2016 – 1 Second a Day
Great Barrier Reef
ROBERT SCHOLTE
ROBERT SCHOLTE
10/11/1946 – 11/04/2016
2015 – One Second a Day
Yeppoon, Emerald and Noosa
Charters Towers Gold
It’s only a 90 minute drive to Townsville from Cardwell but it’s a very different place, we didn’t get much rain in Cardwell but Townsville looks like it hasn’t rained for a thousand years. I set up camp and the Rowes Bay caravan park to finalise the solar setup for car and van. I had trouble finding an auto electrician with any interest in helping me get one part of the setup organised, even standing in an empty workshop offering cash I was told it’s not something he’d get involved in!!! After three days in the beachside desert I headed west on the Flinders Highway to Charters Towers in the hope I’d find gold, over the years the area has coughed up a substantial amount of gold, the only problem for me is, it’s mixed in with lots of dirt.
Charters Towers the town was born in 1870 after a young aboriginal boy found gold by chance whilst searching for his horse that had bolted in a lightning storm, the 12 year old boys name was Jupiter Mosman. So much gold was found that the town swelled to over 30,000 and even had its own stock exchange and became the second largest city in Queensland at the time.
The town has many heritage listed buildings from the era, the post office the most impressive for me. After setting up camp in the closest caravan park to town and one that offered a site backing onto the local golf course.
For a place founded on gold and talks up its tourism as a gold town, it wasn’t so inviting, the friendly old ladies in the information center couldn’t help but showed a lot of interest in trying to find the info I was chasing. It was then onto the local prospecting shop where I found even less interest from the guy behind the counter. It seems the attitude is, its our town, our gold, your not welcome.
I checked out a few of the tourist spots around town and organised a game of golf on the Thursday arvo comp before a flash storm flooded out the park and disappeared as quick as it came.
I’d heard of a local old gold town that may still be worth checking out, so I decided it was worth the hour drive to check it out and see if I could relocate there for the weekend and hunt the yellow stuff.
Gold was first discovered in the Ravenswood area in 1868 over the next 30 years the towns population topped 5000 and said to have boasted 48 hotels…… its hard to believe this number but the history books are sticking to the story. I only found two and to be honest I thought the town had more pubs that the current population commanded.
No more than one kilometer from town, a gold mine is still being mined and I found a campground close by to setup camp and do some panning in the rivers close by. I grabbed a bucket of dirt that I hoped would become paydirt to pan up later and headed back to town and take a closer look at the two hotels. I chose the Imperial Hotel first and had a chat with the lady behind the bar about the building and where her income comes from with so few locals.
She told me they had plenty of fifo gold miners who don’t mind a beer living in town and the locals keep them going. The building constructed in 1901 was amazing, the timber staircase rivaled my favorite (Queenstown, Tasmania) and behind the main bar was something out of an American western film. She talked about ghosts and other stories that come with old pubs like this before doing her best to talk me into come and stay for the weekend. Ravenswood was about to fill up with a motorcycle club from Mount Isa, (from memory) she told me it was the Rebels Motorcycle club, one of them owned the Railway Hotel just up the road and the only other pub to survive of the amazing number of 48 pubs in town.
If I was to take her word for it, the weekend promised to be one of the great weekends in this town, not only was the Railway hotel fully booked with Rebels bikies, hers was fully booked as was the campground… I decided I wouldn’t relocate Ravenswood for the weekend, golf was more my pace.
I had to check out the Railway Hotel especially now it had six small military vehicles with trailers parked out front. Like the Imperial, the Railway looks well looked after from the outside, I approached the empty bar but for one guy in full army gear sipping a coke and chatting to a girl of Asian appearance about 20 years old, the patch over his left breast told me his name was Chubb, her open top and loose bikini top told me she was happy for Mr. Chubb to take a peek.
The barmaid approached me and closed the open top shirt, I ordered a beer and wondered the old hotel. Being a hot day I finished my beer in record time and returned to the bar to see Mr. Chubb copping a fair look at the left one that was now fully exposed, again it was covered up as my beer was poured and I couldn’t help wonder why I wasn’t worthy of a look, I wasn’t clad in army attire like Mr. Chubb but surely worthy of a peak had I wanted it… I was a prospector after all.
