Southern Peninsula News 21 September 2021

Page 1

Southern Peninsula YOUR GUIDE TO WHAT’S ON THIS WEEKEND FOR PENINSULA FAMILIES FACEBOOK:

peninsulakids.com.au mornpenkids

INSTAGRAM:

An independent voice for the community

FREE

Your weekly community newspaper covering Safety Beach to Portsea For all advertising and editorial needs, call 03

5974 9000 or email: team@mpnews.com.au www.mpnews.com.au

Gardens wilt with lockdown lockout

Author’s winning words

Stephen Taylor steve@mpnews.com.au

REBECCA Fraser, of Mount Martha, impressed the judges with her story Due South in the Mayor’s Short Story Writing Awards. Picture: Yanni

REBECCA Fraser, of Mount Martha, has been awarded $1000 in money, bookstore vouchers and a two-week Police Point artist’s residency after her story Due South won the 18 years-plus category in the Mayor’s Short Story Writing Awards. The tale is about a Tasmanian widower, Franklyn, who rebels against his daughter’s plan to deposit him in a retirement home on the mainland and, instead, packs up his cat and rows “due south”. “Franklyn wants to maintain charge of his own destiny,” Fraser said. “He reminds us that we have our own paths to follow.” She said it was a “thrill to win” the prize which comes hot on the heels of her success in the Farrell’s Bookshop 2021 writing and illustrating competition where her contribution Yelah won the adult writing section.

Judges for the awards, including the mayor Cr Despi O’Connor and writers Danielle Binks, Garry Disher and Paul Kennedy, read their way through 115 fiction entries. “It was an honour to immerse myself in stories of hope, heartbreak, humour and happiness,” Cr O’Connor said. Highly commended in the short story writing category was Close to Home, by Deline Skinner, of Somers; the 8-12 years winner was Running with the Wolves, by Chloe Brigden, of Mornington; highly commended In my Wildest Dreams, by Gracie Medlicott, of Mount Eliza; 12-17 years winner Untitled (the story of Jake) by Maddy Macdonald, of Rye; highly commended Untitled (the story of Eleanor) by Amira Lees, of Somerville. The winning stories and judges’ comments are at mornpen.vic.gov.au/writingawards

THE mental health and wellbeing of community gardeners on the Mornington Peninsula is being tested by the continuous COVID-19 lockdowns. Members of the 17 shire-run community gardens, who may also be socially isolated, like nothing better than to potter around picking vegetables, weeding, composting and pruning – all joys put on hold by the restrictions. Shire officers told members at the start of lockdown that, under state government COVID-19 restrictions, their gardens would be closed until further notice. Some even had their locks changed to stop entry. Several members, who asked not to be named, told The News it was heartbreaking to watch their hard work going to waste. Rats and weeds have become problems, with vegetables eaten before they can be picked, dying of thirst, or succumbing to a weed with purple flowers that is running rampant. “All this food is going to waste,” one said. “The shire goes on about food for change and then they shut the gardens. They say one thing and do the other.” Another demanded “an explanation of the shire’s reasoning”. Last year the shire reportedly denied a request for one member to go in and pick as much produce as possible to donate to a food bank. Mornington Community Garden has been in Pine Avenue Reserve, Mitchell Street, for 20 years and produce is shared with disability groups, Focus Support Services, and Chisholm TAFE. Members said they were not allowed to pick vegetables but sawthe alternative of shopping in air-conditioned supermarkets as being less safe. “My chances of picking up COVID are much higher in a crowded

Enjoy more quality time with your loved one, by trusting After-Care with their in home care needs For information on how to take the complication out of Home Care Packages and NDIS Support, visit our website or give our friendly staff a call!

NDIS Support

Garden & Home Maintenance

Home Care Packages

All In-Home Care Services

1300 46 46 63

Wednesday 22 September 2021

inhome@after-care.com.au

www.after-care.com.au

supermarket than on my own in the community garden,” one said. The member said they had found no mention of community gardens in the government’s list of restricted activities. “Adjacent to the garden is a dog park. It has no restrictions - thankfully - and this morning there were at least 20 people using it at the one time,” she said. “[At the time] there was no restriction on numbers in playgrounds, yet a single member is not allowed to use the community garden.” The avid gardener said it would be easy to regulate times so there was never more than one person in the garden. This, combined with QR codes, sign-in book, sanitiser, members wearing their own equipment and masks, would ensure COVID safety. “A short time in the garden provides physical activity and greatly adds to mental wellbeing, especially for our many members who have limited outdoor space at home,” she said. “Let’s hope the shire is able to work towards a way that people can enjoy the community garden again during lockdowns.” Blairgowrie Community Garden president Anne van Veen said the garden committee “takes COVID-19 restrictions seriously and requests our members follow the rules”. “Of course, we would like the garden to be open, however, [we] understand this is not possible.” Ms van Veen said committee would maintain the garden with watering of fruit trees and compost collection. “The garden has done it hard this year: apart from being shut for long periods, our seedlings have become dinner for rodents. “Our community is right behind us and we all can’t wait to enjoy revisiting the garden when possible.”


*T

E

R

M

S

A

N

D

LY P P A

C

O

N

D

IT

IO

N

S

SE R 3 VI NO YE C AR E F S * EE

Two Bedroom Villa Offer Purchase a qualifying 2 bedroom villa and pay no service fee for 3 years!

VILLAGE GLEN… 41 YEARS OF SERVICE TO RESIDENTS

Retirement is a time to really enjoy life. At Village Glen, we have a selection of premium, self-contained 2 bedroom villas, available in a range of layouts to suit all types of lifestyle. We’ll even waive the service fee for the first 3 years to give you one less thing to worry about when you purchase a qualifying 2 bedroom villa and settle prior to the 31st December 2021.

TO SECURE YOUR NEW LIFESTYLE, CALL VILLAGE GLEN TODAY ON

03 5986 4455

335 EASTBOURNE ROAD, CAPEL SOUND VIC 3940 W W W .V I L L A G E G L E N . C O M . A U *Terms & conditions apply. Visit website for more.

PAGE 2

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021


NEWS DESK

Liberals on move under new leader Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au THE re-emergence of Matthew Guy as state Opposition Leader saw Mornington MP David Morris lose his position in the shadow cabinet and Eastern Victoria MP Edward O’Donohue bring forward his retirement from parliament. Mr Morris was the Coalition’s spokesperson for local government, housing and aged care and Mr O’Donohue - whose electorate includes Frankston and the Mornington Peninsula - had already signalled that he would not contest next year’s state election. A supporter of former leader Michael O’Brien (“you back your leader”), Mr Morris was one of 11 MPs who voted against the spill that saw Mr Guy appointed Opposition Leader on Wednesday 8 September. Seven of the 11 were left out of the 20-strong shadow cabinet. Mr Morris told The News last week that being freed of his shadow portfolio duties meant “I can focus 100 per cent on my immediate job - being the member for Mornington”. He said the state government had “failed to live up to its rhetoric” to protect the peninsula during the coronavirus pandemic. In the neighbouring electorate of Hastings, Liberal MP Neale Burgess, who supported Mr Guy, was also left out of the shadow cabinet. Neither Mr Morris or Mr Burgess mentioned Mr Guy’s victory on their social media or websites. On the day of the spill Mr Morris posted that the Liberals “have a plan to boost mental health support for schools” with a follow-up one day later quoting adolescent psychologist

Dr Michael Carr-Gregg saying, “I think they need to put a psychologist in every school now”, with the added comment: “Matthew Guy is right about this…” Mr Morris told The News that he would definitely contest the November 2022 election. “Absolutely, I’ll stand. I’m going nowhere.” Pre-selections are likely to be held for Hastings and Mornington after the results of a Victorian Electoral Commission redistribution are released at the end of October and before the end of the year. In the days after Mr Guy’s appointment Mr O’Donohue, one of five MPs representing the upper house seat of Eastern Victoria, announced he would leave parliament before the end of 2021. The region of Eastern Victoria includes the peninsula and Frankston as well as East Gippsland. Mr O’Donohue issued a statement saying he had already told Mr O’Brien that he did not intend to contest the 2022 election but decided to bring that date forward “with imminent changes to be made to the shadow cabinet, I have decided, in consultation with current Liberal Leader Matthew Guy”. Mr O’Donohue ended his statement saying: “I wish my friend Matthew Guy and the Liberal Nationals team every success at the November 2022 state election, Victoria needs a better, positive alternative which only the Liberal Nationals can deliver.” First elected in 2006, Mr O’Donohue was shadow attorney general in Mr O’Brien’s shadow cabinet. The Liberal Party has yet to announce its choice of a successor to Mr O’Donohue.

MARY, a 14-year-old wombat, had no problems getting into the celebratory mood when being offered a treat by keeper Brodie Zealand to mark Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park’s 20th anniversary. Picture: Gary Sissons

Animals dining out for anniversary 10-hectares of what was a farm and pony club. Now it is home to more than 400 animals representing 70 species. The sanctuary initially ran night tours to the public, hence the name Moonlit Sanctuary. In 2007, the sanctuary began opening during the day, increasing the number of animals and recording 80,000 visitors a year. Before COVID-19 closures, the sanctuary was seeing about 150,000 visitors annually and it is still proving to be a favourite day out. “We are honouring this major milestone and are grateful to the community who helped us get there,” Mr Johnson said. “We are elated to be celebrating our role in connecting people with wildlife since the sanctuary first opened 20 years ago.” Stephen Taylor

MOONLIT Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park, Pearcedale, celebrated its 20th anniversary on Friday, 17 September with treats for the resident animals. Despite lockdown, keepers served up “cakes” for koalas, dingoes, wombats and emu to mark two decades of bringing people and wildlife together. Life sciences manager Lisa Tuthill said such ingredients as sweet potato, meat or insects, “can serve as a great source of nutritional and behavioural enrichment”. The sanctuary grew from the childhood dreams of Michael Johnson into a place where people could experience and appreciate the rare and unusual animals that roam the bush. It was established by the Johnson family on

S P R ING SALE UP TO ON WHOLE HOUSE CARPET OR FLOORING ORDERS *

*conditions apply

• CARPETS • TIMBERS • LAMINATES • VINYL• TILES • BLINDS • ENGINEERED FLOORS • HYBRIDS • PLANTATION SHUTTERS • FLOOR SANDING & POLISHING • WALLPAPER P LU S! Luxury Bremworth# Wool Carpets and a huge range of Timbers and Oaks available in store #

OPEN

7 DAYS

Carrum Downs Store Only

Shop 2/544-546 Frankston-Dandenong Rd, Carrum Downs Shop 9/991 Point Nepean Rd, Rosebud

1300 069 340 www.mikescarpets.com.au

CONTACT US FOR A FREE MEASURE & QUOTE

Connect with us

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 3


COUGH OR COVID COUGH? The only way to be sure is with a test at the first sign of any symptom.

For testing locations, visit CORONAVIRUS.vic.gov.au Authorised by the Victorian Government, Melbourne

PAGE 4

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021


NEWS DESK

Peninsula tops prostate cancer list Stephen Taylor steve@mpnews.com.au A PROSTATE cancer campaigner is urging men on the Mornington Peninsula to find out their prostate cancer risk as data shows the region has the highest rate in the state and the second highest in the country. The Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia’s Stargate portal reveals the peninsula’s rate of 216 per 100,000 men compares poorly with the state’s average of 139 and the national average of 150. Winston Trood, 80, who convenes the Peninsula Prostate Cancer Support Group, says more men need to be aware of the disease. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2014 aged 74 after having his regular PSA blood test. His GP noticed his PSA levels were rising and a urologist confirmed he had prostate cancer. “My mother fought cancer for 10 years and eventually she told me she couldn’t fight any more and wanted to let go,” Mr Trood said. “All those thoughts were going through my mind, and I did the fatal thing of getting on the computer and googling.” Mr Trood, of Mornington, said support he received through PCFA’s website was valuable: “I called the local support group and told my story. The coordinator told me: I’m going to assure you, there’s life after prostate cancer. “Those words really resonated with me, and I turned a corner then.”

A ‘fairly normal’ life: Winston Trood reflects on life after prostate cancer. Picture: Gary Sissons Mr Trood elected to have surgery to remove his prostate. With the help of his urologist, physiotherapist and medical team he recovered and life is now “fairly normal”. He is grateful the cancer was picked up at a treatable stage and wants other men to participate in PSA blood tests. “One of the things we do with the group is run an awareness program to teach men about prostate cancer. We

speak to men’s groups and tell them not to be brave about it – speak to your doctor and get your PSA test done.” PFCA boss Professor Jeff Dunn said: “I would encourage all men to look at the Stargate data and find out about their prostate cancer risk. Regular screening tests are vital for early detection and it’s also important that men know there is help and support available throughout their journey.”

A telenursing service can support anyone affected by prostate cancer, including family and friends. The service is available Australia wide. Details: Visit stargate.org.au Those affected by prostate cancer can talk to a specialist nurse on 1800 22 00 99. To find out about support from PCFA, including local support groups go to prostate.org.au/support/

Festival adapts A REIMAGINED 2021 Seniors Festival will be staged next month. Mornington Peninsula Shire, community, businesses and organisations have put together a COVIDSafe calendar of events complementing a host of online and radio programs through the Victorian Seniors Festival website. Events and offers include a free plant giveaway at The Briars, the workshop Compost Like a Champion at the Eco Living Display Centre, Tai Chi at shire libraries, community choir workshop, and downsizing your home online information sessions. The festival will be launched on the inaugural Australian Ageism Awareness Day: Friday 1 October, coincidingwith the UN’s International Day of Older Persons. The Ageism. Know it. Name it campaign from EveryAGE Counts is encouraging members of the community to attend a virtual morning tea to get conversations brewing about the impacts of ageism on the community – socially, economically and even physically. The morning teas can be hosted on any date and time that is suitable. For more information about the reimagined Seniors Festival, including last minute additions, visit: mornpen. vic.gov.au/seniorsfestival Events, activities and promotions will be listed in the spring Positive Ageing newsletter. To read a digital copy online, visit: mornpen.vic.gov. au/PositiveAgeingNewsletter To receive a printed copy in the mail, email: positiveageing@ mornpen.vic.gov.au or call 5950 1698 before Friday 24 September.

