Edition Number 117 August / September 2014 INNISFAIL ... · Edition Number 117 August / September...
Transcript of Edition Number 117 August / September 2014 INNISFAIL ... · Edition Number 117 August / September...
Other peoples’ winter. Yackandandah (Victoria) -1°C ( Photo by Dennis Moore 16 July 2014)
Edition Number 117 August / September 2014
WEB PAGE www.csci.org.au
DISCLAIMER
ALL ARTICLES IN THIS MAGAZINE ARE PRINTED IN GOOD FAITH FOR THE
COMMUNITY AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT
THE VIEWS OF THE INNISFAIL COMMUNITY SUPPORT CENTRE INC
Contents Page 2 Editorial, Cooking Morning, Tax Help, Country Music
Page 3 Sands in Innisfail
Page 4 & 5 Ailsa Moyle story, Tropic Taining Solutions
Page 6 Coping with stress, Anger Management
Page 7 Grandpa’s Hands
Page 8 Women’s Coffee Mornings, Crocheting
Page 9 Poetry Workshop for Young People
Page 10 Recipes
Page 11 & 12 Hub Happenings
INNISFAIL & DISTRICT Community Information Newsletter
Produced by the
COMMUNITY SUPPORT CENTRE 13-17 Donald Street, P O Box 886, Innisfail 4860
Phone: 40438400 Fax: 4061 7312 Freecall: 1800 616 001
The Community Support Centre is funded primarily by the Department of Communities
I have always been grateful that at my age I can move around freely and am free of pain so I do have a lot to be thankful for. I feel it is important to like yourself. I have always lived with the belief— to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. Ailsa Moyle, OAM, is a woman who has been true to herself and her story is told in this issue. This time we have vegetarian recipes, which I hope you enjoy. Just in time for Fathers’ Day! Gwen
Editorial
Talkabout August / Septem- 2
‘Free’ Cooking Mornings
cooking basic food from each of the five food groups’
“The Basic 5”
WHAT WILL BE COVERED?
One morning a month for five consecutive months we will cook a basic meal/s covering one of the five
food groups each time.
Participants will receive a booklet each month which includes some basic information on the food group
we are covering, along with recipes, lunchbox tips and ideas.
Where? The Community Support Centre,
13 –17 Donald Street, Innisfail When?
Friday 29th August, Friday 19th September & Friday 31st October 2014
Time? 9.30am to 12 noon
For more information or to make a booking please contact
Natasha or Renee on 40438400 before
Monday 20th June 2014
Enrolments Essential!
Community Support Centre Innisfail primarily funded by:
Department of Communities
Contact Community
Support Centre
Innisfail on 40438400
for appointment.
Welcome to a day of Country Music at Warrina Lakes, Innisfail
on Sunday 17th August, 2014 from 11.00 am onwards.
Admission $10.00 (Includes Afternoon Tea)
For further information please contact:
Lydia - 40 645 281 Carmel - Mobile 0413 198 620
‘Double Dice’ Backing Band
Contact Carlo 0419742172
Talkabout August / Sep- 3
.
SANDS in Innisfail
Hello! My name is Melissa Zaini. I am a trained Parent Supporter through SANDS (Miscarriage,
Stillbirth & Neonatal Death Support) and I am based in Innisfail. SANDS is a national not-for-profit
organization that offers support when a baby dies before, during or soon after birth. SANDS provides
access to trained volunteer parents who have experienced the loss of their baby and are using their
understanding to help others through their journey.
My story began on the 14th January 2011. I gave birth to a beautiful baby boy, Harry, my 3rd child.
Due to complications Harry was on life support for 3 days in the Special Care Baby Unit at Cairns Base
Hospital. My husband and I had to make a decision no parent should ever have to make and let him go.
In those precious days with my Son he taught me so much about unconditional love. I would have
moved heaven and earth to be able to bring him home. Sadly, our miracle never came and we had to
say goodbye to our Son. He grew his wings on the 17th January. The precious hours we had with Harry
will never leave us, especially time we had with him after he passed, when there were no more tubes
and wires attached to him. We could hold him and cuddle him without any restrictions.
