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Motorists urged to take care

DRIVERS using rural roads across the region are being urged to take extra care as roadside slashing and weed-spraying programs ramp up ahead of the peak fire-risk period.

Last week, crews were out along Wallan-Whittlesea Road undertaking extensive vegetation management, including the spraying of invasive blackberry and gorse and the slashing of long grass and overgrowth. The works form part of the Victorian Governmentโ€™s ongoing Roadside Weeds and Pests Program, which provides funding to councils to tackle high-risk weeds and improve safety on rural roadsides.

Motorists travelling through the area may notice reduced visibility on some sections where vegetation has been cut back, as well as roadside machinery operating along shoulders. Drivers are advised to slow down, follow temporary traffic directions, and be prepared for workers and equipment close to the road edge.

Blackberry and gorse remain two of the most aggressive invasive plants impacting local landscapes, degrading farmland, overrunning native vegetation and contributing to higher fire danger. Their treatment is a key focus of current weed-control operations across the Mitchell and Whittlesea municipalities.

Authorities say the roadside works are essential to protecting both the environment and the travelling public.

โ€œThese programs reduce fuel loads, stop the spread of noxious weeds, and make our road network safer. We ask motorists to stay alert, especially where crews have been active in recent days,โ€ a spokesperson said.

Residents and drivers are encouraged to report any roadside hazards, including fallen debris or visibility issues following slashing, to their local council or the relevant road authority.

Further weed-control and roadside-maintenance activities are expected to continue throughout the summer period.

Pet of the week

This week’s VIP is Pedders the Cow, owned by Tallarook’s Shaun McCormick!

Pedders has been Shaun’s pet for 12 years, and gives out a daily kiss!

Letters to the editor – December 9, 2025

CFA staffing gaps put our region at risk

As we face what is shaping up to be one of the most dangerous fire seasons in recent memory, a new report has again highlighted the very real pressures facing our Country Fire Authority, including here in our own communities.

The Fire Services Implementation Monitor 2024 to 25 Annual Report reveals ongoing vacancies, fatigue, and a shortage of senior operational staff across the organisation. These warnings are not new.
Our local brigades have been raising alarm bells for years, making it clear the secondment model with Fire Rescue Victoria is failing to deliver the consistent staffing and leadership our volunteers rely on.

When experienced personnel are stretched thin or unavailable, response times are impacted. For regional communities, those delays can be devastating.

Compounding this is the lack of transparency around Forest Fire Management Victoria and its grounded G Wagon fleet. Communities still have no clear answers on why these vehicles remain off the road, what the replacement plan is, or how many CFA brigades have been asked to loan their own appliances to fill the gap.

With fire conditions escalating, the State Government must act on the Monitorโ€™s recommendations and ensure the CFA has the resources, personnel and leadership needed to protect our towns.

Our communities should not be left carrying the consequences of inaction when safety is on the line.

โ€“Annabelle Cleeland,

ย Member for Euroa

Wild life treated 

I recently witnessed a baby possum being attacked by a large raven/crow in my backyard.

It had been injured and its life was in clear danger.

I took moves to protect it from further attack but had no idea what to do, thereafter.

Until a colleague advised me that vets were obliged to treat injured native wildlife in Victoria at no cost to the rescuer.

I thank the local veterinary clinic which accepted responsibility for the care of the marsupial.

Which, eventually, will be released back into its natural environment.

โ€“Michaelย J Gamble

Belmont

Dodging potholes

Labor says it is โ€œproudโ€ of its road performance but every regional Victorians can see straight through it.

Whether you’re driving kids to school, heading to work, or simply trying to get into town โ€“ youโ€™re forced to dodge potholes and crumbling shoulders.

Even worse, we learnt that out of 196 road-damage claims by motorists last year, Labor approved just one.

Road maintenance targets were missed by half, then quietly cut again while Labor patches 200,000 potholes.

But remember, come November 2026, it doesnโ€™t have to be this way.

You have a choice: keep dodging potholes or elect a government that will take road maintenance seriously and build roads that last.

