simulator from disability service provider Endeavour Foundation, and is using it to develop driving skills and confidence in students. Four students in their final year at Warwick State High School showcased their new VR learning hub – including a computer, VR headset, and VR driving kit complete with a steering wheel and pedals – on Thursday 9 September. Riley, 17, said the program had helped him immensely in gaining confidence and proficiency on the roads. “It’s really helped me learn how to drive, use the indicators, select the gears, accelerate, brake and use the clutch,” he said. “It’s made me a lot more confident behind the wheel.“ Now, with a learner’s permit and a parttime job he’d like to drive to, Riley is more determined than ever to hone his driving skills. Head of Special Education at Warwick State High School Kathy Maudsley said the school was proud to be able to help him on that journey. “In a rural town like Warwick, public transport isn’t readily available and driving is

Year 12 WSHS students Tegan, Riley, Leanna, and Tori demonstrated how they used the VR system to improve their driving skills. Pictures: JESS BAKER a necessary skill many of our students want to achieve,” she said. “The program is an important addition to our classroom and has helped students practice driving and gain confidence on the road, and further develop their independence.” Member for Southern Downs James Lister, who attended the program launch on Thurs-

day, said the initiative would open plenty of doors for the Warwick students. “When you talk about Virtual Reality and training for driving, that is a fantastic thing because a lot of young people find difficulty in meeting the expenses of driver training,” he said. “And if you haven’t got a driver’s licence it

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really narrows down your employment opportunities. “So anything that can be done to help youngsters become more proficient, and more confident, and want to pursue driving, that’s great.” Speaking on behalf of Endeavour Foundation, David Blower said the unveiling of the school’s new VR hub was symbolic of the organisation’s commitment to bettering the lives of people with an intellectual disability into the future. “Our message is very clear: that people with an intellectual disability deserve the same rights, same access, same education, (and) same life skills as everybody else in the community,” he said. “Getting ready for life after school can sometimes be daunting, but this is where the Virtual Reality helps make that transition a little bit easier. “You can learn things in a safe, controlled environment before you actually have to go out into the real world …” Endeavour Foundation’s VR tools, whilst designed for people with learning disabilities, are usable by anyone, and have been integrated into various classes at Warwick State High School. As well as driving skills, the program – funded in partnership with Arrow Energy and a grant from the Gladys Myrtle Brown Charitable Trust – can be used to develop warehousing, travel safety, and general life skills.

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Tributes paid to colleague By Jess Baker Tributes have flooded in from across the Southern Downs and beyond following the sudden death of former Warwick/Stanthorpe Today and Southern Free Times editor Jeremy Sollars. Jeremy was an adoring father of four and grandfather to one, a brilliant journalist, and a good man. He was kind, funny, and generous with his time – I know this because he was a mentor to me, as well as my first editor. Jeremy was the first person I met in Warwick. He interviewed me for my current job, he showed me the ropes of journalism, and he encouraged my curiosity. He had an innate ability to understand the topics that mattered to his readers, and would go to great lengths to report them honestly and accurately. He was considered by many to be one of the best journalists the Southern Downs had ever seen. I’ll never forget, in the very early days of my career at Southern Free Times, sitting at my desk, mulling over single words in a story for far too long. Meanwhile, Jeremy would spend all of 10 minutes pounding on his keyboard and produce an eloquent and compelling 1000word lead. His devotion to his work and inherent journalistic capabilities were and are inspiring. I know I am not alone in my admiration. Colleagues and friends remember Prior to being editor of Southern Free Times, and later of Warwick/Stanthorpe Today, Jeremy was editor of Warwick Daily News. Former general manager and editor-inchief of Warwick Daily News Peter Read appointed him to the position years ago, and remembers him fondly. Peter said: “Jeremy was a courageous, talented and inspiring Warwick Daily News editor. “He was popular with the team and never afraid to challenge issues where necessary, regardless of the consequences – a great example of a very effective country editor. “I am proud to have given him his first job as an editor and he more than fulfilled my expectations and was a pleasure to work with. He will be sadly missed.” A professional acquaintance and friend of Jeremy’s since first meeting at Warwick Daily News in 2007, Phill Le Petit of Star News Group, said Jeremy’s passing was an “incredible loss” to the newspaper industry. Phill said: “A man who continually fought for right as a journalist. Would not find a more persistent individual to source out the facts regarding a story. His work area reflected this with papers printed out everywhere, reports on this and documents on that. “The same could be said for his desktop computer with all manner of files loaded across the entire screen. It was his way, it worked for him and undoubtedly returned the result. Award winning stories and championing the people’s cause to expose stories and keep an unaccountability ever present.

Jeremy was a devoted and much-loved father, grandfather, journalist, mentor and friend. “Your humour, talent and the ability to keep confidences amongst your reader will be missed. I am a better person for knowing you than never meeting, rest in peace.” Phill, who also currently serves as Queensland Country Press Association president, said Jeremy’s ethical professional skills and belief in the role of community newspapers had been acknowledged in the QCPA’s annual Media Excellence Awards the past six years. “He was honoured with successive Journalistic Excellence Awards as the Best Individual Journalist in 2018, 2019 and 2020, as well as awards for news and sports photography,” Phill said. In paying tribute to his work, the Excellence Awards judges said Jeremy showed a high degree of empathy with his readers, and his ability to deliver stories that were relevant to them demonstrated a persistence to stay with an issue that he and his newspaper believed was important for his community. Whilst editor of Southern Free Times, between 2017 and 2021, Jeremy led a small editorial team. He worked closely with journalist Tania Phillips, now seniors and special publications coordinator at Star News Group, for several years. Tania said: “My ring tone for Jeremy was Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog – not my first choice, my first choice had been Thank God I’m a Country Boy. He didn’t directly tell me he hated that one – there was just that very Jeremy pause when I mentioned it.

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“He used that pause to good effect to convey disapproval without actually saying it. I changed it that day. Bullfrog was met with a slightly more positive ‘not the first time that song’s been sung to me’ though I complained that really all I really got was almost a minute of applause when he rang. ‘Rightly so!’ he deadpanned. “Yeah it probably was rightly so but I was never going to tell Jeremy that. He was a complicated man but brilliant people often are and he was that too, dedicated to his work and his people, writing about other people’s demons but also fighting his own. “I worked with him on and off for four years – really two stints at the beginning and end of his time with our paper. The second time, I would like to think we became friends and often when he was watching his son at training in Toowoomba we shared long conversations talking about, work, life and everything. “I loved his sense of humour, dry at times and then descending into silliness. We had a lot of serious conversations, but it was when they descended into fits of giggles (often mine) that he was at his best. He rang me one afternoon, I was driving and he was on speaker and we ended up laughing so hard that I had to pull over. My daughter drove the rest of the way. “When he started at the Times (Warwick Stanthorpe Today), he spent a lot of time apologising for taking my job but I said I’d just been caretaker waiting for the right person to come along to build the paper and to chronicle the lives of the people of the Southern Downs. “He was the right person. And he’ll be missed.

Jeremy was awarded Best Individual Journalist at the QCPA awards in 2018, 2019 and 2020 whilst editor of the Free Times. “Jeremiah was a Bullfrog, was a good friend of mine.” At the time of his passing, Jeremy was working as a reporter for The Daily Journal. The paper was founded by the former publisher of Southern Free Times Dr Olav Muurlink and edited by Elizabeth Voneiff. Olav said: “Jeremy and I had been sparring partners in a news sense since the day he arrived at the Daily News in Warwick, so it was let’s say ‘interesting’ when he was assigned to write the story about my company going into liquidation. “He had a way of getting the story—part persistence, part professionalism, and part simply by being real, being humane, and being on the receiving end of a piece of Jeremy journalism, was interesting. “He made a painful process less painful. He showed mercy. When he came to work for the Daily Journal it was just so strange having him there—in a good way. “I learnt something new—his consumption of calories was colossal –when I was in the office, I was often able to live off the scraps of biscuits, cakes and chocolates off Jeremy’s plate. He brought a good energy to the newsroom, and I guess that energy had to come from somewhere. “Elizabeth loved working with him. His local knowledge was immense, and while his methods were mysterious—he would stare at his phone for hours thoughtfully, and then suddenly pump out a thousand words in a jackhammer concerto—but he always delivered.”

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and friend Jeremy Sollars Government representatives reflect Jeremy cemented himself as a trusted journalist and a prominent member of the Southern Downs community in the 15-odd years he lived in Warwick. He forged professional relationships with many, but he was a friend – a confidant – to even more. Member for Southern Downs James Lister was one such person. He said: “As our MP, I knew Jeremy as a professional and fearless journalist. But as someone who lives in our community, I also knew him as a friend. “These two states, reporter and mate, are supposed to sit awkwardly together in the world of journalists and politicians. For how can an honourable gamekeeper be the poacher’s friend? In Jeremy’s case the answer is simple. He was both a great journalist, and a great guy. “Jeremy was a pro. There’s no doubt about that. It was his patient and meticulous devotion to a story – that dogged commitment to uncovering the facts and exposing wrongdoing – which made him such a formidable force for the public interest. I can honestly say that he never shrank from asking me the tough questions, and when the answers were embarrassing, or the facts unflattering, he reported them anyway. “But here’s the thing: I still liked him. I sincerely admired him. Jeremy was a great guy and I enjoyed our conversations voraciously. Jeremy was a hero and mentor to my young son, also named Jeremy. The two of them hit it off, and now thanks to Jeremy my son wants to be a journalist. Because of Jeremy, my son has a purpose. When I became yet another veteran with mental health demons, I could talk with Jeremy about it. Jeremy understood. He just understood. “There was a touching kind of fairness and integrity about Jeremy’s journalism. He was modest and deeply quiet, but in his own way, he burned for the public good. Jeremy never had a big opinion of himself, but there was iron in his soul. No intimidation, retaliation or bullying, however vicious, would deter Jeremy from doing his job. In spite of the toll that these things took on him personally, Jeremy would always put the story front and centre, and never once did I see him use his position to tackle personal grievances or to highlight the dirty tricks being applied to him. “Our community will not be the same now that we don’t have Jeremy. We are, all of us, terribly sad for his passing. But I’m sure that he’s somewhere up there in heaven, pencil tucked in his ear, notepad at the ready, asking Saint Peter about his travel expenses. “Vale Jeremy Sollars.” Southern Downs Mayor Vic Pennisi also came to know Jeremy well over the years, particularly since being elected to the top job in 2020. The mayor said: “It was an interesting conversation just after the 2020 election, after campaigning on rebuilding relationships with the media, I found myself sitting in my office with Jeremy. I am not sure he was totally comfortable being there but when I asked him ‘how long had it been since he was in the Mayor’s

It was never a surprise when Jeremy was named journalist of the year at the QCPA Excellence Awards.

Queensland Country Press Association president Phill Le Petit, Free Times past editor Jeremy Sollars and QCPA past president Ted Rogers. office’ he replied ‘about seven years or so’. “It became a regular occurrence every week on a Thursday he would sit across from me and ask his probing questions, often knowing that the answer was not as forthcoming as he would like it to be, but also knowing that if it was able to be released to him he would not need an RTI request to get it. I am sure he appreciated that. For me personally, it gives me great comfort that I was able to restore the relationship with him and bring it to a level that we were both respectful of. “I pause and think of some of those memorable moments in my office, such as when I suggested that he might look to use the paper for more positive comments, which of course he denied ever being negative. I reminded him that the media was a great way to sell the community to the broader public and that we all had a role in this, and that we should collaborate more in this area. Whilst there was a level of denial on the matter, I can honestly say that the public noticed the difference in the weeks following. “I reminded him on more than one occa-

sion that, even though I disagreed with him at times, I felt that he was a talented writer and one of the best the region had seen. He would use these opportunities to dig for information, a small comment this week would result in a story in a few weeks’ time. He was never afraid to ask those questions that were not able to be answered. “He would ask that probing question with a grin hoping for the ever so slightest glimmer of a small snippet of information that he could build on. He would often ask ‘now, off the record’ grinning the whole time to which I would reply ‘Jeremy you know there is no such thing as an off the record conversation’ and I would continue by adding ‘it’s like me asking you who the leak is from Council’? To which he would invariably reply, ‘I understand’ and grin. “There were many who saw Jeremy as a ‘hack’. I am grateful that I was able to have those frank and fearless discussions with him and that he didn’t need to use RTI requests to do what he needed to so that he could get the information that held us to account. That was his role, he did it well, I respected that and he

was aware that I did. My life is richer as a result. “Jeremy formed part of the tapestry, part of the coat of many colours that defines Southern Downs. He will always be part of our history and his valuable contribution to our region will be remembered. My sincere condolences go to his family and friends, during this sad time. A life lost too soon with much more to contribute.” Federal Member for Maranoa David Littleproud said: “The Southern Downs community has suffered a significant loss after the sudden passing of our well-known and respected journalist, Jeremy Sollars. He cared deeply for his community and was dedicated to its improvement and unity. “Jeremy didn’t shy away from tough issues. Yet he also had the compassion required to capture the human element of the stories he covered diligently for many years while Editor of the Warwick Daily News, Stanthorpe Border Post, and Southern Free Times. “More recently, as a senior journalist with The Daily Journal, Jeremy continued his passion for unveiling the truth behind the story. “I am deeply saddened by the loss of Jeremy and extend my heartfelt condolences to his partner, children and extended family. “He was a part of the fabric of our local community; he will be remembered fondly and greatly missed by all who knew him.” OUR team at Warwick/Stanthorpe Today, and indeed the entire Southern Downs, have been left devastated by the sudden loss of Jeremy Sollars. He will be immensely missed. Rest in peace, Jeremy. If you or anyone you know needs help: Lifeline: 13 11 14 MensLine Australia: 1300 78 99 78 Beyond Blue: 1300 22 4636 Kids Helpline: 1800 55 1800

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Matt Denny with Grayson Chandler, Zavier Dalsanto, Pippa Dalsanto, Metice Chandler, Caitlyn Hoey, and Millie Dalsanto.

Matt with local girls Molly and ‘Diddle’ Williams. Picture: PERRY CRONIN

Hero’s welcome for Matt By Dominique Tassell Excitement levels were high when Allora welcomed hometown hero Matthew Denny back home on 10 September. Balloons lined the street in Australia’s green and gold, with homemade signs hung on on locals’ homes and in business windows. The atmosphere was electric as locals lined the streets to cheer Matt on, with his family gathered outside the Allora Hotel. Matt was driven through the parade from the Allora Sports Club down to the Allora Sports Museum. Allora local, Jill Bockman, said Matt has “done very well for himself”. “He’s a really dedicated young man,” she said. “He’s done us proud.” She said “he never gives up” and is a wonderful role model for local kids. “He comes up really well in all aspects,” she said. Southern Downs Regional Council members were in attendance, including Mayor Vic Pennisi who presented Matt with a certificate of recognition to honour his efforts. The Mayor joked that if Matt brought home a gold in 2024, he’d get the key to the city. Mayor Pennisi said Matt “breathes hope” into the community after a tough period of drought, Covid-19 and more. “You breathe hope into the community for now and into the future.” Allora Sports Museum curator, Perry Cronin, was also presented with one of the certificates for posterity. Matt spoke outside the sports museum, first thanking everyone for their support. “For me, it’s pretty incredible that I got fourth and still have the amount of support that’s been shown.” While he usually speaks off the cuff, he had prepared a few words.

“It’s hard to talk at the moment,” he said. This was evident as he spoke, becoming overcome with emotion at times. “I just want to say I honestly can’t believe the parade and the hugs and the wishes and the high fives and just the general support in everything that I’ve done since I started.” Matt stated he wanted to share a story about why he’s so proud to be from Allora. “As you may all know, my brothers were great footballers. My dad probably sold half the people here a car in his local business, and my granddad and uncle owned a local silo business that took over Queensland,” he said. “I was so proud when I used to walk down the street and tell everyone who my family was, the best part was when people used to say to me ‘aren’t you John Denny’s boy?’ or ‘hey, you’re Jason’s little brother, how’s Jason going

after getting sin-binned on the weekend?’ “A lot of people used to say I had a lot to live up to but I always thought I used to have a lot of people to look up to. “Living in the shadow of people I admired, and that were family, wasn’t something I was afraid of. If anything they gave me the opportunity to learn and to grow in the shade before I walked into the sunlight. “So I want to say thank you to mum and dad, Mia, my family, and those who I looked up to when I was growing up and thank you for still being those people in my life today. “I’m so grateful for this parade being planned for me today, for placing fourth, it makes me so much prouder that I’m part of a community that supports me win, lose, or draw. “You’ve all said congratulations to me, but I want to say congratulations to us because

this was a group effort. Without the support of you all in something that I wanted to achieve, I never would have made it past Darling Downs trials. “So thank you for all your support, your effort in this parade, and your love. “You make me love what I do so much more and you make me even more proud to call this place home “But most of all, thank you for always referring to me as John Denny’s boy.” Matt said afterwards that it’s hard to put into words what it means when a whole town comes out to support you. He says the whole experience has been crazy, and he wants to say a massive thank you to everyone who has supported him. For Paris ‘24, he thinks the town might just have a “street party” in celebration.

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Call to hand in guns

Bubble is back along the border

By Dominique Tassell A leading Warwick firearm dealer has backed the Crime Stoppers Queensland Illicit Firearms Campaign, joining forces to reduce the threat of illicit firearms falling into the wrong hands. Crime Stoppers has partnered with Downs Guns and Ammo to promote a permanent national firearms amnesty, visiting Warwick on Thursday, September 9, as part of a state-wide regional road trip. While Australia has some of the toughest gun controls in the world, regional and rural property owners can be at an increased risk of their unsecured firearms being stolen and used in criminal activity. Downs Guns and Ammo owner, Chris Thompson, said the store supported the amnesty by helping members of the public dispose of unwanted firearms. “I think the amnesty is a great way to help keep firearms out of the wrong hands and them being used for criminal activity,” she said. “In the first few days we had six firearms handed into our store, but I would encourage more people to come forward. “It’s not about taking guns off people, it’s about ensuring they are registered.” As of Thursday 9 September, the store had a total of eight firearms handed in through the amnesty. Downs Guns and Ammo’s other owner, Peter Thompson, says three out of five guns handed in are “junkers”. Chris says “we had a gentleman who found an old rusty gun in the roof of his shed“. “He didn’t know how long it had been there but decided to do the right thing and hand it in. “This is a common occurrence where people find an old firearm on their property and have no purpose for it or are unsure if it’s registered.” Chris and Peter did say that this amnesty being national has made it slightly different to the last one in 2017, as every state has different laws and the new amnesty has had to fit them all. They stated that they would like some elements of other state systems to be included in Queensland. In Queensland, firearms dealers can’t check themselves if a firearm is flagged in the system. Victorian dealers can do this, and they say it’s “better to know than not know”. Crime Stoppers Queensland CEO, Carmen Jenkinson says the amnesty is “a work in progress” and “a workaround until the legislation catches up”. John Vichie Firearms in Stanthorpe are participating in the amnesty, though they are not listed on the website. They weren’t aware they weren’t listed until recently. “We’re certainly participating,” they say. The business say they’ve had a “small number“ of people handling in firearms through the amnesty.

By Jess Baker

Chris and Peter Thompson. They say “some people don’t want to be involved because its lots of paperwork and you have to destroy the firearms yourself, but that’s certainly not us.” He says “often people find old guns and don’t know what to do with them”. Crime Stoppers Queensland CEO, Carmen Jenkinson said “the fight against gun crime is stronger than ever and by joining forces with the Warwick community and surrounding regional towns, we can all play our part in keeping our towns safe and reducing the risk of illicit weapons falling into the wrong hands”. “During our regional road trip, our key focus is to educate the public on the threat of unwanted, unregistered and illicit firearms in our communities. “Our message to regional Queenslanders is to keep your firearm licence current, ensure all of your firearms are registered and keep them securely stored.” Australia has estimated 250,000 long arm and 10,000 handguns that are either unregistered or unable to be registered, as well as prohibited firearm accessories. “Firearms are often kept in innocence and ignorance of their illegality or simply overlooked and forgotten in people’s homes,” she said. Carmen says 973 firearms have been provenance checked so far in the state, with 26 firearms of interest. “Our focus in Warwick and surrounding regional towns is to educate the public on the threat of unwanted, unregistered, and illicit firearms and encouraging residents to hand in these firearms so that they cannot fall into the wrong hands. “Firearms, like the ones handed in to Downs Guns and Ammo, are often kept in innocence or simply overlooked and forgotten in people’s homes. “There are occasions where someone might have Grandad’s old gun in the back shed, have received a gun from a friend or family member, or a firearm is legally registered but no longer needed.”

Unregistered firearms pose a serious a threat to our local communities because they are difficult to trace and can fall into the hands of criminals. The amnesty provides an opportunity to safely dispose of a firearm without cost or penalty. Crime Stoppers participated in a national firearm amnesty in 2017, which saw 57,324 firearms handed in along with 2,432 parts and accessories and more than 80,000 rounds of ammunition. During that campaign, a number of machine guns were handed in, including a WWII Sten and a Russian-made sub-machine gun, as well as a flare gun converted to shoot 12-gauge ammunition, a rocket launcher, and an anti-tank bolt action rifle. Being caught with an unregistered or illegal firearm outside amnesty conditions could result in a fine of up to $66,725, up to 13 years in jail, and a criminal record. Carmen wanted to emphasise that crime stoppers is not trying to make all guns disappear. She says they understand that people have legitimate reason to own guns. The organisations’ focus is on “no penalty if you take steps”. Locations confirmed to be participating in the amnesty in our region: Daniel Alfred Johnson in Rosenthal Heights Warwick Outdoor and Sports and Downs Guns and Ammo in Warwick Redback Precision Equipment at The Summit John Vichie Firearms in Stanthorpe If not included on this list, check with your local dealer to find out if they are involved in the National Firearms Amnesty. Information about Queensland requirements, including how and where to surrender firearms, can be found at https://crimestoppers.com.au/firearmamnesty/qld/.

· · · ·

The NSW-Queensland border bubble is once again in operation, meaning Queensland residents and some NSW border residents can cross for essential purposes, including work, volunteering, and face-to-face learning. From 1am Monday 13 September, vaccinated people from non-restricted local government areas in the NSW border zone can also travel to Queensland to collect food, access medical care, provide assistance, and donate blood if they have a border pass. The 12 LGAs in the border zone classified as non-restricted include Tenterfield Shire, Glen Innes Severn Council, and Kyogle Council. People may not travel between NSW and Queensland to attend a wedding or funeral, to exercise, or for recreational purposes like holidays or meeting friends. Those who have been in a restricted NSW border zone LGA, such as Bourke Shire, City of Broken Hill, and Walgett Shire, or any other Covid-19 hotspot in the last 14 days are also not permitted to cross the NSW-Queensland border. Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said her government was happy with how the border bubble had been reinstated and that vaccinated people could cross to complete essential work and attend school. Also from Monday, all Queenslanders aged between 12 and 15 years old can be vaccinated at Queensland Health vaccination centres. Stanthorpe and Warwick locals who received their first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination hub in August will this week and next week receive their second dose. Queensland Health data indicated, as at 27 August 2021, 53.9 per cent of people aged 15 and over on the Southern Downs had received their first shot of a vaccine and 22.3 per cent had received their second. As at Sunday 12 September, a total 22.8 million vaccine doses had been administered nationally. Nearly 69 per cent of people over the age of 16 had received at least one dose of the vaccine, and 42.6 per cent of people over the age of 16 were fully vaccinated. At the time, Queensland had administered the third highest number of vaccines at 3.98 million, behind NSW at 8.17 million and Victoria at 5.88 million.

