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Back Roads - Season 12 - Episode 05: Copper Coast, SA
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00:12Oh, I look like I'm straight out of the 1860s.
00:16Backroads is off to join in the fun of the Cornish Festival
00:19on the Copper Coast of South Australia.
00:27It's surprising that right here,
00:30outside Cornwall, they hold the biggest Cornish festival in the world.
00:35It's a legacy of the thousands of miners
00:38who left a depressed Cornwall in the 1860s,
00:42enduring an arduous 10 weeks
00:44for new opportunities on the Copper Coast.
00:47It's just west of Adelaide,
00:49with the bustling towns of Kadena, Munta and Wallaroo.
00:54And one, two, three, four...
00:58I'm here just as they're finishing all the preparations for the festival,
01:01which started over 50 years ago.
01:05This looks hard.
01:07Left, right, that's it.
01:09I feel like having a jig too.
01:11And then I'm going to turn and we go one, two...
01:16It's a massive community effort.
01:18Oh, foul.
01:20It's not going to fit me, though.
01:21Oh, sorry.
01:22Ow.
01:23Sorry.
01:24Ow.
01:24There's probably about 40 mums
01:26doing the exact same thing right now.
01:28Better get out of the way.
01:29The parade's coming.
01:30I'm Paul West,
01:31and I'm on the Copper Coast
01:33to see why they make such a fuss
01:35about all things Cornish
01:36and if there's enough people
01:38with enough push
01:39to go for another 50 years.
01:41Welcome to Colonel McLemanser!
01:54The big week really kicks off
01:57in the town of Munta
01:58with a grand parade.
02:05I'm told the name of the festival
02:06means Cornish happiness.
02:10I don't know much about the Cornish
02:12except they love pasties,
02:13so I'm keen to find out more.
02:17I can see this as a showcase
02:19of history and legend.
02:22Give us your gold!
02:26Apparently, real-life pirates
02:27really did raid the Cornish town of Penzance
02:30hundreds of years ago.
02:31Who knew?
02:37Well, g'day, you two.
02:38You certainly look the part.
02:39Are you locals?
02:40We are.
02:40Our children are in the parade here today.
02:43Here she comes now!
02:45Here she comes!
02:45This is our daughter, Scarlett.
02:46G'day, G'day, Scarlett!
02:48And Jake is on the Picky Boy float.
02:51Oh, look at the little legends up there.
02:53So what are they doing up there?
02:54So they're sorting all the ore
02:56for the mines
02:57and they've got their Cornish flags
02:59and, yeah.
03:01So even the little kids
03:02would be working in the mines?
03:03Yes.
03:04And how far from town here
03:06would the Munta mine be?
03:07Uh, only a couple of k's.
03:09There's actually lots of underground tunnels
03:11still to this day.
03:12Woo!
03:14This is the history
03:15behind all the hoopla.
03:27The old mine just outside Munta
03:29with mountains of tailings
03:31is the key to the area's Cornishness.
03:34It was rich with copper.
03:36It was huge.
03:38And from the 1860s,
03:39it shaped the culture here.
03:51As head of the local national trust,
03:53this mine has been
03:54Graeme Hancock's passion
03:55for the last 15 years.
03:58Copper mining actually began
04:00in South Australia
04:02before it went to other parts of Australia.
04:05There's not much he doesn't know
04:07about the skill of Cornish miners.
04:12It was said that
04:13at any hard rock mine in the world,
04:16you could always find a Cornishman
04:18at the bottom.
04:19So they had a real reputation.
04:23I'm learning that the Cornish
04:25had been miners for thousands of years,
04:27since the Bronze Age.
04:29So they found the copper here.
04:32Yes.
04:33And then put the call out
04:34for Cornish miners
04:36to come to Australia.
04:37Absolutely.
04:37A major immigration program.
04:40Yeah.
04:40We were talking a population here
04:42of 12,000 to 13,000 people.
04:46Yeah.
04:48I can just picture this place
04:50pumping in its heyday.
04:55It was the first Australian mine
04:57to make a million pounds.
04:58And it fuelled
04:59the early South Australian economy.
05:06How significant a site
05:08was this mine here?
