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TMR Range Road Update – Road Works Completed

Good Morning,

Please be advised that road works on Mount Spec Road have now been completed.

Kind Regards 

Meghan

Customer and Stakeholder Management (Northern) | North Queensland Region
Program Delivery And Operations | Infrastructure Management & Delivery Division |

Department of Transport and Main Roads

Floor 6 | Townsville Government Office Building | 445 Flinders Street | Townsville Qld 4810
PO Box 1089 | Townsville Qld 4810
P: 1800 625 648 | F: (07) 4421 8711
E: engagement.northern@tmr.qld.gov.au
W: www.tmr.qld.gov.au

A Sucker for Succulents

It’s no secret that there are some fanatical gardeners in the village of Paluma. At many a social gathering in ‘BC’ times (‘Before Coronavirus’), the main topic of conversation revolved around our passion for propagating, planting and growing our favourite plants, be they native or exotic species.

One such fanatic has to be Jennie at Cloud Cottage. Jennie has developed a serious addiction to succulents of many varieties, shapes, sizes and colours. Her collection is ever-growing and her dedication to growing these plants is very impressive.

Jennie’s addiction developed just over a year ago, with just a couple of plants. A friend, fellow gardener and neighbour (another Jenny), inspired Jennie to grow some of the different varieties of succulents.  Since then her collection has rapidly expanded and she now has over 250 individual plants. Her favourite varieties are the Crassula’s and the Echeveria’s. Combined, she has over 90 different species and sub-species of these types of succulents. 

Just some of the many varieties of succulents grown by Jennie.

Why grow succulents? Jennie says they are very easy to grow and easy to propagate. You can get free plants and expand your garden with very little effort. There are a huge variety of shapes and colours to collect. They are very adaptable and forgiving plants – if you forget to water them they will continue to thrive with neglect. 

Jennie has some tips for ensuring successful succulent growing at Paluma (try saying that three times really fast!). Most importantly, they need protection from our heavy and continuous rain, so shelter is very important. They require bright, indirect light and some varieties like full sun, for at least part of the day. Good drainage is essential and they don’t like wet feet. Don’t kill them with kindness by watering them too often!

Jennie has taken to propagating many of her parent plants and she is also growing several specialist and rare varieties. She is potting up plants to sell in the future at the Rainforest Inn and at the Paluma Market (in ‘AC’ times – ‘After Coronavirus’).  She continues to be creative in finding new and innovative ways to use succulents in the garden and in home displays and arrangements. Her latest creation is a ‘living clock’ made entirely from ‘baby’ succulents.

What time is it? Time to get into the garden!

As with most ‘fanatics’, Jennie is always happy to talk about her passion and to share her vast knowledge and expertise in growing succulents. Just be aware……if you happen to ask Jennie about her succulent collection, prepare to be informed and inspired! 

Text by Michele Bird. Photos by Michele Bird & Jennie Robinson

Rainforest Biodiversity: 5 easy species Part 5 – Reptiles & Amphibians

By Jamie Oliver

About 162 species of reptiles can be found in the Wet Tropics. The concentration of endemic species (that are found nowhere else) is greater (18 species) than anywhere else in Australia. Likewise, the Wet Tropics hosts an impressive variety of frogs (amphibians). Out of the 212 species known to Australia nearly 29% can be found in the region[1]. Unfortunately, reptiles and amphibians tend not be as visible to the casual Paluma visitor. Frogs are most active at night during the wet season, while many reptiles seek the shade of logs and rocks when the sun is high. Nevertheless, there are two species of reptiles that are often out and about in gardens and along the roads and open tracks of the village. Two of the frogs listed here are best found by going out with a torch at night and listening first for their distinctive calls. With luck you may be able to trace the call to its origin and be rewarded with a view of the frog itself. The third frog can be found along the H-Track using a torch to look for eye shine on warm, wet, summer nights

[1] https://www.wettropics.gov.au/plants-animals


1. Red-bellied Black Snake (Pseudechis porphyriacus)
Red-bellied Black Snake showing red markings on its side

This is the most commonly seen snake around Paluma village, and can often be found sunning itself on a rock in gardens and along the road.  They hibernate during the winter but can be found most other times of the year. They are relatively thick bodied and a uniform dull black above and pale below with a series of red blotches long the side.

