The Feb 1 Show

Heat, Memory and the Long Australian Road

By early February, the country is stretched thin. Heat lingers. Storms threaten. Rivers shrink in one place and swell in another. Fires burn on distant ridgelines. And when the phone lines open on a Sunday morning, what comes through is not outrage or spectacle, but the steady sound of Australians measuring the season in lived experience.

There are snowdrifts in Maine and minus twenty-six degree nights. There are forty-eight-degree kitchens in South Australia and cruise ships idling in Eden. There are blazes still active near Euroa and smoke hanging low over Newcastle. It is one of those mornings when the map feels restless.

From Rusutsu to Shark Beach

Dr Ian Francis rang from Sydney, just back from a trauma conference in Rusutsu, on Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido. A ski resort, he said, with a week of lectures and a little skiing folded in.

He had spoken to colleagues about recent shark attacks in Sydney. Not in abstract terms, but clinically. About arterial forceps. About blood loss. About the minutes that decide whether someone lives or dies. At one beach, he said, someone had opened a “shark bite kit” only to find a tourniquet, a phone number and a space blanket. The audience had laughed at the absurdity. The last thing you need, he said, is a space blanket. You need to stop the bleeding.

The conversation drifted to older habits. To swim inside enclosures. To be told as children never to venture beyond the net. On the Georges River, the fear had once been grey nurse sharks, now known to be largely sedentary and misunderstood. But the rule stood: do not swim where you are not protected.

The sea, it seems, remains indifferent to our confidence.

Nullarbor Skies and Mullamullang Cave

Photo Credit: OzGeology/YouTube

Bill rang from near the mouth of the Brisbane River, camped beside boat trailers and watching fishermen launch before sunrise. But his story belonged to the Nullarbor.

In the 1960s he had joined expeditions organised by the Sydney University Speleological Society. Through aerial photographs and long drives over limestone country, they located what was then known as the longest cave in Australia: Mullamullang Cave. They surveyed it to the one-mile peg before reaching a rock pile that seemed impassable. Later, others found the continuation. Bill returned and became one of the first to reach the end.

He described it as mountaineering underground. Vast passages rather than claustrophobic squeezes. Sand dunes inside the earth. A blind spider and a cave cockroach, one photographed and later catalogued.

Above ground, life continued across the same plain. He and his wife spent their first Christmas at Twilight Cove, south of Cocklebiddy, driving a Volkswagen Beetle along the beach. Sixty years together followed. Twenty-seven crossings of the Nullarbor. Standing at night beneath skies so wide they recalibrate your sense of scale.

He spoke of her passing three months ago, without drama. Just fact. The road, it seems, holds memory.

From Forty-One Degrees to Minus Forty-One

Jenny from Wonthaggi remembered leaving Victoria in forty-one degrees Celsius, shepherding eighteen Rotary exchange students through Los Angeles airport toward flights stretching from Alaska to Mexico.

Within days she was standing in snow at the Grand Canyon. Then in Thompson, Manitoba, at minus forty-one overnight. From heat that makes the bitumen shimmer to cold that freezes eyelashes.

She learned cross-country skiing in minus twenty. She said she would live there if she could. The extremes were less remarkable than the adjustment. The body, she implied, is adaptable. It is the shock of transition that lingers.

Back in Victoria, even a modest sprinkle of rain felt like relief.

Entangled off Tathra

Marine scientist Dr Vanessa Pirotta rang with urgency. A humpback whale had been sighted entangled off Tathra, heading north when most of its cohort should be feeding far south in Antarctic waters.

The animal was wrapped tightly, she said, around the body and pectoral fins. Not a minor trailing line but a full encirclement. It may have remained in Australian waters because it could not travel properly.

She asked listeners along the south coast to report sightings to National Parks or ORRCA. The migration corridor is vast, but distress narrows it quickly. A single whale, wrapped in rope, can alter the rhythm of a season.

