Downs designer’s new direction revealed

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By CAITLIN CROWLEY

THE Darling Downs designer behind one of rural Australia’s most sought after fashion brands is about to embark on her next big adventure, after making the difficult decision to scale back the thriving business.

Kayde Lehman launched Spinifex & Co in 2016 and quickly amassed a loyal following of country women drawn to her classic, wearable and versatile designs.

The leap from contract mustering and fencing to fashion was a huge one for the creative, but six years down the track Kayde is more confident than ever in the direction of her brand.

“I’ve really been able to hone in on my own style and what I really love rather than taking on too much of everything else,” Kayde said.

“I’ve found my photographer that I love and areas that I love to do shoots, and really sticking to my guns about things I really love rather than trying to produce things that I think customers will want.”

Scrolling through Spinifex & Co’s breathtaking social media imagery, it may come as a shock to customers Kayde had considered completely walking away from the brand.

“There was a lot of times when I felt like shutting up shop, but that had a lot to do with heading in the wrong direction with it really,” she said.

“It’s very natural for people to want to grow – grow your business and grow and grow and grow and I think you’ve nearly got to do it to realise, it’s not right for everyone and that’s what I did.”

While her business was booming, Kayde was feeling disconnected from the creative process which drew her to the venture in the first place.

“It got to a stage where it was beyond what I could control and I kind of felt like I was losing a bit of a personal touch with it.”

Kayde packing an order in her Bell store

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Kayde decided to move to small releases of three key pieces each season, having expanded to a product range of 45 different items.

“Scaling back has been really good and I’m really confident and happy with my decision to do that,” she said.

“It’s nice to definitely have that control and know that I’m making the right decision.”

It’s a change which also aligns with the “buy once, buy well” trend and evolving retail habits through the pandemic.

“I think a lot of peoples’ perspectives have changed on a lot of things and I think that’s filtered through to being very cautious about where they’re spending their money and what they’re spending their money on.

“I would much rather do small releases that sell out rather than have stock sitting there.”

The boutique brightening up the streets of Bell

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The sleepy Darling Downs town of Bell received a rare, new addition to its small selection of shop fronts 18 months ago, when Kayde moved her Spinifex & Co headquarters into town, outgrowing the demountable she’d been working in on her property nearby.

“It was getting hard to separate work and home life, having the container at home. It’s definitely been nice to have a separate area to come to work.”

What she didn’t expect was the impact opening a boutique would have on the tiny town.

“It doesn’t happen in Bell,” said Bell local Kate Toomer-Ford, who runs the nearby Pips ‘N’ Cherries cafe.

“You have the pub and you have the corner store but to have something like designed linen clothes and a beautiful shop front – that just creates a new lift in town.”

Spinifex & Co headquarters in Bell

Now this chapter in the Spinifex story is also coming to a close.

Kayde will continue the business online only, after she and her husband decided to move their family back to the Northern Territory, where the pair has spent most of their lives.

A trip to Katherine last year to break-in horses sparked a feeling Kayde couldn’t shake, admitting she loves change.

“I guess we just didn’t realise how much we missed it until we went back up there and got home and realised and decided to make some changes,” she said.

The news didn’t go down well with Kayde’s biggest fans, at home in Bell.

“We are mortified actually, when we first heard we were very very sad to hear that she’s going,” Kate Toomer-Ford said.

Kayde said while she wouldn’t miss the cold winters, her time on the Darling Downs will always be a special part of Spinifex history.

Big Rig Tower takes outback tourism to new heights

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By CAITLIN CROWLEY

ROMA’S iconic Big Rig is about to become an even bigger tourist attraction for the Maranoa region, with a new observation tower and tree walk opening to the public with a community celebration this weekend.

The Big Rig Tower is now the Maranoa’s tallest building at 40m high, offering sweeping 360 degree views of Roma and the country beyond, connected to a 100m tree walk for locals and tourists alike to explore.

“One of the benefits is the amazing view of the town from up there and how far you can see,” Maranoa Mayor Tyson Golder said.

“It’s pretty fantastic – well worth going and having a look. Everything looks pretty small, it’s a beautiful aspect.”

