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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong><br />

<strong>Ender</strong><br />

Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Inc<br />

FEBRUARY | MARCH <strong>2021</strong><br />

A MAGAZINE CREATED BY DEFENCE FAMILIES FOR DEFENCE FAMILIES


THE TOP ENDER TRI-SERVICE MAGAZINE<br />

<strong>February</strong>/<strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong><br />

COVER IMAGE<br />

Australian Defence Force Flags at the Bombing of Darwin Commemorative<br />

Ceremony, 2018.<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

Chairperson Amanda Letcher<br />

Treasurer Dan Campbell<br />

Secretary Madison Collier<br />

General Members Deborah Muir, Deb Herring, Emma Thom<br />

CONTACT US<br />

COMMUNITY CO-ORDINATOR<br />

Denna Menz<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

CONTRIBUTIONS<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

GRAPHIC DESIGN<br />

Emma Thom | Amanda Letcher<br />

chair@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

ADVERTISING & SUBSCRIPTIONS<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

Phone: 0419 274 735<br />

Postal: PO Box 35874, Winnellie NT 0821<br />

Email: admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

WWW.THETOPENDERMAGAZINE.ORG.AU<br />

Published bi-monthly<br />

All Rights Reserved.<br />

Printed by Colemans of Darwin, Northern Territory.<br />

THE TOP<br />

ENDER<br />

TRI-SERVICES MAGAZINE INC<br />

DISCLAIMER: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated welcomes manuscripts, photographs or<br />

other material for publication, however we do not accept responsibility for loss. Please ensure your copy fits to<br />

a specified dimension and is received by the Designer on the Copy Deadline for the month. Copy can be<br />

accepted on disk or via email. All artwork produced remains the property of the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> and cannot be<br />

reproduced without permission of the Designer. Editorial Disclaimer: Any opinions expressed in this<br />

publication are not necessarily those of the Editorial Staff or of the Defence Community Organisation or<br />

Department of Defence. All articles in this newsletter are printed on the understanding that they are the<br />

original work of the authors and not necessarily those of the Editorial Staff or Designer. Editorial Staff reserve<br />

the right to reject, edit or rearrange any item submitted. <strong>The</strong>y are not responsible for the accuracy of items<br />

submitted but will make every reasonable effort to verify information. <strong>The</strong> Trade Practices Act provides severe<br />

penalties for false and misleading advertising. Because it is not possible for this magazines’ staff to check the<br />

accuracy of advertising claims, the responsibility for accuracy lies with the person or companies submitting<br />

material for publication in their advertisements.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated is a non-profit organisation, partially funded by the Family<br />

Support Funding Program administered by the Defence Community Organisation. Over 3000 copies are<br />

produced bi-monthly and distributed free to defence families, members and units in Darwin, Palmerston and<br />

Tindal. Revenue raised from advertising helps directly to pay for printing and production costs as well as<br />

improvements to the facilities used by volunteers.. Please contact our friendly team for more information.


FEATURES<br />

10 THE BEST JOB EVER - AJM TRAVEL<br />

12 TALES OF A TOP END MUM<br />

24 THE SAFETY OF OUR SHORES<br />

42 A QUIET HERO<br />

46 CELEBRATING OUR ARMED FORCES<br />

SUPPORT<br />

16 DEPARTMENT OF VETERAN AFFAIRS<br />

17 DFA NT<br />

18 DCO NATIONAL & NT<br />

20 ROBERTSON BARRACKS FAMILY GROUP<br />

21 LARRAKEYAH NEIGHBOURHOOD HOUSE<br />

22 NETWORK TINDAL<br />

23 DEFENCE DANDELIONS PLAYGROUP<br />

25 OPEN ARMS<br />

28 DSM DIRECTORY<br />

32 FROM THE PADRE’S PEN<br />

34 DEFENCE HEALTH<br />

40 MATES4MATES<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

3 FROM THE COMMITTEE<br />

4 WELCOME FROM THE TOP<br />

26 DOCTORS NOTES<br />

27 PETS IN THE NT<br />

29 DSM - LARRAKEYAH PRIMARY<br />

30 COMMITTEE NOTICEBOARD<br />

31 COMMITTEE IN THE COMMUNITY<br />

33 OVERCOMING ISOLATION<br />

36 WHAT’S ON / DIARY DATES<br />

37 LET’S GO, BOWL PATROL!<br />

38 GROM - ENGINEERING CALCULUS<br />

39 SAVING AT THE SHOPS<br />

CONTENTS<br />

44 FISHING FOR THERAPY<br />

45 SCOUTS - REDCYCLE<br />

48 DSM - DRIPSTONE<br />

50 HMAS GLENELG FITNESS<br />

52 CYCLONE SEASON<br />

54 RLLT HOLIDAYS<br />

62 DIRECTORY<br />

SPOTLIGHT<br />

WELCOME FROM THE TOP - P4 - P7<br />

A QUIET HERO - P42<br />

ARMED FORCES BIRTHDAYS - P46<br />

COMPETITIONS<br />

EASTER COMP - P14<br />

FOR THE ADULTS - P33<br />

FOR THE FAMILY - P59<br />

FOR THE KIDS - P61<br />

LIFESTYLE<br />

SAVING AT THE SHOPS - P39<br />

RLLT HOLIDAYS - CAIRNS - P54<br />

MOSQUITO WATCH - P56<br />

WHATS THE TIDE DOIN’ - P57<br />

KIDS CORNER<br />

CROC COVE COMP - P59<br />

KIDS SPACE - P60<br />

TEEN SPACE - P61<br />

FROM THE COMMITTEE<br />

IMPORTANT DATES<br />

SUBMISSION DEADLINE<br />

If you wish to submit an article, event, photo,<br />

advertisement or would like to contribute some<br />

ideas for the next edition of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong>, please contact us. Submission Deadline<br />

for April/May edition is: 18 <strong>February</strong> <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

DISTRIBUTION DAYS<br />

Distribution Day (formerly known as Stuffing Day) is<br />

a chance for you to meet our community and make<br />

new friends, while we label the magazine for posting.<br />

Light refreshments are provided and children are<br />

always welcome.<br />

Next Distribution Day: 11 April <strong>2021</strong><br />

MONTHLY MEETING<br />

Come along to our next committee meeting where<br />

we finalise article selections, discuss community work<br />

and magazine planning. You can input as much or as<br />

little as you like. Light dinner is provided and children<br />

are always welcome. Each meeting is held on the last<br />

Thursday of each month.<br />

<strong>2021</strong>: 25 <strong>February</strong>, 25 <strong>March</strong>, 29 April, 27 May<br />

Contact admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

for further details.<br />

FEBRUARY MARCH <strong>2021</strong><br />

Indigenous performers, July 2017<br />

WELCOME<br />

Posting season is almost over, so we’d like to welcome<br />

all those arriving into the Northern Territory, as well<br />

as welcoming back those who get to enjoy another<br />

year here in the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

Without the DCO Welcome Expo this year, we’ve<br />

focused this edition of the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> on<br />

introducing you to our Defence community. We have<br />

some exciting competitions, interesting feature articles<br />

and of course, lots of essential information to help you<br />

get the most out of life in the NT.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> aims to support the Defence<br />

community through community houses, fundraising<br />

activities and more. If you have ideas to help Defence<br />

organisations, support networks and build stronger<br />

relationships with our community, come along to our<br />

next committee meeting!<br />

Bombing of Darwin Commemorative Ceremony<br />

Distribution Day, November 2020<br />

Distribution Day, November 2020<br />

2W W<strong>The</strong> W.T <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> H E | TTri-Services O P E N<strong>Magazine</strong> D E RIncorporated M A G A Z I N E . O R G . A U<br />

FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 3


Welcome from the <strong>Top</strong><br />

Happy New Year to all Defence<br />

families and welcome to those who<br />

have recently arrived in the Northern<br />

Territory. On reflection, 2020 was an<br />

extraordinary year for our nation, with<br />

two domestic emergencies —<br />

Operations BUSHFIRE ASSIST and<br />

COVD-19 ASSIST — testing the ADF’s<br />

preparedness and adaptability. <strong>The</strong><br />

demand for ADF support was intense,<br />

requiring more high readiness<br />

capabilities in more places, more often.<br />

This resulted in many of our people<br />

spending more time away from<br />

home, which was only possible with<br />

the love and support of family and<br />

friends. With this in mind, I extend<br />

my sincere appreciation to<br />

everyone who supports the ADF in<br />

the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

<strong>The</strong> ADF has provided ongoing<br />

support to the NT Government’s<br />

COVID-19 response since <strong>March</strong> 2020,<br />

and these efforts are likely to continue<br />

into <strong>2021</strong>. I particularly appreciate<br />

those ADF personnel who remained<br />

on task over the Christmas and New<br />

Year period. <strong>The</strong> sacrifice made by<br />

these members and their families is<br />

significant. Whether you were attached<br />

to a headquarters element in Darwin<br />

or Alice Springs, a member of the<br />

quarantine compliance monitoring team<br />

in support of NTPOL or working to<br />

facilitate the repatriation of vulnerable<br />

Australians from abroad, your<br />

contribution is valued and has helped<br />

ensure the health and safety of all<br />

Territorians.<br />

As I reflect on the year that has passed,<br />

I am inspired by the resilience<br />

demonstrated by all Australians and I<br />

am particularly proud of the<br />

contribution of our service personnel.<br />

<strong>The</strong> attitudes, professionalism and<br />

compassion, in challenging<br />

circumstances, has been impressive.<br />

Supported by our families and friends,<br />

we truly have served the community<br />

within which we live and work. This has<br />

been both humbling and incredibly<br />

rewarding. I commend all Defence<br />

families for enabling this support,<br />

particularly in the midst of so much<br />

uncertainty. I have also been impressed<br />

with the resilience and spirit that the<br />

wider <strong>Top</strong> End community has shown.<br />

In the face of dynamic circumstances<br />

and considerable ambiguity, the<br />

community has remained united,<br />

supported one another and<br />

demonstrated true Territorian spirit.<br />

While 2020 provided many<br />

unprecedented challenges, we must all<br />

prepare for what <strong>2021</strong> may bring.<br />

Notably, the 1st Brigade has retained its<br />

role as the Australian Army’s Ready<br />

Brigade, while the Patrol Boat and<br />

Regional Force Surveillance Groups will<br />

continue to protect our maritime<br />

borders. <strong>The</strong> RAAF will continue to<br />

play a critical role in the repatriation of<br />

Australians from overseas, while also a<br />

key enabler for all ADF contingency<br />

operations. Being ‘Ready’ requires —at<br />

times — high operational tempo to<br />

support both domestic and offshore<br />

operations, as well as the need to<br />

maintain high readiness forces for a<br />

range of contingencies. This is a no-fail<br />

mission.<br />

While we must maintain our strong<br />

readiness culture, I encourage all service<br />

personnel to maintain an effective<br />

work-life balance, where possible. I aim<br />

to have our people at home with<br />

families for important events, including<br />

school holidays and major festive<br />

periods. While travel opportunities<br />

were limited throughout 2020, the<br />

New Year brings with it renewed hope<br />

for domestic and overseas travel. I<br />

encourage all personnel to make the<br />

most of their Remote Location Leave<br />

Travel (RLLT) entitlements and take<br />

the opportunity for downtime<br />

whenever it presents.<br />

<strong>The</strong> ADF’s service to the nation during<br />

2020 confirms the need to foster<br />

important relationships through<br />

community engagement. Our role<br />

within the community is critical and<br />

important for the ADF’s reputation, as<br />

well as our own individual well-being.<br />

This is particularly important in the <strong>Top</strong><br />

End, noting the challenges from<br />

geographical dislocation with the rest of<br />

the country.<br />

I encourage all ADF families<br />

to enter the New Year with<br />

a sense of purpose and<br />

positivity. Immerse<br />

yourselves in all that the<br />

Northern Territory has to<br />

offer, and explore the many<br />

unique and vibrant natural<br />

and cultural attractions<br />

available. I sincerely hope that you<br />

embrace the challenges and rewards<br />

that a posting to the <strong>Top</strong> End provides.<br />

Defence’s greatest asset is its people,<br />

including our families. I look forward to<br />

engaging with as many of you as<br />

possible throughout <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

Australian Army<br />

Brigadier Ash Collingburn, DSM<br />

Senior ADF Officer in the NT and<br />

Commander 1st Brigade<br />

Hi everyone, Happy New Year to all<br />

and I hope that <strong>2021</strong> finds you in a<br />

good place. For those new to the NT,<br />

welcome to the <strong>Top</strong> End Navy and<br />

wider ADF Team in HMAS<br />

Coonawarra, the Larrakeyah Defence<br />

Precinct (LDP) and Defence<br />

Establishment Berrimah (DEB), and to<br />

what is a unique and wonderful part of<br />

Australia.<br />

To those who have continued to work<br />

at sea and ashore over the Christmas/<br />

New Year period in support of<br />

operations, I thank you for your Service<br />

during what is traditionally a time of<br />

pause for most Australians. In particular<br />

too, I wish to thank family members for<br />

your understanding, sacrifice and the<br />

important ongoing support you provide<br />

to your loved ones. You too are very<br />

much a part of our team, and I am very<br />

grateful of your strong support.<br />

Although <strong>2021</strong> has arrived, the<br />

challenges of COVID-19 remain with us<br />

as they do across the globe, and I note<br />

the additional difficulties this has<br />

presented for many of us, including not<br />

being able to visit family and friends in<br />

2020, and having plans disrupted at<br />

short notice recently. I remain<br />

impressed by your efforts to manage<br />

these issues, and more broadly of our<br />

contribution to Government efforts<br />

here in the NT and across Australia to<br />

manage COVID. We look ahead with<br />

much optimism as we build on National<br />

efforts which will see us progressively<br />

emerge from the current pandemic<br />

over the coming year.<br />

I was very excited to return to Darwin<br />

in December, having enjoyed a<br />

previous posting here in 2011/12.<br />

During that period (and I’ll pick up<br />

where I left off in this regard) I sought<br />

as much as possible to experience the<br />

unique beauty and cultural diversity of<br />

the <strong>Top</strong> End; I encourage you to do<br />

the same. Whether you’ve been here<br />

for a while or are newly arrived,<br />

acquaint yourself with the many natural<br />

and cultural attractions that are part of<br />

the annual rhythm of Darwin and the<br />

<strong>Top</strong> End, and engage!<br />

For newcomers, I strongly endorse the<br />

DCO Darwin Welcome ADF Families<br />

Event to be held on January 23 at a<br />

local venue. You will meet your local<br />

DCO Darwin team, learn about the<br />

wide range of support and networking<br />

services available to you, and also meet<br />

some of the amphibian locals who<br />

sport a very wide grin – but don’t get<br />

too close! We will continue to provide<br />

opportunities throughout the year for<br />

connection and access to information<br />

on all available services through<br />

information events in LDP and via<br />

regular Navy Divisional System<br />

interaction.<br />

Having joined our Team in the <strong>Top</strong><br />

End, you are now part of a large,<br />

diverse and growing Navy presence,<br />

with more than 700 uniformed<br />

personnel in a variety of roles spanning<br />

Navy and Joint positions. <strong>The</strong> Navy<br />

(and ADF more broadly) constitute a<br />

significant part of the Darwin/NT<br />

community. Indeed, our families inject a<br />

depth and breadth of diversity through<br />

their engagement in work, schools,<br />

sporting activities, and other social<br />

engagements. We are well respected<br />

and enjoy a good reputation, to which<br />

you will make a direct contribution as a<br />

member of the wider community, and<br />

by participating in various HMAS<br />

Coonawarra community-based<br />

activities. <strong>The</strong>se events are a great<br />

opportunity for us to share with the<br />

community our great pride in our Navy.<br />

<strong>The</strong> year ahead will be another busy<br />

one with ongoing operations and<br />

exercises at sea, and the essential work<br />

ashore in support. All this while we<br />

build future capability including<br />

infrastructure upgrades above and<br />

below ground in HMAS Coonawarra<br />

and across LDP and see work progress<br />

on our waterfront infrastructure.<br />

In closing, I trust you will make the<br />

most of the professional opportunity<br />

and challenge provided by our work in<br />

the <strong>Top</strong> End, and hope you and your<br />

family find your time in this unique part<br />

of Australia enriching and enjoyable. I<br />

very much look forward to seeing you<br />

at work and in the community<br />

throughout the year. Be ‘Fit to Fight’, be<br />

safe, remain connected and prosper.<br />

Australian Navy<br />

Commander Moses Raudino<br />

Senior ADF Officer in the NT and<br />

Commander HMAS Coonawarra<br />

4 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 5


Welcome to the North<br />

A very warm welcome to all Air Force<br />

personnel and their families posted to<br />

RAAF Base Darwin. <strong>The</strong> recent posting<br />

cycle has been like no other and for<br />

those who undertook a removal over<br />

the Christmas period, I thank you for<br />

your patience. <strong>The</strong> Northern Territory<br />

is very proud of its impeccable record<br />

for COVID-19 management; we have<br />

enjoyed freedoms beyond those of<br />

other states thanks to robust border<br />

controls and strong community<br />

compliance. You are now part of this<br />

community, and I’ve every confidence<br />

you will see why so many people love<br />

the Northern Territory.<br />

Some of you may not have been to the<br />

Northern Territory before or<br />

considered Darwin as a preferred<br />

posting location. Rest assured, you’re<br />

not alone. Many Air Force members<br />

come to Darwin with apprehension<br />

about the climate, distance from major<br />

cities on the east coast and flying time<br />

to see family. In almost every case,<br />

these members depart Darwin at the<br />

end of their posting having thoroughly<br />

enjoyed their time here, many wishing<br />

they could have stayed longer to<br />

complete their ‘Northern Territory<br />

bucket list’.<br />

During your posting you will have<br />

opportunities to explore a very<br />

distinctive part of Australia, and learn<br />

about rich indigenous cultures in the<br />

region. For those who enjoy activities<br />

close to the city, the Mindil Beach<br />

Sunset Markets and Parap Markets offer<br />

an excellent opportunity to experience<br />

the diverse multicultural aspects of<br />

Darwin. You will also find shopping,<br />

schooling and employment<br />

opportunities are comparable with<br />

many larger cities.<br />

I encourage you to visit many of the<br />

unique destinations within driving<br />

distance from Darwin, including Kakadu<br />

National Park, Litchfield National Park<br />

and Katherine Gorge. You will see<br />

firsthand the rich indigenous history at<br />

each site and there are many more<br />

opportunities for you to learn about<br />

various local indigenous cultures during<br />

your stay. Whether you have a small<br />

car or fully-equipped four-wheel drive,<br />

you will find plenty to see and do.<br />

Some planning is required to make the<br />

most of your posting, as many of the<br />

Northern Territory’s best destinations<br />

are seasonal and the peak recreation<br />

season usually coincides with our peak<br />

exercise periods.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a diverse range of units<br />

permanently stationed on RAAF Base<br />

Darwin, including 13 Squadron, 114<br />

Mobile Control and Reporting Unit,<br />

Headquarters 452 Squadron, 452<br />

Squadron Detachment Darwin, 2<br />

Security Force, 2 Expeditionary Health<br />

Squadron, Estate and Infrastructure<br />

Group and Chief Information Officer<br />

Group. RAAF Base Darwin also hosts a<br />

six-month deployment of United States<br />

Marine Corps personnel and their<br />

aircraft under the United States Force<br />

Posture Initiative.<br />

RAAF Darwin is a relatively small base<br />

by east coast standards, though finds<br />

itself at the forefront of activities<br />

pertinent to Australia’s national<br />

interests. Each unit on RAAF Darwin<br />

plays a crucial role to the capability of<br />

the base and every one of you makes<br />

an essential contribution. Through<br />

2020, RAAF Darwin assisted the<br />

movement of troops in support of<br />

bushfire relief efforts, conducted<br />

international engagement activities and<br />

received many Australians repatriating<br />

from abroad due to the COVID-19<br />

pandemic.<br />

<strong>2021</strong> will be an equally busy year, with<br />

the earlier arrival of the Marine<br />

Rotation Force Darwin due to<br />

quarantine requirements and Exercise<br />

Talisman Sabre being held in northern<br />

Australia this year. Importantly, <strong>2021</strong><br />

marks the 100th birthday of the RAAF<br />

and many activities are scheduled to<br />

commemorate this important<br />

milestone. I encourage you to<br />

participate in Air Force <strong>2021</strong> events<br />

and involve family and friends where<br />

possible.<br />

Darwin has strong links with Defence<br />

pre-dating World War Two, and you<br />

will notice high levels of public support<br />

towards Defence personnel. Many<br />

Australians are well versed in events<br />

surrounding the attack on Pearl<br />

Harbour, however, have little<br />

knowledge of the Bombing of Darwin<br />

executed by the same strike force.<br />

Some buildings on RAAF Darwin still<br />

bear scars from World War Two, along<br />

with other sites in the Darwin area.<br />

Your posting presents a great<br />

opportunity to better understand our<br />

military history, and to be proud the<br />

contribution the RAAF has, and<br />

continues, to provide in support of<br />

Australia’s national interests.<br />

You will find a strong sense of<br />

community within all Defence<br />

establishments in the Northern<br />

Territory, and RAAF Darwin is no<br />

exception. If you are having any<br />

difficulties following your recent move,<br />

please do not hesitate to contact your<br />

unit, the Defence Community<br />

Organisation, or any of the other ADF<br />

Community Groups or forums in the<br />

area. Remember you are not alone, and<br />

we are here to ensure your posting in<br />

Darwin is enjoyable.<br />

Welcome to RAAF Darwin!<br />

Australian Air Force<br />

Wing Commander Andrew Anthony<br />

Senior ADF Officer RAAF Base Darwin and<br />

Commanding Officer Number 13 Squadron<br />

I would like to take this opportunity to<br />

welcome our uniformed and civilian<br />

Defence members and their families<br />

posted to RAAF Base Tindal in <strong>2021</strong>. I<br />

also welcome back the Team Tindal<br />

members and families returning from<br />

2020 and trust you had a happy and<br />

restful Christmas/new year break. I would<br />

also like to recognise the large body of<br />

contracted workforces we have at Tindal<br />

and the key role they play in developing<br />

and maintaining the bases estate and<br />

infrastructure. <strong>The</strong> numbers of<br />

contractors will increase as project works<br />

commence, and I welcome you as part of<br />

our community.<br />

If this is your first venture into the<br />

Katherine region and/or Northern<br />

Territory, I encourage you to take the<br />

time to look around and discover all that<br />

is at our doorstep – it is truly an amazing<br />

part of the world. <strong>The</strong> regional tourist<br />

opportunities include Nitimuk National<br />

Park with thirteen stunning gorges,<br />

Mataranka and Katherine Hot Springs, and<br />

the internationally renowned Litchfield<br />

and Kakadu National Parks. However, this<br />

is just a taste of the many natural<br />

attractions that could take years to<br />

discover.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Katherine region has a strong<br />

