
Yesterday, Belle Property held a public fundraiser to support local mum Fern Wilson, who is living with stage 4 metastatic breast cancer. The event featured food, drinks, face painting, and a raffle, all aimed at raising funds and showing the community’s support for Fern during this difficult time. It was a wonderful occasion filled with laughter, generosity, and strong community spirit.
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A single-vehicle bus crash has sadly claimed the life of one passenger at Gumlu, north of Bowen overnight. According to initial police investigations, at approximately 4pm on Thursday 14th May, a bus with 29 people on board was travelling south along the Bruce Highway from Cairns to Airlie Beach, when it left the roadway and rolled onto its side. Several other passengers were injured and transported to Townsville, Ayr, and Bowen Hospitals. The bus driver, a 70-year-old Mackay man, was transported to Bowen Hospital with minor injuries. As of Friday morning, three patients are confirmed to be in a life-threatening condition with one assessed on the scene and two airlifted to Townsville University Hospital. Multiple people were injured and transported to Ayr Hospital before being airlifted to Townsville University Hospital by Royal Flying Doctor’s Service. There are eight stable patients in Townsville whilst one remains in a stable condition at Ayr. The Bruce Highway has reopened at Gumlu. This tragic accident comes less than two years after a fatal bus crash on the same stretch of the Bruce Highway, which claimed the lives of three women in on June 3rd, 2024. On this occasion, a Greyhound bus with 33 people on board was travelling north along the Bruce Highway, also near Gumlu, when it crossed over to the wrong side of the road and into oncoming traffic. The bus struck a Land Cruiser station wagon travelling in the opposite direction. A 56 year old Townsville woman and two German women aged 21 and 33 passed away as a result of the incident. The 52-year-old bus driver from North Ward was charged with five counts of dangerous operation of a vehicle causing death or grievous bodily harm, but was subsequently found not guilty. Anyone with relevant dash cam vision of incident last night is urged to contact police. Investigations are continuing
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So, what’s going on with the property market? The thing about the property market is that it doesn’t stand alone in its own little world untouched by the drama going on around it. And there is a fair bit of drama at the moment. Let’s get all the dramas to form a conga line and point them out one at a time. First there’s inflation, an annoying factor that adds to the cost of living and affects people’s ability to buy real estate. Right behind inflation, and I mean very close, is its brother in arms/partner in crime/long-time bedfellow, interest rates. Interest rates have been particularly pesky lately as the Reserve Bank pushes them up in an attempt to bring inflation down. The idea is to make housing less affordable so you can make housing more affordable. Then there’s a war in the Middle East. War is very good for business if you are a weapons producer and part of the military-industrial complex but it’s not very good for everyone else. It certainly isn’t good for confidence and housing markets are pretty big on the old confidence factor. So, not good. This particular war has the additional benefit of taking place in the Persian Gulf, where a fair portion of the world’s oil is transported from Middle East oil producers to the rest of the world. The war has created a traffic jam in the Strait of Hormuz, which is restricting the supply of oil, meaning that in a world of demand and supply the price of fuel at the petrol bowser has gone up significantly. Which means our old friends inflation and interest rates give us another wave from the conga line and remind us of another impact on the property market. The conga line of dramas was joined this week by the Federal Budget and its changes to negative gearing, up until now a key driver in property investment and the supply of rental properties. Nothing changes for people who had negatively geared properties up until Budget night. My Pommy colleague Andy Collins, the Sales Manager at Gardian real estate, pointed out after the Budget that there was no way the changes would include investors’ existing properties because too many politicians own investment properties and the pollies wouldn’t do anything to hurt themselves. It’s up to you whether you think Andy is a sniping little Pommy whinger or an astute judge of human nature. Or can he be both? What Andy correctly pointed out is that from now on investors will be looking for properties that provide such good rental returns that they are positively geared, removing the need for negative gearing. That’s where Mackay’s strong rental returns come into it. Investors from southern markets have been active in the Mackay market because of those rental returns. When they can get returns like $750 a week on properties they have bought for $650,000, those southern investors realise Mackay offers better opportunities than the high-priced, low-rent options in their own cities. Andy was suggesting that it is possible that the budget changes will spur even more investment activity in Mackay because the removal of negative gearing makes investments in other markets unviable. I will delve further into the status of the Mackay market in upcoming columns but there are a few initial points to make. There is no doubt that, like every other market, the conga line of dramas has had an impact and given buyers pause for thought. But we are still seeing strong buyer activity and properties selling. As always, the buoyancy of our coal market and the jobs and business it provides will continue to be a driver of our economy and a key factor in the property market. Will the budget changes create an additional spur to our market and bring more investors in or is that conga line going to have a bigger impact? Stay tuned over the coming months.
