Man missing in river near Wagga Wagga

Police are searching for a man who went missing while swimming in the Murrumbidgee River at Oura Beach today.

About 6.45pm (Thursday 25 December 2014), two men were swimming in the Murrumbidgee River at Oura Beach, 15km north east of Wagga Wagga, when they got swept down the river.

One man, aged in his mid 20’s, managed to swim to shore. The other man, aged 25, was swept away and has not been seen or heard from since.

Police were contacted and Wagga Wagga Local Area Command attended and commenced searching for the man, with the assistance of NSW Volunteer Rescue Associate (VRA).

Heavy vehicle collision on the Hume Highway at Gundagai

About 8.15pm yesterday (Sunday 21 December 2014), highway patrol police were called to a heavy vehicle collision on the Hume Highway at Gundagai approximately 200m north of West Street.

Inquiries revealed the 43-year-old male driver was allegedly using his mobile phone when he lost control of the prime mover and trailer. As a result of the crash, the vehicle’s fuel tanks ruptured and HAZMAT personnel from Fire & Rescue NSW responded to the fuel spill. The driver was issued with infringement notices while defect notices were applied to the prime mover and trailer.

Emergency warnings for Vic bushfires

Strong winds and challenging weather conditions have sparked bushfire emergency warnings in Victoria.

The Country Fire Authority currently has emergency warnings in place for Boweya, Mount Bruno, Boweya North, Strathbogie South, Strathbogie, Kithbrook, Kelvin View, Gooram, Creightons Creek, Goorambat, Chesney, Devenish, Chesney Vale, Winton North, Bungeet and Bungeet West in Victoria.Watch and act alerts are also current for West Wodonga, Wodonga, Killawarra, Wangandary, Waldara, Wangaratta South.

Fire fighters have made good progress in their battle against a large grass fire heading towards the Victorian town of West Wodonga.The community has been on high alert all day due to hot, dry and windy conditions. Firefighters have used large water bombing aircraft and heavy machinery to build a fire retardant to protect homes just six kilometres from the blaze.

With temperatures and winds easing in the area by Tuesday evening the CFA says it is comfortable that houses will not be affected by the blaze overnight.Residents in Strathbogie South, Strathbogie, Kithbrook, Kelvin View, Gooram and Creightons Creek have been told they are in immediate danger and to move to a relief centre in Euroa if it was safe to do so.

Unpredictable weather conditions on Tuesday evening will cause the fire behaviour to become erratic and fire fighters are continuing their efforts in difficult terrain, the CFA said.Chesney Vale, Winton North, Goorambat, Chesney and Devenish residents have been told that leaving was their safest option before conditions became dangerous due to large fast moving out-of-control grass fires.A relief centre has been set up in Benalla.

Crash at Yass

A 53-year-old man driving a Ford Falcorn crashed his car on the Hume Highway on Saturday at 9am. The man was travelling north, two kilometres south of the Barton Highway when he lost control and collided with the guard rail on the left hand side of the road. The man was taken to hospital with serious injuries. Investigations are continuing.

LEE KERNAGHAN PAYS TRIBUTE TO DIGGERS PAST & PRESENT ON 'SPIRIT OF THE ANZACS'

2015 marks the 100th Anniversary of the ANZAC’s landing at Gallipoli. In honour of this landmark occasion, music icon and former Australian of the Year, Lee Kernaghan, teams up with a host of local artists and musicians to bring you ‘SPIRIT OF THE ANZACS’; released 27 February 2015.

Recorded at Rancom Street Studio in Sydney with long-time producer and collaborator Garth Porter, ‘Spirit Of The Anzacs’ is a tribute to those that have given their lives, those who have served, and those that still today step bravely into the unknown to serve our country.

Lee and Garth were granted unique access to the Australian War Memorial archive, collecting letters penned by diggers to their loved ones at home and spanning World War I to the present day. Each song on the 16-track recording is inspired by one of these real letters.

“This is some of the most powerful material that I’ve ever had the privilege to record in my career”, said Lee. “The album takes you on a real journey, from the trenches of the Western Front to the bombing of Darwin, Kokoda, Long Tan, and the dust of Uruzgan Province in Afghanistan. It is a project that goes to the heart of who we are as a nation.”