Don’t let tendon pain stop you in your tracks Up to 90% success rate# | Non invasive therapy Radial Shockwave therapy Clinically proven* to help these conditions: • Heel pain (plantar fasciitis and Achilles tendinopathy)

• Rotator cuff tendinopathy with calcification

• Tennis & golfers elbow

• Hip bursitis

• Patella tendinopathy

• Shin splints and heel spurs

• Frozen shoulder

Call 5983 1021 or book online for your

Free Initial Assessment

# Am J Sports Med 2007; 35:972 * lnt J Surg 2015; 24:113-222 ^ Int J Surgery 2015; 24:207-9

Back In Motion Balnarring 6/2-8 Russell Street backinmotion.com.au/balnarring Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 5


Southern Peninsula

Proudly published by Mornington Peninsula News Group Pty. Ltd

PHONE: 03 5974 9000 Published weekly

Circulation: 22,870

Audit period: Apr 2014 - Sept 2014

Source: AMAA; CAB Total Distribution Audit for further information visit auditedmedia.org.au

Journalists: Stephen Taylor, Brodie Cowburn 5974 9000 Photographers: Gary Sissons, Yanni Advertising Sales: Ricky Thompson 0425 867 578 or ricky@mpnews.com.au Real Estate Account Manager: Jason Richardson 0421 190 318 Production/Graphic design: Marcus Pettifer, Dannielle Espagne Group Editor: Keith Platt 0439 394 707 Publisher: Cameron McCullough REGULAR CONTRIBUTORS: Craig MacKenzie, Peter McCullough, Stuart McCullough, Ben Triandafillou ADDRESS: Mornington Peninsula News Group, PO Box 588 Hastings 3915 Email: team@mpnews.com.au Web: mpnews.com.au DEADLINE FOR NEXT ISSUE: 1PM ON THURSDAY 23 SEPTEMBER 2021 NEXT ISSUE PUBLICATION DATE: WEDNESDAY 29 SEPTEMBER 2021

An independent voice for the community We are the only locally owned and operated community newspaper on the Mornington Peninsula. We are dedicated to the belief that a strong community newspaper is essential to a strong community. We exist to serve residents, community groups and businesses and ask for their support in return.

Police patrol Home invasion TWO Mornington residents were awoken by a man possibly armed with a gun last week. Detective Senior Sergeant Eddie Lagonder, of Somerville CIU, said the unknown man broke into the Grange Road home, 4.50am, Thursday 16 September. After confronting the married couple, he allegedly assaulted the 74-year-old man who was later taken to Frankston Hospital with minor injuries. Detectives were still determining what was stolen, Thursday morning. The offender is described as being short and stocky. Anyone with information about either of these incidents is urged to call Somerville CIU 5978 1300 or Crime Stoppers 1800 333 000.

Grand operation MORNINGTON Peninsula Highway Patrol police are gearing up for a big AFL Grand Final long weekend. They will be taking part in Operation Scoreboard from just after midnight Thursday 23 September to just before midnight Sunday 26 September. Somerville Highway Patrol Senior Sergeant Phillip Hulley said the long weekend had historically been high risk in terms of road trauma. He said police would target badly behaved drivers with a major focus on excessive speed and impaired driving. Police will provide a “highly visible active and mobile presence to reinforce positive driving behaviours and lessen the incidence of road trauma and ensure road user compliance”.

Nominate a local hero

2022 Australia Day Local Awards The search is on to find Mornington Peninsula’s most dedicated, generous and community minded people.

Do you know someone whose contribution to our community deserves to be recognised? Acknowledge their contribution by nominating them for the 2022 Australia Day Local Awards.

Nominate for: • Citizen of the Year • Young Citizen of the Year • Community Event of the Year (virtual or in person) Nominations are open and close Friday 5 November 2021.

Nominate them now!

mornpen.vic.gov.au/ausdayawards 5950 1137

PAGE 6

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

With Stephen Taylor

POLICE and ambulance officers outside the scene of a fatal stabbing in Frankston. Picture: Gary Sissons

He said motorists would be given either or both a personal breath test and/or drug test.

Frankston deaths

Breaking out SURFERS driving to breaks along Boneo Road, from Rosebud to Flinders, were being checked for breaching the five-kilometre limit last week. Somerville Highway Patrol Senior Sergeant Phillip Hulley said police under Operation Guardian were asking surfers’ addresses and were prepared to issue penalty notices if they were in breach. “We often get pretty feeble excuses, but they won’t wash with us and the surfers can expect a heavy fine if they are outside their limits,” he said. The penalty for breaching the fivekilometre rule is $1817. Operation Sentinel Sergeant Steve Wood, based at Somerville CIU, said three fines for breaching the Chief Health Officer’s regulations had been issued on the Mornington Peninsula in the week up until Thursday: one to a passenger on the Sorrento-Queenscliff ferry and two to guests at a house gathering at Mount Eliza.

HOMICIDE Squad detectives are investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of a man in Frankston on Saturday. The man’s body was discovered when police attended at an address in Rassay Court to conduct a welfare check just before 10pm. Police and forensic experts attended the scene and SES volunteers were called in to help. The victim was a 34-year-old man. The Rassay Court death on Saturday follows the death of a man in Frankston on Thursday night. Police believe a woman, 58, and her son, 17, were at their Dandenong Road West home when there was a knock on the door about 11pm. The woman answered the door and was allegedly confronted by a 45-yearold male with a knife. A scuffle ensured and the teen came to check on his mother. A further confrontation between the two males has occurred, resulting in the 45-year-old man being fatally stabbed in the upper body.

Solar and energy efficiency bulk buy program

Dreading the power bill? Sick of living in a freezing cold house in winter and a piping hot house in summer? Wanting to do better for the environment? Together with the Australian Energy Foundation, we now offer our residents free access to energy advice and webinars, access to high quality products from accredited suppliers at discounted prices and support to access government rebates. The Bulk Buy program includes: • Solar • Hot water heat pumps • Reverse-cycle air conditioners • Batteries (coming soon). mornpen.vic.gov.au/bulkbuy AEF: 1300 23 68 55 aef.com.au/mps-bulk-buy


NEWS DESK

CORRECTION

Council offers $2m for COVID-19 relief Stephen Taylor steve@mpnews.com.au MORNINGTON Peninsula Shire has adopted a $2 million COVID-19 grant scheme as part of its $10 million recovery package adopted earlier this year. The offer of money aims to ease the pain of more than 200 days of lockdown resulting in ongoing financial stress and impacts on wellbeing.  The direct payments will be available from next month to eligible businesses, community groups, creatives (individuals and organisations), not for profits and environmental groups. “Council is seriously committed to helping

In last week’s newspaper, an actor portraying Thomas Ritchie was advertised to appear at Ritchies Dromana on Friday 24th September, 2pm - 5pm. Due to the current COVID restrictions, this appearance has been cancelled.

“Local economy booster” vouchers are also available. They aim to increase visits and spending at peninsula venues though a reimbursement program for accommodation and attractions in the off-peak season. They are available to peninsula residents aged over 18 and can be used for paid tours and tourism “experiences”, entry fees to attractions and eligible paid accommodation. The shire also has a $100,000 program to support sports and recreation clubs over summer and winter. The shire’s Funding Finder website gives an overview of funding and grants available from state and federal governments, philanthropic organisations as well as the shire.

our community recover from COVID-19,” the mayor Cr Despi O’Connor said. “These grants are just one of the many things we are doing to make a real difference. Information sessions and assistance will be provided to ensure everyone is well supported throughout the application process. “We have expanded some current programs, created new programs and also extended eligibility criteria to ensure great community impact. We have also tightened our internal processing times so we can deliver grants quickly as we work towards a recovered and revitalised peninsula.” The grants’ opening and closing dates are listed on the shire’s website.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may have caused.

Mangrove storage site for ‘blue carbon’ THE CSIRO and BHP are measuring and quantifying the net emissions reduction potential of Australia’s mangroves, seagrasses and tidal marshes. The $3.3 million 30-month program will also quantify the value of other benefits these ecosystems provide for coastal protection, fisheries and biodiversity. Mangroves, seagrasses and tidal marshes, also known as “blue carbon” ecosystems, lock up carbon at faster rates than most land ecosystems. CSIRO research scientist and project coleader Dr Andy Steven said the conservation and restoration of blue carbon ecosystems could deliver substantial emissions reductions, while also delivering other important benefits to the environment and local communities. “Along with their ability to absorb high amounts of carbon dioxide, blue carbon ecosystems can reduce the impact from waves and storm surges and provide important habitat for many species of plants and animals, including DECKING T/Pine 70x22 KD ACQ ........................... $3.25mt T/Pine 90x22 KD ACQ ........................... $4.25mt Merbau 70x19 Random ........................ $5.25mt Merbau 90x19 Random ........................ $6.50mt Merbau 140x22 Random .................... $13.25mt Spotted Gum 86x19 .............................. $8.95mt Spotted Gum 135x19........................... $15.95mt

FIBRE CEMENT SHEET UNDERLAY 1800x900 ............................................ $18.95ea

4.5MM 1800x1200 .......................................... $18.00ea 2400x450 .............................................. $9.00ea 2400x600 .............................................$12.00ea 2400x900 ............................................ $18.00ea 2400x1200 .......................................... $24.00ea 3000x900 ............................................ $22.50ea 3000x1200 .......................................... $30.00ea

6.0MM

1800x1200 .......................................... $25.75ea 2400x900 ............................................ $25.75ea 2400x1200 .......................................... $34.25ea 3000x1200 .......................................... $42.75ea

BLUEBOARD 2400x1200 .......................................... $41.25ea 2700x1200 .......................................... $46.00ea 3000x1200 .......................................... $50.75ea

BGC DURAFLOOR

2250x600x19 T&G.................................$85.00ea

CEMENT PRODUCTS Concrete Mix 20kg .................................$7.95ea Rapid Set 20kg ...................................... $8.50ea Cement 20kg ......................................... $8.50ea

SHADOWCLAD GROOVED Shadowclad 2.4x1.2x12mm .............. $130.50ea Shadowclad 2.7x1.2x12mm .............. $146.75ea Large quantities ......................................... P.O.A.

KDHW F17 90x35 ..................................................... $7.65mt 90x45 ................................................... $10.05mt 140x45 ................................................. $14.50mt 190x45 ................................................. $20.95mt 240x45 ................................................. $29.95mt 290x45 ................................................. $37.75mt

ALL PRICES INCLUDE GST PAYMENT BY CASH OR CREDIT CARD ONLY E. & O.E.

M. & A. EGAN Licensed Plumber & Gasfitter Lic No: 22042

461 Dundas St, Rye, 3941.

MANGROVES and seagrasses in Western Port - as well as providing a safe, shallow but temporary mooring to the submarine Otama - are regarded as being a “blue carbon” ecosystem. Earlier this month the Westernport Oberon Association was given 28 days to find a new home for the submarine. Picture: Gary Sissons some that support important recreational and commercial fisheries,” Dr Steven said. “They are natural solutions to some of the most pressing problems the world faces.” The project will use existing information about

CYPRESS

OBHW F8 50x25 ................................................... $1.95mt 75x38 ................................................... $3.75mt 125x38 ................................................. $6.25mt

MDF CRAFTWOOD 2400x1200x3mm ................................ $11.00ea 2400x1200x6mm ................................ $18.00ea 2400x1200x9mm ................................ $24.00ea 2400x1200x12mm .............................. $27.00ea 2400x1200x16mm .............................. $33.00ea 2400x1200x18mm .............................. $36.00ea

PARTICLEBOARD

18mm 2400x450 ............................................ $13.50ea 2400x600 ............................................ $18.00ea 2400x1200 .......................................... $36.00ea

POLYESTER BATTS

R2.0 12pc $31.50 per bag R3.5 6pc $28.50 per bag

FLOORING SHEETS

FENCE EXTENSIONS

Yellow Tongue 3600x800mm ............... $44.50ea Plyfloor 2.4x1.2x15mm ........................ $70.50ea

2400x500 ............................................ $26.00ea 2400x500 Slat Type ............................. $30.00ea 2400x500 Woven ................................. $36.00ea

42x19 ................................................... $3.95mt 65x19 ................................................... $5.95mt 90x19 ................................................... $8.50mt 110x19 ............................................... $10.50mt 135x19 ............................................... $14.50mt 185x19 ............................................... $23.75mt

NOW IN STOCK!

75-100x1.8mt ....................................... $7.75ea 75-100x2.4mt ..................................... $11.25ea 75-100x3.0mt ..................................... $14.25ea 75-100x3.6mt ..................................... $18.95ea 100-125x1.8mt ................................... $11.25ea 100-125x2.4mt ................................... $16.50ea 100-125x3.0mt ................................... $23.25ea 100-125x3.6mt ................................... $31.00ea 100-125x2.4mt Splits .......................... $12.95ea

m.eganplumbing@gmail.com

KDHW DAR SEL GRADE

90x42, 140x42, 190x42, 240x42, 290x42

TREATED PINE POLES

MOB: 0418 301 980

how much carbon is stored in these ecosystems and the rates at which it is sequestered, as well as satellite-based earth observation technology and computer modelling to estimate their net emissions reduction potential. Keith Platt

SMARTFRAME LVL15 H2S

125x75 ................................................ $14.50mt 100x100 .............................................. $14.50mt 125x125 .............................................. $24.00mt 150x150 .............................................. $46.50mt 70x19 Blanks.......................................... $3.05mt

PO Box 101, Rye, 3941.

PRIMED MDF MOULDINGS

A/B EUROPEAN POPLAR PLY

2440 X 1220 X 18mm

$75.00ea WHILE STOCKS LAST!