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8 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021


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Platypus out in numbers By Jess Baker After a weekend of surveying Cambanoora Gorge, a local group has discovered a surprisingly large paddle of platypus is living among Killarney residents. Organised through Killarney Bushcare, group member Barbara George-Jaeggli said the survey of platypus at the Gorge on Sunday 5 September was the first of its kind and produced exciting results. “We had 16 different pairs of people sitting at different places along the river at the upper Condamine, going into Cambanoora Gorge,” Barbara said. “We ended up seeing 15 different platypus.” Barbara said that while the group’s findings indicated the local environment was habitable for platypus, changes will have to be made to increase their chance of breeding success and of survival. “(Our concerns are) they’re secretive and shy animals, so disturbance is something they don’t like,” she said. “Increased traffic from four wheel drives, and the sediment they bring up, is a concern.” She said drought was also a major threat to local platypus as although the Condamine River never used to dry up, in the last 25 years she had seen it nearly stop running two times. Climate change and people pumping out of the river were also listed as two of the group’s biggest concerns. “We really want to raise awareness, not only because they’re threatened, but also because they’re such a nice thing to have in our midst,” Barbara said. She said Killarney Bushcare would like to

Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) selected Killarney to get its own Urban Design Framework (UDF) at the Council meeting on 8 September.

Killarney UDF approved By Dominique Tassell Killarney Bushcare’s Barbara George-Jaeggli said she was surprised to find so many platypus at the weekend. see traffic around the Gorge regulated, and Condamine River Road used less by four wheel drives and more by mountain bikes and the like. “We’re also looking in to getting some funding to do a conservation project,” she said. More than 40 people attended an information session with Killarney Bushcare and Platypus Watch at Killarney Senior Citizens Hall on Saturday 4 September to learn about protecting platypus, which are considered a near-threatened species. Barbara said she and the Killarney Bushcare team were amazed at attendance on the day and locals’ interest in the topic. “We would like to repeat the survey, make it every six months, and make it a real community initiative,” she said. She said tracking numbers at the Gorge more frequently will help the group understand the threats and challenges platypus currently face in Killarney, so that they can work to eliminate them.

Killarney is set to get its own Urban Design Framework (UDF) after it was selected at the Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) meeting on 8 September. Wallangarra, Leyburn, Maryvale, Dalveen and Pratten have previously had UDFs developed. The aim of the UDFs is to “consider how to support industry and tourism growth in line with the town’s unique character and location”. Southern Downs Councillor and small towns advocate, Sheryl Windle, said Killarney’s UDF would play to its strengths and build on its existing tourism clout and country charm. “Our region is home to some very special towns with unique appeal only found on the Southern Downs,” Councillor Windle said. “Killarney has already positioned itself as a must-see location through its gorgeous nature walks, key tourism events and country charm and a strategic UDF will pivot from these qualities. “With Killarney’s proximity to South East Queensland and the News South Wales bor-

der, the town is also well positioned to see growth in the transport and logistics, and agriculture sectors and for those seeking a tree change. “Council will collaborate with the proud Killarney community to capture its vision for the future.” Killarney’s UDF will be completed in the 2021/22 financial year and dates for public consultation will be announced in the coming months. The UDFs are an initiative of the Shaping Southern Downs Advisory Committee, which is currently on “pause”. Meetings have been deferred until Council has an opportunity to review the purpose of the advisory committee and its terms of reference. While on “pause”, the UDFs already passed by Council will continue to go ahead SDRC CEO Dave Burges assured Council late last month that funds had been budgeted for those projects. Councillors Sheryl Windle and Marco Gliori have expressed that they would like to see other towns in the region, such as Ballandean and Allora, get their own UDFs.

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A focus on defibrillators By Dominique Tassell Through tragedy, Jenny Thornton became educated in the importance defibrillators play in the chain of survival. Almost five years ago, her husband passed away from Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA). “Danny was a young healthy male and SCA was the last thing we ever expected to happen to him,” she says. “Now after much research I am aware that heart disease can occur at any age and fitness level for many different reasons, 40 per cent of which are not lifestyle related. “Four young Australians die every week from sudden cardiac arrest. “No prior symptoms, no warning of anything wrong and in five minutes they can be gone.” Jenny says she had taken CPR courses consistently over the years, but didn’t know the importance of having access to a defibrillator. She says having a defibrillator “could have changed everything”. Losing Danny spurred her on to help make a change. With the help of the “generous community”, the Warwick Westpac Bank, and “hardworking organisations like the Pentathrun, Warwick Woodcutters and Sunrise Rotary Club”,

26 clubs and organisations in the community have been supplied with a defibrillator. Jenny says “from the awareness that we have raised, other towns and communities are supplying their clubs and organisations with life saving devices”. “We had the pleasure to receive a call that after our initial campaign, a friend raised funds to supply their school with a defibrillator, which did save a life. “How great is that!” Jenny says this has all been possible due to clubs and organisations that have received a defibrillator paying it forward, “and by a community of people that support our mission”. She says that she knows “a lot of people are frightened about using defibrillators or hurting people”, but getting training can alleviate these fears. She encourages locals to attend training courses, including those held by Pentathrun. Defibrillators are “super easy to use”, she says, with some even voice prompted. Jenny says it’s important to get the use of a defibrillator into your “survival pattern”. “Learn to run for the defibrillator,” she says. If anyone would like to get involved, or would like to know more about purchasing a defibrillator, Jenny says they can contact her directly on 0412 283 097.

Through tragedy, Jenny Thornton, became educated in the importance defibrillators play in the chain of survival.

Region is in full bloom By Dominique Tassell The ornamental plum trees along Grafton and Palmerin Streets in Warwick’s CBD and in full bloom, carpeting the sidewalks with petals in the recent windy weather. The bees are loving the new blooms, regularly buzzing around the trees.

Spring has truly sprung in the region, with the wattle around Leslie Dam getting a spotlight recently too. If you’d like to have your photos of the region included in our paper or on our social media, please send them through to newsdesk@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au and include when you took them and where.

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Action aplenty at Sprints The 25th anniversary Leyburn Sprints, commemorating the 1949 Leyburn Australian Grand Prix, lived up to its reputation as one of the most popular events on the historic motorsport calendar over the weekend. A desperate last effort clinched a fourth outright win for driver Warwick Hutchinson. After duelling all weekend, Hutchinson trailed rival Brett Bull until he crossed the line on his ninth and last run around the 1.0 kilometre Leyburn street course. Bull, driving a Van Dieman single-seater, booked his best time of 42.365 seconds on the ninth run and with a margin of 0.189s looked set to win his first Col Furness Memorial Trophy. But Hutchinson, next in line for the start, flung his Mazda rotary-powered OMS28 around the track in 42.271s to claim his first Sprints victory since 2013. “This trophy is close to my heart. I’ve been up here several times and it’s good to be back,” he said. “Brett was in front most of the weekend and it was a really close battle. That was very satisfying to beat him on the very last run.” Sprints President Tricia Chant said that although competitor numbers were down

slightly without interstate entries due to Covid-19, the event provided plenty of action and entertainment. “We’ve faced some challenges in the past couple of years after having to cancel the 2020 event and postpone this year’s by three weeks, but there was no sign of that at the weekend – everyone seemed to have a great time,” she said. Tahlia Wilkins, 6, won our colouring competition and received a gift pack which included two hats, a shirt, stickers, and tickets to the sprints. She is a year one student at Warwick Central School. “She was so excited,” says Tahlia’s mum, Kylie. Tahlia’s favourite car was the pink car driven by a woman. Tahlia’s grandad, Stephen Wilkins, entered the first ever Leyburn Sprints and participated in the 15 following it. He also participated in Formula Vee. On both sides of the family, Tahlia has car enthusiasts. “Cars are kind of in the blood,” her mum jokes. For the full gallery, see our article online.

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Scott and Rosanne Garven of Moorina. Pictures: JESS BAKER

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warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 11


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

William’s weekend By William Lister, Age 7 On the weekend Mum and Jeremy and I went to Jeremy’s piano lesson with Mrs Chapman and then we went to Jamwork’s for lunch and I had the best chicken curry ever in my life. The rest for Saturday was pretty boring and Dad was away in Goomburra. On Sunday Dad drove back to Stanthorpe really early and went to the spring stampede early in the morning and then we finally got to see him after he had been away. Then Dad, Jeremy, Nonna and Dan Dan and I all went to the foxbar falls open day which I’d been waiting for all day. It was really great and Dad said he’ll take me camping there maybe on the holidays.

Following a heated discussion at an ordinary meeting of Southern Downs Regional Council, and months of public speculation, Mayor Vic Pennisi announced he would no longer be asking his colleagues to approve his ‘innovation mentoring program’. Here’s what some of our Facebook readers had to say about our breaking story sharing the news: Al Holmes: Not every idea is a good idea and not every good idea is accepted but gee its refreshing to have a major that listens and acts unlike the big stick “invasive pest program” from the last council. Nathan Parkes: Al Holmes agreed. A refreshing change. Nathan Colyer: (Referring to a 2 September Warwick/Stanthorpe Today article titled ‘Secrecy surrounds group’ in which Councillor Stephen Tancred criticised the transparency of a former council) Councillor Tancred hit the nail on the head. Pot calling the kettle black? Dennise McKenzie: Nathan Colyer they were as transparent as mud Nathan Colyer: Dennise McKenzie yep. Lots of secret squirell business coming out we didn’t even know was going on. Geoffrey Pittard: Old boys club and secret mens business alive and well in this community. Liberally nasty party as usual.

Dad took our kayaks in the back of his ute and Jeremy and I went kayaking and we found a rocky island in the middle of the dam and I fell in but it wasn’t deep and I had a life jacket. Mum was at a violin rehearsal at the art gallery all afternoon. When Mum got home from her violin stuff we had a BBQ for dinner on the back patio which we haven’t done for ages and then Dad had to pack and go back to Brisbane for Parliament. On Monday we got dressed up in pink and purple to show support for our friend Santina who is in hospital. I hope Miss Santina feels better soon. The photo is of me dressed in pink and purple for Miss Santina.

Also published on our Facebook recently, was our story about a NSW woman who appeared before the Warwick Magistrates Court over breaches of Covid-19 border rules. Police reportedly located the 49-yearold woman at a Warwick home in late August. Some comments from our Facebook readers: Bob Mundy: Is this the best use of Police (and Court) resources? Over 150 deaths on Queensland’s roads so far this year; shouldn’t reducing that toll be the priority? Caitlyn Meiklejohn: Bob Mundy there will be 150 deaths from covid if they don’t stop people entering the state without proper declarations. So I’d personally say it is a great use of police resources. Bob Mundy: Caitlyn Meiklejohn Really? It’s inevitable that Covid will eventually rip through Queensland just as it has done elsewhere; get everyone fully vaccinated and very few will die. Then deploy similar measures and resources on making our roads safer! Caitlyn Meiklejohn: Bob Mundy I somewhat agree but in the mean time until we reach 80 per cent + vaccination of Qld then we need to stop covid coming in from other states. Maybe then we can focus on deaths on the road.

COVID-19 has affected all of us, but there is a way forward. It’s time to arm yourself by getting vaccinated. Protect yourself and the people you care about. The sooner we all do it, the sooner we’ll get through it. Book your vaccination today.

australia.gov.au 1800 020 080

The 49-year-old woman had been intercepted by police at the border at Goondiwindi on three previous occasions.

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12 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

SOCIALLY SPEAKING


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

BUSINESS IN FOCUS

Focus on … Business

Sellers’ market persists By Jess Baker More than 19 months into the Covid-19 pandemic, Warwick’s housing market is still red hot. Local agent Helen Harm said property prices were continuing to increase with demand and were unlikely to stop any time soon. “It is insane,” Helen said. “I think that market price here has probably gone up $30,000 to $50,000 at least. “I can’t see it stopping this side of Christmas.” Helen said the current market was ideal for sellers who already had their “ducks in a row” and were ready to vacate their home almost immediately. Homes must, as always, be value for money and well-presented, she said, not ‘fixer-uppers’. “Odd jobs … get them done,” Helen said. “The people with the money who are buying are time-poor. They want to walk in and unpack, or they want to buy a house (that is already tenanted).” Helen said that while she would in ordinary non-Covid times have more than 100 properties for sale, she currently has less than 30. Demand for Southern Downs homes is so high she has had to start listing properties for sale at the end of her work day – these days, around 7pm – so that she can take a breath before the sale process begins.

“If you’re looking for a property and you haven’t got your finances in a row – so if you haven’t sold your house and it’s not on the market, you haven’t been to the bank and you’ve got to get a loan – don’t go looking because you’re wasting your time,” she said. “You’ve got to be prepared to sign a contract there and then.” Helen said cash buyers were common and properties often settled in between 14 and 30 days, so non-serious buyers were unlikely to find a home in Warwick through any agent. Available rental properties are also few and far between at present, with Helen Harm Real Estate currently assessing more than 20 applications per listing. Helen said the surplus in demand and shortage in supply meant prospective tenants had to have near perfect records to be considered suitable by local agencies. “If you’re a tenant who has missed paying rent, you’re not going to get a rental,” she said. “If you’re a tenant who hasn’t looked after the property, you’re not going to get a rental, (and) if you have more pets than is councilaccepted, you won’t get a rental.” She said it was now both cheaper and easier to buy than to rent. Though really, the current market is “definitely a seller’s market”. To find out how you can take advantage of Warwick’s “red hot” property market, contact Helen at 0408 457 496 today.

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Helen Harm said Warwick’s property market was “red hot” and ideal for sellers. Picture: JESS BAKER

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Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 13


NEWS

Stanthorpe’s own hero By John Telfer, History Writer On 3 September 1939, 81 years ago, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain declared war on Germany over their invasion of Poland, and from 10 July 1940 to 31 October 1940, the historic Battle of Britain was fought over the skies of England defended by the bravery of the pilots and aircrews of the Royal Air Force. In this conflict the Royal Air Force lost 900 fighter aircraft, 560 Bombers and 500 Coastal patrol aircraft. This caused the British Government to appeal to the Dominion countries to help defend the Empire. The Australian government responded by introducing the British Empire Training Scheme to help Britain in her hour of need and hundreds of young Australians took up the cause and enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force. However, there were about 12 expatriate Australians living in England who joined the cause, and enlisted in the Royal Air Force. One young man from Stanthorpe who was resident in England at the time, Charles Alexander McGaw, was quick to enlist and joined the RAF on 13 June, 1939, just as the Luftwaffe were bombing England. Charles McGaw was born in Pebbleshire, Scotland, on 3 November, 1915. He was the son of William and Agnes McGaw, and when Charles was only aged five, William and his family moved to Stanthorpe on the Southern Downs, Queensland, in 1920. It was here that Charles received his early education at the Stanthorpe State school, before he was enrolled at Scots College from 1928

to 1930. Charles was never a stand out at Scots as a boarder, but showed a keen interest in music and drama. On leaving school after obtaining his Leaving Certificate, Charles worked in the family accounting business but was not inspired by this, so decided to explore his Scottish heritage. He noticed an advertisement in the newspaper that Glasgow Technical College in Scotland was offering a Bursary to prospective students to take up an Engineering course, so he applied and was accepted. Charles took up the Bursary and did very well, scoring first place out of 600 students with an average of 87 per cent in his first-year examinations. After graduating from Glasgow Tech, Charles secured a position as a draughtsman with Duncan Stewart Engineering Company in Clyde. Now settled in Scotland, Charles met and married a young woman named Margaret Turner who lived in Paisley, Renfrewshire, and settled down to married life. Charles was always interesting in flying, so successfully obtained a position as an aeronautical instructor with the Air Ministry. With the imminent threat of war, England was preparing for conflict with Germany and were calling on enlistments in the services, before the first bombs started to fall over London. Wanting to do his duty to King and Country, Charles enlisted in the RAF on 3 June 1939 for pilot training, and was immediately sent to RAF Cranwell where he gained his ‘wings’. He was commissioned as a pilot officer and posted to 73 Squadron to train and fly Hurricane night fighters. The squadron’s main role was to

but suddenly he encountered extremely bad weather. In a forced attempt to fly around the gathering stormy Charles McGaw. weather, Charles’s aircraft ran out of fuel and he was forced to ditch in the sea. In the ensuing struggle to keep airworthy, Charles crashed into the sea near Messina, but there was only one survivor in Walter Fulton, who suffered terrible injuries. Charles and his navigator were trapped in their aircraft and so sank to a watery grave. Charles Alexander McGaw died a hero’s death in the service of the RAF and his name is remembered on the Malta Memorial with the caption “Known unto God”; but although he died under a foreign sea, Charles never forgot that he was also an Australian flying with the RAF, and in his documents and personal effects to be sent to his next of kin after his death, it contained a copy of the “Clansman”, the Scots College ex-students news- letter as he had never forgot his days there. After the war, Charles’s wife Margaret made a sad visit to Charles’s beloved Stanthorpe, to bring her son to meet his grandparents. A son that brave Charles never met. So, Stanthorpe has the distinction of producing a hero of the Battle of Britain who survived this great conflict and will go down in history of one of the “few” as stated by the British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill in 1945, when he made that famous speech: “Never in the history of human conflicts Was so much owed by so many, to so few”

provide cover over allied airfields and bases. In April 1940, Charles was sent on to No. Six Operational Training Unit at Aston Downs in Gloucestershire, situated in South-West England, which was one of only two squadrons to fly Hurricanes. Such was the high casualty figures for pilots, Charles was moved around various RAF airfields. On 13 May, Charles was posted to France with 73 squadron before moving back to Biggin Hill, near London to fly spitfires against the Luftwaffe. On 8 December, 1940, Charles was given a rest from combat duties and posted to the RAF Central Flying School, at Cranwell, as a flying instructor. He remained in this position until early May 1943, but eager to get into a combat squadron, he applied and was sent to undergo a conversion course on twin engine Douglas Boston aircraft and on completion of this training he was posted to No. 18 Squadron in the Mediterranean. He was also called on to provide air cover for the British evacuation from Dunkirk. In July 1943, No. 18 Squadron was moved to Gerbini, in Paterno, Sicily, where he was now facing a new foe in the Italian Air Force in August, 1943. On 1 October, Charles, now a Squadron Leader, set out with eight other Boston aircraft with orders to attack a bridge in Italy. Charles was flying a Boston III W8398 ‘G’ aircraft with a crew of three which included Flying Officer John Spark, navigator, and Sergeant Walter Fulton, the wireless air gunner. Charles took off across the Mediterranean,

Warwick Bridge Club... By Neil Bonnell, Warwick Bridge Club

Results 06/09/21 (6 & ½-table Mitchell): · Monday, N/S T. Hinde N. Bonnell (60.4) 1; J,Mobbs

Pat Kelly, Susan Goddard, John Nankervis, Judy Mobbs. South cannot trump the diamond with the nine, as this would be over-ruffed with the Queen. Rising with the Ace would simply end the defence. The heart finesse is then taken and the cross-ruff continues. Declarer makes sure that trick eleven is won in dummy (East).

South has Ace and nine of spades and West has Q8. Whichever South plays will allow the West’s Queen to make. That will be the eleventh trick. Pat Kelly is now a State Master. He is second only to Tony Hinde in the speed with which he has reached this milestone.

·

S. Goddard (55.4) 2; N. Collins M. Simpson (52.5) 3. E/W P. Kelly J. Nankervis (66.7) 1; H. Richardson D. Moran (63.2) 2; Jenny Smith Jill Smith (52.5) 3. Friday, 10/09/21 (5-table Mitchell): N/S J. Nankervis J. Rose (59.2) 1; N. Collins M. Simpson (54.6) 2. E/W P. Kelly Jenny Smith (60.4) 1; M. Finlay Jill Smith (59.6) 2.

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The leaders at the half-way point in the Club Pairs Championship are John Nankervis and Pat Kelly on 66 per cent, followed by Hilary Richardson and David Moran on 63 per cent with Tony Hinde and Neil Bonnell in third place with 60 per cent. On Board 9 (above) Pat and John managed to make eleven tricks in 4S by West, a result that eluded all other E/W pairs, although Jenny Smith and Jill Smith did bid game and made ten tricks. John (declarer) received the lead of the Queen of diamonds which he won with one of dummy’s top diamonds. It happens to be best if the King of spades is continued from dummy, challenging South to rise with the Ace. A cagey South would play low, but when North’s Jack falls, the way is open for some cross-ruffing. First, the King of clubs would have to be played. North would routinely win with the Ace, but now has a choice to make. A club would be fatal for the defence, so the Jack of diamonds would be better. This would be won by the King and a third diamond played.


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

Drought support lifeline By Dominique Tassell Funds are available through Lifeline Darling Downs for drought affected communities across South West Queensland. Residents who reside or work in the shires of the Southern Downs as well as Paroo, Balonne, Maranoa, Murweh, Lockyer Valley, and Toowoomba may be eligible for financial support. The grants are open to individuals or families who have been impacted by the drought and who require assistance with the cost of living pressures. Also included under the program are nonfarming small business operators such as tradesmen and retail operators This is as they “rely on regional economies and the agriculture that underpins these economies to earn an income”. School related items can also be applied for,

Lifeline Darling Downs have advised that there are funds available to distribute to a number of drought affected communities. with entities such as schools and Parent & Citizen Associations encouraged to inquire. Each individual, family, business or entity may only apply for funding once. Things that can be funded include outstanding bills, school uniforms, stationery or

text books, replacement tuckshop equipment, and school breakfast programs. “We encourage members of the eligible communities who are experiencing financial hardship to complete an application form,” Chief Operating Officer Human Services, Rachelle Patterson said. “The available grants range from $1000 for an individual to $2000 for a family, small business or entity.” There will be three rounds of funding held per quarter commencing in the last quarter of the 2020 calendar year. Applications will be eligible for consideration during each month for the quarter they have been submitted. Applicants will be advised within 14 working days of the end of the month if they were successful and within 14 working days of the end of the quarter if they were unsuccessful.

This means that applicants may not hear back about their application for three months. If successful, the money will be deposited directly into the applicant’s nominated account within 14 working days of the end of the month. To apply for the Community Drought Support Grants please visit https://bit.ly/3h9fOyW The Community Drought Support Grants program is funded by the Department of Communities, Child Safety and Disabilities Services. Lifeline Darling Downs & SWQ Ltd (LDDSWQL) is a community-based organisation providing an array of crisis support and community services. For more information on services or to support Lifeline Darling Downs with this and other life changing programs visit www.lifelinedarlingdowns.org.au

Councillors debate advisory committee voting rights By Jess Baker Southern Downs councillors have criticised a decision made earlier this year to remove the voting rights of their representatives who sit on advisory committees for pest management, saleyards, and local road safety. An amended policy and amended terms of references five different council advisory committees were tabled at an ordinary meeting of Southern Downs Regional Council on Wednesday 8 September. The item was intended simply to be “procedural”, according to Mayor Vic Pennisi, but prompted debate among councillors. Councillor Cynthia McDonald said that as

a councillor representative on numerous advisory committees, including the Saleyards Advisory Committee, she believed she had a right to vote. “My question to my colleagues around the table is: who has the right to discern which particular advisory committees may or may not have voting rights?” Cr McDonald said. Councillor Jo McNally said she agreed councillors should be afforded voting rights, otherwise she couldn’t see the point of being on a committee at all. “We’ve already heard Councillor (Stephen) Tancred talk about trust. Well, trust our fellow councillors and delegate them to attend these committee meetings,” she said.

“Really we should be going back to everybody being able to vote on those committees. That’s democratic.” She said Cr Tancred had taken many “hot shots” at herself, Councillor Sheryl Windle, and Councillor Marco Gliori in relation to them representing councillors on community grants and RADF committees, and she believed the council needed to review its representation on groups. “… I think it’s an opportune time to actually review that because I’m sick of having my integrity called into question,” Cr McNally said. Councillor Marco Gliori said he would like all councillors to be able to sit in on all com-

mittee meetings with council representation. “There are things that I have a genuine interest in that I would like to attend …,” he said. “And that way it just makes it a blanket, open opportunity for councillors to sit in, not to participate, only as observers.” All councillors voted to adopt new terms of references for the Pest Management, Saleyards, Southern Downs Road Safety, Shaping Southern Downs, and Stanthorpe 150th Anniversary Celebration advisory committees. Mayor Vic Pennisi and council officers agreed to host an information session in October this year, where councillors can discuss – and debate – the topic further.

