Now! - Northern Exposure
Transcription
Now! - Northern Exposure
1 issue no.3 / 2014 / 2015 2 Editor: Melanie Spears Creative Director: Carl Welsby Publication/Advertising Design: c55.com.au Copy Editor: Janice Hogg Photographic Contributions: Cover image by Colin Heany Photography by Alan and Perri Wain www.vibrantimaging.com.au Peter Gibney www.byronphotos.com Jules Hunt www.juleshunt.com Printed Printed In China by Everbest Printing Co Ltd To order your own copy of Northern Exposure please go to northern-exposure.com.au / Books are $25 each plus postage If you would like to have Northern Exposure in your holiday rental, or advertise your business for 2016 please contact sales@northern_exposure.com.au Acknowledgement of country Northern Exposure respectfully acknowledges the indigenous elders, custodians, their descendants and kin of this land, past and present. 3 We’ve been waiting for you What makes the Northern Rivers of Australia so special? Why do people come here for a holiday year after year and eventually relocate? Is it the easygoing coastal attitude? The exquisite beaches and surf? The alternative and creative people who reside here? We are indeed an ocean-loving and artistic community, just over 100 years young. I can’t deny that there is something special about this area. Known as ‘the meeting place’, it is said that the traditional custodians of this land, the Bundjalung people, would come to Byron Bay in times of sickness. The ‘energies’, they say, are a powerful healing force. The tea-tree lakes on Tallows Beach were said to hold a protective and sacred energy that supported women in childbirth. This is my experience of the area, having moved here over 15 years ago. Exhausted and burnt out by my professional life as a psychiatric nurse, I was in desperate need of rest and recreation. I was drawn here like a magnet and did indeed rejuvenate and now I cannot imagine being anywhere else. So why is this area so special? A geologist friend shared recently that this whole area sits on a huge base of black obsidian under the crust of the earth. From the air you can see most definitely a circle of, well, lusciousness surrounding Wollumbin (otherwise known as Mount Warning). It is the central plug of a volcano that erupted over 20 million years ago. The rainforest in this area is alive with birds and insects, flowers, trees and native animals. Perhaps this is one reason why this place is ‘special’. With the most recent upgrade of the Pacific Highway, areas like Pottsville, Kingscliff and Cabarita are also attracting more attention. They are equal in beauty, yet still quaint, natural and underdeveloped. There’s always plenty to do here. Outdoor activities, bush walks, swimming, surfing, shopping, massage and healing sessions… but make sure you leave aside some time to just sit and be. You might just get a surprise. Melanie Spears, Editor T A B PLACES TO VISIT L E O F C O N T E N T S F E AT U R E S 15 HONEY FOR SALE 1 0 B Y R O N B AY 2 9 W E A R E WAT E R S P I R I T S 31 BURSTING THE BYRON BUBBLE 48 BANGALOW 3 7 H I P P I E AT H E A RT 38 WELCOME BACK TONI CHILDS 64 NEWRYBAR 5 0 U N I T Y/ H E A L I N G / P E A C E . . . 60 SHARE THE LOVE 72 MULLUMBIMBY 8 2 T YA L G U M 74 S O T I M E R O L L S B Y 8 4 A W E LC O M E C H A N G E TO A L L T H AT 93 ON SOCIAL MOVEMENT 98 LEGAL SUPP ORT: EDO STEPS UP 100 MY PERS ONAL STORY AND THE 90 BRUNSWICK HEADS EVOLUTION OF PEACE BY PIECE 111 THERE’S MORE TO MURWILLUMBAH 104 KINGSCLIFF T H A N A M O U N TA I N 116 MARKETS 108 MURWILLUMBAH 118 POT TERING AROUND This is a peaceful place for everyone. Whether you’re a family of four, a lone traveller from afar, a happy hippie or a proud local you’ll walk away feeling relaxed and energized. And it’s all thanks to two key ingredients – a beautiful Byron Bay backdrop of rainforests and lush views combined with laid-back activities that will leave your spirit enriched long after your visit. Why not start by discovering our namesake – take a stroll through the Shambhala Gardens and admire giant crystals dating back over 500 million years. On the way you may come across another proud highlight: our Kalachakra Stupa for World Peace, unique in the southern hemisphere and a project blessed by the Dalai Lama. If you’re up for a taste of how the locals live then head to the café and enjoy our delicious dishes made with ingredients you may see growing in our organic gardens. Accompanying your coffee or meal will be an impressive view of Byron Bay’s lush tropical hinterland. Aside from the food, you’ll find the locals who work here are keen to share their stories and experiences behind what makes this place so peaceful. In fact you’ll walk away feeling less like a visitor and more like a local. They’ll tell you the secret to loving life is sometimes taking time away from it. And you couldn’t find a better place to do it than here. Your spirit will thank you. 81 Monet Drive, Mullumbimby, NSW, 2482 02 6684 3111 / crystalcastle.com.au 6 This is a peaceful place for everyone... 7 COLIN HEANEY Byron bay is the home to one of the world's most exciting digital print artists. Colin Heaney's luxury resortwear range can be viewed at his private showroom by appointment. Please call 02 66857798. Shop online at www.colinheaney.com 8 9 10 To the lighthouse YRONBA There are special places where the very heart of our planet has found its way to the surface to burst forth and speak to us. Byron Bay, and its surrounds, is one such place as it is part of the erosion caldera of the 40 kilometre-wide and, therefore, giant Tweed volcano that last erupted 23 million years ago. Perhaps that’s the reason that since time immemorial the Arakwal people called the area ‘Cavvanbah’ or ‘meeting place’ and all those who have been touched by it since have come to know it as a special and healing place. European influence arrived in 1770 with Captain James Cook, who named it Cape Byron after John Byron, the first man to circumnavigate the world and grandfather of Lord Byron. Captain Cook started a trend for later European cedar-cutter settlers naming the town’s early streets after English writers and philosophers. As the area’s first industry was cedar cutting, it led to the word ‘shoot’ following many names, as in ‘Possum Shoot’, ‘Cooper’s Shoot’ or ‘Skinner’s Shoot’, so named for routes where the loggers would slide or ‘shoot’ the logs downhill to be loaded onto waiting ships. The township officially became Byron Bay in 1894 and once the hills had been cleared, a thriving dairy and farming industry flourished and culminated with the Norco Dairy where they refrigerated dairy products and exported butter to the rest of the world. Byron was once home to a whaling station—a dangerous one at that, as the bay is littered with wrecks from that era. That grisly trade, as well as the abattoir, were happily consigned to the past in 1962 and now Byron Bay enjoys whale watching instead, as well as diving, surfing, canoeing, fishing and watersports of all kinds. Some might even suggest the next industrial wave might have been surfing due to The Bay’s close proximity to so many world-class point breaks attracting surfboard manufacturers from everywhere in the 70s to decentralize there. These enterprises employed young locals as the abattoirs closed and butter factory jobs waned. And if the number of retail surf shops and people in the water surfing in 11 12 the town is any indication, it’s thriving. With a population of 9,000 plus in the town itself (30,000 in the surrounding Shire), Byron Bay now boasts several schools and learning institutions to cater to its fast-growing young population: Byron Bay Public School, Byron Bay High School, St. Finbarr’s Primary School, Byron Bay Community School, Cape Byron Rudolf Steiner School, two pre-schools, the Lexis English Centre and Byron Region Community College. As a hub for so many things young and exciting and so many attractions, the quiet days of sleepy Byron Bay are a little less so now. And while the hustle and bustle isn’t exactly Sydney’s Pitt or Bourke Streets, the eclectic and colourful mix of surfers, European and Asian tourists and backpackers from everywhere have shaped this little beach town into a beautifully cosmopolitan village catering to the young and romantic at heart. Whether it’s a photo standing at the base of the lighthouse on Australia’s eastern-most point, a surfboard from two-time World Longboarding Champion Beau Young or a surfing lesson from 1965 US Surfing Champion Rusty Miller, a special handcrafted gift or an article of clothing or jewellery for yourself or a friend, perhaps a painting or special bit of furniture for that little spot or a whole houseful of tasteful furnishings, Byron Bay has it. And for those with a penchant for the Blues or anything musical, Byron Bay and its annual Blues Festival certainly provides it all. 13 greenhouse " Somebody said, Don't make something unless it is necessary and useful; but if it is necessary and useful don't hesitate to make it beautiful... Through our love for quality and eclectic designs we have created three innovative stores intended to inspire the interior addict within. We offer 100% authentic products from some of the greatest design houses this world has to offer. Marimekko, Missoni Home, Basil Bangs, Stelton, Menu, Eva Solo, Iittala, Lightly, Elk.... Our range is carefully selected to appeal to all ages, for we believe a beautiful home should be shared with family and friends. If you value versatility, character, sustainability and style the Greenhouse is the perfect location for you. Lettuce (haha pun - lettuce is green) assist you in colouring-in your world today! greenhouseonline.com.au Lawson St, Byron Bay - 02 6685 6531 Ferry Rd Market, Gold Coast - 07 5531 1219 James St, Fortitude Valley, Brisbane - 07 3852 1006 14 Honey, for sale ...a night and day in the Bay “ We all have a big mull... There’s barely a break in development from Caboolture to Cabarita these days. To the left and to the right, not one tall tree in sight. Concrete tilt-up industrial sheds, project builder’s brick veneer, Colorbond and tiled roofs for as far the wary eye can see. Motorway flow stalls every so often—for no apparent reason. It’s mid-afternoon heading south. The world’s most expensive coffee kicks in, soon after doing our bit for the economy by filling the VW’s fuel tank to the brim. We nearly run over some kids walking across the servo car-park as they meander toward Hungry Jack’s. They’re all head-down, oblivious, texting into their smart phones. Pretty dumb, if you ask me. Tradesman and trucks make up most of the traffic. South of the Gateway Bridge in Brisbane, it’s insanity and not even peak hour. The sterility and drab design of the urban sprawl between the outer suburbs and the theme parks make me wonder: who would want to live around here, and why? We cross the first of the rivers that signpost the far southeast of Queensland. The Logan, then the Albert. Memories flood in. I recall at the Coomera River I detour off the highway, right down there to the scrub; it’s ‘91. The pitstop in the old XB Falcon serving as a radiator top-up, after I allow the engine to cool. Meanwhile, we all have a big mull. I bought the car on tick from my mate’s 15 “ Now we’re winding our way through canefields instead of traffic... old man. Five-hundred, I think? The boot’s so big we fit three surfboards inside, plus all of our gear, which only really consists of a towel each. I buy the gas-guzzling bucket of crap solely because it has a bench seat. I always dream of driving down the road with my girlfriend sided-up next to me with my arm around her, but it never works out that way. Today, there’s five lanes on the highway south. And, on the left, skyscrapers reflect the sun back in our direction. We drive on, selecting the middle lane. 16 “Let’s take the Tweed-Coast Road to Casuarina then down to Hastings Point so we can check the surf,” says the driver. I concur with my travelling companion with a thumbs-up and a nod. Soon after crossing the border we take the turnoff from the Pacific Highway. Now we’re winding our way through canefields instead of traffic. It looks like it’s going to be a bumper crop. The cane is so bloody green, and so tall. Every so often I see fruit and vege stalls along the side of the road, with ‘Honey for Sale’, and it makes me smile. I’d live from them if I was a local, maybe. During the walk from the carpark at Hastings Point, down to the rocks, I rub my eyes, stretch my back and neck, then check myself. There’s a few good waves, despite the online surf report claiming one foot of lacklustre swell hitting the Tweed. I sight our destination of Cape Byron at the end of 80 miles of beach, without a soul on it. I turn away from the ocean and I can’t see one manmade structure besides the bitumen and a few cars belonging to fisherman, surfers, and whoever. Past Pottsville, Cudgen Creek, it’s just bush and beach. Mooball Creek shadows us along the narrow bumpy road to Wooyung. “Yeah, this is it along here,” I reckon. I wonder how long it’ll take until development seeps in? Then again, the natural geography just might see this strip spared for a long time yet… Back on the highway. We pass Grey’s Lane. I hear rumours of teatree lakes and a beach where clothing is optional and anything goes. A full reconnaissance of Tygarah will have to wait until I’m alone, or travelling with a special type of friend—the type with benefits. Soon enough, we come to a highway bridge, just before the Byron Bay turnoff. Its guide-rails are painted with rainbow colours, fading and barely visible. I wonder if it’s symbolic of Byron ‘Brigadoon’ that awaits, now only a few minutes away. This trip isn’t exactly for pleasure, but I hope to make to the most of it. I’m vibing positive, and for sure, I’m grateful. Driving through town, it’s twilight. A few of the restaurants are warming up their kitchens. A beautifully natural femme maître de, entices “ A beach where clothing is optional and anything goes... “ I sight our destination of Cape Byron at the end of 80 miles of beach, without a soul on it. I turn away from the ocean and I can’t see one manmade structure besides the bitumen and a few cars belonging to fisherman, surfers, and whoever... 17 folks out looking for an evening meal. Shopfronts glimmer and sparkle with neon lights. Mannequins are adorned in the latest. Big brand names shout “inside is what you need.” Woolworths is a hive of activity like any other normal Australian town. But, Byron isn’t “normal”, Byron is a bit special. Special, yeah, in the way that I, or anyone, can walk along at a leisurely pace with the only care in the world being what cuisine to sample that evening. We arrive at our first destination: our friend Mark’s house, only a five-minute walk to the centre of town. Tonight, I desire to hear some live music and retrace the steps of my youth, so I suggest the ‘Railway Friendly Bar’. Mark, seconds the motion. Mark is a familiar face to the staff at ‘The ‘Rails’ and it’s smiles all round. Last time I was here with my friends, the train stopped right beside the bar. An impromptu jam session by The Cruel Sea, us with a skinful of beer, great vibes, shared with a lucky few, make that particular afternoon one I’ll never forget. Tonight is so mellow I feel like I’m floating instead of walking, and, I’m not even high this time. I order free-range organic chicken, Mark orders grilled mahi-mahi and my frugal cohort, gnocchi—because it’s the cheapest dish on the menu. He doesn’t even know what gnocchi is… We share our food, catch up, and talk story. All three dishes are sublime; the beer is delicious. Special-edition Stone & Wood on-tap. The beer is mother’s milk and packs quite a punch. After my third, I’m positively glowing and slowly falling in “ I desire to hear some live music and retrace the steps of my youth... 18 love with the young lady serenading the laidback crowd with soothing vocals and guitar, original, and from the heart. It’s an evening of simple bliss, assuring me Byron is still a place dear to me, despite any naysayer’s rhetoric to the contrary—so make sure you don’t ever stay away for too long. Unfortunately, life throws a curve ball to my Byron friend. It’s January 2014. Mark sustains a workplace injury to his hand and I can tell he is a little depressed and out of sorts. Although the hand looks okay, an X-ray image reveals the gravity of the damage. The doctors say different things. In any case, they say he’ll never have the full use of it again. For an active, healthy man in his prime, the injury is a bitter pill to swallow, so we rally around him tonight and try and raise his spirits with positivity and mateship. We crash-out late as the conversation gets a little messy and words become harder to find. I make the couch my bed. My travelling companion sleeps in the van. Mark retreats to his loft, I think, much happier than when we found him. He’ll be all right. It’s so quiet in Byron tonight. I relieve myself outside by the big gum-tree and look up to see a crescent moon and a plethora of stars. Tonight, I dream—so deep. At first light we partake in a dingo’s breakfast and say hooray to our friend and host. Today, we are visiting George, which is always bound to be eventful in some way or another. Last time he was really cranky that we aren’t on time; we’re only six hours late! We get held up in Southport at Mickey’s surfboard shaping shed. I guess George is a stickler for punctuality, so I can forgive him for the earbashing. At seven am sharp we shake hands with George and have a ‘bullshit’, that’s what George likes to call conversation. The instant we exit the van, a fresh gust of icy westerly wind rolls over the ridge making my skin writhe with goosebumps. After five minutes of putting a brave face in front of a barefoot George, I retrieve a jumper from my luggage to ward off the cold. It’s as if George magically calls up an inhospitable wind to make us go away. He doesn’t like visitors much, it’s plain to see. His body language forces us back down the steps from his veranda onto the dew-covered grass. Some find him very odd and eccentric, but I really like George, and I understand him—perfectly. The deeds are done and the exchange is made, as I sample a mandarin from the orchard and inspect the variety of produce growing in the vegetable garden. I soak up the sacred energy from the land, the sea and the sky and meditate on the wise words George directs toward me completely out of the blue. “Just make it happen, Damon.” 