Stanthorpe Today - 10th March 2022

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Thursday, 10 March, 2022

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Young ambassadors pull together

Truck rollover halts traffic

On the farm this week

The Spin with Casey

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SPORT

SDRC loses award for pest action The Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) was stripped of its 2019 Froggatt Award last week. Froggatt Awards recognise outstanding achievements in protecting Australia’s natural environment. Full story on page 4

A grape time had by all

Here’s to the great women of our region

People travelled from far and wide to join in on the grape fun had at the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival this year. Check out pages 33-35 to see our photos of locals and visitors alike enjoying the main weekend

To mark International Women’s Day, we’ve highlighted a selection of local women including our female councillors and some of our local organisations doing good in our community. Read about them on pages 36 and 37

Full steam ahead Belt, they have looked for ways to depict the world around them. The region’s Indigenous people used art and songs to tell creation stories, guide their way across their country and record their history. Art is prolific in our place. Long before and in the last 150 years, there have been many forms of art: music, dance, photography, painting and more. This exhibition charts our art history through time.

said they have a really good relationship. “We’ve worked closely with them for many years,” she said, and doesn’t believe the current discussions will affect their relationship. Mary said the gallery has “always punched above its own weight”, and the “nest egg” that is the centre of the debate is the reserve they’ve established by being frugal in recent years. Full story on page 4

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Gallery Director, Mary Findlay, said she is so passionate about art in the region. “In a time when we’ve been polarised, art brings us together.” While Southern Downs Regional Council has debated in chambers about whether or not the gallery should be forced to use their savings to support themselves during upcoming construction on the gallery and library, Mary

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Stanthorpe Regional Art Gallery is full steam ahead as they prepare to open their new exhibition, Then | Now | ART : 150 Years of Stanthorpe’s Creativity. The official opening of the exhibit will be held on Friday 11 March at 6pm, and the gallery will return to regular hours from Saturday 12 March after closing earlier this week to prepare. As long as people have lived in the Granite


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INSIDE ENTERTAINMENT ........................ page 22 TV GUIDE .............................pages 23-26 PUZZLES ................................... page 27 RURAL .................................pages 28-29 CLASSIFIEDS .......................pages 42-43

What a week. I don’t think Emily and I have stopped working for about 16 days at this point. But we had an absolute blast at the Apple & Grape Festival. One of my favourite parts was stopping people at the festival for photos or meeting them at events, and hearing them talk about how great our region is. Because yeah, it is. I’m really proud of this issue, and how we’ve highlighted some of our fantastic local women and their stories. We were absolutely inundated with suggestions of local women we should interview, and couldn’t possibly fit them all in this week’s edition. We’re currently brainstorming ways to include them in the paper, or possibly even our magazine Southern Living. We might have to do a part two next week, at the very least. Emily and I attended the March 4 Justice over the weekend, and I have to be honest, I was incredibly frustrated by the lack of other media there. The absence of one outlet, in particular, stood out. This outlet published an article last week that included details so graphic I almost threw up when I was sent it. Now, I know sugarcoating the truth helps no one, but I’m of the mind that respect for a victim always ALWAYS comes first. And I just don’t believe they would want those details out there just yet. At the very least, I would want to know they were okay with them being out there before I published them. To publish intimate details of an alleged rape case but not show up to the event advocating for women is, in my opinion, disgusting. Do you think you represent our community well? Do you think that court lists and polls about the best real estate agent in the region represent our community and their concerns? Because they do not. It is an absolute disservice to our community. Honestly, I don’t think it’s one single journalist’s fault. I know they have click requirements and subscription requirements, and they get sent the polls to be rolled out across all their titles. I know they’re probably on their own, which is actually seemingly unusual for this organisation. I feel sorry for them. It points to a larger systemic issue in that organisation, that’s coming from its core. They are not for news or the community, they are for money. And it’s doing far more harm than good. It points to a larger systemic issue in that organisation, that’s coming from its core. They are not for news or the community, they are for money. And it’s doing far more harm than good.

SPORT .................................pages 44-46

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Our great grape crush Our journalists, Dominique Tassell and EmilyRose Toohey, joined in on the grape crushing fun over the weekend at the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival. While they didn’t win, they do believe they learnt some valuable techniques from SDRC Mayor, Vic Pennisi, and did enjoy getting the opportunity to have a grape fight with him. He threw the grapes first, they swear. We’d love for you to send through your favourite photos from the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival for us to include in next week’s edition. Please send them through to newsdesk@ warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au to be featured.

Website: WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Editorial: Email: newsdesk@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Advertising: Email: advertising@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au Classifieds: Phone: 1300 666 808 Email: sales@networkclassifieds.com.au EDITORIAL Garry Howe Group Editor E: garry.howe@StarNewsGroup.com.au T: 03 5945 0624 Dominique Tassell Journalist E: dominique.tassell@WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au T: 07 4542 6253 12511505-BL36-21

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NEWS

Ambassadors’ big efforts By Emily-Rose Toohey The Apple and Grape Harvest Festival Young Ambassadors raised a combined total of $101,291.06, announced at last Friday’s Gala Ball. Here are the 2022 award recipients: Ambassador’s Choice Award: Ben Green,

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sponsored by Stanthorpe Veterinary Care Services Fundraising Ambassador Award: Rachelle Todd, sponsored by Vincenzo’s ($28,300 raised) Apple and Grape Young Ambassador Award: Jordan Cassidy, sponsored by Granite Belt Growers Association

Apple and Grape Young Ambassadors at the Gala Ball.

Pictures: DOMINIQUE TASSELL

Apple and Grape Festival a community success story By Emily-Rose Toohey Stanthorpe’s Apple and Grape Festival for 2022 came to a close on Sunday 6 February. Apple and Grape Harvest Festival president Russell Wantling said although numbers were lower than usual (no exact figure yet), there was a comfortable number of people in attendance. “With all the problems we’ve had, it’s great that people turned up,” Russell said. “I think we ticked all the boxes.” Russell said it is a testament to the community that the event was a success. “It takes a community to put on a community event,” he said. “Everyone should be very proud. “Every event was beautiful - I designed Weeroona Park to be Covid safe and the band said it was one of the best set ups they’d played at.” He said that it was particularly incredible to see the amount the Apple and Grape Young Ambassadors raised - over $100,000. “This ensures security for Apple and Grape’s future,” Russell said. “Everyone’s a winner in my book and the ambassadors should be very proud of what they’ve done.” After a rough few years, he said that the community just wanted to get out and have a good time, and the festival provided that. “People came from everywhere to support us,” Russell said. “Overall, it was perfect - everyone was raving.”

The Street Carnival on Saturday.

One of the Young Ambassadors at Grand Parade. Highlights from the main weekend The Apple and Grape Gala Ball At the Exhibition Centre, locals and tourists showed up for an evening to celebrate the Young Ambassadors and their achievements, were served delicious food, and danced to live music. Markets in the Mountains Local artists displayed their work in the Civic Centre as people packed in to purchase these goods. Street Carnival Vendors and local creatives lined the main streets of Stanthorpe over Saturday and Sunday.

Grand Parade Down Maryland and High Street, the grand parade occurred. A display of old cars were part of this parade, and unfortunately, one stopped unexpectedly. In order to continue the parade, three crowd members pushed the car until it was able to drive again - they jumped in with no hesitation. Celebrity Grape Crush The Young Ambassadors, Mayor Vic Pennisi, David Littleproud, and local media competed against each other in three separate competitions before a large crowd.

Herbie made an appearance at the Grand Parade.

The people from the crowd who assisted with a car that stalled.

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Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 3


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Council loses gong By Emily-Rose Toohey The Southern Downs Regional Council (SDRC) was stripped of its 2019 Froggatt Award last week. Froggatt Awards recognise outstanding achievements in protecting Australia’s natural environment, and SDRC was recognised for local landholders taking action on pests and weeds - the 2017 implemented Invasive Pest Control Scheme (IPECS). Its official removal in 2021 following a council vote has resulted in the award loss. SDRC Mayor Vic Pennisi said there were a number of reasons why the IPECS was removed. “The first instance is that it was an election issue - it was a very unpopular scheme, and although some embraced it, others didn’t feel that way,” Cr Pennisi said. “Secondly, it was costly - rate payers were losing money and we have to do right by them.” A spokesperson for SDRC said more than 700 Southern Downs landholders joined forces at Freestone on 10 August 2017 to voice their discontent with IPECS. “It was time for SDRC to listen and act,” the spokesperson said. “After it was removed, a new era began with the current Pest Management Scheme which utilises existing tools to manage and police non-compliant landholders in a cost effective and fair manner.” The spokesperson said IPECS was based on a similar scheme introduced in Victoria. “At the time IPECS was implemented across the Southern Downs, the scheme looked to be a world-first in invasive pest management,”

SDRC lost its 2019 Froggatt Award last week. the spokesperson said. “The Victoria scheme had a major difference: it was a rewards-based scheme and not a penalty-based scheme, and SDRC was the latter. “The money collected by council from the rate base of landholders was not enough to support the operational costs of IPECS.” As a result, the spokesperson said the scheme left council open to costly legal challenge. “All of our legal obligations are being filled with our new scheme,” the spokesperson said. Cr Pennisi said that if he had known removing IPECS would have lost council the Froggatt Award, he still would have made the removal decision. “We have an obligation to landholders and the existing scheme is now working well,” Cr Pennisi said.

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New art exhibit to open By Dominique Tassell Stanthorpe Regional Art Gallery is full steam ahead as they prepare to open their new exhibition, Then | Now | ART : 150 Years of Stanthorpe’s Creativity. The official opening of the exhibit will be held on Friday 11 March at 6pm, and the gallery will return to regular hours from Saturday 12 March after closing earlier this week to prepare. As long as people have lived in the Granite Belt, they have looked for ways to depict the world around them. The region’s Indigenous people used art and songs to tell creation stories, guide their way across their country and record their history. Art is prolific in our place. Long before and in the last 150 years, there have been many forms of art: music, dance, photography, painting and more. This exhibition charts our art history through time. Gallery Director, Mary Findlay, said she is so passionate about art in the region. “In a time when we’ve been polarised, art brings us together.” While Southern Downs Regional Council has debated in chambers about whether or not the gallery should be forced to use their savings to support themselves during upcoming construction on the gallery and library, Mary said they have a really good relationship. “We’ve worked closely with them for many years,” she said, and doesn’t believe the current discussions will affect their relationship Mary said the gallery has “always punched above its own weight”, and the “nest egg” that is the centre of the debate is the reserve they’ve established by being frugal in recent years. She said the gallery has a clear plan for these funds.

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The extension to the art gallery and library has been on the cards for over ten years, Mary said, and part of the need for it was because the gallery has always fit the national gallery standard. Mary said the gallery wants to use its reserve to look after emerging artists and young artists in the community. She’d love to be able to have some artists in residence, which is an expensive endeavour. The gallery’s art prize money also comes out of this reserve. “That money is really important,” Mary said. The gallery has run a 5000 biennial art prize that has run since 1972 and is one of the top ten art prizes nationally. She said money is secured in different ways by the gallery, but all that money goes back into the community, The gallery has undertaken “really careful and astute planning for the future,” Mary said. She said the reserve means the gallery is able to donate their whole space to the Crisps Youth Art Prize every year. The gallery tries to save money by applying for grants where they can, and Mary said they understand that Council is dealing with public money. “We’re looking at public money,” she said, and this is why the gallery holds itself to such a high standard. Mary said the gallery has become a huge drawcard for tourism, and this is why a central location is important. She said they try to support all the local groups and continually give back. Mary said the gallery is working very closely with the project manager, and they “don’t want anything except what we really need”.


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Library services needed By Dominique Tassell Locals spoke up at last week’s Connecting with Council meeting in Killarney to highlight the lack of access they have to proper library services. Colin and Marge Murphy from Mt Colliery asked when the community would get the library van back or get an “actual library” provided by Southern Downs Regional Council. A staff member stated they had been talking with local facilities, including the Killarney CWA, about using their facilities and staff.

They stated that the library van is hard to social distance in, and stated that home delivery is an option. Locals stated it “doesn’t suit us at all how it’s happening now”. They said it’s “wonderful” for the community to have the van, but it is indeed quite small and hard to use. Locals stated “we need a library here” in Killarney, and there is enough demand to justify it. Locals made allusions to the growth of other libraries in the region, wondering why funding was not being more spread out.

Staff agreed that the current mobile library is quite restrictive, and said it will take some time to find a solution. Locals stated they just want to know that the Council are working on it, with one joking it used to be the place to get all the local gossip. The Council provides libraries in three towns throughout the region, with those located in Allora, Stanthorpe, and Warwick. They also provide a mobile library service, which travels to Dalveen, Karara, Killarney, Leyburn, Maryvale, Pratten, Wheatvale, and Yangan.

Calls for ‘damaged’ Tannymorel Centopaph upgrades By Emily-Rose Toohey At the Killarney Connecting with Council Meeting, a local brought forward a request to improve the Tannymorel Cenotoph. Because the monument is 100 years old, Killarney local Jim Simons said it needs to be maintained. “We noticed that it has started to deteriorate,” Jim said. “Ants have made their homes there and

the sandstone has been damaged.” He said that some preventative measures will likely look after the Cenotaph and ensure its preservation. “We think that really needs to be looked at.” The Killarney Connecting with Council Meeting occurred on Wednesday 2 March, with Southern Downs Regional Council Mayor, councillors, and some council staff in attendance.

Tannymorel Cenotaph.

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Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 5


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This week in Covid data By Dominique Tassell The Southern Downs recorded 53 new cases of Covid-19 in the last week, with case numbers jumping last week but slowing by the start of this week. Queensland had a total of 603,264 cases of Covid-19 at the time of print. Restrictions eased across the state over the past week, with masks no longer required across the state from March 4. Density limits were also removed on venues and events from March 4. Weddings and private hire venues still have capacity restrictions. If anyone attending is unvaccinated, a maximum of 20 people is allowed. The stats: Southern Downs Tuesday 1 March: 1269 cases (6 new cases) Wednesday 2 March: 1276 cases (7 new cases) Thursday 3 March: 1285 cases (9 new cases) Friday 4 March: 1300 cases (15 new cases) Saturday 5 March: 1310 cases (10 new cases) Sunday 6 March: 1312 cases (2 new cases) Monday 7 March: 1315 cases (3 new cases) Tuesday 8 March: 1316 cases (1 new case)

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Masks are no longer mandated in Queensland. Non-essential leisure businesses (where vaccination is a condition of entry) must continue to use the Check In Qld app. There continue to be no density restrictions on these businesses. Queensland Tuesday 1 March: 4453 new cases (316 in hospital) Wednesday 2 March: 5011 new cases (312 in hospital) Thursday 3 March: 6479 new cases (315 in hospital) Friday 4 March: 5446 new cases (284 in hospital) Saturday 5 March: 4,152 new cases (276 in hospital) Sunday 6 March: 2934 new cases (265 in hospital) Monday 7 March: 3677 new cases (267 in hospital) Tuesday 8 March: 4397 new cases (268 in hospital)

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Maeve, the other half of the bonded cat duo available for adoption together.

Ashling, one half of the bonded domestic long-hair calico cats.

ARK animal of the week Southern Downs ARK has a number of dogs and cats up for adoption. This week we’re highlighting ASHLING and MAEVE. Ages: 11 months Adoption fee: $550 for both ABOUT Ashling and Maeve are a bonded pair of very attractive, long-haired calicos, born around March 2021. Ashling’s foster mum gave her that name, which means ‘dream or vision’, because she’s a very pretty little girl. She has gorgeous symmetrical markings on her face and her soft and silky coat is fluffier than the photos suggest. A little unsure until she gets to know you, Ashling enjoys a pat once you’ve earned her trust. Although she didn’t like the photo shoot

that much, she was sufficiently cooperative to earn a gold star for tolerance. With patience, time and a gentle hand, she will reach her full potential. Miss Maeve is equally lovely but much more outgoing. She has a distinctive, but very cute, bobtail. Sweet-tempered and friendly with her humans, she is an excellent foil for her quieter sister. Both girls are cat-friendly, but neither has had exposure to children since being in care. Their joint adoption fee is $550 and they are desexed, vaccinated and microchipped. They live inside exclusively and are litter-trained. For more information and enquiries, follow the link: petrescue.com.au/listings/885881

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Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 7


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Opinion: Ritchie’s jokes aren’t funny By Emily-Rose Toohey Former Australian cricket player Greg Ritchie is no stranger to the spotlight. However, during his post-cricket career, Ritchie has become a figure who causes controversy. During a stint on Channel Nine’s The Footy Show, he created a ‘comedic’ character named Mahatma Cote – a Punjabi man who loved sports. Not only did he dress up in brownface, a racist and dehumanising act, but his caricature-like impersonation was for his sole gain. Ritchie has been publicly criticised for this and for other racially insensitive comments – he was even banned from all Cricket Australia events during the 2012-2013 season as a result. Nonetheless, Ritchie was MC at a Stanthorpe-based event last Friday night, and much to my horror, his opening bit was an impersonation of a Punjabi Sikh pilot. It was not funny. In fact, it was mortifying – he even blatantly referenced his Footy Show character without a hint of remorse. A simple nod to this character speaks volumes. It means that Greg Ritchie has not learned anything, or simply does not care about who he offends and how appalling this continued performance is. His appearance last Friday served as an unpleasant reminder of Mahatma Cote and everything this character symbolises: inherent racism.

Warwick man’s body found Brownface and blackface have been performed by white people for centuries in film and minstrel shows, and were purposefully designed for comedy and to entertain white audiences. Instead, as Kendall Trammell (2019) wrote, these performances were “hurtful and demeaning because they reinforced white people’s notions of superiority”. Furthermore, Washington State University’s David Leonard wrote in 2012 that blackface is “part of a history of dehumanisation,

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of denied citizenship, and of efforts to excuse and justify state violence”. In 2022, to see someone on stage in front of hundreds of people and unashamedly reference an outdated skit is concerning. It does not matter that Ritchie did not actually dress up in brownface at the event, as his impersonation was horrendous enough and a call-back to the many times he did. Greg Ritchie, it is time to wake up. The world has changed and it is time you changed with it.

Police have located a body believed to be that of a 31-year-old man missing in Warwick on Monday. The man had been missing since Sunday February 27. Police divers located the vehicle and deceased man in the flood waters of the Condamine River near Victoria Street around 4pm on Monday. Police said investigations are continuing and are preparing a report for the Coroner. The man was last seen leaving Ross Street around 7:30pm on 27 February in a blue Volkswagen Polo hatchback with Queensland registration. Anyone with further information should contact police.

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Zonta’s big IWD brekky By Dominique Tassell

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The Zonta Club of Warwick held its International Women’s Day breakfast on 8 March at Warwick RSL. International Women’s Day is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating gender parity, celebrating women’s achievements and raising awareness about women’s equality. The breakfast featured keynote speaker Deirdre Davis. The title of Deirdre’s talk was “14,000 dreams on hold”. Deirdre shared her adventures into the less attractive elements plaguing Nepal’s most vulnerable children. She spoke of her partnership with others across the globe, lending their strength towards the annihilation of child trafficking. The rescued children, now young women, are working to prevent this cycle from continuing and how they are conquering the mountain of child trafficking through bravery, tenacity, compassion and love.

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 9


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Cars damaged by vandals By Emily-Rose Toohey Despite the Apple and Grape Harvest Festival’s success, some attendee’s cars were vandalised by unknown individuals over the weekend. Local Ash Smith said he was parked in Lock Street between 2pm and 8pm, and returned after the festival to his car scratched on the bonnet. “The damage will cost me $1000 to fix,” Ash said. He reported the incident to police and said he discovered that others had experienced

similar vandalism at the same time. “There was a lady I spoke to, her daughter’s car had been keyed from the bonnet to the passenger side to the boot,” he said. “Another lady had ‘whore’ written of her bonnet. “It’s just disgusting.” From what Ash has heard, he said other locals have suspected the culprits were driving a white van. Stanthorpe Police were approached for comment about the crime at Apple and Grape but were unavailable to respond.

Ash’s car that was keyed.

Auditions are on for 1872 As part of the 150 year celebrations for the district, Stanthorpe Little Theatre have been invited to produce a reenactment of the proclamation day of Stanthorpe in 1872. The aim is to produce something like a living museum (where there are costumed actors who are going about ‘normal’ life in 1872.) to be held at the theatre grounds. Would you like to be involved as a part of this and be one of our district’s prospectors, shopkeepers, magistrates, troopers judge, Chinese miners, local school teachers, children going to school, people going about their everyday daily lives, publicans et cetera? Can you “Strip the willow?”, “Dance the waves of Bondi” or do “the heel and toe polka”? Can you do the calls for these dances? It would involve you being dressed in 1870s style costumes and undertaking a small activity (ie if you were a shopkeeper, you would be restocking your shelves and talking to people about what things can be bought at your shop, a good wife doing her baking or knitting or crafting, a school child

sitting and listening to the teacher etc.) or be part of the general background and then be part of the bush dances at the end. After the official proclamation and SRDC ceremonies, we intend for a bush band to play some tunes so that some bush dancing can occur. Following this, we are hosting Mark Twain - Adam & Eve Diaries ( see auditions for this below). Actors of all ages and dancing abilities are welcomed. Auditions will be held on Thursday, 10 March 2022 at Stanthorpe Little Theatre at 7 pm at 20 Connor St. You can also learn more info at this event. This will involve discussing in detail what the afternoon will look like, fitting you with costumes and looking for props. We are also looking for people interested in researching the parts and finding props and historical pieces to be part of the museum. For more info call Shan on 0405 244 575 or Elise on 07 4683 7009 or turn up on the night.

Police investigating after truck rolls over on highway By Emily-Rose Toohey Police are investigating a single vehicle crash at Stanthorpe on Thursday 3 March. Around 3:30am, a B-double truck failed to navigate a roundabout on the New England Highway, coming to a stop on its side as a result. The southbound lane of the highway was closed for several hours while the scene was cleared. The 48-year-old Grafton man driving was not injured. Police said that investigations are continuing. This comes at a time when the number of trucks on the New England Highway have increased because the Pacific Highway has been cut-off due to flood damage. 10 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

Photo of the truck on its side, courtesy of Kylee Mochrie.


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Warwick Show for 2022 This year’s Warwick Show is shaping up to be the best year ever! With lots of different things to see and do for families with children under 12 free. Family Pass $20 Weekend Family Pass $35 includes 2 Adults +1 student. Friday 18th March is “People’s Day” with lots of family fun entertainment and a full night programme including Big W Firework Demonstration.

With Ray Bunch Machinery Trots, a Junior Touch Competition, Carey Bros Lucky Ball Drop, Helen with her Helly Hoops Workshops and death-defying FMX Motocross Spectacular and the Action-packed Demolition Derby. Visit the Warwick Credit Union Amazing Animal Nursey where you can feed all different and exciting animals or enter your own pet

in the pet parade. You can also enter your own pony in some of our ring classes. Saturday 19th March has our Goodyear Auto Car Ute Show. Fantastic Prizes to be won. Come down and show off your Ute. Take a walk through the pavilions, sideshow alley and Cattle and Sheep Judging Spanos IGA NRA Show Rodeo with all the

thrills and spills of Cowboys n Cowgirls testing their skills in rough stock and timed events. Sunday 23rd March – Australiana – come and watch some fantastic showjumping with free entry for all. Schedules are now available on our website: www.warwickshowandrodeo.com.au Come along and be entertained!

