
Tomatoes, Tankers, Piano Keys and the Quiet Authority of Everyday Australians
It started in the cold of a Tasmanian morning and stretched outward — across tomato fields in Echuca, cattle stations in Queensland, floodwaters filling Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre, classrooms in Port Vila, dairy plants in India, and a solar project in Chad — before circling back through Blue Mountains traffic, Toowoomba training schools and a quiet paddle on the Coorong. What held it all together wasn’t scale, but clarity: callers who knew what they were talking about, and who spoke with the kind of grounded common sense that turns a radio program into something much bigger than a conversation.
Cass and Andrew from Triabunna
Cass and Andrew set the tone from Triabunna, Tasmania, calling on their drive to work. Cass, originally from Papua New Guinea, has spent 14 years in aged care and spoke simply about loving the work. Macca lingered on that — the idea that purpose matters as much as pay — while the conversation drifted through autumn arriving early, four-degree mornings, and the quiet satisfaction of building a life far from where it began.
There was also a thread of PNG pride running through it, especially when rugby league came up. Even from Tasmania, that connection remains strong — a reminder of how identity stretches across borders without losing shape.
Chris from Echuca and the Tomato Harvest
Chris brought scale and pressure from the tomato fields around Echuca. Working with Kagome, he described a massive operation — thousands of tonnes processed daily — but also a season hit by rain, mould and rising costs.
The most telling moment came when he spoke about losing around 20,000 tonnes of crop to mould. No recovery, no workaround — just disc it back into the ground and move on. From there, the call widened into imports, diesel costs and the fragility of Australia’s remaining processing industry.
His message was direct: check the label. “Made in Australia” doesn’t mean Australian-grown. It was one of the clearest consumer calls of the morning — practical, specific, and rooted in real consequence.
Will from Quamby and Life on Gleeson Station
Will’s call from near Cloncurry shifted the tone back to the bush. A ringer on Gleeson Station, he was heading back to work after the races — part social event, part community glue.
The conversation wandered through weather, coffee runs and station life, but what stayed was Will’s ease with it all. He liked the work, liked the life, and wasn’t overthinking the future. Maybe management one day, maybe his own place. For now, it was enough to be where he was.
Fiona in Nowra and the Sydney Royal Easter Show
Fiona’s call added a slice of agricultural tradition. She was heading to the Sydney Royal Easter Show to steward egg judging in the Poultry Pavilion — a detail-rich world most listeners never see.
It was a quick exchange, but it highlighted the expertise behind the scenes: preparing birds, teaching students, judging eggs. The kind of knowledge passed on quietly, but kept alive through people who show up and do it.
Mario and the Fuel Question
Mario, the paper man, cut straight into national policy. If Australia wants to drill for oil, he argued, it needs refineries first.
His analogy landed clean: buying food but having no stove to cook it. Without refining capacity, crude oil means little. He pointed to the loss of refineries, lack of reserves, and absence of long-term planning.
Macca picked it up immediately — another example, he said, of a country reacting instead of preparing.
Peter MacDonald and Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre in Flood
Peter’s call from Barham lifted the program into something almost cinematic. Fresh from a flight over Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre, he described water everywhere — lakes between dunes, green grass across the desert, pelicans arriving in numbers.
The detail made it vivid: insects swarming, roads cut, the William Creek Hotel sweeping out buckets of beetles. It wasn’t just water — it was a system coming alive.
For a moment, the continent felt vast, dynamic, and unpredictable in the best way.
Phil from Wollongong and Wartime Lessons
Phil added historical weight to the fuel debate. During World War II, Australia built dozens of inland fuel depots. Why not now?
He and a colleague had even proposed a small levy years ago to fund infrastructure — build it, pay it off, remove the levy. Simple, practical, and ignored.
Like Mario, he wasn’t just complaining. He was pointing to what had worked before.
Jerry Harvey and the AI Disruption
Jerry Harvey brought a different energy — sharp, fast, and slightly unsettling. He spoke about AI, rising costs, and constant disruption hitting from “left field.”
His core message was uncertainty. Even those closest to the technology don’t fully understand where it’s heading. But change is coming quickly — and adaptation will be essential.