Although it belongs to the venomous elapid family, for its size the Red-Bellied Black Snake is probably the least dangerous elapid snake in Australia. Despite the number of bites received every year, very few human deaths have resulted. You should still be very cautious when encountering this snake. Keep your distance and stamp your feet to encourage it to move away.

During the morning they can often be seen sunning themselves on a rock

Red-bellied Black Snakes are the only species in the genus Pseudechis that have live young (the other species are all egg-layers). They feed on a variety of vertebrates including fish, tadpoles, frogs, lizards, snakes (including its own species), and mammals.

For a more detailed account of the Red-bellied Black Snake and it’s habits see the post by Colwyn Campbell. Addition notes and  observations by Linda Venn were also presented in a recent post here.


2. Eastern Water Skink (Eulampris quoyii)

Skinks are small, smooth-bodied lizards, with most species having no defined neck. They are the most common type of lizard seen around gardens throughout Australia and there are about 389 different species. The Eastern Water Skink is a large species (28cm long) that can often be seen and heard rustling in the leaf litter in search of small prey.

They shelter in holes and burrows, under logs and rocks, and near streams and ponds feeding on a diet of water beetles and other aquatic insects, snails, tadpoles, spiders, small fishes, smaller lizards, and native fruit.   They can become quite tame and will quickly learn to eat small bugs and meal worms out of your hand. Birds, big lizards, and black snakes all prey on these skinks. Eastern Water Skinks breed in spring and as many as nine live babies are born in summer.

Further notes and  observations on the Eastern Water Skink by Linda Venn can be found here


3. Orange-thighed Tree Frog (Litoria xanthomera)

This frog is arguably the most photogenic in tropical Australia, with a deep green upper surface, deep red-orange eyes, and lemony-orange sides to its legs and toes. It is quite common in Paluma and during rainy nights it can often be heard calling near garden ponds and gutters around the village.

A male calling

Its call is very distinctive, and you are more likely to hear this species than see it. However, if you are able to trace the calls, you should be able to find a male perched on a leaf or twig near a pool or puddle. Watching a male inflate its yellow throat as it calls is a great reward for diligent searching.

Litoria xanthomera calling near a small pond in front of a house in the village

During the day these frogs hide in the foliage and can have very different pale green and white skin and whitish eye colour.


4. Mottled Barred Frog (Mixophyes coggeri)

This large mottled frog can frequently be found beside the road on Lennox Cr. and along the H-Track at night during the wet season. They can be picked up from their eye-shine using a torch and tend not to move when approached, so it is easy to get close enough for a clear identification.

Mixophyes coggeri showing two different colourations

They are also found (and heard at night) around the Village Weir. The call is a loud croak that can be heard at some distance.

Mixophyes coggeri calling in the early evening from the weir near the Community Hall
M. schevilli showing continuous dorsal stripe. © wild_lachie

There is one other species of mottled frog (Northern Barred Frog – Mixophyes schevilli) that can be found around Paluma that looks very similar but has a distinct continuous stripe down its back, whereas M. coggeri has an irregular and discontinuous series of dark blotches.


5. Southern Ornate Nursery Frog (Cophixalus australis)
Photo by Reiner Richter (Creative Commons Attribution International CC BY 4.0)

This tiny frog has an amazingly loud call that is so common in the evenings at Paluma that it becomes part of the background soundscape. It hides out in the foliage and on the forest floor and is seldom seen. Even tracking down a calling male can be a frustrating and often futile exercise. However, the call itself is so distinctive that you can confidently claim you have identified one just by hearing it.

Cophixalus australis calling near a house in the village

There are 13 species of nursery frogs in the Wet Tropics and many of them have highly restricted distributions with some occupying only a single mountain top forest. Consequently, Nursery Frogs are considered to be one of the most threatened groups of vertebrates in the Wet Tropics bioregion. However, the Southern Ornate Nursery Frog has a much wider distribution and is not considered threatened.

Nursery Frogs have direct development (eggs are deposited under rocks or logs in moist soil and the froglets hatch directly from the eggs). The male has been known to guard the eggs during development – hence the common name.

ANZAC Commemoration, Past Pandemics and Covid-19 – Lest We Forget

Article Contributed by Michael Drew in the lead-up to very different ANZAC Day commemorations in Australia in April 2020.