We left the hospital with empty arms, only a box which had little things that belonged to Harry that the
nurses had put together for us. Anything that touched Harry was collected and placed in this memory
box. A kind gesture by the lovely nurses, but I should have taken my child home, not a box. Harry
would never grow up. I would never see his first day of school, his graduation. He would never
experience love and share a first kiss. I would not see him marry or have children of his own. His future
ripped away and ours forever changed. I remember after Harry's funeral I felt alone. Everyone went
back to their normal lives, except us. No more phone calls, no more visitors, no more hearing Harry's
name. As time went on I felt uncomfortable speaking about my Son as I felt my situation was wearing
thin on family and friends. I felt it made others feel uncomfortable by speaking about Harry. It is when I
realised how taboo baby loss really is and how socially unacceptable grief can be. In October that year I
had learned of the annual SANDS " Walk To Remember", in Cairns. This is a ceremony where you get
to honour your baby by having their name read out aloud and you release a butterfly. By attending I was
amazed and saddened to learn how many families have been affected by pregnancy and infant loss. At
the same time I knew I was not alone. This is when I found out about the organisation SANDS and what
they stood for. Since Harry's passing I have known of other parents who have experienced the loss of
their baby in my community. It saddened me that they too do not have the support in our community.
This is when I contacted SANDS and they supported my decision in joining their cause. I feel my role
as a Parent Supporter is my legacy to my darling sweet boy, Harry, and I hope to make a small
difference in supporting other families and bringing more clear understanding into baby loss and grief.
I am working in conjunction with the Community Support Centre Innisfail (CSCI) in bringing SANDS
to Innisfail. The CSCI is in partnership with SANDS in bringing support to families by providing a
venue to hold support meetings on the 4th Saturday of each month at 2.00pm
starting in August. This will be a safe place for parents to meet with myself and
each other to speak freely about their baby and experiences.
Miscarriage, Stillbirth and Neonatal Death Support Group Meetings Date: 4th Saturday of each month, starting the 23rd August 2014.
Time: 2.00pm
Venue: Innisfail Community Support Centre, Donald Street, Innisfail.
Contacts: Melissa Zaini (Parent Supporter) on 0427794 776 and Natasha Obah (CSCI) on 40 438400.
Talkabout August / Septem- 4
This year Innisfail has been very proud to welcome
Ailsa Moyle to the ranks of those holding the Order
of Australia Medal—For service to the arts in the
community of Innisfail. Moylie, as she is known to
her friends and many of her former students, is a
much beloved member of our community and we
were pleased when she accepted our invitation to
pop in and tell us about the life and service that has
led to this award.
Ailsa Fisher was born and raised in Cairns with a
brother who was 7 years older than herself. She did
her primary schooling at Cairns Central (Ailsa says
girls would watch the boys next door over the fence
during breaks in the school day) and went on to
Cairns State High School. During the war years,
however, all the schools were closed and the kids
had to be home schooled with weekly work
arriving in the mail. It was then that Ailsa first
discovered her love of teaching as she took charge of all the kids in the street. It was also at this
time that she gave her first public performance, which was staged as a fund raiser in the Church
of England hall. The 11 year old Ailsa wrote the play herself and all her friends took part with
her mother playing the piano as an accompaniment. Thus began a long life of theatre entwined
with philanthropy.
Once formal schooling recommenced Ailsa had to choose between the commercial or science
stream—she chose commercial and became one of the first senior class to progress through
Cairns High School. This was followed by two years at Kelvin Grove Teachers College in
Brisbane where, in her own words, she had a “ball”. Her first teaching job was in Babinda where
fate intervened and she met the love of her life, Bob Moyle, and they were married 18 months
later in Cairns and then moved to Innisfail in 1950. Married women were not allowed to teach in
those days but Ailsa happily devoted herself to raising a large family of 9 boys (sadly one son
died in an accident as a small child) and, finally, a daughter.
