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SPIRIT OF ORANGE APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

Anzac Day is back!

Traditional Anzac Day is back in the Colour City after two years of pandemic-hit lockdowns. Fine weather and good crowds welcomed our veterans, families, schools, and Cadet groups, with our first full commemorations since 2019. See inside this week’s Orange City Life for full coverage of how locals celebrated this most important of national days.

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2 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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SPIRIT OF ORANGE APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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See inside for some of the horse sports action from the Blayney Campdraft, held at the Orange Showgrounds over the Easter Weekend

ORANGE PROPERTY MARKET

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— STARTS ON PAGE

25

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4 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022


contents EDITOR’S

Spirit

WE CAPTURE THE

note

OF ORANGE

General disclaimer: Whilst every care is taken in preparing this publication, we cannot be held responsible for errors or omissions. The publisher accepts no responsibility for letters, notices and other material contributed for publication. The submitter accepts full responsibility for material, warrants that it is accurate, and indemnifies the publisher against any claim or action. All advertisers, including those placing display and classified or advertorial material, warrant that such material is true and accurate and meets all applicable laws and indemnifies the publisher against all liabilities that may arise from the publication of such material. Opinions expressed in the publication are not necessarily those of the publisher. Senior Journalist, David Dixon, accepts responsibility for election comment. Articles contain information of a general nature – readers should always seek professional advice relevant to their particular circumstances. Complaints: Orange City Life has a policy of correcting mistakes promptly. If you have a complaint about published material, contact us in writing. If the matter remains unresolved, you may wish to contact the Australian Press Council. © Copyright 2022 Orange City Life Pty Ltd. Copyright in all material – including photographs and ads – is held by Orange City Life Pty Ltd or its providers and must not be reproduced in any form without prior written permission from the Publisher. Printed for the publisher at the News Print Centre, 26-52 Hume Highway, Chullora 2190.

Published by Orange City Life Pty Ltd ABN 14 649 575 333

Suite 3/241 Lords Place ORANGE

Seeing the large numbers of people wearing their deceased family member’s war medals at our local Anzac Day services this week, I was reminded just how many lives today have been shaped by these past conflicts. Take my own family. Two of my great grandfathers served in the First World War, one in the Royal Engineers, the other, Henry Dykes in the 7th Australian Light Horse. Both men were fortunate enough to return home but each carried wounds from shrapnel and gas that remained with them for life. For Henry, from a woodcutting and farming family on the NSW mid-north coast, his wounds meant he could not return to the farm. Relocating to Sydney he found himself work as a watchman and private inquiry agent with the Sydney Night Patrol and settled down to life in the Eastern Suburbs. During the Second World War, Henry’s daughter Dulcie (my grandmother) met a young English sailor named Alec at a dance hall in George Street. Married in June 1945, my grandfather never returned to England, remaining in Australia where he raised my mother and her older brother.

14 Anzac 2022 ~ Lest we forget

That is just one small example (and a happy one at that). So many similar stories can be found all over the country, whether it be the family member who never returned home or those disposessed by war who found a new home in Australia. These wars of the past can sometimes seem so far away, but the impact they had are with us every day.

02 6361 3575 reception@oclife.com.au www.orangecitylife.com.au www.facebook.com/orangecitylife

Lest we forget.

Jono!

Thank you to our Sponsors: Orange

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City Life is grateful to the following sponsors for their ongoing support over many years. These sponsorships, among others things, have enabled us to bring our readers a lot more enjoyment to our publications than would otherwise be possible. In return, we ask you to please support them as often as you’re able.

What's happening in the entertainment world...

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

5


OCLife | community

GARY’S DONE IT ALL WITH

Blowes’ 50 good years — JONATHAN ROE —

In his 50 years in real estate in Orange, Gary Blowes has seen and done it all, but he’s not quite ready to call it a day yet. “I did the first open house in Orange,” he says as an aside during our conversation, later throwing in, that he was the first local agent to use television advertising and that he also sold the first house out at Clifton Grove. “It made $21,000 and it was on five acres, a four-bedroom, double garage…. but, yeah, I've done it all. I've sold things for next to nothing and I sold the first house in Orange to make a million dollars. I’ve seen some major changes; I started off selling 3000 square metre blocks of land for $3000 each. Now I'm talking about 500 square metres of land for $300,000!” A third-generation agent, Gary was going to the local stockyards with his father from the time he was six. At the age of 17, he joined him in the business, which became known as Lance Blowes and Son. “I was 17 and Dad said to me one day, ‘Can you sell real estate?’ We only ever sold stock and he said, ‘Well, we're not making enough money selling stock, so have a go at it’,” Gary recalls. “One thing led to another, and I haven't been back to a saleyards since!” Blowes Real Estate came to be when Gary’s father retired and it has remained largely the same in the 50 years since. “It has had a couple of little changes along the way, we got tangled up with

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the Professionals at one stage, I had a partner at one stage but, predominantly, I've been on my own and it has been very kind to us. “We're not the biggest agency in town by any means — I was once. I had this burning ambition to have the biggest agency in Orange, but when I got it, I wished to Christ I'd never seen it! “So now we're down to six staff here, and it's just a nice number. I'm lucky I've got good, conscientious staff who are more interested in making a sale than making money. That's one of the things my Dad told me: make the sale and the money will come. When you start chasing the money instead of the sale, you lose your perspective.”

you form with clients that has been the biggest change in the business, according to Gary. “In my early days, you formed relationships with people and with families. People would come along and say, ‘you sold my Mum and Dad a house and they said to come and see you’. You had referral business from friends and things like that,” he says. “Now it doesn't exist because you meet people on-site, you show the one house and they go and see some other agent and look at another house… You could sell real estate off a push bike to be honest, because you don't get anybody in the car with you anymore.”

Over the past five decades, Gary has seen many changes in the real estate industry, not the least of which is the technology available to agents today.

There have been good times and ordinary times over the years, says Gary, but even he has been surprised by the current boom in real estate prices in Orange.

He recalls one meeting many years ago, when a colleague was telling him that one day you could have a virtual inspection of a property in Brisbane from your desk at home.

“Yeah, I've never seen a boom like it — ever!” he says, adding the only comparison might be during the Federal Government’s ill-fated decentralisation plan in the 1970s.

“I said, ‘what a load of sh*t!’ and now it's happening,” laughs Gary, who still works out of a paper diary as he always has because, as he puts it, ‘that’s just the way I am’.”

“Gough Whitlam's brainchild. They were gonna build a city between Orange and Bathurst of a million people and they raced out here and they bought land everywhere… Of course, it all fell by the wayside.”

But it is the nature of the relationships

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

But the world will turn and booms don’t last forever, although Orange is in a more fortunate position than many other rural centres, he says. “Between the mining, the medical and the tourism where we're basically bulletproof,” he says. “I don't think it'll go backwards; it will plateau somewhere and it will get harder to sell, but I don't think you'll see — in a place like this — where it will actually drop.” At 70 years of age and having survived a cancer scare last year, Gary is starting to maybe think about slowing down, although he has a few things left on his plate. “Well, I'm trying to do less,” he says unconvincingly, “When I got sick, I took on some fairly big things to make myself get out of bed… at that stage, they were saying the cancer was terminal. We've been beaten that, so I’m very lucky… But now I'm regretting it because I've got that much work on, it's ridiculous! “But I do think about retiring. Some mornings it'd be nice just to not have to get up, but I don't play golf, I don't play bowls, and I've no patience as far as fishing is concerned… “So, I won't be here when I'm 80, I can assure you that, but I don't know just where to cut it off at this stage either.”


around the region | OCLife

Tranquil scenes at Fourth Crossing. Local photographer Henry DeRooy sent us this fantastic shot of Summer Hill Creek in full flow at Fourth Crossing in the Mullion Range State Conservation Area.

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

7


OCLife | community

“A courteous gentleman and a gallant soldier" — JONATHAN ROE —

O

n Anzac Day, as we stop to remember those Australians who died in wars, thoughts often are filled with imagery of the fiery landing at Gallipoli, the horrors of Somme, and heroic actions in the face of the enemy

to selflessly save a mate.

But here I’d like to take a moment to share a touching tribute to a soldier who never set foot on the battlefields of Europe or Turkey, but whose kindness and diligence had a great impact on the lives of countless thousands of young men who did. I first stumbled upon Frank Smith while deep in a research rabbit hole on the National Library of Australia’s online newspaper archive, Trove. It was a letter to the editor, written after his death with the simple title of ‘The Late Major Smith (by one who knew him)’. During the First World War, the then Captain Frank Smith was a member of the Administrative and Instruction staff and camp adjutant at the Casula, Liverpool, and Holsworthy camps where he personally oversaw the training of thousands of new recruits. The letter, written by a former army chaplain, speaks of the kind and fatherly way that Frank Smith attended this duty. “As a chaplain, the writer frequently came into contact

8 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

with Captain Smith, and he and his fellow padres had no better friend in camp. Nothing was too much trouble for him to do to help them in their work, and his kindness and courtesy they have not forgotten… “Tall and commanding in appearance, he was every inch a soldier, and a most efficient officer. Part of his duty was to deal with the daily squad of new recruits as they arrived in camp. Each afternoon he would meet them, men from all walks in life, and would give them a ten minutes' talk, offering them in a fatherly manner some good advice as to how to acquit themselves as good soldiers. Thousands of members of the A.I.F. would remember with gratitude the hints on soldiering that they received from Captain Smith at the very beginning of their service for their Empire.” Researching a bit further, I found another contemporary account by a journalist visiting the Liverpool camp that paints a very similar picture of the man. “Captain Smith is the “mainspring'' of the Camp, so to speak, and there could not be a more suitable man for the position — a typical officer and yet a kindly and sympathetic man. In terse but explicit words, with humorous asides, he sketched the daily, nay hourly, life of a recruit, from the time he enters the Camp until the morning he marches to No. 1 Embarkation Wharf, on his way to the firing line. “The Captain personally interviews each and everyone

on joining, explains lucidly all their work, and expounds the 'soldier's ten commandments,' which he drew up himself. When occasion demands he is the superior officer, but when needed the personal friend. For instance, while chatting to me the phone ran three different times — messages to different lads from friends in Sydney re: visits, appointments and parcels. He answered each call, gave needed replies, noted messages and passed them on to one of his orderlies to be handed to recipients when they came back from morning work.” And it was not only the recruits that came into Captain Smith’s camp that benefited from his instruction. For about a decade prior to the war, he was heavily involved in the cadet movement (made compulsory in 1911). He wrote pamphlets on drill and physical culture for boys and girls, often reproduced in newspapers, and as Staff Officer of the Senior Cadets, Captain Smith regularly visited and gave instruction to brigades all over the state, including here in the Central West. Indeed, our letter writer goes on to make the point that many of the officers and men who fought with the Australian forces had received their training under Major Smith. “...some years ago, it was reported in the Sydney Press that "a host of men in this and other States owe most of their training in military drill and physical exercises to


comment

with DAVID DIXON

Album covers to smart phones: things that are not built to last Human ingenuity seems to know no boundaries. Witnessing the creativity and inventiveness our best minds put to solving seemingly intractable problems in mechanics, space travel, medicine, and computers, makes one marvel at the human faculty for new ideas.

“Thousands of members of the A.I.F. would remember with gratitude the hints on soldiering that they received from Captain Smith at the very beginning of their service for their Empire.” Captain Frank Smith addresses new recruits at the Casula Camp on the first duties of a soldier. (Photo from the Australian Town and Country Journal, 12 January 1916) Lieut. Frank Smith of the instructional staff of cadets. Many of the members of militia and volunteer regiments in all parts of the Commonwealth in their younger days were taught how to drill by that instructor, and probably nobody could excel him in getting boys, individually and collectively, to so quickly acquit themselves well at drill… The high state of efficiency of the cadet corps has largely been reached by his efforts.” In all the accounts I have read, Captain Smith is universally lauded and was held in great regard by both his superior officers and

those under his instruction. Our letter writer certainly thought highly of him and was moved to make his small, touching tribute to a local paper on the NSW South Coast following Frank Smith’s death in 1929. His letter concludes: “The writer did not know of the death of Major Smith till some time after the event. He has been prompted to pay the above tribute out of respect to the memory of one who was a courteous gentleman and a gallant soldier who faithfully served his country and his King.”

In other areas of our lives, we seem to be the most obtuse of slow learners. Receiving an old-fashioned turntable from Santa last Christmas, I recently pulled out my old K-Tel and Majestic records for a spin. Extracting or replacing the albums in the cellophane liners and cardboard covers, recalled the frustrating years I spent as a teenager trying not to scratch or mark (and irreparably damage) the LP’s surface. The same goes for the record’s technological replacement, the CD. Extending my retro music phase, I’m listening to a couple of dozen old recordings in the car, Creedence Clearwater’s Revival’s Willy and the Poor Boys, Head on the Door by The Cure. Could there be a less practical way to store a delicate musical recording than a CD cover? Snapped clips, broken centre teeth, cracked flanges, and liner notes that tear and come out at the slightest touch, my impatience at trying to remove and replace new discs at traffic lights has seen me in almost half-a-dozen accidents in the past few weeks! Couldn’t human ingenuity design better ways to store these beloved items or, for a more modern example, smartphone covers that don’t crack at the slightest bump?

Captain Smith seated far right.

Maybe we can. Maybe we don’t want to.

Currently reading John Steinbeck’s wonderfully evocative account of his 1960 odyssey around the United States, Travels with Charley (his dog), much of his observations of modern life still apply. Ordering a purpose-built and solidly designed campervan from a major car manufacturer, he notes how much of American technology — cars, refrigerators, and televisions, were seemingly created with a designed redundancy — they are not meant to last, but to be replaced with newer, more expensive models in the future. He also observed that, compared to his famous travels throughout his own country before World War II, how much junk — discarded consumables — scattered and befouled the outer rims of major American cities. He thought the two related, the first expressions of the then-new consumer society, and the waste that this entails. How much more so has this become the case over recent decades in Australia? When was the last time that someone called a television repairman, or had their refrigerator re-gassed? Ever stopped by a major regional highway in the country for an unscheduled stop — a flat tyre or car-sick passenger? Our roadsides are absolutely littered with discarded drink bottles, food wrappers, KFC and Mcdonald's containers. With the waste of modern life now an issue for many, supermarkets are starting to restrict plastic bags, soon to be banned, with reusable carrybags now preferred. I’ll be going back to the old paper bags though, organic and recyclable, it’s what John Steinbeck would have used 60 years ago anyway.

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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OCLife | community

Fairbridge campaigner Hill is taking his fight straight to Prince Charles! — By David Dixon —

Friend an d collabor ator, Wad David Hil e Marlow l at the rec , with auth e n t launch of on the com or his book, pensation "Reckonin case pursu g" ed by victi Fairbridg m s of e Farm at Molong.

Fairbridge Farm campaigner David Hill’s fight for justice is not over. Seeking redress for children abused at resettlement homes in Australia, only last week he wrote directly to the future king of Britain and Australia, Prince Charles.

how Hill’s first book on abuse at Fairbridge, The Forgotten Children, was launched from the back of a ute at Molong Railway Station after a local venue cancelled their booking.

Hill recently launched his latest book, Reckoning in the Colour City, telling of the successful fight for compensation over the abuse of former students of Fairbridge Farm adding, however, that more work needs to be done.

Wade said that many survivors of sexual abuse at Fairbridge had only opened up after many years of silence.

The former student at the Molong school is now seeking compensation for all survivors of childhood abuse at other schools in Australia that were controlled by Fairbridge from the Prince’s Trust, which took over the near-bankrupt Fairbridge Society in the United Kingdom. “The Prince’s Trust has refused to compensate the children. I wrote to Prince Charles only last week and said, ‘this doesn’t reflect very well on you’,” the former head of NSW State Rail and the ABC told a full house at Orange City Library last week. Reckoning catalogues how Australian attitudes have changed over the past 15 years to revelations about the wide-ranging exploitation of children in institutions like Fairbridge. Friend and collaborator, Wade Marlow introduced Hill with an anecdote about

“Many people didn’t tell David of the abuse until the third interview, one was a 73-year-old woman… for her whole life, no one believed her, but with David, she had a champion.” “David took these bastards to court for the abused kids and won $24 million for them. It wasn’t the money though, it was the recognition,” Marlow said. Hill explained how his revelations in his first work led to the court case that eventually took nearly seven years to resolve. “Arising out of The Forgotten Children was this reckoning for what happened… the personal injury firm Slater and Gordon approached me, and I said: ‘the problem is, none of these kids have any money.’ “It was then run on a ‘no-win, no-cost’ basis,” he explained. Hill said that the idea of sending unaccompanied children across the world to save them from poverty, with no proper oversight as to its success, was a bizarrely

Dickensian idea that exposed these minors to terrible abuse.

education. At 15, we all had to leave school and had to work on the farm.

He said that it solved two “problems”; populating Australia with British people and removing poor children from Britain’s streets.

“There was nothing that included nurturing and caring. It was very heavy on corporal punishment with public thrashings, and we were stipulated as ‘inmates’.”

“The problem is, that the model was flawed from the start. Britain was the only country to export its poor children. “The idea was to take children out of the slums of London and give them a new life… we were described as ‘a menace to society’.” He said that the idea that these children had no other options, was a lie perpetrated by the scheme’s supporters who portrayed Australia as a land of sunshine and unlimited food. “Very few were orphans, many were as young as five, and most never saw their parents again. We were in for a shock, we realised we knew nothing about this place where our life was regimented by a bell. “The meals were the same every day… porridge for breakfast, and everything prepared by the students.” He said that promises made to relinquishing parents of unlimited academic opportunities were another invention. “Everybody left school at 15 — that was the great betrayal, we were promised an

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His efforts to seek redress for this mistreatment – which included, for at least three former inmates, alleged sexual interference by former Governor-General of Australia Sir William Slim when he visited Molong in 1955 – saw delaying legal tactics that strung the matter out over seven years and 23 court hearings. “When it eventually went to mediation, it took two days to settle. I was livid, we spent six and a half years in court. The British Government was the same; Fairbridge was only one of 26 of these institutions.” “The Fairbridge Society was the plaything of the aristocracy, and child migration didn’t stop until 1980,” he said, adding that Australian’s changed attitude to acknowledging child abuse, would mean such events never recurred. “This isn’t over yet… but it is less likely that this terrible thing will happen again,” Hill reflected.

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community | OCLife

Orange-born Alex helping take the bite out of shark attacks — By Steph Allen —

The slopes of Mount Canobolas are a long way from Newy Beach, but for the past 18 months Orange-born Alex Vardanega has been at the forefront of exciting new technology helping make surfing safer. Newcastle-based startup, Aqua Armour, is developing a shark-proof wetsuit, using a combination of fibre-reinforced composites and high-tech alloys to protect major arteries, while keeping the wetsuit flexible and comfortable. Alex, 25, moved to Newcastle in 2016, where he is currently studying for a double degree in Engineering and Mechanical and Mechatronics. It was while at the University of Newcastle, that Alex approached Assistant Professor Thomas Fiedler and Dr Chris Dayas, the co-founders of Aqua Armour, to come on board and help with the development of their exciting new product as part of his honours project. “They came up with the idea (about six years ago) to develop a shark-proof wetsuit and began researching high-strength, low-weight materials that would stop shark bites,” he said. “The increase in shark attacks has definitely been a factor in developing this technology. We’d like to protect humans in

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the marine environment.”

Alex and Dr Daya, both keen surfers have been testing out a number of prototypes along with their surfer friends.

After Alex joined the team in August 2020, the trio started work on the Aqua Armour technology through lab testing, later moving into prototyping the product and developing a consumable product: “A professional level wetsuit we’d be happy to sell to customers,” stated Alex.

“We’ve quite happy with the product,” he said. “We’re collaborating with a wetsuit manufacturing company in Sydney, SeaTech, who is making the wetsuit for us and incorporating our technology.

“What we’ve done is localise the protection of our material to a few key areas where people normally die from (a bite) – that is your femoral arteries, and the upper biceps.

“Eventually we’re hoping to get it either an online store process or just retail presences or both in collaboration with other wetsuit companies.” Alex expects Aqua Armour to be available for purchase in the next year or two, with wetsuits to suit all sizes.

“Sharks come up and have a nibble and swim away…but by then the damage has been done,” he explained. “We’re balancing comfort and flexibility while still protecting the person in the suit.” The product has been designed as a ‘type of chainmail mesh’, but it’s the high-tech materials that make the difference. “It’s arranged in such a way that it’s designed to be flexible, scrunched into a ball, or spread out. It’s very light,” said Alex

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“The government has been good in providing us with a little momentum, but we need more to help fund our prototypes,” Alex said. To stay up to date or donate, visit aquaarmour.com.au.

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OCLife | community

Orange Evangelical Church is soon to present a unique dramatisation of the life of Jesus, as told in the Gospel of Mark.

“The actors become a team, they work together and bounce off one another, and each performance will be slightly different, but basically the same. The message will be the same; Jesus will say what is said in the Bible — he won't be making anything up!