05:10It is of world significance
05:13because it was one
05:14of the biggest mining areas
05:16for copper in the world.
05:23Well, this was purely built
05:25as a water pump
05:28in 1865.
05:30Graeme kept up
05:31the campaign for recognition
05:32and now the mine's been shortlisted
05:34for World Heritage status.
05:38These ruins are Richmond's engine house.
05:41So this is the beating heart of the mine?
05:43It is the beating heart of the mine.
05:46The heritage listing
05:47will keep the history alive
05:49and the Cornish culture meaningful
05:51for future generations.
05:53Now here, from the inside, of course,
05:56you can look up and see
05:57exactly where the Cornish beam engine
06:00was perched.
06:01In here was world-leading technology,
06:04invented, of course,
06:05by Cornish engineers.
06:07Steam-driven cylinder here,
06:10the bob connected
06:11to the winding equipment.
06:15And so this was...
06:15They pumped out groundwater
06:17so mining could go deeper
06:18and deeper.
06:20The innovations here
06:22actually did change
06:25the face of mining
06:26around the world.
06:28It's Cornish innovation,
06:30it's Cornish endurance,
06:32if you like,
06:33that exists and oozes
06:35out of every relic that you see.
06:37And people,
06:38as we go forward
06:39with World Heritage listing,
06:41more people will see
06:42our place in the world today.
06:49But there is a darker side
06:51to the Cornish miner story.
06:54Boys as young as 10
06:55work sorting through
06:56a tonne of ore
06:57every shift.
06:59This is the grim reality
07:01behind the picky boy kids
07:02I saw earlier in the parade.
07:05Many local families
07:06have a picky boy
07:07in their history.
07:10Up in the nearby town
07:11of Kadena,
07:12I'm meeting Paul
07:13and Liz Rowan.
07:15Paul's grandfather,
07:16Reg, became a picky boy.
07:17And Paul has Reg's
07:19precious keepsakes
07:20safely tucked away.
07:24That's how I remember him
07:26as a young boy.
07:29We'd go out the mines
07:30and he'd show us everything.
07:33He started off
07:33as a picky boy.
07:36He was 14 years of age
07:37when he started that
07:38and then, you know,
07:40upgraded up through
07:41the ranks
07:42and become a miner.
07:43And then that's when
07:45he was a bit of a younger man
07:46with his movie camera.
07:48Yeah, he looks like
07:48a movie star.
07:49He's a dashing-looking chap.
07:51Yeah, a bit like me.
07:52Yeah,
07:53Apple doesn't fall
07:53far from the tree there, Paul.
07:55No.
07:55There's another one.
07:56Paul and Liz retired
07:58to Kadena
07:59after a life
08:00of farming nearby.
08:01But memories of Reg
08:03and the mines
08:03left a deep impact
08:05on the family.
08:07Incredible.
08:08I mean, they're so striking.
08:09It's so crystal clear.
08:11Yeah.
08:12He was a keen photographer
08:13in the early days.
08:14Reg helped
08:15the official photographer
08:16at the Wallaroo mines
08:17in the early 1900s
08:18and left these
08:20incredible glass photos.
08:23It's huge.
08:24Yeah, absolutely, yeah.
08:26Because you don't really
08:27get a sense of that now.
08:28No, it's all gone.
08:30That's an underground shop.
08:32Oh, wow.
08:34I mean,
08:35so these are the conditions
08:36that they were working in.
08:38And this could be
08:38100 metres underground
08:40with no electricity.
08:41Yeah.
08:42So these guys
08:43are doing this work
08:44by hand,
08:45by candlelight.
08:46Yeah.
08:47It looks like a hard job.
08:48Yeah, the conditions
08:49of the mines were terrible.
08:51Dirty, wet, dusty,
08:53you name it.
08:54Well, he actually
08:55was interviewed
08:56with an article
08:57and some of his words
08:59on that were
09:03they worked wet the skin
09:05in awful temperatures
09:07and when they were killed
09:08on the job,
09:09their widows got
09:10one day's pay
09:11in compensation.
09:13One day's pay.
09:14And if they survived
09:15the mines,
09:17they often died
09:17young of the dust.
