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SPIRIT OF ORANGE JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Orange Winter Jazz Festival strikes the right note!

Orange City Life Photographer, Henry DeRooy, was there to catch Mahalia Barnes’ stunning performance in front of a packed house at Holy Trinity Anglican Church on Saturday, part of the Inaugural (and hopefully not the last) Orange Winter Jazz Festival.

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2 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

THECOUNTRYCLUBORANGE


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.

A busy long weekend in the Colour City by all accounts and it certainly seemed that way as I got about town. The Orange Winter Jazz Festival was a great success by all accounts. Out and about on Sunday, I stopped by the free festival stage at the Royal Hotel to see a packed house and I’ve heard other good reports of the weekend’s musical offerings. Great to see and thanks need to go to all those who volunteered their time to make these things happen.

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On Monday, I joined in the crowds of trainspotters to see the BeyerGarret steam locomotive arrive in Orange – an incredible feat of engineering and an amazing sight to see the machine in action! Photographer Troy Pearson has kindly let us print some stunning shots he took of the steam locomotive’s visit to Orange.

Great weekend of Jazz..

You’ll find Troy’s photos inside along with our coverage of the jazz festival, and all our regular segments, including the weekend’s sport, entertainment, competitions and the rest.

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Until next week, Jono!

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Orange 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.

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 3


OCLife | Community

Local specialist travel agent, Michelle Slack-Smith from boutique booking firm, Adventum, couldn’t be busier.

Travel bug bites at wanderlust’s return — DAVID DIXON —

Lined up at one of our village post offices recently — in a scene being replicated all around our wide, brown land — were a dozen baby boomers all patiently waiting to have their passport applications processed. Travel is back, with two years of effective international bans finding plenty of Australians now with very itchy feet. Local specialist travel agent, Michelle Slack-Smith from boutique booking firm, Adventum, couldn’t be busier. “We’ve had lots of people looking to book in the last four or five months… probably from about February–March, after we came out of Christmas,” she said. “It’s as if people have decided, ‘we’ve got to learn to live with COVID’, lots of my clients typically have one or two overseas holidays a year, and they’ve been missing out.” She said that the dearth of overseas experiences, has also changed the pattern of many of her client’s plans, with whole families — ma and pa, gran, aunt mavis, bub, and sis — all now going together.

“A lot of it at the moment, is multigenerational travel — kids, parents, and grandparents all doing trips to Europe together. These are probably 19–21 yearolds who would have done a gap year in England say, with Mum and Dad going over to see them for a few weeks,” she said. “They’ve been unable to travel due to COVID, so now they’re booking five–six week European journeys together… people are definitely doing bigger trips.” The plethora of pandemic restrictions and vaccination requirements around the world, has also seen many Australians return to the old-style travel agent to ensure hassle-free travel abroad, she added. “COVID has probably changed people, they want someone to hold their hands a touch. Since the lockdowns, they want

someone to guide them with a bit of advice about travelling post-COVID. “Travel restrictions have changed so much, and they need to know what the requirements are regarding vaccinations and what shots they need,” she explained. She adds that her travel industry contacts have all confirmed the same thing, overseas travel is suddenly back on everyone’s agenda. “Everybody is saying the same thing, ‘it’s really busy’, you can feel the excitement,” she enthused. Currently co-organising a tour to Morocco with Journey for Women’s Sarah Hoyland, Michelle started her own agency early last year, but spent her first few months frantically trying to get stranded customers back home.

“People were in desperation, there was a fair barrage of abuse for many people in the industry as emotions were heightened. “After that it went eerily quiet, and we were just trying to keep going, not knowing exactly when things were going to re-open.” Having got the travel bug early — Africa, Croatia, and New York are her favourite destinations — she later worked for a major travel agency for years before her own flight into the unknown, with business now so busy, she’s looking at putting on staff. Her advice for those for whom wanderlust is again starting to stir is, don’t delay, get in early. “If you’re thinking about it, book now! Even if you’re looking at Christmas, you may find you can’t get your first option,” she concluded.

...COVID has probably changed people, they want someone to hold their hands a touch. Since the lockdowns, they want someone to guide them with a bit of advice about travelling post-COVID... 4 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022


Community | OCLife

Flashing “panda lights” will be installed at the two new CBD crossings near Robertson Park.

New “panda lights” at crossings to notify drivers of pedestrians Good news for locals who have had to run the gauntlet of unaware drivers almost collecting them at Orange’s two new CBD pedestrian crossings, help is at hand. Council is soon to install flashing “panda lights” at the crossings, one of which is on Lords Place on the west side of Robertson Park, and the other on Byng Street opposite the Visitor Information Centre. Since their installation late last year, regular users of the pedestrian crossings have complained of not only unsighted vehicles,

finish times.

but also drivers indifferent to the road rules, flashing through the crossings as they approached. The panda lights, named after their superficial similarity to the prominent round ears on a panda bear’s face, are situated atop the yellow-and-black pedestrian crossing signs at “zebra” intersections and flash intermittently to warn drivers of their imminent approach.

A spokesperson for Council, said that the lights had always been intended for placement at the two intersections with necessary electrical work being carried out in the next week.

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They are often located at school crossing zones and activated around school start and

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A mother with a school-aged daughter recently using the crossing on Byng Street, said that the lights were: “a fantastic idea”. “The cars often don’t slow and stop as quickly as they should. Hopefully, this will make a difference,” she said.

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 5


OCLife | Community

Orange Ex-Services’ Club CEO, Nathan Whiteside, wants the newly reopened Country Club at Bloomfield to become a community hub for workers, sports teams, and residents on the southern side of Orange.

Lick of paint, breath of new life for Bloomfield’s watering hole It’s been a long time between drinks, but The Country Club at Bloomfield will reopen its doors to the public on Saturday, June 18. Closing due to the COVID lockdown in March 2020, Country Club bowlers and patrons have been eagerly awaiting the reopening of their favourite watering hole for the past two years. You may not see it from the outside, but Orange Ex-Services’ Club has breathed new life into the club, having completely repainted the interior, remodelled the bar and kitchen, and replaced the old, dated furnishings. “Basically a bit of a facelift,” Orange ExServices’ Club CEO, Nathan Whiteside, said while giving Orange City Life a tour of the renovations last week. The exterior of the clubhouse is heritage-listed, he said, but inside they have modernised the club, expanding

the variety of beers on-tap and installing multiple large-screen TVs for sports lovers. While The Country Club itself reopens on Saturday, bowlers though will have to wait a little bit longer to get back on the green. “The bowling green is not quite ready for our bowlers to come home yet, so to speak. It will be in coming months but, obviously, this is a bad time of year to be growing grass!” Nathan said. “We’ve had a great relationship with Orange City Bowling Club where our club has been bowling there, and that will continue for a period until the green is ready to bring them home.” The Country Club will be open for coffee, take-away and dine-in lunches, six days a

week, Tuesday to Sunday, and will also be open for dinner on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays.

a broad appeal, Nathan said, and fill a need that is not being met in that part of Orange

While all the club favourites — schnitzels, steaks, fish and chips, burgers — will be available, the menu will change seasonally and have some different offerings to the Ex-Service’s Club, Nathan said.

“Yes there is a bowling green there, and we have a DA in to get a second bowling green in at some stage, but [there is] Ronald McDonald House, Western Care Lodge, the hospital, the Glee Club will come back, Orange Hawks train next door — so they will come here on Thursdays…

The club will also be trialling a new QR code online ordering system, so hospital workers with limited break time, patients, and visitors can pre-order meals. Being situated a little bit further out of town is something that is not lost on the club and they will also be purchasing a courtesy bus in the coming weeks. The idea is for The Country Club to have

“So what we are trying to create is a bit of a community hub, another option on this side of town where there is not much.”

The Country Club (behind the hospital at Bloomfield) will reopen to the public at 9am on Saturday, June 18.

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Community | OCLife

Executive Officer, Rebecca Walsh, says the name change to Ronald McDonald House Charities Central West, better reflects the services and region they support.

NEW NAME BUT SAME MISSION for Ronald McDonald House Ronald McDonald House Charities Orange will now be known as Ronald McDonald House Charities Central West NSW — a name that better reflects the service the house provides to families in the region and around the state, says Executive Officer Rebecca Walsh. The name change is something that the board has been working on for some time, according to Ms Walsh.

as well — we have one overnight volunteer that travels from Parkes across to do overnight volunteering.”

“The board believes the name change will really resonate with the communities who use our services here in Orange.”

The towns that most draw on the accommodation assistance provided by RMHC Central West are Parkes, Forbes, Dubbo Condobolin, Cowra, Mudgee, and Bathurst.

Since opening its doors eight years ago, Ronald McDonald House Charities in Orange has provided more than 8400 nights of free accommodation for 1035 families in need — this is a combined saving to families of about $1.2 million.

“Our families come from right across the central west — and in fact right across the state – but our name did not reflect the community that we did serve,” she said.

So the new name better reflects the catchment area of families who come to stay at the Orange House, Tim Leahey, Chairman of the Board RMHC Central West added.

“Also, it does not reflect where our donors and our supporters come from… our volunteers aren’t just from Orange, they come from surrounding towns and villages

“Our goal with this name change is to involve more central west communities in house activities which includes fundraising and volunteering,” Mr Leahey said.

Without this vital option, the financial burden of paying for weeks, and sometimes even months, in a hotel room so as to remain close to sick loved ones, would be far too great for many people to bear. Prior to the house opening, it was not unheard of for family members to be sleeping in their cars or even pitching a

tent to be near the hospital. It was Geoff and Joanne Lewis who were the driving force behind the 11-year fundraising campaign and the building of the Orange house, which has been a safe haven for families from the central west at a difficult time in their lives. “The people of the central west were absolutely incredible from day one when the idea of an Orange house was first raised,” Mrs Lewis said. “Every time I go and visit the house, I am always impressed by the wonderful volunteers we have from Orange who give up their time. “From day one, the house was filled with love,” she concluded.

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 7


OCLife | Community

Kids in the kitchen; Calare pupils learn what they eat! — DAVID DIXON —

YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT, BUT HOW MANY OF US REALLY KNOW HOW OUR FOOD IS PRODUCED? Well, the “kids in the kitchen” at one of our local schools are now finding out — the old-fashioned way! A fantastic program at Calare Public is answering this essential question while teaching good eating and nutrition habits to its pupils. The new kitchen at the school is part of an integrated project for children to grow, prepare, cook, and eat their own produce. Known as the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program, its aim is to engage and educate young children in growing, harvesting, preparing and sharing delicious and healthy food, coordinator Mikayla Riley explained. Students in the course were busy recently, happily preparing a treat in the kitchen that they then get to cook and eat themselves. “It’s good fun, I like it,” Lara Hooper said. “When we get to make the dough and then the pasta, it makes more sense, it gives us lots more appreciation of where everything comes from.”

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Her hands-on work in the school garden and kitchen has fired Lara’s appreciation of food preparation, saying that she would love to be a cook or chef someday, listing “pizza and pasta” as her favourite foods. Alice — Lara’s Mum, who regularly shares helping out with a cooking group in the lessons between herself and her hubby — said the classes had seen her daughter become far more engaged with the “how and why” of food and its nutrition and preparation. “She came home and wanted to make fresh pasta. “She’s definitely interested in cooking and in trying other foods, fritters, pumpkin pie,” she said. Charlie Law, nine, added that the classes have so inspired him, that he’s got something special planned for his own mother in the near future. “It’s her birthday soon, and I’m going to bake her a cake… I’m going to try to, anyway!” Coordinating the vegetable patch and kitchen, teacher Mikayla described the program as designed to provide: “a pleasurable journey from paddock to plate.” “It’s about cooking what we grow, teaching how to enjoy making and eating their own food.” The thriving veggie patch adjacent to the kitchen — which also includes a free-range chicken run, herb garden,

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compost bins, and rainwater tanks — grows everything from silverbeet, kale, rhubarb, tomatoes, broccoli, and there’s even a plum tree. The program runs for two years for children in Years 3–4: “but it’s for everyone, we open the garden up at lunchtime for all the kids to get involved. “It’s all healthy produce, and all from our gardens. If we don’t have that thing growing in our garden, it’s because it is seasonal,” she added. With our food processing industries now so removed from our lives, she suspects that classes in home cooking and preparation, are for many children, a revelation. “I would say, they assume that food comes from a packet. “This group is making their own pastry, some are making pasta. They’re learning that eggs and flour makes pasta, and following this process through to pasta makers,” Mikayla said. Kitchen Assistant, Karen Harrison said that the strength of the program, is that it takes the children from the very beginnings of food production to a finished meal. “They learn how to plant seeds, and how to nurture them,” she said. “They then harvest them and take them to the kitchen


comment

with DAVID DIXON

Stable government proof of our constitutional pudding With the Australian Labor Party having secured at least 76 seats in the new Parliament, it seems that we are spared the dramas and compromises of minority government. Though “spared” is probably not the right term. With a third of Australians now giving their first preferences to minor parties or independents, it seems a tad unfair that the three majors, still end up with nearly 90 per cent of the seats in the new parliament. The most common alternative though, proportional representation, where a party that gets, say, 20 per cent of the vote, is entitled to onefifth of the seats, does have its own problems. and share a meal together from what they’ve grown. From earth to table,” she added. Supporters of the program include Orange Coles and the local Bunnings. “Coles helps us with funding and staples like

▲ Making pasta the old-fashioned way, from left, Grace Yelland, Lara Hooper, parent Alice Hooper, teacher Mikayla Riley, Lottie Harvey, Miyleigh-Jade Sherlock, and Elizabeth Dean.

As is seen overseas, this tends to lead to fragmented voting; a plethora of minor, often single-issue, parties; and unlikely and often unstable alliances. Italy, for instance, has had more than 60 governments since World War II, on an average of a new government every 13 months or so. Must be exhausting!

flour and cheese that we can’t produce here; and

Talk about political turmoil. Due to the delicate cultural and political balances at force in Israel, that country was forced to hold a total of three elections in one year up to 2020, with the current government a fragile coalition of conservative, reformist, and singleissue parties with seemingly little in common.

Bunnings help with mulch, seed, gloves, and with cupboards and other materials,” Mikayla explained. “We cook 200 meals a week for 200 kids, it simply wouldn’t be possible without that support,” she added. Another project important to healthy eating at the school, is a new breakfast program supported

For instance, the Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett leads the ultranationalist Yamina (“Rightwards”) party that champions Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, while Mansour Abbas, as head of the United Arab List, is a proindependence Palestinian — the first to serve in an Israeli government!

by the Orange Foodbank (FoodCare Orange) to provide that most important meal of the day at no cost to dozens of kids five days a week. Deputy Principal, Joy Harvey said the “Breakfast for Legends” program provides 40–50 meals each day which has seen a commensurate increase in many pupils’ enjoyment of school. “There’s been more engagement in class and their general behaviour has improved,” she said.

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▲ Calare Deputy Principal, Joy Harvey, in the school’s vegie patch with Kitchen Assistant, Karen Harrison.

k... e e w e h t f o

Not that Italian and Israeli politics are of great interest to most Australians,

however it does show that we should not take for granted our relatively stable form of parliamentary democracy. For this, we can largely thank those fusty old gents who wrote the Australian Constitution over a period of nearly two decades leading up to Federation in 1901. Because it was not a given that six culturally and geographically isolated states, were ever going to form a Commonwealth Government together. For instance, out of the two largest colonies, NSW was determinedly a laissez-faire (“let do”) free trade state welcoming imports from around the globe, while Victoria was passionately protectionist with a large industrial base to support. In fact, free trade versus protectionism was the source of the most heated debates at the colonial conferences held from 1883. It is little known by most Australians, that New Zealand and even Fiji, were initially intending to be part of the new Commonwealth, both eventually getting sick of the infighting and going their own way. Realising that their work would not be perfect, our founding fathers also built in a constitutional release valve, the referendum, so that their oversights, and also unforeseen developments in society, the economy, and technology, could be better reflected in the future. A difficult but not insurmountable bridge to cross (a majority of people in a majority of states, and an overall majority), referendums have meant that our constitution has proven to be both reliably durable, and open to change and evolution, when the need required.

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 9


OCLife | Community

Love brought Anna to Australia; and has now taken her back to Ukraine — DAVID DIXON —

Stronger than hate — it is the most powerful force in the universe. It is love that brought Hanna and her mother from war-ravaged Ukraine to Orange, and it is love that has taken them back again. Partner of Orange businessman, Glen Evans, Hanna (also, “Anna”) and her mum, Olena, recently returned from the safety of the Colour City to the war-ravaged Black Sea city of Odesa to try and relocate her father, Alexander. “She’s going back with mum to rescue dad, he’s in our flat in Odesa with Anna’s cat, the house in their village south of there was 100 per cent destroyed by the Russians,” Glen said. “They’ve lost everything they’ve had, the apartment block he’s in, has itself had a direct hit from a Cruise missile, it came in and hit the apartment next door, so it’s still very dangerous,” he added. Glen was able, with the help of an Australian-Ukraine friendship association, to organise Anna and her mother’s exit in March via a “green corridor” bus to Sofia in Bulgaria and then on to Australia. Rescued from the war zone via an Australian 90-day visitor’s visa, Anna and her mother have spent more than two months here, before last weekend heading back via Melbourne to their devastated homeland. Hanna said her aim is to try and get her

father to safety away from the front line. Due to strict Ukrainian bans on militaryaged men leaving as refugees, Alexander — who is in his late fifties — was forced to stay behind. “The first thing is, I’m so grateful I’m alive, and that my Mum was able to come here with me; my Father couldn’t leave because of martial law,” Anna said. “We want to move him to a village in the west, but he doesn’t want to leave Odesa, this is where he has lived all his life,” she added. With Ukrainian news on the television, Olena takes a call from Alexander inquiring about their odyssey back into an active war zone. The seemingly unprovoked Russian invasion for so-far undeclared military objectives, now consumes their whole waking hours, their thoughts, and their prayers. Their village near Pervomaiska in the country’s ravaged east, has been alternately in Ukrainian and Russian hands, with the Russians seemingly intent on a scorchedearth military conquest.

Anna with her mother Olena, Both recently returned to the war zone in the Black Sea city of Odesa to help relocate her elderly father.

“It’s all so very sad, your heart bleeds for them, but the Ukrainians have been living with this for 16 years,” he said of the twodecade on-again, off-again, Russian-backed insurgency that has killed thousands in the former Soviet republic.

strong city where they had bought a unit together and were planning a future.

Meeting in 2016 and planning to wed, the pandemic put a spanner in their long-held plans.

After our interview, Glen sent confirmation via email of his love’s return to the city where they intended to make their future together.

“They’re from 42km away at Bilozirka and near Mykolaiv, they’ve destroyed every house,” Glen said.

“COVID kept us apart for 20-months; we planned to get married in 2020, but haven’t been able to due to the lockdowns and restrictions.”

“They’ll conquer a village and then destroy it on the way out, seemingly out of spite.

The current ground war is a world away from the life they enjoyed in the million-

10 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

“Life in Odesa is very like Europe, beautiful cafes, bars, wonderful history… they were part of the Soviet Union, but now they look to the western culture,” he explained.

“Just wanted to tell you, Anna has arrived back in Odesa, who knows what tomorrow brings? Ukrainians are a peaceful-loving people, so many lives already lost, family’s torn apart from this war.”


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OCLife | Community

Beyer-Garratt 6029 steams into Orange It was a big weekend for local railway aficionados with Australia’s largest operating steam locomotive, the BeyerGarratt 6029, steaming into Orange on Monday.

Hundreds of people gathered along the railway tracks to see the locomotive steam in and out of Orange. Joining the NSW fleet in 1954, ‘The Garratt’ travelled more

Now part of the Transport Heritage NSW fleet, the historic engineering marvel spent Saturday and Sunday of the long weekend running day trips from Bathurst to Wimbledon,

than one million kilometres before it was retired from service in 1972. Troy Pearson from Eyetrix Productions was kind enough

before making the longer journey to Orange Station on

to share these stunning images of Beyer-Garratt 6029

Monday.

taken at East Fork, Orange, on Monday afternoon.

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Community | OCLife

Olsen admits; “local pressure” for special work to new Gallery! Acclaimed Australian artist, John Olsen admits it! The recent donation of one of his major works to the newly reopened Orange Regional Gallery, followed local pressure… The emblematic painting, “Flight to Minderoo” was completed as part of a series sponsored by mining magnate Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest with Olsen recently visiting Orange to dedicate the work.

Artist John Olsen with his “Flight to Minderoo” on his recent visit to Orange to dedicate the work.