I remained in the bar as a couple of guys took a perched at the bar, I had a chat to Mr. Chubb who came from Eden on the far south coast of NSW, he was training with the other guys out the front of the Railway, they had driven up from Townsville where they are based and were heading into the bush to be assessed before they graduated.
I noticed a Budweiser Sturgis Bike Rally 2013 sign behind the bar and a couple of “proud to be a son/daughter of a Vietnam Vet” stickers on the fridge along with a Vietnam Veterans MC stickers, maybe it wasn’t the Rebels MC? I still didn’t see a point in hanging around for the weekend so I checked out the garden next to pub with loads of rusted old mining machinery and headed back to Charters Towers.
I found a couple of places to hunt down the gold, Young’s Block it turns out is a piece of dedicated land to the prospector, I spent some time checking it out but with only a $100 metal detector, a gold pan and no water I didn’t do so well in the 40c heat. Back at the park I filled a large container with water and panned out my Ravenswood paydirt and found my first ever “small” spec of gold. I am sure now, that I have some experience I’d find some places in Charters Towers to pan for gold and if I’d had a gold detector even better so don’t let my experience put you off because Charters Towers is a great town and this was my first go at this prospecting caper other than our great experience in the WA gold fields.
I must mention the golf before I leave, played a couple of rounds before the clubs main Sunday comp, I was grouped with a couple of old guys and Roderick a guy or around 35 who tried to smash to cover off the ball every chance he had. We also picked up some young brothers along the way to make a group of six on this great golf course that had green grass on the tees and the putting greens but it was all red dirt in between. For $3 you could purchase a fake grass mat 300x300mm to hit the ball off instead of the red dirt fairways.
I’d done ok prior to the comp but lost it on the day and put a large number up, around 120, not great for the handicap that! Unlike other bad days I could stop laughing because I knew I wasn’t that bad, one of the older guys took a shine to me I guess because I laughed off my ordinary form. Turns out Norm Carrington was the club legend and part time teacher of the game, after some gentle persuasion, he offered to give me a lesson the next day. Best thing I’ve ever done, I had to change everything, but as I got used to it I’m playing much better, not for a full 18 holes but much better over all. Norm wouldn’t accept any money so I purchased a thank you card, a lotto ticket and put $20 in it with the words;
“Thanks for taking time out of your day to help me with my golf, you’re a great teacher. Let’s hope I can be as good a student. Enjoy a couple of drinks on me”.
I dropped it back at the club with his name on it and hope he got it, someone I will most likely never see again but appreciate what he did and had no doubt done for many around the Charters Towers Golf Club for years. I took some time to read the names on the honor boards in the club, Norms name is everywhere so no doubt he could play in his day.
I left town the next day headed South to grab Shell and head west to find gem stones out near Emerald (yep that’s right) but not before I wondered the back of the golf club closest to the park I was in and picked up around 80 golf balls, now I’ve had a lesson I guess I should practice a bit.
Charters Towers is out the back of Townsville on the way to the outback but it’s a great town, the narrow winding main street with its grand old buildings is one worth seeing. It has plenty of secondhand or relic stores full of great things left behind by the 30,000 miners, I spent plenty of time in these stores checking out the old bottles, signs, mining tools and so much more.
I may not have found any gold worthy of talking about, but no doubt I’ll find plenty of gemstones in central Queensland.
Cardwell
We spent a couple of months resting and holidaying in Port Douglas and Cairns, the offer we’d got for our next adventure had stalled a couple of times with contract problems between two parties (not our contract), my experience in this area had us cautious, if it begins bad it usually ends bad. So after a couple of start dates passing we decided the timing was right for a trip to the Kimberley and work the season in Broome.

It was a Friday, June 5th and the third deadline was about to pass whilst walking to The Court House Hotel in Port Douglas to catch up with friends from Traralgon who were up for the week we decided that if the contract wasn’t signed by 4pm today we were headed for Broome in a few days. We left around 2pm on our walk into town and before we arrive on the 15 minutes walk I got a call saying the contract was signed we were starting in Cardwell in a week. We had a couple more hold ups after this but we’d committed and we were on our way south so we wouldn’t back out after committing to The Nulleys.