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With more than three decades of experience and deep roots in the land, Royce Dunn brings unmatched insight to rural property across the Mackay region. Joining Blacks Real Estate in 1991, Royce is a licensed real estate agent and auctioneer, who has spent the past 25 years as Director leading the agency’s rural department. Over that time, he has built a strong reputation for his knowledge across all areas of property sales and marketing, from farmhouses and grazing land to residential subdivisions. Coming from a rural background and operating his own small farm, Royce understands the realities of life on the land, and the expectations that come with it. That lived experience allows him to connect with clients on a practical level, offering advice that is grounded, honest and tailored to the needs of farming families. Known for his straightforward approach and strong work ethic, Royce is committed to delivering results, working closely with clients to navigate the complexities of rural property transactions and achieve the best possible outcome.
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This is a question we get asked all the time.
Statistic – ‘For a couple aged 65 today there is a 50% chance that one person will still be alive at age 95. Source ABS.
A sobering thought when you’re working out much you need in the super and investment nest egg to retire. Generally, people fall into one of two camps when it comes to retirement planning: 1. Those fortunate enough to have built such a large nest egg that it represents up around 20 times their required annual retirement income. I.e., They want $70,000py and have built up over $1.4mill. For these few people, their nest egg will grow throughout retirement as they will only spend a portion of the interest earned; 2. The more common scenario is those whose nest egg represents around 15 times their required income. I.e., They want, say, $60,000 per annum and have around $900,000 built up. This is most people, and they will be gradually eroding their nest egg to meet their income requirements and will eventually run out of money.
The key to good retirement planning is to do all the smart things to maximize your financial position throughout retirement and try and have your money run out when you think you will run out. It is no good running out of money in your early 70’s but it’s also no good scrimping and saving, not enjoying your retirement and having heaps left in your 90’s.
As an example: we recently reviewed a couple’s situation, Jim and Mary (names changed for privacy) decided they wanted $800pw or $41,600py as a pension from their super. This coupled with part Age Pension entitlements of around $26,000py would get them up to $67,000 odd per year income in retirement to cover living, hobbies and travel in today’s terms. We projected they were currently on track to build up around $450,000 in super and investments by their preferred retirement age. As ‘balanced’ investors, expecting 7%pa after fees and costs, this meant their nest egg would run out in around 14 years, after allowing for inflation. As Jim and Mary were 50, and planning on retiring young at 60, they weren’t comfortable with running out at age 74. We implemented strategies to put away an extra $1,000pm tax effectively to ensure they built their nest egg up to over $700,000 which should now provide their required income and last them until age 90.
If you’d like a cost and obligation free review of your retirement projections, give us a call.
Written by Justin Butler, Managing Director Eclipse

Clinicians across the region enhanced their emergency trauma skills with the latest round of Rural Emergency and Trauma Simulation Training last week.
Collinsville, Proserpine and Bowen hospital staff each attended the simulation sessions which focused on non-critical and critical trauma presentations.
The training also included skills stations which honed clinicians’ approaches to managing unexpected complications and intraosseous – directly into bone marrow - needle insertions.
The participants faced a number of scenarios, utilising the Telehealth Emergency Management Support Unit (TEMSU), as well as a Mackay Base Hospital senior Emergency doctor.
The Telehealth Unit assisted virtually with treating the fractured elbow of a 14-year-old patient, following a fall from a tree, to ensure safe reduction of the fracture in a first scenario.
