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Tractors, tools and trophies: Kate goes from mechanic to cattle judge 
Tractors, tools and trophies: Kate goes from mechanic to cattle judge 

10 May 2025, 8:00 AM

There is no such thing as an ordinary day for Kate Bourke.One moment she might be sowing the winter crop, repairing a tractor on Jamie Hamilton’s dairy farm, the next she could be leading a prize heifer into the Sydney Royal Easter Show ring. Somewhere in between, she is raising calves, fine-tuning her cattle judging skills, and quietly building a future many young farmers only dream about.Kate’s journey into agriculture did not begin on the farm. It started in her father’s four-wheel drive workshop, where she completed a full mechanical apprenticeship before stepping onto the land.“I always wanted to work in agriculture. That was the end goal,” Kate said. “But I wanted mechanical knowledge first, so I left school after Year 10 to get the theory and hands on skills training needed.”It was a move that now sets her apart. When something breaks down on the farm, Kate can fix it.Her mechanical know-how has made her an indispensable part of Jamie Hamilton’s team, where she handles the tractor work and machinery maintenance, while her colleague Ebony Wilson focuses on milking the cows.But it is not just about what happens behind the scenes. Kate is also making her mark centre stage.Earlier this year, she came runner-up in the Sydney Royal Easter Show dairy cattle judging competition, an achievement that reflects her dedication to understanding livestock and presenting them at their best.It is a far cry from the early days, when she admits she was daunted by public speaking and unsure of her place in the industry.“I used to be really quiet. But participating in show competitions helped me so much. It taught me to project my voice, to back myself,” she said.Photo: Kayley Spowart PhotographyWhen she is not working on the dairy or showing cattle, Kate is competing in horse riding events across the South Coast.From barrel racing and campdrafting to team penning and stock horse classes, her weekends are packed with adrenaline and horsemanship.A proud member of her local pony club, Kate has been riding since the age of 12 and now competes at shows and rodeos in places like Milton, Moruya, Braidwood and Goulburn.For her, riding is more than a hobby, it is another way of living the agricultural lifestyle she loves.Kate’s approach to farming is practical, hard-working, and quietly ambitious.She sees agriculture as a long-term career, one built over decades rather than years. Like many young farmers, she dreams of leasing or managing a farm one day, but recognises the rising cost of land will make that path a tough one.“There is a lot of money in genetics, in tractor work, in farming,” Kate said. “You have got to work your way up.”She sees her involvement in showing cattle, riding horses and competing in farmers’ challenges as the perfect work-life balance, blending passion with purpose.“It is a lifestyle. You do it because you love it,” she said.With her mix of mechanical skill, stock sense, and steely determination, Kate is redefining what it means to build a future on the land - one tractor, one show ring, and one quiet triumph at a time.

Council clears $60m loan ahead of schedule
Council clears $60m loan ahead of schedule

10 May 2025, 3:00 AM

Kiama Council has taken another giant leap towards getting back into a financially strong position after its $60 million loan for Blue Haven Bonaira to the NSW Government has been cleared ahead of schedule.Following last month's settlement of Blue Haven Bonaira with new owners Hall & Prior taking over the aged-care facility, Council repaid the final instalment of $14.6 million on Wednesday to the NSW Treasury Corporation, well ahead of the August 2025 deadline which had been extended in 2023 given Council’s financial position at that time.Kiama Mayor Cameron McDonald was pleased to see the matter resolved ahead of schedule.“This final payment improves our Debt Service Cover Ratio, returning it to positive territory, satisfying another requirement of the NSW Government’s Performance Improvement Order,” he said.“I want to thank the NSW Government for their support, through TCorp, allowing Council the extended time to clear the debt.”Kiama Council’s remaining loan obligations are $5.6 million for a range of infrastructure projects at holiday parks and Gerringong Library as well as road and bridge improvements.Chief executive Jane Stroud said the Blue Haven Bonaira divestment was a major part of Council's overall Performance Improvement Order.“Staff across our organisation have done a great job completing the difficult divestment, including acquitting this loan, while ensuring we have the necessary cash reserves to continue our core Council operations,” she said.“This has meant we have been able to continue providing services to our community, and confidence to our external regulators, auditors and the NSW Government.“This is another demonstration that we are well on track to meet the goal of being financial sustainable by 2026/2027.”

Unsafe light poles removed from Kiama Sports Complex
Unsafe light poles removed from Kiama Sports Complex