He suggested a shift back toward trades, where skills remain in demand. Reinvention, he said, may become normal. It was a mix of warning and pragmatism — not comforting, but not defeatist either.
Alan from Buderim and Sally Hall from Blackheath
Listener correspondence sharpened the mood.
Alan from Buderim vented frustration over rising land valuations and government spending, reflecting a broader sense of pressure on everyday Australians.
Sally Hall from Blackheath offered something more immediate: a warning about the Great Western Highway closure at Victoria Pass. Detours, traffic through Lithgow, and serious risks heading into Easter travel.
It was local knowledge with real stakes — the kind radio delivers best.
Lynne Presley and a Plug for Blackheath
Lynne Presley followed with a practical response: come and visit the Blue Mountains — just not over Easter.
With businesses already feeling the impact of the highway closure, she made the case for supporting the region when travel conditions improve. She also pointed to the train as a reliable alternative.
It was community advocacy, grounded and timely.
Michael Kelly in Toowoomba and Training the Next Generation
Michael Kelly’s call moved into workforce planning. Visiting his son at a pilot academy in Toowoomba, he described the scale of training underway — domestic and international students preparing for aviation careers.
But his deeper concern was national capability. In shipping and aviation, Australia is increasingly reliant on overseas workers. Through Offshore Specialist Ships Australia, he and others are funding training themselves to keep local pathways alive.
It was one of the most quietly powerful moments of the program — people stepping in where systems fall short.
Luciano, Linton and Dawn in Port Vila
From Vanuatu came a snapshot of Australians abroad. Luciano, Linton and Dawn were part of a Bowral-Mittagong Rotary team building classrooms at Malatia School.
Linton described the physical reality — heat, unfinished work, the need to return. Dawn spoke about purpose and the impact of volunteering.
Together, they captured something enduring: Australians contributing quietly, without fuss, in places far from home.
Sandra at Narrung on the Coorong
Sandra’s call was pure atmosphere. Kayaking through the Narrows at Narrung, she described pelicans, swans, mist and still water.
Having recently retired, she had found a place that offered calm and connection to nature. It was one of the most evocative moments of the morning — simple, visual, and unhurried.
Ian Lucas, Piano Day and Music’s Place
Ian Lucas marked Piano Day from Montville, but the conversation quickly deepened. A former pilot who returned to music after decades away, he spoke about rediscovery and persistence.
He also raised a broader point: large-scale entertainment has squeezed smaller performance spaces, making it harder for emerging and independent musicians to find their place.
Macca agreed — not just the young, but the “brilliant old” too. It became a quiet defence of small venues and local music.
Craig from Wisconsin via China and India
Craig’s call spanned continents. After working in China, he had spent months in India’s dairy sector before landing in Wisconsin.
He described vast differences: automated systems in China, versus thousands of small-scale suppliers in India, each contributing small amounts of milk collected by hand and transported by scooter.
The scale was staggering — and so were the conditions. Families working at ground level, sometimes sleeping alongside cattle for warmth. It was global industry seen from the inside.
Paul in Chad
Paul’s call from Chad added another layer. Working on a solar installation project, he spoke about building energy reliability in a region where power is inconsistent.
Having lived there for years, he described strong local relationships and a sense of purpose in returning to complete the work. It was a reminder of how many Australians operate quietly overseas, contributing skills where they’re needed.
Lawrence in Bundaberg
Lawrence closed the program from Bundaberg, cutting turf after recent floods. His concern was familiar: labour shortages and the difficulty of finding workers.
That led into a broader discussion about education, apprenticeships and the value of practical skills — a theme that had surfaced repeatedly throughout the morning.
One Conversation at a Time
From Triabunna to Echuca, Cloncurry to Blackheath, Port Vila to Chad, the morning built its own map — not of places, but of perspective. Each caller added something grounded and lived-in: how to grow food, move fuel, train people, fix roads, build classrooms, or simply pay attention to the land. Taken together, it was a portrait of a country — and a world — still held together, quietly, by people who understand how things actually work.
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.