community feel with many opportunities<br />

to engage in the towns’ sporting and<br />

social clubs and organisations, and the<br />

Tindal Community strongly supports and<br />

benefits from these important local<br />

entities. Participation in the local sporting<br />

and club activities will also assist in your<br />

transition into the Territory way of life. I<br />

would like to thank the Katherine Region<br />

for your strong ongoing support to RAAF<br />

Tindal and its personnel over more than<br />

30 years of the bases existence as an<br />

operational base.<br />

<strong>The</strong> base here at Tindal remains the last<br />

of the traditional Air Force bases due to<br />

its large composition of nearly 550<br />

uniformed personnel. <strong>The</strong> airbase itself<br />

celebrates over 30 years of ongoing<br />

support primarily to the F/A-18 Classic<br />

Hornet, but far greater is the bases ability<br />

to generate large-scale operations and<br />

exercises. As with all Airbases across<br />

Australia, RAAF Tindal could not survive<br />

without the provision of multiple<br />

capabilities. <strong>The</strong>se capabilities are<br />

provided by either larger Squadrons such<br />

as 17SQN and 75SQN; or smaller<br />

detachments like 452SQN (Air Traffic), 2<br />

Expeditionary Health Squadron, 2<br />

Security Forces Squadron, 2 Squadron,<br />

Estate and infrastructure Group and Chief<br />

Information Officer Group – just to name<br />

a few of over 10 detachments living at<br />

the base and working together to support<br />

the generation of Air Power. In addition<br />

to this is the solid contractor support<br />

network including Ventia and Wilson<br />

Security. Together we form Team Tindal,<br />

a diverse and effective team that<br />

consistently provides strong contribution<br />

to Defence operations, disaster relief and<br />

major exercises supporting both domestic<br />

and international partners across the <strong>Top</strong><br />

End.<br />

We are at the start line of a very exciting<br />

time for RAAF Tindal. Over the next 7<br />

years, this base will see a transformation<br />

from a fast jet operational base to a truly<br />

multi-role airbase, capable of projecting<br />

large-scale, multifaceted defence effects in<br />

support of Australia’s interests. You will<br />

witness major facilities and project work<br />

take place during your tenure as the base<br />

transitions into a significant defence asset<br />

and capability for the projection of Air<br />

Power. It is an exciting time to be part of<br />

Team Tindal.<br />

<strong>2021</strong> will be yet another busy year with<br />

Exercise Talisman Sabre 21 being the<br />

premier large-scale activity, and multiple<br />

medium scale Australian and international<br />

engagement exercise periods throughout<br />

the year. While these will be surge<br />

periods, please take the time to enjoy the<br />

activities our Tindal Community has to<br />

offer. <strong>The</strong> base boasts impressive<br />

sporting facilities, such as sporting ovals,<br />

gym and a newly refurbished and reopened<br />

swimming complex. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

facilities house several sporting teams like<br />

the Tindal Magpies Sporting Association,<br />

which is home to football, netball, softball<br />

and rugby teams. During the dry season,<br />

the outdoor Moonlit Cinema is a great<br />

opportunity to grab a picnic (or sausage<br />

in bread) and take in a movie under the<br />

stars with friends and family.<br />

Tindal’s community support program is<br />

largely driven by the Network Tindal<br />

organisation and its newsletter – “<strong>The</strong><br />

Tindal Community Times”. <strong>The</strong><br />

community operates from the recently<br />

opened Community Centre, which has<br />

many and varied activities, arts and crafts<br />

for the whole Tindal community, with<br />

activities for all ages.<br />

Most importantly though, if there is one<br />

thing I really want you to remember, it’s<br />

this; you are not alone during your Tindal<br />

posting. <strong>The</strong> Base has multiple support<br />

agencies to help you. Along with the<br />

Network Tindal, the base also offers<br />

support via the Base Chaplains and<br />

Defence Community Organisation – all<br />

residing in location to support and assist<br />

you and your families. Please make the<br />

time to introduce yourselves, as these<br />

organisations are central to the<br />

experience you will have whilst on your<br />

Tindal posting.<br />

Air Force 100th Anniversary<br />

31 <strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong>, marks 100 years of<br />

service that the Royal Australian Air<br />

Force has given to the nation. It is a time<br />

for us to reflect on the things achieved<br />

and be proud of who we are. It is also a<br />

time to look forward and play our part in<br />

developing the Air Force of the future.<br />

Please join me in marking this milestone<br />

in our history through several base and<br />

Katherine events held this year.<br />

Lastly, I say – A big welcome to Katherine<br />

and I sincerely hope that you enjoy your<br />

time here in the Northern Territory.<br />

Australian Air Force<br />

Wing Commander Shane Smith<br />

Senior ADF Officer RAAF Base Tindal<br />

6 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 7


Joel Bowden<br />

A warm welcome to our<br />

relocating Defencepersonnel.<br />

A big Territory welcome to all<br />

Defence personnel across Army, Navy<br />

and Air Force who have joined us in<br />

Darwin and Palmerston with their<br />

families. I have no doubt that you will<br />

find your experiences in the <strong>Top</strong> End<br />

enriching and I congratulate you<br />

on the next stage of your journey as<br />

you serve our country with pride.<br />

I wanted to reach out and introduce<br />

myself to you as your Federal<br />

Member in Australian Parliament for<br />

Solomon, representing Darwin and<br />

Palmerston. My electorate is<br />

regarded as a Defence Force town<br />

with more than 12,000 serving ADF<br />

members and their families living in the<br />

Northern Territory. Like you, I served<br />

in the Australian Defence Force for 13<br />

years, with the Parachute Infantry,<br />

Commandos and the Defence<br />

Cooperation Program in Timor-Leste. I<br />

also had the opportunity to work<br />

abroad in Afghanistan and other<br />

countries.<br />

I was recently hosted onboard HMAS<br />

Ararat by Lieutenant Commander<br />

Martinussen and visited Larrakeyah<br />

Barracks with my colleague, Shadow<br />

Minister for Defence, Richard Marles. It<br />

was impressive to see the infrastructure<br />

upgrade works that are underway as<br />

part of the Larrakeyah Barracks<br />

Redevelopment Plan and I look forward<br />

to seeing the progress of the<br />

redevelopment throughout <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

As a proud veteran, I am incredibly<br />

passionate about the commitment and<br />

Luke Gosling<br />

contribution of our Defence Force to<br />

protect our nation and the sacrifice that<br />

you all make. I am always advocating for<br />

our veterans, current serving men and<br />

women and their families in National<br />

Parliament.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore, it’s important that relocating<br />

personnel are aware of who their local<br />

Federal representative is and where to<br />

find me should they need to raise any<br />

concerns or just have a cup of tea and<br />

a yarn. It’s always a real honour to<br />

catch up with those who are serving, to<br />

get a better sense of the demands of<br />

their jobs and to thank them for<br />

keeping our borders secure and our<br />

nation safe.<br />

I am aware that 2020 was a challenging<br />

year for everyone, so the achievements<br />

of Defence personnel and continuous<br />

support from the Defence community<br />

are a credit to you all — I thank each<br />

of you for your dedication and service.<br />

I know that the holiday period can also<br />

be a stressful time for many, so look<br />

after your families, colleagues and<br />

mates, and if you are concerned or<br />

facing hardship, don’t hesitate to seek<br />

support and advice through your<br />

command group, health service and/or<br />

DCO.<br />

I hope that you start the new year<br />

rested and refreshed, and to those who<br />

remained on watch, at sea and ashore,<br />

or on notice to respond, I thank you<br />

for your devotion to duty. Our<br />

community was able to relax and<br />

celebrate because you remained alert.<br />

Your wellbeing and that of your family<br />

is extremely important to me and I<br />

would encourage you to pop into<br />

our office in Casuarina (opposite<br />

KFC) at any time. My door is<br />

always open to you.<br />

2020 is done and dusted - have a<br />

great <strong>2021</strong> and I look forward to<br />

seeing you around the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

Luke Gosling MP<br />

Member for Solomon<br />

Luke Gosling is the Federal Member of<br />

Parliament for Darwin and Palmerston and<br />

served in the ADF for 13 years.<br />

Co-Chair Parliamentary Friends of Veterans<br />

Welcome to Darwin and the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

Darwin is great city for families and anyone who enjoys<br />

sunshine, beaches and our laid-back lifestyle.<br />

My wife and I moved back to the Northern Territory with<br />

our four children after a decade in Melbourne. We love it<br />

here in Darwin.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re’s a saying that ‘nothing in Darwin is more than 20<br />

minutes away’ and it’s almost true. <strong>The</strong>re are no traffic jams,<br />

no sitting in the car for an hour to commute to and from<br />

work every day. This gives you more time to see what our<br />

thriving multicultural community has to offer.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Nightcliff foreshore is a great space to enjoy Darwin’s<br />

natural beauty. <strong>The</strong>re are great spaces for people of all ages<br />

to enjoy the sunset - scenic walking tracks, cycle paths,<br />

playgrounds, exercise equipment, swimming pool, café and<br />

street food.<br />

Vendors selling culinary delights from across the globe are an<br />

iconic part of the Darwin lifestyle and along the foreshore<br />

each night there are many options available. A favourite for<br />

my family is the wood fired pizza. <strong>The</strong>re are tables set up<br />

under strings of lights or you can bring your own picnic set<br />

up and enjoy the evening. <strong>The</strong> City of Darwin website has a<br />

list of all the street food vendors and what nights they<br />

operate. https://www.darwin.nt.gov.au/street-food-vendor<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is nothing quite like our dry season, which provides<br />

perfect weather for our outdoor markets. Darwin and the<br />

<strong>Top</strong> End has a strong culture of outdoor markets, including<br />

Palmerston on Fridays, Parap on Saturdays, Mindil and<br />

Nightcliff on Sundays. But if you want to go where the locals<br />

go, its Rapid Creek on Sundays. <strong>The</strong> Rapid Creek Markets<br />

are bursting with life, offering everything from locally grown<br />

produce, handmade pastries, noodles, plants and freshsqueezed<br />

juices. Rapid Creek markets offer many South East<br />

Asian delights including laksa, pawpaw salad, Mie Goreng,<br />

Thai desserts and much more.<br />

We’re an active lot in Darwin and sport is high on our<br />

agenda. For a city with a relatively small population, we play<br />

an impressive range of sports. In Darwin, if you want to have<br />

a go at a sport, everyone is welcome. <strong>The</strong>re’s tennis, golf,<br />

rugby, league, soccer, swimming clubs, triathlon clubs, paddle<br />

boarding groups, athletics, dance schools, cycling and many<br />

more. AFL is extremely popular across the Territory, with<br />

many clubs offering great juniors' programs and adult teams.<br />

<strong>The</strong> NT Football League offers live games and great<br />

entertainment for football lovers and you might recognise a<br />

few familiar club names and colours.<br />

<strong>Top</strong> End locals are welcoming and people from all over the<br />

world have made this tropical city their home. I urge our<br />

newcomers to get out and enjoy everything on offer here.<br />

You’ll make new friends, love the lifestyle and find plenty to<br />

explore. Give it a go … you might find that you’ll stay here<br />

for good!<br />

Joel Bowden MP<br />

Member for Johnston<br />

Joel Bowden is also the General Secretary at<br />

Unions NT.<br />

8 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 9


<strong>The</strong> Best Job Ever!<br />

It required long, tedious hours, with no earnings. It was the<br />

most challenging time of my career. My obligation was to<br />

take as much worry away from my clients as possible. As<br />

much as I wish I were making sales instead of refunding trips,<br />

I had to do the right thing for my clients. My focus was<br />

directed at educating clients about their options to postpone<br />

rather than cancel so they could make the best decision for<br />

themselves. I made it 100% right for the needs of every<br />

client!<br />

As the world shut down, I went to work!<br />

Rewind to <strong>March</strong> 2020 (NO PLEASE DON’T), many<br />

travellers who “did their own travel booking online” would<br />

have heard a message like this “Your call is important to us.<br />

All our representatives are currently assisting other<br />

customers. Your estimated wait time is two to three hours.”<br />

When they were finally able to speak to a live person, in<br />

many cases, they were not offered much help.<br />

Did I have this message on my answer phone? NO – I was<br />

available 24/7<br />

What the pandemic has taught me is that having a<br />

professional travel manager help plan your trip has made<br />

Travel Agents more apparent.<br />

As a dedicated Travel agent, I worked tirelessly around the<br />

clock to get clients home safely, applied for refunds or<br />

credits for future travel and helped them rebook a future<br />

trip. I truly served as an advocate for them and did<br />

everything I could to help protect their travel investment.<br />

Despite the impact the coronavirus has had on the travel<br />

industry, I am remaining optimistic about the future of my<br />

business. I am focused on preparing for the surge in<br />

international travel requests as I know this will happen once<br />

my clients feel it is safer and international borders reopen. I<br />

know it will take some time for the travel industry to fully<br />

recover and travel will look a little bit different, but I know<br />

that travel agents will play a significant role in the industry’s<br />

resurgence.<br />

With guidelines and policies fluctuating for suppliers and<br />

travel destinations on an almost daily basis, it can be a lot to<br />

process by yourself. Travel agents will be the key to helping<br />

travellers navigate this new world and provide guidance on<br />

safe destinations and tourist activities. We are here for<br />

clients who want to know that they will be safe when they<br />

travel. It is our mission to ensure everything is in place,<br />

protected and safe for every one of our clients. When things<br />

don’t go to plan, you have someone advocating on your<br />

behalf to protect your travel investment.<br />

I still feel I have the best job ever, even with the curveball’s<br />

thrown in the mix throughout 2020! Please contact me with<br />

any questions – I am truly here to help you safely navigate<br />

your next journey!<br />

Bon Voyage for now!<br />

Andrew J McFarlane<br />

Director, AJM Global Journeys<br />

Broome<br />

Where the Outback Meets the Ocean<br />

People visit Broome for many reasons. For<br />

some it is the gateway to the Kimberley’s or<br />

the starting point on a drive along the<br />

famous Gibb River Road. For others it is the<br />

perfect Dry Season Beachside Holiday<br />

Destination.<br />

I visited Broome last Dry Season, so I highly<br />

recommend these <strong>Top</strong>10 things to see and<br />

do while you’re there.<br />

Ready to book?<br />

Both Qantas & Airnorth fly to Broome<br />

regularly. Contact me to talk all things<br />

Broome for your next RLLT Holiday<br />

Package!<br />

TOP 10 THINGS TO SEE AND DO<br />

Spend time on Cable Beach, whether it’s a run, walk, SUP, Camel ride or<br />

simply a Coldie enjoying the spectacular sunset<br />

Explore China Town, the heart & soul of Broome. It is a dining and retail hub<br />

See the history of the Pearl Luggers<br />

Go to the movies, the oldest outdoor theatre in the world<br />

Shop at the Courthouse local markets<br />

Have a Matso’s (alcoholic) Ginger Beer at Matso’s Brewer (Yum!)<br />

Visit Willy Creek a fascinating insight to the pearling industry<br />

Bon Voyage for now!<br />

Andrew J McFarlane<br />

Director, AJM Global Journeys<br />

Take a trip to Horizontal Falls<br />

See Cape Levique, the northernmost tip of the Dampier Peninsula, it’s<br />

a big day however well worth it!<br />

See the Stairway to the Moon when the tide is at its lowest and there is a full moon<br />

10 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 11


Tales of a <strong>Top</strong> End Mum<br />

Part 2<br />

<strong>The</strong> stress of arriving in Tindal was worth it, even<br />

though my forehead now resembles a highly<br />

anxious Shar Pei. We resolved the hire car issue that was<br />

originally booked in my 2 year old’s name and convinced our<br />

case manager we wouldn’t fit our family of 5 (plus luggage)<br />

into a sedan. We endured the (almost) 1-bedroom<br />

quarantine from hell, which turned into a pretty delightful 2-<br />

bedroom apartment quarantine and finally no longer needed<br />

to spend our days trying to contact our rarely available case<br />

manager. But, we all survived, despite what felt like anything<br />

and everything that could go wrong during our move to the<br />

<strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

So... As I write this, I am settled but already ‘husbandless’ -<br />

sigh. Only 3 weeks into our relocation, he was sent off as<br />

part of the Covid Taskforce. I waved goodbye with a<br />

grimace, completely unaware of my underarm rash caused<br />

solely by an excess of sweat, then stepped into survival<br />

mode like a Boss Lady... and I mean; ‘Serious Boss Lady<br />

Status’ was achieved that day. No tears, just a camouflage<br />

headband and red lipstick. I was determined not to lock<br />

ourselves inside craving social interaction, so with a nervous<br />

smile and a dirty sweat moustache that screamed ‘I live in<br />

Tindal now’, I packed up my kids and started exploring what<br />

the local Tindal community has to offer. I found sanctuary at<br />

the park only 100m away from our house with its enormous<br />

shade, the sparkling pool and the welcoming vibes of the<br />

Community House. We all got involved at Playgroup and<br />

Music Time, meeting so many new friends through our<br />

adventures and started to feel ‘at home’.<br />

whinging baby crickets. That’s how many it felt like there<br />

were! Here in <strong>Top</strong>sy Turvy Town (otherwise known as<br />

Tindal), the birds never sleep and the bats are still flying<br />

around with an imagined sense of purpose at 8am. Weird,<br />

but ok Tindal, I accept you for who you are. I’ll save my<br />

complaining about the vampire flies and mosquitos for next<br />

time.<br />

Thanks to the epic storms, we have endured 2 blackouts in<br />

our 10 weeks here, the second blackout lasting 4 sweaty<br />

hours. Crowning myself as ‘Mother of the Year 2020’, I<br />

alternated from one child to the next child, fanning them<br />

with a giant piece of cardboard (embellished with stickers<br />

and texta, of course) to try and help cool them to sleep. No<br />

joy. <strong>The</strong> solution? Lots of cool showers, sips of iced water,<br />

icepacks to cuddle and a fairly relaxed text message to my<br />

husband that we should definitely invest in a 2100 kVA<br />

generator or battery-operated ice room for situations like<br />

these.<br />

Christmas shopping in Tindal can be a bit of<br />

a nightmare for busy mum’s like me because<br />

there’s barely anywhere to buy gifts. But, if you run<br />

out of time to plan ahead and order gifts online, you can<br />

still make it work. I’m happy to report that Katherine has<br />

a Mini Target, a discount store, Newsagency, Post<br />

Office and even a Pharmacy that has a few little<br />

surprises to pull you through. In saying that, my kids are<br />

little enough that they would be happy with a jar of<br />

olives, pack of stickers, and an endless supply of pickles. I<br />

don’t know how their taste buds developed like that,<br />

they just did - ok?<br />

As for my <strong>2021</strong> goals – Visit Katherine Gorge in the dry<br />

season, publish my children’s book, write an actual novel<br />

and FINALLY get to visit interstate family.<br />

I’m still #teamtindal, but I have one main complaint -<br />

I’ve still only seen one dingo!<br />

Written by Katie B.<br />

Community Contributor<br />

I managed to visit the Mataranka thermal pool before the<br />

frequent monsoonal rains raised the water level to<br />

dangerous heights. Words can’t describe the serene beauty it<br />

offers. <strong>The</strong> crystal water, the vibrant shrubs and the<br />

precautionary check to make sure there are no crocodiles<br />

lurking. <strong>The</strong>re isn’t, it’s fine, but I’m still terrified of any water<br />

that isn’t the pool on base.<br />

It seems that we are now entering a different stage of the<br />

wet season. Torrential rain brought out an abundance of<br />

crickets at one point. I can’t really find the words to describe<br />

just how many there were, but imagine if every cricket in the<br />

world met in Tindal for the ‘Annual Cricket Chirping<br />

Competition’ accompanied by every single one of their 683<br />

Family - Katie B.<br />

I’m becoming more ‘Tindalised’ as time goes on. My blow<br />

dryer has taken a long holiday and I no longer care if I get<br />

rained on because it washes away my sweat. I walk<br />

everywhere, despite looking like I’ve just survived 5 rounds of<br />

a WWE match and thankfully, we asked for a car fridge for<br />

Christmas – Hallelujah, A CAR FRIDGE! I’m a city slicker,<br />

remember? We don’t usually cruise around with car<br />

fridges.....Eeeek!<br />

Celebrating over 30 years of quality Christian Education in Palmerston<br />

08 7922 5600<br />

www.pcs.nt.edu.au<br />

12 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 13


E AS TE R<br />

C OMP E TI T I ON<br />

..<br />

.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Easter Bunny needs your help!<br />

He’s lost his easter eggs throughout the magazine.<br />

Find all the Easter eggs and you could win a very<br />

chocolatey hamper from<br />

Pure Indulgence Fine Chocolates.<br />

Email us the total number of Easter Eggs you’ve found<br />

by close of business <strong>March</strong> 4 th <strong>2021</strong>. Open to all ages!<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

14 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 15


From your Delegate<br />

Moving Towards Improved Wellbeing<br />

2020 was anything but an ordinary year and <strong>2021</strong><br />

provides the perfect opportunity to take steps to<br />

improve our mental and physical wellbeing.<br />

Setting Good Habits<br />

When we talk about habits, one thing is clear: not all<br />

habits are good. But, just like bad habits have the<br />

potential to significantly impact our lives in a negative<br />

way, good habits can lead us towards a happy, healthy<br />

and successful life.<br />

Some tips to build good habits include:<br />

Start with small adjustments<br />

Be positive<br />

Commit to your decisions<br />

Create a plan to succeed<br />

number of 386 events nationally. Here in the <strong>Top</strong> End,<br />

the fantastic range of events promoting Social<br />

Connection included:<br />

• Darwin RSL’s Poppy Craft Mornings, Barefoot Lawn Bowls<br />

Competition, Curry Cooking Night and Poppy Planting<br />

and Remembrance Service<br />

• Veteran Sport Australia and Darwin Off Road Cyclists’<br />

Mountain Biking and BBQ<br />

• Veterans Australia NT Inc.’s Visit to the Darwin Military<br />

Museum, Bounce into the Build-up and Live Country<br />

Music and Bush Band<br />

• Palmerston RSL’s Parkrun<br />

• Mates4Mates’ Stand Up Paddle Boarding, Learn to Cook<br />

Thai, Clay Pottery Class, Go-Karting Family Fun Day<br />

• Robertson Barracks Family Group’s session on<br />

Recognising Mental Health Crises Through Social<br />

Connection and Positive Mental Health Connections<br />

Through <strong>The</strong>rapy Dogs<br />

• Larrakeyah Neighbourhood House’s Canapés With<br />

Friends and Dinner With Friends<br />

Firstly, to our new families - Welcome to the Northern<br />

Territory! I hope by the time this is published you are<br />

starting to find your way around this unique part of<br />

Australia.<br />

My name is Jessica, and I am the National Delegate for<br />

Defence Families of Australia - Northern Territory and<br />

Kimberley. I have been a Defence spouse since 2009<br />

and my family have undergone many postings since<br />

then, so we are familiar with the challenges of<br />

relocation, housing, schools and moving to the Territory.<br />

Defence Families of Australia (DFA) is the<br />

official government appointed advisory body<br />

representing the views of Australian Defence Force<br />

Families. Our role is to directly inform the Minister for<br />

Defence Personnel and the Chief of the Defence Force<br />

on issues affecting families.<br />

Keep up to date by following the DFA Northern<br />

Territory Facebook page. I regularly upload content<br />

that I think you will find relevant and engaging about<br />

life in the Northern Territory.<br />

https://www.facebook.com/DFANorthernTerritory/<br />

DFA Webinars<br />

We have received feedback from partners that they<br />

wanted to know more about Defence life – so we ran<br />

three webinars during <strong>March</strong> 2020, with one for each<br />

service.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se webinars looked at the first five years as an<br />

ADF partner. During this time, information was also<br />

provided on how COVID-19 and ADF operations was<br />

affecting families.<br />

To watch these recordings please visit the DFA<br />

website at: https://dfa.org.au/webinars-2/<br />

Please note, these were recorded in <strong>March</strong> 2020, so<br />

any COVID related information was relevant at the<br />

time the recordings were made.<br />

Build a routine<br />

Get support from family,<br />

friends and your community<br />

Celebrate your achievements<br />

along the way<br />

Invest time working on these strategies and let good<br />

habits help you to make the most out of life.<br />

Social Inclusion<br />

Good health isn’t just about physical activity and eating<br />

well, social inclusion is just as important as other healthy<br />

lifestyle choices.<br />

Loneliness and social isolation can have negative impacts<br />

on your physical and mental health, so investing in<br />

social inclusion and how we interact with the world<br />

around us can have positive effects on a healthy<br />

lifestyle. It can enhance our psychological well-being and<br />

improved health habits.<br />

Last year’s Veterans’ Health Week theme of Social<br />

Connection is one of the most important aspects of<br />

mental health and wellbeing, and 2020 showed us that it<br />

is more important than ever to remain connected with<br />

our families, friends and local communities.<br />

Despite all the challenges 2020 threw at us, last year’s<br />

Veterans’ Health Week was a great success, with a total<br />

• Network Tindal’s Ceramics Course, BBQ and Base Run/<br />

Walk<br />

• Australian Seniors Computer Clubs Association’s Tech<br />

Tune Up and Try Out<br />

In <strong>2021</strong>, I encourage you to take the opportunity to<br />

get out and about and become involved in our local<br />

community. Darwin and Katherine are friendly towns<br />

and if you are new, or looking for new ideas to become<br />

involved, there is plenty on offer. Community and<br />

sporting groups are always looking for new members so<br />

get out there and make those social connections. It’s<br />

great for your overall wellbeing!<br />

If you have any questions about entitlements you may<br />

be eligible for, transitioning from the ADF, or what<br />

veteran support services are available in your local area<br />

call DVA on 1800 VETERAN (1800 838 372).<br />

Meghan Bailey<br />

Deputy Commissioner, NT<br />

Department of Veterans’ Affairs<br />

<strong>The</strong> National Convenor of DFA is based in Canberra,<br />

and 8 National Delegates are formally appointed by the<br />

Minister for Defence Personnel. DFA advocates<br />

on issues which are brought to our attention by families,<br />

serving ADF members, Commanding Officers and<br />

Defence stakeholders. Through the DFA network, we<br />

are able to discuss issues concerning families at both<br />

regional and national levels, to seek clarification and<br />

resolution. Please contact DFA if you have been<br />

unsuccessful in resolving a concern through either your<br />

local relevant channels or national channels.<br />

Jessica Hanison<br />

NT Delegate<br />

DFA<br />

16 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 17


DCO National<br />

A New Name for DCO<br />

Defence Community<br />

Organisation - NT<br />

In 2020, we took the time to reflect<br />

on our purpose and vision for the<br />

future and we’re excited to<br />

announce that we will officially<br />

change our name from Defence<br />

Community Organisation (DCO) to<br />

Defence Member and Family<br />

Support (DMFS) from 1 July <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

