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Grants Road closed indefinitely

THE City of Whittlesea has temporarily closed Grants Road at the Plenty Road end after significant damage was identified on Thursday, November 20.

Large sections of the road surface have begun to break up, creating a clear safety risk for the community.

The deterioration is the direct result of heavy haul trucks travelling to and from a privately owned property where a large dam is being constructed under a permit issued by Melbourne Water.

Council has already been forced to close other damaged sections of Grants Road, and trucks diverting along the detour route have now caused further deterioration on those areas as well. Residents have reported hundreds of truck movements each day to and from the site.

Under the conditions of the approved Traffic Management Plan, any damage to the road must be repaired. Council is working with the property owner and their contractor to ensure urgent repairs are carried out so the road can be reopened as soon as it is safe.

Council is working closely with Melbourne Water to ensure the responsible parties meet their obligations and that disruptions to residents and local traffic are minimised.

While current laws do not allow Council to prevent trucks from using Grants Road, they are holding those responsible to account and ensuring they undertake the necessary repairs.

Doreen makes a splash

CLOUDY skies did nothing to dull the joyous mood as dozens of local families showed up to celebrate the water being turned on at the revamped Hill Top Splash Park and Playground in Doreen.

The City of Whittlesea held the community event on Monday, November 10 to mark the official opening of the parkโ€™s new 150 square metre splash pad, which will be the perfect way to beat the heat this summer.

While free ice cream and coffee sweetened the deal, it was the new splash pad and expansive playground delivered as part of the $2.6 million upgrade of the Landano Way Park that proved the main attraction.

Informed by more than 700 individual submissions across two phases of community consultation, the parkโ€™s design includes a 150 square metre splash pad featuring jets, misters and water channels.

The playground, which opened to the public in August, includes among its features slides, swings, climbing nets and a trampoline, as well as a dedicated area for younger children to play.

The park also has a strong emphasis on nature play, with logs, boulders and winding paths for children to explore, while there are large picnic shelters and barbecues for family gatherings.

An upgraded car park, new public toilets, accessible paths and surfaces for people with impaired mobility and a Changing Places facility for people with higher needs ensure the park is welcoming to people of all ages and abilities.

The water to the splash pad, which is treated and recycled, will remain on during the warmer months before being switched off over winter.

City of Whittlesea Mayor Councillor Lawrie Cox said it was a great inclusion for the town just in time for summer.

โ€œThe upgraded Hill Top Splash Park and Playground in Doreen is a fantastic place where the whole family can go and enjoy quality time together,โ€ he said.

โ€œVisitors to the park have been enjoying the new playground since it opened earlier in the year and now the splash pad is sure to be a hit as the weather warms up.

โ€œThis is a wonderful example of how different levels of government can work together to deliver something that will benefit the community for many years to come.

โ€œWe thank both the Federal and State Government in helping make this park a success. The local members Rob Mitchell MP and Lauren Kathage MP have been critical to the successful outcome to this project.โ€

From the Boundary with Ray Carroll – December 2, 2025

ONCE UPON A TIME

A postcard recently of fox hunting near Camperdown in Southwest Victoria was a reminder of times when it was very popular in this area, especially in the Willowmavin area. There used to be quite a few hunt clubs in the region and meetings were regular during winter time. An Irish priest at St Patricks, Father Tim Oโ€™Callaghan was one of the key figures involved. The former Carlton football โ€œgreatโ€ was very keen on the pastime and was a regular participant for many years.

ROVER 2025 12 02 Once upon a time

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WHEN IS THE NEXT?

Australia is strongly tipped by most pundits to win the Ashes series now underway. But there are worrying signs for the Australian game. The current side is an ageing one, dubbed โ€œDadโ€™s Armyโ€, once the name given to Englandโ€™s teams. The selectors have let the game down in this country by ignoring the fact that there always needs to be transition. Across Australian cricket history each generation has thrown up fine players, some of them truly great. Think of the enormous impact the following names have had โ€“ Victor Trumper, Bill Pnsford, Stan McCabe, Don Bradman, Keith Miller, Ray Lindwall, Ian and Greg Chappell, Dennis Lillee, Shane Warne, Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist, and Steve Smith.

Cricket in this county desperately needs another champion to emerge. It also requires selectors with some vision.

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Meanwhile Merv Hughes and many former Aussie players have slammed the authorities for selling all the iconic โ€œBay 13โ€ seats to Englandโ€™s Barmy Army. This area of the MCG has almost forever been the area filled with passionate Aussie fans. Ian Chappell has called it โ€œdespicableโ€.

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Cigarette sponsorship and advertising has long been banned from sport. Cricket here and in England enjoyed much financial support from the tobacco companies.

ROVER 2025 12 02 Countey Life Cigs

The little advertisement shown was from the Daily Mail in England in 1930, the year Don Bradman strode like a colossus through England. Such was his dominance that the top brass at Lordโ€™s over several meetings devised the โ€œbodylineโ€ plan to take Bradman down in Australia in 1932-33. The plan worked in a drama filled series watched by enormous crowds. But Aussie fans were hostile and at Adelaide Oval when captain Bill Woodfull and keeper Bert Oldfield were filled by blows to the heart and head. Things turned really nasty and mounted police ringed the oval to stop angry fans from invading the pitch.