Roma’s new Big Rig Tower

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The council project received funding from the state government’s Outback Tourism Infrastructure Fund and was forecast to increase visitation by more than 50 percent, helping grow the local economy by $3.3 million annually.

Tourism has become an increasingly important pillar of the outback economy, particularly through years of drought.

“It puts a base under the community in our winter season and really with the droughts we’ve had in the past, it really keeps country towns going,” Cr Golder said.

“People have said to me, they just would not have survived without it, in that winter period.

“Any increase is good for the community, it’s good for jobs and businesses and so forth and it does have a flow on effect.”

The 100m Tree Walk connected to the Big Rig Tower

While the Big Rig Tower was built as a tourist attraction, Cr Golder said there’d been strong demand from the local community to use its 195 stair climb for exercise and training.

“Council will look at making it available for people to use it for exercise, so it’s got some unintended benefits for the community,” he said.

Locals will have their first chance to ‘Run the Rig’ this Saturday morning, with the tower opening at 6.30am to those keen to scale the steps as a warm-up for Roma Park Run at 7am.

Saturday’s community celebration begins at midday at the Big Rig Parklands, with food trucks, markets and live music through until sunset.

There’s free admission to the Big Rig Oil Patch Museum, Tower and Tree Walk all weekend, for more information head to Council’s website.

WATCH: Police raid 4500-plant cannabis grow house

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FIVE people have been charged with drug offences after detectives seized cannabis plantations worth an estimated street value of $1.7 million from two rural properties in the Lockyer Valley.

Detectives from the Crime and Intelligence Command’s Drug and Serious Crime Group, with assistance from the Ipswich Tactical Crime Squad and Laidley police executed a search warrant at a Redwood Drive, Brightview rural property yesterday morning.

The property consisted of four greenhouses containing 4,581 cannabis plants of varying sizes, along with hydroponic growing chemicals, irrigation and machinery, which police will allege was used for the large scale production of cannabis.

Police also seized 28 kilograms of dried cannabis located in a shed on the property.

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Five men (two 27-year-olds, a 46 year-old, a 36-year-old and a 21-year-old) were charged with producing dangerous drugs, possessing dangerous drugs and possessing anything used in the commission of a crime. All are due to appear in Ipswich Magistrates Court today.

As part of the investigation, detectives executed a second search warrant on a Boyces Road Mount Tarampa property yesterday afternoon, where a greenhouse with a sophisticated hydroponics system and a further 144 cannabis plants were seized.

State Drug Squad Detective Acting Inspector Stephen Thiry said properties were being used by a criminal syndicate for the large scale production of cannabis.

“This was a substantial cannabis production and we will continue targeting and dismantling such productions and the illicit proceeds of criminal syndicates given the risk they pose to the community,” Thiry said.

“Investigations remain ongoing and we encourage the community to report suspicious behaviour to Crime Stoppers.”

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Cattle queen mustering up new cafe culture

By CAITLIN CROWLEY

THERE’S a new player in the Darling Downs food scene going a step further than ‘paddock to plate’ – serving up succulent Wagyu beef and locally sourced produce from somewhere you’d least expect.

Sonia Hornery greets me with her trademark megawatt smile but behind the bright pink lipstick is a fierce determination, resilience and entrepreneurial spirit which has led this cattle queen to her latest business venture.

She purchased what was Goombungee Antiques and Cafe late last year, embarking on a total transformation of the property and its menu, starting with a name change.

Sonia Honery outside Vintage Cow Cafe in Goombungee

“I called it Vintage Cow, because I sold old cows to buy it,” Sonia laughed.

“I wanted to do it without the bank, so the old cows – with the cattle market being as strong as what it was – had to go.”

“When I bought it I was really just buying somewhere to live in the short term, with the side line of being able to develop this into something that reflects the rural industry.”

Vintage Cow Cafe awaiting new signage

It’s an industry Sonia has dedicated her life to and a passion she shared with her late husband, Lachlan Hornery.

Their love story started on Queensland’s campdrafting circuit in the early 1990s and blossomed after Lachlan called on Sonia, then a young veterinary technician, to lend a hand on his Central Queensland property.