19 Byron Car Hire NetworkRentals Competitive Rates Quality Vehicles Open 7 Days 02 6685 6638 Cnr Butler & Lawson Sts, Byron Bay NSW 2481 simmonsbyronbay.com.au / servo@simmonsbyronbay.com.au SMASH REPAIRS + BATTERIES + NRMA ROAD SERVICE + MECHANICAL REPAIRS 24 HR TOWING - licence number 91515 An Eclectic and affordable range of fashion and gifts... Fashion, Lawn nighties, Giftware and Candles, Bags , Shoes, Costume jewellery and scarves, Fashion for the larger figure. Barefoot Browzin 2/70 Ballina St Lennox Head 2478 20 02 6687 4070 and lives to live. We part and go our separate ways—George to the beach, us to Suffolk Park Bakery. Their pies are scrumptious, hearty and hot and the staff is gracious, welcoming, and kind. Away from the wind, which seems to miraculously dissipate the moment we leave George’s place, the sea-level sun warms us to the core as we eat. Back into T-Shirts, as the school bus departs brimming with children waving, the bus, emanating much merry banter. I can’t believe how mild the weather is for June. The day is perfect. I want to try to catch-up with Melanie while I’m here. She hasn’t returned my call as yet so I take the initiative. It turns out she can’t meet with me today. Instead—a Skype call is my consolation. George’s words resonate in my head. After breakfast the journey continues. My travelling companion veers off the main road out of town toward the industrial estate. “What’s happening”, I ask. No reply is forthcoming. We park adjacent Bob McTavish’s establishment, yet head in the opposite direction. I follow like a lost puppy until we reach an obscure roller-door in the far corner of the commercial lot. My friend and the proprietor greet one another like long lost brothers as I cross the threshold, to make my introduction. Inside is a pleasant, unassuming man. I soon discover Wayne, to be a father, a husband, a surfer and an artisan, one of fine printing, in the style of an era long gone. His antique printing machines are amazing. Not a computer in sight. Three old fashioned mechanical printing presses, quality ink and the finest cotton paper produce timeless works of art, under Wayne and his beautiful wife, Merrins’, creative hands. Wayne proudly produces a sample of the work at The Artisan Press. It’s unique, beautiful, original, precious and simple, yet exquisite. I’ve never held anything quite like the invitation Wayne shows me. I rifle one question after another and plead for him to turn on one of the presses, so I can hear, as well as see, the machinations of the post-modern press in operation. As I absorb the sights, sounds and smells 21 Suddenly, time appears to be of the essence. There’s things to do and lives to live. We part and go our separate ways—George to the beach, us to Suffolk Park Bakery. Their pies are scrumptious, hearty and hot and the staff is gracious, welcoming, and kind. Away from the wind, which seems to miraculously dissipate the moment we leave George’s place, the sea-level sun warms us to the core as we eat. Back into T-shirts, as the school bus departs brimming with children waving, emanating much merry banter. I can’t believe how mild the weather is for June. The day is perfect. I want to try to catch up with Melanie while I’m here. She hasn’t returned my call as yet so I take the initiative. It turns out she can’t meet with me today. Instead, a Skype call is my consolation. George’s words resonate in my head. After breakfast the journey continues. My travelling companion veers off the main road out of town towards the industrial estate. “What’s happening”, I ask. No reply is forthcoming. We park adjacent Bob McTavish’s establishment, yet head in the opposite direction. I follow like a lost puppy until we reach an obscure roller door in the far corner of the commercial lot. My friend and the proprietor greet one another like long-lost brothers as I cross the threshold, to make my introduction. Inside is a pleasant, unassuming man. I soon discover Wayne to be a father, husband, surfer and artisan, one 22 of fine printing, in the style of an era long gone. His antique machines are amazing. Not a computer in sight. Three old-fashioned mechanical presses, quality ink and the finest cotton paper produce timeless works of art under the creative hands of Wayne and his beautiful wife, Merrin. Wayne proudly produces a sample of the work at The Artisan Press. It’s unique, beautiful, original, precious and simple, yet exquisite. I’ve never held anything quite like the invitation Wayne shows me. I rifle one question after another and plead for him to turn on one of the presses, so I can hear, as well as see, the machinations of the postmodern press in operation. As I absorb the sights, sounds and smells of the printing shop, Wayne explains that he did his time as a young apprentice printer in Sydney using these machines, and that they were antiques even then. It goes to show, no skill is ever wasted or obsolete. What follows are more wise words from another of my elders. Without any prompting, Wayne tells me: “Make something out of nothing, create your own niche, do what you love, and do it well.” Wise words indeed. Merrin arrives and we’re introduced. I look at her and Wayne together and somehow, now, I know what I want in life. Heartfelt farewells are exchanged again, for the third time this morning. And, as we’re so close, I can’t resist a peek inside the world of Bob McTavish. Once inside the surf studio, I interpret, then critique the space. What I see is a personal reflection of one of the most eminent elders of the Australian surfing tribe. Adorning the board racks are rows of magnificent longboards, with the most amazing hues of highly polished colour that I’ve ever seen, in any surf shop, anywhere in the world. Well out of reach, in the highest Cobblers at Byron Authentic Footwear Quality footwear and leathergoods for men and women Cobblers has evolved into an internationally renowned destination for locals and travellers alike to purchase a vast range of quality comfort and travel footwear and leathergoods for men and women. Shop 5 Feros Arcade Byron Bay NSW 2481 02 6685 6190 Open 7 days 23 Naot / Duckfeet / ElNaturalista / DrMartens / Birkenstock / Keen / Ecco / Teva www.cobblersatbyron.com.au realms of the walls and ceilings, are collections of original handmade boards from bygone eras. The studio is spotlessly clean, tastefully arranged and free from unnecessary clutter, and although I’m informed that Bob is a devout Jehovah’s Witness, the shop emits quality chi, and displays some good Feng Shui. After visiting with George earlier, now Bob McTavish, I begin to imagine the halcyon days of Lennox Head in the 1960s and 70s, and of George and Bob’s collaborations. Although the two are chalk and cheese, I get that these two elders share the same philosophy of living in the now, not in the past, and to make the most of the time we have, and to live life to the full. It’s the same with Mark and his situation—I counsel him about not dwelling on the negative “possible outcomes” regarding his injury. I tell him that his job, right now, today, is to keep up his occupational therapy and to look after himself, and that things will work out how they’re meant to work out. Bob isn’t around, after my travelling companion requests an audience with Mr McTavish. To my surprise, I discover my travelling companion and Bob are old acquaintances as well. We’re informed Bob’s in hospital having a hip replacement. The two guys working at McTavish’s seem to be cruising, too, with not a care in the world. The young men obviously possess a genuine zest for their vocation, both grateful for living and working in such a beautiful part of the world, I imagine. Right now, I’m beaming from ear to ear, pinging with exuberance and passionate about living in the moment and being grateful for everything, good and bad. It’s like an epiphany of sorts. I won’t go as far to say I achieve enlightenment after one night and day in Bryon Bay. Rather, I feel my whole life and each of the experiences, lead me to the moment. Yeah, that’s what’s happening... We eventually depart Byron Bay and make our way onto the highway once again, heading north. My friend takes a wrong turn into the hinterland, but for me there’s nothing wrong about it, as it too is meant to be. As we wind our way along the road for a few kilometres then ascend the foothills of the range, the exit from a long tunnel of trees reveals a vista that rivals anything I’ve ever seen anywhere in this great country. We pull over and take it all in without a word spoken between us. On the way back I catch sight of an old farmhouse with a surfboard lying on the weathered porch and a blue heeler lazily warming up in the winter sun. I envisage the frame in black and white and my intuition guides me to purchase a good camera, to capture images—how I see things, to accompany my writing. 24 “ My travelling companion and I never listen to car radio when we travel together, we just talk about life and bounce ideas off each other... “Buy the ticket, take the ride...” MORE than a GIFT shop! Suffolk Park Shopping Centre 0 2 6 6 8 5 4 9 81 www.f lyme2themoon.com.au next to post office No other product is able to match that same distinctive smell and luxury feel of the impressive range of leather bags and accessories from Byron Bay’s Rugged Luxury, a leather company that epitomises the descriptive terms ‘Australian’ and ‘Handmade’ Rugged Luxury’s Byron Bay factory outlet is a tight knit operation, with Jock and his handful of lieutenants utilising the same handcrafting skills of the country’s pioneering leather craftsmen. For the creative ones Rugged Luxury supplies a variety of leather, hardware and tools and is a Tandy Leather authorised reseller. 02 6680 8990 2/97 Centennial Circuit Byron Bay ruggedluxury.com 25 Discover your world beyond the world Relax • Daydream • Imagine • Chill out Adventure • New Energy Freedom • Transformation Fresh • Alive • Cleansing • Purification • Vitality Power • Strength • Insight • Knowing • Spirit Reinvent your life in paradise … Awaken, transform and create a brand-new way of living with HVR! Do you have a desire for change? Want a vacation for your heart, mind, spirit, and soul? Discover and unleash all your hidden talents and create a new reality. Join our team of new-energy coaches, trek guides, and healers and step into a vortex of amazing, powerful energies when you join us on an adventure into your ’soul’. Enjoy transformation as you snorkel, island hop, trek jungles, walk through serene rice paddies and bathe in waterfalls. HVR can provide a wide range of extra activities upon request. Enjoy Lombok, the Gilis, and Bali. Cleansing, purification, detoxification await. Wake up, live, laugh, love, and enjoy being present! Web: www.highviberetreats.com.au Email: highviberetreatsinfo@gmail.com Phone: +62 813 3973 0696; +62 878 6424 0491 Please note that while we will endeavour to answer calls as promptly as possible, phone service is not always reliable. Email is the most reliable way to connect with us. 26 During this visit I see lots of things I don’t like about the town and things I’d rather not concern myself with, or reveal to anyone. Byron Bay will be whatever one chooses to make of it, their life there, or their visit, it’s entirely up to the individual. Brigadoon or a Shangri-la, I’m not so sure, as for my travelling companion—he still refers to Byron Bay as Byron Pay, because of real-estate prices—and he’s from Dee Why! My travelling companion and I never listen to car radio when we travel together, we just talk about life and bounce ideas off each other. Buddha Gardens Byron Bay Day Spa is a sanctuary of flowing waters and peaceful ambience and is devoted to health, beauty and relaxation. Experience Byron Bay’s best massage in Balinese-inspired surrounds and only a short stroll from the heart of Byron Bay. The only Day Spa in Byron Bay with tropical gardens, sauna and heated plunge pool. We’re friends, so we don’t need to be deceptive or guarded, even though some things are taboo and private, such as intimate details of our girlfriends— naturally. I reveal to my friend that eventually I’ll live in the Byron shire for a time and explore everything the region has to offer. Maybe base myself in one of places out of town with a fruit & vege stall by the roadside, with Honey for Sale. Maybe I will, maybe I won’t. I’m just making the most of my life and being grateful, wherever it is I may be, and for whatever it is I’ve got. Written and edited by Damon Bereziat. damonis@ymail.com 02 6680 7844 1 Skinners Shoot Road, Byron Bay buddhagardensdayspa.com.au 27 28 We are Water Spirits Uncle Lewis Walker is an Aboriginal elder of the Gidabal people of the Bundjalung Nation of Byron Bay. As the keeper of the ancient songlines of the whales, Uncle Lewis asks that we remember our inherent connections to dolphins and whales. Reaching out to inspire present and future generations to protect what’s vitally important in our sacred oceans, Uncle Lewis says, “Hear the ocean, the wind, the birds, and the didgeridoo speak to us about the vital connections with our ancestors, both past and present.” 29 He recalls the song of Migaloo, the white humpback whale who was first recorded in 1988. ‘Migaloo’ means ‘White Fella’. In the ancient language, Migaloo’s name is Yiragir. He was named by Australian Aboriginal elders. Yiragir, pronounced ‘yirrigi’, is the ancient Great White Whale, the Great Great Grandmother Spirit. It signifies the Creator in many of the Aboriginal peoples’ creation stories. The ancient white whale, the grandmother, is seen as the storyteller. The blue whale, the grandfather, is the songman of the ocean, the caretaker of the ocean. Uncle Lewis tells us that the whales gift us visions of who we really are when they sing their songs. As they ride the waves, dance upon the water and reach for the stars, our connection is deepened about who they really are and also who we humans really are. “As they ride, going down deep to teach the newborn to be free, we gotta let them be. When they are under the sacred ocean, we gotta respect them. It is a must to care for the ocean, we are all caretakers to pass knowledge and wisdom from the sacred ocean and earth from generation to generation,” explains Uncle Lewis. “We all care for country like we do. It doesn’t matter what colour you are, we are all individual spirits belonging to the one spirit of the water spirit. We are water people,” he says. In sharing and connecting to the story of the Great White Whale, we honour Uncle Lewis’s indigenous lineage, the Ancestor Spirits and Uncle Lewis’s innate understanding of the relationship between the water, the whales, the Earth and humanity. Uncle Lewis reminds that there is no separation of species in all beings. He sees us as all Earth’s creatures, as brothers and sisters. Uncle Lewis’s role as a custodian is to share stories of the traditional culture, to be a bridge between the wisdom and way of his people with the global tribal community to bring unity once again to all tribes. Uncle Lewis’s tribal name is Spirit of the Night or Possum Spirit. His people still live very close to the land in Jubullum Country by the Clarence River with Poppy Harry Mundine Walker’s Clan in Tabulam NSW. The Clan’s relationship with Mother Earth is very real and very deep. “ We all care for country like we do, it doesn’t matter what colour you are... 30 destinations is not an easy circus trick. being one of the country’s foremost tourist Juggling a small town ambience while URSTING HE BYRON UBBLE “ Byron Bay: There is no door to shut” I am occasionally asked what changes I’ve seen during my 30 years of living in Byron Bay. My quick one-liner is, “I see more Land Rovers, fewer Kombi vans”. This answer is a bit cute but also true. If we look deeper, more interesting things are going on here than what models of cars are being parked in the main street of Byron Bay. Juggling a small town ambience while being one of the country’s foremost tourist destinations is not an easy circus trick. This is Australia’s third most recognised destination for tourists after Sydney and Uluru. We had over 1.1 million visitors here in 2013. Also, more southern city retirees are choosing it as the place to make a final nest. But all this success has its problems. Anyone who takes the time to read the letter pages in the local rag ‘The Echo’ can see that there is a lot of complaining going on and a lot of that complaining is around one thing: housing! Not long ago there was a crusty old councillor called Ross Tucker who once said, “You people come here and claim a piece of paradise and then want to shut the door.” He was right, but there is no door to shut. The only way to maintain exclusivity is with price and now, with Byron’s property prices on par with the southern capitals, that is exactly what is happening. 31 Byron Bay is not alone with this problem. It is an ongoing dilemma for small towns and some cities all over the world. The Silicon Valley area of San Francisco is possibly the most famous exclusive urban area. Schoolteachers and government employees have to commute long distances as 32 close, affordable housing is not available. The city’s public transport is being left behind by private fleets of white, wi-fi-enabled luxury buses commuting the high tech workers to and fro. The once low-rent areas, such as Mission and Tenderloin, have been gentrified. Not a problem, you may think. But it is a problem for many thousands of long-term residents no longer able to afford to rent or buy property in their own town. I have seen this cycle played out a number of times in Byron Bay over the last few decades. Different groups of people come, settle, struggle, pack up and move on. It’s amazing that the resilience of the community is maintained while being continually recycled. I hear the names mentioned of the new, more affordable, versions of Byron Bay as well: Kyogle, 1770, Maclean, Drake, Bermagui, to name “ Byron Bay is not alone with this problem. It is an ongoing dilemma for small towns... At the end of financial year 2014, the median price for a standalone residential dwelling in Sydney was $807,880 while Byron Bay and postcode 2481 is $775,000 and Melbourne is $658,000. The green council that replaced Ross Tucker has been replaced as well since many of those green voters can’t afford to live here anymore. Everyone is against rampant, unchecked development but not everyone acknowledges that the repercussions of limited development are usually unbridled real estate prices. a few. But Byron’s unmatched natural beauty, strong active community and social life remain the stand-out choice for all who can afford it or are prepared to make sacrifices to stay. I have also heard lots of ideas and schemes to assist people with this ongoing problem: affordable housing committees, developer contributions, rent control, talk of stopping holiday letting to bring back housing stock for locals. There has been a tsunami of talk but very little ever comes of it since the forces in play are probably too strong to tackle. We have decided to put the environment, rural land and nature above people and houses. The residents and voters of Byron Shire have consistently chosen this preference and that’s great. One of the side effects of this is that property prices will rise quicker than in other areas. How to resolve negative aspects of this resolution is still on the drawing board. Ha’veli furniture gallery is passionate about unique interior styling and maintaining a sustainable philosophy with everything that is sourced. Re-designing to create distinctive pieces of “furniture with a history”. Bespoke ethnic jewelry, home wares, creative lighting, organic silk & linen bedding, traditional Batiks, tribal rugs and water features for your home. Open: Mon – Fri 10 to 5, Sat 11- 4, Sun by appointment 0408186007 Shop 1/5 Centennial Circuit & Crn Brigantine Street Arts & Ind Estate, Byron Bay NSW 2481 Visit Haveli at www.haveli.net.au to stay updated on our new collections and follow us on instagram, Pinterest, and Facebook. ha’veli of byron bay info@haveli.net.au 33 www.haveli.net.au “ If there is a solution then it needs to be an extension of what is already working. Is it possible to create more dwellings while still maintaining our rural vistas and rolling green hills? “ I have heard it joked that if compliance officers went all out we would probably lose up to a third of our population. Landlords certainly want it kept under the radar as their income is threatened and tenants want to maintain any dwelling they can, knowing that going back into the rental market is too painful to even contemplate. Under the radar, behind the scenes, if not exactly illegal but certainly in a grey area, one option is already in play and working in a fashion. The hills of Byron Bay are alive with studios, workshops, cowbales, storage units and sheds that have been converted and customised to housing. The question is are people being exploited in paying high rents for substandard accommodation? Or is this a neat way around the housing shortage and are these landlords being both altruistic and community-minded? Probably more of the former but another problem is this topic is never widely discussed. Council do not want to know about it for obvious reasons. 