“Every nation has its story. This is ours. From the bloody Gallipoli landing to the dusty deserts of Afghanistan, precious war letters held at the Australian War Memorial have inspired this moving tribute from one of Australia’s great story tellers, Lee Kernaghan. The spirit of the men and women who wrote them, their courage and sacrifice lives in these songs – and in us.” – Dr Brendan Nelson, Director, Australian War Memorial

“Throughout Lee Kernaghan’s career he has created albums that tell our Australian stories – from the struggles and hardship of life on the land, to the great and sometimes terrible beauty of our country, to the resilience, pride and good humour of our people. In this album he sets to music some of the most profound and moving stories, first-hand accounts of Australians touched by the horrors and tragedy of war. Lee Kernaghan is perhaps the only artist who can craft an album that will resonate equally with all Australians, from the cities to the bush, men and women, young and old. These are our stories and they continue to shape who we are.” – Robert Patterson, ABC Commercial

“I’m really looking forward to releasing ‘Spirit Of The Anzacs’ in February, in a special year when we commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the landing at Gallipoli, and the birth of the ANZAC legend”, says Lee.

DESIGNING CRAFT / CRAFTING DESIGN 40 Years of JamFactory

Four decades of the very best contemporary art and design are now on display at Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, in an exhibition celebrating one of Australia’s iconic creative institutions – Designing Craft / Crafting Design: 40 Years of JamFactory.

Curated by Margaret Hancock Davis, Margot Osborne and Brian Parkes, this enthralling exhibition presents new work by 40 selected artists, craftspeople and designers who have had a significant involvement with the JamFactory during its forty year history and who are presently producing work of outstanding quality.

Designing Craft / Crafting Design, sponsored by JamFactory’s 40th anniversary partner ANZ, showcases the vibrancy of craft and design practice and demonstrates the diverse pathways to a sustainable and successful career in the field.

The exhibitors include alumni as well as past and present staff and studio tenants – from dynamic emerging talent through to some of the most established and recognised practitioners in Australia. Their works on display cover an incredible range of creative innovation, from ceramics, furniture and jewellery to metal design and glass.

Established by the South Australian Government under Premier Don Dunstan in 1973, JamFactory supports and promotes outstanding design and craftsmanship through its widely acclaimed studios, galleries and shops. A unique not-for-profit organisation located in the Adelaide city centre, JamFactory is recognised nationally and internationally as a centre for excellence.

Designing Craft / Crafting Design: 40 Years of JamFactory will be on display at Wagga Wagga Art Gallery from Saturday 13 December, 2014 until Sunday 25 January, 2015. The exhibition will be officially launched on Friday 12 December at 6pm by Bronwyn Kemp, who is among Australia’s most acclaimed ceramic artists, as well as one of the JamFactory alumni whose works have been showcased in the exhibition.

Designing Craft/Crafting Design: 40 Years of JamFactory is a JamFactory and Country Arts SA touring exhibition, principally sponsored by ANZ.

Designing Craft/Crafting Design: 40 Years of JamFactory is supported by Arts SA’s New Exhibitions Fund and by Visions of Australia, an Australian Government program supporting touring exhibitions by providing funding assistance for the development and touring of Australian cultural material across Australia.

Exhibition Launch:
When: Friday 12 December, 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Where: Wagga Wagga Art Gallery

Exhibition Dates:
When: Saturday 6 December 2014 – Sunday 25 January 2015
Where: Wagga Wagga Art Gallery

Italian spin for Aussie mohair at Tarcutta

2105508AUSTRALIAN Angora producers are primed to grow the best mohair in the world following a visit from Italy’s biggest spinner, who can’t get enough of their premium clip.

Cesare Savio – owner of Safil, Europe’s biggest worsted yarn plant – was at Narrandera in southern NSW’s Riverina recently to meet growers and inspect their mohair clip ahead of the Australian Mohair Marketing Organisation’s (AMMO) final auction for the year.

Mr Savio was impressed by the clip’s premium weaving-style mohair, which he requires for his high-end customers, including Louis Vuitton and Armani.

At his worsted yarn plant in Bulgaria about 300 tonnes of mohair and mohair-blended yarns are processed, the bulk of which is sourced from South Africa.

However, Australian mohair grower G.T. Ferreira, who moved from South Africa four years ago, captured Safil’s attention by growing the finest mohair Mr Savio had seen worldwide.

“The quality of the mohair you have in Australia – I could not have imagined,” Mr Savio said.

Mr Savio holds high hopes for Australia as the place to invest in the development of fine mohair, not South Africa.

“In all markets people are always looking for finer quality products, and mohair is a wonderful fibre with lovely characteristics for apparel,” he said.

Mr Savio said he wasn’t concerned with price since his focus is on supporting Australian producers to grow quality mohair.

“Developing and improving the quality of mohair will lead to better prices when Australia can produce higher quantities,” he said.

He said presently most mohair was used for knitwear and hand knitting – an image he believed most people had of the fibre.

