The following weekend, the Nambour Caravan and Camping Show was held. This turned out to be quite a good event, considering it is a local show. It was well attended by manufacturers and suppliers and we were able to buy several items which had been on the list for a while. Rick has been hanging out for a new UV protection sun shirt – made by Sun2Sea, these shirts are fantastic both to wear and also to wash and dry. They are light, and best of all, breath well in the heat. I was also able to get hold of a new camp oven. I have spent a long time looking at the Aussie Camp Oven made by Southern Metal Spinners in SA. These are a Bedourie style camp oven, made from steel rather than cast iron. Time will tell whether it is worth the hype.
We met a couple of local (Sunshine Coast) Kedron owners via the Kedron Owner Group forum, and invited them to lunch at the start of May. It was a lovely afternoon and we thoroughly enjoyed their company. They have decided to come along to the Goomeri Pumpkin Festival, so we get to catch up with them again.
We had lots of visitors in the lead up to our week away for the Pumpkin Festival – mostly Kedron owners, funnily enough. Lis Cocks (from SA) came to visit for a few days after going to an event in Maryborough. Her husband, Brian, continued back home to SA as he had other commitments, so we were able to enjoy Lis’s company and conversation whilst pottering about the local area. Took a quick trip out to Boreen Point, on Lake Cootharaba. This is a lovely, quiet little area, but it apparently becomes bedlam in summer holidays.
Then Tony Heat and his father Gordon (both from NSW) arrived to stay for a few days. Fortunately, they were able to overlap with Lis and get to know her as well.
We had arranged with Brett and Joanne to come and look after the Lake Cooroibah property while we took off for a week to go to the Pumpkin Festival. They were able to arrive on Sunday so we had a couple of good days together before setting off. On Tuesday, we drove to Cobb & Co. 9 Mile Campground, near Tandur. Considering that this is only about 45km away from Lake Cooroibah, we arrived nice and early with plenty of time to set up. Deb & Glen B. had arrived over the weekend, so everything was sussed out and the fires ready to burn. Cobb & Co is a lovely spot, with lots of room for Big Rigs. It has toilets, showers and you can buy firewood. No power or water is available, but it’s lovely and quiet.
The ants KNOW it is going to rain!!!! |
Cobb & Co. 9 Mile Campground |
Leaving Cobb & Co on Thursday, we headed for Goomeri and the Pumpkin Festival. This was a KOG gathering organised by Rod & Mavis (Spinifex owners!!!) and was a ripper of a weekend. The photos will give a much better impression than I can with words.
Sadly, we heard from Terry & Nelly in early June to say that they would be returning home a month earlier than originally planned. Terry was still suffering problems after a double hernia operation in February so they wanted to get home and get it checked out. Also, they had cancelled their planned trip to Canada and the US in September and October for the same reason. Pity, we were really enjoying the property.
During this period, Rick visited both his dermatologist and his plastic surgeon. The plastic surgeon removed a couple of problem areas AND THEN the dermo found more!!!! Unfortunately, the pathology results from the plastic guy showed that more needed to be removed. Add this to what the dermo found, and Rick is now scheduled to see the plastic guy again in mid July. Damn it all!!!
Then the fertiliser really hit the fan!!! Ralph, a very good friend of T&N’s had been diagnosed with Mesothelioma (that’s Asbestosis for the medically challenged – like me) in mid-April. The doctors told him that he was terminal and gave him about 6 to 8 months to live. By mid-June, that period had dropped to a couple of weeks. Terry & Nelly made it home in time to celebrate Ralph’s 60th birthday, and marriage to his partner of 12 years. 6 days later, Ralph passed away. It was the most awful time for Ralph’s partner Christine, as well as for their combined family. We were only peripheral to the story, having met Ralph & Christine a couple of times, but you can’t help but be affected by such a tragedy. 9 weeks from diagnosis to death!
Nelly & Terry were quite happy for us to continue camping on the property for as long as we liked, but we decided to leave them to recover their composure in peace and quiet. We left Lake Cooroibah on 22 June and headed for Standown Park, between Gympie and Tin Can Bay.
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