“He rings me and says, we’ve got a thousand cows to AI, will you come up and do them? I said yep, no worries. So I went up, and never came home,” she laughed.

Within two years the pair was married, and five beautiful children and a dream life on the land followed.

The Hornery family was pioneers of the Wagyu breed in Australia, taking Sonia’s interest in genetics and IVF to the next level.

“I was there from day one when the Hornerys started AI-ing – we built a purebred herd, so four generations of Wagyu,” she said.

Two of Sonia’s five children with their Wagyu herd

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But that dream life was shattered when Lachlan was diagnosed with lymphoma in early 2008. At the time their children ranged in age from just two to eleven.

The family relocated to Brookfield on the outskirts of Brisbane so Lachlan could undergo chemotherapy.

It was during those darkest days, Sonia found community in the tight-knit town and built bonds which would become invaluable after Lachlan lost his battle with cancer later that year.

“Brookfield was very much like a village, everybody knew everybody and it was a family that helped me raise those five children after Loc didn’t make it through chemo,” Sonia said.

It’s also where the idea of owning a local store or cafe first sparked, simmering away until late last year when Sonia found herself house hunting in Toowoomba to be close to her two youngest children during their studies.

At first she rented a place in the city but admits she hated it and immediately felt like a “fish out of water.”

She started looking further afield and stumbled onto not just somewhere to live, but a new business opportunity in the tiny town of Goombungee.

Vintage Cow Cafe on Goombungee’s main street

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It’s clear Sonia has a knack for turning ideas into opportunities, listing various businesses she’s developed over the years – a horse riding venture, a dog kennel in the FIFO town of Moranbah, and a Wagyu pie concept she sold to Brumby’s.

Now it’s a boutique cafe celebrating the locally sourced and sustainable ethos today’s “conscious consumers” can’t get enough of, just as a new generation of young families moves into town.

“There’s a new culture – those young families who have maybe come from the city, they’re culturally trained to be exposed to that (food culture),” Sonia said.

“Breakfast is a big thing for us here, and I have my own Wagyu sausages and my own rissoles I make that morning, with a gravy I’ve made from where the rissoles are cooked.”

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“I always say conception to consumption, not paddock to plate. Because I either AI’d or bred those calfs and grew them right through to when they went to the meat works.

“I used to slap them on the bum as they’d go out to the meat works and say, thank you for the school fees!”

Vintage Cow is proudly a deep fried-free zone with a seasonal menu reflecting what Sonia can source from a growing list of local suppliers.

“The farmers around here are supporting me – your chickens and your eggs and your veggie gardens – they walk in the door and say, ‘is there anything you need right now?'” she said.

She’s recruited a local baker who is taking the lead with cakes and sweet treats and a new chef to join her in the kitchen.

Tourists and diners coming for a country drive from Toowoomba and Highfields are her main customer base but Vintage Cow has been embraced by locals too, with Friday pizza nights proving particularly popular.

Sonia planning what’s next for Vintage Cow Cafe.

Sonia has big dreams for Vintage Cow and the large vacant block behind it, hoping to open the space for community groups and potentially even weddings down the track.

“I love making people feel good.

“There’s been times when I’ve gone, I’m just not game to dream again because if I don’t dream, I won’t have to be disappointed if those things I really wanted didn’t happen,” Sonia said.

For now, she’s turning her dreams into reality, one hearty meal at a time.

“I’ve had some pretty amazing people around me. That village mindset of Brookfield has overflowed into here.”

Littleproud takes questions from Caller audience

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By HARRY CLARKE

THE call was put out to the Country Caller’s audience for questions they’d like asked of David Littleproud, Member for Maranoa and Australian Agriculture Minister, during the days before the 2022 federal election.

Downs talent shines at Fairholme art showcase

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By CAITLIN CROWLEY

A CAREFULLY curated collection of artwork from across Australia will be on show at this weekend’s Facets exhibition at Toowoomba’s Fairholme College, including several pieces from Darling Downs artists and local senior students.

Year 12 student Sarah McMaster’s watercolour of Toowoomba’s Japanese Gardens will be among the works for sale and she said she couldn’t be more excited.

