Paterson Hill Blockade – 20 years on

IT was an early morning phone call to my house in Alcorn Street, Suffolk Park that alerted me to the fact that a low-loader carrying an excavator was reversing up Pacific Vista Drive at Byron Bay and heading to Paterson Hill, the site of a planned controversial 15-townhouse development.Read More…

When the Oleander Festival died

IT probably said a lot about the changing fabric of the Byron Bay community when the much-loved Oleander Festival hit a brick wall in the early 1990s.

The death of the festival, which kicked off in the early 1960s and which,  over the years, raised many thousands of dollars for community projects, including the town’s swimming pool, was hastened in February, 1992 when no-one stepped forward to take on the role as the event’s prime organiser.Read More…

Whale of an idea

 

WITHOUT doubt, the best view of the Cape Byron lighthouse I have ever had in the nearly 40 years I have lived in the area, was from Ewingsdale Road, at a spot just about where the much-maligned silvery sculpture now sits in the middle of a roundabout.Read More…

Tony lived life to the end

WITH a thick mane of wavy, silver hair and a big and exuberant personality, Tony Narracott was hard to miss as he did the rounds of Byron Bay.

As executive officer for the Byron Bay Chamber of Commerce back in the 90s and a leading voice for the push for a Byron Bay bypass and an opponent of the plan to move Byron Council’s HQ to Mullumbimby and sell the council chambers at Byron Bay, livewire Tony had a significant public profile.Read More…

Arakwal Native Title dream

ONE of the major and long-running stories  I covered in my time as a journalist at Byron Bay was the Native Title claim lodged over a wide area of coastal  Crown land that stretched from Byron Bay to Broken Head.

It was lodged by sisters Lorna Kelly, Yvonne Graham, Linda Vidler  and Dulcie Nicholls  who  long dreamed of one day returning to live on the land at Byron Bay where they had lived as children.Read More…

Mural a towering achievement

TODAY it has become home to multiple telecommunications antennae which, to many, has turned it into a highly visible eyesore.

But I remember the time when it was just the very ordinary Byron Bay water tower sitting on the top of Paterson Hill and a very obvious landmark from the sea for local fishos heading out to the Seven Mile and Nine Mile reefs.Read More…

Time stands still

IT was a case of time standing still when it came to the installation of the Byron Bay town clock that has been a fixture at the intersection of Jonson and Byron Streets for almost 30 years.Read More…

Byron Bay’s radioactive scare

WHEN I told a much-loved uncle back in 1983 that we were moving to Byron Bay, he said be very careful because there had been a major radioactive scare in the town.

I don’t know why I wasn’t aware of the story because apparently it had made national headlines and caused major divisions in the town, but I wasn’t.Read More…