DCO was formed in 1996 when the<br />

three Services’ family support<br />

organisations were brought<br />

together. Since then, DCO has<br />

grown to have a nation-wide<br />

presence with on-the-ground<br />

services delivered from local area<br />

offices and ADF transition centres.<br />

It’s important that Defence<br />

members and their families see<br />

DCO’s services as something<br />

accessible to them as part of their<br />

community. Recently we’ve received<br />

some feedback that families may<br />

think DCO is not part of Defence<br />

and that our programs and services<br />

are not available to them.<br />

To overcome that misconception,<br />

we undertook staff and stakeholder<br />

consultation last year, within<br />

Defence and also with Defence<br />

Families of Australia, the<br />

Department of Veterans’ Affairs and<br />

a number of ex-service<br />

organisations. This consultation<br />

helped us develop a new name that<br />

people could look at or hear and<br />

immediately know what we do and<br />

who we do it for.<br />

So what does this name<br />

change mean for families?<br />

<strong>The</strong>re will be no changes to the<br />

services we currently provide to<br />

Defence families. <strong>The</strong> local area<br />

offices around Australia will remain<br />

and there will be no changes to the<br />

Defence Family Helpline number<br />

1800 624 608 or email.<br />

Leading up to the change, you’ll<br />

start to see DMFS increasingly used<br />

so by 1 July <strong>2021</strong>, there won’t be<br />

any surprises. Families can expect to<br />

see a couple of changes online as<br />

we update our factsheets, guides,<br />

forms and office email addresses to<br />

reflect our new name. Families can<br />

also expect to see name changes to<br />

our social media channels,<br />

(Facebook, Instagram and Twitter),<br />

our Google business listings and on<br />

ForceNet.<br />

So when will the name<br />

change formally take<br />

place?<br />

We have selected 1st July <strong>2021</strong> to<br />

officially change our name because it<br />

coincides with DCO’s 25th<br />

anniversary. This is a chance to look<br />

back on where we’ve come from,<br />

where we are and where we are<br />

going in the future.<br />

Defence Community Organisation’s NT<br />

team hope that December and January<br />

treated you all kindly and that, as you<br />

settle into your <strong>2021</strong> routine, you take<br />

the time to check out the great activities<br />

and resources available to you.<br />

In addition to the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong>, the Off<br />

the Leash magazine and website https://<br />

www.offtheleash.net.au/ is also a great<br />

guide to what's on across the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

It has something for everyone – local<br />

gigs, book and film reviews, youth<br />

activities, what’s happening in the Arts<br />

scene.<br />

For those with small children, do not<br />

underestimate the wonderful air<br />

conditioned libraries, or the activity<br />

room at the museum. <strong>The</strong> cinemas also<br />

provide a wonderful retreat and the<br />

Wave Pool is fun for big and little kids<br />

alike. A number of sports will be up and<br />

running in late January. For those new<br />

to Darwin, yes AFL is a wet season<br />

sport; cricket is a dry season sport; and<br />

all sports and community groups are<br />

always looking for new players, officials<br />

DCO<br />

defence.gov.au/dco<br />

defence.gov.au/DCO/Family/Partners/PEAP<br />

and volunteers alike. A big plus in<br />

Darwin and Katherine is that you will<br />

never get caught in that traffic snarl as<br />

you are in transit from one activity to<br />

another –access is easy. <strong>The</strong> School<br />

Sports Vouchers are also a great way for<br />

families to be introduced to new sports<br />

or activities.<br />

Defence Community Organisation’s NT<br />

team look forward to meeting new to<br />

and returning Darwin and Katherine<br />

ADF members and their families at our<br />

<strong>February</strong> and <strong>March</strong> activities, plus<br />

reconnecting with those who are in their<br />

second, third or additional years in the<br />

NT. You will see us at meet and greets<br />

and unit welcomes; plus at the<br />

community groups – Network Tindal,<br />

Robertson Barracks Family Group, and<br />

Larrakeyah Neighbourhood House.<br />

Please take the time to come and chat,<br />

and we can connect you with your local<br />

community and services, or just reach<br />

out.<br />

Defence Community Organisation’s<br />

Defence Family Helpline is the best way<br />

to access the programs and services that<br />

we offer to help Defence families<br />

manage the military way of life. <strong>The</strong><br />

Helpline is staffed by qualified human<br />

services professionals including social<br />

workers and psychologists and provides<br />

advice, referrals and local community<br />

information. <strong>The</strong> Defence Family<br />

Helpline can be contacted 24/7 on 1800<br />

624 608 or via email<br />

defencefamilyhelpline@defence.gov.au.<br />

See our website<br />

www.defence.gov.au/dco for more<br />

information about local events and<br />

activities or follow Defence Community<br />

Organisation on social media to stay upto-date<br />

with news and events for<br />

members and their families in the NT.<br />

Again, from myself and the DCO NT<br />

team, welcome to the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

Di Elson<br />

Area Manager<br />

DCO, NT Team<br />

CONNECT WITH DEFENCE COMMUNITY ORGANISATION<br />

Defence Family Helpline<br />

1800 624 608<br />

defencefamilyhelpline@defence.gov.au<br />

Stay tuned for updates on our social<br />

media channels, - we’re really<br />

excited to start this new chapter<br />

supporting Defence members and<br />

their families!<br />

Hello from the DCO NT team!<br />

Welcome back! We hope you all had an enjoyable break.<br />

To all the new families, a huge welcome to the Northern<br />

Territory from the Defence Community Organisation NT<br />

team! We have some exciting events and activities<br />

planned for <strong>2021</strong>, with something for everyone. Follow us<br />

on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or ForceNet for up to<br />

date event information and links to tickets. You can also<br />

find out what events are coming up by checking out the<br />

national events calendar on our website https://<br />

www.defence.gov.au/dco<br />

Are you looking for work and want to<br />

become job-ready?<br />

initiatives to assist ADF partners become job ready. We’ve<br />

extended the eligibility criteria to all ADF partners, so you can<br />

apply for PEAP if you’ve been in location a while and your<br />

employment circumstances have changed, or if you’re looking<br />

to get back into the workforce. You don’t have to wait until<br />

your next posting, or if your ADF member is medically<br />

transitioning to be eligible.<br />

You can find a range of information and resources about PEAP<br />

on the DCO website. Visit the PEAP webpage on https://<br />

www.defence.gov.au/DCO/Family/Partners/PEAP.asp for more<br />

information or to download the factsheets, guidelines or<br />

application forms.<br />

Sukhjot Kahlon<br />

Each year, Defence Community Organisation DCO hosts events around the<br />

country to welcome families to their new location. <strong>The</strong> Palmerston family<br />

attended the Canberra event held at Royal Military College Duntroon.<br />

Photo by Corporal Kylie Gibson<br />

Our Partner Employment Assistance Program (PEAP)<br />

provides up to $1,500 funding towards employment-related<br />

Family Liaison Officer, Darwin<br />

DCO, NT Team<br />

18 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 19


Robertson Barracks<br />

Family Group<br />

Over the last 5 months, the Robertson Barracks Family<br />

Group centre has been under renovation. During this<br />

time, we have made the most of what Darwin has to<br />

offer by heading out to catch up each week. <strong>The</strong><br />

opportunity to venture out to different coffee shops,<br />

play centres and parks has been warmly welcomed and<br />

it has been a great opportunity to support local<br />

businesses as well.<br />

Unfortunately, without our usual space, we have had to<br />

postpone quite a few activities, however we are able to<br />

now add these activities to our <strong>2021</strong> plan! Everyone on<br />

the RBFG committee are looking forward to reopening<br />

our centre in late January. Throughout <strong>2021</strong>,<br />

we will have a few of our usual sessions returning each<br />

week and we have some new and really exciting things<br />

coming! Our Monday coffee & cake will be back, as well<br />

as Friday playgroup and lunch and dinner catch ups. A<br />

few NEW sessions we will be organising include sensory<br />

play, nature-based sessions and.......... LEGO CLUB! We<br />

cannot wait!<br />

Our kids club bunch (ages 6-12) were able to utilise<br />

the amazing Salvation Army building at Roberston<br />

Barracks to hang out and use the table tennis table, air<br />

hockey table, board games and tv’s. <strong>The</strong>y also met up at<br />

Flip Out, where they had a stack of fun and it was a<br />

lovely opportunity for parents to catch up as well. We<br />

look forward to running more of these sessions in <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

Our little play-groupers, (ages 0-5) have been loving all<br />

the adventures off base with their friends, attending<br />

Adventureland, the Play Shack, the Jape Markets indoor<br />

playground and so many more activities during the last<br />

school term of 2020. We finished off with a bang,<br />

where we hosted our annual Christmas party! We were<br />

lucky enough to have face painting by our favourite<br />

fairy, a bouncing castle, a beautiful Christmas craft<br />

activity by Playgroup NT and a visit from Santa! Santa<br />

brought beautiful books for every child and it was a<br />

wonderful morning to share with all of our Robbo<br />

families! Thank you so much Santa for visiting us and<br />

making our morning extra special!<br />

In October, DVA held their annual Veterans Health<br />

Week and with their support, RBFG were able to host 3<br />

VHW activities. Thank you to Lauren Keys for running a<br />

fantastic mental health session, it was very informative<br />

and there were some great ideas and strategies to help<br />

and support others in<br />

need. We also held two<br />

‘Mind your Paws’ dog<br />

therapy sessions, this was<br />

a great opportunity to<br />

chat with one another and<br />

make social connections<br />

with the 2 gorgeous dogs,<br />

Harlow and Scout. Kristy<br />

does amazing work with her pair of 4 legged friends in<br />

our community and it was a pleasure to be able to have<br />

her come in and support us for these sessions!<br />

After a challenging year for all Defence families, RBFG<br />

felt it were fitting to host an end of year cocktail event<br />

at the Landmark in Palmerston. It was a great night with<br />

delicious food and drinks, and we mustn’t forget our<br />

generous lucky door prize of a $150 spa voucher, which<br />

was kindly donated by the Australian Military Bank.<br />

Thank you everyone who attended, we look forward to<br />

hosting more of these events throughout <strong>2021</strong>!<br />

<strong>The</strong> Robertson Barracks Family Group<br />

support all defence members, families and<br />

spouses from the Tri-services. We offer a<br />

range of social activities for children and<br />

adults. Please feel free to head over to our<br />

Facebook group Robertson Barracks Family<br />

Group for all event information or email<br />

robertsonbarracksfamilygroup@gmail.com<br />

and we will assist you.<br />

We hope you had a safe and<br />

wonderful Christmas break,<br />

and we look forward to<br />

meeting you in <strong>2021</strong>!<br />

Samantha Maloney<br />

Centre Coordinator<br />

RBFG<br />

Larrakeyah Neighbourhood<br />

House<br />

<strong>The</strong> past few months have been filled to the brim<br />

with our Christmas activities! It was wonderful to<br />

see everyone who came along to these events,<br />

enjoying the Christmas festivities.<br />

I am the Community Support Coordinator for the<br />

Larrakeyah Neighbourhood House. My family and I<br />

have been living in Darwin for the past three years<br />

and we are loving all the amazing things Darwin has<br />

to offer! I have been in the role for more than a<br />

year and have enjoyed meeting so many amazing<br />

Defence families, as well as watching other families<br />

make new connections that grow to become lifelong<br />

friendships.<br />

Many of our amazing families are preparing to<br />

leave Darwin and we wish them every happiness in<br />

their new location and hope that new adventures<br />

will be even better than life in the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

If you are new to the <strong>Top</strong> End this year -<br />

welcome! We hope that your experience in<br />

Darwin will be filled with many exciting adventures<br />

and you find plenty of opportunities to make some<br />

amazing lifelong friends. My advice to you would<br />

be to get out and try to attend as many of the<br />

wonderful events and programs that our Defence<br />

community has to offer - it has been a great help<br />

to me and my family. Make sure you also join all<br />

of the local Facebook groups to ensure that you<br />

stay up to date with the latest information.<br />

Our programs and activities are designed to help<br />

all members of your family settle into their new<br />

location, engage with other families and embrace<br />

life in the <strong>Top</strong> End. We offer a weekly program<br />

including Bumps & Bubs, Playgroup, Yoga for<br />

beginners, Coffee catch ups and Kids Club. Our<br />

monthly events may also include Ladies Nights,<br />

luncheons and craft nights, plus we even run<br />

special six-week programs, such as; Introduction to<br />

Pilates, Self Defence and Drama classes. Our<br />

Community House also organises special<br />

events throughout the year, including;<br />

Australia Day, Easter Celebrations, Children’s<br />

week, First Aid courses and our Annual<br />

Christmas Party. Our goal for <strong>2021</strong> is to<br />

continue organising fun and engaging activities<br />

for the whole family to enjoy, with the<br />

possibility of some new and exciting initiatives<br />

that we look forward to sharing with you!<br />

www.larrakeyahhouse.com.au<br />

larrakeyahhouse@hotmail.com<br />

We kickstart every year<br />

with our ‘Australia Day<br />

Welcome to the <strong>Top</strong> End’<br />

event. This year’s event was<br />

slightly different with some<br />

exciting changes and we hope you<br />

were able to enjoy the day with<br />

us!<br />

We look forward to welcoming<br />

you to the Larrakeyah<br />

Neighbourhood House very soon.<br />

Charné Saunders<br />

Centre Coordinator<br />

LNH<br />

20 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 21


What a year it has been!<br />

Network Tindal<br />

We finally took ownership over the beautiful Community<br />

House and had started opening it up for community groups<br />

and events. Playgroups, book club and gamers had only met<br />

a handful of times before COVID hit, which saw the closure<br />

of our house and a big pause placed on our events.<br />

Just at the time our community needed the most support<br />

and connection, we weren’t able to give it to them. It was<br />

time to think differently and to connect virtually. Book club<br />

met via zoom, and so did the gamers!<br />

Yoshi, our previous Community Coordinator, worked<br />

tirelessly to make take home packs for important<br />

community events like Mothers’ Day, ANZAC Day and<br />

Easter. <strong>The</strong>se were well received and appreciated by a<br />

community that had children home from school, adults<br />

trying to work from home and families separated by<br />

lockdowns and borders.<br />

Tindal was unique in that we had members return from<br />

operations and exercises and then placed in quarantine –<br />

we delivered boredom buster packages and our Facebook<br />

page was flooded with offers of assistance and puzzle swaps!<br />

Upon the easing of restrictions, we celebrated with a huge<br />

community event – the COVID welfare committee ensuring<br />

that we all had a great time!<br />

Upon return to our new normal, the Community House reopened<br />

and has become a hub for activities as well as a<br />

popular venue for children’s birthday parties and now, end<br />

of year events.<br />

We now regularly have the following community groups<br />

utilising the house: playgroups, music and dance, after school<br />

drop ins, gamers, book club, boot camp and crafters.<br />

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank the volunteer<br />

coordinators for the work they put into these events. We<br />

are now also opening the house on a Sunday morning,<br />

which has proven to be popular .<br />

We have had the opportunity to<br />

apply for and receive some grant<br />

funding that has allowed us to run<br />

a self-care course and a ceramics<br />

course as part of Veteran’s Health<br />

Week as well as a base-wide BBQ<br />

too.<br />

We have benefited from<br />

partnering with Debbie Marshall<br />

(our DCO Family Liaison Officer)<br />

and Patricia Thompson (our RAAF Indigenous Liaison<br />

Officer) to run our first school holiday program – which was<br />

hugely popular and well attended. We look forward to<br />

being able to support our community in this way again in<br />

<strong>2021</strong>.<br />

Yoshi, our Community Coordinator resigned in September<br />

and left big shoes to fill. We ran a recruitment process<br />

which yielded no applicants, so the committee decided to<br />

re-advertise the position in January when new people have<br />

posted in. In the meantime, I stepped down from my role as<br />

Chairperson and have been working as the Community<br />

Coordinator for 10 hours per week. Thank you to our<br />

amazing group volunteers who continue to open the house<br />

and provide opportunities for our community to connect..<br />

Moving into <strong>2021</strong>, we are excited to meet new members<br />

and their families and look forward to supporting their<br />

transition to Tindal. We will have a significant focus on<br />

supporting our community members who may be in LIA,<br />

posted unaccompanied or are part of our Veteran<br />

community. We would love to hear your ideas to help<br />

accomplish this!<br />

Good luck and best wishes if you are posting out this year,<br />

thank you for your contribution to our community. If you<br />

are staying on, we look forward to<br />

seeing you at Network Tindal events<br />

in <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

Lauren Bruhwiller<br />

Centre Coordinator<br />

Network Tindal<br />

Defence Dandelions<br />

Defence Dandelions Playgroup runs at Playgroup House during the school<br />

term on Thursday mornings from 09:30am to 11:30am on the corner of<br />

Defence Dandelion Playgroup is a peer support<br />

group for family wellbeing (particularly those<br />

families experiencing PND, PTSD, Anxiety and/or<br />

Depression, however no diagnosis is necessary). It<br />

is a safe space where Defence families are invited<br />

to enjoy a cuppa while the kids play happily in our<br />

amazing, newly renovated space. We have a large<br />

outdoor area with a sandpit and playground where<br />

we often set up messy and water play activities to<br />

cool down in the steamy Darwin weather. Inside,<br />

we have a comfortable area with lounges and<br />

carpet for babies to explore while the bigger kids<br />

enjoy the playroom, which is filled with toys, books,<br />

dress- ups and a home corner. We also have a<br />

highly popular play gym, featuring; soft gym flooring,<br />

padding on the walls and obstacle courses set up to<br />

burn all that energy in air-conditioned comfort.<br />

Playgroups are relaxed sessions where parents,<br />

caregivers and children can socialise and learn<br />

through play in a fun environment. Each week we<br />

love planning themes and activities to provide an<br />

enriching playgroup experience for our members<br />

and to foster a safe, caring community space where<br />

we can support each other. I would like to<br />

introduce myself as the new Defence Community<br />

Support Coordinator, along with Cindy (the<br />

playgroup facilitator), who run the playgroup<br />

sessions. As we are also Defence spouses ourselves,<br />

we understand the unique circumstances faced by<br />

Defence families living in the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

If for any reason the Defence Dandelions is not the<br />

most suitable playgroup for you, Playgroup NT have<br />

many other programs, from relaxed community<br />

playgroups that are run by volunteer parents or<br />

caregivers, to playgroups specific to families with<br />

special needs, those who are culturally and<br />

linguistically diverse or those who experience postnatal<br />

depression and/or anxiety. <strong>The</strong> extensive<br />

range of playgroups are run at various locations<br />

around Darwin, Palmerston and the rural area, and<br />

we also support playgroups run by other<br />

organisations, such as those specific to Defence<br />

families, including the Larrakeyah Neighbourhood<br />

House, Robertson Barracks Family Group, and<br />

Network Tindal.<br />

McMillans Road and Marrara Drive.<br />

HENRY WRIGLEY DRIVE<br />

If you have a young family and wish to widen your<br />

support network while posted to the <strong>Top</strong> End, we<br />

encourage you to attend our fun activities and<br />

programs for all ages.<br />

Jessica Schultz<br />

Defence Community Support Coordinator<br />

Playgroup NT<br />

HOW TO FIND US<br />

We're located on the corner of<br />

McMillans Road and Marrara Drive,<br />

Marrara (next to Darwin Toy Library).<br />

McMILLIANS ROAD<br />

LARRAKIA PARK<br />

FOOTBALL STADIUM<br />

MARRARA TENNIS CENTRE<br />

DARWIN SQUASH CENTRE<br />

PLAYGROUP NT<br />

ABALA ROAD<br />

CONTACT DEFENCE DANDELIONS<br />

If you are interested in attending or would like further<br />

information please contact us at<br />

defence@playgroupnt.com.au, on (08) 8945 7775 or<br />

message ‘Defence-Dandelions Playgroup’ on Facebook.<br />

MARRARA DRIVE<br />

LEE POINT ROAD<br />

22 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 23


<strong>The</strong> Safety<br />

<strong>The</strong> Safety of our Shores<br />

My name is Kerryn. I have been<br />

married for 20 years and living the<br />

“Army wife life” for the past 10 years.<br />

I’ve always been a creative person,<br />

whether it be playing musical<br />

instruments or singing, photography or<br />

writing a book. But poetry had never<br />

really been an activity that I had<br />

explored.<br />

of our Shores<br />

<strong>The</strong> sand between my toes<br />

<strong>The</strong> safety of our shores<br />

<strong>The</strong> laughter and the freedom<br />

Enjoyed naively by those<br />

Who go about their days<br />

Unaware of the true cost<br />

Of those who guard our country<br />

So our innocence is not lost<br />

I long to scream “You have no idea!”<br />

But it would fall upon deaf ears<br />

<strong>The</strong>y don’t want to believe the reality<br />

That their freedom isn’t theirs<br />

But if they have the luxury<br />

Of being so naive<br />

<strong>The</strong>n we’ve our home grown heroes to thank<br />

For their job with no reprieve<br />

And when those special days come ‘round<br />

Don’t let it be cliché<br />

But honour and remember those<br />

Who have fought for your today<br />

-<br />

© KP 2014<br />

However, in 2014, I discovered I just<br />

needed the right stimulus and the<br />

words just flowed from the depths of<br />

my soul. My heart was racing and the<br />

words just poured out onto the page,<br />

almost quicker than I could write.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y say the war is over<br />

