September 29 - October 27, 2024: Issue 635

Avalon Car Boot Sale Celebrates 10 Years: 'Spring Into Summer' at Newport is next!

On  Saturday October 26, 2024 Council took a leaf out of the Enliven Pittwater book and hosted an event that brought out the village atmosphere of Avalon Beach and had something for all ages and all tastes.

Across the streets and street corners there were activations of stalls, painting boards for youngsters, and quite a few 'oldsters' contributing splashes of colour too, strolling musicians and some stationed outside popular cafés, a children's colouring competition and book stand at Bookoccino, a packed field in Dunbar Park wherein residents could find not only some great pre-loved treasures but also find out more about our bushland and native animals, priority weeds and invasive predators and get advice on creating a Native Habitat in your backyard and grab a free plant to get you started.

Northern Beaches Council's stall was packed with information and educational material on all things waste related, while youngsters could  enjoy story time with Tilly the Turtle and Billie the Bandicoot.

Local eateries and shops offered specials for the day, there was a free 40 minute Orientation Workout class at Studio Pilates on offer, and those youngsters not painting the boards on every street corner could get their own face painted or play with giant game boards - ...or just do some freestyle handstands and cartwheels for themselves:

There was even a market for pooches hosted in the Avalon Bowling Club grounds, with lots of 'ruff-ruff' play involved.

It all began back in 2014 when Pittwater Council became part of the 2014 Garage Trail Sale and held a Community Boot Sale at Dunbar Park, Avalon on Saturday October 25th.

Cr. Jacqui Townsend, then Mayor of Pittwater, welcomed the involvement of Council and the unique opportunity Garage Sale Trail provides local residents and organisations in Pittwater.

In bringing Garage Sale Trail to the area, Council saw an opportunity to deliver a fun, creative and community-driven program for the benefit of residents and local organisations who might want to repurpose their unwanted belongings; live in a more sustainable fashion by reducing waste; connect with their community and raise some money for themselves or others.

“Pittwater is proud and excited to be supporting Garage Sale Trail this year; it’s a great opportunity for us all to think creatively about how we can reuse items that might otherwise end up in landfill,” Cr. Townsend said then.

“I would love to see the whole community get on board; it’s a great way to move on those unwanted items. As clichéd as it sounds ‘one person’s trash is another person’s treasure’,” she added.

This was a resounding success, and although the Garage Sale Trail lapsed locally, there have been recent moves by residents, once again, to get the program up and running again.

Garage Sale Trail is a not-for-profit community enterprise founded by Andrew Valder and Darryl Nichols. Garage Sale Trail aims to promote reuse, reduce waste to landfill, create awareness about illegal dumping, unite communities, and stimulate local economies. The first Garage Sale Trail took place in Bondi in May 2010. 

The 2014 event saw Australians list over 1.5 million pre-loved items for sale, generated average earnings for sellers of $323 and make on average of 13 new community connections between local sellers and buyers on the day. Over one third of participants fundraise for a charity or a cause. 

It's still going, with this year's edition happening on 9-10 and 16-17 November 2024 all over Australia.  In 2024 2,179,203 Pre-Loved items are for sale at 8,965 Garage sales. You can find out more at: www.garagesaletrail.com.au

Certainly a case of 'from little things big things grow'.

Yesterday the Northern Beaches Council, supported by the great work being done by the Avalon-Palm Beach Business Chamber, renewed this festive marketplace and community coming together spirit in the village - it was a little alike a mini-Avalon Market Day.

Newport's Chamber of Commerce will be hosting the Spring into Summer Celebration on Saturday November 2 from 8am until 4pm, supported by Council through its community grants scheme, along with many boots on the ground on the day.

Spanning Bert Payne Park, Barrenjoey Road and Robertson Road, the village festivities also coincides with the popular Timber Boat Festival at the Royal Motor Yacht Club (RMYC) in Newport. Shuttle buses from Porter's Reserve are set to run people back and forth on the day between the RMYC on the Pittwater estuary side of Newport and the beachfront.

The day will be filled with loads of activities, entertainment, market stalls, activations and special ‘one day only’ offers the whole family can enjoy.  

Those keen to snap up an early Christmas bargain may find just the thing at the local fashion boutiques and lifestyle stores as they present their new season collections, plus host ‘market day’ sample and archive sales and special offers.

 

State of the beaches 2023-24 Report + Beachwatch Program NSW Government Changes update + Narrabeen lagoon entrance openings not recorded + the 'state of Collaroy-Narrabeen beach': Extension approved 

Water quality at the ocean beach at Palm Beach remains 'Very Good' in the latest State of the Beaches report.

Recreational water quality has been monitored in the Sydney region since 1989 by the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water’s Beachwatch program and since 2022 by Blue Mountains City Council under the Beachwatch Partnership Program. 

Monitoring of estuarine beaches commenced in 1994, with the addition of Sydney Harbour, Botany Bay and lower Georges River to the program. Pittwater Council estuarine areas were added in 1996 and most sites in Port Hacking were added in 1999. 

In December 2023 the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) advised that NSW councils who wish to continue participating in the Beachwatch program will be required to provide funding for it from 1 July 2024.

However, the sate government has adjusted the timeframe since.

The 'State of the Beaches 2023-2024' report summarises the performance of 101 swimming sites in the Sydney region, providing a long-term assessment of how suitable a site is for swimming. 

Monitored sites include ocean beaches, a lagoon, a rockpool, estuarine sites in Pittwater, Sydney Harbour, Botany Bay, lower Georges River and Port Hacking and freshwater creeks in the Blue Mountains.

The Report states that in 2023–2024, 67% of swimming sites in the Sydney region were graded as Good or Very Good, including 33 ocean beaches. 

Best beaches: All in Pittwater

The Report states 19 of the 20 ocean beaches were graded as Very Good or Good in 2023–2024. Palm Beach, Whale Beach, Avalon Beach, Newport Beach, Bungan Beach and Mona Vale Beach were graded as Very Good. The water quality at these sites was of a very high  standard and suitable for swimming almost all of the time.

Newport Beach, Bungan Beach and Mona Vale Beach were upgraded to Very Good from Good, due to improved microbial water quality.

Palm Beach stormwater drain opposite Wilshire Park creek, July 6, 2024

MORE HERE

 

Warriewood Community Centre Build: October 22, 2024 Progress Pictures

Photographer Joe Mills has visited the Warriewood Community Centre build this past week, honouring his commitment to keep readers updated, pictorially, on the stages of the works as these progress.