The second challenge the groups faced was a critical scenario with a 29-year-old patient involved in high-speed motorbike accident.
The patient had been under the influence of drugs, and sustained thigh injuries and contusion of left lateral chest and abdomen.
Participants used their existing skills and knowledge to stabilise the patient with the assistance of Retrieval Services Queensland (RSQ) who provided virtual oversight of ventilation, intubation, fluid resuscitation and subsequent retrieval.
“Skills stations provided an opportunity for participants to refresh their critical thinking and review their own practice to consider various approaches to procedural sedation and to anticipate complications,” a Mackay Hospital and Health Services spokesperson said.
For authenticity, rib meat models were used to perform intraosseous needle insertion into real bone and place intercostal needles and tubes.
“Many of our rural clinicians are highly skilled in dealing with trauma emergencies, however it’s reassuring for them and junior staff to know they are supported by teams who provide a crucial link to consult with specialists when needed,” the spokesperson said.
Proserpine, Collinsville, and Bowen hospital staff took part in trauma simulation training over the past week
The training helped the staff hone their skills in emergency trauma situations in a safe environment

Advanced Practice Enrolled Nurse Debbie Phillipson first walked through the front doors of Proserpine Hospital 40 years ago and she hasn’t looked back.
She was only 21 and on a trip around Queensland with a friend, having just finished training at St Vincent’s Hospital in Toowoomba. That friend stayed on in Mackay at the Base hospital, while Debbie travelled north to Proserpine.
After an interview with the Proserpine Hospital’s matron, Debbie, to her surprise, received a phone call to say she was starting that night.
“There was no orientation, I just walked in the front door and started night duty,” she said.
“I came in and never left. I soon fell in love, got married and had children so this community is definitely my home.”
Aside from a year off after the birth of her two children, Debbie has worked continuously and still holds court across the wards and in the operating theatre as a scout nurse and also attends to the sterilising.
Debbie says she has no regrets about spending four decades in the same workplace.
“Everyone says ‘gee you’ve been here a long time’ or ‘you looked after my mother’ or I see children I saw being born having their own children and I think, they are right, I have been here for a while,” she said.
“It’s a lovely connection, most people know you are a nurse and relate to you for something in their life. You feel close to everyone even though they are not your family”.
Debbie says one of the qualities of a good nurse is always doing your best to look after people, and she has no plans to retire as one of the hospitals longest serving nurses.
Debbie Phillipson, an Advanced Practice Enrolled Nurse, has been at Proserpine Hospital for forty years

A by-election to vote in a new Mayor for Whitsunday Regional Council will be held on 13 August 2022 according to Electoral Commission Queensland (ECQ).
Currently there are six candidates running for the office: Jan Clifford, Al Grundy, Mike Brunker, Peter Hood, Julie Hall and Phil Batty.
Two separate Meet The Candidates Events will be hosted by Bowen Chamber of Commerce and Whitsunday Coast Chamber of Commerce respectively.
Bowen Chamber of Commerce will hold their Special Mayoral Candidates Meeting on Wednesday, August 3 at 5.45pm at the Larrikin Hotel. Whitsunday Coast Chamber Of Commerce will host their Meet The Mayoral Candidates Event on Monday, July 25 from 6 to 8pm in the Reef Gateway Function Room.
ECQ Commissioner Pat Vidgen said there were a number of ways people could vote.
“Don’t worry if you can’t make it on polling day, we have several options available including telephone voting for people who meet the eligibility criteria - like those who have tested positive to COVID-19 and anyone interstate or overseas,” Mr Vidgen said.
“There will also be two weeks of early voting and postal voting and both of those options are open to everyone.
“We know there are more than 23,600 registered voters in the Whitsunday region and we want to make voting as quick and easy as possible for every one of them.”
Postal vote applications are open now and close 7pm on 1 August 2022.
Early voting starts at 9am on 1 August 2022 and finishes at 6pm on 12 August 2022 at three early voting centres in Bowen, Cannonvale, and Proserpine.