With a cast of 15 members from the local congregation, The Mark Drama will recreate Mark’s account of the life of Jesus in a 90-minute “theatre-in-the-round'' production. “The cast is eight men and seven women — there are no costumes, no lighting, no microphones, it is a very ‘bare-bones' performance, but it will be engaging and very powerful,” Producer, Suellen Milham explains. What makes The Mark Drama' different from other productions, is that the only scripted lines are those that Jesus speaks. The rest of the cast learn the order and detail of events, then react in character, using their own words. “The actor who plays Jesus is the only one who has a script,” Suellen said, adding: “Everyone else is learning the order of events, and so, when they come together, they know what has to happen. The

“But the others will be the kind of person they are meant to be to bring all the different events that are in Mark's Gospel to life,” Suellen explained.

Cast members for The Mark Drama production at OEC: Luke Reed, Clare D'Ugo, Andy Nelson (playing Jesus) and Naomi Thompson.

Unique drama presenting life of Jesus “in-the-round” directors help them work out where to be and they know the story well, so they are filling in the lines but using their own words to describe what's happening — it works very well.

the first time, I was quite nervous because I wasn't confident about how it was going to work, but it works brilliantly.”

Given the improvised nature of the show, each performance will differ and “It is a very interesting way to put together the cast will even play different characters, Suellen said. a show and, to be honest, when we did it

OEC is presenting three performances of The Mark Drama on 8pm, Saturday, May 7, and 2pm and 7pm on Sunday, May 8 in their brand new church meeting hall on Cottonwood Way, just off Cargo Road. “We thought, with the opening of our new ministry centre, what a lovely way to invite the community into our new space and to see what we are on about as a church in a way that is non-threatening and will be an experience that they walk away from going ‘I'm glad I went to see that!’,” Suellen said. “It is a very powerful story, it will be funny in parts, it will be quite intense in parts, it's just a great, great story to be part of and to witness.”

Tickets to The Mark Drama are free, but booking is essential, go to: www.trybooking.com/events/landing/860426

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community | OCLife

Trivia night launches 2022 Tractor Trek Light-hearted and not too serious; a social trivia night is being held on Saturday to launch this year’s Central West Charity Tractor Trek. The Tractor Trek is a unique decadeold fundraising event for Little Wings, a volunteer air service for transporting sick kids to medical appointments in the City. This year’s Tractor Trek will be based in Blayney with more owners of the farm workhorse machinery now sought for entries. First thing though, is the trivia night this Saturday, April 30, at Orange City Bowling Club. “The trivia night is relatively trivial,” Trek

organiser Sue Moffatt punned. “It’s just a small thing in Orange to kick off this year’s Trek,” she added.

“We’ve had them at Bathurst, Orange, Molong, Dubbo, and this year in Blayney,” she said.

“It’s only $10 a head, you bring your own nibbles, and you don’t have to be in a table of eight. Just turn up, and we’ll find somewhere for you to sit… it’s open to everyone and it’s cheap and cheerful,” she added.

About 20–30 tractors take part every year, although last year’s event had to be cancelled at the last minute.

The Tractor Trek itself is the major fundraiser for the group, last year bringing in more than $45,000 for the Little Wings group. “It’s been going for 10 years or so, it’s like a car rally, only that it’s over one weekend and based at one town.

“We were all organised for last year, and then COVID killed it two weeks before September. Most sponsors, however, said ‘keep the money’. So, we were able to make a donation of $45,000 to Little Wings.” “The generosity of country people blows me away,” Sue said. Owners and drivers however are still being sought for this year’s Trek that runs

over the weekend September 23–25. “It’s about individuals who own a tractor and then go out and get sponsorship.” The Trek will cover tractor trips to Shire villages including Carcoar, Hobbys Yards, Newbridge, Neville, and Millthorpe. “The principal of the public school at Neville is very excited and they’re going to provide lunch; and the Newbridge Progress Association is providing morning tea with Blayney Rotary Club doing breakfast each day,” Sue said. “You drive a bit and eat and then drive a bit more; you’re eating all the time!” Sue concluded.

For more information on the trivia night or the Trek, call Sue Moffatt on 0414 961 390.

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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OCLife | community

Crowds return for Anzac Day 2022 Crowds returned in large numbers for Orange’s first fully-open Anzac Day dawn service, street march, and civic commemoration since 2019.

Charles Huxtable from the Australian Navy, and the national anthems of both Australia and New Zealand.

Estimates put the Dawn Service figure at more than 2000 attending with many arriving early to watch a large screen presentation on Anzac history.

Millthorpe’s dawn service drew about 1000 locals, equivalent to the village’s whole population, to its post-dawn Anzac Day service held in clear, cool weather.

The event included a brass band playing as they marched down Summer Street to the Robertson Park cenotaph with a group of motorcyclists later circling Robertson Park in tribute to those who served.

The march this year, for the first time, started near the Skate Park on Boomerang Road before heading through Redmond Oval to the War Memorial gates.

In another touching moment, a carol of both magpies and galahs was loudly heard welcoming the dawn as the sun rose during the service. Spectators later lined Summer Street four-deep for the march past of veterans, schools, Cadet units, marching bands, and scout groups, finishing at the Civic Commemoration at Robertson Park with about 10,000 locals in total taking part. Anglican Minister, the Reverend Gary Neville, led prayers for the service with Orange High School Choir and String Ensemble providing the musical accompaniment for songs including “In Flanders Fields” and “I am Australian”. The Commemoration also included two minutes’ silence, wreath-laying, an address by Commodore

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About 150 pupils from Millthorpe Public School marched along with their teachers. They were joined by former students now attending high schools in Blayney, Bathurst, and Orange as well as student cadets from local units. A highlight of the event was Millthorpe School’s moving performance of the Anzac Day tribute, Lest We Forget. As per recent tradition, the Canobolas Highland Pipe Band led the march, which is organised by members of the Lyndhurst RSL sub-branch. The event was followed by a morning tea with the sub-branch selling its quota of raffle tickets. It was a busy day for the Lyndhurst members who also held commemorative events at the villages of Carcoar, Newbridge and Neville.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

True Anzac spirit: New Zealander Sydney Dunn in the regalia of the Wellington 1st Light Horse, with Warren Willis in the uniform of the 1st Australian Light Horse at the Millthorpe Anzac Day service.


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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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OCLife | community

The goodenough parent with Emily Thompson

Term Two. The caravan pulls into the driveway and out jumps two grubby, exhausted girls who somehow got taller while away camping for the long weekend. I hold my arms out as they run down the path and straight past me towards our border collie. “LUCY!!! We missed you SO MUCH!” they declare as they cuddle her and smother her with kisses. Still, it’s wonderful to have them home. The best part about their camping trip for me was four whole days of just being ‘Emily’ for a change, not ‘Mum’. But four days away from my children is just about my limit, so I pull them off the dog for my turn for a cuddle. Miss 13 says, the best thing about camping is the bushwalks and bike-riding, and the worst is being away from home. Miss Seven says the best thing was, no rules or bedtimes for four days and the worst, was the phone calls home. It’s not the speaking to me that she hates, she assures me, it’s just the nature of phone calls themselves. “Talking in person is better, because I can just talk the whole time and talk louder when it looks like the other person has something to say,” she explains. “But on the phone, there’s too much listening to the other person and I don’t like that.” When I ask about Easter Sunday, Miss Seven sits me down. “I promise not to get angry,” she says gravely: “if you can just explain to

16 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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me why you forgot to buy me an Easter present. I got chocolate from Grandma and Pop-Pop, and all my aunts, uncles and cousins. The Easter Bunny brought me Pjs, a dressing gown, TWO Easter eggs, and a Bluey activity book. But there was NOTHING from you and Dad. Why?” I try to explain that we knew she’d get lots of things from other people, and we didn’t want her to wind up spoiled. You know, like the kind of child who sits her parents down and demands to know why they didn’t get her anything for Easter. It’s obviously working very well. We end the holidays with an attempt to get to the Anzac March, which can be summed up as “MissSeven-has-had-a-hugegrowth-spurt-and-not-onlydoesn’t-fit-into-her-size-six -uniform-from-last-yearbut-also-doesn’t-fit-thesize-eights-we-bought-forher-to-wear-next”. She takes the belts off now the too-small dresses and exclaims “look at my new whips!” while I desperately message the uniform shop at the school to see what they have in stock. We decide not to even bother trying on the shoes we bought 12 weeks ago. A quick grocery shop (where I spend the cost of a new car on yoghurt?!?) and we’re set to start school again. Term One brought us a broken foot, a broken wrist, a bout of bronchitis, and COVID. Fingers crossed Term Two is better for everyone.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

Mary’s colour-in efforts wins family movie pass

Budding artist Mary Alexander (pictured) was winner of our fantastic Colouring-in Competition sponsored by our good friends at Peter Mitchell Property Management, Lords Place. Mary’s fine efforts saw her win a family pass to Orange’s great Odeon 5 Cinema. We’d also like to thank all the other entrants who got the crayons and coloured pencils out during the school holidays, to give our friendly T-Rex a happy makeover!


Andrew GEE MP

Your Country Your Voice

FEDERAL MEMBER FOR CALARE

DIXONS LONG POINT CROSSING PROJECT OUT TO TENDER!

RUNS ON THE BOARD FOR ORANGE √ $1.9 million for The Orchard crisis accommodation centre $2 billion for Great Western Highway upgrade √ $54 million in water security pipelines around the Central West √ $3.8 million for the raising of Suma Park dam wall at Orange √ $54.8 million for the new CSU medical school and research centre √ Federal Regional Investment Corporation established and based in Orange √ $29.8 million for Dixons Long Point Crossing √ $10.7 million for the Southern Feeder Road project √ Dept of Infrastructure branch moved to Orange √ $2 million for the Forest Road Bridge duplication √ $14.7 million for Mission Australia’s Benjamin Short Grove Aged Care facility √ $100,000 for new stadium seating at Wade Park √ $3 million for a second radiotherapy unit at Orange Health Service √ $10 million for the Orange Conservatorium & Planetarium √ $1.42 million for an upgrade of Clergate Road √ 24 hour rescue helicopter service for Orange and region √ $14 million for highway upgrades between Lithgow and Orange √ Bat/hail netting funding for local orchardists √ $1.2 million for CCTV in Orange, Bathurst and Wellington √ 40 mobile phone towers and base stations across Calare

It’s great that the Dixons Long Point Crossing project between Mudgee and Orange has gone out to tender, the next step in getting this important piece of infrastructure built. Together we have been fighting for this crossing for years and now we have achieved another key milestone. This project has been in the making for more than 160 years and I’m proud the Australia Government has committed almost $30 million to get it done. The investment will benefit locals and create a vital link between the Orange, Cabonne, Mid-Western and Bathurst local government areas. It will deliver huge benefits for tourism and the economy for both current and future generations. After geotechnical testing in January, the tender process will make sure we get the right businesses involved to ensure the bridge and the approach roads are built to the highest quality so they stand the test of time and last for generations to come. It’s going to be a huge feat of engineering, and it’s terrific to see this key local project moving.

COMMEMORATING ANZAC DAY AROUND OUR REGION After the Dawn Service in Canberra, it was a privilege to spend Anzac Day with veterans, Defence personnel and their families from around our region at a number of services and functions at Yetholme, Bathurst and in Orange. The support shown by our community was overwhelming, and it was great to see so many younger veterans involved in the commemorations. At the Orange Anzac Day lunch, I met up with 101-year-old Gillie Street (pictured below, front row right). Gillie served with the Women’s Air Force during the Battle of Britain and told me that she never doubted that Britain and the Allies would prevail. I also visited one of Orange’s living treasures, my mate, Jack Brown (pictured top right), who sadly didn’t make it to the march and service in Orange. I assured him I would let the community know how much he wanted to attend. Jack is 100-years-old and served in the New Guinea and Pacific campaign during the Second World War. We talked about his wartime experiences and I relayed how grateful we are for what he and his generation did for our country. I wrapped up the day at the Retreat Service in Robertson Park (pictured top left). I did manage to squeeze in a couple of rounds of two-up at the Orange RSL, but had no luck. Anzac Day is sacred to Australians as a time when we honour and remember our nation’s Defence personnel who have served across all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations. We reflect on the more than 102,000 Australians who have given their lives for our nation, and all those who have been physically and emotionally wounded, as well as their families. We are eternally grateful for all that they have done. Thank you to everyone who organised and attended a service or paused to remember. Lest we forget.

WELCOME TO OUR REGION’S NEWEST CITIZENS! Congratulations to our region’s twenty eight newest Australian citizens who made their pledge in Orange this week! I was so incredibly honoured to welcome our newest Aussies, with members of the group hailing from Afghanistan, Brazil, Philippines, United Kingdom, Canada, India, United States of America, Tonga, Vietnam, Thailand, Pakistan, Croatia and Hong Kong. May you enjoy much success, happiness and a brilliantly bright future!

ORANGE ELECTORATE OFFICE 1/179A Anson Street PO Box 673 Orange NSW 2800

(02) 6361 7138 andrew.gee.mp@aph.gov.au www.andrewgeemp.com.au

For regular updates and news, follow me on Facebook and Instagram @andrewgeecalare

Authorised by Andrew Gee MP Suite 1/179A Anson Street Orange, NSW 2800.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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PaulTIERNEY

TWO SIDES TO THE STORY I’ve got a solution, or a suggestion at least. Regular readers here know that one of the highlights of my week is the Thursday night excursion to Trivia. Our team is an eclectic mix of young and young-at-heart, geography gurus, music maestros, history heavyweights, current affairs authorities, political passionates, and of course, flag fanatics. Flags, you say? Well, yes. Almost every week there’s a question on something to do with a flag of the world. Sheldon from the Big Bang Theory would be in his element. Our flag fanatic almost always nails the question – “Which colour stripe is on the top of the Ukrainian flag?’ or ‘What is the main colour on the flag of Bahrain’? She’s an encyclopaedia on the topic, and one of the main reasons our table proudly spruiks itself as an ‘all-rounder’ bunch. The bottle of wine, stubby holder and drinks vouchers come our way on a semi-regular basis. But we got to thinking, one day last year… what if our ‘flag legend’ was away? We’d miss out on a point or two during that session, for sure. So, this lovely lady took it upon herself to bring the rest of us up to speed on this most important area of trivia. Before we started one Thursday night, we were all issued with a copy of a magazine-style booklet called the ‘Flags of the World Sticker Book’. On the cover it says: “Explore the fascinating history and symbolism of flags”. So explore I have. Poring over this book during breakfast has been a regular pastime recently, with my word power increasing exponentially as I became a flag-info-sponge. The answers to the two questions above are now embedded in my brain – it’s the blue

18 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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stripe at the top for Ukraine, and the flag of Bahrain has a zig-zag pointy thing going on and is dominated by red. But there’s so many flags with the red-white-blue or red-whitegreen combos that your head spins; I don’t think I’ll ever master all that stuff. A couple of fun facts for you. There’s only two flags in the world that are exactly square … the Swiss flag and the one for the Vatican City. All the rest are rectangular, except for one. Arguably the coolest flag of them all – the Nepalese flag. It’s made up of two right-angled triangles sitting atop each other. Go Nepal, you rock. Also, do you know what the symbol on the Mexican flag is? It has an eagle, with a snake in its mouth sitting on top of a cactus. Long story – so go and look it up. Then, my brain went ‘bing’ with an idea when reading about the Paraguayan flag … it’s the only flag in the entire world where one side is different to the other. Same colours, but different symbols. One side has the coat of arms, and the other has the Treasury symbol. Awesome. Different. Wait … why can’t WE do this? This would solve ALL our controversies! Leave one side the same as current, and put the flag of our aboriginal people on the other side. Truly, a double-sided flag for a nation united. Neither is ‘front’ nor ‘back’, just double-sided. Tell me why this wouldn’t work – I’m thinking genius idea, Paul. Finally (and controversially), my head tells me it won’t be toooo much longer before the Union Jack isn’t in the top-left corner of the side of our flag that contains our Southern Cross, so there’s a spot that the Torres Strait Island flag can go (we have three official flags, you know). Everybody happy? Done. Dusted. Post the royalties my way. Now, go and get yourself a copy of the ‘Flags of the World Sticker book’, and start the fun. You won’t be disappointed.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

Planets parade on Anzac Day dawn

Local photographer Troy Pearson of Eyetrix Productions captured this stunning photo of a “once-in-a-thousand-year” planetary alignment above the Cenotaph in Robertson Park. The waning moon is at the top of the picture, with Saturn below and left, next down is Mars, then Venus and Jupiter.


Campdraft Action With so much happening in and around Orange over th e Easter Weeke nd, you may h missed out on ave catching all th e a ction of the Bla Campdraft, h yney eld at the Ora nge Showgrou April 15-18. Lu nds, cky our Orange City Life photographer was on hand to bring you som highlights from e the four days of co m p et organised by B ition, layney Shire H orse Sports.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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ACCEPTED HERE Programme for Thurs 28th April to Wed 4th May 2022

43 WILLIAM ST ORANGE • 6362 0213 (ADMIN) 20 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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ONLINE BOOKING IS PREFERRED SUBSCRIBE AT WWW.ODEON5.COM.AU TO HAVE PROGRAMME EMAILED WEEKLY.

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HEARING/VISUAL IMPAIRED EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

Parking available at rear, enter March or Byng Streets • ALL CINEMAS HAVE WHEELCHAIR ACCESS TIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE • BOOKINGS RECOMMENDED


entertainment | OCLife

Hip hop, blues and RnB all in the blend for Orange singer-songwriter

Brad White LIVE & KICKING — ART’S OUT WEST’S GIG SERIES

CELEBRATING ORIGINAL LOCAL MUSIC — CONTINUES AT THE BLIND PIG THIS SUNDAY, MAY 1, WITH AN AFTERNOON SESSION FROM SINGER-SONGWRITER BRAD WHITE.

But more recently, Brad has refined his sound which can best be described as a blend of hip hop, blues and RnB.

Dividing his time between Sydney and Orange, Brad can be found playing covers at pubs and bars every weekend and is in demand for weddings. Recently, he has begun playing shows with his own material, as well as recording them. He has just released his second EP ‘Déjà vu’.

“Brad’s influences include ‘The Used’ to ‘Ab-Soul’ which fuels him to create a sound with his voice and guitar that fills the dancefloor providing an atmosphere of fun wherever he plays,” said Arts OutWest’s Patrick Coomey.

Entry to the show on Sunday is free, said Patrick, presented by Arts OutWest in conjunction with The Blind Pig, and supported by the Australian Government’s Live Music Australia program.

Brad has also pursued his love for music by studying audio engineering and currently works as an assistant at a recording studio.

“These Live & Kicking gigs are about showcasing and supporting newly published, original live music by local artists,” said Patrick.

Growing up in Orange, Brad discovered his love for music through his family. From high school to his early twenties he played in various bands and toured all over Australia.

Catch Brad White at the Blind Pig Sound Lounge & Bar from 4pm this Sunday, May 1.

Mother’s Day

EVERY FRIDAY / SATURDAY AT 8PM ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴

FRIDAY 30TH

Toni & Lenny ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴

SATURDAY 1ST

PROUD TO BE A PUB

Amber

To all our beautiful mothers out there – A gift of appreciation for everything you do... Claim your FREE glass of La Sagria Prosecco / Coffee with the purchase of your meal. Plus a lucky door prize to be won for the best dressed. Entree E $18 / M $32 Butterflied Coconut Prawns on a bed of fresh Asian salad + Coconut Cream Sauce

T-BONE

LUNCH & DINNER SPECIAL MEAL DEAL Mains Pork Belly with mash & gravy $28 Atlantic Salmon Served with fresh garden salad $30 Garlic Prawn Spaghetti $28 Cocktails Espresso Martini $20 Margarita $20

TUESDAY 15

$

or

CHips & salad

WitH your CHoiCe of sauCe (diane, musHroom, pepper or GraVy)

lunCH

and

dinner

Conditions apply: customers will be required to purchase a beverage

OPEN 7 DAYS | 107 BYNG STREET | 6362 1353 | WWW.THEMETROPOLITANHOTELORANGE.COM.AU APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

+ CHips & VeG

PLEASE RING FOR BOOKINGS

|

T-BONE

ORANGE CITY LIFE

21


OCLife | entertainment

FRIDAY APRIL 29

SATURDAY APRIL 30

Live Music at the Metro

Cultured

Toni and Lenny live at the Metropolitan Hotel from 8pm.

on w h a t 's

Free, live performance at the Orange Cultural Precinct (see page opposite)

Live Music at the VIC

Loca country favourite Justin Landers at the Victoria Hotel from 8pm

Live at the Metro

Live music at the Metropolitan Hotel from Amber, 8pm.

APRIL

Live and Kicking: Genni Kane

Genni Kane ‘Meet the Songwriter’ session at the Agrestic Grocer, 6pm.