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BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER WE ARE THERE FOR YOU Raymond and his staff at Carnarvon Funeral Services are justified in saying that over the years, they have aided many Granite Belt families at their time of greatest emotional need and crisis. They have done so by providing caring & dignified attention to every detail of the funeral service. It is their aim to continue taking the agonizing confusion and organization from your shoulders and placing it on theirs. They truly do understand. At Carnarvon Funeral Services they know exactly what to do. Delivering careful attention, before, during and after the service. They are most honoured to be asked for help by local families, in their very trouble times. They know just how difficult this time can be, with grief and other emotions clouding the need to attend your loved ones’ personal affairs and the added stress of arranging a funeral service.

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NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Day of the Species By Kaz Thorpe, Arts Writer I met Carmel Killin sitting on the floor creating more displays for her Pop Up exhibition at Stanthorpe Gallery – Day of the Species which runs until 19 September. This exhibition is the official beginning of an ongoing national community art project to prompt “conversations around Australia’s appalling record for biodiversity loss” and to instigate stronger national environmental laws. Carmel is the instigator, designer and heroine behind the art activism display with an alarming message: as at June 2021, there are 1813 threatened flora and fauna in Australia. The display at Stanthorpe Gallery features 32 threatened species that are specific to the local area. It all began in 2020, prompted by a summer of “unprecedented fires” and what Carmel saw as a newly elected federal government out of touch with the existing and future environment. This view was reinforced by the 10 Year Review of Australia’s environmental legislation which charged the Australia’s Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC) as being weak and effectual. She cut a 3cm x 7cm rectangle out of a

Designer, educator, writer, and activist Carmel Killin’s pop-up exhibition is on now. tea bag box and illustrated the endangered spotted-tail quoll. Her aim was to illustrate all 1800 endangered species which would be displayed in an effort to engage viewers and create an experience where they too sought environmental change. It has been slow road, including a global epidemic continually blocking Carmel’s plans. Yet after a social media call out, The Field Nat-

uralists Club of Victoria got behind the project and really got it going. Since then, “professional artists, designers, students, children, ecologists, park rangers, botanical illustrators, academics, fiction writers, therapists, climate activists and a dentist” have created 1813 illustrations of threatened species. Walking into Carmel’s exhibition at Stanthorpe is overwhelming. One is blown away by the sheer scale of the potential loss of so much of Australia’s unique biodiversity and the beauty of the artwork. One is aroused to act! Carmel suggests writing, even a line or two, to Susan Ley, Federal Minister for the Environment, asking her to act to save our exceptional and precious flora and fauna. Specially, she hopes to touch local communities so they wish to “follow through in their own way.” Carmel wants to travel the exhibition and make it an “all singing, all dancing” experience. I know she will be successful! If you would like further information contact Carmel on carmelkillin@gmail.com. A short video about Day of the Species is available at https://youtu.be/aU2TWNF-uZ0.

45 per cent of Australia’s birds are found nowhere else on earth.

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WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Q&A

with GARY ZERNER

This week’s Q&A subject is new owner of Downs Heating, Cooling and Outdoors on Grafton Street GARY ZERNER. Gary has lived in Warwick for 23 years, and took over the business with his wife Kim earlier this year. Here’s what he had to say in this week’s Q&A:

THREE … events this Spring Spring has sprung, and the region is looking beautiful. Here are three events to check out this season.

When did you take over Downs Heating, Cooling and Outdoors and what were you doing prior? February 2021. I was National Business Development Manager for our family’s company, AgSolutions, which was soil and livestock nutrition.

1

Toowoomba Carnival of Flowers Toowoomba Carnival of Flowers is the longest running floral event of its kind in Australia as the premiere celebration of flowers, food, wine, culture, and more. Multiple gardens throughout Toowoomba are sure to be an impressive sight. You can find the full program at www.tcof.com.au.

2

Walk Among the Wildflowers on the Granite Belt The second in a series of spring wildflower walks being organised by the Stanthorpe Rare Wildflower Consortium will be held this Sunday 19 September in the Broadwater State Forest. The walks are aimed to show people some of the diversity of the flora. Further details about the walk can be found at www.granitebeltwildflowers.com.

3

PYO strawberries Applethorpe’s Eastern Colour is inviting Queenslanders to pick their own strawberries and admire the annual King Blossom on 25 and 26 September. The farm will be open from 9am-1pm at 244 Aerodrome Road. Pickers should register via Eastern Colour’s Facebook page by 5pm, 24 September.

What do you love most about your job? Being our own bosses and being surrounded by a positive team. What is your most popular product and your most popular service? Wood heater spare parts, that’s the online part of our business. We send products all over Australia and we also export to six countries. And probably more recently is our Kings camping gear which is new. So in recent weeks, our Kings camping gear has become quite popular. How do you relax after a long day? A rum and dry and a bit of tele, watch the footy. What’s something people may not know about you? I represented Queensland in cattle judging when I was younger, and placed fourth in the nationals. If you could spend 24 hours anywhere, any year, where would you choose? On the snowfields. What is something you can’t live without? Coffee. (Maybe I should say my wife.)

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What would your last meal on earth be? Steak and chips.

ery opportunity. Always look into something. What you put in, you get out.

What is the best piece of advice you have ever received? Go the extra mile and take advantage of ev-

How would you spend a lottery win? A beef property and a unit at the coast.

Warwick Cricket will be hosting the following training day for all current and future junior cricketers, boys and girls all welcome.

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We will also be providing information for the upcoming junior season including registration and sign on information.

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Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 17


YourCommunity YourVoice YourCouncil THURSDAY 16 SEPTEMBER 2021

Killarney steps forward with urban design framework

Want Sort-It Sally and Council’s waste collection truck to personally visit you and your family? A new video/photo competition by Council is offering just THAT to one lucky household! Bin collection day is a much anticipated highlight for some kids. The thrill of the big Cleanaway truck with its bright safety lights and beeps, cruising down the street, effortlessly lifting the wheelie bin off the ground with its Transformer-like arms and dumping the contents into its huge back-bin has a huge WOW factor. And Council wants parents to capture their kids’ excitement watching a ‘reallife-movie-in-motion’ these school holidays. Regional waste warrior, Southern Downs Mayor Vic Pennisi said he looks forward the seeing the competition entries roll in, just like the waste trucks. “Our waste mascot Sort-It Sally is a rock star in

The Business Marketing Support Program provides small businesses with three FREE sessions with a local marketing consultant, funded by Council.

the waste arena and she is hugely popular as the ambassador for our waste education program,” Mayor Pennisi said. “I’m sure the opportunity to have her personally visit one lucky winner’s home will have kids and families snapping and filming away during the school holidays.” Council reminds participants to watch and film entries from the recommended distance of 5m from the truck and the wheelie bin during collection. Children must be supervised at all times.

The rich history and natural beauty of Killarney will be celebrated after the town was selected as the next in line to be included in the Southern Downs Regional Council’s Urban Design Framework (UDF) program. Following in the footsteps of Wallangarra, Leyburn, Maryvale, Dalveen and Pratten, Killarney’s framework will consider how to support industry and tourism growth in line with the town’s unique character and location. Small towns advocate, Southern Downs Councillor Sheryl Windle said Killarney’s UDF would play to its strengths and build on its existing tourism clout and country charm. “Our region is home to some very special towns with unique appeal only found on the Southern Downs,” Councillor Windle said. “Killarney has already positioned itself as a must-see location through its gorgeous nature walks, key tourism events and country charm and a strategic UDF will pivot from these qualities. “With Killarney’s proximity to South East Queensland and the News South Wales border, the town is also well positioned to see growth in the transport and logistics, and agriculture

sectors and for those seeking a tree change.” As part of the Shaping Southern Downs strategic plan, the region’s UDFs provide direction on urban design and recommend projects that will protect and enhance the liveability, identity and landscape of a community. Killarney’s UDF will be completed in the 2021/22 financial year and dates for public consultation will be announced in the coming months.

Video and photo entries must be received between Monday 20 September and 5pm Friday 1 October and must be filmed or snapped within Southern Downs local government area. For further information, please visit www.sdrc.qld.gov.au.

You will Receive: One-on-one marketing advice tailored to your business Three one-hour long consultation sessions at your business Practical tools and tips to better manage your own marketing and branding

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12512927-NG38-21

Jointly funded by the Australian and Queensland Governments through the Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements.

Southern Downs Regional Council 1300 MY SDRC (1300 679 372) | www.sdrc.qld.gov.au PO Box 26, Warwick Q, 4370 | mail@sdrc.qld.gov.au 18 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021


The Guide SUNDAY

TOP PICKS OF THE WEEK

THE NEWSREADER ABC TV, 8.30pm

SATURDAY

X-MEN: APOCALYPSE SEVEN, 9.25pm

The forces of good and evil are once more pitted against each other. The immortal mutant, Apocalypse (Oscar Isaac), is awakened after thousands of years and recruits Magneto (Michael Fassbender) and other mutants to create a new world order. As Earth’s fate hangs in the balance, Professor X (James McAvoy) and Raven (Jennifer Lawrence) lead a team of young X-Men to stop their nemesis. The cast includes Sophie Turner (Sansa from Game of Thrones) as a young Jean Grey.

SUNDAY

THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES SBS WORLD MOVIES, 8.30pm

From the director of Blue Valentine comes this melodrama spanning 15 years, starring Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes, along with Bradley Cooper and Ben Mendelsohn. Mysterious Luke (Gosling) is a motorcycle stuntman who, upon returning to New York, discovers he has fathered a son with ex-lover Romina (Mendes). Desperate to provide for him, he turns to robbing banks and soon cop Avery (Cooper) is on his tail. Running almost two-and-a-half hours, this epic film has a dreamy feel, livened by its soundtrack from Mike Patton. While the plot is a tad thin and the ending perhaps over-the-top, the story is captivating.

TUESDAY

THE MASKED SINGER AUSTRALIA TEN, 7.30pm

Yes, they’re masked: but not in the way we’ve recently come to know it. A crazy concoction of fun and masquerade, this unique escape from reality features celebrities disguised as wacky and quirky creatures – including an angelic baby, a downright bizarre kebab, a creepy looking, sparkly volcano, and a marine-inspired mullet creature – in a singing competition that is sure to leave you spinning. Their out-of-this-world garb is designed by Oscarwinning costume designer Tim Chappel, and the diverse guessing panel includes Dannii Minogue, Dave Hughes, Urzila Carlson and Jackie O, with Osher Gunsberg hosting. One peek, and you’ll lose yourself in the tomfoolery.

Flush with deeply flawed yet instantly engaging characters, this excellent series pulls the curtains tonight with its final episode. From the hustle and bustle of a Melbourne newsroom during a pivotal period of world and local news in 1986, the show has been packed with memorable moments from the headlines, but it’s the captivating mix of personalities that lingers. Tonight, will the intense and confusing relationship between newsreaders Helen (Anna Torv) and Dale (Sam Reid) be resolved? The chemistry between the co-stars is magnetic, but as frightening reports of a nuclear disaster in Chernobyl emerge, they finally face their truths. Anna Torv in The Newsreader

Friday, September 17 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Q+A. (R) 11.05 Grand Designs: The Street. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 1.30 That Pacific Sports Show. (R) 2.00 The Capture. (Mlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 The Twist. (PG, R) 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 4.50 Chopsticks Or Fork? (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 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 The Rise Of The Clans. (Mav, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Britain’s Most Historic Towns. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Outlaw Prophet: Warren Jeffs. (2014, Masv, R) Tony Goldwyn. 2.00 House Of Wellness. (PG) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. Hosted by Larry Emdur.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Explore. (R) 12.15 MOVIE: Dying For The Crown. (2018, Mav) 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 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (a, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGas) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. Analysis of the day’s news. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Advice for the home gardener. 8.30 Midsomer Murders. (Final, Mv, R) DCI Barnaby and DS Winter investigate when the winner of a music award is murdered and his violin stolen. 10.00 The Capture. (Mlv, R) Carey uncovers a complex conspiracy. 11.05 ABC Late News. Detailed coverage of the day’s events. 11.20 The Vaccine. (R) 11.35 Question Everything. (R) 12.05 Rosehaven. (PG, R) 12.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Secrets Of The Pyramids. (PG) Follows archaeological teams across Egypt. 8.30 World’s Most Extraordinary Homes: India. (PG) Piers Taylor and Caroline Quentin visit India. 9.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. (M) The squad takes stock of their time together. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.55 The Eagle. (Malv, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. Joh checks out an orb house in Templestowe. 8.30 MOVIE: The Help. (2011, Ma, R) An author writes a book detailing the African-American maids’ point of view on the families they work for. Emma Stone, Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer. 11.25 To Be Advised. 1.05 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (Mv, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 My Greek Odyssey. (PG, R) 5.00 NBC Today.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Rugby League. NRL. First semi-final. 9.45 NRL Finals Footy PostMatch. A post-match NRL wrap up of the first semi-final with expert analysis and player interviews. 10.35 MOVIE: Double Impact. (1991, MA15+slv, R) Twin brothers, separated when young, join forces as adults to avenge the murder of their parents. Jean-Claude Van Damme, Geoffrey Lewis. 12.40 Tipping Point. (PG, R) Hosted by Ben Shephard. 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.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Living Room. Lifestyle program. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.30 The Graham Norton Show. (PGa, R) Guests include Rebel Wilson, Keeley Hawes, Noel Clarke, Daniel Sloss and M. Night Shyamalan. 10.30 Best Of The Sydney Comedy Festival. (MA15+ls, 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)

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon RocKwiz. 12.50 Meghan Markle Escaping The Crown. 1.40 Ngumpin Kartiya. 2.00 Yokayi Footy. 2.35 Over The Black Dot. 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Joy Of Painting. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.20 Love And Sex In Russia. 10.25 Reset. 11.55 VICE News Tonight. 12.20am MOVIE: Crimson Peak. (2015, MA15+) 2.30 NHK World English News. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Room For Improvement. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Border Security: International. 8.30 My Impossible House. 10.30 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. 11.40 Home Rescue. 12.20am M*A*S*H. 1.30 The Fine Art Auction. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 Home Shopping.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon David Attenborough’s Natural Curiosities. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: Agatha Christie’s The Mirror Crack’d. (1980, PG) 5.30 David Attenborough’s Natural Curiosities. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Country House Hunters Australia. 8.30 MOVIE: Bridget Jones’s Baby. (2016, M) 10.55 MOVIE: Wanderlust. (2012, MA15+) 12.55am Explore. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon Charmed. 2.00 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Friends. 11.30 The Big Bang Theory. Midnight Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 Charmed. 2.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 3.30 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 4.30 Home Shopping. 5.30 Infomercials.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Kirikou And The Sorceress. Continued. (1998) 6.15 Lion. (2016, PG) 8.25 White Tuft, The Little Beaver. (2008) 9.50 Amazonia. (2013, No dialogue) 11.20 Fist Of Fury. (1972, M, Cantonese) 1.25pm The Red Balloon. (1956, French) 2.05 Operation Arctic. (2014, PG, Norwegian) 3.45 Rosie. (2018, PG) 5.25 Frantz. (2016, PG, French) 7.30 Gold. (2016, M) 9.45 All Quiet On The Western Front. (1979, PG) 12.35am Mon Roi. (2015, MA15+, French) 2.55 Drunken Master. (1978, M, Cantonese) 5.00 All Quiet On The Western Front. (1979, PG)

7MATE (73) 6am Fishing And Adventure. 6.30 The Fishing Show. 7.30 Creek To Coast. 8.00 Graveyard Carz. 9.00 American Pickers. 10.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Pawn Stars. 1.30 Pawnography. 2.00 Alaska’s Wild Gourmet. 3.00 Big Australia. 4.00 Timbersports. 4.30 Graveyard Carz. 5.30 MOVIE: Police Academy. (1984, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: The Transporter. (2002, M) 9.30 MOVIE: Transporter 2. (2005, M) 11.15 MOVIE: Beowulf. (2007, M) 1.30am Collectables Guru With Gaz & Rob. 2.30 Sound FX: Best Of. 3.00 NFL. NFL. Week 1. Kansas City Chiefs v Cleveland Browns. Replay.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Italian Grand Prix. Highlights. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon Walker, Texas Ranger. 1.00 NCIS. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 11.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Home Shopping. 1.00 Infomercials. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 JAG. 4.00 NCIS. 5.00 Diagnosis Murder.

Programs. 7pm Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.15 Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.35 LSO: Gardiner Conducts Mendelssohn And Schumann. (Premiere) 10.05 Gruen. 10.45 Doctor Who. 11.30 Art Works. Midnight Brush With Fame. 12.30 Live At The Apollo. 1.15 QI. 1.45 Would I Lie To You? 2.15 30 Rock. 2.35 Reno 911! 3.00 Friday Night Dinner. 3.20 Upper Middle Bogan. 3.50 News Update. 3.55 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Miffy’s Adventures Big And Small. 5.15 The Furchester Hotel. 5.25 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.

N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 8.45 Wapos Bay. 9.05 Kagagi. 9.30 Bushwhacked! 10.00 Going Places. 11.00 My Life As I Live It. Noon MOVIE: Resurrecting The Champ. (2007) 2.00 On The Road. 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 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Red Chef Revival. 7.00 NITV News: Nula. 7.30 Red Dirt Riders. 7.45 MOVIE: Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant. (2009, M) 9.55 First Nations Bedtime Stories. 10.35 The Fifth Region. 11.30 Late Programs.

11.30 Clarence. Noon Parenthood. 2.00 Big Fat Gypsy Weddings. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 5.30 MOVIE: Rise Of The Guardians. (2012, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: Warcraft. (2016, M) 10.00 MOVIE: The 5th Wave. (2016, M) 12.15am Love Island USA. 1.10 Big Fat Gypsy Weddings. 2.05 The Bi Life. 3.00 Adventure Time. 3.30 Regular Show. 4.00 Pokémon The Series: Sun & Moon – Ultra Adventures. 4.30 Beyblade Burst Turbo. 4.50 Bakugan: Battle Planet. 5.10 Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.

CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat (a) Adult themes (d) Drug references (h) Horror (s) Sex references (l) Language (m) Medical procedures (n) Nudity (v) Violence.

QLD

Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 19


Saturday, September 18 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 10.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Grand Designs: The Street. (PG, R) 1.20 Restoration Australia. (PG, R) 2.15 Dream Build. (R) 2.25 Harry Seidler: Modernist. (R) 3.30 Further Back In Time For Dinner. (R) 4.45 Landline. 5.15 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 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 Gymnastics. FIG Rhythmic World Challenge Cup. 3.30 Secret Life Of The Cruise Ship. (R) 4.45 QE2: The World’s Most Luxurious Hotel. (PGl, R) 5.35 The Blitz: Britain On Fire. (PGa, R)

6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) Highlights from the past week. 12.00 Horse Racing. MRC Foundation Race Day and George Main Stakes Day. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Creek To Coast. A look at the latest in outdoor activities.

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG, R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Rivals. 12.30 Destination WA. 1.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 3.30 Travel Guides. (PG, R) 4.30 The Garden Gurus. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. (PG)

6am Morning Programs. 7.30 Seafood Escape. (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. (R) 2.30 Australia By Design: Innovations. (PG, R) 3.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 5.00 News.

6.15 The Repair Shop. (R) Tim Weeks tackles a Peter Pan gramophone. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 The Durrells. (PG) The King of Greece is coming to visit Corfu and the Durrells are keen to be part of the welcoming committee. 8.20 The Trial Of Christine Keeler. (Mals) It is the summer of 1963 and Stephen Ward is before the court at the Old Bailey in the trial of the decade. Christine and Mandy appear for the prosecution and find themselves exposed to the crowds. 9.20 The Newsreader. (Mal, R) Dale’s career and his relationship with Helen are attracting more attention. 10.15 Miniseries: Roadkill. (Madl, R) Part 3 of 4. 11.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) Music video clips.

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Castles: Secrets, Mysteries And Legends: Portugal. Part 4 of 4. 8.30 Celebrity Mastermind. (PG) Celebrity guests include Shane Gould, Tanya Hennessy, Prinnie Stevens and Phil Burton. 9.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mls, R) Game show, featuring Kathy Burke and Russell Howard, with Joe Lycett. Hosted by Jimmy Carr. 11.20 MOVIE: Downfall. (2004, MA15+av, R, Germany) Follows the final days of Adolf Hitler. Bruno Ganz. 2.10 Fox News: Divide And Conquer. (Mals, R) 4.05 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 MOVIE: Ant-Man. (2015, PGlv, R) A master thief is recruited to pull off a heist, armed with a suit that allows him to shrink in size. Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas. 9.25 MOVIE: X-Men: Apocalypse. (2016, Mlv, R) After the world’s first mutant is freed from his ancient prison, the X-Men must unite to defeat him and his trio of powerful followers before they can put his extinction-level plans for humanity into effect. James McAvoy, Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender. 12.10 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (Mv, R) The team discovers what Coulson has been hiding. 1.05 Air Crash Investigation: Deadly Discussions. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) 5.00 House Of Wellness. (PGa, R)

6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 Rugby League. NRL. Second semi-final. 9.45 NRL Finals Footy PostMatch. A post-match NRL wrap up of the second semi-final with expert analysis and player interviews. 10.30 MOVIE: Miami Vice. (2006, MA15+lsv, R) Two detectives investigate after an informant, his family and two FBI agents are killed by an international drug cartel. Jamie Foxx, Colin Farrell, Gong Li. 1.00 Rivals. (R) Former Women’s Championship Tour surfer Chelsea Hedges puts her skills to the test at Tweed Coast, NSW. 1.30 A Current Affair. 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) Home shopping. 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG) Hosted by Stu Cameron.

6.00 Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. Jamie Oliver reinvents family favourites. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PGal, R) Trainee Lachie finds out if he has earned a permanent spot on the Bondi lifeguard squad. 7.00 The Dog House. (PG, R) A Pomeranian arrives at Wood Green having spent its entire life in a puppy farm cage, used only for breeding. 8.00 Ambulance. A crew attends to a woman who has contracted COVID-19 while pregnant. 10.00 To Be Advised. 11.00 Blue Bloods. (Mav, R) Identical twins are linked to a murder. 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Hour Of Power.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Russell Howard Stands Up To The World. 9.15 Live At The Apollo. 11.00 Sammy J. 11.05 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 11.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 12.10am Would I Lie To You? 12.40 Everything’s Gonna Be Okay. 1.00 Bliss. 1.30 Would I Lie To You? 2.00 Escape From The City. 3.00 News Update. 3.05 Close. 5.00 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Letterkenny. 2.20 Do Planes Need Pilots? 3.20 WorldWatch. 4.45 Seconds From Disaster. 6.35 American Runestone: A Viking Mystery. 7.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. 8.30 The X-Files. 11.00 Dateline. 11.30 Insight. 12.30am MOVIE: Beyond The Lights. (2014, M) 2.40 France 24. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 12.30pm Sydney Weekender. 1.00 House Of Wellness. 2.00 Animal Rescue. 2.30 MOVIE: Arthur 2: On The Rocks. (1988, PG) 5.00 Horse Racing. MRC Foundation Race Day and George Main Stakes Day. 5.30 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. 6.30 Martin Clunes: Islands Of Australia. 7.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Newstyle Direct. 6.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 The Avengers. 11.00 Edgar Wallace Mysteries. 12.20pm MOVIE: Five Golden Dragons. (1967, PG) 2.15 MOVIE: Rio Grande. (1950) 4.30 Rugby Union. Rugby Championship. Round 4. Australia v South Africa. 7.00 The Rugby Championship 2021 Post-Match. 7.30 MOVIE: Deep Impact. (1998, M) 9.55 MOVIE: Dante’s Peak. (1997, M) 12.05am Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2.25pm Rugby Union. WA Premier Grade. 3.55 Rugby League. NRL NT. 4.55 Indian Country Today. 5.25 News. 5.55 NITV News: Nula. 6.25 Going Places. 6.55 Yokayi Footy. 7.30 News. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Pariah: The Lives And Deaths Of Sonny Liston. 10.10 MOVIE: One Thousand Ropes. (2017, M) 11.50 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Malcolm. 2.30 MOVIE: House Arrest. (1996, PG) 4.45 Children’s Programs. 5.15 MOVIE: Bee Movie. (2007) 7.00 MOVIE: How To Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World. (2018, PG) 9.00 MOVIE: Star Trek Into Darkness. (2013, M) 11.35 All New Traffic Cops. 12.35am Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. 1.35 Mexican Dynasties. 2.30 Social Fabric. 3.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 Home Shopping. 9.00 The Doctors. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. Noon JAG. 2.00 One Strange Rock. 3.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 4.00 Truck Hunters. 4.30 iFish. 5.00 Reel Action. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 Blue Bloods. 11.20 CSI. 1.10am Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 13. Aragon Grand Prix. Replay. 3.10 Late Programs. 12503970-JW29-21

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Blokesworld. 1.30 The Food Dude. 2.00 Motor Racing. Extreme E. Artic X-Prix. 3.00 Rides Down Under: Workshop Wars. 4.00 Heavy Rescue: 401. 5.00 Graveyard Carz. 6.00 Dirty Rotten Survival. 7.00 Cities Of The Underworld. 8.00 Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 9.15 Building Giants. 10.15 Mysteries Of The Abandoned. 11.15 Late Programs. IENDLY BAN FR

NG KI

EA SY

Morning Programs. 8.30 Frantz. (2016, PG, French) 10.30 Drunken Master. (1978, M, Cantonese) 12.40pm Lion. (2016, PG) 2.50 Amazonia. (2013, No dialogue) 4.20 The Straight Story. (1999, PG) 6.25 Agatha Christie’s Crooked House. (2017, PG) 8.30 Charlie Countryman. (2013, MA15+) 10.25 Into The White. (2012, M, Norwegian) 12.25am Late Programs.