The Nationals in government will fight for regional Victorians and ensure they get their fair share of investment, services and infrastructure.

Danny Oโ€™Brien,

Leader of The Nationals

Shadow Minister for Roads and Road Safety

Just my Opinion with Ian Blyth – December 9, 2025

APPARENTLY the City of Melbourne has discovered a bold new frontier in historical interpretation: if something from the past makes you uncomfortable, simply move it somewhere no one will notice. The latest victim of this enlightened approach? The Burke and Wills monument, a tribute to two men who crossed an entire continent with less equipment than the average inner-city cyclist carries on a weekend ride.

After years of promising the statue would return to City Square, the City of Melbourne has now decided it just doesnโ€™t โ€œfitโ€ the vibe. The explorers who once stared down the unknown are no match for the modern aesthetic: curated minimalism, interpretive ambiguity and a landscape carefully designed to avoid offending the easily startled.

Instead of standing proudly in the city centre, the place where it spent more than a century, the monument is being quietly escorted to a polite corner near the Royal Society of Victoria. Safe. Contained. Out of the way. A bit like a historical inconvenience.

Itโ€™s ironic. Pioneers faced starvation, monsoons, hostile terrain and the small technical challenge of not knowing where they were half the time. Todayโ€™s decision-makers face far more daunting obstacles: committee meetings, โ€œplace activation strategies,โ€ stakeholder workshops, and the terrifying possibility that somebody on social media may misunderstand the symbolism of a 160-year-old statue.

We live in an era where the bravery of the past is judged by the fragility of the present. Where monuments to endurance are treated as administrative clutter. Where history isnโ€™t learned from, itโ€™s edited, downsized, relocated and reinterpreted until it poses no risk of causing intellectual discomfort.

The question isnโ€™t whether Burke and Wills deserve a plinth in City Square. The real question is: what does it say about us when the only thing weโ€™re willing to honour publicly is whatever passes the mood board test of the moment?

Because whether council likes the optics or not, one fact is immovable: without the exploration, decisions and developments that built the foundations of modern Australia, the very people deciding the statueโ€™s fate wouldnโ€™t be here to make the decision at all.

And thatโ€™s just my opinion.

Ray Carroll’s; ‘From the Boundary’: December 9, 2025

TWO CHAMPIONS

ROVER 2025 12 09 Two Champions

Two great players in the crowd at the MCG for the celebration a week ago were Shane Crawford and Andrew Mackie (pictured). In the photo they were part of the crowd at my final game as coach at ACK. The pair are great friends and first met when Assumption played SHC Adelaide in 1991. They were outstanding college players and went on to wonderful careers with Hawthorn and Geelong.

THREE AMIGOS

ROVER 2025 12 09 Three Amigos

Three former ACK captains met up at a local area pub recently. From left they are Mick Oโ€™Donnell (1969), Sandy Symons (1976) and Adrian Mitchell-Hill (1979). Mick Oโ€™Donnell is Simonโ€™s older brother. He too was a very good cricketer. Sandy Symons came from Hay in the Riverina. He was a rugged defender who took no prisoners. Adrian Mitchell-Hill from Albury led the 1979 champion team. Like the others a fine player and champion guy. A couple of years later his younger brother Tim played 1st XVII, he tragically lost his life not long after leaving college. The trio of captains were among the near 80 1st XVIII and 1st XI leaders I was privileged to have coached.

ERNIE HUG

Among the overflow crowd in the Olympic Room was Ernie Hug III. From a great Gippsland family Ernie was a champion 1st XVIII player in the late eighties. An outstanding high jumper he was ACK champion each year from seven to 12. He has really known tragedy. His grandfather Ernie was killed in a level crossing accident near Maffra. His dad, also Ernie, who played for Collingwood died young in a tree logging accident on the home farm. His brother died in his arms on the footy field at Sale when he suffered a severe head knock. Life for almost everyone is a mixture of sun and shadow, there has certainly been a fair bit of shadow in Ernie IIIโ€™s life.