Technology, Obsolescence and the Electric Question

The All Over News turned to technology. A former photographer described how digital wiped out his livelihood in three months. Decades of chemistry, darkrooms and composition skills rendered obsolete by automation. He now fixes things for a living.

Another caller reflected on artificial intelligence composing songs and generating artwork at the push of a button. Musicians, he warned, may soon feel what photographers did.

Then came the electric vehicle debate. One listener detailed kilowatt hours, tariffs and vehicle-to-load systems, describing how he powers his house each evening from his EV battery, cutting daily electricity costs dramatically. Another cited concerns about depreciation, battery replacement and charging infrastructure.

It was not a shouting match. It was generational. The sense that change is accelerating faster than people can comfortably evaluate it.

Sixteen Days Over One Hundred

From Hallett in South Australia came a letter that read like field notes from a furnace. Sixteen days above one hundred degrees Fahrenheit. Forty-eight in the shade. Mid-thirties at night. The kitchen at forty-seven.

Blue gums flowering in bone-dry calm. Bottlebrush hanging on for weeks. Sheep drinking from sixty-degree water and collapsing in piles behind one another. Frozen freight trucks parked because it was too hot to run.

People, the writer observed, had begun to go ratty. Short fuses. Best to stay home.

The heat was not theatrical. It was attritional. The kind that grinds.

Tallygaroopna and a Missing Marker

In Tallygaroopna, volunteers had restored a large steel sign salvaged from the pub fire years ago. It stood at Station Park, repainted, repurposed, a marker of identity.

One night it vanished. Bolted into the ground, nearly twenty feet high, removed cleanly. All that remained were bolts and threads.

The caller did not rage. He sounded deflated. The town had rescued the sign once. Perhaps it would do so again. Rural communities are accustomed to rebuilding, but they still feel each loss.

Alstonville and the Waiting

From Alstonville came a quieter frustration. A dance studio owner described her third break-in. Windows smashed repeatedly. Offenders known. One police officer covering Alstonville, Coraki, Wardell, Woodburn and Evans Head.

She had been waiting thirty-two days for attendance. The officers, she said, were exhausted. Overstretched. When they did answer the phone, they sometimes asked what she wanted them to do.

It was not blame she expressed, but fatigue. A sense of slow erosion.

Basketball and the Five-Hour Drive

Claire rang from Gosford, leading teams from Dubbo, Lithgow, Bathurst and Orange. Children travelling five hours to compete. A promised six-court stadium in Dubbo still unrealised a decade after the ceremonial sod-turning.

Two Dubbo players had made the New South Wales country team. Talent exists. Infrastructure lags.

Parents drive. Kids wait. The apprenticeship of regional sport continues kilometre by kilometre.

Anthem of the Seas in Eden

Photo Credit: Wikipedia/CC0

In Eden, the cruise ship Anthem of the Seas sat offshore with propulsion issues. No passengers on board, but around 1,500 crew. There was no berth available in Sydney long enough for repairs, so the vessel came south.

Crew members disembarked to walk the streets, buy groceries, sit at cafés. A floating city reduced temporarily to workers at rest.

The scale of it struck the caller. Nearly 5,000 passengers when full. Thousands of staff working below decks. A town of 3,000 hosting a ship built for many times that number.

Blazes and Tenterhooks

Kevin from BlazeAid spoke of eleven blazes across Victoria and New South Wales. Camps near Euroa, Goomalibee, Natimuk and beyond. Fences down for kilometres. Livestock losses mounting.

He recalled 1939, Black Saturday, Ash Wednesday. February has form. The state remains on tenterhooks. Grass waist-high along roadsides. One week of forties and it runs.

Volunteers are still needed. The work is slow, repetitive, necessary.

Smoke in Newcastle and Pines at Risk

From Newcastle came reports of smoke from Port Stephens and the Shortland wetlands. Asthmatics advised to stay indoors. The sky thick and acrid before six in the morning.

Further south, a part-time pine farmer described losing a ten-year plantation near the Longwood fire. Nearly at maturity. A retirement plan turned to blackened trunks. He counted himself lucky. His house survived.