MELAMINE - EDGED 16MM

TREATED PINE SLEEPERS

2400x300 ............................................ $12.00ea 2400x450 ............................................ $18.00ea 2400x600 ............................................ $24.00ea 1800x450 ............................................ $13.50ea 1800x600 ............................................ $18.00ea 3600x450 ............................................ $27.00ea 3600x600 ............................................ $36.00ea Not Edged 2400x1200 .......................................... $40.00ea 2400x1200x3mm ................................ $18.00ea

PINE LINING 140x12 VJ/Regency .............................. $3.05mt 140x19 VJ/Floor..................................... $4.85mt

PINE DAR STD GRADE 42x19 ................................................... $1.65mt 70x19 ................................................... $1.95mt 90x19 ................................................... $2.50mt 120x19 ................................................. $2.65mt 140x19 ................................................. $3.35mt 190x19 ................................................. $4.95mt 240x19 ................................................. $6.75mt 290x19 ............................................... $11.95mt 140x12 ................................................. $2.75mt

For price and availability of all your building supply needs please call

200x50

2.4 mt ................................................. $19.25ea 2.4 mt (Packs 50) ................................ $17.00ea 2.7 mt ................................................. $21.75ea 2.7 mt (Packs 50) ................................ $19.25ea 3.0 mt ................................................. $24.25ea 3.0 mt (Packs 50) ................................ $21.50ea 200x75 1.8 mt ................................................. $21.95ea 1.8 mt (Packs 30) ................................ $19.25ea 2.4 mt ................................................. $28.75ea 2.4 mt (Packs 30) ................................ $25.50ea 2.7 mt ................................................. $32.50ea 2.7 mt (Packs 30) ................................ $28.75ea 3.0 mt ................................................. $36.00ea 3.0 mt (Packs 30) ................................ $32.00ea 3.6 mt ................................................. $43.25ea 3.6 mt (Packs 30) ................................ $38.50ea 200x100 2.4 mt ................................................. $38.50ea 2.4 mt (Packs 25) ................................ $34.25ea 3.0 mt ................................................. $48.00ea 3.0 mt (Packs 25) ................................ $42.75ea

S/Bevel 42x15 ...................................... $1.25mt S/Bevel 67x15 ...................................... $1.65mt S/Bevel 67x18 ...................................... $1.70mt L/ Tongue 67x18 ................................... $1.70mt L/ Tongue 92x18 ................................... $2.45mt L/ Tongue 140x18 ................................. $3.65mt B/nose 67x18 ....................................... $1.70mt B/nose 92x18 ....................................... $2.45mt

CYPRESS WINDSOR PICKETS 70x19 900mm ....................................... $2.85ea 70x19 1200mm ..................................... $3.70ea 70x19 1500mm ..................................... $4.55ea 70x19 1800mm ..................................... $5.35ea

PRIMED LOSP T/PINE 18x18 Quad/Fillet/DAR .......................... $2.25mt 42x18 DAR ............................................ $3.65mt 66x18 DAR ............................................ $4.75mt 90x18 DAR ............................................ $6.50mt 138x18 DAR .......................................... $9.50mt 185x18 DAR ........................................ $12.85mt 30x30 Int Stop ....................................... $4.20mt 57x30 Ext Stop ...................................... $6.95mt 42x42 DAR ............................................ $6.50mt 90x42 DAR F7 ..................................... $12.75mt 138x42 DAR F7 ................................... $19.05mt 185x42 DAR F7 ................................... $29.95mt 230x42 DAR F7 ................................... $39.75mt 280x42 DAR F7 ................................... $48.25mt

T/PINE SLEEPER SPECIAL

200 X 75 X 2.4mt

$25.50 each PACK LOTS ONLY

5981 0943 sales@dromanatimber.com.au

TREATED PINE R/S 100x12 Paling....................................... $0.90mt 150x12 Paling....................................... $1.35mt 150x25 ................................................. $2.85mt 150x38 ................................................. $4.25mt 75x50 ................................................... $2.85mt

T/PINE F7/MGP10 – LASER CUT 70x35 ................................................... $4.25mt 70x45 ................................................... $5.70mt 90x35 ................................................... $5.70mt 90x45 ................................................... $7.50mt 140x35 ................................................. $8.55mt 140x45 ................................................ $11.25mt 190x45 ............................................... $14.95mt 240x45 ............................................... $20.50mt 290x45 ............................................... $28.95mt

T/PINE FASCIA PRIMED 190x30 D&G... .................................... $16.50mt 230x30 D&G... .................................... $25.50mt

PINE MGP10 70x35 Long .......................................... $4.25mt 70x45 Long ...........................................$5.50mt 90x35 Studs ......................................... $4.25mt 90x35 Long .......................................... $4.25mt 90x45 Studs ......................................... $5.50mt 90x45 Long ...........................................$5.50mt

PINE MERCH 90x35 ................................................... $3.30mt 90x45 ................................................... $P.O.A.

PINE F7/MGP10 – LASER CUT 140x45 ................................................. $8.95mt 190x45 ............................................... $12.35mt 240x45 ............................................... $16.75mt

GALV SLEEPER CHANNEL

‘H’ SECTION $64.00mt ‘C’ SECTION $42.00mt 90° CORNER $93.75mt

1 Dalkeith Drive, Dromana Mon-Fri 7am-4pm Sat 7am-12noon

www.dromanatimber.com.au

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 7


NEWS DESK Shire join ‘save the pier’ bid

Seadragons to survive pier demolition - Parks

EFFORTS to save an historic section of Flinders pier have been reinforced with Mornington Peninsula Shire Council voting unanimously to back its retention. The decision adds impetus to the efforts of the Flinders Community Association to have the 180-metre long timber section added to the Victorian Heritage Register (“Heritage bid adds time for ageing pier” The News 7/9/21). It also acknowledges the backing of environment “royalty” Sir David Attenborough who stepped in to bat for the pier as a way of protecting the habitat of the weedy seadragon (“Attenborough supports Flinders pier” The News 12/7/21). The Save Flinders Pier group’s Charles Reis said the council vote was an important development in efforts to have Parks Victoria reconsider its plans to demolish the pier. The council voted to support the inclusion of the Flinders historic foreshore precinct into the Victorian Heritage Register and write to support the Heritage Council, and back the application for an interim protection order to protect the precinct until a decision is made by the Heritage Council. The council will write to the ministers of Ports and Freight, Environment and Planning, stating the community and the council’s opposition to the proposed demolition of the inner Flinders pier and request the use of available finance to maintain and preserve the pier. Stephen Taylor

Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au

PAGE 8

Southern Peninsula News

PARKS Victoria says that a scientific study has found that the effect on weedy seadragons by works to demolish part of Flinders pier “would be localised and temporary”. The report commissioned by Parks by environmental marine biology consultants CEE, examined the marine ecosystem at the pier, mapping habitat and marine life, and identifying potential impacts from removing the “unsafe” 180-metres of timber pier. Parks says the report shows removing the timber piles and deck “is unlikely to impact the population of weedy seadragons at a state, regional or local level and that any minor, temporary disturbances can be managed”. Parks Victoria’s marine and maritime regional director Jo Richards said the report confirmed the “sensitive marine values” of Western Port “can be achieved”. “We are reassured by the report findings that with careful management, scheduling of works and the development of a construction environmental management plan, the proposed works can go ahead without any significant impact to the marine ecosystem and the local weedy seadragon population,” she said. “Flinders Pier is an important snorkelling and diving destination, and it will continue to be a great location for seeing the iconic weedy seadragons up close.” The decision by Parks to demolish the timber section of the pier has been

22 September 2021

Picture: Yanni delayed while it is assessed for inclusion on the Victorian Heritage Register (“Heritage bid adds time for ageing pier” The News 7/7/21). Parks last week released a statement saying the CEE report “has found the outer section of pier – which will remain in place - provides the most valuable marine habitat for seadragons, including extensive beds of sea nymph seagrass”.

“This habitat [highly suitable for seadragons] is widespread along the coast between Flinders and Balnarring but also occurs alongside the pier, and to a much lesser extent due to shading, under the pier from the middle to outer sections,” Parks stated. “However, with work planned for the inner section of the pier away from the main weedy seadragon habitat, the effect on the abundance, behaviour and

movement of this species is expected to be negligible.” Parks expected minor impact on “resilient and common marine life” living on the inshore flat sandy seabed and piles which would “recolonise over time”. The Flinders Pier Marine Ecology and Pier Removal Impact Assessment Report can be viewed at www.parks. vic.gov.au/projects.


• No more mud in your gutters • Gutters stay clean - no more cleaning • No more vermin or birds in your roof • Save money and cleaning time • Protect your most valued investment • 30 year guarantee -your home, your building

1300 220 869 *Valid Until 01/10/21 Conditions apply Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 9


LETTERS

Letters - 300 words maximum and including full name, address and contact number - can be sent to The News, PO Box 588, Hastings 3915 or emailed to: team@mpnews.com.au

One-hit sand plan won’t survive test of time At a recent meeting of the Mount Martha North Stakeholder Group (MMNSG) convened by the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), their representatives announced that they intend letting a contract soon for the dredging of 25,000 cubic metres of sand from a nearby offshore borrow area to replenish our beach’s depleted sand stocks at an estimated cost of $1m-$1.1m. They expect the sand to last 3 to 10 years. The source of the funding is the federal government allocation of $1.5m to protect the beach and the associated project agreement was executed by the state government on 12 February 2020. At MMNSG’s first meeting on 10 June 2020, DELWP advised that contrary to our understanding, these funds were to be applied solely to sand replenishment, topping up sand stocks as required - foreseeing that the allocation would enable several replenishment exercises over a number of years giving the beach some longevity. In our view, to contemplate accounting for the bulk of the funding in one hit with a very expensive dredging proposal (approximately twice the cost per cubic metre) of other replenishment projects), delivering a massive quantity of sand (virtually twice the size of the previous replenishment of a decade ago which survived less than three years) with no guarantee of retaining the sand for any reasonable period, is contrary to the purpose of the funding and the associated project agreement and, demonstrably, based on previous experience, is a very poor use of public funds. We strongly oppose this extraordinary proposal and request that the replenishment strategy for our beach reverts to a far more cost effective solution as was originally advised and proposed, delivering enhanced beach usability and longevity as the federal funding intended. Alan Farquhar, chairman, Mount Martha North Beach Group

Cruelty to kangaroos I am writing about my concern in regard to how dog owners on the Mornington Peninsula, of which I am one, are ill-informed about how kangaroos, which are on our Australian Coat of Arms, are killed to provide the dry food and fresh kangaroo meat that they buy from their local supermarkets (“Pet owner vows to ensure meat is safe” The News 30/8/21). Until only a few years ago I had no qualms about buying kangaroo pet food for my dog, but then I was educated by others concerned about the cruel practices used to kill kangaroos that the majority of pet owners are ignorant of. Our beautiful native eastern grey kangaroo family mobs are killed in their natural habitat in the dead of night. Kangaroos slowly dwindling in numbers on the Mornington Peninsula due to development and shooting. There are about 2000 kangaroos on the peninsula, and they are included in the Victorian government’s kangaroo harvest pro-

gram which provides meat for the thriving pet food Industry. Many pet owners believe that kangaroos are farmed or taken to an abattoir to be euthanised humanely. They definitely are not killed humanely. The poor joeys are left behind or have the heads stomped on to kill them in a so-called “humane” manner as they cannot fend for themselves once their mothers are dead. My fear is that eventually our kangaroos will end up shot to extinction, at least on the peninsula, because they are seen as a pest. Go onto the Australian Wildlife Protection Council website to find out more. Mary Waterman, Arthurs Seat

Independent ‘chaos’ Forty “Voices for” groups across Australia are targeting only Coalition held Federal seats, and this includes Voices for Mornington Peninsula aiming to get an independent to run against Flinders member Greg Hunt (“Voices raise concern among Liberals” The News 7/9/21) ). They have the temerity to say they are not a political party. A vote for them is by default a vote for Labor. Imagine the chaos if 40 independents were elected to Parliament with no structure. The country would be ungovernable. The electoral commission certainly should have a good look at them. Peter Grey, Rye

Think about vote Why does the Flinders electorate keep re-electing and rewarding Greg Hunt? I believe he has a record of documented policy failures, including a policy which enabled increased emissions and loss of clean energy business opportunity that will impact generations for decades to come and ignoring executive requests from Pfizer to discuss a vaccine deal that has resulted in Australia sitting at the back of the pack. I think this shows an inability to act as a forward thinker, preferring instead to play a political game of the moment. Think about merit when the upcoming federal election comes around - we deserve better than below average. Kelvin Stingel, Blairgowrie

Missing award It is disappointing to see that nominations have opened for the annual Mornington Peninsula Shire’s Australia Day awards and there is an award for young citizen and citizen of the year, but no senior citizen. The Australian of the ¥ear awards recognise a senior Australian of the year along with Australian of the year and young Australian of the year and most municipalities include an award for senior citizen of the year - including neighbouring Frankston Council which recently opened nominations for a senior citizen of the year award for 2022. In the 2016 Census, Mornington Peninsula Shire had a lower proportion of children (under

Financial incentives for kinder teachers. Giving Victorian children the best start means more qualified teachers are needed across the state. Teachers not currently working in the sector: Join or re-join the sector and be financially rewarded with $9,000. All qualified teachers: Get up to $50,000* on top of your salary for positions at high-priority services. Search and apply for a position that suits you via the new Jobs Board at vic.gov.au/kinder *Terms and conditions apply, visit vic.gov.au/kinder

PAGE 10

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

THE eroding cliff base and loss of sand at Mount Martha beach north leaves precious little dry sand for a stroll along the beach. Picture: Gary Sissons 18) and a higher proportion of persons aged 60 or older than greater Melbourne. This census showed that there were 5059 people over 85 living in the shire, with the largest age group being 65 to 69. Yet it seems that the MPSC doesn’t want to recognise people doing outstanding work who make up a significant proportion of our population. Interestingly, the MPSC published in its most recent Positive Ageing Newsletter an article to highlight the worst manifestations of ageism and inequality in our society and indeed the shire’s own Positive Ageing Strategy states that one of its goals is to raise community awareness on issues of ageism and the need for respectful inclusion. But the shire doesn’t include our ageing population in its Australia Day awards. Sure, it has separate age friendly awards, but why is there no recognition of an outstanding local senior on Australia Day? Alina Tooley, Mornington

Politics loom As a ratepayer of 50 years, I have seen councils come and go, with an increase in politics becoming more involved. The letters published last week (14/9/21) highlight the state of our current, money-wasting councils (“Democracy rules” and “Waste of money”). Environment as an example, leave it to the state government, which can make things happen. Mornington Peninsula Shire councillors are there to serve the ratepayers’ wishes, not their own political beliefs. John Hodgson, Balnarring

Mixed feelings I, like most others, am a bit tired of being in lockdown and at some point we are going to have to learn to live COVID, just like the flu. I can empathise with all of the businesses shut down as I grew up in a small business environment and know how tough it is.

It is important to keep in mind that fewer than one per cent of cases in NSW were vaxxed. Having said that, I have mixed feelings about classifying the Mornington Peninsula as regional. We are quite different from Geelong where traffic to and from can be monitored. We are already suffering from what I call tourrorists slithering down under the cover of darkness and can only imagine if we were classed regional for covid restrictions. Had Mornington Peninsula Shire considered my proposal for monitoring parking and traffic it would be quite easy to track and fine these people, adding much needed dollars to the budget. The peninsula like the federal government, is living in the Australia bubble: “Never learn anything from anyone, reinvent the wheel in a void.” I am all for a vax passport and restrictions on those who do not have them. First the government has to prevent the issuing on fake passports. We also need to make sure the most vulnerable are not left behind. I am all for the unvaxxed being locked out of events and hospitality venues. Joe Lenzo, Safety Beach

Let them stay The Murugappan family of Biloela, Queensland has lived with a lot of publicity. For years and over many court cases the Australian government has spent millions of dollars to stop them living permanently in this country. They have endured years of cruel detention and privations. They have suffered physical illnesses and mental anguish. Throughout these hardships they have remained together as a family, have continued friendships and maintained the commitment of the Biloela community. And they still hope to stay in Australia to live and work as good citizens as they did before when living in Biloela. But they still face deportation. Surely, they have passed the good character test. Grandmothers for Refugees support the granting of permanent residency for this family. Enough is enough. Ann Renkin, Shoreham


The Guide TOP PICKS OF THE WEEK

FRIDAY

MINISERIES: DES

ABC TV, 8.30pm

SATURDAY

BATTLE OF BRITAIN: 3 DAYS TO SAVE THE UK

SBS, 7.30pm

Whether you are a history buff who delights in every little detail or someone who feels like watching something different to a reality TV or game show tonight, you should probably get your nerves in check. Using archival footage and real-life recreations of critical moments, British historian and veteran TV presenter Dan Snow and his co-presenter Kate Humble (pictured) examine three pivotal days during WWII.