Australian bush. “The Australian landscape is best viewed from the air. It’s so vast, so spread out… it’s on the way to one of Forrest’s cattle stations and I saw all these Sturt desert peas, under the curvature of the earth, as the helicopter turned.” He said his work is an attempt to portray the special qualities of the Australian outback that were too often dismissed by our early artists.

He said that part of his reason for gifting it — as well as pressure from friends — is that the new gallery, he believes, is one of the best regional facilities in Australia.

“The landscape was not particularly looked at until the Heidelberg School and artists like Streeton and Roberts… and later, Nolan and Drysdale.

“Well, certain friends in Orange, suggested it would be a good idea,” he said lightheartedly of the piece donated to the Colour City.

“When I first saw it, I thought ‘this is not bloody dead, this is alive,’ there’s so much to look at…it’s a beautiful beast,” he added.

Olsen had sketched it while on a helicopter as part of the Forest commission. He said the view from the air gives a better perspective of the unique vastness of the

He said Orange itself was also “very special” and one of his favourite Australian country towns, with an artist’s role to reflect this landscape in their works.

et. If your n increased ou know that s your pet free ust come and

He said the new gallery was the ideal backdrop, that did not intrude on the works that it housed, listing it with Newcastle as his favourite regional gallery. Visiting the Orange gallery during its redevelopment phase, Olsen was said to be so impressed, he offered the painting along with a bronze sculpture and four works on paper. “It has wonderful open spaces… it provides a place of concourse. It’s warm with a sense of intimacy. “People feel comfortable about coming here, it’s monastic,” Olsen added. His visit included a fundraising event in support of acquisitions for the Gallery’s permanent collection.

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OCLife | Community

“Just the best aftern n! ” Orange U15s Netball Reps visit Anson Street School

“Just the best afternoon!” is how excited Anson Street School Stage 4 students described the visit last Tuesday by the Orange Under 15s Netball Team.

upset. It was a wonderfully honest conversation where the Anson Street students helped out with practical ways of coping when you feel anxious.

Together, the students and players had great fun talking, playing, and learning together.

Then it was organised mayhem with the U15s leading Stage 4 through some high-energy activities. Stage 4 had no trouble mastering team balloon races, keeping balloons off the ground, playing competitive heads and shoulders, and racing tunnel ball

These U15 girls have all been selected to represent Orange at the upcoming Hart State Titles, which means three demanding days and 18 games of hard netball. What better way to help prepare than to visit the fabulous kids of Anson Street School? In readiness for the visit, Stage 4 made some eye-catching posters for the team tent and prepared some excellent questions. In a shared circle of friendship, they talked happily about netball, what they valued about their team, whether they had a “team cheer”, and what they did if they felt worried or

14 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Best of all, it was all-in together. The ONA representative team is coached by Pam Ryan and managed by Emily Callaway, who were so proud of both the netballers and the students. What they particularly noticed, was the beautiful way in which everyone interacted – showing great mutual respect and kindness. A very special afternoon indeed!


Phil DONATO MP State Member for Orange

Donato’s Diary

orange push for

Palliative Six years ago I first met Jenny Hazelton and Janice Harris of Orange Push for Palliative (OP4P) where I listened to their vision for expanding palliative care services for the Orange community and having a standalone dedicated facility solely devoted to palliative care patients. Six years on and after a lot of work, perseverance and cooperation with local health agencies and overwhelming community support much has been achieved. We now have two solely dedicated palliative beds and surge capacity for another two beds at the Orange Health Service complimenting the specialist community palliative team who do such great work managing palliative care in the community. OP4P have provided furnishings, artwork, quilts and other items to make these dedicated rooms tranquil, comfortable and appropriate for these settings, patients and family members. They have also arranged community forums and fund raising

I am finally out of isolation and although it was more probably like a normal flu for me, I can see that if you had respiratory issues and/or other medical complications that put you into the higher risk bracket - it would be very serious. Although was not able to be in Parliament last week, my SFF colleagues continue to hold the NSW Government to account and pursue the interests of the community, who are increasingly challenged with cost of living pressures. The Hon. Robert Borsak MLC has introduced a bill to remove the public sector wages cap. The wage cap is well below inflation and public sector working families are struggling. Mr Borsak also joined in solidarity with protesters in Macquarie Street, calling on the government to listen and act.

��

events to raise awareness in the community. I was delighted to present Jenny and Janice with a copy of a Community Recognition Statement I delivered in the NSW Parliament last year acknowledging the tremendous work Orange Push For Palliative has done in our community over the last half a dozen years. OP4P are dedicated, passionate, enthusiastic advocates in our community. Well done on what you have helped to achieve for our community thus far. There is still more to be done and your advocacy and support is appreciated by a grateful community.

THANK A FIRST RESPONDER DAY

PET Scan

Accessibility WHERE CAN YOU GET PET SCAN?...NOT ORANGE Orange is a glaring absentee from this list of the Australian Government's Department of Health PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Units in NSW. Given the size, scale and scope of Orange Health Service, a PET/CT scanner is essential imaging equipment for 21st century medicine. The people of Orange and the broader Central West deserve this medical equipment and service, and I'll keep pursuing the Government until they commit and deliver.

Last week saw the celebration of Thank a First Responder Day. So to all those men and women in our emergency services who stand vigilantly on the front line, turning up to help people at all hours in all conditions - WE THANK YOU. For more than two decades I was a police officer, and I have an understanding of what many first responders face. It’s not easy to deal with what they see and do each day. Everyday first responders see people on the worst days of their lives, and it takes its toll - we should all remember that. We appreciate our first responders and thank them for their service and being there for us.

Shane Mumford Visits Orange It was great to welcome 2012 AFL Premiership Winning player and former Geelong, Sydney Swans and GWS Giants ruckman Shane Mumford to Orange. Due to the extreme cold conditions the training session was held in the Naylor Pavilion, Orange Showgrounds, where my old club, Orange Tigers AFL, Auskick and Womens team took

Orange Electorate Office

|

the opportunity to meet, listen and learn from one of the best AFL Ruckman of the last decade. Shane played over 200 games in the AFL over a career spanning over a decade and won the flag with the Sydney Swans in 2012. Great to see players like Shane coming to our town to help develop the skills and mentoring the next generation.

Phil

Palliative Care Services I’ve long championed palliative care, and improving palliative services has been, and remains, one of my biggest priorities since first being elected in 2016 - when I met with members of Orange Push for Palliative. Since then I’ve lobbied government to reinstate dedicated inpatient palliative care services, which vanished from our local health service when moving from the old hospital to the new. I debated a 10,000+ signature petition on the floor of parliament and raised the issue in many speeches and media interviews. I formed the Orange Palliative Working Group, comprised of stakeholders and NSW health representatives, and I have chaired it since. I have sat and listened to palliative patients, who shared their palliative journey with me. I’m forever grateful to the late Toney Fitzgerald, pictured here, and may he Rest In Peace. Toney braved discomfort and fatigue to implore me to deliver better palliative services. Sadly, Toney passed away soon after this picture was taken in 2019, but I have never given up in seeking better palliative services. The Government and NSW Health finally listened to our united voice and reinstated impatient palliative services at Orange, once again. Premier Perrottet’s announcement today of $743m in palliative funding over the next five years is most welcome. It’s important rural and regional communities get access to our share of the funding and resources. We need funding to train and retain palliative doctors and nurses out here in the country, having palliative inpatient beds made available, providing access to allied health such as psychologists, occupational therapists, chaplaincy and spiritual care. Rest assured, I will be speaking with the Premier and his team about palliative resources for the Orange electorate and the broader rural and regional NSW.

123 Byng Street, Orange NSW 2800 |

Telephone 6362 5199

Authorised by Philip Donato MP, Member for Orange. Funded using parliamentary entitlements.

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 15


OCLife | Community

City stalwart and two-handed bowler on Queen’s Birthday list A tenpin bowler with a unique action and a local community volunteer and leader were local conferees in this year’s Queen’s Birthday Honours list in Orange.

Owned and operated by his parents, Orange Tenpin Bowl is where Belmote learnt his trade and developed his iconic twohanded bowling style as a child.

Championship bowler, Jason Belmonte who has competed for years at and won some of the major tournaments around the world, was made a Member of Order of Australia (AM) in the yearly awards announced on the official birthday of Queen Elizabeth II.

Former Orange City Councillor and local church and community volunteer, William (Bill) John Kelly was also awarded an Order of Australia Medal (OAM) in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list for “service to the community of Orange.”

A professional tenpin bowler since 2008, Belmonte won world Professional Bowling Association (PBA) championships in 2017, 2019, and 2020 and was PBA Player of the Year in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019, and 2020. Belmonte has earned more PBA major titles than any other player and his two-handed bowling style has revolutionised the sport. The 38-year-old won his 13th major in March 2020, watched by his wife Kimberly, and children Hugo, Sylvia, and Aria.

THE

His good deeds and service over a number of years have included: former chair of the Orange Parish Finance Committee, including membership for 30 years; parishioner and volunteer for 50 years with the Catholic Young Men’s Society (CYMS) and a major sponsor through his Kelly’s Rugby Hotel for nearly 30 years of CYMS Junior Rugby League. An Orange City councillor between 1977–1988, he has also supported over decades the St Vincent de Paul Society, was chair of Orange Liquor Accord for 10-years, and has been a supporter of the Australian Red Cross since 1991.

Championship bowler, Jason Belmonte

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 17


OCLife | Community

The goodenough parent with Emily Thompson

The loooong weekend Friday: Hubby drives off into the sunset, heading to his family’s acreage near Yass for the annual maintenance regime — tree chopping, fence repairs, and other outdoorsy stuff I’m grateful not to be involved in. My contribution is sending him on his way with 24 chocolate chip cookies, baked to perfection by the heroes at North Orange Woollies… Well, 22 after I’d had morning tea, but it’s the thought that counts. I pick up the children after school, hand out screens, and take my new book to the bubble bath. I sleep diagonally across our king-sized bed and truly enjoy the night. Saturday: After a craft morning and a long play outside, I tell Miss Seven that we’ll try something new while watching a movie. “Instead of you asking us to explain the plot to you all the time, I want you to try and use your ‘listening ears’. You control the remote, and you can press pause, but only when you NEED to. Then you can ask us to clarify anything.” One minute and twenty-three seconds into The Princess Bride, she exerts her new power “Hey Mum…” she starts. I remind her that it’s only if she has something really important to ask. “Did you know that when we chew we don’t move your whole head? We only move our bottom jaw?” she says, proud of her important new knowledge. She demonstrates the lower jaw movements, looking like a starving lion at a three-day rave. Her sister and I collapse with laughter. I kiss the top of her head and we spend the next two-anda-half hours watching a 90-minute movie. After it is over, I tell her The Princess Bride was my favourite movie when I was her age. “This movie used to be black and white?!” she gasps. Sunday: I attempt to “adult”, briefly, by stacking the dishwasher and washing uniforms. Surreptitiously throwing half a loaf of bread to the chooks, I announce we need to duck-out for bread… via the coffee shop obviously. Both children complain and I open my mouth ready to explain how we all need to pitch in, and that means sometimes doing things you don’t want to do. Not having had any coffee yet, what I actually say is: “I’ll give you both $5 to buy a treat if you stop whingeing.” Miss 13 buys a new sketchbook and spends the afternoon practicing shading techniques. Miss Seven buys a whistle and a toy grenade. I know I should have seen this coming and I can only blame myself. I last less than an hour before announcing that whistles are only for outdoor play. Hubby arrives home as Miss Seven blows a whistle in my ear in protest and asks “How was your quiet weekend?” Monday: Miss Seven wakes us by blowing her whistle as loudly as she can, heralding her announcement that she has a Queen’s Birthday party planned. Hubby, god bless him, rises to the challenge and spends the morning making (amazing) profiteroles with her for the ‘High Tea’. It’s so fancy we even pull out the Darth Vader teapot and even finish our Darjeeling before the first grenade is thrown and the stegosaurus nerf gun is produced from behind a back for a series of headshots. It’s another beautiful weekend, and although Miss Seven’s writing at school tomorrow is sure to include the phrase “and then I threw a grenade at Daddy”, it was an awful lot of fun. Plus,I know exactly how to wake them up for school tomorrow…

18 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Thank you to our first responders! Children attending Orange City Council’s Occasional Care Cottage last Wednesday were thrilled to meet some of our local fire fighters and say “thanks” on “Thank a First Responder Day”, June 8. Firefighters from the Orange Fire Station, Tom Ringk and Jared Taylor, helped the excited kids try-on jackets and handle firefighting equipment, before they all braved the cold to climb aboard the two visiting fire-trucks — lights flashing and sirens wailing! The two also gratefully accepted the thank-you card the children made for them, along with some homemade baked treats.


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End of Financial Year Review of your Estate Planning EOFY! The 30th June deadline is fast approaching! Tax time and the EOFY is a time when we stop and take stock of where things are at, and where they are headed. Usually, we think this time of year is all about our finances. For our tax, we review our finances, assets, investments and liabilities. We examine our business structures and take time to plan, budget and forecast for the next financial year. We set personal and/or business targets for the next financial year. We make or adjust plans where there have been changes in circumstances during the last financial year. Did you know that some of these financial decisions could be impacting on your estate planning? Estate planning is the process of planning ahead to make sure your affairs are in place when you pass away or become sick and can no longer make decisions yourself. So, as well as reviewing your financial status, this is also the perfect time to get your estate plan in order or take time to review what you have in place already. Everyday financial changes can have an impact on your Estate Planning. This may include changes in the structure of investments, ownership of assets, the setting up of family trusts or self-managed superannuation as part of taxation strategies and alterations to business and corporate structures you have in place. Any major life change should trigger a ‘check in’ with your solicitor to see whether your Will and other documents (e.g. Enduring Power of Attorney & Appointment of Enduring Guardian) are still relevant and in accordance with your wishes. Major life changes can include (but are not limited to) death of an appointed executor/beneficiary, marriage, separation, divorce, entering a new relationship, birth of children/grandchildren, buying property, estrangement or a falling out with a beneficiary, going overseas, being diagnosed with an illness, your children becoming adults, winning the lottery, entering a business and/or setting up a company. As you can see, the reasons for reviewing your documents are many and varied! We suggest that you make a routine of ‘checking in’ with your solicitor at least once every two years to make sure all your Estate Planning affairs are in order. Our team can review your current Estate Planning documents and determine if any changes need to be made. Alternatively, where a Will has not been made, we will help you work out who you would like to appoint to the various Estate Planning roles. We often communicate and collaborate with client’s accountants and financial advisors to ensure that what you have set up with your finances will work with your estate planning documentation. Just like you feel a sense of relief when you hit ‘lodge’ on your tax return, you will feel that same sense of satisfaction once you know your Estate Planning is in order and up to date. Please contact one of our Wills and Estates Team solicitors, Geraldine, Deirdre or George for an appointment at Blackwell Short on 02 6393 9200 or bsl.reception@blackwellshort.com.au.

This article does not constitute legal advice and provides general information only.

60 Hill Street Orange | PO Box 26 |DX 3014 | 02 6393 9200 | bsl.reception@blackwellshort.com.au | www.blackwellshort.com.au JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 19


OCLife | entertainment

More to the story…

Smith & Jones at The Agrestic Grocer

Popular Bathurst duo Smith & Jones have earnt a special place in the hearts of audiences across the Central West. Join them at The Agrestic Grocer on Friday, June 24 for a uniquely intimate performance as these two accomplished musicians share the stories behind some of their favourite original tunes.

Keyboard player Abby Smith and guitarist Sophie Jones formed their musical partnership in Bathurst eight years ago. In this time, Smith & Jones have released two albums of original music: Dark Gives Way (2017) and Something Worth Learning (2019). They recently released a new single Waiting on My Turn. Produced with Kris Schubert at The Boatshed studio in O’Connell, it marks a new chapter in the sound and musical journey of Smith & Jones. “As a duo, we are constantly walking the line between self-expression as individuals, and the desire to produce and perform work that speaks to the heart of who we are together,” the pair said. “The songs we’ll be performing as part of this show will allow the audience to peek behind the curtain of this special collaborative relationship and will explore the way our dedication to our musical connection lets us create the work we’ve made over the past eight years.” Abby and Sophie have worked as educators, community choir leaders, mentors to young artists and conducted workshops within the disability sector. They have also expanded their creative outlets as composers and performers as part of a visual art installation and working extensively in theatre. Having toured extensively, most recently the duo have provided support to Katie Noonan, Sam Buckingham, The Hussy Hicks and Amy Vee. They have also appeared in many festival lineups including Tamworth and Inland Sea of Sound. Join Smith & Jones at The Agrestic Grocer and explore the way they have weaved their musical magic from early days and journeys in a beloved Corolla along many a highway of lost hearts and other assorted tales. It will also be an opportunity to peak behind the curtain and see what they are cooking up for their new album — tentatively titled “My Heart is Always Taking Me” Tickets available online from The Agrestic Grocer. Doors open at 6pm.

20 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022


entertainment | OCLife

Flute and Harp star in

Orange Symphony Orchestra’s mid-year concert Orange Symphony Orchestra’s mid-year concert on Sunday, June 26, will be a lively affair featuring a diverse selection of dance-inspired energetic music under the baton of Elizabeth W. Scott. Mozart’s ‘Flute and Harp Concerto’ heads the concert, held at the Kinross Wolaroi School’s Derek Pigot Auditorium, with soloists Emily Granger on harp and David Shaw on flute.

Coelho from Sydney, is an extraordinary piece of music that fits very well — it’s originally for a flute, harp and string sextet, but we’ve contacted the composer and he’s agreed to have it written and performed by an orchestra instead.” After a short break, the Orange Symphony Orchestra will return with dance-inspired pieces to get the blood racing, David said.

“It is a fantastic 25-minute work for solo flute, solo harp plus the orchestra,” said David Shaw, who is currently Head of Keyboard Studies and School Liaison at the Orange Regional Conservatorium and Orchestral Manager of the Orange Symphony Orchestra.

“The first one is a Khachaturian piece, the ‘Sabre Dance’ from the ballet Gayane… and it is an instantly recognisable piece full of energy, very hard and aggressive articulation for the wind and the brass — some fantastic moments, plus saxophone which you don’t see in orchestras very often,” David said.

“And we have created a companion piece for this because Mozart’s ‘Flute and Harp Concerto’ gets performed quite a lot and this other work – which has been written by a local Australian composer, Tristan

This will be followed by Copland’s ‘Hoedown’ from the ballet Rodeo, saluting North American square dance traditions; and the sultry Danzón No. 2, by Márquez, which is sure to transport the audience to

a smoky dance salon in Mexico City. “The concert overall has a little bit of an American bent to it,” David added. “Our conductor is American, she’s from New York, and the harpist, Emily Granger, is from Chicago originally… “And Aaron Copeland is one of the United State’s great 20th-century composers, so we have quite a number of little snippets and examples of American music throughout our concert.” Elizabeth W. Scott’s work with the Orange Symphony Orchestra began last season, in which she prepared what would become its 2022 opener in February after the long COVID shåutdown. Based in New York City for two decades before her move to Australia, Elizabeth worked as a music director and guest conductor with opera companies, festivals, and choruses across the US Northeast —

including ensembles that performed in Carnegie Hall. Elizabeth has a long-standing love of preparing and premiering the works of living composers and introducing them to new audiences. Harpist Emily Granger is an internationally renowned performer who has featured in the previous two Orange Chambre Music Festivals. Emily has performed recitals from Carnegie Hall to the Kennedy Centre and has appeared with the Chicago, Sydney, and Tasmanian Symphony Orchestras. Following the June 26 concert in Orange, Emily departs for the USA where she will marry composer Tristan Coelho. Orange Symphony Orchestra’s winter mid-year concert will be held at Kinross Wolaroi School, in the Derek Pigot Auditorium, on Sunday, June 26 at 2.30pm.

Tickets are on sale from HUMANITIX events.humanitix.com/the-oso-at-kws or call the Orange Regional Conservatorium on 6361 7974. CHILDREN ARE FREE TO ATTEND WITH PAYING ADULTS.

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

FRIDAY 17TH

Mila Haske ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴ ✴✴✴✴✴✴✴

SATURDAY 18TH

PROUD TO BE A PUB

Jason Hill

To all our customers the Metro & Town Square thank you for your patience & support whist we continue our refurbishment to endevour to improve your experience with us...