09:20Liz has Cornish ancestors too.
09:22Her great-great-grandfather
09:24also worked
09:25at the Wallaroo mines.
09:27Unfortunately,
09:28he was killed
09:28in the mines.
09:29They were setting up
09:30some blasting
09:31and the blast
09:33wasn't successful.
09:34So leaving
09:35a widow,
09:37which would have been
09:38my great-great-grandma,
09:39and a young family.
09:41Jeez,
09:42we've got it easy now,
09:43don't we?
09:43We do.
09:44We do.
09:49The Copper Coast
09:50is changing.
09:52It's becoming
09:53a hot coastal destination
09:54with hundreds
09:55of new people
09:56moving in.
09:58And I wonder
09:59if that will affect
10:00the area's love
10:01of Cornishness.
10:03The town of Wallaroo
10:04is where they once
10:05smelted the copper
10:06and shipped it out.
10:10Today,
10:11there's a favourite
10:12festival event
10:13at the Wallaroo Church Hall,
10:14and I think it's sure
10:15to keep drawing
10:16in the crowds.
10:17I've come to lend a hand.
10:22OK.
10:24Glad you're here.
10:25Extra pair of hands
10:26is always welcome.
10:28What are we making today?
10:29We're making pasties.
10:31According to an old
10:33Cornish recipe
10:34that my great-grandmother
10:36brought with her
10:37from Cornwall.
10:37June Ladner
10:38is not only
10:39a uniting church minister,
10:40she's Cornish
10:41up to her pasty-making elbows.
10:44So would the miners
10:45used to take the pasties
10:47down the mines of them?
10:48Yep.
10:49It was probably
10:50the first takeaway food,
10:51a pasty.
10:52And how specific
10:53is the recipe?
10:55Very specific.
10:56You don't put carrots
10:57in Cornish pasties.
10:58Oh, OK.
10:59Yeah, oh, yeah.
11:00It can be...
11:02Civil war.
11:03So it's steeped
11:04in tradition then,
11:05making pasties.
11:05Oh, absolutely.
11:06Absolutely.
11:07The recipe...
11:08June's grandparents
11:09and her eight
11:10great-grandparents
11:11were all Cornish.
11:14What kind of characteristics
11:16do the Cornish folk have?
11:18They're pretty resilient.
11:21They're stubborn.
11:23That describes me
11:24pretty well.
11:25And I think
11:27our expression,
11:28you know,
11:28Jack's as good
11:29as his master
11:30is definitely Cornish.
11:31They would not
11:32kowtow to anyone.
11:34Yeah.
11:34Yeah.
11:35Sounds like they're
11:35really proud people.
11:36Proud, independent,
11:39stubborn.
11:40Yeah.
11:42Turns out
11:43today is a sellout
11:44with 50 eager
11:45and hungry students.
11:47Well, I'm going to be
11:48picking your brain
11:49for pasty-making
11:50wisdom today, Wendy.
11:51It looks like you've
11:52made a few over the years.
11:54Just a couple.
11:56You're going to
11:56buy pasty, Paul?
12:00Liz, good to see you.
12:02I do have friends.
12:03Here's Liz,
12:03who I met earlier
12:04with her husband, Paul.
12:06This is the first time
12:07I've actually
12:08taken part in this
12:10and I thought,
12:12well, why not?
12:13You're never too old
12:14to learn something different.
12:16Right.
12:17School's in.
12:19So the first thing
12:20you do is you tip in
12:21the flour
12:22and the dripping.
12:25Now it's time
12:26to get down
12:27and get dirty.
12:29You never, never, never,
12:32never, ever dice.
12:34The meat
12:35do not mince.
12:37It's supposed to be
12:38quarter-inch cubes.
12:40It was poverty cooking.
12:42They were very,
12:44very poor.
12:45They worked very hard
12:47and they were very poor.
12:49All right, ladies and gentlemen,
12:50we're up to the last
12:52and final step.
12:55Move it towards you.
12:57Squeeze.
12:59Squeeze before and after.
13:03Pretty happy with that.
13:04Hope it tastes
13:05as good as it looks.