SUNDAY

FIRES

ABC TV, 8.40pm

The devastating blazes of 2019 and 2020 which swept across Australia are the motive behind this star-studded six-part anthology series. Co-creator/ executive producer Tony Ayres (Glitch) wanted to tell the real stories of the people affected. In tonight’s premiere, volunteer firefighters Tash (Eliza Scanlen) and Mott (Hunter Page-Lochard, pictured) nearly lose their lives, but form a bond motivating them to follow the fire, meeting an array of characters.

SUNDAY

VICE

SBS WORLD MOVIES, 8.30pm

The story of former US vice president Dick Cheney is given a darkly comic treatment by writer-director Adam McKay (The Big Short) in this controversial Academy Award-nominated biopic. From humble beginnings as a power worker in 1960s Wyoming, the film takes a wry look (and no shortage of liberties) with Cheney’s journey to Washington, where the college dropout eventually landed just a heartbeat away from the US presidency. Christian Bale (pictured above) stars Cheney alongside Amy Adams as his wife Lynne and Sam Rockwell as president George W. Bush.

The talented David Tennant, pictured below), who glides from sci-fi (Doctor Who) and murder-mystery (Broadchurch) to comedy (Staged), steers a subtler route in this uncomfortable dramatised examination of Scottish serial killer Dennis “Des” Nilsen. From 1978 to 1973, Nilsen killed at least 12 boys and men: this threepart miniseries, premiering tonight, explores the mind of the murderer after he openly admitted to his crimes, the challenges of the police force in dealing with him and finding his victims, and the cultural climate of early ’80s Britain. Tennant’s portrayal is sophisticated and guarded.

DOES YOUR HOME NEED AN AMAZING KITCHEN MAKEOVER? Facelift or replace your drawers, bench top or cabinetry

BEFORE

Best quality products at the most competitive prices

AFTER

David Tennant plays a serial killer in Des.

Call now for a FREE HOME CONSULTATION on 1800 373 263 or 0414 060 481

w ww.dre a m doors .com .a u

Thursday, September 23 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Australian Story. (R) 10.30 Back To Nature. (R) 11.00 How To Live Younger. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 Question Everything. (R) 2.00 Victoria. (PG, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Native America. (PG, R) 3.10 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGadn, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Love At Daisy Hills. (2020, PG) 2.00 Kochie’s Business Builders. 2.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. (PGls, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGa, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Entertainment Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 6.55 Sammy J. (PG) 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. Takes a look at Chinese millennials. 8.30 Q+A. Science special. 9.35 Secrets Of The Museum. (Return) A behind-the-scenes look at a museum. 10.25 ABC Late News. 10.40 The Business. (R) 10.55 The Cult Of The Family. (Ma, R) 11.55 Midsomer Murders. (Final, Mv, R) 1.25 Victoria. (PG, R) 2.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Walking Britain’s Lost Railways: York. (PG) Presented by Rob Bell. 8.30 The Battle Of Alcatraz. (M) Takes a look at a jailbreak from Alcatraz Prison. 9.20 Miniseries: The Victim. (MA15+al) Part 2 of 4. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Criminal Planet. (MA15+dv) 11.55 Mr Mercedes. (MA15+v, R) 1.00 Taken Down. (MA15+ads, R) 4.00 VICE Guide To Film. (Malnv, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour Down Under Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGs) Ziggy’s return is not welcome. 8.30 The Front Bar: Grand Final Edition. (Ml) In the lead-up to the Grand Final, hosts Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher take a lighter look at all things AFL. 10.00 The Latest: Seven News. 10.30 To Be Advised. 12.00 Black-ish. (Return, PG) Junior is excited to vote for the first time. 1.00 The Jonathan Ross Show. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 RBT. (Mdl) A look at police random breath test patrols. 8.30 Epstein’s Shadow: Ghislaine Maxwell. (MA15+als) Part 2 of 2. After the death of her father, Maxwell flees to New York, where she falls in love with Jeffrey Epstein. 10.00 Reported Missing: Michael. (Ma, R) 11.15 Nine News Late. 11.45 Chicago Med. (Mamv, R) 12.35 World’s Worst Flights. (Ma, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. Special guests are The Inspired Unemployed. 7.30 Making It Australia. The makers focus their skills on challenges involving food, including having to work in pairs. 8.40 Gogglebox. TV fanatics open up their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows. 9.40 To Be Advised. 10.40 Blue Bloods. (Mv, R) Jamie asks Erin for help. 11.30 The Project. (R) Special guests are The Inspired Unemployed. 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s

Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 Question Everything. 10.10 Doctor Who. 10.55 That Pacific Sports Show. 11.25 You Can’t Ask That. 11.55 Micro Monsters. 12.50am Russell Howard Stands Up To The World. 1.35 30 Rock. 1.55 Reno 911! 2.15 Friday Night Dinner. 2.40 Mock The Week. 3.15 Close. 5.00 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Do I Have To Take Care Of Everything? 2.40 New Girl. 3.30 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. 10.10 Dave Gorman: Modern Life Is Goodish. 11.00 The Feed. 11.30 News. 11.55 Reunions. 1.55am 7 Days Of Sex. 2.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Jabba’s School Holiday Movie Special. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Wall. 3.00 Weekender. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Inspector Morse. 10.50 Murdoch Mysteries. 11.50 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon As Time Goes By. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Garden Gurus Moments. 3.05 Antiques Roadshow. 3.35 MOVIE: Cairo Road. (1950, PG) 5.30 The Great Migration. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 MOVIE: Allied. (2016, M) 11.05 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 2.00 Friends. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 The Unicorn. 10.00 Seinfeld. 11.00 Late Programs.

N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 2.20pm Bamay. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 Bushwhacked! 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.15 Keep Calm And Decolonize. 7.20 News. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 MOVIE: Footy Legends. (2006, PG) 10.05 The Point. 10.35 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Morning Programs. 8.40 Growing Up Smith. (2015, PG) 10.35 The Fireflies Are Gone. (2018, M, French) 12.25pm The Cobbler. (2014, M) 2.15 My Brilliant Career. (1979) 4.10 The Falcons. (2018, PG, Icelandic) 6.05 Love And Friendship. (2016, PG) 7.45 Still Here. (2020, M) 9.30 The Girl Who Played With Fire. (2009, MA15+, Swedish) 11.55 Late Programs.

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Pawn Stars. 10.00 America’s Game. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picked Off. 1.00 Picker Sisters. 2.00 Alaska’s Wild Gourmet. 2.30 Limitless. 3.00 Caught On Dashcam. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 MOVIE: Rambo: First Blood Part II. (1985, M) 10.35 MOVIE: Rambo III. (1988, M) 12.45am Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 Survivor 41. (Return) 9.30 MOVIE: Into The Blue. (2005, M) 11.45 3rd Rock From The Sun. 12.15am Love Island USA. 1.10 The Bi Life. 2.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 14. San Marino Grand Prix. Replay. 10.00 JAG. Noon Demolition Down Under. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Hawaii Five-0. 10.30 SEAL Team. 11.30 FBI: Most Wanted. 12.30am Home Shopping. 2.00 Elementary. 3.00 NCIS. 4.00 Hawaii Five-0.

CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat (a) Adult themes (d) Drug references (h) Horror (s) Sex references (l) Language (m) Medical procedures (n) Nudity (v) Violence.

Southern Peninsula News – TV Guide

22 September 2021

MEL/VIC

PAGE 1


Friday, September 24 ABC (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Q+A. (R) 11.05 Grand Designs: The Street. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 1.30 That Pacific Sports Show. (R) 2.00 The Capture. (Mlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Native America. (PG, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.05 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGav, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Kissin’ Cousins. (1964, G, R) 2.00 House Of Wellness. (PG) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Moonstruck. (1987, PGal, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) Hosted by Eddie McGuire.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 The Living Room. (PG, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Costa learns about bushfire recovery. 8.30 Miniseries: Des. (Mal) Part 1 of 3. In 1983, a grisly discovery alerts British police to a serial killer, who has operated under their noses for years. 9.20 Miniseries: Capital. (Ms, R) Part 1 of 4. 10.05 The Capture. (Final, Mlv, R) Carey teams up with Shaun Emery. 11.05 ABC Late News. 11.20 The Vaccine. (R) 11.40 Question Everything. (R) 12.10 Rosehaven. (Final, PG, R) 12.40 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Death Of The Pyramids. (PG) A look at why ancient Egyptians abandoned pyramids. 8.30 World’s Most Extraordinary Homes: Norway. (PG) Piers and Caroline head to Norway. 9.35 The Queen’s Mother In Law. (R) Explores the life of Princess Alice. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.55 The Eagle. (MA15+av, R) 4.10 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+ans, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. Melissa King helps spruce up a garden. 8.30 MOVIE: X-Men: Dark Phoenix. (2019, Malv) After a mishap, Jean Grey is struck by a mysterious cosmic force which she absorbs into her body, turning her increasingly powerful and unstable and ultimately a liability for the X-Men. James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Sophie Turner. 10.50 To Be Advised. 12.20 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (Mv, R) The team gets a lead. 1.20 Travel Oz. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 5.00 NBC Today.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Footy Show Grand Final Eve: My Room Telethon. (Ml) The show joins forces with My Room Children’s Cancer Charity on the eve of the Grand Final. Hosted by Tony Jones. 10.30 MOVIE: Semi-Pro. (2008, Mls, R) A basketball team tries to avoid dissolution. Will Ferrell, Woody Harrelson. 12.30 Tipping Point. (PG, R) Hosted by Ben Shephard. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Global Shop. (R) 4.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair.

6.30 The Project. Special guest is Miguel Maestre. 7.30 The Living Room. A mother of four, who gives her all to kids with special needs, gets a spring-themed makeover. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.30 The Graham Norton Show. (M, R) Graham Norton chats with Ewan McGregor, Miley Cyrus, Ashley Banjo, Shirley Ballas and Frank Skinner. 11.10 Nick Cody: Live At The Enmore. (MA15+l, R) A performance by comedian Nick Cody. 12.10 The Project. (R) 1.10 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R)

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 RCO: Järvi Conducts Mozart And Schumann. 9.50 Gruen. 10.25 Doctor Who. 11.20 Art Works. 11.45 Brush With Fame. 12.15am Live At The Apollo. 1.00 QI. 1.35 Would I Lie To You? 2.05 30 Rock. 2.25 Reno 911! 2.50 Friday Night Dinner. 3.15 Mock The Week. 3.45 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon RocKwiz. 12.50 Butter Lamp. 1.10 Mimi. 1.30 Yokayi Footy. 2.35 Over The Black Dot. 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.20 Monica And Sex. (Premiere) 10.20 Reset. 11.50 News. 12.15am MOVIE: The Death Of Stalin. (2017, MA15+) 2.15 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Better Homes. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Border Security: International. 8.30 My Impossible House. 9.30 Selling Houses Australia. 10.30 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. 11.40 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Animal Tales. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 MOVIE: The 14. (1973) 5.00 The Great Migration. 6.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.00 Rugby League. NRL. Second Preliminary Final. South Sydney Rabbitohs v Manly Sea Eagles. 9.45 NRL Finals Footy Post-Match. 10.30 MOVIE: Shooter. (2007, MA15+) 1am Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 The Big Bang Theory. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 1.30 Seinfeld. 2.30 The Unicorn. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Friends. 11.30 Big Bang. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Mom. 2.00 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Fishing And Adventure. 6.30 The Fishing Show. 7.30 Creek To Coast. 8.00 American Pickers. 9.00 Demolition NZ. 10.00 America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picked Off. 1.00 Storage Wars. 1.30 Pawn Stars. 3.00 Cricket. Women’s One Day International Series. Australia v India. Game 2. 10.00 MOVIE: Transporter 3. (2008, M) 12.10am Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 5.30 Children’s Programs. 5.40 MOVIE: Spy Kids. (2001, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: The Last Airbender. (2010, PG) 9.30 MOVIE: Van Helsing. (2004, M) Midnight Love Island USA. 1.00 The Bi Life. 2.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Mega Mechanics. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon Truck Hunters. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 11.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Home Shopping. 2.00 Elementary. 3.00 JAG. 4.00 NCIS. 5.00 Diagnosis Murder.

6am Morning Programs. 1.35pm Clinton’s Walk For Justice. 2.00 On The Road. 3.00 Jarjums. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 NITV News: Nula. 7.30 Red Dirt Riders. 7.45 MOVIE: Arthur And The Two Worlds War. (2010, PG) 9.35 First Nations Bedtime Stories. 9.45 Etthen Heldeli: Caribou Eaters. 10.40 Late Programs.

The Falcons. (2018, PG, Icelandic) 6.55 My Brilliant Career. (1979) 8.50 Wadjda. (2012, PG, Arabic) 10.35 Love And Friendship. (2016, PG) 12.15pm Little Men. (2016, PG) 1.50 Growing Up Smith. (2015, PG) 3.45 Believe. (2013, PG) 5.35 The Young Victoria. (2009, PG) 7.35 Mum’s List. (2016, M) 9.30 The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest. (2009, MA15+, Swedish) 12.10am Late Programs.

The Specialist in Mobility and Home Living Aids

WESTERNPORT MOBILITY HOME LIVING + HIRE • Service • Battery tests • Repairs • Accessories • Home Hire

The One Stop Mobility & Home Living Shop

WE OFFER FREE HOME DELIVERY ON ALL PRODUCTS (conditions apply)

We’re local and we come to you!