We spent a week at Leos place in Cairns setting the van up better for free camping as we’d decided to spend a few days near Mission Beach at Bingil Bay a great free camping area right on the beach looking across at Dunk Island on the Coral Sea.
We headed south from Cairns with two cars and a caravan on an easy drive of 150ks, around ten kilometers short of our turn off I noticed a sign for the old El Arish Hotel a real old Queensland type of pub almost 100 years old. Our quick stop for a beer only 15ks short of the destination never happened with both cars being pulled over by the police who asked me a few fair questions “how long you been traveling” and how long since you’ve got any mail” it was then that I worked our where he was going with his line of questioning…
Not to say too much, but that episode cost a few thousand! Luckily we got permission to drive direct to Cardwell giving us time to fix the problem in the coming days. We didn’t get a few days camping on the Coral Sea under the stars, that hurt as much as the fines we received.
We spent the next week in the caravan park across the road from our new workplace and home, I got the call at 4pm on June 28 “why aren’t you two over here, the contract is signed and we need your help to drink this bar dry tonight”.
We had a good night trying to drink the place dry, played loads of load music, I am sure I have a video of Faith & Shelly dancing, I must have one, I have one from every other time they get together. I have a picture of me with a silly hat on that come out of the box of promo gear that Shane Mullins the business sales guy bought in, these another silly one of Joe looking more like Colonel Sanders than the Colonel himself and the worst or best of all was Max behind the bar with his shirt off doing whatever he was doing. I don’t know so I guess he didn’t know.
A great and late night was had before we got stuck into the reno the next morning. We moved the van over, blocked off all the entrances to the motel, bar and bottle shop with “closed for renovations” signs at each entry point.
The Lyndoch Motor Inn is a large venue with around 90 meters of highway frontage and 40 meters to the back fence so 3600 meters is a fair size property with a full commercial hotel license, 40 rooms, a bottleshop, a good size kitchen with a restaurant that seated 60 inside and 30 outside in the beer garden over looking the resort style pool.
We started in the kitchen, bar and dinning area with our renovation knowing we could work on the rooms once the business was open, we had hoped two weeks would see the place up to our standard but we pushed into a third week to make sure we were all happy with the place. It wasn’t so bad overall but dated with its mission brown brickwork bar face that went floor to ceiling and the best (worst) part being the archways to expose the inside of the bar.
My preference was to knock the top part over, it wasn’t load bearing but we decided to paint it white and the tile bar top a cream colour, it took far to much paint to cover the rough brown brickwork but once complete it certainly brightened the room up. We ripped out everything that looked out of place, cleaned up the kitchen and fitted new deep fryers.
Once we had plenty of rooms ready to go we opened up on a Friday afternoon and a few locals started to come and check us out. Cardwell is a great place the weather is great, the fishing is great with loads of fishing clubs coming to town for Barramundi fishing competitions and the people were either fantastic or total _ _ _ _ _%$@s it was strange how we didn’t come across many in-between these two types.
Shelly came up with a new menu, it took a bit to get it going but once we got the right locals coming in for dinner the town was talking about Shells food and how it was without doubt the best in town…. But we already knew this. We didn’t get swamped with people on the first night like we did when we opened Bundaberg but we built business up by joining the local golf club and knocking on many doors at Port Hinchinbrook and handing out flyers and talking to the locals who had the money to eat out a few nights a week.
Cardwell is in the middle of Cairns and Townsville approximately 150ks to each of these major FNQ centers and has population of almost 1500 not many but the place swells to a few thousand in the winter with all the grey nomads in town for a few months. Its an old place with the first white settlement in 1864 and the name of Port Hinchinbrook in the shadows of Hinchinbrook Island before adopting the name Cardwell after a rather hairy looking fella by the name of Edward Cardwell, 1st Viscount Cardwell.
Old Edward was a Tory politician from Liverpool who lived to a decent age of the time 72.
Port Hinchinbrook is now the name of the Marina precinct just few hundred meters south of Cardwell developed by Keith Williams, but his death and the devastating cyclone in February 2011 has left the place without a sole. Tropical Cyclone “YASI” ripped through the area with wind gusts at 250ks an hour and sadly this place is now most famous for these pictures.