After 17 years devoted to her husband , family and family business, Ailsa felt obliged to return to
work for financial reasons and she took up a post at East Innisfail Primary School when her
youngest was 6 months old. She was to remain there for the next 24 years until her retirement in
1988 and it was here that her theatrical and directorial skills blossomed. Having had a choir and
held concerts in her early teaching days, Ailsa started a choir at East Innisfail. She had always
wanted to run a choral speaking choir so that all children could participate, not just those who
could hold a tune, and she sought approval from the P & C to take the group to the Cairns
Eisteddfod as a learning experience but they actually won their section and returned home
triumphant to their anxiously waiting parents. (As Ailsa pointed out, there were no mobile
phones in those days so no way of phoning the good news ahead.) From then on she took a
singing and speaking choir to Cairns every year. This success, and a chance conversation in the
Talkabout August / Sep- 5
street with Jo Pagano in 1988, led to the launch of the Innisfail Young Performers Competition. The
first event was organised in a matter of 6 weeks, lasted 1½ days and was held in the Shire Hall. The
competition later moved to the Con Theatre and then the choral section moved to the 7th Day Adventist
Hall after Cyclone Larry.
Ailsa’s other great project, the Junior Theatre Group, was inspired by a visit to the school by the
Queensland Puppet Group performing the “Stolen Wings” with a script by Noel Coward. Ailsa thought
that it would make a great show for the children to perform and wrote to the producers who passed on
her request to the playwright. The response was a copy of the script from Noel Coward himself with
permission to do whatever she liked with it. Up to then, Ailsa had been staging musicals at the school
but this performance was held at the Con Theatre and opened up to the community and from this was
born the Innisfail Junior Theatre Group , which became Ailsa’s focus after her retirement from teaching.
She also kept herself busy teaching RE at 7 local schools, for the Innisfail Uniting Church, and started
putting on children's Christian plays before Christmas and Easter. She extended her talents to the adult
community by joining the Choral Society after her daughter left for university and the members
provided great support after the death of her husband—a time when Ailsa really appreciated the
kindness of the people around her—especially Barbara and Derek Lamperd, the owners of the
Moondarra Hotel who provided accommodation at a critical time in her life.
Ailsa has always written her own plays and musicals, and included appropriate songs and music
( royalties on music being much cheaper than on scripts for plays). She often found inspiration from the
kids themselves. Even everyday items like coloured umbrellas in Crazy Clarkes could spark an idea and
other stories were fairy tales changed and reinvented to suit the current situation and everything always
ended happily, with good overcoming evil. As an extension of her work with Junior Theatre, Ailsa
provided training and mentoring for children from the Theatre Group as they prepared for speech and
drama exams, always at no cost to the students, and this led to her being sponsored by a visiting
adjudicator to be qualified as a Trinity College Speech and Drama Teacher.
Ailsa’s personal history is inextricably linked with the history and development of theatre in Innisfail
Tropic Training Solutions
Email: [email protected]
Improving skills & knowledge
.
Would you like to learn how to:
Operate your personal computer
Insert pictures and borders into a document
Search the internet and send email attachments
Create a simple home budget using excel spreadsheets
Use MYOB to help with the bookkeeping
Classes starting in August!
Learn how to complete basic computing tasks that you thought were impossible to do.
Make a start today!
Tropic Training Solutions offers face to face short course group
workshops in:
Basic Computing
Internet and Email
Microsoft Word
Microsoft Excel (Spreadsheets)
MYOB Basics (including a session on manual
bookkeeping)
Talkabout August / September 6
COME AND LEARN ABOUT
COPING WITH STRESS
Monday, 11 August 2014 9am—1pm
At the Community Support Centre Innisfail 13 - 17 Donald St., Innisfail
Do you feel you are unravelling?
Coming apart at the seams?
Free workshops made possible by funding from the Queensland Department of Communities.
Making your anger
a positive experience
_______________________
A brief anger management workshop at the
Community Support Centre Innisfail
13-17 Donald Street, Innisfail
5.30pm—9.00pm Thursday, 18 September 2014 Call to register on 4043 8400
Talkabout August / Sep- 7
Grandpa's Hands By David L. Griffith
Grandpa, some ninety plus years, sat feebly on the patio bench. He didn't move, just sat with his head down staring at his hands. When I sat down beside him he didn't acknowledge my presence and the longer I sat I wondered if he was OK. Finally, not really wanting to disturb him but wanting to check on him at the same time, I asked him if he was OK.
He raised his head and looked at me and smiled. Yes, I'm fine, thank you for asking, he said in a clear strong voice. I didn't mean to disturb you, grandpa, but you were just sitting here staring at your hands and I wanted to make sure you were OK I explained to him.