34 If there is a solution then it needs to be an extension of what is already working? Is it possible to create more dwellings while still maintaining our rural vistas and rolling green hills? Last year NSW state planning allowed residential zones to include granny flats on urban allotments. This infill type development could be expanded to rural zonings. Byron Shire Council have just adopted the new LEP and are looking at approving detached dual occupancy in rural zonings. Another option is to expand accommodation for rural workers to include environmental restoration. This policy currently allows dwellings only for farm workers within strict guidelines. Both these options would encourage people on acreages to build smaller secondary dwellings and so creating more houses without the urban sprawl. C’mon people let’s do it! Range Rovers and Kombi vans.... able to park side by side This is the only way that is currently working to house people who would otherwise have to leave the shire. Why not encourage more people to build more affordable housing on their rural properties and actively support financially challenged long-term residents to stay. This is what is supposed to happen in a diverse, multi-textured community. Range Rovers and Kombi vans should be able to park side by side. Michael Murray is a long-term Byron resident and works as a property buyer’s agent. Michael Murray © 2014 byronpropertysearch.com.au “ Why not encourage more people to build more affordable housing on their rural properties... “ “ 35 36 Hippie at heart Brett Connable’s hippie past shares more in common with his career as a successful Byron Bay real estate agent than you think. When Brett Connable cycled into Byron Bay in 1994, he thought it was a temporary stop on a long spiritual journey. While Brett certainly wears a different style today, his strong sense of self, coupled with his background in permaculture, brings a unique perspective to his work. Now a leading sales associate at Ray White Byron Bay, he chuckles as he recalls the young man who pedalled into town that day. “Permaculture to me looks a little like the inside of a watch with a network of tiny cogs all working together,” he says. “Permaculture mimics nature and is essentially a series of systems; an ecology of which humans are a part. At its core are the sustainability principles of earth care, people care and self care.” “I had two long braids, was wearing a bandana and a feather in my hair, with an old didgeridoo hanging off the back of my bike,” he says. “I remember the wind was blowing behind me, almost pushing me into town.” “Without my background in permaculture, I wouldn’t see real estate the way I do and I wouldn’t be here today. It has all been part of my life-long process of discovery. The breeze certainly had plans for Brett, who at the time went by the spiritual name ‘Running Bear’. It not only led him into his beloved hometown to be, but also to a chance meeting with his future wife. “She was camping outside her auntie’s house on the beach above the Pass,” he says. “We went for a long walk in the moonlight and that was it. I fell in love twice that day. Once with Byron Bay, and then with her.” Brett’s journey of self-discovery was far from over. He spent 18 months cycling through Southeast Asia, India and Nepal before reuniting with his Byron Bay sweetheart in New Zealand to open a retreat centre. Byron Bay was soon to beckon once again, and the two returned to Australian shores where Brett pursued his passion for permaculture. Brett Connable - Sales Associate “When my first son was conceived I had the realisation that I needed to do something that would provide a more stable income for my family,” he says. “Real estate offered that, along with the prospect of getting involved with sustainable eco development.” 02 6685 6222 - 0408 155 931 brett.connable@raywhite.com rwbyronbay.com “ byron on a bicycle in 1994 15 Fletcher St Byron Bay, 2481 37 Welcome back Toni Childs! M u s i c i a n i n r e v i e w . . . A beautiful noise: Toni Childs takes her mature soulful voice to the world. David Bowie was recording his ‘Station to Station’ album at Cherokee Studios in Los Angeles in the mid-1970s when someone told him about Toni Childs, a young 18-year-old singer who had a voice like an 80-year-old black woman. Bowie just had to hear this young woman, with her premium mature and soulful voice, for himself. After Toni had sung for him, he said to her, “You are the next David Bowie.” Many people would remember Toni for the lyrics of her beautiful song, released in 1991: “I’ve got to go now, I’ve got to say goodbye, Don’t try to stop us now, And please don’t you cry.” “That song was big in Australia,” explains Toni. “A lot of people were dealing with relationship and alcohol issues in the 1980s, and there was many a show when someone from the audience came backstage after the gig to share how that song helped them out of a very bad situation. Essentially, the song is about the addiction to pain in a dynamic where you just keep going back, even though you know that you are in a very dangerous and unloving relationship.” 38 39 “ Props for the stage of Toni’s Concert , It’s all a beautiful noise. A celebration and Honouring of the little pollinators of the planet Toni wrote the song with friend and co-writer David Ricketts. “All the lyrics are mine, she says. “The only song I did not write the words to was ‘Many Rivers to Cross’ by Jimmy Cliff.” Funny, I remember that song well and thought that it was hers because she absolutely makes it her own and wrenches the passion right out of the river! I must admit that I fell I love with Toni in the 80s and, when I heard she had moved to the Northern Rivers in 2012, I hoped one day we would cross paths. It’s the voice, you see. There is something cosmic, wrenching, and powerfully evocative about Toni’s voice. I liken her style to the way Jewel sings, or perhaps even our beloved local Gyan. 40 These singers tell stories, but they also communicate the deep well of emotions inside the story, so that the words become kind of irrelevant because the tonal qualities inside the voice are purging the deeper story, the real story behind the words. The true story! I cannot think of many singers who have mastered this art. And so Toni and I chatted more deeply about this phenomenon, so I could understand exactly what was happening here, with this voice, this magical tool, that evoked so much in everyone with the ability to listen. “I just wanted to have my own voice, one that is uniquely mine,” she says. “A voice is like a fax machine. It relays all the experiences we have lived, and reveals all that is yet to be lived.” When Toni was 16 years old, it was actually a struggle for her to even speak, let alone sing, as her throat was very closed. “My voice sounded to me like a horn!” she laughs. “So around this same time, I just decided to go for music. I made a choice. I’m a storyteller, actually. When I was 14, I wrote a musical and two plays.” One time when she was jamming at the Huntington Beach Blues Festival, Toni, in her coveralls, could have been mistaken for a hillbilly chick, she says. “I so desperately wanted to get up and jam with the band, but there were other singers in the queue, and they kept bumping me to the back of the line. Finally, when there was no Suddenly I had a place to be. Be with my voice AND a band. I was only 15 years old, with a new-found realisation that I had a power.” But what happened to Toni after her phenomenal success and recognition during the 80s and 90s. Where did she go? In 1997 Toni fell ill with Graves’ disease, an autoimmune disease, so she moved back to Hawaii to heal and regroup, taking a break from the music industry for over a decade and growing her own organic vegetables. In 2003, Eve Ensler, writer and creator of ‘The Vagina Monologues’, created a documentary called ‘Until the Violence Stops’, asked Toni to write the anthem for the production. So the Emmy award-winning song, “ Everybody in the room came up to the front of the stage. I just went for it, improvising all the way. So the band invited me back the following week. My voice sounded to me like a horn!” she laughs. “So around this same time, I just decide to go for music. I made a choice. I’m a storyteller, actually. When I was 14, I wrote a musical and two plays... one left, the band decided that they probably had better let me sing. They asked me what key I sang in. I had heard another singer answer this question with ‘A’, so I said ‘A, and can you do a blues shuffle?’ I just made up my own words and went for it.” 41 The Jewellers Workshop ® design and create a piece of jewellery every bit as unique as you are? the best quality. Working together to create your one-of-a-kind masterpiece, the team combines their complimentary from Australia and around the globe. workshop is also in full view of the public, so you can view your special piece as it comes to life. and sights of Byron Bay. Shop 5/13 Lawson Street, Byron Bay 42 Ph: 02 6685 6988 www.jewellersworkshop.com ‘Because You’re Beautiful’, was created, reigniting and reminding Toni of her passion for music. I asked Toni about her move to the Northern Rivers, and what prompted her decision to relocate from her beloved island. “In 2008, I was on tour in Australia and, quite simply, I was drawn to the region. I recognised kindred spirits here, similar to those in places like Kauai, San Juan Island, and the Salt Spring Islands. It’s the same community, just in different spots around the world. “One day I was travelling to Melbourne to have some dental work done, and I sat next to a guy called Mick on the plane. The dental work was an ongoing process and I needed to fly to Melbourne on a regular basis, so Mick and I began dating, and eventually we married. Moving to LA, where I was living at the time, would have been a big shift for Mick but it was my heart that chose to move to Australia. Nothing is lacking here. We are international artists and collaborate with great and talented people all over the world. We are global citizens.” Moving forward into the now, Toni is back like never before. With Mick’s support (he just happens to be an ace-hot guitarist), Toni has written a new album called ‘Citizens of the Planet’ (tonichilds. com). But this is not JUST an album, it’s an exciting contemporary art experience. “The purpose of ‘Citizens of the Planet’ is to invite people to care enough about our home, enough to participate in a planetary trust so that we can make decisions about the care of our environment. We cannot rely on governmental bodies to ‘take care’. We must be custodians, each and every being. It’s our responsibility,” she says. The project, which has been completely crowdfunded via social media, will tour the globe from 2016 through to 2020. It costs just $1 to join Citizens of the Planet and the donor decides where the funds should be spent. The only thing that gets spent is the actual interest, which means this project will sustain itself well into the future and beyond. As Toni details the project, I discover the business plan is actually brilliant. Not only does she have ‘the voice’ but also she is an exceptional businesswoman. When asked about her tenacity and understanding of the business world, Toni tells me that she is just one of many artists today who are responding to the “collective squeeze”, authentically desiring to find solutions to our global problems. This creates much expanded thinking outside the box, where new ways of solving problems are revealed. Another current project of Toni’s is an album called ‘It’s All a Beautiful Noise’, a celebration and honouring of all the little pollinators of the planet: the birds, bees, mammals and reptiles. In fact, every living creature that makes this planet whole. The album features a 3-D installation of massive paper animals on stage. The audience are invited to be a part of the show by wearing masks or hats of their favourite animals. Toni was desperately searching for the right paper needed for the installation, when one day, she and Mick were driving in the country when she spotted a big factory. She asked Mick to turn around so she could explore. Inside, she found the building filled with masses and masses of paper. 43 Frangipani Beauty Spa Anti-Ageing, Skin Management, Medi-Spa Frangipani Beauty Spa is the North Coast’s Leading Anti-Ageing, Skin Management Medi-Spa. Owner Sue Marcon has been in the industry since 1983 and is dedicated to providing the latest technology and equipment to her valuable clients. Frangipani Beauty Spa offers results-driven skin care, beauty treatments and day spa packages. Most importantly we offer highly trained, educated and professional therapists to take care of you. Leave all your worries behind as you relax in our oxygenated hydrotherapy spa in our beautiful Balinese outdoor oasis. We cater for groups, hens parties and couples and can organise beautifully presented gift vouchers to be delivered. We offer unequalled experience in relaxation, rejuvenation and energising treatments designed to cater for men and women. Prepare for a bit of pampering and indulgence with our quality spa treatments and medi services with 100% customer satisfaction … guaranteed! 6686 8486 21 Moon Street, Ballina frangipanibeautyspa.com.au 44 My final question to Toni was to ask what she most wanted to communicate to her fans right now? “People know me primarily from 30 years ago as a singer,” she says. “I would love now for people to notice where I’m taking music. Art installations, interactive audiences, fund-raising and conscious participation in the movement to help restore the planet, are just the beginnings of what I’m doing, not just as a musician, but as an artist.” Melanie Spears / In a conversation with Toni Childs “ I would love now for people to notice where I’m taking music. Art installations... She met the manager and told him of her project, and he offered her as much paper as she needed at no charge! It was just another of those cosmic moments and loving gestures of support that keep Toni alive and guided through her adventures. Toni will tour the ‘Beautiful Noise’ show in 2015. 45 All our latex mattresses are made from 100% natural materials, ECO certified & LGA tested.100% natural NZ wool, 100% cotton coverings. Latex is both anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, dust mite resistant, and made from sustainable materials, to make for an unparalleled natural sleep experience. Ph: 6685 6722 Unit 1/8 Banksia Drive Byron Arts & Industry Estate Go to store.zentai.com.au to view our huge range of quality bedding & living. Latex Mattresses, Oak BedFrames, Bedroom Furniture, Japanese Style Furniture, SofaBeds, Tatami Flooring, Futon Mattresses. Natural Linen and Accessories / Zentai Living – since 1981 - Your Natural Bedding and Furniture Store. 46 ceramics sculpture textile art photography created in byron bay “I am truly inspired and in awe of the colours, nature and patterns that surround us all – these inspirations bring me endless creative possibilities.” jules hunt studio gallery Visit today and see award winning ceramicist and photographer Jules Hunt creating her stunning art. A treat for the eye, heart and soul her unique stylised forms have a strong focus on nature and colour. Jules has exhibited throughout Australia and sells her work internationally. Purchase original works direct from the gallery or discuss commissioning an artwork made especially for you. 47 Mon-Fri 10-4 pm, Sat 10-2 pm 10 Brigantine St Byron Bay A&I 0408 766 546 www.juleshunt.com 48 the lighthouse / the environment / the water ANGALO Bangalow is one of those beautiful and unforgettable places, not only for its unusual name, which is a derivative of the Aboriginal ‘bangalla’ meaning low hill or a type of palm tree, but for its quaint yet tasteful melding of old and new. Where else can one wander a little village with its country pub, old-style shops, heritage buildings, houses with verandahs, and myriad welcoming shade trees, and then sip exotic coffees in stylish cafes or nosh gourmet dinners in sophisticated eateries, browse galleries and boutiques to rival any anywhere and still be hundreds of kilometres from any major city? Only minutes from the coast, and one of the prettier of the precious pearls on this meandering string of the North Coast’s precious beauty spots, Bangalow will instantly have you in her spell. Famous for its local market day on the fourth Sunday of every month, featuring works and wares from local artists, artisans, bakers, victuallers, therapists, farmers and friends, and just a short drive from Ballina, Lismore and Byron Bay, or the Gold Coast, it is the ideal destination for daytrippers in search of adventure. 