10 May 2025, 1:00 AM

Kiama Council is removing two light poles at the Kiama Sports Complex for safety reasons. The Kiama District Sports Association is helping the affected sporting organisations. Council will be organising replacements as a matter of urgency.Kiama Sports Complex is one of the town’s most valued and widely used assets, hosting football, netball, cricket, and athletics serving residents as young as four as well as senior citizens.The Kiama Sporting Complex Workers Group has launched a campaign urging politicians at local, state and federal level to pledge their support for a long-overdue upgrade and modernisation of the site.They have outlined several major concerns: a cramped 45-year-old clubhouse, dilapidated change rooms and toilets, limited disability access, poor lighting, inadequate field drainage, and unsafe netball courts.“These deficiencies not only hinder current sporting activities but also prevent us from attracting major sporting events, impacting our community both economically and reputationally,” Ryan McBride, president of the Kiama Junior Football Club, recently told The Bugle.Newly re-elected Member for Gilmore Fiona Phillips is backing the Kiama Sports Complex Master Plan, which is being developed by Kiama Council.“Federal funding, through the Local Roads and Community Infrastructure Program, was utilised by Kiama Council to support the development of the Kiama Sporting Complex Master Plan,” she said.“Once the project is shovel ready, I will explore and advocate for further federal funding for this important community project.”The Kiama Sporting Complex Workers Group letter was also addressed to Kiama Mayor Cameron McDonald, CEO Jane Stroud, MP Gareth Ward, Federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley, and Craig Scott, President of the Kiama District Sporting Association.

Adventures in Climate Change Episode Four: Ranking uncertainty
Adventures in Climate Change Episode Four: Ranking uncertainty

09 May 2025, 11:00 PM

By Ray Johnson A big post-election welcome to first-time and regular readers. Today the task is to explore some of the key concepts the IPCC use to assess the wide range of individual climate-change-relatedresearch projects from around the planet.To simplify a complex matter, we begin by using the Rumsfeld matrix to explain the scientific task.Donald Rumsfeld was the United States Secretary of Defence in 2002 and was responding to a media question linking Iraq with “weapons of mass destruction.”He used the terms “Known knowns”, “Unknown knowns”, “Known unknowns” and “Unknown unknowns” to describe the intelligence space he worked in.With climate change it’s the scientific process that takes us from things we are neither aware of nor understand (Unknown unknowns), to things we are aware of and understand (Known knowns).Along the way science will grapple with things we are not aware of but do understand or implicitly know (Unknown knowns), and things we are aware of but don’t understand (Known unknowns).The IPCC has been assessing science for over three decades. The process has been refined over time, and review and improvement continues. Higher level IPCC assessments use a mix ofdegrees of “confidence” (a judgement of quality) and “likelihood” (an estimate of probability).The IPCC has a very extensive glossary of definitions which is the reference for the short summary here.Assessing “Confidence” takes account of the “type, amount, quality and consistency of evidence” as well as “the degree of agreement across multiple lines of evidence.”A level of confidence is expressed using five qualifiers: very low, low, medium, high and very high, and typeset in italics, for example, medium confidence." (Summary for Policymakers AR6 WGI Note 4 p4)“Likelihood” is “The chance of a specific outcome occurring, where this might be estimated probabilistically.”“The following terms have been used to indicate the assessed likelihood of an outcome or result: virtually certain 99–100% probability; very likely 90–100%; likely 66–100%; about as likely as not 33–66%; unlikely 0–33%; very unlikely 0–10%; and exceptionally unlikely 0–1%.Additional terms (extremely likely 95–100%; more likely than not 50–100%; and extremely unlikely 0–5%) are also used when appropriate.” (Summary for Policymakers AR6 WGI Note 4 p4)Still with us? Some examples:“Globally, gross domestic product (GDP) per capita and population growth remained the strongest drivers of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion in the last decade (high confidence)” AR6 WGIII Technical Summary TS3 The full AR6 WGIII report provided more detail for this assessment, noting “robust evidence, high agreement”. AR6 WGIII Report Ch 2 Executive Summary We are clearly in the ‘known knowns’ here. [Calling all politicians]Regarding future sea-level rise (beyond 2100) … “As emphasized by SROCC (an earlier IPCC Special Report), there is a substantial likelihood that sea level rise will be outside the likely range. As described in Box 1.1, since the definition of ‘likely’ refers to at least 66% probability, there may be as much as a 34% probability that the processes in which there is at least medium confidence will generate outcomes outside the likely range. Furthermore, additional processes in which there is low confidence may also contribute to sea level change.” AR6 WG1 Main Report Ch 9 Ocean, Cryosphere and Sea Level Change Par 9.6.3 The main uncertainties here relate to the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets. Science in these locations is especially difficult eg under the Antarctic ice. The science is definitely in the ‘known unknowns’ and ‘unknown unknowns’ categories. Some recent research examples, with tentative projected outcomes measured in metres of sea-level rise over hundreds of years, are here and here.We’ll conclude with two acknowledgements. First, a shout-out to local members of the Australian Religious Response to Climate Change and the South East Climate Alliance for their climate and energy election scorecard.Secondly, and more importantly, with the passing of Pope Francis the world has lost one of the great advocates for protecting our natural environment and acting on climate change. No one was safe from his criticism as this media release from the May 2024 Vatican three-day summit From Climate Crisis to Climate Resilience clearly shows.Some quotes from the media release: “The wealthier nations, around 1 billion people, produce more than half the heat trapping pollutants ... On the contrary, the 3 billion poorer people contribute less than 10%, yet they suffer 75% of the resulting damage.”“An orderly progress is being held back by the greedy pursuit of short-term gains by polluting industries and by the spread of disinformation, which generates confusion and obstructs collective efforts for a change in course.”The Pope appealed to policy makers to harness the regenerative power of nature in order to remove vast quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere: “This holistic approach can combat climate change, while also confronting the double crisis of the loss of biodiversity and inequality by cultivating the ecosystems that sustain life.”

