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How English Literary Techniques Shape Modern Storytelling: Lessons for Today’s Students

How English Literary Techniques Shape Modern Storytelling: Lessons for Today’s Students

Understanding literary techniques empowers students to read, write, and think with confidence in a media-driven world.

English literary techniques continue to shape how stories are written, read, and shared—from classic novels to modern digital media. This article explores their role in contemporary storytelling, highlights why students should learn them early, and offers practical tips for application in both academic and everyday writing. It covers essential techniques like metaphor, irony, symbolism, and their presence in advertising and online culture. Parents and teachers can support learning through discussion and real-life examples, while students seeking structured help may benefit from expert tutoring for literary analysis. These timeless skills remain central to effective communication.

Friday, August 22, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (88)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
The Role of Osteopathy Colonel Light Gardens in Supporting Active Lifestyles and Sports Recovery

The Role of Osteopathy Colonel Light Gardens in Supporting Active Lifestyles and Sports Recovery

Osteopathy keeps Colonel Light Gardens residents moving with confidence and strength.

Colonel Light Gardens is a community that thrives on activity, from sports clubs to weekend recreation. With this lifestyle comes the risk of injury, which is where osteopathy plays a valuable role. Osteopathy focuses on the body’s structure and movement, offering hands-on treatment to manage pain, improve mobility, and prevent recurring issues. Common injuries like sprains, strains, and back pain can be addressed effectively, supporting both recovery and long-term performance. By choosing Osteopathy Colonel Light Gardens at Blackwood Osteopathy, residents have access to holistic care that aligns with their values of health, resilience, and community wellbeing.

Thursday, August 21, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (95)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Youth and Mental Health: What Thinking Families Counselling Teaches Us About Supporting the Next Generation

Youth and Mental Health: What Thinking Families Counselling Teaches Us About Supporting the Next Generation

Supporting youth mental health requires families, schools, and communities to work together, and counselling provides the bridge to stronger connections.

Youth mental health has become a growing concern in Australia, particularly for young people in regional communities who often face additional barriers to support. This article explores the challenges young people encounter today, from academic pressure to the influence of social media and family dynamics. It highlights how counselling, especially family-centred approaches, provides a safe space for expression and guidance. By working with professionals such as Thinking Families counselling specialists, families may strengthen communication and resilience. Combined with community involvement and open conversations, these efforts create a stronger support network for the next generation.

Thursday, August 21, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (90)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating

The Growing Role of RWS Settlements in First-Home Buyer Success Stories

First-home buyers in WA are turning to RWS Settlements for trusted support during one of life’s biggest milestones.

Purchasing a first home in Western Australia is exciting, but it comes with challenges ranging from affordability to complex paperwork and strict deadlines. This article explores the role of settlement agents in helping first-home buyers achieve smoother property transactions. It highlights how RWS Settlements supports clients by managing legal documents, ensuring compliance, and guiding buyers through grants and concessions. By reducing stress and preventing costly mistakes, settlement agents give new homeowners the confidence to enjoy their purchase. For many, professional guidance has become the difference between an overwhelming process and a success story.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (112)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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The Growing Role of RWS Settlements in First-Home Buyer Success Stories

First-home buyers in WA are turning to RWS Settlements for trusted support during one of life’s biggest milestones.

Purchasing a first home in Western Australia is exciting, but it comes with challenges ranging from affordability to complex paperwork and strict deadlines. This article explores the role of settlement agents in helping first-home buyers achieve smoother property transactions. It highlights how RWS Settlements supports clients by managing legal documents, ensuring compliance, and guiding buyers through grants and concessions. By reducing stress and preventing costly mistakes, settlement agents give new homeowners the confidence to enjoy their purchase. For many, professional guidance has become the difference between an overwhelming process and a success story.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (103)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating

Sick of Subtle? Why Movements Like ‘Kiss My Brass’ Are Making Health Messaging Impossible to Ignore

Cheeky campaigns like Kiss My Brass are leading a new wave of honest, impactful health communication in Australia.

 

 Traditional health campaigns often miss the mark by being too polite, clinical, or forgettable. In contrast, Kiss My Brass is redefining how Australia talks about bowel health—using humour, bold visuals, and direct messaging to break stigma and encourage early screening. This article explores why boldness is more effective than subtlety, how humour boosts message retention, and why movements like Kiss My Brass may be the future of public health communication. With the rise of culturally fluent campaigns that speak to Australians in their own voice, it’s clear that loud and proud messaging may be exactly what saves lives.

Wednesday, July 23, 2025/Author: Julian Parsons/Number of views (923)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Local News

The GrainCorp Long Graze - a successful fundraiser for the local school of Burren Junction

The GrainCorp Long Graze - a successful fundraiser for the local school of Burren Junction

Burren Junction Public School

Fun day at Burren Junction for the The GrainCorp Long Graze raising money for the Burren Junction Public School. 

