Sunday, July 7, 2024

OUTBREAK OF PRICKLE FARMS


 In this blog's relentless  hunt for interesting   books , ephemera  galore  ,  old photos , overlooked   Dead Sea scrolls  and  assorted  other flotsam , various editions  of  the  Prickle Farm ,  by former Darwin  ABC journalist , muso   and   radio personality  , the late  Mike  Hayes , have  been  unearthed. This is  an  indication that  the   book and   associated  radio  and newspaper column  were very  popular  with  the  public. 

Two  editions  of  the  Prickle Farm are shown  here, another one  somewhere  in  the   files .    


Born in Redding, England,  his father  suffering tuberculosis ,  Mike came to Australia  , via Sri Lanka, where his mother had been born , with his  parents .

He grew up in Melbourne , started as a journalist  on the  The Age  and moved to the  ABC.

In  Melbourne during the l960s  he  and his brother  formed  Australia's first true bluegrass band , the Hayes Brothers and  their Bluegrass Ramblers Moving   to Darwin with the ABC, Mike played in a band  called Brown Sugar so named  because  its members  were said  to  be coarse  and  unrefined.  


From  the Little  Darwin  jumbled  files  the  above   exclusive  photograph  shows  Mike  ,for some unknown reason  armed  with a bow and arrow, lining up  a large barramundi , a marlin  or  crocodile  at  Fannie  Bay , Darwin. 

After  Cyclone Tracy , Mike  and his  family took up residence on a rural property in Gundaroo , New South Wales,  which became the famous Prickle  Farm , near Canberra, where he  headed  the ABC News  team .

In fact , his untimely death at  58 on February 10 , 2003  was  raised in parliament . Senator Ursula Stephens told the house  the Prickle  Farm stories  were yarns of mayhem and mishap on a hobby farm . One reviewer, she  said,  had called them ,"Tales of rebellious dunnies, chooks who thought they  were sheep  and a sheepdog with  no instinct to muster either  sheep or chooks. " 

Hayes  had been  well known to many people working in parliament house—especially those in the Press Gallery  and the people of the Canberra region through his running commentary on the lives and the loves of the people of Gundaroo, which was broadcast on ABC Radio, and through his weekly column about the Prickle Farm, which featured later in his books of the same name.

"He was a hugely entertaining persona. He was certainly larger than life, dry, outrageously caustic and self-deprecating. He was also an extraordinarily astute observer of human nature. He was gruff and generous and he had a huge social and political conscience."

In a Sydney Morning Herald obituary , Ron Miller wrote : What can you say about a man whose writing created a world that spoke to a whole generation of hobby farmers, put the phrase `prickle farm' into the lexicon and put [the] village of Gundaroo on the world stage; whose musical talent should have made him rich; whose Easter jam sessions were legendary; whose choice of dress was somewhere between Johnny Cash and Hagrid; and whose barbecues almost without fail started out by thawing 15 pounds of chops on the hotplate because he'd forgotten to take them out of the freezer?

 The  radio series , a newspaper column  and books had captured  a  lifestyle  that  was  quintessentially  Mike Hayes.

LIFE AFTER DEATH GUARANTEE

Reassuring  sandwich  board, Townsville .
 

Saturday, July 6, 2024

EXCITING DINOSAUR DIG

A  recent trip through outback Queensland included digging for Dinosaur bones  at  Kronosaurus  Korner,  Richmond .

Centrepiece could  be  part  of  Moonstone ?

 

GREETINGS FROM PAPUA NEW GUINEA

Central Province. Petros photo.
 

SAILING IN

Townsville . Shipping  Reporter .
 

Thursday, July 4, 2024

DARWIN SPLASH

Sanctuary Lakes , Palmerston. Sara special.

 

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

CHRONICLER OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC


Rummaging  about  North Queensland  , our Shipping Reporter  found   a  sunned copy of  the  above book  by Louis  Becke, once    regarded  internationally  as   the  renowned  Australian  writer  with  a  swag  of  stories   about  the  fabulous   South  Pacific. 