More in earlier October 2024 report: Warriewood Community Centre: Build Update - October 2024 + Build photos July to Oct. 1 2024

Details of the GIPA form provide:

  • Contract Commencement Date: 21/12/23
  • Duration of Contract: 18 months design/construction and additional 12 months defects liability period
  • Description of Goods, Services, Consultancy or Works: Demolition of existing buildings and design and construction of new community centre.
  • Estimated amount payable to the contractor under the contract (exc GST): $17,040,033.00
  • Provisions for Variation to the Cost Amount: Council resolution approved contract sum plus 10% contingency.

Although Joe is taking these from standing tall at the bus stop at the corner of the works as people cannot access the site due to safety requirements, he is still getting some great shots and the contractors are being pretty kind and helpful with some insights. 

His photos show the works are progressing, with the raising of more prefabricated wood walls since his last update, and lend an idea as to how the site will look when finished.

Joe's latest shots were taken on Tuesday October 22, 2024.

MORE HERE


 

Jacqui Scruby WINS!: First Ever Lady Pittwater MP Signals A Historic Shift In the electorate's thinking

Jacqui Scruby and her daughter at the 2023 Avalon Beach RSL Anzac Day 11am Commemorative Service.
Counting close at 10pm Saturday evening October 19 with the figures made available showing Jacqui Scruby has 53.69% of the Formal Votes at 18,315, compared to nearest Candidate, the Liberal  party's Georgia Ryburn's 14,477 and 42.44%.

 

Saturday evening's Initial Count Two Candidates Preferred records: 

Jacqui Scruby: 18,550 - 55.4%

Georgia Ryburn: 14,948 - 44.6%

Doug Rennie, Libertarian party, has secured 1,323 formal votes at close of counting, or 3.88%, which means, even with this party announcing they would direct their preferences to the Liberal candidate, Mrs. Scruby has an unassailable lead for the seat of Pittwater.

The NSW Electoral Commissions statistics record the Early voting total as: 17,013 or 29.75%

Although there are still votes to be counted, Pittwater holds 56,345 electors and only 35,112 have been counted so far, and it has been stated Liberal Georgia Ryburn was not going to conceded Saturday night, Pittwater looks set to have its second independent MP and the first MP to be woman in the history of the seat.

Former Pittwater Council councillor Alex McTaggart won the seat as an independent in a 2005 by-election.

The Liberals will retain Epping and Hornsby with their 2024 By-election candidates for those seats, after Liberal MP's Matt Kean and Dominic Perrottet stepped out of politics, having an unbeatable lead at close of counting on Saturday, 10pm.

This means the NSW Parliament will welcome three new first-time state MP's, Monica Tudehope for Epping (and daughter of Damien Tudehope), James Wallace for Hornsby (corporate lawyer and former state party vice-president), and Jacqui Scruby for Pittwater.

Although the Liberal party faithful will be pleased with the results at Epping and Hornsby, the word from Liberal elders, that first generation of children of the founders of the party, now 80+ years mostly, is that people who excel as individuals in every other area and aspect of their lives have been found wanting since the last term of the Morrison years at a local, state and federal level.

For many, Jacqui Scruby represents what has naturally evolved in Australian politics in recent years. 

Her aim is to reinstate statespersonship to Australian politics, to renew the Ted Mack approach - straight talking, forthright, and upright, because there's nothing to hide.

Which should inspire support on all sides and from all quarters.


There is no counting today, Sunday October 20 2024. If there are any further updates from the Pittwater candidates today, October 20th, this page HERE will be updated.

On Sunday Jacqui Scruby posted via Instagram:

''Pittwater deserves better and you agree! Here’s to community representation free from party politics, to deliver things important to you (esp MV Rd) and to have your voice on NSW issues in Parliament!

Thank you to all the community support and hours of incredible volunteering! Local people power is what defines this type of representation!

Many are calling it a win… but we’ve been here before and I’ll wait until prepoll votes are counted… but it’s looking very exciting so far!!!

We are very lucky to be living in such a robust democracy! Every vote counts so thank you to everyone who voted. ''

Liberal candidate Georgia Ryburn conceded she would not win the seat on Monday afternoon, by which stage Mrs. Scruby led the count with more than 56 per cent of the vote on a two-candidate preferred basis.

At 4.15 p.m Jacqui Scruby posted:

''With prepoll booths now counted, I just received a gracious conceding phone call from Georgia. I thanked her for standing and being willing to serve Pittwater.

I am incredibly honoured to go forward and serve the Pittwater community as a member of NSW Parliament. With the parliamentary term half way through, work starts today to represent you, fight for Pittwater and protect what makes living here so special.''

Key Dates for the remainder of the 2024 Pittwater By-election are:

  • Friday, 1 November 2024:6pm: Close of postal vote return
  • Tuesday, 5 November 2024: 10am: Distribution of preferences
  • Wednesday, 6 November 2024: Declaration of results
  • Friday, 8 November 2024: Return of the writ

The next NSW full State Election will be held no earlier than 30 January 2027 and no later than 27 March 2027, to elect the 59th Parliament of New South Wales.

 

Church Point's Thomas Stephens Reserve Landscape works: Do post-consultation changes announce installing Rubber crumb products alongside the Pittwater Estuary? + works may commence in 2025 + McCarrs Creek Road Safety Updates

Council advised on October 3rd 2024 the final design plan and materials palette are now available for its plans for Thomas Stephens Reserve at Church Point and it is preparing documents for tender.

This project, for which consultation was held from April to May 2024, now has a finalised design.

Council documents state the modified design now includes the use of permeable paving and permeable tree surrounds, the repositioning of the bike rail, the retention of the existing sandstone planter at the street front, and the deletion of the proposed timber block seating along the seawall.

Pittwater Online News was contacted by residents on notification of the updated design with fears products containing plastic and rubber granules were to be installed, post-consultation, beside the estuary.

Permeable tree surrounds contain rubber granules.

Permeable pavers also contain rubber granules.

Everyone who visits this reserve beside the Church Point wharf knows how much wear and tear it undergoes due to the popularity of the site with residents and thousands of annual visitors.

The news service also received queries as to where funding allocated in past Council budget announcements had gone.

The Council budget allocation in 2024/25 lists ‘’Church Point landscape and paving upgrade Budget: $600,000 for Start Jul-24 and Completion  Jun-25 

Council's Capital Works map and literature, also allocated at Church Point: Project Public Amenities Works Program Work Renewal works to Church Point Public Amenities Budget $499,477 Start  Jul-24 Completion Jun-25.

