Archive for the ‘VVFACT Activities’ Category
Veterans ready to shape metal at Stephen King Memorial Centre
An article in The Chronicle featuring Jim Wain and the new Surface Grinder for the Metal Work Shop.
Click here to view article.
VV&VFACT Fishing Trip – Jindabyne
VV&VFACT is organising a fishing trip to Jindabyne, over the period, 24th to 26th March, 2010.
Closing date for numbers is 12th March
Click here for details on the trip.
If you wish to nominate for the trip, contact the Office, on telephone, 02 6255 1599.
Click here to nominate for the trip via email.
Veterans Walking Group Christmas Schedule
VIETNAM VETERANS’ FEDERATION ACT WALKING GROUP
(The Group is open to all Veterans’, plus Men & Women, not just Vietnam Vets.)
Details as at 11 DECEMBER 2008
Contact Terry Lawler 0401 109 550
|
DAY
|
DATE |
TIME |
MEET AT |
|
Tuesday |
16 December |
9.30am |
Skateboard ramp in Bartlett Place, Greenway. Refer Canberra Map 79, B, 11.2. Walk around Lake Tuggeranong. Coffee at McDonalds (it’s not bad), then walk on to the cars. About 1 hour and 10 minutes walk and a beauty. |
|
Tuesday |
23 December |
9.30am |
Behind Water Police, Beissel St, Refer Canberra Map 29, D 13.5. Walk around Lake Ginninderra. Coffee after. One hour and a bit walk and fantastic. Then head off to Page for the BBQ or Ladies lunch, which will be advised on the walk day. |
|
Tuesday |
30 December |
9.30am |
A great walk today. Long Gully Road off Yamba Drive at Isaacs. Refer Canberra Map 71, B 15.5. Park opposite and a little down from the Reservoirs and walk along the path behind Isaacs. Coffee at Southlands, Mawson. A walk not to be missed. |
|
Tuesday |
6 January 2009 |
9.30am |
Regatta Point Car Park. Refer Canberra Map 51 G.6.5. Walk around Central Basin taking in Aspen Island and the Carillon. Coffee at “The Deckâ€. This is a great walk which takes about I hr 10mins. |
|
Tuesday
|
13 January |
9.30am |
Corner Springvale Drive & DeSalis Street Weetangera. Refer Canberra Map 38, G.7. Walk thru “The Pinnacle Nature Reserve.†Coffee after @ Hawker Shops. This is a great walk with fantastic views. |
|
Tuesday
|
20 January |
9.30am |
Yarralumla Nursery. Refer Canberra Map 50 B,9. Walk around lake alongside Royal Canberra Golf course towards Government House and return. Coffee at Yarralumla Gallery at the Nursery. About 1 hour walk. This walk is fantastic. |
|
Tuesday |
27 January |
9.30am |
Regatta Point again. Refer Canberra Map 51, G, 6.5. Walk under Commonwealth Bridge and around to the National Museum and back via National University. Coffee @ Regatta Point “The Deck.†Don’t miss out on this walk it’s fantastic. |
|
Tuesday |
3 February |
9.30am |
Behind War Memorial. Refer Canberra Map 52, D, 2. Walk around Mt Ainslie Nature Reserve and back. Coffee @ the War Memorial. One hour walk with great views. |
|
Tuesday |
10 February |
9.30am |
Back to Queanbeyan. Meet at McDonalds in Wanniassa Street. Refer Map 75. G.2. Walk towards Railway Station and back. Coffee after. About 1 hour walk. |
|
Tuesday |
17 February |
9.30am |
Skateboard ramp in Bartlett Place, Greenway. Refer Canberra Map 79, B, 11.2. Walk around Lake Tuggeranong. Coffee at McDonalds (it’s not bad), then walk on to the cars. About 1 hour and 10 minutes walk and a beauty. |
If it’s raining, get out of bed and do some exercises.
PLEASE DON’T FORGET TO BRING YOUR WATER
Food Van and John Padovan
John Padovan has been and still is not travelling very well.
John get well, all of us would like to see you and Pam back at the Stephen King Memorial Centre,
John is the Food Van Co-ordinator.