His extensive  writings , which included  books,  short  stories, novellas, historic and ethnographic  works,  were compared   to Rudyard  Kipling , Herman   Melville , Joseph  Conrad and  Robert  Louis Stevenson.

Furthermore, Becke ( 1855-1913 )  had worked as a  bank clerk in Townsville  after  failing to  make his fortune in the North Queensland  goldfields.

Born in  Port Macquarie ,NSW,  George Louis Becke's adventures started at an early age.  In 1869  he  sailed to  San  Francisco , then , aged  16, he stowed away on a  ship bound for  Samoa. In following years  his experiences included  sailing a ketch, involvement  with  the notorious  blackbirder William "Bully" Hayes, being  shipwrecked  and  acquittal  in  Brisbane  of  a  charge of  piracy .

Lured  to the  North Queensland  goldfields , he took part in the Palmer River rush  , lived  at Charters Towers , a mining boomtown, worked for a time at Ravenswood  Station.  Then  he  did  a quiet spell  in  the Townsville bank  from  l878-l879.

He was encouraged to write  his experiences by J.F.Archibald of  The Bulletin , Sydney. By Reef and Palm, a collection of short stories , was published in London in 1894  and  reprinted three times that year . One of the stories in the book , Nell of Milliner's Camp, was set in a North Queensland  mining camp. Becke was popular in  America , some of  his  output  published  there.

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

TENNIS GRAND SLAM / YUCKY CANE TOAD KISSING / SLOW BOAT TO SINGAPORE

 

From  deep  inside dusty  files  bounced  this  l985  first  day cover  marking the  reopening of the  Lawn Tennis  Museum , Wimbledon.  It  was sent to  former  Townsville   schoolteacher   Verne  Jack  ,  a  keen   sportsman ,who when  he  lived  on   Magnetic Island , ran  cane toad  races, fed wallabies , had  a vegetable stall . 

Upon  his death in 2019, the Townsville  Bulletin decribed him as a great  North Queensland  character  who  even kissed  cane toads . He  encouraged children to  capture  toads , which he bought and  auctioned  at races held  at  the Arcadia Village Hotel , proceeds going  to the local surf club .  

Those races  are still   staged  and have   been going for  40 years.  It must be said  that  not everyone was  happy about   the  noxious pests,imported from Hawaii,  a threat  to  native  wildlife, being  promoted  on  the  island.

During his  time as a  Townsville teacher , Jack  encouraged many children to become  involved in a wide range of sports, including   softball  and  swimming . He  went to  Wimbledon and  is even said to have attended  international  golfing  events .      

On  Magnetic Island  he was involved in many  communty events  and regularly  fed  wild rock  wallabies , there  being  a memorial   to  him  in  this respect.    

He revealed  that when  he was a  schoolboy he was caught in a  police raid on an SP betting shop and  was named  and   listed  as  Verne Jack, student .  Modern  day  children  were  lucky  , he  pointed out, not  named in  court  reports .

Apart from running  a vegetable stall on the  island , Verne also occasionally sold  odd  items of  interest from  his collections  - one being  the postal cover for the "Can-Tiki" first beer can boat  expedition from Darwin to Singapore in 1977.

The daring 2500 mile  voyage  , in rough seas, was  made by the  former  Darwin Reconstruction Commission chairman and ALP ex-  Brisbane Mayor , Clem Jones,  Darwin used car dealer Lutz  Frankenfeld ,originator of the  Darwin Beer Can Regatta , and  Sydney yachtsman  Paul  Harding . The signatures of  all  three are on the  Singapore  stamped  envelope.

FROM PIER TO PODS

Conversion of Townsville's popular The Pier restaurant into new accommodation  pods with  a  great view will  be completed  in about two  weeks, according to our  Shipping  Reporter  who provided  these snaps.

The  Pier, left, reflected ,Castle Hill in background. 
   

SUN WORSHIPPERS

Genuflecting  Cormorants, Townsville . Vallis.