49 Unity/Healing/Peace... Healer and author Zonti shares her wisdom on her path to peace. The more silence and stillness we can be from, the more direct the prompting can be available to intuitively follow. Sometimes these promptings will lead us towards a practitioner or counsellor, and Byron shire is particularly rich in these folk. Often, each step leads to the subsequent one in our quest to recover and live in peace and ease as our best self. My own wanderings, with a supreme desire to reclaim and live as my best self, have been a few decades of a magical mystery tour, with many potent realisations along the way. Often, when my own intuition seems to be not sending me clear signals, a serendipity with a person or nature-delight will show me the next step. A natural honing of the five physical senses, and all the subtle ones, naturally increase when our attention is integrated and utilised in daily life. We can also incorporate sacred ceremony as a joy and another level of homage to that which is greater than ourselves, that which sustains us. I find that after 30 years of conscious practice to integrate inner soul knowing as outer life action, circumstances are now revealed to me as a constant stream. It is clear each day, and hour, where I need to go, what I need to do, who I need to see and what I need to say. 50 The Bangalow Rug Shop B o r n i n B y r o n B a y 11 Byron Street, Bangalow Open everyday 10 am–5 pm orientalcarpets.com.au 02 6687 2424 As we are all fallible on this plane, this is open to a multitude of interpretations, which if insisted upon as ‘my truth’, can simply constitute yet another notch in the belt of battle. Imagine that if we were a planet of beings in human bodies, all with a definitive view of our individual moment-to-moment ‘truths’, then it could be a hotbed for potential mind and emotion misunderstanding. Perhaps the less we are adamant and the more we are all accommodating and allowing of each other’s apparently diverse realities, the easier we can live in peace. My personality certainly loves to experiment with ‘adamancy’. Delving into many spiritual pathways has supplied a plethora of platitudes that nowadays are part of ‘normal language’ for many people. Care needs to be taken with how we choose to blithely bandy these around, expecting them to have changed life responses. 51 6687 1144 the bangalow hotel 1 Byron Street, Bangalow bangalowdining.com BANGALOW DINING ROOMS and Bangalow Catering 52 Certainly, awareness of our ‘word as a creation’ can be a powerful tool to pay attention to. For example, I recently decided to undertake a fast from complaining, having noticed a habit of constant complaints about life and the world, and inner complaint in the form of selfcriticism, had almost overtaken my previously optimistic demeanour. This practice immediately reduced the volume of dialogue in thought and action each day, and quietened my mind considerably! We are also a planet of billions of ‘busy minds’, each with our own constant stream of insistences. No wonder our history has a stream of wars as its legacy. We are all capable of contributing to our personal and planetary peace simply by being mindful of what we think, say and do. It’s probably not necessarily helpful to just be ‘positive, positive’, however. We can make a difference by realising our own contribution to the aspects of life here that we don’t prefer. Opposing anything will mostly only contribute to it. By streaming our thoughts, feelings and actions towards what we see as peaceful coexistence, and away from our incessant finger-pointing and blaming of something or someone else, might be a powerful step toward the planetary peace most of us crave. With the strong characters and beliefs we have all accrued throughout eons, effective self-responsibility can hide itself amid all kinds of justifications for the perpetuation of our present global state being their fault. There is no ‘they’. Tough as this can be for our egos to accept, we all individually and collectively have ability to live the life we desire. Much physical and mental illness nowadays, seemingly increased, might make this apparent simplicity a target of protest. To be in the circumstance of a terminal illness or intense depression or distress is seldom fixable by just ‘positive thinking’. P: (02) 6687 1933 25 Bryron Street, Bangalow NSW 2479 windhorsegallery.com contact@windhorsegallery.com Artwork and Sculptures from local and internationally renowned Australian Artists; Australian made Knitware; Beautiful Pearl Jewellery; Stunning Jewellery from Mexico and Brazil; Locally handmade Toys and Breadboards; Australian Handcrafted Pewter; An amazing collection of scarves and much much more … 53 We all need to find our own sense of how and why, and create, follow and make peace with our own pathways in every aspect of our life’s circumstances. This is as individual for each person as their fingerprint. Making another wrong because their realisations and values are not as ours can be counterproductive. Embracing each other’s diverse preferences without judgement might be a more rapid path to restored ease. This means that differences in education, traditions, history, perception, values and beliefs need to be honoured and not emphasised. Nature can be our greatest teacher and healer in this plane. She usually acts as a calmant, even amid her wilder expressions. We can each choose to individually follow our own conviction star, while refraining from needing to find another wrong, so we can be right. 54 At this juncture, as a planetary population we are at a point that has been predicted by the prophets for centuries. My sense is that we have just passed the ‘tipping point’ of consciousness. So, although media sources report all manner of mayhems, there is a strong, calm underlying ‘hundredth monkey effect’ on consciousness that now strongly and gently acts as unity. Adopting and acting from this reality could be productive, even as we might be yet to sense it from within ourselves. Unmasking our souls might be the key. Perhaps the circumstances of our present life have brought a harshness that has instinctively caused us to shield “ We can gently let these layers fall as we feel more safe, nurtured and nourished When I pay attention to this in microcosmic and macrocosmic ways, I find that I always have strings of miraculous moments. don’t tell mama Don’t Tell Mama is an eclectic range of natural fibred products, showcasing an assortment of hemp, bamboo, beech-wood, silk and merino wool. Sourced both locally and nationally, Don’t Tell Mama boasts a range for everyone. Complimenting the varied clothing lines for men and women, are a collection of jewellery, leather goods, home wares and natural body cosmetics. 02 6687 2553 - 54 Byron St, Bangalow 55 ourselves. We can gently let these layers fall as we feel more safe, nurtured and nourished. How this occurs is very individualised. Dropping our masks can be a major cause of happy relationships, as can be to stop making demands for anything at all from another. We each have only to mind our own business and be as kind as possible with ourselves, and each other, for our best selves to be in the action driver’s seat of our daily existence. Utilising the rich vein of practitioners of the many modalities Byron shire offers can facilitate much of value. The old maxim of ‘follow your nose’ is a wise course, as this intuition can lead us through our own maze. Making nothing wrong or right from within our own story and from our observations, reflections and projections of others can be a mighty way to contribute to world peace, while simultaneously improving our own personal daily experience. Interacting with nature like a small child could shed layers of masks in an instant. Without the burdens of these armours, we are then free to simply harmoniously exist. 56 zonti quantum counselling 0412 498 353 zontista@gmail.com free app (iphone & android) zontizapp w i t h s e a s W e c o l l a b o r l o c a l a n d a r t i s a n s . . . a t e o v e r At Island Luxe, we travel the world for inspirational pieces that offer an experience of a nomadic existence, recreating a feel of a luxurious yet carefree ‘gypset’ lifestyle. In store, we focus on giving each client the experience of a lifestyle that reflects our soul, a glimpse into a world we cherish, where quality is sought in every piece we offer. Each detail in our store has been created to stimulate your senses, from exotic music to the scent of fresh coconut and aged leather, and the textures of the finest fabrics we have gathered for you. P: 02 6687 1605 62 Byron St, Bangalow NSW 2479 info@islandluxe.com.au P: 02 6680 9600 1&2, 11 Marvell Street Byron Bay, NSW, 2481 tribe@islandluxe.com.au islandluxe.com.au Our locations avoid the usual high traffic areas in favour of more out-of-the-way sites, thus not compromising our concept and creating a destination in itself and a sense of journey for those select individuals who search and go beyond the commonplace. Once inside the store, our clients find our interior style is inspired by a deep love of nature and humble but noble objects, like a peasant’s bed from Pakistan, an old leather oilpot from a gypsy tribe in India, a restored kilim from Turkey or a battered workbench. We collaborate with local and overseas artisans wherever possible to produce exclusive one-off accessories and furniture, making each piece unique for every client. Our highly skilled Island Luxe team knows that true style transcends fashion and they can assist clients to find their individual expression. We hope you enjoy sharing in our Island Luxe vision... 57 Exquisite French Pastries, wicked cakes, gourmet pies, excellent coffee 02 6687 1209 12 Byron Street Bangalow (opposite the pub) Mon-Fri 6.15am-5.30pm Sat 7am-4pm Sun & public holidays 7.30am-3.30pm 58 Given the right ingredients the body has the ability to regenerate and repair itself Sue Daly / Naturopath 02 6687 1831 / 0427 872 874 34 Byron St, Bangalow, NSW, 2479 bangalownaturopath.com.au 59 Share the love An interview with Melanie Spears about the power of gratitude and being with what is. Living in financial fear along with the heartbreak of a broken relationship, the pressures of life a little while ago had destroyed Melanie Spears. Unable to work because she was physically and emotionally exhausted, she had every reason to surrender. But with a notepad, pen and a glimpse of hope, one day she began the practice of giving thanks. Soon realising the power of gratitude, Melanie’s now internationally famous ‘Gratitude Diary’ (givingthanks.com) was born. Growing up on a farm near Condobolin with her parents, Melanie was always blessed with a sense of freedom. The freedom to walk, the freedom to ride, the freedom to drive anywhere over their 500 acres. “Freedom has always been a primary value of mine. I had fun times playing in the shearing sheds bouncing on big piles of wool.” Now living just north of Byron Bay in New Brighton with a direct view to the ocean, she takes pleasure in whale watching right from her home. Melanie is still blessed with the freedom she so yearns for, but it was not always this way. Facing bank foreclosure in 2007, Melanie and her partner’s financial state became unmanageable. Longing for a life of stability and normality had turned their worlds into a spiral of loss. Their emotional state soon took a toll on their relationship, and finally Melanie decided to fight her unknown world of helplessness and restrictions alone. As floods of anxiety filled early morning wakings, Melanie would sit on her veranda looking out onto her beautiful ocean view. She began to write down what she was grateful for, just the simple things in her life. Realising that her stress levels started 60 to soothe immediately, she says,“I began to develop faith that everything was going to be all right, and so it was.” As the practice of giving thanks became such an important part of Melanie’s everyday ritual, she combined it with her working diary. Just jotting down what she was appreciative of gave Melanie a new lease on life, and she soon learnt to be grateful for every experience she encountered. She had learnt to no longer be affected by the stresses of life; even more so, she was grateful for them. ‘The Gratitude Diary’ was produced as a direct result of her experiences, and Melanie gradually became aware that there was a demand for this type of daily therapy—much cheaper than seeing a therapist, and probably far more effective. A combination of an everyday journal and a space for giving thanks to all you are grateful for, she explains: “It’s a tool for transformation, self-reflection and awareness. Each day there is a section to practice the blessing of giving thanks. If you do this on a regular basis, you can literally go from a lack perspective to an abundance perspective” and from emotional despair to enjoyment and appreciation. “Its not about denying unpleasant emotions created by what is not working, but rather a full embrace of those emotions, and a dialogue with them so that they may show you what it is that you are truly desiring. Finding the little specks of gold in a bucket of river sand.” “Sometimes I notice people wasting so much energy in avoiding or denying their emotions. It’s generally the same people who are struggling with the same issues 10 years later. Basically, if you deny your unpleasant emotions, you are denying yourself.” Melanie decided to share ‘The Gratitude Diary and Daily Planner’ with many. Having sold over 10,000 copies last year in Australia, she received the most incredible response. “About 100 letters from users of ‘The Gratitude Diary’ all express their heartfelt thanks in ways that often make me cry. I stand surrendered to the awe of how such a simple act of being grateful can transform a soul on such a profound level. In some cases, it has saved lives!” Melanie has also set up a playful and deeply nurturing rejuvenation retreat for people to “simply explore what creating a life that you love might look like.” As a group, people are able to experience real possibilities and explore passions at a paradise-filled location in Bali. The group takes part in a detox and help each other to be genuinely honest with themselves, which helps to support a healthier and brighter vision. She also runs a workshop called ‘Soul and Money’, which shows you how to align with your passions in a profitable way. “Very simply, what you focus on grows. So if you focus on what it is you love, you create more love. It’s about finding the good or learning in what may appear to be a difficult situation, and transforming that situation from within.” Melanie is also fulfilling a long-awaited passion of hers that was put on hold due to her fears of“not being good enough” by recording an album of songs that she has written. She now lives life her own way with the freedom she knew so well as a child. Manoeuvring from 40 hours a week of shift work to experiencing a creative life was a radical, empowering change for Melanie. “I’m also renovating an old shack that I may one day reside in, planting trees and watching them grow, building a new website to support people’s wellbeing, planning workshops, reading interesting books about great and enlightening things, and generally having fun.” With plans to expand her enterprise, Melanie is currently looking for people who want to launch their own ‘Gratitude Diary’ business in the UK and the US. “Why not share the love abroad? The diary is just another expression of me being free to create a book that I like and that I think is pretty cool.” love xx givingthanks.com.au 61 Bangalow Guesthouse The Bangalow Guesthouse is a stunning property sitting amongst beautifully landscaped gardens on the banks of picturesque Byron Creek. Situated in the main street of Bangalow and just minutes walk from a wonderful array of cafes, restaurants, boutique shops and the iconic Bangalow Hotel, this is the perfect Northern Rivers holiday spot. www.bangalowguesthouse.com Unique Estates 62 Free call: 1300 911 720 www.uniqueestates.com.au VELVETST Cuts Colours Makeup Weddings R Feel free to drop in for advice, a quote or any help with your hair including cuts and colours. Naomi also specialises in hair up styling and makeup for weddings. Look her up on Naomimurray hair and makeup 6687 1967 30 Byron st, Bangalow ( post office building ) naomihairandmakeup.com 63 64 Gaia Retreat EWRYBA The small hamlet of Newrybar sits just off the Pacific Highway between Bangalow and Ballina. Famous for its old bakery, which has been lovingly restored to a fully functioning store, the building retains the quirk and charm of days gone by. There, you’ll find spelt, rye and other specialty grain loaves freshly baked daily. Next door, the fresh food deli features local organic produce, condiments, cheeses, pâtés, meats and poultry, to name a few. In-house herb gardens supply the Harvest Cafe with the fresh leaves that infuse and garnish their dishes. There is nothing more delightful than a stroll through these lovingly restored buildings and gardens while discovering real foodie treats unique to the Northern Rivers. Surrounded by macadamia and coffee plantations are a general store and antique shop as well as other pioneering boutiques. The town is also the gateway to Olivia Newton-John’s famous Gaia retreat and spa. Just take the turnoff only a few kilometres south of Bangalow, on the western side of the Highway. It’s easy to find and one of my favourite places in the region! 65 driftlab Gaia Retreat & Spa Celebrates 10 Years Perfectly poised high on sacred land in the Bangalow hinterland, Northern NSW, Gaia Retreat & Spa boasts majestic vistas over rolling hills and emerald green valleys. Gaia has been recognised internationally as a leading multi award-winning boutique pamper retreat and spa, focusing on restoring wellness and calm. Individually tailored programs, flexible stay dates, Signature Day Spa experiences and freedom of choice are just some of the standalone features available. The heart of Gaia is the renowned Gaia Day Spa where nurturing, exceptional healers and therapists deliver exquisite specialised treatments for both men and women, treatments which are grounding and profoundly restorative. Breathing a mark of distinction in the region Gaia continues to lead the way, creating a unique and authentic Australian spa retreat experience with 2015 marking a special anniversary. Gaia celebrates 10 successful years in the spa and retreat world. Best friends Gregg Cave and Olivia Newton-John along with fellow directors Ruth Kalnin and Warwick Evans opened the property in 2005. Constantly seeking to enhance the retreat and spa experience, Gaia offers a varied range of boutique retreat accommodation. The newly opened Komala Villas are designed to spoil with elegant luxury in pure privacy and seclusion, with magnificent views on the 66 40 jonson st, byron bay ph: 6680 9869 16 old pacific hwy, newrybar ph: 6687 0751 | www.driftlab.com.au itÕ s about heart ... itÕ s about pampering ... itÕ s about you ... come for the day or retreat for a while ... Ultimate Wellness Spa Best Wellness Spa Australasia & South Pacific With every 90 minute spa treatment you get complimentary use of spa facilities. Mention Northern Exposure Magazine and receive a complimentary Gaia skin care product from our new Certified Organic Range - Ô RetreatmentÕ . All spa treatments include full use of our tranquil gardens, outdoor hot tub spa, sauna and heated swimming pool. (conditions apply) Gaia Day Spa Ph: 02 6687 1670 or 6687 1216 W: www.gaiaretreat.com.au 67 VILLAGE STAY & ART SPACE NEWRYBAR On 100 acres of lush farmland with magnificent sea views over Lennox Head, this idyllic Queenslander is the perfect getaway for those seeking a true rural escape in luxurious comfort. 