On election day there will be five polling booths in Cannonvale Beach, Proserpine, Collinsville, Bowen and Hamilton Island.
Mr Vidgen reminded people in the Whitsunday region voting is compulsory and failure to vote fines increased to $143.75 from 1 July 2022.
Candidates may still nominate for the seat of Mayor until Monday, July 25.

Campbell Irvine’s face underneath his iconic, well-worn hat, framed by thick grey beard and hair, is of “Never-give-in, of bright heat and of help-your-mate,” as Henry Lawson would have said.
One of Australia’s last bush poets, the true essence of Waltzing Matilda, has been wandering up and down the country’s coast for the last four decades.
He regularly stops in near Mackay, and on a recent trip through Airlie Beach where he performed poetry at the Airlie Beach Foreshore Markets, our Whitsunday Life reporter caught up with one of the country’s last swagmen.
Wearing blue jeans and a red button-down, Campbell the Swaggie had five or more festival bands on his wrist — he pointed to one and said it would be gone soon, replaced by another.
He hunches when he walks from years of carrying heavy swags and billy kettles on the road — as well as being born disabled up one side — but when he sits down there is an instant ease and gladdening.
With a swag, a few bags, and his hat, the Swaggie has trekked most of Australia. He’s performed countless round-trip tours of the country, taking part in festivals in South Australia, Victoria, Queensland, and Darwin in a life under the stars.
He’s become an icon of folk Australia – although a New Zealand born Mauri – since he arrived in the country in 1975 following a band, The Bushwhackers. It was a first infatuation with the cultural history and character of the lucky country and most importantly its swagmen.
“I’m a bard, I guess you could say. An Itinerant, nomadic, traveller,” Campbell said.
“It was Waltzing Matilda that drew me to the swaggie’s life; and I’ve been doing it for 40 years now, living life on the hoof.”
Famed Australians and poets Henry Lawson and Banjo Paterson would have called him a swagman. Others have called him a walking storybook and the embodiment of the bush ballads and poems. He performs the poetry of Australia’s past, as well as his own originals, and has made friends across the regions.
Especially in Airlie Beach, where most know him for his performances at Wintermoon Festival near Calen.
“I love the Whitsundays; it’s the Great Barrier Reef for me that is so special. I’ve only been there once but that was enough to know how important it is,” he said.
“There’s the bush side to it too: tramping the stock routes outback Queensland, I was reborn and raised into the whole thing from the Bushwhackers band and Australian folk music — that was back pretty well in the early ’70s and ‘80s,” he said.
“An apprenticeship between learning to love the land and being a swagman on the old routes of cattle musterers in Winton and places like that. I take on that character and tramped those routes.
“It bore down to a love of pretty much everything that’s Australian; I hold dearly to it and celebrate it, that sort of thing. I came here at about the age of 23 and I’ve never left this country — it’s been 47 years, now.”
Appearances at festivals have kept the storyteller on his chosen path, as well as busking in between those gigs to make ends meet. That keeps his pockets filled and the damper cooking — although he once claimed a government allowance but has not done so for more than 25 years.
He said it was a love of poetry that kept him travelling.
“It’s a history. It’s education, that’s the way I see it, you know,” he said, “it’s about my home, my new home that I’ve nearly been in for 50 years already.”
He said being a swagman, a traveller and to recite poetry on the road was “like bringing things to life.”
Campbell is 70 now, but still recites his poetry by memory, as well as hoofing it much of the country.
As if he weren’t extraordinary enough, he uses much of his busking money — as well as festival hauls — towards charities like the Flying Doctor’s Service and Australian Conservation.
“Old bush legends like me,” he said.
He also wants Waltzing Matilda to be the national anthem: “It has more to do with Australia than that other song we’ve got,” Campbell said.
Campbell will be travelling through Airlie Beach once again in the coming weeks, dropping by to see some old friends, recite some poetry, and have a laugh.
His final message for the people of the Whitsundays was “I’ll catch up with them on the road.”
