FireReady App must be updated now

The FireReady App for smart phones and tablets has been updated and renamed VicEmergency: you MUST update it to continue to get warnings and information. The old FireReady App has been turned off.
https://www.emv.vic.gov.au/news/new-vicemergency-app-launched
If you don’t like the new app, Emergency AUS is a good alternative, and is national.

Tragedy: Don O’Connor and Sue Ewart taken from us

Known to many as ’The Timber Benders’, these two doers of good were taken from us as a result of a road accident on Wednesday evening. In attempting to avoid a ’roo their car left the road and hit a tree on the Daylesford-Malmsbury Road, Denver. So simple, so tragic. Words fail.

Channel 9 News report

Franklin’s ship found intact in Arctic

HMS Terror sank during a disastrous expedition led by British explorer Sir John Franklin, after whom Mount Franklin is named. Franklin was attempting to chart the North-West Passage, from the Atlantic to the Pacific via the Canadian Arctic.

”The long-lost ship of British polar explorer Sir John Franklin, HMS Terror, has been found in pristine condition at the bottom of an Arctic bay, researchers have said, in a discovery that challenges the accepted history behind one of polar exploration’s deepest mysteries.”

Read more (Guardian)

And here’s a song to go with it…

NBN is now available in our area, but only satellite

Our area has been downgraded on the NBN rollout plan. We were to receive fixed wireless, but now we have been relegated to the Sky Muster satellite service. This technology is inferior to fixed wireless or FTTN, but is better than the old satellite services. Speeds will be comparable to ADSL2 which many of us now enjoy, BUT the latency will be longer. Longer latency negatively affects services that require many interactions with a server, such as online gaming, Voice over IP, Facetime, Skype, etc..

Any form of voice communication over the Sky Muster service will suffer a noticeable delay, making a natural conversation difficult. ‘Ping time’ (the time it takes for data to make a round trip from you to the server and back to you) is typically 600mS on Sky Muster. On ADSL2 the ping time can be 35mS or even less. So in terms of latency, Sky Muster is a downgrade from ADSL2, although the bulk download and upload speeds should be higher than ADSL.

Check NBN availability at your address here.

Copper fixed lines will continue to be available at addresses served by the Sky Muster service (recognising the unsuitability of Sky Muster for voice communications), however products such as ADSL internet will eventually be decommissioned and you will be forced to use Sky Muster or the expensive 3G/4G mobile network for internet access.

The Sky Muster service is also affected by bad weather and may drop out on some days, so it is not reliable for emergency purposes.

Response from NBN Co to my enquiry regarding the degrading of our service:

  • “Once an area as been made available for the Sky Muster Satellite scheme it will not be receiving another type of infrastructure. The nbn Sky Muster satellite service is dedicated to providing broadband connectivity to regional and remote Australia.”

As far as internet connectivity is concerned, you might as well be living in the middle of the Simpson Desert.

Interestingly, the major players (Telstra, Optus) are not yet offering Sky Muster internet plans. Sky Muster plans are currently only being offered by a motley list of minor ISP’s that you have never heard of: here they are.

In summary, our area will now receive a second-rate NBN service, and I suggest you all complain to our local member, Catherine King (contact form here).

 

Yandoit free book exchange overcrowded!

The Yandoit Mechanics’ Institute is returning to its roots, but with a more inclusive bent: “Mechanics’ Institutes are educational establishments, originally formed to provide adult education, particularly in technical subjects, to working men”. “The Mechanics’ Institutes were used as ‘libraries’ for the adult working class, and provided them with an alternative pastime to gambling and drinking in pubs” (Wikipedia).

The Book Exchange has grown like Topsy – too many books, amazing range! Get down there and take some (and contribute others)!

Outside Yandoit Hall, open all hours, no membership cards to lose, no fines, no grumpy librarians saying “Shhh”, and no obligation to return the books!

The Book exchange consists of a couple of cupboards and an unexpected number of boxes outside the Hall which folks can access at any time. And I promise you there is an eclectic mix of stuff, reflecting our community.

