About

ABOUT
ilovebrokenhill.com , was first published on 8 December 2011 by Jane Deany. My blog is all about the famous outback Australian National Heritage Listed City named Broken Hill, located in the state of New South Wales. I first visited #BrokenHill in 2002 and have returned many times since then. ilovebrokenhill.com will help you discover what's great about this historic mining city, where in the mid 1880's the line of lode, a rich ore body of silver, lead and zinc was found. You will find stories about anything related to Broken Hill.

Showing posts with label New Year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Year. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 January 2017

Happy New Year 2017 Broken Hill and everyone - it's all about time today

Happy New Year for 2017. Today is all about the passing of time. One interesting fact about Broken Hill is that although the city is situated in New South Wales which runs on Australian Eastern Daylight Time (AEDT), #BrokenHill actually uses Australian Central Daylight Time (ACDT), the time zone used by South Australia. The reason being that the city is relatively close to the South Australian border and the nearest capital city is the South Australian city of Adelaide.

Silver City Highway, 40 km south of Broken Hill
When you drive north up the 683 km Silver City Highway, about 40 km south of Broken Hill you will come across a sign, see pictured, advising that you should turn back your clock/watch by half an hour.

Broken Hill is unique in Australia because of this arrangement.

I remember my second trip to Broken Hill on New Year's Eve 2005-6. It was fun for me to be able to celebrate two New Year's Eves, the first one back home in Melbourne Victoria which is another one of the Australian states using the Australian Eastern Daylight Time, and then half an hour later, celebrating again with everyone else in Broken Hill.

That's a little bit of trivia about Broken Hill to start 2017.

Happy New Year everyone.

Cheers, Jane Deany

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Happy New Year Broken Hill and welcome 2014

January sunrise over quintessential Broken Hill

Wishing everyone in Broken Hill, Melbourne, across Australia and around the globe a fantastic New Year.

May 2014 bring you much joy, good health, happiness and prosperity.

Cheers,

Jane Deany

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Happy New Year Broken Hill

photo courtesy
www.commons.wikipedia.org 

Happy New Year to everyone in Broken Hill, Melbourne and everywhere else.

I hope 2013 is a wonderful year for you all filled with good health, fun, success and happiness.

Cheers, Jane D

Monday, 2 January 2012

It's 2012 - Happy New Year from Australia ...


fireworks courtesy
wikimedia.org

Happy New Year to you all, I hope 2012 is a wonderful year for you.  Okay, it's now 8.35am, 2nd January here in Melbourne (so I'm slightly late), 8.05am in Broken Hill, but it is still 1 January in places like New York City - 4.35pm and London 9.35pm.  There was too much happening on the 1st in Melbourne to post!

Once again Happy New Year.

Cheers, Jane D

Thursday, 15 December 2011

2005 and I've returned to Broken Hill at last

Leaving early afternoon on 30 December 2005 for Mildura some 5.5-6 hours north west of Melbourne, I was excited to be going to Broken Hill again.  My travel companion and I left Mildura early on New Year’s eve, arriving at our destination about 11.30 am.  We gained half an hour as, 40kms south of Broken Hill, the time zone goes back 30 minutes as although Broken Hill is in NSW, it runs on South Australian (SA) 'Central time', as it’s fairly close to the SA border and it just makes more sense to do so.
Being a country city, most shops in the heart of town were closing between 12 noon and 1 pm.  (The shops in the newer shopping centre a few kms from the centre of town, we found out later on, were thankfully open longer, a little bit more typical of what bigger cities have).  We rushed around for an hour or so visiting as many shops, galleries and clubs as we could in that time.  A visit to the Broken Hill Visitor Information Centre was very helpful.

                                                                                       Must See
Broken Earth Cafe Restaurant
on top of Line of Lode
It was then up to the Line of Lode hilltop lookout where we stopped off for lunch at the Broken Earth Cafe Restaurant. The restaurant sits at the highest point of the Line of Lode - see note below - and therefore enjoys a fantastic view over the town in all directions.  It served and still serves a tasty and diverse range of food (and drinks-yes licensed) and also has some excellent art adorning the walls which is sometimes for sale. It is actually a striking and award winning piece of architecture and has a Visitor's Centre attached as well.

We followed this up by a visit to the adjacent, (accessed via the Visitor's Centre) impressive and touching Miner’s Memorial, which also sits on top of the Line of Lode, which is made up of in part, remnant mullock (skimp) dumps and appears as a hill that divides north and south Broken Hill and is part of the massive orebody that has proved to be one of the world's largest silver-zinc-lead mineral deposits.
Must See
Miner's Memorial
Art Scene
We took in some more galleries, including a brief visit to the famous Pro Hart Gallery which you have to pay to go into. They were about to close but luckily someone buying some art delayed the closure and I zipped around the 3 levels as fast as I could.  It was a fantastic personal collection which, unfortunately for visitors, has been significantly sold off after Pro died in 2006.  It is now a gallery primarily exhibiting Pro's own work.
Must See
We then did a little shopping for picnic supplies and headed a few kilometers out of town to go to the wonderful Living Desert Sculpture Symposium/Park to take in a fabulous sunset and view.  The sculptures are pretty impressive as well.  Oh, by the way it was about 42 degrees celsius, so just a 'tad' hot!  After taking lots of photos, we enjoyed some champagne and a yummy picnic.

Horse head sculpture

Club Scene
It was then back to our motel to freshen up and off to the Muso Club aka Broken Hill Musician's Club (one of a number of clubs in town) to see in the new year and to catch up with one of the local identity Steer brothers whom we’d met earlier in the day at his art gallery in town.  More about art later…  It was lots of fun at the club and we felt we could enjoy seeing in the new year twice – with the half hour interval between events due to the time zone variation adding an extra bit of fun to the night.  I don’t think many Melbournite’s go to Broken Hill for new year's eve, it was certainly a different and novel way of seeing in another year.


(Above, left and right) Sunset and several sculptures from the Living Desert Sculpture Symposium/Park

Cheers for now, Jane D