WARWICK SHOW 2022 PAVILIONS OPEN DAILY FROM 9AM COOKING, ART, FLORAL ART, HORTICULTURE, POTTERY, LEGO, NEEDLEWORK, PHOTOGRAPHY, LAPIDARY, WOODWORK, BEES AND HONEY

FRIDAY 8.30am Show Jumping and Horse Ring Events 9am Prime Cattle & Sheep judging Sheep Dog Trials 11.00am Pet Parade 12pm Animal Nursery Daily Feeding Times 2.00-3.00pm Prime Lamb Sale Prime Cattle Presentations Stud Cattle Young Paraders & Judges 6pm Stud Sheep Junior Judging

FRIDAY NIGHT 5.30pm Junior Rep Touch Competition 6pm Ray Bunch Machinery Trotting Heat 1 6.15pm Ray Bunch Machinery Trotting Heat 2 6.30pm Show Opening 6.45pm Carey Brothers Lucky Ball Drop 7pm Ray Bunch Machinery Trotting Heat 3 7.15pm Warwick Thistle Pipes & Drums 7.30pm Crosscut Saw Team Events

SPANOS IGA SATURDAY 7.30am Show Jumping and Horse Ring Events 8am Stud Cattle and Stud Sheep Judging

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9am-2pm Poultry Judging

Free Entry for Everyone

1pm Animal Nursery Daily Feeding Times

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GATE ENTRY ADULTS $12 | SENIOR/CONCESSION $7 CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE Family Day Pass - $20 Weekend Family Pass $35 for 2 adults and 1 student. Weekend Pass $20 for 1 Adult

7.50pm Ray Bunch Machinery Trotting Final 8.05pm Wickhams Freight Lines Helly Hoops 8.15pm Careys Bros FMX Kaos Morocross Spectacular 8.40pm BIG W Fireworks 9pm Wickhams Freight Lines Demolition Derby

1.30pm Goodyear Auto Ute Show

2pm Sheep Shearing Finals 2 - 3 pm Meet and Greet Warwick Showgirl and Rural Ambassador & Warwick Rodeo Queen

Main Ring Saturday Night RODEO From 5.00pm Approx And Live Entertainment Till Late

Contact Warwick Show & Rodeo Society Email - info@warwickrodeo.com.au 12539081-CG10-22

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Primed for sections Prime Feeder Cattle Section With the changing of the guard in the Prime Cattle Section at this year’s Warwick Show, new Chairman Matt Cleary and Chief Steward Steven Maher are optimistic about this year’s Prime Cattle Section. The committee has decided to introduce a new feeder section with classes for feeder Steers and Heifers, with a weight range from 280 – 400kg. The committee is also thrilled to see new sponsors come on board which will see increased prize money on offer. With the improved season in the district, we are looking forward to increased entries this year, especially in the young vealer section. Please contact your preferred agent or contact the Warwick Show & Rodeo office for entry forms. Cattle will be judged and then offered for sale on Friday 18th March.

In the pony ring In the pony ring at the 2022 show, there are classes for every level of young rider and every size horse. The local led classes sometimes referred to as the halter classes, start the day on Friday (show holiday) and it’s the chance for everyone to show off just how good looking their pony is. Everyone always has a better-looking horse at home but if you don’t bring it to the show, how can you prove it? The local riding events are aimed at the age of our pony club riders but member or not, all local riders are invited to make an effort to show off their horses in their various size categories as the day rolls on. Entry fees are not expensive and a lovely sash or ribbon is always a delight to show off at home.

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The 78 Sound headlines “Fresh from their win at the National Busking Championships, Warwick band ‘The 78 Sound’ will headline the Warwick show’s Saturday night rodeo entertainment program. The band, comprised of local brothers Ben, Clayton and Morgan Vellacott are looking forward to a hit out on their home turf. Eldest

brother Ben said that off the back of covid restrictions on entertainment and the current flooding disaster across the SE corner, he and the boys were looking forward to putting on a great show and seeing punters able to enjoy themselves.”

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Show program of events FRIDAY Events from 8.30am to 6pm: Show Jumping and Horse Ring Events Prime Cattle and Sheep Judging Sheep Dog Trials Pet Parade Animal Nursey Daily Feeding Times Prime Lamb Sale Prime Cattle Presentations Stud Cattle Young Paraders and Judges

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Stud Sheep Junior Judging FRIDAY Night Events from 5.30pm to 9pm: Junior Rep Touch Competition Trotting Show Opening Carey Brothers Lucky Ball Drop Scots PGC Pipes and Drums Crosscut Saw Team Events Helly Hoops

· FMX Kaos Motocross Spectacular · Fireworks · Open Demolition Derby SATURDAY Events from 7.30am to 4pm · Show Jumping and Horse Ring Events · Stud Cattle and Stud Sheep Judging · Poultry Judging · Animal Nursery Daily Feeding Times · Goodyear Auto Ute Show

· Sheep Shearing Finals · Meet and Greet Warwick Showgirl and Rural

Ambassador and Warwick Rodeo Queen SATURDAY Night Events from 5pm: Rodeo Live Entertainment until late SUNDAY Events from 9am: FREE Entry for everyone Show Jumping and Horse Ring events

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Action for everyone Amazing animals Amazing animals to you will bring Huacaya and suri alpacas, cheeky miniature goats, dorper and damara sheep as well as lots of fluffy hens, piglets, an adorable rabbi, cute guinea pigs and clever Indian runner ducks that just love cuddles! We will have bottle fed lambs, kids or piglets. We are a very interactive mobile farm that supplies all animal feed, little brushes and small seats for the children to sit and cuddle our chickens! Helly Hoops Helly Hoops brings the fun and everyone’s invited. A colourful clown who’s out to entertain you, prepare for spinning plates, circus workshops, and fire & light-up hula hoop shows at night time. Helly’s a professionally trained hooligan who’s been performing and teaching for 9 years in 7 different countries. In 2018 a global tour took her to Central America with Performers Without Borders, then went on to Paris, returning to Melbourne, Sydney and then Brisbane to perform at festivals, markets, events and, more recently, at agricultural shows all across Queensland. Circus ahoy! FMX Kaos Looking for some action to fill your Friday night at the 2022 Warwick Show? Well, this year the FMX Kaos Freestyle Team

will be bringing the goods! Watch as they perform their extreme freestyle show live in our famous Warwick arena. A show which they perform all around Australia and overseas. This will be a great family event as part of our Friday Night Entertainment & Fireworks Remember, children under 12 years enter the Show Free of charge with their family. Warwick Show - 18, 19 & 20 March 2022 For more information and schedules, head to our website https://warwickshowandrodeo. com.au/show/ Beaut-Utes wanted If you have a tidy street ute or a jacked up 4x4 ute or old school classic ute or you have the ultimate camping ute or maybe you have flash chicks ute, then we want you at our 2022 Goodyear Autocare Ute Show being held at our local show on the Saturday 19th March. Judging starts at 1:30pm, so load the utes up and bring all ya mates along, stay the night and enjoy the Rodeo action and entertainment Saturday night with the Bar running till late in the night. Check out the flyer below or jump over to our website www.warwickshowandrodeo.com. au for more details about our Ute Show and program

THE HON

Proudly supporting the Warwick Show P5, 81 Palmerin Street | PO Box 188 Warwick Qld 4370 E: david.littleproud.mp@aph.gov.au P: (07) 4661 2494 Authorised by the Hon David Littleproud MP, Liberal National Party, Dalby Qld

Focused on Maranoa’s future 16 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

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DAVID LITTLEPROUD FEDERAL MEMBER FOR MARANOA

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For the kids A Day Care Masquerade Parade is being held for all children currently enrolled at a Day Care Centre (younger than kindy) in Warwick. They are encouraged to make a mask out of a paper plate, elastic and decorations. This is a great chance for them to use their imagination and be part of the Warwick Show. This is Free to enter. The event will be held on Friday 18 March at 11.45 am, on the Outdoor Community Stage, next to the Kevin Thumpkin Pavilion. There will also be a Kindy Ute Show held on Friday 18 March at 11.30 am on the Outdoor Community Stage. Children are encouraged to build a “Ute” out of a cardboard box and decorate it however they wish. This is also free to enter and the entries close Friday 11th March. Email warwickshowgirlquest@gmail.com The Pet Parade will be on Friday 18 March at 11 am. So please dress your favourite pet up and bring them for a day out at the Warwick Show. Categories will be Best Dressed Pet, Pet with the Best Trick, Best Pet and Owner Lookalike, Most Unusual Pet, Smallest Pet, Biggest Pet, and Best Non-Living Pet. Conditions are that all handlers must be capable of restaining their pet, must be 15 years of age or under, and proof of age may be required. It will be held on the Outdoor Community Stage, next to the Kevin Thumpkin Pavilion. Entries will be taken on the day from 10.30 am with judging from 11 am, and the entry fee is $1. The Pet Parade is sponsored by Total Dog grooming and Warwick Town & Country Vets LEGO Does your child love getting creative with lego? Then we would love to see your creations entered in the Warwick Show. Thanks to Ironside Industry and Boonah, Warwick & District Family Day Care for supporting the Lego competition….it’s now time

to get your Legomaster on! Classes 4 years and under, 5 to 7 years of age, 8 to 11 years of age, Open – This class is for anyone from 12 years +, including adults. Disabled Section – This section is for people whose disability physically or intellectually challenges their performance to produce their exhibit Champion Overall Best Lego Display Entries Close – Thursday, 17th March 2022 Entry forms and fees can be taken to the Show Office prior to this date, otherwise, forms and cash fees can be given when dropping exhibits off. Entries to be delivered to the Kevin Thumpkin Agricultural Pavilion on Thursday, 17th March from 4 pm to 6 pm Entries to be picked up Sunday, 20th March from 9 am to 10 am Judging commences: Thursday 17th March at 7 pm Pavilion Opening Time: Friday, 18th March: 9 am – 8 pm Saturday, 19th March: 9 am – 6 pm Find your entry forms and schedule online right here https://warwickshowandrodeo.com.au/ show/ entries close 17 March 2022 Colouring Competition: Relaxing with Birdie’ helps children relax, rest and sleep during stressful times. The ‘Fun with Birdie’ activity book is full of games, puzzles and activities to help children learn the words for big feelings, and ‘who helps’ in an emergency. Winners of the colouring competition will receive a full kit of books, puppets, crayons, and pencils. Birdie’s Tree - Growing together through natural disasters | CHQ (health.qld.gov.au) This project has been jointly funded under the Commonwealth/State Disaster Recovery funding arrangements (2018).

· · ·

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Access free advice about disaster recovery support for your business and family at the Warwick and Stanthorpe Shows.

Warwick Show: 18 &19 March 2022

Stanthorpe Show: 23 April 2022

Receive information about: • Rural financial counselling • Financial support • Mental health support • Food, fodder and water support

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Go in the draw to WIN A $100 GIFT CARD when you visit our stall and give your feedback.

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WARWICK SHOW 2022 COLOURING IN COMPETITION

THREE PRIZES TO GIVEAWAY INCLUDING SHOW PASSES AND PRIZE PACKS! Drop entries into the Warwick Show office at 18 Kingsford St, Warwick, or the Warwick Today office at 94 Palmerin Street, Warwick Competition closes 4pm Friday 11th March. Winners notified on Monday 14th March NAME ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ AGE................................................................................................................PHONE................................................................................................................

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18 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

OPINION

Concerns over word usage I am concerned about the use of ‘unethical’ in a headline. I am new to Warwick. I do not know Cr Gale, or even what party he belongs to. However, I read the article expecting some significant revelation about unethical behaviour and misuse of power. It seems that the counsellor was rude and poorly behaved. Unethical behaviour implies corruption and misuse of position, which he denies in the article. This is poor reporting and a misuse of your power as a reporter. You open yourself up to liable. Think about your responsibility to individuals and the community when you incorrectly label behaviour or spread the errors of others misuse of language. Jo Nehmer Editor’s Note: Hi Jo, the use of unethical in the title of this article was a direct quote from the complainant, which was included in the report tabled at the Council meeting. You can tell it is a quote from the apostrophes around the word. You can find the quotes from the report in the third column of the article when reading the printed version.

Malcolm McDougall making a mark I read with interest the article about Malcolm McDougall submitted by John Telfer in today’s edition (3-3-22). There’s a good chance that he knew my great uncle Jim Beyers, who also sailed aboard the A15 Star of England as a member of the 2nd. Light Horse. He also arrived at Gallipoli on the 9th. May, but sadly was killed on the 14th. May at Quinn’s Post, apparently the most heavily shelled place of the whole campaign. When my wife & I visited his grave in 2010, it dawned on us that he had been laying there for 95 years without any family visitors. It was very moving at all the monuments commemorating both sides of this futile campaign. Peter Andrewartha, Stanthorpe

Sustainable Waste Management In a SDRC media release on 25th February about sustainable waste management the statement was made that there would be “1225 new residential waste collection points by April 4” and that this bolsters “the region’s recycling capacity”. Also, that it was a progressive and necessary step forward in continuing the region’s long term environmental sustainability. Increased kerbside pick ups doesn’t increase sustainable waste management processes.

We often hear about the circular economy and the reduction of our environmental footprint, and there is mention of working together to divert waste from landfill. [In 2020, 27,000 tonnes to landfill]. However, is expanding the roadside waste collection areas and providing dedicated bins as far as it goes? The SDRC’s Waste Reduction and Recycling Plan 2021-2024 does not focus heavily enough on new initiatives regards resource recovery. There’s a lot about bins, landfill and transfer stations. There are limited life spans for landfill and costs involved in their decontamination and rehabilitation. Not to mention the cost of

transporting waste to landfill. Now, more than ever, is the need to implement new existing innovative technologies, feasibility studies, economic viability for council and economic benefits to the region within the area of resource recovery and waste management. It’s one thing to talk about aspirations to develop circular economies and another to start on the research and development to meet important waste reduction target dates and to see SDRC become a trail blazer for resource recovery. B. Benham Stanthorpe

MacIntyre WIND FARM PRECINCT Procurement and Information Session

Come along to find out more about the MacIntyre Wind Farm Precinct soon to commence construction!

ABOUT MACINTYRE WIND FARM PRECINCT Construction of the 1,026MW MacIntyre Wind Farm Precinct is commencing soon, and once completed, it will be one of the largest onshore wind farms in the world. The project is being developed by ACCIONA Energia in partnership with CleanCo, the Queensland Government’s newest renewable energy generator.

Want to know more?

Leyburn Date: Monday 14 March Time: 10:00am-12:00pm Venue: QCWA Hall - 89 MacIntyre Street, Leyburn

Karara Date: Tuesday 15 March Time: 10:00am-12:00pm Venue: Karara Community Hall, Karara School Rd, Karara

Inglewood Date: Wednesday 16 March Time: 10:00am-12:00pm Venue: Inglewood Civic Centre, 18 Elizabeth St, Inglewood

Warwick Date: Thursday 17 March Time: 10:00am-12:00pm Venue: Town Hall, 72 Palmerin St, Warwick

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Members from organisations involved in the project, including ACCIONA Energia, ACCIONA Construction, Powerlink and UGL, will be available at locations in Leyburn, Karara, Inglewood and Warwick to talk about the project and provide the opportunity for you to give your feedback. Local businesses interested in procurement opportunities and people interested in job opportunities with the project are also invited to attend. There is no need to make an appointment – just call in anytime during the session times below:

For more information call - 1800 283 550 | Email –Macintyre@acciona.com | Website - www.acciona.com.au/projects/macintyre-wind-farm

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 19


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Branch’s monthly meeting The CWA (Condamine Valley Warwick Branch) held its monthly meeting on Monday 7 March, just in time to celebrate International Women’s Day together. The meeting also acknowledged the organisation’s international country this year of Australia, with some interesting history read out by Lyn Sparks. The organisations’ produce this year of pineapple was also featured, with an array of goodies also provided by Lyn.

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Lending criteria, fees and charges and terms and conditions apply. Full terms and conditions available at wcu.com.au. Minimum loan amount of $150,000. The referrer must be an existing customer of the Warwick Credit Union (WCU). The ‘friend’ must be a new home loan customer. You cannot ‘refer yourself’ to WCU. $500 payments only made in relation to approved and funded home loans and are made at the settlement of the loan. Maximum of $1,000 paid per eligible loan. Eligible new home loan applications must be submitted by 30/04/2022 and must be approved by 31/05/2022 and drawndown by 31/07/2022. Not valid in conjunction with any other offer. Warwick Credit Union Ltd ABN 98 087 651 116. AFSL and Australian Credit Licence 240556.

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Call Norm or Andrew on 4661


THURSDAY 10 MARCH 2022

Parks Week: Let’s celebrate our green spaces During Parks Weeks 2022, Council invites the community to walk beside us as we celebrate our green spaces and strategise a sustainable long-term plan for our parks. Parks Week promotes the vital role parks play in creating liveable and thriving communities. On the back of COVID-19 and restrictive lockdowns, Parks Week this year focuses on how spending time in our parks and open spaces positively influences our wellbeing. While Council’s Parks Optimisation Project has been the subject of recent community discussion, Mayor Vic Pennisi said the resource-prioritising initiative was aimed at enhancing popular destination parks for the enjoyment of the community, not reducing green spaces to the detriment of residents.

Hello happy campers! Dedicated to changing the lives of teenagers through youth mental health education and programs, the not-for-profit organisation offers free youth camps which will now be hosted at Fred Rogers Camp at Storm King Dam, thanks to the new arrangement. Southern Downs Councillor Cynthia McDonald said Borderline Australia’s camps extended a valuable and supportive lifeline to the younger generation. “While we continue to demonstrate our resilience in tackling the pandemic and its moving parts, good mental health is important for healthy teenage development, strong relationships and resilience, and supporting our younger generation has never been more critical,” Councillor McDonald said.

“Borderline Australia is a progressive grassroots community organisation offering social connection activities and it’s wonderful to see some inspiring young leaders at its helm addressing the issues impacting teenagers today.

“Parks are valued spaces, essential to wellbeing – places where we can come together to socialise, exercise and relax, especially during difficult times,” Mayor Pennisi said.

Parks Week is coordinated by Parks and Leisure Australia each year between 5 and 13 March. Visit www.parks-week.org for more information.

“Fred Rogers Camp is a wonderful outdoor resource and by making the site available to Borderline Australia, Council is helping an excellent community focused organisation with the certainty to provide youth camps for years to come.” For more information on attending a Borderline Australia Youth Camp visit https://www.facebook.com/borderlinecamp/.

to put towards your Neighbour Day event

Access free advice about disaster recovery support for your business and family at the Warwick and Stanthorpe Shows. Warwick Show: 18 & 19 March 2022

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“Through the course of the process, we will undertake a balanced and informed approach to secure a brighter future for our green spaces and will engage in public consultation to understand how each space is valued and utilised by the community.”

“Time and time again, I hear from the younger members of our community that there is not enough for them to do and Borderline Australia Youth Camps strike the right chord as they are fun, relevant, real and relatable.

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The Mayor added that while the Parks Optimisation Project provides strategic guidance and direction on the future management of Council-owned green spaces, it also has a firm focus to reflect demand and shift resources from under-utilised parks.

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Council has thrown its support behind youth mental health with a new in-kind partnership with Borderline Australia.

“Our parks contribute to the liveability and identity of our community and I encourage everyone to use Parks Weeks as an opportunity to explore and enjoy the parks and facilities in their neighbourhood.

To participate in Neighbour Day, simply organise an event on your own or work with a group of neighbours. To help you celebrate, you can win a $200 gift card for your Neighbour Day event. To enter the gift card draw, tell us how you are going to help create positive and meaningful social connections within your neighbourhood this Neighbour Day.

Receive information about: • Financial support • Mental health support

Stanthorpe Show: 23 April 2022

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Go in the draw when you visit our stall and provide feedback.

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Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 21


ENTERTAINMENT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

A real romantic getaway By Emily-Rose Toohey Last Thursday night, Dalveen Film Society hosted a special screening of Under the Tuscan Sun for the Apple and Grape Harvest Festival. The 2003 released film stars Diane Lane as Frances, a book critic who finds out her husband’s cheating on her. As a result, her life is turned completely upside down. But as it turns out, this major life event is exactly what she needs. When Frances’ best friend (portrayed by Sandra Oh) falls pregnant, she is unable to go on a trip to Italy with her partner – a tour for LGBTQ couples, it turns out. After some persuasion, Frances takes up the offer and packs her bags for a soon to be remembered trip of a lifetime. Instead of committing to the whole tour, she abandons the group and purchases an old home in Tuscany on a whim. She meets locals, tries to find new love, and forms life long bonds with the people she meets. The film as a whole is an escape from everyday life into the ancient streets of Italy. In a way, it’s an escapist movie and is easy to watch as we follow a woman recovering from a major life event and blossoming into a stronger, happier person. The film promises us a grand getaway, but overall, Under the Tuscan Sun is very average. Although the beautiful scenery shown may take away from the film’s mediocrity, it’s hard to ignore the sub-par, often cringe worthy writing and acting. That being said, the film was a perfect choice to show during the Apple and Grape Festival week. It captures the atmosphere and serenity of a getaway to Italy, and the adventures this can offer. In fact, it’s a rather effective comfort film – easy to digest and sit with.

In a way, it could be compared with Eat Pray Love. However, Under the Tuscan Sun is more accomplished. Nonetheless, if ever one wants to imagine

a getaway to Italy, this one’s for you. It’s not the best travel-themed movie set in Italy (this reviewer recommends Call Me By Your Name, as heartbreaking as it is), but

it’s fun and very much a product of the time - early 2000s. Under the Tuscan Sun is available for streaming on Disney+.