We got to know some great people from that area and we hear it could finally be going ahead with stories of up to $500,000,000 about to be spent on the rebuild and expansion, if true it will bring many jobs and plenty of money back to area something it needs greatly.

Port Hinchinbrook pre Tropical Cyclone Yasi.
We made plenty of friends at the Cardwell Golf Club with most people being great, I got my first handicap and sent out on a mission to break 90 and get my handicap under 20, I have achieved one of these goals. The very first day I played in a competition at Cardwell I meet Warren whilst paying for the comp, we played that first round together and almost every other round, we got on well.
Warren from Beaumaris and Port Hinchinbrook depending on the season is retired and loves the yachting, he’d done well in business in Melbourne but was very down to earth and we got on well. We have a large night on one night knowing we would do over 100 meals so I asked him to help out and drive the courtesy bus, he did this and helped out in the kitchen. Shelly and I spent the night at his Beaumaris house with he and his wife Glenda over summer in 2016 just before he headed back to the sunshine for another perfect winter in Far North Queensland.
Shell played a bit of golf and even played in her first competition where she had a number of hits on one of the worst days for golf, she had good company though driving around in the cart with Jodie Jansen wife of local police office Dave Jansen, these were the nicest couple in town except for us of course.
We met Dave early on when he came in to look at CCTV footage in the hope he’d see a vehicle that was involved in a robbery across the road. We got talking and soon discovered this tall dude had played footy with a couple of my friends at two different clubs in two different states. I talked to Dave about going to have a kick of the footy some time, Cardwell had no sporting clubs other than the golf club and a girls softball team.
I put the word out and called for people interested in having a kick of the footy at the local rugby ground, flyers went up all over town, asked every one I ran into around town, started a Facebook group and got a story in the local papers, to try and attract players. First night out we got two people, then we got three or four and it built up from then, all up we had 12 different people train over the first five weeks.
I made contact with the Townsville Sharks Masters Football Club who had a good group of players and play games regular, the played a few games in Cardwell since Cyclone Yasi, the guys from Cairns Masters would travel down for a game on the local rugby ground trying to put some money back into the struggling community.
Maurie Soars from the Townsville Sharks was great, he’d been involved for years around Townsville and still played into his 60’s, Maurie sent up four decent footys and some water bottles to help get us going. He also committed to get the Cairns boys to come down and play another game in Cardwell in November. It was my job to get as many local to join in as possible. I was over at the ground trying to put a bit of fitness into my legs when I got a visit from five kids across the road and their mum, four brothers and there sister and mother joined in and he had a mini skills training run. They had great natural skill for kids who had never played any sport, with no sport in town its not surprising kids get into trouble when they grow up.
Things were going ok in the business, wed managed to renovate the extremely dirty managers apartment above the bottle shop and had moved in on the freshly sanded and painted floorboards when we got word that Shells dad Rob wasn’t going so well with his battle with Cancer. Shell went down a couple of times and when she decided she’d be staying down after we went down for Robs birthday I arranged a ride back up with our neighbor in his truck.
I’d traveled much of Australia roads but never sitting up high in a truck and the ride with Pat was great. Pat lived on the land behind us and spent four days a week on the road and three at home getting ready to travel and keep his business running. He’d come in for a beer and a feed and always got on well with everyone, we liked Pat very much and no doubt will run into him again some day.
We had discussed Shells departure with Max & Faith who as always were fantastic, we may have been the face of the place and running it day to day just as we did at the Lions Dem Hotel but they were great and always around to back us up when required. They knew once Shell wasn’t coming back I’d be close behind her and gave us there blessing to go. We didn’t quite make it to the end of the contract but under the circumstances I guess we never would have.
When I returned from Tannum without Shell and we got closer to the November game we picked up four new guys, I had heard they knew a bit about footy but were all League players, we had a training run just prior to the game and these League guys were great and picked up the game on the first night. At this rate (with a few unavailable) we could have around ten locals play on Saturday. A few of the guys from Townsville and Cairns stayed at our motel and a few camped at the footy ground, on match day I was up early converting the rugby ground into a footy ground.
With two games organised, over 45s would play the curtain raiser before the under 45s, I am not sure why but I was told to play in the under 45s game. It was a great day with plenty of locals out watching, things didn’t turn out so well for me after kicking the first goal of the match on the run I dived forward and to the right to grab the footy from a poor kick to me.