Just call 03 5979 8374 or 1800 449 452

Shop 6-7, 28 Victoria Street, Hastings. PH: 1800 449 452

Saturday, September 25 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 10.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Grand Designs: The Street. (PG, R) 1.20 Restoration Australia. (PG, R) 2.25 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG, R) 3.30 Further Back In Time For Dinner. (PG, R) 4.45 Landline. 5.15 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (R) 6.15 The Repair Shop. (R) Two teddy bears are restored. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 The Durrells. (Final, Ms) The island realises it can’t ignore the rumblings of war. 8.20 The Trial Of Christine Keeler. (Final, Mal) In the fallout of Stephen’s trial, Christine is arrested for perjury. John Profumo seeks to rebuild his reputation. 9.20 The Newsreader. (Final, Ml, R) With Helen still reeling from Dale’s revelation, reports emerge of a nuclear accident in Chernobyl. 10.15 Miniseries: Roadkill. (Final, Mls, R) Part 4 of 4. 11.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Gymnastics. European Championships. Artistic Gymnastics. 4.45 QE2: The World’s Most Luxurious Hotel. (PGa, R) 5.35 Cheating Hitler: Surviving The Holocaust. (Premiere, PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Battle Of Britain: 3 Days To Save The UK. (Premiere, M) Part 1 of 3. 8.30 Celebrity Mastermind. (PG) The four winners from the first rounds battle it out for the coveted Celebrity Mastermind title. 9.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) Game show, featuring Stephen Mangan and Brett Domino Trio. Hosted by Jimmy Carr. 11.20 Feast To Save The Planet. (PG, R) 12.20 Miniseries: Deep Water. (Malv, R) 4.25 VICE Guide To Film. (Madlv, R) 4.50 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 NBC Today. News and current affairs. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. The latest news, sport and weather. 10.00 Armchair Experts. (PG) Experts discuss all things AFL. 12.00 AFL Grand Final Day: Road To The Grand Final. 2.00 AFL Grand Final Pre-Game. 5.45 Seven News. 6.15 Football. AFL. Grand final. Melbourne v Western Bulldogs. From Optus Stadium, Perth. 10.30 AFL Grand Final Post-Game. Post-match analysis of the AFL Grand Final. 11.30 To Be Advised. 1.00 Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. (Mv, R) As Fitz and Simmons race to find a way to seal the rift, they are faced with one of their greatest fears manifested. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) Educational kids’ program in which the wonders of maths and science are explored. 5.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) Luke Darcy, Jo Stanley and Luke Hines look at locations that highlight living well.

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Rivals. 12.30 Destination WA. 1.00 Travel Guides. (PGl, R) 2.00 The Garden Gurus. 2.30 Getaway. (PG) 3.00 Rugby League. NRL. First Preliminary Final. Melbourne Storm v Penrith Panthers. 6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Rugby Union. The Rugby Championship. Round 5. Australia v Argentina. 10.00 The Rugby Championship Post-Match. A post-match wrap-up. 10.30 MOVIE: Triple 9. (2016, MA15+lv, R) An unsuspecting rookie foils a heist. Casey Affleck. 12.40 Australia’s Top Ten Of Everything. (PG, R) 1.30 A Current Affair. 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG)

6am Morning Programs. 7.30 Escape Fishing. (R) 8.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 9.00 Taste Of Australia. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 The Living Room. (R) 1.00 The Dog House. (PG, R) 2.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 2.30 Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. (R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. (PG, R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 5.00 News. 6.00 Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. Jamie Oliver reinvents family favourites. 6.30 Bondi Rescue. (PGal, R) Two people are endangered by a miscommunication. 7.00 The Dog House. (PG, R) Dogs are matched with companions. 8.00 Ambulance. An asylum seeker struggling with isolation causes concern for the whole service. 10.00 FBI: Most Wanted. (Mv, R) After a hacker causes a car crash that kills a family of three, the team races to hunt him down. 12.00 NCIS. (Mv, R) Ziva surprises Gibbs with a cryptic warning. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Hour Of Power.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Live At The Apollo. 9.15 The Stand Up Sketch Show. 9.40 Sammy J. 9.45 Whose Line Is It Anyway? (Final) 10.05 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 10.50 Everything’s Gonna Be Okay. 11.30 Would I Lie To You? Midnight Unprotected Sets. 12.30 Escape From The City. 1.30 Arj Barker: Get In My Head. 2.30 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Letterkenny. 1.30 Black Lives Matter: A Global Reckoning. 2.20 The Truth About Racism. 3.25 WorldWatch. 4.50 Seconds From Disaster. 6.40 American Runestone: A Viking Mystery. (Final) 7.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine. 8.30 The X-Files. 9.30 Cycling. UCI Road World Championships. Women’s Elite Road Race. Antwerp to Leuven. 1am Dateline. 1.30 Insight. 2.30 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 8.30 Travel Oz. 10.00 Weekender. 10.30 Creek To Coast. 11.00 House Of Wellness. Noon Horse Racing. Golden Rose Day. 5.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.30 Charlie Luxton’s Homes By The Sea. 6.30 Martin Clunes: Islands Of Australia. 7.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Martin Clunes: Islands Of Australia. 12.30am The Fine Art Auction. 3.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am Newstyle Direct. 6.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. 10.30 The Baron. 11.30 The Avengers. 12.30pm MOVIE: Nurse On Wheels. (1963) 2.15 MOVIE: Laxdale Hall. (1953) 3.50 MOVIE: The Lone Gun. (1954, PG) 5.20 MOVIE: The Bridges At TokoRi. (1954) 7.30 MOVIE: He’s Just Not That Into You. (2009, M) 10.05 MOVIE: Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past. (2009, M) Midnight Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 6.50 The King Of Queens. 7.50 Becker. 8.50 The Middle. 9.40 Frasier. 10.40 To Be Advised. 2pm The Neighborhood. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.45 2 Broke Girls. 10.45 The Conners. 11.45 The Big Bang Theory. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.40 Crazy ExGirlfriend. 3.30 Friends. 4.30 Home Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Love

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm Blokesworld. 1.30 The Food Dude. 2.00 Heavy Rescue: 401. 3.15 Rides Down Under: Workshop Wars. 4.15 Storage Wars Canada. 4.45 Graveyard Carz. 5.45 AFL Grand Final Pre-Game. 6.15 Dirty Rotten Survival. 7.15 Cities Of The Underworld. 8.15 Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 9.30 Building Giants. 10.30 Mysteries Of The Abandoned. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm MOVIE: My Little Pony: Rainbow Roadtrip. (2019) 2.45 Malcolm. 3.45 MOVIE: Journey To The Centre Of The Earth. (2008, PG) 5.45 MOVIE: Abominable. (2019) 7.30 MOVIE: The Great Wall. (2016, M) 9.30 MOVIE: Star Trek Beyond. (2016, M) Midnight Young, Dumb And Banged Up In The Sun. 1.00 Mexican Dynasties. 2.00 Social Fabric. 2.30 Surfing Australia TV. 3.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 9.00 Soccer. Women’s International Friendly. Australia v Ireland. Replay. 11.30 Bondi Rescue. Noon JAG. 2.00 One Strange Rock. 3.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 4.00 Truck Hunters. 4.30 iFish. 5.00 Reel Action. 5.30 Scorpion. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: New Orleans. 10.20 Blue Bloods. 11.20 CSI. 1.10am Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Sasquatch’n. 1.45 Road Open. 1.55 Rugby Union. SA Premier Grade. 3.25 Rugby Union. WA Premier Grade. 4.55 Indian Country Today. 5.25 News. 5.55 NITV News: Nula. 6.30 Yokayi Footy. 7.30 NITV News Update. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 MOVIE: The Final Quarter. (2019, PG) 9.55 MOVIE: Manganinnie. (1980, PG) 11.25 Late Programs.

PAGE 2

And Friendship. (2016, PG) 7.40 Believe. (2013, PG) 9.30 The Young Victoria. (2009, PG) 11.30 My Brilliant Career. (1979) 1.25pm Wadjda. (2012, PG, Arabic) 3.10 Toast. (2010, PG) 4.55 Little Men. (2016, PG) 6.30 1982. (2019, PG, Arabic) 8.30 A Royal Affair. (2012, M, Danish) 11.00 Bad Genius. (2017, M, Thai) 1.20am Late Programs.

Southern Peninsula News – TV Guide

22 September 2021


Sunday, September 26 ABC (2)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PGa, R) 11.30 Praise. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Aust. (R) 2.30 Rick Stein’s Road To Mexico. (R) 3.30 Todd Sampson’s Life On The Line. (PG, R) 4.00 Secrets Of The Museum. (R) 5.00 Art Works. (PG, R) 5.30 Antiques Roadshow.

6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Speedweek. 3.00 Cycling. The Power Of The Pedal. Highlights. 4.00 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 4.05 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 4.35 Mission Galapagos. (R) 5.35 Cheating Hitler: Surviving The Holocaust. (PG)

6.00 To Be Advised. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Better Homes And Gardens. (R) 2.00 Football. AFL. Grand final. Melbourne v Western Bulldogs. Replay. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R)

6.00 Animal Tales. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 The AFL Sunday Footy Show. (PG) 12.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 1.00 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 1.30 Ultimate Rush. (PGl, R) 2.00 MOVIE: Middle School: The Worst Years Of My Life. (2016, PGal, R) Griffin Gluck, Lauren Graham, Alexa Nisenson. 4.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Postcards. (PG)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.30 Back Roads. (PG, R) 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Restoration Australia: Baddeley. (Return) Hosted by Anthony Burke. 8.40 Fires. (Premiere, Mal) Lighting strikes start what is to become a treacherous summer for a pair of young volunteer firefighters. 9.30 We Hunt Together. (Premiere, MA15+al) Two troubled individuals go on a murder spree. 10.20 Les Norton. (Mdlnsv, R) 11.10 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 12.15 MOVIE: Dark Place. (2019, MA15+alv, R) Clarence Ryan, Bernard Curry, Hugh Sheridan. 1.30 Pine Gap. (Mls, R) 3.25 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 5.00 Insiders. (R)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Inside Central Station: Lidcombe Self Harm. (M) Narrated by Shane Jacobson. 8.30 Australia Uncovered: Bowraville Murders. (M) Traces the battle for justice waged by the families of three Aboriginal children murdered in a rural town. 10.15 Russia: 1000 Years Of History. (PGa, R) 12.00 24 Hours In Emergency. (Ma, R) 12.55 John Pilger: The Dirty War On The NHS. (Mal, R) 2.55 Sinkholes: Deadly Drops. (PG) 3.50 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+alv, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 7NEWS: Disappearance Of William Tyrrell. 8.30 Miniseries: Manhunt: The Night Stalker. (Malv) Part 1 of 4. Police pursue a notorious serial burglar and rapist known as the “Night Stalker”. 9.30 The Real ‘Des’: The Dennis Nilsen Story. (MA15+av) Narrated by David Tennant. 10.30 The Real Manhunter. (Madv) 11.30 The Blacklist. (Mv) 12.30 Orange Is The New Brown. (Mls, R) 1.00 Air Crash Investigation. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 The Block. (PGl) 8.30 60 Minutes. Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. 9.30 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.00 The First 48: Closing Time/Family Matters. (Mav) 11.00 Prison Girls: Life Inside. (MA15+adlv, R) 11.50 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now. (MA15+as) 12.40 The Garden Gurus. (R) 1.05 The Xtreme CollXtion. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Sunday Project. A look at the day’s news. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Dannii Minogue, Urzila Carlson, Jackie O and Dave Hughes try to guess a celebrity singer’s identity. 8.40 Young Talent Time Unmasked. Takes a look at Young Talent Time, with guests Johnny Young, Tina Arena and Dannii Minogue. 9.40 FBI. (MA15+v, R) Maggie and OA team up with FBI’s Fugitives Department to track down a man wanted for murder. 11.30 The Sunday Project. (R) A look at the day’s news. 12.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Sir Mouse. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Compass. 8.30 Louis Theroux: Under The Knife. 9.30 The School That Tried To End Racism. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.20am Unprotected Sets. 12.50 Ghosts. 3.40 News Update. 3.45 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Miffy’s Adventures Big And Small. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Bloodlock. 12.30 North To South: NZ’s Wildest Journey. 3.55 WorldWatch. 4.20 The Point. 4.50 The Orville. 6.40 Planet Expedition. 7.40 The UnXplained With William Shatner. 8.30 Life And Death Row. 9.30 Cycling. UCI Road World Championships. Men’s Elite Individual Road Race. 1.20am I Was A Teenage Felon. (Final) 2.10 The Therapist. 2.40 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 11.30 My Road To Adventure. Noon Escape To The Country. 1.00 To Be Advised. 1.30 DVine Living. 2.15 MOVIE: Ben-Hur. (1959, PG) 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Chris Tarrant’s Extreme Railway Journeys. 9.30 Mighty Trains. 10.30 Coastal Railways With Julie Walters. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92)

6am Morning Programs. 7.30 In Touch. 8.00 Beyond Today. 8.30 The Incredible Journey. 9.00 TV Shop. 10.00 My Favorite Martian. 10.30 Garden Gurus. 11.00 Getaway. 11.30 NRL Sunday Footy Show. 1.30pm MOVIE: The Ghost Of St. Michael’s. (1941, PG) 3.15 MOVIE: Comanche. (1956, PG) 5.05 MOVIE: Shane. (1953) 7.30 Death In Paradise. 8.40 Coroner. 9.40 Chicago P.D. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am Seatbelt Psychic. 7.00 The Neighborhood. 8.00 The Middle. 9.00 Neighbours. 11.00 To Be Advised. 1.30pm Jamie’s Easy Meals For Every Day. 2.00 The Dog House. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 The Neighborhood. 9.30 2 Broke Girls. 11.30 Mom. Midnight Home Shopping. 1.30 2 Broke Girls. 2.30 Friends. 4.30 Home Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Heavy Lifting. 7.00 The Fishing Show. 8.00 Creek To Coast. 8.30 Fishing. Australian Championships. AFC VIII. 9.30 River To Reef: Retro. 10.00 Cricket. Women’s One Day International Series. Australia v India. Game 3. 5pm MOVIE: Batman Returns. (1992, PG) 7.35 MOVIE: Fast & Furious. (2009, M) 9.45 MOVIE: Fast Five. (2011, M) 12.35am Blokesworld. 1.05 A Football Life. 2.00 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. 8.00 MOVIE: Barbie Big City Big Dreams. (2021) 9.20 Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Rivals. 2.00 Peaking. 2.50 Soapbox Racing. Red Bull Series. Replay. 3.50 Race Across The World. 5.05 MOVIE: Babe: Pig In The City. (1998) 7.00 MOVIE: The Secret Life Of Pets 2. (2019, PG) 8.40 MOVIE: Transformers: Dark Of The Moon. (2011, M) 11.45 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Reel Action. 9.00 Snap Happy. 9.30 Escape Fishing. 10.00 Roads Less Travelled. 10.30 The Doctors. 11.30 Scorpion. 1.30pm Bondi Rescue. 2.00 The Offroad Adventure Show. 3.00 All 4 Adventure. 4.00 Truck Hunters. 4.30 What’s Up Down Under. 5.00 I Fish. 5.30 Bondi Rescue. 6.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 9.25 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 48 Hours. 11.20 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 8.45 Wapos Bay. 9.05 Kagagi. 9.30 Bushwhacked! 10.00 Wkfl Women. 11.15 Football. QAFL. 1pm Rugby League. NRL NT. 2.30 Football. NT Women’s Premier League. 4.30 Ice Hockey. SA Premier League. 5.45 African News. 6.00 NITV News: Nula. 6.30 Art + Soul. 7.30 NITV News Update. 7.40 First Footprints. 8.40 The Infinite Race. 10.00 Saving Seagrass. 10.30 Going Places. 11.30 Late Programs.