Bliss of Heaven: Music of Latin America

Irresistible rhythms and a melting pot of melodies, Chilean-born pianist and composer Daniel Rojas reimagines some of Latin America’s best-loved tunes and tangos. Orange Function Centre, 8pm

SATURDAY April 30 Anything you can Do

Step back into the Golden Age of light music and musical theatre with Broadway classics by Porter, Gershwin Rodgers, Hart and Hammerstein. Orange Civic Theatre, 8pm

Coming event s... MAY 7

MAY 14

4 ON THE 4LOOR

150th ORANGE SHOW

MAY 8

JUNE 10 -12

MOTHER'S DAY

ORANGE WINTER JAZZ FEST

22 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

SUNDAY May 1 Brad White – Live & Kicking @ The Blind Pig

Brad White brings his blend of hip hop, blues and RnB to the Blind Pig from 4pm. Free entry.


entertainment | OCLife

Flutist David Shaw performing at last year’s ‘Music at the Museum’ in the Orange Regional Museum.

CULTURED TAKING CLASSICAL MUSIC TO SOUTH COURT STEPS

O

range Cultural Precinct will come alive this Saturday, April 30, with a series of free, pop-up performances combining heritage, the visual arts, and classical music in one unique event.

CULTURED, part of the Orange Chamber Music Festival, is a free all-day event building on the success of last year’s Music at the Museum, which saw local violinist Lisa Stewart and flautist David Shaw perform pieces in the Orange Regional Museum, while attendees wandered the exhibition. Expanding on the idea, CULTURED 2022, will feature four performances, from outdoor pop-ups to intimate solo recitals, held at the Civic Square South Court, the Orange Regional Gallery, and Orange Regional Museum. “We came up with this idea of integrating all of the arts organizations of Orange and unite heritage, visual arts and music,” Carmen Nieves, Director of the Orange Chamber Music Festival said. “It is a pop-up style, so not a sit-down concert and that is a concept we discovered last year with Music at the Museum and it was very well received. Tourists were stepping into the visitor centre, they didn't know about the festival, and they just came in and found these musicians playing and there was no restrictions — like you have to sit quietly - you can wander around.

“So this year we thought we need to develop that better and integrate the gallery and do the same thing. So we want people to come and walk around, enjoy the musicians and enjoy the art —not just sitting down quietly.”

of all sets; people that are very knowledgeable of classical music and chamber music in particular so we have to keep the quality high.. But at the same time we want to invite tourists to just be surprised when they arrive here and see all this happens in Orange.”

As well as encouraging people to come and experience the gallery and the museum, CULTURED is also about removing preconceived ideas about classical music and making it more accessible to people, Festival organiser, Jay Byrnes said.

One of the most popular and charismatic brass bands in Australia, the NSW Police Band Brass Ensemble will kick the day off in the Southcourt at 11am, performing a repertoire of popular and wellknown pieces.

“A big goal of the festival really is to pull away from that preconceived idea of ‘stuffiness’ with classical music. These events in the gallery and the museum and the Southcourt is to show that classical music can be accessible to everybody. It doesn't have to be this idea of sitting in a concert hall and knowing when or when not to clap or those sorts of things. It is about trying to open up our passion for classical music to the general public.” As professional musicians who have attended many other festivals, Carmen said they wanted the experience in Orange to be different. “Seeing all the facilities and the quality of the environment here we knew we needed to do something different, something that is accessible, that will invite younger people as well,” Carmen added. “We are trying to offer something for everyone

Next up, at 2pm, will be the Orange Regional Conservatorium Chamber Academy, a group of Orange’s best and brightest school-age musicians who will be premiering exciting new works by Lyle Chan, Sally Greenaway and Noel Annett. At 4.30pm, CULTURED moved inside the Orange Regional Gallery, where American harpist Emily Granger will perform works from her latest album In Transit. At 5.15pm and 6.15pm, Lisa Stewart and Stefan Duwe of the Acacia Quartet will be joined by local flutist David Shaw, performing classical music in the Orange Regional Museum, as audiences wander the exhibitions How Cities Work and Inherit. The Orange Chamber Music Festival begins today and continues until May 1. For more information and the full program, visit ocmf.com.au

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

23


SUPA ON SALE FROM WEDNESDAY 27TH APRIL UNTIL TUESDAY 3RD MAY 2022 mon Try our easy Le pe ci re k ea St Pesto

RE Visit IGA.COM.AU/

CIPES

110

Dairy Farmers Thick & Creamy Yoghurt 150g Selected Varieties

$

ea

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73¢ per 100g

750

$

Energizer Max AA Batteries 10 Pack or AA Batteries 8 Pack

ea

Hot buy

Coca-Cola, Sprite, Fanta, Lift or Mount Franklin Lightly Sparkling Water 1.25 Litre SelectedVarieties $1.40 per Litre

175

$

ea

SAVE $1.10

Australian BEEF RUMP STEAK

26

$

$1.80 per 100g

18

$1.80 per 100g

$

kg Sliced or Shaved Champagne Leg Ham

18

$ kg

Silverside Sliced or Shaved

kg

HotE! PRIC

2

$ kg

Australian Bananas

SUPA

kg

Australian Brushed Potatoes 2kg $2 per kg

4

$

ea

2kg bag

Connoisseur Gourmet Ice Cream 1 Litre Selected Varieties 80¢ per 100mL

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

ea

SAVE $3.50

82 SUMMER ST, ORANGE NSW 2800 | 6362 0775

OPEN 7 DAYS: MON TO SAT 7AM-9PM | SUNDAY 8AM TO 8PM WWW.IGA.COM.AU

210 PEISLEY STREET, ORANGE NSW 2800 | 6362 7233

OPEN 7 DAYS: MON TO SAT 6AM-9PM | SUNDAY 7AM TO 8PM WWW.IGA.COM.AU

Specials available from Wednesday 27/04/22 until Tuesday 03/05/22 or while stocks last. Retail quantities only. No trade supplied. We reserve the right to correct printing errors. Pictures used for illustration purposes only. IGA Liquor supports the responsible service of alcohol. Tobacco and alcohol not sold to under 18’s.

24 ORANGE CITY LIFE

8

$

IGANS12842_270422

4

$

Australian Imperial Mandarins


ORANGE PROPERTY MARKET

BEST PROPERTIES

FOR THIS WEEK’S LATEST LISTINGS www.orangecitylife.com.au

BEST AGENTS

PROPERTY OF THE WEEK BROUGHT TO YOU BY

WILLIAMS MACHIN MARTY LYDEN

Roger Burrell

t. 0404 070 391

1 COOGAL DRIVE, ORANGE 4

2

2

t. 0438 017 416

• Positioned in an established, family-friendly neighbourhood in West Orange • Expansive floorplan with multiple living areas and entertaining options • Four bedrooms, all with built-in wardrobes

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

25


OCLife | community

OLD SALT AMY RETURNS HOME

for Colour City’s Anzac Day — DAVID DIXON —

Amy Searle loves Anzac Day, memorably “misplacing” her family’s medals at one event as a child.

T

he RAN Chief Petty Officer and Colour City local initially chose the Royal Australian Navy over the Army due to her colour preferences, rather than any maritime links in her past. But after a number of postings in the Gulf and as part of Australia’s sovereign borders operations, she’s now an “old salt” who loves her life of duty and adventure on the high seas. “I’m Orange born-and-bred, Canobolas and Orange High, I have no military background, but always came to Anzac Day,” she explained. “I remember I lost my grandfather’s medals; I was probably about 10-yearsof age. We eventually found them in the leaves,” Amy laughingly recalls.

GARY BLOWES Director 0418 635 248 Commercial Sales + Leasing

Her near two decades serving her country though, was initially determined by colour schemes, and not career choices. “It was always the Navy I was going to join; I didn’t like the brown uniforms of the Army. Until I joined, I’d never even seen a warship,” she said. “I now love the sea, being at sea… I’ve been in 17 years on quite a few Anzac Class warships and Armidale Class patrol boats.” Currently stationed at HMAS Stirling off Western Australia, she has previously fulfilled two deployments in the Persian Gulf as well as with border protection as part of Operation Resolute. With the Navy taking part in rescuing many groups of asylum seekers on unseaworthy vessels, the work showed the important role that our armed forces now play in so many areas outside of their

CHRIS TYACK 0438 258 590 Residential Sales Manager

BLOWESRE.COM.AU 26 ORANGE CITY LIFE

RAN Chief Petty Officer Amy Searle back in Orange for Anzac Day. The Colour City local loves her life of duty and adventure on the high seas.

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

traditional defensive duties. “It was a very busy time, doing some really important stuff. Our armed forces have done a lot of humanitarian activities recently, helping flood-hit communities around the country,” Amy said. It is this sense of common purpose and camaraderie that she finds most gratifying about her vocation. “We’re highly trained and highly skilled and it’s our lives… it’s being part of a team,” she said. “We’ve got to rely on each other and it’s the people that you work with, that make it so enjoyable.” Despite her years of service, she said that her feelings for Anzac Day are largelyunchanged from when she was a child, although this year she did the reading at the Dawn Service in Orange.

MARG LONGHURST 0499 013 427 Sales Co-ordinator

“They’re probably the same emotions, actually. It’s a privilege to honour those who served their country, many who never came back. “It’s an emotional day for everyone, and it’s so good to see everyone at home as well.” Although now stationed over the other side of the country nearly 3700km away, she tries to make it back each year with her twins, Harvey and Lucy, for this most special of days for those who always supported her dream. “I come back for the family, it’s nice to be able to see me… they’ve always been 100 per cent supportive of my decision to join,” she said. “I’ve never regretted that decision, not ever,” Chief Petty Officer, Amy Searle concluded.

SHARISSA GILL 0477 063 857 Property Manager

cnr lords place + kite street orange

ABIGAIL PALMER 6362 1233 Office Manager

02 6362 1233


UNDER OFFER 23 MCCARRON PLACE ORANGE

183 SALE STREET ORANGE 3

1

2

4

$580,000 - $620,000

• An investment opportunity not to be missed

• 3 bedrooms with built-ins

• Blank canvas, big block plus a shed

• 778m2 block, room to grow

2

2

$800,000 - $830,000

• Open plan, quality living • 4 bedrooms, all with built-ins.

• Entertainers kitchen with breakfast bar, dishwasher & 900mm oven • Rear yard access with room to build a shed

CONTACT: MARTY LYDEN 0404 070 391, marty@williamsmachin.com.au

CONTACT: MARTY LYDEN 0404 070 391, marty@williamsmachin.com.au

188 MCLACHLAN STREET ORANGE

466 BURRENDONG WAY ORANGE

4

1

CONTACT AGENT

• Perfect renovation project with large block

• Gas heating, split system ac

• Multiple living areas with functional floorplan.

• Currently leased $420 per week

CONTACT: MARTY LYDEN 0404 070 391, marty@williamsmachin.com.au

$1.1m - $1.2m

• With 24 acres around you, this parcel of land is right on the edge of town

• Shade and shelter trees form a belt connecting two dams.

• Building entitlement subject to council approval.

• Panoramic views of Mount Canobolas.

CONTACT: TOM SHEEHAN 0414 418 232, tom@williamsmachin.com.au

THINKING OF

SELLING UNDER OFFER 9 SPEET PLACE ORANGE

4

2

2

CONTACT AGENT

• Large family home, immaculately presented.

• Renovated kitchen with 900mm Smeg oven, integrated dishwasher

• Multiple living areas, room for everyone

• Plantation shutters, ducted heating/cooling

YOUR HOME OR BUSINESS

Contact us today, we would love to do it for you!

CONTACT: MARTY LYDEN 0404 070 391, marty@williamsmachin.com.au

PH 02 6362 6966 37 SALE STREET, ORANGE WWW.WILLIAMSMACHIN.COM.AU

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

27


ORANGE 6362 4016

MOLONG 6366 8800

BLAYNEY 6367 3153

www.molongre.com.au

www.townsendrealestate.com.au

NEW LISTING

11 REDGUM AVENUE

4

3

4

BEL-AIR LOCATION Beautifully presented two storey home with space for the family to grow. Upstairs you’ll find the main with an ensuite, plus walk in robe and the other three rooms are double bedrooms with builtins. Downstairs you will be greeted by a large formal lounge and dining area as well as an informal open plan living area. Lovely sunroom to compliment the gardens. Large 1141 square meter block and double garage and car port. Inspection by appointment. Jen Stojanovic 0473 401 666

6 SULLIVAN CIRCUIT

4

2

2

CANOBOLAS VIEWS Located on the high side of Sullivan Circuit, this four-bedroom home is located on a quiet street and is ideal for first home buyers or those wanting to invest. Offering open plan living and dining area plus kitchen boasting stainless steel appliances including gas cooktop and dishwasher makes it ideal for low maintenance lifestyle. Close to North Orange Shopping, and Waratah Sports Club, this home is sure to impress.

Jen Stojanovic

0473 401 666

OPEN

OPEN

SATURDAY 11AM

SATURDAY 10:30AM

28 SULLIVAN CIRCUIT

4

2

2

4

2

4

CLOSE TO NORTH ORANGE SHOPS If you are looking for a great investment, close to the North Orange Shopping and Bunnings, this is the one. Featuring four bedrooms, main has walk in robe and ensuite. Enjoy the kitchen which has an island bench and gas cook top with electric oven. There is plenty of cupboards for storage. Open plan living area is a large space with dining, lounge and kitchen. Warmed with ducted gas heating. Fully enclosed rear yard is a great space for the kids to play. The parents can enjoy the covered patio area all year round. Double garage with internal access. Jen Stojanovic

115 DALTON STREET

3

1

0473 401 666

1

$585,000 This 1940s cottage is ideally located within a 10-minute walk to Orange CBD and NSW Department of Primary Industries and consists of 3 bedrooms encompassing high ceilings plus the master being generous in size and boasting built-in wardrobes, with the lounge room at the centre of the home serviced by a split system air conditioner and gas heater, perfect for those cooler months. The kitchen includes a breakfast bar and 900mm freestanding oven with 5 burner gas cooktop and flows into the adjoining dining room with the main bathroom featuring a deep retro bath and separate shower with an additional toilet off the laundry. The glorious north facing back yard includes rear yard access, single carport, two large garden sheds, plus plenty of room for dogs to roam and kids to play. Whether you are looking to invest, downsize, or buy your first home, 115 Dalton Street is definitely worth the look!

30 MOONSTONE DRIVE

Features include: - Three bedrooms boasting high ceilings plus two with built-in robes - Generously sized master bedroom - Walking distance to Orange CBD, DPI and cafes - Zoned for Bletchington Public School - Breakfast bar and 900mm freestanding gas cooker - Bathroom with shower and deep retro bath - North facing backyard with room to extend or renovate

SPACE, STYLE AND SOPHISICATION Located in North Orange, this beautiful property is one of a kind. The property features 4 bedrooms with built ins as well as a large study. The generous master bedroom has a walk in robe and ensuite. There is an abundance of living spaces, plus, the open plan kitchen and dining are the hub of the house and the walk in pantry, dishwasher and gas cooking are all a bonus for entertaining. The rear yard is fully enclosed and tastefully landscaped, with a water feature and a private covered area featuring a spa bath.Inspections by appointment only.

Cameron Foley 0429 775 680

Jen Stojanovic 0473 401 666

MEET THE SALES TEAM 28 ORANGE CITY LIFE

STEPHEN TOWNSEND 0427 631 957

|

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

JEN STOJANOVIC 0473 401 666

CAMERON FOLEY 0427 775 680

NORA MCNAMARA 0431 320 230

MARK HOWES 0427 668 800


ORANGE 6362 4016

MOLONG 6366 8800

BLAYNEY 6367 3153

www.molongre.com.au

www.townsendrealestate.com.au

“BERI”

4

2

2

1648 EUCHAREENA ROAD, MOLONG Just 16 km from Molong and 38 km North of Orange lies “Beri”. Just over 100 acres of beautiful North-Easterly red basalt country. Starting at the 10 year old brick home with all the comforts we have grown accustomed to, plus a beautifully renovated one bedroom cottage is just the most perfect guest accommodation. Additionally the workshop and machinery shed is just about everyone’s dream set-up. With two hi-lift roller doors, LED hi-bay lights plus an adjoining lock-up room, bathroom and kitchenette, this is the perfect doghouse that any bloke would love to be banished to. Stephen Townsend 0427 631 957

LOT 47 BRAZIER ROAD

710 SQM

$350,000 TO $375,000 With land being hard to find you will be surprised by this 710sqm block. With views towards Mt Canobolas and located close to the CBD you will be in walking distance to coffee shops, restaurants, schools and public transport. Canobolas Views will be the place to build your dream home or investment. Don’t miss out on this ideal opportunity. less

Jen Stojanovic

0473 401 666

AUCTION 07.05.22

LOT 110 CARGO ROAD

1880 SQM

$575,000 TO $600,000 Great location in Orange close to Wentworth Golf Course and Duntryleague Golf Club and only a five minute drive to the CBD. If you are looking for views and a peaceful place to call home this block is definitley worth a look. Equipped with a well so you will have plenty of water all year round. The land size is 1880 sqm and has a building envelope for your new home.

Jen Stojanovic

“GUMNUT”

0473 401 666

50 ACRES

NEW LISTING

136 GREGHAMSTOWN RD, BLAYNEY With just over 50 acres of heavy carrying & highly fertile Basalt country and situated just on the town boundary of the progressive & go-ahead town of Blayney lies “Gumnut”. Currently leased but being offered for sale with vacant possession “Gumnut” is a blank canvas just waiting for the masterpiece to be painted.

Predominantly North Easterly to Easterly with minimal Southerly and no Westerly aspect this is the next best thing to the perfect small farm. Central Tablelands (Town) water are nearby. Infrastructure consists of a lock-up, concrete floored shed with two roller doors and has been well sited with mature pines offering protection from southerly winds and probably the ultimate homesite.A small set of steel cattleyards have direct access to Greghamstown Road.

WALL STREET, CARGO

4,475 SQM

$300,000

About 35km to Orange and only 12 to Millthorpe, “Gumnut” should be on you must do list. Auction 07.05.22. Parkview Hotel - 11am.

At just over an acre, this 4,475 square metre block has a beautiful Northerly aspect within the village of Cargo. Build the house of your dreams with sheds that your mates would die for, walk to the shop and the Cargo Inn for a long lunch on Sunday or a refreshing beverage on Friday. With oodles of space for the pooches and kids to run around and grow up in start planning the next chapter in your families journey.

Stephen Townsend 0427 631 957

Stephen Townsend 0427 631 957

Small blocks like Gumnut that include a dwelling entitlement are rare and getting rarer. At an altitude very similar to Orange, Blayney enjoys a cool climate, mild Summers with low humidity, stunning Autumns & Springs and cold, invigorating winters. Average, annual rainfall of 850mm is pretty evenly split over the four seasons.

LOOKING TO SELL THIS YEAR? WANT TO KNOW WHAT YOUR PROPERTY IS WORTH? GET IN TOUCH WITH OUR SALES TEAM TO ARRANGE YOUR FREE APPRAISAL APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

29


ORANGE 6362 4016

MOLONG 6366 8800

BLAYNEY 6367 3153

www.molongre.com.au

www.townsendrealestate.com.au OPEN

SATURDAY 10AM

47 BORONIA CRESCENT

3

1

1

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY What a fabulous opportunity to secure a property in an established community. This original full brick home is the perfect start for young families looking to enter the market, or an ideal opportunity for those looking at long term investment. Entry hall leads to lounge room, which flows to dining and kitchen. This home has been freshly painted throughout, plus new carpets and blinds have been installed.

Jen Stojanovic

0473 401 666

LOT 10, CUDAL STREET, MANILDRA

1416 SQM

COMMERCIAL SHED SPACE Are you looking for commercial shed space or large storage facilities? Come & have a look at these two large sheds centrally located in the busy township of Manildra conveniently located between Orange & Parkes in the thriving Central West region. First shed approx 24m x 15m x 5m high 360sqm, second shed approx 35m x 10m x 4 High 350sqm, both with concrete floors & Industrial lighting. Single & 3 phase power connected, plus town water & sewerage connected to the block Mark Howes 0427 668 800

OPEN

SATURDAY 1:30PM

27 OLYMPIC DRIVE

4

2

4

3

1

1

GREAT LOCATION WITH SO MUCH SPACE This beautiful home is nestled in a beautiful area of Orange offering breathtaking views of Mt Canobolas. Featuring 4 bedrooms, main bedroom has ensuite and WIR, the remaining 3 bedrooms are double size and all have built ins. The modern kitchen has gas cooking, dishwasher, breakfast bench and loads of storage. Ducted heating throughout plus a split system allows your family to be comfortable all year round. Attached double garage plus another single garage with enough room for another 2 cars under the house. Jen Stojanovic

31 RACECOURSE ROAD

4

1

0473 401 666

3

ELEVATED FAMILY HOME Sitting on a 784m2 block this beautiful home has space for a large family with four bedrooms & three living areas. North faces and situated to capture the elevated views across to Suma Park Dam, this property is perfect for a breakfast coffee, and then out to the undercover alfresco area in the back yard for evening drinks by sunset. This home has it all! The open plan living and kitchen area provides the ideal setup for entertaining with family and friends, plus during those warmer months you can take advantage of the enclosed outdoor area accessible from the living room. The garden is well established with mature trees and shrubs, as well as 17 solar panels on the roof. Even the man of the house will be happy with a double car garage and single lock up shed for all the toys and tools.