Prominent female directors worth celebrating this IWD By Emily-Rose Toohey In honour of International Women’s Day, we’re highlighting prominent female movie directors who work in the industry and have made some incredible films. Directors are essential – they’re the people in charge of movie sets and collaborate with artists to bring their vision to life. Here are four talented female directors and their best films to watch: Greta Gerwig Lady Bird (2017) Lady Bird stars Gerwig’s frequent collaborator, Saoirse Ronan, as teenager Christine ‘Lady Bird’ McPherson. She faces the ups and downs of high school as she navigates her relationships with family and her closest friends – the prospect of graduation is looming. Little Women (2019) Based on Louisa May Alcott’s iconic novel, Gerwig’s adaptation is definitive for this generation. It stars Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Emma Watson as Meg, Florence Pugh as Amy, and Eliza Scanlen as Beth. Olivia Wilde Booksmart (2019) Actress turned director Olivia Wilde made her directorial debut with Booksmart, a comedic film about two High School seniors (Beanie Feldstein and Kaitlyn Dever) who decide to rebel by going to a party. Over one chaotic night, the friends get themselves into hilarious situations. Chloe Zhao Nomadland (2020) Oscar winner Chloe Zhao is known for her thoughtful, reflective indie films. Nomadland is no different. It stars Frances McDormand as a woman who loses everything in the Great Recession, and embarks through life as a nomad. 22 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

Emerald Fennell Promising Young Woman (2020) Another actress turned director, Fennell helmed the Carey Mulligan starrer about a woman who seeks revenge after her best friend is brutally assaulted. The film is an interesting look into the psychology of those who have been affected by abuse – with devastating consequences. Other great female directors (to name a few) Kathryn Bigelow Ava DuVernay Sofia Coppola

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The Guide CELEBRITY LETTERS AND NUMBERS SBS, Saturday, 7.30pm

Ordinary folk can turn out to be not so “ordinary” as they show off their impressive brain matter in this lighthearted and fun game show. But plunk a few celebrities into the mathematical and alphabetical flurry and the entertainment level goes up a few decibels. This week, host Michael Hing (pictured) is joined by comedians Benjamin Law, Concetta Caristo, Bob Downe and Carlo Ritchie in a test of their word and numerical resourcefulness. COMPASS ABC TV Plus, Sunday, 7.30pm

After more than 30 years of stories revolving around the intersection between religion and life, recently Compass has branched out with a series of “sacred space” episodes. This week, these insightful and intimate instalments return with journalist, podcaster and TV host Marc Fennell opening up his safe space: the kitchen. He chats with host Geraldine Doogue (pictured with Fennell) about his Pentecostal upbringing, multicultural family, complex relationship with food, as well as his hopes for Australia. SCOTLAND: ESCAPE TO THE WILDERNESS SBS, Monday, 7.30pm

PICK OF THE WEEK THE TEACHER ABC TV, Friday, 8.30pm

Starring Sheridan Smith (Gavin & Stacey, pictured), there’s more than a whiff of melodrama and cheesy dialogue in the four-part British drama. The Teacher is a wayward cocktail of inappropriate behaviour, jealous colleagues and backstabbing friends, which all sounds very promising until it gives you a headache. Is it the story of a popular teacher going off the rails, or a case of some bad decisions and nefarious students? Time will tell, if you choose to partake in this fizzy tale of a flawed female. It all begins to go pear-shaped as English teacher Jenna Garvey (Smith) is accused of sleeping with her pupil after a night out celebrating a promotion.

The past couple of years have highlighted that escaping to some sort of wilderness is high on many peoples’ wish lists. But we can’t all just pack up and leave, which is where this charmingly therapeutic series punches above its weight. It features wildlife cameraman Hamza Yassin (pictured) adventuring with celebrities through Scotland’s picturesque landscapes. This week, actor Martin Clunes (Doc Martin) joins Yassin in the Inner Hebrides and the Isle of Mull.

Friday, March 11 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) 11.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Griff’s Great Kiwi Road Trip. (R) 1.50 The Beautiful Bush. (R) 2.10 Unforgotten. (Madlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (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. (R) 2.00 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mls, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PGaw, R) 4.00 Queen Victoria’s Children. (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: Risky Business. (1983, Mls, R) Tom Cruise. 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 MOVIE: Watching Over You. (2018, Mav) Sierra McCormick, Beth Broderick, Trevor St. John. 1.45 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.30 WIN News.

6.00 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. (PGa) 1.00 Australian Survivor. (R) 2.15 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Costa Georgiadis visits a native sanctuary. 8.30 Miniseries: The Teacher. (Mals) Part 1 of 4. A teacher is accused of sleeping with her pupil after a night out celebrating a promotion. 9.20 Grantchester. (Mv, R) A murder sees racial tensions spike. 10.05 Mum. (Ml, R) 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M, R) 11.25 Starstruck. (Mal, R) 11.45 QI. (Final, Ms, R) 12.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Robson Green’s Icelandic Adventure. (M) 8.30 Queen Victoria: Love, Lust And Leadership. Part 1 of 3. 9.25 The Pyramids: Solving The Mystery: Meidum And The Mystery Of The False Pyramid. (R) Explores the Meidum pyramid. 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.50 I Am Emmanuel. (PGa, R) 12.10 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Stage 6. 2.10 Dynamo Beyond Belief. (Ml, R) 4.40 Bamay. (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. Dr Harry meets a bitey lorikeet. 8.30 MOVIE: Green Book. (2018, Ml) Based on a true story. In the ’60s, a distinguished African-American pianist hires a tough-talking Italian-American bouncer as his chauffeur for a concert tour through America’s Midwest and Deep South. Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini. 11.15 To Be Advised. 12.45 Scandal. (Mav, R) The Gladiators make the ultimate sacrifice. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 5.00 NBC Today.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Brisbane Broncos v South Sydney Rabbitohs. 9.00 Golden Point. A wrap-up of the Brisbane Broncos versus South Sydney Rabbitohs match, with NRL news and analysis. 9.45 MOVIE: Gringo. (2018, MA15+dlv) A man plots his own abduction. David Oyelowo, Thandiwe Newton. 12.00 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures. (PGl) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R)

6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 To Be Advised. 8.40 The Graham Norton Show. (PG, R) Guests include Eddie Redmayne, Jessie Buckley, Stephen Merchant, Motsi Mabuse and Sir Ian McKellen. Music from Sir Elton John and Charlie Puth, who perform After All. 9.40 To Be Advised. 11.40 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.40 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Infomercials. (PG, R)

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon MOVIE: Shanghai Surprise. (1986, M) 1.40 Flophouse. 2.10 Hunters. 3.00 Jungletown. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.25 Fukushima: Nature In The Danger Zone. 10.20 Day Of The Dead. 11.10 Instinctive Desires. Midnight VICE News Tonight. 12.55 Criminal Planet. 1.45 Epicly Later’d. 2.35 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 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Jabba’s Movies. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Medical Rookies. 5.00 Australia’s Deadliest. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Railroad Australia. 8.30 Selling Houses Australia. 11.45 Greatest Outdoors. 12.45am The Fine Art Auction. 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 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 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Story Of Gilbert And Sullivan. (1953) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Brisbane Broncos v South Sydney Rabbitohs. 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Keeping Up Appearances. 8.40 To Be Advised. 11.30 The Equalizer. 12.30am Antiques Roadshow. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 NBL Slam. 7.30 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon To Be Advised. 1.00 Mom. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 11.00 Nancy Drew. Midnight Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 3.30 Becker. 4.30 Home Shopping. 5.30 Infomercials.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Orlando. Continued. (1992, PG) 6.40 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 8.20 Strings. (2004, PG) 10.00 Adam. (2019, PG) 11.55 Chevalier. (2015, M, Greek) 1.55pm Watership Down. (1978, PG) 3.35 Toast. (2010, PG) 5.20 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 7.30 The Kindergarten Teacher. (2018, M) 9.20 Destroyer. (2018, MA15+) 11.35 Good Manners. (2017, MA15+, Portuguese) 2.05am The Other Side Of Hope. (2017, M, Finnish) 4.00 The Protector 2. (2013, M, Thai)

7MATE (74) 6am The Fishing Show. 7.00 Step Outside With Paul Burt. 7.30 Creek To Coast. 8.00 American Pickers. 9.00 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 10.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 1. Sydney SuperNight. Day 1. Highlights. 11.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 1. Sydney SuperNight. Day 2. Highlights. Noon MOVIE: Executive Decision. (1996, M) 2.45 Pawn Stars. 3.15 Shipping Wars. 4.15 Timbersports. 4.45 MOVIE: Maverick. (1994, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: Lethal Weapon 4. (1998, M) 10.05 MOVIE: Fire Down Below. (1997, M) 12.15am MOVIE: Beast. (2015, M) 2.05 Late Programs.

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

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 8.30 Bondi Rescue. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Home Shopping. 2.00 Jake And The Fatman. 3.00 JAG. 4.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 5.00 Diagnosis Murder.

Programs. 5.10pm Fireman Sam. 5.20 PJ Masks. 5.35 Luo Bao Bei. 5.50 Peppa Pig. 5.55 Circle Square. 6.05 Octonauts. 6.20 Bluey. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Safari Adventures. 7.00 Dino Dana. 7.10 Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: Infamous. (2006, M) 10.25 MOVIE: Looking For Eric. (2009, MA15+) 12.20am QI. 12.50 Community. 1.15 Parks And Recreation. 1.40 Grand Designs. 2.25 ABC News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.

N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Land Of Primates. 10.50 Going Places. 11.50 Ngumpin Kartiya. 12.10pm MOVIE: Arrowhead. (2015, M) 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 NITV News: Nula. 6.00 Bamay. 6.35 News. 6.40 Land Of Primates. 7.30 Little J And Big Cuz. 7.45 MOVIE: Mosley. (2019, PG) 9.30 First Nations Bedtime Stories. 9.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 10.30 NITV On The Road: Barunga Festival. 11.30 Late Programs.

10.30 Pokémon Journeys. 11.00 Mega Man: Fully Charged. 11.30 Bakugan: Battle Planet. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 MOVIE: Paddington 2. (2017) 7.30 MOVIE: The Great Wall. (2016, M) 9.30 MOVIE: 47 Ronin. (2013, M) 11.45 Everybody Loves Raymond. 12.15am #Killerpost. 1.15 Reverie. 2.10 Below Deck Sailing Yacht. 3.00 Bakugan: Battle Planet. 3.30 Ninjago: Masters Of Spinjitzu. 4.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 5.00 Pokémon Journeys. 5.30 Mega Man: Fully Charged.

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, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 23


Saturday, March 12 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Midsomer Murders. (PG, R) 2.00 Grantchester. (Mv, R) 2.45 Outback Ringer. (PG, R) 3.30 Landline. (R) 4.00 Basketball. WNBL. Round 14. Bendigo Spirit v Sydney Uni Flames.

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. (R) 2.00 Sportswoman. 2.30 Sportswoman 2021. 3.00 FIFA World Cup 2022 Magazine. 3.30 The Seekers Farewell Concert. (R) 4.30 Blitzed: Nazis On Drugs. (PGad, R) 5.40 Secret Nazi Bases. (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. Chandon Ladies Day and Super Saturday. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Creek To Coast. A look at the latest in outdoor activities.

6.00 Easy Eats. (R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Surfing Australia TV. 12.30 Drive TV. 1.00 My Way. (R) 1.30 Talking Honey: Relationship Specials. (PG, R) 1.35 Delish. 2.05 MOVIE: Annie. (2014, PGa, R) Quvenzhané Wallis, Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz. 4.30 The Garden Gurus. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. (PG)

6am Morning Programs. 8.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 8.30 Pooches At Play. (R) 9.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 1.00 Left Off The Map. (R) 1.30 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 2.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 2.30 Destination Dessert. (R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.00 Taste Of Australia. (R) 4.30 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 5.00 News.

6.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces: House In 24 Hrs Special. (R) Presented by George Clarke. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Death In Paradise. (Mdv) A bachelor party goes awry. 8.30 All Creatures Great And Small. (Final, PG) It is Christmas Eve, and the day before Helen and Hugh’s wedding, and everyone is gathering to celebrate at the Skeldale Christmas party. However, James is called away to help with a dog in labour. 9.30 Troppo. (Mal, R) Ted and Amanda’s hard work leads to Jong Min’s remains being found in the river. 10.30 Call The Midwife. (PG, R) Lucille is trapped in a lift with a woman in labour. 11.30 Les Misérables. (Mav, R) 12.30 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. (M) Hosted by Michael Hing. 8.30 Exploring Northern Ireland. (PG) Part 2 of 4. Siobhán McSweeney continues to explore Northern Ireland by taking in the Mourne Mountains. 9.30 World’s Greatest Bridges: Sydney Harbour Bridge. (PG, R) A look at the Sydney Harbour Bridge. 10.20 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.15 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Stage 7. 1.10 MOVIE: The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest. (2009, MA15+v, R, Swedish) Michael Nyqvist, Noomi Rapace, Lena Endre. 3.50 100 Vaginas. (MA15+lns, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan 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 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG) Narrated by Grant Bowler. 7.30 MOVIE: Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade. (1989, PGhv, R) Indiana Jones tries to locate his missing father, who was on a lifelong quest to find the legendary Holy Grail. Harrison Ford, Sean Connery. 10.05 MOVIE: The Commuter. (2018, Malv, R) An insurance salesman is caught up in a criminal conspiracy during his daily commute home. Liam Neeson, Vera Farmiga. 12.15 MOVIE: Beast. (2015, Malv, R) A boxer experiences a life-changing night. Chad McKinney. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) 5.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R)

6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Space Invaders. (PG) Experts help people declutter their lives. 8.30 MOVIE: Gladiator. (2000, Mav, R) After a successful Roman general is betrayed and his family is murdered by the emperor’s heir, he seeks revenge. Having been forced to become a gladiator, he uses his new position in the arena to torment his nemesis. Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix, Connie Nielsen. 11.30 MOVIE: Don’t Breathe. (2016, MA15+alv, R) Stephen Lang. 1.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG, R)

6.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 18. Melbourne City v Melbourne Victory. From AAMI Park, Melbourne. 9.00 Ambulance Australia. (Mdlm, R) Paramedics Jeff and Tamara are called to help a 92-year-old pinned under his mobility scooter after it tipped over, and attend to a baby who is turning blue and struggling to breathe. 10.00 Ambulance. (Ma, R) A man found slumped in his car in London’s city centre turns on the good Samaritan who called an ambulance for him, leaving the caller needing emergency hospital treatment. 11.00 FBI. (Mv, R) After a Muslim student is murdered, OA struggles to understand his FBI mentor’s endgame. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 5.00 Hour Of Power. Religious program.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Live At The Apollo. 9.15 Sammy J. 9.20 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 10.05 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 10.45 Gavin & Stacey. 11.15 Schitt’s Creek. 11.40 Archer. Midnight Year Of The Rabbit. 12.25 The Young Offenders. 12.55 The Planets. 1.55 ABC News Update. 2.00 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Insight. 1.00 SBS Courtside. 1.30 Basketball. NBA. Washington Wizard v Los Angeles Lakers. 4.00 Front Up. 5.00 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 5.15 WorldWatch. 5.45 PBS News. 6.45 Extreme Food Phobics. 7.35 Impossible Engineering. 8.30 Secrets Of America’s Shadow Government. 9.20 Black Market. 10.10 The X-Files. 12.40am South Park. 1.30 King Of The Road. 2.20 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Horse Racing. Chandon Ladies Day and Super Saturday. Noon Weekender. 12.30 Creek To Coast. 1.00 House Of Wellness. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 The Great Outdoors: Greatest Escapes. 3.30 Selling Houses Aust. 4.30 Meghan & Harry: The Next Chapter. 5.30 Ed And Karen’s Recipes For Success. 6.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 TV Shop. 10.00 Edgar Wallace Mysteries. 11.20 Avengers. 12.20pm MOVIE: Mystery Junction. (1951, PG) 1.40 MOVIE: Hue And Cry. (1947) 3.20 MOVIE: It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. (1963, PG) 6.30 Rugby Union. Super Rugby. Round 4. Queensland Reds v Fijian Drua. 8.45 Super Rugby Post-Match. 9.00 MOVIE: Donnie Brasco. (1997, MA15+) 11.30 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Frasier. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 The King Of Queens. Noon Australian Survivor. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.15 Friends. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.10 Infomercials. 1.40 Mom. 2.35 Naked Beach. 3.30 Nancy Drew. 4.30 Home Shopping.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.40pm Songlines On Screen. 2.00 Rugby Union. Ella 7s. 2.20 Ice Hockey. National Hockey Super League. 4.20 Over The Black Dot. 4.50 Rugby League. Koori Knockout. Newcastle Yowies v Cabbage Tree Island. Replay. 5.50 VICE World Of Sports. 6.20 Rivals. 6.50 News. 7.00 First People’s Kitchen. 7.30 How It Feels To Be Free. 9.40 MOVIE: The Descent 2. (2009, MA15+) 11.20 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (74)

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

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 9.00 The Doctors. 10.00 What’s Up Down Under. 10.30 Escape Fishing With ET. 11.00 Bondi Rescue. Noon Jake And The Fatman. 1.00 JAG. 2.00 Diagnosis Murder. 3.00 Buy To Build. 3.30 Hotels By Design. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 iFish Summer Series. 5.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 The FBI Declassified. 11.20 Late Programs.

1.30pm Peaking. 2.25 Race Across The World. 3.40 Ultimate Rush. 4.10 Soapbox Racing. Red Bull Series. Replay. 5.10 Road Trick. 5.40 MOVIE: The Flintstones. (1994) 7.30 MOVIE: The Truman Show. (1998, PG) 9.30 MOVIE: You, Me And Dupree. (2006, M) 11.40 Weird Science. 12.10am Flip It Like Disick. 2.10 Very Cavallari. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Late Programs.

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6am Morning Programs. 1pm Paralympic Winter Games Beijing 2022: Highlights. H’lights from the Winter Paralympics. 2.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Collingwood v Richmond. 4.00 Pawn Stars. 5.00 American Pickers: Best Of. 6.00 MOVIE: Caddyshack. (1980, PG) 8.00 MOVIE: Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. (1999, M) 10.05 Late Programs.

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NG KI

EA SY

Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 8.10 Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 10.10 A Separation. (2011, M, Farsi) 12.25pm Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 2.05 Adam. (2019, PG) 4.00 Playtime. (1967, PG, French) 6.15 Big Fish. (2003, PG) 8.30 Booksmart. (2019, MA15+) 10.25 Curiosa. (2019, MA15+, French) 12.25am Tanna. (2015, M, Bislama) 2.20 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.

Sunday, March 13 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 The World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R) 11.30 Songs Of Praise. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Australia. (R) 2.30 Australia Remastered. (R) 3.25 Love On The Spectrum. (PG, R) 4.30 Back In Time For Dinner. (PG, R) 5.30 Nigella At My Table. (Final, 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 Speedweek. 3.00 AusMoto Show. (Return) 3.30 The Rising. 4.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 4.40 Secrets Of Nazi U-Boat Bases. (PGa, R) 5.40 Secret Nazi Bases. (PGa, 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 MOVIE: McFarland, USA. (2015, PGal, R) 3.50 Better Homes And Gardens. (R) 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Weekender.

6.00 Weekend Today. 9.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 10.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. (PG) 11.00 Rugby League. NRL Women’s Premiership. Round 3. Brisbane Broncos v St George Illawarra Dragons. 12.50 Rugby League. NRL Women’s Premiership. Round 3. Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans. 2.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans. 5.00 News. 5.30 My Way.

6am Morning Programs. 8.30 What’s Up Down Under. (R) 9.00 Left Off The Map. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 12.30 Australian Survivor. (R) 1.45 My Market Kitchen. (R) 2.00 Luca’s Key Ingredient. (R) 2.30 Australia By Design: Architecture. (R) 3.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 3.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGal, R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 5.00 News.

6.00 Antiques Roadshow. Hosted by Fiona Bruce. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Grand Designs New Zealand. (PG) Hosted by Chris Moller. 8.30 Troppo. (Mal) A shocking revelation leads Amanda and Ted to focus their attention on Yoon Sun and Olivia as prime suspects. 9.25 Killing Eve. (MA15+v) 10.10 Miniseries: Patrick Melrose. (Mal, R) Part 5 of 5. 11.10 Harrow. (Mav, R) 12.05 Mum. (Ml, R) 12.35 Silent Witness. (Masv, R) 2.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.00 Horror Movie: A Low-Budget Nightmare. (Mal, R) 5.00 Insiders. (R)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Acropolis: The Ancient Builders. (PG) Explores the construction of the Acropolis. 8.30 Spain’s Secret Conquest. (PG) Part 1 of 2. A look at the little-known history of the Spanish colonists who settled in Florida in 1565. 10.50 The Real Hunt For Red October. (PGa, R) 11.40 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 12.35 Great British Railway Journeys. (R) 1.10 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Final stage. Nice to Nice. 116 km hilly stage. From France. 3.10 The Virus: What Went Wrong? (Mal, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan 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 Dancing With The Stars: All Stars. (PG) Hosted by Daryl Somers and Sonia Kruger. 8.30 Crime Investigation Australia: Baby In The Suitcase. (MA15+adv) Takes look at the murder of two-year-old Khandalyce Kiara Pearce, whose body was found in a suitcase. 9.50 Born To Kill? Donald Gaskins Jr “Pee Wee”. (MA15+av) A look at serial killer Donald Gaskins Jr. 10.55 Death Row: Countdown To Execution. (MA15+av) Part 3 of 4. 12.00 The Proposal. (PGa, 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 Sunday. 7.00 Married At First Sight. (PGal) The social experiment continues. 8.50 60 Minutes. Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. 9.50 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.20 Australian Crime Stories: The Queen Of Con. (Ma, R) A look at the case of Jody Harris. 11.20 The First 48: Broken Home. (Malv) 12.10 Shallow Grave. (Mav, R) 1.00 Ultimate Rush. (Ml, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Sunday Project. Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 7.30 Australian Survivor. A group of castaways are in Far North Queensland, where they face challenges in the quest for the title of Sole Survivor. 9.00 FBI. (Mv) The team investigates an extremist gun group after an anti-gun lobbyist building is bombed. Bashar dangles a possible promotion for OA, but only if he can persuade Tiffany to not report an incident of misconduct. 11.00 The Sunday Project. (R) Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America. 9.35 The Exhibitionists. 10.35 Tate Britain’s Great British Walks. 11.20 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.10am MOVIE: Infamous. (2006, M) 2.05 ABC News Update. 2.10 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Washington Wizards v Los Angeles Lakers. Replay.s 2.00 Nuts And Bolts. 2.30 Look Me In The Eye. 3.30 WorldWatch. 4.00 Insight. 5.00 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 5.10 Unknown Amazon. 6.00 Speed With Guy Martin. 6.55 Lost Gold Of World War II. 7.40 Ice Cowboys. 8.30 The Story Of Late Night. 9.20 Atlantis Found. 10.55 Dark Side Of Football. 11.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Out Of The Blue. 9.30 Australia’s Best Backyards. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 NBC Today. Noon The Yorkshire Vet. 2.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 3.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Dog Patrol. 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Railroad Australia. 9.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. (Premiere) 10.30 Great Scenic Railway Journeys. 11.10 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 The Incredible Journey. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. 10.30 Explore. 10.40 Garden Gurus. 11.10 Getaway. 11.40 MOVIE: Dentist On The Job. (1961, PG) 1.30pm MOVIE: Home At Seven. (1952, PG) 3.15 MOVIE: The Titfield Thunderbolt. (1953) 5.00 MOVIE: The Pride And The Passion. (1957, PG) 7.30 To Be Advised. 10.00 Chicago P.D. 11.00 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am NBL Slam. 6.30 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Neighbours. 10.30 The Middle. 11.00 To Be Advised. Noon Basketball. NBL. Round 15. Tasmania JackJumpers v Illawarra Hawks. 2.00 Basketball. NBL. Round 15. South East Melbourne Phoenix v Melbourne United. 4.00 The Middle. 5.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Friends. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (74)

11.15 Football. CAFL. 12.45pm Motor Racing. W Series. Round 5. Highlights. 1.15 Soccer. Serie A Femminile. 3.00 Rugby Union. Monsoon Rugby Union. 4.30 Softball. SA Premier League. 6.00 Going Native. 6.30 News. 6.40 Animal Babies: First Year On Earth. 7.40 Ice Cowboys. 8.40 Nadia. 10.10 Dwayne Wade: Life Unexpected. 11.55 Late Programs.