Ward to face court over sexual assault allegations
Ward to face court over sexual assault allegations

09 May 2025, 8:00 PM

Kiama MP Gareth Ward will face a jury trial in Sydney later this month on five charges, including sexual intercourse without consent.The independent member for the state seat has pleaded not guilty to all five counts, which relate to incidents alleged to have occurred in 2013 and 2015.He will face Downing Centre District Court on May 26 for what is expected to be a lengthy trial.The 44-year-old has been Kiama’s state representative in NSW Parliament for the past 14 years and won three elections as a Liberal candidate before he was suspended from Parliament by the party but managed to emerge victorious as an independent at the 2023 poll.He has been charged following alleged assaults of a 17-year-old at Meroo Meadow in 2013 as well another incident two years later involving a man aged in his 20s in Potts Point.The sexual assault trial had been scheduled to begin last year but Ward was granted a delay after a last-minute application from his legal team.Ward faces one count of sexual intercourse without consent, three counts of assault with an act of indecency, and one count of common assault.He served as the NSW Minister of Families, Communities and Disability Services from April 2019 to May 2021.NSW Premier Chris Minns in 2023 accepted the recommendations of a report from a parliamentary privileges committee that Ward should not be suspended from Parliament after the previous Coalition government had done so.1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

Libs let women down, came off as mean: Constance
Libs let women down, came off as mean: Constance

09 May 2025, 8:00 AM

Andrew Constance believes the Liberal Party failed the women of Australia in their election campaign and believes they need to do some serious soul-searching in the wake of their cruising defeat.The former NSW Treasurer, who failed in his bid to unseat Labor incumbent Fiona Phillips in Gilmore last weekend, has walked away from politics after two unsuccessful tilts at the South Coast federal electorate.“The Liberal Party is going to have to, I think, work hard to find its heart and soul again. And you can't live in the past,” he said.“The Liberal Party is a fantastic movement but the strength of the movement is made up of the policies that count. “We have let the women of Australia down, quite frankly. We've got a lot of work to do to re-engage the aspirations of young people, and women in particular if you look at the results on Saturday. “And that stems from everything from leadership to policies, to values. Our party and its history is one of an incredible party supporting the individual. That's what our founding beliefs are about.”Constance describes himself as a progressive member of the Liberal Party and is adamant the Coalition should modernise its views on issues like the environment or risk spending multiple terms out of office.“We're not an anti-environment party, we should be a pro-environment party. We're a party that should be strong on issues to do with community and workforce participation, particularly for women,” he added.“I think workplace flexibility and working from home and telling the world we're going to sack 41,000 people and all of these things - it all adds up. To be honest with you, we probably looked a little mean, and that's got to change. “I'm not going to be one of these people who will hide in the backdrop and not put my name to what I believe in relation to what went wrong. I'll just call it how it is if I'm asked about it.”The party was founded by Australia’s longest-serving Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies in the 1940s but some of their thinking is stuck in the past, according to Constance.“I do think that we have to do some soul searching in the times ahead,” he said.“Our values and our principles are right. The movement that Menzies founded around supporting the forgotten people of Australia, supporting all walks of life, supporting the individual to be the best that they can be. That's a given. “But you've got to have modern-day policies which reflect modern Australia. And there are things which need to be immediately taken off the table. “The community has spoken on the energy transition. They've made that crystal clear. So we need to listen to the community.”He took a dig at Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s election campaign trope of holding out his Medicare card to say that is all people need to receive medical treatment.“I hope they're held to account on that, because that means that every time you go to the doctor, regardless of which medical practice you're in, you're only going to need your Medicare card. Well, let's see how that goes,” he said.Constance said he thought he had been part of one of the best governments in the state's history under Gladys Berejiklian, Mike Baird and Barry O’Farrell, they completed lasting infrastructure and were able to operate effectively because they had harmony between the progressive and conservative elements of the Coaltion.“I'm very proud to be a party progressive. Being a moderate is important. But I'm a Liberal first and foremost. And that's where the party, I think, everyone coming together is really important. “Be a Liberal first and foremost, be a progressive conservative underneath that, but get the best out of each other. I think the party's got to reconcile its focus and that’s why we got the result that we got.“Young people, women in particular, they've got to reflect the dynamic not only within the party organisation, but they've also got to be able to connect with the policies and the approach we want to take forward.”