Photography and story by Declan Durrant
Campbell Irvine is one of Australia’s last swagmen, a bush poet who regularly travels up the country’s coast, including Airlie Beach
Campbell the Swaggie’s iconic hat. Two torn wide brims on top of another, held together by tarn and cloth
Campbell’s only belongings when he’s hoofing it up the coast reciting poetry for a living

The Whitsunday housing crisis is set to be tackled by local council who have come up with sweeping reforms to ease the issue crippling the region.
Working both alongside Whitsunday Neighbourhood Centre and Bowen Neighbourhood Centre, Whitsunday Regional Council have adopted a consultation plan to determine what measures will have the best results.
According to council documents submitted at the July 13 Ordinary Meeting – a Housing Affordability Literature Review - the Whitsunday region is well above the statewide rate of 45.6 persons per 10,000 homeless, with a rate of “59 per 10,000”.
Director Development Services, Neil McGaffin, said the crisis was nationwide.
“As everybody should be aware, there is a housing affordability squeeze everywhere in the country,” he said.
“Alongside Neighbourhood Centre’s in the Whitsundays, we have come up with some potential solutions that could ease that.”
Councillor Jan Clifford said that, even within the council, they’ve been struggling with staff shortages due to the housing availability.
“The housing crisis is endemic across the entire nation. There is nowhere for anyone to live; it’s a crisis and it’s getting worse and worse every day,” she said.
Releasing their Housing Affordability Community Engagement Plan, council suggest seven potential changes for public consideration.
These include potential changes to the planning scheme, such as granny flat floor sizes and dual occupancy on measured lots, as well as revising minimum lot sizes.
“Council wants to know if there is anything the community is disliking about the planning scheme in relation to housing and the development of housing,” the document states.
Council will seek community feedback through email, Facebook, and other social media as well as in local newspapers.
Whitsunday Neighbourhood Centre have previously said that the crisis has seen families living in caravan parks, cars, and in tents.
Councillor Clifford echoed those sentiments.
“I have families living in my division who have been sleeping in cars and there has to be something we can do,” she said.
“This is a step in the right direction for that.”

A group of Proserpine State High School Students didn’t think twice about letting Lochie Tucker join in on their pick-up basketball game at the Cannonvale courts.
Little did they know that it would mean the world to both Lochie and his mother Renee Tucker, who said, after her son came home that night, she had to wait until he’d fallen asleep to “just bawl with tears”.
“Lochie has Asperger’s – he just doesn’t fit in at mainstream schooling – his social cues are not there, which I love; he dresses how he wants, but he sees the boys down here and he always wants to join in,” Ms Tucker said.
“We’ve been down here to the courts so many times and these were the first bunch of boys that have ever let him join in with them.
“He was rapt when he came home; he was just so happy and he’s smiling all the time when he’s with them. Usually they’re forced but he’s just smiling for real.”
The Proserpine State High School Grade 9 students, Elijah, Will, Niall, Jason, Kody, and Chaz, said it was just a normal thing for them to include everyone.
“It’s good for him to see a group of good young men,” Ms Tucker said.
Sarah Post, a mother of one of the boys said they “didn’t think anything of it, that’s just how they are.”
Lochie said it felt very including to play with the boys.
“It was just really nice,” he said.
“I think we’ll come down and make it a regular thing!”
The boys at the court, Elijah, Will, Lochie,Niall, Jason, and Kody

Hi, Constant Readers.
We can all feel a bit stressed sometimes. But, within those times, there’s an opportunity for great personal growth. I’ve certainly felt a bit under the pump lately – as is to be expected running a newspaper – but I already know I’ve learnt so much.
My time as Editor has been such a horizon expanding experience, to coin a phrase. I’ve certainly had some knocks along the way, like any new role, job, or responsibility. And there’s still (by my estimation) three weeks left.
I’m hoping the challenges keep coming and that I can keep hurdling them. Should I stumble, though, I know there’s plenty of people in my corner to come pick me up again and dust me off.
I’ve struggled in the past with mental health issues like depression and anxiety and learning to live with those things presented its own challenges, too. I look back on how far I’ve come, and I want you all to look back on how far you’ve come in your own personal journeys.