53 PARK STREET

RENOVATED BEAUTY This property has 3 good size bedrooms all with built-ins. The main bathroom has been fully renovated and is stunning. You will also find a second toilet in the renovated laundry. The kitchen has also been done with a breakfast bench and quality appliances you will be able to entertain endlessly. With space for all the family there are two seperate living areas. The entertaining deck is a relaxing space to enjoy outdoors and admire the beautiful gardens. So much to see with this wonderful property you must inspect to appreciate everything on offer. Jen Stojanovic

Nora McNamara 0431 320 230

0473 401 666

LOOKING FOR THE BEST MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE FOR YOUR INVESTMENT PROPERTY? GIVE US A CALL 02 6362 4016

30 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022


time warp | OCLife Open day a Orang e E t ast

Public Sc hool

Does any one recog nise these at Orang boys and e Ea s t P u girls b li c School August 19 65 years a 57? The p g o in hoto was day at the taken at a school to n open mark Edu The child cation W ren show e e k . e d off their mothers, skills to v grandmo is iting thers and Educatio younger n Week w s ib li n gs . a s an oppo families to rtunity fo find out h r ow studen faring as ts were they work e d their w the schoo ay throug l curricu h lum.

Photo courtesy CWD Negative Collection, Orange & District Historical Society. The society holds a working day each Wednesday from 10.30am to 4pm at 148 March Street. Our volunteers are available to answer inquiries at this time.

MORE PROPERTIES WANTED WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING 46 Diamond Drive Orange

UNDER OFFER

2-8 Carcoar Street Lyndhurst

c3c ab b c a

3 a 1b

c2c ab b c a

4 a 2b

$550,000 Tidy Little Country Retreat Just under 3 acres plus horse stables and round yard

$900,000 Is this your dream home?

Nestled in the popular and tightly held area of North Orange, this beautiful home will impress as soon as you open the front door. Bathed in natural light, accented by a tasteful, neutral colour palette, this large family home offers location, space and liveability.

14 Sutton Street Canowindra

c8c ab b c a

4 a 2b

Large Home and Big BackYard Suit large family or first home buyer. Enclosed BBQ area.The top floor of this home has the potential for a great parent retreat. Large shed with workshop plenty of room for the boat and caravan.

56 Gaskill Canowindra $1.5 MILLION A Piece of Historic Canowindra- a new chapter of your life?

UNDER OFFER

9 Maple Crescent Blayney

This magnificent heritage building in the main street of the charming Canowindra. Currently functioning as a fully ducted heated and cooled B and B with full dining room, garden seating, industrial kitchen and operating bar.

SOLD

SOLD

$700,000

SOLD

c1c ab b c a

3 a 1b

$465,000 First Home Buyers Dream Great condition very neat and tidy. Solid investment!

Ph 0428 650 675 | scottmunro.ljhooker.com.au Email scott.munro@ljhooker.com.au APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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39 SALE STREET, ORANGE | 6363 1000 | PFISHER.COM.AU ALL PROPERTIES CAN BE VIEWED BY PRIVATE INSPECTION OR VIDEO CALL, JUST CONTACT THE AGENT.

ALL INSPECTIONS WILL BE CONDUCTED UNDER STRICT HEALTH GUIDELINES. 3

2

PRICE GUIDE: $750,000-$790,000

1

6 OPHIR STREET

4

2

1

2 PARK LANE

PRICE GUIDE: $889,000-$929,000

NEW LISTING

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 30 APRIL 11.00-11.30 BEAUTIFUL ART DECO HOME SHIRT DISTANCE FROM CBD This beautiful home is located on a 950sqm block just a 2 minute drive from the DPI and 5 minutes from the CBD. It has a lot of the original art deco features common to houses in the 50 era such as art deco lights, picture rails, high ceilings, picture roses and decorative cornices. It has a lovely sunny feel, given the living area faces north as do two of the bedrooms. The kitchen has loads of storage and there is a formal dining room. Reverse cycle air conditioner and wood fire ensure the home is cosy no matter the season. There is a super handy mudroom which leads to the laundry and second toilet. Leading off the back of the home is a huge second living area with loads of storage and beautiful polished floors and a second bathroom. Out the back is a large deck which overlooks the secure backyard. Rear yard access through a cement driveway leads to the lock up garage. Plenty of potential in a lovely area, book your inspection today. CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

4

1

PRICE GUIDE: $690,000-$730,000

1

26 ANSON STREET

HELLO GORGEOUS! This home in recent times has undergone a beautiful transformation and is ready for you to move in and fall in love. You’ll love the large kitchen with heaps of storage space and room for a big fridge. The home has four bedrooms, three with built-ins, reverse cycle air conditioner and ducted gas heating throughout. The bathroom has undergone a gorgeous renovation and features a beautiful custom-made vanity. The large open plan floor plan is lightfilled and spacious and overlooks the secure backyard, perfect for watching the kids play. There is also rear-yard access through the garage if you’re keen to add additional shedding. The home is just a 20 second stroll to James Sheahan and the Anson Street School and located around the corner from Orange Christian School. It also boasts zoning to Orange Public and Orange High making it a great investment as it will attract a huge range of tenants. There really is nothing to do. It’s a must-see! CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

32 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

GORGEOUS GREEN LANE AREA This mid-century gem is located in the very popular Green Lane area. Meander your way to the front door through the beautiful established and private front garden and soak in the calm and warmth of this property. The home has a lovely sense of space, with open plan living, high ceilings, and picture windows to enjoy the outside from within. Lovely timber floorboards in the family room add to the warmth and character of this delightful home. Ducted gas heating throughout and a split system ensures year-round comfort. There are French doors opening onto the undercover pergola perfect for entertaining or an outdoor meal. The main bedroom has its own private wing with ensuite, private living area and secluded verandah. Beautifully presented, perfectly positioned and ready for someone to love. Don’t miss this one, you may just be the new lucky owner. CONTACT: ADAM SAVAGE 0419 232 416

4

3

2

29 LEE STREET, MOLONG

PRICE GUIDE: $1,000,000-$1,100,000

SOMETHING TRULY SPECIAL This beautiful property is something truly special. Centrally located and set on a large block with stunning views, this home is of the highest quality. No detail has been missed in the high end finishes that evoke a sense of decadence and luxury. With an enticing blend of classic style and modern convenience from the attractive front façade through to the thoughtful floor plan and the amazing outdoor deck beyond, this is a wonderful family home. There is a formal lounge room and a gorgeous open plan living space with a wood fire, gabled ceiling and huge window capturing the outside and bringing it in. The kitchen and butler’s pantry are an entertainer’s dream and the dining area will fit the biggest family table. The master suite has an ensuite and walk-in robe and the other three bedrooms are spacious. All three bathrooms are luxuriously appointed and there is an office overlooking a courtyard. The showpiece of this home is the al fresco deck that wraps around the living area inside and provides a beautiful space from which you can relax, entertain, CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789 sit by the open fire and admire the views on offer.


39 SALE STREET, ORANGE | 6363 1000 | PFISHER.COM.AU ALL PROPERTIES CAN BE VIEWED BY PRIVATE INSPECTION OR VIDEO CALL, JUST CONTACT THE AGENT.

ALL INSPECTIONS WILL BE CONDUCTED UNDER STRICT HEALTH GUIDELINES. 4

1

2

296 PEISLEY STREET

PRICE GUIDE: $630,000-$670,000

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 23 APRIL 11.00-11.30

CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

1

2

3 KURIM AVENUE

1

PRICE GUIDE: $699,000-$729,000

1

35 RACECOURSE ROAD

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 30 APRIL 11.00-11.30

THE PERFECT START The minute you walk in the front door you feel warm and comfortable – just like home. The heart of the home is the updated kitchen which is a fresh white with good bench space and a handy breakfast bar. It flows beautifully to the formal and informal living areas and beyond to the large, covered deck perfect for entertaining and the family friendly backyard. All four bedrooms are all a good size and the flexible floor plan could have a fifth bedroom added with a minimum of fuss. The renovated bathroom is a luxurious delight with huge double shower and freestanding bath. The huge 5.8m x 10m shed with power is the ultimate “man cave” or “she shed” with heaps of room for multiple cars, workshop space and storage. This is the perfect starter home with lots of room to grow and expand and is so close to town. At this price point this property will not be here for long. Don’t miss out!

3

4

PRICE GUIDE: $370,000-$390,000

FALL IN LOVE WITH THIS BEAUTY Are you ready to fall head over heels for this gorgeous home? In a great location close to popular schools, this lovely home is ready for you to move in with nothing to do but enjoy. With a welcoming colour scheme you will feel instantly at home as soon as you enter from the sunny front verandah. You will love to gather in the light and bright lounge room which will be so cosy with the wood fire crackling away. Mealtimes are a breeze in the well-appointed kitchen and dining area that opens onto the timber deck. There are four comfortable bedrooms and the renovated bathroom feels luxurious with its floor to ceiling tiles and big bath and shower. Also featured is the stylish and practical flooring throughout plus plantation shutters for that modern feel. The house is nestled into the block and the terraced landscaping, lush lawn and gardens create a wonderful space to enjoy the outdoors. There is a garage plus a workshop for the handyman. The property has been successfully run as an Airbnb over the last couple of years and if this interests you, there is an option for you to continue with that. CONTACT: CHRIS MASON 0438 629 417

4

2

PRICE GUIDE: $1,050,000-$1,100,000

1

1 PARK LANE

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 30 APRIL 10.15-10.45 BRICK HOME UNDER $400,000! There is loads of potential in this one! This neat and tidy brick home is located on a decent sized block and has a large double garage with power. There are three bedrooms, with the master having a built-in robe. The kitchen and meals area receives lovely northern sun. You’ll love the large second living area, which is bright and airy and there is also a handy second toilet. The yard is well-fenced and there is a lovingly maintained garden. Perfect home for children and pets to run around. The yard is perfectly set up for the addition of a little chook run and veggie patch if you’d like. With a bit of a spruce up the value in this house can be unlocked. Book your inspection today. CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

FALL IN LOVE WITH THIS MID CENTURY MARVEL In one of the most sought after addresses in town, this unique home is a beautiful example of Mid Century Modern architecture and offers something different and bold. Classic features of the period include the flat roof style, floor level changes and floor to ceiling windows flooding the home with light as they invite the outside in. The stunning pathway framed with brick pillars and timber rafters guide you from the front gate to the sunny pergola and into the warm and inviting entry foyer with solid Black Bean timber lined walls that continue through the big formal lounge and dining space. The kitchen has been lovingly renovated with stone benchtops, stainless steel appliances and walk-in pantry. The private master suite has a fully renovated ensuite and walk-in robe. There are three other bedrooms set in their own wing with the family bathroom and powder room nearby. There is a sun-dappled paved courtyard off the second living area and the whole home enjoys a sense of privacy provided by the established trees dotted CONTACT: CHRIS MASON 0438 629 417 along the boundary.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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39 SALE STREET, ORANGE | 6363 1000 | PFISHER.COM.AU ALL PROPERTIES CAN BE VIEWED BY PRIVATE INSPECTION OR VIDEO CALL, JUST CONTACT THE AGENT.

ALL INSPECTIONS WILL BE CONDUCTED UNDER STRICT HEALTH GUIDELINES. LOT 450 AND 480 IN CANOBOLAS VIEWS ESTATE

3

$325,000 EACH

CANOBOLAS VIEWS ESTATE These brand new blocks are located just 5km from the CBD and have elevated views across town to Mt Canobolas. Close to the conveniences of the CBD and with the amenities of North Orange just a short drive away you, will be wonderfully situated for modern living in a thriving regional centre. With blocks of land in great demand, you know these will not last long. House and land packages are available for each lot, and you can contact Michael or Ashleigh for more information on floor plans and prices. Block sizes: Lot 450 – 377.9 sqm, Lot 480 – 402.1 sqm CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

1

1

26 BANKSIA STREET

PRICE GUIDE: $619,000 - $639,000

CALARE AREA Ideally located in the popular Calare area and within easy walking distance to both Calare Public School and Orange High School this home is equally attractive to the owner occupier or investor. All 3 bedrooms have new carpet, 2 with built in wardrobes, the lounge room is sunny & bright with a gas wall heater, there’s new modern flooring in the living areas, a single bathroom with a shower, bath and a separate toilet. The garage has drive through access to the lovely established backyard, including shade trees, a private pergola area, and it’s well fenced for pets and kids. Make sure you include this great home on your list of properties to inspect. CONTACT: ADAM SAVAGE 0419 232 416

3

1

CONTACT AGENT

1

18 BUNA STREET

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 30 APRIL 10.15-10.45

4

2

2

“YARRAWONGA PARK” 587 BULGAS RD

PRICE GUIDE: $1,900,000-$2,050,000

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 23 APRIL 10.15-10.45

YOU’LL BE SMITTEN This gem has recently received a beautiful makeover and radiates loveliness from every room. There is nothing to do but move in. This charming home is located on a corner block, is very private and is fully fenced with a manageable yard. The façade faces north making it bright, light and airy giving the cottage a beautiful ‘summery’ feel. There is fresh paint and gorgeous plantation shutters. Pops of colour in the splashback, combined with the lovely mint green painted cabinets add a nice feel to kitchen. With modern appliances at your fingertips including a brand-new fridge, you’re sure to find cooking enjoyable again. The laundry is not only stylish but practical and offers heaps of storage. Two brandnew reverse cycle air conditioners combined with ceiling fans will keep the climate as you like it all year round. Outside there is access to the yard through double gates and a single lock-up garage. This home really is a credit to its owner, don’t miss the opportunity to own one of the sweetest cottages in Orange.

PRODUCTIVE 100 ACRES IN A GREAT LOCATION Located less than 10km from the centre of Orange, this ideally located 100 acre (approx.) property is tucked away in a quiet and secluded area. The land is predominantly undulating country that is generally quite clear with scattered native timber and some areas of heavier vegetation providing ideal coverage for livestock. The property is well watered with several dams, a reliable bore and a 90,000 underground concrete tank accompanying the four bedroom home. The house provides a practical layout and is a well portioned home with a generous living space and attractive timber features giving it a rustic look and feel. There is plenty of opportunity for those willing to add their own touch to the home to easily do so. Outside there is an established garden and verandah wrapping around all four sides of the home, providing ample opportunity to make the most of and enjoy the outdoors. There is also a great 12x12m workshop located nearby to the house and a very functional set of cattle yards already in place.

CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

34 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022


AUCTION

521 Gowan Road, Orange - Recreational, Lifestyle & Bushland

Mostly uncleared bushland with tracks & creeks - 260.94acres. Handy to both Orange & Bathurst, this property is easily accessible with its own fenced access road - setting it back approx 500m from the road. With a brand new 2-bedroom, one bathroom cabin, horse yards & spectacular views, this property is just waiting for a new owner to take the next step.

Auction

Open

Friday 3rd June, 10.30am The Auction Centre Bathurst

Agents

By Appointment

SALE

Michael Kennedy 0428 243 222 Bill Marshall 0427 663 240

SALE

305 Nancarrow Lane, Orange

5 Grove Street, Spring Hill

This 3.83ac property with stunning views & has A charming family home on 1000m2 is ready to move commercial sized storage & is only 10kms West Orange. in & enjoy! A 4 BR home with a recently renovated There is a 3 BR, 1 bathroom cottage comprises a huge kitchen, two living areas, a beautiful large open rear 1600sqm shed with cold storage & cool rooms yard with low low-maintenance gardens Sale Contact Agent Sale Contact Agent Open Saturday 30th April 9.30am - 10am Open By Appointment Peter Bromley 0404 037 729 Kurt Adams 0428 747 050

Ray White Emms Mooney

18 Sale Street Orange NSW raywhiteemc.com 02 6362 0211 APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

35


y to hwa

Hig

ell

ch Mit

Turners Vineyard FOR LEASE

Function and Convention Centre TURNERS VINEYARD FUNCTION AND CONVENTION CENTRE

nge

Ora

FOR SALE

BLUE RIBBON COMMERCIAL LAND TO BUILD ON

Surrounded by a variety of commercial enterprises are these last remaining blocks in the prestigious Gateway Business Park positioned with easy access to the Mitchell Hwy at entrance to Orange. The blocks are zoned B6 Enterprise Corridor and are level and ready to develop for your successful business or investment.

Turners Vineyard Function and Convention Centre nestled amongst the grapevines overlooking the hills of the beautiful Lucknow Valley. Turners Vineyard Function and Convention Centre is located a scenic 31/2 hours drive west of Sydney. Situated only 5kms out of Orange, this complex consists of a Function Centre, an A-la-Carte Restaurant and Vineyard Café.

Land sizes available from 2,045m2 to 2,902m2 Please contact our office for further details.

PRICE RANGES FROM $787,000 + GST TO $957,666 + GST

THIS SPACE IS RESERVED For further information: FOR YOUR PROPERTY FOR Turners Vineyard Function and Convention Centre is located a scenic 31/2 hours drive west of Sydney. Situated CHRIS GRYLLIS Turners Vineyard Function and Convention Centre nestled amongst the grapevines overlooking the hills of the beautiful Lucknow Valley. Coffee Shop

Capacity Up to 100

Bar & Grill

Capacity Up to 120

Function Room Capacity up to 450

Lucknow Valley Room is the main function Auditorium; an elegantly appointed area, which offers the versatility of being able to be used as a ballroom or conference area with the capacity to hold functions for up to 450 people. This area can also be sub divided into two separate function areas depending on your requirements. The Vineyard Bar and Grill has a beautifully appointed bar which overlooks the vineyard, the Restaurant seats up to 120 people with a walk in wine cellar. Coffee Shop with outdoor balcony area, capturing the beautiful viess. Seats up to 100 people.

only 5kmsm:out0417 of Orange, complex consists of a Function Centre, an A-la-Carte Restaurant and Vineyard Café. CHRIS GRYLLIS 626this361 Lucknow Valley Room is the main JOHN STEVENSON m: 0417 887 738 function Auditorium; an elegantly appointed area, which offers the versatility

REAL ESTATE

of being able to be used as a ballroom or conference area with the capacity to hold functions for up toService 450 people. Personal & Attention Since 1974 Email: info@chrisgryllisrealestate.com.au SINCE 1974 This area can also be sub divided into two separate function areas depending on your requirements. Wiradjuri Country 74 MCNAMARA STREET ORANGE NSW 2800 The Vineyard Bar and Grill has a beautifully appointed bar which overlooksCOMMERCIAL the vineyard, the Restaurant seats up | RURAL | INDUSTRIALS | HOMES to 120 people with a walk in wine cellar. www.chrisgryllisrealestate.com.au Coffee Shop with outdoor balcony area, capturing the beautiful viess. Seats up to 100 people. www.chrisgryllisrealestate.com.au

FREE!

NO ADVERTISING COSTS

Call us now if you are SELLING

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

OFFICE COMPLEX IN QUIET CBD LOCATION

THE PERFECT RESTAURANT OR CAFÉ VENUE – UPSTAIRS/DOWNSTAIRS

FOR LEASE - MODERN FACTORY

Approx. 200m2 in area that includes separate offices, reception area and board room. Has 8 on-site car park spaces for the convenience of your staff and customers. Air conditioning throughout and compactus included.

A popular precinct on Summer Street surrounded by a variety of businesses and a new hotel complex to commence construction soon nearby. The main area downstairs is complimented by further space on the first floor. Rear laneway access for secure on-site parking for staff. Total floor area (ground floor & first floor) approx. 200 m2.

RENT: $50,000 PER ANNUM + GST & OUTGOINGS

RENT: $57,500 P.A. + GST & OUTGOINGS

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

START OFF YOUR BUSINESS FROM HERE

GROUND FLOOR OFFICE WITH PARK OUTLOOK

• Has its own amenities. • Great main street exposure .

• Affordable • Available now

RENT: $1,400 PER MONTH + GST & SOME OUTGOINGS

Attractive offices conveniently located just of Summer Street. Approximately 120 m2 in floor area consisting of 4 separate offices, a spacious light filled reception area, kitchen/ meals room, air conditioning and under cover car space. Available soon

This is a rare opportunity to operate from a building of this size and calibre for use factory /warehouse & offices. The warehouse floor area is 3,170.3 m2 (approx.) with an additional office area of 674.6 m2 (approx.). Large hardstand area and plentiful on site car parking spaces. The block has the benefit of two driveways for easy and safe access and egress. Expected availability around middle 2022.

RENT: $40,000 PER ANNUM + GST

RENT: $ 499,837 PER ANNUM PLUS GST & OUTGOINGS

FOR YOUR COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT-WE WILL LOOK AFTER YOU CHRIS OR JOHN ON 6362 5999

36 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022


history talking | OCLife with HELEN MCNULTY

Some time ago, I was pushing my trolley along the aisle of a supermarket, trying to decide what I might need for the following week. The whole place hummed with activity and noise. Under the cunningly placed spotlights, fruit and vegetables looked fresh and dewy; the cuts of meat looked temptingly succulent and the fish gleamed as if they were just out of the water. The checkouts were shepherding customers through with their goods, while the queues grew longer, ever longer. Suddenly everything changed. The place became strangely silent. People stopped in their tracks and the light faded to murky dusk, while the air, which had been delightfully cool, became thick and stuffy. Customers gazed at each other in disbelief as if their world had been turned upside down. There was a blackout! Of course, it wasn't long before order was restored, the electricity came back on and life, as we have come to know it, continued. But it made me think about the days when we were not so reliant on the magic of new technology and most of the energy we used was engendered by our own effort.

much faster, he told us. While we lamented the passing of the old cash register, he reminded us of all the things the new technology can do — and in a much shorter time. "Enormous amounts of data can be stored on electronic equipment," he said.