Local Catholics rejoice after Pope Leo XIV chosen
Local Catholics rejoice after Pope Leo XIV chosen

09 May 2025, 2:57 AM

The Bishop of the Wollongong Diocese, Reveren Brian Mascord, has welcomed the appointment of Pope Leo XIV as a "sacred and historic moment" for the Catholic Church.Robert Francis Prevost, a 69-year-old who was born in Chicago, has been announced as the successor to Pope Francis, who died on Easter Monday at the age of 88.Reverend Mascord on Friday described the appointment as one that will continue to guide Catholics on their spiritual journey and build upon the legacy of Pope Francis."This is a sacred and historic moment for the universal Church and fills our hearts with renewed hope and calls us to unity as one body in Christ," Reverend Mascord said."The election of our new Holy Father comes at a time of both challenge and opportunity. "Guided by prayerful discernment and trust in God’s providence, the cardinals have chosen a man who brings with him a deep love for Christ and his Church, a commitment to the Gospel, and a heart for humility, service, and evangelisation. In his first address, Pope Leo XIV calls us to renewed discipleship when he proclaimed that 'The world needs Christ’s light. Humanity needs him to be the bridge so that God and his love can reach us'."As Pope Leo XIV begins his petrine ministry, I invite all the faithful of our diocese to unite with me in prayer for him. May he be granted wisdom, courage, and strength to shepherd the Church with compassion and truth."Reverend Mascord said this new chapter of the Church’s journey would renew their commitment to faith, discipleship, and unity.

Lions need to get out of early-season slumber
Lions need to get out of early-season slumber

09 May 2025, 1:01 AM

Gerringong Lions received a timely wake-up call in the Group 7 last weekend and will get their credentials tested further when they lock horns with Albion Park-Oak Flats this Saturday. The premiers have had a stop-start first month of their title defence - they opened with a bang by beating Berry 28-6 but then faltered 24-6 to Jamberoo, missed two weeks due to a bye and the Easter break before sneaking hom last Saturday at Michael Cronin Oval against Milton-Ulladulla. Gerringong coach Scott Stewart said it wasn’t a case of his team playing dry-weather style in wet conditions, it was a case of “playing under 10 footy in first-grade conditions”. “We were our own worst enemy with errors and turning the ball over and never really gave ourselves a chance,” he said.“But in saying that, our defence was good. To go in only 12-6 down at half-time after all the ball we had given them was a pretty good result for us.“It’s been raining, we’ve had a break, I could come up with a hundred excuses but we’ve just got to be better than that.“We had to work really hard for it in the end because we put ourselves in tough positions.”The Bulldogs shot out to a 12-0 lead after Jayden Millard and Lachlan Barr crossed the stripe in the opening 20 minutes. An Isaac Russell break swung the momentum back to the Lions to cut the gap to six at the break before they added another early in the second stanza to trail by two.Gerringong hit the front midway through the second half before nearly throwing the result away.“We fell into some bad habits again and at the end of the game, they had all the running and we were defending our line,” Stewart said.“We scrambled well to our credit, did well to hold them out.“We know we’re going to have to improve.”Stewart added it was hard to get an accurate gauge on who will be the teams to beat this year due to the inconsistency of the early results but said it was great to see some of the clubs that struggled last year lift their standard to challenge the frontrunners.Gerringong have a new-look team with around half of last year’s grand final side no longer at the club but he was confident that the mix of youth and experience in the 2025 line-up would eventually string together some consistent performances.“Some have gone to NSW Cup with the Dragons or Queensland Cup. That’s something we’ve dealt with for the last seven or eight years. Each year there’s blokes that go up and get that opportunity,” he said.“We’ve been lucky we’ve got some good juniors coming through, they’ll be on a steep learning curve.”Berry Shoalhaven Heads Magpies vs Kiama Knights was postponed last weekend due to the waterlogged state of Berry Showground.Shellharbour Sharks edged out Albion Park-Oak Flats 32-24 and Stingrays Shellharbour trounced Nowra Bomaderry Jets 42-12.Round 5 kicks off on Saturday with Berry at home to Jamberoo and Albion Park-Oak Flats hosting Gerringong at Centenary Oval. “They’ve had the wood on us up there over the past couple of years so we certainly won’t be taking them lightly,” Stewart said. On Sunday, Kiama travel south to Milton-Ulladulla at Mollymook Oval and the local derby between the Stingrays and Shellharbour will be held at Flinders Oval.Ladder after Round 4: Stingrays, Kiama, Shellharbour, Jamberoo, APOF, Gerringong, Milton-Ulladulla 4, Nowra 2, Berry 0

Fiona reveals strain of strenuous election campaign
Fiona reveals strain of strenuous election campaign