SBS (3)

The Young Victoria. (2009, PG) 8.00 Walking On Sunshine. (2014, PG) 9.50 Little Men. (2016, PG) 11.25 1982. (2019, PG, Arabic) 1.25pm Believe. (2013, PG) 3.15 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 4.55 White Lion. (2010, PG) 6.35 Hunt For The Wilderpeople. (2016, PG) 8.30 Vice. (2018, MA15+) 10.55 Just A Breath Away. (2018, M, French) 12.30am Late Programs.

SEVEN (7)

6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 8.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGal, R) 9.00 Destination Dessert. (Return) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.00 Three Veg And Meat. (R) 1.30 Healthy Homes Aust. 2.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 2.30 My Market Kitchen. (R) 3.00 GCBC. (R) 3.30 Roads Less Travelled. 4.00 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGal) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. 5.00 News.

Having trouble reading the TV Guide?

CALL US NOW!

03 5985 7233 RYE 2277 Point Nepean Road. 03 5985 7233

Monday, September 27 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. (R) 11.00 Restoration Australia. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Durrells. (Final, Ms, R) 2.00 Miniseries: Des. (Mal, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (R) 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. 8.30 Four Corners. Investigative journalism program. 9.15 Media Watch. (PG) Hosted by Paul Barry. 9.35 China Tonight. A look at current affairs from China. 10.05 Road To Now. (Malv, R) 11.00 ABC Late News. 11.15 The Business. (R) 11.35 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG, R) 12.35 We Hunt Together. (MA15+al, R) 1.25 Miniseries: Roadkill. (Mls, R) 2.20 Victoria. (R) 3.10 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Inside Central Station. (M, R) 3.00 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.35 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG, R) 4.05 The Supervet. (PG) 5.00 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R) 6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 The Assassination Of JFK: Ten Mistakes. (M) 8.30 Secret Scotland: Argyll And Bute. (PG) Susan travels to Argyll and Bute. 9.25 24 Hours In Emergency: Someone To Talk To. (M) A 76-year-old is rushed to St George’s. 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 Outlier. (MA15+l) 11.40 An Ordinary Woman. (Mal, R) 2.15 Free Solo. (Ml, R) 4.10 Huang’s World. (Ml, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Marrying Mr. Darcy. (2018, PG) 2.00 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 2.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGs) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Maln) The recruits face a terrifying test of fear. 8.45 MOVIE: Terminator: Dark Fate. (2019, MA15+v) A cyborg and a seasoned female warrior team up to stop the death of a young woman. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Mackenzie Davis. 11.25 Station 19. (Ma) Dr Diane Lewis counsels the team. 12.30 The Passage. (Mhv, R) 1.30 The Real Seachange. (R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.50 Under Investigation: Girl In The Chute. (Ma) Presenter Liz Hayes takes a look at the 1986 murder of 24-year-old Phoebe Handsjuk. 9.50 To Be Advised. 10.50 Nine News Late. 11.20 The Arrangement. (Malsv) 12.10 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 A Current Affair. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGs) 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Hosted by Osher Günsberg. 8.45 Have You Been Paying Attention? (Malns) Celebrity panelists compete to see who can remember the most about events of the week. 9.45 Just For Laughs Uncut. (MA15+ls) Hosted by Nikki Osborne. 10.15 Just For Laughs. (Mdls, R) Hosted by Tommy Little. 10.45 Becky Lucas: Live At Enmore Cafe. (MA15+ls, R) 11.45 The Project. (R) 12.45 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 David Attenborough’s Micro Monsters. (Final) 9.25 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 10.10 Doctor Who. 11.00 How To Live Younger. Midnight QI. 12.30 30 Rock. 12.50 Reno 911! 1.15 This Time With Alan Partridge. 4.10 News Update. 4.15 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 2.30 Crossbow. 2.45 New Girl. 3.40 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Taskmaster. 9.25 Hypothetical. 10.20 Lost For Words. 11.20 Me And My Mental Illness. 12.15am Adam Looking For Eve. 1.05 The X-Files. 2.45 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 My Road To Adventure. 11.00 Mighty Trains. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Sydney Weekender. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. 10.30 Cold Case. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon The Great Migration. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Man Upstairs. (1958, PG) 5.10 Waterhole: Africa’s Animal Oasis. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Poirot. 8.40 Agatha Christie’s Marple. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Big Bang Theory. 7.00 Friends. 9.00 The 74th Annual Tony Awards. 1pm Seatbelt Psychic. 2.00 The Big Bang Theory. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 The Unicorn. 11.30 The Conners. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 James Corden. 3.30 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. 4.30 Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 4.00 Children’s Programs. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 RBT. 8.30 MOVIE: The Peacemaker. (1997, M) 11.00 Stunt Science. Midnight Love Island USA. 1.00 Dr Christian Jessen Will See You Now. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Demolition Down Under. 10.00 JAG. Noon Mega Mechanics. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 15. Russian Grand Prix. Highlights. 11.20 Blue Bloods. 12.15am Home Shopping. 2.15 48 Hours. 3.15 Diagnosis Murder. 4.10 NCIS. 5.05 The Doctors.

6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Art + Soul. 2.30 Lost Diamonds. 3.00 Jarjums. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 The 77 Percent. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.20 News. 7.30 Road Open. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. 9.00 Cold Justice. 10.00 News. 10.10 Te Ao With Moana. 10.40 Late Programs.

Wadjda. (2012, PG, Arabic) 6.30 1982. (2019, PG, Arabic) 8.30 White Lion. (2010, PG) 10.10 Toast. (2010, PG) 11.55 A Royal Affair. (2012, M, Danish) 2.25pm Hunt For The Wilderpeople. (2016, PG) 4.20 Jour De Fete. (1949, French) 5.50 Walking On Sunshine. (2014, PG) 7.40 L.A. Story. (1991, M) 9.30 Amélie. (2001, M, French) 11.45 Borg Vs McEnroe. (2017, M) 1.45am Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picker Sisters. 12.30 Picked Off. 1.30 Great Lake Warriors. 2.30 Caught On Dashcam. 3.00 Demolition NZ. 3.30 Graveyard Carz. 4.30 7th Gear. (Premiere) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: The Enforcer. (1976, MA15+) 10.35 MOVIE: Assassins. (1995, M) 1.20am Late Programs.

Southern Peninsula News – TV Guide

22 September 2021

PAGE 3


Tuesday, September 28 ABC (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Four Corners. (R) 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Trial Of Christine Keeler. (Final, Mal, R) 2.00 Victoria. (R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Native America. (PG, R) 3.00 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.05 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGavw, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Lethal Vows. (1999, PGad, R) 2.00 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 2.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PGa, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.20 Driving Test. (PGl, R) 1.50 Garden Gurus Moments. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGs, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.15 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Back To Nature: Red Earth Heart. (Final) Aaron and Holly visit Arrernte country. 8.30 The School That Tried To End Racism. (PG) Part 2 of 3. 9.30 How To Live Younger. Part 2 of 3. 10.30 ABC Late News. 10.45 The Business. (R) 11.00 Q+A. (R) 12.05 China Tonight. (R) 12.35 The Cult Of The Family. (Ma, R) 1.35 Victoria. (Final, Mv, R) 2.25 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great Alaskan Railroad Journeys: Ninilchik To Wasilla. (PG, R) 8.30 Insight. Presented by Kumi Taguchi. 9.30 The Feed. A weekly news and current affairs show. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) 11.30 Cacciatore: The Hunter. (MA15+alsv) 12.40 The A Word. (Mals, R) 4.10 Huang’s World. (Ml, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGas) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Mal) The recruits tackle a backwards fall. 8.45 Australia: Now And Then. (Mal) Part 3 of 4. Shane Jacobson and a panel of celebrities take a look at which generation of Aussies was the toughest. 9.45 S.W.A.T. (Mv) Hondo, Deacon, Tan and Hicks hunt a criminal in Japan. 10.45 The Latest: Seven News. 11.15 Station 19. (Ma) 12.15 The Real Dirty Dancing. (PGa, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.40 The Hundred With Andy Lee. Andy Lee is joined by a panel of comedians and 100 Aussies to explore the fun behind the facts. 9.40 Travel Guides. (PGl, R) Ordinary Australians become travel critics. 10.40 Nine News Late. 11.10 Reverie. (Mav) 12.05 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 A Current Affair. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Masked Singer Australia. Hosted by Osher Günsberg. 8.40 The Cheap Seats. (Mal) Presenters Melanie Bracewell and Tim McDonald take a look at the week that was. 9.35 NCIS. (M, R) Flashbacks reveal the murder case that introduced young Gibbs to NCIS and his first meeting with Ducky. 10.35 NCIS: Los Angeles. (Ma, R) The team searches for a missing witness. 11.35 The Project. (R) 12.35 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 To Be Advised. 9.10 Ghosts. (Return) 9.40 This Time With Alan Partridge. 10.15 Rosehaven. (Final) 10.40 Doctor Who. 11.45 The Games. 12.15am Superwog. 12.40 W1A. 1.10 The Stand Up Sketch Show. 1.30 30 Rock. 1.50 Reno 911! 2.15 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 3.00 Friday Night Dinner. 3.20 Mock The Week. 3.55 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon The X-Files. 1.40 Inside The X-Files. 2.30 Vote Yes. 2.45 New Girl. 3.35 WorldWatch. 5.00 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Alone. 9.45 Unknown Amazon. 10.35 Fanatics: The Deep End. 11.00 VICE. 11.35 Detective Chinatown. 12.55am News. 1.20 VICE Investigates. 2.20 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Under The Hammer. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 Creek To Coast. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Lewis. 10.30 One Lane Bridge. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Poirot. 1.10 Days Of Our Lives. 2.05 The Young And The Restless. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Brain Machine. (1955, PG) 5.10 Waterhole: Africa’s Animal Oasis. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.55 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.55 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Seinfeld. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 Friends. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 11.35 Frasier. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 A Football Life. Noon Picker Sisters. 12.30 Picked Off. 1.30 Great Lake Warriors. 2.30 Caught On Dashcam. 3.00 Graveyard Carz. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 The Mike & Cole Show. 5.00 Demolition NZ. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Aussie Salvage Squad. 10.30 Outback Truckers. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 MOVIE: Killers. (2010, M) 9.30 MOVIE: Masterminds. (2016, M) 11.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. Midnight Love Island USA. 1.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon Mega Mechanics. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Blue Bloods. 10.25 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.15am Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: Child’s Play. (2019, MA15+) 4.00 SEAL Team. 5.00 JAG.

6am Morning Programs. 12.30pm The Kimberley Man. 1.00 Bamay. 2.35 Urban Native Girl. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 African American: Many Rivers To Cross. 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Living Black. 8.30 Chi-Town. 9.55 Jackie Robinson. 10.55 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 9.05 Hunt For The Wilderpeople. (2016, PG) 11.00 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 12.40pm Goodbye Mother. (2019, M, Vietnamese) 2.45 White Lion. (2010, PG) 4.25 Belle And Sebastian 3. (2017, PG, French) 6.05 Hacker. (2019, PG, Danish) 7.50 Le Week-End. (2013, M) 9.30 Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. (2000, M, Mandarin) 11.45 Late Programs.

THE BEST BRANDS IN TV

AT T H E B E S T P R I C E S David Barke Appliances 1263 Pt Nepean Road, Rosebud, VIC 3939  (03) 5986 5544

Wednesday, September 29 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 The Recording Studio. (R) 10.55 The Repair Shop. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.35 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 Victoria. (Final, Mv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.05 The Repair Shop. (R) 5.05 Grand Designs Australia. (R) 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) 8.30 Question Everything. Presented by Wil Anderson and Jan Fran. 9.00 Frayed. (Return, MA15+l) Sammy returns to London. 9.45 Would I Lie To You? The Unseen Bits. (PG, R) 10.20 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 11.00 ABC Late News. 11.15 The Business. (R) 11.30 Four Corners. (R) 12.20 Media Watch. (PG, R) 12.35 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 1.35 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 2.20 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Dateline. (R) 2.30 Insight. (R) 3.30 Destination Flavour China Bitesize. (R) 3.40 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw. (PG) 4.10 Greek Island Odyssey With Bettany Hughes. (PGasv, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R) 6.00 Mastermind Australia. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Coastal Ireland with Adrian Dunbar. (PG) Part 1 of 2. 8.30 Lost For Words. (M) Part 2 of 3. 9.35 War Of The Worlds. (MA15+) Chloe hopes Sacha will return to the group. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Hunters. (Ma) 11.50 The Killing. (Mlv, R) 2.00 VICE Guide To Film. (Malv, R) 2.50 Futsal. FIFA Futsal World Cup. First semi-final. 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Love’s Last Resort. (2017, PG) 2.00 Harbour Cops. (PGa, R) 2.30 Coastwatch Oz. (PG, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGas) 7.30 SAS Australia. (Mal) 8.45 MOVIE: Jumanji: The Next Level. (2019, PGlv) A group of friends re-enter a dangerous adventure-based video game to rescue one of their own. Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Jack Black. 11.15 The Latest: Seven News. 11.45 Chicago Fire. (Mav) 12.45 First Dates Australia. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Block. (PGl, R) 1.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. (R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. (PGl) Hosted by Scott Cam. 8.40 Paramedics. (Ma) The fun ambulance helps seriously ill children escape from their daily challenges. 9.40 Kings Cross ER. (Mdm, R) A look at St Vincent’s Hospital’s ER. 10.40 Nine News Late. 11.10 Manson: The Lost Tapes. (MA15+av, R) 12.05 Pearson. (Premiere, Malv) 1.00 A Current Affair. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal, R) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.10 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG) 3.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Making It Australia. (PG) The makers are tasked with making a unique light fixture from second-hand materials. 9.00 Bull. (Ma, R) Bull and Chunk represent an emergency room doctor being sued for malpractice after she ignored direct orders to save one near-death patient in favour of helping another who was also critically injured. 12.00 The Project. (R) A look at the day’s news and events. 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.15pm Odd Squad. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Art Works. 9.00 To Be Advised. 10.00 Doctor Who. 11.05 Restoration Australia. Midnight Louis Theroux: Under The Knife. 1.00 30 Rock. 1.25 Reno 911! 1.45 Friday Night Dinner. 2.10 Rosehaven. 2.40 Mock The Week. 3.15 Close. 5.00 Rainbow Chicks. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Counter Space. 1.00 Curse Of Oak Island. 2.40 New Girl. 3.30 WorldWatch. 5.05 Takeshi’s Castle Indonesia. 5.30 Shortland Street. 6.00 Forged In Fire. 6.55 Jeopardy! 7.30 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 MOVIE: The Salvation. (2014, M) 10.10 Australia Uncovered: Bowraville Murders. 11.50 News. 12.15am Back To Life. 1.15 The Erectionman. 2.15 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Under The Hammer. 7.00 Auction Squad. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 To Be Advised. 3.00 DVine Living. 3.30 Medical Emergency. 4.30 M*A*S*H. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.40 Bones. 1.40am M*A*S*H. 2.20 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Animal Tales. 1.00 Days Of Our Lives. 1.55 The Young And The Restless. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: Hell Is A City. (1960, PG) 5.10 Waterhole: Africa’s Animal Oasis. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 An Unexpected Killer. 11.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Becker. 9.00 The Middle. 10.00 Frasier. 11.00 Friends. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 2.00 The Big Bang Theory. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.20 2 Broke Girls. 11.35 King Of Queens. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon The Incredible Hulk. 1.00 Airwolf. 2.00 A1: Highway Patrol. 3.00 Malcolm. 3.30 The Nanny. 4.00 3rd Rock From The Sun. 4.30 That ’70s Show. 5.00 Malcolm. 6.00 The Nanny. 6.30 3rd Rock From The Sun. 7.00 That ’70s Show. 7.30 MOVIE: Safe House. (2012, M) 9.45 MOVIE: Collateral. (2004, MA15+) 12.10am Love Island USA. 1.05 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Destination Dessert. 8.30 Snap Happy. 9.00 Diagnosis Murder. 10.00 JAG. Noon One Strange Rock. 1.00 Star Trek. 3.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 7.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 SEAL Team. 12.10am Home Shopping. 2.10 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 15. Russian Grand Prix. Highlights. 3.10 48 Hours. 4.10 Diagnosis Murder. 5.05 The Doctors.

