
Some Sundays start softly, with stories that linger long after the radio is off. A caller in the studio explaining how a single layer of carbon — graphene — might help roads last longer than the people who drive them. A woman from Albany speaking quietly about scattering her father’s ashes along the Rabbit-Proof Fence, fulfilling a promise to a man who had worked that lonely line as a teenager. And a father in Wangaratta saying he’s grateful Australia is finally giving kids a chance to grow up without the weight of social media on their backs. By the time the morning found its rhythm, you could feel how these scattered voices — thoughtful, tender, practical, hopeful — were all part of the same gentle Sunday mood.
Pete Flying Over Lake Eyre
Pete called from the cockpit, still carrying the exhilaration of another flight over Lake Eyre. He has watched the lake shift week by week, and this season has been unlike any he’s seen. “The colours are just incredible,” he said — deep red in Madigan Gulf where Cooper Creek’s fresh water mixed with salt, a green streak in Jackboot Bay, and the surreal blue-green layer in Belt Bay, framed with bright white salt crust. Earlier in the year it was 70 to 75 percent full. Now it’s maybe half, yet still astonishing.
Cool weather lingered longer than usual. “Only had mid-40s once this year,” he said. And with a November cyclone forming near Darwin — the first in fifty years — he laughed gently, “We don’t do averages in Australia. Just droughts, flooding rains and the odd bushfire.”

Ed Watching Dawn at Carrickalinga
Ed was looking out over Carrickalinga Bay from a lonely phone box on the Fleurieu Peninsula. “Just wonderful to be alive,” he said, describing the soft orange light behind him. Yesterday brought one of those perfect farmer’s rains — “just drizzled all day” — and it lifted the whole region after a dry stretch.
He spent the afternoon in the shed with the cricket on and the rain pattering on the roof. “I’m retired,” he said, “but I’m busier now than when I was working.” There was a cosy contentment in the way he said it.
Cheryl and the Life Saved at 38,000 Feet
Cheryl wrote in with a story that married skill, timing and a touch of fate. A decade ago, she was a Qantas hostie on a Brisbane–Los Angeles flight when a woman collapsed just before breakfast service. Cheryl had refreshed her CPR not long before. The trainer’s words stuck with her: “Don’t worry about breaking ribs — just save a life.”
“I had carpet burns on my knees to prove it,” she said. The woman had only a one-percent chance of survival. It turned out to be a pulmonary embolism followed by cardiac arrest. She lived, and they’ve remained in touch. On 13 March 2026, that woman will turn 100. “Do that CPR training,” Cheryl urged. “It matters.”
Margaret and the Chilean Sheep-Eating Plant
Margaret from Armstrong near Great Western has been tending three unusual South American plants for twenty years. One of them — a two-metre-high Chilean sheep-eating plant — finally flowered. “We called it the alien,” she said. Its spear shot straight up like a giant asparagus, its long leaves lined with rows of backward-facing spines.
She later learned why shepherds in Chile fear it: sheep can become trapped, die, and nourish the plant. “We’ve got orphan lambs,” she said, half laughing, half worried. “This may not end well.” Macca told her not to let it go to seed. She promised, “Don’t panic, Ian. I’ll be very sensible.”
Val Singing at the Enmore Theatre
Val from Woonona had a voice that carried its own music. She’s nearly 90 and had just sung at the Enmore Theatre with Astrid Jorgensen’s Pub Choir — “two thousand one hundred people!” She has sung all her life, following her mother and sister into choirs.
Astrid organised the crowd into three parts, and while Val is a soprano, she stayed in the mezzo section because “there were too many people to climb over.” She still sings with the U3A choir and had attended a moving concert earlier in the week with the Sydney Male Choir and the Arcadians Lamplighters. One of the Lamplighters was 93. “It brings tears to your eyes,” she said.
Colin and Lily Driving the Monaro
Colin was driving his 1969 HT Monaro to a car show in Geelong with his daughter Lily beside him. The old Holden burbled beneath them as they talked about its rising value. “Eighty to one-fifty, even unrestored,” he said.
“It’s stylish,” he added. “Not comfortable — but stylish.”
He joked about passing Teslas — “They look like wheelie bins.” Lily will inherit the Monaro one day, and you could hear how much that meant to him.
Debbie and the Illegal Tobacco Crisis
Debbie Smith, an independent grocer, called with a sobering report. Tobacco sales in mainstream supermarkets have crashed from around ten percent to as low as two. For independents, the collapse has been catastrophic — some stores dropping from $20,000 a week to $1,700 as illegal tobacco floods the market.