This position is very onerous for one person.
The Federation wishes to delegate tasks for Food Van outings. The Food Van is a major fund raiser for the Centre.
John would be the Co-ordinator, with other members organising other aspects for the deployment of the Van.
Suggested delegations are, but not limited to, the following:
Maintenance,
Cleaning,
Purchasing non food stock,
Purchasing food stock,and
Working with John to achieve successful results.
If you are interested, please contact Karen, on telephone, 62551599, or email, vvfact@internode.on.net.
Picking up The Peaces Sets Strategy
A dozen members of Picking Up The Peaces spent Friday and Saturday at Eagle Hawk Resort devising a 5 Year Plan for raising awareness of PTSD.
Working with facilitator Meg Richens they brainstormed and discussed a Vision, Mission and Goals, and then worked on strategies and tactics. And then tried to figure out who was going to do it all!
Seriously, massive steps were taken, and the group will get together over the next few weeks to refine the plan and put it into action.
They have adopted one of the most successful models available, and working with several key players hope to make significant progress on helping younger veterans avoid the ravages of PTSD that so many Vietnam veterans endured.
A list of simple things that will help towards the campaign will be circulated soon, but if you’d like to be involved, or discuss the campaign, now is the time. Contact Kate Tonacia at info@pickingupthepeaces.org.au or phone 0410 900 433.
Time to Help Yourselves
Food Van
Future outings are this weekend – 28, 29 and 30th November – and 6 and 7th of December. Helpers are required so if you’d like to have fun, please call the Office for details.
Pension Officers and Welfare Officers
Pension and Welfare Officers’ are required to undertake Refresher Training within the next two Months, please contact Karen at the Office for details.
Christmas PartyThe Federation Christmas Party will be held on Tuesday, 9th December at the Stephen King Memorial Centre.
Details in the Christmas Newsletter. You may need the latest version of Adobe Acrobat to read it.
What training do you need at the Federation?
Please contact the Federation, if you would like Training in Metalwork, Woodwork, Cooking or Computers.
All this is available at the Centre, all you have to do is apply through our Office Manager. Karen Toscan, on telephone, 02 6255 1599, or email, vvfact@internode.on.net.
Walking Group Schedule August-October
VIETNAM VETERANS’ FEDERATION ACT WALKING GROUP
(The Group is open to all Veterans’, plus Men & Women, not just Vietnam Vets.)
Details as at 17 AUGUST 2008
Contact Terry Lawler 0401 109 550
|
DAY
|
DATE |
TIME |
MEET AT |
|
Tuesday |
19 August |
9.30am |
A great walk today. Long Gully Road off Yamba Drive at Isaacs. Refer Canberra Map 71, B 15.5. Park opposite and a little down from the Reservoirs and walk along the path behind Isaacs. Coffee at Southlands, Mawson. A walk not to be missed. |
|
Tuesday
|
26 August |
9.30am |
Regatta Point Car Park. Refer Canberra Map 51 G.6.5. Walk around Central Basin taking in Aspen Island and the Carillon. Coffee at “The Deckâ€. This is a great walk which takes about I hr 10mins. |
|
Tuesday |
2 September |
9.30am |
Meet at Vietnam Veterans’ Centre at Page to deliver flyers in Page, Scullin & Florey. |
|
Tuesday
|
9 September |
9.30am |
Corner Springvale Drive & DeSalis Street Weetangera. Refer Canberra Map 38, G.7. Walk thru “The Pinnacle Nature Reserve.†Coffee after @ Hawker Shops. This is a great walk with fantastic views. |
|
Tuesday |
16 September |
9.30am |
Yarralumla Nursery. Refer Canberra Map 50 B,9. Walk around lake alongside Royal Canberra Golf course towards Government House and return. Coffee at Yarralumla Gallery at the Nursery. About 1 hour walk. This walk is fantastic. |
|
Tuesday |
23 September |
9.30am |
Regatta Point again. Refer Canberra Map 51, G, 6.5. Walk under Commonwealth Bridge and around to the National Museum and back via National University. Coffee @ Regatta Point “The Deck.†Don’t miss out on this walk it’s fantastic. |
|
Tuesday |
30 September |
9.30am |
Behind War Memorial. Refer Canberra Map 52, D, 2. Walk around Mt Ainslie Nature Reserve and back. Coffee @ the War Memorial. One hour walk with great views. |