We should all take a moment in our day to just reflect on how we got here, who helped us, and where we want to be. There’s one thing we should always strive for: to be better than yesterday.
Stick with me here: there’s a line from BoJack Horseman that I always think of.
One character says to BoJack: “It gets easier. Every day it gets a little easier. But you got to do it every day. That's the hard part. But it does get easier."
In that instance, he’s talking about running, but he’s not really; take it as being about life.
Whatever you’re doing, keep the momentum. Keep doing it every day because it gets easier. One foot in front of the other. And if you haven’t begun, there’s no time like the present.
Declan
Quote Of The Week:
“It's the job that's never started as takes longest to finish.” – J.R.R Tolkien

The more than 41,500 people visiting the Big Mango Visitor Information Centre and the information booth at Bowen’s front Beach in the past financial year can pick up a copy of the new Bowen and Collinsville Visitor Guide.
The guide was recently launched by Bowen Tourism and Business and is currently being distributed to Visitor Information Centres in Queensland as well as some in NSW.
It is a complete guide to Bowen and Collinsville with sections on where to eat, where to stay and what to do.
The business is hoping its new guide will capitalises on those visitors and the further 1,100 that passed through the centre in the first week of this financial year.
Manager of Bowen Tourism and Business, Leanne Abernethy, said those numbers are not expected to slow down any time soon with data showing strong forward bookings for accommodation providers in Bowen in coming months.
“We’re noticing the number of overseas visitors had been increasing each month since the opening of the international borders,” she said.
“In January this year, we only had 10 international visitors for the entire month but in June, we welcomed 177 people from overseas.”
The guide includes maps of Bowen and Collinsville as well as a regional map of the Whitsundays.
There is also a farming map with a QR code to be scanned by those looking for farm work.
There is a story about when the Big Mango was stolen as part of a publicity stunt and about the movie “Australia” being filmed in Bowen when Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman called the town home for several months.
The Summergarden Cinema, Queensland’s longest running movie theatre, is also featured as well as sections on the walking trails and lookouts around Bowen.
Aside from at the centre, it is also available at various business throughout the Whitsundays.
The 60 page A4 full colour guide is also available online by going to www.tourismbowen.com.au and clicking on “Holiday Planner” at the bottom of the home page.
Bowen Tourism and Business staff Melissa Beuzeville and Beverley Adams reading the new Bowen and Collinsville Visitor Guide

A special council meeting was held on Wednesday this week to appoint a deputy mayor of the Whitsundays, with previous deputy, Mike Brunker, stepping down.
Councillor Brunker is one of six candidates campaigning for the role of mayor, and as such saw it fit to step down so there was no conflict of interest, perceived or real.
Councillor Brunker was filling the role of acting mayor with the office left vacant after now Member for Dawson Andrew Willcox was elected to the federal seat in April.
With there still no current council mayor, the role of deputy takes on status as acting mayor until the election appoints the position after the August 13 vote.
Councillor John Collins was elected to the role in a 6-0 landslide.
Now acting mayor John Collins was first elected as Councillor for Division 3 on Whitsunday Regional Council in 2012 and was returned for his third term at the 2020 Local Government Elections.
He has been a member of the Proserpine community since the age of four, when his family relocated to the region, with his father transferred as the local police sergeant. John completed his schooling at the local St. Catherine’s Catholic Primary School and Proserpine State High School, and currently lives in Proserpine with his wife Jill and four daughters.
“I would like to acknowledge the work of Councillor Brunker, who rang me after the federal election and said he was happy to step down there and then,” Acting Mayor Collins said.
“I’d like to thank him for what he’s done both in the budget and in the past months. Until the election I’m going to be calling upon my fellow councillors to delegate work to them.
“I’d like to thank everyone for their confidence.”
Councillor John Collins has been voted in as deputy mayor of the Whitsundays this week, giving him the role of acting mayor until a new mayor is sworn in

Cody Gibbs passed away in early July after 11-months of treatment for a cancer which had manifested as three tumours on his brain and spine.