It’s far away from home<br />

Yet loved ones who remain here<br />

Fight their own wars alone<br />

So feel that sand between your toes<br />

<strong>The</strong> sun upon your face<br />

Enjoy your laughter and your freedom<br />

Let their courage not go to waste<br />

My husband was away on his first<br />

deployment for 5 months. We didn’t<br />

realise at the time that there would be<br />

3 more trips within the following 18<br />

months! Our sons were 10 & 6 at the<br />

time. It was also around the time that<br />

‘ANZAC Girls’ was airing on TV – a<br />

show that impacted me deeply.<br />

Getting to know each character every<br />

week, seeing the incredible conditions<br />

and the sacrifices that these young<br />

Nurses endured, was so profound.<br />

I remember sitting at the beach one<br />

day, realising that all these people<br />

wandering past me would have<br />

absolutely no idea what was going on in<br />

my world. <strong>The</strong>y were happily enjoying<br />

themselves, while I sat there feeling<br />

guilty for enjoying a nice day out,<br />

knowing my husband was sweltering on<br />

the other side of the world, trying to<br />

stay safe while helping his comrades.<br />

I realised that it is fantastic to see<br />

people enjoying freedom, but I<br />

wondered if they truly realised how<br />

lucky they were and if they understood<br />

that there were people literally fighting<br />

right now, to give them that freedom. I<br />

didn’t begrudge anyone but felt an<br />

immense sense of pride for all military<br />

personnel who had made sacrifices for<br />

our freedom.<br />

So…. the words flowed out. I had a<br />

lot of thoughts to communicate, but I<br />

also didn’t want to be<br />

critical of anyone who<br />

doesn’t live this life. I<br />

wanted it to be raw and<br />

real, but also encourage<br />

people to appreciate what<br />

they have and why they<br />

have it. I am inspired to<br />

see the growing number of young<br />

people attending ANZAC &<br />

Remembrance Day services. Some<br />

children may not be able to fully<br />

understand the meaning behind these<br />

events, however they are developing an<br />

appreciation for the incredible freedom<br />

that we could easily take for granted.<br />

Since writing my heart-felt thoughts<br />

into a poem, it has struck a chord with<br />

many who have read it while also being<br />

shared hundreds of times across<br />

multiple social media platforms. My<br />

greatest honour is that my poem has<br />

now been accepted into the Australian<br />

War Memorial in Canberra as part of<br />

their National Collection.<br />

My hope is that it brings respect and<br />

encouragement to all military personnel<br />

(past present and future) and their<br />

families who continue to stay strong on<br />

the home front, while also encouraging<br />

others to appreciate the ongoing<br />

commitment and sacrifice that it takes<br />

to protect our freedom.<br />

Written by Kerryn P.<br />

Community Contributor<br />

Writer of the poem ‘<strong>The</strong> Safety of our<br />

Shores’<br />

Open Arms<br />

Compassion, resilience and support<br />

Open Arms – Veterans & Families Counselling (Open Arms)<br />

is Australia’s leading national provider of high quality, free and<br />

confidential counselling and support services for Australian<br />

veterans and their families.<br />

Open Arms staff members have specialist training in the<br />

military experience and understand that service in the ADF<br />

brings a unique set of challenges – both for those who serve<br />

and for those who support them. It also brings opportunities<br />

to learn first-hand the importance of resilience, mateship and<br />

compassion, and other skills we can use to strengthen our<br />

own wellbeing and to assist others in times of uncertainty.<br />

<strong>The</strong> past year has presented many challenges for our veteran<br />

community—leaving some feeling anxious and unsure about<br />

what the New Year will bring.<br />

<strong>The</strong> foundation skills for living well are:<br />

- staying connected to friends, family and community<br />

- using exercise as a quick and effective way to distract yourself<br />

from negative thoughts and manage emotions<br />

- sleeping well<br />

- eating well<br />

While you are establishing or recalibrating these areas of<br />

your life, you can also try:<br />

- getting your information from reliable sources<br />

- balancing your exposure to media<br />

- calming your emotions with our self-help tools<br />

- practising kindness and gratitude<br />

Cultivating an attitude of gratitude leads to better sleep,<br />

physical and mental health, self-esteem and resilience. It is also<br />

associated with increased empathy, decreased aggression, and<br />

building stronger relationships.<br />

Setting aside a time and place to deliberately think of what<br />

you are thankful for is important. Doing this with others<br />

allows you to inspire and be inspired by them.<br />

Friends and family can be a great source of support, but<br />

sometimes we are better served by that extra help from<br />

outside your usual circle. If you or someone you know wants<br />

someone to talk to, even just for a chat, Open Arms is<br />

available 24/7 by calling 1800 011 046. We are here to help.<br />

We also host Safe Zone Support, which offers anonymous<br />

and free support with specialised counsellors who have an<br />

understanding of military culture. <strong>The</strong>y’re here to listen and<br />

help on 1800 142 072. Safe Zone Support is available 24/7<br />

and calls are not recorded.<br />

We are stronger, together.<br />

24 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 25


Happy New Year to all and welcome to the<br />

Territory to all who posted up over the<br />

break! This year’s Wet season has already<br />

been the best for a little while - while we<br />

welcome the rain and tropical storms,<br />

unfortunately with the Wet season also<br />

comes some additional health risks.<br />

Mosquitos<br />

First of all, the rain means mosquitoes are out in force.<br />

Fortunately, there’s no Dengue or Malaria in the NT,<br />

but there are plenty of other mosquito-borne diseases,<br />

such as Ross River virus, Murray River encephalitis and<br />

Barmah Forest virus. <strong>The</strong> peak season for Ross River<br />

virus is from December to <strong>March</strong> - with the majority of<br />

NT cases reported in Darwin. Symptoms usually come<br />

on quickly with very sore muscles and joints, fevers,<br />

headache and a rash on the trunk and limbs. <strong>The</strong>re’s<br />

no specific treatment, only rest and pain killers. Most<br />

people get better within a few months but some can<br />

have ongoing symptoms for over a year! <strong>The</strong> best<br />

prevention is by protecting yourself from mosquitos -<br />

cover up, use insect repellent, mosquito coils and<br />

mosquito nets while camping.<br />

Melioidosis<br />

Something else to watch out for is Melioidosis.<br />

Melioidosis is caused by the Burkholderia pseudomallei<br />

bacterium that lives in the soil up here all year round.<br />

During the Wet, when the water table rises, the<br />

bacteria washes out from the soil and can be found in<br />

puddles and even airborne in windy conditions! People<br />

become infected through cuts on their skin or breathing<br />

in the bacteria - patients usually present with high<br />

fevers, a chesty productive cough, and severe<br />

shortness of breath - and they get admitted to hospital<br />

for treatment with antibiotics. <strong>The</strong> best prevention is to<br />

wear waterproof shoes when walking in the wet,<br />

muddy soil, and wear gloves when gardening. If it is<br />

windy and dusty then wear a mask. Fortunately, children<br />

are less likely to get infected but just to be safe, avoid<br />

letting them play in muddy areas and in wet, soggy<br />

sandpits.<br />

Box Jellyfish<br />

Stinger season is from October to May, and the advice<br />

from the NT Department of Health is very clear; “do<br />

not enter the sea”. Box Jellyfish can have heads as big as<br />

basketballs and tentacles of up to three metres. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

have 24 eyes (of four different types), actively hunt, can<br />

swim as fast as an Olympic swimmer, and have the<br />

fastest acting venom ever studied. It’s so fast, it can kill a<br />

person in just three minutes! <strong>The</strong>re have been around<br />

seventy documented deaths from Box Jellyfish in<br />

Australia, and fourteen of these were in the <strong>Top</strong> End -<br />

all of whom have been children. <strong>The</strong>y could be<br />

anywhere and they are<br />

hard to see in the<br />

water, but they’re<br />

more likely to be found<br />

after heavy rainfalls and<br />

in calm seas -<br />

unfortunately, this can<br />

also mean river outlets<br />

and close to boat<br />

ramps. You’ll know if<br />

you’re stung as there<br />

is an immediate and<br />

severe pain, a rash in the shape of the tentacle on your<br />

skin, and this can lead to cardiac arrest within minutes.<br />

Immediate First Aid is to get the person out of the<br />

water, call for help and dial Triple Zero (000), apply<br />

vinegar (keep a 2L bottle in your car if you go to the<br />

beach regularly). If vinegar is not available, remove any<br />

tentacles (carefully, using a stick so you don’t get stung<br />

too!), And rinse with sea water (not fresh water). Keep<br />

monitoring the person, apply ice packs for local pain<br />

relief, and get ready to start CPR while waiting for the<br />

ambulance. To protect yourself, simply stay out of the<br />

sea - but, if you do decide to enter the water, covering<br />

up all exposed skin could provide some protection.<br />

While the Territory has fortunately remained mostly COVID-<br />

19 free, we do unfortunately face other health issues not seen<br />

in other parts of the country. Stay safe and keep well, and if<br />

you have any concerns, please see your doctor.<br />

Dr Andrew Flint<br />

HMAS Coonawarra<br />

Medical Officer, Royal Australian Navy<br />

From fur-babies to service dogs, dogs are an<br />

important part of our lives. We have a<br />

responsibility to keep them happy and<br />

healthy. When a new threat appears, we owe<br />

it to them to be prepared to act.<br />

Australia is luckier than most countries in terms of<br />

disease, we don’t have to worry about rabies or<br />

ebolavirus. We thought we were safe from Ehrlichiosis,<br />

but it has recently been identified in the Northern<br />

Territory and Western Australia. Ehrlichiosis is a tickborne<br />

disease which can be fatal. For example, during<br />

the Vietnam War, many US Military dogs perished from<br />

Ehrlichia(1). As a vet, I have seen the devastating effects<br />

of this disease first hand whilst working in Thailand with<br />

stray dogs. This disease means that performing basic and<br />

even life-saving surgery has huge risks as Ehrlichia makes<br />

any bleeding difficult to stop. Part of what makes this<br />

disease so tragic is that it is preventable. Protecting<br />

your dog from Ehrlichiosis is as simple as putting on a<br />

collar. Year round tick prevention is the only way to<br />

prevent infection and you can do this by using flea/tick<br />

collars, monthly spot-on/oral medications and by<br />

environmental control.<br />

Symptoms are similar to other tick-borne diseases such<br />

as lethargy, poor appetite, sore/stiff joints and bleeding<br />

disorders can be common (e.g. bleeding from the<br />

nose). If your dog shows any of these signs or you find a<br />

tick on them, you need to take them to the vet.<br />

Ehrlichiosis is a notifiable disease which means that any<br />

possible infection must be reported. If your dog is not<br />

currently on tick prevention, talk to your vet about how<br />

to add this into your pets routine care. Even if you have<br />

never seen a tick on your dog before, all it takes is one<br />

bite. Tick prevention may seem an additional cost but<br />

the alternative bears a higher price. <strong>The</strong> treatment for a<br />

dog with a severe case of Ehrlichiosis may cost<br />

thousands and could jeopardise the life of your pet.<br />

Protect your dog today! For more information talk to<br />

your vet or visit: https://nt.gov.au/industry/agriculture/<br />

livestock/animal-health-and-diseases/ehrlichiosis-diseasedogs<br />

References<br />

Parap<br />

Veterinary<br />

Hospital<br />

(08) 8981 9767<br />

Parap Veterinary Hospital is the only ASAV Accredited Hospital in the Darwin/<br />

Palmerston region. <strong>The</strong> ASAV Hospital Accreditation Scheme recognises<br />

companion animal practices that achieve the highest levels of quality health care<br />

and practice management in innovative, state-of-the-art hospital facilities.<br />

Written by Parap Vets<br />

Parap Veterinary Hospital<br />

1. Harrus S, Waner T. Diagnosis of canine monocytotropic ehrlichiosis<br />

(Ehrlichia canis): an overview. Vet J. 2011 Mar;187(3):292-6. doi:<br />

10.1016/j.tvjl.2010.02.001. Epub 2010 Mar 11. PMID: 20226700.<br />

2. Little SE. Ehrlichiosis and anaplasmosis in dogs and cats. Veterinary<br />

Clinics: Small Animal Practice. 2010 Nov 1;40(6):1121-40.<br />

Defence<br />

Discount<br />

Available!<br />

26 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 27


Defence School Mentors<br />

Directory<br />

DARWIN PRIMARY SCHOOLS<br />

Alawa Primary<br />

Katie Wedel<br />

Katie.wedel@ntschools.net<br />

Durack Primary<br />

Cassie Knight<br />

cassie..knight@ntschools.net<br />

Essington College<br />

Chris Mayes<br />

chris.mayes@essington.nt.edu.au<br />

Holy Spirit Primary<br />

Christine Crimmings<br />

Christine.crimmings@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

Larrakeyah Primary<br />

Jodie Murdoch<br />

Jodie.murdoch@ntschools.net<br />

Leanyer Primary<br />

Christos Kastaniotis<br />

christos.kastaniotis@ntschools.net<br />

DARWIN MIDDLE/HIGH SCHOOLS<br />

Darwin High<br />

Kerry Gray<br />

Kerry.gray@ntschools.net<br />

Darwin Middle<br />

Carolyn Mu<br />

Carolyn.mu@ntschools.net<br />

Dripstone Middle<br />

Kristine Rushforth (leaving)<br />

Kristine.rushforth@ntschools.net<br />

O’Loughlin Catholic College<br />

Katherine Peel<br />

Katherine.peel@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

Palmerston College<br />

Sheryl Schmode<br />

Sheryl.schmode@ntschools.net<br />

Mackillop Catholic College<br />

Sue Lowery<br />

Suw.lowery@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

Defence School Mentors<br />

Jodie Murdoch is the Defence Support Mentor at<br />

Larrakeyah Primary School. She has been working within<br />

the School community since 2011. When Jodie started at<br />

the school, they had 350 students with 55 students from<br />

Defence families. Now the school is bustling with 540<br />

students and the largest enrolment of Defence students<br />

for <strong>2021</strong>, being 104.<br />

Based on her passion for supporting the needs of<br />

Defence families in her DSM role, she organises a<br />

Defence lunch group every Wednesday, which is always<br />

packed with fun activities. <strong>The</strong> activities vary from week<br />

to week and generally include colouring competitions,<br />

POGO stick challenges and Hermit Crab races. All<br />

activities have some relevance to life in Defence and<br />

Jodie finds engaging ways to teach children about<br />

resilience and the benefits of meeting new people while<br />

exploring our amazing country.<br />

In addition to her lunchtime activities, Jodie also oversees<br />

the “Jodie Bus” (an imaginary bus) two days per week<br />

and collects the Transition and Year 1 Defence students<br />

from their classrooms at the end of the school day and<br />

‘drives’ them to the base gate. Not only does this fun<br />

initiative give parents a few extra minutes to arrive at<br />

school in the afternoon, but the excitement of ‘travelling<br />

on the Jodie Bus’ is a highlight of the day for the kids.<br />

Jodie is a nurturing soul who farewells up to 30<br />

students who post out of Darwin each year and<br />

provides a warm welcome for new Defence students<br />

as they transition into their new school community.<br />

As a DSM who genuinely enjoys caring for Defence<br />

families, Jodie has made a personal commitment to<br />

enriching the lives of Defence children. During the<br />

COVID-19 lockdowns, Jodie created kits for all her<br />

Defence children and included “Worry Woggles”. <strong>The</strong><br />

“Worry Woggles” are designed to provide comfort<br />

for children who feel worried but are unsure how to<br />

talk to a parent. Jodie also organises school<br />

community events, such as Remembrance Day,<br />

ANZAC Day and a Father’s Day sausage sizzle, plus an<br />

end of year Pizza Party!<br />

Based on her long-term commitment to the<br />

Larrakeyah community, Jodie is a valuable asset to the<br />

Larrakeyah Primary School and the students always<br />

enjoy spending time with her, which is evident<br />

throughout the following testimonials from some of<br />

Jodie’s students;<br />

Ludmilla Primary<br />

Vanessa Schiller (leaving)<br />

vanessa.schiller@ntschools.net<br />

Rosebery Primary<br />

Amanda Guerin<br />

Amanda.guerin@ntschools.net<br />

Sacred Heart Primary<br />

Margaret Howe<br />

Margaret.howe@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

St Mary’s Catholic Primary<br />

Justine Mitchell (leaving)<br />

Justine.mitchell@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

Wanguri Primary<br />

Amanda Metcalfe<br />

Amanda.metcalfe@ntschools.net<br />

Palmertson Christian / Marrara Christian / Sattler Christian<br />

Colleges<br />

Alice Kempster<br />

alice.kempster@ntschools.net<br />

Casuarina Senior College<br />

Mike Whitmee<br />

mike.whitmee@ntschools.net<br />

TINDAL/KATHERINE SCHOOLS<br />

Casuarina Street Primary<br />

Renee Lace<br />

Renee.lace@ntschools.net<br />

Katherine South Primary<br />

Leonnie Matthews<br />

Leonine.matthews@ntschools.net<br />

St Joseph’s College<br />

Tammy Taylor<br />

Tammy.taylor@nt.catholic.edu.au<br />

Send us your feedback:<br />

If your school has an amazing DSM who deserves a<br />

“shout out” in the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, please email<br />

us your feedback so we can feature your DSM in the<br />

the next edition of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong>ender <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />

Written by Denna Menz<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Community Coordinator<br />

28 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 29


<strong>The</strong> Commitee Noticeboard<br />

BECOME A COMMUNITY CONTRIBUTOR<br />

We welcome all contributions from our Defence Members<br />

and their families. We’re looking for stories about Defence<br />

life, history, helpful guides to living in the NT, family<br />

experiences, travel adventures and more. If you have<br />

something you’d like to share in the next edition of <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong>, submit it today. If published, you will receive a<br />

$100 Community Contributor voucher!<br />

VOLUNTEER WITH US<br />

$100<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

CONTRIBUTOR<br />

VOUCHER<br />

We always welcome new general members and volunteers at <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>. <strong>The</strong>re is<br />

no time obligation, we just ask that you join us for our monthly meetings wherever possible.<br />

You can input as much or as little as you like and will be supported by our community along the<br />

way.<br />

If you would like to increase your volunteer hours, contact us today or come along to our next<br />

committee meeting (also available via Zoom) to find out more.<br />

POSITION VACANT<br />

Our Community Coordinator is posting to a new location, so<br />

we are looking for the right person to fill this paid contract<br />

position. To find out more visit our website at<br />

www.thetopendermagazine.org.au or get in touch today to<br />

get a copy of the Position Description and apply now!<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are also opportunities to join our committee as a Vice<br />

Chairperson. <strong>The</strong>se positions look great on your Resume and<br />

are crucial to the continuation of our magazine.<br />

ADVERTISE WITH US<br />

Check out our new Rate Card on the back inside cover!<br />

FEEDBACK<br />

We would love to hear from you!<br />

Contact us at<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

LOCAL<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Calling all Defence members and<br />

their families! Do you operate your<br />

own business? Do you have a sidehustle,<br />

hobby or passion that you’d<br />

like to share with our community?<br />

Get in touch now to be featured<br />

for free in the next edition of <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />

We’re launching a classified section<br />

specifically to support businesses<br />

run by our Defence community.<br />

By providing feedback on <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, we can keep making improvements<br />

that benefit our community.<br />

Committee in the Community<br />

ARE YOU OUR NEXT COMMUNITY COORDINATOR?<br />

<strong>The</strong> Community Co-Ordinator oversees the day-to-day<br />

operations of the organisation and ensures that it operates in<br />

accordance with the Committees decisions, constitution,<br />

relevant legislation and funding requirements.<br />

We’re looking for a self-motivated, organised and reliable<br />

person with sound communication and strong office and<br />

bookkeeping skills. <strong>The</strong>y will have the ability to work<br />

independently, meet strict deadlines, support the Committee<br />

and be a positive contributor to the team who will champion<br />

the NT and the unique lifestyle it affords its residents.<br />

This is a Part-Time position of up to 24 hours per fortnight, 9-<br />

12pm Monday - Thursday (Negotiable days and operating<br />

Winner Winner<br />

Christmas Competition Winners<br />

1 st prize: Myles from Larrakeyah<br />

2 nd prize: Catherine from Eaton<br />

3 rd prize: Liana from Casuarina<br />

Dec/Jan Crocodile Hunt Competition<br />

Winner: Joshua (aged 5) from Parap<br />

Win for your Spouse<br />

Monica won $100 for Anthony<br />

TEMPORARY<br />

ACCOMMODATION BAGS<br />

As part of our commitment to the Defence community<br />

in the NT, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> has sent out over<br />

100 ‘self-isolation’ packs for Defence members<br />

isolating in hotels around Darwin.<br />

Now that the need for self-isolation is becoming less (thank<br />

goodness!) We’re adapting the remaining packs to be sent out<br />

over the posting season.<br />

If you or someone you know would like to have one of our<br />

remaining packs delivered to their temporary accommodation,<br />

please get in touch! We have limited quantities left, so get in<br />

quick!<br />

Community Initiative by Deb Herring (CDDA)<br />

Committee Member<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

hours), based at our child-friendly office on Defence<br />

Establishment Berrimah. This position does include some<br />

flexibility to work from home on certain days.<br />

<strong>The</strong> salary is above award rate, negotiable based on your<br />

experiences, with incentivised bonuses which are negotiable<br />

upon increase in revenue, fundraising generation, and<br />

performance reviews.<br />

For more information, please visit our website at<br />

www.thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

To apply for this role, email<br />

chair@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

SPORTS ASSOCIATIONS<br />

We’re seeking information about Sports<br />

Associations in the <strong>Top</strong> End. Can you<br />

provide information, including season<br />

dates, ways to join and cost to join?<br />

We’re compiling a list of Sports and<br />

Recreation groups to share these<br />

amazing organisations with our Defence<br />

community. If your sports or recreation<br />

group are interested in advertising,<br />

please get in touch!<br />

Thank you<br />

Our out-going Community Coordinator, Denna<br />

Menz, has been invaluable to <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> over this past year.<br />

We wish to thank Denna for her hard work and<br />

organisation in the role and wish her the best of luck<br />

for her next adventure! We’d also like to thank Luke<br />

Menz for his chef skills and contributions to our<br />

yummy meeting dinners, and the kids for participating<br />

and helping out with our Kids Corner puzzles.<br />

30 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 31


From the Padre’s Pen<br />

Actions, Reactions and Over-reactions…..<br />

<strong>The</strong> words we say and think have a powerful biochemical effect on our<br />

bodies. <strong>The</strong>re’s some pretty interesting science behind all this. Our<br />

everyday thoughts and feelings create biochemical reactions to mental and<br />

emotional stimuli. <strong>The</strong>se reactions occur not just in the brain, but also in<br />

virtually every system of our body. We know that the brain, nerves,<br />

immune and digestive systems are all capable of releasing and receiving<br />

many of the same peptides. All these systems are chemically linked to our<br />

central nervous system.<br />

What a difference it makes saying “maybe you’re mistaken’” to someone,<br />

instead of loudly declaring “You’re wrong!” Or genuinely enquiring… “Are<br />

you sure?” as opposed to blurting out, “You’re lying!” How we speak to<br />

others influences how we all experience our external life.<br />

How we speak to ourselves influences how we experience things in our<br />

internal life. Imagine if we could total up all the emotions we have felt in<br />

the past week. What would be really interesting would be the words we<br />

attach to each event that created those emotions.<br />

What tends to happen is: EVENT > WORDS > EMOTIONS.<br />

An event gives stimulus to words and thoughts that we use to describe<br />

that event. <strong>The</strong>se words lead to the feelings we experience from that<br />

event. Personally, what I have found so important are the words we attach<br />

to the experience. <strong>The</strong> words we use to describe the event become our<br />

experience.<br />

Too often we ‘catastrophize’ events by using ‘habitual vocabulary’,<br />

repetitive words that we lazily use instead of thinking and defining<br />

situations before speaking. We’re like a tradie with a dozen tools in his<br />

toolbox who lazily continues to grab the hammer to try and fix everything.<br />

He ends up doing more damage than fixing. We do the same with the<br />

words we use.<br />

So often we overreact and yell out “I’m devastated!”, when in fact we’re<br />

really just a bit disappointed…” We boldly declare “This is a disaster!”<br />

when, with a little bit of effort, we can fix this situation pretty quick.<br />

We all know that putting things in ‘perspective’ is a powerful process. My<br />

three children are now all adults but getting them through their teenage<br />

years, I would often say to myself when dealing with a ‘so-called’ disaster:<br />

“If this is the worst thing that happens this year... It’s a pretty good year”.<br />

It’s a quick and useful way of putting things into perspective.<br />

Another tool I’ve learnt for my toolbox is “Don’t give a $100 responses to<br />

50c problems.” Naturally I’m an ‘over-reactor’. I wasn’t born that way but<br />

it is a learnt behaviour. In fact, I come from a long line of over-reactors.<br />

When a stimulus happens, an event, an accident, something that looks like<br />

a problem or a ‘disaster’, I now try to evaluate the situation quickly and<br />

not over-react to something simple or easy to navigate through. I learnt<br />

this lesson well when my son was young and accidentally broke the TV<br />

remote. I ‘spent’ a lot of negative emotion overreacting. It ended up<br />

costing me $5 to fix the remote. I realised my son’s feelings are worth a<br />

lot more to me than $5.<br />

“Don’t give a $100 responses to 50c problems.” It sometimes helps to<br />

put a dollar value on the perceived problem as we learn to evaluate<br />

situations and circumstances that are just ‘not worth’ the negative<br />

emotional energy and damaged relationships that come from over-reacting.<br />

In the Bible Proverbs 16:32 it says: “Those who are slow to anger are<br />

better than the mighty. Whoever can rule their spirit mightier than the one<br />

who captures a city”.<br />

CHAPLAIN Shaun Foster<br />

ADF Chaplains in the NT<br />

Navy On-call: 0409 662 823<br />

Shaun Foster HMAS Coonawarra<br />

Australian Christian Churches<br />

08 8935 5388 | 0400 514 375<br />

Kelvin Harris Fleet North/HMAS Coonawarra<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8935 5183 | 0457 712 743<br />

Army On-call: 0427 713 963<br />

Glen Elsegood 8/12 Regiment<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8925 2457 | 0429 345 167<br />