13:06I wonder how the Cornish
13:08feel about tomato sauce.
13:09The girls will be coming
13:11around with the trays now.
13:13This is all good fun,
13:15but I'm keen to know
13:16what drives June
13:17to go to all this trouble.
13:19I think that it's
13:20really important for everyone
13:21to know who they are
13:22and where they've come from.
13:23It saves you from
13:25making some stupid decisions.
13:27It centres your life.
13:29You can't drift
13:30if you know who you are.
13:32Do you think people
13:33are a bit adrift?
13:34Oh, yes.
13:35Or over the place.
13:37Or over the place.
13:39That isn't a problem
13:40right here.
13:41Knowing who you are
13:42is what the massive effort
13:44going into the festival
13:45is all about.
13:53Now for the moment of truth.
13:56Had a blowout.
13:57Epic fail.
13:58Not too bad.
14:00It's still going to taste good.
14:01It'll be okay.
14:02It'll be okay.
14:06Yeah, that's come up good.
14:08Hell yeah.
14:09It smells good.
14:11What do you reckon?
14:12I reckon...
14:13I reckon you're top of the class.
14:15Oh, that's what I want to hear.
14:17Oh, you're just saying that, June.
14:20That's come up good.
14:21If anyone else asks me,
14:23I'll say the same.
14:27I'm getting to understand
14:28that although they were
14:29at the other side of the world,
14:31Cornish ties to the homeland
14:32stayed strong.
14:36Cornwall was famously
14:37the land of King Arthur,
14:39rich in folklore and myth.
14:43Their Celtic language and culture
14:45was suppressed by the English
14:46for centuries.
14:48They fought to keep it,
14:49but lost.
14:51Till finally,
14:52early last century,
14:54it was revived.
15:02The language is cousin
15:04to Irish and Welsh.
15:05It lives again.
15:11The Cornish bards
15:13uphold the culture
15:14and tap into its ancient roots.
15:16Do it or throw
15:19a winner
15:20is craze.
15:22Craze!
15:24Sometimes rituals
15:25take you into strange realms
15:27and I'm keen to delve
15:29into this mystical world.
15:43There are even Cornish bards
15:46in Australia.
15:47I found one of the oldest
15:49living bards,
15:50Lillian James,
15:51right here in the town of Munter.
15:54It's an honour
15:55to become a bard of Cornwall.
15:57It's a part of the culture.
15:59They kept the stories,
16:02the poems,
16:03the songs alive.
16:15I was made by it in 1988.
16:21Lillian James,
16:22Tony Owl.
16:24Mrs James is the first
16:25Australian woman
16:27to have passed
16:29all her examinations
16:30in Cornish.
16:34It's a marvellous ceremony.
16:38The first ceremony
16:39is something
16:40that you never,
16:41never, ever forget.
16:47There we were,
16:48bards,
16:50we're sending
16:50our message
16:51to the world.
16:52Pray what is
16:54you are waiting,
16:57Colonel
16:58Quade MacCarrantan.
17:08And this is
17:10the National Tartan.
17:11Now in her 90s,
17:13Lillian spent a long time
17:15tapping into
17:15her own Cornish roots.
17:18That's my grandfather
17:20and he was a foreman
17:22in the Munter mines.
17:23Fluent Cornish
17:24was long gone
17:25by the time
17:26Lillian's grandfather
17:27arrived in Australia
17:28in the 1870s.
17:30So my mother
17:31didn't know
17:31any Cornish language
17:33and my grandmother
17:35either
17:35when she came
17:36from Cornwall.
17:37Lillian wanted
17:38to reverse this loss.
17:40After retiring
17:41from high school teaching,
17:42she signed up
17:43for a language course.
17:44The study
17:45of the Cornish language
17:46is for four years.
17:49I just used
17:50tapes
17:51and I would do
17:53my ironing
17:54and my boys
17:55and their dad
17:56would go off
17:57to football
17:57and I'd be ironing
17:58and saying
17:59all these Cornish words
18:01as I'm ironing them.
18:08As you take
18:10in paleo melanma,
18:12methyl are take.