68 The Art House is an 100-year-old cottage in the heart of the historic Newrybar Village. Overlooking lush farmland, the cottage is perfect for families and small groups who appreciate a country retreat, fine dining and being close to all that Byron Bay and the hinterland has to offer. FOR BOOKINGS AND INFORMATION FOR BOOKINGS AND INFORMATION Call Wendy on 0402 930 467 Call Wendy on 0402 930 467 wendy@byronplantation.com.au info@the-arthouse.com.au www.byronplantation.com.au www.the-arthouse.com.au highest point of Gaia. Also new is Retreatment, the much anticipated Certified Organic Skin Care range to complement and enhance the signature spa experience. The brand range encapsulates the healing nature of the land, truly reflecting the essence and meaning of Gaia… the spirit of Mother Earth. Over the years Gaia has received numerous accolades and awards. Some of the latest awards include the World Travel Awards received in 2013 and 2014 for ‘Australia’s Leading Boutique Hotel’ and ‘Australia’s Leading Spa Resort’. This is the most prestigious awards program in the travel industry worldwide, regarded as the ‘Oscars of the travel industry’ by ‘The Wall Street Journal’. In the same years Gaia also won the World Luxury Spa Awards as ‘Best Luxury Destination Spa Australia’. 02 6687 1216 | info@gaiaretreat.com.au; gaiaretreat.com.au 69 NEWRYBA 70 BARDOWNS Beautiful One Day – Perfect The Next... Gracious charm abounds in this internationally stylish home. Newrybar Downs provides 5 beautiful spacious bedrooms, 2 sitting rooms, 2 dining rooms large entertaining kitchen and space for everyone to spread their wings. Newrybar Downs is a fabulous property to relax in whilst enjoy the park like grounds, swimming pool, outdoor entertaining areas, a game of bowls, a dip in the pool or a scenic heli ride directly from the property over stunning Cape of Byron. Whether staying for an intimate break, holidaying with family and friends or enjoying that special corporate retreat Newrybar Downs offers it all. Whilst enjoying total privacy of Newrybar Downs you are only 1 km walking distance to renowned Harvest Café and Deli, 3 kms drive to the charming, elegant town of Bangalow with its beautiful shops and restaurants. World best beaches beckon for the ocean dip, surf, and paddle board or up lifting walk along one of Byron Bay surrounding beaches. A dream setting for the perfect wedding, family gathering or corporate retreat Newrybar Downs will cater for all requirements. Accomplished local chefs, organic produce, artists, yoga masters, massage and much more can be arranged for your stay discretely. Newrybar Downs will leave you wanting more and plotting your return. We look forward to welcoming you to 365 sunsets and life time of memories. Visit newrybardowns.com for more details. 71 72 At the heart of the counterculture ULLUMBIMB Mullumbimby or ‘Mullum’, as its known by the inhabitants, is also referred to as the ‘biggest little town in Australia’. The original occupants, the Bundjalung People called it ‘mulubinba’, hence the name Mullumbimby, a derivative from the Bandjalung-Yugambeh dialect, after a fern found there. This unique junction of the three arms of the Brunswick River became a cedar cutters’ staging camp in the 1840s. They found it an excellent site because the tidal river could be easily navigated to that point and gave access to all areas of the catchment area as well as providing the best location for bullock teams to cross the river with their wagons loaded with timber. It’s still possible to see the shallows at low tide where the bullocks crossed the Brunswick River. Located just a short 10-minute drive from Byron Bay, at the foot of Mount Chincogan, it is now home to an eclectic array of artists, photographers, writers and musicians who simply would not live anywhere else as it still reflects the feel it achieved as heart of the counterculture movement in the early 70s. Surrounded by lush farmland and happily reminiscent of the market days of years past, its counterculture influence always present and exuding a colourful carnival atmosphere every day. Whether you stop and shop or stay to play, it is a ‘must-see’ on any journey through the region. 73 Codes of the Mayan Calendar O TIME OLLS BY 74 “ Present moment speeds up towards what ends “ Souls ignited by the fire of consciousness So time rolls by, and 2012 is left in the dust as the present moment speeds up towards what ends? What is it, this compression of time into short moments on a computer screen, interspersed with eating, drinking, shopping and everything stuffed into an increasingly smaller unit of Time? Are we reaching into Zero Point, where the whole old world becomes a comic characteristic of ridiculous actions that deny the glorious truth of our beings as sovereign souls ignited by the fire of consciousness? As we struggle to keep up with all that seems so important and yet is it? Or are we answering the call and continuously letting go of placing the importance on the inane and answering only to what ignites our spirit… Please tell me, ‘Yes!’, that we are learning to redefine and re-evaluate all that we once held dear, in favour of Ease and Grace and the abidance in Self, note the big ‘S’! Are we being hauled over the coals to wake up, as we are given the keys very unceremoniously to our own deliverance? A friend just had a motorbike accident, is in hospital with no bones broken, in wonder at what it took to finally listen to that call to slow down and let go of the probing need to prove himself to the world, to finally answer the inner call of listening to Self, allowing the witness to prompt him with the right action, that must be done… a t e m p l e f o r y o u hot spas + sauna + steam room + plunge pool + massage + skin rituals Byron’s premier garden spa, nestled in a bamboo grove down a quiet lane in Mullumbimby. The ideal place to de-stress at the start of your holiday. Hot Spas, Wood Fired Sauna, Steam Room and Plunge Pool in a secret tropical garden from $20! We also offer awesome Massages and spectacular Skin Treatments from Eminence Organics, plus all day packages for those who want the full pampering. The bathhouse is warming in winter and cooling in summer and magical in the rain. Relax, unwind and nurture yourself as you immerse yourself in Nature and Ritual at the spa where the locals go. A favourite destination for visitors and locals for 15 years. 02 6684 4811 thekivaspa.com info@thekivaspa.com 75 effective, holistic health care using organic herbal medicines Dispensary and Clinic Naturopathic, Homoeopathic Ayurvedic Consultations and Massage 79 Stuart Street, Mullumbimby 02 6684 3002 mullumherbals.com Gallery Casamexico / Day of the Dead shop A large selection of imported fabric designs of soft furnishings cushions & bags. Gallery Casamexico specialises in affordable visual art: gloss vintage print panels & small framed printed collage works of art. We support hand made ethnic Mexican crafts. 02 6684 1647 / 0403 734 791 / 75 Stuart St, Mullumbimby / gallerycasamexico@bigpond.com Contact your friendly hardworking Professionals Real Estate team White Lotus Cleansing Retreats Organic Detox Spa & Transformational Healing Detox Retreats At White Lotus Cleansing, we recognise that optimal wellness comes from learning to love and respect the body, mind, and spirit, where health and well-being are a reflection of inner harmony. +61 0427 857 148 / whitelotuscleansing.com.au Brunswick Heads 76 (02) 6685 1839 Ocean Shores (02) 6680 4777 Mullumbimby (02) 8884 2615 It helps to have codes to work by, in which to define the unknowable, or at least recognise its existence by allowing these tools to be the pointers along the way, of whether we have it right or not… So it is that 17 years later I am still following and learning from these same 33 codes, as they reveal the evolution of this consciousness that appears to speeding up at such a fast rate. My daily practice of witnessing and allowing my awareness to evolve with the shift in consciousness, makes me compassionate for those many populations that are guided solely by a system that, at its basis, is only interested in boxing experience into This is what the Dreamspell (based on the Mayan Calendars 260-day Count of Days/Light) is for me… For around 17 years now I have followed these codes, at first as a scientist entering in to test to act in the perfect moment, not a moment too early, not a moment too late…“ a theory, to prove it wrong and obsolete, in order to continue along the road of disproving. But very quickly I recognised the serendipity, the match of the codes with the personal experience, and rather than making me lull into a false sense of finding ‘it’, my search became even more intensified as my intelligence approached the serendipity of my intelligence matching my experience, to a ‘T’! “ Serene serendipity synchronistically occurring when we listen and are ready Yes, folks, it is indeed the dawning of a New Time, and a new way of relating to Time. Allowing time to be followed from synchronic moment of serendipity to serendipitous moment of synchronicity… Serene serendipity synchronistically occurring when we listen and are ready to act in the perfect moment. Not a moment too early, not a moment too late… 77 In order for survival, we must pull our energy back from the edge of the external need to satisfy desire that never ends. Perhaps it may be better to redirect that desire to igniting the light within, dawning as a Sun, co-creative with consciousness, allowing our rays to light up the whole Earth, not just merely pawns with their heads in the sand, operating from unconscious and ancient patterns inherited from thousands of years of power over games of survival. May we jump out of the box, find some Metaphysical codes and consciousness itself will offer a life that reveals the inner workings of what is occurring on our planet. Whether those codes be numbers, glyphs, letters or whatever alive and evolving codes are giving you goosebumps… Three numbers in a row, or particular numbers that occur again and again and again… What could they mean? Ask the quest-i-ons and consciousness is sure to answer, inspiring further the quest for Godot! For me, the codes of the Dreamspell have been reliably giving me revelations and meaning over time. Spirit unveils similar experiences every 20 days, tempered by a 13-day cycle, revealing a 260-day cycle, replicating itself, yet ever growing, so that every time a similar day comes up, 260 days later, the nature of evolution is revealed… And as I witness the 13-day cycles, each with its own specific purpose, I experience the expansion of that universal truth on our planet from a place of evolving consciousness and am able to put word to 78 “ May we jump out of the box, find some metaphysical codes... a continually limiting reality, one that seeks to prove that it ‘knows’, when all around consciousness itself is attempting to offer signs and synchronicities that reveal that the ‘way out’ is indeed ‘in’. That no outer authority is going to take you home. it, clearly and succinctly, guiding others to see the dawning light within each happenstance. Just as a gardener understands their world by witnessing and watching plants grow, so with the Dreamspell codes do I watch and witness our conscious (and sometimes not so conscious) evolution, where everything is playing out just as it does, from perspectives that are ignited by the elegant design of an underlying harmonic matrix. If this inspires you to look into this set of codes that have been followed for thousands of years in the Maya lands, you can go to the mother site for this particular system of Mayan calendars at lawoftime.org. You can also check my blogsitetimewaves.org where three years of daily codes have been documented through my firsthand experience of them. The last six months or so I have been documenting more primarily the 13-day cycles as a whole, as the acceleration in time demands a different approach. These 13day Wavespell transmissions are also interesting as a birds-eye visioning into a particular purpose and how that evolves over 13 days, evolving naturally through to its manifestation and final resting place on Day 13 of pure presence. This in turn leading into the next purpose, each code a clue for the next, leading forward this eonic dance of consciousness. Codes are the language through which God talks to us. I am in deep gratitude to the Maya of all time and dimension for anchoring this deep and ancient wisdom… To Jose Arguelles for his unerring passion in awakening more of the world to these codes, for being dedicated to the search for meaning and revelation in understanding of the greater and lesser cycles of evolution, and for having the courage to let the world know about it, amid ridicule and denial. Ah, but ain’t that the way of this strange world, point the finger at the Moon, and they look at the finger and pick it to bits, when it is just the messenger, and that bright orb goes on beckoning unseen. Release Mayan Calendar and 2012 folks and educate yourself with the codes, be OK with Jose Arguelles aka Valum Votan 79 not knowing what they mean in the beginning. Just follow the days with eyes, ears and indeed all senses open and then it is highly possible that we maybe are shown the path of Ease and Grace beyond the confines of old paradigm thoughtforms that have held our world captive in realities of war and conflict, in favour of peace, love and harmony. Oh, well, those that are on the similar search looked at what was being pointed to, and are now flying! Thank you, dear brother, from the bottom of my heart… Blessings to all Vasumi xxxxx Vasumi travels and ignites the fire of the heart with her work with the Mayan Dreamspell. If you would like to invite and organise a workshop for her she is available for that. Although these days she resides in either New Zealand or Bali, Australia is her crossing place and she is happy to travel anywhere to this work that she is most passionate about. She is also available for private personal sessions. Birthdate needed. 80 The Biggest Little Shop Of Treasures, Clothing, Gifts, Jewellery, Art, Crystals, etc. Local and Beyond... 6684 6603, 76 Burringbar St Mullumbimby, amoremullumbimby.com.au Darling Buds Florist Flowers Plants Gifts From the lush hinterland of the Northern Rivers to the pristine coastal beaches of Byron Bay. Creative floral designers, specialising in weddings, Australian wildflowers, fresh flowers, bouquets and arrangements. Corporate events and functions. Mention this add for your special bridal package offer. shop. 02 6684 2557 m. 0417 691 117 55 Burringbar St, Mullumbimby darlingbudsflorist.com Facebook: darlingbudsflorist 81 82 On the main street YALGU There’s something special about Tyalgum. Whether it’s the setting, surrounded by the Coastal Range and Mount Warning, or the way the mist seems to rise from the Pumpinbil and Tyalgum Creeks in the early mornings or the fact that Mount Warning is the core of the world’s largest extinct volcano, the Tweed Volcano—Tyalgum speaks to the soul. How else could a small town, with a tiny population of just 300 manage to support an annual classical music festival featuring some of the finest Australian and international musicians in a hall that is said to produce some of the finest acoustics in the world and held every September since 1991? And what could possibly possess the population of a tiny rural town so far from anywhere to build and maintain a hall that produces such incredible acoustics. Perhaps the ensuing 23 million years since its last eruption have failed to completely subdue such a massive spiritual energy pulse from the very heart of Mother Earth. Stranger, more immutable things have come to pass, surely. And then there’s the other heritage buildings that have been so lovingly restored and maintained to house businesses with quirky names like the famous Flutterbies Cafe or The Shop Next Door or Tyalgum Garage located in the old Norco Factory, not to mention or the incredible Tyalgum Hall. And, yes, this is the village I stumbled into for breakfast after surviving that wild squall all those years ago and sometimes wonder still if it’d all been just a dream. Doubt my recollections at your own risk but at least come and have a wander around and see if you too don’t come away a little bit changed. My children and grandchildren still call butterflies ‘flutterbies’ because of it. Go on—you deserve it. 83 the heart of the caldera.... of life brought me here, to How the mysterious turns WELCOME HANGE TO LL THAT 84 I moved to Tyalgum some 15 years ago, having spent the previous decade working and traveling between Sydney, Chicago, London and Dublin. What a welcome change to all that! Years earlier, when I was still a uni student in Brisbane, I used to do the trek to Byron Bay quite regularly, as my ‘getaway’. Each time I made the drive alongside the majestic, sparkling Tweed River, I’d look out to my right at this stunning blue mountain outline and lush green canefields in the valley below, and I’d say to myself: “One day I’m going to live there.” And funnily enough, the mysterious turns of life brought me here, to the heart of the caldera. Over the last eight years or so, my village has blossomed into a vibrant little destination for daytrippers from up and down the coast. What was once a sleepy little village now boasts its own café with fabulous organic, barista coffee, a coffee micro-roaster, local illustrator, a number of art galleries featuring works from talented local artists and photographers, an eco store, fashion and gift stores, bookshop, silversmith studio and furniture shop, Friday night pizza and live music and, now, monthly artisan markets. It’s really lovely to be able to have a proper maker’s market; the day adds vibrancy to an already colourful village, and brings with it a sense of community, as elders teach children how to weave, young local musicians sing amid an array of gourmet treats and handmade treasures, all by local artisans and craftspeople. And everything is just so gorgeous! The main street is lined with a collection