Joel Vergara Regional Support<br />

Roman Catholic<br />

08 8925 2662 | 0409 778 462<br />

Chris Lindsay 1 CER<br />

Presbyterian<br />

08 8925 6414 | 0418 428 337<br />

Garth Mayger 1 CSSB<br />

Roman Catholic<br />

08 8925 9005 | 0419 869 187<br />

Phil Riley HQ1 BDE<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8925 2018 | 0407 283 050<br />

Steve Maggs 5 RAR<br />

Baptist<br />

08 8925 2754 | 0408 684 783<br />

Roger Cowan 1 AVN<br />

Baptist<br />

0429 891 274<br />

Airforce Darwin On-call:<br />

0477 308 064<br />

Airforce Tindal On-call:<br />

0427 890 054<br />

Mitchell Herps RAAF Tindal<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8973 6032 | 0438 493 232<br />

Andrew Knox RAAF Tindal<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8973 6033 | 0457 803 372<br />

Angela Stanfield RAAF Darwin<br />

Anglican<br />

08 8923 5016 | 0417 953 396<br />

All three services provide a 24/7 on-call number<br />

for emergencies. Each Unit/Ship/Base has its<br />

own chaplain who can assist. If you chaplain is<br />

not available, please contact the on-call number<br />

for your Service. Denominational or faithspecific<br />

ministry can be arranged as required.<br />

Overcoming Isolation<br />

A posting to the <strong>Top</strong> End often means that serving personnel can spend many months away every year. This<br />

experience can be isolating for many spouses and dependents who find it difficult to settle into life in the<br />

Territory, especially when family and friends are located interstate and may not be able to travel during <strong>2021</strong>. If<br />

isolation is something that you struggle with or you know someone who feels lonely, here are some actions you<br />

may consider to help overcome isolation:<br />

FOCUS - It can be extremely beneficial to work out<br />

some goals that you can focus on during times of<br />

isolation. This could be as simple as focusing on a<br />

home workout program, small business idea, garden<br />

area or a family project to help pass the time. Most<br />

importantly, focus on your health and wellbeing while<br />

also looking out for those around you.<br />

GET INVOLVED - If you’re not too sure how to meet<br />

new people, you might consider getting involved with<br />

a community group, sports club, volunteer program or<br />

social events that will help you to build new<br />

connections and a strong support network. Have you<br />

tried competitive ten pin bowling, indoor volleyball or<br />

fundraising? It can be a lot of fun and a great way to<br />

get involved with the <strong>Top</strong> End community.<br />

HOBBIES - If you don’t have many personal interests,<br />

but find yourself feeling bored and lonely during times<br />

apart, you might consider trying some new hobbies to<br />

help pass the time. This could include learning a new<br />

skill (knitting, painting, cake decorating), keeping a<br />

journal of your adventures and daily activities, bicycle<br />

riding, bonsai or cooking. <strong>The</strong>re are so many ways to<br />

pass the time without even leaving home. You might<br />

be surprised what activities you can find to keep you<br />

busy and inspired.<br />

LEARN – Even if you are busy with full time<br />

employment or staying home with children, the nightly<br />

routine can feel lonely and isolating. You may use<br />

some of your spare time to learn something through<br />

flexible learning options (look at Charles Darwin<br />

University, Darwin Adult Short Courses or Open<br />

Universities for ideas). Alternatively, you can find<br />

thousands of books or DVD’s in your local Library or<br />

videos on YouTube to learn just about anything from<br />

origami to servicing a motor vehicle. Learning new<br />

skills will also help you to feel more confident and<br />

independent, so it’s a positive way to pass the time<br />

and reduce feelings of boredom.<br />

CLOSE CONTACT – Despite most travel restrictions<br />

being lifted, you may find that interstate travel may be<br />

limited throughout <strong>2021</strong>. In the event that travel is still<br />

not an option, maybe consider the option of writing<br />

regular emails, thank you cards, a family newsletter or<br />

hand written letters to stay in close contact with loved<br />

ones interstate. A hand written letter can take longer<br />

than an email, however it is always exciting to receive<br />

a handwritten note in the mail. Try to stay in contact<br />

through social media support groups and video calls to<br />

loved ones, where possible.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are a number of support<br />

groups available to provide help<br />

through the difficult times, so<br />

please remember that you are<br />

never alone and reach out if you<br />

are feeling overwhelmed or<br />

unable to cope.<br />

Written by Deb Herring (CDDA)<br />

Career Development Association of Australia<br />

<strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Community Contributor<br />

WIN<br />

FOR YOUR LOVED ONE<br />

If you could win<br />

$100 to treat<br />

someone special,<br />

what would you<br />

spend it on and why?<br />

Email your answer, name<br />

and phone number to<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

before 4 <strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong> to be in the draw.<br />

Winners will be notified by email/phone<br />

and announced in the next edition of<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong>.<br />

32 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 33


Defence Health has been providing valuable<br />

health care benefits to Defence families since<br />

1953, so we truly understand the unique<br />

demands on serving families.<br />

<strong>The</strong> posting period is one of the most demanding<br />

times when families need a little bit of extra support. It<br />

can be a particularly challenging time for young children<br />

- making new friends, getting to know a new teacher<br />

and finding their way in a new school. That’s why<br />

Defence Health is focused on providing support for the<br />

valuable work of Defence School Mentors (DSM).<br />

A New Initiative<br />

Defence Health<br />

Making Connections Matter<br />

DSM, Katie Thornton, came to us earlier this year with<br />

a clever initiative to keep military families connected<br />

within the classroom. Defence Health immediately<br />

jumped on board to support her innovation; the Making<br />

Connections Matter program.<br />

We know that family connection to the classroom is<br />

important and serving families miss out on so many<br />

school highlights that other families take for granted.<br />

Defence Health has supported Katie’s program by<br />

installing webcams to connect absent-from-home ADF<br />

caregivers with their child’s classroom.<br />

<strong>The</strong> webcams allow caregivers to virtually attend the<br />

classroom for special award presentations,<br />

performances, celebrations and assemblies. <strong>The</strong>y are<br />

also provided with opportunities to engage with their<br />

child’s teacher and friends or discuss the benefits and<br />

challenges of being a Defence family.<br />

Not surprisingly, the students, teachers and<br />

parents have embraced the Making<br />

Connections Matter program. Teachers can<br />

incorporate cultural and geographic<br />

elements of the curriculum, depending on<br />

where a caregiver is deployed. Parents also<br />

get the opportunity to participate in student<br />

conferences and day-to-day classroom<br />

experiences, which helps many Defence<br />

students to feel supported and less<br />

isolated and disconnected from their<br />

caregivers.<br />

Connecting with Our Community<br />

This initiative has also encouraged<br />

opportunities to connect outside of the<br />

classroom too! Cassie Knight, who works<br />

for Defence Health and is also a DSM,<br />

recently facilitated a classroom video call<br />

with a Durack School parent who is<br />

currently deployed to East Timor. During<br />

the call, the deployed parent had a<br />

colleague join in the discussion as her father<br />

was a Vietnam Veteran currently living in<br />

Darwin. Coincidently, Cassie unexpectedly<br />

met the veteran-father at a Veterans’ event<br />

in Darwin the following week - it’s a small<br />

world when we’re all connected!<br />

Since Katie Thornton started her trial<br />

program at Medowie Public School in rural<br />

New South Wales, Defence Health is proud<br />

to have implemented a nationwide program<br />

to schools with Defence School Mentors. If<br />

you would like to implement this valuable<br />

program into your school, please contact<br />

your DSM. It’s true that Making<br />

Connections Matter and everyone benefits<br />

from this fabulous program!<br />

Children at Medowie Public School participate in the trial<br />

Students from Alawa Primary School in Darwin taking delivery of the<br />

webcam supplied by Defence Health<br />

Contact Us<br />

1800 335 425<br />

info@defencehealth.com.au<br />

PO Box 7518, Melbourne<br />

VIC, 3004<br />

34 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 35


What’s On<br />

in <strong>February</strong> and <strong>March</strong><br />

Let’s Go, Bowl Patrol!<br />

Ten Pin Bowling<br />

10 <strong>February</strong> | 2 sessions<br />

Cyclone awareness information sessions, Darwin<br />

NT Emergency Service will provide cyclone awareness<br />

information to assist families to prepare for the cyclone<br />

season.<br />

10:00am to 11:00am<br />

5:30pm to 6:30pm<br />

17 <strong>February</strong> | 10am -12pm<br />

Connect over coffee, Darwin<br />

Join DCO at Adventure Land for a chat, coffee and<br />

networking with other ADF families. Includes a short<br />

“Be Crocwise” talk with Park and Wildlife Rangers and<br />

an opportunity for you to ask questions.<br />

From 15 - 20 <strong>February</strong><br />

Bombing of Darwin | Various Events<br />

On 19 th <strong>February</strong> 1942, Darwin was bombed in two<br />

separate Japanese air raids becoming the largest single<br />

attack ever mounted by a foreign power on Australia.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are multiple events and remembrance<br />

ceremonies listed below:<br />

15 - 20 Feb Sea Darwin - Bombing of Darwin Cruise,<br />

Stokes Hill Wharf $20.00 per adult<br />

19 - 20 Feb Bombing of Darwin Experience, Royal<br />

Flying Doctor Service Tourist Facility 50% off entry<br />

18 - 20 Feb Darwin Military Museum, East Point<br />

Reserve 50% off entry<br />

19 Feb - 8:15 am to 9am USS Peary Memorial Service,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Esplanade, Darwin FREE<br />

19 Feb - 9:30 am to 11am Bombing of Darwin<br />

Commemorative Service, <strong>The</strong> Cenotaph, Darwin FREE<br />

20 Feb - 10am to 11am Ecumenical Service, Adelaide<br />

River War Cemetery<br />

Starts 8 <strong>March</strong><br />

Northern Territory Travelling Film Festival (NTTFF)<br />

celebrates and showcases the outstanding short film,<br />

television and video productions from the NT,<br />

capturing the stories, culture and landscape of our<br />

iconic region and the people that call it home.<br />

Ends 21 <strong>March</strong> | Every Sunday<br />

Flix in the Wet<br />

Darwin Entertainment Centre. Two films are screened<br />

on Sunday Afternoons over 9 weeks with the eclectic<br />

programming that you expect from the Darwin Film<br />

Society.<br />

Dates to Remember<br />

12 Feb Chinese New Year (year of the Ox)<br />

14 Feb Valentines Day<br />

16 Feb Shrove Tuesday<br />

17 Feb Ash Wednesday<br />

19 Feb Bombing of Darwin Anniversary<br />

19 Feb Bombing of Darwin Anniversary<br />

1 Mar St David’s Day<br />

Australian Army & Navy Birthdays<br />

3 Mar World Wildlife Day<br />

17 Mar St Patrick’s Day<br />

21 Mar Harmony Day<br />

31 Mar Australian Air Force’s 100 th Birthday<br />

Bowl Patrol is an 8-week program organised by Planet Ten<br />

Pin in Nightcliff, which teaches children between the ages<br />

of 6-12 about the principles and fundamentals of Ten Pin<br />

Bowling. <strong>The</strong> program has been running for the last three<br />

years through Planet Ten Pin and is managed by Terry and<br />

Deb, who are passionate, understanding and patient<br />

coaches. Although bowling is generally known as a fun<br />

activity for all ages, Ten Pin Bowling is also an independent<br />

and competitive sport for all ages. <strong>The</strong> well-known<br />

entertainment facility has been running in Nightcliff since<br />

1976 and provides party rooms, catering, league<br />

competitions, Halloween parties and other fun events<br />

throughout the year!<br />

Terry and Deb are a friendly couple who both served in<br />

the Australian Defence Force. Deb was in the Air Force<br />

between 1977-1982, then Terry enlisted into the Australian<br />

Army in 1982. Back then though, it wasn’t possible to be<br />

co-located with a serving spouse, so Deb made the difficult<br />

decision to retire from the Air Force to focus on starting a<br />

family and completing her Bachelor of Nursing.<br />

Bowl Patrol costs only $99 for 8 weeks and can be covered<br />

by the NT Government School Sports Voucher.<br />

Participants also receive a t-shirt and a hat, plus the option<br />

of joining a league after reaching a certain level of<br />

competence and skill. <strong>The</strong> program is also suitable for any<br />

person with disabilities and the Bowl Patrol team provide<br />

dedicated coaching and support as part of their<br />

commitment to the community.<br />

For more information and to find out about other events in the region during <strong>2021</strong>, check the Tourism <strong>Top</strong> End Website<br />

www.tourismtopend.com.au/events<br />

We also recommend checking the websites in different towns and councils, as well as organisations like the Waterfront Precinct.<br />

This is not a complete list of events, and they are subject to change. Please confirm with the organisation before attending.<br />

TICKET REQUIRED<br />

36 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 37


Saving at the Shops!<br />

I was recently discussing with an<br />

‘Engineering Buddy’ of mine, the<br />

future of electric motorcycles. We<br />

shared our opinions (based on our<br />

obvious differences in emotional<br />

bias) regarding noise and<br />

environmental factors. For most, the<br />

thought of an electric motorcycle<br />

conjures up images of those “orange<br />

open-hire scooters” that we often<br />

see, loitering throughout our Capital<br />

Cities. Most are ridden by tourists<br />

who use the opportunity to release<br />

their “inner child”, but quickly<br />

discover that they really aren’t “allterrain<br />

machines” or suitable for<br />

“gutter jumping” in the Darwin<br />

stormwater system. For most riders,<br />

the lacklustre acceleration that these<br />

machines provide has obviously<br />

been engineered to cater for the<br />

average person’s abilities.<br />

Furthermore, the handling of these<br />

‘motorbikes’ can only be described<br />

as an unstable skateboard with a set<br />

of handlebars and no suspension or<br />

straight-line stability - they are slow<br />

for a reason.<br />

Now let’s compare this to some of<br />

the well-known motorcycle brands<br />

and their electric bike offerings:<br />

Harley is currently producing its<br />

“Live Wire”; with its 78 kilowatt,<br />

(105 horsepower - in the old<br />

language) electric motor, switched<br />

to Sport Mode. It will propel its<br />

Rider from 0 – 60 mph/100kmh in<br />

around 3 seconds. To put that into<br />

context, that is 0.4 secs slower than<br />

a Ducati 1199 Panigalle, Kawasaki<br />

Ninja H2, or BMW S1000RR. Not<br />

much difference between them, but<br />

the Live Wire will obviously lose out<br />

in top speed as it is limited to 110<br />

mph/177 km/h. This is more than<br />

enough for most NT tourists to<br />

manage on our sidewalks! If you like<br />

four wheels, rather than two; picture<br />

a 2020 Porsche Carrera S, racing the<br />

Live Wire, side-by-side to 100km/h<br />

and this is no slow Beetle. <strong>The</strong><br />

sidewalks won’t be the place to test<br />

the Live Wire’s performance, but<br />

let’s remember that comparison.<br />

Some people seem to think that you<br />

can get away with more on an<br />

electric motorcycle because they are<br />

quiet. <strong>The</strong> future of electric bikes is<br />

something that the internal<br />

combustion engine junkies will<br />

begrudgingly have to deal with in<br />

the next five to ten years. But, do<br />

we know the science behind how<br />

fast and slow things move, speed up<br />

or slow down?<br />

Enter my learned ‘Engineering<br />

Buddy’. <strong>The</strong>re are several<br />

calculations every rider should<br />

know. Let’s take our Live Wire for<br />

example and look at acceleration,<br />

assuming constant acceleration. <strong>The</strong><br />

Live Wire achieves: 0 – 3 seconds to<br />

100 km/h,<br />

Formula for Velocity:V = U + A/T<br />

V = (velocity)<br />

U = standing start from 0 km/h<br />

A/T = acceleration/time: 100km/h,<br />

which is 100000 metres/hr, divided by<br />

60 divided by 60 = 27.7m/s divided<br />

by 3.0 seconds = 9.25 metres per<br />

second.<br />

So, our Live Wire’s Velocity: V = 0<br />

+ 9.25 = 9.25 m/sec2, which is<br />

nearly 1.0 G of acceleration. As<br />

identified in our earlier comparison,<br />

the Ducati, H2 or BMW are<br />

accelerating at over 1.0 G<br />

acceleration.<br />

Why is all of this physics so<br />

important, you ask? Well,<br />

acceleration is what we enjoy<br />

about motorcycles and not every<br />

affordable car will exceed the<br />

acceleration of a Live Wire,<br />

Kawasaki H2, BMW S1000RR or a<br />

Ducati 1199. But, (and this is a ‘BIG-<br />

BUT’), cars stop or decelerate<br />

consistently faster than bikes under<br />

average conditions. Why? Well there<br />

is little the car driver has to do<br />

other than depress and keep<br />

pressing the brake pedal, allowing<br />

the ABS to independently control<br />

the deceleration of those four fat<br />

tyres on the road surface. Some<br />

steering correction may be required,<br />

but the Driver does not have to<br />

balance their car, proportion force<br />

between a separate hand/foot<br />

operated braking system and they<br />

don’t need to panic. <strong>The</strong>y don’t<br />

panic because they have a<br />

protective “cage” around them.<br />

To brake a motorcycle at 1.0 G<br />

deceleration, requires some skills<br />

and practice to perfect. A driver of a<br />

modern car can come to a complete<br />

stop without too much effort. Keep<br />

in mind that an elite Moto GP rider<br />

and motorcycle can decelerate as<br />

quickly as 1.8 G, compared to a<br />

similarly skilled Formula 1 drivers at<br />

5.7 G. <strong>The</strong>y are both using state-ofthe-art<br />

machines, but the resultant<br />

weight-shift, centre of gravity<br />

positions and down force varies for<br />

each machine. <strong>The</strong>se factors cause a<br />

significant difference to their<br />

stopping abilities. Now lastly, keep<br />

in mind that the best braking you<br />

did whilst learning to ride, was at<br />

about 0.4 – 0.6 G rate of<br />

deceleration. It's important to be<br />

cognisant of these factors when<br />

creating space between the car in<br />

front (for example; a 3-second gap)<br />

and accelerating at 1.0 G, because<br />

stopping is much harder than<br />

accelerating.<br />

Safe riding,<br />

GROM<br />

One of the quickest ways to save money is to<br />

look at how you plan meals and shop for<br />

groceries.You may leave a little in the budget for<br />

weekly takeaway meals, but there are some<br />

simple ways to stretch your money further with<br />

meal planning and online grocery shopping.<br />

THE BENEFITS OF MEAL PLANNING<br />

To create a successful meal plan, it’s important to only<br />

consider meals that your household enjoy and think of ways to<br />

get creative with items you already have at home. As most<br />

households spend between $100-$200 per week on food, this<br />

can be a significant area of spend leakage for the household<br />

budget.<br />

If you are not comfortable with setting up a complete<br />

household budget, you could start by setting a simple goal to<br />

reduce your grocery expenditure. A meal plan could include 3<br />

meals per day or just nightly meals to help you stay organised.<br />

Once you have worked out your meal plan, you can create a<br />

structured shopping list to help you buy only what you need<br />

for the week or fortnight. This reduces the likelihood of buying<br />

additional meal options that may go to waste.<br />

Meat is the most expensive ingredient when meal planning, so<br />

it pays to split meat into smaller portion sizes and stretch it<br />

further. For example; you could cut 1 or 2 chicken schnitzels<br />

into portions for multiple chicken schnitzel wraps or use 1kg of<br />

mince across 2 meals, instead of cooking additional leftovers<br />

that often end up in the bin. Alternatively, when cooking<br />

spaghetti, lasagne, pasta bake or tuna bake, it’s a clever strategy<br />

to prepare a large batch that can be separated into meal<br />

portions and frozen in foil containers from the supermarket.<br />

Your ‘future self’ will thank you on busy nights when you can<br />

take a home cooked meal from the freezer and leave it in the<br />

oven to cook while you focus on the nightly routine.<br />

Some good tips for meal planning; ensure that you look a day<br />

ahead to ensure that you are thawing meat overnight and have<br />

everything ready to go. It is also a great idea to chop<br />

vegetables for a couple of meals and store in containers to<br />

reduce your preparation time for each meal. Plan consecutive<br />

meals that have similar ingredients to help you prepare<br />

multiple meals at the same time (ie; diced capsicum for baked<br />

potatoes, spaghetti and fried rice).<br />

THE BENEFITS OF ONLINE GROCERY<br />

SHOPPING<br />

Online grocery shopping is the best way to save money at the<br />

supermarket. Not only can you purchase straight from your<br />

previous shopping list, but you can also order from the specials<br />

list (half price, if possible) and stick to your allocated budget as<br />

you “add to cart”. Always review your order before submitting<br />

to see whether you have duplicated items or purchased<br />

unnecessary ‘extras’. You could also keep an additional<br />

shopping list of household items that can wait for a sale (50%<br />

off), as this is often where the biggest savings are. A good tip<br />

to reducing your grocery bill is to never shop when you are<br />

hungry or short on time as you are more likely to purchase<br />

extra items.<br />

COST OF CONVENIENCE<br />

If you are really wanting to save on your grocery bills, consider<br />

the additional cost of convenient meal options. This is<br />

especially true when you consider the difference between<br />

homemade spaghetti ($10) and takeaway pizza ($40+). It<br />

makes sense some nights to find a convenient solution,<br />

however you can significantly reduce your food budget by<br />

making most meals ‘from scratch’, preparing multiple meals in<br />

bulk or choosing some convenient options for each meal (ie;<br />

pasta packets) to reduce your cooking time when life is busy.<br />

10 MEALS UNDER $10<br />

Chicken drumsticks with mash and veggies<br />

Spaghetti Bolognaise<br />

Vegetable Lasagne<br />

Fried rice with chicken and veg<br />

Stuffed baked potatoes<br />

Beef casserole or stroganoff<br />

Honey mustard chicken with mash or rice<br />

Tuna bake<br />

Chicken schnitzel wraps<br />

Beef stirfry<br />

For many families, the cost of returning to school can be<br />

financially demanding, including school uniforms, stationery,<br />

fees and other costs. Here are some easy lunch snacks that are<br />

budget-friendly:<br />

FUN LUNCH SNACKS UNDER $1 PER SERVE<br />

English muffin mini-pizzas<br />

Popcorn<br />

Fruit skewers<br />

Savoury skewers (cheese, cabana, capsicum, cherry<br />

tomato, pickle, cucumber)<br />

Nachos<br />

Vegemite or salami scrolls (puff pastry)<br />

Mini fruit muffins<br />

Chicken or beef meatballs<br />

Cucumber and carrot sticks with dip<br />

Yoghurt<br />

Written by Deb Herring (CDDA)<br />

Career Development Association of Australia<br />

<strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Community Contributor<br />

38 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 39


Mates<br />

4<br />

Mates<br />

Mates4Mates is also for the entire family. We know that when one person is impacted by trauma, anxiety or stress, among<br />

No one should have to go through injuries and<br />

mental health issues alone – which is why<br />

Mates4Mates is now delivering services in the<br />

Northern Territory.<br />

To help ensure that local current and ex-serving members,<br />

and their families, are supported when they need it most –<br />

whether that’s for physical injuries, challenges like anxiety<br />

and depression, or isolation, Mates4Mates has started to<br />

provide much-needed support in the region.<br />

Mates4Mates is a national charity providing support and<br />

rehabilitation services to the Defence community, from<br />

psychology and exercise physiology appointments, to<br />

wellbeing activities like group fitness and trauma-informed<br />

yoga, coffee support groups, and rehabilitation workshops.<br />

Our programs are evidence-based and led by a team of<br />

health professionals experienced in working with members<br />

of the Defence community. Our purpose is to help you,<br />

and your family, find a way forward from any challenges<br />

that arise as a result of service.<br />

We first launched in the Territory last year after the<br />

Department of Veterans’ Affairs enlisted us to build the<br />

Territory’s first Veteran and Family Wellbeing Centre. We<br />

currently have Centres in Brisbane, Townsville and Hobart,<br />

and programs in outreach areas.<br />

While developing a Centre takes time, and the doors won’t<br />

open until 2022, we knew that some services couldn’t wait.<br />

So, in October 2020, we launched our first activities. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

focused on bringing local Defence families together and<br />

providing a supportive network for anyone impacted by<br />

service.<br />

By December, we had also launched telehealth services for<br />

psychology and exercise physiology appointments, with the<br />

aim to deliver these face-to-face in the future.<br />

This year, we have added a few more wellbeing activities<br />

and workshops to our local services, along with more<br />

online programs, so that those living right across the vast<br />

Territory can participate.<br />

By the time we open the doors to our new Centre in<br />

2022, we will have a full suite of services on offer.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re’s estimated to be over 12,000 Defence Force<br />

members and their families living here in the Territory. As<br />

an organisation, we are proud to provide evidence-based<br />

support, where it’s needed most.<br />

So, if you need support, or know someone that may<br />

benefit from our activities, please get in touch. I’m available<br />

to meet with you and help find out what services are right<br />

for you.<br />

other things, it can have a significant impact on partners, children, parents, or grandparents. If you’re an immediate family<br />

member of someone currently serving, or a veteran, you can also access our services.<br />