Cardwell doesn’t get a whole lot of rain the ground was as hard as a road as I was fully stretched out and got my hands on the footy my rib cage landed first and I felt a sharp pain in my ribs, next my head hit the deck as the ball spilt from my grip, I got up very slowly with my ears ringing and the feeling of a couple of broken ribs. I played a couple more quarters without any influence on the game, I couldn’t move and couldn’t hear much. MY hearing came good after around a week but almost twelve months on I still haven’t recovered from the rib injury, it affect my greatly when playing golf and when I played a game of footy at my home club in Traralgon it probably told me that the game in Cardwell should have been my last….
The local guys did well in the two games, the rugby guys had a real crack and one in particular kicked a couple of goals. Big Dave the local police officer destroyed them in the ruck I can see why my mate Bova said Dave was the reason he made the ACT team of the year. A guy who’d made contact about having a kick was Adrian from Innisfail, we hadn’t seen him at training but on the day he was best one ground by a long way and won the medal for the best player on the day. We did well considering a few weeks earlier when we first trained only two of us turned up. I left all the gear in town and think the rugby guys will keep it going this year.
I packed up and left Cardwell the next day, after saying goodbye to Max and Faith (and Lynn) I stopped in at the Police Station, Dave lived next door, he was on duty but we went to his place and had a coffee, I got pretty emotional and found it hard to say goodbye, I guess because I knew where I was heading and what lay ahead but I also think it was because I had just met a few really good people in Cardwell in the rugby guys and knew if Id have stayed we’d of had some great times. Dave and Jodie were great people, Shelly and I got along with these guys great so hopefully we’ll meet again someday in the future.
We had a few friends drop in during our time in Cardwell our German friends travelled down from Port Douglas a couple of times to help out, a good thing considering our first large function was possible the best drink I’v seen by 100 thirsty locals at a wake, they had us running to keep the beer up. Butch came up from Traralgon for a few weeks and Brendan and Gail Broker dropped as they had done a year earlier to the Lions Den only this time they were heading home after taking part in the variety bash.
I headed south with plans of a few weeks alone in the bush hunting gold…..
Port Douglas Project
PORT DOUGLAS VIDEO AT BOTTOM OF PAGE
Since leaving the Lions Den in November 2014 we have done some driving, the map shows the trip to Cape York, back to Cairns then to Airlie Beach, after a week in Airlie we went back up to Port Douglas to look at our next job. We then headed to Melbourne before going back to Brisbane, Tannum Sands for Christmas then back to Port Douglas to start the next adventure.
If you look close at the picture you can see the blue lines showing our little drive… That’s a 9000 k round trip, half of it towing a caravan and the other half done in the comfort of a car we hadn’t seen in two years. We caught up with Family in Airlie Beach and our neighbours from Broome Bob and Linda, had a day on Whitehaven Beach before the trip back to Port Douglas to look at a backpackers known as Parrotfish Lodge. It was run down and in need of a lot of work. We then headed for Melbourne to check out the other backpackers the owner ran just down the road from the great pub Young & Jacksons.
We then stopped in at Traralgon, Tathra and Brisbane before Christmas in Tannum Sands, a couple of days after new years we packed up and headed north, we stopped in at Townsville for a night where we caught up with our other neighbours from Broome Ed & Lia before landing in Port Douglas and getting ready to start on January 7 2015. Getting ready to start consisted of going to the pub to check out the local music scene.
The backpacker reno kicked off slow before really winding up in weeks two and three, it was very long hours seven days a week, the three story building was stripped of everything, every bed, ceiling fan, light everything was tossed to the local dump.
Fifteen or sixteen weeks later the building was looking new, just like it did when built twelve years ago, the project really required another couple of months so we weren’t so rushed but we got it open. We decided to not manage the business so in May we moved the van around the corner to the caravan park and had a rest after our quick trip to Victoria for a football reunion where one of us got to play game number 200.
After a few week rest we headed south to look at the next opportunity, a nice place on the beach with good fishing I hear. As we near the end of June 2015 we have relocated and ready for our next adventure.
SEE THE FINAL VIDEO AT BOTTOM OF THIS PAGE
PORT DOUGLAS PROJECT VIDEO