Thank-you The Murphy Family

rump

the awesome

sunday roast tuesday $ $ 15

+ chips & veg or chips & salad

OPEN 7 DAYS | 107 BYNG STREET | 6362 1353 | WWW.THEMETROPOLITANHOTELORANGE.COM.AU

15

+ roast veg

ROAST SUBJECT TO CHANGE EACH SUNDAY - GROUND FLOOR ONLY

PLEASE RING FOR BOOKINGS

THE AWESOME

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 21

HUMP RUMP

SUNDAY ROAST


OCLife | entertainment

FRIDAY 17 JUNE

SATURDAY 18 JUNE

Metropolitan Hotel

The Victoria Hotel

Live music at the metro every Friday from 8.00pm.

on

Orange Civic Theatre Australian Tenors

Five of the best tenor voices in Australia live at the Orange Civic Theatre, 7.30pm, Tickets at Ticketek or call 6393 8111

w h a t 's

JUNE

The Robin Hood Hotel

Live Music from Robbie Mortimer in the Sports Bar, 8.00pm – 11.00pm.

SHINDIG! Julie Gilmore and Tony Haley sing the music of Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, The Beatles, Doris Day, Johnny Cash, The Monkees, Dean Martin, Neil Diamond, Simon & Garfunkel and more. From 8pm.

The Robin Hood Hotel

Samuel Debenham in the Sports Bar, 8.00pm – 11.00pm.

The Ophir Tavern Neil Gill from 6.30pm.

MARKETS JUNE 18 Cumnock Markets - 9.00am - 12.00pm. Crossroads Park, Cumnock.

JUNE 19 Blayney Farmers Markets, 8.30am 12.30pm. Carrington Park, Blayney

The Ophir Tavern

Live music from Tameka Kennedy from 6.30pm.

SATURDAY 18 JUNE Metropolitan Hotel

Live music at the Metro, every Saturday from 8pm.

Orange Conservatorium Choral Gala

The combined choirs of the Orange Regional Conservatorium present Claudio Monteverdi’s Beatus Vir from Selva morale e spirituale, one of the renaissance composer’s most stirring liturgical works. 5pm–6.30pm

SATURDAY 18 JUNE Orange Civic Theatre - 1927

Australian rock icons 1927 in concert — a show not to be missed. Orange Civic Theatre, 7.30pm. Tickets at Ticketek or call 6393 8111

Coming events.. JUNE 24

JUNE 26

JULY 7

THE SILK ROAD ENCORE! ERIC BOGLE & FRIENDS IN CONCERT

ORANGE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA WITH THE COLOUR CITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA

SYDNEY SYMPHONY PERFORM TCHAIKOVSKY

JUNE 25

JULY 1–2

MELBOURNE INTERNATIONAL COMEDY FESTIVAL

THE COMEDY OF ERRORS, BELL SHAKESPEARE COMPANY

22 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

JULY 8 QUEEN BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY


entertainment | OCLife

Bogle and Orange Male Voice Choir’s

“Encore”reunion show Australian folk music legend, Eric Bogle and the Orange Male Voice Choir are reuniting for a unique and unforgettable “Encore” performance at Orange Civic Theatre on Friday, June 24.

In 2019, the novel pairing of Eric Bogle and the Orange Male Voice Choir, wowed local audiences with their joint performances at the Bloomfield Hall and Orange Civic Theatre.

to come back and do it again.”

An “Encore” performance has been on the cards ever since but only now has been realised, Orange Male Voice Choir Vice President, Don Harvey said.

“We will do three of our own songs and Eric will do a bracket of he and his band — they will do a number of songs and then we will join with Eric and do some backing vocals to a couple of his quite famous songs,” Don said.

“That was the first time Eric had ever done anything with a choir,” Don said. “He was a bit tentative about what it would be like but, at the end of the experience he thoroughly enjoyed it… we were absolutely stunned at how good the concert was — as was Eric, in fact, and I think that’s why he agreed

The program will be of a similar structure to that in 2019, with Eric and band alternating sets with the choir, as well as performing together.

The choral parts for Bogle’s music have been arranged by internationally renowned Australian multi-instrumentalist and composer Paul Jarman, who will also be guest conductor.

Don considers the two concerts with Eric Bogle in 2019 as a highlight of his own musical career and said this is a show not to be missed. “It really was a magnificent experience and we had audiences responding months afterwards… to say what a wonderful experience it was to have Eric and the choir together,” Don said. “Eric is an icon… he is one of the few, in my opinion, who speaks with a genuine nature of Australia and its people and we don’t anticipate ever doing another concert with Eric; this is a performance that we are really looking forward to doing as well as we possibly can.”

Encore! Eric Bogle and friends in Concert: Featuring Eric Bogle and the Bogle Band, Paul Jarman, and the Orange Male Voice Choir. Orange Civic Theatre, Friday, June 24, 7pm for a 7.30 start. Tickets at Ticketek or call 6393 8111.

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 23


jazz Amy Viola

all t hat

Robbie Mortimer

— PHOTOS BY HENRY DEROOY —

Di White, Rob White, Cheryl and Sean Hanson at Mahalia Barnes

Deb Finlay and Bob Sykes at Mahalia Barnes

Donita Me On and Marina Ratnarajah at Mahalia Barnes

Helen Schaefer and Kim Filmer at Mahalia Barnes

Wanderlust

24 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Wanderlust

Wanderlust

Wanderlust


Inaugural Orange Winter Jazz Festival strikes the right note It was a big weekend for live music lovers in the Colour City, with the inaugural Orange Winter Jazz Festival putting on over 50 performances in venues across the CBD.

Seb Jones

Town Hall String Band

Matt McMahon

Mahalia Barnes

It was an ambitious first offering from the volunteer-run festival committee and while there’s plenty they’ll look to do differently next year, it all ran without a hitch, festival coordinator Luke Wilkinson said. “All the bands turned up all on time, all the sound worked, PAs worked… basically all the concerts went off as planned, so we’re very happy.” The committee will get together to debrief in the coming weeks, said Luke, who believes there is the potential to see a jazz festival become a permanent fixture on the Orange calendar.

Andrea Keller and Sandy Evans

Town Hall String Band

Dan Ratnarajah and Corrine Gunasekera at Mahalia Barnes

Into the Blue

Kasia Ciszak, Adele Carrington, Sam Ingham and Wayne Carrington at The Lord Anson

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 25


PaulTIERNEY

THE GREAT ESCAPE

I hope Orange supports a new initiative in town I was given an original version of the Monopoly game on my fifth birthday and the rest, as they say, is history. Not only do I still have it, albeit a little beaten up, but it still gets played semi-regularly. From those days back in 1971 until now, I’m still always on a mission to get the “green properties” — Oxford, Bond, and Regent Street — I reckon they’re the best chance of bankrupting someone, mathematically speaking. And the board games obsession hasn’t waned now that I’m in my fifties. We still have regular games nights (with wine and beer nowadays☺), and some of the newer games are brilliant — Bananagrams, Exploding Kittens, and Codenames just to name a few. Last year, the passion for this type of thing jumped from the dining room table into the main street, as a company brought their murder mystery role-play adventure to our town. Our crew were there with bells on, along with hundreds of others, who dressed up and gallivanted madly around the streets of Orange solving puzzles, putting together the pieces of clues to work out “whodunnit.” A couple of the best hours of my year in 2021, I have to say. Last month, a new business venture launched on Summer Street. One less empty shopfront, thank goodness. It’s refreshing to see headlines on the local news and social media platforms support this new enterprise, instead of the constant banter about potholes, golden balls, and what some people would like to do to cyclists (ugh, did that really get said?). Whilst I don’t write this column for kickbacks or favours, I am going to give this project a bit of a plug, they deserve to get off the ground. It’s called an “Escape Room”, and if you’ve never

heard of one before, I’ll try and enlighten you a bit. It’s like playing a real-life board game, where the aim is to “escape” from the room within your hour time limit, by working collectively within your group and piecing together the clues of the puzzles, making progress to eventually “unlock” the door. There are three different adventures to partake in, and we were so impressed the first time around with the setup of the rooms and professionalism of the staff, that we’re back on deck this coming weekend. I can’t (won’t) divulge anything about what goes on inside the rooms, for fear of doing the spoiler thing. But if solving puzzles, patterns, mysteries, clues, riddles and challenges is your thing (or you think it might be), then you should give this new venture a go. Spooky music, flashing lights, stunningly detailed props, great special effects and, most importantly, challenges that make sense and really work. The adrenaline buzz I got after using my brain to solve a couple of clues to make progress was insane. Love it. I’m sure many of you still have a couple of “Dine and Discover” vouchers left on your phone — you’ve got until the end of this month to use them, so this is a great opportunity to cash them in. There’s been quite a few new and interesting projects get underway in Orange over the last few years, and they all deserve our support. New businesses can often have a honeymoon period — they will be fully patronised for the first months of their establishment in our town as inquisitive locals go and investigate. But, I believe we have a bit of a duty to keep supporting these kinds of ventures, and to ensure their longevity to allow them to grow deep roots.

26 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

LIFEandTIMES with ANGUS GIBB

Finding Your Way: Last week, my wife and I saw Jimeoin at the Ex-Services’ Club. We had a great time. Despite his flights being delayed, the show started on time and he did not disappoint. For those familiar with his style of stand-up comedy, it was a lot of the usual sorts of jokes and amazing facial expressions that he is famous for. At the end of the show, however, he made a fascinating comment that has been rattling around in my head ever since. He said: “If there’s a point to my show – which there probably isn’t – I just hope that you can all find your own way in life.” Find your own way in life. I wonder if you’ve ever stopped to consider a question like this. What does it actually mean to find your own way in life? And what is the destination? If everyone is going their own way, how do you know if you have arrived? I think most of us at some point in our lives, are confronted with existential questions such as these. They can cause us to stop dead in our tracks as we think about what we may or may not have accomplished. Questions such as these can keep us awake at night. They can cause us to make huge, lifealtering decisions For example, a recent article published by the ABC shared about how one family decided to adopt a nomadic lifestyle in a

caravan with their two children in order to make the most of life as they go and explore Australia together. They did not want to wait until they were retired to join the great caravanning pilgrimage, but have chosen to do this now. What brought it on? At the root of their decision was a question like: “how can I make the most of my life?” So how can you? Part of what makes a question like this so confronting is that, when what we thought we knew fails, or our deeply held conviction turns out to be untrue, we can be rocked to our very core. So how can you find your way? Jesus spoke about the need for us to find our way in life, but it wasn’t some abstract question that could be answered in all sorts of varied and different ways. In fact, one of his close friends asked Jesus about how to find the way and the response Jesus gives is remarkable. In John 14:5-6, it says this: Thomas said to him, “Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?” Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” Jesus himself is the way. Jesus himself is the one that is both the answer to, and the giver of life. He answers this question by giving himself up to death for you. So that you can find your way to life.


ODEON 5 MOVIE CLUB - $20 PER YEAR, AND ALL MOVIES (EX 3D) ARE THEN DISCOUNTED FOR MORE INFO CONTACT CINEMA

120 MINS

Thurs 16th

10.30, 1.00, 3.45, 6.30

Fri

17th

10.30, 1.00, 3.45, 6.30

Sat

18th

10.30, 12.15, 1.00, 2.45, 3.45, 6.30

Sun 19th

10.30, 12.15, 1.00, 2.45, 3.45, 6.30

Mon 20th

10.30, 1.00, 3.45, 6.30

Tues 21st

10.30, 1.00, 3.45, 6.30

Wed 22nd

10.30, 1.00, 3.45, 6.30

TOP GUN

JURASSIC WORLD

Thurs 16

Thurs 16th 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 6.15*, 7.45

MAVERICK

146 MINS

DOMINION

10.30, 1.30, 2.30, 4.30, 7.15

th

162 MINS

Fri

17th 10.30, 1.30, 2.00, 4.30, 6.15, 8.00

Fri

17th 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 7.45

Sat

18th 10.30, 1.30, 4.30, 6.15, 8.00

Sat

18th 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 7.45

Sun

19th 10.30, 1.30, 4.30, 6.15, 8.00

Sun

19th 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 7.45

Mon 20th 10.30, 1.30, 2.30, 4.30, 7.15

Mon 20th 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 6.15*, 7.45

Tues 21st 10.30, 1.30, 2.30, 4.30, 7.15

Tues 21st 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 6.15*, 7.45

Wed 22nd 10.30, 1.30, 2.30, 4.30, 7.15

Wed 22nd 10.45, 1.45, 3.15*, 4.45, 6.15*, 7.45

THE

MOVIE CLUB

123 MINS

DROVER’S WIFE Thurs 16th 10.30*, 12.45*, 5.15 Fri

17th 10.30*, 12.45*, 4.30

Sat

18th 5.15

Sun

19th 5.15

MULTIVERSE OF MADNESS 141 MINS

HOW GOOD DOES A FREE MOVIE TICKET SOUND?

Thurs 16th 7.45

For an annual fee of just $20 you will receive:

• • • •

$10 10.30 , 12.45 , 5.15 TIX

Mon 20th 10.30*, 12.45*, 5.15 Tues 21st

DOCTOR STRANGE

Head to the candy bar or our website to sign up!

*

*

ADVENTURE

SONIC 2

THE HEDGEHOG

104 MINS

115 MINS

17th 7.00

Sat

18th 7.45

Sun 19th 7.45 Mon 20th 7.45 Tues 21st 7.45

DON’T FORGET DINE & DISCOVER VOUCHERS EXPIRE SOON

Wed 22nd 10.30*, 12.45*, 5.15

PIL’S

A free ticket upon sign up Discounted ticket prices for any 2D/3D movie session Every 5th visit you receive a $5 ticket voucher to use! A weekly e-newsletter direct to your inbox.

Fri

Wed 22nd 7.45

THE BAD GUYS

OPERATION MINCEMEAT

115 MINS

142 MINS

Thurs 16th ----

Thurs 16th ----

Thurs 16th ----

Thurs 16th 11.30

Fri

17th ----

Fri

17th ----

Fri

17th ----

Fri

17th 11.00

Sat

18th 10.15

Sat

18th 10.30*

Sat

18th 1.00*

Sat

18th ----

Sun 19th 10.15 Mon 20th ---Tues 21st ---Wed 22nd ----

Sun 19th 10.30*

$10 TIX

Mon 20th ---Tues 21st ---Wed 22nd ----

Mon 20th ---Tues 21st ---Wed 22nd ----

ONLINE BOOKING IS PREFERRED

$10 TIX

Mon 20th 11.30 Tues 21st 11.30 Wed 22nd 11.30

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ACCEPTED HERE Programme for Thurs 16th to Wed 22nd June 2022

43 WILLIAM ST ORANGE • 6362 0213 (ADMIN) SUBSCRIBE AT WWW.ODEON5.COM.AU TO HAVE PROGRAMME EMAILED WEEKLY.

Sun 19th ----

Sun 19th 1.00*

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*

HEARING/VISUAL IMPAIRED EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE

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

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 27


YOUR LOCAL

COUNCIL AT WORK

Orange playground map now available on Council’s website Find your nearest Orange playground, no matter where you are around town, with Orange City Council’s new online playground map. The handy map of all of Orange’s playgrounds has been added to Orange City Council’s website at www.orange.nsw.gov.au/ playgrounds/. It includes a list of playground features, amenities, and photographs of each space. Users can also get directions to playgrounds through Google Maps. Once the installation of new playgrounds in Matthews Park, Larance Park and Sullivan Reserve is completed, Orange will have 37 outdoor play areas ranging from a neighbourhood swing set to the city’s largest play space, the Orange Adventure

IN BRIEF w A key element of Refugee Week 2022, Orange is preparing to welcome a group of 40 recent arrivals from Ukraine on a tour of Orange and Cowra tomorrow, Friday 17 June.

Playground. The indoor playground at the Orange Indoor Tennis Centre will also be a valuable addition for children to play inside this winter. It is expected to open in time for the school holidays. Orange Mayor Jason Hamling says the new Council map is an important tool that provides relevant information and the location of our playgrounds. “With 37 outdoor playgrounds around the city, many residents might not know they have playgrounds in or near their neighbourhood, not to mention the many thousands of visiting families we have to the city each year,” Cr Hamling said. Orange City Council Sport and Recreation Committee Chair, Cr Tammy Greenhalgh, says the

city’s playgrounds fall into three categories, local, district and regional. “A diverse network of play spaces throughout the city is an effective way of ensuring the city’s playgrounds met the needs of different users with different needs,” Cr Greenhalgh said. Local: Orange has 30 local play spaces. Serving one neighbourhood or located close to or within residential areas, local play spaces are accessible by pedestrians and those on bicycles and are generally used for short periods of time. District: Orange has six district play spaces, Glenroi Oval, Elephant Park, John Lomas Skate Park, Lake Canobolas, Cook Park and Sir Jack Brabham Oval. District playgrounds serve several neighbourhoods, and

often people from other towns, and are designed to be used for longer periods of time, with facilities such as parking, toilets, tables and seating. Regional: Orange has one regional play space, Orange Adventure Playground. Serving the whole city and visitors from other towns it is expected to be used for prolonged periods, perhaps even all day, with parking, toilets, tables, seating and barbecue facilities. Orange City Council’s playground network is inspected every month, and repairs and maintenance are carried out as soon as possible. The playground map will be updated when playgrounds are replaced, and new playgrounds installed.

Members of the community are invited to attend a free community event at 6.30pm at Orange Regional Conservatorium to learn more about the Ukranian Refugee Program, run by the Community Migrant Resource Centre at Parramatta. Two staff members from the centre, Priscella Mabor and Olha Lyesakova will offer reflections on the Ukrainian Refugee Program, followed by a community bannermaking workshop and supper. Free tickets can be booked via Eventbrite.

Mayor welcomes government support to tour art exhibitions to the bush People from Orange and across regional NSW will be able to enjoy renowned art exhibitions usually only seen Sydney, thanks to funding provided through the NSW Government’s ‘Blockbuster initiative. Orange Mayor Jason Hamling has welcomed the announcement by NSW Deputy Premier Paul Toole, and Arts Minster Ben Franklin of funding of $762,000 for the threeyear regional touring program. The program will benefit regional galleries across the state for years to come. Thanks to this new funding, the exhibition by internationally acclaimed artist William Kentridge, ‘I am not me, the horse

is not mine’, which opened at Orange Regional Gallery in late March, will have its tour extended to other regional centres across NSW. The program will also enable the popular Wynne Prize for landscape painting to tour regional galleries.

and State Government decided they wanted to see more major exhibitions in regional areas, it was no surprise that they came to Orange to make that announcement,” he said. “People have been very impressed by the installation of the William Kentridge exhibition in our new

While its companion exhibition, the Archibald Portrait Prize, already has a long-established regional touring program, the funding will allow some of the finest contemporary landscape paintings to tour country areas, including Orange Regional Gallery.

$5.5 million Gallery extension.

Cr Hamling said it was good news for country communities.

people in other regional centres will be able to see it.

“When the Art Gallery of NSW

“In Orange, art is great for tourism.

www.orange.nsw.gov.au 28 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

|

Since

it

opened

in

Orange,

thousands of people have been through the doors to experience it, with many travelling specifically to the region to see it. Its success here has contributed to this new development

whereby

more

s FUNDING: Choosing Orange for a major funding announcement, (l. to r.) Orange Mayor Jason Hamling, Arts Minister Ben Franklin, Deputy Premier Paul Toole and Gallery Director Brad Hammond.

It’s great for the cultural life of our local residents. We have rich education programs for our school

students. It makes our community a better and more attractive place to live.”

Find us on social media @ Orange City Council


ORANGE PROPERTY MARKET

BEST PROPERTIES

BEST AGENTS

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

PROPERTY OF THE WEEK BROUGHT TO YOU BY...

MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

27 HALE STREET 3

1

ASHLEIGH BOCK 0421 360 948

4

TWINKLE, TWINKLE

$639,000

This lovely three-bedroom home is immaculate inside and out, perfect for the young family, downsizer or investor. The home has beautiful polished floorboards, plantation shutters and a lovely northerly aspect that keeps the home sunny and light filled all year round. Both the kitchen and bathroom have recently undergone renovations. You’ll love the kitchens neutral colour palate, modern appliances and storage. An added bonus is the enclosed sunroom; perfect for use as a second living area, office or play room. A toastie wood-fire will keep you warm in the cooler months. Outside is a great deck for entertaining and a two-bay shed with carport. Lovely manicured gardens add privacy to the home and there is a large level yard for the kids to run around on. You’ll love the feeling evoked when walking through this little star, take a look today!