of quaint Federation buildings, from the pub on the corner [which happens to be one of the last existing country pubs and has been operating since 1926] right through to the now-famous Tyalgum Literary Institute Hall, a beautiful building circa 1908, from local cedar felled in the area. The hall boasts stunning acoustics and has been host to the famous Tyalgum Music Festival for over 20 years, as well as seasonal music and dance spectaculars presented by Hearts Aflame Productions. I’ll never forget one recent show where the guest performer, the unbelievably talented and gorgeous Tim Draxl, opened the show with the words “Last night: Sydney Opera House, tonight: Tyalgum Village Hall”. And he had the time of his life, as did we! Each building in the main street has many a story to tell, and often we get to hear delightful anecdotes from visitors and locals, that their grandma was a seamstress in what is now Paddington of Tyalgum, or that Osiris Jewellery was the poolroom, among other things. Flutterbies Cottage Café was originally the town’s bakery, with the butcher next door in the Little Shop Next Door. In the early 80s, the bakery was converted to a pottery studio, the potter using the old baker’s ovens as his kiln. And, by the way, if you visit the café you’ll find that the amenities are now in what was once the kiln / oven, making for a very unique bathroom decor! I’ve heard many a visitor turn to their friends and say, “You simply HAVE to check out the bathroom!” The General Store, another fabulous heritage building, is also our local Post Office, so popping down to check the mail or send off parcels is a daily delight. to Heaven! The air is thick with the heavy scent of jasmine and orange blossom for many, many months, and you find yourself breathing ever so deeply to draw in the rich scent. Flutterbies [or ‘Flutters’ as regulars call it] is the best little café you could hope for in a village. Locals pop down on horseback for a cuppa, and the northerners have been known to drop in by the occasional helicopter! Often, we get the wonderful vintage car groups out for a Sunday drive. They line up their much-loved beauties down the main street for us locals to enjoy, while they tuck into a hearty country lunch. For a small country town, there is so much to enjoy here. Walking to the local weir is a treat, you can sit and listen to the crescendo of the waterfall among the ducks, cows, turtles and even the odd platypus! You can catch a round or two of tennis, go have a luxurious facial or massage at the Wellbeing Centre, get a tarot reading, or simply sit back in the sun on the front porch of the café and enjoy the uninterrupted rural views. At various times of the year you can visit local organic farm Summit Organics and enjoy guided tours of the Garden of Light. The best days are when the local coffee ‘dealer’ is roasting his beans and the intoxicating scent wafts through the air and tantalises one’s desire to pop down for a fresh brew. He stocks some of the world’s most exclusive beans, including the elusive Jamaica Blue. What I love most about Tyalgum is watching the visitors roll in, all buzzed up and loud from their city lives. Then, as they settle for a cup of tea and some wonderful home-baked scones, you can see the hustle and bustle fall away, as they melt into the deep peace and tranquillity of the landscape. There’s something magic about Tyalgum, and people can feel it. Speaking of blissful aromas, if you visit Tyalgum in the spring you will think you have died and gone Kirra Springs is the resident silversmith at Osiris Jewellery 85 Flutterbies Cottage Cafe Come and enjoy the finest country hospitality at Flutterbies Cottage Cafe. With its warm, friendly service and wholesome meals reminiscent of Grandma’s baking, you are sure to feel right at home. We are open seven days for breakfast and lunch, and are fully licensed so you can enjoy a glass of French Champagne or wine with your meal. Our food is fresh and homemade, and our organic coffee is roasted right here on the premises! We also specialise in an elegant High Tea service, held in our exquisitely decorated tearoom, which can be hired for your special occasion. Our signature dessert, the Flutterbies Cake, is simply divine! Open: 8:30am - 5pm (Tues 10am-3pm) 02 6679 3221 / 23 Coolman St, Tyalgum flutterbies.com.au The Little Shop Next Door Charming boutique gift shop brimming with all the finest wares from around the world. French provincial furnishings and homewares, soaps and candles / Fairy Shop, Lavender Shop and Teddy Bears / Exclusive Organic skin care range / Open 7 days right next to Flutterbies 86 Paddington of Tyalgum Tyalgum is my Tuscany You’ll be surprised at this little boutique and what it has to offer! The perfect place for lovers of handmade art and craft! Tyalgum’s colourful artisan gallery is housed in the 100-year-old original General Store which is the perfect location for its wares. Handmade pottery, glassware, soaps, woodwork , stunning local photography and paintings. Contemporary range of mens and ladies wear / Gifts including fine leather-bound journals, men’s accessories / Jewellery / games, stationery / Vintage clothing / And of course…Paddington Bear! Open: 10am – 5pm 02 6679 2075 / 10 Coolman St, Tyalgum Open: 10am–4pm 0458 571 373 / 29a Coolman St Tyalgum info@tyalgumismytuscany.com Osiris Jewellery studio + gallery The Orpheum Bookshop Come and visit Tyalgum’s own resident silversmith Kirra Springs as she creates artisan jewellery right here on the premises! All items created in the studio are handmade from eco-friendly material and are one-of-a-kind pieces. Workshops available. Commissions welcome! Local Tyalgum musician and book aficionado Hoel Durand has established a culture shop with a selection of lovingly curated books, vinyl LPs and DVDs. The store offers quality literature and hosts a quarterly play reading as well as creative writing workshops and classes. Visit Thursday to Sunday to find that special book or just sit and admire the eclectic decor! Either way … it’s a book lovers’ paradise! Open: Wed-Sun 10am-4pm 0499 747 473 / 10 1/4 Coolman St, Tyalgum osirisjewellery.com Open: Thurs - Sun 10am - 4pm 0408 314 607 / 10 Coolman Street, Tyalgum theorpheumbookshop@gmail.com 87 Garden of Light Tours + Organic Skin Care Products The Garden of Light is a beautiful property in the heart of Tyalgum that has been lovingly created over the past 15 years, drawing inspiration from many established gardens throughout Europe as well as the Butchart Gardens in Canada. The Garden of Light is open to the public for organised tours during the seasons of Spring and Autumn, with the bookings taken through Flutterbies Cottage Cafe. The Garden is a forever changing canvas, with new spaces and areas being created all the time, so people have been returning to see what has been happening at The Garden. This jewel at the foot of Mount Warning has inspired a collection of books, paintings, organic skincare mother and baby range and other wonderful products. These encapsulate the essence of this enchanting place, with each hand-drawn illustration featured on the packaging reflecting the beauty of the gardens and the animals that live on the property. This whole enterprise of the Garden of Light has been created as a cottage industry to help support a local home- schooling cooperative. Bookings through Flutterbies Cottage Cafe / 02 6679 3221 / gardenoflight.com.au Flutterbucks Boutique Coffee Roaster and Pizzeria Passionate about coffee? Looking for the perfect cup? Love organic? Well, come to Flutterbucks! Voted best coffee in the Tweed, “Double or Nothing” is worth the drive… you won’t be disappointed! Tucked away in what was the old shed is this hole-in-the-wall style barista servery and coffee roastery, that transforms itself into a pizzeria each Friday night, offering live music with talented artists playing both originals and covers. Definitely the place to be! 02 6679 2014 / 02 6679 3221 flutterbucks.com.au | contact@flutterbucks.com.au 88 Earth Heartbeat Conscious Lifestyle Eco Shop Our aim is to educate and communicate options for a healthy, sustainable lifestyle by creating, sourcing and providing Certified Organic, Fair Trade and local products such as: Organic bedding, bath towels, yoga mats, superfoods, supplements, cleaning products, skincare, essential oils, meditation cushions, books, esoteric energies and more. Discover our sweet, inviting shop through the peaceful garden walkway once you have entered Flutterbies Cottage Café. You can also shop online (see below.) 02 66 79 2121 / info@earthheartbeatshop.com.au earthheartbeatshop.com.au Celestial Dew of Tyalgum One of Tyalgum’s most interesting buildings, this distinctive and charming guesthouse will delight enthusiasts of the Golden Age of Railways with its railway-themed fixtures and elegantlyappointed European furnishings. You’ll be assured a comfortable, relaxing stay in the country with all the conveniences of a café right next door. Curl up with a great book on the generous verandah, or relax in the in-house sauna as you unwind and restore your senses in this peaceful, country village. 0474 512 528 / 21 Coolman St, Tyalgum celestialdewoftyalgum@gmail.com celestialdewoftyalgum.com Tyalgum Wellbeing Centre Need to relax and restore? A visit to the Wellbeing Centre could be just what you need! It houses a collection of talented and experienced practitioners from a wide range of modalities, including acupressure, chiropractic, structural integration, reflexology, shiatsu massage, photonic treatment, and transformational sessions. Included in this building is a beauty therapist who specialises in hot stone massage and organic skincare facials. Sessions are by appointment. 0458 537 950 / 21 Coolman St, Tyalgum 89 90 Simple pleasures: www.juleshunt.com photography RUNSWICKHEAD The quiet and sleepy village of Brunswick Heads is 10 minutes north of Byron Bay. Originally inhabited by the Bundjalung nation until Captain Rous first charted the Brunswick River in 1828, which led to it being opened up to the cedar cutters that followed some 20 years later and accounted for it becoming a thriving port and robust commercial centre in the 1880s. The town, however, would slip into decline when the railroad was built in Mullumbimby. The gorgeous little village, far from dead, would transform this apparent downturn into a mecca for those who seek the road less travelled in search of the quiet life, caring not for the economic and logistical considerations. A convenient 30 minutes from both Coolangatta and Ballina-Byron Gateway airports, this quiet little fishing village isn’t very far from everywhere and caters for so many of life’s simpler pleasures like great, uncrowded beaches, cute nosheries that cater to all tastes and budgets, as well as easy ocean access for fishing in the river itself or outside, whale watching or kayaking adventures. And for those who need a special recharge, there is always the nearby Crystal Castle. 91 Kristina's Tasty Kitchen We offer a large variety of raw, organic, dairy, allergy and gluten free food, pies, cakes and salads etc. All vegetarian and vegan. Catering for functions, retreats and gatherings. Cooking classes available on request. Kris Campbell 0429 456 299 Mina Mina fine art and giftware A colourful boutique gallery, which specialises in Aboriginal Fine Arts and Crafts, complemented by sophisticated pieces from local artisans, unusual home wares and quirky gifts. Cnr Park & Mullumbimbi Streets, Brunswick Heads NSW 2483 02 6685 0229 www.minaminagallery.com 92 Northern Exposure editor Melanie Spears speaks with Aidan Ricketts, a coordinator for and one of many people at the coal seam gas protest at Bentley, a few kilometres from Lismore. ON SOCIAL MOVEMENT Most people tend to think in terms of structural organisations as a pyramid model, in that those with more power govern over those with apparently less power. That’s not how a social movement works, says Aidan Ricketts, a spokesperson for the CSG-Free Northern Rivers campaign. “Imagine a network as a bunch of dots on a page, then start drawing lines between those dots and a pattern emerges. So it’s a network, rather than one egalitarian leader.” This system “permanently works imperfectly”, says Aidan, but it begins to explain how brilliant people can work well together. It’s also a natural system where respect and trust are created based on what people are contributing to the mission at hand, like the Steiner method. Natural selection capitalises on people’s strengths. Aidan’s term for this is “activocracy”. With a pyramid structure, a single idea can rule or govern over a situation. However in an activocracy, ideas are spawned every day, Aidan explains. That means the creative process is always in real-time, actions are governed by feeling and desire, but are more in response to what is happening, and less on a policy or procedure. 93 Melanie: Northern Exposure comes out once a year and, while it’s designed for the tourist market, it also holds in mind the underbelly of what is actually happening here in the Northern Rivers. We expose the underbelly. Aidan: This isn’t the underbelly, this is the mainstream. M (laughing): Yep, you’re right. This is the mainstream. The real Northern Rivers. This is what’s real right now. So what’s your role or title here? A: We don’t tend to have roles or positions, but yeah, “coordinator” is usually what we are called. However, there are a lot of coordinators. We are a very distributed network and it’s not always easy for people to understand. Most of us work in “organisations” and tend to think in terms of a pyramid structure. But that’s not really how a social movement works. A social movement is better thought of in terms of a network— those dots on a page with interconnecting lines between them. Between those dots is how information is shared. Then, if you start to imagine some of those dots blinking on and off, which might indicate someone who holds information but may not necessarily be here today. Within the network are sub-networks. Some of these people those will be involved in media, physical blockading or police liaison. So there are internal networks and then those link over to other parts, so that we are always communicating. That’s not to suggest that this system works perfectly, however it permanently works imperfectly, which is what we have all come 94 to accept. But it at least begins to explain how social movements actually work. We have really brilliant people working in very different areas, and eventually a respect develops around the people who are doing their job and doing it well. M: Kind of a natural selection where people gravitate towards where their talents lie and have an opportunity to express those talents, whether that be playing music or putting up the telegraph poles? A: That’s what I call “activocracy”. M: I like it. And, of course, you get to divert the traditional manipulations of power that are so common in a pyramid or organisational kind of structure. A: That’s right. And the trouble with pyramid structures is that single ideas start to predominate. Social change is a very experimental process. Whereas single ideas are often dependent on certain outcomes. And that outcome just may not occur. So what you are actually doing in a complex social movement is engaging in multiple experiments. But I can take you down a rabbithole here, into deep theory and structure, if you’re not careful (laughing). 02 6685 1283 1/12 The terrace Brunswick Heads 2483 brunswicksurf.com.au Latest surf fashion / apparel M: OK, so have you done this before? A: Yes, I was heavily involved in the North East Forest Alliance’s campaign during the 1990s and also wrote ‘The Activists’ Handbook’. It’s been my main area of study and writing. [Aidan and I are standing beside a two-metre concrete well that has been dug into the ground. I’m curious.] M: This particular well is making quite a statement. Is this the first of its kind during these CSG stand-offs? A: No, there are a few other wells in. The social movement really kicked in strongly in early 2012. In late 2012 there was a protest near Grafton, and then in early 2013 there was another one Open for Breakfast & Lunch from 7am, 7days and dinner from 5pm Thur to Sat 02 6685 0265 3 Park St, Brunswick Heads, NSW 2483 parkstpastabar.com.au 95 “ Now, we know on reliable figures that above 85 per cent of the resident population is against this industry. That’s the hard data. “ at Doubtful Creek, west of Kyogle. Then the company stopped for a while. Metgasco is in a very difficult situation at the moment because it only has reserves in the Northern Rivers and it’s facing a community that is absolutely opposed to it. Now, we know on reliable figures that above 85 per cent of the resident population is against this industry. That’s the hard data. There was actually a poll done in Lismore that came out at 87 per cent against. There has been university research done in the Richmond Valley, which is supposed to be the heartland of this company’s operations, that showed 65 per cent opposition and only 18 per cent support. Metgasco’s problem is that their cash reserves are dwindling and they have nothing but the Northern Rivers to show for it. You have a company that won’t back down and a community that won’t back down either. They have their backs against the wall, trying to save themselves. Our view in that it is just one more speculative exploration company and these companies go to the wall all the time. Society should not suffer because of that. A society suffers when you destroy an entire community’s economy and lifestyle with an invasive industry. M: I heard that a lot of exploration companies attempting CSG mining here in Australia are from China. Is that true? A: In general, about 85 per cent of the mining industry is foreign-owned. M: So, has our government has sold the rights for other countries to mine here? A: Yes, it goes back to the (original) law where the Crown owns all the minerals under the ground. A farmer, by law, actually does not own what lies beneath his land. And that’s fine, the government can make those claims, but it does not give them the right to toxify our watertable or put human health at risk. M: So the mining companies must be paying BIG money to our government for the right to mine. A: No, not very much actually. Just $10,000 to $15,000 will get you a mining exploration lease. M: That’s nothing. So what are Australians and the government actually getting out of this. What are the financial benefits to the country? 