Home Blog Page 13

See Hanging Baskets At Cobb+Co Museum

Now in its seventh year, The Hanging Basket Competition is Cobb+Co Museum’s unique twist on Toowoomba Carnival of Flower celebrations.

The baskets have been designed, grown, and cared for by a variety of community groups including schools and kindergartens, aged care and retirement homes, families and creative individuals. They have been working hard over Autumn and Winter and their baskets are on display for the public to enjoy for the rest of September.

St Saviour’s College
Middle Ridge State School

There are trophies for the best basket in each category, as well as a lucky draw prize for entering the People’s Choice Awards.

Last year we had 700+ votes in the people’s choice awards so we’re hoping for even more this year!

Submitted by:
Veronica Dawson
Marketing Coordinator
Cobb+Co Museum
27 Lindsay Street | Toowoomba | Queensland 4350 | Australia

Protests Put Groom MP Under Pressure

Groom MP Garth Hamilton is under pressure to keep the community safe by acting on the climate crisis. Locals will protest outside his office every Friday until November’s United Nations Climate Change COP26 Conference.

We are protesting to show how scared we are about global heating’s impact on Toowoomba’s families, economy and way of life,” Toowoomba for Climate Action spokesperson Alison Fearnley said.

CSIRO data shows by 2050 our region will have some of the worst temperature rises in Australia. This means more and more drought, life-threatening heatwaves and catastrophic fire conditions,” Ms Fearnley said. As well as this, Toowoomba’s water supply is also only guaranteed until 2049.”

One of the most important international conferences on climate change – COP26 – is being held by the United Nations in November. Australia is under significant international pressure to commit to cutting carbon pollution at this event,

A recent report scored Australia last out of 193 United Nations countries for action. “With this in mind, we have invited Mr Hamilton to speak to us about what the science says will keep us safe,” Ms Fearnley said. The Australian Climate Council says we need 75% emissions reductions below 2005 levels by 2030 and net-zero by 2035” she said. Use of fossil fuels – including gas – also needs to immediately stop to avoid catastrophic global heating,” said Ms Fearnley.

Last month United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said the alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable: greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestation are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk.” He added that the UN’s IPCC climate change report, released last month, must sound a death knell for coal and fossil fuels, before they destroy our planet.”


When:
4-5pm, Fridays – 10th Sept until 12 November (last day of COP26 United Nations Climate Conference)

Where: Garth Hamilton’s office, 516 Ruthven St Toowoomba

 

Submitted by:
Alison Fearnley

Can We Spark Your Interest?

Darling Downs residents will have the opportunity of seeing and hearing about a wide range of electric vehicles and e-bikes in one place. The Toowoomba Branch of Renew will hold an Electric Vehicle and E-bike Expo at Cobb+Co Museum on Sunday 29th of August, commencing at 9.30am.

A wide variety of electric vehicles will be showcased – from the top of the range Mercedes and Teslas, to the more affordable MGs and Hyundais. For people interested in e-bikes there will be a range of models on display and perhaps even the opportunity of trying one out.

In addition to the displays, there is a full program of speakers. The topics range from the basics of owning an EV – driving and charging  to autonomous driving and what happens to old EV batteries.
The convenor of Renew Toowoomba, Mark Tranter, said There are more and more people interested in purchasing an electric vehicle, and I am frequently asked about my own electric vehicle as well as being asked by community groups to talk about electric vehicles” The common questions people ask about electric vehicles are: What range do you get?” and How long does it take to charge?”

The Electric Vehicle Expo will provide an opportunity for the public to get answers to those and many other questions from people who have been owning and driving electric vehicles for a number of years.

Toowoomba Regional Council is supporting Renew’s Electric Vehicle Expo at the Cobb+Co Museum on Sunday 29th of August commencing at 9.30am.

Miss the Ekka? A Taste Of It Is Coming To You!