With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 10.30 To Be Advised. 1pm 2021 MTV Video Music Awards. Hosted by Doja Cat. 4.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.15 2 Broke Girls. 10.45 The Conners. 11.45 Friends. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.10 Infomercials. 1.40 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. 3.30 Seatbelt Psychic. 4.30 Home Shopping.

WARWICK CREDIT UNION

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Sunday, September 19 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (R) 11.30 Praise. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Aust. (R) 2.30 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (R) 3.30 Todd Sampson’s Life On The Line. (PG, R) 4.00 How Australia Got Its Mojo. (PG, R) 5.00 Art Works. (PG, R) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow.

6.00 France 24 English News First Edition. (R) 6.30 Al Jazeera 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 Speedweek. 3.00 Sydney Harbour Patrol. (PG, R) 4.40 Mission Galapagos. (R) 5.35 The Blitz: Britain On Fire. (PG, R)

6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. (PGav, R) 1.30 To Be Advised. 3.30 Border Patrol. (PG) 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. (R) 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Weekender.

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG, R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 11.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. (PG) 1.00 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 1.30 Ultimate Rush. (PG, R) 2.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. (PGls, R) 3.00 Rugby League. Intrust Super Cup Finals. Week 1. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 My Way. (R)

6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PG, R) 9.00 Australia By Design: Interiors. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.15 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 1.30 Three Veg And Meat. (R) 2.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 2.30 My Market Kitchen. (R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. 4.00 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGal) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. 5.00 News.

6.30 Back Roads: Glen Helen Ride, NT. (R) Presented by Heather Ewart. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 To Be Advised. 8.30 The Newsreader. (Final, Ml) With Helen still reeling from Dale’s revelation, reports emerge of a nuclear accident in Chernobyl. 9.25 Traces. (Final, Malv) While Kathy oversees the excavation of Marie’s grave, Daniel gives McKinven the lead he needs to make an arrest. 10.10 Les Norton. (Mdlsv, R) The Kelly Club coffers are dwindling. 11.10 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 12.10 Pine Gap. (Ml, R) 2.00 Hilltop Hoods Live. (Ml, R) 3.05 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.55 Insiders. (R)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Inside Central Station: Woman Faints Into Train. (M) 8.30 Australia Uncovered: Osher Günsberg: A Matter Of Life And Death. (MA15+) Explores suicide in Australia. 9.55 Michael Mosley: Eat, Fast, And Live Longer. (R) 10.55 The Surrogates. (Man, R) 11.55 24 Hours In Emergency. (Mal, R) 12.50 9/11: Escape From The Towers. (Maw, R) 2.20 The 250 Million Pound Cancer Cure. (PGa, R) 3.25 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PGa) 4.20 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+adls, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (PGaw, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 7NEWS: Disappearance Of William Tyrell. A look at the case of William Tyrrell. 8.30 MOVIE: Jack Reacher: Never Go Back. (2016, Mv, R) Jack Reacher comes to the aid of an army officer he suspects is the victim of a conspiracy. Tom Cruise, Cobie Smulders, Danika Yarosh. 11.00 Criminal Confessions: Vanished In The Night. (MA15+alv, R) Sheriffs investigate a missing person’s case. 12.00 Madeleine McCann: The Hunt For The Prime Suspect. (Ma, R) 1.00 Air Crash Investigation. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 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: Secrets And Lies. (Mav) A look at the murder of Leslie Griffin. 11.00 Prison Girls: Life Inside. (MA15+adlv, R) 11.50 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now: Heroes. (Mam) 12.40 The Garden Gurus. (R) 1.05 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Sunday Project. A look at the day’s news. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Dannii Minogue, Urzila Carlson, Jackie O and Dave Hughes try to guess a celebrity singer’s identity. 8.40 FBI: Most Wanted. (Mv, R) After a hacker causes a car crash that kills a family of three, the team races to hunt him down. 10.40 FBI. (Mv, R) The mayor interferes in an investigation. 11.40 The Sunday Project. (R) 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 1.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Compass. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Altered States. 9.30 Shaun Micallef’s On The Sauce. (Final) 10.30 A-ha: The Movie. 11.35 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.20am Live At The Apollo. 1.05 Arj Barker: Get In My Head. 2.05 Review With Myles Barlow. 2.35 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon First Contact. 1.00 Vogue Williams: Going It Alone. 2.00 The Carmichael Show. 2.25 Batman And Bill. 4.05 WorldWatch. 4.30 The Point. 5.00 The Orville. 6.40 Planet Expedition. 7.40 The UnXplained With William Shatner. 8.30 Life And Death Row. 9.35 Policing In America. 10.30 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Eschborn-Frankfurt. 2.15am The Therapist. 2.45 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Shopping. 9.00 NBC Today. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 11.30 My Road To Adventure. Noon The Yorkshire Vet. 1.00 Reno Rookie. 1.30 DVine Living. 2.15 Jabba’s School Holiday Movies. 2.45 Escape To The Country. 3.45 MOVIE: Where Eagles Dare. (1968, PG) 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Miniseries: Manhunt. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 7.30 In Touch. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 The AFL Sunday Footy Show. Noon Explore. 12.10 Getaway. 12.40 MOVIE: My Learned Friend. (1943, PG) 2.10 MOVIE: The Woman In The Window. (1944, PG) 4.10 MOVIE: A Passage To India. (1984, PG) 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 Coroner. 9.40 Chicago P.D. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Big Bang Theory. 7.00 The Neighborhood. 8.00 The Middle. 9.00 Neighbours. 11.00 To Be Advised. 1.30pm Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. 2.00 The Dog House. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 The Neighborhood. (Return) 9.30 2 Broke Girls. 11.30 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

Wkfl Women. 11.15 Football. QAFL. 1pm Rugby League. NRL NT. 2.10 Rugby Union. Ella 7s. 2.30 Football. NT Women’s Premier League. 4.30 Ice Hockey. SA Premier League. 5.45 African News. 6.00 NITV News: Nula. 6.30 Art + Soul. 7.30 NITV News Update. 7.40 First Footprints. 8.40 The Ripple Effect. 9.35 Stolen Glory: The Tale Of Porky Brooke. 10.15 Going Places. 11.15 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 7.55 The Straight Story. (1999, PG) 10.00 Howard Lovecraft. (2016, PG) 11.35 Agatha Christie’s Crooked House. (2017, PG) 1.40pm Frantz. (2016, PG, French) 3.45 All Quiet On The Western Front. (1979, PG) 6.35 The Perfect Candidate. (2019, PG, Arabic) 8.30 The Place Beyond The Pines. (2012, MA15+) 11.05 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Rivals. 2.00 Peaking. 2.30 Soapbox Racing. Red Bull Series. Replay. 3.30 Road Trick. 4.00 Race Across The World. 5.15 MOVIE: Babe. (1995) 7.00 MOVIE: The Secret Life Of Pets. (2016) 8.45 MOVIE: Transformers. (2007, M) 11.35 Outlaw. 12.30am Race Across The World. 1.45 Road Trick. 2.15 Rivals. 2.45 Clarence. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Roads Less Travelled. 10.30 The Doctors. 11.30 Scorpion. 1.30pm Bondi Rescue. 2.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. 3.00 All 4 Adventure. 4.00 Matildas: Countdown To India 2022. 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. 5.00 I Fish. 5.30 Bondi Rescue. 6.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 9.30 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 14. San Marino Grand Prix. 11.15 Late Programs.

20 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Fishing. Australian Championships. AFC IX. Replay. 11.00 River To Reef: Retro. 11.30 Step Outside. Noon The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. 2.00 Fish’n With Mates. 2.30 Merv Hughes Fishing. 3.00 Fishing Addiction. 4.00 Pawn Stars. 4.25 MOVIE: Batman. (1989, PG) 7.00 Brownlow Medal. 10.00 MOVIE: Passenger 57. (1992, M) 11.45 Late Programs.


Monday, September 20 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. (R) 10.30 50th Anniversary Of Operation Ivanhoe. 11.00 To Be Advised. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Durrells. (PG, R) 2.00 Victoria. (R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 4.50 Chopsticks Or Fork? (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Inside Central Station. (M, R) 3.05 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PGa, R) 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.05 The Supervet. (PG) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Home For Harvest. (2019, PGa) 2.00 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 2.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGas, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGs) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 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) Hosted by Paul Barry. 9.35 China Tonight. A look at current affairs from China. 10.05 Road To Now: Global Shapers. (PG, R) 11.05 ABC Late News. 11.20 The Business. (R) 11.35 Juanita: A Family Mystery. (Final, PGa, R) 12.35 Traces. (Final, Malv, R) 1.20 Miniseries: Roadkill. (Madl, R) 2.20 Victoria. (R) 3.05 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Ten Mistakes: 737 Max. (M) Part 1 of 4. 8.30 Secret Scotland: Isles Of Mull And Staffa. (PG) In Staffa, Susan visits one of the UK’s natural wonders, a cathedral-like cavern formed over thousands of years. 9.20 24 Hours In Emergency: Sacrifice. (M) Colombian born Diana rushes to St George’s where her 19-year-old son Daniel has been brought into resus. 10.15 SBS World News Late. 10.45 Outlier. (Mal) 11.35 An Ordinary Woman. (Mal, R) 2.25 The Great Escape With Guy Martin. (Mln, R) 4.05 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+av, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGa) Ryder’s reality comes to a head. 7.30 SAS Australia. (Malv) The celebrity recruits face a frightening casualty mission to learn how to turn their aggression on and off. 9.00 9-1-1: Lone Star. (Ma) Owen helps Tommy through a personal emergency involving her husband. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 Station 19. (Ma) The team try to save a couple trapped in a car. 12.30 The Passage. (Mv, R) 1.30 The Real Seachange. (R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.50 Under Investigation: War With China. A panel of experts explores the possibility and consequences of a war between China and the US. 9.50 100% Footy. (M) Features the latest rugby league news. 10.50 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.20 The Arrangement. (Malsv) Kyle and Megan clash over career choices. 12.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 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) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Hosted by Osher Günsberg. 8.40 Have You Been Paying Attention? (Malns) Celebrity panelists compete to see who can remember the most about events of the week. 9.40 Just For Laughs Uncut. (Return, MA15+als) Gina Yashere, Moshe Kasher and Bridget Everett showcase some of their most raunchy material. 10.10 Just For Laughs. (Mals) Hosted by Nick Cody. 10.40 The Project. (R) 11.40 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 David Attenborough’s Micro Monsters. 9.20 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 10.10 Doctor Who. 10.55 Decoding Danger. 11.55 Escape From The City. 12.50am QI. 1.25 30 Rock. 1.45 Reno 911! 2.10 Friday Night Dinner. 2.30 Upper Middle Bogan. 3.00 News Update. 3.05 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. 8.00 Basketball. WNBA. Indiana Fever v Chicago Sky. 10.00 WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 2.45 New Girl. 3.40 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hypothetical. 9.25 Taskmaster. 10.20 Reclaiming Amy. 11.30 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 10.30 My Road To Adventure. 11.00 Air Crash Investigation: Special Report. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Wall. 3.00 Sydney Weekender. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. 10.30 Cold Case. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Attenborough’s Natural Curiosities. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Explore. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Lady Godiva Rides Again. (1951) 5.30 Attenborough’s Natural Curiosities. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Poirot. 8.40 Agatha Christie’s Marple. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Big Bang Theory. 7.00 Friends. 9.30 The Middle. 11.00 The Unicorn. 11.30 The Neighborhood. 12.30pm Seatbelt Psychic. 1.30 The Big Bang Theory. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 The Unicorn. 11.30 The Conners. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Art + Soul. 2.30 Mparntwe: Sacred Sites. 3.00 Jarjums. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 The 77 Percent. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 News. 7.25 Songlines On Screen. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. 9.00 Pacific Lockdown: Sea Of Resilience. 10.00 News. 10.10 Te Ao With Moana. 10.40 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Infomercials. 7.30 Home Shopping. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon Mega Mechanics. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 11.15 Blue Bloods. 12.10am Infomercials. 12.40 Home Shopping. 2.10 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 14. San Marino Grand Prix. Replay. 4.00 48 Hours. 5.00 The Doctors.

Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 4.00 Children’s Programs. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 MOVIE: Mad Max: Fury Road. (2015, MA15+) 11.00 Paranormal Caught On Camera. Midnight Love Island USA. 1.00 The Bi Life. 2.00 Late Programs.

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6am Morning Programs. 9.30 Armchair Experts: NFL Edition. 10.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picked Off. 1.00 Picker Sisters. 2.00 Alaska’s Wild Gourmet. 3.00 Big Australia. 4.00 Graveyard Carz. 5.00 Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: Magnum Force. (1973, MA15+) 11.05 Late Programs. IENDLY BAN FR

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EA SY

Morning Programs. 7.05 The Perfect Candidate. (2019, PG, Arabic) 9.00 Wildwitch. (2018, PG, Danish) 10.55 Into The White. (2012, M, Norwegian) 12.55pm The Straight Story. (1999, PG) 3.00 White Tuft, The Little Beaver. (2008) 4.25 A Monster In Paris. (2011, French) 6.05 Abe. (2019, PG) 7.40 Warm Bodies. (2013, M) 9.30 Back To Burgundy. (2017, M, French) 11.35 Late Programs.

WARWICK CREDIT UNION

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Tuesday, September 21 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

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 The Trial Of Christine Keeler. (Mals, R) 2.00 Victoria. (PG, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 4.50 Chopsticks Or Fork? (R) 5.10 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.10 Native America. (PG, R) 3.10 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PGa, R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGa, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Love At First Bark. (2017, PG) 2.00 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 2.30 Highway Patrol. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.20 Driving Test. (PGl, R) 1.50 Explore. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGs, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGadl, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Back To Nature: The Deep River. Hosted by Aaron Pedersen and Holly Ringland. 8.30 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG) Part 1 of 3. A group of young kids take part in a bold program aimed at stopping racism. 9.35 How To Live Younger. Part 1 of 3. 10.35 ABC Late News. 10.50 The Business. (R) 11.05 Q+A. (R) 12.10 China Tonight. (R) 12.40 Storm In A Teacup. (Ml, R) 1.45 The Cult Of The Family. (Mad, R) 2.45 Victoria. (PG, R) 3.30 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Who Do You Think You Are? Troy Cassar-Daley. (PG, R) Troy Cassar-Daley explores his roots. 8.30 Insight. Kumi Taguchi takes a look at what it’s like to be the odd one out. 9.30 Dateline. Looks at Germany’s far-right extremists. 10.00 The Feed. A weekly news and current affairs show. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) 11.30 Cacciatore: The Hunter. (MA15+alsv) 12.35 The Pier. (MA15+as, R) 4.10 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+v, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGav) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Mal) The recruits identify the weakest members. 8.30 MOVIE: Lucy. (2014, MA15+av, R) After becoming caught up in a drug deal, a young woman begins to unlock the potential of her brain. Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman, Choi Min-Sik. 10.15 The Latest: Seven News. 10.45 Station 19. (Mad) 11.45 Surveillance Oz. (M, R) 12.15 Temptation Island USA. (MA15+als, R) 1.15 Harry’s Practice. (R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.50 The Hundred With Andy Lee. Andy Lee is joined by a panel of comedians and 100 Aussies to explore the fun behind the facts. 9.50 Travel Guides. (PGl, R) Ordinary Australians become travel critics. 10.50 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.20 Reverie. (Mav) Mara tries to save a young dancer. 12.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 A Current Affair. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Hosted by Osher Günsberg. 8.30 The Cheap Seats. (Mal) Presenters Melanie Bracewell and Tim McDonald take a look at the week that was. 9.25 Just For Laughs. (Mls) Hosted by Nick Cody. 9.55 Nick Cody: Live At The Enmore. (MA15+l, R) A performance by comedian Nick Cody. 11.00 The Project. (R) 12.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Soccer. Women’s International Friendly. Australia v Ireland. From Tallaght Stadium, Dublin, Ireland.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Whose Line Is It Anyway? (Final) 8.50 Everything’s Gonna Be Okay. 9.35 Rosehaven. 10.05 All My Friends Are Racist. (Final) 10.25 Doctor Who. 11.10 The Games. 11.35 Superwog. Midnight W1A. 12.30 30 Rock. 12.50 Reno 911! 1.15 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 1.55 Friday Night Dinner. 2.20 Upper Middle Bogan. 2.50 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 2.45 New Girl. 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Alone. 9.45 Unknown Amazon. 10.35 Fanatics: The Deep End. 11.00 VICE. 11.30 Detective Chinatown. 12.40am News. 1.05 Curse Of Oak Island. 2.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Room For Improvement. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Wall. 3.00 Creek To Coast. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Lewis. 10.30 One Lane Bridge. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Attenborough’s Natural Curiosities. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Magic Box. (1951) 5.30 The Great Migration. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 Friends. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 11.35 Frasier. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

Treaty. 1.10 Stockman’s Strategy. 2.10 Urban Native Girl. 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 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 African American: Many Rivers To Cross. 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Living Black. 8.30 Guru Of Go. 9.30 Jackie Robinson. 10.30 Anote’s Ark. 11.30 Late Programs.

Howard Lovecraft. (2016, PG) 7.00 Tom Thumb. (2001, PG, French) 8.40 The Illusionist. (2010, PG) 10.10 Back To Burgundy. (2017, M, French) 12.15pm The Perfect Candidate. (2019, PG, Arabic) 2.10 Abe. (2019, PG) 3.45 Wildwitch. (2018, PG, Danish) 5.40 The Ash Lad. (2017, PG, Norwegian) 7.40 The Cobbler. (2014, M) 9.30 Red Joan. (2018, M) 11.25 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 MOVIE: Knight And Day. (2010, M) 9.45 MOVIE: The Whole Nine Yards. (2000, M) 11.45 3rd Rock From The Sun. 12.15am Love Island USA. 1.10 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon Mega Mechanics. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Blue Bloods. (Final) 10.25 Matildas: Countdown To India 2022. 10.55 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.45am Infomercials. 1.15 Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo. (1999, M) 4.00 SEAL Team. 5.00 JAG.

6am Fishing And Adventure. 6.30 The Fishing Show. 7.25 Creek To Coast. 7.50 American Pickers. 8.50 Storage Wars. 9.20 Pawn Stars. 9.50 Cricket. Women’s One Day International Series. Australia v India. Game 1. 5pm Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Aussie Salvage Squad. 10.30 Aussie Lobster Men. 11.30 Late Programs.

Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 21


Wednesday, September 22 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 The Recording Studio. (PG, 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 Victoria. (PG, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 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 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGaw, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 The Chase. (R) Hosted by Bradley Walsh. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. Hosted by Larry Emdur.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.20 Destination WA. (R) 1.50 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGadl, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) Presented by Tom Gleeson. 8.30 Question Everything. Presented by Wil Anderson and Jan Fran. 9.00 Rosehaven. (Final, PG) Barbara’s retirement doesn’t go to plan. 9.30 Would I Lie To You? (PG, R) Hosted by Rob Brydon. 10.00 QI. (Ms, R) 10.30 ABC Late News. 10.45 The Business. (R) 11.05 Four Corners. (R) 11.50 Media Watch. (PG, R) 12.05 A Life In Ten Pictures. (Madl, R) 1.00 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 2.00 Victoria. (PG, R) 2.50 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) Presented by Jennifer Byrne. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Tony Robinson’s World By Rail: Scandinavia. (PG, R) Sir Tony Robinson heads to Scandinavia. 8.30 Lost For Words. (M) Part 1 of 3. Host Jay Laga’aia brings together eight Australians who struggle to read and write. 9.35 War Of The Worlds. (MA15+) Sophia immerses herself in the videos recorded by Dylan, a human survivor who they find dead in the university they are sheltering in. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Hunters: Virus. (PGal) 11.50 The Killing. (Ma, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+sv, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Singapore Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGav) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Ma) The celebrity recruits are taken to an abandoned power station to face a life or death situation. 9.00 RFDS. (Mav) As the RFDS fundraising ball gets underway, Pete is overnighted at a remote clinic. 10.00 The Rookie. (Madv) Nolan is reunited with his ex-wife. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 Chicago Fire. (Ma) A fire breaks out at a homeless encampment. 12.30 The Windsors. (Mls, R) 1.00 First Dates Australia. (PGls, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.40 Paramedics. (Ma) A 38-year-old man has suffered an attack while enjoying a day off with his wife in their spa. 9.40 Kings Cross ER. (Mlm, R) Takes a look at the emergency department in St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney’s Kings Cross. 10.40 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 11.10 Manson: The Lost Tapes. (MA15+adlv, R) Part 1 of 2. 12.05 Bluff City Law. (Ma, R) 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.

6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Making It Australia. Eleven makers return to the crafting barn for two home sweet home-themed challenges. 9.00 Bull. (Ma, R) Benny’s burgeoning political career is threatened when he and Bull mount a difficult defence for a young mother accused of aiding and abetting her extremist husband in an act of domestic terrorism. 12.00 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late night talk show. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings. Morning news and talk show.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Art Works. 9.00 To Be Advised. 10.00 Doctor Who. 10.50 Louis Theroux: Altered States. 11.50 MOVIE: Walk With Me. (2017) 1.20am 30 Rock. 1.45 Reno 911! 2.05 Friday Night Dinner. 2.30 Upper Middle Bogan. (Final) 3.00 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 2.45 New Girl. 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Life And Death Of A TV Presenter. 9.25 Australia Uncovered. 10.50 MOVIE: Lord Of War. (2005, MA15+) 1.05am Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Room For Improvement. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Wall. 3.00 DVine Living. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.40 Bones. 1.40am M*A*S*H. 2.20 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Animal Tales. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Explore. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Outcast Of The Islands. (1951, PG) 5.30 The Great Migration. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 Friends. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 2.00 The Big Bang Theory. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.20 2 Broke Girls. 11.35 King Of Queens. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm Anote’s Ark. 3.00 Jarjums. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 The South Sydney Story. 8.00 Yokayi Footy. 8.35 Over The Black Dot. 9.35 NITV News Update. 9.45 Rugby League. NRL. WA Premiership. 11.00 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Wildwitch. (2018, PG, Danish) 7.25 Abe. (2019, PG) 9.00 The Falcons. (2018, PG, Icelandic) 10.55 The Ash Lad. (2017, PG, Norwegian) 12.55pm Rams. (2015, M, Icelandic) 2.35 The Illusionist. (2010, PG) 4.05 Tom Thumb. (2001, PG, French) 5.45 Growing Up Smith. (2015, PG) 7.40 Free In Deed. (2015, M) 9.30 The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. (2009, MA15+, Swedish) 12.15am Late Programs.