“We want to improve people’s knowledge of the characteristics of the fibre and how it is suited to apparel and other fabric uses, like upholstery.”

Mr Savio believed there was a market for pure mohair Italian suits.

“It’s a yarn that manufacturers have wanted for many years but I had not been able to supply,” he said.

The finest mohair micron he had sourced prior to meeting Mr Ferreira was 24-micron from South Africa.

Mr Ferreira provided Safil with a 23-micron mohair this year that was grown in Australia and used to produce very fine suiting fabric for Ermenegildo Zegna.

“Australia is now growing the finest mohair in the world and by next year it will no doubt reach an even finer level,” Mr Savio said.

Safil buys 40 to 50 tonnes of standard mohair a year.

New mohair brand

Mohair Australia launched its new marketing brand Pure Australian Mohair over the AMMO auction weekend.

The Pure Australian Mohair label was created to provide full traceability for premium mohair and differentiate it from other mohair on the market.

Mr Savio said full traceability from the animal in Australia along the processing chain to the final garment was important to his customers.

Of the 7000 tonnes of yarn Safil produced each year, 50 per cent was standard yarn and 50 per cent was customised yarn (combined with other fibres).

Mr Ferreira, who is Mohair Australia vice president, said the Pure Australian Mohair brand, and the quality mohair that would be marketed under it, gave Australian the opportunity to become the most valuable mohair producing country in the world.

Mr Ferreira said 26 growers were involved in the first weaving mohair trial that was backed by Safil, and they were now busy stockpiling mohair for the second trial.

There were 1600 kilograms of greasy mohair committed to the first trial, with at least 1600kg to 2000kg (with a minimum fibre length of 120 millimetres) the target for the second trial.

AMMO chairman Brett Grant, Tarcutta, NSW, said it was a very exciting time for the mohair market because weaving mohair was a product and market Australian growers hadn’t entered before.

“If we can produce a fibre that meets the market standard it will mean the whole industry will move forward in producing better fibre,” he said.

Mr Grant hoped premium prices of about 6000 cents a kilogram paid for weaving mohair would entice more people to the industry.

There are presently 300 growers on AMMO’s books, with most Australian mohair currently bought by South African traders who re-class and pool with their fibre prior to on-selling.

“It’s good that we will now have our own brand of Pure Australian Mohair in the marketplace,” Mr Grant said.

Cudal mohair grower Doug Stapleton, central NSW, who has been growing mohair for 45 years, said the development of weaving mohair in Australia was not only innovative, but it also had a washover effect to the attitude of other processors who will need to step-up their competition to secure the best Australian mohair.

Australian wool a ‘guaranteed market’

Mr Savio believed Merino wool had a new lease of life.

“Until recent years wool meant ‘old’ to most people, but now wool means ‘natural’,” he said.

He said this was particularly prevalent in the sportswear market where wool was respected as a sustainable and ecological fibre.

“For many years sportswear was focused on nylon and polyester and polypropylene, but all synthetics are derived from petroleum.”

“As the world population increases people want to wear a natural fibre not petroleum.”

Safil buys 5000 tonnes of Merino wool a year – a figure Mr Savio would like to increase.

From Australia they buy wool ranging in micron from 15 to 32; and a small portion of South America wool ranging from 18- to 32-micron.

They also purchase about 300 to 400 tonnes of New Zealand wool annually for its bright white colour.

“Australia is our guaranteed market for wool and as we produce a wide range of products, we need a wide range of different wool types,” Mr Savio.

McALISTER KEMP ANNOUNCE HAITUS IN 2015 'BEST OF' ALBUM TO BE RELEASED MARCH 2015

Much-loved country duo, McAlister Kemp, have this morning announced that they will take a break in 2015, posting a message to fans on their Facebook page. Comprising of Drew McAlister and Troy Kemp, the band released three studio albums across the past six years, topping the ARIA Country Albums chart and the Country Radio Airplay chart, taking out a CMC Music Award, earning a slew of Golden Guitar nominations, and performing to audiences of thousands both in Australia and in the US.

A McAlister Kemp Best Of compilation will be released through ABC Music in March 2015, featuring previously unreleased songs and new music, including the latest single ‘100 Years The ANZAC’.