Open for inspection: Thursday 16 June 5.15-5.45 JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 29


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

1

0

258 MCLACHLAN STREET

PRICE GUIDE: $510,000-$540,000

4

1

1

35 RACECOURSE ROAD

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

NEW LISTING

OPEN HOMES: THURSDAY 16 JUNE 12.30-1.30 POTENTIAL IS MY FIRST NAME This is a wonderful opportunity to own a lovely home on a 733sqm corner block. With three good-sized bedrooms, this mainly timber-clad home offers two living areas, a modern bathroom and functional galley kitchen with breakfast bar. The main living area is big, light, and airy with gas heating and leads off onto a northfacing paved area. There is a huge level yard which would be perfect for a shed with driveway access from Bletchington Street. At some stage the garage has been closed in and can be converted back without too much effort. If not, it makes a perfect utility room or third living space. Whether you’re looking to live, update or invest; you won’t find better value for money then 258 McLachlan Street. CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

5

2

2

60 CUDAL STREET, MANILDRA

PRICE GUIDE: $480,000-$520,000

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 gas fireplace. 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

1

25 MOULDER STREET

PRICE GUIDE: $769,000 - $799,000

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 18 JUNE 11.00-11.30 COUNTRY CHARM & COMFORT This beautiful and spacious home is full of charm and has been immaculately maintained and thoughtfully updated. You will love the white picket fence and cottage garden that frame the inviting front verandah. From the moment you walk into the home you are greeted with stunning timber floorboards, high ceilings, plantation shutters and a gorgeous colour scheme throughout the house which adds a modern and fresh twist. The room sizes are very well portioned and are perfect for family living. Outside, the yard is established and needs little maintenance. There are plenty of places to sit, relax and soak in the peace and quiet that this style of living has to offer. This is a wonderful home in a lovely country town and well worth a look. CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

30 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

HOUSE AND GRANNY FLAT Set in the very popular Cook Park precinct this much-loved family home has been in the one family for approximately 60 years. Currently set up on one side of the house with 3 bedrooms, a modern bathroom and living areas, while on the other side is a 1 bedroom fully self-contained granny flat that is currently leased out. The flexible floor plan allows for a dual income property or easily converts back to a conventional 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom home. This mid-century modern home has many endearing features including raked ceilings, exposed timber beams, floor to ceiling picture windows, a sunken lounge room, but most importantly a sense of soul and homeliness. Don’t miss this golden opportunity to make this gem your next home. CONTACT: ADAM SAVAGE 0419 232 416


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

1

2

10 TRUNKEY STREET, NEWBRIDGE

PRICE GUIDE: $599,000-$639,000

NEW LISTING

COFFEE ANYONE?

Our 50th birthday celebrations are continuing and this time your coffee might be on us!

From Monday, 20 June to Friday, 24 June there will be specially marked cups, randomly dispersed throughout the cup stacks, at five different coffee shops around town. If you’re lucky enough to get one of those cups, then your coffee is on us! So, keep an eye out for the Peter Fisher sticker … Good luck and enjoy! 4

2.5

2

21 ROSELAWN DRIVE

CONTACT AGENT

PRIVACY, SPACE, VIEWS Situated 10 minutes from Blayney and 20 minutes from Bathurst in the quaint historic town of Newbridge is this lovely home which boasts sensational views. Pretty as a picture, dressed in a wrap around verandah, the home is spacious and light filled. You’ll love the racked ceilings, the aspect of rolling hills from every window and the large block. The bedrooms are generous in size and have built-ins. Enjoy the view and serenity while you cook and dine in the modern kitchen which boasts brand-new appliances. Comfort won’t be a problem with ducted reverse cycle air conditioning. The home has also been modified to accommodate wheelchair access with a ramp to access the verandah and wider door frames throughout, with cavity doors installed everywhere. Outside is a double bay shed with power, a lovely Japanese-inspired garden, two water tanks and plenty of room to grow your veggie patch or get some chooks. There is heaps of storage underneath the home too. If you’re looking for peace, quiet and a tranquil lifestyle then look no further then this beautiful home. CONTACT: MICHAEL WRIGHT 0421 360 948

2

1

PRICE GUIDE: $445,000-$485,000

1

4/382 PEISLEY STREET

OPEN HOMES: SATURDAY 18 JUNE 10.15-10.45 COULD THIS BE YOUR DREAM HOME? This spacious family home is perfect for the buyer looking for a low maintenance lifestyle in an attractive area close to the gorgeous Botanic Gardens and North Orange Shopping Centre. The spectacular gardens are a botanical delight themselves having been established over many years and designed to be easy care as well as beautiful. The home is stylish with a formal lounge and lovely open plan living that both open onto the covered al fresco area that overlooks the inground pool and is perfect for entertaining with blinds and fans added. There are four great sized bedrooms with the master suite having an ensuite and walk-in robe and there is a three-way bathroom with spa bath perfect for unwinding at the end of the day. Every nook and cranny of the substantial block has been utilised to its best advantage including rear yard access at the side with space for a trailer or caravan, a dedicated BBQ area and garden shed for storage. The inground pool will delight you come summer and there is a powder room nearby so there’s no traipsing of wet feet inside. CONTACT: CHRIS MASON 0438 629 417

WONDERFUL UNIT Ideally located at the back of a small complex of only 4 units and in a relatively central location within easy walking distance to the CBD. Currently leased to a very good tenant until 1/23, this neat unit has an open plan kitchen/dining/living area with a R/C system and another electric heater. Both bedrooms are spacious and have built in wardrobes. The generous sized “L” shape backyard gives you the option of space for pets, kids or to establish your own special garden. Internal access from the garage and an electric opener provides both security and convenience. Make sure you inspect this great unit as it has a lot to offer. CONTACT: ADAM SAVAGE 0419 232 416

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 31


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. 5

2

PRICE GUIDE: $480,000-$520,000

2

191 SHREEVES ROAD, MOLONG

3

1.5

2

2762 CARGO ROAD

PRICE GUIDE: $990,000-$1,050,000

INSERT DREAM HOME HERE! These opportunities are very rare. This large 2 hectare (approx.) block is set in a quiet street on the outskirts of the ever growing town of Molong. This block offers everything you could ever want from rural living; creek running through the back of the block, established trees and native grasses. With most of the building area being quite flat, it is the perfect place to build that home you have always dreamt about, whilst encapsulating some of the best views around. There is something very special about having a creek running through your property, allowing for exploring, adventures or enjoying a picnic watching the water flow by. The positioning of this block is such that you have minimal neighbours and can position your house to look to the rolling hills behind the creek and the farmland across the road. This is one of the last blocks on offer in this subdivision and as these blocks are few and far between it will not be on the market for long!

LIVE A COUNTRY LIFE This private property, set away from the road and surrounded by picturesque vineyards, is just 20 minutes from Orange and is 25 acres of pure country lifestyle. Ride a horse or a motorbike, have a few farm animals, reinstate the old tennis court or just simply sit back and admire the view and enjoy the peace and quiet on offer – the choice is yours. The partially renovated home has good bones and is ready for a new lease on life. The interior of the home is light and bright with a good floor plan. There are three good sized bedrooms, a sunken lounge room with open fireplace and reverse cycle air conditioner, two toilets and great views from every window. There is a double garage attached to the house plus plenty of room for the all-important extra shed or two. Water is not a problem with a bore plus 20,000 and 1,000 gallon water tanks. With decent acreage being so hard to find in the current market, don’t miss your opportunity to inspect this property.

CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

CONTACT: CHRIS MASON 0438 629 417

5

2

2

36 BOWMAN AVENUE

PRICE GUIDE: $1,150,000 - $1,230,000

SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME, FANTASTIC LOCATION Nestled in the very attractive Wentworth Estate amongst other quality homes, the fantastic location of this five bedroom home will be the first item to be ticked off your list. This home is, in a word, spacious and will easily accommodate the largest of families. Warm and inviting with its calming neutral tones and beautiful flooring, you will love the multiple living areas including the open plan kitchen, dining area and family room. The enclosed sunroom is a real point of difference being both a great size and offering versatile zones to use as you please. The master bedroom suite is wonderfully private with a walk-in robe and a luxurious ensuite. The four remaining bedrooms are all a great size and the family-sized bathroom will easily handle the demands of a busy family. The home includes all the features that make modern living a breeze including a study nook and reverse cycle ducted air conditioning system plus a cosy woodfire. Outside there is a covered al fresco area overlooking the established backyard. The garage with designated workshop space has drive-through access to the backyard. CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

32 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

4

3

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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, sit by the open fire and admire the views on offer. CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789


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

2

2

“YARRAWONGA PARK” 587 BULGAS RD

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

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. Properties of this size are often hard to find. CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

LOT 450 AND 480 IN CANOBOLAS VIEWS ESTATE

$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

4

1

2

296 PEISLEY STREET

PRICE GUIDE: $620,000-$650,000

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! CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

70 HILL STREET, MOLONG

PRICE GUIDE: $550,000 - $590,000

A UNIQUE PROPOSITION Rarely do you have an opportunity to purchase DA approved sites with the capacity to build 7 standalone 2 bedroom villas. The first stage of this development is complete with four villas already well established. The residual land on offer, sitting directly behind the first stage, totals 2,719 sqm in size and provides a generous amount of space for each of the new villas. There are equally great prospects for an investor to build the new villas and retain them as investment properties or alternatively to on-sell some or all of the newly developed homes. Molong has proven to be a very strong investment town with great growth in property prices and consistently low rental vacancy rates. Such a unique proposition is well worth your consideration as the potential reward here is great. CONTACT: JACOB EVANS 0428 130 789

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 33


AUCTION

3 Wattle Avenue, Orange - Family Home - Prime Location

Sitting on close to 900m2* this family home offers the new owners space to grow in a quiet street with a short stroll to Calare Public & Orange High School. The home is open & spacious - generously proportioned bedrooms - 2 with built-in wardrobes, a large family bathroom with a separate shower & bath off the lounge area.

Auction

Friday 22nd July, 10.30am The Auction Centre Bathurst

Open

Saturday 18th June 10.45am - 11.15am

Agents

Peter Bromley 0404 037 729 Brooke Tonkin 0400 286 541

AUCTION

517 Browns Creek Road, Browns Creek - Luxury Lifestyle Living

This luxurious family home is truly something that must be seen to be appreciated. Sitting proudly on a manicured 5 acres* of land, the home was constructed to take advantage of the extensive, north-facing, mountainous views & to capture natural warmth from the sun. This allows the living & bedroom areas of the home to be bathed in natural light all year round.

Auction

Friday 22nd July, 10.30am The Auction Centre Bathurst

Open

Saturday 18th June 10.30am - 11am

Agents

Lucy Nell 0400 726 897 James Taylor 0457 792 800

Ray White Emms Mooney

18 Sale Street Orange NSW raywhiteemc.com 02 6362 0211 34 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Open

By Appointment

Agents

Peter Bromley 0404 037 729 Kurt Adams 0428 747 050


AUCTION

6 James Sheahan Drive, Orange - East Orange Location

As neat as a pin, and within walking distance to medical centers, schools, parks, and the CBD, you will be hard-pressed to find a property that represents better value in this price bracket. The current owners have tastefully renovated and modernised this sturdy brick veneer residence that would make for a sound investment or a fantastic place to live for a growing family, or first home buyer.

Auction

Friday 8th July, 10.30am The Auction Centre Bathurst

Open

By Appointment

Agents

James Taylor 0457 792 800 Brooke Tonkin 0400 286 541

AUCTION

19 Toogong Street, Cudal - Affordable First Home or Investment

Situated on over half an acre, this property is a great starter with loads of potential, these homes are getting hard to find. Conveniently situated close to the daycare, primary school, cafe and parks. 4 bedrooms, all very generous in size and a recent renovation on the bathroom. If you have been searching for an affordable home to break into the market – this could be one not to miss out on.

Auction

Friday 8th July, 10.30am The Auction Centre Bathurst

Open

By Appointment

Agents

James Taylor 0457 792 800 Kurt Adams 0428 747 050

Ray White Emms Mooney

18 Sale Street Orange NSW raywhiteemc.com 02 6362 0211 Open

By Appointment

JUNE 16 — 22,Agents 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 35

Peter Bromley 0404 037 729 Kurt Adams 0428 747 050


OCLife | Community

Harry Roe, Matt Senyard (at back) with Heidi, Liam and Phoebe Senyard

Tanya and Angus Phillips, Penelope Brewer and Asher Phillips

Rex, Martin and Owen Bennett getting creative at the play tables

Hailey, Chris, Lucas and Caitelin Milne

'MORELLA' 1257 Bundalah Road, Euchareena / Orange NSW 490 ha or Approx. 1225 Acres A Perfect Blend of Productive, Private and Picturesque Foresight in planning, careful paddock management, meticulous selection of improved pastures, plus regular applications of super and lime – have all combined to make ‘Morella’ a property that punches far beyond its weight 55 km to Orange – a city with first rate amenities, high quality educational opportunities, excellent medical facilities and abundant district attractions Ideally suited to sheep production/wool – owner estimates c/c 1,000 ewes Entire boundary of the property features electrified exclusion fencing Particularly well grassed scenic hills – rising to some steeper areas Excellent water security – fifteen dams (3 spring fed) plus a bore Abundant infrastructure – including outstanding three stand shearing shed Positioned to offer ultimate seclusion and capture a peaceful rural outlook – the tastefully renovated home at ‘Morella’ radiates warmth and space Expansive open plan kitchen/dining/living area – four bedrooms – two bathrooms, rumpus room (or 5th bedroom) – office – laundry – mud room

AUCTION - Saturday 25th June 2022 – 11 am Venue: Duntryleague Golf Club

Inspections by Appointment Contact Agent: Brian Cullinane 0418 637 338

Brian Cullinane 0418 637 338

Marie Fox 0412 166 132

Hannah and Eloise Vaughan

'BRYNVILLA' 188 Carbine Rd, Forest Reefs

Set on approx. 8 acres this superb 48 sq home has been designed to take full advantage of the brilliant views looking out towards Mt Canobolas. Perfectly private and ideal to raise a family, produce an income and live in a clean sustainable environment.

Selection of formal, casual living and meal areas. Stylish manicured gardens and house yard Gourmet kitchen with quality appliances and extra large walk in pantry 4 generous sized bedrooms appointed with built in robes and rural views. 5th Bedroom/Study perfect for the home office or working from home Spacious main bedroom with extra large walk in robe and modern ensuite. Large bathroom with bath. Significantly large laundry with plenty of bench space, cupboards and additional toilet. Double glazed windows, ducted reverse cycle heating/cooling, wood heater. 13KW solar capacity to assist with energy consumption Fabulous undercover alfresco entertaining area 9 x 15 metre shed with mezzanine floor, 3 phase power and carport attached Currently running a small flock of sheep. Well fenced to several paddocks and automatic entrance gate Water supply includes dam, bore with solar panel pump, 2 bore tanks 22,500 ltr each and 100,000 ltr rainwater tank

4/5 BED 2 BATH 4+ CAR $1,950,000 Contact Agent :Marie Fox 0412 166 132

119 Peisley Street, Orange NSW 2800 Ph: 02 6362 4755 www.mccarrons.com.au

36 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022


Community | OCLife

Orange Brick Show 2022 Local Lego lovers’ dream s came true this Queen ’s Birthday long weekend, with the Ora nge Ex-Services Club ho stin g over 50 tables of custom-built and kit Leg o builds. Run by Playwell Events , the Orange Brick Show 2022 attracted hundreds of families ove r the two-day show, wit h young and old marvelling at the creati ons on display, getting to work on their own builds on one of the pla y tables, or purchasing a mu ch sought-after minifig (Lego minifigure) or building accessory.

Liz and Archie Maclean

Tim and son Samuel

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

OPEN this Saturday 10:00 – 10:30am

28 YARAWINI DRIVE ORANGE 4

1

1

$730,000 - $760,000

• Positioned in an established, family-friendly neighborhood • Ducted gas heating • Exceptional four-bedroom property with sun soaked living area • Polished timber floor boards, Plantation shutters CONTACT: TOM SHEEHAN 0414 418 232, tom@williamsmachin.com.au

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

OPEN this Saturday 11:30am – 12:00pm

1/13 BLETCHINGTON STREET ORANGE 3

1

1

$420,000 - $450,000

FOR SALE

OPEN this Saturday 12:15 – 12:45pm

OPEN this Saturday 9:00 – 9:30am

3/61 BLETCHINGTON STREET ORANGE

2/189 CLINTON STREET ORANGE

3

1

1

$430,000 - $450,000

2

• Great value for the astute investor, or first home buyer

• Small complex of 3 units

• 3 bedrooms plus large study or 4th bedroom

• Functional kitchen with electric cooking

• Living/dining area opening onto private verandah • Large, enclosed rear yard with plenty of space for kids

• Low maintenance rear yard, single lock up garage

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

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

FOR LEASE

1

1

$420,000 - $440,000

• Located in a great, quiet complex

FOR LEASE

• Sunny living area with North facing window • Currently leased $285 P/W

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

Residential Sales Rural Sales Commercial Sales Property Management Holiday Letting Serviced Properties

83 KEARNEYS DRIVE ORANGE 4

3

2

CONTACT AGENT

• Huge, modern family home • Multiple living areas, flexible floorplan • Guest bedroom with ensuite and walk-in wardrobe

• 6.6kw solar CONTACT MARTY LYDEN 0404 070 391, marty@williamsmachin.com.au

101A GARDINER ROAD ORANGE 2

2

1

$620 PER WEEK

• Brand New, central location • 2 bedroom, main with ensuite • North facing rear yard with timber deck CONTACT NATALIE GOW 0407 213 073,

propertymanagement@williamsmachin.com.au

80 BOTANIC WAY ORANGE 4

2

2

$650 PER WEEK

• Close to botanic gardens

• Quality kitchen with butlers pantry

• Gas ducted heating, multiple living areas CONTACT NATALIE GOW 0407 213 073,

propertymanagement@williamsmachin.com.au

FOR A FREE MARKET OPINION PLEASE CONTACT OUR TEAM PH 02 6362 6966 37 SALE STREET, ORANGE WWW.WILLIAMSMACHIN.COM.AU

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 37


New Listing!

New Listing!

Lot 103 Buesnel Lane, Millthorpe

67 Kurim Avenue, Orange

THE JEWEL IN THE CROWN

DA APPROVED FOR TWO LOT SUBDIVISION

Covering 2.553 Hectares (6.3 Acres) with bitumen lane frontage and part of a small rural sub-division this is the last vacant block. Kept by the owner as the jewel in the crown, a change of circumstances is the only reason this block is being offered for sale. A long walk or short drive to Millthorpe, not too far to the Reefs and 15 minutes to Orange this block is in the Golden Triangle Call us today – tomorrow might be too late!

DA Approved development site approved for a two-lot subdivision with two detached dwellings. With the opening of the new Southern Feeder Road, the property offers an ultra-convenient location perfect for a builder looking for a site ready to build, or a developer looking to cash in on the growing market. With the lack of land release within Orange and its close proximity to local government infrastructure, it will be difficult to find another block so affordable

Jen Stojanovic 0423 401 666

$695,000

Stephen Townsend 0427 631 957

Contact Agent

New Listing! Open Home Saturday Stephen Townsend 0427 631 957 1:00pm

27 ROTHERY STREET CARCOAR

2

3

1

2

2

4

1

HOUSE, SHED, SOLAR & SPACE - WHAT MORE CAN YOU WANT

MAKE CARCOAR HOME WITH COUNTRY CHARM Located in historic Carcoar, this family home is situated on a 790 square meter block amongst a cozy country garden. Polished floor boards throughout, welcomes you to this 3 bedroom with build in main, 1 bathroom home, with open living and dining. Functional kitchen with dishwasher. Reverse cycle air conditioner and wood heater, you will comfortable all year round. Large extended lockable double garage on concrete slab, with power. Room outside for pets and a swing set. Only 15km to Blayney, 49km to Orange and 55km to Cowra.

Contact Agent

Jen Stojanovic 0473 401 666

161 BANK STREET MOLONG 4

2

A spacious family brick veneer home situated on a huge 5918sqm yard. Consisting of 4 spacious bedrooms 3 with built ins, dining & family rooms, great kitchen space with loads of storage and stone benchtops, spacious bathroom. Front & back verandas overlooking the spacious parklike gardens. Reverse cycle air con & solar panels. Remote control security shutters. Several sheds & workshop area with power & a large double length carport. Town water & rainwater tanks connected. There is subdivision potential subject to council approval.

Mark Howes 0427 668 800

Contact Agent

New Listing!

11 REDGUM AV ORANGE

4

2

2

A beautifully presented two storey home with space for the family to grow. Large 4-bedroom, 2 bathroom and laundry with another shower and toilet. Main bedroom with ensuite, and remaining bedrooms are large with built in cupboards. All bedrooms are located on the top floor, along with main bathroom. 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 complement the gardens setting on the large 1141 square metre block.