I’ve been very thankful to meet so many from the Defence community already and look forward to meeting many more.<br />

I’ve been living in the Territory for more than 40 years and am very ingrained in the local culture and proud to call this<br />

region home.<br />

Joining an organisation that makes a tangible difference in the lives of thousands of people has also been very motivating.<br />

Annually, Mates4Mates provides around 25,000 connections to the Defence community, over 4,400 psychology<br />

appointments, and 8,400 social connections.<br />

In <strong>2021</strong>, with our expansion into the Territory, we will be reaching even<br />

more people in need.<br />

One of our values as an organisation is collaboration, so we will also be<br />

partnering with other local businesses and service providers to ensure the<br />

best possible support and care is offered across a range of options.<br />

You don’t have to tackle life’s challenges alone. Our staff all understand<br />

what it means to serve, with many having served themselves and they are<br />

here to help. We can also refer you to other organisations that help with<br />

areas like employment, financial services, homelessness and more – many<br />

of which will also be available direct from the Veteran and Family<br />

Wellbeing Centre, as soon as it opens in 2022.<br />

To get in touch with me, you can reach out via nt@mates4mates.org.<br />

For more information about Mates4Mates, visit mates4mates.org or phone<br />

1300 462 837.<br />

Written by Jan Peters<br />

Northern Territory Regional Manager<br />

Mates4Mates<br />

40 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 41


‘A Quiet Hero’<br />

By Norman S Cramp, from the wartime diary of Petty Officer Harold<br />

Ronald Healey, RAN 20751 (Retired) August 2019.<br />

Harold Ronald (‘Tim’ or ‘Nuts’ to all who knew him)<br />

Healey was born at Williamstown, Victoria on 23rd<br />

October 1916, the only child of Frederick and Alice (nee<br />

Goff) Healey.<br />

‘Tim’, as we shall call him, joined the RAN on 10th April<br />

1935 with rank of Seaman following which he moved<br />

through the ranks to Able Seaman, Petty Officer and Chief<br />

Petty Officer. He married Edna Grace Kirk at Hawthorn,<br />

Victoria on 6th November 1937 and four years and four<br />

months later found himself in the fight (and fright) of his<br />

life.<br />

It is not known as to when Tim joined the HMAS<br />

Deloraine’s company, but he sailed in her for Darwin on<br />

26th December 1941, after ‘spending the most miserable<br />

Christmas Day in my life’ on board, anchored in Sydney<br />

Harbour. <strong>The</strong> Deloraine sailed for Darwin via Brisbane<br />

and Townsville arriving at Darwin on 7th January 1942.<br />

His big, and terrifying, adventure was about to begin!<br />

Shortly after arriving in Darwin, he suffered a bout of<br />

dengue fever that hospitalised him for a short period, but<br />

to make matters worse, he and his shipmates realised<br />

‘there was no beer anywhere in the town’. On 16th<br />

January 1942, he reported a ‘big submarine scare’ and an<br />

order for the ship to be ready for sea immediately. <strong>The</strong><br />

sighted submarine was one of four Imperial Japanese Navy<br />

(IJN) submarines that were operating off the coast of<br />

Darwin, NT at that time and could well have been the one<br />

that Tim and his mates would engage in a few days’ time.<br />

On 20th January, Tim journaled that ‘HMAS Deloraine is<br />

off on a submarine hunt’ and that it ‘turned out to be the<br />

most exciting day of the war for me’. He reported that at<br />

1300 hours, an Able Seaman (AB) on lookout on the<br />

bridge had casually informed his chain of command that<br />

“there’s a torpedo coming right at us, Sir”’. <strong>The</strong> Captain<br />

had a look and exclaimed – ‘Good Lord, so there is – Hard<br />

to Port!’. <strong>The</strong> Deloraine turned and as a result the<br />

‘torpedo missed our stern by three feet’, Tim recorded.<br />

It is not clear what duties Tim had on board during that<br />

time, but after the call-to-action stations went out he<br />

recorded, ‘just as I had taken over the wheel, the<br />

submarine started to surface about twenty feet away from<br />

us on our port [left] side’. He recorded that the Deloraine<br />

‘let go’ with a depth charge from ‘the port thrower’ that<br />

‘landed smack on his [the submarine’s] conning tower’ and<br />

that a Catalina flying boat hovering above ‘let go a load of<br />

bombs’ that also appeared to have damaged the<br />

submarine. <strong>The</strong> Skipper and crew were sure the submarine<br />

was done for, but Tim journaled; ‘just to make sure, we<br />

dropped every depth charge we had in the ship and we<br />

blew enough oil [from the submarine] to the surface to<br />

steam this ship for Sydney’.<br />

To make doubly sure of the ‘kill’, HMAS Katoomba also<br />

dropped depth charges on the now stricken submarine.<br />

Later on the 20th, crew from HMAS Kookaburra and<br />

Platypus attempted to dive on the submarine but the<br />

attempts failed due to equipment failure, tidal rip and bad<br />

weather. <strong>The</strong> USS Holland, a US Navy (USN) submarine<br />

repair ship, also sent divers down. Reports on the damage<br />

to the submarine were completed but the submarine was<br />

not entered. <strong>The</strong> thrill, and fear, associated with the sub<br />

hunt and its demise was over and Deloraine returned to<br />

port.<br />

Unbeknownst to Tim and the crew of HMAS Deloraine,<br />

they had just sunk the IJN submarine I-124 that had been<br />

laying sea mines in the entrance channels to Darwin<br />

Harbour and along the coast, as well as conducting<br />

reconnaissance of shipping movement to and from the<br />

harbour. <strong>The</strong> I-124 remains where she settled on the sea<br />

floor on that fateful day in January 1942 with all 80 crew<br />

members entombed within her. She was declared a war<br />

grave by the Australian and Japanese governments in 1985<br />

and, as a result, no diving or interfering with the vessel is<br />

permitted.<br />

Throughout the remainder of January and into early<br />

<strong>February</strong> 1942, the Deloraine carried out patrolling duties<br />

in the Bathurst and Melville Islands areas and convoy duties<br />

for various Allied ships as far afield as Thursday Island. On<br />

18th <strong>February</strong>, the Deloraine was steaming back to Darwin<br />

after convoy duty to Thursday Island, when she passed a<br />

USN destroyer, (most likely the USS Peary) and a USN<br />

Cruiser (USS Houston). Both ships had been on convoy<br />

duty escorting American and Australian troops to reinforce<br />

the garrison at Ambon. No one knew it at that time, but<br />

both ships’ fates were sealed and Tim’s moment of truth<br />

and bravery was about to arrive.<br />

At 1700 hours on 18th <strong>February</strong>, the Deloraine ‘secured to<br />

buoy in Darwin harbour’ and at 2000 hours the Captain<br />

was taken off the ship to the Darwin Hospital – illness<br />

unknown. On 19th <strong>February</strong> 1942, all hell broke loose in<br />

Darwin and Tim’s life changed forever.<br />

On that day, the first day of air raids on Darwin by<br />

Japanese forces, he journaled that ‘Today will live in my<br />

memory forever as long as I live. I will never be able to<br />

forget the horrors that I have seen today – horrors which<br />

no mortal man could do justice to’. He also wrote that at<br />

‘approximately 1030 (hrs), I heard the old familiar sound of<br />

bombs falling. I looked up in time to see the [Stokes Hill]<br />

wharf go up in the air and a stick of bombs hitting the<br />

Neptunia [sic]’. He said, ‘<strong>The</strong> Japs were raiding Darwin and<br />

as our ship has only a 12pdr gun which is useless against<br />

high level bombing, we had a first-hand view of the raid<br />

and what a raid it is’.<br />

At that stage of the war, Tim reported the Darwin area as<br />

being ‘a proper hot bed of submarines’ with many reports<br />

of asdic, (‘A/S’), contacts and resultant depth charge<br />

attacks by various Allied warships. However, there were no<br />

more IJN submarines sunk in the area.<br />

He mentions a USN destroyer, (most likely the USS Peary,<br />

although he never named her), that was ‘blazing astern<br />

(she sunk later)’, ‘a stick of bombs straddling the [HMAS]<br />

Platypus’, the Zealandia ‘that was ablaze from a direct hit’,<br />

the Moana Loa ‘that was ablaze from a direct hit’ and that<br />

‘the town was wreathed in smoke from numerous hits’.<br />

Besides that, ‘the aerodrome was a pall of smoke, death<br />

was riding wild and then the dive bombing and machine<br />

gunning started’. <strong>The</strong> HMAS Swan was hit with, as Tim<br />

recorded, ‘four dead and Christ knows how many<br />

wounded’. He recorded that the Japanese ‘machine gunned<br />

the boom defence vessels repeatedly’, ‘dive bombed the<br />

HMAS Warrego repeatedly without hitting her’, machine<br />

gunned the Deloraine twice ‘without hurting anybody and<br />

they dive bombed the hospital ship Manunda until they hit<br />

her just aft of the bridge. Her hull is riddled with shrapnel<br />

holes’.<br />

He continued to journal and added that a troopship full of<br />

American soldiers (the ship being either the Portmar or<br />

the Tulagi) was hit resulting in several soldiers being<br />

wounded. In fact, a number of American soldiers on the<br />

Portmar were killed that day. He also mentions that ‘I was<br />

bombed for six months, night and day, but I’d crack under<br />

another raid like that. <strong>The</strong>y missed nothing and they used<br />

1000 bombs’.<br />

After the Japanese had departed, Tim and his crewmates<br />

noticed a man ‘in the water near the jetty’ - meaning the<br />

Stokes Hill Wharf. Tim et.al ‘went away in the motor boat<br />

to pick him up and when we got there we found hundreds<br />

in the water. <strong>The</strong> two ships at the jetty were blazing and<br />

the jetty itself was ablaze. <strong>The</strong> water was no more – we<br />

were steaming through a sea of oil and some of it was afire<br />

and there were some men in the fire getting nicely<br />

roasted’. He and his mates picked up eight Malay crew<br />

members from the Neptuna, after which Tim turned the<br />

boat toward the jetty only to be told by ‘jabbering’ Malays<br />

not to approach the ship as she was full of depth charges.<br />

Tim is honest enough to say ‘I could feel my knees start to<br />

shake as there was the ship full of deadly explosives afire<br />

from stem to stern and us only about fifty yards from her’.<br />

He turned the motorboat toward a nearby beach and<br />

when he pulled in about ‘twenty yards off it’, he ordered<br />

the Malays to jump overboard and swim to the beach so<br />

he could return for more survivors. <strong>The</strong> Malays however<br />

refused to leave the boat so Tim ‘jobbed one of them and<br />

slung him over [the side] and the rest soon followed’.<br />

Returning to the jetty area, he heard a man calling out -<br />

‘help me dig, I’ve got a broken leg’. Tim stopped to pick<br />

the man up but, by the time the man was in the boat, five<br />

more men ‘were trying to clamber in and as our boat is<br />

very small, she was in danger of being sunk. So, I went full<br />

ahead and jumped on their hands and they had to let go’.<br />

Tim rescued a lot of men that day and picked up two more<br />

survivors before heading to HMAS Platypus to drop the<br />

injured men off.<br />

While coming alongside Platypus, the Neptuna ‘blew up,<br />

bits of her flew everywhere’ with one piece of steel plate<br />

‘that must have weighed 2 cwt [hundredweight]’ flying<br />

through the air’. He goes on to mention other ships that<br />

were ablaze and rescuing survivors from various ships<br />

(including the Portmar) and from the fire-covered sea.<br />

Finally the raids finished and Tim had survived that terrible<br />

day. He and his mates had taken their lives into their own<br />

hands and placed themselves in harm’s way to help their<br />

comrades, but it had taken its toll. Later that day he wrote,<br />

‘I have never prayed for darkness before, but I prayed for it<br />

today. I wish the sun would never rise again and I wonder<br />

what tomorrow will bring forth. <strong>The</strong>re is a lot that has<br />

happened today that doesn’t appear in this book, mainly<br />

concerning cowardice of personnel but I never know<br />

where this book will finish up, so I won’t put it on record,<br />

but I will remember it – Christ I’ll remember it!’<br />

On 20th <strong>February</strong>, he commences his diary entry by<br />

writing, ‘No raids today, thank God. One alert and a lot<br />

has happened, but we are still alive’. He mentions the<br />

devastation around the harbour and town, that the<br />

‘aerodromes are wrecked’ and that ‘the hospital was<br />

bombed and machine gunned’. He also mentions that ‘again<br />

today I saw much cowardice that I am not going to log’ and<br />

that ‘the Manunda put thirty bodies ashore today. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

had died overnight. <strong>The</strong> bodies lay on the beach<br />

surrounded by millions of flies and of course, in this<br />

climate, they went rotten. <strong>The</strong> Manunda took them all back<br />

[that night] as she is sailing tonight and is going to bury<br />

them all at sea’. He finished that day’s entry by writing ‘I<br />

did the biggest thing today I have ever done since I have<br />

been in the Navy’. An understatement to be sure!<br />

Tim recorded that there were no raids on the 21st, but<br />

HMAS Warrnambool was attacked on the 22nd when she<br />

was ‘about 40 miles from Darwin’, HMAS Katoomba sailed<br />

for Thursday Island and the freighter Barossa, that had<br />

been towed to a sandbank, exploded. On 27th <strong>February</strong>,<br />

he recorded that ‘<strong>The</strong> official list for the day of the raid is<br />

now 500 killed and 1000 casualtys [sic]’. <strong>The</strong> Deloraine<br />

(with Tim on board) remained in the Darwin area for<br />

another five months, during which time she was attacked<br />

by a long-range bomber on 5th <strong>March</strong> and survived several<br />

other air raids.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Deloraine left Darwin for Thursday Island, Townsville<br />

and Brisbane on 12th July. She sailed from Brisbane to<br />

Sydney on 23rd July and whilst at sea, received a message<br />

that a merchant ship had reportedly sighted a Japanese<br />

submarine off Newcastle. Tim’s laconic diary entry was ‘we<br />

might have some fun yet’.<br />

His diary ends on 25th July, but his war didn’t end then. He<br />

served throughout the war and was discharged from the<br />

RAN on 25th August 1947 with the rank of Regulating<br />

Petty Officer. Post-war he and Edna were shopkeepers in<br />

Collingwood and Orbost, Victoria, where they both played<br />

golf for many years. After retiring they moved to Nelsons<br />

Bay, NSW where they were living when Tim suddenly died<br />

of a heart attack at Newcastle Hospital on 6th April 1982.<br />

Like many war veterans, Tim spoke little of his wartime<br />

experiences and buried any ‘demons’ deep within himself.<br />

Given his actions on 19th <strong>February</strong> 1942 and his decision<br />

not to speak about that horrible day and many others that<br />

he undoubtedly witnessed, it is fair to say that Harold<br />

Ronald (Tim) Healey was a quiet hero.<br />

42 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 43


Luke Gosling<br />

Amessage<br />

fromLuke<br />

Awarmwelcometo<br />

ourrelocating<br />

Defencepersonnel.<br />

AbigTerritorywelcome<br />

to allDefencepersonnel,<br />

acrossthearmy,navy,<br />

andairforcethathave<br />

joinedusinDarwinand<br />

Palmerstonandamassive<br />

welcometoyourfamilies.<br />

Iwantedtoreachoutand<br />

introducemyselftoyouas<br />

yourfederalmemberinthe<br />

AustralianParliamentin<br />

theseatofSolomon.<br />

Likeyou, Iservedin<br />

theAustralianDefence<br />

Force(ADF).Iservedfor13<br />

yearsintheArmy,withthe<br />

ParachuteInfantry,<br />

Commandosandthe<br />

DefenceCooperation<br />

PrograminTimor-Leste.<br />

It’simportanttomethat<br />

relocatingDefenceForce<br />

personnelareawareofwho<br />

theirlocalfederal<br />

representativeisand<br />

wheretofindmeshould<br />

theyneedtoraiseany<br />

concernswithmeorjust<br />

haveacupofteaanda<br />

yarn.<br />

Yourwellbeingandthat<br />

ofyourfamilyis<br />

extremelyimportantto<br />

meandIwould<br />

encourageyoutopop<br />

intoourofficein<br />

Casuarinaatany<br />

time.Mydoorisalways<br />

opentoyou.<br />

2020isdoneand<br />

dusted,haveagreat<br />

<strong>2021</strong>andlookforward<br />

toseeingyouaround<br />

the<strong>Top</strong>End.<br />

Luke Gosling MP<br />

Member for Solomon<br />

Co-Chair Parliamentary<br />

Friends of Veterans<br />

Luke Gosling is the Federal<br />

Member of Parliament for<br />

Darwin and Palmerston and<br />

served in the ADF for 13 years.<br />

CONTACT LUKE<br />

Luke.gosling.mp@aph.gov.au<br />

08 8928 0180<br />

lukegosling.com.au<br />

Fishing for therapy<br />

Fishing is by nature a reflective and meditative activity<br />

that forces you to slow down and enjoy your<br />

surroundings. People fish for many reasons. Some food<br />

and some for sport, while others just want an excuse to be<br />

outside on our many wonderful waterways or get together<br />

with friends.<br />

No matter what gets them out there, any fisherman can<br />

attest to the supreme sense of relaxation and calmness<br />

that spending a morning or evening doing their favourite<br />

activity provides. This very quality has made fishing a<br />

popular therapeutic exercise used by counsellors and<br />

therapists who work with veterans, people with chronic<br />

illnesses, and others who have experienced trauma in their<br />

lives.<br />

I am a Member for Solomon who served in the Army for<br />

13 years and is active in the veteran community. I believe<br />

that fishing is a fantastic outlet for many veterans, their<br />

families and the broader community. <strong>The</strong>re’s really nothing<br />

better than casting a line in a natural environment. <strong>The</strong><br />

calming effect of water relaxes the mind and can be very<br />

therapeutic.<br />

For many veterans I have spoken with, they feel a sense of<br />

camaraderie in fishing with a group of people, which is<br />

often what they miss from being in the military.<br />

Fishing is a great outlet for veterans who may have<br />

experienced symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression – it<br />

encourages them to talk with each other and realise that<br />

they’re not alone and that they’ve got this group of people<br />

that understand what they’re experiencing and how<br />

they feel.”<br />

In Federal Parliament, I started the ‘Parliamentary Friends<br />

of Recreational Fishing‘, because I know how important it is<br />

to Territorians and the Territory economy.” It is estimated<br />

that recreational fishing brings in around $80 million into<br />

the Territory economy each year – making it not only a<br />

great activity for families and veterans, but a significant<br />

economic driver.<br />

Matilda Woolley is a Year 5 Defence student<br />

at Rosebery Primary School.<br />

She has just received the "Australia Day<br />

Student Citizen Award <strong>2021</strong>" for outstanding<br />

contribution to her school and community.<br />

This award goes to one student from a<br />

Northern Territory school every year.<br />

Matilda, along with her parents, teachers and peers,<br />

were very excited and proud that she has received this<br />

award. Half of the award relates to her schooling and<br />

the other half relates to her Community involvement.<br />

She always tries very hard to do her best at school and<br />

strives to help others.<br />

Matilda is also involved with Scouts at 1st Palmerston<br />

Scout Group and has enjoyed Scouting for 5 years. She<br />

started as a Joey, then transitioned into cubs and has<br />

recently moved up into the Scout age group.<br />

Matilda has received both her Joey Scout Promise<br />

Challenge & Grey Wolf Award, which are the highest<br />

awards that a Joey and Cub can receive. A lot of work<br />

and commitment goes into receiving these awards,<br />

including lots of home projects and presentations at the<br />

Scout hall, as well as group activities during camps,<br />

bushwalking and bushcraft.<br />

Earlier this year, Matilda was chosen to represent Scouts<br />

NT (whilst wearing both school uniform and Scout<br />

uniform throughout the day) at Parliament House in<br />

Canberra, for the 2020 Plastic Summit. She learned<br />

about soft plastic and the process of recycling. Soft<br />

plastic is any plastic packaging that you can scrunch up,<br />

which is commonly used to wrap food items that you<br />

find in the supermarket. This type of packaging can be<br />

placed into special ‘REDcycle’ bins at Coles and<br />

Woolworths and then made into outdoor furniture and<br />

other items. It is important to remember that soft<br />

plastic cannot be recycled in your yellow recycle bin at<br />

home, as the soft packaging can get caught up in the<br />

sorting machines. After returning home from the<br />

Summit in Canberra, Matilda also prepared a summary<br />

of her experience and spoke at her school assembly<br />

about the process for recycling soft plastic packaging.<br />

Scouts<br />

If you are interested in learning more about Scouts for<br />

your child, please contact Scouts NT -<br />

www.nt.scouts.com.au. Scouts is a great outlet for young<br />

people to help the community, meet new friends,<br />

improve self-confidence, develop skills and learn the<br />

benefits of teamwork.<br />

For more information about the REDcycle program or<br />

find a local drop point, check out www.redcycle.net.au<br />

or look for the specially marked bins at selected Coles<br />

and Woolworths supermarkets. <strong>The</strong> REDcycle<br />

Program makes it easy for consumers to keep plastic<br />

bags and packaging out of landfill - together we can<br />

make a difference to helping our environment!<br />

Congratulations to Reeling Veterans – for their Fishing for<br />

<strong>The</strong>rapy family fun day recently. An awesome day was had<br />

by all at Barramundi Adventures. Thanks to everyone who<br />

attended.<br />

Luke Gosling<br />

OAM MP is the Federal Member for Solomon<br />

(representing Darwin and Palmerston)<br />

Adding to Matilda’s impressive achievements to date,<br />

she also participated in the "Clean Up Australia Day"<br />

activities around Palmerston with her Scout group and<br />

other members of the community, the same day that<br />

she flew to Canberra for the Summit! Matilda is an<br />

inspiring member of our community and has learned a<br />

lot due to her opportunities through Scouts -<br />

Congratulations on your well-deserved achievements,<br />

Matilda!<br />

44 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 45


$100<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

CONTRIBUTOR<br />

VOUCHER<br />

Together, the Royal Australian Air Force, the Australian Army and the Royal<br />

Australian Navy form the Australian Defence Force, an organisation woven<br />

into the fabric of our society. Despite a global pandemic the services each<br />

celebrate significant birthdays in <strong>2021</strong>, with its soldiers, sailors and airmen<br />

and women deployed on the front line domestically and abroad.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Royal Australian<br />

Air Force celebrates 100 years in the air<br />

Celebrating its 100th birthday on 31 st <strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong>, Australia’s<br />

involvement in the air began with the formation of the<br />

Australian Aviation Corps in 1911 with a Flying School<br />

opened at Point Cook, Victoria in 1912. In 1914 the Corps<br />

was renamed the Australian Fly Corps. In the First World<br />

War the Australian Flying Corps fought in support of the<br />

Indian Army during the Mesopotamian Campaign in today’s<br />

Iraq against the Ottoman Empire, and later in Egypt, Palestine<br />

and the Western Front. In the inter-war years, the Australian<br />

Air Corps was formed in 1920 and in 1921, the Royal<br />

Australian Air Force (RAAF) was born.<br />

During the Second World War, thousands of Australians<br />

served with Commonwealth Air Forces, most notably the<br />

Royal Air Force in the European theatre. <strong>The</strong> Second World<br />

War and Japan’s rapid advance in the pacific saw the<br />

threatening of mainland Australia for the first time in its<br />

history. Despite devastating air raids on Darwin, the RAAF<br />

played a crucial role in the Solomon Islands and New<br />

Guinea campaigns, the latter in which the RAAF was<br />

instrumental in inflicting the first decisive victory by allied<br />

forces over the Japanese of the war.<br />

RAAF pilots and aircraft were amongst the first to fly combat<br />

missions in the Korean War and later served in the Malayan<br />

Emergency and the Vietnam War. <strong>The</strong> RAAF continues to<br />

provide a presence in Malaysia based out of the now Royal<br />

Malaysian Air Force Base at Butterworth. RAAF combat<br />

aircraft were again used during the 2003 Iraq War and the<br />

RAAF would maintain a presence in the Middle East,<br />

sustaining operations in Afghanistan and Iraq for over a<br />

decade. In 2014 RAAF deployed an Air Task Group to the<br />

Middle East as part of the global coalition to combat the<br />

Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. In 2017, RAAF Maritime Patrol<br />