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Infomercials. 8.00 Destination Dessert. 8.30 Snap Happy. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon One Strange Rock. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 SEAL Team. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.40 Infomercials. 2.10 48 Hours. 3.10 NCIS. 4.05 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 The Doctors.

Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 MOVIE: Safe House. (2012, M) 9.45 MOVIE: Collateral. (2004, MA15+) 12.10am Love Island USA. 1.05 The Bi Life. 2.00 Late Programs.

IENDLY BAN FR

NG KI

EA SY

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Picker Sisters. 2.00 Alaska’s Wild Gourmet. 3.00 Caught On Dashcam. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 The Mike & Cole Show. 5.00 Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.00 Surveillance Oz Dashcam. 8.30 Beach Cops. 9.00 Fat Pizza: Back In Business. 9.40 Australia’s Sexiest Tradie. 10.20 Late Programs.

WARWICK CREDIT UNION 12503972-NG29-21

Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. Trading as Warwick Credit Union, Gympie Credit Union and Dalby Credit Union, AFSL and Australian credit licence 240556.

Thursday, September 23 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Australian Story. (R) 10.30 Back To Nature. (R) 11.00 How To Live Younger. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 Question Everything. (R) 2.00 Victoria. (PG, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Native America. (PG, R) 3.10 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGadn, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: What A Girl Wants. (2003, G, R) 2.00 Kochie’s Business Builders. 2.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. (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 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 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. International affairs program. 8.30 Q+A. Interactive public affairs program featuring a panel of experts and commentators answering questions. 9.35 To Be Advised. 10.25 ABC Late News. 10.40 The Business. (R) 11.00 The Cult Of The Family: A Question Of Identity. (Ma, R) 11.55 Midsomer Murders. (Final, Mv, R) 1.30 Victoria. (PG, R) 2.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Walking Britain’s Lost Railways: York. (PG) Presented by Rob Bell. 8.30 The Battle Of Alcatraz. (M) Tells the story of one of the greatest jailbreaks of all time, from Alcatraz Prison off San Francisco in 1946 by five desperate convicts who launched a brilliant escape plan. 9.20 Miniseries: The Victim. (MA15+al) Part 2 of 4. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Criminal Planet. (MA15+dv) 11.55 Mr Mercedes. (MA15+v, R) 1.00 Taken Down. (MA15+ads, R) 4.00 VICE Guide To Film. (Malnv, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour Down Under Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven Local News. 6.30 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGs) 8.30 The Front Bar: Grand Final Edition. (Ml) In the lead-up to the Grand Final, hosts Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher take a lighter look at all things AFL. 10.00 The Latest: Seven News. 10.30 To Be Advised. 12.00 Black-ish. (Return, PG) Junior is excited to vote for the first time. 1.00 The Jonathan Ross Show. (PG, R) British chat show. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 RBT. (Mdl) A look at police random breath test patrols. 8.30 Epstein’s Shadow: Ghislaine Maxwell. (MA15+als) Part 2 of 2. After the death of her father, Maxwell flees to New York, where she falls in love with Jeffrey Epstein. 10.00 Reported Missing: Michael. (Ma, R) A look at the disappearance of Michael Price. 11.15 Nine News Late. 11.45 Chicago Med. (Mamv, R) 12.35 World’s Worst Flights. (Ma, 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.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Making It Australia. The makers focus their skills on challenges involving food, including having to work in pairs. 8.40 Gogglebox. TV fanatics open up their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows. 9.40 To Be Advised. 10.40 Blue Bloods. (Mv, R) Jamie asks Erin for help. 11.30 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.00 Infomercials. (PG, R) 3.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 Question Everything. 10.10 Doctor Who. 10.55 That Pacific Sports Show. 11.25 You Can’t Ask That. 11.55 Micro Monsters. 12.50am Russell Howard Stands Up To The World. 1.35 30 Rock. 1.55 Reno 911! 2.15 Friday Night Dinner. 2.40 Mock The Week. 3.15 Close. 5.00 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Do I Have To Take Care Of Everything? 2.40 New Girl. 3.30 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. 10.10 Dave Gorman: Modern Life Is Goodish. 11.00 The Feed. 11.30 News. 11.55 Reunions. 1.55am 7 Days Of Sex. 2.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Wall. 3.00 Weekender. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Inspector Morse. 10.50 Murdoch Mysteries. 11.50 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon As Time Goes By. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Garden Gurus Moments. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: Cairo Road. (1950, PG) 5.30 The Great Migration. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Tipping Point. 8.30 To Be Advised. 11.00 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 2.00 Friends. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 The Unicorn. 10.00 Seinfeld. 11.00 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2.20pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Morning Programs. 8.40 Growing Up Smith. (2015, PG) 10.35 The Fireflies Are Gone. (2018, M, French) 12.25pm The Cobbler. (2014, M) 2.15 My Brilliant Career. (1979) 4.10 The Falcons. (2018, PG, Icelandic) 6.05 Love And Friendship. (2016, PG) 7.45 Still Here. (2020, M) 9.30 The Girl Who Played With Fire. (2009, MA15+, Swedish) 11.55 Late Programs.

7MATE (73)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 14. San Marino Grand Prix. Replay. 10.00 JAG. Noon Demolition Down Under. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Hawaii Five-0. 10.30 SEAL Team. 11.30 FBI: Most Wanted. 12.30am Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 2.00 Sherlock Holmes: Elementary. 3.00 Late Programs.

Bamay. 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 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 MOVIE: Footy Legends. (2006, PG) 10.05 The Point. 10.35 Living Black. 11.05 Late Programs. 22 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Pawn Stars. 10.00 America’s Game. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picked Off. 1.00 Picker Sisters. 2.00 Alaska’s Wild Gourmet. 2.30 Limitless. 3.00 Caught On Dashcam. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 MOVIE: Rambo: First Blood Part II. (1985, M) 10.35 MOVIE: Rambo III. (1988, M) 12.45am Late Programs.

Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 Survivor 41. (Return) 9.30 MOVIE: Into The Blue. (2005, M) 11.45 3rd Rock From The Sun. 12.15am Love Island USA. 1.10 The Bi Life. 2.00 Late Programs.


PUZZLES No. 046

To solve a Sudoku puzzle, every number from 1 to 9 must appear in: each of the nine vertical columns, each of the nine horizontal rows and each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes. Remember, no number can occur more than once in any row, column or box.

easy

6

8

9 4 6 1 2 7 8 9 6 6 7 3 2 3 6 1 9 2 5 2 8 1 6 8 3 4 9 2 1 7 medium

7

4

3 1

1 7 5 9 7

6 2 9

1 4 5 9 9 6 3

7

2

1

6 1 4 8 3

QUICK CROSSWORD Variety of nut (9) Boss (4) Tavern (3) Confusing (10) A rectangle halved from diagonal corners (8) Special abilities (6) Objurgation (4) Group of organisms (7) Obliterated (7) Circle of light (4) Spectacles (6) Rocky (8) Impregnating (11) Biological blueprint (abb) (3) Calm (4) Worsen (9)

13 14 15 20 21 25 26 28 29 30 31

Conscious (8) West Australian port city (6) To admit one's failings, eat — (9) Musical instrument (4) Treble (6) Abstract (6) Book of the Old Testament (7) Purifying (9) Non-specific (7) Asian country (8) Temper (8) Employable (6) Car fuel (6) Brand (6) Middle Simpsons child (4)

2 3

ACROSS 1 6 10 11 12

No. 046

4 5 7 8 9 16 17 18 19 22 23 24 27

DOWN Office machines (8)

1

DECODER

No. 046

hard

1 1

22

23

24

25

26

3

2

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

5 9 7 6 2 8 3 1 4

7 3 8 1 2 9 5 6 4

9 4 5 6 3 8 2 1 7

2 1 6 4 7 5 9 3 8

4 6 9 2 8 1 7 5 3

Using the nine letters in the grid, how many words of four letters or more can you list? The centre letter must be included and each letter may only be used once. No colloquial or foreign words. No capitalised nouns, apostrophes or plural words ending in “s”.

Y

Today’s Aim: 5 words: Good 7 words: Very good

F

L

R

O

O R

L

4 LETTERS EARN EBBS EDDY KNEW LEST LYRE MUST REAR REND ROLE ROTS SENT STAG TOMB

ODOUR RAGED RARER REEDS ROUSE SADLY SAWED SCARF SHARK SHEER SIREN SNARE SNEER SPEAR STORY TABOO TIARA TSARS UNTIE WHITE WINED YEARN

6 LETTERS ASSURE LETTER PRISMS STONED

8 LETTERS DECANTER DYNAMITE ELIGIBLE INITIATE

7 LETTERS BLUSTER CONSOLE ELASTIC LINKAGE RELEASE STREETS

11 LETTERS FORERUNNERS SECRETARIAL

floor, folly, fool, forlorn, FORLORNLY, loon, lorry, only, roll, roof

1

Insert the missing letters to make 10 words – five reading across the grid and five reading down.

Kennedy William Gordy, better known as Rockwell, had a hit in 1984 with what song?

2

Former Japanese prime minister Junichiro Koizumi is a devotee of which musical icon?

NOTE: more than one solution may be possible

3

Which children’s character is Chinese leader Xi Jinping unflatteringly likened to?

4

Sam Rockwell (pictured) stars opposite Michelle Williams in which 2019 biographical miniseries?

5

Which manga series by Go Nagai got a 2019 Netflix adaptation?

No. 046

E

D

D

E

E A C H R T H O O T E S

L O V

C K S C

T

S

No. 046

17-09-21

I

8 7 2 5 9 3 1 4 6

3 5 1 7 4 6 8 9 2 4 9 5 1 6 3 2 8 7

S

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What nocturnal mammal belongs to the genus Procyon?

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By what name is the Helianthus plant genus better known?

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With what colour flame does sulfur burn?

9

In 2020, Elon Musk’s company Neuralink implanted a chip into the brain of what animal?

10 Aquafaba is an egg-white alternative derived from what? ANSWERS: 1. Somebody’s Watching Me 2. Elvis Presley 3. Winnie the Pooh 4.Fosse/ Verdon 5. Devilman 6. Raccoon 7. Sunflower 8. Blue 9. Pig 10. Chickpeas

SUDOKU

Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 23


RURAL LINKS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Rural Links Bull goes for record price By Perditta O’Connor A large crowd of buyers gathered at the Glenisa Angus on property sale complex at Glen Aplin last Thursday for the Wise family’s annual Glenisa Angus Bull Sale. Due to Covid-19 restrictions there was also higher than normal interest from online and telephone bids. The beef industry is currently on a high and that trend continued on Thursday with top Glenisa bull selling to a record price for the stud of $30,000. In total Glenisa offered 37 bulls which sold for a 100 per cent clearance and to a new record average of $15,270 to gross $565,000. The top priced bull, Glenisa K Monty Q179 is sired by Glenisa’s walking sire, Knowla Monty M186. Monty is a super long bull with a heap of red meat and a faultless phenotype, docile nature and excellent do-ability. Before being transported to his new home at the DSK Angus Stud of Chris Knox and Helen Alexander in Coonabarabran, Glenisa K Monty Q179 will remain at Glenisa to have semen collected by the team at the Ced Wise AB Centre for use in Artificial Breeding programs. It was very evident why the sons of Knowla Monty are in high demand and they featured prominently in the draft. The 16 sons of Monty sold for an average of $16,937. Glenisa Angus offered a mix of two year old and yearling bulls in the 2021 sale. Included in the draft of two year old Bulls was the top priced bull. The draft sold to an average of $16,535. The nine yearling bulls sold to a top of $15,000 twice to average $11,333. Stud principal and Glenisa spokesman, Aaron Wise said following the sale that Glenisa Angus is extremely grateful for the support and spirited bidding by the large number of local producers. Bulls sold to local buyers Michael McMeniman, Brian Hopgood, Michael Cusack, John and Marg Arnold and John Passmore. David Crombie’s Aruelian Pastoral, Montrose, Warwick was one of the volume buyers of the sale securing four lots including the two top priced yearlings, Glenisa Lotto R008 and Glenisa 316 Stunner R012. There was a mix of new buyers and solid support from many repeat buyers. One of the repeat buyers, Richard Cameron of Mirradong Meats purchased three 24 month sires for an average of $20,000. In 2020, Cameron purchased 30 yearling

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Lot 3 Glenisa Monty Q180 goes under the hammer, sold to the Nobbs family, Yendabarra Cattle Co for $24,000. bulls privately from Glenisa and has been impressed with the performance of these bulls in his breeding program. Other repeat buyers included Stuart, Steffanie and Tom Nobbs of Yendabarra Cattle Co who selected four 24 month to average $20,000. Ronald and Veronica Howson, Miles Qld were successful in purchasing lot 33 for $17,000 while another strong supporter of the Glenisa Stud, Doreen Edwards of Glencoe NSW purchased the final of the yearling bulls offered for $9000. New Glenisa clients including Sally Harper of Harper Rural Holdings, New Koreelah showed strong support and were successful in securing the second heaviest bull in the draft, Glenisa K Monty Q165 for $26,000. Q165 weighed 924kg and scanned 127cm EMA, 12mm P8, 8mm rib and 6.7 per cent IMF. Mr Wise expressed his gratitude and sincere thanks to everyone who contributed to making the 2021 Glenisa Angus bull sale such a success and thanked the successful purchasers and underbidders for their support of the Glenisa Angus program. “We wish the purchasers every success with their new sires,” he said following the sale. He also acknowledged sponsors Wilshire and Co, Elders and Boehringer Ingelheim for kindly donating prizes for purchasers of the top priced bulls and volume buyers. Aaron Wise reserved his final word on the sale for the “amazing team” at Glenisa Angus, saying, “We have a small but dedicated team at Glenisa who all pitch in, helping in every area of the sale. “Without their efforts this sale would not be possible.”

A total 142 head sold for a top of $4400 to average $2250.

Australian Whites sell for a $4400 top at Stanthorpe By Jess Baker This year’s Springdale and Keilah sale at Stanthorpe was a huge success, with all 142 Australian White rams selling for a top of $4400 and an average of $2250. The sale, held at Stanthorpe Showgrounds on Friday 10 September by selling agents TopX, Elders and Ray White Livestock, saw 100 per cent clearance for a total $318,000. TopX agent George McVeigh said a third of sales, 52 lots, were made on AuctionsPlus. The Australian Whites available at auction were offered by Helen and Murray Schroder of Keilah at Inglewood and Mark and Angie Davey of Springdale at Stanthorpe. Volume buyers on the day included Andrew and Lara Finlay of Pikes Creek, Lachlan Finlay and his mother Janine of Inglewood, Millmerran Rural Agencies, and Maroo Pastoral. The sale topping 105kg Springdale ram went to David and Michelle Murray of Meandarra, who purchased six head on the day. George McVeigh said the run of rams at

Selling agents Elders, Ray White Livestock and TopX handled the sale. the sale was “magnificent”. “Since we started five years ago, they have improved every year,” he said. “This year was an outstanding run of rams.” Last week’s sale was the first time he had seen all rams presented sold. With 150 registered bidders on AuctionsPlus, 37 bid cards filled out on the day, and plenty of repeat buyers, George said it was obvious people were really starting to like the produce.

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RURAL LINKS

Regenerative agriculture By Helen Lewis, Ag Columnist Over 100 people gathered at the Stanthorpe Civic Centre for a forum on regenerative agriculture. GBSAN Chair Rick Humphries explained the role of Granite Belt Sustainable Action Network is to be a change agent. Facilitating new ideas and practices that are more sustainable. We need to encourage collaboration not competition. An open mind is one of the most important thing we can all cultivate. This forum is just the beginning of promoting further dialogue for more involvement and further discussion in regenerative practices for the Southern Downs region. The following report is from the forum with my own additions in thinking and ideas. From the forum It is clear agriculture needs to be front and centre to improve the climate change as farmers hold the key to stable sequestering of carbon dioxide - their soil. Green plants and trees grow from carbon dioxide and create carbon in their structures. When these are processed back to the soil by grazing and manure, then we start to build carbon in the soil. As Christine Jones puts it: for every additional one per cent of soil carbon sequestered, 168,000 litres of water could be stored per hectare, in addition to the water-holding capacity of the soil itself. The power of sequestering carbon is such that if every farmer planned their grazing, used natural living processes, inputs and ensured ground cover with growing green plants… climate change would achieve net zero. This is backed up by Christine Jones: “It is not so much a matter of ‘how much’ carbon can be sequestered by any particular method in any particular place, but rather, ‘how many’ soils are sequestering carbon. If all agricultural, garden and public lands were a net sink for carbon we could easily draw down sufficient CO2 to counter emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.” Like farming or Agriculture, Regenerative Ag is not defined, however what makes a farm regenerative is management practices that intentionally enhance the soil biology – with natural biological processes. This intention maximises the natural function of the waters cycle, mineral cycle, diversity and sunlight capture. The change imperative is gathering momentum. Farmers who are improving their soil biology are in the box seat to make the most out of the move that is on in all layers of our society as John Bennett from USQ highlighted the Federal and State programmes and funds that are available to facilitate the change in the farming community. Policy settings: National biodiversity fund, Emissions Reduction Fund – carbon trading with methodologies. In Queensland, the Land Restoration Fund. The Carbon Market does exist in Australia. Over the last three years various Carbon agents/funds and aggregators have established themselves. Companies Woolies and Coles are advertising that they are

Green plants and trees grow from carbon dioxide and create carbon in their structures. becoming sustainable. They are responding to customers who are asking more questions about their food and how it is produced. They will be sourcing food from Sustainable and Regen Agriculture. As a side note: if Woolies and Coles are serious about being more sustainable, the first thing they could do is accept food produced in any shape, size, and colour when it arrives from the farmer. The artificial production specifications set by Woolies and Coles on fruit and veg have created our artificial growing and production systems, where the soil is simply the medium for holding up the plant. Artificial fertilisers and chemicals are used to grow the food and combat the pests and weeds the monoculture causes, respectively. In addition, these artificial quality specifications have perpetuated an unrealistic expectation by consumers of what ‘perfect’ is yet the same consumer would not think twice about eating an odd shape or twisted carrot from their own garden. If Woolies and Coles accepted the produce how it happened to turn out this season, this would enable farmers the freedom to trial and transition to cleaner food production, as they would be free to deliver on their contracts with

what nature provided this season, rather than unrealistic product quality specifications. The Odd Bunch (the seconds deemed by Woolies) produce should be the norm! Financial RABO, NAB, Westpac all adding to their assessment for loans-criteria by including Natural Capital. Social license is the transparency by companies being able to tell consumers and customers. What they are doing and why they are doing it? Transparency in decision making and considering – people, environment and prosperity. Consumer Power: Not only does every family need a farmer, every farmer needs a consumer, bank, insurance company, and the shift is coming from these sectors. The popular phrase that if you eat, drink and wear clothes you are involved in Agriculture, but it doesn’t stop there. Three times a day, everyday as consumers – with every dollar we spend - we choose what kind of food production and fibre production we are going to support. Are we supporting regenerative, clean food and natural fibre production, or not? It is worth remembering without farmers we are hungry, sober and naked.

It is clear agriculture needs to be front and centre to improve the climate change as farmers hold the key to stable sequestering of carbon dioxide - their soil.

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07 4661 2178 Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 25


RURAL LINKS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

This week on the farm By Judy Barnet, Farm Columnist

Lambs at play. The village have a week long festival of the Big Cow during which they will have daily shearing demonstrations and singer/songwriter/shearer Terry Arnold from Warwick will use my lambs for working dog demonstrations. On Sunday the 19th a Concert featuring Brendan Walmsley, Ray and Sue Owen, Michelle Schneider and the Voll Girls promises to be an excellent day. The mini steam train “Mrytle May” will be running as will “Henry” to Model T Bus – taking visitors around the village. On the 19th, 22nd and the 26th there will be Bee Keeping demonstrations and a Farmer Innovation Display – the train and bus will also run on these days. I will be attending from the 22nd to the 26th, you will find me at the Animal Nursery so call in and say hi! A while back I talked about the rogue goats I had bred and was having trouble catching to send into the sale. One of these goats had eluded yarding for two years. Well, I now have a finale to their story, the two worst culprits (including the one still wearing a halter) were finally caught by a very persistent Richie, loaded into the trailer and delivered to the Warwick Saleyards. That night I received a phone call from the agent saying the goats had escaped the saleyards – the Blue one was recaptured but to date the fat white wether is still on the loose. My three fat heifers, Tess, Vicky and Varina have been letting me know it is time for me to find them a boyfriend. They are extremely vocal and upon spotting the neighbours cattle they run up and down the fence for hours hoping there may be a bull nearby. I would like to use A.I. but I can’t find anyone willing to come out this far to Glenlyon. So I am on the lookout for a Hereford, Speckle Park or Shorthorn Bull as first preference. I sold my Shorthorn bull and herd due to the drought a couple of years ago and have not worried about replacing the bull as three cows is not enough to keep a bull happy. Spotlight on Shropshire Sheep:

Australian Shropshire Sheep is a · The Small to Medium Size Sheep · Docile Temperament Fine Dense Wool – Count 56-58 mi· crons for small farms due to docil· Excellent ity and hardiness feed conversion and carcass at· Good tributes · Excellent wool for hand spinners

MCDOUGALL & SONS STOCK AND STATION AGENT & Licensed Auctioneers 141 Palmerin Street, Warwick

Anglo Nubian x Kid.

Gimme that! Vicky and CJ.

PTY LTD

What a cracker start to Spring with glorious weather, beautiful crisp mornings followed by warm sunny days and cool nights great for good sleeping. I have been up by 5.30am every morning enjoying the mist on the dam and the early morning chorus of birds. It truly is the best time of day. This week has seen about 20 lambs born but unfortunately there have been several losses due to feral cats most likely. The losses have all been in ewes having twins and triplets. A cat trap has failed to catch anything so far. A couple of nights ago we went spotlighting, I figure I have the best job as the driver, I just jam the old cruiser in first gear and head off around the property in the cosy warm cab. Richie and CJ are on the back with the spotlight and the rifle ready to shoot a feral cat or fox but this trip resulted in nothing. Births, Deaths and Marriages I am proud to announce that the Marriage of Shirley Shropshire to Jimmy Baa-rnes earlier in the year has resulted in a splendid pair of twin girls, real b-ewe-ties are they! I have had a run of ram lambs this season so it was heartwarming to welcome these beautiful twin ewes into the world. In Australia there are only 16 breeders of Shropshire Sheep with a combined total of approximately 300 breeding ewes. Of these flocks, the three longest running were established in 1891, 1906 and 1966 respectively – these three flocks have about half (150) of the breeding ewes in Australia. The breed is the oldest registered pedigree breed in the UK and are known as a tri-purpose breed, producing excellent wool for hand knitters. They have excellent meat and great feed conversion. They are tree friendly, being small – medium size are good for orchards and vineyards. They also make a good terminal sire. My Anglo Nubian Milking Goat Noobi kidded last night with twin doe kids. Anglo Nubians tend to have what is called “Bottle Teats” – big bulbous teats that are hard for newborn kids to latch onto and sure enough when I spotted them this morning on my daily circuit they had not had a drink from mum. They were slightly tucked up and their hair was standing on edge. It must have been one of my quicker days as I was able to sneak up and grab the pair before they realised what had happened. They screamed blue murder, lucky there were no guests in the cottage. An hour later I had mum and kids back at the house, milked the goat and bottle fed the twins. I will do this for a couple of days by which time they will be big enough to latch onto mum’s teats. I have taken advantage of the beautiful spring days and got stuck into the garden trying to wrestle back garden beds from the jungle of weeds that has flourished with the wetter than normal winter. Friend CJ has been planting these areas as they are cleared so bit by bit the garden is taking shape again. I am making preparations to take a menagerie of animals over to the Highfields Pioneer Village for a week during the carnival of flowers.