These queries were forwarded on to Council, which confirmed:

 ''The unused allocated funding for this project is rolled over to the following financial year to complete the project. ''

However, direct queries as to whether the natural products consulted on were now being swapped out post-consultation for ones that may leach or disperse into the waterways received an opaque reply which addressed, in part, the query about the pavers now announced to be used and no answer as to what tree guards will be composed of:

''Although the specific product has not been selected it will be a concrete paver that does not include plastic.''

The May 2024 landscape plan, consulted on, included a Porphyry pavement area to be installed. Porphyry is any of various granites or igneous rocks with coarse-grained crystals such as feldspar or quartz dispersed in a fine-grained silicate-rich, generally aphanitic matrix or groundmass - and 100% natural.

On Monday October 21 2024 Council sent in the follwing clarifications:

''Generally, permeable pavers are made from fired clay brick or concrete with crushed aggregate filling the joints between the pavers. They do not contain rubber or plastic.

The tree surrounds are proposed to be a resin bound gravel, which stabilises the loose gravel while still allowing oxygen and water to penetrate. This removes the need to excavate around the tree roots which would have a detrimental impact on the tree’s health. There are no permanent tree guards proposed in the revised plans.''


RPAYC Wins 2024 John Messenger Women's Match Racing Championship

Juliet Costanzo makes it back-to-back Women's National Titles and reclaims the John Messenger Women's Match Racing Trophy


RPAYC's Juliet Costanzo, Clare Costanzo, Evelyn Foster, Jemma Hodgson and Sarah Parker. Photo by: CYCA | Darcie Collington

RPAYC teams skippered by Juliet Costanzo and Isabella Holdsworth, delivered impressive performances across the weekend of October 11-13 at the John Messenger Women's Match Racing Championship.  

Juliet and her crew, sister Clare Costanzo, Evelyn Foster, Jemma Hodgson and Sarah Parker, took out first place after a hard-fought final, that saw them come back from 2 races down to claim the overall victory from Jade Gavin (RSYS).  


Juliet and crew are now shifting focus towards Bermuda and the Women's World Match Racing Tour at the end of October.

Youth Development sailor, Isabella Holdsworth led her crew of Bayley Taylor, Heidi Bates, Sophie Aitkin and Annabelle Sampson into 4th place after displaying strong, consistent sailing in her first major competition as Skipper.

The details are: HERE

RPAYC youth development team Skippered by Isabella Holdsworth with crew Bayley Taylor, Heidi Bates, Sophie Aitkin and Annabelle Sampson

Issue 635 - Week Five:

Profiles of the Week October 2024 - No.5: Michaela Douglas: Boating Industry Australia’s Apprentice of the Year for 2024

Four Aussies qualify for 2025 WSL Championship Tour: George Pittar among them!

Avalon Car Boot Sale Celebrates 10 Years: 'Spring Into Summer' at Newport on November 2 is next!

B-Line Breakdowns Raises Questions about Buses Longevity: a way Forward in Wakehurst MP's Sights

Aquatics State of the Beaches 2023-24 Report + Beachwatch Program NSW Government Changes update + Narrabeen lagoon entrance openings not recorded + the 'state of Collaroy-Narrabeen beach': Extension approved 

Warriewood Community Centre Build: October 22, 2024 Progress Pictures by Joe Mills

Food: A Sugar-Free Halloween

Pictures: Turimetta Moods: Week Ending October 25 2024 by Joe Mills

Champions crowned at 2024 Australian SUP Titles

NSW Government introduces changes to tackle illegal tobacco: licensing scheme for retailers - tougher penalties to be introduced

History Clareville Public Wharf: 1885 to 1935 - Some History

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Issue 635 - Week Four: 

Profiles of the Week October 2024 - No.4: Katandra Bushland Sanctuary

Jacqui Scruby WINS!: First Ever Lady Pittwater MP Signals A Historic Shift In the Electorate's Thinking

Pictures: Turimetta MoodsWarriewood Wetlands Perimeter Walk by Joe Mills

Church Point's Thomas Stephens Reserve Landscape works: Do post-consultation changes announce installing rubber crumb products alongside the Pittwater Estuary? + works may commence in 2025 + McCarrs Creek Road Safety Update

Regan Persists: Local Gap in Youth Mental Health Care Services needs listed by Wakehurst MP

Sprott's Last Hurrah A Win for Local Wildlife

Council's 2024 Grants  Recipients Announced: For Community - Sports & Infrastructure - Environment - Placemaking

NSW Government's Community Building Partnership Grants Confirms A BIG List of Great Local Projects

Newport SLSC's Jemma Smith Wins 2024 Coolangatta Gold Ironwoman - Jackson Borg secures podium finish

RPAYC Wins 2024 John Messenger Women's Match Racing & Australian Championship - Juliet Costanzo makes it back-to-back Women's National Titles

Narrabeen to Mona Vale: Proposed Roads and Walkways Safety Changes - NB: Council has updated their Draft Plans on Friday October 18, Feedback to Closes November 24

Park Bench Philosophers  Narrabeen Cenotaph + RSL History: 100 and 65 years markers of service in 2021 - Narrabeen RSL Site Sold in 2024

Vibrancy Reforms announced - Concerns Persist for Safety,  Amenity of Neighbourhoods

History: Palm Beach Public Wharf: Some History 

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Issue 635 - Week Three:

Profiles of the Week October 2024 - No.3:  2024 Pittwater By-Election Candidates: Doug Rennie, Jacqui Scruby, Georgia Ryburn - about the candidates + their Policies

NSW set to welcome Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen CamillaNSW Premier Chris Minns is inviting members of the public to join Their Majesties at the Sydney Opera House on Tuesday afternoon, 22 October - Fleet Review

Avalon to Palm Beach: Proposed Roads and Walkways Safety Changes - Feedback to Council Closes November 24

Warriewood Community Centre: Build Update - October 2024   + Build photos July to Oct. 1 2024

Bayview Sea Scouts Hall History: Updated with insights provided by 'T of Church Point'

From the Council Chamber - Meeting Held October 8, 2024 by Pittwater Greens Councillor Miranda Korzy

Pictures: A Walk on the Duffy's Wharf Track by Kevin Murray and Joe Mills

2024 NSW Youth Sailing Championships: Local Place-getters + Strong Representation in a Big fleet

Rat poison kills family of 3 kookaburras in Avalon

2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Approaching 100 Entrants: Entries Close October 25 by Di Pearson

Almost 550 people safely returned to shore by Marine Rescue NSW crews in September 2024