Farming, he said, is long-term. You begin again.

Bathurst Evenings and Herring Island

There were lighter threads. A Festival of Speed in Canberra. Old cars revving at Thoroughbred Park. A sculptor exhibiting on Herring Island in Melbourne’s Yarra River, where few realise an island exists.

At Bathurst, the heat eased as the sun dropped. A stillness settled over the track. The simple relief of evening air after forty degrees.

In Darwin, the monsoon had finally stirred. Gusty storms. Nightcliff foreshore under heavy cloud. Rain as restoration.

Holding It Together

By the time the lines quietened, the country sounded neither panicked nor triumphant. Just occupied. Ski conferences and shark kits. Caves beneath limestone plains. Forty-eight degree paddocks. Cruise ships paused. Blazes smouldering. Junior athletes driving toward possibility.

Australia in February is a collage of temperatures and effort. The conversations are longer when the conditions are harder. The details matter.

And perhaps that is the steadier thing. Not the weather, not the machinery, not even the fires. Just people describing what they see from wherever they stand, trusting someone on the other end of the line to hear it.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

Creative Coast: Top Art Classes and Openings for 6–8 February

This weekend features a significant cultural double-header at the Redland Art Gallery with two thought-provoking exhibitions opening on Sunday. The precinct at Raby Bay will also come alive on Saturday night with unique roving performances, while the local art societies offer a packed schedule of workshops ranging from glass fusing to nature sketching.


New Exhibitions: My Soil Farsh & The Hidden and the Held

8 February – 22 March 2026 | Redland Art Gallery, Cleveland New Exhibitions: 

The gallery launches its first major season of the year with two powerful exhibitions opening this Sunday.

  • My Soil Farsh (Frash) : Iteration 3: Prita Tina Yeganeh explores the concept of “place as guest,” using soil and cultural symbolism to examine connection to land. Read More
  • The Hidden and the Held: Sorour Fattahi presents a compelling body of work that delves into personal and collective narratives, often highlighting what is concealed beneath the surface. Read More

Raby Bay Harbour Entertainment

7 February 2026 | Raby Bay Harbour Park, Cleveland 

Raby Bay transforms into a stage this Saturday (coinciding with the Witches Valentine Market). Look out for Graham Greybeard the Oak Sprite, a magical roving character bringing nature to life, and the mesmerizing Empyrean Dance, a performance troupe set to light up the harbour with their dynamic choreography.


Hot Glass Art – Birds and Butterfly Glass Suncatchers

7 February 2026 | Carys Martin Ceramics, Cleveland
Get Tickets

Discover the art of warm glass in this hands-on workshop. Participants will learn how to cut, layer, and fuse glass to create colourful suncatchers in the shapes of birds and butterflies—a perfect introduction to the medium.


Adventures In Colour

5 February – 1 March 2026 | Old SchoolHouse Gallery, Cleveland New Exhibition:
Get Tickets

Brighten up your weekend with a visit to the Old SchoolHouse Gallery. Adventures In Colour is a vibrant new exhibition that celebrates bold palettes and expressive techniques, showcased in one of the district’s most charming heritage buildings.


Redland Coast Art Society Workshops

6 – 8 February 2026 | Capalaba 

The RCAS is hosting a creative marathon this weekend with three distinct workshops:

  • Gouache Landscape (Fri 6 Feb): Master the opaque watercolour medium to capture scenic views. Tickets
  • Nature Sketching (Sat 7 Feb): Head outdoors (or focus on botanical references) to refine your observational drawing skills. Tickets
  • Artificial Flower Arrangements (Sun 8 Feb): Learn the principles of floral design using long-lasting materials. Tickets

Passages by The Coochie Art Group

27 January – 13 March 2026 | RAG, The Mezz, Cleveland
Get Tickets

Take a moment to view the world through the eyes of island artists. Passages is a collaborative exhibition by the Coochie Art Group, reflecting the unique environment and lifestyle of Coochiemudlo Island.