Big Fish. (2003, PG) 8.15 Toast. (2010, PG) 10.00 Playtime. (1967, PG, French) 12.15pm Brooklyn. (2015, M) 2.20 Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 4.20 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 6.30 Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 8.30 Another Round. (2020, M, Danish) 10.40 The Big Picture. (2010, M, French) 12.50am Calvary. (2014, MA15+) 2.45 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Surfing Australia TV. 2.00 The Break Boys. 3.00 MOVIE: Pokémon The Movie: I Choose You! (2017, PG) 5.00 To Be Advised. 7.00 MOVIE: Johnny English Reborn. (2011, PG) 9.00 MOVIE: The Bourne Supremacy. (2004, M) 11.10 Allegiance. 12.10am Flip It Like Disick. 2.10 Below Deck. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.30 Key Of David. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Healthy Homes Australia. 9.30 Bondi Rescue. 10.00 iFish Summer Series. 10.30 Reel Action. 11.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 11.30 Beyond The Fire: Recovery. 12.30pm Scorpion. 2.30 Soccer. A-League Women. Semi-final. 5.00 Pooches At Play. 5.30 What’s Up Down Under. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 9.25 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 Late Programs.

24 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Fishing. IFS Championships. Replay. 11.30 Step Outside. Noon Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. St Kilda v Adelaide. 2.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. Western Bulldogs v Brisbane Lions. 4.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. Fremantle v Gold Coast. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 MOVIE: 2012. (2009, PG) 10.05 MOVIE: Commando. (1985, MA15+) 11.55 Late Programs.


Monday, March 14 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) 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Death In Paradise. (Mdv, R) 2.10 Miniseries: The Teacher. (Mals, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 8.40 French News TV5MONDE. 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 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mlns, R) 2.55 Hidden Algeria. (PGa, R) 3.55 Queen Victoria’s Children. (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: The Other Mother. (2017, Mav) 2.00 What The Killer Did Next. (Malv, 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 Married At First Sight. (PGal, R) 1.45 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. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal) 1.00 Australian Survivor. (R) 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGa) 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 share their personal stories. 8.30 Four Corners. Investigative journalism program that leads national debate and confronts issues that matter. 9.20 Media Watch. (PG) Hosted by Paul Barry. 9.35 China Tonight. A look at current affairs from China. 10.05 ABC News Video Lab: World In Crisis. (R) Three mini-documentaries. 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 The Business. (R) 11.10 Q+A. (R) 12.15 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv, R) 1.05 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 3.05 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) Presented by Marc Fennell. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Scotland: Escape To The Wilderness. (PG) Part 1 of 4. 8.30 Royal History’s Myths And Secrets. (PG) Lucy Worsley examines the so-called “madness” of George III and how it threatened the British throne. 9.35 The Great House Revival. (R) Hugh Wallace takes a look at the restoration of a former Church of Ireland rectory from 1800s. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Paris Police 1900. (Mav) 12.05 Tin Star. (Return, MA15+) 1.05 Unit One. (Malsv, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+a, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan 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) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Mal) The Aussie celebrities traverse a ladder underneath a hovering chopper. 8.40 The Amazing Race. (PGl) The teams travel through Corsica, France, where each team member must try a piece of casu martzu, a local delicacy also known as maggot cheese. Hosted by Phil Keoghan. 10.40 The Latest: Seven News. 11.10 The Resident. (Ma) A familiar patient returns to the ER. 12.10 MOVIE: Inherent Vice. (2014, MA15+dns, R) Joaquin Phoenix. 3.00 To Be Advised. 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Married At First Sight. The social experiment continues. 9.00 La Brea. (Mv) The search party explores a mysterious fort that raises more questions than answers. 10.00 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.30 100% Footy. (Return, M) Features the latest rugby league news. 11.30 Bluff City Law. (PGa, R) 12.15 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.05 Hello SA. (PG) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Australian Survivor. A group of castaways are in Far North Queensland, where they face challenges in the quest for the title of Sole Survivor. 9.00 Would I Lie To You? Australia. Two teams go head-to-head in a battle of wits that has them trying to fool the opposition. 10.10 FBI: Most Wanted. (Mav, R) The team pursues a vigilante. 11.00 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 12.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.00 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. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 The Planets. 8.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.20 Grand Designs. 10.10 The Greek Islands With Julia Bradbury. 10.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 11.15 QI. 11.45 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.05am Escape From The City. 1.05 Community. 1.30 Parks And Recreation. 1.55 ABC News Update. 2.00 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 WorldWatch. 12.30pm Lethal Ladies: NZ Female Fighters. 12.55 MOVIE: The Big Squeeze. (2021, M) 2.05 World Of VICE. 2.30 Does America. 3.00 Sloths Save The World. 3.30 Dead Set On Life. 3.55 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Taskmaster. 9.25 Derry Girls. 10.25 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 Better Homes And Gardens. Noon Dr Death. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.50 Cold Case. 11.50 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Rebel. (1961) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Agatha Raisin. 8.30 Poirot. 10.30 Law & Order. 11.30 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am Basketball. NBL. Round 15. South East Melbourne Phoenix v Melbourne United. Replay. 8.00 Friends. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 Seinfeld. Noon Instinct. 1.00 27th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards. 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 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. Noon Nadia. 1.30 Going Native. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 Bamay. 6.40 News. 6.50 Land Of Primates. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. 9.30 Colony. 11.10 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (74)

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon MOVIE: Win A Date With Tad Hamilton! (2004, PG) 2.00 Social Fabric. 3.00 Children’s Programs. 3.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Killers. (2010, M) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 18. Melbourne City v Melbourne Victory. Replay. 10.30 Bondi Rescue. 11.00 Diagnosis Murder. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 A-League Highlights Show. 11.20 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.15am Shopping. 2.15 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 8.45 Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 10.45 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 12.55pm Checkered Ninja. (2018, M) 2.25 Big Fish. (2003, PG) 4.40 Asterix: The Mansions Of The Gods. (2014, PG, French) 6.15 Capricorn One. (1978, PG) 8.30 Whiplash. (2014, MA15+) 10.30 Young And Beautiful. (2013, MA15+, French) 12.10am Late Programs.

We

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 2.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 2.30 Last Stop Garage. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 4.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Support 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: The Dark Knight Rises. (2012, M) 11.50 Late Programs.

Local News

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12539056-SG09-22

Tuesday, March 15 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (8, 9)

TEN (5, 1)

6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 10.30 Rosie Batty’s One Plus One. (R) 11.10 Grand Designs New Zealand. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 All Creatures Great And Small. (Final, PG, R) 2.05 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (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. (R) 2.00 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mas, R) 2.55 Hidden Algeria. (PG, R) 3.55 The Royal House Of Windsor. (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: Forgotten Evil. (2017, Mav, R) 2.00 The Real Manhunter. (Madv, 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 Married At First Sight. (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. (PGa, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 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 Outback Ringer. (Final, PG) The wet season looms. 8.30 Freddie Mercury: The Final Act. (Ml) The story of Freddie Mercury’s battle with AIDS and the tribute concert Queen staged in his memory. 10.00 You Can’t Ask That: HIV Positive. (Mals, R) Eight people talk about HIV. 10.35 ABC Late News. 10.50 The Business. (R) 11.10 Four Corners. (R) 11.55 Media Watch. (PG, R) 12.10 Press. (Mals, R) 1.10 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 4.10 First Nation Farmers. (R) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys: Oxford To Abingdon. (Return, PG) Presented by Michael Portillo. 8.30 Insight. Takes a look at deathbed confessions and promises and the effect on loved ones left behind. 9.30 Dateline. (Return) Evan Williams reports on China’s Kazakhs. 10.00 The Feed. Explores the dark side of photo filters. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) 11.30 Shadow Lines. (Malnv) 12.25 Transplant. (MA15+a, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+sv, 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) 7.30 SAS Australia. (M) Celebrities undertake SAS training. 8.30 The Rookie. (Mav) Officers Chen and Bradford demand a treasure hunt rematch and enlist Officer Grey to set the terms to a new bet, all while they arrest a series of wealthy criminals. Wesley struggles to keep it together. 10.30 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 MOVIE: Sudden Impact. (1983, MA15+alsv, R) A detective investigates a series of murders. Clint Eastwood. 1.30 Absentia. (MA15+av, R) 2.30 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 Married At First Sight. The social experiment continues. 9.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. Andy Lee is joined by a panel of comedians and 100 Aussies to explore the fun behind the facts. 10.00 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.30 True Story With Hamish & Andy: Dani. (PGl, R) 11.00 Mr Mayor. (PG) 11.25 Killed By My Stalker. (Malv, R) 12.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.05 Delish. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Dog House Australia. Narrated by Dr Chris Brown. 8.30 NCIS. The team is summoned to Philadelphia to investigate the death of a US Navy petty officer. 9.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. After a newborn child is found abandoned on a US Navy ship, Kensi and Deeks search for the mother. 10.30 NCIS. (M, R) A musician’s murder is investigated. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 9.15 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 9.35 Gavin & Stacey. 10.05 Schitt’s Creek. 10.30 The Office. 11.00 Starstruck. 11.25 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.10am Plebs. 12.30 Community. 12.55 Parks And Recreation. 1.20 Dawn French Live: 30 Million Minutes. 3.20 Close. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Indiana Pacers v Atlanta Hawks. Replay. 2.00 Rum: The Thirsty Road. 2.30 Outsider: World’s Weirdest Films. 3.00 Video Game Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Inside The Christchurch Mosque Attack. 9.35 Undercover Asia: South Korea’s Debt. 10.30 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Billy Connolly & Me: A Celebration. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Harry And Meghan: Royal Rebels. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.40 Without A Trace. 12.45am Crazy On A Plane. 2.00 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Not Now, Comrade. (1976, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon Instinct. 1.00 Mom. 2.00 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. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2pm

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (74)

Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Indian Country Today. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Arctic Secrets. 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Wellington Paranormal. 8.30 Over The Black Dot. 9.00 Yokayi Footy. 9.55 MOVIE: The Final Quarter. (2019, PG) 11.20 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 9.25 Richard The Stork. (2017) 11.00 The Big Picture. (2010, M, French) 1.10pm Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 3.10 The Three Musketeers. (1973, PG) 5.10 The Secret Of Kells. (2009, PG) 6.40 The Importance Of Being Earnest. (1952) 8.30 Vicky Cristina Barcelona. (2008, M) 10.15 Anthony Zimmer. (2005, M, French) 11.55 Late Programs.

9GO! (82, 93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Sicario: Day Of The Soldado. (2018, MA15+) 11.00 Young Sheldon. 11.30 Raymond. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.50 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 A-League Highlights Show. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 12.15am Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: Braven. (2018, M) 4.10 Walker, Texas Ranger. 5.05 JAG.

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 2.00 Billion Dollar Wreck. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.00 The Mike & Cole Show. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Outback Truckers. 10.30 Aussie Lobster Men. 11.30 Late Programs.

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 25


Wednesday, March 16 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 And We Danced. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.40 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 Press. (Mals, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 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. (R) 2.00 Dateline. (R) 2.30 Insight. (R) 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 3.35 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 4.10 The Royal House Of Windsor. (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: Hometown Killer. (2018, Mav, R) 2.00 Autopsy USA: Steve McQueen. (Ma, 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 Married At First Sight. (R) 1.30 My Way. 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 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa) 1.00 Ambulance Australia. (Mdlm, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. Presented by Leigh Sales. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) Presented by Tom Gleeson. 8.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M) Host Shaun Micallef presents a round-up of important news stories of the week. 9.00 Starstruck. (Ml) Tom and Jessie are both offered jobs. 9.25 QI. (PG) Hosted by Sandi Toksvig. 10.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 The Business. (R) 11.10 Killing Eve. (MA15+v, R) 11.55 Press. (Mal, R) 12.55 Miniseries: Patrick Melrose. (Mal, R) 1.55 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 2.35 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 3.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) Presented by Marc Fennell. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Michael Mosley’s Health Intervention. (M) Part 2 of 3. 8.30 Life On The Outside. (M) Part 1 of 3. Danielle Cormack presents an initiative to tackle recidivism . 9.30 The Responder. (Premiere, MA15+) A police officer is offered a path to redemption in the form of a young heroin addict. 10.40 SBS World News Late. 11.10 In Therapy. (Mal) 12.00 The Handmaid’s Tale. (Malsv, R) 12.55 The Good Fight. (Mals, R) 1.55 Before We Die. (Mdlv, R) 4.05 VICE Guide To Film. (Malnv, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour: Japan 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) 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 1. Melbourne v Western Bulldogs. 8.45 The Front Bar. (M) Hosts Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher take a lighter look at the world of sport. 9.45 The Latest: Seven News. 10.15 Ambulance: Code Red. (Ma, R) A car passenger is seriously injured. 11.15 Autopsy USA: Florence Ballard. (Mad) A look at the death of Florence Ballard. 12.15 Splitting Up Together. (PG, R) Lena organises a beach getaway. 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 Married At First Sight. The social experiment continues. 9.00 Under Investigation: The Coward Killer. (MA15+av) Follows the trail of serial killer John Wayne Glover, from the ’60s to his murder spree in the ’80s. 10.00 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.30 Forensics: The Real CSI: Fatal Weapon Unknown. (Mv) 11.40 Grand Hotel. (Msv, R) 12.30 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.20 Talking Honey: Relationship Specials. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 Ambulance Australia. (Maln) Follows dispatchers and paramedics working for an ambulance service. 8.30 Bull. (Ma) The founder of a trial consulting firm uses psychology and technology to win cases for his clients. 10.30 This Is Us. (PGa) In 1986, Jack goes alone to Marilyn’s funeral and is surprised when the Big Three arrive at the church. 11.30 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Infomercials. (PG, R) 4.30 CBS Mornings. Morning news and talk show.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Anh’s Brush With Fame. 8.00 Art Works. 8.30 Tate Britain’s Great British Walks. 9.15 Fake Or Fortune? 10.15 Keeping Australia Safe. 11.15 Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America. 12.20am Community. 12.50 Parks And Recreation. 1.10 ABC News Update. 1.15 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Payday. 1.40 Noisey. 2.30 Motherboard. 3.00 Earthworks. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Wellington Paranormal. 9.30 MOVIE: Once Were Warriors. (1994, MA15+) 11.25 MOVIE: Ill Manors. (2012, MA15+) 1.35am The Source. 2.25 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Billy Connolly: Made In Scotland. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Medical Rookies. 5.00 Australia’s Deadliest. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 Ms Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries. 9.30 Frankie Drake Mysteries. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (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 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Iron Maiden. (1963) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 House. 11.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 The King Of Queens. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon Instinct. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.30 NBL Slam. 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. 10.10 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Merchants Of The Wild. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Te Ao With Moana. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Arctic Secrets. 7.30 Country Music. 8.30 Going Native. 9.00 Hunting Aotearoa. 9.30 Nadia. 11.00 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Morning Programs. 7.20 The Importance Of Being Earnest. (1952) 9.10 Capricorn One. (1978, PG) 11.25 Asterix: The Mansions Of The Gods. (2014, PG, French) 1pm The Cowboys. (2015, M, French) 3.00 Richard The Stork. (2017) 4.35 A United Kingdom. (2016, PG) 6.40 An Ideal Husband. (1999, PG) 8.30 Birdman. (2014, MA15+) 10.30 The Long Good Friday. (1980, MA15+) 12.35am Late Programs.

7MATE (74)

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

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 iFish Summer Series. 8.30 Bondi Rescue. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 FBI: Most Wanted. 11.15 FBI. 12.10am Shopping. 2.10 48 Hours. 3.10 Diagnosis Murder. 4.05 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Harbour Cops. 2.00 Billion Dollar Wreck. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.00 Portland Charter Boat Wars. (Premiere) 5.30 AFL PreGame. 6.00 Football. AFL. Round 1. Melbourne v Western Bulldogs. 8.30 Storage Wars. 9.30 Desert Collectors. 10.00 American Restoration. 10.50 Late Programs.

Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Rush Hour. (1998, M) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.50 Late Programs.

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Thursday, March 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 Australian Story. (R) 10.30 Nigella At My Table. (R) 11.00 Catalyst. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M, R) 2.00 Press. (Mal, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 5.00 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.30 Hard Quiz. (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. (R) 2.00 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 2.10 Ireland In Music. 3.10 Sing St Patrick. 4.10 The Royal House Of Windsor. (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: Frequency. (2000, Mlv, R) 2.30 Dog Patrol. (PGa, R) 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 Married At First Sight. (R) 1.30 Driving Test. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 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) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 6.55 Sammy J. (PG) 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. International current affairs program. 8.30 Q+A. Public affairs program. 9.35 Rosie Batty’s One Plus One: Walter Mikac. Rosie Batty speaks with Walter Mikac. 10.05 Scottish Vets Down Under. (PG, R) 10.35 ABC Late News. 10.50 The Business. (R) 11.10 Freddie Mercury: The Final Act. (Ml, R) 12.40 Call The Midwife. (PG, R) 1.40 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 3.40 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Then And Now: The River Thames. Takes a look at the River Thames. 8.30 The Royals: Keeping The Crown: Post-War Amnesia. (PG) Explores the history of royal families in the wake of World War II. 9.30 Britain’s Most Expensive Houses. (PG) Part 3 of 4. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Gomorrah. (MA15+v) 11.55 Manayek. (Premiere, MA15+v) 3.10 Blinded. (Madl, R) 4.00 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, 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. (PG) 7.30 MOVIE: Harry Potter And The Philosopher’s Stone. (2001, PGh, R) A boy learns of his magical family background and is sent to a special school to train to become a wizard. Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson. 10.35 The Latest: Seven News. 11.05 To Be Advised. 12.15 MOVIE: Kiwi. (2018, Ml, R) A horse is transformed into a racer. Nick Blake, Alison Bruce. 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 Rugby League. NRL. Round 2. Melbourne Storm v South Sydney Rabbitohs. 8.55 Thursday Night Knock Off. Post-match NRL news and analysis of the Melbourne Storm versus South Sydney Rabbitohs match. 9.45 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.15 Fred & Rose West: The House Of Horrors. (MA15+asv, R) 11.15 New Amsterdam. (Mamv, R) 12.05 The Horn. (Malm, R) 1.00 Getaway. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 First Dates Australia. Singles go on a blind first date. 8.30 Gogglebox Australia. TV fanatics open up their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows. 9.30 Law & Order: SVU. (Ma) A young woman asks Benson for help. Carisi and Rollins weigh the risks of taking their relationship public. 10.30 Blue Bloods. Follows a family of cops in New York. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Infomercials. (PG) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. 10.10 QI. 10.45 Gruen. 11.20 Live At The Apollo. 12.05am Would I Lie To You? 12.35 Community. 1.05 Parks And Recreation. 1.25 Plebs. 1.50 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Jasper And Errol’s First Time. 1.00 Mr Tachyon On The Edge Of Science. 1.30 Most Expensivest. 2.00 Gaycation. 2.50 Cyberwar. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. (Final) 9.20 Behind Bars: World’s Toughest Prisons. (Return) 10.15 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Billy Connolly: Made In Scotland. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 To Be Advised. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Inspector George Gently. 12.30am The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (81, 92) 6am Morning Programs. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 2.55 Antiques Roadshow. 3.25 MOVIE: I Was Monty’s Double. (1958) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 2. Melbourne Storm v South Sydney Rabbitohs. 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 DCI Banks. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (52, 11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 The King Of Queens. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon This Is Us. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Mom. 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 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. Noon

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Richard The Stork. Continued. (2017) 6.55 An Ideal Husband. (1999, PG) 8.45 A United Kingdom. (2016, PG) 10.50 The Three Musketeers. (1973, PG) 12.50pm Brick Lane. (2007, M) 2.45 The Importance Of Being Earnest. (1952) 4.35 Rosie. (2018, PG) 6.15 Fame. (2009, PG) 8.30 Spotlight. (2015, M) 10.50 Albert Nobbs. (2011, MA15+) 12.55am Late Programs.

7MATE (74)

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

10 BOLD (53, 12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. 8.30 NBL Slam. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.30 NCIS. 12.30am Home Shopping. 2.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 4.00 Walker, Texas Ranger.

Nadia. 1.30 Going Native. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 The 77 Percent. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Arctic Secrets. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 Tribal. 9.20 MOVIE: Red Heat. (1988) 11.15 Late Programs. 26 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

6am Morning Programs. Noon Desert Collectors. 12.30 Extreme Unboxing. 1.00 Harbour Cops. 2.00 Billion Dollar Wreck. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 Football. AFL. Round 1. Carlton v Richmond. 9.30 AFL PostGame Show. 10.00 MOVIE: 300. (2006, MA15+) 12.30am Late Programs.

Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Survivor 42. 8.30 Surviving The Stone Age: Adventure To The Wild. 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.50 Late Programs.


PUZZLES No. 071

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

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

8 1 5 7

9

1

QUICK CROSSWORD ACROSS

DOWN

Synthetic material (7) Tiny, six-legged creatures (7) Cast down (11) Expanse (3) Manually (2,4) Poster (7) Shortage (4) Valuation (10) Senior managers (10) Andamooka gemstone (4) Argue noisily and angrily (7) Of a tribe (6) Official (3) Common joint injury (11) Late (7) Association of individuals (7)

1 5 9 10 11 12 14 15 17 19 20 22 25 26 28 29

No. 071

Agreement (4) Gaseous fuel (9) Popular aquarium fish (5) Surreptitious (11) Harm (3) Beachwear (7) Rib-like structure (5) Absence of motion (10) Showy (11) Society below the surface (10) To place imortance on (9) Blasphemous (7) Horrible (5) Actor, Oscar – (5) Sole (4) Unhappy (3)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 12 13 16 18 21 23

24 27

DECODER

No. 071

8 8

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

8

4 6 2 5 1 3 9 7 4

4 5 9

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10 11 12 13

14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26

K R 21

22

23

24

25

26

3

2

4

5

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Today’s Aim: 22 words: Good 33 words: Very good

D

E

A

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4 LETTERS ABLY ADZE AIDE BUSH CLAM HANS HIDE HONG OHIO ORBS SAIL SETH TROY USDA 5 LETTERS AGATE

7 3 9 4 6 5 2 1 8

4 9 5 2 7 3 8 6 1

8 1 7 4 6 9 5 2 3

3 6 2 1 5 8 4 9 7

9 5 4 3 8 1 6 7 2

SEATS SICKO SIFTS SPANK SPAWN TENET TERRA THING TRIPS 6 LETTERS FATIMA KELPIE STATIC TARMAC

7 LETTERS ACCOUNT CANDIED HITACHI ICELAND MIDWIFE NIGERIA 8 LETTERS LEBANESE OVERFLOW PARENTAL WOMANISH

7

What is the name of the Greek appetiser of fried or grilled cheese (pictured)?

What was the name of the first and only studio album recorded by the Sex Pistols?

8

What were the names of the three mascots of the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games?

Which Australian drama series was set in the fictional town of Pearl Bay?

9

True or false: khaki is a synthetic fibre?

O O T

S

4

Which number does the Roman numeral L represent?

10 Monitor, anole and horned are all kinds of what animal?

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C R E W O A L A N T E R

S K I

Which classic nursery rhyme is said to be a reference to the Bubonic plague?