Office - 4661 1411 Dennis Bourke - 0427 031 442 Ross Ellis - 0419 744 151

• Cattle Sale - Tuesdays 7.30am • Pig and Calf Sales - Wednesdays 10.30am • Sheep and Lamb Sale - Wednesdays 1pm • Poultry Sale - Wednesdays 9.30am • Sundry Sale - Wednesdays 10.30am • Direct sales to feedlots & processors weekly 12459960-SN36-20

26 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

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RURAL LINKS

Livestock agent ROSS ELLIS of McDougall and Sons brings us an update on the local lamb and cattle markets from last week…

Livestock markets update Agents saw a small lift in numbers for the weekly sales as 576 cattle and 1351 head of sheep and lambs were presented by vendors for sale. The cattle market was strong particularly for the light feed on and back to the paddock categories. Cows and steers as well as processing beef were all firm. The sheep and lamb market virtually mirrored the cattle sales as restockers and feed on types were keenly contested. The trade and export weights whilst bringing a higher price per head are proving to be the best buying. Cattle numbers Vealer steers averaged 593.3c to a top of 708.2c/kg or $1524.81 to $1942.47 Vealer heifers averaged 546.2c to a top of 614.2c/kg or $1370.93 to $1815.12 Feeder steers averaged 517.3c to a top of 590.2c/kg or $1966.89 to $2519.31 Feeder heifers averaged 449.2c to a top of 520c/kg or $1564.96 to $1976.00 Yearling steers averaged 509.1c to a top of 600.2c/kg or $1741.46 to $2087.97 Yearling heifers averaged 476.9c to a top of 574.2c/kg or $1538.12 to $1995.54 Steers averaged 457.9c to a top of 572.2c/kg or $2252.46 to $2926.32 Heifers averaged 402.8c to a top of 459.2c/kg or $1675.36 to $2734.52 Cows averaged 355.1c to a top of 382.2c/kg or $2047.59 to $3000.00 Bulls averaged 396.1c to a top of 614.2c/kg or $1872.15 to $3705.57

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Pig and poultry numbers Boars sold to $150, Sows to $440, Baconers to $270, pork to $198, Stores from $62 to $171 Drakes sold to $22.50, Ducks to $25, Turkey hens to $25, Silky pullets to $30,Guinea fowl to $15,Roosters to $17.50, Pullets to $25, Hens to $30

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McDougall and Sons sheep and lamb report Agents (Wednesday 8 September) yarded 1351 head to the market with the market fully firm to a shade easier influenced by a larger percentage of sheep compared to lambs. Top lambs returned $248 to average $184.32($7down), hoggets topped at $199 to average $183.32(par), ewes topped at $194 to average $133.63($7down), wethers topped at $210 to average $159.97($20down), lamb rams topped at $200 to average $163.43($9up), ewe lambs topped at $255 to average $207.48($22up). The sale averaged $177.61 which was $8 down on (the previous) week’s sale. The yarding was tilted more towards the light feed on and replacement types. The better processing weight lambs still attracted good competition. Tony and Lynne Duncan sold Dorper x ewe lambs 90kg to Thomas Foods for $225, ewes to Thomas Foods for $180 Jim Cooper sold Dorper x lambs 48.75kg to

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Tonys Supa Meats and Eversons for $213, 45.7kg to Jock Young for $196, 60kg ram lambs to Eversons for $190, 50kg hoggets to Uniplaza Meats for $182 Stillwater Past Co sold Dorper x lambs 48.1kg to Eversons for $213 Shelly F/T sold Dorper lambs off feed 44.6kg to Highchester Meats for $199, 51kg Merino lambs to Thomas Foods for $180, wethers to Whites Trading for $114 Sandy and Brian Morris sold Dorper lambs 50kg to Eversons for $212, 35kg ram lambs to GR Prime for $146 Greg Rathmell sold Dorper x lambs 47.1kg to Leslie Lamb for $217 Reg Cooke sold Dorper x lambs 51.3kg to Ashtons Butchery for $228, 44.8kg to Leslie Lamb for $210, 35.7kg to Jock Young for $171, 40kg to Whites Trading for $117 Condamine Crushing sold 52.2kg Xbred lambs to Eversons for $222, 50.7kg to Elliots Butchery for $218, 49kg lambs and hoggets to Eversons for $201 and $178, ram hoggets and rams to Whites Trading for $176 Jim Judd sold Dorper x ewes to Thomas Foods for $188, ewe and lamb units to restockers for $260 Von Souvlis sold Dorper x lambs 44.2kg to Eversons for $180, ram lambs to Eversons for $156 Evelyn Hughes sold Dorset x lambs 42.3kg to GR Prime for $143, 37.5kg to restockers for $129, 32.5kg hoggets to Uniplaza Meats for $130 Gary O’Rourke sold Suffolk x lambs off shears 37.5kg to Uniplaza Meats for $164, shorn Merino wethers to Thomas Foods for $135, to Highchester Meats for $150 Wegner F/T sold Dorper suckers 37.5kg to restockers for $173, 28.3kg to restockers for $150, ewes to Thomas Foods for $175, rams to Whites Trading for $150

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Sheep and lamb numbers Lambs topped at $248 to average $184.32 down $7/head Hoggets topped at $199 to average $183.32 par on last sale Ewes topped at $194 to average $133.63 down $7/head Wethers topped at $210 to average $159.97 down $20/head Lamb rams topped at $200 to average up $9/head Ewe lambs topped at $255 to average $207.48 up $22/head Sale average of $177.61 was down $8/ head on the previous week.

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Phone JOHN 0438 831 914 Email: johnjacob@jacobprecast.com.au www.jacobprecast.com.au Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 27


FOCUS ON … REAL ESTATE

AUCTION Saturday 16th October 2021 | Onsite 10.00am Followed by Clearing Sale

Lot 1/172 Freestone Creek Rd, Freestone QLD 4370 A/C Estate of the late John Gosen BRICK RESIDENCE ON 20 ACRES Solid 3-bedroom residence on 20 acres just 15 minutes east of Warwick in the fertile Freestone area. Open plan kitchen and dining area with formal lounge, 3 spacious bedrooms plus a large office. 2 bay lockable shed with concrete slab & steel machinery shed approximately 50’ x 25’ enclosed on 2 sides. 90% cultivation with quality black soils. Excellent north facing outlook.

12513114-BL38-21

HOME HAS POTENTIAL FOR SUBDIVISION

STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER WARWICK, QLD, 4370

Please contact Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775 or 4661 3462 www.stuartbondrealestate.com.au sbondrealestate@bigpond.com

THIS spacious home has subdivision potential (subject to council approval) and is located at 46 Conrad Street, Warwick. It offers a rural outlook and sits on a 3000 sqm corner allotment with subdivision potential (STCA). The property is situated just on the edge of town and it includes four built-in bedrooms and two lounge rooms. There is a combined kitchen/dining as well as a rumpus/family room. The house features reverse cycle air-conditioning, a practical bathroom and separate toilet. There is a sunroom capturing the rural

views and ample storage space as well as security screens. Outside is a double lock up garage and double carport. Agent Tiffany Cruice said the property had been “beautifully maintained from the time it was built which is evident from the minute you step foot inside”. She said the yard was a “blank canvas for you to do as much or as little as you wish. Whatever your needs are, this parcel is worthy of your consideration.” ●

HOME ESSENTIALS Address: 46 Conrad Street, WARWICK Price: $450,000 Description: 4 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, 4 garage Inspect: Contact the agent Contact: Tiffany Cruice 0447 301 913, GEORGE & FUHRMANN WARWICK

AUCTION

HUGE COLLECTABLES SALE

OVER 5000 ITEMS! TO BE HELD OVER 2 EXCITING DAYS 9AM SAT 25TH SEPT & SAT 9TH OCT 2021 256 LYNDHURST LANE, WARWICK • Oil Bottles, Tins, Racks, Cans, Stands, Signs, Fuel, Bowsers • 500 Rabbit, 100 Dog & Animal Traps, Imperial Collecotrs Figures • 100+Bells, Old Tricycles, Scooters, Tin Car, Steel Wheels • Cast Iron Pots. Boilers, Saucepans, Kettles, Camp Ovens, Fountains • Blacksmith Anvils, Vices, Swage Block, Forges, Tools • Enamel Cannister Sets, Jugs, Billy’s, Saucepans, Basins, Stone Ware • Tobacco Cutter, Corn Cracker, Shellers, Chaff Cutter • Pack Shaddles, Dray, Haynes & Collars & Sheaing Gear • Miscellaneous Items Too Numerous To Mention

FOR PHOTOS VISIT - WWW.STUARTBONDREALESTATE.COM.AU

STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER PTY LTD Office: 07 4661 3462 Mobile: 0419 677 775 Email: sbondrealestate@bigpond.com 12513111-AV38-21

28 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021


FOCUS ON … REAL ESTATE

LIFESTYLE PROPERTY CLOSE TO WARWICK CBD THIS elevated 44 Acre lifestyle property is located within minutes of the Warwick CBD, one hour from Toowoomba and two hours from Brisbane and the Gold Coast. The three-bedroom ranch style home sits on 20 acres of lightly timbered grazing and 24 acres of cultivation. The property is well equipped for the horse enthusiast with a 55m cutting arena, stables and wash down area. A fully equipped bore supplies water to multiple tanks around the property and there are also two dams. There is also a new fully equipped steel yard complete with full crush, head bale, loading ramp & 3 x yards (Approx. 50 head cattle capacity) The includes a three-door steel garage complete with bedroom, bathroom and kitchen, two bay steel skillion (9.8m x 8m) attached to garage, two bay steel carport, five KVA Solar System back to grid with option to add another 5 KVA. There is also a large timber hay/ machinery shed 18.5m x 15m comprising: four x horse stables, (6.5m x 3.5m) complete with internal panels, hay shed holds 105 round bales, large area for machinery storage, two x tack rooms, rear wash down area on concrete pad, workshop 9m x 4m, two x day stalls. The agent believes inspection of this property is a must to truly appreciate all it has to offer. He said vendors Motivated - All offers over $900,000 considered. Contact Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775 for further information or to arrange an inspection. ●

HOME ESSENTIALS Address: 85 Womina Willowvale Road, WARWICK Description: 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom Price: Offers over $900,000 Inspect: Contact the agent Contact: Stuart Bond 0419 677 775, STUART BOND

CLEARING SALE Acc:- K. Taylor 460 KINGSLEIGH ROAD WARWICK SATURDAY 2nd OCTOBER 2021 – 10am ONSITE Tractors Landini Powerfarm 95 tractor with loader & 4 in 1 bucket – 3800 hrs Iseki 7000 Tractor with loader & heavy duty blade & stick rake – 5400 hrs David Brown 1210 Tractor Case – 4200 hrs David Brown selectamatic 770 – 4500 hrs Vehicles Holden Rodeo ute – 194,168kms (2800) Turbo diesel (steel tray) Ford Falcon XF ute – roller International Acco truck – Perkins motor displaying 266,284kms Farm Eqiupment 3 point linkage cone spreader Snapper rotary hoe and Honda GX 160 motor 6.5hp Firefighter pump – brand new Grow 6.5hp petrol Pressure cleaner – brand new 3 point linkage 4 tyne ripper 2 x 3 point linkage slashers Hayes 3 point linkage rotary hoe – very good condition (like new) 2 metre Scarifier 7 tyne chisel plough

General 7 pallets of assorted bricks, Paint spray gun, Pallet racking Tandem trailer with stock crate – unregistered Tankmakers BT 5000 water tank, International plough frame Millers Falls sawbench – very good condition, Large dog kennel Toyota Forklift – high lift, 2 x Fuel tanks 2 x Stick welders & 1 Mig welder, Stock crate to suit Acco truck Hay feeder, 2 x Feed troughs, Concrete trough, Large poly trough 3 x Trolley jacks, Big rolls of tarp, Freestyle motor x ramp Clean air – air compressor, Kawasaki petrol generator Assorted cattle panels, Renegade Jack Hammer – RIJA75 – very good condition Assortment of military memorabilia, Assorted household furniture

Outside Vendors Welcome TERMS – Payment on day of sale. Cash or Cheque (no cards) GST will be added to knockdown price excluding household items Bid Card system – ID required | CONTACT:- BLAKE DORO 0423 962 797 | www.gnfrealestate.com.au – more photo’s available on website 12513317-CG38-21 12508358-BL34-21

Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 29


SPRING has SPRUNG

202109051485_1-DL38-21

Get set for Gardenfest By the Stanthorpe Garden Club Have you been out in your garden recently? Not just a quick frenzied dash up the front path – have you been for a really good look around your garden including out the back? It has been proven by scientists that a spot of gardening, even on those cold, damp and grey days, will lift your spirits and warm you up. Gardening for pleasure is very beneficial for your health. Gardening in the winter can be a bit of challenge when plants are looking tattered and weather worn. But spring is with us now and summer is not that far off, so it is an exciting time to be outside getting some dirt on our hands. OK, good old mother nature sometimes brings a shower or two of rain on the weekends just when you have some outdoor time, but it is not difficult to find a sheltered spot to do some therapeutic gardening to chase away any blues. Even five minutes outdoors can lift your spirits, be it a short walk or a spot of gardening, and it will do wonders for your mental and physical wellbeing. If you garden for pleasure, you may not be aware how beneficial this hobby is for your health. While you are preparing your garden plot to grow fresh veggies, or you are busy turning the compost pile, or doing basic gardening activities such as mowing the lawn or raking up leaves, you are actually doing a decent amount of exercise as well! It is far less expen-

sive than going to the gym for a weekly visit! Just think of the relaxation you experience when working in the garden. Gardening is one of life’s few simple pleasures. It is the creating, the designing, the improving of our surroundings and the selecting from the vast array of plants and hard landscaping materials and subjects that entices us into this wonderful hobby of gardening. Perhaps you are a little short on ideas for your garden? Then why not visit the 2021 Stanthorpe Gardenfest and Trade Fair being held in the Exhibition Centre at the Showgrounds, High Street, Stanthorpe on Friday 8 and Saturday 9 October from 9am until 4pm. Admission is free. This is a tremendous opportunity to view the latest releases in garden plants which are totally tolerant of local conditions. Collect some inspiring ideas from the plants people and landscaping specialists or purchase a plant garden ornament to fill in that vacant spot in the garden. Come along to the 2021 Stanthorpe Gardenfest and Trade Fair. You will be most welcome and we look forward to your company. As an added bonus, think of the exercise you will gain digging all of those holes to plant your purchases when you return home to your garden.

Locals Judy Blank and Lorraine Feurer at a past year’s Gardenfest event.

OPEN: DAILY DURING SCHOOL HOLIDAYS Please visit website for more Info. TRADING HOURS: 9am to 5pm last entries 4pm.

12513511-BL38-21

30 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

364 Old Warwick Rd, Glen Niven, you will find us 8.5kms North of Stanthorpe www.thegranitebeltmaze.com.au or find us on

12513548-HC38-21

PH: 0467 824 520


SPRING has SPRUNG

202109051485_1-DL38-21

Get your gardens ready for Spring Flower Show By Warwick Horticultural Society 113 years ago in 1908 some local folk that were interested in gardening got together and formed the Warwick Horticultural Society. Our current president Graham Gillam is proud to say that some of his forebears were among the founding members. Trophies donated by these people are still being contested to this very day and the recipients each year are proud to be the winners of such longstanding competitions. Each year the Horticultural Society aims to encourage gardening in the local area by

holding two Flower Shows, a Spring Garden Competition and the Floral Window Display. With the possible exception of the Floral Window Display, these were started by the founding members and with few exceptions, have been held each year ever since. Our very successful Autumn Flower Show was held in March and it is now time to get your gardens ready for the Spring Garden Competition and the Spring Flower Show. The weather has been much kinder to us this year and the gardens around the area at the moment are a delight – in fact they are ‘bloomin’ beautiful’!

Granite Belt Wildlife Carer Dominic Ward caring for a possum.

Looking out for wildlife By Stanthorpe Eco Expo

12513319-CG38-21

Aussie kids born in recent years wouldn’t know that the occasional wildlife sighting today is a far cry from what we older folk saw around as kids, even only as far back as the ‘60s to ‘90s. Wildlife habitats and nature corridors are vital in keeping our feathered, fury and slithery friends safe, healthy and able to exist in great numbers for future decades to come. Granite Belt Wildlife Carer Dominic Ward said: “I was obsessed with possums as a child. Utterly. Totally. Every year I would diligently produce for whomever the teacher was that year an assignment on possums. “Many years later, the family would experi-

ence the Applethorpe fire; we resolved to get involved with caring for our decimated local wildlife. “On joining the Granite Belt Wildlife Carers Group, we were asked what species we would like to work with. I chose caterpillars. No, just kidding. The only choice for us was obviously possums. “We work with mostly brushtails and ringtails with the very occasional glider. Our family gets so much satisfaction out of releasing a healthy possum back into the bush.” Come see Dominic speak about ‘A garden for wildlife’ and you might just meet some furry friends at the Stanthorpe Eco Expo Saturday 25 September.

HORTICULTURALSOCIETY

Warwick Horticultural Society president Graham Gillam.

PLEASE BRING CASH FOR PURCHASES

E do ntry na b tio y n

Spring

Floral

Spring

Friday 29 October 2021 Entries are FREE

Judging commences Monday 4 October 2021 from 9am – 5pm | Entries close Friday, 1 October 2021 at 5pm No entry fee

Window Competition 2021

Flower Show 2021

Wednesday 20 October 2021 12 noon to 4pm Thursday 21 October 2021 9am to 4pm Exhibits may be staged between 8am but definitely no later than 10am sharp on 20 October

ENTRIES CLOSE - 5pm on Thursday, 28 October 2021 To be ready judging from 9am on Friday, 29 October 2021

Garden Competition 2021

12510801-AV38-21

ST MARY’S HALL | WOOD STREET | WARWICK

Placegetters will be notified by phone following completion of judging

Entry into all competitions is FREE

Inquiries contact Secretary: 07 4661 1414 Email: d.coryvermont@bigpond.com

Public admission: $3 Members & Children FREE Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 31


COMMUNITY DIARY FRIDAY 17 SEPTEMBER ‘Discover slow stitching’ at Artworks. Place: Artworks at the Stanthorpe Railway Station each Friday 9am-11am. Phone Barbara 0438 845 624. Cost $5 all materials provided.

SATURDAY 18 SEPTEMBER Warwick and District Historical Society fundraising event. Pringle Cottage Museum 79-83 Dragon St, from 8am. Plants, new and preloved items, crafts and books for sale. The Museum Complex will also be open all day from 8am to 3pm. A special price of $5 for adults and primary school children will be free. Special prices will apply from 8am to 12pm. Phone 0429 941 073.

SATURDAY 18 SEPTEMBER Over 50s social club is meeting at 10am at Gardens Galore, 21 Albion St, Warwick. Contact warwickssc@gmail.com or phone Jen 0400505943.

FRIDAY 24 SEPTEMBER ‘Morning tea with an artist’ at Artworks. Place : Artworks at the Stanthorpe Railway Station each Friday 9am-11am. Phone Barbara 0438 845 624. Cost $5 all materials provided.

FRIDAY 24 SEPTEMBER Rotary Club of Stanthorpe in association with Dementia Friendly Stanthorpe. 2nd Seniors Morning Tea Ageing Well at Granite Belt Neighbourhood Centre, Hilton Street. Topic: Legal Matters matter. Advance of Life Planning. Allana Fanke Senior Lawyer from TASC National. Next morning tea 24 September. Topic Healthy Brain, Healthy Life (Reducing the risk of developing dementia). This week is QLD Wills Week.

SUNDAY 26 SEPTEMBER Drive for rural relief. The Rotary Club of Paddington Brisbane is organising a car rally for car clubs in Brisbane to drive to Warwick via Laidley, Gatton and Allora on Sunday 26 September arriving at Leslie Park mid-morning. Come and see the collection of classic, super and luxury cars. All funds raised by the organisers will be donated to Bushkids.

SUNDAY 3 OCTOBER The over 50s social club is meeting at noon at Pub n Grub at Kiosk, Pratten. Contact warwickssc@gmail.com or phone Jen 0400505943.

FRIDAY 8 OCTOBER St Mary’s trivia night. 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Cost is $10p/p (eight people per table). The theme is dress as your favourite tradie. The dress theme is to celebrate the School Building Project. There will be lucky door prizes, multidraw raffle, and 50/50 draw. Bar in operation and tea/coffee and sweets available. Contact St Mary’s School 4661 1872 to book a table.

SATURDAY 16 OCTOBER The over 50s social club is meeting at noon at Country Club Hotel, 26 Maryland St, Stanthorpe. Contact warwickssc@gmail.com or phone Jen 0400505943.

WEDNESDAY 20 OCTOBER VIEW Club meeting and lunch (third Wed each month). 11am start at GOLF CLUB, Warwick. Join women sharing lunch whilst at same time supporting work of the Smith Family. Contact Sue 0427792840.

SUNDAY 31 OCTOBER The over 50s social club is meeting at noon at Warwick Hotel, Palmerin St, Warwick. Contact warwickssc@gmail.com or phone Jen 0400505943.

ROTARY CLUB OF WARWICK SUNRISE ‘Serve to change lives’. The club meets every Thursday from 7am to 8am at Warwick Gardens Galore, Albion Street. Everyone welcome. Contact Don Hughes on 0456654814.

ART STARTERS AND GROUP Art Starters group meets every Tuesday from 9am-12noon. A friendly relaxed sharing atmosphere where artists can network, practice their skills and learn together. Thursday Art Group is an established group of artists poets and friends who get together on Thursday mornings from 9am-12noon. New artists/poets/writers welcome.

BORDER RANGES AMATEUR RADIO CLUB The Border Ranges Amateur Radio Club meets the first Saturday of each month at club rooms Eduardo Vern park Stanthorpe at 12 midday. Anyone with an interest in amateur radio or general electronics welcome to attend. Further details contact David VK4HDE on 0427830030 or enquiries@brarc.org.au.

WELLBEING WORKSHOPS Free wellbeing workshops for 18+. Your key to 32 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

Email your community news to: jess.baker@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

a life of purpose! Workshops run each Tuesday, midday to 1.30pm at 41 Guy St, Warwick. Places limited. To register, call Bronwyn on 0418 961 548. Workshops focus on teaching strategies to grow resilience, self-awareness, and individual potential. Initiative of the Warwick Adventist Church.

ROSE CITY PROBUS CLUB Social meet-up for active retirees! Meets third Wednesday of the month. From 9.30am at The Granary (behind Dairy Lounge - was Weeping Mulberry). “Home baked“ morning tea, informative guest speakers. Other local outings include coffee mornings, lunches, dinners. Day coach trips to destinations of interest. Phone Marion: 0499 267 547; Leslie: 4661 4273.

LAPIDARY CLUB The Warwick Lapidary Club meets every Wednesday and Saturday from 12-4pm at their workshop in Barnes Park, Warwick (off Horsman Road). Learn all aspects of lapidary - the engraving, cutting and polishing of stones and gems - including cabbing, faceting and silverwork. Membership is just $25, $5 workshop fee. Enquiries to 4661 7865.

KILLARNEY ALL-AGES SKATE NIGHTS Last Friday of every month from 5.30pm until 8.30pm at Killarney Recreation Hall opposite showgrounds. Entry is gold coin donation. Food, Drinks, Games, Prizes, Great Music, Video clips, disco light show. Bar is open for adults. Fun for all ages! For more information phone Sonya 0439618371.