Shopping out catalogues which enabled country customers to keep up with what was available and to arrange to have the goods dispatched. "It also provided great reading material for families who lived in the bush like we did," said Dot feelingly. Both Dick and Audrey were fascinated with the pneumatic tube device which propelled documents and the money, in a container, over a wire right into the hands of the cashier who was generally perched in a high office above the customers' heads.

With this in mind, I suggested to the Oral History Group that we should look back at shopping in days gone by.

Bill remembered the butchers' shops with water cascading down the inside of the windows which, he said, served a double purpose of keeping the meat cool and killing flies.

As usual, we allowed ourselves the luxury of wallowing in the past!

There were other clever inducements to shoppers, as Mick revealed.

"My mother used to take me to David Jones in Sydney many years ago," said Owen. “It was probably in the early 1930s.

"When I worked at Western Stores they would grind up coffee on Friday night and spread it on the floor behind the counter so that there was a wonderful aroma."

“She would sit on a chair at the counter while the assistants showed her various things she might want to buy. There was even a floorwalker to direct people to the right department." The big department stores used to send

We thought longingly of the more gracious service and the slower tempo of shopping and Gary reminded us of the changes in workers' conditions and pay and the longer hours in which shops are open. "It would not be feasible to operate as it was done in the past," he said. "Costs are much greater and prices would have to be much higher.

it up in brown paper, tied with a string in which he would cleverly make a loop for you to carry it home on your finger.

“When I first started we did all our own buying, but now it is all centralised in Melbourne.."

The milkman delivered milk to your door and filled the billy which had been left out the night before. There seemed to be no worry about contamination in those days and we seemed to have survived pretty well.

We wondered, rather naively, why we in Orange see summer clothes for sale when the weather is still freezing, but have to be content with the fact that the people in Melbourne are now making those decisions for us.

We also remembered, with some nostalgia, when our order was taken at our door by the grocer and delivered the next day right into our kitchen, as happened to Pat, who lived just across the street from the shop. Leslye recalled the time when the shops used to shut for an hour for lunch and life seemed to be lived at a much slower pace. One of our group, Gary, who had experience at Myers Department Store in Orange, was able to pull the Oral History group out of the past with his view of the present.

Everyone talked of the old "corner shop", where, as Pat said, "you could buy a big bag of broken biscuits for a penny".

He reminded us that, while we were nostalgic about home deliveries, this is now happening when you order online and your goods are brought to your door in almost the same way.

You could also ask for your order and watch the grocer weigh it out and wrap

Catalogues, which we loved so much, are now on the Internet and the service is

According to Gary, shoppers are not interested in buying summer clothes after the season starts. While the Oral History group looked sadly back at the days of our youth, we realised that people's needs and desires have changed enormously. We no longer want clothes to last for years, items are superseded rapidly and technology, as in almost every avenue of life, is a catalyst for change. As John said: "We are paying the penalty of progress — we cannot go back, we have to go with it." We may have to do that, but we can remember a more gracious time and we miss it! Copyright Helen McAnulty 2022

If you want your property to reach its maximum sale potential please call our experienced team at McCarron Cullinane. We've been servicing our local area for over 50 years. Brian Cullinane 0418 637 338

Marie Fox 0412 166 132

119 Peisley Street, Orange NSW 2800 Ph: 02 6362 4755 www.mccarrons.com.au APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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Open Houses For week 28 April - 4 May, 2022 DATE

TIME

address

price range

30.4.22

10.00-10.30

112 Anson Street

3

1

2

$660,000-$685,000

30.4.22

10.00-10.30

60 Diamond Drive

4

2

2

$700,000-$730,000

30.4.22

10.45-11.15

74 Diamond Drive

4

2

2

$834,000

30.4.22

11.30-12.00

26 Avondale Drive

4

2

4

$750,000-$800,000

30.4.22

12.15-12.45

17 Isaac Drive

4

2

2

$760,000-$835,000

30.4.22

10.15-10.45

1 Park Lane

4

2

1

$1,050,000-$1,100,000

30.4.22

10.15-10.45

18 Buna Street

3

2

2

Contact Agent

30.4.22

11.00-11.30

35 Racecourse Road

4

1

1

$699,000-$729,000



OCLife | sporting life with ANTHONY BARBAGALLO

BARRACKER THE

Sporting ebb and flow; how do great sports teams decline? Recent medicore qualifying results that leave the Australian Socceroos precariously poised to miss the upcoming football (soccer) World Cup, contrast sharply with the heady days of 2006. This was when — at our first World Cup appearance in 32 years since our only other appearance — we mixed it with the best teams in the world. With a golden generation of players including Harry Kewell, Mark Viduka, Tim Cahill, and goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer, all under the astute coaching of Dutchman Guus Hiddink, we came within a typically theatrical Latin swandive in the box of upsetting the mighty Italians in the second round, ultimate winners of the tournament. That the famous “Azzurri” have themselves this year failed (for the second consecutive time) to qualify for the 32 teams heading off to Qatar in eight months, shows how far the sporting pendulum can swing. This is the eternal question that keeps sporting coaches, officials, and owners awake at night. What happens when that magic mix of talent, drive, focus, training, and a winning mentality, disappears? How is it that over time, great sporting teams and clubs, with all the assets of wealth and talent and careful management, slowly and inexorably decline? How did the mighty West Indies cricket side, undefeated in a series for nearly two decades through a seeming production-line of cricket stars like Brian Lara, Vivian Richards, Michael Holding, and Curtly Ambrose, fall so rapidly to become a second-tier cricket team? The formerly feared and admired Manchester United — who for two decades were consistently the greatest club side in world football — a few days ago were humiliated four-nil by Liverpool in the Premier League. In rugby league, the Brisbane Broncos were, for a quarter of a century, the pacesetters in the game, almost every season making the play-offs, winning six titles, and with home crowds and national supporter levels higher than the best AFL clubs. They are now among the also-rans,

38 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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buying cast-offs from other franchises like South Sydney, teams they used to dominate year-in, year-out. In rugby, the NSW Waratahs were for decades the premier provincial rugby team in the world, regularly taking on and beating international sides. Last year, however, they went winless in the Super Rugby titles, beating no one and coming last. The problem with sporting titans that are eventually laid low, seems partly to be that old-fashioned Greek curse of hubris (excessive pride) — a belief that once a champion team has been created, one only has to continue on, and the results will follow. However, the natural ebbs and flows of talent, complacency, personnel changes, and old-fashioned luck, all play a far greater role in sporting success or failure, than most fans, and club administrators, ever care to acknowledge. It’s not a comforting thought for most star teams, their players, coaches, and managers, but it often only takes a couple of people to retire or sign with someone else, and the magic glue that seems to bind champion teams, suddenly starts coming apart at the seams. Brilliant though abrasive rugby league thinker Warren Ryan, who took three moderately-talented clubs to grand finals, winning two titles, always said that good teams needed to continually evolve. Opponents were always trying new ways to beat champions, so great sides always need to progress their play for these challenges. Iconic English club manager Brian Clough, who took a mediocre side like Nottingham Forest to back-toback European titles in 1979 and 1980, believed that continual new signings of talented players was the lifeblood of championship teams. Legendary Scottish manager Alec Ferguson obviously knew the secret. After losing the title in the last game of his 26th year as Manchester United manager, he reportedly went home and told his wife that, unfortunately, his retirement was off for a year. United then won the title in a canter the next season, after which he retired for good.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022


sporting life | OCLife

Orange Hawks hold off late Nyngan Tigers charge

Orange Hawks continued their impressive start to the 2022 Peter McDonald Premiership after surviving a late scare from the Nyngan Tigers to win 20-18 in a thrilling contest at Wade Park on Sunday afternoon. After beating a tough Dubbo CYMS in the opening round, the confident Hawks side faced another stern test against a tenacious Nyngan Tigers. With the Tigers almost pulling off an upset over competition favourites Orange CYMS in Round One, this fixture against the Orange Hawks promised to be a tight battle. It didn’t take long for the Hawks to score the opening try through Lachie Lawson, with Jake Blimka successfully kicking the conversion. The home side then continued to dominate in attack, forcing several opposition goalline drop-outs, which consequently backed Nyngan into a corner. With this effective game plan, the Two Blues ran out to a 20-0 lead with eight minutes until halftime. But after cruising for almost the entire first half, the Hawks started to lose their shape and discipline in the final minutes before the break. Some incomplete sets and poor defending allowed the Tigers to get back in the contest. Thanks to tries from Cameron

Bourke and Sam Simmonds, Nyngan reduced the deficit to eight points before the halftime siren sounded. The Group 11 visitors continued to pile on the pressure in the second half with their improved completion rate and effective passing. Nyngan eventually pulled back another try through Aidan Bermingham in the 76th minute before a successfully converted goal turned it into a two-point game. In the final moments, it seemed that the Tigers scored a match-winning try and completed the comeback, but a held-up review overturned the decision. Nyngan fell agonisingly short of producing an incredible turnaround against one of Orange’s premier sides. The Hawks should consider themselves fortunate to have escaped with the win, especially after they failed to get on the scoreboard in the entire second half. But despite the turbulent end, the two blues have earned maximum points from the first two rounds. The Hawks will travel to Lithgow this Sunday where they will take on Workies Wolves in Round Three.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

39


OCLife | around the grounds with ANTHONY BARBAGALLO

Western Premier League action Parkes’ late equaliser spoils party at Waratahs

Lithgow Workmens in Round Three of the Western Premier League at Jack Brabham Park on Saturday,

Parkes Cobras continue to be this season’s WPL dark horse after extending their unbeaten run with a 2-2 draw against Waratahs FC at Waratahs Sports Ground on Saturday evening.

The young Orange side came into this fixture with renewed hope after an improved performance against Parkes Cobras in the previous round, but some repeated defensive errors eventually came back to bite the green-and-gold.

After suffering an upset loss against Panorama FC in the previous round, Waratahs were looking to bounce back against an in-form Parkes outfit.

Lithgow took the lead inside the first 10 minutes, but CYMS managed to control the possession and attacking chances until the halftime whistle.

It was a tight battle in the early stages, with both sides sharing the possession and chances on goal. But the Tahs finally broke the deadlock in the 38th minute through a set-piece; Craig Sugden whipped in a curler that found a Waratahs attacker who headed the ball into the net.

The second half proved to be a different story.

The Sky Blues took a 1-0 lead heading into the break, looking poised to finish the job in the second 45.

Lithgow scored four goals in the second 45 minutes, inflicting another embarrassing loss on CYMS. As a result, the newcomers remain bottom in the standings, while Lithgow records their first points of the new campaign.

The home side appeared to be in control for the first 15 minutes of the second half, but a slight lapse in concentration in the backline presented the Cobras with an opportunity to score the equaliser in the 61st minute. With the score locked at 1-1, the game started to open as both sides chased for a late winner. In the 88th minute, Lachie Peet put Waratahs 2-1 up after scoring a thundering header off a Ryan Sinclair free-kick. As the Tahs players and fans believed they had scored the winner, Parkes countered with a stoppage-time equaliser off the back of some dreadful Waratahs defending. While it’s a disappointing result for Waratahs, Parkes can continue to smile about their undefeated start to the season.

Lithgow attack sinks CYMS Orange CYMS were humiliated 5-0 by

ODFA A/B Grade football CYMS snatch late win against Barnstoneworth United CYMS escaped with a 1-0 victory over Barnies United B on Saturday at Jack Brabham Park. Barnies started the game with extraordinary attacking intensity through their crisp passing and quick movement on the flanks. Despite dominating the possession and chances on goal, the redand-whites were denied by the crossbar on three occasions and failed to take the lead in the first half. Barnstoneworth continued their

onslaught on CYMS’s goal up until the 70th minute, when the opposition quickly scored a goal on the counter from their very first chance on target. The sucker punch proved enough to beat an impressive Barnies outfit that was simply unfortunate in front of goal on the day.

Peter McDonald Premiership action CYMS down Wellington Cowboys On Saturday, Orange CYMS made it backto-back wins after comfortably beating the Wellington Cowboys 38-16 at Kennard Park, Wellington. After their late victory over Nyngan Tigers in round one, CYMS hoped for an easier contest against a struggling Wellington Cowboys side. Despite the absence of captain-coach Daniel Mortimer, CYMS got off to a flying start, Ethan McKellar scoring the opening try inside the first five minutes. But with the Wellington defence on the brink of capitulating early on, the home side still mustered an equalising try moments later through Brian Baxter. The Cowboys showed incredible bravery to stay in the contest during the first half, but CYMS dismantled the opposition in the second 40 minutes by constantly playing their footy on the Wellington goal-line. CYMS scored seven tries during the game, sending a strong signal to the other Peter McDonald Premiership favourites. The 22-point win sees the green-andgold pick up their second victory of the season while the Wellington Cowboys are still searching for their first set of points.

Orange local earns Canberra Raiders captaincy Former Orange CYMS and Bloomfield Tigers star, Jack Wighton, captained the Canberra Raiders for the first time in

Sunday’s NRL round seven clash against the Penrith Panthers.

Spalding Waratah League Basketball Orange Eagles lose to Inner West Bulls in two-point thriller Orange Eagles endured another defeat after going down to Inner West Bulls 85-83 in round four of the Spalding Waratah 2 Youth Men Basketball league at Ryde X Basketball Stadium. The contest looked reasonably even in the first quarter, with both sides applying offensive pressure early on. But the Bulls changed up this narrative in the second and third quarters when they started to lift their intensity. The Orange Eagles struggled to defend the home side’s three-point shooting and the Bulls extended their lead to 20 points with six minutes remaining. But after some tactical changes, the Eagles were able to go on an incredible 21-2 run to narrow the scoreline to 85-83, falling short by two points of an astonishing comeback.

Winter Basketball With ODBA’s summer basketball season ending, this means that the winter edition is fast approaching. There will still be multiple divisions, with all games played throughout the week. Head over to the ODBA website or Facebook page for more details on team nominations for the upcoming Orange District Basketball winter season.

Netball season returns The Orange netball season will finally get underway this Saturday, April 30. All the senior and junior Orange Netball Association divisions will start simultaneously. Who will be able to stop the 2020 firstgrade champions, Orange City?

MARTIAL ARTS: TEAM KAMAO ON THE RISE representation for our Kamao Martial Arts School,” Lisa added.

The Kamao Martial Arts School have shown they can stand toe to toe with the finest talent in the region, bringing home multiple trophies and medals from the Australian Martial Arts Championships (AMAC) held in Dubbo last month.

Through Rolly Tandang’s teachings and training, the Kamao students are gearing up for equal success at home, when Orange hosts the Australian Martial Arts Championships on Sunday, August 21.

Team Kamao's success in this multi-style tournament stems from the students’ determination and hard work in training under instructor Rolly Tandang, according to club organiser Lisa Ford. “Rolly Tandang, the Kamao Martial Arts School founder, currently trains the students on Tuesdays and Thursdays. This amazing program teaches all mixed martial arts, even though team Kamao's speciality is Taekwondo. The 11 and 12-year-olds have been working hard during these versatile training sessions, so it’s great to see most of them walk away with trophies after the Dubbo tournament,” said Lisa. Team Kamao had significant success at various age levels in the Dubbo

40 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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Given the team’s performance in Dubbo last month, Lisa believes that team Kamao can repeat similar feats in the upcoming Orange tournament.

Team Kamao brings home several trophies and medals from AMAC Dubbo championships championships, but it was the 11 and

rising pupil Cjhay Bensgrove won bronze

12-year-old martial artists that really

in the Sparring (Points) division.

impressed with 12 placings. Star student, Jayden Ford, secured gold in the Sparring (Freestyle) division while

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

“Most students in the 11-12 age group came away with a trophy and medal, which is a satisfying result and fantastic

“Now that the upcoming AMAC Orange Tournament is fast approaching, the Kamao students are making great progress in training to help put on another successful State Championship performance. “If some of the competitors perform well in this state event, they will then take on other teams in the National titles later in the year; there’s also a chance of gaining a spot in representing Australia on the world stage,” she concluded.


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LETTER TO THE EDITOR To the editor, Is Councillor Melanie McDonell the only councillor who understands the huge impact that the sports precinct will have on traffic in south Orange once this 8500-capacity precinct is built? No councillors obviously live in the soonto-be affected areas of Orange; they wouldn't want a constant stream of traffic to pass their doors!

“Bubbles” still in need of a shear: Call for help from her rescuer Ken

Two weeks’ ago in our April 14 edition of Orange City Life, we featured the amazing survival story of “Bubbles” the sheep.

looking for a helping hand.

Rescued from the wilds of Mt Canobolas and facing almost certain starvation after five years on the run, Bubbles is desperately in need of a shear.

“I was hoping Orange Show Society and some shearers could help us out.

Old-style stockman Ken Hayden is looking for help to give Bubbles a new beginning. “I just want to give her a chance of life,” Ken said. Having done “a bit of shearing” over the years, he doesn’t, however, quite feel up to trying to remove the estimated 40cm (16 inches of wool) around her three-metre (9-foot girth) and is now

Bubbles needs a shearing, and Ken’s got a few ideas on how to go about this.

“Maybe we could do it at the Show, people could guess the weight of her fleece, and drop a coin donation in a bucket.” Either way, Bubbles is now facing her very first shearing, but it can’t be a one-man job! “The money would pay for the shearing, I think she’d need at least two shearers working together to do the job, and the winning guess would get a donated meal or something,” he said.

We live in Edward Street and we put up with the traffic that starts at 4.50am each weekday going to the industrial areas and also on Saturday morning. This used to be a lovely old, quiet street. Now the only peaceful day is Sunday. We have a constant stream of trucks, B-doubles, and other heavy traffic passing and, on occasions, even cattle and sheep trucks on every one of those days. Anson Street and Peisley Street have always been extremely busy roads that have to put up with heavy and domestic traffic each day, yet no regard has been given to the people living in these areas. And how are sick patients supposed to rest and recover with the noise that the sports precinct will emit? The sports precinct should be built where it was originally planned and where it won't impact so many rate-paying residents of lovely old streets like ours, and sick patients wanting peace and quiet to aid their recovery. The 500-odd extra trees that are yet to be felled, cannot be replaced with “new” ones taking many years to grow.

Lynda Rowlands

Top author at annual Blayney book event Top-selling local author, Kim Kelly is the special guest this weekend for the Blayney Anglican Church’s traditional book fair. The Adelaide St event continues on Friday and Saturday, April 29–30, with the Millthorpe-based writer discussing her most recent novel, “The Rat Catcher: A Love Story”, on Saturday from about 10am in the Anglican Church. This major fundraiser for the local Anglican Parish each year runs on a mixture of generous donations, volunteer work, and hope. Now all they require, are plenty of browsers and buyers. “It’s coming together very nicely, now we need is for book-lovers and readers, to come out and support us,”

organiser Elizabeth Russ said. “We’re very happy with both the quantity and quality of books we got this year, there’s something for everyone.” “There is also a trading table with a whole range of items — plants, preservatives, jams, cakes, and we’ll have a barbecue run by the Blayney Association for Scripture in Schools group,” she added. “We also have some DVDs, a few puzzles, games, and some other odd items as well, it’s very much pot-luck,” Elizabeth enthused. The event runs from 8.30–4.30 each day, call Elizabeth on 0408 682 122 for more information. APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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PUZZLES…. PUZZLES…. PUZZLES…. Quiz

Quick Crossword

No. 029

ACROSS

1 2

3 4 5 6 7

8 9 10

DOWN

1 Predictions (9) 6 Greek letter (5) 9 Quicker routes (9) 10 Mission (5) 11 Jot (4) 12 ‘Idiot box’ (10) 14 Runway hub (7) 16 Facet (6) 18 Dark blue (6) 20 Manipulate (7) 23 Plant shelter (10) 24 Male elephant (4) 26 Jobs (5) 27 Contamination (9) 28 Finished (5) 29 Finds (9)

What is a wasp’s (pictured) nest called? In which Japanese city was the first capsule hotel, designed by Kisho Kurokawa, opened on February 1, 1979? What invention did plastic surgeon Dr Fiona Wood patent? How many metres high are the letters that make up the Hollywood sign? In clout archery, what object do the archers aim at? Which country has the most species of flightless birds? Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?, published in 1976, was the first shortstory collection by which American writer? What is the capital of Angola? In which year did the London Underground begin operation? What do sufferers of algophobia have a fear of?

