Chewing Tobacco and Pregnancy

Angela Ratsch, PhD scholar with the University of Queensland, registered nurse and midwife, was once well-known in these parts. She is a member of the wider Wilson and Aspinall families but her nursing career has taken her far, far away.

After completing her education in Warwick, and training as a nurse at the Warwick Base Hospital, Angela spent 25 years working in the Northern Territory.

There, as a practicing midwife, she came to realise the prevalence of chewing tobacco, or “pituri” particularly amongst indigenous people. Pregnancy being her area of interest, when she decided on a subject for research for her PhD she chose the effects of chewing tobacco on pregnant women. Angela realised that the chewing of tobacco, rather than smoking it, is a subject which has largely been ignored in all the research about the effects of tobacco.

Angela says more indigenous peoples the world over chew tobacco – or tobacco substitutes – than smoke it. These cultures go back a long, long time.

In Western countries smoking is not only infra dig, it is illegal in most places; so many people have turned to chewing tobacco as a way of enjoying the effects of nicotine. Chewing is private and affects only the person doing it … or does it? What about unborn babies?

Angela is going to find out and she has a $500,000 research grant to do so. The funds will provide a backfill for Angela’s position as Nursing Director for Critical Care at the Hervey Bay Hospital for five years so that she can concentrate on her research.

It is a unique area of study and a huge vote of confidence in Angela’s ability. The world will be waiting to hear what she finds out.

© Jane Grieve – www.janegrieve.com.au

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Rex Baguley on Anzac Day

They are getting thin on the ground now, those precious old blokes who were in the theatre of war so close to our own shores. But Rex Baguley is one of them. You’ll see him at the ANZAC Day parade; this year he’ll be riding in the JEEP. The pace of the footslog down Palmerin is starting to get to him.

But still the mind is willing enough; the memories are intact – possibly brighter as time goes on. And the friendships forged in the crucible of fire which was New Guinea in 1945 have more than stood the test of time. Trouble is, there are only three of them left, the signallers who shared a tent on the Fauro Island group, south-east of Bougainville.

Rex was the youngest of them, a babe of 19 for whom the intricacies of Morse code at boy scouts had remained too complex to commit to memory. It was different once he was in the CMF, though. He learned the whole of the Morse code alphabet in two hours; and, he’s never forgotten it.

“We sang it”, says Rex. And if you’re persistent, he’ll sing some of it for you now, albeit a bit sheepishly.

Nor has he forgotten the rest of the equipment that formed his arsenal during the times when the signallers were coast-watching, keeping a look out with the 7th Battalion at New Georgia, and on front-line service on the Numa Numa Trail in Central Bougainville.

“I learned to work a heliograph, a lucas lamp, a radio, and to do Morse code and semaphore”, says Rex. Half of that is double Dutch these days, but if you want to know what any of those things are, Rex is your man.

Honouring the original ANZACs is what ANZAC Day means the most to Rex. He is visibly upset at the thought of the hardships they endured at Gallipoli, and the fact that it came about through such rank stupidity.

Well, the rank stupidity of war, really – in particular, that of the top brass thousands of miles from the action in that particular campaign, and again during the Kokoda campaign.

For Rex, the part he played in World War II has underpinned his life. And now, he lines up to pay tribute.

© Jane Grieve – www.janegrieve.com.au

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Barastoc Polocrosse Nationals

Not everyone who lives in Warwick, arguably Australia’s Horse Capital and most certainly home to the best polocrosse facility in the world (or so says Warwick Polocrosse President Les Fraser), has a direct involvement with horses.

But simply by virtue of living here, each of us has a vicarious connection to these magnificent creatures and the many horse sports that flourish on the Southern Downs.

But you don’t need to be told that.

It just remains a matter, then of reminding everyone in the district that a highly significant, rare and exceptional biennial event will be happening this month at our very own Morgan Park.

This event, the Barastoc Polocrosse Nationals, is shared around all the states of Australia and only happens in Queensland once every 14 years. It was last staged in Warwick in 1998. So make sure you get out there at least once between Monday 23 April and Sunday 29 April!

It will be wall-to-wall action for 7 days and 4 nights, and that means something for everyone and a family occasion to boot. It will be an event the kids will be able to say they saw happen (people are still talking about the World Polocrosse Finals in 2003 and 2007).