Aircraft supported the Philippines during the Marawi Crisis.<br />

<strong>The</strong> RAAF personnel and aircraft have provided regular<br />

Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief both<br />

domestically and abroad including Aero-Medical Evacuations<br />

following the Bali Bombing in 2002 and 2005; the 2004<br />

Boxing Day Tsumani; the 2011 Queensland Floods, Cyclone<br />

Yasi, Christchurch Earthquake and Japan Earthquake; and,<br />

various cyclones in Fiji, Vanuatu and the Philippines to name a<br />

few. Of note, the RAAF has been involved in global<br />

operations in response to accidents and disasters including<br />

the search for MH370 and the repatriation of Australians<br />

after the shooting down of MH17. <strong>The</strong> RAAF continues to<br />

provide support on a global scale in response to disasters<br />

and as part of military operations.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Australian Army celebrates 120 years<br />

On 1st <strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong> the Australian Army celebrates 120 years<br />

of dedicated service to the nation. Formed in 1901 through<br />

the amalgamation of the six state Colonial Military Forces<br />

following the federation of Australia, it would only be 14<br />

short years until the Australian Army, and the nation, would<br />

face its first true test of quality. <strong>The</strong> character traits of<br />

Courage, Mateship and Sacrifice shown in the trenches of<br />

Gallipoli would see the birth of the ANZAC legend with the<br />

spirit of ANZAC becoming firmly embedded in the attitudes<br />

of all Australians. Australian soldiers would later go on to<br />

serve in combat during the Second World War, the Korean<br />

War, Vietnam and Iraq and Afghanistan, developing a<br />

reputation across the world as highly respected, capable and<br />

professional force.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Australian Army’s capability, however, is not limited to<br />

times of conflict. Its officers and soldiers have served with<br />

distinction in peacekeeping restoring and maintaining<br />

stability in Bougainville, East Timor and the Solomon Islands<br />

and continues to deploy peacekeepers to Israel, Mali, the<br />

Sinai, and South Sudan.<br />

Over its 120 year history, the Australian Army has come to<br />

be relied upon to give humanitarian support in response to<br />

120 years at sea – <strong>The</strong> Royal Australian Navy<br />

turns 120<br />

Initially formed as the Commonwealth Naval Forces on 1st<br />

<strong>March</strong> 1901, following the federation of Australia with the<br />

integration of the Colonial Navies’ ships and resources, it was<br />

renamed the Royal Australian Navy in 1911. As with the<br />

Army, the Royal Australian Navy served under British Imperial<br />

command during the First World War operating in the<br />

South Pacific and later the Mediterranean and North Seas.<br />

<strong>The</strong> interwar years saw a dramatic decrease in the size of the<br />

fleet and a shift in focus from defence against invasion to<br />

protection of trade routes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> outbreak of the Second World War again saw the Royal<br />

Australian Navy fall under British command with its sailors<br />

serving with distinction in areas such as the Mediterranean,<br />

Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean. <strong>The</strong> outbreak of war in<br />

the pacific following the destruction of the allied navy in<br />

South-East Asia saw the Royal Australian Navy begin to<br />

operate more independently or as part of fleets from the<br />

natural disasters at domestically and abroad. At home, fulltime<br />

and reserve soldiers were ever present in the clean-up<br />

and rebuild following Cyclone Yasi and the Queensland<br />

Floods in 2011, Cyclone Debbie in 2017 and the 2020<br />

Victorian and South Australian Bushfires. Likewise, overseas<br />

our soldiers have deployed to areas such as Banda Aceh,<br />

Indonesia in response to the 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake<br />

providing critical aid to our near region neighbours and again<br />

in 2020 to Fiji following Cyclone Yasa.<br />

In 2020 the Australian Army deployed domestically to<br />

support local communities combat the Coronavirus<br />

pandemic ensuring the integrity of state border closures and<br />

working with State and Federal Police supervising quarantine<br />

facilities, an operation ongoing today.<br />

United States Navy in the pacific. 2020 was a significant year<br />

for the Royal Australian Navy with the posthumous<br />

awarding of the Victoria Cross to Ordinary Seaman Edward<br />

“Teddy” Sheean, the first Navy crew member to be awarded<br />

Australia’s highest honour Australian Navy. Teddy Sheean<br />

was killed in action with the sinking of the HMAS Armidale on<br />

1st December 1942 after defying orders to abandon ship,<br />

instead strapping himself to an anti-aircraft gun and continually<br />

engaging Japanese bombers despite being wounded.<br />

Following the Second World War, the Royal Australian Navy<br />

again served with British and American sailors as military<br />

operations in Korea, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Persian Gulf<br />

and Indian Ocean. Alongside the Australian Army, the Navy<br />

has deployed on peacekeeping operations in East Timor and<br />

the Solomon Islands.<br />

An integral element of Australia’s Humanitarian Assistance<br />

and Disaster Relief capability, the Royal Australian Navy has<br />

regularly provided assistance to nations within our near region<br />

including the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami, the 2005 Banda<br />

Aceh Earthquake and various Cyclones in the Philippines,<br />

Vanuatu, Fiji and Australia. <strong>The</strong> Royal Australian Navy<br />

continues to deploy ships to the Middle East Region as part of<br />

international efforts to ensure maritime security and counter<br />

piracy. Since 2006, the Royal Australian Navy has been a<br />

leading contributor to Australian Border Protection<br />

operations continually deploying ships and personnel against<br />

threats of illegal maritime arrivals and illegal activity in<br />

protected waters amongst others.<br />

46 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 47


Fitting in at a new location isn’t easy, and yet with the<br />

support of Dripstone Middle School Defence Mentor<br />

Kristine Rushforth,Year 7 student Penny Down has<br />

made Darwin feel like home.<br />

After taking art classes at <strong>The</strong> Artful Room at Nightcliff,<br />

Penny was thrilled to choose Art as an elective in Term<br />

4. When asked to sketch a portrait based on the staff<br />

photo of her favourite teacher, Penny didn’t hesitate to<br />

choose Airlie White, a Defence spouse who has called<br />

Darwin home for the past two years. Penny and Ms<br />

White bonded after discovering that were both in the<br />

same location in a previous posting and Ms White was<br />

thrilled to be drawn by such a talented young artist.<br />

Dripstone Middle School is a Defence family school-ofchoice<br />

located in the Northern Suburbs of Darwin and<br />

aims to nurture students to develop their talents whether<br />

that be art, sport, music, languages or academic success.<br />

Dripstone Middle School provides a dynamic learning<br />

environment that caters to middle years students in Years<br />

7, 8 and 9. Our school motto, “A Community of<br />

Achievers”, demonstrates our commitment to<br />

maintaining high standards of excellence and delivering<br />

programs that are challenging and actively engage all our<br />

students in curricular and extracurricular activities. We<br />

encourage our students to challenge their personal best<br />

and recognise their strengths, capabilities and potential.<br />

For more information on Dripstone Middle School, please<br />

contact DSM Kristine Rushforth. Prospective families can<br />

find virtual school tours and an introduction to the DSM<br />

program online - simply search for Dripstone Middle<br />

School’s channel on Youtube.<br />

Take a tour:<br />

youtube.com/watch?v=WEv9tumQOp4&t=37s<br />

Get to know DSM Kristine Rushforth:<br />

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDgeHA4U2i4<br />

Kristine Rushforth<br />

Defence School Mentor<br />

Dripstone Middle School<br />

Kristine.rushforth@ntschools.net<br />

or the front office on<br />

(08) 8983 7777.<br />

Office Hours: Monday/Tuesday/<br />

Wednesday 8:30am to 1:30pm<br />

COME AND TRY<br />

DRAGONBOAT PADDLING<br />

Marina Boulevard, Cullen Bay (opposite Ferry Terminal)<br />

Every Monday & Wednesday 5:30 - 6:30pm<br />

Every Saturday (Harbour paddle) 7:45am - 9:15am<br />

Fast, Fun, Exhilarating...<br />

Suitable for all aged over 14 and all fitness<br />

levels.<br />

Enjoy a paddle on the sparkling waters of<br />

Cullen Bay while you participate in this low<br />

impact exercise.<br />

Equipment provided. Please bring a hat,<br />

water bottle and sunscreen... And prepare to<br />

get a little wet!<br />

Portrait of Airlie White, by Dripstone Student Penny Down.<br />

ADVERTISE<br />

HERE<br />

For Advertising Rates for your<br />

business. please see the inside<br />

back cover or contact us for<br />

more information!<br />

CONTACT<br />

0417 423 414<br />

info@arafuradragons.com.au<br />

48 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 49


HMAS Glenelg Onboard<br />

Fitness<br />

Have you considered how the<br />

crew of an Armidale Class<br />

Patrol Boat (ACPB) maintain<br />

their fitness and well-being<br />

during extensive sea-time?<br />

<strong>The</strong> Commanding Officer (CO) of<br />

HMAS Glenelg, LCDR Jared Webb,<br />

and his crew provided the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> with an insight into how his<br />

ship’s company do just that.<br />

LEUT Tyson Hales, the Executive<br />

Officer (XO) of Glenelg, said:<br />

“Physical training has immediate and<br />

long-term health benefits – most<br />

importantly, improving the quality of<br />

life of our sailors.”<br />

Each ACPB is equipped with the latest<br />

Life Fitness Spin Bike or Assault Air<br />

Bike and Concept II Rower for cardio<br />

training. For those who train for<br />

strength, equipment like kettle bells,<br />

torsion bars, slam balls, strength bags<br />

and medicine balls add variety to the<br />

standard dumbbells and barbell<br />

exercises.<br />

Circuit training sessions designed by<br />

the PTIs are popular with personnel<br />

combining both cardio and strength in<br />

their daily routine.<br />

“Having time out of your busy day to<br />

get some fresh air on the quarterdeck<br />

really helps clear the mind” the XO<br />

said.<br />

LEUT Hales drives all sport, group PT<br />

and adventure training activities while<br />

ashore. At sea, he overseas internal<br />

department competitions. “<strong>The</strong><br />

Charge, Ships Technical Officer, loves<br />

to exercise and lift heavy weights and<br />

is often seen just flexing his guns<br />

shouting the mantras “You don’t get<br />

these peeling potatoes” or “Can’t flex<br />

cardio” he said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Navy’s Mental Health and Well<br />

Being Action Plan 2018-2023 requires<br />

Navy personnel to be Fit to Fight, Fit<br />

to Work and Fit for Life.<br />

According to the Chief of Navy (CN),<br />

“Mental health and resilience is a<br />

critical enabler for our modern Navy<br />

and that this takes time and effort to<br />

achieve”. Glenelg’s Command team<br />

believe physical training plays a large<br />

part in the CN’s statement. Research<br />

indicates mental wellness through<br />

exercise can assist in reducing anxiety,<br />

depression, negative moods, low selfesteem<br />

and it helps improve cognitive<br />

function.<br />

<strong>The</strong> limited space to train and store exercise equipment<br />

has not deterred the crew of 25 with 90% training daily<br />

during the designated times of 1600-1700. <strong>The</strong> CO, an avid<br />

runner, recently completed 20,000 laps of his vessel.<br />

Physical Training Instructors (PTI) are not billeted to an<br />

ACPB, so the crew must remain diligent in their training to<br />

ensure they are physically and mentally fit to conduct<br />

assigned tasks, often in arduous conditions.<br />

Two Sports Officers, ABML-C Catalano and ABBM<br />

Dawson, liaise with HMAS Coonawarra’s PTIs to design<br />

creative workouts to accommodate the limited space for<br />

exercise and procure resistance and cardio equipment for<br />

the crew.<br />

“We enjoy working with the PTIs as they are ever<br />

accommodating by delivering a top notch service” said AB<br />

Dawson.<br />

AB Catalano, a true advocate of the importance of<br />

exercise, said: “Whilst doing PT you get a rush of chemical<br />

endorphins. <strong>The</strong>se trigger a positive feeling in the body<br />

leaving you feeling happier, healthier and with a clear mind<br />

ready to take on whatever is thrown at you”.<br />

Glenelg has worked hard to follow the CNs directive. <strong>The</strong><br />

Command team understands the importance that exercise<br />

plays to promote and maintain physically & psychologically<br />

resilient personnel.<br />

Life at sea has its challenges, and it is important to develop<br />

a good exercise routine early to help maintain control over<br />

your health. That is something the crew of HMAS Glenelg<br />

know only too well when sailing around the <strong>Top</strong> End.<br />

Written by CPOPTI Stuart Rowe<br />

Community Contributor<br />

50 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 51


STAY INFORMED<br />

ONLINE<br />

Weather and warnings - www.bom.gov.au<br />

Information on emergency situations in the NT - www.securent.gov.au<br />

Northern Territory Emergency Service - www.emergency.nt.gov.au<br />

Update on power, water & sewerage services - powerwater.com.au or<br />

follow @PowerWaterCorp on Twitter<br />

EMERGENCY KIT<br />

CHECKLIST<br />

ALERTS<br />

FREE severe weather alerts - register for SMS, email or voice alerts at<br />

www.tiofi.com.au/alerts<br />

CALL<br />

NT Tropical Cyclone Information Service - 1300 659 211<br />

NT Marine and Land Weather Warnings - 1300 659 214<br />

Australian Tsunami Threat Information - 1300 878 6264<br />

NTES emergency help in floods, storms & cyclones - 132 500<br />

Power & Water Corp - enquiries 1800 245 092<br />

or emergencies/faults 1800 245 090<br />

Cyclone Season<br />

Cyclone Season ends on 30 April each year. Darwin is no stranger to cyclones, with the<br />

last big one a Category 2 cyclone in <strong>March</strong> 2018. Cyclone ‘Marcus’ brought with it strong<br />

wind gusts of 130km per hour. It caused major damage to thousands of trees which, in<br />

turn, caused infrastructure damage to houses, vehicles, fences, carports, sheds,<br />

footpaths etc... Around 430 powerlines were downed leaving some 26,500 residents<br />

without power immediately after the cyclone.<br />

TUNE IN<br />

ABC Darwin - 105.7 FM (official emergency broadcaster)<br />

Or find your local ABC frequency - www.abc.net.au/reception/freq/<br />

Frequency-NT.pdf<br />

LISTEN OUT<br />

Listen for local community safety announcements and Emergency Alert<br />

messages sent to your phone.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Standard Emergency Warning Signal (SEWS) is a distinct audio<br />

signal that has been adopted to alert the community of an urgent safety<br />

message relating to a major emergency/disaster. It will be broadcast on<br />

public media (radio, television, sirens etc..)<br />

HOW TO PREPARE FOR A CYCLONE<br />

You may be alone for up to 3 days, ensure your emergency kit will sustain you and your<br />

household for that time.<br />

Prepare your property for severe storms, cyclones and storm surges.<br />

Warning: Never use portable generators indoors or in enclosed spaces<br />

Listen for official warnings and advice<br />

Follow instructions of emergency services<br />

Fill your vehicle with fuel and fill any water containers you may have<br />

<strong>The</strong> Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) issues the following tropical cyclone services:<br />

- OUTLOOK: Risk of cyclone formation within the next three days<br />

- WATCH: Gales expected in 24-48 hours; forecast updates every 6 hours<br />

- WARNING: Gales expected within 24 hours; updates at least every 3 hours<br />

REMEMBER TO CHECK!<br />

For loose or light materials that may need to be<br />

secured<br />

Your vehicle fuel tank is full in the event of<br />

evacuation<br />

Your emergency kit is ready to use<br />

You all know where the strongest part of the<br />

house is if you need to take cover<br />

Your children, pets and neighbours are all safe<br />

Your window shutters are closed or windows<br />

taped/secured<br />

You have enough water!<br />

TIPS FOR KITS<br />

Store in an easy to reach, dry place<br />

Information sourced from https://www.pfes.nt.gov.au<br />

52 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated<br />

Check contents once per year to<br />

ensure items still work and<br />

consumables are FEBRUARY/MARCH still in date. <strong>2021</strong> 53


First and foremost, before I begin<br />

speaking about our wonderful<br />

experiences using our RLLT Scheme<br />

A, I must mention that if you have<br />

little ones, please remember to pack<br />

their car seat! We forgot - lesson<br />

learned because the cost to hire one<br />

is like selling a kidney! We rented a<br />

car seat for one day, then visited good<br />

ole’ Kmart to purchase a new one.<br />

Now on a more exciting note; we<br />

chose to use our RLLT to visit Cairns<br />

and Port Douglas. As we are all very<br />

aware, COVID-19 has certainly<br />

restricted our travel options. Though<br />

we are usually regular overseas jet<br />

setters, we were excited to explore<br />

our Aussie backyard. We spent the<br />

first three days in Cairns staying at the<br />

Novotel. Though it was nice, it was<br />

best suited to the kiddos. Our room<br />

was complete with a queen-sized bed<br />

and a bunk, which had a television at<br />

the foot of each bunk in the wall. This,<br />

with their very own Xbox’s - yes, our<br />

children were excited! Although it was<br />

a lovely place to unwind, I would<br />

recommend something a little closer<br />

to the town centre if that is what you<br />

are looking for.<br />

During our few days in Cairns, we<br />

took the scenic railway train to<br />

Kuranda, through the Daintree, which<br />

included an educational talk about<br />

how the train track was built. After<br />

the two-hour train ride, we arrived in<br />

the beautiful town of Kuranda where<br />

you also have the option to get on a<br />

river cruise in the Daintree as well.<br />

We were keen to experience the<br />

Skyrail, however, it was under<br />

maintenance whilst we were there.<br />

We also embarked on a day tour to<br />

Green Island for some snorkelling, a<br />

trip on a glass-bottom boat and a<br />

semi-sub glass bottom boat as well. It<br />

was absolutely stunning and an<br />

Exploring Cairns<br />

and Port Douglas<br />

RLLT Holidays<br />

amazing experience, particularly for<br />

our second child as it was his first<br />

swim in a proper beach! Darwin born,<br />

almost 5 years old and never<br />

experienced an ocean swim - our<br />

poor deprived child. We do have the<br />

Larrakeyah base pool to thank for his<br />

swimming and snorkelling abilities<br />

without fear! To top off his first ocean<br />

experience, he almost stood on a<br />

huge turtle when he got in the water.<br />

He was not too impressed with that<br />

encounter, but the surrounding guests<br />

and his big brother thought it was<br />

“pretty cool”.<br />

To add to our family adventure, we<br />

enjoyed some fun in Muddy’s<br />

playground. I highly recommend this<br />

attraction! Remember to pack the<br />

swimmers for the kiddos as there is<br />

free water play and lots of fun play<br />

equipment. It is suitable for all ages as<br />

there are safe, separated sections for<br />

the tiny tots as well. We also visited<br />

the Cairns Esplanade Lagoon, where<br />

you can swim and enjoy the beautiful<br />

views whilst enjoying a range of<br />

delicious cuisines on offer.<br />

This brings me to a very important<br />

part of the experience... Shall I say,<br />

indulging in Thai food while looking<br />

over the water one night, followed by<br />

wood fire pizza and wine the next.<br />

Oh my goodness, Cairns delivered the<br />

goods with freshness and reasonably<br />

priced as well. It doesn’t get much<br />

better than that!<br />

After soaking up the Cairns lifestyle<br />

for a few days, we moved onto our<br />

next adventure - Port Douglas. We<br />

chose to hire a car from the day we<br />

arrived, which was the best decision<br />

for exploring. We travelled along the<br />

Great Barrier Reef Drive between<br />

Cairns and Port Douglas<br />

(approximately 70km) and the views<br />

were simply divine; crystal clear, blue<br />

waters as far as the eye can see and<br />

surrounding mountains nearby. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

is also the opportunity to stop at any<br />

of the 14 lookouts along the way!<br />

After exploring the coastline, we<br />

arrived in Port Douglas where we<br />

stayed at Peppers Beach Club. Let me<br />

tell you, wow wow WOW! Talk<br />

about living like Royalty or a celebrity<br />

at the very least. Thanks to the limited<br />

number of tourists as a result of<br />

COVID-19, we were blessed to be<br />

given a spa room for our children and<br />

an adjoining kitchen/lounge room with<br />

a penthouse suite for us – why, thank<br />

you! Complete with our very own<br />

pool view from our top floor<br />

apartment and topped off with a<br />

delightful balcony spa, including an allimportant<br />

privacy screen. Life could<br />

not get much better. While the kids<br />

were sound asleep in bed, we shared<br />

a bottle of wine and relaxed in our<br />

balcony spa, which was softly<br />

illuminated by the cool blue night<br />

glow of the pool.<br />

<strong>The</strong> kitchen was fully self-sufficient<br />

with all the appliances and accessories<br />

you need. <strong>The</strong>re was also a bar fridge<br />

in each room, lots of cupboard<br />

storage to unpack and feel at home,<br />

plus a washing machine and dryer. I<br />

am an ‘organiser’, so for this Mumma,<br />

being able to wash and pack clean<br />

clothes the night before leaving was a<br />

dream. <strong>The</strong>n, to unpack the suitcases<br />

right back into the cupboards at home<br />

= domestic bliss!<br />

Although the Peppers Beach Club<br />

provided the perfect holiday<br />

destination, we did also explore the<br />

surrounding area during our time in<br />

Port Douglas. We checked out the<br />

local markets on Sunday, which was<br />

great for little trinkets but very much<br />

like most markets. On one of the<br />

days, my husband and eldest son<br />

spent the day together snorkelling the<br />

Great Barrier Reef from a boat that<br />

transported them to three snorkelling<br />

locations.<br />

Whilst they were snorkelling; myself<br />

and my youngest son visited Rex<br />

Smeal Park and Trinity Bay Lookout,<br />

which provided stunning views and<br />

easy travel between the sights. We<br />

then indulged in a Thai massage for<br />

30 minutes, which is suitable for kids<br />

and only cost $35! I also did a sneaky<br />

little shop to a boutique clothing store<br />

in the Main Street of Port Douglas,<br />

with gorgeous dresses for under $25<br />

each. I think my indulgence was<br />

justified to help support the gorgeous<br />

community and boost tourism<br />

following the impact of COVID-19. As<br />

an additional bonus, I enjoyed filling<br />

my wardrobe before our end of year<br />

posting, without emptying our bank<br />

account.<br />

<strong>The</strong> following day, we drove 20<br />

minutes to Mossman Gorge, which<br />

was absolutely breathtaking and<br />

completely child friendly. Very easy<br />

walking paths, a beautiful bridge,<br />

mountain views, waterfalls, a small bus<br />

ride up to the gorge and we were<br />

able to go for a swim in the rock pool,<br />

all for only $30 with a family pass.<br />

Finally, on our last day in Far North<br />

Queensland, we<br />

visited the Fig<br />

Tree Playground<br />

and had a<br />

delicious lunch<br />

from a café on the<br />

boardwalk near<br />

the playground,<br />

which is another<br />

activity I highly<br />

recommend for<br />

young families. We<br />

flew back to Darwin with some<br />

amazing family memories of Cairns<br />

and Port Douglas, which was packed<br />

with so many ‘must-do’ activities and<br />

adventures!<br />

Written by Kylie Kurtz<br />

<strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Community Contributor<br />