6am Morning Programs. 2pm Power Meri. 3.00 Wapos Bay. 3.25 Bushwhacked! 3.50 Bino And Fino. 4.00 Mustangs FC. 4.30 Grace Beside Me. 5.00 Shortland Street. 5.30 Chefs’ Line. 6.00 Cooking Hawaiian Style. 6.30 Kriol Kitchen. 7.00 Our Stories. 7.20 News. 7.30 The South Sydney Story. 8.30 Over The Black Dot. 9.35 NITV News Update. 9.45 Rugby League. NRL. WA Premiership. 11.00 Late Programs.

PAGE 4

Hacker. (2019, PG, Danish) 7.40 Mary And The Witch’s Flower. (2017, PG) 9.35 Belle And Sebastian 3. (2017, PG, French) 11.15 Call Mom! (2019, M, Swedish) 1.10pm Jour De Fete. (1949, French) 2.40 Ragnarok. (2013, PG, Norwegian) 4.30 Dil Dhadakne Do. (2015, PG, Hindi) 7.40 Manifesto. (2015, M) 9.30 The Graduate. (1967, M) 11.30 Late Programs.

Southern Peninsula News – TV Guide

22 September 2021

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Motor Racing. Extreme E. Arctic X-Prix. Replay. 2.00 7th Gear. 3.00 Heavy Rescue: 401. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Graveyard Carz. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 Fat Pizza: Back In Business. 9.10 Australia’s Sexiest Tradie. 9.40 MOVIE: Talladega Nights: The Ballad Of Ricky Bobby. (2006, M) 11.50 Late Programs.


“The difference between a good price and a great price is a great estate agent”

BED

MORNINGTON 26 Adelaide Street

MORNINGTON 5 Portrush Grove

$800,000 - $880,000 / ONLINE AUCTION 18/09/2021 @ 11:30am

$1,550,000 - $1,650,000

Alluring Seaside Cottage With Studio

Beachside Townhouse Dreams

Covered alfresco deck & sunset veranda n Picket fence & auto gate with double carport n Office or studio with reverse-cycle heat/cooling n

4

Luxury designer townhouse from Stelson Homes Zoned ducted heating/refrigerated cooling n Double glazed windows

BATH

2

CAR

2

n

Jarrod Carman | 0423 144 102 Tyler Joy | 0437 726 213

n

Jarrod Carman | 0423 144 102 Shaylee Sweetnam | 0424 315 399

‘Mornington Peninsula’s most trusted real estate agent’ Eview Group Mornington Peninsula Office Awarded #1 Office of the Year 2015 and 2016

#3 Sales Office in Australia *REB Awards

Jarrod Carman Awarded #1 Principal of the Year 2015 2016, 2017 and 2018

Awarded #1 Principal of The Year – Regional 2020 ®

2018

AGENCY

OF THE YEAR

BED

MORNINGTON 37 Serenity Way

4

BATH

2

2

$1,400,000 - $1,540,000 Ideal Family Living Master Suite with walk in robe and ensuite n Large outdoor entertaining area with swimming pool n Double garage, ducted heating & evaporative cooling

mpnews.com.au

MORNINGTON VIC

Jarrod Carman Licensed Estate Agent

n

eview.com.au

AWARD WINNER

CAR

0423 144 102

jarrod.carman@eview.com.au jarrod.carman.eview

Jarrod Carman | 0423 144 102 Tyler Joy | 0437 726 213

jarrodcarman

Why list with one, when you can list with all Office: Mornington, 311 Main Street| 5971 0300

Wednesday, 22nd September 2021

SOUTHERN PENINSULA NEWS

Page 1


mpnews.com.au

Wednesday, 22nd September 2021

SOUTHERN PENINSULA NEWS

Page 2


mpnews.com.au

Wednesday, 22nd September 2021

SOUTHERN PENINSULA NEWS

Page 3


ARTWORK: 'SUMMER COLOURS' MIXED MEDIA ON CANVAS @JANINEDADDO @MANYUNGGALLERY

‘SUMMER ON THE PENINSULA’ COMPETITION SPRING SCHOOL HOLIDAYS ARE AROUND THE CORNER AND BONACCORDE ARE LOOKING FOR A BUDDING YOUNG LOCAL ARTIST TO DESIGN THIS YEAR'S CHRISTMAS CARD, WHICH WILL BE SENT TO ALL OUR LOVELY CLIENTS. THE THEME IS ‘SUMMER ON THE PENINSULA’. ENTRIES WILL BE JUDGED BY LOCAL ARTIST JANINE DADDO. WIN a fabulous inflatable stand-up paddle board perfect to enjoy with the entire family this Summer! Head to our website or call 5974 8900 to find out more.

HEAD TO OUR SOCIALS OR BONACCORDE.COM.AU FOR DETAILS @bonaccorderealestate

@bonaccorde property services

SALES + PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 4/42 LOCHIEL AVENUE, MT MARTHA WWW.BONACCORDE.COM.AU

03 5974 8900 mpnews.com.au

Wednesday, 22nd September 2021

SOUTHERN PENINSULA NEWS

Page 4


PUZZLE ZONE 1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

14

12

15

16

21

13

17

18

22

19

20

23

24

25

26

27

28

ACROSS 1. Fads 5. Flows away 7. Implant 8. Branch 9. Unsightly 10. Keepsake 11. Vital body parts 13. Top pilots

29

14. Food toppings 18. Took notice of 21. Small island 22. Skimmed on ice 24. Arm joint 25. Auction offers 26. Perfumed powder 27. Levels 28. Serpents

29. Injured DOWN 1. Uncaring 2. African striped animal 3. Scorches 4. Put an end to (law) 5. Teach 6. Accept as true

12. Named before marriage 15. Accosts 16. Edam & Cheddar 17. Skin mite rash 19. Large deer 20. Drew conclusions 22. Rustling sound 23. Daisy-like flower

Southern Peninsula News

Puzzles supplied by Lovatts Publications Pty Ltd www.lovattspuzzles.com See page 21 for solutions.

22 September 2021

PAGE 19


THE MEANING OF EXISTENCE... AND OTHER SHORT STORIES

When Your Grocery Trolley Is A Handcart to Hell By Stuart McCullough YOU’D think I’d have gotten the gist by now. After months of practice, I’m still no better at it. I’ve studied them, poked and prodded them, sent samples down to the lab, soaked them, baked them and even set fire to them (albeit by accident – don’t leave anything next to the hotplate!). But despite my extensive and, some would say, creative research, I still have not mastered the whole face-mask caper. I know what you’re thinking – if a tree falls in a forest, does anybody hear? And, quite possibly, why did they ever mess with the formula for Barbecue Shapes? (It was destined to end badly for all concerned.) But you’re also thinking – what kind of fool struggles to wear a face mask? All you need to do is loop the elastic over your ears, ensure the mask is facing forwards rather than backwards, and away you go. That’s where you’re wrong. I wear glasses. In fact, I’ve worn glasses since I was a teenager. And it’s been fine, up until now. But what the last miserable eighteen months has taught me is that wearing a mask and glasses simultaneously is pretty much impossible. I can get by without them if I’m just walking around, but I am totally incapable of reading anything. At all. When you’re wearing a mask, glasses fog up. They just do. Instead of lenses through which you can see, they become entirely frosted over in an instant. This has proved especially impractical when shopping. Once, I’d prepare an inventory (something I refer to as a ‘shopping list’), travel to the supermarket and purchase the things I’d already decided on. It sounds simple, but it worked for me. Having glasses that fog up because I’m wearing a mask makes this somewhat simple act a whole lot more complicated. I’ve now officially given up. By which I mean I’m now no longer wearing my glasses to the supermarket. This has resulted in a number of challenges. Firstly, there’s the issue of the list itself. Whereas once, I wrote my shopping list on

a small piece of paper that I kept in my pocket. I’ve now had to go with something bigger so I can increase the size of my writing. For this reason, I’m using a bed sheet. Because I’m now using a bed sheet on which to write my shopping list, the first thing I need to write each week is ‘bed sheet’. Permanent marker is nothing if not unambiguous in terms of what it does, and I need a new sheet each week to replace the last. But despite the fact that my list is now written in letters that are the size of a three year old child, I still have trouble reading the list without my glasses. Which is disappointing,

given that if left on an oval it could probably be read from space. This means that shopping has become an essentially random act. My list begins with the basics – rice, bananas, yoghurt and milk. However, last week I returned from the supermarket with shoe polish, string, a litre of prune juice and pigs’ trotters. Back home and with mask off and glasses on, I shuddered as an image of the calamitous sandwich that results from such a cavalcade of ingredients took my mind hostage. It got my entire week off on the wrong (pigs’) foot. This is so much worse than simply not being

able to distinguish between full and low fat. I am getting the wrong products entirely. The first hint of this comes when I reach the checkout and the eyebrows of the person working there begin to rise. As a result, I started avoiding the human checkouts in favour of the ‘self serve’ version. Even there, the checkout lit up like a poker machine as I tried to scan what turned out to be a bucket of tripe. Somewhat ironically, I’m making a complete spectacle of myself because I don’t have my glasses. I’ll admit I’m feeling listless. By which I mean I’ve now given up using a list at all and am simply using either my intuition or, if you prefer, ‘The Force’. Clearly my intuition leaves a lot to be desired and I’m beginning to regret dropping out of my Certificate III Jedi Training course. Today, I returned only with tea. I swear I bought things at multiple locations within the store, but have returned only with enough tea to see me through the rest of my life. Granted, there are some variations as to the type of tea, which is nice, but it won’t make for much of a sandwich. There will be some reading this, screaming at their newspapers as to why I don’t order on line while I still have my glasses and let the food come to me. It’s a fair point, but I’m reluctant to give up a legitimate reason to leave the house at this time. Instead, I’ll need to embrace the randomness of it all and make the best of things. It’s what we’re all doing, really. I’ve been working all day in the kitchen trying to whip up something tasty, but I’m going to need a much larger whip if I’m to succeed. Using tripe, stock, potatoes, string and a pomegranate, I’ve been boiling the whole thing up for the last twelve hours and the time has finally arrived where I can no longer avoid tasting it. I raise the spoon to my lips. The results were, predictably, offal. Glasses or not, I should have seen that one coming. stuart@stuartmccullough.com

Advertise in the Southern Peninsula’s own newspaper

Call MPNG Classieds on 1300 666 808

PAGE 20

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021


100 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK...

The Football Pennant – Carrum Defeats Hastings by 14 Points Compiled by Cameron McCullough THE Mornington Peninsula Association rang down its curtain on Saturday last, when, before a very large and enthusiastic attendance, Carrum wrested the premiership from Hastings by 14 points. The match was played at Somerville. Hastings did not make any changes, and relied on the same team that defeated the Carrumites the week before. As Mackay was on the injured list, he was replaced by Homsie in the Carrum team, whilst Carroll was replaced by Johnstone. Apart from these changes, the sides were the same as published in “The Standard” last issue. As umpire, Osborne showed distinct improvement, and escaped the satire of the critics. He gave 35 frees to Hastings and 26 to Carrum. The decisions of at least one goal umpire were not quite so satisfactory. It was a brilliant opening quarter. At the very outset, Carrum came into the game with confidence, and one quickly realised that Hastings would have to give a very fine exhibition to repeat its performance of the Saturday before. In any case, Carrum opened briskly, and for a time Rigaldi was in the limelight, being the most prominent of the initial stages. Receiving from Tom Feavor, he scored the first point with a beautiful place. Knox sent the sphere to Dalton, but Smith secured and returned to Comer, who lost no time in sending it along. Carlson and Ballinger soared into space after it, and the Carrumite proved successful. He raised the two flags for the first time that day. Jack and Hurley attacked and Garth

capped the effort with six points. There was some excellent individualistic efforts in the next few minutes – Carlson’s dominance in the ruck, Peddle’s fine picking up, and Fred Davis fine dashes being outstanding features. Tom Feavor, busy as the proverbial bee, worked the play into Carrum territory, where Carlson snapped a single. Langholtz put his boot well into the leather, only to have it marked by Carlson and returned to Rigaldi, who brought more grist to Carrum’s mill in the shape of six points from a long place. A move by Knox was negatived by Oliver, and, thanks to unselfish play by Comer, Rigaldi snared it, and punted another major point. Smith was fine in defence, but some of the Carrum players were paying too much attention to Floyd, who was getting any quantity of frees. The play was very spirited, and, just as Garth was en route for goal, Carmichael brought “Pompy” Davis heavily to earth. With the free, Davis passed to West and Lucas, and play strayed to opposite territory. Will Allen, however, returned to his brother, whose try was spoilt by Smith. “Pompy” Davis pushed Alf Tipping, right in front, but he sent it out. Fred Davis shoved Floyd into space, but the shot strayed. Oliver and Rigaldi brought the sphere back to Cullen, who, getting into difficulties, passed to Tom Feavor, and a worthy try was frustrated by Knox. Armstrong and Woolley – sounds more like cricket – helped it along to Hastings territory, where some fine play by Alf Tipping was finished by Garth with six points. Hurley secured at centre, and R. Tipping hand-balled to Garth, who again kicked

straight and true. These two goals by Garth put life into the Hastings enthusiast. At this stage, Carrum were leading by 2 points – 3.2 to 3.0. The second quarter, too, was very interesting. A nice effort for a single by “Pompy” Davis opened the scoring, and a second point by Heffernan a moment hence resulted. A series of passes by Langholtz, Woolley, Floyd and Francis merited the applause that followed, but Laging spoilt the series by returning to Oliver. Stryde and Johnstone sent it to “Pompy” Davis, who had a fine chance to score, but he kicked poorly. A rush by Peddle to Mirabella was cheered, and the play opened out a bit for a change. Homsie had a couple of fruitless shots before Carlson added a point. Langholtz and Ballinger forced the play to the centre, but back it came, and Homsie scored a point. Wells marked and gave Cullen a chance, and the goal was duly recorded. Tom Feavor and Cullen had shots for nought, but West got a point. This player – who so closely resembles ‘Snowy’ Atkinson of Fitzroy fame – met with severe injury, and from this out Carrum were a man short. Frank Allen, in soaring into the air, also got a nasty clout on the way up! Laging got a free and playing to Homsie, a point resulted. “Dido” Feavor sent it to Cullen for a single, but he followed with a goal. Peddle and Francis transferred activities to opposite territory, where a curious incident occurred. A scrimmage was in progress, and from it Hastings kicked for the goal. The ball first struck the goal post, and, as it bounced back, Garth kicked it through. Of course, it wasn’t a goal, but to the astonishment