Jen Stojanovic 0423 401 666 38 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

Contact Agent

Lot 8 & Lot 9, 5 Borrodell Dr, Orange Blocks like this are hard to find in Orange. Located in West Orange with great views and in a very private spot. All town connections to blocks available. Great sizes so you have lots of space around you to enjoy. Lot 8: 1,617 sqm Lot 9: 1,930 sqm

Jen Stojanovic 0423 401 666

Contact Agent


A FIVE BEDROOM FAMILY HOME WITH MUCH TO OFFER

TO BE OFFERED FOR SALE SOON ‘KINROSS MEWS’ 99 BATHURST ROAD, ORANGE

Consisting of 2 x Townhouses and 8 x Villas 2 and 3 bedrooms Communal Indoor Pool Security Gated Complex

51 SUNDEW CIRCUIT, ORANGE OPEN HOUSE SAT 18th JUNE 11.00-11.30am

This welcoming home for the whole family sits high in a premier residential area on a 1,055 m2 block that’s just a short stroll to James Sheahan High School and an easy drive to the Hospital precinct. A north facing kitchen (complete with dishwasher, self-cleaning oven & gas cook top) adjoins the light filled dining room that soaks up the winter sun. For movie and gaming lovers, the lounge/home theatre room comes complete with a projector and surround sound. The heart of this home is the spacious sunroom with a cosy slow combustion wood heater, gas BBQ and windows galore to capture the garden views. Other features include an en-suite and walk in robes to the main bedroom, central ducted under-floor gas heating, a central evaporative cooling system, solar panels with 5kw capacity and a separate solar hot water system. Underneath the garage has a built-in room you can readily utilise to suit your needs. The large sprawling backyard has a solid multi-purpose shed ideal for safe storage, hobbies etc. and the garden boasts a beautiful mature radiata pine tree in its centre. A real bonus feature is the access to the rear from a public reserve road with native bushland behind.

$880,000 – $920,000

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

COMMERCIAL FOR LEASE

ATTRACTIVE OFFICES OPPOSITE ORANGE CITY COUNCIL PRECINCT

GROUND FLOOR OFFICE WITH PARK OUTLOOK

FOR LEASE - MODERN FACTORY

With an outlook over Robertson Park these offices feature both private and open plan rooms, a reception area and a large meals/ kitchen room. 3 x on site secure car spaces. Becoming available soon. Total floor area approx. 180 m2.

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

RENT: $70,000 PER ANNUM + GST

RENT: $40,000 PER ANNUM + GST

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: $ 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

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 39


OCLife | social scene

Ann is in the pink on happy birthday Anne Pink recently celebrated her 70th birthday with more than 20 friends and relatives at the Ophir Hotel, Orange. An event, at which, everyone had a great time.

Delia Conetta and Jenny Livermore.

Anne with friends.

Marie Davis and Pat Harkham.

Anne with friends.

Having fun at the Ophir Hotel for Anne Pink’s recent 70th birthday, Delia Conetta with Anne.

MORE PROPERTIES WANTED WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING 1487 Longs Corner Road Canowindra

477 Mousehole Lane Bowan Park

c2c ab b c a

3 a 2b

3 a 2b

CONTACT AGENT

Offers Over $1.4m

c4c ab b c a

Amazing property, fabulous views!

A pretty place in the country

This 250 acre holding has the best of both worlds; high yielding, fertile soils, well established pastures, ideal for sheep and cattle yet close to the quaint township of Canowindra Charming older home is partially renovated modernised kitchen are enhanced by a sleepout and three separate verandahs.

This roomy and delightful weatherboard home is surrounded by lovely established gardens and set on undulating 25 acres (10.88 ha) with captivating views of the central west. The large 20m x 8m shed is fully enclosed with side (16mx4m) shed includes a 4 post car hoist and 2 mezzanine levels for extra storage. This also includes a kitchen, bedroom and living area and bathroom- great for family accommodation or extra income.

56 Gaskill Canowindra $1.5 MILLION

FOR LEASE

3 Carcoar Street Blayney

c2c ab b c a

4 a 2b

$600 PER WEEK

FOR LEASE

34 Goldfinch Way Orange

c2c ab b c a

4 a 2b

CONTACT AGENT

Scott Munro from LJ Hooker will re-evaluate your Rental Property Investment? FOR SALE

26 Quinlan Run Orange

c2c ab b c a

3 a 2b

CONTACT AGENT

Is your Real Estate Agent compliance with smoke alarm legislation and Fire Safety in your property investment? If Not then Why Not ?

40 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

A Piece of Historic Canowindraa new chapter of your life?

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.

Ph 0428 650 675 | scottmunro.ljhooker.com.au Email scott.munro@ljhooker.com.au


Open Houses For week 16 — 22 June, 2022 DATE

TIME

ADDRESS PRICE RANGE

18.6.22

11.30am

31 Racecourse Road Orange

4

1

3

CONTACT AGENT

18.6.22

1.00pm

27 Rothery Street Carcoar

3

1

2

CONTACT AGENT

18.6.22

10.15-10.45

35 Racecourse Road

4

1

1

$699,000-$729,000

18.6.22

10.15-10.45

4/382 Peisley Street

2

1

1

$445,000-$485,000

18.6.22

11.00-11.30

21 Roselawn Drive

4

2

2

Contact Agent

18.6.22

11.00-11.30

25 Moulder Street

4

2

1

$769,000 - $799,000



SUPA ON SALE FROM WEDNESDAY 15 TH JUNE UNTIL TUESDAY 21ST JUNE 2022 Serving suggestion

HotE!

HotE!

PRIC

PRIC

175

$

ea

2

Campbell's Canned Soup 495-505g Selected Varieties

$

ea

Arnott’s TeeVee Snacks or Chocolate Biscuits 160-250g Selected Varieties

SAVE $2

SAVE $1.75

Violet Crumble Share Pack 135-180g Selected Varieties

250

$

ea

SAVE $2.50

Australian BEEF T-BONE STEAK

29

$

kg

Serving suggestion

97

¢

ea

SAVE 98¢

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Specials available from Wednesday 15/06/22 until Tuesday 21/06/22 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.

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 41


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. 10:00am to 12:00pm Duntryleague Club. Enquires: Marlies 0418 440 512 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...

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 THE AMUSU THEATRE in Manildra has regular movie screenings. The Movie Museum is open every weekend by appointment. Enquiries: Joan 0418 452 902. THE COMMITTEE OF ADFAS ORANGE & DISTRICT holds lectures at 6:30pm once a month in the main auditorium at the Orange Regional Cons. Enquiries: Anne 02 6361 3923.

42 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

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. 3RD ORANGE SCOUT GROUP. Meeting dates for Joeys, Cubs, Scouts, Venturer & older ages call for details. 3 Icely Road Orange. Enquiries: Scouts NSW, 1800 SCOUTS (726887)

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. $5.00 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

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

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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 9.30am, 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. 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 THE COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS (BEREAVED PARENTS) meet every third Thursday of the month in the meeting room of the North Orange McDonalds from 7.00pm to 8.30pm. Enquiries: Donna 0419 357 431 & Tammy 0417 482 688.

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. LIKEMIND ORANGE hosts a free Mindfulness group with an experienced facilitator on Mondays during school terms. 9:30am – 10:45am. Enquiries: 02 6311 1700 for further details.


yourspace | OCLife

Have something of interest to share? Send to reception@oclife.com.au

Samaritan’s Purse — Operation Christmas Child

Samaritan’s Purse Operation Christmas Child is holding a working bee this

Saturday, June 18, from 10–4pm at Kenna Hall, Hill Street. Any help making items for the shoe boxes, would be greatly appreciated. For more information, contact Robyn on 0427 653 431.

WeEkend Markets Cumnock

et will be held this The next Cumnock Mark 12pm. Saturday, June 18, 9am–

try cooks, our fresh With lots of fabulous coun endary — so too are cakes and biscuits are leg kles! the jams, chutneys and pic tiful craft au be h wit ies There are always lad cellent fresh fruit and items and a stall with ex able price. vegetables at a very reason Park Cumnock ds roa oss See you Saturday at Cr . (opposite General Store) g to have a stall, Visitors and those wishin on from can get further informati 72 Pat Gilmour on 6367 70

Cowra Cowra’s always-popular Community Markets are on this

Saturday, June 18, at Sid Kallas Oval, from 8–12noon. Phone 0473 346 046 for more information.

Blayney Blayney Farmers Markets at Carrington Park is on this Sunday, June 19, from 8.30–12.30pm.

Actor Sam Webb to speak at Orange Mental Health Expo Actor and mental health champion, Sam Webb will give a special guest talk at a free mental health expo in Orange on Wednesday, June 22. Organised by CatholicCare Wilcannia-Forbes; schools, parents, carers, students, and other community members, are all invited to attend. “We’re thrilled that Sam Webb has come onboard,” CatholicCare Wilcannia-Forbes mental health programs manager, Kate Shambrook said. Known for his appearances in Home and Away, Neighbours and Australian Survivor, Webb co-founded the mental health charity, “LIVIN” in 2013, after losing a good friend to suicide. “He is committed to helping people and organisations understand the importance of mental health and making

wellness a priority,” Ms Shambrook said. Representatives from mental health support providers at Orange will also be at the event for community members to meet and talk to. “We think the community will gain a lot from his talk,” Ms Shambrook added. “Mental health as an issue is growing in communities, especially in young people and it is an area of concern. “This event is so important to increasing the community’s knowledge and understanding, and its capacity to support people’s wellbeing.” The Orange Mental Health Expo will be held at Orange Function Centre on Wednesday, June 22 from 9.30–12.30pm. It is free to attend, but people are asked to register through

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 43


OCLife | sporting life with ANTHONY BARBA-

WESTERN PREMIER LEAGUE: Round 10 action — PHOTOS STEVE COWLEY —

Orana and Barnies play out 2-2 thriller

Barnstoneworth United had to settle for a 2-2 draw against Orana Spurs on Saturday after a wonder goal in the last 25 minutes prevented the visitors from picking up a famous victory in Dubbo. It was Barnies’ second consecutive visit to the Orana region, having defeated Macquarie United 4-2 in the previous round. As for Orana Spurs, the seventh-placed side was looking to make amends after a lacklustre performance and 5-0 loss to Dubbo Bulls in the derby, and round eight’s 1-1 draw with Lithgow. Orana struggled to find rhythm in the contest’s opening stages, exposing them to Barnstoneworth’s dangerous forwards on the counter. The visitors opened the scoring in the eighth minute after Charlie Ross pounced on a defensive mistake and dazzled his way forward to cooly dispatch his shot into the bottom corner of the net. The Barnies’ striker also teased his opponents by running over to the corner flag and emulating a small “Cristiano Ronaldo” goal-scoring celebration. But from here on, things became interesting with the game opening up and providing end-to-end action for the spectators. Orana’s highpressing style constantly threatened the visitors’ unsettled backline and the Spurs soon equalised in the 23rd

minute when their striker pressured the Barnstoneworth keeper, forcing a costly error, before tapping the ball into an empty net. The visitors kept pushing forward and regained the lead a couple of minutes before halftime. Rowan Edwards got on the end of a delightful cross and headed his shot past the Orana goalkeeper to put Barnies up 2-1. A re-energised Orana Spurs came into the second half with more intensity, stepping up their game in the final third. The riskier game-plan constantly left the back door open for Barnies to score, but their strikers lacked that clinical edge to close the game. Despite making an error in the first half, Barnies’ goalkeeper Marcus Tieppo produced a fantastic save from a free-kick to keep his side’s slender lead. But after constantly knocking on the door, Orana finally found their equaliser in the 65th minute after one of their playmakers scored off a long-range effort. The fourth goal was a testament to this entertaining spectacle, hopefully enhancing the Western Premier League’s reputation across the Central West. This draw sees Barnies drop four points behind fourth-placed Dubbo Bulls. But the red-and-whites will have the chance to close that gap when they host the Bulls in Round 11.

CYMS earn first WPL point after stalemate with Mudgee Wolves A brave performance by Orange CYMS saw them clinch their first point of the season after a scoreless draw against Mudgee Wolves on Saturday afternoon at the Glen Willow Regional Sports Stadium. This match-up couldn’t have come at the perfect time, as both sides were desperate to record their first victory of the 2022 campaign. CYMS also came into this bottom-of-the-table clash with zero points, so the stakes couldn’t have been higher. CYMS goalkeeper Joseph Kay, who played right-back for this game, said he is incredibly proud that his side earned their first point of the season. “It was a gritty performance from us, especially after travelling with a squad of 12 and only nine regular WPL team members. So to get the point on the road was a really great effort. It’s also pleasing to get our first clean-sheet; our defence has recently improved, and it is finally paying off,” Joseph said.

44 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022


sporting life | OCLife

Western Premier League: Round 10 action

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 45


OCLife | sporting life

Western Premier League: Round 10 action — PHOTOS STEVE COWLEY —

Experience helps Waratahs get past Macquarie United test Resilience and experience were the key factors that helped Waratahs defeat a tough Macquarie United 2-0 on Saturday night at Victoria Park, Dubbo.

found the equaliser in the 29th minute when a looping cross reached their striker, who headed the ball inches over the crossbar.

The Tahs were keen to return to their winning ways after dropping two points in a 3-3 draw against second-placed Bathurst ‘75 in Round Nine. Macquarie United came into this contest in poor form, hoping to snap their four-game losing streak and cause an upset against the competition’s highest goalscoring side.

With the first half coming to a close, Macquarie again nearly levelled the score, off a free-kick that just curled above the crossbar.

Macquarie looked threatening inside the first 10 minutes, posing some questions at the back for the visitors. But after the hosts’ small spell of domination, Waratahs started to settle into the game. Macquarie almost found the net several times, but Waratahs shocked their opponents in the 25th minute, scoring the opener from an intelligent counterattack. Exceptional dribbling from the Tahs’ winger allowed him to send in a low cross into the box that found the feet of star striker Guy Burgess, who tucked the ball into the net. With Waratahs 1-0 up, Macquarie ramped up their attack and almost

After the break, Waratahs picked up the intensity and started taking over the possession, their experienced midfielders holding up the play. Guy Burgess almost scored his brace in the 65th minute, but the striker’s shot rolled wide of the right post. Macquarie began to run out of steam in the last 20 minutes and the visitors made them pay after a lapse in concentration off a set-play in the 75th minute. Veteran forward, Craig Sugden, doubled Tahs’ lead when he scored a flying header off a corner. Waratahs closed the game by keeping calm at the back and using their tactical advantage to hold onto possession. This victory sees the Tahs leapfrog Bathurst ‘75 and move into second spot in the Western Premier League standings.

46 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022


sporting life | OCLife with ANTHONY BARBAGALLO

BARRACKER THE

Finals footy still on the radar for

ORANGE HAWKS

The Orange Hawks have had a rollercoaster journey in the first half of their 2022 Peter McDonald Premiership season. Despite fielding a relatively newlook side this year, the two-blues still hold high hopes they can defy the odds and find themselves in the finals at end the season.

All the momentum was with the Hawks early in the season. Their explosive football and talented playmakers caught many by surprise. But after starting with three-straight wins — including the two victories against Group 11’s Dubbo CYMS and Nyngan Tigers in the crossover rounds — the young Hawks faced fresh challenges and it led to an inconsistent run of results. Coach Shane Rodney says it was largely injuries that derailed his team off this incredible early run. “We started the season really well, and we even went down to the wire with CYMS in the derby loss in round four. But our inconsistent form was mainly caused by a few injuries and sickness, which often left us in a position where we struggled to fill in a full side. You can’t make excuses, though it’s these issues that immediately disrupted our good form,” Shane said. During the challenging period, between rounds five and six, the Hawks endured a 46-4 thumping by the Bathurst Panthers and lost 28-16 to St Pat’s. While not able to field their top 17 in both these games, Shane explains that his players still showed tremendous fight and unity through this hardship. “Even though it was disappointing to lose these games, it was still positive to see that the players were giving it their best to compete and carry out their jobs against tough opponents throughout this difficult moment,” Shane said. After sliding from second to outside the top-four in the Group 10 pool, the Hawks really needed a win when they hosted last-placed Lithgow Workies in round seven. The two-blues may have struggled in certain moments throughout the game, but they were able to grind out a hard-

fought victory and gain two crucial points to get their season back on track. The match also saw the team play attacking-style football again, along with maintaining a higher completion rate. The three-time Group 10 champions recently enjoyed a team bye and a general bye over the long weekend. Shane says that this valuable rest has given the team time to refocus and rediscover their mojo before making a finals push in the second half of the season. “The byes we’ve had now come at a good time so that the players can freshen up and reflect on past performances before the next game against the Bathurst Panthers,” Shane said. “We played some great footy at the start of the season due to getting the basics right, and I think this will be important in the back end of the season.” The Hawks still have to take on Group 10 leaders Mudgee Dragons before facing Parkes Spacemen and Forbes Magpies in their other two tricky crossover fixtures. But, according to Shane, team unity is one of the other vital factors that will help the two-blues successfully navigate their way through the next eight rounds of the campaign. “We got a really good group of players this year. There’s a nice blend of youth and experience that gives this team a special bond, and this is just as important as it makes no individual above anyone else,” he said. “If we can replicate the team and fighting spirit, like in the games against Orange CYMS and Dubbo CYMS, then I’m sure we can get more wins than losses. Our goal is to reach the finals and test our abilities against some of the competition’s toughest sides,” Shane concluded. The Hawks currently sit in fourth place with 10 points, wedged between some top-sides and St Pat’s breathing down their neck.

“The Shark’s” world golf tour could be a reality, 30-years on Greg Norman is a singular sportsman and individual. It’s easy now to forget how — in the pre-Tiger Woods 1980s and 1990s — he strode the world golfing stage with athletic good looks like a latter-day Jack Nicklaus, whose records many thought he could match. Like Woods, he also had the perfect sporting moniker, “The Great White Shark”, or simply “The Shark”. This was apparently in reference to his thatch of blonde hair, aquiline appearance, and his casual comment to an American reporter once that he had dived with sharks in Queensland as a child and, occasionally, later despatched them with shotguns when they had tangled his fishing lines. Prodigiously talented with a singular sense of destiny matched with a ferociously long fairway drive and impeccable cool around the greens, he took his talent to the United States, home of world golf, where he finished fourth in the US Masters at his first try in 1981. A result which was, before Woods, an almost unparalleled achievement. He spent nearly six-and-a-half years, 331 weeks in total, as the world’s number one player but, due to a mix of bad luck and a seeming inability to curtail his aggressive shot-making even when leading by half a dozen strokes, only ever won two “majors”. These were the British Opens of 1986 and 1993, which were punctuated by an agonising eight second-places in which one-hit wonders like Larry Mize and Bob Tway seemingly robbed him of his due with incredible one-in-a-million offthe-green chips that miraculously went straight in. In what became a sort of emblem of his fate in major tournaments, British golfer Nick Faldo famously hugged him after he had let slip a six-hole lead on the last day of the 1996 US Masters — probably the world’s premier tournament — to lose to Faldo by an amazing five shots over 18 holes. While it’s inappropriate to describe a sporting melt-down of this kind as “a tragedy”, it was hard not to feel sorry seeing a grown man almost in tears after what golfers call “a choke” of the highest order in front of millions of television fans.

Yet as an individual, he was not an easy person to sympathise with. Soon after relocating to America, he began to affect an unattractive mid-western drawl becoming, in many ways, “more American than the Americans”. Returning to Australia only to play when the “appearance money” — paid whether he performed on the course or not — suited his bank balance, he began to lecture his home country on its many shortcomings. Australia was too socialist, not competitive enough, Aussies didn’t appreciate their champions like the Americans did, and we all had a “tall poppy” chip on our shoulders. For someone who learned his trade on many publicly owned and rate-payer funded golf courses in the back-blocks of Queensland, this seemed a bit rich. Australia is one of the few countries in the world where golf is a massparticipation sport open to almost everybody. Council-owned golf courses for working-class duffers dot even our poorest suburban and rural locations in a sport almost totally reserved for the rich urban elites elsewhere in the world. One of our liberal broadsheets hilariously once hit on the idea of having Norman write a column when he was back here for one of his brief sojourns, soon dropping the series when, in his first effort, he basically told readers unhappy at his playing golf professionally in Apartheid-era South Africa, to get stuffed. Norman though, did perform one act of sporting courage by, in 1994, pitching an idea for a World Golf Tour involving eight events with $3 million purses for the top 40 players in the rankings. Grovelling American reporters and sponsors, soon turned on their previous hero and cheerleader, at the thought of the US losing its position as the home of professional golf. Nearly 30-years later, world-class golfers now greedily signing up for the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Tour, can thank Norman — head of the breakaway league — for being the first No.1 player to challenge America’s right to “own” this international sport. Nelson Mandela he may not be, but it is something…

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 47


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7 9 1 8

48 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

TRIVIA TEST 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

On which continent did pampas grass originate?

8

Bitou bush originated in which country?

9

“Too Long in Exile” and “Poetic Champions Compose” are albums from which artist?