96 A: Well, supposedly royalties but that really doesn’t even stack up compared to what’s at risk: our farming-based culture. You only have to fast-forward 20 years to realise that, by then, fossil fuels will not be an economic proposition because of climate change. Food security will be the greatest challenge ever known. M: And water. A: Yes, water and food will be the big industries of the future, and that’s already starting to happen. Food is getting more and more expensive globally. Agriculture has been in a slump for years but it will come back as an absolutely important industry. And a place as fertile and productive as the Northern Rivers shouldn’t be turned into an industrial gasfield. M: Absolutely! So this article is most likely going to be read by people living in cities, who are perhaps busy and therefore out of touch with the CSG issue. What would you say to them to help educate them. What do they most need to know? A: For a start, there is no gas shortage. There is plenty of gas in the large conventional gasfields, such as in Western Australia, Bass Strait and the Cooper Basin, where you get a lot of gas from a single site. So although it has its impacts, these are relatively confined in area. The CSG is so problematic because it is invasive over vast areas. It’s like pincushioning the landscape and pulling little bits of gas out everywhere. It is not for our domestic needs. It is entirely for an export rush, to sell it overseas and get money for these exploration companies. It’s simply not something we need and will do massive long-term damage. It’s got an estimated life of about 30 years as an industry, but the legacy that it will leave in terms of our ecosystem and our agriculture is devastating. For more information, visit aidanricketts.com The Big Fish we have things you don’t even know you need 4 the terrace, BRUNSWICK HEADS 0401 570 007 furniture, collectables & stuff ( new - recycled - vintage ) 97 Legal Support: EDO steps up When communities like Bentley are faced with proposals like Metgasco’s planned coal seam gas (CSG) and unconventional gas exploration activities in the Northern Rivers, the need for independent and expert legal support quickly becomes apparent. The potential adverse social, economic and environmental impacts of CSG developments are now well understood thanks, in large part, to the tireless work of conservation groups and special-interest organisations who have informed themselves and the broader community about the potential risks. Communities now rightly view proposals for such developments with a large degree of caution, and even trepidation. Some communities have even gone so far as to declare themselves CSG-free. However, an important part of any campaign to oppose CSG developments is to understand the legal rights and obligations of both the gas company and the community. Unfortunately, the law regulating CSG exploration is both technical and complex. Not many communities are in a position to pay commercial fees for legal advice and, even if they were, many law firms would be unable to provide such advice because they act for (or want to act for) the gas companies and must avoid conflicts of interest. This is where Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) NSW steps in. With over 25 years’ experience in environmental law, EDO NSW has a proven track record in achieving positive environmental outcomes for the community. With broad expertise in environmental law and policy, EDO NSW helps the community to respond to environmental problems by providing legal and scientific advice, community legal education and proposals for better laws. Over the past few years, EDO NSW has focused on demystifying the law as it applies to CSG developments and empowering communities to use the law to the fullest extent possible to protect their interests and 98 the environment. We have produced a plain English publication called ‘Mining and the Law: A guide for the community’ and several online fact sheets on CSG and the development assessment process. We have also conducted dozens of targeted legal education workshops throughout NSW to help communities respond to specific projects. This support has helped place communities on the front foot when it comes to dealing with CSG companies and the Government. Simultaneously, EDO NSW has engaged extensively in various law-reform processes, advocating for better laws that strike a fairer balance between the interests of the community and the interests of gas companies. Where general information is not sufficient, individuals and community groups can approach EDO NSW for free initial legal advice about specific problems or questions of law. We have assisted many clients to understand and exercise their legal rights through our advice service. Where appropriate, EDO NSW has also acted for community groups in litigation to challenge approvals for CSG developments and clarify the law as it applies to CSG activities, the most notable being the challenge to the Gloucester Gas Project in 2011. Through these legal services, EDO NSW helps to not only provide access to justice for the community by making the courts accessible, but levels the playing field by ensuring the community can compete in court with well-resourced government agencies and corporations. As a nongovernment and not-for-profit legal centre, our services are affordable and provided without fear or favour. With regards to the Bentley and broader Northern Rivers community, EDO NSW has provided ongoing advice over many years on the legality of Metgasco’s CSG and unconventional gas exploration activities. We also assisted the organisers of the Bentley blockade in their Development Application for a protestor camp. Our support for the Northern Rivers community in this matter is ongoing and responsive to community need. For more information, visit edo.org.au 99 My personal story and the evolution of Peace By Piece Peace by Piece was established in 1997 to mark a new beginning. After a fast-paced career in film and television, I fell sick for years with chronic fatigue. As I learned about energy and regained my strength, Peace by Piece became my way to start producing my own ideas. First came ‘Surfing Made Easy’ in 1998, a 70-minute instructional film on how to surf because as a young girl I wanted to surf but was given all the wrong information and didn’t get any pleasure from it. The film was released by Roadshow and set a benchmark for the surf school industry. 100 Handmade Footwear and Leather Goods Brunswick Heads Shop and Bangalow Design Studio / Peace by Piece / peacebypiece.com.au 101 In 2000, I left Australia to meet a friend in Nepal and within three years I had created a sandal-making industry in Kathmandu and the surrounding villages. I was truly inspired by the energy and commitment to God and nature by the simple people of Nepal. go on. Also, to be clear and constantly vigilant about my personal agenda. My products reflected this in the use of prayers, mantras and all-natural materials. It also became very important to me to control the energy used to produce Peace by Piece products. My marriage couldn’t survive the pressure of the ‘rock star’ and in 2009 with two beautiful kids and help from friends and family Peace by Piece was born again, this time with a more mature and refined idea of how to create my dream. I was appalled at the working conditions so, with other Westerners, we set about reforming what we could and setting up new workshops that provided work, training and support for the women and their families. I didn’t realise it at the time, but I was a part of the beginning of the Fair Trade Movement. It has become my personal goal to continue to make things using the purest energy as possible. This means looking at the consciousness behind the act of manufacturing as well as to be in the ‘light’ without fear, jealousy, ego, and the list could In 2003, I returned from Nepal to Australia to have babies and Peace by Piece took a back seat to my partner’s skyrocketing music career. With an intention of creating energetically pure products in Australia, using Australian materials where possible and refining where we could, I have garnered the cream of local leathersmiths, shoemakers, jewellers, painters, poets and artists who work together crafting covetable bespoke shoes, bags, briefcases, hats, belts, wallets, sandals, and stunning hand-forged jewellery that last a lifetime. I value age more than youth, quality more than trends. The older and better quality something is, the more character it develops as it ages. “I value age more than youth, quality more than trends... 102 You can attach memories to things that last and I want to make beautiful things that are in our lives and carry the energy and memories with them as they age. Every year you have your yummy jumper, those amazing boots, you look at your bag with love and touch its smoothness and livingness, your summer sandals are moulded to your feet, your wallet gets deeper in colour as the oils from your skin keep it supple. I want these things in my life and have had through my parents and grandparents. But I can’t get these things anymore because they are too hard and expensive to make. I have noticed that like-minded people find Peace by Piece. I don’t just mean customers but also artists and designers with the same philosophy. Peace by Piece is my commitment to making these things so that people who love energy, value integrity and longevity of product can also have these things, made to suit their needs or bought from a range of classic designs that I have settled on after 13 years of experimenting and sampling. I talk to many people in the shop at Brunswick Heads and in my workshop in Bangalow. This deepens my understanding of what I am trying to do and develops my personal philosophy. When we connect, we integrate ideas and skills into the business so it grows into areas that I can’t possibly expand into personally. For this continued collaboration I have established a workshop where we manufacture product but also thrive from all working in the same environment and sharing our skills and ideas. Amanda Coutts 103 104 The waves / the beach / the life INGSCLIF Kingscliff is a secret. And, just quietly, it’s probably the most underrated beach town in Australia. Barely out of the shadows of the Gold Coast, this little beach town offers so much more for so much less than anywhere else in the country and yet it remains virtually unknown. I had the pleasure, one Friday afternoon several years ago, of interviewing Phyllis O’Donnell, the 1964 Women’s World Surfing Champion and long-time resident of Kingscliff. When asked, “Why, Kingscliff?” prior to my turning on the tape-recorder, she replied aghast, “Why not, Mike? It has a world-class righthand, sand-bottomed point surf right there, and the high tide produces another great wave on the reef outside. And even though I don’t surf much any more, it’s nice to know that it’s always there if I choose to.” She went on to say how nice it was to live in a place where she could drive into the main street and park right in front of where she wanted to go—when she wanted to be there. Interview completed, the southeasterly sea breeze was just beginning to freshen as we finished our coffees. As I was pocketing my tape-recorder and notepad and rose, she slipped her arm into the crook of mine and walked me down the street. As we walked, she happily pointed out the many features that you could easily be forgiven for not knowing as we strolled past young mothers, waist-deep in the crystal clear water of Cudgen Creek, floating their happy, laughing babies. “Hopefully, those babies will never know any different,” she began earnestly. When pressed, she went on to explain she thought that there are too many people who go through life working their tails off to come to places like this on holiday not realising that this is what their everyday lives should be about. My gaze already on the waves still riffling down the point in spite of the side-shore breeze made her smile. “That’s not the half of it. The kitesurfers are rigging up and they’ll burn up and down the point until the sun gets low and the wind fades. And that’s when the beach fishermen will show up with buckets and rods and pull a nice feed of whiting, flathead or bream and, if they’re lucky, a big jewy for sport when the sun goes down.” 105 Looking back across the street, she pointed out some very nice cafes, class-act gourmet restaurants, adding “very good and very reasonably priced,” fish and chips shops as well as her favourite dress shop, even suggesting a gift shop where I might pick up that something special for my wife. “I’ve been a lot of places, done a lot of things and seen a lot of things and everything I’ve ever wanted is right here. This place just makes me happy!” After we’d said our goodbyes, she climbed in her little hatchback and drove off to another appointment, leaving me to wander around before heading back into the hubbub of the Gold Coast, the office and the keyboard. Glancing up the street to the caravan park on the beachfront and then across the street, with its tidy shopping precinct and holiday accommodation, I’m suddenly struck by the total lack of high-rises, begging the question, Why? And then I remember the mothers playing with their children in Cudgen Creek and something about their innocent laughter made me smile. That smile still fresh, my heart leaps as hoards of squealing, boisterous kids with surfboards, body boards and anything else that will float charged across the street onto the beach and into the surf. School’s out! I think to myself, as more kids arrive on bikes and skateboards. On road back to the car, Phyllis’s, ‘Everything I’ve ever wanted is right here. This place just makes me happy!’ echoes in my head. And as I leave this tidy, peaceful little town with its gorgeous beaches, both still and surf, close proximity to the big smoke of Brisbane if need be, great fishing and surf both here and at Fingal as well as Cabarita, total lack of high-rise and a safe haven for kids to play and grow up in and yet still a secret, I recall Phyllis’s emphatic, “WHY NOT?” And mutter a “Dammit! Why not?” of my own. 106 KINGSCLIFF UNIQUE MEN’S FASHION & ACCESSORIES Stocking locally made products as well as (02) 6674 8006 mainstream 90a Marine Parade, Kingscliff NSW 2487 fashion and accessories the atmosphere created is a ‘retro/old school’ vibe. instagram@cavekingscliff While there, be sure to check out some of info.cavekingscliff@bigpond.com Bridgette’s own pieces on display, including her https://www.facebook.com/CaveKingscliff dad’s Malibu from the early ‘60s. Jimmy Stuart, Von Weirdos, Silent Theory, St Goliath, Ben Sherman, Comrade, Status Anxiety, Reef, Deus, Golden Breed, Fontaine, Chisel Denim, Moonrocks, Leather Accessories and more... Breathe 02 6674 5915 breatheswimwear.com.au Cakes By The Moon, where amazing creations happen. Weddings / Birthdays / Anniversaries Themed / Kids / Cup cake towers 02 6674 2338 shop 4, 32 Marine Parade, Kingscliff 2487 www.cakesbythemoon.com.au 107 kathy@cakesbythemoon.com.au 108 Local photographer Jules Hunt. Available as prints www.juleshunt.com URWILLUMBA Within the McDonnell ranges and the World Heritage-listed Wollumbin National Park, you’ll discover a clandestine world that will reveal itself to you—if you ask. Walk the various hiking trails, silently take it all in, one breath at a time. Dream into the campfire or fireplace when you base yourself at one of the camping grounds or take shelter in Murwillumbah for a night or two in one of the tasteful B&Bs, cottages, or bush retreats. Take your own journey through time by following your intuition and tune in to Mother Nature’s soothing voice. Transport your mind’s eye all the way back into pre-colonial past, transcend to the present, then fast-forward to imagine the future for generations to come. If it’s your sole intention to undertake the nine kilometre round-trip to the summit of Mt Warning, please show your respect for the traditional people of this land. At the very least, please take the time to acknowledge country, and always tell someone where you’re going. 109 110 There’s more to Murwillumbah than a Mountain A lot of thought has gone into writing a piece about Murwillumbah, especially since Northern Exposure requested a feature on Mt Warning. After weeks of conjecture, I stopped thinking and allowed my intuition to guide me. I let my spirit “feel”, rather than just “seeing” with my eyes. “ I look past the façade of white Australia’s historical remnants I look past the façade of white Australia’s historical remnants and art-deco style architecture of the town. So, too, the shaping of the floodplains, the clearing of the land for sugar-cane and dairy pasture, and the manipulation of the waterways. Instead, my imagination retrogrades to a time before the tall ships and the colonialists’ charter of the Great Southern Land. I travel back in time to the very same day the giant sails were first glimpsed by the elders from atop sacred places like Wollumbin. The mountain’s second name, Mt Warning, shared among a tribe of foreign seafaring people that day, yet very significant to both, for different reasons. To the white man, Mt Warning represented a geographical landmark for wary sailors manoeuvring too close to the shore, with shipwreck a certainty for foolhardy souls with hungry eyes for virgin lands of plenty. Perhaps the man who named Mt Warning had come ashore, despite what the history books say, and seen for himself what lay a short trek from the coast into the hinterland? Perhaps Cook named the mountain in a bid to keep other prospective explorers away? Who really knows? After all, history is always written by the winners, then sanctioned by the rulers of the day. Perhaps Cook was protecting a proverbial Garden of Eden until the colony had been claimed for King and country? Anyway, it’s just a thought… My daydream of Cook making landfall and venturing by oar and foot into the Tweed Valley clouds over as the 360-degree vista often does on Wollumbin’s majestic peak. The name Bundjalung people give the sacred volcanic plug translates to “cloud catcher”, and the mountain plays an important part in their Dreaming. She marks the territory in more ways than one, lording over the township of Murwillumbah and the Tweed Valley like an ever-watchful, benevolent mother who gave birth to the forest and fertile soil below. 111 “ Foothills weep the trickles, springs and streams “ Walk the various hiking trails Her slopes and foothills weep the trickles, springs and streams that feed the magnificent Tweed River. If you take the time to do some exploring of your own, you’ll discover pristine native forestry, bejewelled with unique natural formations carved through the body of the earth, as water follows its path of least resistance to the sea. Within the McDonnell ranges and the World Heritage-listed Wollumbin National Park, you’ll discover a clandestine world that will reveal itself to you—if you ask. Walk the various hiking trails, silently take it all in, one breath at a time. Dream into the campfire or fireplace when you base yourself at one of the camping grounds or take shelter in Murwillumbah for a night or two in one of the tasteful B&Bs, cottages, or bush retreats. Take your own journey through time by following your intuition and tune in to Mother Nature’s soothing voice. Transport your mind’s eye all the way back into pre-colonial past, transcend to the present, then fast-forward to imagine the future for generations to come. If it’s your sole intention to undertake the nine kilometre round-trip to the summit of Mt Warning, please show your respect for the traditional people of this land. At the very least, please take the time to acknowledge country, and always tell someone where you’re going. 