The 15-year-old Airlie Beach boy had originally been diagnosed with Pineoblastoma in 2018 – an aggressive, rare form of the disease in the pineal gland in the brain’s centre.
He was 11 at the time and spent nine months fighting the malignancy in hospital – four operations, chemotherapy, and radiation - which ended in clear scans for a period of two years.
In 2021, the cancer returned, and with the support of the community and his family, a second outing of “Cody’s Battle” began, but would sadly end in a Brisbane palliative care ward.
His mother Donna Davis said cancer is not the thing that defines who her son was, although it may have claimed his life in the end.
He was an avid Aussie Rules footballer, a larrikin with a self-deprecating sense of humour, and as a little boy he was “high adrenaline, high octane; he was on and he’d go and go and go, then he’d fall asleep just where he was.”
“I think his generosity and kindness defined him. He always thought of others before himself,” Donna said.
“I think I was pretty hard on him when he was little and it paid off. He was kind and had respect for others, but he was cheeky and loveable. He had that smile that you’d say: ‘You’re just trouble, mate!’
“You just want to hug him, and I think he affected everyone he met. He was funny, he loved to dance, and he loved making people laugh at his own expense.
“Those that knew him relayed it to others who didn’t. People knew he was a really good kid and that he didn’t deserve to have this disease.
“He never, ever once complained about anything or got upset with having cancer. We always thought he’d break at some point but he never complained about anything.
“I think that’s why everyone loved him and supported him so much. He never let it get to him.”
Over the course of the two cancer diagnoses and subsequent treatments, separate fundraisers and GoFundMe pages raised tens of thousands of dollars for Cody’s Battle.
Some of those events included an Airlie Beach Rodeo, raffles and auctions at businesses across the region: The Metropole Proserpine, Kazza’s Barber Shop, Domino’s Airlie Beach, Jubilee Pocket Tavern, Hay Point Hotel, and Ray White Whitsundays.
Parts of those funds raised helped with treatment, while others sent Cody skydiving in Airlie Beach – a dream he’d always had - on a Jetski trip, and Jet Boating.
And some of them eased Cody’s journey close to its end, putting him in a comfy hotel room away from the hospital beds where he could lay in a bath and float, “finding the weightlessness he craved” when the pain was too bad.
His faithful local AFL team, the Whitsunday Sea Eagles were chief amongst those fundraisers. Cody had found Aussie Rules not too long before the second diagnosis but had made an indelible impression on the club.
They hosted an enormous Kickathon Fundraiser for him in 2021 on top of already donating to his Battle, which included an auction with signed guernseys from clubs across the country, giving club members an outlet for their desire to help.
But no actions were more touching than, in solidarity, when upwards of 15 of Cody’s mates in grade 9 at Proserpine State High School whipped off their hats to reveal they had shaved their heads in 2021.
“It was beautiful. The boys, that group of his close mates that he met through the Sea Eagles, they were wonderful,” Donna said.
“They were always telling each other they loved one another, and that’s hard for boys of that age to do.”
Donna said he made the most of every day and that he left an indelible mark on everyone he interacted with, which is why she believes there are so many whose lives he touched.
“His attitude was that he never sweated the small stuff and made the most of everything.”
“I know there are so many people out there who did something for him - things that we don’t even know about – but we’ll learn about them in the coming weeks.
“There are too many people who have become family and helped Cody in his journey. I can’t thank this community enough for what they’ve done for us.”
If you would like to attend The Cody Effect, a celebration of Cody’s life at Whitsunday Sailing Club on July 24, please RSVP at the link: https://forms.office.com/r/Yx2QCWQawD
Cody Gibbs passed away in early June after almost a year of treatment for Pineoblastoma


Celebrating its tenth year, the Airlie Beach Festival of Music has big plans to celebrate a decade of unforgettable events.
Festival founder Gavin Butlin says the event has brought over 600 bands to Airlie over the past nine years and this year is looking big.
“We’re looking forward to our biggest and our best one yet,” he said.