What colour are the flowers of the Illawarra flame tree? What is a guffaw? Who circumnavigated Australia in the Investigator in the early 1800s? The Galapagos Islands belong to which South American country? In SMS talk, what does LOL mean? Which country won rugby union’s Bledisloe Cup in 2002? Galapagos Tortoise

which state is the Siding Spring 10 InObservatory? TQ639. SEE THE TV+ GUIDE FOR ANSWERS

PLEASE NOTE: YOU NEED 1 X 7, 1 X 3 , 1 X 1, AND 1 X 8 TO WIN THIS WEEK

DELIVER OR POST ENTRIES TO...

Jun 16: Joyce Carol Oates, US author, 84. Peter Sterling, footy player, commentator, 62. Mark Occhilupo, surfer, 56. Mark Beretta, sports presenter, 56. Phil Mickelson, US golfer, 52. Peter Helliar, comedian, 47. Nathan Parsons, American-Australian actor, 34. Latrell Mitchell, footy player, 25. Jun 17: Barry Manilow, US singer-pianist, 76. Greg Kinnear, US actor, 59. Jason Patric, US actor, 56. Venus Williams, US tennis player, 42. Shane Watson, cricketer, 41. Marcos Baghdatis, Cypriot tennis player, 37. Rebecca Breeds, actress, 35. Andrew Ogilvy, basketball player, 34. Stephanie Rice, swimmer, 34. Jun 18: Paul McCartney, of The Beatles, 80. Nick Tate, actor, 80. Isabella Rosselini, Italian model-actress, 70. Blake Shelton, US country singer, 46. Craig Mottram, middle-distance runner, 42. Jason Segel, US actor, 42. Cameron Smith, footy player, 39. Billy Slater, footy player, 39. Daniel Keighran, soldier, Victoria Cross recipient, 39. Jun 19: Ian Smith, Harold Bishop on Neighbours, 84. Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar Nobel Peace Prize laureate, 77. Salman Rushdie, author, 75. Virginia Hey, actress, 70. Richard Wilkins, TV-music personality, 66. Paula Abdul, singer, 60. Boris Johnson, British PM, 58. Marty Sheargold, comedian, 51. Poppy Montgomery, Aussieborn actress, 50. Justin Carney, Dubbo-born footy player, 34. Jun 20: Brian Wilson, Beach Boys songwriter, 80. Xanana Gusmao, first President of East Timor, 76. Lionel Richie, US singer, 73. John Goodman, US actor, 70. Nicole Kidman, actress, 55. Jun 21: Bernie Kopell, TV actor, 89. Michael Gross and Meredith Baxter, starred as husband and wife on TV’s Family Ties, both 75. John Paul Young, pop singer, 72. Craig Lowndes, race car driver, 48. Shelley Craft, TV personality, 46. Brandon Flowers, rock musician, 41. Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, second in line to the British throne, 40. Rob Mills, actor, 40. Lana Del Rey, US singer-songwriter, 37. Sharna Burgess, ballroom dancer, 37. Jun 22: Prunella Scales, Sybil on TV’s Fawlty Towers, 90. Meryl Streep, actress, 73. Lindsay Wagner, TV’s Bionic Woman, 73. Cyndi Lauper, pop singer, 69. Bruce McAvaney, sports broadcaster, 69. Garry Gary Beers, INXS musician, 65. George Brandis, former AttorneyGeneral, 65. Erin Brockovich-Ellis, activist, 62. Dan Brown, author, The DaVinci Code, 58. Jessica Rowe, journalist, 52. Damien Oliver, jockey, 50. Thomas Leuluai, footy player, 37. Lara Worthington, model, 35.

Orange City Life, Suite 3/241 Lords Place Orange or email reception@oclife.com.au and mark each entry with the competition name

TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS #639 1 South America, 2 red, 3 loud, 4 Matthew Flinders, 5 Ecuador, 6 laughing out loud, 7 Australia, 8 South Africa, 9 Van Morrison, 10 NSW.


PUZZLES…. PUZZLES…. PUZZLES…. Quiz

Quick Crossword

No. 036

ACROSS

1

Ataxia is a symptom of damage to which system of the human body? 2 What is the highest mountain in Greece? 3 What is the capital city of the state of Utah in the US? 4 In which country did gin originate? 5 Kirk Douglas played Colonel Dax in which 1957 war movie? 6 Are bomboras musical instruments, powerful waves or wall supports? 7 What do you call the shedding, or casting off, of feathers, hair, horns, shell or a layer of skin by an animal? 8 Which American rock band was formed in Seattle, Washington by guitarist Jerry Cantrell and vocalist Layne Staley?

Wordfind

9 In what year was Spain admitted to the United Nations? 10 What instrument is Kenny G (pictured) famous for playing?

No. 036

S

BARK

HABITAT

BRANCHES

LARCH

CEDAR

LEAVES

CONIFERS

MOSS

CYPRESS

PINE

EUCALYPTS

SEQUOIAS

FAUNA

TIMBER

FIR

TREES

FLORA

WOODLAND

R A

E

S

E

S

Crossmath

No. 036

Insert each number × + = 39 from 1 to 9 in the shaded squares + + × to solve all the + – = 9 horizontal and vertical equations. No. + + 2 + Multiplication × + = 12 and division are performed before = = = addition and 15 18 17 subtraction.

No. 036

IN

SS

PI

ME

EX

ED

HU

RE

Drop Down

No. 036

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.

G R A V I

E S

9 2

8

9 7 8 5

8 4 7 6 4

9-Letter

No. 036

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: 14 words: Good 21 words: Very good 28 words: Excellent

There may be more than one possible answer.

E

There may be more than one possible answer.

PUzzLES AND PAGINATION © PAGEMASTERS PTY LTD | pagemasters.com

U

F O

U T N

B I

L

GRAVIES GRAVES SAGER EARS ARE RE E DROPDOWN

EDGEWORD EXHUME, EXPIRE, MESSED, REINED

S I T E S

A R E A L

S A R G E

S T R E W

Y E A R S

5x5

QUIZ 1. Central nervous system 2. Mount Olympus 3. Salt Lake City 4. The Netherlands 5. Paths of Glory 6. Powerful waves 7. Moulting 8. Alice in Chains 9. 1955 10. Soprano saxophone

9-LETTER blot, blunt, bolt, botulin, BOUNTIFUL, bout, built, bunt, flint, flit, flout, font, fount, futon, into, lift, lint, loft, lout, obit, tofu, toil, unbolt, unfit, unit, unlit, until, unto

8 × 4 + + + 6 + 5 – + + 1 × 9 + = = 15 18 CROSSMATH

7 = 39 × 2 = 9 + 3 = 12 = 17

9 6 3 2 1 4 5 8 7

7 2 1 8 5 6 3 9 4

4 8 5 7 3 9 6 2 1

8 1 4 3 9 7 2 5 6

SUDOKU

3 7 6 5 4 2 8 1 9

5 9 2 1 6 8 4 7 3

1 5 9 4 2 3 7 6 8

2 3 8 6 7 1 9 4 5

Solutions

No. 036

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

2 8 5 4 2 3 5 1 5 4 2 3 2 5 9

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

A

Sudoku

3

Edgeword

Y T

T

The leftover letters will spell out a secret message.

GLADE

R

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

Theme: Forests

ASPEN

S

1 Driven (9) 2 Microbial bread additive (5) 3 Limitation (11) 4 Photos (9) 5 Japanese seaport (5) 6 — Guevara (3) 7 Incompetency (9) 8 Entrance (4) 13 Things built on beaches (11) 15 Insect similar to a moth (9) 16 Creator’s protection (9) 17 Hundreds and — (9) 21 Skimping (5) 23 Perturb (5) 24 Semi (4) 26 Billiard rod (3)

WORDFIND Secret message: In green shadows

5x5

DOWN

1 Town leader (5) 4 Displaying bad posture (9) 9 Defrosts (5) 10 Awe (9) 11 Democracy participant (5) 12 Rareness (8) 14 Cigarette filling (7) 16 Join (7) 18 Particulars (7) 19 Famous painter (7) 20 Christmas animal (8) 22 Adult male deer (plural) (5) 25 Influencing (9) 27 Cloth (5) 28 Boxing category (9) 29 Eyelid inflammations (5)

Reference: Macquarie Dictionary

0809 Dubbo & OrangeWed170622

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 49

6 4 7 9 8 5 1 3 2 QUICK CROSSWORD


6.00 Morning (2) Programs. 12.00 News. 1.00 Barons. Final. 2.00 Good Karma Hospital. 3.00 Grand Designs Aust. 3.50 Long Lost Family. 4.40 Tenable. 5.25 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Gardening Australia. 8.30 The Jubilee Pudding: 70 Years In The Baking. 9.30 Keeping Faith. 10.30 ABC Late News. 10.45 Agatha Raisin. 11.35 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 12.05 You Can’t Ask That. 12.40 Rage. 5.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (3) Programs. 10.55 Hidden Algeria. 12.00 WorldWatch. 2.05 Ancient Superstructures. 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.40 The Cook Up. 4.10 Tony Robinson: Britain’s Ancient Tracks. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Railway Journeys UK. 6.30 News. 7.30 Mastermind Aust. 8.30 The Riddle Of The Roman Coneheads. 9.25 Henry VIII And The King’s Men. 10.25 SBS News. 10.55 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (6) Programs. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Maternal Instinct. (2017) 2.00 House Of Wellness. 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 Better Homes And Gardens. 8.30 MOVIE: Murder On The Orient Express. (2017) Kenneth Branagh, Daisy Ridley, Judi Dench. 10.50 MOVIE: Poseidon. (2006) 1.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 Morning (8) Programs. 12.00 MOVIE: The Wrong Patient. (2018) 1.45 9 Honey: Queen Elizabeth II. 2.00 Pointless. 3.00 Tipping Point. 4.00 Afternoon News. 4.30 Hot Seat. 5.30 WIN News. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 15. Melbourne Storm v Brisbane Broncos. 9.55 Golden Point. 10.35 MOVIE: Triple 9. (2016) 12.40 Tipping Point. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (5) Programs. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 Living Room. 2.00 Ent. Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. 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 The Living Room. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.30 The Graham Norton Show. 10.30 Just For Laughs Uncut. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 1.30 Home Shopping. 4.30 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.30 The Most Magnificent Thing. 7.10 Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: Puberty Blues. (1981) Nell Schofield, Jad Capelja. 9.55 Black Mirror. 11.05 QI. 11.40 Parks And Recreation. 12.20 Long Lost Family. 1.10 Close. 5.35 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (31) WorldWatch. 9.30 Shortland St. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 MOVIE: Warm Bodies. (2013) 1.50 The Movie Show. 2.20 Planet A. 3.20 Feeding The Scrum. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Shortland St. 5.45 Joy Of Painting. 6.15 Forged In Fire. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 The Orville. 9.40 Viva La Vulva. 10.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (62) Programs. 12.00 House Of Wellness. 1.00 The Day We Walked On The Moon. 2.00 South Aussie With Cosi. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Dog Patrol. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Railroad Australia. 8.30 I Escaped To The Country. 9.30 Escape To The Perfect Town. 10.40 Penelope Keith’s Hidden Villages. 11.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (81) Programs. 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 Man Who Finally Died. (1963) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Children’s Hospital. New. 8.30 MOVIE: Miss Congeniality 2: Armed And Fabulous. (2005) 10.50 MOVIE: Sex And The City 2. (2010) 1.40 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (53) Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 MacGyver. 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 Cheers. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 Evil. 11.30 48 Hours. 12.30 Home Shopping. 1.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Art Ninja. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Operation Ouch! 7.00 Deadly Pole To Pole. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 Good Game Spawn Point. 8.55 Log Horizon. 9.20 Dragon Ball Super. 9.45 Sailor Moon Crystal. 10.10 Slugterra. 10.30 Close.

6.00 Morning (66) Programs. 12.00 9-1-1. 3.00 Modern Family. 3.30 American Dad! 3.55 The Simpsons. 4.20 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. 4.45 MOVIE: Tom And Jerry: The Movie. (1992) 6.30 MOVIE: Smallfoot. (2018) 8.30 MOVIE: There’s Something About Mary. (1998) Cameron Diaz, Ben Stiller. 11.00 MOVIE: Dangerous Liaisons. (1988) 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 12.10 SAS: UK. 1.10 MOVIE: Superman IV: The Quest For Peace. (1987) 3.00 Pawn Stars. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Timbersports. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars: Texas. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 AFL: Friday Night Countdown. 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 14. St Kilda v Essendon. 10.30 AFL Post-Game Show. 11.00 Armchair Experts. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Six Million Dollar Man. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 Young Sheldon. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 MOVIE: Megamind. (2010) 7.30 MOVIE: The Legend Of Tarzan. (2016) 9.40 MOVIE: Snow White And The Huntsman. (2012) 12.05 Supergirl. 1.05 The Village. 3.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.00 TV Shop. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (52) The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The Middle. 7.30 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 The King Of Queens. 12.30 Frasier. 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 Charmed. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

FrIday, June 17

aBC tV

aBC tV PLuS

aBC ME

SBS

SBS VLNd

7FLIX

PrIME7

NINE

7tWO

9GEM

7MatE

9GO!

tEN

10 BOLd

10 PEaCH

Saturday, June 18 SBS (3)

PrIME7 (6)

NINE (8)

tEN (5)

6.00 Rage. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Rage. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Midsomer Murders. 2.00 Andrew Olle Media Lecture. 2.40 Parkinson In Australia. 3.50 The Art Of Collecting. 4.20 Landline. 4.50 The Gruffalo. 5.20 MOVIE: The Secret Garden. (2020) Dixie Egerickx, Richard Hansell. A girl discovers a magical garden. (PG) 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 The Good Karma Hospital. 8.20 Call The Midwife. Final. 9.20 Barons. Final. 10.20 The Trial Of Christine Keeler. 11.20 High Fidelity. 11.45 Rage.

aBC tV (2)

6.00 DW English News Morning. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.00 BBC 6 O’Clock News. 7.30 France 24 English News. 8.00 DD India Prime Time News. 9.05 Love Your Garden. 10.00 Great Canal Journeys. 10.55 Paul O’Grady: For The Love Of Dogs. 12.00 BBC News At Ten. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 PBS News. 2.00 Motor Racing. FIM Superbike World Championship. Round 4. Pirelli Emilia-Romagna. Highlights. 2.55 Gymnastics. FIG Artistic World Challenge Cup. Highlights. 4.35 The Pyramids: Solving The Mystery. 5.30 Forgotten Frontlines. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 World’s Most Scenic Railway Journeys. 8.30 Secrets Of Royal Gardens. 9.25 Secrets Of The Tower Of London. 10.15 Serena Vs The Umpire. 11.15 MOVIE: Vicky Cristina Barcelona. (2008) Scarlett Johansson, Javier Bardem, Rebecca Hall. 12.55 MOVIE: Birdman. (2014) Michael Keaton, Emma Stone. 3.05 MOVIE: Predestination. (2014) Ethan Hawke. 5.00 NHK World English News. 5.15 France 24 Feature. 5.30 ANC Philippines The World Tonight.

6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. 12.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 1. 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: Die Hard. (1988) Bruce Willis, Bonnie Bedelia, Alan Rickman. A New York City police detective heads to Los Angeles on Christmas Eve to be reunited with his estranged wife. However, his plans are disrupted when a gang of terrorists takes over the office tower where she works. (M) 10.15 MOVIE: Bad Boys. (1995) Will Smith, Martin Lawrence. Two detectives pursue the gang that stole a fortune in drugs from their police station’s evidence room. (MA15+) 12.30 Home Shopping.

6.00 Easy Eats. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. 12.00 Living On The Coast: Shoalhaven Recovers. 12.30 Cybershack. 1.00 Our State On A Plate. 1.30 My Way. 2.00 The Pet Rescuers. 2.30 Taronga: Who’s Who In The Zoo. 3.30 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. 6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 MOVIE: Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again. (2018) Amanda Seyfried, Meryl Streep. A woman looks back at her late mother’s life. (PG) 9.40 MOVIE: Footloose. (1984) Kevin Bacon, Lori Singer. A Chicago teenager takes on a minister. (PG) 11.45 Labour Of Love. 12.35 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. 1.30 Living On The Coast: Shoalhaven Recovers. 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 My Market Kitchen. 9.00 Australia By Design: Innovations. 9.30 Studio 10: Saturday. 12.00 Luca’s Key Ingredient. 12.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 1.00 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 1.30 The Living Room. 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 Wildlife Rescue Australia. 7.00 The Dog House. 9.00 To Be Advised. 10.00 My Life Is Murder. 12.00 Just For Laughs Australia. 1.00 Home Shopping. 3.30 Infomercials. 5.00 Hour Of Power.

6.00 Kids’ (22) Programs. 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. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.10 Wiggle. 4.35 Wolf Joe. 5.20 PJ Masks. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.30 Thomas And Friends: Mines Of Mystery. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.20 The Stand Up Sketch Show. 9.45 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 10.10 Would I Lie To You? 10.40 Friday Night Dinner. 11.05 The Witchfinder. 11.35 Blunt Talk. 12.00 Schitt’s Creek. 12.25 Brassic. 1.10 David Attenborough’s Flying Monsters. 2.25 Close. 5.55 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 TRT World (31) Newshour. 6.50 Indian Country Today News. 7.20 Fiji One News. 7.40 Deutsche Welle Global 3000. 8.10 ABC America Nightline. 8.40 TVNZ One News At Six. 9.00 Basketball. WNBA. Connecticut Sun v Seattle Storm. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 Bamay. 12.20 Letters And Numbers. 12.50 If You Are The One. 2.50 Over The Black Dot. 3.20 Yokayi Footy. 4.15 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 4.40 PBS News. 5.40 Insight. 6.40 Good With Wood. 7.35 Underground Worlds. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.20 RAW Comedy Festival. 10.50 Harlots. 12.55 Sexplora. 1.45 My Secret Sexual Fantasy. 3.25 NHK World English News. 5.00 Al Jazeera.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 8.30 Travel Oz. 10.00 Weekender. 10.30 Creek To Coast. 11.00 House Of Wellness. 12.00 Horse Racing. VRC Country Race Day And Bookmakers Recognition Day. 5.00 To Be Advised. 5.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 I Escaped To The Country. Return. 9.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 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 (81) Direct. 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 Gideon’s Way. 11.45 Antiques Roadshow. 12.15 MOVIE: The Young Ones. (1961) 2.30 MOVIE: Ski Party. (1965) 4.30 Rugby Union. Super Rugby Pacific. Final. 7.15 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 1. Heats. 8.15 MOVIE: Escape From Alcatraz. (1979) Clint Eastwood, Patrick McGoohan, Fred Ward. 10.35 MOVIE: A Fistful Of Dollars. (1964) Clint Eastwood. 12.35 Customs. 1.00 My Way. 1.30 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 1. Finals. 4.20 Late Programs.

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 MacGyver. 3.00 Cheers. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 5.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 NCIS: Los Angeles. 12.10 48 Hours. 2.10 Scorpion. 4.00 The Doctors. 5.00 Home Shopping.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 9.30 Miraculous. 9.55 TMNT. 10.15 Slugterra. 10.40 Kong: King Of The Apes. 11.00 Log Horizon. 11.25 Dragon Ball Super. 11.50 Sailor Moon Crystal. 12.10 Slugterra. 12.35 Horrible Histories. 1.00 All-Round Champion. 1.50 Kong: King Of The Apes. 2.30 Deadly 60 On A Mission: Pole To Pole. 3.00 Operation Ouch! 3.35 Space Nova. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 The Wonderful World Of Puppies. 7.15 The Zoo. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 9.05 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.55 Close.

6.00 It’s Academic. (66) 7.00 News Of The Wild. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Flushed. 10.00 Weekender. 10.45 MOVIE: Tom And Jerry: The Movie. (1992) 12.30 Spectacular Schools Inspired Special. 1.30 Behave Yourself. 2.30 MOVIE: Smallfoot. (2018) 4.30 MOVIE: The Sisterhood Of The Travelling Pants 2. (2008) 7.00 MOVIE: The Dressmaker. (2015) Kate Winslet, Judy Davis. 9.20 MOVIE: Bombshell. (2019) Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, Margot Robbie. 11.40 The Mentalist. 12.40 MOVIE: The Saint’s Vacation. (1941) 2.00 Home Shopping. 3.00 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.00 What Really Happens In Thailand. 5.00 S.W.A.T.