Quantock Triumphs in CYCA's Flinders Islet Race Wild Rose Division by Emily McCutcheon

NSW SES, NSW RFS, VRA, Surf Life Saving, NSW Ambulance, Fire & Rescue NSW Members Shine At UK Rescue Challenge 

Social Media's adverse impacts on communities - young people: October 2024 Post-Summit Update

NSW Introduces electronic monitoring for DV Offenders Granted Bail

DIY Ideas Spring Garden Care + A Salad Garden For Children: Inspire them to Grow what they will Eat this Summer

Food Asparagus: Spring Vegetable Recipe Ideas -The new Spring asparagus crops have come in and with the price now cheaper than it was a month ago, and the peak of the variety now readily available, a few insights into this Spring vegetable and a few recipe ideas to try out as sides or main course celebrations of the many ‘fruits’ of Springtime.  Food: October 2024 - Weeks One and Two: 10 Minute Spring Salads

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Issue 635 - Week Two:

Profiles of the Week October 2024 - No.2:  Giles Stoddard's Avalon Honey

Pictures: A Saturday Morning Stroll around Bongin Bongin - Mona Vale's Basin, Mona Vale Beach by Kevin Murray

Three Candidates for Pittwater By-Election 2024 + Information on Early Voting and where, Postal Voting, Declaration of Results: Also - how did they get your phone number/email address?

NSWRFS to Conduct internal Review Into Oxford Falls HR: lower your fire risk with a Bush Fire Survival Plan this Bushfire Season

Reminder: $5 million available for Local Surf Clubs Under Facility Program - James Griffin, Manly MP

Women In Emergency Management & Response  Empowered Through NSW SES Network

Make this Summer your Safest Boating Season yet: Water Rescue Agencies ask all to 'Get on Board'

Local Government Election 2024: Results + Statistics + Pittwater by-election updates

Red and yellow flags Go Up as Volunteer Patrol Season 2024-25 commences

‘Beat the bite’ helps youngsters stay mosquito safe: free book available from NSW Health

Social Media Summit Update: Survey highlights growing concerns 

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Issue 635 - Week One:

Profiles of the Week October 2024 - No.1: Tamara Sloper-Harding OAM: 25 Years After Being Deployed to Timor as part of INTERFET

Former Palm Beach fish & chip shop site DA proposal Update: Plans Supported by Council's Experts, Again

Aquatics: Study shows what stresses Pittwater's seagrass meadows (and the fish that love this estuary habitat)+ Review of Jetty Design to Protect Seagrass

NSW Government delivers millions in funding to support all recreational fishers + fish habitat: Kids Gone Fishing Day through RMYC this October

''Pittwater At Place''- Craig Burton by Pittwater Pathways - John Illingsworth

Hawkesbury Nepean River Coastal Zone Management program: Feedback Sought - community sessions at Church Point, Bayview + Palm Beach this October

Next Generation zero-emissions Freshwater vessels For Manly Ferry route: Narrabeen to return in 2025

Supermarkets Inquiry: Next Phase Commences as ACCC takes Woolworths and Coles to court over alleged misleading ‘Prices Dropped’ and ‘Down Down’ claims

NSW Government Consultation for Aboriginal people on desire for a treaty process: Commissioners appointed

Pictures Paradise Beach Wharf + Taylor's Wharf renewal projects: October 2024 pictorial update - update pics of Paradise Wharf and Pool renewal, pre-renewal Taylors Point wharf + a few others of Pittwater on a Spring Saturday afternoon

Park Bench Philosophers Harry Wolstenholme; Ornithologist Of Palm Beach, Bird Man Of Wahroonga

Profile of the Week Katandra Bushland Sanctuary
Dedicated to the Study & Preservation of Native Flora & Fauna of the Warriewood, Mona Vale & Ingleside Area

Website: katandrabushlandsanctuary.com/home
Email: information@katandra.org 

Katandra is open to visitors 10am to 4pm every Sunday from July to October (inclusive). Group visits can be organised at alternative times. Please visit the Katandra Bushland Sanctuary website for more information.

Katandra Bushland Sanctuary is situated in on the face of the Ingleside escarpment, overlooking the Warriewood Valley and the seaside suburb of Pittwater's Mona Vale. The land presently comprising the Sanctuary was part of a grant in 1859 to a Robert McIntosh of Botany. It changed hands in 1885, and again in 1913 when a sub-division was effected. 

Twenty-five acres was purchased by Roseville businessman, Harold Alfred Seymour, on December 3rd, 1946. 

The name 'Katandra' originates in Victoria, where it is said to derive from an Aboriginal word meaning 'song of the birds' or 'a hunting area'. 

Mr Seymour delighted in his surroundings, enjoying both the native flora and fauna, including the 'Koala', still to be seen. 

He also loved to share his 'bushland' with friends, taking them for long rambles through the undergrowth, as initially there were no paths to follow. He became well respected for his knowledge of indigenous flora, thus earning the friendship and support of people well known in the world of natural history and conservation. 

Harold was also among the growing band of local Honorary Rangers:

WILD FLOWERS AND NATIVE PLANTS PROTECTION ACT, 1927-1945.

Appointment of Honorary Rangers.

THE undermentioned persons have been appointed as Honorary Rangers for the purposes of this Act:—

Edward Selwyn Holmes, 18 Queens-avenue, Avalon Beach; Katherine St. George Holmes, 18 Queens-avenue, Avalon Beach; Edward Gordon Sellers, "Deerholt", Plateau-road, Avalon; Audrey Enid Sellers, "Deerholt", Plateau-road, Avalon; Arthur Eric Brown, "Wirrabilla", Hill-top road, Clareville; Saidee Kathleen Brown, "Wirrabilla", Hill-top road, Clareville; Harrie Humphreys, 74 Avalon-parade, Avalon; Marjorie Ethel Humphreys, 74 Avalon-parade, Avalon; Allan McDonald Warden, 63 Avalon-parade, Avalon; Isabella Olive Warden, 63 Avajon-parade, Avalon; Percy Robert Hillier, 7 George-street, Avalon; William August Miller, Paradise-avenue, Paradise Beach; William James McDonald, Avalon-parade, Avalon; Harold Alfred Seymour, Old Gordon-road, Foley's Hill, Mona Vale; Reginald William Squire, "Aranui", Cabarita-road, Clareville Beach; Herbert Strickland Rice, "Lorne", Riverview-road, Clareville.