This is what will be happening out there at the unsurpassed polocrosse HQ at Morgan Park (just 5km from Warwick’s CBD):

There will be over 400 horses; but that’s no problem as the 41-acre Morgan Park facility houses 500 with ease. Those horses and their riders will all take part in the 103 games of polocrosse spread over the 7 beautiful fields at Morgan Park. Each game will be a 50-minute spectacular of skill, speed, horsemanship, excitement and non-stop action.

There will barely be time for pause between events. Food and drinks will be available day and night; and for the kids, if the horses don’t keep their attention fully engaged, there will be face-painting, a magician, a balloon artist and a whip-cracker.

So Warwick and District – do it! Get your butts out there to Morgan Park for this once-in-a-decade-and-then-some opportunity. You will be so glad you did!

© Jane Grieve – www.janegrieve.com.au

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Down at the Creek

Kookaburras laughing; koalas grunting. Magpie song.

Snippet of white underwing as a dollar bird flaps across the creek, settling on a high branch, there to watch, hawk-eyed, for dinner on the wing. Dragonfly dinner.

Sharp, twittering bursts of colour as small groups of double-bar finches flit in perfectly synchronised unison from seedy grass clump to wattle blossom to seedy grass clump. Squeaking. Whistling. Invisible in an instant.

Brilliant flash of blue-green kingfisher, darting; hunting. Splash.

Photo: David Bishop

A flock of cockatoos, arriving suddenly, flies screeching along the watercourse, weaving and dodging amongst the trees, flying off in an hysterical white cloud; leaving behind them for a short while, a startled silence.

An occasional ‘plop’ as a yellow-belly breaches and disappears again into brown water, leaving only telltale, silent, evolving rings.

Platypus drifting in the sun on the water’s surface disappear with a quick flip of their broad tails as the voices of the People send warning signals; out of sight, out of danger.

A sudden scurrying sound and then splash! as a water dragon takes fright, panicking that his camouflage is not good enough (but really, it is); then a chain of rings surrounding lizard head zooms across the creek to lap the other side, abandoned in panic as the lizard rushes up the far bank and disappears into the long, yellow grass.  A faint pathway of disturbed air and waving grass settles in his wake.

The hollow clank of the windmill provides intermittent background noise as its sails drift their open blades to find the face of the breeze to turn the mill pump, which will lift water from the creek up to the tank near the chooks’ yard – garden water.

A light breeze ruffles leaves and blossoms way up high; way, way up in the tops of the giant river gums.  Gum blossoms drifting, drifting; gum leaves spinning, gum nuts falling, gliding, falling soundless, onto the elastic surface of the dappled brown water where they sit, held up by the surface tension. Not even the gum nuts with their sharp little points can break through this faintly-wobbling jelly-skin, not til they become waterlogged and then slowly sink, twisting down in a bubbling spiral, soon out of sight in the brown depths.

Blossoms, leaves, nuts, sit like icing on a cake, rising and falling on the tiny, imperceptible wavelets as the gentle breeze scuds along at water level and riffles the surface of the Oakey Creek.

The smells of marsupial, mud, clean brown water, gum blossoms, eucalypt leaves, and smoke from our little fire, spin on the breeze.  They drift up from the ground and down from the giant trees above and across the top of the water and weave themselves together into a delicious familiar smell that says ‘home’ and ‘comfort’ and ‘fun’.

It says ‘down at the creek’.

Filtered sunlight bathes our eager little faces as we hop from tree root to tree root over the edge of the water, gently tugging at pieces of string suspended amongst them to see if they give promise of a hungry yabbie attached to the piece of flap tied to the other end.

Now and then a shout of ‘Hey, got one! Got a big one! Ooooooh nooooooo – he got away’ as a flash of blue exoskeleton and the thwack of a swift tail on the surface of the water tell the same story.  Then another semi-circle of rings wobbles off to the middle of the creek, its other half breaking in tiny wavelets against the bank and yabbie holes below the enormous roots under our muddy, splayed, tough little feet.

Johnny’s mum sits in her house dress on a towel spread over the bare black earth, in a spot in the shade which has been scrupulously cleared of prickles and inflammable dry grass, higher up the bank.  She watches and listens over us as our discreet little fire burns under a billycan of boiling water waiting for a fat yabbie to cook and eat on the spot.