Thank you for the support of our family and friends. 

Monday, August 25, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (71)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Burren Junction Public School’s open netball team win their way through to the state knockout finals

Burren Junction Public School’s open netball team win their way through to the state knockout finals

Netball took centre stage when Burren Junction Public School’s open team travelled to Yamba this week, with the beach as a perfect scenic backdrop to their shot at going for state glory.

The small school from the north west proved unstoppable once again in round three of the 2025 NSWPSSA Small Schools Netball Knockout Competition as they scored a dominant victory to book a ticket to the state finals in Sydney this September.

Thursday, August 21, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (0)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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How I became a Fettler in 1964

How I became a Fettler in 1964

by Rob Bell

My name is Rob Bell, and I was born in East Bankstown (later Greenacre) in 1945, into a solid working-class family. By 1964, 5 years after leaving Punchbowl Boys High, I was requested by the local gendarmes to leave town. This was also issued to many of my friends who, like myself, travelled down the wrong roadway.

A friend who had been off the scene for a while was back in town and was going on about working on the railway as a fettler in a place called Burren Junction. Where the hell is B.J., we all cried, North West NSW, have you heard of Walgett? Well, it's this side of Walgett, and they are looking for workers.

So come Monday, we all troop down to Central Station (about 6 of us) for a medical and get the guts on this Fettler business. Being good, strong Aussie boys with an average age of around 20, we were in. Some of us were sent to Cryon and others to BJ.

Thursday, August 21, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (648)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Burren Junction Preschool is hiring an Early Childhood Educator

Burren Junction Preschool is hiring an Early Childhood Educator

Burren Junction NSW
Part-time position (potential for additional casual days)

Are you a dedicated and passionate person seeking a new career opportunity?
Burren Junction Preschool is seeking an Early Childhood Educator to join their team and enjoy their close-knit community.

If you value family, community, and respect, and are passionate about nurturing the next generation in a warm and supportive environment, we'd love to hear from you!

Application with a Certificate !!! or Diploma in Early Childhood Education and Care (or currently working towards one) are encouraged to apply.

Please send your cover letter and resume to:  directorbjpreschool@bigpond.com

For More information 0467 661245

 

Tuesday, August 19, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (616)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Artesian Bore Bath Caretaker – Burren Junction (2 month, casual position)

Artesian Bore Bath Caretaker – Burren Junction (2 month, casual position)

𝗪𝗲’𝗿𝗲 𝗵𝗶𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴! 𝗔𝗿𝘁𝗲𝘀𝗶𝗮𝗻 𝗕𝗼𝗿𝗲 𝗕𝗮𝘁𝗵 𝗖𝗮𝗿𝗲𝘁𝗮𝗸𝗲𝗿 –𝗕𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗲𝗻 𝗝𝘂𝗻𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 (𝟮-𝗺𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗵 𝗰𝗮𝘀𝘂𝗮𝗹)

Love the outdoors? Enjoy meeting new people? This casual role runs until the end of October and is perfect for someone who takes pride in presentation and wants to work in one of our region’s most popular attractions.

✅ Hands-on role with flexible hours

✅ $36.90 – $45.07 p/h + super

✅ Keep the Bore Baths clean, safe, and welcoming

✅ Could suit a single person or travelling couple

📅 Applications close 9am, Tuesday 26 August 2025

Apply online here: 

Tuesday, August 19, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (449)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Little House on Alma (Burren Junction)

Little House on Alma (Burren Junction)

LITTLE HOUSE ON ALMA (Burren Junction)

Burren Junction accommodation is available. 
Can sleep up to 3 ppl. Kitchen and bathroom. Nice yard.
Walk to the local pub and cafe.
Call for rates, availability and more details.
Dee 0416 624 681

Monday, August 18, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (737)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Burren Junction Cottage

Burren Junction Cottage

The Burren Junction Cottage

Looking for accommodation while visiting or working in Burren Junction? We have the place for you.
Our little cottage offers a one-bedroom, fully self-contained unit
Double bed with a built-in wardrobe
Bathroom with a shower, toilet and sink area.
A small hallway leads to an open-plan kitchen and lounge area
There’s a fold-out lounge to accommodate more friends to stay.
The kitchen has a full gas oven for all your cooking needs.
Set on a quiet town block close to all our beautiful town has to offer.
Only a short walk to our local pub and the local cafe.
The relaxing Burren Junction bore baths are only a 5-minute drive away to soak away all your worries at the end of the day.