“It’s a really good opportunity, everyone can look at each other’s artworks and it’s very exciting for everyone really,” Sarah said.

Karen Haywood hanging art for the exhibition.

The boutique exhibition of around two hundred pieces is now in its fifth year and provides an avenue for established and emerging artists to share their work with the wider community.

“Toowoomba and the Downs is a rich centre for the arts so to have their support and engagement in a process like this is really rather wonderful,” said Fairholme head of arts Karen Haywood.

She said it was also an important learning opportunity for aspiring artists, not just from Fairholme, to come and see the innovative ideas and materials being used.

“For them to see artists who are making a career out of art is a pathway to the future for them,” Ms Haywood said.

Mayor Antonio receiving some tips from Sarah McMaster ahead of his portrait sitting.

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Facets has also added a live portrait competition this year, recruiting Toowoomba Mayor Paul Antonio to pose in full mayoral robes for six artists on the Saturday morning.

“I’ll also have my chains on and that tells the story and has the name of every mayor of the Toowoomba region and when they served,” Mayor Antonio said.

“I’m a little nervous about it, I’ve never done this sort of thing before.”

He admitted he was a little daunted by the prospect of sitting still for two hours, but was looking forward to seeing the finished products.

“Given I’m sort of entering the latter stages of my political career, I think it’s probably something that I would like to have and would like to hang on the wall at home,” he said.

Facets: An Art Exhibition At Fairholme opens this Friday May 20th with a ticketed event, and is open to the public all weekend.

Bush footy premiers to reunite after 20 years

  • (ABOVE) MITCHELL MAGPIES 2002 A-GRADE PREMIERS: Darren Hockey, David Witt, Malcom Mitchell, Les Irwin, Neil Hodgen, Willie Lemon, John Birkett, Matt Hughes, Clint Castles, Ben Hindle, Clinton Gordon, Ray Newton – Capt/Coach, Brad Baker, Nigel Steadman, Grant Goodman, Darren Bobbett, Clinton Mailman, Randal Beale, Matthew Anderson. STAFF: Tony Shultz, Geoffrey Kenafake, Micheal Tate, Frank Maiore, Chris Allen, John Hamilton, Andrew Short

COUNTRY CALLER FOOTBALL COVERAGE SPONSORED BY INTURA

By HARRY CLARKE

VIRTUALLY every player from the mighty Mitchell Magpies’ champion team of 2002 will reunite for a home ground Old Boys Day on May 28, marking 20 years since the club last won an A-grade premiership in the south west Queensland rugby league competition.

As the current Magpies A-grade contingent makes a promising start to the season, organisers have special plans for the day which they hope will continue to inspire a winning mentality in 2022.

Replica club jerseys from two decades ago will be presented by the 2002 team to this year’s players before the game, and they’ll be auctioned off after the final whistle with proceeds being put back into the club.

“We haven’t won an A-grade grand final since 2002 and that 20 years is pretty significant, so we thought it would be good to get a few of the guys back together,” said Magpies president John Birkett.

“Some of them probably haven’t been back here for a long time. The good thing about Facebook is that we’ve been able to track 99 percent of them down, but there’s a couple who we can’t locate.”


MITCHELL MAGPIES 2002 UNDER-16 PREMIERS: Randal Hockey, Matthew Buldurs, Nathan Wichlacz, Lawson Black, Luke Burton, Brock Hamilton, Michael Anderson, Peter Beckey, Daniel Dodd, Kane Morvel, Keiran Gorry, Greg Hamilton, Adam Hamilton, Dane Burey, Toby Burey, Tynan Farndon, Brodie Edmedes, Drew Silvester, Damien Wichlacz. COACH: John Birkett, MANAGER: Ritchie Hamilton

In 2002 the Magpies also bagged the Under-16s premiership. Players from that winning team will also be attending to form a guard of honour for the current Under-16s as they run out onto the field.

May 28 will be a big day at the Magpies’ Kokoda Oval, colloquially known as “The Nest”.

The club be hosting St George for the fixture and and there’ll also be six games of junior football, making for a full day of rugby league.