Wordfind

1 Intriguing (11) 2 Cockerel (7) 3 Domestic animals (4) 4 Scholars (8) 5 Method (6) 6 Accept reluctantly (9) 7 Exact (7) 8 Fitting (3) 13 Holland (11) 15 Arranged (9) 17 Comforts (8) 19 Attired (7) 21 Insulting (7) 22 Jumped on one foot (6) 25 European currency (4) 26 Dead heat (3)

Theme: Vikings

The leftover letters will spell out a secret message.

Sudoku No. 029

5

ASGARD

RUNE

AXE

SAGA

BERSERKER

SKALD

CONQUEST

SLEIPNIR

EDDA

THANE

ERIK

THOR

FENRIR

VALHALLA

FREYJA

VALKYRIE

JARL

YGGDRASIL

6 8

3 5 7 9 9

ODIN

No. 029

S

A O

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

Edgeword

S A

A

I

Place each of the tiles of letters into the blank jigsaw below to create four six-letter words going across and down.

Y

N

I

H

S

Y

Crossmath

No. 029

Insert each number – – = 1 from 1 to 9 in the shaded squares + × × to solve all the × – = 30 horizontal and vertical equations. No. + 2– × Multiplication + + = 11 and division are performed before = = = addition and 24 17 12 subtraction.

TE

ER

RE

NE

TH

SE

NS

DA

Drop Down

No. 029

Starting with the seven-letter word, drop a letter and form a six-letter word. Continue in this manner until you reach the single letter at the bottom. You can rearrange the letters in each step, if necessary.

T R A I P S E

8

2 6 7 1 4

1

7 2

3

3

8 5 2 3

5 1

9

9-Letter

No. 029

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”. Today’s Focus: 13 words: Good 19 words: Very good 26 words: Excellent

There may be more than one possible answer.

E

There may be more than one possible answer.

D

N

E

E

G

P

PUZZLES AND PAGINATION © PAGEMASTERS PTY LTD | pagemasters.com

I E

N

TRAIPSE PIRATE TAPER PARE ERA RE E DROPDOWN

EDGEWORD SERENE, SEDATE, NETHER, TENSER

S M A S H

C O R N U

A L I A S

B A T I K

S L Y L Y

5x5

QUIZ 1. A vespiary 2. Osaka 3. Spray-on skin 4. 13.7m 5. A flag 6. New Zealand 7. Raymond Carver 8. Luanda 9. 1863 10. Pain

9-LETTER deep, deepen, DEEPENING, deign, dine, edge, ending, engine, epee, geed, gene, genie, ginned, idee, need, needing, nine, peen, pend, pending, penned, pied, pine, pined, pinged, pinned

8 – 5 – 2 = 1 + × × 9 × 4 – 6 = 30 + – × 7 + 3 + 1 = 11 = = = 24 17 12 CROSSMATH

5 9 7 2 4 6 3 8 1

1 8 2 5 7 3 9 4 6

4 3 6 8 9 1 5 7 2

6 1 8 3 2 5 4 9 7

SUDOKU

3 2 9 7 1 4 6 5 8

7 4 5 9 6 8 1 2 3

2 6 1 4 8 9 7 3 5

9 7 3 6 5 2 8 1 4

Solutions

No. 029

6

WORDFIND Secret message: Northern warriors

5x5

Fill in the blank cells using the numbers from 1 to 9. Each number can only appear once in each row, column and 3x3 block

Reference: Macquarie Dictionary

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

1408 Dubbo & Orange Sat 290422

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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8 5 4 1 3 7 2 6 9 QUICK CROSSWORD


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6.00 World(31) Watch. 12.00 Leah Remini: Scientology And The Aftermath. 3.20 It’s Suppertime! 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland St. 5.40 The Joy Of Painting With Bob Ross. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Hoarders. Final. 9.20 Atlanta. 9.50 Sexplora. 10.20 Day Of The Dead. Final. 11.10 Instinctive Desires. 12.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (62) Programs. 12.00 House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 All The Things. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 ICU. 5.00 Coastwatch Oz. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Railroad Australia. 8.30 Escape To The Perfect Town. 9.30 Penelope Keith’s Hidden Villages. 10.40 World’s Most Secret Homes. 11.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (81) Programs. 12.00 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The 14. (1973) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Escape To The Chateau. 8.35 MOVIE: Pitch Perfect. (2012) Anna Kendrick, Brittany Snow. 10.45 MOVIE: Wanderlust. (2012) 12.40 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (53) Programs. 8.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 8.30 Reel Action. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 The PM’s Daughter. 5.50 Total DramaRama. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Teenage Boss. 7.00 Horrible Histories. 7.35 Spirit Riding Free. 8.00 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.25 Good Game Spawn Point. 8.50 Log Horizon. 9.15 Dragon Ball Super. 10.00 Voltron: Legendary Defender. 10.25 Close.

6.00 Morning (66) Programs. 12.00 Surf Patrol. 1.30 Black-ish. 3.00 My Name Is Earl. 3.45 The Simpsons. 4.15 Jabba’s Movies. 4.45 MOVIE: The Iron Giant. (1999) 6.30 MOVIE: Pokémon Detective Pikachu. (2019) 8.30 MOVIE: Alice Through The Looking Glass. (2016) Mia Wasikowska, Johnny Depp. 10.45 MOVIE: Sweet November. (2001) 1.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 1.30 Sound FX: Best Of. 2.00 No Man’s Land. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Motorway Patrol. 4.00 Timbersports. 4.30 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 AFL: Friday Night Countdown. 8.00 Football. AFL. Round 7. West Coast v Richmond. 11.00 AFL Post-Game Show. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 MOVIE: Igor. (2008) 7.45 MOVIE: The Golden Compass. (2007) 10.00 MOVIE: Van Helsing. (2004) 12.30 Weird Science. 1.00 The Sex Clinic. 2.00 Summer House. 3.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.00 TV Shop. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 NBL Slam. 7.30 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. 12.00 The King Of Queens. 1.00 The Middle. 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. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Late Programs.

FrIday, April 29

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Saturday, April 30 aBC tV (2)

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6.00 Rage. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Rage. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 MOVIE: A Royal Night Out. (2015) Sarah Gadon, Bel Powley. Princess Elizabeth joins VE Day celebrations. (M) 2.05 Father Brown. 2.50 War On Waste. 3.50 Grand Designs. 4.35 Landline. 5.10 Tiny Oz: Broome. 6.10 Griff’s Canadian Adventure: Bigness. New. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.20 Call The Midwife. Return. 9.20 Barons. 10.15 The Good Karma Hospital. 11.05 Victoria. 11.55 Rage.

6.00 France 24 English News. 6.30 WorldWatch. 7.00 BBC 6 O’Clock News. 7.30 Italian News Daily. 8.10 Filipino News. 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 First Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Motorcycle Racing. FIM Superbike World Championship. Round 1. Highlights. 2.55 Motorcycle Racing. FIM Superbike World Championship. Round 2. Highlights. 3.50 Sportswoman 2022. 4.30 Battle Of Crete. 5.30 Could Hitler Have Been Stopped? 6.30 News. 7.30 Letters And Numbers. 8.30 Miniseries: The Boleyns: A Scandalous Family. 9.40 Delphine: The Secret Princess. 10.40 Greatest Hits Of The 70s. 11.30 MOVIE: Apocalypto. (2006) Rudy Youngblood, Dalia Hernández, Jonathan Brewer. 2.00 MOVIE: The 15:17 To Paris. (2018) Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone. 3.45 Meghan Markle Escaping The Crown. 4.35 VICE Guide To Film. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.

6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. 12.00 Horse Racing. Ladbrokes Park Race Day, Treasury Brisbane Queensland Guineas Day, Hawkesbury Cup Day and Oaks Day. 2.00 Football. AFL. Round 7. Adelaide v GWS Giants. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 7.30 MOVIE: Sister Act. (1992) Whoopi Goldberg, Maggie Smith. A lounge singer on the run from the Mafia takes refuge in a convent. (PG) 9.45 MOVIE: The Hangover Part III. (2013) Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms. The Wolfpack finds themselves faced with the consequences of Doug’s bachelor party, four years earlier. (MA15+) 12.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 4. Perth SuperNight. Day 1. Highlights. From Wanneroo Raceway, Perth. 1.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 Easy Eats. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. 12.00 Our State On A Plate. 12.30 The Rebound. 1.00 Great Australian Detour. 1.30 Outback & Under. 2.10 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. 3.10 LEGO Masters. 4.30 The Garden Gurus. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. 6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Space Invaders. 8.30 MOVIE: Notting Hill. (1999) Hugh Grant, Julia Roberts, Rhys Ifans. The simple life of an English bookshop owner changes after a celebrity enters his shop. (M) 11.00 MOVIE: August: Osage County. (2013) Meryl Streep. A family gathers for a funeral. (MA15+) 1.10 Tipping Point. 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.30 Global Shop. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron.

6.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 6.30 Leading The Way With Dr Michael Youssef. 7.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 7.30 The Offroad Adventure Show. 8.30 Pooches At Play. 9.00 My Market Kitchen. 9.30 Studio 10: Saturday. 12.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 1.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. 2.00 Roads Less Travelled. 2.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 All 4 Adventure. 4.30 Farm To Fork. 5.00 10 News First. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 21. Perth Glory v Western Sydney Wanderers. From HBF Park, Perth. 10.00 Ambulance Australia. 12.00 Home Shopping. 3.30 Infomercials. 5.00 Hour Of Power.

6.00 Kids’ (22) Programs. 11.30 Ready, Jet, Go! 11.45 Sally And Possum. 12.00 Teletubbies. 12.15 In The Night Garden. 12.50 Ben And Holly. 1.35 Mister Maker. 2.05 Bob The Builder. 2.35 The Wonder Gang. 3.15 Floogals. 3.30 Play School. 4.35 Noddy Toyland Detective. 5.20 PJ Masks. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.30 Room On The Broom. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Live At The Apollo. 9.20 Tom Gleeson At Enmore Theatre. 10.20 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 11.05 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 11.45 Gavin & Stacey. 12.20 Schitt’s Creek. 12.40 Archer. 1.00 The Young Offenders. 1.30 Australia Remastered. 2.30 Close. 5.30 Clangers. 5.55 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 8.30 Macedonian News. 9.00 Croatian News. 9.30 Serbian News. 10.00 Dutch News. 10.30 Hungarian News. 11.00 NHK Japanese News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 If You Are The One. 2.10 Over The Black Dot. 2.40 Yokayi Footy. 3.35 America: News. 4.00 PBS News. 5.00 Insight. 6.00 I Want My MTV. 7.30 Underground Worlds. 8.30 Greatest Hits Of The 80s. 9.20 Devoured. 10.15 Escorts. 11.05 Sorry For Your Loss. 12.15 The Looming Tower. 1.10 South Park. 1.40 Is This Sexual Harassment? 2.45 France 24 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.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 8.30 Travel Oz. 10.00 Australia’s Best Backyards. 10.30 1 Man And A Bike. 11.00 Dog Patrol. 11.30 Sydney Weekender. 12.00 Weekender. 12.30 Creek To Coast. 1.00 House Of Wellness. 2.00 Horse Racing. Ladbrokes Park Race Day, Treasury Brisbane Queensland Guineas Day, Hawkesbury Cup Day and Oaks Day. 5.00 Dog Patrol. 5.30 Dr Harry’s Animal Encounters. 6.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 I Escaped To The Country. 9.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 The Great Outdoors: Greatest Escapes. 12.30 The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 4.00 Weekender. 4.30 Creek To Coast. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 Newstyle Direct. (81) 6.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. 10.30 The Baron. 11.40 MOVIE: Eight O’Clock Walk. (1954) 1.30 MOVIE: Golden Ivory. (1954) 3.20 MOVIE: The Captain’s Paradise. (1953) 5.15 MOVIE: Rio Grande. (1950) John Wayne. 7.30 Rugby Union. Super Rugby Pacific. Round 11. Melbourne Rebels v Moana Pasifika. 9.45 Super Rugby Pacific Post-Match. 10.00 MOVIE: Valkyrie. (2008) Tom Cruise, Bill Nighy, Carice van Houten. 12.20 My Favorite Martian. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Turning Point With David Jeremiah. 4.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

Home (53) 6.00 Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 9.00 The Doctors. 10.00 Bondi Rescue. 11.00 The Love Boat. 12.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 2.00 Pooches At Play. 2.30 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 3.30 Buy To Build. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 Reel Action. 5.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 NCIS. 11.20 Blue Bloods. 12.15 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 1.10 48 Hours. 2.10 Scorpion. 4.00 The Doctors. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 11.25 Dragon Ball Super. 12.10 Voltron: Legendary Defender. 12.35 Horrible Histories. 1.00 Fierce Earth. 1.30 Mikki Vs The World. 1.55 Boruto: Naruto Next Generations. 2.15 The Zoo. 2.30 Top Jobs For Dogs. 3.00 Play Your Pets Right. 3.15 Thunderbirds Are Go. 3.35 Lost In Oz. 4.30 Sadie Sparks. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 The PM’s Daughter. 5.50 Total DramaRama. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.25 Sea Lions. 7.10 Mythbusters “There’s Your Problem!”. 7.40 Spirit Riding Free. 8.05 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 9.05 So Awkward. 9.35 Find Me In Paris. 10.00 Close.

6.00 It’s Academic. (66) 7.00 ZooMoo. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 News Of The Wild. 10.00 Weekender. 10.30 Restaurant Revolution. 11.45 Motorway Patrol. 12.15 The Amazing Race. 1.30 MOVIE: The Iron Giant. (1999) 3.15 MOVIE: Pokémon Detective Pikachu. (2019) Ryan Reynolds. 5.15 MOVIE: The Ant Bully. (2006) Nicolas Cage, Meryl Streep. 7.00 MOVIE: Ever After: A Cinderella Story. (1998) Drew Barrymore, Dougray Scott, Anjelica Huston. 9.30 MOVIE: War For The Planet Of The Apes. (2017) Andy Serkis, Woody Harrelson, Steve Zahn. 12.20 MOVIE: Patti Cake$. (2017) 2.40 Home Shopping. 4.00 The Rookie.

6.00 The Fishing (63) Show. 7.00 Fishy Business. 8.00 Home Shopping. 10.00 Step Outside With Paul Burt. 10.30 Goin’ Off-Grid. 11.00 Harley-Davidson TV. 11.30 Life Off Road. 12.00 The Weekend Prospector. 12.30 Timbersports. 1.00 Blokesworld. 1.30 Wheelburn. 2.00 Motor Racing. Australian Motor Racing Series. Round 1. 3.00 Motor Racing. Powerpalooza. Season Opener. Replay. 4.00 Pawn Stars UK. 5.00 Shipping Wars. 5.30 American Pickers. 6.30 AFL Pre-Game Show. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 7. St Kilda v Port Adelaide. 10.30 AFL Post-Game Show. 11.00 MOVIE: Zodiac. (2007) Jake Gyllenhaal. 2.15 S.W.A.T. 4.30 Life Off Road. 5.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 1.40 Motor Racing. FIA World Endurance Championship. Round 1. 1000 Miles of Sebring. Highlights. 2.40 Motor Racing. IndyCar Series. Round 3. Grand Prix of Long Beach. Highlights. 3.40 Ultimate Rush. 4.10 A1: Highway Patrol. 5.10 How To Train Your Dragon Homecoming. 5.40 MOVIE: Spy Kids. (2001) 7.30 MOVIE: Hulk. (2003) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly. 10.15 MOVIE: Elektra. (2005) 12.10 Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. 1.10 Made In Chelsea. 2.10 Summer House. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Monkie Kid: A Hero Is Born. 5.30 Dino Ranch.

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6.00 The Late Show

With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Frasier. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Big Bang Theory. 11.00 The King Of Queens. 11.30 To Be Advised. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.15 Friends. 12.15 Home Shopping. 1.15 Infomercials. 1.45 Mom. 3.05 The Big Bang Theory. 3.30 Nancy Drew. 4.30 Home Shopping.

SuNday, May 1 SBS (3)

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6.00 Rage. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.30 Offsiders. 11.00 Compass. 11.30 Songs Of Praise. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Australia. 2.30 The Great Acceleration. 3.25 Further Back In Time For Dinner. 4.25 Tomorrow Tonight. 5.00 Art Works. 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. 6.30 Compass: Wendy Sharpe – Site Unseen. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Grand Designs. 8.30 Barons. 9.25 Life. 10.30 Harrow. 11.20 Miniseries: Dark Money. 12.15 McKellen: Playing The Part. 1.45 MotherFatherSon. 2.45 Rage. 4.30 Insiders.

aBC tV (2)

6.00 France 24 English News. 6.30 Al Jazeera Newshour First Edition. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 Motorcycle Racing. ProMX Championship. Round 3. 4.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Liege-BastogneLiege. Women’s race. Highlights. 4.30 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Liege-Bastogne-Liege. Men’s race. Highlights. 5.00 Countdown To Qatar 2022. 5.30 Could Hitler Have Been Stopped? 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Secrets To Civilisation: Cities And Empires. 8.30 Edward VIII: Britain’s Traitor King. 9.30 Expedition Bermuda Triangle. 11.00 George W. Bush. 3.10 United States Of Conspiracy. 4.10 VICE Guide To Film. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.

6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. 12.00 House Of Wellness. 1.00 Surveillance Oz. 1.30 MOVIE: Message In A Bottle. (1999) Kevin Costner, Robin Wright. 4.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Sydney Weekender. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 The Voice. 8.40 An Audience With Adele. 10.10 Billy Connolly: My Absolute Pleasure. 11.25 The Blacklist. 12.25 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 4. Perth SuperNight. Day 2. Highlights. From Wanneroo Raceway, Perth. 1.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Easy Eats. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. 11.00 NRL Sunday Footy Show. 1.00 Drive TV. 1.40 LEGO Masters. 3.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 8. St George Illawarra Dragons v Wests Tigers. 6.00 Nine News Sunday. 7.00 LEGO Masters. 8.45 60 Minutes. 9.45 Nine News Late. 10.15 Australian Crime Stories: Murphy’s Law. 11.20 5 Mistakes That Caught A Killer: Harold Shipman. 12.10 Forensics: The Real CSI. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. 4.30 Take Two. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.00 Mass For You At Home. 6.30 Farm To Fork. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 Tomorrow’s World. 8.00 The Living Room. 9.00 Luca’s Key Ingredient. 9.30 Studio 10: Sunday. 12.00 Farm To Fork. 12.30 To Be Advised. 4.00 My Market Kitchen. 4.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Sunday Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 9.00 FBI. 11.00 The Sunday Project. 12.00 Home Shopping. 2.30 Infomercials. 4.30 CBS Mornings.

6.00 Kids’ (22) Programs. 11.30 Ready, Jet, Go! 11.45 Sally And Possum. 12.00 Teletubbies. 12.15 In The Night Garden. 12.50 Ben And Holly. 1.35 Mister Maker. 2.05 Bob The Builder. 2.35 The Wonder Gang. 3.15 Floogals. 3.30 Play School. 4.10 Wiggly Fruit Salad. 4.35 Noddy Toyland Detective. 5.20 PJ Masks. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.25 Love Monster. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Shooting Joe Exotic. 9.20 Tiny Oz. 10.20 MOVIE: Palazzo Di Cozzo. (2021) Franco Cozzo. 11.20 Golden Guitar Awards. 12.50 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 1.35 MOVIE: Hunger. (2008) 3.15 Close. 5.30 Pablo. 5.55 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 8.00 Maltese News. 8.30 Macedonian News. 9.00 Croatian News. 9.30 Serbian News. 10.00 Portuguese News. 10.50 Urdu News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 Forged In Fire. 1.30 Letters And Numbers. 2.00 North To South: The Full Journey. 5.05 Bamay. 5.25 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 5.50 Our Guy In China. 6.45 Lost Gold Of World War II. 7.30 The Meaning Of Hitler. 9.15 Fear The Walking Dead. Return. 11.00 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Eschborn-Frankfurt. 1.00 VICE Sports. 1.30 Quitting Wework And Losing Ground. 2.30 Bamay. 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.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 It Is Written. 7.00 Tomorrow’s World. 7.30 Leading The Way. 8.00 David Jeremiah. 8.30 Home Shopping. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 NBC Today. 12.00 The Yorkshire Vet. 2.00 The Bowls Show. 3.00 All The Things. 3.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 4.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Motorway Patrol. 7.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 8.30 Railroad Australia. 9.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. 10.30 Great Scenic Railway Journeys. 11.10 Sunday Night True Stories. 12.20 The Great Australian Doorstep. 12.50 The Fine Art Auction. 4.00 Harry’s Practice. 4.30 Million Dollar Minute. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 TV Shop: (81) Home Shopping. 6.30 Amazing Facts Presents. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 In Touch Ministries. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey Presents. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 The AFL Sunday Footy Show. 12.00 The Rebound. 12.30 The Garden Gurus. 1.00 Getaway. 1.30 The Avengers. 2.40 MOVIE: The Constant Husband. (1955) 4.30 MOVIE: Irma La Douce. (1963) Jack Lemmon. 7.30 David Attenborough’s Seven Worlds, One Planet. 8.40 MOVIE: Shooter. (2007) Mark Wahlberg, Michael Peña, Kate Mara. 11.10 House. 12.05 Covert Affairs. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.30 Joyce Meyer. 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping.