For all inquiries or to book, please call
Jacquelle on 0475 295 791
Or Email Jacquelleminers10@gmail. Com

Monday, August 18, 2025/Author: Kate Schwager/Number of views (703)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Rural News

Quality coastal cattle property with a 12km creek frontage on the market

Quality coastal cattle property with a 12km creek frontage on the market

The 3008 acre Miva property is being offered with 300 breeders.
Sunday, August 24, 2025/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (6)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Categories: Rural News
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Quality coastal cattle property with a 12km creek frontage on the market

Quality coastal cattle property with a 12km creek frontage on the market

The 3008 acre Miva property is being offered with 300 breeders.
Sunday, August 24, 2025/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (6)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Political News

 

 

Local Events

How I became a Fettler in 1964

Published on Thursday, August 21, 2025

How I became a Fettler in 1964

by Rob Bell

My name is Rob Bell, and I was born in East Bankstown (later Greenacre) in 1945, into a solid working-class family. By 1964, 5 years after leaving Punchbowl Boys High, I was requested by the local gendarmes to leave town. This was also issued to many of my friends who, like myself, travelled down the wrong roadway.

A friend who had been off the scene for a while was back in town and was going on about working on the railway as a fettler in a place called Burren Junction. Where the hell is B J, we all cried, North West NSW, have you heard of Walgett? Well, it's this side of Walgett, and they are looking for workers.

So come Monday, we all troop down to Central Station (about 6 of us) for a medical and get the guts on this Fettler business. Being good, strong Aussie boys with an average age of around 20, we were in. Some of us were sent to Cryon and others to BJ.

Following Sunday, we caught the North West Mail out of Central, and from memory, we were in the back carriages as I think the train split at Werris Creek.

Monday morning, we arrive in Cryon, and nothing, just a railway station, absolutely nothing. The station master took us to a row of tents and a very big tent with a huge fireplace, and wished us well.

4 mates in the middle of nowhere, and along comes our boss, who was, from memory, Charlie Fuller, a beautiful old man, who quickly sized us up.

This was to become the life of many of us through 1964, as many left and were replaced by other mates, fights were common, people pinching food, the kero fridge never bloody working and relying on food bought in BJ and sent out to be picked up off the platform.

There wasn't too much happening in Cryon except at the local hall where we would match it with the locals at table tennis, and we could get a cup of tea and some cake, and we were welcomed by all. To earn extra money in Cryon, my mate John and I would empty the dunny cans from the station. That meant getting a pole and carrying the pan out into the paddock, digging a hole, tipping it in, while the flies buzzed and covered over..For that, I think we got two shillings a can..

Cryon was way too lonely, and after a month or 2 we all jacked it in and headed back to Sydney, and went back to living on the streets, or in cars or caravans, and bad habits were returning. So back to the railway.

There were no computers, no age/identity papers, just needed a name, but not your real one. So I started with my favourite Rolling Stone, and I became Robert Jones and this time I asked for BJ. For some entertainment whilst at Cryon, we would catch the afternoon train to BJ and stay at Dillons Hotel, mainly on a couch and have some tucker and a drink and maybe play some cards, plus it was warm and they had electricity, and then head back the next day. Cryon was tough, and we learnt plenty.

For us, city kids, we had never really seen mobs of kangaroos, not too many in Bankstown. The sight I remember most of them is the huge mobs approaching a fenceline and leaping over the fence like a huge wave, simply awesome.

Arriving at Burren Junction, we were better prepared, at least we bought a blanket and warmer clothes. In Cryon, all we had to put over us was a tarpaulin, but we would keep the fire going; after all, we had plenty of old sleepers.

This time we were in town next to the track and life was very different, and our boss in this gang was a tough nuggety bugger called Ronnie Hancock, who lived down the track a bit in a house with his girls, in their late teens. Food and eating properly were still a problem until Mrs Hancock offered to cook for us during the week for a reasonable price. We jumped at the chance.

We were now in huts, as seen in the pics, that's my mate Dessie Evans, who was a pain in the arse and one time whilst riding the trike, we were both engaged in quite a tussle until Ronnie stopped the trike and threatened to sort both of us out. The trike had a Volkswagen motor and could really fly, but at the back, it was bitterly cold on the trike, and we would be rugged up no end.

This is how the day went from what I can remember. 100 sleepers to be laid, old ones taken out, new ones in.

Then, depending on the passing time of the train, we would jack up the track, as that was being done, one person with a sledgehammer would be knocking out the sleepers, then another following behind would be using a pick to slide out the old sleeper. Around this time, as I was the Nipper, I would get the fire going from some sleeper pieces and have the Billy on the boil, keeping my eyes on the gang down the track. As soon as I saw them coming, I threw a handful of tea in the Billy and started swinging it over my head. Then I would set it down and tap the sides, so the tea was settled, and they would pass me their cups. We all had special Railway lunch boxes, big square things that also doubled as a seat.