There’ll also be a double header in Under-16s as the Magpies host a game between Roma and Wallumbilla-Surat.

Mitchell A-grade during a convincing win over the Chinchilla Bulldogs
Magpies lock Jackson Nicholls meets the Miles Devils defence. IMAGE: Harriet Brown

Having overcome Miles in an away game yesterday, the Magpies A-graders have now notched up three wins from four games in the 2022 season.

They beat Chinchilla at home last weekend and Birkett said is was a “different team” on the paddock compared to their loss to Roma the previous week.

“We played Roma the week before and they ran away with it, but last weekend we were like a different side and hopefully that carries on,” he said.

“It’s certainly been a long time between drinks (premierships). Our last win was 20 year ago and the time before that it was 28 years. Hopefully we won’t take another 8 years to win one.”

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Despite vast distances which some players have to travel, the Magpies have been fielding strong numbers in all four senior grades this year.

And despite the introduction of the Charleville-based Western Ringers into the competition, a couple of Magpies players from Charleville and Cunnamulla have remained committed to the club.

“Over the years the ties that players have had to the Magpies have either been through relations that have played or mates of mates,” Birkett said.

“We’ve always had guys from surrounding towns such as Roma, some guys from out on properties and from the west.

“A lot of times young guys can’t get work here in Mitchell so they go to Roma, but keep playing for the Magpies, so we’ve been lucky to keep them involved” Birkett said.

“The four grades have got reasonable numbers again this year and we’re probably stronger now than last year, so it’s looking good for the season.”

Mitchell Magpies A-grade celebrates victory over the Miles Devils. IMAGE: Rileigh Lawson

Report casts doubt on Toowoomba’s Olympics dream

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By CAITLIN CROWLEY

HIGH hopes Toowoomba could host a range of sporting events during the 2032 Olympic Games have had a reality check, after analysis from Toowoomba and Surat Basin Enterprise (TSBE) found there were “numerous challenges to be overcome” to secure a “significant role in the Olympics.”

When Brisbane won the bid last year, Mayor Paul Antonio said the Games would be a “once in a lifetime opportunity for the Toowoomba region to shine on the world stage”.

Now TSBE’s long-awaited capability report has found the best chance for Toowoomba to get in on the Olympics action was to maintain its hosting rights for preliminary football matches and potentially provide pre-games training, food and renewable energy to the world’s biggest sporting event.

TSBE CEO Ali Davenport and Mayor Paul Antonio with the Olympics Capability Report

“I’ve always been enthusiastic about the prospects of it,” Cr Antonio said.

“But I’ve also been practical enough to realise that the main events, the glory moments, will certainly be in places like Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast.”

The TSBE assessment showed while the region was well serviced for facilities at a community sport level, a “significant gap exists” between the requirements for community and elite sport.

The Toowoomba region has only been allocated hosting rights for preliminary rounds of football and retaining these matches “must be the region’s single biggest priority”, the report found, with “competitive tension” from other regions likely to cause a reassessment of Toowoomba’s merit as a host city, closer to the Games.

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“To do that, we’re going to need to upgrade the Toowoomba Sports Ground,” TSBE CEO Ali Davenport said.

“We’re also going to need to attract more investment into hotel accommodation and look at our people transit around the city as well.”

There are approximately 2,500 short term accommodation rooms currently available in the Toowoomba region, while around 15,000 spectators a day, for 5-10 consecutive days, are anticipated for preliminary football games.

Toowoomba’s “limited 4.5 Star and no 5 Star rated accommodation” is of greatest concern, the report said, making the city less attractive as a host for Olympics spectators, Games staff and partners including sponsors and media.

“We need to get more accommodation and to do that, we need to get regular events so that accommodation providers, and I’m talking hotels, will see this as a great opportunity to invest in our region,” Ms Davenport said.

An artist’s impression of proposed Olympic Games facilities at Wellcamp. IMAGE: Wagner Corporation

“Infrastructure like the Wellcamp Entertainment Precinct, that’s regular events, so that could draw people to our region which would mean we would have to invest in those hotels,” Ms Davenport said.