Create and connect: Fork flowers

6 February 2026 | Capalaba Library, Capalaba
Get Tickets

A fun, low-pressure craft session perfect for beginners. Learn how to use simple materials like forks and yarn to create adorable flower decorations. It’s a great way to meet new people and chat while you craft.


Aspects of Australian Art

5 January – 13 February 2026 | Redlands Coast Museum, Cleveland
Get Tickets

With only one week remaining, this is your last chance to see this specific curation of Australian works before the exhibition closes. It offers a broad look at the styles and stories that have defined the nation’s art history.


Coastal Rhythms Exhibition

25 January – 1 March 2026 | Redland Coast Art Society, Capalaba
Get Tickets

If you are attending a workshop at the RCAS this weekend, be sure to check out the current member exhibition. Coastal Rhythms features diverse interpretations of the sea, sand, and sky that make the Redlands so special.


From the intellectual depth of the new exhibitions at the gallery to the whimsical street performance at the harbour, the Redlands arts scene is offering a lot of variety this weekend. It is a fantastic time to get out, see something new, and perhaps even create something yourself at one of the many workshops on offer.

Weekend Planner: Top Kids’ Events for 6–8 February

The Redlands Coast is buzzing with energy this weekend. Circus Rio brings its high-flying stunts to Redland Bay, while Waitangi Day celebrations offer a chance to connect with culture and community in Capalaba. For those looking for something a little different, the Witches Valentine Night Market at Raby Bay promises a magical evening under the stars.


Circus Rio

6 – 8, 11 – 15 February 2026 | Redland Bay Hotel, Redland Bay
Get Tickets

The carnival has arrived in Redland Bay! Circus Rio brings a spectacular lineup of aerialists, jugglers, and daredevil motorbikes to the grounds of the Redland Bay Hotel. It is a high-octane show designed to dazzle the whole family.


Witches Valentine Night Market

7 February 2026 | Raby Bay Harbour Park, Cleveland
Get Tickets

For a market experience with a twist, head to Raby Bay on Saturday evening. This special Valentine’s edition features unique stalls, mystical wares, and a magical atmosphere by the water. It’s a fun, quirky evening out for families who love the fantastical.


Waitangi Day

6 February 2026 | Capalaba Tavern, Capalaba
Get Tickets

Celebrate New Zealand’s national day with the community at Capalaba Tavern. Expect cultural performances, great food, and a welcoming atmosphere as the Redlands celebrates its strong connection to Kiwi culture.


Shoreline Street Food Market

6 February 2026 | Jingeri Park Redlands, Redland Bay
Get Tickets

Let someone else do the cooking this Friday. Jingeri Park hosts a vibrant street food market featuring a variety of cuisines, live music, and plenty of space for the kids to run around while parents enjoy a relaxed dinner.


Gymchella Open Day

8 February 2026 | Twistarz Gymnastics Academy, Capalaba
Get Tickets

Twistarz throws open its doors for “Gymchella”—a festival-themed open day. It is the perfect opportunity for energetic kids to try out the equipment, meet the coaches, and see if gymnastics is their new favourite sport.


All Ages “A Little Sweetie” Royal Icing Cookie Decorating

8 February 2026 | Cordie’s Cake Supplies, Capalaba
Get Tickets

Get ready for Valentine’s Day with a sweet workshop. This all-ages class teaches the art of royal icing, guiding you to create beautiful, professional-looking cookies that are (almost) too good to eat.


Messy Play: Sensory & Nature Sessions

8 February 2026 | Baily Road Park, Birkdale
Get Tickets

Let the little ones get messy without the clean-up at home! Gumtree Kids runs these sensory play sessions designed to engage toddlers and preschoolers with nature-based textures and activities.


Wellington Point Bowls Club Junior Wello Wildcats Squad

6 February 2026 | Wellington Point Bowls Club, Wellington Point
Get Tickets

The Junior Wildcats return for another Friday afternoon of lawn bowls fun. It’s a great, low-pressure way for kids to learn a new skill, make friends, and enjoy the outdoors.