112 Lavender Blue Day Spa La Belle Lumiere Skin & Body Retreat Microdermabrasion / IPL / LED light therapy Pampering packages Northern Exposure special : A melting Back massage and a radiant facial Only $89 Lavender Blue Aromatherapy Day Spa 68 Main St, Murwillumbah 2484 | 02 6672 6133 www.lavenderbluedayspa.com.au Forget the selfies! La Belle Lumière Skin & Body Retreat 10 Commercial Rd, Murwillumbah 2484 02 6672 3910 | www.labellelumiere.com.au Bring home fabulous photographic portraits taken at your iconic holiday destination by Vibrant Imaging! We’ll come to you for your Creative Portrait Session. Together we’ll create timeless images, available to you in a range of high quality print and digital packages. Call us now to book a session: (02) 6679 5141 or 0488 795 141 info@vibrantimaging.com.au www.viportraitsandweddings.com.au 113 Take heed of your “gut feeling” and don’t continue if you have any doubt in your heart. It’s a moderate climb, and at around 400 metres from the summit you’ll reach a signpost. The sign asks you to be content with where you are and to refrain from conquering the mountain out of respect for Bundjalung dreaming and law, but it doesn’t forbid you from doing so, either. Own and embrace your decision to ascend or descend, and don’t let pride get in the way, or a photo opportunity be your primary reason for going to the top. There’s no shame of admiring the mountain from a distance as you peel back the layers around Murwillumbah. Don’t take the district on face value, but look past the veil and uncover a still sacred part of Northern New South Wales and stay a while. You may well be pleasantly surprised and glad you booked that room, pitched the tent, or took that hike, and remember—you don’t always have to follow the path right to the very end, just go as far as you need to go, till you see what you’re meant to see. Author: Damon Bereziat. 1/2 PAGE AD 114 Evergreen and otherworldly, (Yook-eye) exists on a beautiful bend of the creek where the meandering Tweed is still all but a stream. A small country settlement, a true village by definition, Uki has all one could ever need if wishing to live a kind of tree-changers’ dream. With a pub, a bakehouse, plus one café times two, at Uki you’ll find a swag of interesting things to do, too. With world-class bass fishing, bush walking, and bird watching at Clarrie Hall dam, nearby— one might even decide to live here before they die. If I had only a day to devote to a stay— I’d say: grab a hot mug of the finest Byron Bay, skip along the left hand side of the street, stop, about face, now stroll down the right. Gather picnic supplies from any or all of the unreal stores and keep in mind you could end-up anywhere by night, so be prepared… Before heading out in any direction on your Uki mini-adventure take a snap-shot posing beside ‘Sweetnam’s Humpy’, and while still adorning the ear-to-ear grin politely approach one of the friendly locals asking to direct you to one of the many marvellous water-holes or picture-book panoramas whereby one might privately picnic cradled in Mother Nature’s soothing caress. And, then my dear friends - I wish you the very best. “ Uki There’s no shame of admiring the mountain from a distance as you peel back the layers around Murwillumbah. Don’t take the district on face value, look past the veil and uncover a still sacred part of Northern New South Wales and stay a while. “ Admiring the mountain from a distance 115 MARKETS 116 1st Friday 4th Saturday Kingscliff Lantern Markets Kingscliff Markets / Uki Produce Markets / Bangalow Farmers Markets 1st Saturday Brunswick Heads Market / Uki Produce Markets / Bangalow Farmers Market 1st Sunday Pottsville Beach Market / Byron Bay Market / Tweed Heads PCYC 2nd Friday Tweed Twilight Markets 2nd Saturday Kingscliff Markets / Uki Produce Markets / Bangalow Farmers Markets 2nd Sunday Chillingham Village Market / Coolangatta Markets/ The Channon / Tweed Heads PCYC 3rd Saturday 4th Sunday Bangalow Markets / Murwillumbah Markets / Tweed Heads PCYC / Nimbin Markets / Kingscliff Markets / Coolangatta Markets ( 5-week month only ) 5th Saturday Uki Produce Markets / Bangalow Farmers Markets 5th Sunday Tweed Heads PCYC / Nimbin Markets Last Saturday Tyalgum Village Markets Every Wednesday Murwillumbah Farmers Markets at Murwillumbah showground (7-11 am) Mullumbimby Markets / Uki Produce Markets / Bangalow Farmers Markets Every Tuesday 3rd Sunday Every Thursday Pottsville Beach Markets / Uki Buttery Bazaar / Tweed Heads PCYC Byron Bay Farmers Markets behind hospital oval 4th Friday Mullumbimby Farmers Markets at the showground Tweed Twilight Markets New Brighton Farmers Markets at soccer oval Every Friday 117 1. Catherine Lane Ceramics 4. John Stewart Ceramics Catherine Lane’s tranquil garden studio is an inviting oasis in the northern part of Byron Shire. Catherine’s established practice is professional and intimate, eclectically drawing from a range of ceramic traditions as diverse as elegant eastern aesthetics to contemporary, soft florals. John Stewart specialises in the design of eloquent wall and table vases. These slip-cast ceramic forms incorporate the use of glass test tubes fitted with colourful anodised aluminum sleeves. Some works feature decals sourced from his photographic portfolio while others explore textures and patinas that echo his previous sculptural work. Each vase is sold in individually designed and printed handmade boxes. Studio sales are welcome and are available most days by appointment, phone or email. Open by appointment: 25 Kallaroo Circuit, North Ocean Shores 0403 527 545 / catherinelaneceramics.com 2. Pinky & Maurice Pinky & Maurice design and create fine ceramics from their lush, garden studio in South Golden Beach. In a time defined by expansion and lightning download speeds, they are unashamedly small and work with materials that refuse to be hurried up. Every piece is hand-formed using a unique blend of porcelain that’s made in the studio and tested in fire. Their exquisite work infuses everyday moments with beauty and inspiration. Open by appointment: 23 Gloria Street, South Golden Beach 0420 986 570 / pinkyandmaurice.com 3. Wheel of Life Studios Lucy Vanstone is well known for her practical yet elegant range of porcelain, stoneware, ceramic art and jewellery. The Wheel of Life pottery is a mustsee working studio and gallery housed in an old church hall in beautiful Brunswick Heads. Open 10am-4pm Tuesday to Saturday and at Bangalow Market on the 4th Sunday of the month. 21 Fingal Street, Brunswick Heads 0458 668 419 / lucyvanstone.com 118 02 6629 1327 / johnstewartceramics.com FB- John Stewart Ceramics 5. Zani McEnnally Zani McEnnally graduated with a Bachelor Visual Arts from Southern Cross University in 2009 and today she creates delicate porcelain tableware formed from nature. Each piece is uniquely decorated with a range of images, from insects including butterflies, to fruit and vegetables. Zani’s work is represented in local and regional galleries in the Northern Rivers. Workshops are available upon request. Open by appointment: 14 Coolamon Ave, Mullumbimby 0417 867 801 / zani.com.au POTTER 6. Moonrise Studios to the Gold Coast & Picasso Ceramics Moonrise Studios is a new retail art gallery where you can discover a beautiful array of work by local artists and creatives. It’s also home to Blossom Young’s ceramic studio where she combines a love of lyrical illustration and the joys of working with clay and the many form and surface possibilities it affords. She likes to explore a wide variety of ideas and techniques including figurative sculpture, wheel-thrown functional ware, slip casting, sgraffito illustration, and tissue transfers. North Ocean Shores South Golden Beach South Golden Shop 3 Brunswick Heads 5 6 Crystal Castle Goonengerry Myocum 8 7 moonrisestudios.com.au Coorabell Federal 7. Ilanga Studio Ewingsdale Possum Creek Byron Bay Bangalow e or Clunes sm i L d to a o R ow l ga Bexhill an 4 Nashua Binna Burra Booyong B Eltham Valley Pantry Fernleigh Newrybar Pacific Highway Open by appointment: 2 Mullumbimby 105 Stuart Street, Mullumbimby, NSW 2482 Ilanga Studio is operated by local potter Diana Harvey and is located in the forested hinterland of Byron Bay, just outside the village of Federal. Diana trained in Ceramics at East Sydney Technical College and later took a degree in Visual Arts. She creates functional tableware in a range of glazes from vibrant blue greens and subtle Tenmokus and Celadons. Her latest work includes incised tea lights and press moulded plates. 1 Billinudgel 624 Federal Drive, Federal 02 6688 4395 / 0413 980 109 / FB - Diana Harvey Tintenbar to Ballina ERING AROUND 119 8. Suvira McDonald ceramic artist & sculptor Call 6684 9194 to visit studio and gallery / suviramcdonald.com Heather recently had the utmost pleasure of shooting-the-breeze with a lovely local gentleman who just happens to be an exceptionally talented artist on the side. Read along as Heather and her subject talk candidly about Suvira’s early years as an artist, his arrival in the Shire, ‘crossroads’, fate, following the heart, motivation, passion, and luck. After living up to familial expectations by studying business, marketing, and management, Suvira decided to depart on a radical diversion in true spirit-of-the-times fashion, circa ’71. Suvira’s trip landed him in Nimbin as one of the pioneers of the Aquarius Festival, staying on for an education of a different kind. After four years immersed in the glory of the Northern New South Wales wilderness, Suvira returned to Sydney with new eyes and ideas to build on some earlier laid foundations in theatre, dance, and choreography. One thing led to another—but perhaps not quite as first planned… Heather: Suvira, where did you study dance? Dance in Sydney was a far cry from what it is today, let me tell you. Basically, I attended as many classes as possible all across the city, until one day I was invited to join a company. What helped me, over the other dancers was my self-management and business skills, plus I had a lot of luck. Mark Farrow, of the Australian Opera, took me under his wing and was very helpful. I was so wet-behind-the-ears artistically, yet extremely determined to take part in the Comeddia dell’Arte workshop Mark was running, and after the second session he invited me to join the opera company. It was wonderful. We worked together for several years, helping with his clown shows, carrying his suitcase and learning lots. Besides the performing, my natural resourcefulness and visual sense kickedin as I saw an opportunity to design and craft, so I started making masks and props to support my dance and choreographic bent. Mark inspired the first living statue in Sydney, ’74 or ’75. I played an authentic Grecian statue, painted white with a lyre. The Lord Mayor spoke to me when I was standing in Martin Place during the Sydney Festival but I wouldn’t speak to him, I kept in character. I was taken away 120 by the police for standing in the garden at the Botanical Gardens. It was great! It’s all on film somewhere. There are so many stories about it. Apparently, a cataclysmic twist of fate extinguished Suvira’s dancing dreams, but that didn’t deter this determined disciple of the arts. Languishing in the pursuit of a new passion, Suvira took-up ceramics, embarking on a love affair with clay. At TAFE and university his teachers recognised a devoted type of talent, far exceeding that of the hobbyist, encouraging Suvira to strive for excellence. As a teacher now I see that with my workshops. You see people who you feel if they devoted themselves could make a vocation out of it. Any art form requires a lot of devotion. I think it takes at least five years to make an artist in any form, whether it’s dance, or painting, or ceramics. You need to work at it for at least five years of dedicated, focused work. And, probably more, to get any level of achievement. Of course the earlier you start the better, especially with visual and foundation stuff like drawing. Otherwise there is so much stuff to cut through to get that kind of crystalline, essential ability. Heather: What lies within the heart of Suvira? I have a creative heart and I also have an idealistic heart. Those things together kind of form my trajectory in life. And it hasn’t always been in a business-like way. The ideas come when you are having fun, but if you’re going to make anything out of those ideas, that’s when the discipline, dedication, and hard work come in. It’s important to be able to play in your art, that means to play around with your ideas. Structural parameters are also important, so you stay relevant. Sometimes I feel I can go anywhere but it’s not all relevant. Work needs to have cultural, social relevance. Otherwise you’re just doing it for yourself. Art needs to have some kind of audience, whether it’s a visual performance audience; musicians, and all artists. Heather: Your motivation? I’m compulsive. I don’t think I’m the only one. I think most artists are compulsive. When I wake up in the morning I’m itching to get into the studio. I know that I have to do a whole lot of other things, but all I really want to do is get down here. Someone recently asked where was my favourite place to hang out in Byron, and I said, ‘In my studio.’ My surrounds are saturated in nature’s spellbinding peace. Heather: What are you passionate about? Something I have been passionate about for some time, is to have a public presence for my art. The appalling lack of public art in Byron Bay is something I have been passionate about for many years now. We needed a cultural plan and a public art policy. Fortunately, it is changing now, with council becoming gradually more receptive to murals and sculpture. Heather: It was a shame that the Sculptor by the Sea was cancelled here. The Sculpture by the Sea was a fantastic opportunity to raise the standard by bringing international artists up here. Heather: What have you on display in the Shire at this time? The Frank Mills Seat, in the Brunswick Park. The Chamber of Commerce wanted to recognise a Suvira in his studio. Portrait: Jules Ober 121 well-known historian of the Byron and Mullumbimby area, so they commissioned the seat. The Mullumbimby sculpture walk is a big project. We have approval for an initial sculpture gateway behind the Post Office along the river cycle-path. It’s a project that’s taken years in the making. The sculpture walk will give another presence to that area. I want to have a big symposium and invite other sculptors to design for that site, to respond to the site. There are a lot of cultural institutions that can be recognised in sculpture. Landcare have done so much work along the river in Mullumbimby and I think their efforts can be recognised in sculpture. All this year I have been busy with the Frank Mills project, which was heavy work. We made a huge platform for the seat from 20 railway sleepers. Then there was the Community College courtyard, also very heavy work. So after all this hard heavy outdoor work I was very relieved to come back to my studio and do much more intimate, personal, quiet work. More intimate with the material—softer. You have come on a day when the last firing is finished for an exhibition for the Tweed Gallery. These pieces are inspired from my study of an Asian artform. Very special amazing rocks from the landscape are selected to make ornately carved wooden bases for them. The scholars, the philosophers and the calligraphers would take them for their studies as a bit of nature to study. I have also made little wooden bases for my sculpture. The yellow mountains in China have special spiritual significance, and so they take pieces from these mountains and put them in their gardens—a smaller scale for indoors. This style of art is called ‘Suiseki’ in Japan, ‘Sukeon’ in Korea, ‘Gongshi’ in China. Heather: Is this a time when you are producing a lot more than ever? You do seem to be producing a lot of work! I think I have always produced a lot of work. I don’t really think I could be any other way. I suppose I could stop—see what that’s like. I don’t have kids. I have a very supportive partner who has been great about me focusing on my work, through thick and thin times, which is an enormous benefit. Heather: How do you hold your own balance in daily life? I don’t know if I am balanced. I do walk a bit and go to the gym and try to have a bit of a social life, I watch a bit of TV. I know now when I am stressed, and I avoid that now. I have been blessed with a healthy body, and I can go pretty hard. I guess being a dancer for years means I have a strong heart and fit body. I can get away with quite a bit. Heather: If you had some wisdom for an up and coming young artist as a mentor, what would that be? Just keep doing it. Do it every day. If you want to make it your life you must be engaged with your work in an earnest way. Not that you might be inspired all the time. If you are drawing you might feel inspired about the piece, but you have still got to deal with all the fine work and detail and rendering. I come down here and I think I have to wash the floor and clean the buckets, pack the kiln. I have someone to help me now, because I know if I do that all the time, I can’t get my ideas out. I can come in here not feeling very inspired but after a while of kicking things around, then I start to loosen up and I can get on the wheel or get out some clay. It’s about doing it! Suvira shares sentiments of genuine contentment within himself these days and where Suvira’s at sure sounds and feels like a beautiful place, and not just where he lives and works. His wholehearted contribution to the Northern Rivers community, combined with a far-sighted commitment to creating engaging art for all, is both commendable and a blessing. Suvira’s current and future collaborations certainly give all who live in the Shire something aesthetically beautiful to appreciate, critique or contemplate, and something wonderful to look forward to for visitors. Look for Suvira’s creations at exhibitions such as ‘Table Manners’ in Ballina and Mermaid Beach, and keep your eyes out for a new edition to the Byron Bay high school landscape for a sandstone sculpture second to none. See you soon... northern-exposure.com.au