On Sunday 20 October, as the sun rose to welcome a glorious day, the P&O cruise liner Pacific Explorer slid over the horizon and at 6.15 am anchored in Cascade Bay on the north-east side of Norfolk Island.
Isaac Robinson is the man credited with bringing Thanksgiving Day to Norfolk Island. Arriving aboard a whaling ship in 1860, he went on to become an important member of the community. Some believe he may have been educated in England, such was his keen interest in botany. He certainly had sufficient standing in scientific circles to enable him to send many plant specimens to scientists in Europe.
Carefree and idyllic, Norfolk Island is the perfect place for a childhood that is rarely found elsewhere in the world today. Written about my daughters Libby and Annie’s experiences growing up, and illustrated by Annie, they spent some of their formative years on Norfolk Island living an enviable, unique, carefree life that is rarely found today.
From critically endangered to being declared extinct, then back again – the fate of Norfolk Island’s morepork owls hangs in the balance. But now there is some great news – with the dedication and care of researchers and Parks Australia – it can be revealed that two chicks successfully fledged in the 2019–2020 breeding season.
On Norfolk Island, the bullet-proof among us have demonstrated a cavalier attitude to a simple request to step up and self-isolate during this coronavirus, covid-19, pandemic. Even with non-stop media explaining the nuances of herd immunity, and banging on about self-isolation, social distancing and cough etiquette, sadly some still choose not to ‘get it’. It is more important that they can party, see their mates, and maintain ‘business as usual’.
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