Sunday, December 18, 2016

A Flight in the Muster Chopper !

A Flight in the The Muster Chopper !

I was fortunate enough to be taken up in the helicopter by the boss as a late birthday present to watch a muster. The chopper is a small 2 seater and is used to muster the cattle. Our boss, the pilot, organises the ringers who are on bikes on the ground from the air.

Now, this special event was a while coming because each time the boss tried to take me something stopped it from happening. The first time it was an unusual event... it rained overnight. The second time I told the boss I was too busy in the schoolroom. His very smart answer to this was to take me up the day after we arrived home from holidays and before school started back.

We left early in the morning at 6:15 as the sun rose, and had a wonderful view across the property as he explained where the boundaries were. 

The four ringers worked the cattle on the ground riding dirt bikes. They mustered the cattle from one paddock into the 'chase' where they could be easily moved through to another paddock further along. A chase is an ingenious way to move cattle across large distances. They are long passages that make it easy to drive cattle from one paddock or property to another. The paddock was in the boss's words, ' a couple of thousand acres.' It took an hour for a chopper and four ringers on bikes to move 400 cattle, a mix of calves, weaners and bulls.

While in the air he flew up over the new dam that they are having built to help make the property more drought resistant. When completed it will cover several acres which are a natural catchment and provide gravity fed water via a pump and solar power to the cattle. When rain eventually comes and the dam fills it will sustain their cattle for up to 7 years.

As we approached home on the way back we had a great view of the homestead - the main house, kitchen, ringers quarters, sheds, house dams and our own house.

It was a memorable morning !

By Lynne

Monday, December 12, 2016

A Look Back at the Year We've Had !

A look back at the year we've had !

Country Events

While living in a rural/outback community there are always lots of community events to attend. 
We have found that as we are not as far from town (only 110kms and some of that bitumen) as we were at Durham Downs Station(300kms) that we are traveling into town to events and church more often than we did at our previous stations.
This not only means we are busier but also tend to spend a little more money than in our previous remote teaching positions.

Some of the events we have attended. 

Mistake Creek Cross Country Fun Run and Cent Auction
The day began with fun runs for adults and children which the girls participated in. The course covered ground within the school and out in the adjacent dry paddocks. All four girls did very well and placed in the top positions.
The day also included some stalls, bbq, bar, and a cent auction. 
At the cent auction you purchased tickets to bid on items to win. You placed your tickets in the box of the item you wanted to bid for and waited for the draw at the end of the day. There were over a hundred items !
Afterwards we headed into town for the Saturday night, where George puts on a campfire show at the caravan park every few weeks.

Athletics, Cross Country and Swim Carnivals
During the year we have attended, with the girls, several carnivals, both their own School of Distance Education ones and local Small Schools Carnivals. The last ones are a combination of local small state and catholic schools. Local students from stations that learn via distance education/school of the air are invited to compete as a team. These carnivals enable all the local students the chance to compete against more children. These small schools may have numbers of students between 17 and 30 students overall.

Easter
At Easter we headed into Clermont, once more, for the Good Friday and Easter Sunday services. The Good Friday service was a combined ecumenical service shared between the Anglican, Catholic and Uniting churches who each had a part of the service held in their church, while the cross was carried through the main streets of town between them. We found this very different, and very....... for the wider community and tourist watching on.

Anzac Day !
The Anzac Day weekend arrived and once more we headed into town. We camped at Theresa Creek Dam, about 12 kms out of town. This is a community funded area that 
charges $15 for camping with showers and toilets available. The dam is a great spot for boating, skiiing, swimming and fishing.
On Sunday we attended church and Monday, the Anzac Day Service. It began with a parade  through town and ended with a service at the memorial gardens beside the lake .....
 Once more we found the personal small community Anzac Day Service very moving.


Gemfest at Anakie  
Each year, in August, throughout the Central Highlands gemfields they hold Gemfest, a weekend of  music and gem and jewelry displays. We decided to spend a day at Anakie on the way home from mini-school in Emerald and then camp at Theresa Creek out of Clermont on the way home.

Gold and Coal Festival, and 100 year Memorial for the Clermont floods
Held in Clermont in September, this festival celebrates the history of the area, settlement and the importance of gold and coal to its development. The beautiful parklands around the lake in town are home to two days/nights of music, displays and stalls. We found the large 
outdoor digital photo display, which included the history of the floods in 1916, to be very interesting and sat through it twice to take it all in. As part of the 100 year memorial service over 60 Japanese floating lanterns were released onto the lake on the Friday night. One for each person that died in the floods that year. A sign.ificant number for a small town.

Rodeos and Campdrafts
We also try to attend local rodeos and campdrafts especially if we know families who are competing or the ringers from our station are competing.