Info(53) 6.00 mercials. 7.00 Turning Point With David Jeremiah. 7.30 Key Of David. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Healthy Homes Australia. 9.30 Hotels By Design. 10.00 Bondi Rescue. 10.30 Reel Action. 11.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 11.30 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 12.30 Buy To Build. 1.00 Pooches At Play. 1.30 Scorpion. 3.30 Demolition Down Under. 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. 5.00 iFish. 5.30 Beyond The Fire. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 48 Hours. 12.10 MOVIE: Deep Rising. (1998) 2.30 Reel Action. 3.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 4.00 L.A.’s Finest. 5.00 The Doctors.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 12.00 Operation Ouch! 12.30 Horrible Histories. 1.00 Fierce Earth. 1.30 Mikki Vs The World. 1.50 Boruto: Naruto Next Generations. 2.30 Top Jobs For Dogs. 3.00 Play Your Pets Right. 3.15 Larry The Wonderpup. 3.35 Lost In Oz. 4.30 Sadie Sparks. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 The PM’s Daughter. 5.50 Total DramaRama. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.25 Australia: The Wild Top End. 7.10 Horrible Histories. 7.45 Spirit Riding Free. 8.10 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.35 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 8.55 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. 9.10 So Awkward. 9.40 Find Me In Paris. 10.05 Rage. 11.05 Close.

6.00 It’s Academic. (66) 7.00 ZooMoo. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 News Of The Wild. 10.00 Manu’s American Road Trip. 12.35 MOVIE: The Ant Bully. (2006) 2.20 To Be Advised. 7.00 Modern Family. 7.30 MOVIE: Unforgettable. (2017) Katherine Heigl, Rosario Dawson. 9.45 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares. 10.45 Hell’s Kitchen USA. 12.45 Black-ish. 1.15 Fresh TV. 2.00 Blindspot. 4.00 The Rookie. 5.00 The Jonathan Ross Show.

6.00 The Fishing (63) Show. 7.00 Fishy Business. 8.00 Home Shopping. 10.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. 11.00 Fish Of The Day. 11.30 Step Outside With Paul Burt. 12.00 The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Big Angry Fish. 2.00 Hook Me Up! 3.00 ITM Fishing Show. 4.00 Pawn Stars UK. 4.30 Football. AFL. Round 7. Sydney v Brisbane Lions. 7.30 MOVIE: Raiders Of The Lost Ark. (1981) 10.00 MOVIE: Fantastic Four. (2005) 12.10 The Sunday Session. 1.10 Blokesworld. 1.40 S.W.A.T. 3.40 American Pickers. 5.00 Life Off Road. 5.30 Garage 41.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 10.00 Mega Man: Fully Charged. 11.00 Lego City Adventures. 11.30 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 12.00 Surf Lifesaving. Australian Championships. 2.00 Social Fabric. 3.00 To Be Advised. 5.00 MOVIE: Ella Enchanted. (2004) 7.00 MOVIE: Stick It. (2006) Missy Peregrym. 9.05 MOVIE: Whip It! (2009) Elliot Page, Drew Barrymore, Kristen Wiig. 11.20 Weird Science. 11.50 Allegiance. 12.45 Made In Chelsea. 1.40 Summer House. 2.30 Social Fabric. 3.00 Power Rangers Super Beast Morphers. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Lego City Adventures. 5.10 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 5.30 Dino Ranch.

6.00 NBL (52) Slam. 6.30 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Neighbours. 10.30 The Middle. 12.00 Friends. 3.30 The Big Bang Theory. 5.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Friends. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 MOVIE: The Illusionist. (2006) Edward Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica Biel. 3.35 The Big Bang Theory. 4.30 Home Shopping.

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APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

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6.00 News (2) Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Victoria. 1.45 Smother. 2.40 War Stories. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 4.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 4.55 Dream Gardens. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. 8.30 Four Corners. 9.20 Media Watch. 9.35 China Tonight. Final. 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. 10.40 Q+A. 11.45 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.10 (3) How The Victorians Built Britain. 3.00 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.05 The World’s Busiest Stations. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.35 Britain By Beach. 8.30 24 Hours In Emergency. Return. 10.20 SBS News. 10.50 Planet Expedition. 11.50 Beneath The Surface. 1.00 Shadowplay. 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Nanny Betrayal. (2018) 2.00 Code Blue: Murder. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. 9.05 Code 1: Minute By Minute. 10.05 Nurses. 11.05 The Latest: Seven News. 11.35 The Resident. 12.35 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. 1.45 Explore. 2.00 Pointless. 3.00 Tipping Point. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 LEGO Masters. 8.50 David Attenborough’s The Mating Game. 10.00 Nine News Late. 10.30 100% Footy. 11.30 New Amsterdam. 12.20 Tipping Point. 1.10 Hello SA. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 The Talk. 7.00 (5) Judge Judy. 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.00 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.30 FBI: Most Wanted. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.30 Infomercials. 3.00 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS Mornings.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 4.10 Wiggle. 4.45 Play School’s Story Time. 5.20 PJ Masks. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.10 Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Australia Remastered. 8.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.15 Restoration Australia. 10.15 Employable Me Australia. 11.40 QI. 12.10 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.35 Parks And Recreation. 1.15 Green Wing. 2.15 Close. 5.30 Pablo. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 12.00 My Extreme Life. 12.50 Forged In Fire. 3.15 Dead Set On Life. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland Street. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Question Team. 9.25 Taskmaster. 10.20 Lady O’Loughlin. 11.20 Naked. 12.20 Fear The Walking Dead. 2.45 France 24 English News. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) 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. 12.00 Hornby: A Model Empire. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.50 Cold Case. 12.50 Grace. 3.00 Late Programs.

6.00 TV Shop: (81) Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz Direct. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. 12.00 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.55 Bondi Vet: Coast To Coast. 2.55 MOVIE: Henry VIII And His Six Wives. (1972) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Agatha Christie’s Partners In Crime. 8.40 Poirot. 10.40 Law & Order. 11.40 Late Programs.

Info(53) 6.00 mercials. 8.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 21. Perth Glory v Western Sydney Wanderers. Replay. 10.30 Bondi Rescue. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 A-League Highlights Show. 11.20 Blue Bloods. 12.15 Home Shopping. 1.15 Infomercials. 1.45 Home Shopping. 2.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Ace My Space. 4.30 Sadie Sparks. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 The PM’s Daughter. 5.50 Total DramaRama. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Teenage Boss. 7.00 Horrible Histories. 7.35 Spirit Riding Free. 8.00 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.25 TMNT. 8.45 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. 9.00 So Awkward. 9.30 Find Me In Paris. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 ZooMoo. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. 12.00 Surf Patrol. 1.00 Black-ish. 2.30 My Name Is Earl. 3.00 How I Met Your Mother. 4.30 Black-ish. 6.00 Futurama. 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 First Dates Australia. 10.40 Family Guy. 11.10 American Dad! 11.40 The Goldbergs. 12.10 The Mentalist. 2.00 Blindspot. 4.00 The Rookie. 5.00 The Jonathan Ross Show.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 12.00 Pawnography. 1.00 QE2: The World’s Greatest Cruise Ship. 2.00 Down East Dickering. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 4. Perth SuperNight. Day 1. Highlights. 4.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 4. Perth SuperNight. Day 2. Highlights. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers: Best Of. 8.30 MOVIE: Dunkirk. (2017) 10.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 3.00 The Nanny. 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 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Now You See Me. (2013) Jesse Eisenberg. 10.45 Young Sheldon. 11.10 Weird Science. 12.10 Top Chef. 1.10 Made In Chelsea. 2.10 Summer House. 3.00 Bakugan: Armored Alliance. 3.30 LEGO Jurassic World. 4.00 Take Two. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) To Be Advised. 8.00 Friends. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 Friends. 2.30 The Big Bang Theory. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 Mom. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 3.30 The King Of Queens. 4.30 Home Shopping.

6.00 Morning (2) Programs. 11.10 Grand Designs. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Call The Midwife. 2.00 Keeping Faith. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 4.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 4.55 Dream Gardens. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 People’s Republic Of Mallacoota. 8.30 Tiny Oz. 9.30 MOVIE: Palazzo Di Cozzo. (2021) Franco Cozzo. 10.30 ABC Late News. 10.45 The Business. 11.00 Four Corners. 11.50 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.05 (3) How The Victorians Built Britain. 3.00 Living Black. 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.05 Who Do You Think You Are? 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.30 Railway Journeys UK. 8.30 Insight. 9.30 Dateline. 10.00 The Feed. 10.30 SBS News. 11.00 Living Black. 11.30 Thin Blue Line. 1.45 The Family Law. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Fiancé Killer. (2018) 2.00 The Real Manhunter. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. 9.05 The Good Doctor. 10.05 The Rookie. 11.05 The Latest: Seven News. 11.35 The Resident. 12.35 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. 1.30 Getaway. 2.00 Pointless. 3.00 Tipping Point. 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 LEGO Masters. 8.50 Matt Wright’s Wild Territory. 9.50 Nine News Late. 10.20 Law & Order: Organized Crime. 11.20 Murdered By Morning. 12.10 Tipping Point. 1.05 The Rebound. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 The Talk. 7.00 (5) Judge Judy. 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.00 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.40 The Cheap Seats. 9.40 NCIS. 10.40 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.10 Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 9.20 Gavin & Stacey. 9.50 Schitt’s Creek. 10.15 The Office. 10.45 Black Books. 11.10 Defending The Guilty. 11.40 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.25 Parks And Recreation. 1.10 Green Wing. 2.10 Close. 5.30 Pablo. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 12.00 Forged In Fire. 2.25 Game Of Bros. 2.55 Go 8 Bit: The Video Game Show. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland Street. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Travel Man. 9.30 Haramain: The Train Of The Desert. 10.30 The Crown Prince Of Saudi Arabia. 12.40 Fear The Walking Dead. 2.20 Deutsche Welle. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Cleaning Up. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Inside The Crown: Secrets Of The Royals. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.40 Cold Case. 12.40 Hard Sun. 4.30 Million Dollar Minute. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 TV Shop: (81) Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz Direct. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. 12.00 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: Up The Front. (1972) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Law & Order. 11.40 Covert Affairs. 12.35 Late Programs.

Home (53) 6.00 Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 A-League Highlights Show. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.20 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.15 Home Shopping. 12.45 Infomercials. 1.15 Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: The Call. (2013) 4.10 Star Trek: The Next Generation.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.15 Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Ace My Space. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 The PM’s Daughter. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Teenage Boss. 7.00 Horrible Histories. 7.35 Spirit Riding Free. 8.00 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.25 TMNT. 8.45 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. 9.00 So Awkward. 9.30 Find Me In Paris. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 Morning (66) Programs. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. 12.00 American Princess. 2.00 Black-ish. 3.30 How I Met Your Mother. 4.00 Black-ish. 4.30 Jabba’s Movies. 5.00 The Simpsons. 6.00 Futurama. 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 MOVIE: The Perfect Storm. (2000) George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, Diane Lane. 11.15 MOVIE: Murder At 1600. (1997) 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 10.00 NFL 100 Greatest. 11.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 12.00 Pawnography. 1.00 Heathrow. 2.00 American Pickers: Best Of. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Lifting. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Outback Truckers: Best Of. 9.30 Outback Truckers. 10.30 Train Truckers. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 Motor Racing. ABB FIA Formula E World Championship. Round 6. Highlights. 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 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Hanna. (2011) 10.40 Young Sheldon. 11.10 Weird Science. 12.10 Top Chef. 1.10 Made In Chelsea. 2.10 Summer House. 3.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.00 Take Two. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) 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. 12.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (2) Programs. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.40 Media Watch. 2.00 Keeping Faith. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 4.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 4.55 Dream Gardens. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 9.00 Tomorrow Tonight. 9.30 QI. 10.00 Would I Lie To You? 10.30 ABC Late News. 10.45 The Business. 11.05 Life. 12.05 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 (3) Dateline. 2.30 Insight. 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.10 The World’s Busiest Stations. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.35 Tony Robinson: Britain’s Greatest River. 8.30 MH370: The Lost Flight. 9.30 Cobra. New. 10.25 SBS News. 10.55 Red Light. 12.45 The Crimson Rivers. 4.25 VICE Guide To Film. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News Morning. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News Morning.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Bond Of Silence. (2010) 2.00 Autopsy USA. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Voice. 9.00 Britain’s Got Talent. 10.15 The Latest: Seven News. 10.45 Outrageous Weddings. 11.45 Absentia. 12.45 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 LEGO Masters. 1.30 Great Australian Detour. 2.00 Pointless. 3.00 Tipping Point. 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Travel Guides. 8.30 The Thing About Pam. 10.30 Nine News Late. 11.00 Damian Lewis: Spy Wars. 11.50 Prison Girls: Life Inside. 12.40 Tipping Point. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 The Talk. 7.00 (5) Judge Judy. 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.00 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.30 First Dates Australia. 9.30 Bull. 10.30 This Is Us. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 3.30 Play School. 4.10 Wiggle. 4.45 Play School’s Story Time. 5.20 PJ Masks. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.10 Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Brush With Fame. 8.00 Art Works. 8.30 Days Like These With Diesel. 9.30 Miniseries: The Hollow Crown. 11.55 Louis Theroux: Shooting Joe Exotic. 12.40 The Set. 1.15 Parks And Recreation. 2.00 Green Wing. 3.00 Close. 5.30 Pablo. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 12.00 If You Are The One. 1.55 Payday. 2.45 Child Genius. 3.45 WorldWatch. 5.10 Shortland Street. 5.40 Joy Of Painting. Final. 6.10 Abandoned Engineering. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Letters And Numbers. 9.30 MOVIE: Timecop. (1994) 11.20 MOVIE: Warm Bodies. (2013) 1.05 The Movie Show. 1.35 The Carmichael Show. 2.00 Fear The Walking Dead. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.00 Jabba’s Movies. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Cleaning Up. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Heathrow. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 Mrs Brown’s Boys. 11.10 Mafia’s Greatest Hits. 12.10 Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 1.10 Australia’s Deadliest. 2.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 TV Shop: (81) Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. 12.00 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: She’ll Have To Go. (1962) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 11.00 The Real Murders Of Orange County. 12.00 Footy Classified. 1.00 Late Programs.

Info(53) 6.00 mercials. 8.00 iFish Summer Series. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 MOVIE: Swing Vote. (2008) Kevin Costner. 12.45 Home Shopping. 1.45 Infomercials. 2.15 NCIS: New Orleans. 3.10 The Love Boat. 4.05 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.15 Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Ace My Space. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Teenage Boss. 7.00 Horrible Histories. 7.35 Spirit Riding Free. 8.00 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.25 TMNT. 8.45 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. 9.00 So Awkward. 9.30 Find Me In Paris. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 ZooMoo. 7.30 Beat Bugs. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. 12.00 American Princess. 3.00 How I Met Your Mother. 4.00 Black-ish. 4.30 Futurama. 5.00 The Simpsons. 6.00 American Dad! 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell. 9.30 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA. 11.30 Bridezillas. 12.30 The Mentalist. 2.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 10.00 NFL 100 Greatest. 11.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 12.00 Pawnography. 1.00 Train Truckers. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Lifting. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 MOVIE: Aliens. (1986) Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, Carrie Henn. 11.20 MOVIE: The Osiris Child: Science Fiction Volume One. (2016) 1.25 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest DSV. 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 Kalgoorlie Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Knight And Day. (2010) Tom Cruise. 10.45 Young Sheldon. 11.10 Weird Science. 12.10 Top Chef. 1.10 Made In Chelsea. 2.10 Summer House. 3.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.00 TV Shop. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) 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. 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Becker. 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. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (2) Programs. 11.00 Griff’s Canadian Adventure. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. 1.30 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 2.00 Keeping Faith. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 4.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 4.55 Dream Gardens. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. 8.30 Q+A. 9.35 Stan Grant’s One Plus One. 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. 10.35 Tiny Oz. 11.35 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 2.00 (3) How The Victorians Built Britain. 2.50 A World Of Calm. 3.15 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 3.45 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.15 The World’s Busiest Stations. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.35 World’s Most Scenic River Journeys. 8.30 Zelenskyy: The Story. 9.30 The Man Putin Couldn’t Kill. 10.50 SBS News. 11.20 Gomorrah. 1.00 The Last Wave. 4.00 NRA Under Fire. 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Relative Chaos. (2006) 2.00 Kochie’s Business Builders. 2.30 Border Patrol. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 PRIME7 News. 6.30 PRIME7 News @ 6:30. 7.00 Home And Away. 8.30 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. 9.30 Police Code Zero: Officer Under Attack. 10.30 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 The Front Bar. 12.00 Crazy On A Plane. 1.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Travel Guides. 1.00 Space Invaders. 2.00 Pointless. 3.00 Tipping Point. 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 9. South Sydney Rabbitohs v Brisbane Broncos. 9.50 Thursday Night Knock Off. 10.35 Nine News Late. 11.05 The Equalizer. Return. 12.00 Urbex: Enter At Your Own Risk. 1.00 Outback & Under. 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 The Talk. 7.00 (5) Judge Judy. 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.00 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.30 Gogglebox Australia. Final. 9.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 Blue Bloods. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 4.10 Wiggle. 4.45 Play School’s Story Time. 5.20 PJ Masks. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.25 Shaun The Sheep. 6.40 Andy’s Prehistoric Adv. 7.10 Catie’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 The Weekly. 10.10 QI. 10.45 Tomorrow Tonight. 11.10 Gruen. 11.50 Live At The Apollo. 12.35 Would I Lie To You? 1.05 Parks And Recreation. 1.50 Green Wing. 2.45 Close. 5.30 Pablo. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 World(31) Watch. 12.00 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) 2.15 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) 4.30 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) 6.50 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) 9.10 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) Bruce Willis, Milla Jovovich. 11.30 MOVIE: The Fifth Element. (1997) 1.45 Shortland St. 2.15 Jeopardy! 2.45 Deutsche Welle. 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.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Cleaning Up. 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 ICU. 5.00 Coastwatch Oz. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Murdoch Mysteries. 10.30 Without A Trace. 12.30 The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Australia’s Best Backyards. 4.00 Harry’s Practice. 4.30 Million Dollar Minute. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 TV Shop: (81) Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. 12.00 Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Queen Of Spades. (1949) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 Emergency. 9.30 New Amsterdam. 10.30 Law & Order. 11.30 House. 12.30 Antiques Roadshow. 1.00 Late Programs.

Info(53) 6.00 mercials. 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. 8.30 NBL Slam. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 11.30 FBI: Most Wanted. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 2.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 3.00 The Love Boat. 4.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.15 Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Ace My Space. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 Odd Squad. 5.00 The Inbestigators. 5.25 So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Teenage Boss. 7.00 Horrible Histories. 7.35 Spirit Riding Free. 8.00 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 8.25 TMNT. 8.45 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs. 9.00 So Awkward. 9.30 Find Me In Paris. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 ZooMoo. 7.30 Beat Bugs. 8.00 Match It. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Bride And Prejudice: The Forbidden Weddings. 12.00 American Princess. 3.00 How I Met Your Mother. 4.00 Black-ish. 4.30 Futurama. 5.00 The Simpsons. 6.00 American Dad! 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell. 9.30 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA. 11.30 Bridezillas. 12.30 The Mentalist. 2.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 10.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 11.00 A Football Life. 12.00 Pawnography. 1.00 Crazy On A Plane. 2.00 Pawn Stars. 3.00 Big Easy Motors. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Heavy Lifting. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: The Fugitive. (1993) Harrison Ford. 10.15 MOVIE: On Deadly Ground. (1994) 12.20 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 IndyCar Series. Indy Grand Prix of Alabama. H’lights. 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 MOVIE: The Fast And The Furious: Tokyo Drift. (2006) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Weird Science. 12.00 Top Chef. 1.00 Made In Chelsea. 2.00 Summer House. 3.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.00 TV Shop. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) 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. 12.00 This Is Us. 1.00 The Middle. 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. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Late Programs.

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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ORANGE CITY LIFE

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heartedly continued to joke about “panic buying.” We remember and hope thatAssessment we won’t have to go through Then we read about 3 confirmed cases in orange and Hearing Aid save Australia war again. We know that those• Excellent who died helped the gravity and seriousness of what was happening hit Fittings us - It got real. then, but not necessarily forever. Our world is unstable. How can Then events started to be cancelled, my churches • Superior level of client we dence? youth group and kids’ program shortly followed andlook to the future with confi service C KAY M INTOSH then we received the message that weekly church The Bible tellsAUDIOLOGIST us that God has the future in hand. There will be • Valuable ongoing services would need to be suspended also. support wars If the severity of things hadn’t hit home before, they and rumours of wars but God made a once for all sacrifice jolly well did now! LatestChrist. technology through the death of his Son, •Jesus He did this not to As I stood outside Aldi before the doors opened with Bluetooth connection peace in this nation but peace with himself. my list ready to restock my pantry after beingguarantee away, I pondered about the way God will return one day and Aussies know and celebrate the history of the Anzacs, but it is prayed my hardest that people would get real about Street, where they stood with Him and respond with remembering the same what God has done —1/256 oneAnson man, one death, one Orange NSW 2800 level of urgency I was witnessing that morning. God is

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48 ORANGE CITY LIFE

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thumbs | OCLife Show us your THUMBS — EMAIL: tom@oclife.com.au | FACEBOOK: inbox “orangecitylife” | SMS 0459 022 084 this is a text only number STANDARD SMS RATES APPLY

Thumbs up to the staff

at the Carriers Arms Hotel. We went there the Thursday night before Easter, and it was quite obvious that they were very understaffed and the place was packed. Despite all the difficulties, Fiona went above and beyond to make sure everything ran smoothly and looked after us with a friendly and courteous attitude. We will definitely go back there, just for the great service we received.