(872) J. B. RENSHAW, Minister for Local Government. WILD FLOWERS AND NATIVE PLANTS PROTECTION ACT, 1927-1945. (1955, May 6). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales (Sydney, NSW : 1901 - 2001), p. 1254. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article220300810

However, Mr. Seymour went one better than this. Alarmed at the advancing tide of settlement, in 1964, Harold offered eighteen acres of his land as a gift to the people of NSW to establish a wildlife reserve for the promotion, study and preservation of native flora and fauna

The Katandra Bushland Sanctuary was officially gazetted as Reserve No 86487 on 6th October 1967.

Today and next Sunday, October 27 2024, coincidentally the same day 57 years ago since this Bushland Sanctuary was 'officially notified' as having been bequeathed by Mr. Seymour, are the last days for this Season of open days. 

This Issue another Spring Celebration of one of Pittwater's very special places.  

    History Palm Beach Public Wharf: Some History

    What became the first Palm Beach public wharf was originally built by September 1911 at the northern end of Snapperman Beach.

    The second, located where the current Palm Beach public wharf is, was finished by April 1938, the contract having been won by A G Larkin.

    This Issue a look into the public wharves on Snapperman Beach, Palm Beach, and some of the fishing industry and ferry services they supported.


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    Community News VALE Jon 'Wallaby' Mitchell, Gone Fishing Day: October 27 at Narrabeen, Pittwater Ocean Swim Series 2025, Remembrance Day 2024: 11 November 2024, Christmas - New Years Events in already!, Narrabeen Dragonboat Club Spots a Stingray, Children's Art Class With Meredith Rasdall, No Nonsense Avalon moving south, Safer Neighbourhood Program Public Meeting + Community drop-in sessions, Update: Critical incident declared after man suffers severe burns - Pittwater, Safer Neighbourhoods Program: Narrabeen to Mona Vale, Avalon Beach to Palm Beach Safety Zone - have your say, Ghostbusters Halloween at Elanora Heights: For Make-A-Wish Foundation, Council's Draft Child Safe Policy and Child Safe Code of Conduct: Have your say, Osprey Livestream, 2024 Spiral NSW State Championships: Pittwater, Shoosh for Youngsters:  Calling all junior summer sports!, Monika's Doggie Rescue Pets of the Week: Mandy + Ricardo, Well done Mr. Griffin, Mental Health Month: Let’s Talk About It, New technology to detect floods and bushfires: Grants open, Draft Councillor Expenses and Facilities Policy: Proposed amendments, Architecture award for new Mosman Pavilion, Public health warning: viral gastroenteritis on the rise, Northern Beaches Police Area Command Updates and Newsletter, Narrabeen RSL Site sold, Warriewood Square: Half Share sold, $33+ Million Proposal for Terrey Hills, Other new DA's Lodged: construction of seniors housing at Terrey Hills + 2 x Secondary dwellings on Palm Beach sites, Council's Draft Managing Unreasonable Conduct by a Complainant Policy: Have Your Say, Pittwater Offshore Newsletter: October 2024, Eramboo Artist in Residence program accepting applications, Proposed lease: KU Avalon Preschool, NBWS Expands with Narrabeen House, Barrenjoey Artwalk, Barrenjoey Headland Amenities, Computer Pals NB needs Volunteers, Life-saving defibrillators available for NSW sports facilities, $5 million available for NSW Surf Clubs, 2024 Anzac Community Grants applications open, Marine Rescue Broken Bay: Christmas Raffle 2024, Avalon Preservation Association AGM, Whale Beach SLSC: New Members Needed, Pittwater Organisations, Sports, Social, Environment and Groups Lists, NSW set to welcome Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla, Battle of the Bends 2024: NASA + Newport Plus, Safer Neighbourhoods Program: Narrabeen to Mona Vale - Have your say, Avalon Beach to Palm Beach Safety Zone - have your say, Council's Draft Child Safe Policy and Child Safe Code of Conduct: have your say, Welcome Home Friendly!, Shoosh for Youngsters:  Calling all junior summer sports!, Narrabeen RSL Site sold, Warriewood Square: Half Share sold, Cancellation of Northern Beaches Music Festival, $33+ Million Proposal for Terrey Hills, Other new DA's Lodged: construction of seniors housing at Terrey Hills + 2 x Secondary dwellings on Palm Beach sites, Scotland Island Garden Festival 2024: Sunday October 20, Council's Draft Managing Unreasonable Conduct by a Complainant Policy: Have Your Say, Northern Beaches Police Area Command Updates: Police and community working together, , Pittwater Offshore Newsletter: October 2024, Church Point Ferry rides, Eramboo Artist in Residence program accepting applications, Draft Councillor Expenses and Facilities Policy: amendments, Proposed lease: KU Avalon Preschool, Carols at the Beach announcement, NBWS Expands with Narrabeen House, Monika's Doggie Rescue Pets of the Week: Spencer + Fergie, Mental Health Month 2024: Theme 'Let's Talk About It',  Barrenjoey Artwalk, Former Palm Beach fish & chip shop site DA proposal Update: Plans Supported by Council Again, Barrenjoey Headland Amenities, Computer Pals NB needs Volunteers, Life-saving defibrillators available for NSW sports facilities, $5 million available for NSW Surf Clubs, 2024 Anzac Community Grants applications open, Marine Rescue Broken Bay: Christmas Raffle 2024, Avalon Preservation Association AGM 2024 + Help needed, Entries Open for the Hansa World & International Championships 2025: to be held on Pittwater, Whale Beach SLSC: New Members Needed, Pittwater Organisations, Sports, Social, Environment and Groups Lists