The human experience of war and pandemics/epidemics are oddly similar in that they each require, of necessity, social isolation and lockdown together with stringent disease control measures.

Most Australians under 50 have no first-hand experience of pandemic disease, but are now having to come to grips with what earlier generations learnt about self-preservation.

In the  period 1880 to 1940, North Queensland was blighted by an endemic mosquito-borne malaria parasite (not virus). Observations by the Cairns-based, German Emigre, Dr Edward Albert Koch, hypothesised that the Anopheles Farauti mosquito was the vector of the often fatal disease, long before scientific research confirmed mosquitos as the culprit, rather than the ‘miasma’ of swamps, (which is why the large swamps behind the Townsville Strand were not drained and built on until the 1900s).

In the late 1800’s Dr Koch set up a screened isolation ward at Cairns Hospital which prevented malaria infected patients from spreading the disease….sound familiar? This of course caused much angst among residents who feared the worst for their loved ones who could, (and did) die without the benefit of clergy or family being present. Thus, it became a personal and economic tragedy with many home remedies being touted as the cure! (eg. the ‘kerosene bath’, favoured by my grandfather, but not enjoyed by my father).   (See Wikipedia Listing: Edward Albert Koch 1843-1901). 

105 years ago, 8000 young Australians died at Gallipoli and in the isolation wards of field hospitals on Lemnos and in Egypt, with many deaths being caused by rampant viral and bacterial  disease. The survivors went on to The Somme, Ypres & Villiers Brettoneux where again diseases required isolation, lockdown and vigorous hygiene regimes to control cholera, typhoid, dysentery, gastro and pneumonia spread by fleas, flies and rats. (It’s a wonder the bubonic plague didn’t come back!).

Again, many died tragically away from their loved-ones in Australia, their last hours spent being comforted by the Australian Army Nurses, who were famous for their care of young mortally-ill Diggers ….sound familiar?

Indeed for decades afterwards “ Base” Hospitals in Australia were run on strict military lines as a consequence of their success in combatting diseases in the era of no anti-biotic drugs, which were only developed for the D-Day Landings in June 1944.

The returning Diggers in 1918-19 brought with them the deadly pandemic, so-called  “Spanish flu”, which is estimated to have killed between 17 million and 50 million persons world wide (more than the Great War total casualties!)

In Australia, the Nation went into lockdown and with isolation procedures eerily similar to those currently in legal force for COVID-19. Public wearing of face masks was the norm.

The economic effects were tragically enormous given that 60,000 young Australians (including young female nurses) had lost their lives in the conflict and twice that number were permanently disabled, both physically and mentally. These casualties set against a total population of 4.5 million meant that Australia was  economically trashed and the lack of young men to father the next generation caused an urgent immigration program which recruited British, Irish and southern Europeans in the early 1920s, thereby changing forever the Australian cultural mix. The flu pandemic added to the death toll of young people who were particularly vulnerable to this virus. (COVID-19 affects 40% of under 40s today, exploding the myth that it is an elderly person’s disease).

In the 1930’s the “horror of parents” pandemic, Poliomyelitis Virus, commenced to ravage young Australians and continued until the mid-1950s when Dr Jonas Salk (USA) produced a very effective vaccine to the huge relief of parents world wide.

In the North, the early 1930’s efforts at treatment of Polio by Chiropractor Ernst Kjellberg at his large-scale Millaa Millaa “ tent hospital” produced very good results which caused him to establish polio treatment centres in Cairns, 11 Sturt St Townsville and The Avenue, Hermit Park. 

Sister Kenny was his famous disciple who treated a young Joh Bjelke-Petersen who suffered lifelong effects of polio.  (See Sister Kenny Park next to the Tobruk Pool on the Strand, Townsville).

Panic-stricken parents (mine included) frantically isolated their children from families who were struck down (and locked down) by this capricious, deadly, paralysis disease which saw many die or be consigned to massive “ iron lung “ machines installed in hospitals. These were the ventilators of the day….sound familiar? 

The economic cost of polio is still with us today as the loss of earning power of many victims affected their subsequent families’ standard of living.