08 May 2025, 11:00 PM

Member for Gilmore Fiona Phillips has opened up on the strain of her achieving her goal of being re-elected after securing her third term on the back of a lengthy and draining campaign leading into last Saturday’s election.Phillips managed to not only hold off Liberal candidate Andrew Constance but secure a swing of just under 5% to Labor as part of the nationwide trend which resulted in Anthony Albanese being returned as Prime Minister with a majority government.For the 55-year-old Gilmore MP, the slings and arrows of public life in an election campaign are part and parcel of the role but she is relieved it is now over.“I was just elated,” she said when asked about the moment she realised the seat had been retained last Saturday night.“I've had an opponent for quite some time, over a year, and I’ve had a lot thrown at me.“I've just really tried to stay focused on what I've had to do, which is support our communities but everything has been a really big strain on me, personally, so just to know that that part is over is very good for me and my team.”Phillips, who was contesting her fourth federal election after losing in 2016 and then winning the next three, said she never questioned if it was all worthwhile.“I always say you would really want to do this role because going through elections is really, really hard,” she said.“And I do want to do it. The moment I stop enjoying it, I won’t be doing it.”“There's lots of different things we do as the federal member and it's a big electorate too - it takes in three local government areas, three state members and just to get across that area is huge.”Phillips was surprised by the overwhelming nature of her victory given the bookmakers had installed Constance as an early favourite before a YouGov poll in the lead-up to the vote indicated that the tide had changed in her favour.“Honestly I really thought it was going to be close and I had a quietly good feeling on pre-poll but you can never tell so I always like to err on the side of caution so I was pleasantly surprised on the night,” she added.As polling closed late in the afternoon, Phillips spent some time with her family before joining her small army of Labor faithful to watch as the official results started filtering in.Now, she says, her priority is to deliver on her promises of strengthening the local economy, alleviating the pressures of the cost of living crisis and helping facilitate Australia’s switch to renewable energy.

Six Power players called up for South Coast rep duties
Six Power players called up for South Coast rep duties

08 May 2025, 3:00 AM

Kiama Power are celebrating after six players were chosen in the NSW/ACT Men’s and Women’s Senior Representative games on Saturday.They will be in the AFL South Coast teams that will square off against Hunter-Central Coast at Blacktown International Sports Park, before Sydney lock horns with Canberra to reignite their rivalry to close the competition series.The handpicked squad lists for the representative games have been identified from across the state and territory and showcase the next generation of burgeoning footy talent on the pathway to the elite level. Power duo Lachlan Kirk and Cooper Richards were selected in the AFL South Coast men’s squad which will be coached by Glenn Haase. For Richards it is his first call-up to the senior representative ranks while Kirk is back in a South Coast guernsey after two years in South Australia..New recruits Maddison Aitkin and Teneale Keene join Kiama teammates Laura Kent and Dakota Mason in the women’s side under the coaching of Sophie and Allie Phillips.Cooper Richards. Photo: Kiama Power Kent has been selected following a stellar 2024 season, which culminated in her being named in the AFL South Coast Women’s Team of the Year.Mason adds another representative honour to her lengthy resume with her maiden selection in the South Coast women’s squad.Head of AFL NSW/ACT Andrew Varasdi said the NSW/ACT men’s and women’s representative games play a critical role in shaping the future of footy.“The selected athletes are a cohort representing the state and territory’s best and have showcased immense potential as they follow the pathway to participation at higher levels.“We are set for an amazing series of representative footy featuring many of our most talented players.”If you can’t get to Blacktown to watch the games, you can view them free on AFL Sydney’s official streaming partner, Streamer.Kiama Power’s men’s premier division registered a thrilling 8.5 (43) to 6.13 (49) in muddy conditions at Bonaira Oval last Saturday while the reserve-grade side was on the wrong side of a 12.16 (88) to 1.0 (6) scoreline against Wollongong Bulldogs.Maddison Aitkin. Photo: Kiama PowerThomas Bell led the way for the Power in the main game with three majors while Max Whiticker booted two with Scott Phillips, Kade Ovenden and Shea Hammond also chipping in.The Power women’s team went down 5.5 (35) to 2.3 (15) to the Bulldogs at Bonaira with Carra Sheldon and Courtney Smith the goal-scorers for the home side.There are no matches this weekend due to the representative fixtures.

Kiama changes strategy for tourism success
Kiama changes strategy for tourism success

08 May 2025, 1:00 AM

Kiama has been named a finalist in the 2025 Top Tourism Awards, recognising not only its scenery but the work being done behind the scenes to market the town to visitors. To be in the running, Destination Kiama created and submitted an itinerary aimed at a specific visitor demographic, alongside a video that uses that target market. According to Kiama Council’s Tourism and Events manager Sally Bursell, the process was about strategy and the community. “It’s a bit of pride in our town too…If people say where you're from, I'm very proud to say Kiama,” Sally said.“That's something that rings true for most people that live in this beautiful area, it's a testament to our welcoming community.”Sally believes it’s the combined efforts of council, local businesses, and the community that make Kiama a strong contender for this award.“When people roll into town, they get a coffee from a friendly barista and the barista can tell you where to get the best loaf of bread or where’s the best surf break,” Sally said“It's a bit of a group effort from everyone that lives here.”Part of Kiama’s tourism strategy has been to move away from increasing visitor numbers and instead encourage longer stays. “It's really about our messaging, about come not just for the day, come for three days, because we've got all these things on offer,” said Sally.“In terms of domestic visitor nights, which are people that are traveling within Australia and staying overnight, we were 24 per cent higher in our latest stats compared to the previous year and the average length of stay is over three nights.”A strong and consistent range of events, from the Kiama Winter Festival, the Jazz and Blues Festival to Changing Tides, have played a role in strengthening the town’s tourism appeal beyond its summer peak.“There's lots of people that come in summertime and consider us as a summer destination,” Sally said.“It's our job at Destination Kiama and Council to try and level that out and remind people how good the area is not in peak time.”“We obviously have been running the Kiama Winter Festival for a few years…we find that because that's the time of year where our businesses are really crying out for more patronage.”Destination Kiama is currently running a winter campaign in partnership with local businesses, offering deals to visitors to increase the town’s off-peak season.Winners of the Top Tourism Town Awards will be announced later this month.