    Environment Late October Tree Colours in Pittwater, Wombat Trapped Beside Appin Road, Sydney's deadliest road for Koalas, The Koalas: Film Screening at Collaroy - Nov. 17, Osprey Livestream: Pittwater + Background - Osprey nesting platform at Careel Bay: Update september 2024, Narrabeen Lake Dragonboat Club Spots a Stingray, Mosman leads marine recovery: Posidonia australis seagrass, Science To Revive Our Oceans: SIM's has a PHD Opportunity - Operation Crayweed, Communities Protecting Biodiversity: Southern Highlands, Estuary vegetation: the threat of climate change and sea level rise, DNA breakthrough accelerates biosecurity response, Discussion paper: Review and report into the NSW wildlife rehabilitation sector, New Books by local author for Primary students On our natural environment, Permaculture Northern Beaches' Monthly Education Night - October 31st, Katandra Bushland Sanctuary Open Season 2024, Next steps to tackle problematic plastics for a cleaner and safer NSW: Have Your Say, It’s magpie swooping season: how to avoid that click near your ear, Select Committee on PFAS (per and polyfluoroalkyl substances) opens for submissions, Barrenjoey access trail closed on weekdays until November, Echidna Love Season, Plastic Bread Ties For Wheelchairs, Volunteers for Barrenjoey Lighthouse Tours needed, Stay Safe From Mosquitoes, Mountain Bike Incidents On Public Land: Survey, Report fox sightings, marine wildlife rescue group on the Central Coast, Watch out - shorebirds about, Possums In Your Roof?: do the right thing, Aviaries + Possum Release Sites Needed, Bushcare in Pittwater: where + when, Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities, Gardens and Environment Groups and Organisations in Pittwater, Ringtail Posses, ‘We will not allow others to determine our fate’: Pacific nations dial up pressure on Australia’s fossil fuel exports, Want genuine progress towards restoring nature? Follow these 4 steps, No home left behind: a postcode approach to electrification, Cultural burning isn’t just important to Indigenous culture – it’s essential to Australia’s disaster management, Let’s tax carbon: Ross Garnaut on why the time is right for a second shot at carbon pricing, Huge volumes of whey go to waste; We could do much more with this nutrient-rich liquid, Expanding coal mines – and reaching net zero?; Tanya Plibersek seems to believe both are possible, ‘The waters become corrupt, the air infected’: here’s how Ancient Greeks and Romans grappled with environmental damage, Do electric cars greatly increase the average mass of cars on the road? Not in Australia, Queensland Premier Steven Miles is promising to hold a vote on nuclear power. Here’s why, ‘Nature markets’ may help preserve biodiversity – but they risk repeating colonial patterns of Indigenous exploitation, Moo Deng: the celebrated hippo’s real home has disappeared – will the world restore it?, An Indian village went from hunting Amur falcons to being their biggest protectors; Here’s how conservationists can harness the power of persuasion, Forest fires are shifting north and intensifying – here’s what that means for the planet, Rebuilding homes after a disaster is an opportunity to build back better – why isn’t the insurance industry on board?, Pittwater Reserves: histories + Notes + Pictorial Walks, Pittwater's Birds, + more, Latest advice on balls as beaches deemed clear, Mysterious black balls have washed up on Sydney’s Coogee beach, Scotland Island Garden Festival 2024: Sunday October 20, PNHA Katandra by night: October 26, Permaculture Northern Beaches' Monthly Education Night - October 31st, $18 million funding for recreational fishing programs a win for fishers, Eye in the sky: Drones assist mapping estuarine habitats, ‘Awful reality’: Albanese government injects $95 million to fight the latest deadly bird flu, Microplastic pollution is everywhere, even in the exhaled breath of dolphins – new research, Giving First Nations names to our bird species is a lot more complex – and contentious – than you might think, This beautiful peacock spider was only found two years ago; Now it could be dancing its last dance, These 5 ‘post-truth’ claims are fuelling the water wars in Australia, Social media footage reveals little-known ‘surfing’ whales in Australian waters, Rebates for buying e-bikes and e-scooters are good but unlikely to greatly boost sustainable transport on their own, Electric car sales have slumped; Misinformation is one of the reasons, Severe thunderstorms are sweeping through southern Australia; But what makes a thunderstorm ‘severe’?, More than 20% of Earth’s plant species are found only on islands – and time is running out to save them,  Whales in Pittwater: Friday October 11 2024, Aurora Australis over Pittwater, Rat poison kills family of 3 kookaburras in Avalon, 42 koalas killed on Appin Rd in the last year: Koala 'visit' to Casula train station a sign of habitat clearing - still no fauna crossings in place, Scotland Island Garden Festival 2024: Sunday October 20, Prepare now for Australia's severe weather season: BOM, Yes nature is complex; But saving our precious environment means finding ways to measure it, Australia is hosting the world’s first ‘nature positive’ summit; What is it, and why does it matter?, Unprecedented peril: disaster lies ahead as we track towards 2.7°C of warming this century, Will the Earth warm by 2°C or 5.5°C?; Either way it’s bad and trying to narrow it down may be a distraction, Australia will protect a vast swathe of the Southern Ocean, but squanders the chance to show global leadership, Whale sharks on collision course as warming seas may force them into shipping lanes – new study, 700 million plastic bottles: we worked out how much microplastic is in Queensland’s Moreton Bay, Ocean protection accounts for 10% of fish in the world’s coral reefs – but we could save so much more, Humpback Whale Pod off Avalon Beach: filmed October 1 2024 - heading south!, New research reveals why the mighty Darling River is drying up – and it’s not just because we’re taking too much water, New video shows sharks making an easy meal of spiky sea urchins, shedding light on an undersea mystery, How we created a beautiful native wildflower meadow in the heart of the city using threatened grassland species, The medicines we take to stay healthy are harming nature; Here’s what needs to change, More consumption, more demand for resources, more waste: why urban mining’s time has come, The biodiversity jukebox: how sound can boost beneficial soil microbes to heal nature, Endure – or peter out? Here’s what Northern Rivers organisers and Stop Adani can teach us about building climate groups, ‘Vegetarian’ possums eat meat when the weather’s cold, Discussion paper: Review and report into the NSW wildlife rehabilitation sector - feedback closes November 30,  Bushfires on the Manly to Barrenjoey Peninsula: MP for Wakehurst Sounds a Warning, Mona Vale Road East Fauna Crossing: A bridge to …where?, New Books by local author for Primary students On our natural environment, PNHA AGM 2024 + 30th Anniversary picnic lunch, Katandra Bushland Sanctuary Open Season 2024, Next steps to tackle problematic plastics for a cleaner and safer NSW: Have Your Say until November 4, It’s magpie swooping season: how to avoid that click near your ear, Select Committee on PFAS (per and polyfluoroalkyl substances) opens for submissions, Aussie Bird Count 2024: 14-20 October, Barrenjoey access trail closed on weekdays until November, NSW community's opinion sought on coal mine regulation, Echidna Love Season, Plastic Bread Ties For Wheelchairs, Volunteers for Barrenjoey Lighthouse Tours needed, Stay Safe From Mosquitoes , Mountain Bike Incidents On Public Land: Survey, Report fox sightings, marine wildlife rescue group on the Central Coast, Watch out - shorebirds about, Possums In Your Roof?: do the right thing, Aviaries + Possum Release Sites Needed, Bushcare in Pittwater: where + when, Friends Of Narrabeen Lagoon Catchment Activities, Gardens and Environment Groups and Organisations in Pittwater, Ringtail Posses, Far south coast of NSW preparing for potential bird flu outbreak in wildlife, Countdown is on for world-leading Australian environmental summit, 'Extinct' mammals return to Sturt National Park, NSW Government grants ACEREZ transmission operator’s licence for Central-West Orana REZ, A name for the state’s newest National Park: Cuttaburra, NSW Government states Koalas protected under agreements with New England landholders, Australia may be facing another La Niña summer, Breathing may introduce microplastics to the brain – new study, Release of zoo-bred birds boosts critically endangered Regent Honeyeater numbers, NSW Consumer Energy Strategy to save money and power across NSW, $1.1 million awarded to NSW Environmental Researchers, Discover the secret lives of grey-headed flying foxes with new flyingfoxcam, Types of land on the Biodiversity Values Map: September 2024 Update, Threatened Species Framework annual report, EPA invests over half a billion dollars to build a circular future, Illawarra illegal tyre dumper caught Red-handed, New funding for Councils to go FOGO, Failure to clean up waste costs Central Coast man nearly $200,000, Supporting businesses to drive down food waste: Info session on October 17, Scientists reviewed 7,000 studies on microplastics; Their alarming conclusion puts humanity on notice, With a million home batteries, we could build far fewer power lines, Our electricity workforce must double to hit the 2030 renewables target; Energy storage jobs will soon overtake those in coal and gas, ‘Breakthrough discovery’: Indigenous Rangers in outback WA find up to 50 night parrots – one of Australia’s most elusive birds, Scientists discover heat-tolerant corals hidden in plain sight; Could it help protect the Great Barrier Reef?, Pittwater Reserves: histories + Notes + Pictorial Walks + more, 