Have you ever looked at your hands he asked? I mean really looked at your hands? I slowly opened my hands and stared down at them. I turned them over, palms up and then palms down. No, I guess I had never really looked at my hands as I tried to figure out the point he was making. Grandpa smiled and related this story:
"Stop and think for a moment about the hands you have, how they have served you well throughout your years. These hands, though wrinkled, shriveled and weak have been the tools I have used all my life to reach out and grab and embrace life. They braced and caught my fall when as a toddler I crashed upon the floor. They put food in my mouth and clothes on my back. As a child my mother taught me to fold them in prayer. They tied my shoes and pulled on my boots. They dried the tears of my children and caressed the love of my life. They held my rifle and wiped my wife’s tears when I went off to war.
They have been dirty, scraped and raw, swollen and bent. They were uneasy and clumsy when I tried to hold my newborn son. Decorated with my wedding band they showed the world that I was married and loved someone special. They wrote the letters home and trembled and shook when I buried my parents and spouse and walked my daughter down the aisle.
Yet, they were strong and sure when I dug my buddy out of a foxhole and lifted a plow off of my best friends foot. They have held children, consoled neighbors, and shook in fists of anger when I didn't understand. They have covered my face, combed my hair, and washed and cleansed the rest of my body. They have been sticky and wet, bent and broken, dried and raw. And to this day when not much of anything else of me works real well these hands hold me up, lay me down, and again continue to fold in prayer. These hands are the mark of where I've been and the ruggedness of my life.
But more importantly it will be these hands that God will reach out and take when he leads me home. And with my hands He will lift me to His side and there I will use these hands to touch the face of Christ."
I will never look at my hands the same again. But I will remember my grandpa's hand, always. God reached out and took my grandpa's hands and led him home. When my hands are hurt or sore or when I stroke the face of my children and wife I think of grandpa. I know he is stroked and caressed and held by the hands of God now.
© 2004 by David L. Griffith The author in his own words: I am still young, just turned 73 the first of January. Was 12 years a Marine, serving 3 tours of combat in Vietnam. I graduated with a BSME from Texas Christian University; then a few years later I earned a Master’s in Theology from South-Western Baptist Theological Seminary, serving 17 years as a Southern Baptist Pastor. So really there is nothing exciting to say about me. I am fully disabled, in a wheelchair and widowed. My first writing was “My Paint Brush” and was written while I was an in-patient at the San Francisco VA hospital at Point Lobo. I am poor as a church mouse, ugly as a brick, and a romantic at heart.
Talkabout August / September 8
Discover your strengths
When: every Thursday starting on 31st of July Time: 9.30-11.00am
Where: Community Support Centre Innisfail Telephone: 40438400
13-17 Donald Street Innisfail
RSVP: by phoning 40438 400
Women’s Coffee Mornings
Make new friends and meet other community women
Help build a stronger community that values diversity and difference
Welcome all women in
the community.
You are invited for
cuppa and a chat.
Community Support
Centre Innisfail invites
you to our August
Recreation Day:
Crocheting with
Maria & Lyn
(for beginners &
intermediate)
Where: Community
Support Centre Innisfail,
13-17 Donald Street
When: Monday 18th
August commencing at
9.30am
Cost: Free
RSVP: Contact Reception
Talkabout August / September 9
Poetry - a look at using language creatively to communicate our Inner Worlds… by Sherrie Meyer
Poetry is an expressive art form that inspires play with words, language, meaning, images, sound and
rhythm while promoting many different emotional responses. We experience poetry throughout our lives in
stories, song, eulogies, ballads, and children’s rhymes among some of the more familiar avenues. Most of
us would be able to dramatically recite at least a few snippets of poetry and name some famous poets
learned from school days or during our life journey. Others may indeed find great contentment in the
writing of their own poems for personal pleasure or to share with others professionally.
Poetry may get overlooked at times as a powerful therapeutic tool. Poems have the power to evoke strong
feelings in the writer/reader/listener such as joy, grief, pride, anger and also peace and contentment. The
creation of a poem offers a unique path into and out of our inner world through the use of imaginative and
symbolic language. Expressing our emotions through writing, reciting and reading poetry gives us the
ability to share our innermost thoughts and feelings by using considered arrangements of words,
pronunciation and punctuation. My own thought is poetry can be a bit like `language’ play therapy.