6

What does the acronym NASDAQ stand for?

No. 071 Insert the missing letters to make 10 words – five reading across the grid and five reading down.

QUICK QUIZ

1

What kind of musical instrument is a clavichord?

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NOTE: more than one solution may be possible

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

S T

S

HYENA IMAGE INNER LEAPS LEWIS LINEN LUCIA MAINS MANIA METAL OMEGA OPERA OUTDO PAYEE PETIT PRATE RECAP RESAT RIVEN SCENE

aced, aces, acid, acre, acrid, arced, arcs, caddie, caddied, caddies, caddis, cadre, card, carded, cards, care, cared, cares, case, cased, cedar, cider, cried, cries, dace, dice, diced, dicer, dices, disc, discard, DISCARDED, erica, iced, ices, race, raced, races, rice, sacred, scar, scare, scared, sidecar

6 7 3 5 2 4 9 1 8

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

C

No. 071

11-03-22

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5 3 1 7 4 6 2 8 9

7 8 6 9 3 2 1 4 5

7 6 1 2 8 4 3 5 9

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AGENT AIMED ANGEL ANOMY AROMA ASCOT ASHEN ASIAN ATOLL BANNS BRAVE BRING CHEAP CORSE DREAM ECOLI EERIE ENDOW EVITA GENII

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5 6 1 3 2 8 9 4 7

4 8 2 1 9 7 5 3 6

3 2 5 6 4 1 8 7 9

6 7 9 3 2 8 4 1 5

2 4 8 7 9 3 5 6 1

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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”.

44 words: Excellent

6 7 4 8 5 9 3 2 1

1 9 8 7 3 2 6 5 4

9 4 3 2 1 6 7 8 5

2 5 7 9 8 4 1 6 3

8 1 6 5 7 3 4 9 2

9 3 6 4 1 5 2 7 8

Puzzles and pagination © Pagemasters | pagemasters.com

I

19

medium

O

18

easy

S

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9-LETTER WORD

3

hard

5x5

16

8 2 7 9 2 6

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7

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2 5 9

3 LETTERS AGO ASS BIZ EEL HAT HER HIC HUN ISH ITA KEN LEE MIR NAG NIL PAY RAP REC REP SPY SRI TIE TIM TRY

U CO S B ANH Y T I GQ

4

P F E L MX J D V ZWK R

1

WORDFIT

ANSWERS: 1. A stringed keyboard 2. Saganaki 3. Syd, Olly and Millie. 4. 50 5. Ring a Ring o’ Roses 6. National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation (System) 7. Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols. 8. SeaChange 9. False 10. Lizard

SUDOKU

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 27


RURAL LINKS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

This week on the farm By Judy Barnet, Ag Columnist Autumn already! Autumn and Spring are my favourite times of the year, Autumn signalling a time to start slowing down and have dinner before 7.30 pm as well as taking time to marvel at nature’s beautiful colours. I love the abundance of leaves to rake up and use as mulch on the garden and compost as well. What’s not to love about Autumn! Driving out the gate this morning low to the ground I saw a magnificent sea eagle take flight only metres from me. Hot on its heels were some small birds. It’s not every day you see a sight like that. Like everyone I was shocked and horrified to see the major weather event evolve last week. My sister lives near Ipswich and was impacted by their shed flooding and storm damage, no words I write can express the terror and heartache people have been through. Frustration is overflowing in buckets from me today. Email on my phone hasn’t been working for some time. I should have just left well enough alone, after all, checking emails once a day should be enough right. But no, I rang Telstra who, for once, got back to me quickly! A quick reset of the password and all was good, or so I thought. I got up this morning with a list of things to do and check as long as my arm and first off the list was turn on the laptop and check the emails before daylight broke. I quickly discovered my email account was no longer working and assumed it had something to do with the reset yesterday. 9.00 I called Telstra and was directed to Jack who advised me my email account had been suspended due to suspicious activity. My computer had a dose of the worms and on top was being attacked by a Trojan Horse. I could feel my anxiety levels rising rapidly. It took Jack’s oneman army the whole day to defeat the Trojan Horse and kill the worms. It cost me an arm and a leg nearly to purchase Telstra’s Premium Cyber Security Package but it covers all devices for a lifetime plus 24-hour technical support. I am incredibly overjoyed to report that the last cow, Tess, was A.I.d this afternoon. Now it is a wait and see game. I have my fingers and toes crossed! The cows are a bit better behaved now moving through the yards after some training with Bernie (the A.I. man). The first couple of times they dug their hooves in and refused to walk up into the crush. Cows that are too quiet can be more difficult to move than wild cattle sometimes! I went to take a few more photos of the sale lambs for my Facebook page yesterday and as I approached them in front of me (about 2 metres) was a tin shelter the sheep use occasionally. I looked down and at the same time a large feral cat, striped like a tiger woke up from his sleep in the shelter. I had the camera of course but I got such a shock he was through the paddock and over the fence into the trees before I could say Holy Mackeral. I suspect the cat has been cleaning up the Guinea Fowl that are often in that paddock. He was a magnificent specimen of a feral cat, fat, large and shiny in his prime I would say. It is essential that we get rid of this cat before the end of winter when lambing starts. We have been trying now for quite some time but will have to ramp up the efforts.

Wednesday dawned bright and clear for our concrete delivery at 6.30 am however by the time I drove out the driveway to work the sky had clouded over. 3 Generations of Gibbings worked hard to lay the concrete. Richie’s son, Steve is a concreter at A1 Aussie Concrete and grandson Cooper also came out to help. Johnson’s Quarries from Inglewood delivered the concrete and also helped when needed. Fortunately, the rain held off until that night and we woke Thursday morning to see the concrete so level, not a single puddle had formed on it. Hopefully, in a few weeks, we will start erecting the shed. In other news, I have started a new job at a Pecan Farm in the Dumaresq Valley. I am looking forward to having my weekends off to spend with Richie in the future (I will still be working at the Waste Facility for a few more weeks). I reckon the first thing I will do (well, we will do together despite Richie’s guaranteed protest about there being too much work to do on the farm) will be to attend a clearing sale! I love nothing better than a weekend drive to a farm I haven’t been to before, enjoying the journey, buying a cup of tea and some delicious cakes that only those country ladies that serve on that always present at clearing sale canteen supporting a charity can bake. And of course, the anticipation of possibly securing a bargain buy that you really really need! I was looking for a file in the Rare Breeds Trust Storage the other day and I accidentally opened a picture of the Trust’s first-ever magazine – it was dated April 1992 so next month will be a 30-year celebration of the Trust. The cover featured a photo of a Middle White Pig

– taken from a stud in Western Australia. This breed is now extinct in Australia, the date of its disappearance is unsure but is likely to be in the 1970s. The Welsh Pig, also a white breed still has its standard in the Australian

Pig Breeders Herd Book but has disappeared from our shores, I believe it was around until the 1980s Take care everyone, I look forward to catching up again next week.

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87 Ogilvie Road Warwick | 07 4661 5900 www.southerndownsag.com.au *Finance available with an interest rate of 0% p.a. available on a Chattel Mortgage agreement minimum 30% cash deposit, the GST component repaid in the fourth month and monthly repayments in arrears over a 36 months term. Offer ends March 31st, 2022, while stocks last to approved purchasers for chattel mortgage finance who use the equipment for business purposes only. Subject to terms and conditions and credit approval by AGCO Finance Pty Ltd, ABN number 42 107 653 878. Fees and charges may apply. 12539235-SN10-22

28 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

RURAL LINKS

Livestock market update

· · · · · · · · · ·

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topped at $178 to average $139.20 ($25down), lamb rams topped at $190 to average $148.41 ($7down). The yarding was drawn from a few areas considering the number of roads still cut and was probably the cheapest seen for a few weeks. The total yarding of 779 head averaged $142.87 a drop of $13/ head week on week. Galloway & Carmichael sold Dorper ewe hoggets 62.5kg to restockers for $216, 42.5kg lambs to restockers for $170, 30kg lambs to restockers for $120, ewes to restockers for $174 Darryl Martin sold Dorper ewe lambs 46.5kg to restockers for $250 and $238, 43kg to restockers for $230, wether lambs 43.75kg to Tonys Supa Meats & Leslie Lamb for $165 Geoff & Helen Lyons sold wether Dorper lambs 44.58kg to Leslie Lamb for $160 Aaron Learoyd sold Dorper ewes to restockers for $176 and $130, 18.3kg lambs to restockers for $94 and hoggets to restockers for $80 Mayes Family sold Dorper x lambs 45kg to restockers for $175, 37.2kg to Whites Trading for $120, 62.2kg hoggets to Thomas Foods for $164, 55kg ewe hoggets to restockers for $164, 45kg ewe hoggets to restockers for $122, ram hoggets to restockers for $141, ewes to Thomas Foods for $152 and $134 John Murphy sold Dorper x lambs 46.15kg to Warwick Meats for $170, 42.14kg to Warwick Meats for $154, 39.25kg to Shelly F/T for $140, 33.3kg to Highchester Meats for $122, 38kg ram lambs to Whites Trading for $121, ewes to restockers for $112 Phil Kemp sold 44.1kf Xbred lambs to Warwick Meats for $164, 33.8kg to restockers for $120, Xb wethers to Thomas Foods for $132, Merino sheep to restockers for $42, Dorper x rams to Whites Trading for $82, 43kg ewe hoggets to restockers for $122 and 4th mixed sex to restockers for $122

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Hoggets topped at $216 to average $154.03 a drop of $7/head Ewes topped at $176 to average $121.11 a rise of $5/head Wethers topped at $178 to average $139.20 a drop of $25/head Lamb rams topped at $190 to average $148.41 a drop of $7/head The yarding of 779 head averaged $142.87 a drop of $13/ head week on week. Pig and poultry numbers Pork sold to $200, Sows to $348, Baconers to $200, Light Pork sold to $188, Stores from $116 to $ 165 Poultry numbers were seemingly unaffected as were the other livestock sales with the numbers consistent with previous weeks.

· ·

The buying power was not evident with the yardings seemingly cheaper than the previous sales. Sussex pullets sold to $15, Roosters to $12.50, Pullets to $12.50, Hens to $14, Guinea fowl to $7.50, Ducks to $7, Drakes to $16 McDougall and Sons sheep and lamb report Agents today yarded a rain affected 779 head to meet the local buying panel which was underrepresented with a few buyers not in attendance. The market was relaxed for the good trade and export types but was slightly firmer for a few good re-stocker ewe lambs and ewes. Lambs today topped at $250 to average $145.14 ($24down), hoggets topped at $216 to average $154.03 ($7down), ewes topped at $176 to average $121.11 ($5up),wethers

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

PTY LTD

Livestock agent ROSS ELLIS of McDougall and Sons brings us an update on the local lamb and cattle markets from last week… The weather not only impacted on the homes and livelihood of people in Queensland and northern New South Wales with the recent weather events but also impacted the flow through for numbers for the weekly sales. Cattle, sheep and lamb numbers were significantly affected by the recent weather events. Vendors were unable to get stock in for the sales or the transport was not able to reach the stock due to conditions of the roads. Cattle numbers Vealer steers averaged 677.1c/kg to 806.2c/ kg or $1587.02 to $1890.14 Vealer heifers averaged 603c/kg to 800.2c/kg or $1349.18 to $1664.99 Feeder steers averaged 563.3c/kg to 598.2c/ kg or $2423.80 to $3035.27 Feeder heifers averaged 450.6c/kg to 528.2c/ kg or $1520.89 to $1718.79 Yearling steers averaged 664.4c/kg to 690.2c/ kg or $2044.27 to $2480.80 Yearling heifers averaged 553.7c/kg to 618.2c/kg or $ $2023.45 to $2366.33 Heifers averaged 426.8c/kg to 478.2c/kg or $2085.10 to $2529.94 Cows averaged 342.5c/kg to 385c/kg or $2110.54 to $2791.25 Bulls averaged 419.4c/kg to 510.2c/kg or $2212.27 to $3080.28 The total yarding saw the average of 554.4c/ kg or $2020.80/head Sheep and lamb numbers Sheep and lamb numbers were also back and saw a lack of buyers at the sale, re-stockers kept the market to the rate, for replacement stock back to the paddocks. Lambs topped at $250 to average $145.14 a drop of $24/head

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

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07 4661 2178 Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 29


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

COMMUNITY DIARY The World Day of Prayer has been prepared by the Women of England, Wales and Northern Ireland. It will be held on Friday 4th March at St Mary’s Church, 163 Palmerin Street, Warwick from 10am. All local Churches are invited to attend. Please indicate your intention by contacting Rita on 4661 8144 Warwick & District Country Music Club invites all to attend a Musical on Sunday 6th March at the Railway Institute Hall, 17 Hamilton Street, Warwick, from 1pm to 5pm. Bring a plate for afternoon tea. Coffee, tea, and cold drinks available all afternoon. Contact Heathre on 0417 038 992, or Rod on 0427 622 687. The Chronicle Lifeline Bookfest being held on March 5 & 6 at the Toowoomba Showgrounds. For more information please contact please call 1300 991 443 N.A. (Narcotics Anonymous) meets every Wednesday night in Stanthorpe 7.30pm - 8.30pm. Contact 0412 637 730 for further information. Table Tennis Seniors Group plays every Monday and Friday morning starting at 9am until 11am at the Railway Institute building at 17 Hamilton Street. All welcome. Contact Luitha on 0447 524 554 or Bob Graham on 0413 865 101 for further information. Artworks at Stanthorpe Station, Art groups meet weekly on Tuesdays, (beginner) & Thursdays, from 9am - 12 noon. New friends/artists/poets/crafters are welcome. Café open weekends. Workshops spaces available. Phone 0468 879 081.

Win tickets to CelticFest

Southern Downs Steam Railway - Volunteers are invited to participate in heritage rail operations in Warwick. Male and female roles available. Drop in Wednesday or Thursday. Phone 0478 657 399 or info@sdsr.com.au QCWA Handcaft provides qualified teachers of all types of handcraft open to everyone in the CWA hall in Grafton Street behind the café every Wednesday 9-11. Cost $3 and morning tea is provided. For more information contact Sharon 46662197 Crafty Chicks Craft Mornings every Friday from 9.00 to 11.30 a.m. at the Warwick Bowls Club in Fitzroy Street, opposite the Police Station. Cost $5.00. Starting date is Friday, 4th March. N.B. To enter the Bowls Club everyone must be double COVID Vaccinated and have a Mask. Any questions ring Trish Owens on 4667 0990 or powens38@icloud.com. Stanthorpe Cycling Club meets at Burton and Sons, High St, Stanthorpe every Sunday at 7am for a ride around the Granite Belt. Call Keith on 0413 870 021 for more information. Zonta Club of Warwick meets every third Tuesday with a focus on empowering women and girls. Contact on warwickzonta@gmail.com for more information

CelticFest Warwick celebrates the Southern Downs’ rich Scottish and Irish heritage as well as contemporary Celtic culture and the natural beauty of the region. Warwick & Stanthorpe Today have FOUR double passes to CelticFest Gathering on Saturday 26 March. We will be giving away tickets to two winners in Warwick and two winners in Stanthorpe. The main event, a Celtic Gathering, is to be held Saturday March 26, bringing ‘All things Celtic’ together at the Warwick Showgrounds, with Celtic Community bringing you satellite events across the region Friday 25 and Sunday 27 March.

Rotary Club of Warwick Sunrise meets every Thursday from 7am to 8am at Warwick Gardens Galore, Albion Street. Everyone welcome. Contact Don Hughes on 0456 654 814. Non denominational Gospel Services at Warwick Senior Citizens Hall, 13A Alberts Street, Warwick, Sunday 4.00pm – 5.00pm. Call Melanie on 0437 552 799 for further details. Stanthorpe Mens Golf at the Stanthorpe Golf Club every Wednesday for a midweek round of golf. 7.45 registration for an 8 o’clock tee off. Handicaps preferred but not essential. Stanthorpe Bridge Club every Thursday at the International Club for a friendly game of Bridge. 10.45 for an 11 o’clock start. Visitors welcome. Call Keith on 0413 870 021 for more information. Border Rangesamateur Radio Club meets the first Saturday of each month at club rooms Eduardo Vern park Stanthorpe at 12 midday. Further details contact David VK4HDE on 0427 830 030 or enquiries@brarc.org.au. Rose City Probus Club meets the 3rd Wednesday of the month from 9.30am. Includes Morning Tea. Other local outings include coffee mornings, lunches, dinner. Opportunities for group travel to destinations of interest. Phone Marion: 0499 267 547; Leslie: 4661 4273 Lapidary Club meets every Wednesday and Saturday from 12-4pm at their workshop in Barnes Park, Warwick (off Horsman Road). Membership is just $25, $5 workshop fee. Enquiries to 4661 7865.

The Celtic Gathering on the Saturday includes: Highland Games including Caber Toss Medieval Village - Vikings, Jacobites, workshops and more Massed Pipe Band Irish and Highland Dancing Celtic bands, fiddlers and Choir Celtic Animals, ‘Highland Coo’s’ and Clydesdales and so much more! Check it out at celticfestqld.com.au To ENTER our competition simply go to warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au/competitions

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Killarney all-ages Skate Nights meet the last Friday of every month from 5.30pm until 8.30pm at Killarney Recreation Hall opposite showgrounds. Entry is gold coin donation. For more information phone Sonya 0439 618 371. Stanthorpe Probus Club meet the fourth Tuesday of the month at Stanthorpe RSL Services Club, from 9.30am. Phone: Elaine 0418 479 687 or Glen 0498 462 954. Warwick Community Hub program for people with or without disability held each Friday from 9.30am at Warwick Senior Citizens Centre in Albert St. Warwick. 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 meet 1st Wednesday of each month, 9.30am to noon. 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 beginner sessions. Four weekly 60-minute sessions. All equipment included, coaching with PGA Pro Sam Eaves. Location: Warwick Golf Course. Date: Thursdays and Sundays. 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 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. 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 0417 595 178 for more information. 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 community gathering held every Saturday from 4pm at the Salvation Army, 25 Guy Street, Warwick. Enquiries to Richard on 0428 230 431 or Leanne on 0419 379 738. QCWA Glen Aplin meets on the first Tuesday of every month at the Glen Aplin hall, 14 Foster St, Glen Aplin from 9am. Visitors very welcome. Enquiries to Kay 0406 828 602. Allora Photography Group meets second Wednesday of each month – 7pm Meeting, 7.30pm photo screening and workshop at St David’s Church hall, Allora. Enquiries: 0435 953 791. Email: alloraphotographygroup4362@gmail.com Warwick Fish Stocking Club meet at Leslie Dam every third Sunday of the month from 9am to 12 noon. Membership is only $10 yearly. Warwick Toastmasters Club meets on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month, between 7pm and 9pm at the CWA hall in Grafton Street (next to Crisp’s bus depot.) For further details contact Chris on 0435 994 763. View Club meeting and lunch (3rd 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 0427 792 840

Amateur Beekeeping Association Southern Downs: Meeting on the 2nd Monday evening each month (except January) in the Wool Pavillion at the Warwick Showgrounds, at 7pm. A practical field day is often held on the 3rd Saturday morning of the month. Beginners of any age or level of experience are welcome to attend. Flow hives covered. Contact John on 0431 188 139. Djembe Drumming for Beginners - 1st and 3rd Sundays of each Month 10-12pm at Warwick City Band Hall Albert Street, Warwick. Cost $20 per session. (First session FREE) More information contact 0400 823 765.

12538805-AV09-22

The 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. The address is 29 Activity Street, Warwick, and the contact phone number is 0490 170 569.

My Yorkshire Tea Surprise By Jeremy Lister

If you are a community group and would like to list your event please email. advertising@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au 30 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

Readers may remember that a few weeks ago I wrote about my 11th birthday and that I had a birthday cake which was made to look like a box of my favourite brand of tea which is Yorkshire Tea. Well I think that Yorkshire Tea must keep a very close eye on the internet because they found out about my birthday and my Yorkshire Tea cake by reading the story online.

They sent me a special package to wish me well for my birthday. It was a big box of Yorkshire Tea merchandise with a lovely birthday card inside. Because they didn’t have my address, they sent it to the office for Warwick Today Stanthorpe Today in Warwick and Mini Tassell looked after it for me until my dad could go in and pick it up. I was really happy to get the parcel and I think that it also shows how this newspaper gets read all over the world.