Any history of North Queensland epidemics should include the horrible deaths of many 1930’s cane cutters who contracted a leptospirosis infection, known as Weil’s Disease, which was ultimately discovered, by scientific observation, to originate in rat’s urine as, in those days, rats and their snake pursuers, were in plague proportions in the North’s cane paddocks. A very major cane cutter strike occurred in 1934 after the bosses refused to act. This caused huge economic damage to the fledgling cane industry. The problem was eventually solved by an observant medico who recommended burning the cane before cutting…problem solved with the crack of a match!.If only COVID-19 was so amenable to a good hot burn!.  (These days …no cane cutters, therefore no burn!) 

The greatest pestilence is war. 

Anzac Day is an opportunity to reflect on the sacrifices of those who have died in serving the Nation’s interests even though for many observants the causes of the conflicts are, sadly, shrouded in the fogs of elapsed time. For example, who knows the reason why Australia joined in a European War in which the English Monarch was the first cousin of the opposing  German Kaiser, who was allowed to go into post war exile in Holland after an estimated 6 million persons died on both sides of the conflict.

In Paluma we have our own history of a budding life and intellect cut short in the death of 23 year old Flight Sgt Bruce Plant, a son of our District, who rose from the status of a Mess attendant at Garbutt Base to a Fighter Pilot at Amberley and a Canadian-trained Lancaster Pilot in the very short time of 18 months! He had matriculated at CBC Townsville 5 years earlier and would have been in the cream of the post-war achievers had he survived the deadly bombing raids over Germany in September 1943 as part of RAAF 460 SQN based at Binbrook,UK.

He suffered the ultimate isolation from his wife and young child, John, whom he never held.

We should also reflect on the fate of the 20,000 men of the 8th Australian Division, 2nd A.I.F, who were captured by the Japanese in Singapore in 1941 and forced to perform slave labour building the Burma Railway until 1945. Notwithstanding the heroic medical efforts of Colonel “Weary” Dunlop, the starvation diet, contagious “jungle” viruses, bacterial infections, cholera, typhoid, beri beri, dysentery, gastro and festering ulcers resulted in one in three Australians dying as a P.O.W. away from their loved-ones and family.

It is also apposite to think of the 30,000 men of the famed 7th and 9th Australian Divisions who left Australia in 1940 for Tobruk, El Alamein and the Sinai Desert and thence to Papua New Guinea to relieve the Militia (CMF- Army Reserve) on the Kokoda Track and to repulse and eventually defeat the Japanese at Milne Bay, Buna, Sanananda and Gona, as well as sea assaults in Borneo on well entrenched fanatical Japanese troops. These men were isolated from their families for years and suffered the exhausting privations of the soldier on a diet of tinned Spam (which would make a goat throw up!)

They suffered all manner of infectious diseases and stomach cancers which for many led to life-long illness, including not well understood “war neuroses”.

On the home front in North Queensland 1940-45, there was social isolation and lockdown of two different types.

Firstly, the civilian population of the North suffered “panic virus” and largely fled south when the triumphant Japanese captured Fortress Singapore, attacked Pearl Harbour destroying many naval vessels and then bombed Darwin 22 times, killing many civilians, and subsequently bombed Townsville from their New Guinea north coast air bases. Those who remained felt very isolated in the face of a notoriously vicious enemy.

Many families were split up with some “essential” workers remaining for civil defence and troops food supply services. Hospitals could not cater for civilian surgical cases necessitating a long rail journey to Rockhampton or Brisbane….sound familiar? 

Secondly, the North’s largely Italian farming families suffered as a result of  “knee jerk virus”, which  manifested itself after some far off bureaucrats decided that the majority of northern Italian males should be interned down south and leave their womenfolk and young children behind to tend the farm and fend for themselves. Talk about social distancing! Talk about gross economic loss and damage! All on the unproven assumption they must all have been supporters of Mussolini! This great injustice has never been properly addressed.

Two little Biloela girls on Christmas Island………. sound familiar?

In 1940, John Curtin, in a famous speech, devoted the entire resources of the Commonwealth of Australia to the prosecution of the War against the enemy….sound familiar?

In 1942-44 the North became an enormous military complex for Australian and US forces of all types, land, air and sea. Our own village became the site for an early warning radar array for Townsville which was guarded and manned by US Troops with explosive charges set to bring down McClelland’s Bluff, according to the late Tom Connor. Later, Paluma would be requisitioned  as a RAAF Rehabilitation Unit  – a far more jolly use if one has regard for the hall photos of the inmates of “Hotel Australia”. Isolation was relaxed and rehab was designed to serve the future post-war economic needs of the inmates….sound familiar?  (eg. “the road out the other side”). 