Young people in particular seem to enjoy the intensity and also the flexibility of sharing their thoughts and
emotional processes through poetry. Here at Community Support Centre Innisfail we would like to
encourage that process and give it a venue for expression. We will be facilitating poetry workshops for
young people between the ages of 12 and 18 years. Next year, to commemorate Child Protection Week
2015, we will be publishing a poetry book that will include selected poetry and art work created by young
people in our community. Young people in the Cassowary Coast Region are now invited to submit poems
for consideration.
For
more
Contact Sherrie at CSCI: PH: 4043 8400
Or email: [email protected]
Time: 9:30am—12pm
Date: Tuesday 23rd September
Where: Community Support
Centre Innisfail
13—17 Donald St—Innisfail
(RSVP essential)
Poetry Workshop for Young People
CSCI will be compiling poetry and artwork produced by young people in the Cassowary Coast over the next 12 months to be included in a book to be launched during Child Protection Week 2015. Material for the book must be submitted to CSCI by June 2015. Only selected material
School Holiday Fun!
Free Poetry Writing
Workshop for young people
from 12—18 years. We will
explore fun activities in a
small group setting to
inspire the poet within!
There will be exercises to
stimulate the creative
writing process and an
Talkabout August / September 10
Simple Vegetarian Recipes BAKED RICE PIE
Ingredients — Cooked calrose rice
Finely diced Spanish onion
Finely cut parsley or shallot
1 dessertspoon plain flour
1 egg
Combine ingredients and mould to pie plate. Do not
have too thick especially at edges or corners. Into this
place a blended mixture of 1½ cups ricotta, 3 eggs,
grated zucchini, finely diced onion, black olive slices,
strips of sun dried tomatoes, finely chopped parsley.
Place into pie plate, top with grated fetta cheese and/or
parmesan. Bake till nicely browned and set in the
middle.
●●●●●
COCONUT NOODLES
Ingredients - Noodles of choice
Variety of red /green vegies
Lemon pepper & salt
Coconut milk
Cook noodles in salted water and drain. Steam
vegetables and add to noodles. Stir in coconut milk,
salt and pepper.
●●●●●
LENTIL STEW
Ingredients - Brown lentils
Tin of tomatoes
Whole sweet potato
Diced onion, garlic
Soak brown lentils in water for a number of hours.
Rinse well and place in pot. Peel and dice sweet potato,
add to pot along with blended tomatoes, garlic and
onion. Cover with water. Cover with lid and make
sure water is added as needed. Once all lentils are soft
and sweet potato has disintegrated, add salt and pepper
and serve in bowls.
●●●●●
HOT CABBAGE SALAD
Shred ½ cabbage, add grated carrots,
buk choy shredded, add ¼ cup hot
water into which vegetable stock
powder has been dissolved, add to cabbage mixture,
turn down very low with lid on. Steam. Add salt to
taste.
●●●●●
SPINACH OMELETTE
Mix together 2 packets frozen spinach, 1 carton cottage
cheese OR 1 cup Ricotta cheese, 1 half block of feta
cheese grated, 3 chopped shallots, 4 beaten eggs. Pour
on to oil sprayed pie plate and bake approximately 45
mins on 180 degrees.
●●●●●
POTATO can be diced and boiled till just tender. Add
1 good teaspoon of vegetable stock powder to ¼ cup
hot water. Add to potato with sour cream. Thicken
with arrowroot paste. Add salt and pepper.
●●●●●
POTATOES AND SWEET POTATO OR PUMPKIN
CAN BE COOKED IN COCONUT OIL IN THIN
ROUNDS
SAVOURY WONTONS
Ingredients - Wonton wrappers
Melted butter
Any vegetable filling
(suggestion below)
Place filling along wrapper and fold sides in on
filling. Roll up firmly. Brush with melted butter.
Cover baking tray with baking paper or foil. Place
wontons on tray and bake till lightly brown. Best eaten
at the time as they go soft if warmed in the microwave.
Filling: Frozen spinach (squeeze out
moisture), with grated fetta
cheese and lemon pepper.
Can also add grated zucchini and grated
carrot and finely chopped onion.
OR: Place a layer of omelette on top of
steamed vegetables.