FOCUS ON … REAL ESTATE

ELEGANT HOME ON MANICURED BLOCK LOCATED just minutes from the Warwick CBD, this immaculate home will appeal to buyers seeking quality, class, elegance and style. With a uniquely distinctive design, this home boasts the charm of the Federation influence. From the moment you step foot into this property through the decorative driveway brick pillars, you will notice the quality craftsmanship that has gone into construction of the large 305.6m2 home. The external ‘London Mix’ brickwork is a striking feature and is absolutely flawless. Step inside through the solid timber front door framed by decorative lead lighting, you are greeted with classic ornamental archways welcoming you into the home. Through the right archway, you enter the formal lounge complete with large bay window, high ceilings, decorative cornice, ceiling rose and rope frieze. The adjoining formal dining room boasts vaulted ceiling and spectacular domed skylight. The generous sized master bedroom located through the second archway and to the left boasts a large bay window, built-in robes and tiled ensuite complete with toilet, shower, vanity and corner spa bath. The second archway also leads you down a smart timber dado lined hallway through to the kitchen/meals area. The serviceable galley kitchen comes complete with electric wall oven, hot plates, rangehood, dishwasher and breakfast bar/

servery through to meals / family room area. The large kitchen window looks out over a beautifully colorful section of the garden.A sliding door in the meals area opens out to a fabulous outdoor entertaining area. The spacious family room hosts a lovely Coonara Wood Combustion Heater for those cooler days and nights. A huge informal entertainment / billiard room complete with timber bar adjoins the family room and also provides sliding door access to the outdoor entertainment area A double-sized second bedroom with built in robes is located at the end of the hallway on the right-hand side of the home. Moving along the hallway towards the front of the house, there is a spacious third bedroom complete with built in robes and a fourth bedroom or study complete with built in robes, large bay window and window seat. A tiled second bathroom with shower, vanity and bath services these bedrooms together with a separate toilet. The laundry is of generous size with work bench, cupboards and external access. Now for the bonus feature! A large home office is located at the top of the hallway and has direct external access. The home office also opens into the double car garage complete with storage cupboards and remote-control roller doors. There is also a detached double steel

framed garage on the property This home comes complete with quality fixtures and fittings throughout and is in absolutely immaculate condition Below is a summary of the property features: Spacious master bedroom with large bay window Ensuite complete with toilet, shower, vanity and corner spa bath Double-sized second bedroom with built in robe Spacious third bedroom with built-in robe Fourth bedroom or study with large bay window and window seat Formal lounge with large bay window and high ceiling Spectacular formal dining room with

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vaulted ceiling and domed skylight

· Galley kitchen with breakfast bar / servery through to meals area · Large family room with Coonara wood heater · Huge informal entertainment / rumpus room complete with bar · Double garage with remote control doors under roofline · Large outdoor entertainment area · Large home office with external access · Landscaped gardens · Detached double steel framed garage · Inspection of this meticulously maintained

property is a must and will not disappoint. Should you require further information or wish to arrange an inspection, please contact Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775. ●

HOME ESSENTIALS Address: 51 Yangan Road, WARWICK Description: 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 garage Price: Offers over $670,000 Inspect: By appointment Contact: Stuart Bond, 0419 677 775, STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER PTY LTD

***MULTI-VENDOR CLEARING SALE*** Stuart Bond Real Estate & Auctioneer Pty Ltd Saturday 02/04/2022 – On Site 9AM (Gates open from 7am) 450 MT MARSHALL CLINTONVALE ROAD, GLENGALLAN 15KM NORTH OF WARWICK – 10KM SOUTH OF ALLORA Outside Vendors Welcome – Genuine Items Only All items to be delivered to site by 28th March 2022 Contact office on 4661 3462 to arrange delivery day & time

12539809-JW10-22

Tractors & Accessories: 3pt Linkage Scoop, Back Blade, Carry All, Half Tracks for Massey Ferguson Tractor. Vehicles: Kawasaki Mule 4x4, Cossack 650cc Motor Bike. Farm Machinery: Crump Fertilizer Spreader Ground Drive, Oliver Dozer, Hay Binder, Variety of Ploughs, Chaff Cutter, Napier Grasslands 20 Run Combine, 8’ Trailing Slasher to 10’ Trailing Slasher, 36’x7-inch Auger (elec) Qty Feed Troughs, Hay Feeder, Digga Post Hole Digger, Chamberlain 14 Disc One Way Plough, Sundercut 14 Disc Plough, 35 Tyne Gyral 3ptl Cultivator, 11 Tyne Trailing Chisel Plough, Chamberlain 21 Tyne Trailing Chisel Plough, Connor Shea 32 Plate Offset (Disassembled), Bagshaw 16 Run Combine. Rabbit & Dog Traps: Qty Rabbit Traps, Qty Dog Traps. Blacksmith Gear: Swage Block. Antiques & Collectables: Cast Iron Tractor Seats, Kero Lights, Sandstone Grindstone, Arcade Games, Grain Grinder, Landmark Rotary Hoe, Metal Punch, Cast Iron Press, Stationary Engine Generators, Grader Badge, Convict Leg Iron, Sunshine Milker, Lucky Number Machine, Cast Iron Fireplace Insert, Cast Iron Kettles, Army Telephone Wire, Cooper Handpiece Sharpener, Moffatt Virtue Handpiece Sharpener, Circular Saw Blade Tooth Setter, Cant Hook, Axe Heads, Old Chaff Cutter, Horse Drawn Scuffler. Stationary Engines: Vintage Motor, Moffatt-Virtue Reconditioned Motor, Villiers Reconditioned Motor, Armstrong Sidley Stationary Engine. General Equipment: 256KVA Generator & 4 cyl Detroit Diesel Engine, Double Horse Float, Cattle Grid, Pipe Fittings, Mechanical Jacks, Cable Tensioner, Monkey Endless Chain Hoist, Qty Poly Pipe, 3 Phase 22kw Motor, Morrissey Calf Branding Cradle (Near Side), qty pulleys, grind stone, 50L sprayer, pump jack, post puller, electric fence & energizer, pressure cleaner, ladder, oil & grease gun, netting & posts. Miscellaneous: Hotel Cunnamulla Sign, old chair, timber/glass cupboard doors, milk bucket. Photos of items updated on website daily

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN SELLING ANY ITEMS AT THIS MULTI-VENDOR SALE, PLEASE CONTACT OUR OFFICE 4661 3462 OR STUART BOND 0419 677 775 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER WARWICK, QLD, 4370

Please call Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775 or 4661 3462 www.stuartbondrealestate.com.au sbondrealestate@bigpond.com Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 31


HOME FOCUS

“WILLOWS END” - GRAZING AND IRRIGATION 318 Acres / 128.69 Ha – 3 Titles “Willows End” is situated on 318 acres approximately 10 minutes from Texas, 20 minutes from Inglewood and an hour and a half from Warwick. This property has 3 titles, 2 x Irrigation Licences and a lovely Queenslander Homestead. 2 parcels of land divided into multiple fully-fenced paddocks sit either side of the Inglewood Texas Road with approximately 70 acres of cultivation and balance open grazing The first parcel of land has approximately 1km frontage to Oakey Creek and a 17 acre irrigation licence from the creek. There is 45 acres under irrigation with 5 acres currently planted to lucerne. First parcel improvements: 450m x 6’ PVC underground main with 7 x 4” outlet hydrants, 4” End Tow x 200m & 26 lengths of 3” x 30’ (9m) on stands hand shift 18 megalitre bore licence with an unequipped cased bore 9.5m deep, 8” steel casing (approx. 3000 gallons per hour) Southern Cross 80/50mm (31/2” x 2”) centrifugal pump with Deutz 4 cyl diesel motor (as per unequipped bore licence) Stock and domestic well with Firefighter pumping to header tank on hill, servicing the homestead 40’ x 40’ container dome currently used for hay storage On the second parcel of land you will find a lovely old 4 bedroom Queenslander Homestead. This lovely home with large front timber deck is located in an elevated

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position overlooking a serene natural gully with good running water, 12’ swimming hole and beautiful big shade trees. The large house yard bounded by a ‘white picket fence’ boasts established lawn and gardens, including a variety of fruit trees Homestead features include: Cypress pine polished timber flooring Timber dado throughout Master bedroom with built-ins, window seat Tiled ensuite with spa bath, shower and toilet 3 additional bedrooms Bathroom with shower, bath, toilet and vanity

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· Tiled kitchen/meals area with french doors · New set of cattle yards currently under onto front deck construction There is approximately 20 acres of · Lounge with wood heater · Air-conditioner cultivation behind cattle yards and open · Laundry/general utility room grazing country behind homestead with 2 · Paved entertainment area to rear of home- stock dams and plenty of shade timber stead This is a well-balanced mixed property · 3 bay car shed on house yard with an abundance of water for farming/ Second parcel improvements: irrigation. If you are looking for a peaceful · 14m x 7m 3 bay carport/shed with concountry live, this property could be just what crete floor and lockable 4th bay you are looking for. · 7m x 7m skillion hay shed Should you have any questions or wish to Small garden shed · book a property inspection, please contact · Chook pens Stuart Bond on 0419 677 775 ● · Variety of other pens/yards

HOME ESSENTIALS Address: 3776 Inglewood Texas Road, TEXAS Description: 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 3 garage Price: $815,000 Inspect: By appointment Contact: Stuart Bond, 0419 677 775 and sbondrealestate@bigpond.com, STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER PTY LTD

CLEARING SALE

SATURDAY 26TH MARCH 2022 | ON SITE AT 10am 106 Gray Lane, Rosehill. 4370 A/c Tommy Naughten (due to sale of property) TRACTORS/MACHINERY: J/D 6520 Tractor, 115hp, 2571hrs, A/C, FWA, front weights, 50% rubber, J/D 6210 Tractor, 90hp, approx. 6300hrs A/C, FWA, 80% rubber, M/F 135 Tractor, 35hp with ROPS, Case 580D Backhoe, 4 x buckets, 4 in 1 bucket (Extras – grader blade, levelling bar, set of forks), N/H L170 Skid Steer Super Boom, 800kg lift, 2475hrs, 4 in 1 bucket (Extras – levelling bar, brand new Digga Digger PD3 post hole digger, hay forks, pallet forks) HAY EQUIPMENT: N/H 469 hay bine g/c, N/H 317 baler g/c, N/H 471 bale loader, Kuhn GA300 rotary hay rake, Hay bale elevator, 20’ hay trailer HAY: Qty big squares, rounds & small square hay bales TILLAGE: Grizzly G6 Series 24 plate offset plough, Grasslands 11 tyne 3ptl chisel plough, I.H.C 2-11 19 tyne scarifier, Yeomans keyline 7 tyne plough (Extras – 2 x extensions), M/F 3ptl 4 furrow mouldboard plough, 2 x sets 4m covering harrows, 1 x set 3m covering harrows PLANTING: Gyrall 17 run combine S & F with finger harrows g/c (extras – spare tyre) Connor-Shea Series 3 18 tyne combine with small seed box g/c VEHICLES: 1998 Toyota Hilux Tray Back 4wd Ute, diesel, 488,000km, unregistered, 1987 Toyota Hilux 2.4D Tray Back 4wd Ute, diesel, 339,000km, unregistered QUADS/BIKES: Suzuki King Quad 4wd, 10,600km, TPF17V children’s quad bike, 2002 Yamaha 200 Ag Motorbike, 1800km with books, Yamaha Pee Wee 80cc (old) IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT: Wade Rain 400m 5” side roll irrigator, Tralico T-150-2 travelling irrigator approx. Briggs T30 turbo winch low pressure irrigator, approx. 200m 4” hose, 30m boom (extra – spare hose), 25 x 30’ x 3” s/c spray line pipes - approx. 15 x 30’ x 4” s/c main line pipes - 7 x 4” x 6m PVC underground main pipes - irrigation pipe trailer - qty irrigation fittings - S/C 2” centrifugal irrigation pump - qty lay flat hose - small garden irrigator CATTLE EQUIPMENT: 10’ steel portable loading ramp - portable yards with 44 cattle panels - 3 x portable yard main gates & 2 x slide gates - 3 x round bale feeders - 2 x 4-ton cattle grain feeders - 2 x calf grain feeders - 5m steel feed trough

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GENERAL EQUIPMENT: Case PTO mobile 12” hammer mill - 20’ x 3” pencil auger on wheels & electric motor - 1-ton upright feed bin/silo - Hardi 600L boom spray with 12m boom - 12.00-24 combine tyre - brand new Silvan 500 fertilizer spreader - 1200L overhead fuel tank - 3ptl Jib - Daken 6’ slasher - 12’ tandem trailer electric brakes registered - steel/aluminium multi-purpose stock crate with internal slide divide & drop-down tail board & loading ramps - 2 x steel painting trestles & 3 x aluminium planks aluminium utility stock crate - 10’ rubber tyre roller - approx. 20m of 8” 10” & 12” steel bore casing - 10 x wooden strainer posts 2 x 10m x 12mm ‘C’ channel - quick hitch - Sunshine E36 3 blade double bagger chaff cutter with 6.5hp b & s - 14’ fibreglass canoe - qty dog kennels - Kara Kar SLE double horse float registered - bloat oil dispenser - qty horse gear - Silvan 90L 12v portable spray with boom - Pope cement mixer - 24” 3hp rotary hoe - brick saw - elec band saw - 2 x JRP floor polishers - qty sawn timber 4 x steel lockers - qty tools & tool boxes - 16 speed pedestal drill - Honda 3kva 8hp generator - Husqvarna 36 chainsaw - qty poly pipe fittings - electric air compressor - electric paint sprayer, 3 x saddles – 1 x fender, 1 x stock & 1 x kids roping saddle HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE: 10 x 5 slate pool table & accessories, household furniture

FOR PHOTOS VISIT - WWW.STUARTBONDREALESTATE.COM.AU PAYMENT STRICTLY DAY OF SALE – EFTPOS AVAILABLE - CANTEEN

PLEASE CALL STUART BOND ON 0419 677 775

STUART BOND REAL ESTATE & AUCTIONEER WARWICK, QLD, 4370 32 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

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


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

APPLE AND GRAPE HARVEST FESTIVAL

Nadine Robertson, Gordon Funk, Judy Funk, Val Matthews, and Hal Rowe at Dalveen Film Society’s screening of ‘Under the Tuscan Sun’.

A grape time had by all The leade up to the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival’s main weekend was jammed full of activities, with locals and tourists alike enjoying the public grape crush, Dalveen Film Society’s

showings of Much Ado About Nothing and Under The Tuscan Sun, and the Paddock to Piazza event running from Monday to Friday. Check out our photos from the week.

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 33


APPLE AND GRAPE HARVEST FESTIVAL WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Natalija Hevesi with Marius, Amariah, Diana, and Elijah Trifan.

Robert Ebenestelli, Kerry Ryan, and Patrick Doyle from Rotary.

The Calvisi family.

Faces of Apple & Grape People travelled from far and wide to join in on the grape fun had at the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival this year. Check out our photos of locals and visitors alike enjoying the main weekend.

Phil Mann, Cathy Poppleton, and Ron Poppleton at the Food and Wine Fiesta on Sunday.

Claire, Niamh, Ava, Gerry, Leo, and Moira Purcell.

Ross, Huckleberry, Harper, Meg, and Jed Carmurry.

Amelia, Roz, Jarvis, Kiara, Tim, and Scarlett.

Leanne Williams and Shamir Jarmyn from Hidden Creek Winery at the fiesta.

Radhika, Bhavna, Shivam, and Kieran Varsani.

Mavis Martin, Laurie Pierson, and Jean Pierson.

Paul and Maria Toohey at the street festival on Saturday.

Anne, Gen, and Diana Campbell.

Kiarna Roche, Eilish Roche, and Samson Lowney at the Food and Wine Fiesta.

34 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

APPLE AND GRAPE HARVEST FESTIVAL

The Channel 7 Parade at the Apple & Grape Harvest Festival swept through the streets on Saturday afternoon. Check out our photos of the colourful celebration of our community and the Granite Belt harvest.

A colourful celebration

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 35


INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Driven by desire to make a difference

Cr Windle ‘proud and passionate’ Sheryl Windle has been a councillor at Southern Downs Regional Council since 2016 and is currently in her sixth year on council. Prior to becoming a councillor, she gained valuable experience as a partner in a family business for 25 years. “I also gained further experience in retail work, office manager, and, property manager in local businesses here in Warwick, “ she said. Along with her working life, she raised four sons and was heavily involved as a volunteer at their schools and sporting organisations. Cr Windle said she first became interested in local government in the early 1990s but was not in a position to run for council at that time, as her priority was raising her children and continuing in her role as a partner in her family business. “My interest in local government never waned and with encouragement from my family, I decided it was time to pursue the challenge and embark on representing the community,” she said. Cr Windle said she is passionate about “the whole Southern Downs”. “It’s people and its future, although my real passion lies within the uniqueness of our villages and small towns.” “I see the potential for this region and I recognise the possibilities for tourism, business development and growth,” she said. “We live in a very diverse region and are fortunate to have so much to offer visitors who choose to visit and explore what we can offer.” “I am both proud and passionate about living here.” When asked how important she thinks representation and having diverse voices is in council, Cr Windle said “it will always be important to have a mix of both male and female representation on council”. “Councillors should be elected to represent the whole region for the right reasons, with integrity, and, be committed to the role. “Having diverse voices should mean that every Councillor, female or male, is given an opportunity to be heard in a respectful manner, and should also be provided with a working environment that is inclusive.” 36 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

Cynthia McDonald is a first-term councillor on Southern Downs Regional Council. She was raised on her Grandfather’s farm in Gloucester, a small town in New South Wales that she said reminds her very much of Killarney. Her family farmed both dairy and beef cattle on several properties. I grew up with very little and learned early to appreciate life and make the best of every opportunity I was given,” she said. “My humble foundations set the grounding for how I live my life today.” “We are all born and we all die and it is what we do in between that makes the difference. “I believe that all of our strengths and weaknesses formed from our experiences provide the diversity of thought needed for local politics.” By the age of 18, Cr McDonald joined the Australian Army at the Australian Defence Force Academy and graduated with a BA in Arts (Hon Politics). She spent one year full-time doing Officer Study at the Royal Military College Duntroon and graduated to the Royal Australian Medical Corps. She then continued her study into Logistics Management and a suite of Human Resource Courses. Cr McDonald spent 16 years in the Army with service with the United Nations in East Timor and a memorable posting as a Guard Commander at Australia’s Federation Guard. “My life has almost turned 360 degrees and I find myself once again enjoying my family and the land,” she said. She said the four-year drought was the catalyst that spurred her into political life. “I was watching a community suffer and had become very involved with charity organisations in an effort to help the community,” she said. “I realised my skill sets would be better utilised from within SDRC, rather than trying to influence it externally.” When asked what she is passionate about in our community, she said it’s the determination and spirit of our community. “Having been in the Army and travelled to many countries in the world I have never seen the determination and spirit of a community

like the Southern Downs”. “The resilience to endure so many catastrophic events such as those we have faced over the last five years shows me the ‘True Grit’ of our Community,” she said. “Whether dealing with droughts, fires, or floods, I’m very proud to work with the local community and to call the Southern Downs my home.” When asked how important she thinks representation and having diverse voices is in Council, she said “the term diversity takes on many forms”.

“While it is extremely important that we continue to have balanced gender representation on the Council, we also require representation from the full diaspora of our community”. She said that, being the youngest Councillor in Southern Downs Regional Council at present, she would like to see some nominees from for younger generation nominate at the next election. “The broader the range of opinions, the better we can represent our community and achieve positive outcomes for all.”

Diverse voices need to be in the debate Jo McNally has been a councillor on Southern Downs Regional Council since 2010, but first and foremost, she’s a wife to Ian and mother to Samuel and Joseph. She has been working since she was 16, where she had jobs in administration, finance and as a serving Queensland Police Officer. She also assists with the bookkeeping for two family businesses. “I left school early but it has never been a barrier to achieving my goals,” she said. “I have always believed that learning new skills and knowledge should be part of life and I still continue to enrol in short courses and undertake workshops and certificates to ensure I am open to new ideas and open to change.” Cr McNally said she ran for council “because I love where we live and I wanted to see the Southern Downs continue to build on the foundation of the potential that the early pioneers of this Region saw”. “Our location, our climate, our diversity of land and our people, is what makes this region such a special place and it is why I wanted to give the region a voice on Council that would be fair and informed when making decisions.” She said she’s passionate about our community’s lifestyle. “Sometimes we take it for granted but we are truly blessed on the Southern Downs with our location and services we have so close on our doorstep, this allows us to have a truly wonderful lifestyle,” she said. “Our landscapes, rural and urban land options, diversity of work opportunities, great

healthcare and school options, world-class sporting facilities, arts and culture exhibitions, festivals and events, there is something for everyone here and that is what I love about my community and it is what gives me purpose and drive to ensure I serve the community well.” When asked how important she thinks representation and having diverse voices are in council, she said “diverse voices need to be in

the debate and in the decision-making process”. “Councils should reflect the community and you cannot do that if half the population is not represented but it must not stop there either,” she said. “Cultural diversity on council is just as important, we are a changing region and we need to reflect the different needs of community members.”


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

Women helping women By Emily-Rose Toohey Southern Downs Women’s Advocacy and Action Team (WAAT) comprise of Sue Hamlet, Kathy Payne, and Judy Hefferan. These women have been lobbying for improved women’s crisis support resources in the Southern Downs, and are motivated by lived experiences and what they see day to day at work. “We know there is an incredible need for resources for women within our community,” the WAAT team said. “The impacts of gendered violence on women and children (mostly) are horrendous, and the ripples of trauma in families and communities are widespread. “This is happening in our hometown, so we felt compelled to act.” A year ago, they organised a popup March4Justice in Warwick and said this inspired them to continue acting and lobbying for change – the Women’s Action and Advocacy Team (WAAT) in the region was hence born. The group said their goals are to increase crisis response funding for women and children in the region, among numerous other goals. “Clear pathways and better services for those impacted by domestic and family violence, creating better connectivity and information among existing outreach services, and continuing to act as a practical and determined agent for change,” the WAAT team said. Their other goals include lobbying for real action on a federal, state and local level, and acting as a catalyst for local action and innovation. “We are in discussions with the Office of Women and Violence Prevention to trial an Integrated Service Response based on the Southern Downs, starting as soon as April,” the

Southern Downs Women’s Advocacy and Action Team, Sue Hamlet, Judy Hefferan, and Kathy Payne. WAAT team said. “This will bring together a number of local stakeholders to see how we can better respond to the needs of our community.”

Sue, Kathy, and Judy are three women who are inspiring change in our community, and they said they will continue to lobby each and every decision maker who can advance their

list of needs. On International Women’s Day, we celebrate their efforts and positive impact in the region.

CWA’s Helen ‘Lyn’ Sparks

Liza Thompson, Denice Arlidge, Judi Kelly, Wendy Mather, Jenny Lutter, Denise Hilton, Desleigh Volpato, Sonia Battle, and Rosemary McMahon assembling life saving birthing kits.

Stanthorpe Zonta Club By Emily-Rose Toohey Stanthorpe’s Zonta Club is a small volunteer group comprising of 29 ladies who dedicate their time to improving the lives of women and girls both locally and internationally. Rosemary McMahon is the group’s current president, and she said the club was formed 23 years ago. “Over those years, a lot of work has been put in to raise funds for many different organisations and needs,” Rosemary said. “We are part of a leading global organisation, empowering women worldwide through service and advocacy - Zonta is now in its second century and has more than 28,000 members in 64 countries.” She said that Zonta provides support to education programs, gender based violence awareness, health, and increases awareness of climate change and its impact on women. “We’re working together to make gender equality a worldwide reality for women and girls,” Rosemary said. The money raised at the club’s upcoming Yellow Dinner to celebrate International Women’s Day is in support of Zonta International. Rosemary said this money will be dis-

Helen (Lyn) Sparks is the International Officer at the C.W.A Condamine Country Warwick Branch. She has lived in Warwick for seven years, living in Rosalie Shire prior to that. Lyn didn’t know anyone when she first moved here and decided to attend a line dancing group at St Mark’s to meet people. One week, a woman was missing and when Lyn asked where she’d been she was told about the CWA. When she first joined, she didn’t know a lot about the organisation but knew how to work. She’d started working when she was 16 years old, and had only been retired a few years. “I had to sit and learn the first 12 months,” she said. But then she was “thrown in the deep end” looking after the photography competition for the branch. Since joining the branch, Lyn has also

achieved her certification as a Country Show judge through the CWA. She said one thing led to another, and now she’s done four years as the International Officer of the branch. “It involves a lot of community work,” she said. Lyn has two more years in the role and enjoys it immensely. She said the role involves a lot of fun, but she also enjoys all the good work they get to do for the community. The branch recently granted three bursaries to local high school graduates and raises funds to donate things like spectacles and hearing aids with the help of other groups. They also donate domestic violence packs for women and focus on keeping money in small towns where they can with things like conferences.

The birth kits will be distributed to expectant mums in developing countries. tributed and used in one of their many worthwhile projects. “On a local level, we have donated to Granite Belt Support Services, Protea Place, Scholarships for High School girls, Warwick Safe Haven, Granite Belt Cancer Support group, and CDS regularly over the years,” she said. The women involved in Stanthorpe’s Zonta Club actively strive for gender equality and to make a difference in the community – we celebrate them on International Women’s Day.