“The whole town comes alive with about 15 venues through town plus the big tent at the Sailing Club.”
Imagine watching world-class live music on the shores of Coral Sea with an expansive view over the islands - it’s a party like no other in the Heart of the Great Barrier Reef.
Plus, there is something for every musical taste at the Airlie Beach Festival of Music.
“If you don’t like it in one venue, you just wander out and jump in the next venue and away you go,” said Gavin.
With a line-up featuring The Animals, Jon Stevens, Eskimo Joe, Ben Lee, Rogue Traders, Mi-Sex and The Badloves plus so many more, a brilliant weekend of music is assured.
As well as the big names, Passport to Airlie has become a highlight of the festival with over 1500 up-and-coming bands going through the competition in the past 10 years.
“Every year it’s getting bigger and bigger,” said Gavin.
Gavin says previous winners of the competition have gone on to great things.
“We’ve got so many local bands here in Mackay and the Whitsundays that don’t get a chance to play their music so it’s really important for the artists to get in front of a crowd and play their music.”
Gavin says tickets are moving quicker than ever this year.
“Get in now and get your tickets because it is going to sell out this year,” he said.
WHAT: Airlie Beach Festival of Music 2022
WHEN: November 4-6, 2022
WHERE: Airlie Beach
TICKETS: www.airliebeachfestivalofmusic.com.au
Sunset on the Airlie Beach Festival of Music main stage. Photo credit: Kai Millen

A sea of maroon (with a few dots of blue) filled the Mackay Senior Citizens Hall as Golden Years showed their colours ahead of State of Origin last Wednesday.
A morning of smoko, tea and coffee, live music, dancing, raffles and bingo for just $3 is reason enough to turn up to Golden Years every Wednesday, but celebrations like State of Origin make it all the more fun.
“We celebrate anything that is, as I usually say, worth celebrating,” said Club President Michele Shepherd.
Just like the punters at Suncorp Stadium on Wednesday night, attendees enjoyed meat pies thanks to Byrnes Good Food, as well as the usual homemade sweets.
“We always do pies and peas and plenty of sauce, they absolutely love that,” said Michele.
Betty and Bruce Kearney provided entertainment alongside some friends.
Everyone joined in on a singalong of ‘aye aye yippee yippee aye’, with dancing and a conga line getting everyone to their feet, Chris Harle being the leader of the celebrations.
“(Chris is) very special,” said Michele.
“She said ‘can I bring something?’ and (Betty) said ‘bring six balloons, we might do something with balloons,’ well she brought six bags,” she laughed.
“We’ve got some lovely people like that,”
Golden Years happens at the Senior Citizens Hall every Wednesday morning from 9am – 11am and is open to everyone.
“They don’t have to register, they don’t have to pay any membership fee, it’s good value for $3.”
“Go the Maroons!” say the volunteers of Golden Years
A morning of meat pies, tea and coffee, music and dancing was enjoyed by many Maroons, and a few Blues' fans

A fundraising breakfast has opened a platform for men across the region to express themselves in art, with the theme of celebrating positive role models.
Shed Happens Mackay, sponsored by DGH Engineering, celebrated International Men’s Day (IMD) last year (IMD21) with a fundraising breakfast. This year, as part of the IMD22 celebrations, Shed Happens have facilitated an Art Show in partnership with the Mackay Art Society, and entries close on August 1.
The first pillar of IMD is ‘Celebrating positive male role models’, and this is the theme for artists to create their works.
Shed Happens convenor Frank Cowell said, “We are calling on any local and emerging artists to submit their entries for this exciting art show.
“The entry form can be found at the SHED Happens Mackay Facebook Page, and there is an entry fee of $10.00 per artwork submitted, with a limit of two pieces per person.”
There are four sections, each with prize money for the winners, with second and third prizes in three of the sections.
The artworks will be on display during August at the Mackay Art Society, Snow Wright Court, Beaconsfield, and the finalists works will be displayed at the Mackay Botanic Gardens Lagoons Café Gallery throughout September.
For more information, contact Frank Cowell on 0434 908 968 or man@dfcowell.net