|
Tuesday |
7 October |
9.30am |
Meet at Vietnam Veterans’ Centre at Page to deliver flyers in Page, Scullin & Florey. |
|
Tuesday |
14 October |
9.30am |
Back to Queanbeyan. Meet at McDonalds in Wanniassa Street. Refer Map 75. G.2. Walk towards Railway Station and back. Coffee after. About 1 hour walk. |
|
Tuesday |
21 October |
9.30am |
Skateboard ramp in Bartlett Place, Greenway. Refer Canberra Map 79, B, 11.2. Walk around Lake Tuggeranong. Coffee at McDonalds (it’s not bad), then walk on to the cars. About 1 hour and 10 minutes walk and a beauty. |
|
Tuesday |
18 October |
9.30am |
Behind Water Police, Beissel St, Refer Canberra Map 29, D 13.5. Walk around Lake Ginninderra. Coffee after. One hour and a bit walk and fantastic. Then head off to Page for the BBQ or Ladies lunch, which will be advised on the walk day. |
If it’s raining, get out of bed and do some exercises.
PLEASE DON’T FORGET TO BRING YOUR WATER
Kokoda Wins PTSD Trekkers
Kokoda Complete, originally uploaded by vvfact.
VVFACT members Peter Kercher (left) and Laurie Drake congratulate one another at Owers Corner after completing the Kokoda Track with the Picking Up The Peaces for PTSD trek. More photos.
Our 13 Picking Up The Peaces for PTSD trekkers completed their nine days on the Kokoda Track in one piece… and totally in awe of the efforts by Australian Diggers in those beautiful, deadly Owen Stanley Ranges in 1942.
As we pulled ourselves to the crest of yet another near-vertical razor-topped ridge, rivers of sweat waterfalling from our noses, team-mates and porters applauded and offered jelly beans, fruit, or water, and we sank to the ground for rest and recovery.
We could only wonder at the Diggers of Maroubra Force – the 39th Battalion, the 2/14th, 2/16th and the other units of the 16th, 21st, 25th and 30th Brigades that followed them through this country 66 years ago.
They reached those same ridges starved, wracked by dysentery, malaria, long-term sleep deprivation, with festering feet, loads weighing up to 65kg, many carrying multiple wounds, and the hypervigilance required to stay alive in a battle zone. We had it easy!
Total casualties of Australian soldiers on the Kokoda Trail from July to November 1942, numbered 1,680. Of these, 625 were killed. Casualties due to sickness exceeded 4,000. The Japanese are believed to have lost over 6500 killed – a ratio of 10:1.
Considering that the Australians were initially poorly trained and poorly equipped militia, and the Japanese were elite special forces unbeaten in more than eight years of campaigning, that result beggars belief.
As part of their general strategy in the Pacific, the Japanese sought to capture Port Moresby. The port would have given them a base from which they could strike at most of north eastern Australia, and control of a major route between the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
The first attempt by sea-borne amphibious invasion was thwarted by the Battle of the Coral Sea. Plan B was to mount an overland assault across the Owen Stanley Range to capture Port Moresby.
Many believe they intended to use Port Moresby as their base to invade Australia. Had they succeeded, Australia today might have been a very different country.
Against that background, walking Kokoda today has a significance well beyond the magnificent scenery, heart-warming people and challenging tracks.
Our four veterans – Peter Kercher and Laurie Drake (Vietnam), Phil Larkham (Timor-Leste) and Bernie Nihill (Solomons) – perhaps experienced it differently, but we were all struck by the overwhelming support of the local Koiroi people. They supplied most of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels in 1942, and our porters today. Incredibly, 19 trekkers (we adopted six rascals from Adelaide and the Sunshine Coast) required 34 porters, even though three of us carried all our own gear!
The personal porters were incredible. They pitched and packed tents, cleaned boots and washed and folded clothes, filled water containers, gave concerts, and anticipated their trekker’s needs to the point where some even seemed telepathic. On the track, they pushed trekkers uphill, held out supportive hands during log and river crossings, and clutched packs to prevent their charges crashing down the slippery descents.