6.00 ITM Fishing (63) Show. 7.00 Fishy Business. 8.00 Home Shopping. 10.00 Step Outside With Paul Burt. 10.30 Oz Fish TV. 11.00 Life Off Road. 11.30 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 12.00 The Weekend Prospector. 12.30 Timbersports. 1.00 Blokesworld. 1.30 Football. AFL. Round 14. Port Adelaide v Sydney. 4.30 Motor Racing. Night Thunder. Australian Sprintcar Championship. 5.30 American Pickers. 6.30 AFL Pre-Game Show. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 14. GWS Giants v Western Bulldogs. 10.30 AFL PostGame Show. 11.00 MOVIE: Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance. (2011) 1.00 MOVIE: Entourage. (2015) 3.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 1.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 1.30 Raymond. 2.00 Motor Racing. FIA World Endurance Championship. 24 Hour of Le Mans. Highlights. 3.00 How To Build A Motor Car. 4.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 5.00 MOVIE: The Croods. (2013) 7.00 MOVIE: Despicable Me 3. (2017) Steve Carell. 8.45 MOVIE: Baywatch. (2017) Dwayne Johnson, Zac Efron, Alexandra Daddario. 11.05 Spy Games. 12.05 Supergirl. 1.05 Aaron Hernandez Uncovered. 2.30 Surfing Australia TV. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Monkie Kid. 5.10 Lego Jurassic World: Legend Of Isla Nublar. 5.30 Dino Ranch.

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10 PEaCH (52)

6.00 The Late Show

With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Frasier. 8.30 Neighbours. 10.30 The Big Bang Theory. 12.00 The King Of Queens. 1.00 MasterChef Australia. 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 Charmed. 4.30 Home Shopping.

SuNday, June 19 aBC tV (2)

SBS (3)

NINE (8)

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6.00 Rage. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 The World This Week. 11.00 Compass. 11.30 Songs Of Praise. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Australia. 2.30 Parkinson In Australia. 3.30 The Jubilee Pudding: 70 Years In The Baking. 4.30 Back To Nature. 5.00 Art Works. 5.30 Antiques Roadshow. 6.30 Compass. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Julia Zemiro’s Home Delivery: Ray Martin. 8.30 Miniseries: Miss Fisher And The Crypt Of Tears. 9.15 Miniseries: Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? 10.20 Harrow. 11.10 Agatha Raisin. 12.00 Parkinson In Australia. 4.10 Tenable. 5.00 Insiders.

6.00 DW English News Morning. 6.30 Al Jazeera. 7.00 Deutsche Welle Global 3000. 7.30 France 24 English News. 8.00 DD India Prime Time News. 9.05 Love Your Garden. 10.00 Great Canal Journeys. 11.00 Paul O’Grady: For The Love Of Dogs. 12.00 France 24 English News Second Edition. 12.30 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 1.00 Speedweek. 3.00 Sportswoman. 3.30 Gymnastics. FIG Rhythmic World Cup Series. Highlights. 4.30 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Critérium du Dauphiné. Highlights. 5.30 Forgotten Frontlines. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Vesuvius With Bettany Hughes. 8.30 Mesopotamia 3D. 9.40 Alhambra: Secrets Of The Ancient Builders. 10.40 Secrets Of Our Cities. 11.40 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 12.35 Mars. 3.20 Targeting Bin Laden. 5.00 NHK World English News Morning. 5.15 France 24 Feature. 5.30 Al Jazeera News.

6.00 Home Shopping. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. 12.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 2. Qualifying. 3.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 2. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Sydney Weekender. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 7NEWS Spotlight. 8.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 8.30 MOVIE: The Equalizer 2. (2018) Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal. 11.00 The Blacklist. 12.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 2. Highlights. 1.00 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. 1.30 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. 3.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 15. Canterbury Bulldogs v Wests Tigers. From CommBank Stadium, Sydney. 6.00 Nine News Sunday. 7.00 62nd Annual TV Week Logie Awards: Red Carpet Arrivals. 7.30 62nd Annual TV Week Logie Awards. 11.00 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. 12.00 Accident, Suicide Or Murder. 1.00 Drive TV. 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 Turning Point With David Jeremiah. 7.00 Leading The Way. 7.30 Tomorrow’s World. 8.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 8.30 The Living Room. 9.30 Studio 10: Sunday. 12.00 MasterChef Australia. 2.30 My Market Kitchen. 3.00 Destination Dessert. 3.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.00 Farm To Fork. 4.30 Taste Of Australia With Hayden Quinn. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Sunday Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 9.00 NCIS: Hawai’i. 10.00 FBI. 11.00 The Sunday Project. 12.00 Home Shopping. 2.30 Infomercials. 4.30 CBS Mornings.

6.00 Kids’ (22) Programs. 9.45 Sesame Street. 10.15 PJ Masks. 11.05 School Of Roars. 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. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.10 Wiggle. 4.35 Wolf Joe. 5.20 PJ Masks. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.40 Andy’s Aquatic Adventures. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Lucy Worsley Investigates. 9.35 Ithaka: A Fight To Free Julian Assange. 10.30 Days Like These With Diesel. Final. 11.25 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.15 MOVIE: Puberty Blues. (1981) 1.45 Close. 5.55 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 TRT World (31) Newshour. 6.50 Indian Country Today News. 7.20 Fiji One News. 7.50 France 24 Feature. 8.10 ABC America Nightline. 8.40 TVNZ One News At Six. 9.30 Shortland St. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 If You Are The One. 4.05 Letters And Numbers. 4.35 ABC World News Tonight With David Muir. 5.05 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. 6.45 In Search Of... 7.35 Abandoned Engineering. 8.30 The UnXplained With William Shatner. 9.20 Fear The Walking Dead. 11.20 The Black Full Monty. 12.15 MOVIE: Edge Of Darkness. (2010) Mel Gibson. 2.20 MOVIE: Being John Malkovich. (1999) 4.25 NHK World English News. 5.00 Al Jazeera.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 7.30 Leading The Way. 8.00 David Jeremiah. 8.30 Home Shopping. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 The Yorkshire Vet. 12.00 House Of Wellness. 1.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 1.30 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. 2.00 The Bowls Show. 3.00 South Aussie With Cosi. 3.30 Creek To Coast. 4.00 Meghan & Harry: The Next Chapter. 5.00 Diana: A Love Affair. 6.00 Vintage Roads: Great And Small. 7.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 8.00 Railroad Australia. 9.00 Mighty Trains. 10.00 David Jason: Planes, Trains And Automobiles. 11.00 Sunday Night True Stories. 12.00 Dog Patrol. 12.30 The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Late Programs.

6.00 TV Shop: Home (81) 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 My Favorite Martian. 12.30 Getaway. 1.05 MOVIE: It Always Rains On Sunday. (1947) 3.00 MOVIE: Clambake. (1967) 5.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 2. Heats. 7.45 David Attenborough’s The Mating Game. 8.55 To Be Advised. 11.30 Covert Affairs. 12.30 World’s Greatest Man Made Wonders. 1.30 Living On The Coast: Shoalhaven Recovers. 2.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 2. Finals. 3.50 Late Programs.

(53) 6.00 Infomercials. 7.00 Turning Point With David Jeremiah. 7.30 Key Of David. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Healthy Homes Australia. 9.30 Buy To Build. 10.00 Bondi Rescue. 10.30 Reel Action. 11.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 11.30 Wildlife Rescue Australia. 12.30 Scorpion. 2.30 Camper Deals. 3.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. 4.00 Cheers. 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. 5.00 iFish. 5.30 Bondi Rescue. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 48 Hours. 12.10 MOVIE: Tenacious D In The Pick Of Destiny. (2006) 2.05 L.A.’s Finest. 3.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 5.00 The Doctors.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 9.30 Hardball. 9.55 MaveriX. 10.20 School Of Rock. 10.40 The Next Step. 11.05 Amelia Parker. 11.35 The Athena. 12.00 Operation Ouch! 12.30 Horrible Histories. 1.00 All-Round Champion. 1.50 Kong: King Of The Apes. 2.30 Deadly 60 On A Mission: Pole To Pole. 3.00 Operation Ouch! 3.35 Space Nova. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Australia: The Wild Top End. 7.15 The Zoo. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 9.05 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s Academic. (66) 7.00 News Of The Wild. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Motown Magic. 10.00 Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly. 11.00 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. 11.30 MOVIE: The Sisterhood Of The Travelling Pants 2. (2008) America Ferrera, Alexis Bledel. 2.00 To Be Advised. 5.00 Modern Family. 7.00 MOVIE: The Wizard Of Oz. (1939) 9.15 MOVIE: Made Of Honor. (2008) 11.15 MOVIE: Annabelle Comes Home. (2019) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, McKenna Grace. 1.30 The Mentalist. 2.30 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 3.30 Modern Family. 4.00 What Really Happens In Thailand. 5.00 S.W.A.T.

6.00 Home (63) Shopping. 6.30 ITM Fishing Show. 7.00 Fishy Business. 7.30 Home Shopping. 10.00 Big Angry Fish. 11.00 Fish Of The Day. 11.30 Seven’s Motorsport Classic. 12.00 The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Hook, Line And Sinker. 2.00 Hook Me Up! 3.00 ITM Fishing Show. 4.00 Mark Berg’s Fishing Addiction. 5.00 Storage Wars. 5.25 MOVIE: 10,000 BC. (2008) 7.30 MOVIE: Pacific Rim. (2013) Charlie Hunnam, Rinko Kikuchi, Charlie Day. 10.10 MOVIE: Sea Fever. (2019) Connie Nielsen, Dougray Scott. 12.15 The Sunday Session. 12.45 Blokesworld. 1.15 Power And Ice. 2.30 Pawn Stars. 3.00 American Pickers. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 Bakugan: Evolutions. 12.30 Beyblade Burst: Quad Drive. 1.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 1.40 America’s Top Dog. 2.40 Say Yes To The Dress: UK. 3.40 Top Chef. Return. 4.55 MOVIE: Smokey And The Bandit II. (1980) 7.00 MOVIE: The Secret Life Of Pets. (2016) Kevin Hart. 8.45 MOVIE: Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom. (2018) Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Rafe Spall. 11.15 Allegiance. Final. 12.05 MOVIE: Finding Neverland. (2004) 2.05 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Charge. 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.

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50 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

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10 PEaCH (52) Theory. 8.30 Neighbours. 10.30 The Middle. 12.00 The Unicorn. 2.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.30 Friends. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 MOVIE: Take The Lead. (2006) 3.40 Mom. 4.30 Home Shopping.

6.00 The Big Bang


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 Mum. 1.30 Vera. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 3.55 Long Lost Family: What Happened Next. 4.40 Tenable. 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 India Now. 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. 10.40 Q+A. 11.45 Keeping Faith. 12.40 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.05 (3) Make Me A Dealer. 9.55 Paddington Station 24/7. 10.55 Hidden Algeria. 12.00 WorldWatch. 1.55 Invisible. 3.25 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 3.55 Talk For Life. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.30 Saving Lives At Sea. 8.40 24 Hours In Emergency. 9.35 Nadia: A Stolen Life. 11.10 SBS News. 11.40 Agatha Christie’s Criminal Games. 1.20 Outlander. 2.25 The Hot Zone. 3.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Secrets In The Water. (2020) 2.00 Criminal Confessions. 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 Big Brother. 9.00 9-1-1: Lone Star. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 The Blacklist. 12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Lethal Beauty. (2018) 1.45 Explore. 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 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. 9.10 Million Dollar Murders. 10.15 Nine News Late. 10.45 100% Footy. 11.45 Manifest. 12.35 Tipping Point. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 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 MasterChef Australia. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. Return. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.40 Have You Been Paying Attention? 9.40 The Montreal Comedy Festival. 10.40 Georgie Carroll: The Gloves Are Off. 12.10 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 6.40 Andy’s Aquatic Adventures. 7.10 Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive. 8.35 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.25 Restoration Australia. 10.25 Enslaved. 11.25 QI. 11.55 Parks And Recreation. 12.35 No Friend But The Mountains, A Voyage Through Song. 2.00 Making Of David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive. 2.50 Long Lost Family. 3.40 Close. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (31) WorldWatch. 9.30 Shortland Street. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 North To South: The Full Journey. 2.30 The Tesla Files. 3.25 WorldWatch. 4.45 Shortland Street. 5.45 Joy Of Painting. 6.15 Forged In Fire. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Taskmaster. 9.25 Kim’s Convenience. 10.25 In My Own World. 11.15 Sex On The Couch. 12.15 Fear The Walking Dead. 2.45 MOVIE: David Brent: Life On The Road. (2016) 4.35 NHK World English News. 5.00 Al Jazeera.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 7.00 The Bowls Show. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 Better Homes And Gardens. 12.00 The Bay. 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. 10.40 Without A Trace. 1.30 A Foodies Guide To Kyushu Japan. 2.00 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 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. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. 4.00 Antiques Roadshow. 5.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 3. Heats. 7.45 Death In Paradise. 8.55 Poirot. 10.55 Law & Order. 11.55 Footy Classified. 12.50 Late Programs.

(53) 6.00 Infomercials. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Camper Deals. 9.30 Bondi Rescue. 10.00 Cheers. 11.00 MacGyver. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Law & Order: SVU. 2.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Cheers. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 SEAL Team. 11.15 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 9. Canadian Grand Prix. 12.15 Home Shopping. 1.15 Infomercials. 1.45 Home Shopping. 2.15 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 12.30 Horrible Histories. 1.00 All-Round Champion. 1.50 Kong: King Of The Apes. 2.15 Dragons: Defenders Of Berk. 2.40 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Art Ninja. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.05 Miraculous. 6.30 Operation Ouch! 7.00 Deadly Pole To Pole. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 9.05 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 News Of The Wild. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Back With The Ex. 11.45 The Goldbergs. 12.15 9-1-1. 1.15 Modern Family. 2.45 To Be Advised. 4.15 MOVIE: Police Academy 4: Citizens On Patrol. (1987) 6.00 Futurama. 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 First Dates Australia. 10.50 Family Guy. 11.20 The Goldbergs. 11.50 The Mentalist. 1.50 Modern Family. 2.20 Fresh TV. 2.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 12.00 Storage Wars. 12.30 American Pickers. 1.30 Down East Dickering. 2.30 Rides Down Under: Workshop Wars. 3.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 1. Highlights. 4.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 6. Darwin Triple Crown. Day 2. Highlights. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: Hacksaw Ridge. (2016) 11.20 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Six Million Dollar Man. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest 2032. 3.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 4.00 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 MOVIE: Patriots Day. (2016) Mark Wahlberg, John Goodman. 11.05 Young Sheldon. 11.30 Up All Night. 12.00 90 Day Fiance. 2.00 Snapped. 3.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. 3.30 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 4.00 Take Two. 5.00 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 The (52) Unicorn. 8.00 Friends. 10.30 The Middle. 12.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.00 Charmed. 2.00 The Big Bang Theory. 2.30 The Unicorn. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.30 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 Late Programs.

6.00 News (2) Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Foreign Correspondent. 10.30 India Now. 11.00 How To Live Younger. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Call The Midwife. Final. 2.00 Mystery Road. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 3.55 Long Lost Family: What Happened Next. 4.40 Tenable. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Space 22. Final. 8.30 Southern Ocean Live. 10.00 Our Brain. 11.00 ABC Late News. 11.15 The Business. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 (3) Make Me A Dealer. 9.55 Paddington Station 24/7. 10.50 Britain’s Biggest Dig. 12.00 WorldWatch. 2.05 Where Are You Really From? 3.05 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 Who Do You Think You Are? Return. 8.30 Insight. 9.30 Dateline. 10.00 The Feed. 10.30 SBS News. 11.00 The Point. 11.30 The Hunt For A Killer. 1.10 The A Word. 3.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Undercover Wife. (2016) 2.00 Criminal Confessions. 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 Big Brother. 9.00 The Good Doctor. 10.00 The Rookie. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 Autopsy USA. 12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. 1.40 9Honey: Queen Elizabeth. 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 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. Final. 9.10 Matt Wright’s Wild Territory. 10.10 Nine News Late. 10.40 Law & Order: Organized Crime. 11.30 Game Of Silence. New. 12.20 Tipping Point. 1.10 Hello SA. 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 MasterChef Australia. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 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. 11.30 The Project. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.40 Andy’s Aquatic Adventures. 7.10 Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 The Witchfinder. 9.00 Blunt Talk. 9.30 Friday Night Dinner. 9.55 Schitt’s Creek. 10.20 Rosehaven. 10.50 Black Books. 11.15 Bounty Hunters. 11.45 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.05 Parks And Recreation. 12.50 Brassic. 1.35 Long Lost Family. 2.25 Close. 5.35 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (31) WorldWatch. 9.30 Shortland St. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 North To South: The Full Journey. 2.15 The Tesla Files. 3.00 Video Game Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Shortland Street. 5.45 Joy Of Painting. 6.15 Forged In Fire. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Craig Charles: UFO Conspiracies. New. 9.25 Story Of Science Fiction. 10.15 Miniseries: Sirius. 11.10 The Rope. 12.05 Briarpatch. 1.55 Fear The Walking Dead. 3.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 The Bay. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 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 Rosemary & Thyme. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.30 Without A Trace. 1.30 A Foodies Guide To Kyushu Japan. 2.00 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 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. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Murder, She Wrote. 4.00 Antiques Roadshow. 5.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 4. Heats. 8.00 New Tricks. 9.10 The Closer. 10.10 Rizzoli & Isles. 11.10 Law & Order. 12.05 Late Programs.

Home (53) 6.00 Shopping. 6.30 Infomercials. 8.00 MacGyver. 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 Cheers. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.20 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.15 Home Shopping. 1.15 Infomercials. 1.45 Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: The Bombing. (2018) 4.10 Star Trek: The Next Generation.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 12.30 Horrible Histories. 1.00 All-Round Champion. 1.50 Kong: King Of The Apes. 2.15 Dragons: Defenders Of Berk. 2.35 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Art Ninja. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.00 Miraculous. 6.30 Operation Ouch! 7.00 Deadly Pole To Pole. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 9.05 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 News Of The Wild. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Back With The Ex. 11.30 Modern Family. 12.30 9-1-1. 1.30 Family Guy. 2.00 American Dad! 2.30 Futurama. 3.00 The Simpsons. 4.00 MOVIE: Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach. (1988) 6.00 Futurama. 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 Family Guy. 8.00 American Dad! 8.30 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. 12.30 The Mentalist. 2.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 8.00 American Pickers. 9.00 Storage Wars. 9.30 Pawn Stars. 10.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 11.00 A Football Life. 12.00 Inside Kings Cross: The Railway. 1.00 SAS: UK. 2.00 American Pickers. 3.00 Pawn Stars. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Wheelburn. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Outback Opal Hunters. 9.30 Adventure Gold Diggers. New. 10.30 Jade Fever. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Six Million Dollar Man. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest 2032. 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 MOVIE: Swordfish. (2001) 9.30 MOVIE: Death Race. (2008) 11.30 Young Sheldon. 12.00 90 Day Fiance. 2.00 Snapped. 3.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. 3.30 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 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. 9.30 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. 7.30 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 News. 12.30 Press Club. 1.40 Media Watch. 2.00 Mystery Road. 3.05 Grand Designs Australia. 3.55 Long Lost Family: What Happened Next. 4.40 Tenable. 5.30 Hard Quiz. 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Gruen. 8.40 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 9.10 You Can’t Ask That. 9.40 Would I Lie To You? 10.10 ABC Late News. 10.25 The Business. 10.45 Miniseries: Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? 11.45 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 (3) Make Me A Dealer. 9.55 Paddington Station 24/7. 10.50 Britain’s Biggest Dig. 12.00 WorldWatch. 2.10 Dateline. 2.40 Insight. 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.10 Tony Robinson: Britain’s Ancient Tracks. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.35 Tony Robinson: WWII By Drone. 8.30 Why Buildings Collapse. 9.30 New York Super Airport. 10.25 SBS News. 10.55 Australia Come Fly With Me. 11.55 La Jauria. 3.40 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: P.S. I Love You. (2007) 2.40 Motorbike Cops. 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 Big Brother. 9.00 Unbelievable Moments Caught On Camera. 10.00 Ramsay’s 24 Hours To Hell And Back. 11.00 The Latest: Seven News. 11.30 The Front Bar. 12.30 Home Shopping. 5.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Celebrity Apprentice Australia. 1.40 9Honey: Queen Elizabeth. 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 To Be Advised. 10.15 Nine News Late. 10.45 Chicago Med. 11.40 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now. 12.30 Tipping Point. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 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 MasterChef Australia. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 8.40 Five Bedrooms. 9.40 Good Sam. 10.40 This Is Us. Final. 11.40 The Project. 12.40 Late Programs.