STANTHORPE PROBUS CLUB Social gatherings for Active Retirees! Meets fourth Tuesday of the month at Stanthorpe RSL Services Club, from 9.30 am. Regular events include guest speakers and morning teas every month as well as travel, theatre trips and other activities. Visitors welcomed. Phone: Elaine 0418479687 or Glen 0498462954.

WARWICK UNITING CHURCH COURSE Is there more to life than this? Alpha is a series of sessions exploring the Christian faith and is commencing on Tuesday 20 July, running each Tuesday at 6pm for about 12 weeks. Where? Warwick Uniting Church, cnr Guy & Fitzroy Streets Warwick (33 Guy Street). More information available office 4661 1080 or https:// wkuc.org.au.

WARWICK COMMUNITY HUB A program for people with or without disability held each Friday from 9.30am at Warwick Senior Citizens Centre in Albert St. Warwick. Program activities include Indoor Boccia, Cooking, Fitness Exercise Programs, Carpet Bowls and Craft. Monthly program of events published on Warwick Community Hub Facebook page, email: warwickcommunityhub@ gmail.com. Small cost involved. Enquiries: Christine 0414 687 651.

WARWICK COMBINED PROBUS CLUB Retired seniors group that meet 1st Wednesday of each month, 9.30am to noon, interesting guest speakers, and morning tea. Regular group outings to both local and more distant places of interest, also trips to theatre (Lyric and Empire) for matinee shows, and multiday group travel to great locations. New Meeting Venue: The Auditorium, Church of Christ Aged Care, Dragon St, Warwick. New members always welcome. Phone Secretary on 0457 317597.

WARWICK GOLF CLUB Women’s beginner sessions. Four weekly 60-minute sessions – maximum group of six women. All equipment included, coaching with PGA Pro Sam Eaves. Come along and learn the game in a supportive environment. Location: Warwick Golf Course. Date: Thursdays beginning 29 July, Sundays beginning 1 August. Time: 11am – 12pm. Enquiries: seaves@pgamember.org.au, 07 4661 3664 or 0408 222 602. Register: www.golf.org.au/getintogolf/facility/Warwick+Golf+Club.

WARWICK LIONS CLUB The Warwick Lions Club meets on the first and third Wednesday of the month. Criterion Hotel 6.30pm to 7pm meet and greet. 7pm dinner meeting. All welcome. Ring Jenny 0432 804 826 for more information.

WARWICK SPINNERS AND WEAVERS GROUP INC. The group meets every Wednesday and the first and third Saturday of the month in the third room of St. Mark’s Anglican Church Grafton Street, Warwick. Phone 0417595178 for more information.

WARWICK BRIDGE CLUB The Warwick Bridge Club meets at Victoria Park Clubhouse. Lessons on Wednesday at 9.30am. Play Monday and Friday 1pm. Please be seated by 12.45pm. Contact Noela on 0417 757 255 for further information.

SALVATION ARMY WARWICK ‘Saturdays’ at the Salvos’ all invited to a community gathering held every Saturday from 4pm at the Salvation Army, 25 Guy Street, Warwick. The gathering includes a free meal, a positive and practical message and fellowship. Enquiries to Richard on 0428 230 431 or Leanne on 0419 379 738.

QCWA GLEN APLIN QCWA Glen Aplin Branch meets on the first Tuesday of every month at 9am. We meet at the Glen Aplin hall, 14 Foster St, Glen Aplin. Visitors very welcome. Enquiries to Kay 0406 828 602.

ALLORA PHOTOGRAPHY GROUP Allora Photography Group meets second Wednesday of each month – 7pm Meeting, 7.30pm photo screening and workshop. Usual venue: Allora State School Library, Raff Street, Allora, but periodically at Warwick or other locations. Please check before attendance. We cater for all levels of interest and experience, be it with DSLR, Point-and-shoot, or SmartPhones and Tablets etc. Enquiries: 0411 772 339. Email: alloraphotographygroup4362@ gmail.com

WARWICK FISH STOCKING CLUB The clubhouse at Leslie Dam is now open every third Sunday of the month from 9am to 12 noon, so please call in. Membership is only $10 yearly. This year, over five million native fish fingerlings will have been stocked since inception.

PENSIONERS’ LEAGUE Warwick’s Pensioners’ League meets once a month at the Cowboys Clubhouse off Alice Street. The club will have lunch at Yangan Pub on 16 September and our 84th Birthday celebration on 30 September. For more information please call Madeleine on 0427324380.

WARWICK SENIORS Monday mornings Play 500 9am to 11.30am. Play Hoy on the 1st Mondays 1.30pm for 2pm start. Play Lucky Numbers 3rd Monday of the month 1.30pm for 2pm start. Wednesday mornings play Indoor bowls at 9.30am Sharp. No Morning Tea. Fridays at 9am sharp come along and play Crazy Whist. 1st Tuesday of each Month at 10am Monthly Friendship Morning. Monthly Meeting 2nd Tuesday of the month 9.30am. Family Fitness Every Monday 4pm. Cost $10. Ring Kerri on 0409 261 103 to book your spot. Further info: Ring Marg 0458 444 101.

COUNTRY MUSIC The Travelling Country Music Association has music socials 26 September, 24 October and 28 November. Venue: Cowboys Clubhouse on Alice Street in Warwick. Meetings second Friday of the month 1pm, practice days second Saturday of the month 1pm – both at Marlene and Arnie’s residence in Warwick. Enquiries: Ruby 0438 674 803.

WARWICK FOLK CLUB Warwick Folk Club meets at O’Mahoney’s Hotel the first and third Wednesdays of the month. Everyone welcome - singers, musicians, poets, and performers alike. Admission $5. Enquiries: Joan Wallace 07 4661 1146 or Klaas Vandersluis 0405 187 066.

QCWA ALLORA BRANCH Located at 51 Warwick Street, Allora. Day meetings - 3rd Tuesday of the month, (10am start) with a shared lunch to finish about 12 noon. Evening meetings - 2nd Wednesday of the month (6.30pm start). Craft/Friendship Group - Every Monday morning 9am to 12 noon. Walking Group - Leaves from outside the CWA rooms every Wednesday morning at 6am. Enquiries: Sandi Blinco 0408 066 192 or Barb McGovern 0412 849 983.

WARWICK MEN’S SHED The new Warwick Men’s Shed is open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday from 8am to 12 noon. All men are welcome to attend for camaraderie, friendship and to learn new skills if desired. We have a wide range of woodworking and metalwork equipment. Address is 29 Activity Street, Warwick, and contact phone number is 0490 170 569.

for the term ahead has been published and it is not too late to enrol. Visit www.u3awarwick. org.au or call community liaison officer Sandy Gordon 0488 427 699.

FISHING CLUB The Stanthorpe Blue Water Fishing Club meets at the Stanthorpe RSL Club first Wednesday of each month. New members most welcome so come along and meet new friends.

BEEKEEPING Amateur Beekeepers’ Association Southern Downs (sub-branch of QBA Warwick): monthly meeting on the 2nd Monday of the month, 7 pm, except January. A field day is arranged as occasion requires, usually on the 3rd Saturday morning of the month, from 9am to 12 noon - involves practical session on working with honey bees. New members welcome, any age, no experience. Facebook: Southern Downs Bees. For further details please contact John on 0431 188 139.

TABLE TENNIS Every Monday - table tennis at the Stanthorpe Fitness Centre, Talc Street, 10am until midday, call Keith on 0413 870 021.

FITNESS GROUP Twenty is Plenty is a beginners short walk for those who want to try something new. We walk around the beautiful Leslie Park at 9:00am every Wednesday. Our walk is no longer than twenty minutes and you can set your own pace. Come and join us! We will meet you opposite the Salvation Army Hall in 25 Guy St. Call Leanne 0419 379 738 for a chat.

HANDCRAFTS WEEKLY CWA handcraft welcomes members and visitors to Wednesday morning classes in the Condamine Valley rooms behind the cafe in Grafton Street, Warwick, from 9-11am.Trained teachers are on hand to teach new crafts and give assistance or bring your own or just come along for a chat. Enquiries to Sharon on 4666 2197.

ON YOUR BIKE Stanthorpe Cycling Club meets every Sunday at 8am outside Burton and Sons (next to Woolworth’s). Contact Keith on 0413 870 021 for more details.

NAVY CADETS TS Kookaburra Navy Cadets - Cadets parade each Sunday from 1pm to 4pm. Red Bridge Court Stanthorpe. Uniforms are supplied at no cost to parents. Weekly cost is $5. For more information please contact the Officer in Charge PO ANC Katrina Nemeth 0418 777 796.

WARWICK POTTERS The Potters Place Gallery and workshop 63 Horsman Road, Warwick. Open Tuesday, Wednesday and most Saturdays 9.30am2.30pm. Classes available phone 0411335193. Thursday night beginners classes both hand and wheel contact Roslyn 46613032, email info@potters.org.au

QCWA GRANITE BELT The QCWA Granite Belt Weekenders meet at 2pm on the last Saturday of the month (28 August & 25 September) at the QCWA rooms in Victoria Street Stanthorpe. Enquiries: qcwagranitebelt@gmail.com

WARWICK HEART SUPPORT GROUP We meet on the last Monday of each month except December and January. Venue: Condamine Sports Club Warwick at 11.30am followed by lunch (optional). Please join us to talk over any issues relating to heart problems as we are in the same situation having had cardiac issues. Enquiries to Jenny on 4664 8173 or Kay on 4661 5421.

PLAY BRIDGE The Stanthorpe Bridge Club meets every Thursday at 10.45am at the International Club. Visitors are welcome. Please call Keith on 0413 870 021 for more information.

GET CRAFTY ... The Sew Crafty Chicks hold their craft morning every Friday at the Warwick Bowls Club, Fitzroy Street, Warwick (opposite Warwick Police Station) from 9am to 11.30am. Everyone welcome, come and enjoy good company, morning tea, work on your own projects, or learn new ones. Cost $5, please bring your own mug. For more info call Tricia Collins on 4661 3076.

U3A WARWICK INC

GOSPEL MEETING AS JESUS TAUGHT

Are you actively retired? If so U3A may be for you. U3A Warwick is a group run by local volunteers who promote lifelong learning for personal enjoyment and wellbeing. The program

Gospel meeting at the Senior Citizen Supper Room on Sundays from 4-5pm and Wednesdays from 7.30-8.30pm. All are welcome. Enquiries: 0483 354 917.


Warwick

GRAND OPENING SALE 12513547-HC38-21

SATURDAY 18 SEPT, 8.30AM - 5PM

25% OFF STOREWIDE

*

• FREE SAUSAGE SIZZLE • SUPPLIER DEMOS • SHOWBAGS & GIVEAWAYS *% OFF REGULAR TICKETED PRICES. AUTOPRO WARWICK ONLY. STORE STOCK ONLY. NOT TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. EXCLUDES GIFT CARDS, NAVIGATION, INSTALLATION, ADVERTISED LINES & IN STORE SPECIALS. VALID SATURDAY 18 SEPTEMBER 2021 ONLY.

WARWICK FORD

REXEL

ALBERT ST

WARWICK 20 Albion Street Ph: 4527 4131

ALBION ST

HARVEY NORMAN

VICTORIA ST

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BP

Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 33


networkclassifieds.com.au General Notices 12450695-NG23-20

Placing your classified advert is so easy... Online: networkclassifieds.com.au (24/7) Phone: 1300 666 808 Email: sales@networkclassifieds.com.au (include your name, address and phone number) We accept payment by: VISA/MASTERCARD/EFTPOS/BANK TRANSFER

Public Notices and Event

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Pest Control

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ANTENNAS Warwick’s ONLY locally owned and operated Pest Control business

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Annual General Meeting

Public Notices and Event

You may obtain a copy of the application and make submission to: Southern Downs Regional Council PO Box 26 Warwick QLD 4370 mail@sdrc.gov.qld.au 1300 697 372 www.sdrc.gov.qld.au

Travel

Leon Bruggemann, Mobile Travel Advisor

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Electricians

Solar & Air Conditioner Installations Repairs to Electrical Appliances, Hot Water Systems, Stoves & Motors

0404 892 139

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Native Bees Will pay $$$ in logs or boxes. Contact Russell at Hatton Vale on

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THE SUMMIT MARKET 117 Granite Belt Drive. Saturday 18th of September, 8am-3pm. Homemade goods, sausage sizzle, and lots more.

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atherton04@bigpond.com

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Garden Time

GARDENING

Beatrice Hawkins

Spring florals are on show Over the years I have grown many things in gardens in many different areas. I do particularly like growing vegetables and find growing food especially satisfying. I enjoy cooking and have made quantities of jams, pickles and preserves over the years. At present I do not own a preserving kit, but for many years the ’Vacola’ bottles were regularly filled with seasonal produce. I have lovely memories of preparing copious amounts of fruit with my mother and grandmother even before I started going to school and that’s a really long time ago! When I married, my wonderful mother in law taught me to make and bottle large quantities of tomato sauce, pickles and relish as, among other things on the farms, they grew acres of tomatoes under contract to IXL for sauce production, so there was always a ready source of produce in season. At present I am involved with cooking for the Warwick Community Van and from time to time we are given donations of home grown produce to use in preparing the Sunday night meals. This weekend I was given three home grown brown onions. Now you may think that doesn’t sound like much, however, the total weight of these three onions was 2.5kg! The largest weighed over 1kg! Rarely, if ever, have I seen larger specimens! I hope the gardener involved has some similar to enter in our Spring Flower Show between 8am and 10am on Wednesday 20 Oc-

Yellow banksia roses are rearing their heads in town, along with wisteria. tober for public display that afternoon and on Thursday 21 October. All you keen growers out there, please check out your gardens and bring in some of your produce to make a great display in St. Mary’s Hall. Flowers, shrubs, pot plants, vegetables there are categories for everything. Children and schools are well catered for with their own sections and we would especially like to encourage this next generation of gardeners to enter. I will be visiting the schools with entry forms! The flower arranging section is always a delight and you don’t have to have grown what you use in this section! So put your artistic talents to work and enter.

My entries this year might be restricted to the herb section as they are flourishing at present, although the lavender is flowering beautifully at the moment also… I’ll have to wait and see what is flowering on the day! Schedules are available as usual from Bryson’s in Palmerin Street, so pick one up, check it out and get ready to enter and help provide a great display of what can be produced in our area and community. As I commented last week, the gardens around the area are looking wonderful with so many different things flowering. May bushes are a picture of white whether left to be arching sprays or trimmed into neat shapes and hedges. It always amuses this small brain that ’May’ bushes bloom in August and September in Australia - a carry over from the fact that white settlement came from the northern hemisphere where May is spring. Wisteria is blooming beautifully over fences and trellises also and the perfume in these gardens must be wonderful. A garden that I see each time I drive down town has the beautiful yellow and white banksia roses climbing up trees along with wisteria and it really is a picture to behold. I doubt they intended for them to be quite so rampant but I really enjoy the sight. The common African daisies are providing a great splash of colour whether white or the many shades of mauve, pink and purple. They are a most forgiving plant and come up regu-

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larly every year once planted, and fill in spaces nicely. The range of colours and forms available from the nurseries is intriguing and I will shortly succumb to some of the ’spider’ varieties and find a spot in the garden or a pot. I have planted three different coloured tomatoes, green and purple climbing beans, peas and rainbow spinach in this last week and am preparing beds for melons, zucchini and cucumbers. Being limited by space and water is one of my regrets about living in town. Deciding which varieties to grow is always a problem to me as I am intrigued by the selection available. I would really like to grow the shiny ’bowling ball black’ tomatoes that I saw in my niece’s garden in NZ a few years ago but have been unable to find seed available in Australia. Just think how appetising they would look in a salad with the little bright yellow, green, red, orange and purple ones that are available? Given unlimited space and water, I would grow them all! Two things I am going to try and find room for this season though, are some of the multi coloured ’Indian’ corn that I’ve seen. Whether used fresh or kept dried for an interesting table arrangement, I would love to grow some. The other is some of the intriguing coloured sunflowers and these will be started shortly as the ground warms, so I can have a continuing show from about Christmas on. Once again, space and water will be the limiting factor.

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You left us peaceful memories Your love is still our guide And though we cannot see you You are always at our side Love Always Barry, Glen, Pam and Families Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 35


SPORT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

The Spin Old foes ready for Ashes As we count down to the end of the football season thoughts begin to turn to the upcoming summer of cricket and in turn the Ashes Series. After a moment of indecision, the Poms have confirmed that they will be touring – big of them really. However, it is the cancellation of the final Test in the series between England and India at Old Trafford that is currently raising eyebrows. Former England captain, and now respected commentator, Michael Vaughan is not backward in coming forward with his views on the matter. Hot on the heels of news of positive COVID 19 tests in the Indian camp came advice that the touring Team could not field a team for the final test. However, it was later revealed that no players were affected. The positive tests coming from the coach and some of the support staff. Vaughan makes a valid point that the Test could have been delayed a few days. But wait, that was not possible as it would have had a domino effect on players preparing for the start of the lucrative IPL tournament. Vaughan feels that Indian Cricket has by their actions placed greater store in the IPL than in Test cricket. He does make quite a valid point, but as they say in the classics, money speaks all languages and may even transcend pandemics. Australian Cricket tragics will be hoping that there are no such hiccups during the Ashes series. Our biggest worry (aside from an out of form side and queries swirling around the future of the Australian Coach) is the recently announced news that captain Tim Paine has to undergo surgery for a bulging disc in his neck. No pun intended, it is causing pain in his neck and left arm. Medical staff are confident the veteran gloveman and captain will be fit for the Ashes which begin on 8 December. Australian cricket fans hope their diagnosis is correct. Me, I am already counting down to the Gabba action. - Casey It would be remiss of me not mention the tragic passing of our former Editor Jeremy Sollars. His death came as a great shock to the entire Newspaper family across the Southern Downs. I am sure Jeremy had no idea the high regard in which he was held by the Southern Downs newspaper community and the community in general. Both Perditta and I worked closely with Jeremy during his time at the SFT and the Warwick and Stanthorpe Today publications. Perditta and Jeremy had crossed paths years earlier at the Border Post shortly after he moved to the district. Jeremy was the first to admit that sport was not his forte however he was an outstanding journalist who loved nothing more than getting to the core of an issue no matter how deeply he had to dig. In fact, the deeper the better. We extend our sympathy to his family and current colleagues at the Journal. Jeremy’s passing should serve as a reminder to us all that we should look out for each other. RUOK should be something not reserved for a particular day in the year. It should be a question more frequently asked. RIP mate.

WARWICK LADIES READY TO LASSO GF The 2021 TRL season draws to a close this weekend with all grand finals to be played at Clive Berghofer Stadium on Sunday. The Warwick ladies team will be flying the flag for the Warwick Cowboys on grand final day when they line up against the Gatton Hawks. The Hawks booked their place in the GF after scoring a 30-10 win over Newtown at week36 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

The Warwick Cowboys Ladies side will be chasing Grand Final glory when they take on the GAtton Hawks in the grand final of the Toowoomba Sports Club TRL Open Women’s competition. The girls are expected to have plenty of support from the Cowboy’s teams and their supporters. end. Warwick had the wood on Gatton who finished at the top of the ladies table when the teams met in the Major Qualifying Semi Final. Warwick scored a 16-12 win to move straight through to the Grand Final. There was little between the sides on that occasion. Each scored three tries, but the difference was the goal kicking of the Carly Cooper. The Warwick ladies have had an excellent season and despite upsetting the minor premiers two weeks ago they will need to bring their ‘A’ game this weekend. Fullback Amanda Hinch is sure to play a big part in the result. She has been one of the lynch pins of the Warwick side since the first ball was kicked in the comepitition back in April and is capable of inflicting punishment on any side on any day. Molly O’Connell is another who has been a great contributor to the success of the side either coming off the bench in games or playing in the second row. The goal kicking of Carly Cooper and Lisa Croft has been a real asset to the team throughout the season. The introduction of the Women’s comepitition this season has been a winner for the TRL. It has proved a popular addition to the comepitition, and many have been pleasantly surprised by the level of skill and commitment shown by the girls. The Warwick team has played well as a team over the course of the season and thoroughly

deserve their spot in the Grand Final. There is sure to be plenty of support from the Cowboys players and club supporters on Sunday. It will be an early start for everyone with the game kicking off at 11.45am. Good luck girls.

TRL GRAND FINAL SUNDAY Standing in the way of a spectacular end to the 2021 TRL season for the Goondiwindi Boars is a very determined and skilful Highfields side who brought down perennial grand finalists Valleys to book their spot in the big dance this weekend. It is no fluke that Highfields have made it though to the grand final and they will be aiming to complete the Madsen-Rasmussen Trophy-A-grade double this weekend. Although the Boars have dominated the A Grade competition this season and go into the game deserved favourites Highfields will take plenty of confidence from their recent performances. In addition to a 34-12 win over Goondiwindi in the Madsen Rasmussen Trophy mid-season, the Eagles also had a round 14 win over their GF opponents. Should be a great game. Kick off is 3pm at Clive Berghofer Stadium. In other grades Wattles and Gatton will go head to head in the Reserve Grade GF at 1.15pm. THE Under 18 Grand final between Dalby and Highfields kicks off at 10am TRL fans are in for a big day of grand final football this Sunday.

SMALL FIELDS BUT GOOD SCORES With a number of regular Stanthorpe Sporters playing other golf events last weekend there was only a small field to tee off with play on the back nine. The course looks in good shape and if scores are any indication it is improving following the long drought conditions and then heavy rain. After an adventurous round the previous week, Gary Kirby discovered that being a bit more direct pays off so much so that he recorded the lowest score of the round. Kirby returned nett 29 and collected the winners prize. There were still a few wayward shots but two birdies in his round help ensure a winning round. Terry Byrnes, normally a regular at the top of the Sporters leader board has been a little out of form in recent weeks but looks like he is turning that around. His round of nett 30 last Sunday was good enough to put him in the runner’s up position. Ivan Juriss was one shot further back for a mention the run down. Paul Armstrong played his usual good round, No surprise when he returned the lowest gross score (39) of the round. This Sunday, Sporters play the front nine with tee off from 7.30 to 8am. The Stanthorpe club’s foursomes championships will follow after Sporters tee off, so all Sporters will tee off from the first tee.