Cr Antonio said: “I do hope that when hotels are built, they’re principally built in the CBD of Toowoomba”.

The report identified continued lobbying for a passenger rail service from Brisbane to Toowoomba as another key priority.

“As a region we should have passenger rail anyway, so that is definitely one of our advocacy pieces for our region,” Ms Davenport said.

Mayor Antonio said: “We’re certainly working hard on that… We’re rather disappointed that we’re not hearing too much at the moment”.

The report found Toowoomba could potentially host equestrian, shooting and archery events, but only if current facilities were upgraded to an international standard.

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The city would also need to host regular and successful national and international sporting events leading up to the Games and gain final approval from the International Olympic Committee.

Hosting rights for all three of those sports are currently allocated to Brisbane.

“I think we need to be realistic about the regions that are going to benefit most from the sport, and those is the ones like Brisbane and the Gold Coast and the Sunshine Coast,” Ali Davenport said.

“What we need to do is find those opportunities that we know we can deliver, and maximise those.”

TSBE and the Toowoomba council want to do that with the help of a new Olympics Taskforce, encouraging locals with relevant experience to apply to participate.

“We want community members that are going to help us drive our vision and maximise every single opportunity for us,” Ms Davenport said.

Jandowae Timbertown Festival – a cut about the rest

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By HARRY CLARKE

THE town of Jandowae is primed for an influx of former locals and tourists from afar as its growing Timbertown Festival returns for the first time since 2018.

The local showgrounds will come alive on Saturday June 11 for the biennial community celebration, which pays tribute to Jandowae’s heritage as a timber cutting and exporting hub.

With a new, invigorated young committee taking the helm over recent events, president Glen Little said preparations were “over the peak and on the downhill run” to possibly the biggest Timbertown Festival yet.

“It’s about promoting the town of Jandowae and what it used to be about – and what it still is a little bit – the great timber industry and bringing the community together,” Little said.

Festival day commences with the old favourite street parade, this year to be held at the Jandowae Showgrounds

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“There used to be 10 sawmills operating in the district and Jandowae used to be a big town of timber cutters and exporters.

“It’s important not to let go of our history, to remember what Jandowae was and why the town is here to start with. Jandowae was built on timber and it’s still here today.”

Naturally, many of the novelty events, exhibits and activities to be held throughout the festival are centred around timber.

Sculpting is one of many timber related spectator events at the biennial Jandowae festival

Visitors will see any timber of timber cutting displays and competitions – a variety of wood chopping races, chainsaw races and sculpting contests to name a few.

There will of course be the parade with 30-odd floats from the district’s businesses, clubs, and schools, as well as colourful markets and countless kids’ activities (such as an aerial lolly drop – a new addition).

“One of the events we started in 2018 was the Timber Man Challenge and it proved to be really popular,” Little said.

“Teams from all over the district go through an obstacle course – loading and unloading timber and that sort of thing. This year they have to build a house as part of the course.”

Sack races, just one of an myriad kids’ activities at the Jandowae Timbertown Festival

The Timbertown Festival comprises various events running from Thursday June 9 until Sunday June 12, but the main festival day will be held on the Saturday June 11 at the Jandowae Showgrounds.

Accommodation in Jandowae has been all but booked out over festival weekend, but free shuttle buses running from Dalby and Chinchilla have been organised to cater for those staying in the neighbouring towns.

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“We had close to 6,000 people at the last event and the crowd really covered a whole spectrum of people – families, groups of young friends and caravaners”.

Festival entry is $10 for adults and free for those under 18. Many events at the showgrounds can be entered free of charge.

For more information, including a the full program of events over the four days, visit the Jandowae Timbertown Festival website.

Officials giving a ruck about rugby women’s wellbeing

COUNTRY CALLER FOOTBALL COVERAGE SPONSORED BY INTURA

By CAITLIN CROWLEY | SPONSORED BY INTURA

MOMENTUM building behind women’s rugby on the Darling Downs is helping to trigger pioneering initiatives to improve the safety, wellbeing and status of players taking the field this season.

Toowoomba Rangers Bullette Carissa Kemp joined the club three years ago, and said she’d seen their numbers explode.