Food Truck Pop Up and Rides and Games

WHEN

Friday 20 August 2021, 4pm-8pm
Saturday 21 August 2021, 12pm-8pm
Sunday 22 August 2021, 12pm-8pm

FREE animal farm 1-5pm Saturday and Sunday

Rides include:
Ferris wheel
Teacup
Bungy trampolines
Dodgem cars
Windjammer
Zorb balls
Inflatable kids castle

Food Trucks:

Grandmas kitchen
American pulled pork
Loaded fries
Churros with Nutella
Dagwood dogs
Fairy floss on a stick
Biggest tubs of fairy floss in the world
Dole whip king
America’s Disney land dole whip
Loaded fully loaded hot dogs and fries

Games:

Shorting gallery attractions
Catch a fish
Vintage carnival Clowns
Balloon pop
All the way from the amazon

Coupons

Children’s rides 6 coupons
Tea Cup ride 6 coupons
Windjammer 6 coupons
Dodgem Cars 7 coupons
Ferris Wheel 7 coupons
Bungy trampolines and Zorb Balls 10 coupons
Sideshow games accept starting from 5 coupons
Fairy Floss stand starting from 5 coupons

We will operate in all weather.
WHERE

Toowoomba Showgrounds, Glenvale Rd, Toowoomba, QLD 4350
Ticketing Notes

Buy Toowoomba Showgrounds Weekend Bites Tickets Here

Entry Tickets are $2 (*Plus $1 Booking Fee) non-refundable.
Every person (any age) participating in any ride/activity is required to present a valid ticket/wristband. This includes parents accompanying their child/infant. Please have your ticket/armband ready to show the operator.

Please Note: Height restrictions apply to some rides – we recommend checking the height rules for each ride before joining the queue.

SE Queensland 3 Day Lockdown

From 4pm on Saturday 31st July,  11 South-East Queensland local government areas will enter a hard lockdown until 4pm on Tuesday, August 3rd.

Local Government Areas include:

Brisbane
Ipswich
Logan City
Moreton Bay
Sunshine Coast
Gold Coast
Noosa
Somerset
Scenic Rim
Redlands
Lockyer Valley

Restrictions include:

Obtaining goods or exercising will be restricted to within 10 kilometres of your home.
Wear a mask when you leave home.
Non-essential businesses will not be permitted to open and pubs, clubs and cafes are restricted to takeaway.
Gyms, cinemas, hairdressers, entertainment centres and places of worship will all be closed.
The lockdown will apply to anyone who has been in any of the LGAs since 1:00am on Saturday and will be in place until at least 4:00pm on Tuesday.

➡️ For the latest contact tracing locations and health advice, visit https://www.qld.gov.au/health/covid-19/contact-tracing
➡️ To find your nearest testing clinic, visit https://www.qld.gov.au/covid19testing or https://qld.health/TestLocator

 

Common Problem Fixed By Surgeon At St Vincent’s


Urologist Dr Devang Desai has performed the first Rezum therapy in a private hospital on the Darling and Southern Downs, at St Vincent’s Private Hospital Toowoomba.

Toowoomba local, Colin Kessler, was able to receive the Rezum therapy for benign prostate enlargement. This therapy uses the thermal energy from steam to target extra prostate tissue causing it to shrink.

Rezum is an alternative to taking long-term medication and doesn’t involve any cutting. It is a less invasive procedure. This procedure can help men retain their sexual function and is also a less invasive treatment for those with health concerns.

Symptoms of benign prostate enlargement can include frequent or urgent urination, weak or hesitant urine stream or inability to completely empty the bladder,” said Dr Desai, who has a special interest in minimally invasive urology.

He is elated to include Rezum to St Vincent’s suite of Urology services and procedures. Many men discard the symptoms thinking they are a normal part of getting older, but they can be treated by talking to your GP.”

Colin was delighted with the result, I am very grateful to Dr Desai. He is a very talented man,” said Colin.

A/Prof Dr Desai is a consultant Urologist with special interest in Reconstructive Urology and Minimally invasive uro-oncology.

Having finished his urological training in Australia Dr Desai went on to undertake a year in minimally invasive urology with special emphasis on robotic surgery and thereafter a GURS and AUA approved fellowship in reconstructive urology.

Dr Desai heads Toowoomba Urology practice and his practice involves a mix of uro-oncology and reconstructive urology alongside endo-urological procedures for stone disease.

NASA And USQ Discover Four Alien Worlds

Astronomers have identified four new exoplanets, worlds beyond our solar system, orbiting a pair of related young stars called TOI 2076 and TOI 1807. The two stars, only 130 light years away, and their ‘teenage’ planets may help unlock a mystery of the universe – how planetary systems, including our own, evolved.