Having regard for the above events of Northern history, any grizzling about not being not able to visit boutiques and coffee shops and to be seen there snuggled up to the glitterati, the cognoscenti and perhaps, the illuminati, seems petty and stupid, when we consider the hardships endured by the past five generations of Australians in times of trouble, strife and pandemics.

As with all calamitous times, this pandemic will pass as did the others referred to above. Our safety and its duration and its economic damage are entirely a matter for us complying with the science-based medical advice. 

Do the time now and reap the early rewards of flattening the curve lower than a run-over cane toad! 

As well as commemorating war’s casualties on 25 April each year we should remember the strength of our nation’s underlying resources and wealth (our Commonwealth), as well as the seemingly bottomless well of scientific and managerial expertise devoted to putting the Country back on track. 

Airlines come and go creating short-term economic chaos.

If one thing we have learned from this pandemic it’s that most business/social travel, air or otherwise can be successfully replaced with online technology …..and as a result…. the Earth will Zoom ahead!

What Katydid…?

Katydids, also known as bush crickets, belong to the Tettigoniidae Family and are closely related to grasshoppers.  Around the world, apart from Antarctica, there are 6400 species known, of which 900 live in Australia.

This little critter is a Leafy Katydid that I found hanging on my bedroom curtains. It is the biggest katydid I have seen and I thought it may be unusual, however after consulting Google, I discovered that 6 cm is a normal adult size for this species, Paracaedicia serrata.  Their life span is a year or less, with most being eaten by birds and small mammals before they reach adulthood.  However in the tropics, some can live longer.

The wings are green and leaflike with a fine yellow streak along the edge.  The hind legs are finely serrated.  Leafy katydids inhabit rainforests and feed on leaves, grass, flower petals and sometimes fruit and aphids.  When disturbed, they will remain motionless and can barely be distinguished from the surrounding leaves.

Eggs, looking like tiny seeds, are laid along the edges of leaves or along stems and when hatched, the nymphs will go through 5 successive moults before reaching maturity.  The stridulous mating call is achieved by rubbing the front wings together. 

So, next time you are gardening, see if you can find one of these cleverly camouflaged critters.

Text & Photo by Colwyn Campbell

I’ve Got Worms…..!

Over the years my garage has provided a refuge and habitat for a diversity of critters, some welcome and some not-so-welcome. Regular visitors have included leaf-tail geckos, eastern water skinks, rodents of all shapes, sizes and dispositions, as well as an occasional red-bellied black snake.

Just lately I have noticed that earthworms are visiting, mostly at night. Not only I have seen worms of many sizes, but evidence of their nightly forays are left in silvery tracks and trails across the garage floor.

The mother of all worms visited last night! The photograph below shows this specimen is a giant. The ruler in the photo is a standard 30 cm or 12 inch ruler. So, she measures at least 27 cm in length. I tried to measure her girth, but she was way too wriggly to hold and measure at the same time. I estimate she was about 1.5 cm round the body.

Late evening I decided to relocate this worm to a leafy, secluded spot in the garden, hoping that she would find a safe place to settle in before the family flock of chortling Chowchillas arrived as usual to forage the next morning!

Text & Photo by Michele Bird

TMR Range Road Update – Notice of Road Closures

The Department of Transport and Main Roads would like to advise that pavement repair works will shortly occur on Mount Spec Road on the Paluma Range. Works to be completed include the removal of damaged pavement and back filling with new bitumen and surface seal.

Please see work details below.

Mount Spec Road pavement repair works 

Work duration: Monday 20 April to Thursday 30 April

Workdays: Monday to Friday (excluding Saturday 25 April and Monday 27 April 2020) 

Work hours: 6:30am to 5:30pm (road closure 9am to 4pm – long delays)

Impact on motorists:

  • A road closure of Mount Spec Road will be in place between the hours of 9am and 4pm to undertake the removal of old pavement and backfill new road pavement in the most expedient and efficient manner.
  • Motorists who travel along Mount Spec Road between the hours of 9am and 4pm can expect long delays of up to 3 hours
  • Stop/go traffic controllers will be on-site at either end of the works zone to direct traffic through the works zone. 
  • Maximum wait time for motorists on Mount Spec Road from the hours of 6:30am – 9am and 4pm – 5:30pm is 15 minutes. 
  • A 40km/hr speed limit will be maintained along Mount Spec Road throughout the duration of the works.