And it’s not just participation which has improved.

“There’s certainly more recognition for women which is wonderful, it’s not just – the men play rugby and the women have a go,” Kemp said.

“It’s women are in it and they have every right to be and they hold their ground.

“There are some weekends when we win our games and maybe the men don’t.

“We support the men’s games, they also come and support our games. There’s a great culture at Rangers so it’s great to see that it’s even, and that our numbers are doing really well.”

The Toowoomba Rangers Bullettes in Roma.

The energy surrounding the women’s game is something Darling Downs Rugby Referee Association’s new president, Ian McGowan, said he enjoyed watching too.

“Women and girls play the game with unbridled joy,” McGowan said.

“They absolutely love it and it certainly doesn’t lack passion, power, pace or commitment.

“But it’s played with respect for each other, respect for their teammates and supporters and for us as match officials and referees.”

Downs women in action. IMAGE: Toowoomba Bears Rugby Club

Downs referees made the decision to appoint match officials equally to the A grade men and senior women’s competition first this season, before appointing them to B Grade and C Grade mens games.

“That’s a respect issue from our perspective,” McGowan said.

“To respect that that’s the senior level of the women’s game and that has equal status in our eyes to the senior level of the men’s game.”

The same protocol is being following for the teenage girls and boys’ matches on a Friday night.

“The feedback we’re getting both from the players and our own referees who do those matches has been nothing but positive. The whole standard of the game has increased,” McGowan said.

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The willingness of referees to get behind the women’s game hasn’t gone unnoticed either.

“The refs on the Darling Downs are so lovely,” Carissa Kemp said.

“If we don’t know something or there are new players, they help guide us and it’s really encouraging how supportive they are of all the players.”

Last weekend the Downs referee association hosted its own version of a Ladies Day, with officials wearing custom jerseys to celebrate and recognise the work of all women in the game on the Mother’s Day weekend.

“For us as referees, it was something we’d never done before. It really caught the attention of the players,” Ian McGowan said.

Referees in their Women in Downs Rugby jerseys.

The biggest change this year was the addition of a dedicated Women in Downs Rugby Coordinator.

Sue-Ann McGowan approached the board to create the position, after witnessing an incident from the sidelines of an under 13 girls game where a player came off and told her coach she’d been hit in the chest.

“Her coach was her male high school teacher. He couldn’t deal with the word ‘breast’, he could not support her in any way, he could only concentrate on the game in front of him,” Sue-Ann McGowan said.

“In that moment I went, I’ve got to support her and I’ve got to support him.

“I’ve got to develop a language to support him, so he is safe to interact over this issue with this player.”

From that moment McGowan said she was determined to create a new culture where players could feel safe to report injuries and be provided the appropriate care.

Fast and furious footy on the Darling Downs. IMAGE: Toowoomba Bears Rugby Club

McGowan quickly realised it was a huge issue going almost completely unnoticed in the sport.

“90 percent of women who get injured in their sport do not report to anyone,” McGowan said.

Now she’s almost finished delivering education sessions on breast care at clubs across the region and is about to start a new series on concussion.

“I can hear first hand from the women, if they have concerns about interactions with their club, or interactions with the governing bodies,” McGowan said.

Sue-Ann McGowan delivering an education session to Condamine players.

Her work will culminate in a two-day, Women in Downs Rugby Carnivale at the end of this season, bringing together women from all aspects of the game to share and learn from each other.

With participation skyrocketing, Sue-Ann said it was a critical time to get the culture right for generations to come.

“All the women who are playing now are cutting the track. They’re cutting through the wilderness, they’re saying this is the path,” she said.

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“I think it’s really vital that the women are involved in this.

“If they don’t have input into it at this level, they’re going to feel it’s just coming from above them.

“Yes, there needs to be structure, but I want them to be part of that structure.”

Carissa Kemp said it was great to see Downs Rugby moving in this direction.

“We support each other but to know that there’s that external support, and it’s not just us trying out best – there are other people who are cheering us on, encouraging us, making sure we have the support we need, it’s a huge encouragement,” she said.