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ROVER 2025 12 02 When is the

However, in a recent story renowned sports journo Robert Craddock writes that England captain Douglas Jardine was a โ€œgeniusโ€ playing by the rules of the time. Jardine (pictured) was revelled by our crowds. Jardine’s Bodyline attack was led by two of the greatest fast bowlers ever, in Nottingham coalminers Harold Larwood and Bill Voce. Herewith is Craddockโ€™s take on Jardine.

Enough is enough – itโ€™s time to stop the sooking.

Australia calls England the land of the whingeing Porns, yet Australia has been whingeing about Englandโ€™s Bodyline captain for 93 years.

Here are the facts. Jardine was ruthless, uncompromising and contrary, but he also orchestrated the greatest single plan in the history of cricket when he cut in half the greatest force the game had seen – Don Bradman.

Bradmanโ€™s career average was 99.94. In Bodyline, where England shamelessly aimed at the batsmenยทs bodies with leg-side fields, he averaged just 56.57 as England won the series 4-l.

Brutal? Absolutely. Illegal? No. Not every Australian loathes Jardine. Allan Border called him a โ€œtactical geniusโ€, while Ian Chappell found him โ€œfascinatingโ€ and wrote โ€œit wasnโ€™t Jardineโ€™s fault the laws allowed for an exploitation of field placement he made use ofโ€™.

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BLOWN AWAY

Australia blew England away in the Perth test in two days. More than 100,000 watched the short and sharp encounter. Travis Headโ€™s blazing century sent the crowd into a frenzy and the Poms packing. At lunch on day 2 England was in control – five hours later they were out – Bazballed.

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R.I.P TWO FINE LADIES

Kilmore residents Maureen Murphy and Jana Harding passed from this life a fortnight ago. Both were fine people, well loved.

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Maureen Murphy was farewelled by a large crowd of family and friends including many former teaching colleagues. She had been a highly regarded teacher at Rosanna and St Patricks Kilmore. Eulogies paid tribute to a much-loved mother and colleague. Maureen was proud of her two sons Greg and Bernard. Greg has for years been a leading figure in Kilmore Fire Brigade. Maureen was laid to rest at Eldorado in Northern Victoria.

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Jana Harding was married to well known identity Bill Harding who predeceased her some years ago. Jana worked for years at Kilmore veterinary clinic. She is survived by daughter Alex and the latterโ€™s several children. Alex was a popular college girls captain at Assumption and during her college time Jana and Bill often hosted ACK sports teams for much appreciated BBQโ€™s. Jana will be much missed by family and all who knew her.

Just My Opinion with Ian Blyth – December 2, 2025

ON December 10, Victoriaโ€™s under-16 social media ban officially begins, hailed by the Federal Government as a bold step to protect young people from the well-documented harms of online platforms. The intentions are good, even overdue. But letโ€™s be honest: a law alone wonโ€™t outsmart the most digitally fluent generation this country has ever raised.

Todayโ€™s teenagers navigate technology with the ease previous generations reserved for riding a bike. Blocking access on paper is one thing; stopping a determined 14-year-old who can set up a VPN, create a burner account, or borrow an older siblingโ€™s phone is quite another. These kids arenโ€™t just tech-comfortable, theyโ€™re tech-creative. If the ban becomes a game of cat and mouse between regulators and teenagers, we already know whoโ€™s quickest on their feet.

Thatโ€™s not to dismiss the policy outright. Any step that slows the flood of harmful content, online bullying, addictive algorithms or predatory behaviour is worth exploring. The psychological toll social media takes on young people is real, measurable and deeply troubling. We canโ€™t shrug and say โ€œthatโ€™s just the modern worldโ€ while rates of anxiety, body image issues and cyberbullying continue to climb.

But the ban risks becoming a symbolic gesture unless paired with serious, sustained work in the real world, work that involves parents, schools, tech companies and, crucially, the young people themselves.

Parents, for a start, need support. Many feel overwhelmed by a digital landscape they never grew up with, unsure how to monitor, moderate or even understand the platforms their kids are using. Education programs and simple, practical tools will matter far more than another layer of regulation. A parent who knows how to check a deviceโ€™s privacy settings is more effective than a blanket rule any day.

Schools also have a role: not as digital police, but as digital educators. We teach road safety long before a child sits behind a wheel; we need the same approach to online life. Digital literacy should be as fundamental as English and maths, teaching kids not just how to use technology, but how to navigate risk, think critically and understand the stakes of their online choices.

And tech companies, flush with billions in profit, cannot keep shrugging off responsibility. Age verification that actually works, algorithm transparency, and platforms designed with child safety in mind should be the baseline, not the exception.

The December 10 ban may slow some kids down. But it wonโ€™t stop them. The real solution lies not in pretending we can fence off the digital world, but in equipping young people to walk through it safely. Because the truth is simple: if we donโ€™t outsmart the platforms, the platforms will outsmart us, and our kids will be the ones paying the price.

But then, thatโ€™s just my opinion.

16 Days of Activism

NC Real Estate (2025-11-25)

WR (2025-11-25)

NCR (2025-11-25)

Weekly 15×15 Crossword Week 25/11/2025 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 25/11/2025 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!