6.00 (22) Kids’ Programs. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.40 Andy’s Aquatic Adventures. 7.10 Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 To Be Advised. 8.00 Art Works. 8.30 The Story Of Film: A New Generation. 9.50 Space 22. Final. 10.20 Talking Heads. 10.55 Everyone’s A Critic. 11.25 Lucy Worsley Investigates. 12.25 Parks And Recreation. 1.10 Diary Of An Uber Driver. 1.35 Long Lost Family. 2.30 Close. 5.35 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (31) WorldWatch. 6.50 Indian Country Today News. 7.20 WorldWatch. 9.30 Shortland St. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 If You Are The One. 3.00 Video Game Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Shortland Street. 5.45 Joy Of Painting. 6.15 Forged In Fire. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Letters And Numbers. 9.30 Shoresy. 10.00 MOVIE: Booksmart. (2019) 11.55 MOVIE: Journey To The West: The Demons Strike Back. (2017) 1.55 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 The Bay. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Heathrow. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Frankie Drake Mysteries. 8.30 Mrs Brown’s Boys. 11.30 Mafia’s Greatest Hits. 12.30 Without A Trace. 2.30 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 Murder, She Wrote. 4.00 Antiques Roadshow. 5.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 5. Heats. 7.45 As Time Goes By. 8.55 Midsomer Murders. 11.05 The Real Murders Of Orange County. 12.00 Footy Classified. 1.00 Late Programs.

(53) 6.00 Infomercials. 8.00 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 9. Canadian Grand Prix. Replay. 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 Cheers. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.20 Evil. 12.15 Home Shopping. 1.45 Infomercials. 2.15 NCIS: New Orleans. 3.10 The Love Boat. 4.05 Star Trek: The Next Generation.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 2.40 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 Art Ninja. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.00 Miraculous. 6.30 Operation Ouch! 7.00 Deadly Pole To Pole. 7.35 Mystic. 8.05 Kung Fu Panda. 8.30 TMNT. 9.05 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.55 Rage. 10.55 Close. 12.00 MOVIE: The Midnight Gang. (2018) 1.05 MOVIE: Grandpa’s Great Escape. (2018) 2.15 MOVIE: Ratburger. (2017) 3.25 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 News Of The Wild. 7.30 Flushed. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Back With The Ex. 12.00 9-1-1. 2.00 Family Guy. 2.30 American Dad! 3.00 Modern Family. 4.30 Futurama. 5.00 The Simpsons. 6.00 American Dad! 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 MOVIE: Troy. (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Diane Kruger. 10.50 MOVIE: The Prestige. (2006) Hugh Jackman. 1.35 The Mentalist. 2.30 Modern Family. 3.00 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 10.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 11.00 A Football Life. 12.00 Inside Kings Cross: The Railway. 1.00 Adventure Gold Diggers. 2.00 Jade Fever. 3.00 Pawn Stars. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 The Simpsons. 9.00 Housos: The Thong Warrior. 9.45 Pizza Classics. 10.25 Family Guy. 10.55 American Dad! 11.25 Family Guy. 11.55 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Six Million Dollar Man. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest 2032. 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 MOVIE: High Crimes. (2002) 9.55 MOVIE: Out Of Time. (2003) 12.05 90 Day Fiance. 2.00 Love After Lockup. 3.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. 3.30 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 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 Friends. 11.30 The Big Bang Theory. 12.00 Mom. 12.30 The Unicorn. 1.00 Frasier. 2.00 Becker. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.30 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.35 Mom. 12.00 Home Shopping. 12.30 Infomercials. 1.00 Home Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (2) Programs. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Gruen. 1.35 The Weekly With Charlie Pickering. 2.05 Mystery Road. 3.00 Grand Designs Australia. 3.55 Long Lost Family: What Happened Next. 4.40 Tenable. 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 Courtney Act’s One Plus One. 10.05 ABC Late News. 10.20 The Business. 10.35 Southern Ocean. 12.05 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 (3) Make Me A Dealer. 9.55 Paddington Station 24/7. 10.50 Britain’s Biggest Dig. 12.00 WorldWatch. 2.10 Where Are You Really From? 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. 4.10 Tony Robinson: Britain’s Ancient Tracks. 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 Mastermind Aust. 6.30 News. 7.35 Scenic Coastal Walks With Kate Humble. 8.30 House Of Maxwell. 9.40 Miniseries: DI Ray. 10.35 SBS News. 11.05 Gomorrah. 12.50 Vikings. 3.20 Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. (6) 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: We Have Your Husband. (2011) 2.00 Kochie’s Business Builders. 2.30 Highway Cops. 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 Britain’s Got Talent. 9.30 MOVIE: 50 First Dates. (2004) Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore. 11.30 The Latest: Seven News. 12.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Today. 9.00 (8) Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: While We’re Young. (2014) 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. Under-19s State of Origin. New South Wales v Queensland. 10.00 Nine News Late. 10.30 The Equalizer. 11.30 Cold Case: New Leads Wanted. 12.20 Tipping Point. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 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 MasterChef Australia. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 MasterChef Australia. 9.30 To Be Advised. 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 The Wiggles World. 4.35 Wolf Joe. 5.20 PJ Masks. 5.35 Kangaroo Beach. 6.05 Ben And Holly. 6.40 Andy’s Aquatic Adventures. 7.10 Grace’s Amazing Machines. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Would I Lie To You? 9.00 Gruen. 9.35 The Weekly. 10.05 QI. 10.40 Insert Name Here. 11.40 Live At The Apollo. 12.25 Would I Lie To You? 12.55 Parks And Recreation. 1.40 Long Lost Family. 2.30 Close. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.

6.00 (31) WorldWatch. 6.50 Indian Country Today News. 7.20 WorldWatch. 9.30 Shortland St. 11.00 Letterkenny. 12.00 My Extreme Life. 2.30 If You Are The One. 3.30 Bamay. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Shortland St. 5.45 The Joy Of Painting With Bob Ross. 6.15 Forged In Fire. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Guns That Changed The Game. 9.30 Inside The World’s Toughest Prisons. Return. 10.25 I Was A Teenage Felon. 11.15 The Bisexual. 11.50 Late Programs.

6.00 Home (62) Shopping. 6.30 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 A Foodies Guide To Kyushu Japan. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 One Road: Great Australian Road Trips. 11.30 Bowls. Australian Open. Day 1. 4.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 4.30 Dog Patrol. 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 Late Programs.

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 Puppy School. New. 4.30 Antiques Roadshow. 5.30 Rugby League. Women’s Under-19s State Of Origin. New South Wales v Queensland. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 Paramedics. 9.30 New Amsterdam. 10.30 Law & Order. 11.30 Late Programs.

(53) 6.00 Infomercials. 8.00 MacGyver. 9.00 The Love Boat. 10.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 12.00 NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Cheers. 3.30 The Love Boat. 4.30 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.30 MacGyver. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.30 Matildas Magazine Show. 11.00 SEAL Team. 1.00 Infomercials. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 3.00 The Love Boat. 4.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation.

6.00 Kids’ (23) Programs. 1.00 All-Round Champion. 1.50 Thalu. 2.15 Dragons: Defenders Of Berk. 2.40 Slugterra. 3.10 School Of Rock. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.20 The Deep. 4.45 FriendZSpace. 5.00 Hardball. 5.25 Still So Awkward. 6.00 Miraculous. 6.30 Operation Ouch! 7.00 Deadly Pole To Pole. 7.35 Supernatural Academy. New. 8.00 Kung Fu Panda. 8.25 TMNT. 9.00 Mustangs FC. 9.30 Dwight In Shining Armour. 9.50 Rage. 10.55 Close.

6.00 It’s (66) Academic. 7.00 News Of The Wild. 7.30 Flushed. 8.00 ZooMoo Wild Friends. 9.00 Home Shopping. 10.30 Back With The Ex. 12.00 9-1-1. 2.00 Family Guy. 2.30 American Dad! 3.00 Modern Family. 4.30 Futurama. 5.00 The Simpsons. 6.00 American Dad! 6.30 The Simpsons. 7.30 MOVIE: Troy. (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Diane Kruger. 10.50 MOVIE: The Prestige. (2006) Hugh Jackman. 1.35 The Mentalist. 2.30 Modern Family. 3.00 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.00 Late Programs.

6.00 Morning (63) Programs. 10.00 Sound FX: Best Of. 11.00 A Football Life. 12.00 Inside Kings Cross: The Railway. 1.00 The Simpsons. 2.00 Family Guy. 2.30 American Dad! 3.00 Pawn Stars. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Al McGlashan’s Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 15. Melbourne v Brisbane Lions. 10.30 AFL PostGame Show. 11.00 MOVIE: Invictus. (2009) 1.45 Late Programs.

6.00 Kids’ Programs. (82) 12.00 The Six Million Dollar Man. 1.00 The A-Team. 2.00 SeaQuest 2032. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.00 Swimming. 19th FINA World Championships. Day 6. Heats. 7.45 Young Sheldon. 8.45 MOVIE: Top Gun. (1986) Tom Cruise. 11.00 MOVIE: Days Of Thunder. (1990) 1.10 90 Day Fiance. 3.00 Bakugan: Geogan Rising. 3.30 LEGO Friends: Girls On A Mission. 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. 12.00 This Is Us. 1.00 Frasier. 2.00 The Unicorn. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.30 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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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 51


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POTATOES & Sat & Sun 9am – 4pm Or by appointment PLANTS

0428 234 602

1008 Browns Creek Rd Browns Creek k plant of the wee r ke Po Red Hot

GHB

PAINTING

In loving memory of

Dougie Papworth

& Maintenance

PUBLIC NOTICES

30.04.1971 ~ 14.6.2009

Ph: 63600706

Wonderful Dad, Son, Brother, Brother-in-Law, Uncle.

Sadly Missed & Loved Dearly His loving family

New & Recycled Designer Clothing

Beautiful Designer Clothing, Shoes & Handbags.

NEW ARRIVALS: Wool & Cashmere Knits, Tracksuit Tops/Pants.

Camilla & Marc, Bassike, Sass&Bide all BNWT. REDUCED.

145 KITE STREET, ORANGE (THE OLD CINNABAR) MON 10-3pm’ish • TUES-FRI 10-5pm • SAT 10-3pm’ish

PICTURE FRAMING Shop 18, 212 Anson St Plaza Orange

PROUDLY SPONSORED BY

Call Victor w

0455 299 043

saucedesign.com.au/framing

Lic. 330255C

NEW LOCATION WE FIX LOCKS!

• From small to large jobs – one room to full house • Internal and External • New homes or repaints • Maintenance Call Glenn

0467 599 668

ghbpaintingmaintenance@gmail.com

J K ADAMS ROOFING

24 Hour Mobile Service • 24hr Emergency Service When you have lock problems – call us! • Commercial & Residential Locks • Roof Also deadlocks and window locks forrepairs Tile,Tin or Slate houses and cars supplied and installed • Window Locks and Deadlocks • Re-guttering and fascia • Re-roofing • Master Keying and Restricted systems Canobolas Locksmiths • Quality Leaf Screening Systems 151 Peisley St, Orange 6369 1222 or 0417 204 176 • Automotive and Computerised keys keys4u@bigpond.com 40YRS EXPERIENCE LIC. 159748C • Locally Owned and Operated for over 30 years

Canobolas Locksmiths

169 March Street, Orange Call Ian: 0417 204 176 or Dale: 0417 491 936 keys4u@bigpond.com MASTER LICENSE NUMBER 407 966 923

Call Jeff

0407 151 419

OrangeOnFarmButchers

BLIND SHUTTERS & AWNINGS

For all your home-kill needs, we come to you. • Fully qualified butcher • We can butcher to your requirements • Servicing Orange and surrounds

HIGH QUALITY AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE Most products carry a 5 - 25yr warranty

Contact David on 0402 259 891 orangeonfarmbutchers@outlook.com

BUDGET BLINDS & AWNINGS

Find us on Facebook

A local Orange business est. 2012 servicing the Central West

Call Milissa for a free measure & quote 02 6369 0173 or 0437 10 60 60 www.bbao.com.au - info@bbao.com.au

Philippa Mitchell Norman J. Penhall Funerals Norman Penhall ORANGE & DISTRICT vvv

Professional Bra Fitter By Appointment Mob: 0499 991 650 Bras for all women through every stage of life

6361 7777 or 6362 3751

Office & Chapel, 31-35 William Street, Orange

52 ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

SLINCO POWDER COATING Powder Coating Everything and Anything Metal Sandblasting Decorative Coatings Pickup and Delivery Available

• From one wall to full house • New houses to repaints • Free quotes • Fully licensed and insured • Interior and Exterior • Specialising in Restora�on • Dulux Accredited

0421 861 262


6361 3575

CLASSIFIEDS TRADES&SERVICES

TRADES&SERVICES

3 Qualified Tradesmen 3 Free Quotes 3 Free Advice 3 Internal/External

ORANGE TYRE SHOP

SABpainters@outlook.com IG-sabpainting22

TYRES FOR ALL MAKES

CARS 4WD PLUS WHEEL ALIGNMENTS

For bookings call 0427 806 774 129 March Street, Orange

ORANGE

0418 869 897

Call

“The mobile skip bin solution” We deliver. You fill. We empty.

Fred Palmer 0447 966 838

Domestic Waste Specialist - Locally owned and operated, servicing Orange and surrounding areas Email: anywhereskips@gmail.com

www.anywhereskips.com.au

CJ BRICKLAYING

Bricklaying and Blocklaying Lic. No. 104973c

Small jobs only, specialising in sandstock renovations

Phone 0428 136 803

WASP treatment

NES 100% T ELIMI GUA NATE RAN D TEE D

From $150

25 years experience

Eagle Eye Pest Control

Call Craig...

Lic. no. 4558

0447 002 193

ORANGE AND SURROUNDS

0417 706 613

6360 1136

www.lindfieldgroup.com.au

Lic. 372395C

Anywhere Skips

PLUMBING Hot Water Systems Blocked Drains Leaking Taps Burst Pipes

3 Fully licenced and insured solar company 3 Competitive pricing 3 Free quotations 3 Government assistance 3 Low maintenance 3 Stylish installations

admin@wildmansolar.com.au www.wildmanplumbingandelectrical.com.au

Lawn Mowing & Rubbish Removal

23 Cameron Place ORANGE

DO YOU NEED SOLAR?

0421 735 839

OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY 8-5PM 99A MOULDER STREET ORANGE

For Humans and Animals

Therapist

TRADES&SERVICES

ph: 6062 3995

Better Health Bowen Therapy

Susan Low

CLASSIFIEDS CLOSE 12PM EACH FRIDAY

TRADES&SERVICES

0422 022 968

ff 20% ost fir visit

To book your ads simply phone and use your credit card or call into our office at Suite 3, 241 Lords Place, ORANGE

Doggy day care now available Dog washing available Long term boarding kennels Grassed yards Secure Cat Enclosures Large horse paddocks

0438 270 374 info@springsideboarding.com.au

BUILDER

holistic healing choices Mora Therapy | Combined Therapy Cocktail™ Remedial Massage | Reiki | NLP Call Rob and Jean Tel. 6361 0650

www.holistichealingchoices.com.au

For your: w Addition w New Home w Alteration or Heritage

H 40 years experience H FOR ALL ENQUIRIES PHONE

Max 0492 803 983 Lic: R79571

CHEAP ADS!

Residential - from one room to the whole house New houses to repaints, No job too big or too small Fully licenced and Insured Local family business

UP & DOWN

PAINTING Lic. No. 340514c

0448 600 095

upanddownpainting@gmail.com

PETS&LIVESTOCK

Advertising packages from as little as

$15 per week.

• Undercover • Safe clean secure dog kennels for boarding use. • Individual exercise yards.

Talk to Tom today about our budget busting packages

6361 3575 or email: tom@oclife.com.au

Shangri La Dog B&B

Amaroo Rd Molong

6366 8789 0447 468 789

JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 53


OCLife | time warp

Diver at Lak e Can obolas

Visitors to Lake Ca nobolas were amaz ed to see a man in full diving gear being lowered into the lake one morning in September 1957. He was W Gray of Brighton-le-Sands in Sydney, who was hi red by Orange City Council to repair broken pu mping equipment. The repairs were ur gently needed so th at water could be pumped fro m the lake for cons um ption in Orange. Mr Gray worked in about 30 feet of wa ter next to the dam wall. He received air via a m ot or pump and commu nicated with his as sis ta nt via a portable telep hone incorporated into his helmet. Hi s job was hampered by poor light and muddy water.

Photo courtesy CWD Negative Collection, Orange & District Historical Society. The society holds a working day each Wednesday between 10.30am and 4pm, when volunteers are available to answer inquiries about local history.

CROSSpurposes BY JILL BRODIE

Goodbye, Old Boy Having pets and living life with animals is a wonderful joy. It makes my heart happy and, to be honest with you, it gives me purpose to enjoy creation, keep things simple, and enjoy those moments in time. I grew up visiting a riding ranch each school holiday as a child and, not long after I married, I returned to horse-riding and met “Spud” — a Palomino Quarter Horse-cross gelding. He taught me to saddle up, to race through the bush, and to enjoy the sunshine. Now I don’t know if the ponies in our lives go to heaven, that is a question for another day, but I sure hope so… As the vet’s ute arrives and the tractor begins to dig, my heart is broken and I say goodbye. Thirty-one years is a good run for a horse, and I know that for the last 15 years with me, he has had only the best. As I say my goodbye, I am reminded of eternity. My turn might be tomorrow, or it might be in 50 years; either way it will happen, but I’m not afraid, for I know my maker. Do you? 54 . ORANGE CITY LIFE | JUNE 16 — 22, 2022

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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 wonderful staff at Service NSW in Orange. Stupid me — my Working With Children Check (WWCC) had expired! I raced 10km into town on my lunch break to renew it. All the staff were polite and cheerful, and the waiting time was around five minutes. Expected renewal would take days or weeks, but I received my renewed clearance in less than two hours. A huge thank you! Thumbs up to my hairdresser for travelling to the other side of town to cut my hair after my knee replacement. Thank you for being a great friend. Thumbs down to the

“Golden Spheres”. The ratepayers of Orange voted for a new council to make wise decisions. What buckets of money are used for other projects the public are not aware of? To waste money on Blackman’s Creek markers, while our streets and roads are in urgent need of repair is unacceptable.

Thumbs down to Orange City Council and our Mayor who decided to spend $92,000 on “golden balls” for Robertson Park when the money could’ve been spent on the roads and the footpath and on homelessness. I think you need to have a really good think about where your money is going, and how much money you want to take off the ratepayers. The money could’ve been spent on a shop so that we don’t have to create more jobs. Thumbs up to

Barry Eltham from B&D Household Services for a great job getting my overrun garden back into order. Barry worked hard in the freezing cold, he was organised, efficient, knew what he was doing, and I couldn’t be happier with the result. Thumbs down to Orange City Council for not replacing the 20-plus dead and/or missing trees in Elephant Park.

Thumbs down in response to the pensioner who complained about not getting a “free coffee” when purchasing an ice-cream cone from a local fast food business. The policy for receiving a free coffee has always been a minimum purchase of $2.50. But some received it because they often complained, so it was a gesture of goodwill. I’m sure other businesses would not give away free products for a sale of only 30–50 cents every day.

Thumbs down to attendees at the Orange Civic Theatre who insist on recording live shows on their mobile phones. Out of consideration to other patrons, put your phone in your handbag, zip it up, and leave it there until after the show. In a darkened room, your mobile phone stands out like a lighthouse, distracting from the performance we all paid good money to see and enjoy.

Thumbs up to Orange City Life for regularly publishing their “Birthdays this Week” column, however an unfortunate Thumbs down for listing Rolling Stones’ drummer Charlie Watts’ 81st birthday on June 2. This rather talented and emblematic “stone” stopped rolling last year :(

Thumbs down to the writer of the “Thumbs Down” complaining about shopping trolleys. I ask, do you return the trolley after you shop? If not, theoretically, you are stealing, as trolleys should not be removed from the shop car park! Thumbs down to

Orange City Council for the total waste of ratepayer’s money on the ”Golden Balls” In Robertson Park. This includes Councillor Duffy, who should have done his due diligence, before complaining after the fact!

Thumbs down to

Cabonne Council… Icely and lower Lewis Ponds Roads are both an absolute disgrace! No doubt there are many more bad roads I could mention. All the ratepaying residents deserve more.

Thumbs up to Paul’s @ Cocos for great service and delicious wings and pizza

Thumbs up to Coco’s

Coffee Shop for the best bacon and egg roll and hot chocolate that I have had in a long time. I recently had to drop my car off to the mechanic and walk to work, and so popped in there for breakfast. It will be a regular thing now!

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.

Proudly supporting your 'Thumbs Up' moments

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JUNE 16 — 22, 2022 | ORANGE CITY LIFE 55


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Weily’s Betta Home Living 43 William St, ORANGE | Tel. 6362 1523 www.betta.com.au

FIND US ON FACEBOOK: WEILY’S BETTA HOME LIVING


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