What young men learn when they talk about Mum
What young men learn when they talk about Mum

07 May 2025, 11:00 PM

“Talking about Mum helps boys understand themselves. Some boys will have wonderful mothers, some not so great. Some will have absent mothers, and some may have mothers who have passed away.” That is the quiet truth at the heart of The Kiama Building Young Men Program, a mentoring initiative that is helping shape local teenage boys into thoughtful, respectful men, one honest conversation at a time.And this week, that conversation is about Mum. As Mother’s Day approaches, mentors from the Kiama LGA are preparing to sit with their mentees and explore one of the most formative relationships of all: the one between mothers and sons.It is not always easy. In fact, program leaders warn the session might be difficult, painful, and upsetting for some of the boys.But they show up anyway.Despite the challenges, there is power in truth-telling. By mentors and mentees sharing stories of how they were mothered - stories of tenderness, mistakes, warmth, estrangement or loss - it gives boys permission to reflect on their own experience, to make sense of it, and crucially, to decide what kind of men they want to be.The Building Young Men (BYM) program does not sugar-coat things.It asks mentors to speak frankly: “The young men are still watching and learning from all of our discussions and attitudes towards women,” it reminds them. “Be true and authentic.”Program facilitator Mark Burns puts it more simply: “It is not about being perfect. It is about being real.”The session asks boys to think not just about their relationship with their mum and other women in their life growing up, but also about how that relationship has shaped the way they treat women now. It is a big ask for any teenager, but mentors say the payoff is worth it.“They open up in ways that surprise even themselves,” said Mark. “And they leave with a stronger sense of who they are and who they want to become.”So if your teenage son who is a part of this program seems unusually reflective this weekend, it might just be because someone gave him the space to talk about Mum and he took it.Happy Mother’s Day to all the women who helped raise our boys, and to the men brave enough to talk about them.To learn more about the Building Young Men Program, click here

Jamberoo dog park going ahead despite community concerns
Jamberoo dog park going ahead despite community concerns

07 May 2025, 8:00 PM

“It may not be ideal, but at least it’s a start.”A fenced dog park is coming to Jamberoo by late July 2025, but not without questions from locals about location, size and shared use.Guest speakers from Kiama Council, Donna Flanagan (Manager of Property and Recreation) and Peter Giouroukelis (Capital Works Project Coordinator), presented the plans at the latest Jamberoo Valley Residents and Ratepayers Association (JVRRA) meeting, outlining the project and responding to spirited community feedback.The proposed park will be located at the south-east corner of the reserve between Gibson Crescent and Churchill Street.Site of the Jamberoo Off Leash Dog ParkIt will be 30 by 30 metres, fenced, and feature basic amenities like a drinking station, bag dispenser, bench and a single shade tree. The area will include a safety “airlock” entry gate.The site was selected for its central location, existing infrastructure and compliance with planning regulations.Several alternative sites including the Jamberoo Cemetery, the reserve near the tennis courts, Reid Park, Kevin Walsh and Keith Irvine Ovals were ruled out due to zoning, user conflict or safety concerns.However, locals expressed concerns about the size. “It’s not big enough to separate small and large dogs,” said one resident, worried about safety. “You’ll only be able to safely run five to ten dogs at a time.”Parking also proved contentious.The proposed site currently serves as overflow parking for weekend football and events like the car show.Peter Giouroukelis said the design avoids steeper, flood-prone land nearby, but gates could be opened to temporarily close the park during large events.Locals suggested using nearby Crown land adjacent to the Jamberoo cemetery for overflow parking, which Council agreed to explore.The $100,000 plus project (funded by Kiama Council and the NSW Government) aims to create a safe, inclusive space for dogs and their owners.Council officers committed to maintaining the facility, restocking waste bags, and providing signage to promote responsible pet ownership.Some attendees questioned whether the space would serve larger or more active dogs, but others welcomed the overdue investment. “It may not be the most ideal outcome,” said one speaker, “but at least it’s something. A starting point.”Brochures are available at Jamberoo IGA, and Council confirmed that works will begin later this month.

 Kiama’s young dairy farmers face uncertain future
Kiama’s young dairy farmers face uncertain future