    Aquatics Study shows what stresses Pittwater's seagrass meadows (and the fish that love this estuary habitat)

    Children  Sunday Cartoons- A CGI 3D Short Film: "Plum", The ‘best comet of the year’ is finally here – here’s everything you need to know, Word Of The Week: Bird + Aussie 2024 Bird Count + Bird Words, School Holidays Reading: Blinky Bill, the quaint little Australian, Avalon Bilgola Amateur Swimming Club: 2024/2025 Season, Narrabeen Amateur Swimming Club Season, Curious Kids: Can chameleons change colour in their sleep? Curious Kids: What does the edge of the universe look like? Daylight saving is about to start; But why do the days get longer?, The Conversation’s Curious Kids podcast + Does magic really exist? The Conversation’s Curious Kids podcast + Curious Kids: how high could I jump on the moon? + Will your phone one day let you smell as well as see and hear what’s on the other end of a call? + Why can’t it always be summer? It’s all about the Earth’s tilt, Stories this Issue: So Much Slime + 'Rodeo Red' read by Gillian Anderson, book of the month October 2024: Dot and the Kangaroo by Ethel C Pedley, published 1899, + More.

    Youth Battle of the Bends 2024: NASA + Newport Plus, Jemma Smith Wins 2024 Coolangatta Gold Ironwoman - Jackson Borg secures podium finish, Word Of The Week: Mind, Farms to fame: How China’s rural influencers are redefining country life, My Fair Lady turns 60: a linguist on how the film has held up, A brief history of the muses: the Greek goddesses who provided divine inspiration for ancient poets, Can listening to music make you more productive at work?, Claims that Qantas is greenwashing build a case for carbon assurance: here’s what it is, Banning debit card surcharges could save $500 million a year – if traders don’t claw back the money in other ways, Friday essay: crimes, redemption and rebellion – the truths told in 65,000 years of Australian art are essential for national healing, For Deaf people, train travel can be a gamble. But an AI-powered Auslan avatar can help, Three letters, one number, a knife and a stone bridge: how a graffitied equation changed mathematical history, New research shows most space rocks crashing into Earth come from a single source, 100 years of surrealism: how a French writer inspired by the avant-garde changed the world forever,  Book of the Month - October 2024: Encyclopaedia of Biodiversity - 5 Volumes (1st Edition) published in 2000, + More

    Seniors Natalie Siegel-Brown appointed as statutory inspector-general of aged care, A Call to Volunteer Trainers and Students, Speakers, vacuums, doorbells and fridges – the government plans to make your ‘smart things’ more secure, Hearing Services Program provider notice – Amendment to the Voucher Instrument, New aged care staffing quality indicators to improve health and wellbeing, My Fair Lady turns 60: a linguist on how the film has held up, How did public service leaders talk to staff about Robodebt? What they said – or didn’t – is revealing, How can Australia make housing affordable for essential workers? Here are 4 key lessons from overseas, Hemingway, after the hurricane, Dietary restriction or good genes: new study tries to unpick which has a greater impact on lifespan, Pittwater-Narrabeen Parkinson’s Support Group, Manly Sailability needs volunteers, Local services, groups for you 

    Pictures Turimetta MoodsWarriewood Wetlands Perimeter Walk by Joe Mills

    Park Bench Philosophers Narrabeen Cenotaph + RSL History: 100 and 65 years markers of service in 2021

    DIY Ideas Spring Garden Care + A Salad Garden For Children: Inspire them to Grow what they will Eat this Summer   Spring has definitely Sprung, the air smells sweet, days are getting warmer, and people are wanting to get outdoors and enjoy the day.  This is a time to enjoy your garden and get ready for a brilliant crop of your own salad ingredients or just do those little chores that will mean your garden is a great place for the family and visitors to enjoy over the coming months. Children can be engaged in planting out 'mini' crops such as grape tomatoes or baby carrots or be helped to plant out luscious herbs such as parsley and basil to make great salads even better.

    For those aiming for a tick-free Spring and Summer, now is the time to put in some bird attracting native plants that will eat these insects ( Attracting Insectivore Birds to Your Garden: DIY Natural Tick Control ) or plant out some of those herbs and flowers that repel these biters (Reducing Ticks in Your Garden: Garden care, Plants that Repel, What to Wear Outdoors) or think about having a few chickens for fresh eggs - chooks also eat ticks.