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Casey O’Connor SEPTEMBER TRIPLES POPULAR The Warwick Bowls club held their September Monthly Triples competition on Tuesday 7 September. Fourteen teams filled the greens in conditions conducive to a great afternoon lawn bowls. The conditions of play were one point for an end plus five for a win. At the completion of the two rounds there was not a lot between overall winners Peter Collis, Danny Hughes and Matt Shepherd and runner’s up Darryl Phillips, John Ruhle and Phil Wagner. In the opening round Collis, Shepherd and Phillips scored a 14-5 win over Edwin Welsh, Craig Thurgate and Trevor Wright and backed that up in round two defeating Pamela Kerr, Doug Warr and Brian Black 12-7. The runners up Darryl Phillips, John Ruhle and Phil Wagner had a 12-7 win over Kay Bloomfield, Lynn Collie and Doug Christensen in their opening game and followed up with a 13-6 win over Margaret Harvey, Barry Murphy and Gaye Wilmot. In other games in Round One Bill Lee, Barry Ziebell and Kim Hankinson defeated Joe Torrisi, Steve Ford and D. Smith 14-5. Ray Schnitzerling, Ken Hayes and Jim Rickard had a 13-6 win in their game against A. Davidson, W. Foster and Steve Tyter. 13-6 a popular margin. It was the score in the game between Nick, Jean and Rhonda (Tannymorel ) who defeated Pat Seipelt, Denis Sterling and Max Holder and another game between Margaret Harvey, Barry Murphy and Gaye Wilmot who played Roger Cavanagh, Geoff Davis and John Johnson. Pamela Kerr, Doug Warr and Brian Black had a 14-5 win over Terry Banditt, John Cockrane and K. Weier. In Round two 13-6 again proved popular the score in the game between Terry Banditt, John Cochrane and K. Weier who played Bill Lee, Barry Ziebell and Kim Hankinson and also Edwin Welsh, Craig Thurgate and Trevor Wright who defeated Pat Seipelt, Denis Sterling and Max Holder. Joe Torrisi, Steve Ford and D. Smith had a 16-3 win against A. Davidson, W. Foster and Steve Tyter. Nick, Jean and Rhonda were beaten 11-8 by Ray Schnitzerling, Ken Hayes and Jim Rickard. The presentation of the special Wooden Spoon prize to the team of A. Davidson, W. Forster and Steve Tyter was met with good natured cheers and lots of laughter. The club extends a big thank you all the teams who played and special thanks to the Green Keepers, Bar person and the ladies in the kitchen who provided a Banquet fit for a Queen. Look for results of the Open Fours Spring Carnival, sponsored by Churches of Christ, and the Visit In from Jacks and Kitties in next week’s edition of Spin. Coming Events for September: Sat 18 Sept: Social Bowls. Wed 22 Sept: Jack Pot Pairs bowls, sponsored by Dominos. Sat. 25 Sept: C/S Pairs Semi Final, and Social bowls. Wed Sept 29: Bing Hansen’s sponsored bowls. Visitors are always very welcome at the Warwick Bowls any Wednesday or Saturday afternoon. Names must be submitted between 12 and 12.30 for play at 1pm. Please call the club on (07)cl 46611516 or add your name to the list on the outside Notice Board.

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PERFECT SPRING CONDITIONS FOR GOLFERS The golfing Gods smiled on the members of the Stanthorpe Golf Club who played an individual stableford last Saturday in perfect Spring conditions. Matt Waterworth had a great round returning a gross score of 71, one under the course par had a very good round in which he returned a gross score of 71, one under course par, to give him a winning score in the men’s section of 39 points. His round included four birdies and it is good to see Matt back in the form we know he is capable of. Not too far off the pace was runner up Lyle Bryant with a score of 37 points. Bryant has been practising diligently on web sites to improve his game. He may just have found one that works for him.

Leanna Clarkson was named the Redbacks Volunteer of the Year. Leanna is pictured doing what she does best – attending to an injured Redbacks player on the field. In the Ladies event, Helen Jones had another good round recording a winning score of 32 points. Following a countback Lisa Stuart edged out Lyn Ludlow to claim the runner’s up position after both ladies returned 31 points. Lyn Ludlow settling for a position in the run down. David Reeves was another who had a fair day out. He collected the pin shot at three, the pro-pin at 1/10 and a ball in the run down. Barry Hughes collected the pin at 12, a birdie included, and Matt Waterworth held the pin at 17. The remaining pro-pins went the way of Ian Harvey at 5/14 and Scott Constable at 9/18. Lisa Stuart held the ladies pin shot at 12 and Helen Jones at 17. The Birdies nest at 13 was shared by Scott Constable and Mick O’Brien. Others featuring in the run down included Ivan Juriss (36), Jacob Steele (35) and David Reeves (34) in the men’s division and Marie Cook in the ladies division. The ladies have been playing match play events of late and two matches were decided during the day’s play. Nikki Waterworth and Lorraine Evans had to go to the 19th hole before Nikki was successful, one up over Lorraine. In the other match, Linda Kelly had a win in her game against Lyn Ludlow. The Club and players appreciate the sponsorship of Marie Cook (men’s event) and Mandy Benussi and Lyn Ludlow (ladies’ event) Saturday. The foursomes championships for both men and ladies will be played this Sunday, 27 holes of alternate shots. Play begins at 9am after Sporters have hit off. Players who have already arranged a partner are requested to enter names on the time sheet. Players who have not arranged a partner but are interested in playing should write their names on the time sheet, hopefully others might join them. Next Saturday is an individual stroke event and is sponsored by the Newley family. The time sheet is also on display at the club. Tee off from the usual time of 11am.

COWBOYS COACHING POSITIONS The Warwick Cowboys RLFC have called for applications for all Coaching positions in the 2022 season. The club is seeking expressions of interest for the A Grade, Reserve Grade, Ladies and the recently announced Under 19 comepitition which will replace the Under 18’s. If you would like to be a part of the Warwick Cowboy’s Club in 2022 applications close at 5.00pm, 24th September. Applications can be mailed to The Secretary, P.O. Box 397 Warwick Qld 4370 or emailed to warwickcowboys@hotmail.com.

GREENS RUNNING FOR TURKEY TRIPLES The greens at the Southern Cross Bowls club were running much better last week as the club hosted the Monthly Turkey Triples. It was unfortunate that not all clubs in the region were able to field a team however the company was good, the bowls good and the conditions ideal but for the odd strong wind gust across the green. The “Girls” from the bush were back in town, Tannymorel players, Rhonda Cox, Jean Callum and Myrtle Wagner. Runners-up were the team comprising of Geoff Davis, John Johnson. Unfortunately, the news for them at the end of play was not great finishing last overall but all was not lost as they took away the fabulous meal voucher donated by the Criterion Hotel. was not but were unfortunate to be last on the overall points score, however they were able to take away fabulous meal vouchers donated by the Criterion Hotel. (Enjoy the meals ladies). The winners, taking home the major prize money were Bill Lee, Barry Ziebell and Kim Hankinson. Bill seems to be able to take the correct amount of grass (greenkeeper), with Barry setting the bar (providore), and Kim knows how to roll a ‘jaffa’ or two (orange bowls). The runners-up Geoff Davis, John Johnson and Clark Davidson were encouraged by the constant compliments from Cheryl “Wicky” Wickham for showing great style. Marion Skaines, Peter Ridgewell, Kev Mooney, Jean Callum and Lyn Collie did not go away empty handed they all had some luck in the raffle. Again the bowlers and the club extend their thanks to the greenkeepers, bar and kitchen staff and other volunteers who combined to make it another great day. In Thursday’s game, Kev Seaby, Daph Cross and Barry Frame had a narrow win over Cate Gardner, Norm Olsen and Val Gray. The score 9-8. On Sunday, Rob Francis lamented that he had wasted his time when he and Brian Bourke -could only tie 17 all in their game against Cita Weier and Val Gray. Linda Hartley however was much more excited when she and Barry Frame scored a 2811 win over Cate Gardner and Geoff Davis. Today, (Thursday 16 September), Social Mixed Bowls will start 1pm. Everyone including beginners are more than welcome. To book your spot please call Val Gray on 0409 611 930 or be at the club by 12.30 to get a game. Social Mixed Bowls on Saturday September

Warwick Golfers Helen Olsen and Melanie McLennan pictured after the Rose City Premium Meats Flag Event on Saturday. On Sunday Melanie and her playing partner Kris McLennan won the 36 hole Mixed Foursome Honour Board event (and not for the first time). 18 starts at 1pm. Please contact Kev (0447 807 699 for further information or to nominate. A Reminder – Sunday, 26 September is the Southern Cross Bowls Club Footy Fun Day. Come dressed in your favourite NRL team colours. Everyone is welcome. Be there at 9.30am for a 10am roll up. There will be a BBQ lunch and prizes galore. Contact Clark 0427 673 277. For barefoot bowls, social and competition bowls, functions and bar, it is hard to go past the Southern Cross Bowls Club Inc. located opposite St Mary’s Church in Warwick. Follow the club on Facebook or contact Secretary, Cheryl on 0407 641 158 for further information. Continued page 38 Thursday, 16 September, 2021 TODAY 37


SPORT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

The Spin From page 37

SUMMIT HOSTS ZONE PENNANT FINAL There was plenty of action on the green at the Summit Bowls Club last Saturday with the club hosting the finals of the Zone Pennant. The Semi Final was between The Summit and Roma was played on Saturday morning. Chinchilla had the bye. Roma defeated The Summit by 12 shots in the semi and despite suffering a loss it was a good effort by the Summit players. Roma went on to defeat Chinchilla by 10 shots in the grandfinal. Congratulations to both the winners and runner’s up who covered plenty of miles to play in the finals. This Saturday, the Summit plays host to the Kitties and Jacks bowlers for a Mixed two Bowl Triples. There will be one game of 10 ends, before the lunch break and another games of 10 ends following the break. This promises to be a fun day on and off the green and kicks off at 10am on Saturday. There are still a few vacancies left on the nomination sheet and the club is still taking nominations so nominate asap. A reminder that nominations for both The Summit Men’s Club Pairs and The Summit Ladies Club Pairs close this weekend. Both events will be played on the weekend of the 25th/26th of September. A few vacancies remain for both competitions so add your name to the nomination sheets on the board at the Club you are intending to play. September Program Sat 18 Sept - Visit from Kitties and Jacks Bowlers Tues 21 Sept - Turkey Triples Sat/Sun 25/26 Sept - The Summit Men’s and Ladies Club Pairs and finals The Summit Bowls Club hosted the Zone Pennant finals last Saturday. The Semi Final was played between The Summit and Roma Saturday morning, while Chinchilla had the bye.

· · ·

SOCIAL AND COMPETITION ROLL ON A mix of social and competition bowls were played in the past week at the Stanthorpe Bowls Club. Luisa Girgenti Helen Jones and Brian Brown proved too consistent for opponents Val White Ernie Jones and Mark Wicks when they played three bowl triples last Wednesday. The final score 20-7. Dot Rankin and David Rose took on Robyn Rose and Ray Rankin in a game of pairs. Rankin and Rose out played their opposition. The final score 19-6. There was another heat of the Club selected triples championship played midweek and it proved be to a thriller. Helen Jones, Dot Rankin and David Rose were defeated 21-18 by Len Girgenti, Ray Rankin and Wendy Hurnall in a close game. On Saturday bowls two games of three bowl Triples were played and another of the heats of the Club selected triples championships. In the first of the three bowl triples games Bruno Stefanon, Ernie Jones and Frank Gallo just pipped Val White Peter Smith and Brian Brown. The score 19-17. In the other game it was all honours to Cathy Stefanon Steve McLean and Len Girgenti who totally out played Joanne McLean, Dot Rankin and David Rose. Apparently, the actual score card was lost in the wash or did the dog eat it? We will never know. The club welcomed Steve and Joanne McLean, visitors from Elliot Head Bowling Club. Visiting bowlers are always made welcome at the Club. Tom Hodgson Robyn Rose and Mark Wicks had a narrow win (16-13) over Len Girgenti Ray Rankin and Wendy Hurnall in the heat of the Club Triples. There are still some heats of the Triples championships to be decided so which teams move on in this comp and who the finalists might be remains anyone guess. Bowlers who have not played for some time, are reminded it is a great time of the year to be on the green so if you are “getting that feeling” why not come head on down to the Stanthorpe 38 TODAY Thursday, 16 September, 2021

Ballandean Junior Colts pictured with SDRC Mayor councillor Vic Pennisi following the presentations.

Winner of the Junior Colts grand final United Colts with Coach Steve McEvoy. Club and roll off a few cobwebs. The club and members wish to acknowledge and their sponsor of the week Walter Mattarollo for his continuing support.

STUART WINS MIDWEEK CHAMPIONSHIP There were a few unfamiliar faces on the Stanthorpe course in the RSL Midweek ladies comepitition last week. The regular playing group welcomed visitors Bev page and Kris Rossiter, visitors from Burleigh Heads and also two newcomers to golf, Kelly De Percy and Anne Parkin. The individual stroke competition was played in conjunction with the final round of the RSL Midweek Championship. The Championship was generously sponsored by Sherry Pittard. The Championship winner was Lisa Stuart who has been a model of consistency in both midweek and weekend competitions recently. Helen Jones finished runner up while Mai Bell played well to featuring in the rundown, just ahead of Lorraine Evans. The daily event was won by Helen Jones. Helen Jones was Nearest the Pin on 12 and Linda Kelly on 17. Lyn Ludlow held the approach on the 5/14 and also won the putting competition. The group hope newcomers Kelly De Percy and Anne Parkin enjoyed their round and would love to see them back on the green soon and perhaps taking up club membership in the near future.

CONDITIONS SUIT CROQUET PLAYERS The Warwick Croquet group have been out and about on the court over the past week and are taking full advantage of the beautiful conditions. Again, Golf Croquet which is played on Thursdays attracted the biggest crowd however Association games played on Tuesday and Saturday are always extremely. Peter Campbell and Julie Grayson had a 26 -18 win over Marian Cirson and Tony Hinde in the Association game played on Tuesday 31 August. The following week (7 September) results were in the first game between Peter Campbell and Tony Hinde were very close. The final score 16-15. On the same day Julie Grayson played strongly defeating Dorothy Gartery and Marian Cirson 26-22.In the game played on Saturday (4 September) Dorothy Gartery had a one point win over Tony Hinde and Helen Dooley winning 11-10. The Golf Croquet group were lapping up the conditions last Thursday and none more so than Heather Guymer without doubt the player of the afternoon after scoring not one but three Holes in One. Thursday 9/9/21 Golf Croquet Lyn Treadwell and Marian Cirson (7) v Robyn Luck and Heather Guymer (2) Maree Windle and Carol Ryan (7) v Joyce Mahony and Helen Dooley (4) Beth Schottelius (7) Sue Stanley Harris (4)

· · ·

Barb Morrison (3)

Bowe and Rhyl Dearden (7) v Lil Hen· Marg ricks and Dani Logan (5) Treadwell and Sue Stanley-Harris (7) v · Lyn Helen Dooley and Carol Ryan (4) Morrison and Marian Cirson (7) v Marg · Barb Bowe and Joyce Mahony (6) Windle (7) Robyn Luck (6) Heather · Maree Guymer (4) Schottelius and Lil Henricks (7) v Rhyl · Beth Dearden and Dani Logan (6) Windle and Marian Cirson (7) v Marg · Maree Bowe and Sue Stanley-Harris (5) Dooley and Lyn Treadwell (7) v Barb · Helen Morrison and Carol Ryan (1) Dearden and Joyce Mahony (7) v Heath· erRhylGuymer and Beth Schottelius (6) If you are interested in learning more about the mallet sports played in Warwick head down to the Croquet Club on game days or contact one of the current players.

CONDITIONS ALMOST SPOT ON FOR SHOOTERS Shooters from the Southern Downs Rifle Club gathered at the 400 yard mound last Sunday. Although it was a perfect spring morning and conditions looked ideal there was a variable gusty wind that could catch out the unwary competitor. Results in the F Open Class were once again close. Greg Wilson shot away to a clear lead but there was little between the place getters The competition in F open was very close with Greg taking first place next three scores as Dave Taylor Bruce McAllan and Margaret Taylor battled it out for the placings. Richard McKillop had another good score to take the honours in the F Standard Class ahead of Daryl Reck and Joe Wood. Gary Snelling had the field to himself in the Hunter Sporter Class 400 yards F Class and Sporter/ Hunter F Open Greg Wilson (120.4); Dave Taylor (115.5); Bruce McAllan (115.4); Margaret Taylor (115.2); Murray Reck (114.4); Craig Montgomery (91.1); Gavin Harrower (90.2); Charlie Montgomery (75). F Std Richard McKillop (116.2); Daryl Reck (112.3); Joe Wood (111.1); Merryn Snelling (107); Nick Kent (92). Sporter/ Hunter Gary Snelling (104.1) This Sunday (19 September) Shooters will be at the 500 yard mound for the weekly comepitition. Sign on is at the usual time of 8.30am in preparation for competition to begin at 9am. If you would like further details about Sunday’s shoot or the Southern Downs Rifle Club, please contact Margaret on (07) 4666 1018.

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GOOD CONDITIONS GOOD FIELDS GOOD SCORES Players enjoyed the perfect spring conditions

as they teed off in the Stableford event sponsored by the Warwick Coffee Club. Anne Lyons has definitely found her form in recent weeks and returned an awesome score of 39 points to win the Warwick Ladies midweek Stableford competition sponsored by the Warwick Coffee Club and pocket the Coffee Club voucher. Jill Barnes, Judy Lester and Patti Hemmings returned 37 points and following a countback it was Jill Barnes who got the nod and finished runner. Judy Lester and Patti Hemmings and Tub Ingall headed the rundowns ahead of Marg Adcock (36). Judy Lester, Jill Barnes, Anna Cox and Kath Devereux took out a share of the pro pin on the 13th. The nine hole competition on the same day was hotly contested. It was Joely Singleton leading the way with a score of 18 points. Jan Byrnes survived a countback before being named runner up when she, Lois Wilson and Helen Daley all returned 16 points. The Warwick Coffee Club also kindly sponsored the nine hole competition. On Saturday there were some wonderful scores in the Rose City Premium Meats Flag Event. Kath Devereux returned to form to take that flag down the first hole again, with two other players in fine form, Helen Olsen and Melanie McLennan. Kath, Helen and Melanie all scored 69 nett, with Kath making her way the farthest with the shots allocated by her handicap. Congratulations also to runner up Helen Olsen. Kath and Helen each taking home Vouchers from Rose City Premium Meats. Melanie McLennan and Margaret Adcock (71), Di MacDonald (74) and Tub Ingall (75) (on countback) were all allocated balls in the rundown. Kath Devereux and Jill Barnes took the pro pin on the 11th hole. Conditions on Sunday were too good to miss the opportunity to play the 36 hole Mixed Foursome Honour Board event and a field of 24 pairs hit the fairways. The winners, with scores of 74 and 78 were Melanie McLennan and Kris McLennan. Samantha Hinze and Simon McDonald scored 77 and 84 finishing runner’s up . Organisers were delighted to see such a big field and congratulations to all the teams your participation made this a great event. On Wednesday the ladies played the Warwick Sandstone 18/9 hole Single Stableford off the white markers. The nine hole Single Stableford was played off the front nine. Look for results of those competitions in next week’s Spin column. Single Stableford events are scheduled for the nine and 18 hole competitions this Saturday. The nine hole group will again be playing off the front nine.

CHOOSE YOUR GAME The Stanthorpe mallet players were spoilt for choice again last week with three of the popular Croquet disciplines all played last week. On Tuesday (7 Sept) Grace Howard and Joy Newman played Heather Widderick, Effey Russell and Jenny Tunbridge in a close game of Association Croquet. Although Howard had two healthy runs of two and one run of three, and Newman one run of two they could not match their opponents who won the game 23-20.


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SPORT

Casey O’Connor The Golf players were out in force the next day perhaps drawn onto the court by the beautiful conditions. Kim Foster (3) and John Colman with a hefty score of 11 scored a well-deserved win over Jennifer Gleadhill (4) and Bev Sullivan (5). Gleadhill scored two jump shots while Foster was excited to score her first ever jump shot in the game. The two Shirleys (Evans and Page) teamed up to play Di Wren and Liz Ellway. Page scored five hoops and Evans added another two, but it was not enough get the pair the win as Wren (7) combined with Ellway (6) for a winning score. After the break Wren played well scoring 11 hoops, one with a jump shot, while her partner Evans added two hoops. This time their efforts were good enough to give them a decisive win over Page (4) and Foster (3). In the final game, Sullivan (2) and Gleadhill (5) were out-played by Ellway (3) and Colman (7). The Gateball group take over the court on Fridays and six players enjoyed four games of Gateball last week. Gateball is a little different to the other Croquet disciplines. The games are timed, and each is 30 minutes in duration. The White team (Les Williams, Joy Newman and John Colman) played well in the opening two games against the red team of Jenny Tunbridge, Heather Widderick and Grace Howard. In game one Whites scored a 19-10 win after three Agaris were scored. In the second game Whites continued their good form. Four Agari’s in this game saw them home again with another 19-10 win. After the break things turned in favour of the Rd team (must have been the cup of tea that did it). Tunbridge, Widderick and Howard played much better losing to their opponents by just one point. Game four finished in a draw handing honours on Friday to Les Williams, Joy Newman and John Colman.

PLENTY ON FOR WARWICK GOLF CLUB MEMBERS Saturday Warwick Golf Club members played in a single stableford event and with the big foursomes championships on the next day over 36 holes we had a smaller field than usual. 31 players contested the event and the winner and a comfortable one at that was Ray Dudley. Ray returned an excellent 41 points, two more than the runner up in Matthew Hartwell. Phil McEvoy (38), Peter Millard and Ted King ( 37) featured in the run down. The pro pin on 13 went the way of Jon Pearson (3 balls), Charlie Morrison (2) and John Patterson (1). Mal Galloway took the NTP on five while Scott McLennan won the seventh and Ted King the ninth. Charlie Morrison was on song at 11and Peter Millard 16. Plenty of repeat names there amongst the winners. The Foursomes Championships on Sunday was sponsored by Greg and Maria Carey and the club thanks them for their support of the club. Greg and Maria played in the event and had a very good first 18 but faded on the second 18 holes. Kris and Melanie McLennan won the event after missing out the previous year. They are multiple winners of the event. On Sunday the pair had 74 gross on the first 18 and 78 on the second finishing clear winners. Congratulations to both Kris who is the current reigning club champion and Mel who was recently selected to represent the Darling Downs in the celebrated ladies Med Nunn event. Simon Macdonald and Sam Hinze were the runners up after rounds of 77 and 84. Garry and Margaret Adcock won the best net for the first 18 and Liz and Eamon Cockram won the second 18 net and also the best dressed couple looking resplendent in their

orange shirts a la Rickie Fowler. Overall best net winners were Darrel Bain and Lisa Weatherley. A popular win as Lisa is only a new player and this was her first trophy win. Next Saturday members play in a stableford event and the men’s 36 hole foursome championship is on Sunday. This event has gross and net trophies and also incorporates the Coe Cup. The club Captain has issued an email regarding scoring etc in this event so make sure you read that prior to hit off.

NRL FINALS FUN AND GAMES The NRL season is thundering towards the Grand Final. Final’s football inevitably goes to the next level and we last week fans were not disappointed. There were a mix of exciting riveting and sometimes spellbinding matches all served with a side of spice. They should have sold tickets to the Benny and Ivan press conferences which were as exciting and revealing as some of the on field entertainment. I reckon the NRL should just contract Wayne to throw in a few hand grenades here and there next season if we don’t see him in a coaching role – Life in NRL land might be pretty boring without him. The Sea Eagles went into their game against the Melbourne Storm soaring and came out the other side looking like forlorn feather dusters. If you are a Manly fan, take comfort in the fact that it would be hard for them to play any worse this week when they face the Roosters at Stadium Mackay on Friday night. The game kicking off at 7.50pm. While the Sea Eagles will be looking to bounce back beware the Roosters with fullback James Tedesco and halfback Lachlan Lam keen to showcase the new spine combination. The Sea Eagles will just be hoping that Tommy

recharges the Turbo. On Sunday the Eels cannot afford to look backwards to their Round 25 humiliation at the hands of the Panthers at Cbus stadium. The Panthers are short, priced favourites to win but must pay close attention to their discipline. The Bunnies gave the comepitition the blueprint to defuse the Panthers last weekend. It will be up to King Gutho, Mitchell Moses and the troops to see if they can turn the tables in the battle of the West. This game also to be played in Mackay with another 7.50pm kick off Which ever way you look at it and no matter who wins or looses the big winners are the Mackay Rugby League fans as were those in Rockhampton and Townsville. There should be more of it. Casey’s Tips: Sea Eagles to fluff their feathers and the wounded Panthers to claw their way to the Prelims.

COMMONSENSE DECISION That unusual commodity Common Sense has prevailed and the power brokers at the NRL have listened to the public and rescheduled the timing of the second Preliminary final featuring the premiership favourites Melbourne Storm and their yet to be decided opponent on Sunday 25 September. The game was scheduled for a 7.50pm kick off at Suncorp Stadium which would have clashed with the AFL grand final played in Perth. In a decision where the wishes of sports fans were for once put first, the small change to the NRL schedule will provide the best outcome for not just Melbourne fans but those in all States. Well done Andrew Abdo, Peter V’landy’s and of course the all-important broadcasters.

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