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Hey Facebook Family, So here we are….. Six years down the road and what a ride it has been! We are so appreciative of the amazing journey we’ve had so far – for the incredible audiences that come to our shows, and the people who buy our albums, thank you so much!! Adam Brand, Linda Chamarette and our incredible record company, ABC Music, really took a chance signing us as a duo after considerable time developing our solo careers, a huge blessing which opened up unexpected and incredible new phase in our lives. Now it’s time for a change and a new chapter in both of our careers. We both want to explore some solo projects, so from March next year we will taking an indefinite break from MK. We still have some awesome shows ahead as McAlister Kemp and we really hope you can make it to those shows. As we make plans for 2015, we want to include you in both our journeys and share the tonnes of exciting things we are planning on different paths. So, we look forward to seeing you out on the road, don’t miss out, come say hi and enjoy the MK ride for the next little while and don’t worry, we’ll be there for Cruisin’ Country 2015 as promised (who’d want to miss that!!). And please know there is no bad blood here! We are two brothers that just need to scratch an itch creatively speaking. We don’t know what the future holds but you can be guaranteed that some great songs are coming your way from both of us… Finally to celebrate our 6 years, we are pulling together a Best Of Album which will include our new single ‘100 YEARS THE ANZAC’, plus previously unreleased tracks. We love you guys and maybe we haven’t expressed that as much as we should have but please know that the only reason we have had the last amazing 6 years is because of YOU!! Cheers Drew & Troy

Noelene Watson’s inspiring speech was a highlight of the 2014 Australian Truck Drivers’ Memorial Service at Tarcutta.

Truckies honoured at Tarcutta
Noelene Watson’s emotional story touched everyone who had suffered.

Thirty two names were added to the Australian Truck Drivers’ Memorial wall at Tarcutta on October 25, including 18 people who had died in truck accidents between 1979 and 2014.

The emotional annual memorial service was attended by about 1000 people.

Some families attended the service for the first time. But a few, like Bill and Fay Belling, have attended all 21 services since the wall was constructed in 1994.

Their son John Belling died in a truck accident in 1979.

For the past 20 years the Bellings have given away flowers for people to place on the memorial wall. This year they gave away over 60 bouquets made from flowers from their own garden.

A highlight of the memorial service was the emotional speech by Australian Trucking Association (ATA) Chairperson Noelene Watson which touched everyone who had loved and lost a truck driver.

“The scar of losing your loved one is embedded in your heart and it never leaves you,” Watson said, explaining the challenges she faced after her husband Don Watson died in 1994.

Her family’s grief was ‘very raw’ when Don’s name was added to the wall at Tarcutta soon after his death.

“The emotions shared that day will never leave me. It was like I was burying my husband a second time. And for that reason, this is the first time that I’ve had the courage to come back here.”

Many attending the service could relate to the challenges Watson faced 20 years ago as she helped her children adjust to life without their father.

Wagga Wagga Potters Club: Out of the Fire

Wagga Wagga Art Gallery is delighted to welcome the 2014 annual exhibition of one of our city’s most vibrant cultural bodies, the Wagga Wagga Potters Club. This year’s exhibition, Out of the Fire, is on display in the E3 art space, and features an extraordinary range of skills, techniques, styles and materials that truly reveal the wide diversity of contemporary ceramic arts.

From the time mankind first noticed the variable effects of fire on clay, potters have striven to achieve perfection. Over the centuries, this pursuit of excellence has led to the exploration of many different materials and methods, as a result of which, given the same starting point, one thousand potters will invariably produce one thousand unique and individual creations. Indeed, the only limit to what can be created using the mediums of fire and clay is our imagination. Out of the Fire is a celebration of the many branches of ceramics, and a showcase for the work produced in the quest for the perfect pot.

The Wagga Wagga Potters Club was founded in 1969, with the aim of promoting the craft of pottery in the community and producing pots that will enrich the lives of those who use them. Exhibitions, raku, sawdust and wood firings along with weekend workshops are regular features on the club’s program.  The Potters Club also participates in a wide variety of community activities, including Seniors Week, Fusion Multicultural Festival, and a range of school support programs.

The talented ceramics artists from this exceptional group exhibiting in Out of the Fire include: Lyn Cameron, Dianne Campbell, Narelle Fullwood, Fran Geale, Linda Lander, Milton Loiterton, Dianne Mahony, Maggie Marriott, Liz McInnes, Elie Passlow, Nola Roberts, Dawn Smith, Dawn M Smith, Julie Willis, and Lynette Wynn.

Out of the Fire will be officially launched by acclaimed ceramic artist Bronwyn Kemp on Thursday 11 December, at 6pm. The exhibition will be on public display in the E3 art space at Wagga Wagga Art Gallery from Thursday 11 December until Sunday 21 December, 2014

Exhibition Launch:
When:       Thursday 11 December, 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Where:     E3 art space, Wagga Wagga Art Gallery

Exhibition Dates:
When:       Thursday 11 December – Sunday 21 December, 2014
Where:     E3 art space, Wagga Wagga Art Gallery