●●●●●
MUFFIN QUICHES
Ingredients - Filo pastry
Eggs
Tomato strips, olive pieces
Cottage cheese, shallots or diced
Spanish onions
Place filo pastry, buttered, in layers in muffin tins.
Bake. Blend together ingredients, pour equal amounts
into tins, bake. Roll 2 layers of filo and cut into fine
shreds. When quiche is almost set, sprinkle shreds on
top and return to oven for a few minutes.
●●●●●
PUMPKIN SOUP
Choose a pumpkin: - butternut are slightly sweeter;
Jap pumpkin, although sweet, is more readily savoury.
Ingredients - Pumpkin, chopped
1 whole onion, chopped
2 potatoes
2 cloves garlic
1 dessertspoon vegetable stock
powder
Talkabout August / Sep- 11
“Hub Happenings”
August 2014
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
1
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
2
09.00 –16.30
Greenway
Stitchers
3 If you have a community group needing a
place to meet why not call in or phone
40438400 for a chat. We have great facilities
and our prices are minimal.
4 09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
18.00 Cassowary Coast Camera Club ph Richard 40643328
5 09.30 Inner Wheel 09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance
Natasha
6
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
12.30-14.00
Social Work
Group Lunch
Meeting
7
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
to be Me
8
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
9 10
11
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00 –13.00
Coping with
Stress Workshop
Ph Carol
40438400
12
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance Nata-
sha 40438400
19.30 Toastmas-
ters Innisfail
13
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
10.00-14.00
Seniors’ Legal
Service
ph 1800 650
931
14
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
to be Me
15
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
16
1.30 –4.30
Innisfail
Horticultural
and Garden Club
17
18
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
09.30 –11.30
Recreation Day
(see flyer for
details)
CSCI Manage-
ment Commit-
19
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance Nata-
sha 40438400
20
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
10.00-15.00
North QLD
Women’s Legal
Service
ph CSCI
21
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
to be Me
22
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00 –12.00
Basic 5 cooking
class Natasha
40438400
09.00-16.00 TSC
Community
23
14.00 SANDS
meeting. Ph
Melissa
0427794776
24
25
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
26
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assist Natasha
40438400
19.30 Toastmas-
ters Innisfail
ph . Dr. Jay Lo
0417406100
27
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
28
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
to be Me
18.00 Deaf Deaf
World Auslan
29
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
30 31
Talkabout August / September 12
“Hub Happenings”
September 2014
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
1 09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
18.00 Cassowary Coast Camera Club ph Richard 40643328
2
09.30 Inner Wheel
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance
Natasha
3
09.30-11.00
Tai Chi
12.30-14.00
Social Work
Group Lunch
Meeting
4
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
5
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
6
09.00 –16.30
Greenway
Stitchers
7
8
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
9
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance Nata-
sha 40438400
19.30 Toastmas-
ters Innisfail
10
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
Seniors’ Legal
Service
ph 1800 650
931
11
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
15.30-16.30 Free
to be Me
12
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 Tully
Support Centre
Community
Learning Project
13 14
15
09.30 - 14.00 Tax Help
09.30 –11.30
Recreation Day
(see flyer for
details)
CSCI Manage-
ment Commit-
16
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance
Natasha
40438400
17
09.30-11.00
Tai Chi
10.00-15.00
North QLD
Women’s Legal
Service
ph CSCI
18
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
17.30-21.00
Anger Manage-
19
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00 –12.00
Basic 5 cooking
class Natasha
40438400
09.00-16.00 TSC
Community
20
1.30 –4.30
Innisfail
Horticultural
and Garden Club
21
22
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
23 09.30-12
Poetry workshop
for Young People
Sherrie 40438400
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance
24
09.30-11.00 Tai
Chi
25
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.30-11.00
Women’s Coffee
Morning ph
Kelly 40438400
26
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
09.00-16.00 TSC
Community
Learning
Project
27
14.00 SANDS
meeting. Ph
Melissa
0427794776
28
29
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
30
09.30 - 14.00
Tax Help
13.00
Form Filling
Assistance
Natasha
40438400
If you have a community group needing a
place to meet why not call in or phone
40438400 for a chat. We have great facilities
and our prices are minimal.