Helen “Lyn” Sparks. Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 37


NEWS WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

Our women are silently By Dominique Tassell When Eliza* was a teenager she found a quote: ‘Don’t set yourself on fire to keep someone else warm’. She wrote it down and put it up on her wall, and it’s stuck with her ever since. To Eliza, the quote speaks volumes about her relationship with her father. She said she knew even then, at around fourteen, that she was emotionally setting herself on fire, but it would take years for her to extinguish all contact with him. Eliza thinks her family presented as “pretty normal” -- even perfect -- to outsiders. She always knew it wasn’t. Inside her house, her father was emotionally, and on multiple occasions, physically abusive. One in four Australian women has experienced emotional abuse by a former or current partner, and studies show that children growing up in these environments have higher rates of social and emotional problems. Indigenous women in Australia are more likely to experience domestic and family-related violence than non-Indigenous Australian women, and more likely to be hospitalised as a result of this violence. Women with disabilities are also more likely to experience domestic and family-related violence than other women and have added barriers when leaving abusive situations. The prevalence of domestic violence in our society is undeniable. In 2020, the deaths of Hannah Clarke and her children in Brisbane sent shockwaves across Australia after her estranged husband set fire to her car while she and her children were inside. But why are we only talking about domestic violence when it presents in the most obvious form? Why do our women have to die for us to take notice of the problem? Hannah Clarke has been quoted as saying her husband’s actions weren’t abuse because he didn’t hit her. But abuse is far more complicated than just physical violence. It takes many forms, some which leave marks of a different nature but marks nonetheless. Survivors of this abuse may only recognise this trauma

38 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

as such years later, and the assistance available only seems to focus on the marks we can see. Eliza’s dad played favourites, and she said that her father’s emotional manipulation left her feeling like she had to work for his love. She can still see the effects of that in her family today and constantly struggles with feeling like she’s not good enough. She hates events that are meant to be about her, like birthdays or graduations, because her dad would rarely show up even though she begged him to. “I remember crying in the car on the way to my formal because he hadn’t shown up to the pre-party at my mum’s house and looking for him at my high school graduation but not finding him,” Eliza said. Both times he later told her it was too hard for him to be there. Eliza tells me she “didn’t bother” inviting him to her university graduation. “I try really hard to be understanding, and I struggle now with finding that line between compassion and being taken advantage of. Even though I’m sympathetic to my dad’s struggles, he consistently prioritised his emotions and as a result I feel like mine are unimportant.” Growing up, Eliza struggled to deal with her dislike of her father’s actions and her love for him as his child. “I think you automatically idolise your parents, and to be confronted so early with the fact that they’re not perfect is really difficult to process,” she said. Eliza said she feels like she almost treated him as two different people to deal with it. “I can definitely remember thinking as a kid that dad would come home and eat dinner and be nice, then he’d go outside and have a few drinks and come back inside and be mean.” Eliza said she still loved him, and that’s difficult for her on many levels. She worries that the love she felt for her father represented an unintentional betrayal of her mother. “I’ve always wished that my mum had got out before I was born. Even though she said my siblings and I are the best thing in her life

and the one good thing to come out of our situation, I’ve always felt like a bit of a burden.” Eliza’s mother, Katherine*, said physical violence definitely wasn’t the worst part of her abusive marriage. For the first two decades of her marriage, the abuse was emotional. The physical violence, however, was what made her realise she needed to leave. She didn’t want her children exposed to that as she thought it would damage them. “With the benefit of hindsight, I now know that the constant and ongoing emotional abuse would be far more destructive and insidious and something I may never truly overcome. “I am still not really sure why I put up with such terrible treatment and this still haunts me,” Katherine said. Like many women in abusive relationships, Katherine was isolated from others. She worked at the family business with her husband and, after their separation, went back to work for a previous employer. She said this provided her with a purpose and helped her get her sense of self back. “It was honestly just good to be treated nicely by people. I’d been very trapped at home.” Stacey* left an abusive relationship over a year-and-a-half ago, suddenly finding herself a single mother of five children. She said she knew her relationship was toxic, but it took someone else pointing out the situation for her to act on it. At that time, she had no formal qualifications and no solid employment for 12 years. Stacey became involved with a training provider through the government. Through the program, she gained a certificate and successfully interviewed for a job. Stacey said that gaining employment helped her in more ways than just financial stability. Her confidence, self-worth, community knowledge, and friendships grew as a result. Stacey said that during her relationship, she was made to feel guilty for not contributing financially to the household. However, when

she created her own cleaning business, she was made to feel guilty for not giving her partner all her attention and not catering to all of his needs. She said she would have to ask permission to accept work. “Once given the permission, I would still suffer the consequences later. “Any interest in work or study was quickly shot down and I was made to feel incapable.” Once Stacey had realised she was in an abusive relationship, she said she couldn’t bring herself to admit it. At the time she didn’t know what support services were available. “To be honest I probably would have been too scared to accept it,” she said. The effects of emotional abuse are just as real and long-lasting as the effects of physical violence, yet due to stigma can often go untreated. Eliza said that she’s only realised recently how badly her experience growing up in an abusive home affected her. She said she knew she had issues from it, but only recently confronted these and started taking steps to work on them, including seeking help from a psychologist. “Therapy was a really dirty word in my family growing up. There was definitely the attitude that it was ‘paying someone to care about you’, which I think in itself speaks to my family’s issues,” she said. Eliza said she thinks her family struggles with low self-esteem and self-worth as a result of their experience. She said this presented itself in various ways, particularly in the form of unhealthy attitudes and habits surrounding food when she was a teenager. She said it’s taken a long time for her not to see food as an easy way to punish herself. Eliza said she struggles with issues around trust, commitment and vulnerability. She worries she’ll be judged for her experiences or seen as an easy target for bad behaviour. “I think that stems from the subconscious thought that I let myself be treated that way, when I know that’s victim blaming and not true at all.”


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

burning and we must act Eliza said she wishes she’d seen someone about her issues as a child and feels like it’s much harder to seek help later in life. “I think every kid whose parents divorce should have to see the school counsellor, at least. Now that I’m older it’s so complicated and costs so much and it’s just not accessible at all.” Katherine said she knows that mental health issues played a huge part in her exhusband’s behaviour but that doesn’t erase the effects of 20 years of abuse. “Twenty years of being told you are unlovable and unattractive, blamed for your partner’s unhappiness, told no-one else would want you or find you attractive, betrayed and cheated on repeatedly, berated and undervalued, manipulated, disempowered, of feeling invisible and of no importance, and having your every action and thought twisted and sullied leaves an indelible mark and makes it difficult to finally move on when you finally break away.” Katherine said there was an enduring shame and sense of failure, and a fear that she could be treated that way again. She said she’s never sought any professional help and wasn’t in a financial position to do so for a long time

nor did she know where to go. Katherine said she felt lucky just to have escaped. She focussed all her attention on raising her children and staying busy. She wouldn’t know where to find help now, though she said it’s something she should probably do. “I find it really hard to trust anyone and although I am by nature a generous person, I often feel used,” Katherine said. Stacey, too, thinks she and her children have lasting effects from their experience. She said at the time it was hard for her to recall specific incidences when explaining her experience to others. However, Stacey said she now experiences flashbacks and memories that suddenly reappear. Her abuse still affects her confidence. Stacey said she struggles to make decisions, and at times doubts her parenting abilities due to past criticism from her ex-partner. She experiences a lot of guilt for having allowed her children to suffer, with one child being targeted more than the others. Stacey said her past experience also affects her new partnerships as well, as it’s hard to trust that person. For both herself and her children, there is always a fear that the past will repeat itself. She said her children still wait

for her new partner to stop being nice at any given time. Stacey said that she received a Mental Health Plan from her GP, but there was a waitlist of up to three months for counselling. After being referred to another service and attending one session, she decided she couldn’t afford to attend any further sessions. Stacey said the most challenging aspect of leaving her abusive relationship was financial, and she needed help from her family to relocate. She also said awareness and knowledge of the different types of domestic abuse is necessary. The stigma around domestic violence is still very real, and all women speaking in this article said this affected them. For Eliza, this meant her family didn’t really talk about their experience - even with each other - until recently. She said there are negative attitudes around ‘broken homes’ and ‘daddy issues’. Growing up in a conservative, religious environment also meant there was a stigma attached to divorce itself. “I think growing up I generally thought people would think it reflected badly on me, not my dad,” she said. Katherine said she felt like a failure for di-

vorcing her ex-husband, and that growing up she’d been conditioned as a woman to “fix things, make things right and keep your family together”. She said there was a sense of shame for staying as long as she did, and not standing up for herself. Katherine said that she felt like she got out okay, and that domestic violence services, in her mind, were for women in physical danger. Stacey said that she’s dealt with many ignorant comments around domestic violence, such as saying survivors are ‘damaged goods’ or should have left sooner. She said these comments “hurt a lot” and she wishes there was more education on the types of abuse and the barriers women face during an abusive relationship. Eliza keeps her quote taped to one of the mirrors in her apartment now. She said she’s glad she has more than a quote to help her deal with what she’s been through. “Talking about it has really helped, both with a trained professional and just with my family. “My sister and I, though, we’ve joked about how fully functioning we’d be if we’d gotten help when we first needed it.” * names have been changed for anonymity

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 39


CELTICFEST Colouring Competition 2 x Family pass to the CelticFest Gathering on Saturday 26 March at the Warwick Showgrounds

Family passes include two adult tickets and two school-aged childrens’ tickets valued at $60 each. There will be a Warwick winner and a Stanthorpe winner. Name: ……………………………………………………………….……………………….……………………….………………………. Age: ………………………………………………………………….……………………….……………………….………………………. Phone: ……………………………………………………………….……………………….……………………….………………………. *Competition closes 4pm Friday 18th March, winners notified Monday 21st March. Drop entries to the Warwick Today office at 94 Palmerin St, Warwick, or email it to advertising@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au 12538284-SN09-22

40 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022


WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

NEWS

Childcare costs slashed Member for Maranoa David Littleproud welcomed a significant increase in the rate of Child Care Subsidy (CCS) for Maranoa families with multiple children aged five or under in child care earlier this week. Mr Littleproud said the Australian Government had lifted the rate of CCS by 30 per cent for the second child aged five or under and any younger children in child care, up to a maximum rate of 95 per cent. The higher subsidy will boost support for working families and follows the removal of the annual CCS cap of $10,655 for families earning over $190,015 (in 2021-22 terms) from 10 December 2021 – and beyond. “These measures will ease the cost of child care for 740 Maranoa families, who on average will be around $2260 a year better off,” Mr Littleproud said. “For a family who are charged a typical fee and earns $120,000 a year with two children in child care for five days per week, the sav-

ing will be $144 per week compared to current settings.” The Coalition Government fast-tracked the increased subsidy, bringing it forward from 1 July 2022 to today. Mr Littleproud was today on the ground at Winton Council’s Little Swaggies Child Care, one of the 74 Child Care Services in his elec-

torate, to hear firsthand how the changes will affect local families. “Families do not have to do anything to receive the increased subsidy - it will flow to families automatically, with no need to apply to Services Australia,” Mr Littleproud said. “But families keen to know their benefits can go to the new StartingBlocks.gov.au web-

site and use the simple family estimator.” Mr Littleproud said the Australian Government measures would make a significant contribution to easing the pressure on the cost of living for many families with young children. “For local families with more than one child aged five or under in child care, today’s increase in the CCS, means more money in your pocket each week. “This is good news for eligible families who will benefit from reduced out-of-pocket child care costs, which also provides an incentive to consider either returning to work or working additional hours. “Local families know that the cost of child care, particularly for families with more than one child in care can be a barrier to pursuing employment or working additional hours. “This is especially so for local mums who may be able to use this to get back into the workforce or to increase their hours in their current job.”

More funding rolling out to strengthen our communities The Coalition Government is providing more funding to help Maranoa recover and grow on the other side of the Covid-19 pandemic. Applications are now open for the new Rebuilding Regional Communities Program, giving local businesses and community groups a chance to share in $5.7 million. Grants are available for a range of grassroots, community-led initiatives that will help communities bounce back by strengthening social connections, supporting jobs and creating economic opportunities. Member for Maranoa David Littleproud

said the funding would deliver a much-needed boost for local businesses, communities and towns hit hard by the pandemic. “The Government is continuing to invest in the projects and initiatives that will make our communities more resilient and more vibrant,” Mr Littleproud said. “After being hit with bushfires, drought and flooding in recent years, the Covid-19 pandemic brought with it new challenges for locals and the communities in which they live. “Access to this funding will help local groups restart activities and maintain social

support networks in regional towns as they recover from these setbacks. “As a regional MP, I know how tough it has been for community groups to raise necessary funds to sustain operations and provide important services across communities. “We know that small grants can have a big impact on regional communities and this $5.7 million in further funding will help drive the recovery of our regions.” The Government is partnering with the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal to deliver the Rebuilding Regional Communities

Program. Funding will be available from two streams to support regional initiatives. The Micro Projects stream will provide small grants of up to $10,000 for regional communities with fewer than 50,000 people to help sustain local organisations and their work. The Covid Recovery stream will provide up to $50,000 for larger projects that will enhance the recovery of communities affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. For more information and to apply: frrr. org.au/funding/place/src-rebuilding-ruralcommunities/

WE ARE ON THE

HUNT

For 13 stunning photographs to adorn the Warwick/Stanthorpe Today 2023 Calendar Each month we will select our favourite submitted amateur photo to be the star of that month in our 2023 Calendar. At the conclusion we will also choose our overall favourite shot to be on the front cover of the calendar. All photos must be landscape, a minimum of 2MB high res JPEG file, and be received by the last day of each month. Photos must be taken within the Southern Downs Region and have a description and location, plus your full name. Enter as many times as you like.

Competition has started, so get your cameras out and start snapping. Send all photos to advertising@warwickstanthorpetoday.com.au. *For further information contact Lisa on 0407 690 066 or Samantha on 0439 420 289. **Submitted photos will only be judged for that month. One winner per month only.

Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 41


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Warwick Bridge Club wrap By Neil Bonnell, Warwick Bridge Club The Annual General Meeting of the Bridge Club will be held in the clubhouse at 11.30am on Monday 14 March and will followed by lunch. Nominations have been received for all committee positions. Last Friday Beverly Bonnell made a spectacular return to bridge after some weeks off. She helped partner to a win in the North/ South section with a score of 70 per cent. One of her several top scores was made on Board 25 (above). Beverly, (sitting South) opened 1C (Precision) showing at least 16 high points; West overcalled 1S and North found a bid of 2C, which showed 5-8 points (only a small fib), which gave Beverly an indication that game could be made. East/West countered by competing with their spades, bidding as high as 4S over Beverly’s 4H. North had remained quiet after that first daring bid. To jolt North into action, Beverly then bid 5D forcing North to make a choice. North put her back into hearts. 5H finally kept East/West quiet. West won the first trick with the King of spades, but dummy made the choice of continuation difficult. Finally a club hit the table, which was won by South’s Ace. Beverly then made two key plays: the first was to play the Ace of hearts immediately, which felled the King and the second was to ruff the nine of spades in dummy. It was then just a matter of drawing East’s remaining trumps and cashing five diamond winners. Twelve tricks were made and a top result scored on this board. Results: Monday, 28/02/22 (6 & ½-table Mitchell): N/S N. Collins D. Moran (70.3)

Creedence in Warwick Creedence: The John Fogerty Show is playing at Warwick RSL on Friday 29 April. This is a chance for audiences in Warwick and surrounding areas to experience Australia’s No. 1 tribute to the classic and timeless rock music of songwriter, guitarist and singer, John Fogerty - legendary frontman of Creedence Clearwater Revival (CCR). Presented by Jabba Entertainment, audiences can expect the concert to be a high quality production, which includes a HD screen showing visuals and a full-blown light show. World-class frontman Andre Lemberg fronts the tribute band and delivers the powerful and emotive Fogerty voice. Blood Rule, one of Australia’s best emerging swamp rock bands, will join him. The greatest hits of both CCR and Fogerty’s solo careers will be played, including

favourites like Bad Moon Rising, Fortunate Son, Green River, Proud Mary, Suzie Q, Run Through The Jungle, Born on the Bayou, The Old Man Down The Road, and many more. Audiences will also be treated with some Texas boogie to open the show, as OZ ZZ TOP rips through a fun set of greatest hits including Sharp Dressed Man, Tush, La Grange, Gimme All Your Lovin, and more. This not-to-be missed show will be a funfilled ride back in time to experience classic rock ‘n roll at its best. Tickets are available through OZTIX, at bit. ly/3AXtdSa Ticket price: $30 + BF For more information, visit Jabba Entertainment’s website (jabba.com.au), Facebook page, or email info@jabba.com.au

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1; J. Mobbs S. Goddard (54.0) 2; L. James S. Head (52.1) 3. E/W J. Rose P. Campbell (63.9) 1; T. Hinde N. Bonnell (57.3) 2; C. Duggan M. Johnston (51.9) 3. Friday, 04/03/22 (5-table Mitchell) N/S N. Bonnell B. Bonnell (70.4) 1; N. Collins J. Nankervis (56.1) 2. E/W D. Moran J. Rose (63.2) 1; S. Goddard N. McGinness (60.1) 2.

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SPORT WarwickStanthorpeToday.com.au

The Spin Vale Warne, King of Spin I like sports fans and people across the world was devastated by the news of the death of Shane Warne. The news delivered to me by my partner in Spin around midnight on Friday night. I was sound asleep when P woke me to deliver the tragic news and frankly, I thought she’d gone a little crazy because it has been a crazy time in the Spin household recently. A quick look at my phone confirmed the news. Time stood still – it was a moment I will never forget as I tried to comprehend the words I was reading and hearing. I had been gutted earlier in the day to hear Rod Marsh had passed away and had been trying to process that news. I always felt a special connection with Rod ‘Bacchus’ Marsh. Marsh the brash young ‘wickey’ debuted for Australia at the Gabba in the first Test against the Poms during the 1970/71 series. During that game, on a very hot November afternoon a bloke who looked a bit like me in those days, may or may not have souvenired a stump during a break in play because of bad light. Thanks to the late Lew Cooper ‘that stump’ holds pride of place in my lounge room. So, Bacchus took his first catch behind the stumps against the Poms (the first of four in the game) and I snatched my first and only stump. I always thought it has a nice symmetry. However, as a ‘broken down leggie’, I was in awe of S K Warne from the moment I saw ‘that ball.’ You all know the one – the ball of the century that dismissed a still bemused Mike Gatting. The delivery he always said was a fluke and that he could never repeat. Warne was nothing short of a sorcerer with a cricket ball making it do impossible things. Shane Warne reinvented the dying art of leg spin bowling. He made every kid and every old kid want to turn the ball in the way he did. His stats and his records speak to his uncanny ability and gift. However, there was so much more that he bought to the table. Like Rod Marsh decades before he bought a brashness to cricket. He made it cool to be a cricket follower or a cricketer. He was the likeable Aussie larrikin who never seemed to take himself too seriously in spite of his talent. By his own admission had plenty of flaws and made mistakes but he owned them. He never denied them, never tries to explain them away and it was what endeared him to most mere mortals. There were many layers to Warnie. He was a student of the history of the game and acknowledged by his peers and cohort as having one of the sharpest brains ever seen in the game. The plaudits he received from Sir Donald Bradman placed him firmly in a league of his own. I have had the very good fortune to spend many hours with Ian Healy and John Buchanan during a number of Wanderers tours. Not surprisingly Shane Warne often came up in conversation. The pair were closer than most to Warne but their relationships with him vastly different. While Buchanan the coach was in awe of Warne’s magic with the ball and his cricket brain their differences put them solar systems apart. Healy, privy to the best seat in the house, behind the stumps for years as Warne weaved his magic counted him a mate . Both spoke of life on tour with Warnie as vastly different experiences. Buchanan driven to distraction and Heals recounting some of the antics that set Warnie apart from the rest. Behind the façade there was someone very special. In some way complex but in other ways a humble human being. A man more interested in the other person in the room than himself who loved to analyse people. A trait that helped him as he honed his craft. 44 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022

Military rifle:- (Max 105) Bob Tyllyer (83.1); Tom Higgins (DNF) This Sunday the action on the range will move to the 400 yard Mound with sign on at 8.30am and competition starting at 9am. If you are keen to learn more about the club or would like information about this weekend’s shoot, please contact Margaret on (07) 4666 1018.

·

CRISPS COACHES GOLF DAY

RIP Shane Keith Warne 1969 - 2022. A man who loved his children and family above all else. That love and his close friendships laid bare for the world to see in the past week. The outpouring of grief and support for the family he held so dearly coming from all corners of the world. Shane Warne re-energised cricket at a time when it needed it. He made it cool and gave everyone a reason to watch. Whether you loved or hated him he made you pay attention. For me it was pure joy to see him walk to his mark at the Gabba on day one of the first test at the Gabba always wearing those cricket boots with the tell-tale splash of red. A hush silencing the crowd in expectation of what was to come. It is hard to fathom that when cricket returns to our screens next summer, we will not see Warnie doing a pitch report, analysing a field placement, or signing autographs and posing for selfies. Critiquing bowlers, batters and handing out constructive criticism to captains, ours and opposition or giving his time and tips to the next crop of young budding leggies. While few of us knew him, we all felt we knew him. He was Warnie. Perhaps the greatest bowler and one of the best cricketers we will ever see. He was a star, a superstar one that burned brighter than the rest - but above all else he was comfortable with who he was, simply Shane Keith Warne. RIP Rod Marsh (1949- 4 March 2022) ; RIP Shane K Warne (1969 – 4 March 2022) -Casey (There is little space remaining in my home for cricket memorabilia with the Don taking pride of place but I’m sure there will soon be space somewhere for S K Warne).

SHINING PERFORMANCE IN RESCHEDULED CUP Weather conditions forced the cancellation of

the ladies section of the Apple and Grape Cup on Saturday 26 February as the Stanthorpe Golf course was lashed by heavy rain and conditions on course deteriorated. Play was rescheduled for Wednesday, 2 March and the strong field enjoyed fine conditions. Lisa Stuart continues to shine and using all of her golfing skills to claim the Cup. Stuart returned a nett 74 and was closely followed by runner up Nikki Waterworth with 77 nett. The run down went to Mei Bell and Lynette Ludlow. Pin shots were won by Lisa Stuart on 17th and Linda Kelly on the 12th and 5/14th.

FINE PERFORMANCES ON THE RANGE A good field gathered at the Risdon Range for the Southern Downs Rifle club weekly comepitition with competitors shooting from the 300yard mound. There were some fine performances and excellent scores during the course of the morning. In the F Class Open Kevin Jones and Kate Sexton both shot very well. Jones missed a maximum score by just one point while runner up Kate Sexton scored an impressive 124.12. Richard McKillop scored a win in the Standard class and in the popular Sporter / Hunter class honours went the way of Curtis Grey. Bo Tyllyer was successful in the Military Rifle class. Results 300 yard F Class Open:- (Max 126) Kevin Jones (125.15): Kate Sexton (124.12); Neil Sexton (122.7), Bruce McAllan(119.9). Standard:- (Max 126) Richard McKillop (118.6); Greg Wilson (116.6). Sporter/Hunter:- (Max 105) Curtis Grey (97.4); Jade Sheehan (93.3); Jamie Squires (91.3); Ben Squires (81.3); Brendan Bunting (81.2); Gail Hannaford (80); Abby Hannaford (77).