Did you know... you can view our papers online

www.mpnews.com.au Sudoku and crossword solutions C R

A

E

I

M B

A

R

R

L

O R G A

N

U

E

S I

S

H

C

E

A

S

L

E

I

D

A

S

P

L

S E

L

E

S

V

E

O E

S

U C

E

A

S

A

A B

S

E M B

E

A L

Z

L

I

E

U G

L

C

I

A

S

T E

E

E

S

K

A

I

I

T

S

N

H

A

S Y S

V D

E

D E

S

S

C

L

B O W E

B

D

I H

B

T

E

D U

of everybody, the League goal umpire gave it a goal. Carrum were leading by 15 points – 5.9 to 4.0. The third quarter was spoilt by a series of free fights, in which the most “brawlsome” on the ringside eagerly joined. These fighting maniacs (who, in ordinary circumstances, couldn’t fight their way out of the waxworks) apparently hunt in packs, like wolves, and are only game when they have about 25 to 1 in their favor. They are real excrescences on the game. But, to the story. Floyd and Carlson were having some fine battles, and, so far as the frees went, Floyd was having slightly the better of it. But, both were taking some fine marks. Cullen opened the scoring with a point, and Comer had a shot, but the breeze swept it out. Ballinger returned, and Frank Allen played to Alf Tipping, who got a point. Carmichael secured and passed to Garth, who registered his fifth goal in succession – a very fine performance. Then we had some “merry moments.” It happened just in front of the “Press Box” (to wit, the wire fence, with a police man’s horse in front, as a rule). Smith kicked in the ruck, and Alf Tipping got the boot in the ribs. Naturally, Alf didn’t care much about it, so he jobbed Dido Feavor, who had nothing to do with it, but who had arrived just in time to get cracked. “Dido,” not appreciating Alf’s fist, returned the compliment. Then the brave youths from the boundary hopped into it, followed by a posse of police. Osborne, who, to give him due credit, will not stand any funny business, got them going again. The incident probably cost Hastings the game, as a couple of the players

GALLERY TALK Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery has been successful with a $300,000 Federal Government, Restart Investment to Sustain and Expand (RISE) Fund grant to deliver an ambitious public art project celebrating key sites and stories on the Mornington Peninsula. This project called Front Beach, Back Beach, will take place across the Mornington Peninsula in November 2022 with an exhibition at the Gallery in the Summer of 2022/23. Front Beach, Back Beach is a public art project, presented in partnership between the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery and Deakin University’s Public Art Commission. Through film, sculpture, sound, performance, participation, and installation this multi-sited event will commission 15 Australian artists/ collectives to respond to fifteen sites and stories that have shaped the Peninsula. From Monmar (Point Nepean) to Wonga (Arthurs Seat), Western Port to Cape Schanck there are hidden histories of national significance that channel our collective past and future. Front Beach, Back Beach will activate these histories and sites using contemporary art to speak to current issues, brought on by the pandemic, climate change and the shifting sands of our social relations. The project will focus on community engagement, collaboration and the power of contemporary art to tell stories across time and space.

We are really excited about this project and are thrilled to have received this major funding. The Gallery continues to remain closed to the public. We have made the decision to extend our planned Spring program of exhibitions through Summer until 13 March. This will give visitors the opportunity to experience five amazing new exhibitions, including our unique Wall Drawing project featuring eleven contemporary Australian artists making work directly onto the walls of the gallery. Visit the MPRG website or sign up to the Gallery’s e-newsletter to find out more about our upcoming programs and activities. While you are online, you can also check out our free kids’ creative activities, listen to a podcast with an MPRG-exhibited artist, or do a linocut workshop with renowned printmaker David Frazer, which has had over 17,000 views. We are looking forward to welcoming you back to the gallery hopefully soon.

MPRG Gallery Director Danny Lacy

C

mprg.mornpen.vic.gov.au

E

E

R M E

D

Civic Reserve, Dunns Road, Mornington Ph 5950 1580

A

L

were like “wild men from Borneo” and several chances were lost. Laging, fouled by one of the “wild men,” got a goal from a free. Back once more, Wells fouled Dalton, who kicked a goal – but only one flag went up. It was certainly a surprising verdict. As the Irishman might put it, Hastings got a goal they did not get and did not get a goal they did get ! After another bit of bruise, Osborne cautioned Alf Tipping for paying his respects to “Dido” Feavor and “Pompy” Davis. In the meantime, Garth raised the two flags by a clever bit of play. Carrum were leading by 9 points – 6.12 to 6.3. The final quarter opened with a nice dash by Dalton, but Rigaldi scored the first point. Mirabella was the pick of the field in this quarter, having much the better of the duels with Comer. But, by design or accident, Mirabella tripped Comer in front, but only a point came of it. Jack, of Hastings, and Tom Feavor and Fred Davis made some spirited dashes. Carrum were attacking and ‘Pompy’ Davis, Cullen and Comer (from a lovely mark) added singles. The breeze was a bit contrary. After another little fight, Carmichael raised the two flags with a well-timed punt. Five minutes to go – Hastings wanted 9 points to win. Oliver got a point for Carrum, and Jack added one to Hastings’ score. A great effort was made, the play was fast but fair, every man doing his utmost. In the midst of the excitement, Tom Feavor rushed out, and kicked the final goal, which placed the issue beyond doubt. Carrum had won the 1921 premiership by 14 points – 7.18 to 7.4. *** From the pages of the Frankston and Somerville Standard, 16 September 1921

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 21


networkclassifieds.com.au networkclassifieds.com.au Trades & Services

12435752-FA03-20

0412 588 130 V

24 HOUR SERVICE 2EC

Pensioner Discounts

V

V

s 0ALING s 0ICKETS s "RUSH 0ANELS s 'ATES &REE 1UOTES #ALL 4ONY

1209702-LB49-15

12461765-NG39-20

5998 7796

V

• 30 years exp • Fully insured

Abel Property Services Brett 0448 866 360

Real Estate V

Roofing

Roof Restoration Specialists

One call, We do it all!

đŏ ((ŏ(! 'ŏ.!, %./ŏđŏ ++"ŏ /$%*#ŏđŏ ++"ŏ %*0%*# đŏ (!4%ġ,+%*0%*#ŏđŏ % #!ŏ0%(!ŏ.!ġ ! %*# đŏ ((!5ŏ $ *#%*#ŏđŏ 100!.ŏ (! *%*#ŏ".+)ŏĸāĂĀ đŏ ((ŏ05,!/ŏ+"ŏ.++ü*#ŏ * ŏ .,!*0.5

V

-OB s 0H Find local work with an advert in the

Trades & Services section of Network Classifieds.

22 September 2021

By Horizon Plumbing Pty Ltd

• Guttering Replacements • Downpipes • 20 Colours • Quality Workmanship • All Work Guaranteed • Old Guttering Taken Away • Free Quotes

ANDY 0414 477 121 V

12464927-SG42-20

GUTTERING

12428296-ACM40-19

&2%% 15/4%3 s $!93 ! 7%%+

Pets & Services

ADVERTISERS PLEASE NOTE

Anyone advertising a puppy, dog, kitten or cat in Victoria for sale or re-homing will need a source number from the Pet Exchange Register and a microchip identification number. It is now an offence to advertise unless the source number and microchip identification number is included in the advertisement or notice. For further information, call 136 186 or visit animalwelfare.vic.gov.au

0414 566 273

Get 10% Discount Use code: EMPDISC

ZZZ QHWZRUNFODVVL´HGV FRP DX

GARY’S RUBBISH REMOVALS We do all the work

NEW STAFF?

Fill your position online

Rubbish Removal

Same day service. No job too small

Positions Vacant

NEED 12400545-LB38-19

PTY LTD

V

Employment

10 year Guarantee. Call now for a FREE quote: 0405 817 173

Specialising in: s 3LABS s &OOTINGS s 0AVING s $RIVEWAYS s #ROSSINGS s ,AYBACKS s )NDUSTRIAL &LOORS s 4ENNIS #OURTS s %XPOSED !GGREGATE

Southern Peninsula News

LIC: 109028

section of Network Classifieds.

Peter Sharp

PAGE 22

0447 007 178

12415744-DJ16-19

Concrete Products & Services

CONCRETE SPECIALISTS

Massage Therapists

ADVERTISERS in this section are qualified practitioners and offer nonsexual services.

12357430-DJ28-17

V

V

www.orbitplumbing.com.au

BLITZ YOUR GARDEN

Call Gary 0407 877 960

Rest in Peace Les and thank you from Hild and Don Hodgins.

** Same Day Plumbing Service **

Call Jason 0439 042 540

� Regular lawn mowing � Complete garden cleanup � Weeding � Trimming � Clear sheds/houses � Small/medium trees removed � NDIS & Homecare packages

We are grateful to Les for his friendship and contribution to the area in his time with us all.

Plumbing

Local & Friendly Plumber Daniel:

12469626-SN46-20

• Pressure Washing • Small Jobs ok

12509734-AV35-21

• Decks etc • Painting • Plaster Repairs

A man that always planned well and exequated all tasks with wonderful results.

General Classifieds

s (OT 7ATER s "URST 0IPES s 4APS 4OILETS s (EATING s #ARBON -ONOXIDE 4ESTING s 0UMPS s "LOCKED $RAINS s 'AS &ITTING

s 7HIPPER SNIPPING s 7EEDING PRUNING s 'ARDEN CLEAN UPS s 'UTTER CLEANING s .O JOB TOO SMALL s &ULLY INSURED s &REE QUOTES

12396062-LB34-18

Don and Hild Hodgins would like to pass on Condolences to his family and many friends in the area.

Home Maintenance

ORBIT PLUMBING

Garden Services

J&T

• All household maintenance • Building work

colinkellygas@gmail.com

Call: 0407 121 284

Lawn Mowing & Garden Maintenance

BUILDING MAINTENANCE

Colin Kelly 0427 314 570

• Home Maintenance • Trees Lopped • Rubbish Removal • Retaining Walls • Gutters • Fully Insured

0403 866 624

V

Builders & Building Services

CARBON MONOXIDE TESTING

Fencing & Gates

Bayline Fencing

See website for details

Les passed away 31 August 2021. A Business man in many Hotels and the Hastings Marina for more than 24 years. A man that gave freely of his time and always very generous to patrons and staff of which there were many

GAS APPLIANCE SERVICING

V

Deaths

LESLIE (Les) JOHN MARTYN MBE OSI

Heating

KELLY’S GAS & PLUMBING Lic. 16546

Jason 1300 644 698

• Air Conditioning Get ready • Split Systems for Summer!! • Evaporative Evaporative Cooler & Split Cooling System Service Specials

V

Phone Tim: 0412 315 798

s %XTENSIONS 2ENOVATIONS s 3WITCHBOARD 5PGRADES 3AFETY 3WITCHES 3PECIALISING IN ALL %LECTRICAL )NSTALLATIONS s (OUSE 2EWIRES &2%% 15/4%3 s 0HONE $ATA 46 ##46 .O *OB TOO BIG OR SMALL s /VEN (OT 0LATE 2EPAIRS s (OT 7ATER 3ERVICE 2EPAIRS WWW JLHUTTELECTRICAL COM AU s 3ECURITY !LARMS s !# )NSTALLATIONS

Be cool this summer

V

Years of experience. Fully insured. Free Quotes. Rye and surrounding area.

Electricians

Air Conditioning

Announcements

Tim The Handyman

for an obligation free quote

J.L. Hutt Electrical

Handy Persons

12513902-DL39-21

Ask about our discounted ongoing advertising rates and how choosing more newspapers gives your advertising more impact and saves you money...

Mulch For Sale

Ph Graham 0407 357 927

12423634-SN31-19

(1.5% credit card processing fee applies. Cheques and money orders can be posted in or hand delivered to our local office)

V

UÊ/ÀiiÊEÊ-ÌÕ «Ê,i Û> UÊ Õ Ê ÃÕÀ> ViÊ ÛiÀ ÊUÊ7 `Ê ««iÀÉ Õ V }Ê-iÀÛ ViÊ Û> >L i

12417889-FA21-19

VISA/MASTERCARD/EFTPOS

Vacuum Gutter Cleaning | Mornington Peninsula

phone: Jordi on 0418 312 121 email: jordi@guttersuncluttered.com.au

Tree Lopping/Surgery

CHEAP CHEAP CHEAP

12423915-CG33-19

We accept payment by:

www.fairbairns.com.au

V

12447720-LB18-20

(include your name, address and phone number)

REC 17042 PIC 38148 AU 06212

Guttering

12468704-HL45-20

Don’t replace your old concrete – we can repair and reseal in any colour of your choice. • All types of concrete work done. • Reasonable rates. • Pensioner discounts. • Small site cleans. • FREE colour with Call now every job.

12497909-AV23-21

Online: networkclassifieds.com.au (24/7) Phone: 1300 666 808 (Open 8.30-5pm Mon-Fri) Email: sales@networkclassifieds.com.au

V

V

ROCKHARD CONCRETING AND SEALING SERVICES

Placing your classified advert is so easy...

Deadline for all classifications is 1pm Friday.

Concrete Products & Services

12468339-CG45-20

V

12337429-CG06-17

Deadline

12438941-CG04-20

V

Place your ad in print and online www.networkclassifieds.com.au

Find work locally in the

Employment section of Network Classifieds.


Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021

PAGE 23


151ST

FUEL CARD

5K

$

PAGE 24

Southern Peninsula News

22 September 2021


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.