    A few ideas about little things you can do now that will make a big difference for Spring and Summer runs 

    Inbox News Four Aussies qualify for 2025 WSL Championship Tour: George Pittar among them!, Word Of The Week: Kudos, Halloween candy binges can overload your gut microbiome – a gut doctor explains how to minimise spooking your helpful bacteria, Mary Queen of Scots and the clandestine tricks of the women who kept her secrets, The long culinary history of pumpkins – from ancient Mexican soups to modern spiced lattes, From fish to clean water, the ocean matters and here’s how to quantify the benefits, New Prada-designed spacesuit is a small step for astronaut style, but could be a giant leap for sustainable fashion, Sydney’s beloved Footbridge Theatre launched some of our biggest stars; After nearly 20 years, it’s making a grand return, Hidden women of history: 19th-century author Augusta Drane was an intellectual ‘warrior nun’, If a Year 12 student gets an early offer for uni does it mean they stop trying?, Going down a Wikipedia rabbit hole? Science says you’re one of these three types, What’s the difference between fusion and fission? A nuclear physicist explains, From Camilla to the ‘ugly’ Elizabeth of Austria: our problematic history of obsessing over royal women’s looks, World Falls Guidelines updates poised to dramatically reduce falls and ease $2.3b healthcare burden, Dying to receive home care, Hip fracture mortality decreases with high quality clinical care, Removing debit card fees crucial for older Australians, Sydney’s beloved Footbridge Theatre launched some of our biggest stars; After nearly 20 years, it’s making a grand return, AvPals Term 4 2024, Wines and Crimes at Avalon Library, Party season is coming. Here are 2 ways to make small talk less awkward, ‘It just lifted me’: new research suggests shared reading groups combat loneliness – and the effects can be astounding, Bill to strengthen puppy and dog welfare across New South Wales, SafeWork NSW inspectors launch blitz targeting scaffold safety, NSW Government passes significant rental reforms, NSW support for the Commonwealth community safety order scheme, Government states Liberals back profiteering private insurers over public hospitals, NSW Government takes action after customers unlawfully charged for merchant fees, New research shows problematic community attitudes allow child sexual abuse to continue, ASIC alleges QBE misled customers, Ombudsman to provide advice and dispute resolution for community members hosting renewable energy, NSW invites technology and AI solutions to improve planning assessments, Child protection caseworkers and NSW government sign historic deal, Australia’s fertility rate has reached a record low. What might that mean for the economy?, What are executive function delays? Research shows they’re similar in ADHD and autism, Where there’s smoke: the rising death toll from climate-charged fire in the landscape, Draft guidelines for ‘forever chemicals’ have been released. Here’s what it means for drinking water safety in Australia, Scurvy is largely a historical disease but there are signs it’s making a comeback, Promoted as a win-win, Australia’s Pacific island guest worker scheme is putting those workers at risk, ‘They do not respect our land. They do not respect our people’. Brazil’s traditional people take on BHP in one of the world’s biggest class actions, Andrew Garfield and Elmo are going viral with their moving chat. Celebrities can help us talk about grief, View from The Hill: We have bigger issues around freedom of speech than Lidia Thorpe’s noisy protest, 4,300 tonnes of space junk and rising: another satellite breakup adds to orbital debris woes, NSW Government supports amended Equality Bill, Forestry firefighters brief Minister on bushfire preparations, Why are some Australian students having to pay to do PE at public schools?   CHOICE Analysis of Car Brands shows they are harvesting then selling your Data, ACCC welcomes introduction of merger reform bill, Federal Court orders Qantas to pay $100m in penalties for misleading consumers: NB - Scam Warning, The Australian government has introduced new cyber security laws; Here’s what you need to know, Research shows people believe lab animals have less mental capacity than other animals, Nobel prize in medicine awarded for discovery of microRNAs, Physics Nobel awarded to neural network pioneers who laid foundations for AI, Building companies feel they must sacrifice quality for profits, Tourism to become $91 billion cornerstone of NSW economy, World first vehicles boost capability for NSW Ambulance, Should you need a permit to protest?; Here’s why that’s a bad idea (and might be unlawful), Government to put pressure on opposition with legislation to ensure NBN stays in public hands, The hidden costs of building a home: what every family should know, Fatima Payman’s new Australia’s Voice party to appeal to the ‘unheard’, Final budget outcome shows 2023-24 surplus of $15.8 billion, Bhutan’s king is set to visit Australia for the first time. Here’s why thousands will line the streets to see him, NSW Government's Property audit finds more sites for over 1,100 new homes: Some sites at Seaforth, NSW Government states Health insurers rorting public hospital beds, There’s a renewed push to scrap junior rates of pay for young adults; Do we need to rethink what’s fair?, NSW will remove 65,000 years of Aboriginal history from its syllabus; It’s a step backwards for education, XEC is now in Australia. Here’s what we know about this hybrid COVID variant, ADHD prescribing has changed over the years – a new guide aims to bring doctors up to speed, Is big tech harming society?; To find out, we need research – but it’s being manipulated by big tech itself, Down and under pressure: US and UK artists are taking over Australian charts, leaving local talent behind,  The design tricks keeping your kids hooked on games and apps – and 3 things you can do about it, Gas supply for Q1 2025 tightens: risk of shortfall in short-term remains; re-shaping of export volumes, Finalists announced for the NSW Health Awards 2024, More paramedics and call takers to join NSW Ambulance, Government boosts access to the contraceptive pill at pharmacies across NSW, $2.1 million to help boost cancer research in NSW, Operational Expenditure Review into icare findings released, Boosting support for children affected by domestic violence: NSW Government, Digital platform regulators release working paper on multimodal foundation models, Joint investment in NSW adult literacy and numeracy, Energy Australia to pay $14m for making misleading statements and breaching the Electricity Retail Code, ACCC proposes not to authorise industry code on marketing of infant formula, Australians on fixed wireless services enjoy broadband speed boost, Why are we seeing more pandemics? Our impact on the planet has a lot to do with it, Costly defamation action looms large over Australian newsrooms; It’s diminishing press freedom, What are ‘rent tech’ platforms?; Action on reining in these exploitative tools is long overdue

    Food Asparagus: Spring Vegetable Recipe Ideas

    The new Spring asparagus crops have come in and with the price now cheaper than it was a month ago, and the peak of the variety now readily available, a few insights into this Spring vegetable and a few recipe ideas to try out as sides or main course celebrations of the many ‘fruits’ of Springtime. 

    October 2024 - Weeks One and Two: 10 Minute Spring Salads

    Events Music at all compass points, Scotland Island Cafe, Scottish Dancing, Fundraisers, Social Groups, Dancing classes + more

     

    Spring in pittwater: October 2024 

    Pittwater Online News is Published Every Sunday Morning


    Past Features  

    Archives (pre 2014)

    Pittwater Online News was selected for preservation by the State Library of New South Wales and National Library of Australia. This title is scheduled to be re-archived regularly.

    Archived Issues (2014 on) may be accessed herepandora.nla.gov.au/tep/143700

    Past Issues are also listed on site on the Community News page, by month.