54 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 55


Mosquitos and Midgies<br />

Thank you to the Department of Health for supplying the calendars of the Salt Marsh Mosquitos and<br />

the Biting Midges. For more information on either of these pests, visit the Department of Health’s<br />

website referenced below.<br />

BITING MIDGES<br />

Personal Protection<br />

REFERENCES<br />

Mangrove biting midges<br />

Usually highest 3 days either side<br />

of the full moon and to a lesser<br />

extent 3 days either side of the<br />

new moon. Relatively low<br />

numbers occur during the wet<br />

season, with an increase from<br />

April to July. Highest numbers<br />

occur between August and<br />

December, coinciding with the<br />

increase in high tide levels each<br />

month during this period. Biting<br />

midges (culicoides ornatus) are<br />

most active in the 2 hour period<br />

before and after sunrise and<br />

sunset.<br />

Mosquitos<br />

<strong>The</strong> mosquitoes are largely<br />

absent or occur in relatively<br />

low numbers from <strong>February</strong> to<br />

July. you will notice lower<br />

populations before the<br />

numbers increase coming into<br />

May. This doesn’t mean you can<br />

be complacent, so please follow<br />

the below recommendations to<br />

protect yourself and the family<br />

from bites, especially near dawn<br />

and dusk.<br />

Try to limit your time outside during the immediate hours before<br />

and after sunrise and sunset, particularly after heavy rainfall.<br />

Wear appropriate clothing, such as full-length trousers, longsleeved<br />

shirts, socks and shoes.<br />

Use insect repellents containing DEET, picaridin or PMD (extract<br />

of lemon eucalyptus – at a minimum concentration of 30%)<br />

Mosquito lanterns and electric plug in devices and barrier sprays<br />

help near outdoor patio or recreation areas. Apply directly to<br />

screening shrubs and external walls and fences up to 2m high for<br />

extended periods of good protection.<br />

https://hdl.handle.net/10137/11382<br />

https://hdl.handle.net/10137/11459<br />

https://hdl.handle.net/10137/11453<br />

https://hdl.handle.net/10137/11460<br />

SALT MARSH MOSQUITOS<br />

TIDES<br />

NORTH COAST - DARWIN <strong>2021</strong><br />

TIMES AND HEIGHTS OF HIGH AND LOW WATERS<br />

TIME ZONE - 0930<br />

MOON PHASES<br />

NEW MOON<br />

FIRST QUARTER<br />

FULL MOON<br />

LAST QUARTER<br />

<strong>The</strong> Bureau of Meteorology gives no warranty of any kind<br />

whether express, implied, statutory or otherwise in respect to<br />

the availability, accuracy, currency, completeness, quality or<br />

reliability of the information or that the information will be fit for<br />

any particular purpose or will not infringe any third party<br />

intellectual property rights. <strong>The</strong> Bureau's liability for any loss,<br />

damage, cost or expense resulting from use of, or reliance on, the<br />

information is entirely excluded. Tidal predictions for Northern<br />

Territory Ports are supplied by the National Tidal Centre of the<br />

Bureau of Meteorology, copyright reserved.<br />

Tides provided with permission of NT Government, Department of Transport<br />

https://nt.gov.au/marine/for-all-harbour-and-boat-users/check-the-tides/tidal-information-nt-ports<br />

PIG HUNTING<br />

You may need a permit to hunt in the NT<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are two types of hunting permits available:<br />

- Pig hunting permit for reserves<br />

- Waterfowl hunting permit<br />

You must always carry your NT shooting licence and your<br />

permit to hunt feral pigs. <strong>The</strong>re are restrictions about where and<br />

when you can hunt, and what firearms you can use.<br />

ALERT African swine fever has been found in countries close<br />

to Australia including Timor Leste. You should follow biosecurity<br />

measures and report sick or dead pigs by calling 1800 675<br />

888. Find out more https://nt.gov.au/industry/agriculture/<br />

livestock/animal-health-and-diseases/african-swine-fever<br />

Harrison Dam Reserve<br />

You can use any category A firearm that is a shotgun -<br />

except for a pump action or self-loading shotgun. Read<br />

the Firearms Act 1997. You can use a hunting bow including<br />

a recurve bow, reflex bow, long bow or<br />

compound bow. Crossbows are not allowed.<br />

Shoal Bay Reserve<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are particular weapons you must use during and<br />

outside the waterfowl season when you are hunting feral pigs<br />

at Shoal Bay Reserve.<br />

Pig hunting during the waterfowl season<br />

You can use any category A firearm that is a shotgun -<br />

except for a pump action or self-loading shotgun. Read the<br />

Act. You can use a hunting bow including a recurve bow,<br />

reflex bow, long bow or compound bow. You cannot use a<br />

crossbow.<br />

Pig hunting outside the waterfowl season<br />

<strong>The</strong> rules about hunting bows are the same as above, but<br />

there are different types of firearms you can use outside of<br />

the waterfowl hunting season.<br />

Hunting dogs<br />

If you want to take hunting dogs into a reserve, you must<br />

have a licensed firearm or weapon with you. You must not<br />

have more than three dogs with you while hunting in a<br />

reserve.<br />

Please visit the following website for further information<br />

https://nt.gov.au/leisure/hunting-and-shooting<br />

56 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 57


With our big rivers primed from monsoonal rain, now is<br />

the time to tackle big barramundi. Look for dropping<br />

water levels up on the floodplains where streams flow<br />

into the big rivers and creeks. <strong>The</strong>se little run off points<br />

are where barra will be waiting in ambush for bait<br />

flowing inward and can return you loads of fish in a<br />

session. Some points of interest to start, the top of<br />

Nourlangie Creek on the South Alligator River, Clear<br />

Creek, Charlies Creek, Browns Creek and Bamboo<br />

Creek on <strong>The</strong> Daly, Beatrice Creek, Scotts Creek and<br />

Manton Creeks on <strong>The</strong> Adelaide River. Don’t ignore any<br />

little run-off looking waterfalls on the river banks either<br />

as they are always worth a cast. Generally, this early in<br />

the year requires small lures for this purpose, so be<br />

armed with 65mm Squidgy Slick Rigs, 3inch Wedgies,<br />

Reidys Rubbers, ZMan 3” Minnows, Samaki Vibes and<br />

trust me…DOA Terroreyz!!<br />

It’s all in the timing, and the timing is near.<br />

Get into Craig’s for the latest up to date info and we<br />

will help you choose the best time and tide for your<br />

preferred location and assist you to select the tackle<br />

best suited to score you the fish of a lifetime.<br />

Craig Grosvenor<br />

Craig’s Fishing Warehouse<br />

Shop 2, 1 Berrimah Road Truck City, BERRIMAH NT 0828<br />

Ph: 08 8947 4867 | Fax: 08 8947 4806<br />

Em: sales@craigsfishingwarehouse.com.au<br />

Big river junctions are good places to scan around and<br />

locate bigger fish and up the size of your lures to match<br />

the bait you may see in the area. I like the 5-6” Airgaps<br />

for this job as they look just like our top end mullet.<br />

Trolling the mouths of the big rivers produce some<br />

monster metre-plus Barra this time of year. Of course,<br />

Shady Camp’s Sampan and Tommy Cut Creeks will be<br />

jam packed with keen anglers trolling big Bombers,<br />

Killalure BarraBaits and Big Ass B52’s. <strong>The</strong> Finniss River<br />

copped plenty of rain this year, so it will also be firing<br />

on all cylinders with quality fish.<br />

Weedless Rigged 5”<br />

Wedgetails<br />

15% OFF ALL LURES<br />

WIN A FAMILY PASS TO<br />

CROCOSAURUS COVE!<br />

Colour in our crocodile and send a photo with your name, age,<br />

phone number and suburb to admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

Entries close 4 th <strong>March</strong> <strong>2021</strong>. Winner will be notified via email/phone<br />

and announced in the next edition of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong>.<br />

Present this voucher at Craig’s Fishing<br />

Warehouse to receive 15% off all lures<br />

in store!<br />

Valid until 1 st April <strong>2021</strong><br />

This voucher is only found in <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> and as such, this<br />

offer is only applicable to recipients of this magazine.<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

JOSHUA (aged 5)<br />

FROM PARAP<br />

WINNER OF<br />

OUR CROC HUNT<br />

DEC/JAN<br />

58 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 59


Kids Corner<br />

FIND ALL THE WORDS<br />

BELOW IN OUR EASTER<br />

WORDSEARCH!<br />

BASKET<br />

BONNET<br />

BUNNY<br />

CHICKS<br />

CHOCOLATE<br />

DAFFODILS<br />

DUCKLINGS<br />

EASTER EGG<br />

EGGS<br />

HOT CROSS BUNS<br />

JELLY BEANS<br />

LAMBS<br />

RABBIT<br />

Teen Scene<br />

CODE BREAKER<br />

Decipher the morse code using our key below to reveal a question you must answer. Send your<br />

answer to the question to admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au for your chance to win 2 tickets to<br />

Event Cinemas!<br />

SPOT THE 7 DIFFERENCES<br />

HELP THE RABBIT GET<br />

TO HIS FRIEND, CHICK!<br />

MINI MOVIE<br />

REVIEWS<br />

Seeking TV and<br />

Movie fans to<br />

submit reviews<br />

of your favourite<br />

film or television<br />

show.<br />

Send your review to<br />

admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

60 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 61


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong><br />

Office.......................................................................................................0419274735<br />

Advertising..............................................admin@thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

Website........................................................www.thetopendermagazine.org.au<br />

Emergencies and Useful Contacts<br />

Emergency Services..............................................................................................000<br />

Police Assistance Line................................................................................131 444<br />

1800 IMSICK.......................................................................................1800 467 425<br />

All Hours Support Line..................................................................1800 626 036<br />

COVID-19 Helpline, NT.............................................................1800 0008 002<br />

Crime Stoppers NT.........................................................................1800 333 000<br />

Defence Family Helpline................................................................1800 624 608<br />

Defence Housing Australia (DHA)........................................................139 342<br />

Defence Switchboard......................................................................1300 333 362<br />

Family Violence and Counselling.................................................1800 737 732<br />

Health Direct.....................................................................................1800 022 222<br />

Hospital, Darwin Private Hospital..............................................08 8920 6011<br />

Hospital, Palmerston Regional Hospital...................................08 7979 9200<br />

Hospital, Royal Darwin Hospital.................................................08 8922 8888<br />

Lifeline..............................................................................................................131 114<br />

Night Patrol........................................................................................1800 101 645<br />

Poisons Information Line .........................................................................131 126<br />

Power and Water.............................................................................1800 245 090<br />

Secure NT........................................................................www.securent.nt.gov.au<br />

SES Emergency Helpline............................................................................132 500<br />

Snake Catcher....................................................................................1800 453 210<br />

Tropical Cyclone Information NT..............................................1300 659 211<br />

NT Defence Bases and Establishments<br />

Defence Establishment Berrimah<br />

Front Gate................................................................................08 8935 4269<br />

Mess Manager..........................................08 8935 4422 / 0437 795 258<br />

Larrakeyah Barracks<br />

Front Gate................................................................................08 8935 5598<br />

Officers’ Mess..........................................................................08 8935 5570<br />

ORs’ Mess.................................................................................08 8935 5591<br />

Sergeants’ Mess.......................................................................08 8935 5580<br />

RAAF Base Darwin<br />

Airmen‘s Mess.........................................................................08 8923 5517<br />

Front Gate................................................................................08 8923 5549<br />

Officers Mess...........................................................................08 8923 5482<br />

Sergeants’ Mess.......................................................................08 8923 5505<br />

RAAF Base Tindal<br />

Airmen‘s Mess.........................................................................08 8973 6240<br />

Front Gate................................................................................08 8973 6228<br />

Sergeants’ Mess.......................................................................08 8973 6385<br />

Robertson Barracks<br />

Front Gate................................................................................08 8925 3700<br />

Officers’ Mess..........................................................................08 8925 3548<br />

ORs’ Mess.................................................................................08 8925 2514<br />

Sergeants’ Mess.......................................................................08 8925 6702<br />

Defence Community Houses<br />

Larrakeyah Neighbourhood House............................................0447 586 591<br />

Email...........................................................larrakeyahhouse@hotmail.com<br />

Network Tindal.................................................................................0412 619 277<br />

Email.....................................................................networktindal@gmail.com<br />

Robertson Barracks Family Group..............................................0490 151 944<br />

Email............................................................................rbfg07@yahoo.com.au<br />

On-base Services<br />

Canteens<br />

AAFCANS<br />

Robertson Barracks, Cafe Central....................................08 8925 2542<br />

RAAF Darwin, Darwin Canteen........................................08 8981 2508<br />

Robertson Barracks, Shout VC Canteen........................08 8925 6720<br />

Tindal Cafe, Convenience & Fuel Station......................08 8973 6201<br />

Navy Canteens<br />

National Operations Manager...........08 8935 5144 / 0477 477 147<br />

Larrakeyah, Outpipes............................................................08 8935 5144<br />

Military Banks<br />

Australian Military Bank<br />

Larrakeyah Barracks...............................................................08 8981 2245<br />

Robertson Barracks...............................................................08 8995 7800<br />

Defence Bank<br />

Larrakeyah Barracks...............................................................08 8935 5499<br />

RAAF Darwin...........................................................................08 7923 2500<br />

Robertson Barracks...............................................................08 8936 6400<br />

Tindal..........................................................................................08 8965 1600<br />

Hairdressers<br />

Larrakeyah Barracks.........................................................................08 8935 5596<br />

RAAF Darwin – Julie-Anne...........................08 8923 5153 / 0402 235 731<br />

Robertson Barracks – Hair Dooz................................................08 8925 3300<br />

Robertson Barracks – South End Barber Shop......................08 8925 6723<br />

Uniform and Equipment<br />

Robertson Barracks, Regional Clothing Store<br />

Retail (Purchases)...................................................................08 8925 8828<br />

CIP (Exchanges)......................................................................08 8925 8823<br />

Tailor...........................................................................................08 8925 8831<br />

Tim’s Medal Mounting.....................................................................0448 129 531<br />

Bulletproof NT..................................................................................08 8947 0935<br />

Chaplains<br />

Army On-call......................................................................................0427 713 963<br />

Navy On-call......................................................................................0409 662 823<br />

RAAF Darwin On-call.....................................................................0477 308 064<br />

RAAF Tindal On-call.......................................................................0427 890 054<br />

Helplines<br />

Lifeline (24hr)..........................................................................................131 114<br />

Kids Helpline (24hr)...................................................................1800 551 800<br />

Parent Helpline – Karitane (24hr)........................................1300 227 464<br />

Parentline.......................................................................................1300 301 300<br />

Defence Community and Veterans<br />

Support Services<br />

Defence Community Organisation (DCO)<br />

Website................................................................www.defence.gov.au/dco<br />

Darwin Office..........................................................................08 8935 7900<br />

Tindal/Katherine Office..............................................08 8973 6186<br />

Defence Families of Australia (DFA)<br />

National Convenor................................................................1800 100 509<br />

National Delegate NT and Kimberly – Jessica Hanison......0418 807 548<br />

Email............................................................................................nt@dfa.org.au<br />

Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA)..................................1800 555 254<br />

Website.................................................................................www.dva.gov.au<br />

Defence Service Home Loans.....................................................1800 722 000<br />

Provider Enquiries..................................................................1800 550 457<br />

Kookaburra Kids................................................................................1300 566 525<br />

Website...........................................................www.kookaburrakids.org.au<br />

Open Arms (24hrs) ...........................................................................1800 011 046<br />

Website........................................................................www.openarms.gov.au<br />

Legacy Northern Territory..............................................................08 8948 0830<br />

Website........................................................................www.legacy.com.au/nt<br />

National ADF Family Health Program.........................................02 6266 3547<br />

Website..................................................................www.adffamilyhealth.com<br />

Red Shield Defence Services – Salvation Army<br />

Gerald & Mairi Mitchell...........................................................0400 642 881<br />

Returned Services League (RSL)<br />

Darwin...............................................................................darwin@rslsa.org.au<br />

Darwin North.............................................................................08 8945 0701<br />

Katherine (via Secretary)........................................................0407 130 095<br />

Nhulunbuy...................................................................................08 8987 0600<br />

Palmerston...................................................................................0488 001 862<br />

Tennant Creek...........................................................................0499 564 031<br />

Veterans Australia (NT) ........................sec@veteransaustraliant.org.au<br />

Advocacy Assistance........................smatdp@veteransaustraliant.org.au<br />

Useful Defence Contacts<br />

Comsuper<br />

ADF Cover..................................................................................1300 001 977<br />

ADF Super...................................................................................1300 203 439<br />

DFRDB..........................................................................................1300 001 677<br />

Military Super (MSBS).............................................................1300 006 727<br />

Defence Housing Australia (DHA)...........................................................133 342<br />

Website....................................................................................www.dha.gov.au<br />

Defence Relocations and Housing Manager NT......................0458 241 867<br />

Toll Transitions.....................................................................................1800 819 167<br />

Defence Tax Management Office (CTMO)...............................1800 806 053<br />

Health<br />

Australian Breastfeeding Association......................................1800 686 268<br />

Autism NT.............................................................................................08 8948 4424<br />

Bereaved Parent Support NT|SIDS and Kids NT....................08 8948 5311<br />

24-hour Emergency Support Line.......................................0448 849 234<br />

Birthline Pregnancy Support......................................................1300 655 156<br />

Cancer Council NT<br />

Alice Springs...............................................................................08 8953 5920<br />

Darwin..........................................................................................08 8944 1800<br />

Katherine......................................................................................08 8971 2022<br />

Website..........................................................................www.nt.cancer.org.au<br />

Carers Australia NT...........................................................................08 8944<br />

4888<br />

Website......................................................................www.carersnt.asn.au<br />

Childbirth Education Association Darwin.............................08 8948 3043<br />

Website..................................................................www.ceadarwin.asn.au<br />

Community Care Centres<br />

Alice Springs Community Health Centre...................08 8951 6711<br />

Casuarina Community Care Centre.............................08 8922 7301<br />

Katherine Community Health Centre..........................08 8973 8570<br />

Karama Child and Family Health Clinic.......................08 8922 7301<br />

Nhulunbuy Community Health Centre.......................08 8987 0435<br />

Nylander Child Health Clinic..........................................08 8922 7301<br />

Palmerston Community Care Centre..........................08 8999 3344<br />

Tennant Creek Community Health Care...................08 8962 4218<br />

Cradle Support Group.................................................................0438 272 353<br />

Website..........................................................................www.cradle.org.au<br />

Darwin Homebirth Group ........................................................08 8922 5522<br />

Website..................................darwinhomebirthgroup.wordpress.com<br />

Defence Special Needs Support Group (DSNSG)<br />

Website...........................................................................www.dsnsg.org.au<br />

National Coordinator........................................................1800 037 674<br />

Darwin Coordinator.............................................darwin@dsnsg.org.au<br />

Katherine/Tindal Coordinator......................katherine@dsnsg.org.au<br />

Down Syndrome Association NT............................................08 8985 6222<br />

Website.................................................www.downsyndroment.com.au<br />

Epilepsy Centre – Epilepsy Association of SA & NT........1300 850 081<br />

Website.........................................................www.epilepsycentre.org.au<br />

Family Planning NT.......................................................................08 8948 0144<br />

Website.........................................................................www.fpwnt.com.au<br />

Hearing Australia.......................................................................................134 432<br />

Northern Territory Department of Health (DOH)..........08 8999 2400<br />

Website....................................................................www.health.nt.gov.au<br />

Pregnancy, Birth and Baby Helpline........................................1800 882 436<br />

<strong>Top</strong> End Mental Health Service................................................08 8999 4988<br />

Wellness Centre............................................................................08 8946 7176<br />

Website..............................................www.cdu.edu.au/wellness-centre<br />

Sports and Activities<br />

Australian Air Force Cadets 8 Wing<br />

AAFC 801 Squadron – Winnellie..................................08 8923 5713<br />

AAFC 802 Squadron – Driver........................................0473 816 694<br />

AAFC 803 Squadron – Tindal........................................0427 397 495<br />

AAFC 804 Squadron – Alice Springs...........................08 8953 4484<br />

Australian Army Cadets..............................08 8935 5174 / 08 8935 5488<br />

Email............................................................aachq-nt@armycadets.gov.au<br />

Australian Navy Cadets<br />

Training Ship Darwin...........................TSDarwin@navycadets.gov.au<br />

Training Ship Melville Bay...........TSMelvilleBay@navycadets.gov.au<br />

Girl Guides NT...............................................................................08 8981 3628<br />

Website...................................................................www.girlguides.org.au<br />

Playgroups Association NT (PANT).......................................08 8945 7775<br />

Website............................................................www.playgroupnt.com.au<br />

RAAF Darwin Fishing Club – Sgt Tracy Sylvester..............08 8924 2045<br />

RAAF Darwin Golf Club.............................................................0459 746 306<br />

Swimming<br />

Masters Swimming..............................................................08 8981 5919<br />

62 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> | Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Incorporated FEBRUARY/MARCH <strong>2021</strong> 63


Alice AUSSI.............................................thecullenanes@ozemail.com.au<br />

Darwin Stingers..........................................................stingers@iinet.net.au<br />

Palmerston Sharks.................................info@palmerstonsharks.com.au<br />

Goldfishbowl Swim School.................................................08 8931 1000<br />

NT Swim School.....................................................................08 8948 1000<br />

Website.................................................www.ntswimschool.com.au<br />

Palmerston & Rural Swimming Club<br />

Head Coach Daniel Gerlach....................................0400 299 622<br />

Swim Dynamics Swim School............................................0421 631 624<br />

Website......................................................www.swimdynamics.com<br />

Scouts NT...........................................................................................08 8948 0994<br />

Website.....................................................................www.nt.scouts.com.au<br />

Surf Life Saving NT..........................................................................08 8985 6588<br />

Website.................................................................www.lifesavingnt.com.au<br />

Local Government and Regional Councils<br />

Alice Springs Town Council..........................................................08 8950 0500<br />

Barkly Regional Council..................................................................08 8962 0000<br />

Belyuen Community Government Council.............................08 8978 5061<br />

Central Desert Regional Council................................................1300 360 605<br />

City of Darwin...................................................................................08 8930 0300<br />

City of Palmerston...........................................................................08 8935 9922<br />

Coomalie Community Government Council..........................08 8976 0058<br />

East Arnhem Regional Council....................................................08 8986 8986<br />

Katherine Town Council................................................................08 8972 5500<br />

Litchfield Council..............................................................................08 8983 0600<br />

MacDonnell Regional Council......................................................08 8958 9600<br />

Nhulunbuy Corporation.................................................................08 8939 2200<br />

Roper Gulf Regional Councils......................................................08 8972 9000<br />

Tiwi Regional Council.....................................................................08 8970 9500<br />

Victoria Daly Regional Council....................................................08 8972 0777<br />

Wagait Shire Council......................................................................08 8978 5185<br />

West Arnhem Regional Council.................................................08 8979 9444<br />

West Daly Regional Council.........................................................08 8901 3920<br />

Government<br />

Bureau of Meteorology..................................................................1800 659 214<br />

Website...............................................................................www.bom.gov.au<br />

Department of Human Services.............................................................132 468<br />

Centrelink<br />

Carers..........................................................................................132 717<br />

Families........................................................................................136 150<br />

Complaints and Feedback.........................................1800 132 468<br />

Medicare<br />

General Enquiries....................................................................132 011<br />

myGov Helpdesk...............................................................................132 307<br />

Motor Vehicle Registry NT...........................................................1300 654 628<br />

Website............................................................................www.mvr.nt.gov.au<br />

Road Report ......................................................................................1800 246 199<br />

Website.............................................................www.roadreport.nt.gov.au<br />

Animal Services and Animal Care<br />

Injured Wildlife<br />

Wildcare Alice Springs.........................................................0419 221 128<br />

Wildcare Darwin....................................08 8988 6121 / 0408 885 341<br />

Darwin Wildlife Sanctuary..................................................0473 992 581<br />

Katherine Wildlife Rescue Services.................................0412 955 336<br />

RSPCA (Darwin)....................................................................08 8984 3795<br />

Pounds and Animal Shelters<br />

Alice Springs Animal Shelter..............08 8950 0500 / 08 8953 4430<br />

Darwin........................................................................................08 8947 2099<br />

Katherine...................................................................................08 8972 5500<br />

Palmerston................................................................................08 8935 9977<br />

Snake Catcher....................................................................................1800 453 210<br />

While the information contained in the Handy Directory is considered by the<br />

employees and committee of the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Tri-Services <strong>Magazine</strong> Inc to be true<br />

and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of<br />

publication may render the information inaccurate. <strong>The</strong> information may change<br />

without notice, and the <strong>Top</strong> <strong>Ender</strong> Tri-Service <strong>Magazine</strong> and those working on<br />

its behalf, cannot be held in any way liable for the accuracy of any information<br />

printed or stored, or in any way interpreted and used, by the reader.<br />

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