And, oh, the track! Its 96km is well-travelled – 5000 (mainly Australians) trekked it last year, and each day we passed other parties travelling north, in the opposite direction to us. But its surface is narrow, precipitous, tortuous, ripped by slippery roots and ankle-turning rocks. Parts are perpetually wet and greasy, deeply pocked by quagmires of black mud and slick clay.
Navigation is generally not difficult, although the trail is actually a network of tracks used by local villagers to reach their gardens, or friends, or destinations. Many of those tracks have nothing to do with the ‘major thoroughfare’, so a guide was very useful.
But the overwhelming sense is of the steepness of the ridges, up and down – have a look at this elevation profile. At times we would climb for hours or descend knee-wrenching ‘undulations’ for hours through features that in wartime were known by such names as ‘the Japanese Ladder’ or ‘the Golden Staircase’ – one of which reputedly had 4000 steps.
Although how anyone counted them, I’ve no idea. To take your eyes off the ground for any reason invited disaster, with one of our number tumbling down a cliff, many a ‘touchdown’ and ricked knee or ankle. We learned quickly that walking and looking at the scenery were two totally different – and separate – tasks!
We paused for memorial services at two of the most prominent battle sites – Isurava (where Bruce Kingsbury won his VC and Charlie McCallum almost did – it was downgraded to DCM) – and Brigade Hill. Our Kokoda Spirit trekking company guide Wayne Wetherall issued a eulogy, prayers, poems and honours lists to various trekkers to read, and then our Rural Fire Services representative Lindon Kinder played Last Post on a trumpet. And our porters sang. Very moving.
There’s a monument to the Australian troops at Isurava, overlooking the magnificent Yodda Valley – four granite pillars engraved with the words Courage, Endurance, Mateship, Sacrifice. And a small one on the peak of Brigade Hill.
At Myola, Oribaiwa and Imita Ridge the monuments are in the form of rotting weapons and ammunition dumps, the remains of Japanese and Australian fortifications, mountain gun positions, ordnance and weapons pits. Plus plaques to trekkers who have died on the track in the last couple of years.
There is an eeriness, and a splendour to these key points along the track. Even beyond the physical exhaustion, you feel them in the air. At night the fireflies may be the ghosts of warriors still flitting through the jungle, but there’s a peace about the place too, a satisfaction of a job done hard, but well.
The time passed remarkably quickly. We managed to spread awareness of post traumatic stress disorder and attract financial and medical support for the Picking Up The Peaces campaign. We laid the foundations for growing awareness in the year ahead, and cemented a team to carry it forward.
The contribution of Vietnam Veterans Federation ACT Branch was inestimable – and is the vibrant seed of a lot of worthwhile future benefits for younger veterans of Australia’s military and emergency deployments.
And for the curious – ‘Kokoda Trail’ and ‘Kokoda Track’ have been used interchangeably since the Second World War. ‘Kokoda Trail’ was adopted by the Battles Nomenclature Committee as the official British Commonwealth battle honour in October 1957. In 2008 the Papua New Guinea Parliament established a Place Names Commission which endorsed the use of ‘Kokoda Trail’. However, the sign at Owers Corner has Trail on one side, and Track on the other, and old Diggers invariably refer to it as the ‘Kokoda Track’.
Veterans’ Voices at Villaggio Sant’ Antonia
Veterans’ Voices at Villaggio Sant’ Atonia, originally uploaded by vvfact.
Friday 1st August, 2008. ABC1 Television filmed the performance of the Veterans’ Voices at Villaggio Sant’ Antonia, Page, for the program Stateline.
The episode on the Voices will be broadcast on ABC 1, Friday 15th August at 1930hrs.
New Lathe Commissioned
New Lathe commissioned, originally uploaded by vvfact.
Training to operate metal Lathe in Workshop.
Peter has commissioned the new Lathe in the Metal Workshop and is planning to run training sessions for members of the Federation.
To obtain further information or to book a training session, please contact the Office, on telephone, 02 6255 2312 or email to 