07 May 2025, 8:00 AM

Opportunities are opening up for dairy exports, but here in our region, short-term leases and rising land prices continue to limit our ability to seize them.Indonesia’s plan to deliver milk to 60 million school children by 2029 could significantly expand demand for dairy across Southeast Asia.According to a new report by Rabobank’s RaboResearch division, the program may require more than two billion litres of milk annually, opening the door for new export partnerships.Yet, as the global opportunity grows, the local reality remains constrained.Kiama’s dairy industry is led by a vibrant generation of young farmers. Many lease land, invest in equipment, and breed award-winning cattle. But they do so under mounting pressure. “Sustaining the industry here isn't about capability, it's about capacity,” one local farmer explained.With Kiama’s coastal lifestyle in high demand, land values continue to climb. The only buyers who can afford to enter the market are wealthy sea/tree-changers or developers banking on future zoning changes. That leaves commercial dairy farmers relying on short-term leases, a precarious foundation for long-term investment.Meanwhile, young farmers in the Kiama LGA are quietly holding up the industry. They’re leasing land year-to-year, investing in equipment they don’t own the ground beneath, and trying to future-proof a legacy that is always at risk of being edged out.RaboResearch senior analyst Michael Harvey said the Indonesian school milk initiative, part of a wider Nutritious Meals Program, represents a major policy shift by the newly elected Indonesian government. “If successful, it could double the size of the white milk market,” he said. While the primary focus is on building domestic supply, Indonesia will remain a net importer of dairy, presenting opportunities for countries like Australia.Harvey believes the greatest potential lies in exporting UHT and recombined milk products, as well as live cattle, genetics, and farm expertise. “To meet the increased milk demand, the local supply would require a fourfold increase in the domestic herd,” he said. “That means importing over one million dairy cattle in the next five years.”Australia is already a long-standing exporter of dairy cattle to Indonesia and holds a strong position thanks to trade access and well-regarded genetics. But Harvey cautions the growth will not be a “game changer” for the Australian industry. It is, however, “a potential growth opportunity.”For Kiama’s farmers, those words ring both hopeful and bittersweet. The global prospects are strong, but local conditions make it difficult to build for the future.What these farmers need isn’t just access to global markets. It’s secure, long-term leases and a recognition that productive agriculture has a place in regions as desirable as Kiama.Without that, export dreams may continue to curdle. 

Inside the wild mind of Dale Frank: A portrait of the Australian artist
Inside the wild mind of Dale Frank: A portrait of the Australian artist

07 May 2025, 3:00 AM

When Jenny Hicks, director of Dale Frank - Nobody’s Sweetie - a documentary based on the life of the Australian artist - first met Dale, it was under unusual circumstances. She was searching for a two-storey farmhouse for a film.“I had a real estate agent in Singleton who told me there was an artist up the hill who had a two-storey house. I tracked him down online and went to check it out as a potential location,” Hicks says.“And of course, it was nothing like a farmhouse.”No, Dale Frank’s house is not your typical home. It has achieved near-mythic status, much like many aspects of Frank’s life. It's a big, solitary place out in the bush - where the reclusive artist lives and works.That chance encounter marked the beginning of Hicks’ entry into Frank’s eccentric, fiercely private world - contributing to, or perhaps deconstructing, the mythology that surrounds him.“A year or so later, when my film came out, he rang me and asked, Why didn’t you use my house?” Hicks says. “And I told him, Because it’s an artist’s house, not a farmer’s house. And he said, Well, why don’t we make a film together? So I went round for a cup of tea.”She was greeted by Frank’s lush botanic garden, filled with palm trees, cacti, and all sorts of plants he had collected and cultivated. Inside, the house revealed quirky yet beautiful interiors and taxidermied animals scattered throughout.“Dale is a mega creative force. Everything he touches, sees, or surrounds himself with is beautiful. I mean, you open a drawer in the kitchen to get a tea towel, and all the tea towels are beautiful. Everything in the house is beautiful,” she says.“He does the finest of everything - not in a showy or silver-spoon way - but with care and vision. His interiors, his colours, the gardens, the paintings - he has this incredible eye. He’s an artist with a capital A.A shot of Dale's house from the documentary. Source: Umbrella Entertainment“And yet, the only thing he wears is a pair of grubby old shorts covered in paint - he looks like a hobo half the time. But everything he surrounds himself with is stunning.”The documentary captures these lesser-seen aspects of Frank’s artistry - those personal, everyday expressions of creativity that never make it into galleries but stem from the same artistic impulse. And, of course, it showcases the work itself.For those that don’t know, Dale Frank is one of Australia’s foremost contemporary artists. Since the 1970s, Frank has enjoyed a successful international career and in the documentary we watch as Dale evolves - his styles, themes, and ideas shifting with each new collection. He’s incredibly prolific, so there’s a lot to cover.Dale in the middle of his process. Source: Umbrella EntertainmentBut even though the film dwells on his art, its true focus is the man himself - which is what makes it so compelling.Rather than feeling like a tour through a gallery, the documentary becomes an intimate portrait: Dale tells stories, pushes back, shares secrets. We learn about his struggles with autism, his existential fears, and his complicated relationship with the art world. It’s like spending an hour inside his wildly creative, chaotic mind.And although he opens up more than expected, especially for someone so isolated, there’s a clear sense that he’s still holding something back - evident in a glance at the camera or the way he carefully phrases an answer.“I think there was a lot of trust between us,” says Hicks. “But he’s still pretty guarded. When I’d ask direct questions, he’d pause and think very carefully before responding.”The film ends with Frank presenting a new exhibition and walking through the gallery, interacting with guests. He doesn’t say a word - but the look in his eyes reveals the discomfort and pain of being forced to socialise. And in that moment, despite all his bravado, we see the vulnerability beneath - the fear.Fear of not being liked. Of not being able to continue making art. Of dying. Of embarrassment. Of everything. But it’s this same fear, paired with his outward confidence and occasional obnoxiousness, that allows him to push through and keep creating. That, Hicks says, was the most inspiring part of working with him.“A few times, when I was having a nervous breakdown while making the film - for one reason or another - he would get right behind me and say, ‘This is your film. You do it your way,’” Hicks recalls.“He gave me these little pep talks, reminding me not to compromise just because of the money or other people’s expectations. And I hope some of that rubbed off on me. Even now, when I’m having a rough day, I think: What would Dale do?”Dale Frank - Nobody’s Sweetie, directed by Jenny Hicks, is out 1 May and showing at Dendy Cinemas.