She described criminal syndicates, vanishing tax revenue, menthol cigarettes arriving by the container load, and enforcement tied up in health regulations that require multiple agencies to act together. “We’ve lost billions that should be funding hospitals,” she said. “And smoking rates are going up, not down.”
Chris Weighing Caravans Across NSW
Chris had just finished weighing 37 caravans in Wentworth and Balranald with Transport NSW. “The heaviest was four-hundred-and-fifty kilos overweight,” he said.
People pack caravans like houses — washing machines, extra gear, the comforts of home. “If you want all the comforts of home,” he said, “maybe stay home.”
He’ll be in Mudgee next for another round of free checks. His main message was simple: “Take your time. You’re on holiday. The trucks are working.”
Matthew on Graphene and the Roads of the Future
Sitting in the studio, tech commentator Matthew Dickerson explained graphene — a single layer of carbon atoms arranged like a honeycomb, discovered experimentally in 2004 with sticky tape and graphite. “Two hundred times stronger than steel,” he said.
Mixed into bitumen, it strengthens the binder so roads last longer — two and a half times longer in some trials. “The rocks become the weak part,” he said. They talked AI, potholes, overloaded roads, and the impossible task of maintaining 877,000 kilometres of Australian road with a growing population.
Jim Marking Lambs in Ballarat
Jim rang from Ballarat with the sound of sheep filling the background. They were marking lambs — vaccinating, tagging, checking the season’s survivors — but sixteen wedge-tailed eagles had descended on the lambing paddock.
“They know we’re the last to lamb in the district,” he said. He admired the birds, but the losses hurt. Ravens, crows, foxes, eagles — no easy answers. One by one, the eagles perched on stumps waiting for movement. “Magnificent things,” he said. “Just too many for us this year.”
Betty and the Pianola That Sings Again
Betty from Nunderi sounded delighted. Her 100-year-old pianola had just been restored by her tuner, Jed, who gave it a test run. “He peddled it and sang ‘Some Enchanted Evening’,” she said.
She has a new turntable, vinyl records, cassettes — “everything old is wonderful.” The pianola came from Newcastle forty years ago and still brings joy to visiting children. “Their eyes pop out,” she said. “They can’t believe it plays itself.”
Flynn and Mum After Cyclone Megan
Young Flynn joined the call from the Tiwi Islands after his first cyclone. “Lots of wind and rain,” he said. School was closed and being used as a shelter for people with weaker homes. His mum, Heidi, said the tide surge hit at the same time as the storm passed.
Despite the chaos, Flynn had been fishing for barra, camping and settling into island life. He spoke with the calm resilience kids often have after wild weather.
Yvette, Her Dad, and the Purple Fairlane
Yvette from Jindabyne had lost her father the week before. He was a truckie and listened to Macca every Sunday. “In the purple Fairlane with the white leather seats,” she said. He’d drive with the windows down, no air-con, letting the wind do the cooling.
She used to pick up the CB and sing to the passing truckies. “Your voice was home to him,” she told Macca. She has passed that ritual to her own boys. She also shared pride in her niece, Josie Bath, who is heading to the 2026 Winter Olympics for snowboard cross. “We’ll be there in our pink helmets,” she said.
Lee on Kids, Screens and Real Friendships
Lee from Wangaratta, a father and educator, saw hope in the new laws restricting social media for under-16s. “It’s a chance for real connection,” he said — kids knocking on doors again, talking face-to-face, learning to navigate friendships without the constant pressure of private messaging.
“Technology just went too far,” he said. “This brings balance.” Matthew agreed — saying the change might be one of the best gifts a country can give its young people.
Suzanne at the Rabbit-Proof Fence
Suzanne from Albany, a bird photographer, had been visiting a remote property north of town when she stopped near the Rabbit-Proof Fence. On a gate she found a damp plastic bag tied carefully to the metal. Inside was a handwritten letter — three pages — asking the station owners’ permission to return.
The writer’s father had worked on that stretch of fence at 15 years old. Before he died, he asked that his ashes be scattered there. When the family returned, they placed a small cross on a rise overlooking the fenceline. “It was very moving,” she said quietly — a simple act in a quiet place that carried decades of meaning.
By the time the morning wound down, the callers had woven a picture of the country that felt both familiar and surprising — pilots tracing colour over the desert, singers raising old rooms to life, farmers watching the sky, parents guiding kids into gentler futures, and families honouring memories in far-off corners of the land. It was the kind of Sunday where ordinary people, just by doing what they do, made the whole morning feel quietly extraordinary.
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