‘Hey, let’s go down to the rapids! Hey mum, can we go down to the rapids? Will you come too – come on mum! It’s just around the corner.  Come on!’  And along we race over logs, jumping over huge washout divots in the lee of the giant trees, skipping across dirt and clumps of grass, dry twigs crackling underfoot and the occasional ‘ouch, wait for meee!’ as the pointy end of a gumnut or a prickle broaches the tough skin underfoot, requiring a hasty removal; down to the place under the huge dirt cliff where the ‘rapids’ run twinkling like diamonds over a bed of coarse sand and pebbles. A faint whoosh as pebbles turn over in the ankle-deep water.  Large freshwater mussels quickly shut themselves up and slide into the gritty pebbles when they feel our vibrations. We cool our feet in the rapids while the yabbies take heart from the quietness around our strings of meat up the creek, under the big gum trees, and come out of their holes again to feast.  And be caught.  And catch them we do, by the bucket-full.

This is home.  This is my childhood world – the Oakey Creek, Darling Downs, Queensland, Australia, circa 1960.

© Jane Grieve – www.janegrieve.com.au

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A Family Thread

On September 5, 2011 I travelled with my immediate family of siblings and their partners to  the Stockman’s Hall of Fame, Longreach where I addressed the gathering on “A Family Thread“, detailing the contribution my grandmother Kathleen Mylne OBE made to the establishment of the QCWA. This was combined with a family presentation (led by my cousin, Dr Graham Mylne) of a sketch by artist Christina Frost Clayton for hanging in the Hall of Fame in honour of Country Women. Here’s the sketch – isn’t it beautiful! It features me and Dusky at the end of the 1980 Winton to Longreach Golden Horseshoe Endurance Ride. What do you think of it?

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Scots PGC – Part of the Fabric of Warwick

“…a school is not rightly judged by mere numbers or buildings, but by the quality of manhood that it produces and the training in character that any good public school gives”

So spoke Mr Briggs, the first principal of Scots College, Warwick, upon his departure at the end of his 5-year tenure which began in July 1919 when the school opened.

In the meantime, a respectable distance across town, The Presbyterian Girls College (PGC) had been established a year earlier, in February 1918, creating a precedent for the provision of girls boarding which has waxed and waned in fortunes over the years but never ceased to provide an outstanding education.

A familiar sight in Warwick for the past 92 years has been that of young Scots men dressed in greys, trailing down Albion Street on forays into town out of school hours. Similarly, the young women of PGC have had a discreet presence in the town precincts that goes back past living memory. As such, both campuses are integral to the historic fabric of the town of Warwick.

The schools combined in 1970 to create The SCOTS PGC College. They operate with separate boarding campuses, using the classrooms and extensive education facilities on the lovely site of the original Scots College in Oxenham Street. The main campus is spread across an area of over 30 hectares along the upper reaches of the Condamine River, graced along its length by ancient river redgums that bespeak the Australian heritage that underpins the College.

From another part of the College’s heritage, the sound of the pipes and drums drifting across the river has also been firmly built into the fabric of Warwick during the 60 years since the band’s inception. The SCOTS PGC Pipe Band officiates at every rite of passage and ceremonial occasion, epitomising the grounding of respect for tradition which is at the core of the College’s ethos.

© jane grieve

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Generations of Men: The Finlays and Welshes

Like the wise old owl of fable fame, Rob Finlay sits in his possie in the Elmes, on the corner of Albion and Wood Streets in the LJ HOOKER’S WARWICK office, and, unobserved, watches the world go by through his reflective window.

In a reflective frame of mind himself, he admits that what he sees out that window is a world to which he lays considerable claim, and with considerable justification. His family has lived around the Warwick district for a hundred years, 4 generations of them. They have contributed towards the population in no small measure, as a result of which Rob boasts no less than 54 cousins – no mean feat by anyone’s standards.

“Name them,” I urge, peeved no doubt by my own paltry tally of 17 first cousins. But discretion takes the better part of valour; Rob does not take up the challenge.

“Well,” he says. “There were Finlays and Welshes in the beginning.

“Fred and Emma Finlay took up Melva on Pikedale Road early last century. Alex and Katheran Welsh took up Clare Hills about the same time. My parents Scott and Margaret raised us on Cooinda, which our family purchased in 1926 from the Slades.

“And the Welshes retired to 84 Locke Street, near West School.”

The long and the short of it is that here is Rob today, with his wife Linda (from the Riverina) proprietors of LJ HOOKER WARWICK, and well satisfied with the lifestyle Warwick has offered to him, his forebears, and his descendants.

Rob and Linda have lived in and around Warwick since they were married 23 years ago, first at Bink Bonnie near Clifton, now in town. They have raised their children here and schooled them locally, as were Rob and his father before him.

For the last 6 years they have lived in Wentworth, overlooking Warwick from the west. They own a business in Warwick and are committed to the prosperity and well-being of the town.