Council walks the talk on Landcare support
Council walks the talk on Landcare support

06 May 2025, 11:00 PM

It was boots on sand and learning hats on this week as Kiama’s Deputy Mayor Melissa Matters joined a Landcare-guided coastal walk along Werri Beach.The event, led by local plant expert and former Werri Beach Dunecare Coordinator Ailee Calderbank, was more than just a stroll, it was a hands-on lesson in the hard work, deep knowledge, and quiet dedication behind 20 years of Dunecare at Werri Beach.Cr Matters’ presence signalled Council’s growing commitment to better understanding and supporting the work of Landcare.Landcare Illawarra Coordinator Meredith Hall, Landcare Illawarra Committe Member Alison Windsor and Deputy Mayor Melisssa MattersShe follows in the footsteps of Cr Melinda Lawton, who joined a similar walk earlier this year from the Little Blowhole to Minnamurra Headland.Both councillors are working to ensure Landcare voices are heard and valued in shaping council’s approach to environmental management.Guided by Ailee Calderbank, the group explored the native plants that make up the coastal and littoral rainforest vegetation unique to the area.From lomandra to banksias, the walk revealed how much life clings to the dunes - despite relentless pressure from invasive weeds, coastal winds and human impact.Morning tea under the fig tree near Pacific Avenue provided a chance to reflect and share stories.Participants heard how Dunecare volunteers have spent two decades painstakingly removing weeds, revegetating fragile dunes, and restoring habitat for native species.Their work is slow, steady and often unsung - but as Cr Matters noted, it is also invaluable.The event, led by local plant expert Ailee Calderbank, was more than just a stroll, it was a hands-on lesson in the hard work, deep knowledge, and quiet dedication behind 20 years of Dunecare at Werri Beach.“This kind of grassroots stewardship is what sustains our environment in the long run,” she said. “It’s not flashy, but it’s deeply effective.”Landcare events like this offer more than ecological education.They build relationships, between people and place, and between council and community.By walking the beach together, council members gain insight that can’t be captured in reports or policy briefings.And there’s more to come.Cr Erica Warren will be rolling up her sleeves to join volunteers at the upcoming community planting days throughout May:Saturday 10 May – Bombo HeadlandSaturday 17 May – Kendalls Beach (South End)Sunday 18 May – Minnamurra HeadlandSaturday 24 May – Werri BeachSaturday 31 May – Little Blowhole, KiamaEach event is hosted by a local Landcare group, and all are welcome to join.Whether you are plant-curious, weed-wary or just after good company and a cuppa, there’s a spot for you.Sign up here 

Stuck on what to get mum for Mother’s Day?
Stuck on what to get mum for Mother’s Day?

06 May 2025, 11:00 PM

Don’t know what to get your mum for Mother’s Day? We’ve all been there, and we want to make her feel special but finding the right gift is surprisingly hard. According to new research by Vistaprint, nearly half of Australian mums (48 per cent) say they’ve been unhappy with their gifts. Close to one in three have pretended to like a gift, with 19 per cent saying they’ve regifted presents. So to help all the confused kids (and adults) here are some ideas that aren’t another bath bomb.Breakfast in bed This one is a classic for a reason. It’s simple, meaningful, and a great start to the day. It could be anything from bacon and eggs to pancakes and fruit, just as long as mum does none of the work.A fun activity togetherTry something creative like Mother’s Day candle making with Tegan at Kiama Art Workshops. It’s a great way to spend time together as well as creating a homemade gift. A spa day Why not spoil mum with a relaxing, peaceful gift? Endota Spa in Kiama offers gift cards, so she can book something for herself when she needs it the most. A scenic picnicPack some of her favourite nibbles and head out to a scenic spot. Loves Bay in Kiama and Minnamurra Falls are both beautiful go-to picnic spots. If the weather isn’t optimal for a picnic, then a charcuterie board at home with a movie never fails. A Mother’s Day lunch outPlenty of local venues are offering special Mother’s Day events this weekend. Check out Yves, Kiama Leagues Club, Kiama Golf Club, and Stoic Brewing, just don’t forget to book ahead.Whether it’s a handmade card, a thoughtful lunch, or just spending time with her, Mother’s Day is about love and appreciation. According to VistaPrint’s research, almost half of mums (47 per cent) would prefer quality time with their loved ones over anything store-bought. But if you do buy a gift, make sure it’s personal.

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