If you want a book to read, just go down the Yandoit Hall and get one!

“In Australia, the first Mechanics’ Institute was established in Hobart in 1827, followed by the Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts[4] in 1833, Newcastle School of Arts in 1835, then the Melbourne Mechanics’ Institute established in 1839 (renamed The Melbourne Athenaeum in 1873). From the 1850s, Mechanics’ Institutes quickly spread throughout Victoria wherever a hall, library or school was needed. Over 1200 Mechanics’ Institutes were built in Victoria but just over 500 remain today, and only six still operate their lending library services.” (Wikipedia)

…well make that seven!

Autumn Community Market

A local Community Market will be held on Sunday 24 April 2016, 10am – 2pm at the Yandoit Hall. This will be the opportunity for the many talented, skilled  and productive people within the Yandoit, Franklinford and Clydesdale areas to sell their wares.

Also, in the spirit of our very successful Trade Fair held last September, ‘Trade, swap and sell’ are all possible: You may have items no longer in use that you are interested in selling or that could be exchanged for much needed skills, goods or services

The Trade Directory handed out at the Trade Fair, will be updated with information of all new participants at the Community Market and available on that day.

There will be small cost of $5.00 per stall or site to cover the hall cost and the Trade Directory.

Inside stalls are limited. So please register your request as soon as possible.

Calling for expressions of interest – Take part in the Autumn Community Market
There are many ways you can take part: Register your interest in having a stall or site; or register to help out on the day.

Contact details:
Please email your stall or site requirement details along with your contact details to:
e: liz.butler08@bigpond.com or ring Liz on: 0414 525 074.

Feathered Five Festival, 19-20th March

Event Summary

The Feathered Five Drive, Saturday March 19 2016, 8:30 am – 11 am, various locations
Our region covers many different habitats and local communities – and to celebrate this and ensure maximum coverage we have decided to hold three simultaneous bird walks, in the following locations Blue Hills/ Nuggetty, Clydesdale/ Sandon area walk, and the Glenluce area. Walk locations have been selected because they are known sites of at least some of the feathered five. More details provided upon registration.

Woodland Bird Evening Forum, Saturday March 19 2016, 5pm – 8.30pm, Campbells Creek Community Centre. Bookings essential.

5 – 6 pm: Speak with experts about attracting birds to your property and kids’ art activities with Judy Laycock.

6 – 7 pm: Vegetarian dinner, followed by a performance by Castlemaine’s Chat Warblers

7 – 8:30 pm: Talks and panel discussion with Andrew Bennett (La Trobe University & Arthur Rylah Institute): Drought then flooding rains: how do woodland birds respond to climatic change; and Phil Ingamells (VNPA): “10 things we can all do to help nature adapt to a new climate”.

Guided FOBIF walk, Sunday March 20 2016, 9:30am, Strangways (meet in Castlemaine)

This walk will have a special focus on woodland birds and their habitat. It will take place at a private property which is a woodland bird wonderland, with a lovely grassy understory and grand old eucalypts. A joint Connecting Country and FOBIF event, it will be led by Tanya Loos, Connecting Country, and Andrew Skeoch, Listening Earth. Meet at 9.30am outside 30 Templeton Street, Castlemaine (Continuing Ed.) and community bus’s will take us to the start of the walk. Bring water, morning tea and lunch.

More information about the festival is available at: http://connectingcountry.org.au/featheredfivefestival/

(Information from Krista Patterson-Majoor)

New post categories added

I have added a new Education category, currently containing Languages, Local Booklist and Technology posts. See Posts by Category in the sidebar at right.

If you know of, or have written, any books with a local focus, please add a post and select the Local Booklist category.

If you want to post something Educational, just select the Education category, and if appropriate, contact me to request another sub-category.

Curious artefact found at my dam…

I found this nicely crafted and decorated small pot by my dam today. No idea how long it may have been there. It is signed,’A.B.’

Probably made from the mud around the dam. I wonder who the artist is?