For them, the value of family extends well beyond the immediate and well into the community to which they undoubtedly belong. The Finlays are typical of a multi-generational Warwick family and a credit to those who strived to create the community that nourishes them.

For more information and full event details visit www.warwick150.com

© jane grieve

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And so … We Party!

All good things must come to an end – but Warwick and District has never been one to end things quietly.

After an extended week of celebrations, Sunday May 29’s PARTY IN THE PARK will host a day of activity in Leslie Park which will be one fabulous farewell to Warwick’s Big Birthday week ….. for another 50 years.

We know our wonderful park fun days, but our community’s kids are new to them. So, since many of them will be around when the bi-centennial is celebrated, the need was seen to make this one an occasion to remember and a yardstick for comparison.

Luckily Leslie Park is big enough to feature a bit of everything when it sets out to do so. In this spirit there will be something for everyone; even the Allora Heritage Weekend vintage vehicle display which was somewhat washed out by January’s inclement weather will relocate for the vintage buffs. And for those who prefer their horsepower a little more living, Mick Bradford’s Heavy Horses will be there in all their magnificence.

There will be a community market, a Craft Expo, whip plaiting by Dave Bishop, shearing demonstrations, and Indigenous Story-telling in a special marquee.

There will be entertainment galore, with lots to see without spending your money..

The FREE GRAND FINALE PARTY IN THE PARK family fun day at Leslie Park, Sunday 29 May; a must-do at the finish of a must-do week.

For more information and full event details visit www.warwick150.com

© jane grieve

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Car Observation Rally

Never will a back-seat driver be more welcome than during the CAR OBSERVATION RALLY on Sunday 22nd May, when eager competitors in this 185 km non-race organised by Warwick Rotary Sunrise take to the district’s roads in a quest for clues.

For catering and organisation purposes, entrants must book by 18th May. Then line up at the Cleary Street entrance to Australiana Park at 7.30am Sunday 22nd for flag-off at 8.30am.

The cost of $15/adult, $10/child, includes (as well as admin costs) one of those magnificent BBQ lunches that Rotary has honed to perfection over years of service to the community.

Entrants will receive a set of ‘route instructions’, advising them which way to go when they reach a crossroads, and guiding them over traverse public roads in the Warwick area (mostly bitumen). Most important, and definitely the responsibility of the back-seat driver/s, will be a list of treasure hunt items to collect and questions to answer about what you see along the way.

If you don’t get them right, you are not in the running to win the mystery prize.

But either way, you are most definitely in the running for a fantastic, fun-filled and interesting day in Warwick Rotary Sunrise’s CAR OBSERVATION RALLY on Sunday 22nd May.

One small tip from a seasoned back-seat driver – make sure your car has a full tank of petrol at the start of the day.

BOOKINGS by Wednesday 18th May to warwickrotarysunrise@gmail.com should include your name, how many will be in the car, and a contact phone number; and for more information, phone Lisa Wilson on 0435 324 671.

© jane grieve

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Where there’s smoke …

… there’s the Southern Downs Steam Railway Steam Train!!

From 10am on Saturday 28th May, smoke will rise again from the funnel of The Downs Dasher as it chugs its merry way from Warwick to Hendon.

Always a happy sight, the carriages in the Dasher’s wake will be filled with excited young and equally excited not-so-young adventurers, plying a familiar route by a not-so-familiar means.

There’s nothing quite like a steam-train ride, especially when it is following a line that is around 141 years old.

Did you know that our Warwick railway station was originally the second station in Warwick, after Mill Hill (built in 1870), and opened in 1880 due to the discovery of tin at Stanthorpe. It became the primary station in 1888, although the lovely sandstone building we know today was constructed in 1912.

In honour of Warwick’s 150th Birthday, the Southern Downs Steam Railway will open its Precinct to the public for a gala occasion when the train returns at midday.

First there will be a re-enactment of the famous egg-throwing incident which led to the establishment of the Federal Police (and the fame of a certain local family who have gone on to produce a number of community leaders in the wake of their forebear’s passionate outburst against conscription).

Then there will be a sausage sizzle, with wagon and trolley rides at the Precinct. Fill your pockets with $2 coins, because these will cost you no more than $2 each.

Purchase your tickets for the 150 Train now at a special, one-off price of $15. Tickets are available online from Hynes News in Palmerin Street, or through www.southerndownssteamrailway.com.au.

For more information and full event details visit www.warwick150.com

© jane grieve

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