AFL CHIEFโ€™S GESTURE

AFL boss Andrew Dillion apologised for not being able to attend the evening due to the womenโ€™s final between North and Brisbane. However, he sent a lovely framed 500-word tribute to be presented. Also, the ACKOC committee headed by Simon Costa, Luke Soulos and Monica Gill presented a magnificent life achievement award. It was nice to get messages from a number of Principals of rival colleges.

***

Gareth Hall, a highly regarded race caller โ€œcalledโ€ an imaginary race featuring some of the ACK legends. It was won by 1982 dual sports captain Ray Power who led the 1st XVIII to AGSV and Herald-Sun Sheild titles. His 210 goals in โ€™82 will probably never be surpassed.

***

James Weatherly, one of seven generation of his family to attend Geelong Grammar from the great Western district sheep station โ€œWoolongoonโ€ was happy to attend. He recalled as a young boy watching my father shearing at Woolongoon each year. One occasion the family had renowned English actor Derek Nimmo holidaying with them. He was fascinated to watch the sheep being shorn and asked dad โ€œYou must need a long holiday from this backbreaking work?โ€ โ€œNo, we spend eight months shearing and then go North to the banana plantations in Queensland to work as banana benders and when they are picked, they are straight and we have to bend them ready to be sent around the country for saleโ€. โ€œWhat fascinating workโ€ exclaimed the actor.

***

Three popular guys at the function were Sportsbet legends Alan and son Matt Tripp; along with racing celebrity Tony Ottobre and wife Lynn. Tony had two winners from his โ€œJenni Stableโ€ that afternoon. Matt Tripp is chairman of Melbourne Storm. Alan and Matt are truly fine people as are Tony and Lynn. They are very highly regarded by all who know them.

FRANCIS BOURKE

One of the legends of the game, Tiger champion Francis Bourke spoke beautifully. Through the shadowy mists of time, =I can still see him playing on the Main Oval in the early sixties. Even then he was tough and rugged. From Nathalia he went on to a 300 plus game career with Richmond and is a Hall of Fame inductee of the Tigers and AFL. His father Frank, and son David also both attended ACK and played for the Tigers. Another speaker was former state and federal national party politician Damian Drum whose sister is married to Francis Bourke. Before politics Damian played for Geelong and coached Freemantle.

***

As usual Bill Brownless and Shane Crawford provided the humorous interludes. Both were in fine form and recalled many hilarious times from their schooldays.

NCR (2025-12-02)

WR (2025-12-02)

NC Real Estate (2025-12-02)

Weekly 15×15 Crossword Week 02/12/2025 Challenge

Crossword puzzle of the week

How to play 15×15 Crossword

You can solve the clues in any order. Click or tap on either a clue or a box in the grid to start entering an answer. You can also use the arrow keys, enter/shift-enter or, tab/shift-tab to move around the grid. The clues for words that have been entirely filled in are marked gray, whether the answer is correct or not.


Play 15×15 Crossword together

Use the Play together option in the navigation bar to invite a friend to play this crossword puzzle with you. Once connected, your friend’s icon will turn green. If either of you is disconnected from the Internet, the icon will turn red. If either of you is inactive, the icon will turn gray. You and your friend can now enter letters at the same time. Click on the chat icon at bottom right to talk with your friend. (Chat is not available if either player is on a mobile device.)


Want more Puzzles?

You can find more of our brain teasing puzzles here at puzzle corner!

Weekly Sudoku Puzzle Week 02/12/2025 Challenge

Sudoku puzzle of the week

How to play Sudoku

The objective of Sudoku is to fill each row, column and sub-grid with exactly one of the possible entries (usually, the numbers 1-9). A conflict arises if you repeat any entry in the same row, column or sub-grid.


Play Sudoku together

Use the Play together option in the navigation bar to invite a friend to play this sudoku puzzle with you. Once connected, your friend’s icon will turn green. If either of you is disconnected from the Internet, the icon will turn red. If either of you is inactive, the icon will turn gray. You and your friend can now enter letters at the same time. Click on the chat icon at bottom right to talk with your friend. (Chat is not available if either player is on a mobile device.)


Want more Puzzles?

You can find more of our brain teasing puzzles here at puzzle corner!