Library Story Time

6 & 7 February 2026 | Various Libraries 

Keep the little bookworms entertained with free story time sessions across the district.

  • Friday Fun: Cleveland, Victoria Point, and Capalaba Libraries. Details
  • Saturday Story Time: Victoria Point Library. Details

Family Picture Hunt – Summer Holiday Scavenger Hunt

5 January – 28 February 2026 | Redlands Coast Museum, Cleveland
Get Tickets

The detective work continues! Families have until the end of the month to explore the museum and find the hidden pictures. It’s a fantastic, educational way to spend a hot afternoon indoors.


Whether you are soaking up the carnival atmosphere at Circus Rio, celebrating culture at Waitangi Day, or getting creative with cookies and sensory play, this weekend offers a fantastic variety of experiences across the Redlands Coast. It is the perfect time to explore different parts of the region, from the bay to the bush.

Clash of the Keys and Classic Rock: Redlands Nightlife Guide

The Redlands Coast is turning up the volume this weekend with a massive theatrical tribute to Meat Loaf at RPAC leading the charge. For those wanting to hit the dance floor, the Cleveland Sands is hosting back-to-back party nights with an 80s spectacular and a high-energy piano duel.


Meat Loaf: The Concert

7 February 2026 | RPAC Concert Hall, Cleveland
Get Tickets

Experience the drama and the power of one of rock’s greatest voices. Meat Loaf: The Concert pays homage to the “Bat Out of Hell” icon, featuring a full band and a theatrical performance that delivers the soaring vocals and operatic rock anthems that defined a generation.


Rewind 80’s Mixtape Tour

6 February 2026 | Cleveland Sands Hotel, Cleveland
Get Tickets

Tease your hair and grab the neon leg warmers. The Rewind 80’s Mixtape Tour is taking over the Sands for a night of pure nostalgia. Expect the biggest synth-pop bangers, rock anthems, and one-hit wonders from the decade of excess.


Clash Of The Keys

7 February 2026 | Cleveland Sands Hotel, Cleveland
Get Tickets

Prepare for a musical showdown like no other. Mitch Dormer and Bodhi Action go head-to-head in Clash of the Keys, a high-energy, interactive performance that blends musicianship with comedy and crowd requests.


Floorburners

6 February 2026 | Redlands Sporting Club, Wellington Point
Get Tickets

Get the weekend started on the dance floor. The Floorburners are known for their high-octane covers of classic rock and pop hits, ensuring a lively Friday night atmosphere at the Wellington Point club.


Weekend at Elysium

6 – 8 February 2026 | Elysium Restaurant & Bar, Victoria Point
Get Tickets

Enjoy live music by the lake with a cocktail in hand. Elysium hosts a solid lineup of local talent this weekend, featuring Latu on Friday, KINGI on Saturday, and QUE wrapping things up on Sunday.


Double Vision

7 February 2026 | Redlands Sporting Club, Wellington Point
Get Tickets

Saturday night entertainment continues at the Sporting Club with Double Vision. This dynamic duo performs a wide range of popular hits, providing the perfect backdrop for a relaxed dinner and drinks session.


Capalaba Sports Club Live Music

6 – 8 February 2026 | Capalaba Sports Club, Capalaba
Get Tickets

Kick back in the lounge with free live entertainment all weekend.

  • Friday: Mono
  • Saturday: Raff De
  • Sunday: Scott Sullivan

Victoria Point Sharks Live Music

6 – 8 February 2026 | Victoria Point Sharks Sporting Club, Victoria Point
Get Tickets

The Sharks Club offers a relaxed vibe with local soloists performing throughout the weekend.

  • Friday: Jasse Cait
  • Saturday: Allan Cameron
  • Sunday: Sean Wade

Whether you are looking for a seated theatre experience at RPAC or a rowdy night of retro hits at the pub, the Redlands has a gig to suit your mood this weekend. It is a great opportunity to support local venues and enjoy some world-class tribute entertainment close to home.