· · ·

The Stanthorpe Apple and Grape Festival golf days wrapped up last Friday with play in the Crisps’ Coaches two person. The uncertain weather and flooding kept a number of intending players away on the day, but still a good field turned out for the event. Conditions were tough. It was no surprise that the course was quite wet and there was not much run on the ball. Although conditions looked tough plenty of scores came in at par level and it looked as if it was going to be a tight finish and then along came Darryl Boekholt and Ken Rossington who returned 63 ¾ to claim the win. After parring most holes both players managed to achieve chip in birdies which was a great help to their scoring. The team of Ian Harvey and N. Sue See (Bribie Island) were the front runners for most of the day. They were in the club house with 68 ¼. In the end they had to settle for the runner up prize. The pair also went close to a parr round but found the birdies very elusive. Ivan Juriss and Gregg Steele combined well to collect the first run down with 69 ½ and Barry Jones and Marie Cook the final run down with nett 71. The Men’s pin shots were claimed by Dave Pelan at three, Darryl Boekholt at 12 and Ian Harvey at 17. The Ladies’ pins were won by Lyn Ludlow at 12 and Nikki Waterworth at 17 while the third went unclaimed. Thanks to Crisps Coaches for their continued support of this event and to Russell Crips who played the event. Earlier in the week, the washed out ladies’ Apple and Grape Cup was replayed on Wednesday and fortunately the weather favoured the replay staying fine for the event. The good form of Lisa Stuart continued and as the winner of the Ladies event she and Men’s Cup winner, Greg Fraser, will hold the title for two years until the 2024 Apple and Grape Festival. It is back to normal Club competition this weekend and members will be playing for the March monthly medal and putting competition. The round is sponsored by Beckett’s Pest Control. There is a time sheet for the medal round on the board at the club. A reminder to members that the deadline for dues has now passed and should you be unfinancial and playing in the event, you are ineligible to win.

MITCHELL SHIELD RESULT DECIDED IN COMMITTEE ROOM The final of the Mitchell shield comepitition between Toowoomba (who finished top of the table) and the defending Shield holders Stanthorpe was to be played in Toowoomba on Feb 27 however the game was washed out. The Stanthorpe Cricket Association was hoping the final would be rescheduled and played on Sunday, 13 March. There was across the board disappointment when a decision was handed down by the DD&SWQ Cricket Senior Sub Committee to award the 2022 Mitchell shield to Toowoomba. Stanthorpe had no input into the meeting and/or the decision and were notified by email. An appeal lodged by Stanthorpe Cricket to the DD&SWQ Management Committee was unsuccessful. The original decision to award the Mitchell Shield to Toowoomba without a grand final being played was upheld.


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With players and officials in Stanthorpe desperate for the opportunity to defend their title on the paddock an appeal was made to Queensland Country Cricket earlier this week. At that appeal the decision was again upheld in favour of the DD&SWQ Subcommittee. It is a disappointing end for Stanthorpe players to their Mitchell Shield defence. Although there is a rule covering the contingency of an abandoned final, the Stanthorpe players were keen to replay the final this weekend. Many believe this decision is not in the spirit of the game or the best interest of the Mitchell Shield competition. Stanthorpe Cricket however will move on with players now focusing on the round 14 games this weekend. Comepitition leaders Souths will play Wanderers while all eyes will be on the game between RSL and Valleys. The semi-final will be played on 19 March followed by the grand final the following weekend, 26 March. A reminder that the SCA presentation night will be held at the Stanthorpe RSL on Saturday 19 March following the semi-final. ($30 per person and $17 for children under 12). Numbers are required by Tim Harslett asap.

Winner of the Ladies Apple & Grape Cup Lisa Stuart left pictured with runner up Nikki Waterworth.

BUSY WEEK AT SOUTHERN CROSS In the past week, the Southern Cross Bowls Club received more than its fair share of rain once again. It was however fortunate that bowlers were able to play last Thursday before “Huey” sent it down again. A team made up entirely of Southern NRL supports, complete with Bunnies on their bowls took on the “Rest.” It seems that the Bunnies struggled on the wet track. In the end Darcy Furness, Cameron Wilson and Val Gray kicked their little tails. Penny, Rob Francis and Thea Francis went down 10 - 5. N (Perhaps they needed a lucky rabbit’s foot) Bill and Wayne have the green running nicely and it saw plenty of action in the Men’s A Grade Singles last weekend. On Sunday, it was Wayne Foster who came to grief after some heavy rain and was beaten by Barry Frame. Meanwhile on anther rink Kim Hankinson defeated Cameron “Yowie” Wilson in a close game. Barry Ziebell wore down Barry Frame to score a ,e25-16 win. Ziebell’s win has propelled him into the final this Saturday where he will play Kim Hankinson in what is sure to be an exciting game. The action starts at 10.00am and spectators are welcome. Today, Thursday (10/3) Val Gray is organising Social Bowls which will get under way at 4pm. Please call Val (0409 611 930) if you would like to play. On Saturday, (12) the club is holding their St Patrick’s Day Celebration. It is a Social Mixed Bowls event sponsored by Val Gray starting at 1pm. To be sure, to be sure this will be a fun day. Plenty of prizes are being offered including $50 for the best dressed female and $50 for the best dressed male (Irish theme of course) an$400 prize pool for the bowlers. Everyone is welcome, simply arrive at the club by 12.30pm ready to play by 1pm. Everyone is then invited to stay on and enjoy some Irish stew and a brew. If you are chasing more details, please call Cheryl 0407 641 158. For barefoot bowls, social and competition bowls, functions and bar, don’t go past the Southern Cross Bowls Club Inc. Located across the road from St Mary’s Church in Warwick. You can follow the club activities on Facebook or contact the Secretary, Cheryl on 0407 641 158 if you require further information.

REDBACKS FINISH ON TOP OF TABLE Congratulations to the Warwick Redbacks who have claimed the 2021/22 Minor Premiership. Redbacks finished the season on 49 points and ahead of defending premiers Maryvale (48 points). Due to the weather conditions last week the final round of club fixtures in the Warwick Cricket Association comepitition were washed out. The Warwick points table at the end of the season: Warwick Redback 49.0; Maryvale 48.0; Warwick Hotel Colts 44.0; Victoria Hill 41.0; Al-

·

Allan Davidson and Greg Johnson battle it out in the Men’s A Grade Singles competition at the Southern Cross Bowls Club last weekend.

RIP Rod Marsh 1949-2022. lora 33.5; Wheatvale 23.5; Sovereign Animals 23.0. The run to the grand final now begins with the WCA Quarter Finals this weekend. All ‘A’ Grade games will be 50 overs with a 10am start. Reserve grade games will be 40 overs and get under way at 12.30pm. On Saturday Colts meet Victoria Hill in the ‘A’ Grade knock out game at Slade Oval. In the Reserve Grade game Allora meet Wheatvale on the turf at Queen’s Park. On Sunday all eyes will be on the ‘A’ Grade clash between Redbacks and Maryvale at Slade Oval with the winner progressing straight to the Grand final and the loser to play the winner of the Colts Vic Hill game the following weekend. No doubt everyone will be paying close attention to the weather forecast for this weekend. Good luck to all teams.

SOGGY SUNDAY Stanthorpe Sporters did not allow a little rain to dampen their spirits on Sunday morning as the group approached their nine-hole round of golf. Fortunately, the showers abated but while it was dry overhead there was plenty of moisture underfoot on the front nine. Terry Byrne returned the best round of the morning, nett 23 and collected the winner’s prize. Byrne also collected the pin shot at the third hole landing just on the green by a matter of millimetres. Gary Kirby finished two back on nett 25 to collect the runner up prize on the day. The run down once again went to Aaron Simmers who had the next best score of nett 30 for the round. Gross scores were tightly closely grouped, only one shot separating the top three. No surprise that it was Paul Armstrong who came out on top with a round of 42 for the nine soggy holes. There is a slightly different format for next Sunday Sporters event. A two person Ambrose is on the list for the Maureen Bates Golf Day sponsored by Rex Bates. There is a time sheet at the club and the nine hole event is open to any and all players. Players are asked to register by 8.30am and play will get underway with a shot gun start at 9am.

APPLETHORPE COURSE A SUCCESS The Bullecourt Bounders hosted their first Bush Orienteering event in 2022 last Sunday and were very pleased to welcome 40 competitors to the Applethorpe location. Ten students from St Joseph’s School, Stanthorpe joined the more experienced group. Many used the event to hone their bush navigation skills ahead of the Downs Regional Orienteering trials being

held in the Leyburn Forest today. Despite threatening weather, most competitors managed to get around their course before the rain began. Those that didn’t still managed to finish their run although soaked through. The club’s next event will be on Sunday 20 March on a property north of Dalveen. There will be more details of this event closer to the date. More information is available by calling (07) 4683 6374 or from the website www. oq.asn.au/event-calendar.

APPLE AND GRAPE TRIPLES A FUN DAY A little rain on the green may have kept some players away but it did not dampen the enthusiasm of those who played the Apple and Grape club selected Triples Fun Day. At the Summit Bowls club. Aaron manned the BBQ preparing and cooking Sausage Sizzle and made sure everyone was well fed and fuelled for the afternoon ahead. The format of changing positions after six ends fun was a success. Although it was challenging it ensured an even playing field for all. The winners with the highest winning margin of plus nine was the team of Maree Ball, Brian Brown and Tina Schubert. Maree Ball, Brian Brown and Tina Schubert defeated John Fairley, Cliff Jones and Sylean Fairley 21-12. Sandra Pianta,(Texas), Keith Mungall and Carl Sutherland defeated Peter Balmer, Graeme Warner and Aaron Ritchie 18-14 Texas visitor, Nic Pianta joined Trudy Elder (Inglewood) and Jamie Zamprogno defeating Bill Calvert, (Gympie) Jacqui Ritchie and Tony Schubert 18-10. Given the conditions it was good to see some visitors on the green. Winners of the Lucky Pot Prizemoney draws were Keith Mungall, Tony Schubert, Carl Sutherland, John Fairley, Graeme Warner and Bill Calvert. The prizemoney for the day was donated by the Stanthorpe Apple and Grape Harvest Festival Committee Thanks to Aaron for looking after the BBQ and the bar staff for keeping players hydrated and to Peter Ayerst for organising the format for the day’s game. With the A & G behind us, this Saturday the programme at the Summit Bowls reverts to Social Bowls this Saturday. On Sunday many Summit Bowlers will play the Warwick East Open Fours Carnival. A reminder that Saturday 19 March the Summit Club will host the SDMDBA Men’s District Pairs (Sectional) followed by the Post Sectional play on Sunday 20 March Tuesday 22nd March is the popular Turkey

Triples competition.

THREE MALLET DISCIPLINES ON GRANITE BELT The weather gods were kind to Stanthorpe Croquet players over the past week. While their Warwick counterparts were confronted with a wet and soggy lawn preventing any play, the Mallet players in from the Granite Belt dodged the rain and were able to play three disciplines. The Association croquet group opened the month on Tuesday 1/3 with two games. The experience of Joy Newman was on display as she played against Grace Howard and Pauline Smith. Newman very well and scored one peel and one run of two on her way to a convincing a 22-13 win. The second game between Carol Verwey and Jenny Tunbridge was much closer. Both played very well. Verwey had two runs of two in the game and Tunbridge scored one run of two before she took the win 24-23. On Wednesday (2/3) the Golf Croquet group took to the court. The strong combination of Shirley Page (7) and Sharyn Roser (6) was able to outplay Kim Foster (2) and Liz Ellway (3). Roser scored some accurate long shots to take hoops and Page was at the top of her game. Shirley Evans (6) and Di Wren (6) also played well and scored a win over Bev Sullivan (2) and Jennifer Gleadhill (2). Evans showed her experience executing a particularly difficult long jump shot during the game. After the break there was one more game played. With only six players available Ellway (4), Foster (4), and Sullivan (3) played Wren (4), Page (3), and Gleadhill (2) scoring an 11-9 win. Despite several attempts to score a hole in one Foster came up empty handed but played well in this game. On Friday, the Gateball players successfully dodged the rain. Jenny Tunbridge, Heather Widderick, Joy Newman and Irene Peachey won the toss and elected to play the white balls. Their opponents (playing red balls) were Les Williams, Grace Howard and Sharyn Roser. In hindsight, perhaps the choice or white balls may not have been a good move with reds dominating the opening game. Grace Howard was in good form with both her long and short shots. Newman also had some accurate long shots but unfortunately it was not enough to stop reds cleaning up with a 23-8 score line. Included in the winning score were four Agaris. The second game was much closer. Reds were well in front when Widderick playing for gate three, managed to put three balls through after a very long shot and went on to Agari. Her efforts narrowed the gap; however, Reds scored their second win the score 12-10. Continued page 46 Thursday, 10 March, 2022 TODAY 45


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From page 45 In the third game, Roser and Howard went slightly off form playing the white balls against Tunbridge, Newman and Peachey playing red. Irene Peachey began to find form and played some accurate shots during the final two games. Whites struggled to get their balls into play allowing Reds to dominate gates two and three kept the white balls off the court and they claimed another win. the score 10-7. The final game was closer but as had been the way all day those playing the red balls got the upper hand early in the game and went on to score a 16-12 win in a a game where each team scored an Agari.

GOOD TURN OUT FOR MONTHLY TRIPLES A total of 14 teams played the Warwick Bowls Club Monthly Triples event which was held on Tuesday 1st March. In spite of all of the recent rain the green played well above expectation with the green keeper and helpers doing a great job. Coming up trumps on the day was the Warwick Bowls Club team of Edwin Welsh, Ryan Cooper and Trevor Wright from the Warwick Club with a score of 31 points. Teams were awarded one for and end and five for a win.) After a countback the Southern Cross team R. Ka, Geoff Davis and John Johnson were declared the runner’s up ahead of John Ruhle’s team. Both teams finished with a score of 28 points. on a count-back from John Ruhle’s Team. Bringing up the rear and claiming the “Last Post the Post” award was the team of Darryl Phillips, Brian Wright and Ken Hayes. In the opening round, the overall winners opened their account with a 15-4 win over Michael Dungey, Tim Gallagher and Craig Thurgate. In round two they scored 16-3 win over the team skipped by Ken Hanes. Runner’s up R. Ka, Geoff Davis and John Johnson had a 13-6 first round win over W. Foster and his crew before defeating Max Balfour’s team 15-4. John Ruhle, Denis Sterling and Russell Bean scored a 15-4 win in their opening game over Dave Scotney, L. Clark and Kim Hankinson and in round two scoring a 13-6 win against the team skipped by Doug Christensen. In other results, Kay Bloomfield, Lynn Collie and Doug Christensen defeated Darryl Phillips, Brian Wright and Ken Hayes 15-4 in their opening game before being rolled 13-6 in the second game by John Ruhle and his team. Andy Imhoff, Gordon Jabo and Steve Ford had a 12-7 win against Pamela Kerr, Phil Wagner and Brian Black and then defeated the defeated the Craig Thrugate skipped group 14-5. K. Darken, Keith Weier and G. Green had promising start in the first round scoring a 14-5 win over Margaret Harvey, B. Murphy and Gaye Wilmot. In the second round they were defeated 14-5 by Dave Scotney, L. Clark W Foster and his team. The visiting Summit team skipped by Gaye Wilmot scored a second round win (12-7)

Apple & Grape ambrose winners Ken Rossington and Darryl Boekholt with sponsor Russell Crisp (Crisps’ Coaches). over Pamela Kerr, Phil Wagner and Brian Black. Standing in for the President and Vice president who were absent, club treasurer, Trevor Wright thanked club members and visiting bowlers for playing also extended a special thank you to the ladies in the kitchen for their great work once again. For some of the Warwick bowlers it was a chance to blow away some cobwebs before the next round of games Club’s A Grade Singles continued on Saturday. Unfortunately, there were two forfeits due to unforeseen circumstances. Tim Gallagher forfeited to Richard Tartan and Craig Thurgate forfeited to Max Holder. After a tough contest John Ruhle scored a 25-8 win over Brian Black. The game marked by Marker Edwin Welsh. In a very close contest that was a thriller for spectators Trevor Wright scored a 25-23 ilewin over Russell Bean. The game which played over 31 ends was marked by Denis Sterling. A social game was also played on Saturday. Pamela Kerr, Ann Whitfield and Max Balfour scored an 18-13 win over Garry Cooper, Max Holder and Doug Christensen. The A Grade Singles continue this Saturday. Richard Tartan will play Trevor Wright while john Ruhle meets Max Holder. Once again there will also be social bowls on Saturday. Please submit names by 12.30 ready for a 1pm start. Next Wednesday evening the club will be holding a KFC sponsored evening bowls game. Play starts at 5.30pm. Please submit your name by 5pm. Ladies if you have missed the notices on the ladies notice board, the club has received an invitation for ladies to attend the Southern Cross Bowls Club President’s & Members’ Day on Thursday, 31 March. If you wish to play, please add your name to their Invitation sheet on the Ladies Notice Board asap as nominations close on Wednesday night 16 March. There is also an invitation for ladies to nomi-

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nate for the S.D.D.L.B.A. Championship Fours which will be played at the Texas Bowls club on the 21 and 22 March.

CLIFTON NIGHT BOWLS CANCELLED Rain last Thursday forced the cancellation of that the Clifton Bowls club. Fortunately, conditions were better on Saturday allowing play in the event sponsored by Rohan Ruhle to go ahead. It was a successful day with 34 bowlers filling the green. The winners (drawn from the hat) were Annette Larkin, Steve Collier and Rob Kehl. Club officials will be hoping for better conditions tonight (Thursday 10/3) for the planned night bowls. Bowls begin at 7pm and if you wish to play, please nominate by 6.30. Free coaching with JK will be available from 6pm. On Friday evening the club will be open for meals from 6pm with the bar opening at 5pm. To make a booking please call Julie on 0402029263. Karaoke will kick off at 8pm and everyone is welcome. The Friday night membership has jackpotted and stands at $30. The club will host an afternoon of Social Bowls on Saturday (12/3). If you are planning to play, please submit your names by 12.30pm ready for a 1pm start. Monday A reminder that there is a committee meeting on Monday (14/3) at 7pm. Nominations for all club competitions close at 4pm Saturday 12 March. Nomination Fee of $2.00 per event applies. The draw for comepitition events will be conduction on Saturday 12/3. If you have nominated, please check next week edition of Spin to confirm when you are to play. A reminder that the Clifton Bowls clubhouse is available for hire for private functions. If you would like further information, please call Necia on 0438 973 707.

NRL KICK OFF Here we are after a week of tragedy in the cricket world many sports fans will be happy to refocus as the 2022 NRL season kicks off to night. The season opens with the defending Premiers the Panthers taking on the well fancied Sea Eagles at Blue Bet stadium at the foot of the mountain. Many are tipping the premiers to go back to back in 2022 but that has proved a bridge too far for some very good teams. It is sure to be a well-covered topic during the season. On Friday night the Raiders and Sharks kick off their season at GIO Stadium in the national capital with a 5pm kick off for the Queensland supporters of those teams. The much anticipated clash between the Bunnies and the Broncos follows with a 7pm kick off at Suncorp Stadium which was recently resembled a lake rather than a football field. The likely hood of this match going ahead looked doubtful. That the Suncorp surface has recovered is a reminder to everyone what a magnificent venue Suncorp is and what a great job the staff have done. There will be plenty of interest when the final run on team for the Broncos is announced with former Bunnies captain and now Broncos leader Adam Reynolds to be given until an hour before play to prove his fitness after he contracted COVID last week.

If the playmaker is unavailable the team will be under the capable guidance of Kurt Capewell. The Bunnies will be stepping out for their first NRL appearance under new coach Jason Demetriou. Three games will be played on Saturday with the Roosters taking on the Knights at the SCG. The Roosters welcome back play maker Luke Keary after he missed the majority of last season with injury. Plenty of interest in this game as Keary and Sam Walker combine for the first time. The Warriors and the Dragons will be in action at the Sunshine Coast Stadium at 3.30pm. Dragons fans will be hoping their team can bring their recent trial form to the table. The game between the Tigers and Melbourne Storm looks on paper to be a mismatch and it would be a huge shock if the Storm who have an enviable first round winning record were to be beaten. The Eels host the Titans in their season opener, and many believe these two sides have the opportunity to figure at the top end of the ladder in 2022. The NQ Cowboys play the Bulldogs at Qld Country Bank stadium in Townsville. Plenty of questions will be asked of both teams this season. The Dogs have a new look side with plenty of star and strike power joining the kennel. The Cowboys have welcomed back their spiritual leader JT. Thurston will add his expertise to the coaching staff and mentor younger players. Unfortunately, the Cowboys might be more in need of a little of that magic JT brings on the field. Good luck with your tips and team this season. How round one pans out is always an unknown, but this is how I see it.

AGM REPORTS ON SUCCESSFUL YEAR The Warwick Sporters club recently held their AGM. Outgoing President Keith Farrell and Treasurer Con Seibel confirmed the Sporters’ Club had enjoyed had another sterling year in both golf and monetary terms. For those interested in statistics, in 2021 Sporters members played 2887 rounds of golf with an average weekly field of 63 players per round. Despite another challenging year, Sporters donated in excess of $31K ( excluding water levies) to their parent club, the Warwick Golf Club. These funds were primarily to support to the purchase of new machinery. It is interesting to note that in the four year period 2019 – 2022, Sporters donations to the parent club amounted to a little shy of $100K thereby contributing significantly to the much acclaimed presentation of our course. The AGM also voted to maintain the annual subscription fees at $10 for the 2022 season but members were reminded that No membership equals No prizes. The incoming Sporters Committee for the 2022 year is Terry Bennett ( President), Don Warrener (Treasurer), Garry Hanson ( Secretary) with committee members Keith Farrell, Robin Farrell, Con Seibel, Bob Lester, Don Stewart and Trevor King. In the face of the club’s strong financial position the new executive will be holding further discussions with the executive of the parent club to discuss contributing to further course improvements. Sporters annual subs for the 2022 year are now due.

CASEY’S ROUND ONE TIPS: PANTHERS SHARKS BRONCOS ROOSTERS DRAGONS STORM EELS BULLDOGS (An apology to the Warwick Sporters after a mishap in the report of their AGM. These things unfortunately happen from time to time, especially when a none too helpful ragdoll cat decides to get in on the action and play on the keyboard when your back is turned.)


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WEEKLY FEATURE MATCHUP

FINAL 2021 NRL LADDER TEAMS COWBOYS PANTHERS RABBITOHS SEA EAGLES ROOSTERS EELS KNIGHTS TITANS SHARKS RAIDERS DRAGONS WARRIORS WESTS TIGERS BRONCOS COWBOYS BULLDOGS

P 24 24 24 34 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24 24

W 21 21 20 16 16 15 12 10 10 10 8 8 8 7 7 3

D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

L 3 3 4 8 8 9 12 14 14 14 16 16 16 17 17 21

B 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

PF 815 676 775 744 630 566 428 580 520 481 474 453 500 446 460 340

PA 316 286 453 492 489 457 571 583 556 578 616 624 714 695 748 710

PD PTS 499 44 390 44 322 42 252 34 141 34 109 32 -143 26 -3 22 -36 22 -97 22 -142 18 -171 18 -241 18 -249 16 -288 16 -370 8

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DRIVE AWAY • Auto

$17,999

20 Alexandra Drive, Warwick QLD 4370 07 4661 2533 www.casselsauto.com.au

12539433-JC10-22

48 TODAY Thursday, 10 March, 2022


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