Thumbs Down to the

morons that saw fit to smash the ornaments on my father’s grave. Surely Karma will catch up with these people. It would probably be a different story if it was their parents’ grave.

Thumbs up to Monique the waitress at the Union Bank Restaurant. We had lunch there on the Saturday of the Easter weekend, and it was no problem for her to help us navigate the QR menu for the first time. Apart from a great lunch, it’s the little things that go a long way. Thank you so much. Thumbs up to “Thread

the Needle” in McNamara Lane. They completed a beautiful quilt out of shirts of my partner’s. They did it so beautifully, and in such a timely manner, all within my budget. Greatly appreciated xx!

Thumbs up to Kevin and

Janice who stayed and helped me at the “Return and Earn” this morning. They had finished putting their cans in the machine and then helped me with mine. Really appreciated the help from two very lovely people.

Thumbs Down to

Orange City councillors who recently voted for a 2.5 per cent rate increase. Most ratepayers haven't had a wage increase and are struggling.

M BS t U H ...T staff a o UP t arriers the C ms... Ar

Thumbs Down to two

teenage boys riding scooters sideby-side at speed on the footpath outside Hogan's Pharmacy on Prince and Sale Streets. Completely silent, they nearly struck two elderly women about to enter the shop. Boys, this has to stop! You sped across the intersection, if a car had been there, you almost certainly would have been badly hurt, or worse. You were teenagers, so surely you knew what you were doing. Wise up!

Thumbs up to the Tegan

Todd family of Orange and the Coughlan family of Blayney, for the lovely Easter lunch and Easter gifts. Also, thank you to Shayley for driving us there. Lots of love, Aunty Dot and Aunty Joan.

Thumbs up to Orange Mountain Bike Club for planning to build one of the best bike trails in Australia on Mount Canobolas, it will be great. Orange has lost so much. Also, why not fix up the BMX track so that it can be used? Thumbs Down to the kids (and, increasingly, adults) using our footpaths and shopping centres over recent times as skateparks, scooter runs, and bike tracks. Flying past pedestrians and shoppers, you might think you have great reflexes, but it only takes a toddler to run out from a shop, or an old person to not see you, and there could be disaster. Shoppers and pedestrians should not have to contend with people on fastmoving bikes and the like, as they go about their business. If an accident occurred, no amount of remorse would make your thoughtless behaviour, right. Thumbs up to Officeworks

who are always most helpful, efficient, and knowledgeable about their products.

S UMB ge H T . n .. Ora ike o t UP tain B n Mou Club

Thumbs up to Orange City

Thumbs Down to our favourite golf club’s recent seafood night. We have been going there for years. We booked six weeks ahead, they lost our booking, gave us the worst table, and we waited ages for mass-produced average food that tasted of disinfectant. Staff were overwhelmed with the number of people, but did the best they could. We are regulars and have been going there for years, but won’t be rushing back until they improve their food.

Council for completely resurfacing Anson Street between Byng and Summer Streets.

S UP B M U ty ...TH ange Ci r to O ouncil C

Thumbs Down to them, however, if they don't continue on and resurface the other side between Anson and Kite Sts. These roads are atrocious, especially outside of Centrelink and Anson House. Forget the mall which would only lead to gridlock in Kite St, especially during Orange Public School’s start and finishing times, even with today's population. The surface of the roundabouts at both Kite and Hill Sts and at Anson St and Gardiner Rd, are also in a woeful state. Disgraceful!

Thumbs up to Jessica and Zena at Bunnings Orange who work in the coffee shop. They are always helpful, smile, and make good coffee.

Thumbs Down to the

owner of a fast-food chain in Orange, who informed an elderly lady that she is not welcome back in their stores, just because she contacted the Customer Feedback Centre with honest feedback about poor cleanliness, service, and the quality of food on some visits. Positive feedback has also been given about some staff. You are NO ambassador for the hospitality industry in Orange.

The Thumbs represent thoughts and opinions of readers and do not necessarily reflect those of Orange City Life. Every care is taken not to publish thumbs that are considered derogatory or defamatory in nature . Please note that thumbs may be edited for clarity, space or legal reasons.

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OCLife | diary dates

ART/MUSIC/DANCE CANTAR WOMEN’S CHOIR meets at the Church of Christ, every Monday from 7.30pm - 9:15pm. Enquiries: Margaret 02 6369 1333. EVERUPWARD CRAFT GROUP holds craft groups at Everupward Church, every Monday morning from 9.00am - 12.00pm. Enquiries: Mary 02 6361 0514. OLD TIME ACOUSTIC JAM SESSION is held at The Blind Pig Sound Lounge & Bar, last Sunday of every month from 4.00pm. Enquiries: Kenneth 0408 619 235. ORANGE ART SOCIETY INC. meets at the Orange Cultural Centre, every Monday from 10.00am. Enquiries: David 0407 627 092. ORANGE CROCHET / KNITTING GROUP meets in the bistro at the Orange Ex-Services Club, every Saturday from 12.00pm - 3.00pm and every Tuesday 10.00am -12.00pm. Enquiries: Karen 0419 616 251. ORANGE LACEMAKERS meet at the front of the Orange Cultural Centre, each Wednesday from 1.00pm. Enquiries: Sandy 02 6362 7938. ORANGE MALE VOICE CHOIR meets at Orange Regional Conservatorium, every Monday from 7:15pm – 9:15pm. Enquiries: David 02 6362 8218. ORANGE OLD TIME DANCERS meet at the Senior Citizens & Pensioners Centre, every Tuesday from 7.00pm - 9:30pm. Enquiries: Alan 0407 062 979. ORANGE SOCIAL DANCE GROUP meets at the Orange City Bowling Club, every Thursday from 6.00pm. Enquiries: Audrey 02 6362 0068 or Richard 02 6361 7718. ORANGE SPINNERS & HANDCRAFT meets at the Orange Cultural Centre, every Thursday from 10.00am - 2.00pm. THE CANOBOLAS HIGHLAND PIPE BAND meets at Legacy House, every Wednesday from 7.00pm. Beginners are welcome. Enquiries: Zoe 0421 379 423. THE COME TOGETHER CHOIR meets at the Orange Regional Conservatorium, every Tuesday from 10.00am - 12.00pm. Enquiries: Vicky 02 6361 8156 or 0424 008 350. ORANGE COLOUR CITY LINE DANCERS meet at the Orange City Bowling Club every Monday from 5pm till 7.30pm and Wednesday from 5pm until 8pm.

CLUBS INNER WHEEL CLUB OF ORANGE meets at Duntryleague, every second Monday of the month from 1:30pm. Enquiries: Tricia 0410 600 869 or iiw.au.orange@gmail.com. THE ORANGE SUB BRANCH OF THE NAVAL ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA meets at 11am on the third Sunday of every month at the Orange RSL Enquiries: Barry 0407 259 2756 or Peter 0438 413 531 or bcynical24@bigpond. com or peter.furguson12@hotmail.com ORANGE LIONS CLUB MEET AT DUNTRYLEAGUE Golf Club, on the second and fourth Thursday of every month from 6:30pm Enquiries/Membership: Pat 0407 217 600 ORANGE COIN AND STAMP CLUB meets at the Orange Community Centre, on the last Tuesday of every month from 7.30pm. Enquiries: Howard 02 6362 2368 or 0427 107 554. ORANGE LADIES PROBUS CLUB Meets every 4th Wednesday of the month. 10:30am to 12:00pm Duntryleague Club. Enquires: Marlies 0418 440 512

50 ORANGE CITY LIFE

ORANGE LEGACY CLUB office hours are 10.00am - 3.00pm Tuesdays to Thursdays at 58 McNamara Street, Orange. Enquiries: 02 6362 1205 ORANGE BRIDGE CLUB. Enquiries: Murray 0418 206 485. BRIDGE LESSONS starting February 9th from 1.00pm - 3.00pm, every Wednesday. Enquiries: Chris 02 6362 3029 or Dorothy 02 6362 8218. ORANGE CANOBOLAS LIONS CLUB meets at Duntryleague Golf Club, on the first and third Tuesday of every month from 6:30pm Enquiries: Lisa 0419 641 282. ORANGE CAMERA CLUB meets on the first and third Tuesday of every month at the Senior Citizens Centre, from 7.30pm. Enquiries: orangecameraclub@gmail.com ORANGE EVENING VIEW CLUB meets at the Orange Ex-Services Club, on the last Thursday of the month from 6:30pm for a 7:00pm start. Enquiries: Anne 0478 124 276 ORANGE LAPIDARY & MINERAL CLUB INC meets at the Orange Cultural Society, every Wednesday from 9.00am - 12.00pm & 7.00pm - 9.00pm. Enquiries: Kathy 0437 917 074. ORANGE COIN AND STAMP CLUB meets at the Orange Community Centre, on the last Tuesday of every month from 7.30pm. Enquiries: Howard 02 6362 2368. ROTARY CLUB OF ORANGE meets at the Ambassador,every Monday from 6.00pm for dinner. Enquiries: Len 0428 459 117 or contact@rotarycluboforange.org.au. SCRABBLE CLUB MEETS at Giyalang Ganya, Community Services Building on the first and third Sunday of each month from 2.00pm. Enquiries: Audrey 02 6362 0068. SOUTHERN CROSS STREET CRUISERS is a family oriented car club that would like to welcome any new enquiries for membership. Enquiries: Jason 0431 456 889 or Mick 0427 856 427 . THE EUCHRE CARD CLUB meets at the Orange Ex-Services Club, every Wednesday from 7:30pm. Enquiries: 02 6362 2666. ZONTA CLUB OF ORANGE INC. meets at Lord Anson Hotel, every second Tuesday of the month , from 6.30pm. Enquiries: Frances 0407 952 675. ORANGE BIRD SOCIETY meets at the Senior Citizens Centre, on the third Wednesday of every month from 7:30pm. Tony 0409 912 370 or 02 6365 8441. THE ULYSSES CLUB OF ORANGE conducts weekly motorbike rides, leaving the Railway car-park, Peisley Street, on Wednesdays from 9.30am. Social dinners are held on the second Friday of every month. Enquiries: Lee 0414 881 178. ORANGE BASIC DOG OBEDIENCE meets every Sunday during school terms at Waratahs 8.45am -10am. BYO dog, lead, treats and patience.Enquiries via Orange Basic Dog Obedience Facebook page. ORANGE GARDEN CLUB Meets the first Friday of every month at 11.00am. May-Sep (Orange Ex-Services Club) Oct-Apr (Local Gardens) Enquiries: Vicki 02 6362 1257

EVENTS

IONIAN CLUB OF ORANGE (Women new to Orange) meets at Duntryleague, every second Thursday of the month, from 11.00am. Enquiries: Helen 0417 749 152.

|

Are you part of a club? Have an upcoming meeting...

THE AMUSU THEATRE in Manildra has regular movie screenings. The Movie Museum is open every weekend by appointment. Enquiries: Joan 0418 452 902.

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

THE COMMITTEE OF ADFAS ORANGE & DISTRICT holds lectures at 6:30pm once a month in the main auditorium at the Orange Regional Conservatorium. Refreshments served from 6pm with a new guest speaker each month. Enquiries: Anne 02 6361 3923.

FOR THE KIDS ORANGE DISTRICT GIRL GUIDES meet at 365 Peisley Street, on a weekly basis, during School Terms. The units meet Mon - Wed from 5pm -6.30pm. Enquiries: Yvonne 0412 736 700. THE MINIATURE RAILWAY PUBLIC RUNNING DAY takes place on the second Saturday every month at Matthews Park, Corner of Moulder Street & Anson Street, from 1pm 4pm. Enquiries: Shane 0414 887 005 ORANGE STORYTIME is held at the Orange City Library, every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during school terms from 11.00am. Storytime and Craft. Bookings are essential. Enquiries: 02 6393 8132 or library@cwl.nsw. gov.au or eventbrite.com.au.

HEALTH & FITNESS BLAYNEY SMOKING CESSATION CLINIC at the Blayney MPS. By appointment only. Enquiries: Pam 02 6368 9000. CHAIR YOGA for those who can’t get on the floor, meets Mondays at the Senior Citizens & Pensioners Centre, from 10:20am for a 10.30 start, until 11:30am. Enquiries: Kerrie 0418 235 495. ORANGE TABLE TENNIS meets every Tuesday from 6:30pm at the Canobolas High School Recreational Hall, 142 Icely Road. Enquiries: Steve 0468 308 705. THE O’BRIEN CENTRE at Bloomfield Hospital has activities each Thursday during school terms, from 10.00am - 2.00pm. $3.00 for the day. Enquiries: Jeff 0423 277 788. TAI-CHI CLASSES Wednesdays at 6.00pm Enquiries: Tony 0409 285 807 CENTRAL WEST MEDIATION meets second Saturday of every month at Senior Citizens Hall 8:30am - 10:00am Enquires: 02 4315 2763

MARKETS / FAIRS ORANGE COIN AND STAMP FAIR is held on the first Saturday of every month at the Orange Cultural Centre. Enquiries: Howard 02 6362 2368. ORANGE FARMERS MARKET is on the second Saturday of every month, at Northcourt, corner of Peisley Street and March Streets (October to May), and the Naylor Pavilion, Orange Showground, Leeds Parade from (June to September). Gold coin upon entry. Enquiries: Holly 0418 654 226. BLAYNEY ROTARY MARKET is held on the third Sunday of every month at CentrePoint Sport and Leisure Centre, Corner of Osman and Church Street, Blayney, rain, hail or shine from 8:30am. Enquiries: rcblayney@gmail.com COWRA COMMUNITY MARKETS is held on the third Saturday of every month at Sid Kallas Oval, from 8am until noon. Phone 0473 346 046 for more information. CUMNOCK MARKET Is held on the third Saturday of every month from 9.00 a.m. to 12 noon at Crossroads Park Cumnock (opposite General Store) Enquiries: Pat Gilmour – 6367 7270

Send to reception@oclife.com.au

MEETINGS

FOODCARE ORANGE is open Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday from 10.30am 1.00pm and Thursday from 4.30pm - 6.00pm, at 142 March Street. Enquiries: 0447 577 884 ORANGE CAKE DECORATORS GUILD meets the second Saturday of every month at 1.00pm at the Senior Citizens & Pensioners Centre, 77 Kite Street. Enquiries: Janelle 0438 618 483 or 0427 659 194. ORANGE RSL SUB-BRANCH OFFICE HOURS Tuesday & Friday from 9.00am - 12.00pm at Orange RSL Sub-Branch (next to the Orange Ex Services Club). Enquiries: (02) 6362 1735 RAILWAYS RETIREES meet the last Friday of every month, at the Orange City Bowling Club, at 12.00pm. Enquiries: Lindsay 02 6362 5959. VIETNAM VETERANS meet every Friday from 10am - 1pm at the Orange Ex-Services Club. Enquiries: Lindsay 02 6362 5959. ORANGE TOASTMASTERS meets every second & fourth Monday of the month from 6:45pm for 7.00pm - 9.00pm, at the Orange Ex-Services Club.Enquiries: 0439 568 752. THE META-COACH FOUNDATION (MCF) Orange Chapter meets on the first Wednesday each month at Shop 15 / 212 Anson Street from 6.00pm - 8.00pm. Enquiries: Shawn 0439 194 323. ORANGE BRANCH OF RSPCA meets 2nd Wednesday each month from 7pm at Orange City Bowling Club. All interested parties are welcome to attend. Enquiries: 02 6362 6171 or orangesupportergroup@rspcansw.org.au

SOCIAL GROUPS BORENORE / NASHDALE MENS’ SHED meets every Tuesday from 1.00pm, at the Orange National Field Days site, Borenore. Enquiries: Max 0418 498 708. ENVIRONMENTALLY CONCERNED CITIZENS of Orange (ECCO) meets on the 4th Wednesday of each month, 7.30pm at the Environmental Learning Facility. Enquires: Neil 0419 224 461. BITCOIN meet at the Robinhood Hotel every Saturday 2.00-4.00pm Enquiries: 0478 391 883 FRIENDS OF THE ORANGE BOTANIC GARDENS run a guided bird walk at the Orange Botanic Gardens, on the first Sunday of every month from 8:30am. ORANGE WOMEN’S SHED meets every Wednesday & Friday at 9:30am - 1:00pm at Wangarang Industries 1635 Forest Road, Orange. Enquiries: 0439 609 849 or orangewsinc@gmail.com ORANGE MEN’S SHED meets every Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday from 9.30am 3.00pm, currently at the Riverside Centre on Forest Road. Enquiries: Alan 0475 250 779. ORANGE TROUT ACCLIMATISATION SOCIETY meets the third Tuesday of every month from 7.00pm at Orange Ex-Services Club, in the Boronia Room. Enquiries: Barry 02 6362 0096 or 0427 620 096. ORANGE & DISTRICT 40+ SOCIAL GROUP meets every Tuesday at Orange Ex-Services Club, from 7.00pm. Enquiries: Brett 0427 462 887. ORANGE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY meets the first Wednesday each month from 1:30pm. Enquiries: Janet 0427 450 346. ORANGE WOODWORKERS ASSOCIATION INC. meets every Wednesday from 8:30am - 3.00pm, on the second & fourth Sunday of every month at the Old Coach House. Enquiries: Chris 0407 129 934.

THE CENTRAL WEST AMATEUR RADIO GROUP meets on the first Sunday of each month, except for January. Due to COVID 19, we have been meeting on air. Enquiries: Garry 0413 358 037 or arcwg@hotmail.com.au.

SUPPORT GROUPS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS ORANGE meets at the rear of Kenna Hall, 84 Hill Street, from 5.00pm Sundays, and from 7.00pm Monday & Tuesday. We also have meetings from 6.30pm - 8.00pm Thursdays at The Leisure Centre Bloomfield. Enquiries: Graham 0447 839 026. AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP ORANGE meets every Monday 6.00pm - 7.00pm at St. Barnabas Church Hall. Enquiries: 1300 252 666. ORANGE SENIORS CITIZENS & PENSIONERS groups meet regularly. Various classes are held. Enquiries: 02 6362 6592. THE ORANGE PARKINSON’S DISEASE SUPPORT GROUP meets fourth Wednesday each month, 10.00am - 12.00pm at Giyalang Ganya, Community Services Building. Enquiries: Bernie 0434 504 414. RED CROSS CLUB MEETINGS are to be held on the second Monday of every month at 1.30pm at the Giyalang Ganya, Community Services Building at 286 Lords Place (Corner of March Street). ORANGE STROKE SUPPORT GROUP meets on the third Monday of every month from 11.00 am - 1.00pm at the Giyalang Ganya, Community Services Building. Please call before attending the group. Enquiries: Michelle on 1300 650 594 or info@strokensw.org.au. ORANGE PROSTATE CANCER GROUP Meets 3rd Tuesday of the month (Except January & December) at Cafe Connect 107 Prince Street, Orange at 6pm Enquiries: Ray 6362 5257 or Charlie 6361 1830

MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORT ORANGE GROW GROUP (Mental Wellbeing Programs) meets every Friday from 2.00pm 4.00pm at the Senior Citizens Centre. Enquiries: 1800 558 268. LIFELINE provides all Australians experiencing a personal crisis with access to online, phone and face-to-face crisis support and suicide prevention services. Enquiries: 13 11 14 Email: info@lifelinecentralwest.org.au. HEADSPACE ORANGE is a youth-friendly FREE service for anyone aged between 12 and 25 years who are having a tough time. Enquiries 02 6369 9300, or email hs.orange@marathonhealth.com.au ORANGE REGIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION Networks, Berevement Group. Have you lost a son / daughter to suicide?. Do you need support or someone to talk to? Enquiries: 02 6369 2030. Register: Jane.Passer@health.nsw.gov.au LIKEMIND ORANGE, STRIDE MENTAL HEALTH, 122-124 Kite Street. LikeMind is an innovative mental health service providing a ‘one-stop’ hub offering support for all adults with mental health concerns, under one roof. No referral required. Enquiries: 02 6311 1700.


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†The save prices listed are calculated from the suppliers RRP (Recommended Retail Price) at the time of preparation and where no such price exists is the retail price found at competing retailers. Due to discount policy we may not have sold at RRP. All products subject to manufacturers availability. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.

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PROPRIETORS: ALISON TASCONE & ANDREW MANIOS

SALE ENDS: 8 TH MAY 2022

APRIL 28 — MAY 4, 2022

|

ORANGE CITY LIFE

51


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