Road users are advised to plan their journey ahead of time around the road closures to avoid long delays and travel times. Residents are encouraged to contact TMR on the details below should they have any further enquiries about the road works.

TMR would like to thank the local community and businesses in advance for their patience during these works. 

Kind Regards

Meghan

Customer and Stakeholder Management (Northern) | North Queensland Region
Program Delivery And Operations | Infrastructure Management & Delivery Division |

Department of Transport and Main Roads

Floor 6 | Townsville Government Office Building | 445 Flinders Street | Townsville Qld 4810
PO Box 1089 | Townsville Qld 4810
P: 1800 625 648 | F: (07) 4421 8711
E: engagement.northern@tmr.qld.gov.au
W: www.tmr.qld.gov.au

Outcomes of the PDCA Annual General Meeting

The PDCA AGM was held last month (March 13) in conjunction with a well attended BBQ lunch. This year we decided to change the date away from Easter and to offer residents a free BBQ lunch prior to the meeting. We received some positive feedback on this initiative and were delighted to easily exceed the number of attendees required for a quorum (although this may also have been due to Wilfred’s door to door encouragement earlier in the morning).

The official minutes of the meeting will be completed soon, but if you are interested in reading the President’s Annual report, or the History Project report, they are both available in our Documents section on the website.

All current PDCA Executive Committee Members were elected for another year.

Many thanks to all those who attended and contributed to the meeting.

PDCA Executive Committee Members for 2020-21
NamePositionemailph
Jamie OliverPresidentJ.K.Oliver@outlook.com0408 710030
Anneshka Brown1st Vice Presidentanneshka@protonmail.com0472 768 227
Ross Murray2nd Vice Presidentrossmurray23@gmail.com0438 015 342
Juanita PolettoSecretaryjpoletto@gmail.com0410 202 968
Wilfred KarnollTreasurerwilfred.suzanne@bigpond.com0447 822 626
Kristy HarrisonCommittee MemberKristylHarrison80@gmail.com0404 833760
Rhett HarrisonCommittee MemberRhettH83@hotmail.com0438 782 053
Helen GodeCommittee Memberhdgode@hotmail.com0497 327 644
Charlie AllenCommittee Member (SES)c-t-a@activ8.net.au0487 840 197
Ross HyneCommittee Member (RFS)ross.hyne@ergon.com0427 447 415

Community Hall Garden beds begin to take shape

Following a meeting in March on the establishment of gardens beds we now have a working group of residents who have made themselves available to help out with this new community project. The Townsville City Council has agreed to donate up to $900 worth of native plants to assist in the project.

After our first meeting a general plan of where beds would be located was agreed on and Graham Malpas immediately cleared out the rear side beds. It turns out there are some quite nice plants along that side but they were masked by a lot of weedy growth.

Following the PDCA Annual General Meeting some “muscle” was requisitioned to help collect some surplus logs from Anne Bruyeres block to the Hall to serve as garden borders. Colin Meads and Jamie Oliver, with assistance from Don Battersby, took two trailer loads of logs over to the hall where placement was overseen by Jill Meads and Anne. It all looked like so much fun that we even attracted a member of the public who was up with his family for a lunch at the picnic tables, volunteer to lend us a hand.

Tony Bligh’s ingenious creation, the “log dolly’, was invaluable in collecting and moving the logs, but one big one that we wanted as a feature piece was just too big to handle. However with the addition of a little brain to Colins’s and Jamie’s brawn, Tony showed us how it could be done.

The next step is to get a couple of truck-loads of topsoil to build up the new garden beds. The Townsville City Council (via Councillor Margie Ryder) has agreed to provide this, but with the new restrictions caused by COVID 19 the delivery has been postponed indefinitely.

Once the restrictions on gatherings has been lifted we will organize our third working bee to start planting! In the mean time Jamie has plans to lay out some irrigation hosing so that the beds can be provided with water during the dry season.