NASA has announced the discovery, confirmed by an international team of astrophysicists including the University of Southern Queensland’s Dr George Zhou. Stars TOI 2076 and TOI 1807 reside over 130 light-years away with 30 light-years between them. Both are dwarf stars more orange than our Sun and around 200 million years old (less than 5 percent of the Sun’s age).

Surrounding TOI 2076 is a system of three planets between the diameters of Earth and Neptune. Innermost planet TOI 2076 b is about three times Earth’s size and circles its star every 10 days, while outer worlds TOI 2076 c and d are both a little over four times larger than Earth with orbits exceeding 17 days.

TOI 1807 hosts only one known planet, TOI 1807 b, which is about twice Earth’s size and orbits the star in just 13 hours. Exoplanets with such short orbits are rare and TOI 1807 b is the youngest example yet discovered of one of these so-called ultra-short period planets.

The astronomy team believed the stars were too far apart to be orbiting each other, but their shared motion suggested they were siblings, born from the same cloud of gas.

The stars produce perhaps 10 times more UV light than they will when they reach the Sun’s age,” Dr Zhou said. Since the Sun may have been equally as active at one time, these two systems could provide us with a window into the early conditions of the solar system.”
[cleveryoutube video=”RE-NpbAW3lM” vidstyle=”18″ pic=”” afterpic=”” width=”” quality=”inherit” starttime=”” endtime=”” caption=”” showexpander=”off” alignment=”left” newser=”” margin=”true”]Christina Hedges, an astronomer at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute in Moffett Field and NASA’s Ames Research Center in California, said the planets in both systems were in a transitional, or teenage, phase of their life cycle.

They’re not newborns, but they’re also not settled down. Learning more about planets in this teen stage will ultimately help us understand older planets in other systems.”

The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) monitors large swathes of the sky for nearly a month at a time. This long gaze allows the satellite to find exoplanets by measuring small dips in stellar brightness caused when a planet crosses in front of, or transits, its star.

The University of Southern Queensland’s Mt Kent Observatory provides a key support role for TESS using MINERVA-Australis, the southern hemisphere’s only dedicated robotic exoplanet observing facility.

A paper describing the findings, led by Hedges and co-authored by Dr Zhou, has been published in The Astronomical Journal.
Submitted by:
Rhianwen Whitney
University of Southern Queensland

Hoof It For Hospice Care”

Toowoomba Hospice has launched its latest fundraising initiative, Hoof It For Hospice Care” (HOOF IT).

The initiative is the brainchild of Hospice Management Committee member Ray Pern,  Administration and Fundraising Manager Mark Munro and their small team of volunteers. Ray said, The loss of a key fundraiser, Toowoomba Camellia Show, was a bitter blow to our annual budget and we needed to replace it with an event which was quirky and one which could involve a large number of supporters and friends.

HOOF IT will comprise many business/family/club 10-person teams taking on the challenge of walking/jogging/running around the adjacent O’Quinn Park for four hours – the winner will be the team which raises the most amount of tax-deductible donations for the hospice.”

The six-bed facility for the terminally ill was opened on July 1, 2003 and has since provided care and comfort for some 1,600 clients. Annual operating cost is $1.8million of which the Queensland Government provides $860,000, health funds $280,000 and the Buddhist Community $120,000 leaving a shortfall of $540,000 which comes from small donations and events such as the HOOF IT.

Volunteer Greg Johnson said, I was thrilled when Mark and Ray asked me and other volunteers to lend a hand with HOOF IT. We derived so much pleasure from presenting the Camellia Show and honouring its founders Sister Frances Flint and Joan Falvey, it was sad to see it go but everything has an end.’

HOOF IT provides us with the opportunity to stage an event right across the road from the hospice and one which enables the community to come together, get fit and raise valuable funds for our beloved Toowoomba Hospice.”

HOOF IT will be staged from 10.00am to 2.00pm on Saturday, July 17. Teams are invited to register at https://www.toowoombahospice.org.au/hoof-it-registration  – there is no registration fee.
For further details and tickets CLICK HERE