With smoko over, the new sleepers would be pulled, holes drilled as Charlie is doing in the picture. By this time, I am back in the gang and getting the new Dogs ready for the drilled holes. We would then drop the rail onto the new sleeper, and here it was a choice of how to knock them in. I was on the Dog Hammer mostly, and I would have to have guys go along and start them, and then I would hammer them home in about 5 to 7 hits. I think Ronnie could do it in 3. Once all the rails were hammered in, we would pack the line as much as we could could stabilise the sleeper. Whilst this was going on, I had to make sure again that the Billy was boiling for lunch, and old sleepers would be thrown into a pile and burnt.

The next job was straightening out the line, and we all had our own crowbar, where we learnt never to lay it on the ground, always have it upright, otherwise it would become red hot. It was during the straightening of the rail that colourful language ensued..Ronnie was hard to please as we yelled arheave!, only to pull too far. Useless bunch of Sydney faggots, bloody hopeless the lot of you and much, much more. It was important that we had the rails done for the afternoon train. I remember yelling "ppppaaape" on the morning train, hoping a newspaper flew out, which it sometimes did. Then we would pack up and head home, and head for the bore, how we loved that bore. Some guys would go into town for a beer or up the Dillons on the station and meet back at Mrs Hancocks' for dinner.

Some of us would look for extra work to try and save some money and make it all worthwhile. Johnny and I did wheat lumping, laying the floor in the shed for the wheat bags and stacking. Gee, that was hard work. We did some voluntary work, I think we painted a boxing gym, but mostly we kept to ourselves. Ronnie had pig dogs, and he would take us out to Pilliga scrub to catch some pigs, but sometimes the dogs wouldn't let go, and we had to help. Also, any pigs we caught, we had to kill ourselves..I did once, never again...not a pretty sight watching a pig run around with blood spurting from its throat.

As we had 4 free train passes back to Sydney, we would often catch the afternoon Friday train and go back to Sydney. Many of us would go up to the Paddington and get a tattoo from the great Alex Chater. Some had homes to go to, and I had a cousin I could stay with. We made the most of the Sydney weekend. It was always a lottery as to who would turn up back at Central on the Sunday arvo.

I have many memories of BJ I remember walking back from the Bore one night, and we were blown away at the amount of open sky and stars, living in Sydney, we had never seen. If you got crook, you just took a couple of days off, no need for a doctor, but one time I had a toothache, and it was bad. So Ronnie said I will run you into Walgett and get it out. Now, Ronnie had a 1956 Customline, and he was a petrol head. We averaged 100mph all the way, and he was laughing. In Walgett, there was no dentist (away on holidays); however, we were told to find the dentist's father, who was a vet. But he said he wasn't allowed to use a needle to deaden the pain, so if you want it out..Out it came, the pain was unbearable, and he didn't charge me, and Ronnie took me across to the pub and bought me a whisky. I had the 2 days off..still feel that pain today.

As 1964 progressed, I again left and came back, this time under the name Robert Wyman (of the Stones), and this time I was sent to North Star, again with some Bankstown boys who turned out to be nutters, and I came down with Berry Berry. Here we stayed in sleeping carriages, a single room, just enough for a bed. But too many fights and crazy people, including a guy from Boggabilla who would sleep standing on his head..

I again left and returned to Burren Junction under Robert Jagger! I stayed until close to Christmas, and that was it. 1964 was over for the Boys from Bankstown. I think one of the boys married one of the Hancock girls.

We all learnt so much during that period, the secret hot bores / Pilliga Scrub / being chased back to the ute by a mad boar, and another chasing Colin up a tree, and nicking him, so off to the hospital. Meeting people like Les Pottum, a lovely, lovely family, Charlie and Ronnie our gangers, oh, I nearly forgot that beautiful lady in the Bread Shop in BJ, we were all in love with her. I took my kids back in 1995 (approx), and it was so sad for me..I found the back part of our huge fireplace and stood it up..If you look really closely, you will see "Little Bankstown" and at the bottom, I painted "Fords Forever Holdens Never". The train would sometimes slow down for the people to read. In 2023, I went back again to BJ and Cryon, and actually cried when I saw what was now left..All those workers, the wonderful station buildings, all gone. Later this year, I will go back again for a final look.

Its funny how we all did the Fettler thing, something completely out of our safe haven of city living, maybe 20 of us made the trip over 1964 of an average age of 19 to 20, to various places in the North West with names like Come By Chance /  Pokataroo / Coolarenabri/ Rowena / Cryon / North Star / Boggabilla. We were always treated right by the local people and never got into any fights with the locals.

Good memories

Rob Bell

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