18:15She's written a book
18:16of stories
18:17entirely in Cornish
18:19and has taught
18:20language classes
18:20at the festival
18:21for decades.
18:26Why do you think
18:27it's so important
18:28to keep the language alive?
18:30Cornwall loses
18:31its language,
18:32it loses
18:33the soul
18:33of its country.
18:37Cornish rolls
18:38off Lillian's tongue
18:39so beautifully.
18:41It's not for the faint-hearted,
18:42but I'm up
18:43for the challenge.
18:47Would you like
18:48to learn some
18:49Cornish language?
18:49some Cornish, yeah.
18:51Just a simple
18:52little sentence
18:53so perhaps
18:54we'll say
18:54thank you
18:55and goodbye.
18:56Murass
18:58Murass
18:59Murass
18:59Ha
19:00which is
19:01and
19:01Ha
19:01Duganis
19:03Murass
19:04Ha
19:05Duganis
19:06Duganis
19:07Deworth
19:08Deworth
19:23Knewick Lawenda
19:24Well done!
19:26You're a great teacher, Lillian.
19:29What about if
19:30I wanted to celebrate
19:31how would you say
19:32cheers?
19:34Yah-hiz-da
19:35good health.
19:37Yah-hiz-da
19:38Yah-hiz-da
19:41It's hard not to be
19:42lifted up by the
19:43passion and high
19:44spirits of people
19:45like Lillian.
19:50Back at the festival
19:51crowds are gathering
19:52for the Merry Maypole
19:54with its celebration
19:55of spring
19:55its abundance
19:56and its weather.
20:00Got it right.
20:01You want it to rain
20:02set up a Maypole.
20:03It'll rain.
20:04Give it up.
20:05And I'm raring
20:06to join in.
20:07Do you think I could
20:08borrow you please?
20:09Sure.
20:10Can you come and sit
20:11and wait for the pole
20:13for me?
20:13Do you think I'm qualified?
20:15I think you have
20:15this completely
20:16under control.
20:26Being a wait
20:27for a Maypole
20:28isn't something
20:28I've tried before
20:29but it feels kind
20:31of nice to be
20:32in the middle
20:32of a pagan tradition
20:33and usher in
20:34the warm summer months
20:35even if we are
20:36drowning.
20:38Well done.
20:39Keep it going.
20:41Nine.
20:42Ten.
20:43Teagan's a local
20:44high school teacher
20:44and loves
20:45the festival.
20:47She's super keen
20:48to see the younger
20:48generation getting
20:49involved.
20:55It looks like
20:56that if you get
20:58one person gets
20:59it wrong
20:59it could be chaos
21:00around the Maypole.
21:02It can be
21:02but we tell the
21:04children we keep
21:05going.
21:05We just smile
21:07and skip without ribbons
21:08if we have to.
21:08Sounds like great
21:09advice for life.
21:11Just smile
21:11and keep skipping.
21:12Keep on going.
21:15What does it
21:16mean to you
21:17to see your
21:17daughters out
21:18here doing it?
21:19It fulfills
21:21my heart.
21:22I adored
21:23doing this
21:24as a child
21:25and getting
21:26my hair done
21:26with mum
21:27and mum
21:27making my
21:28dresses.
21:30Were you looking
21:30sharp today
21:31Kenzie?
21:32Yep.
21:32Do you like
21:33the dress
21:33that Nem
21:34made you?
21:34Yep.
21:35Very much.
21:36I do really
21:37love it.
21:41I hope
21:42that this
21:42continues
21:43and technology
21:44doesn't take
21:45over and
21:46that people
21:47continue the
21:48heritage no
21:49matter if
21:49they're
21:49Cornish or
21:50not.
21:51I hope
21:52this means
21:52the festival
21:53has a bright
21:53future.
21:56Is this
21:56something you
21:57think you'll
21:57be involved
21:58in into the
21:58future?
21:58I really
21:59hope so.
21:59I would
22:00love to
22:00keep going
22:00with it.
22:03I reckon
22:04music and
22:04dance must
22:05have brought
22:05huge joy
22:06to the
22:06Cornish
22:07migrants
22:07of the
22:071800s.
22:12But their
22:13everyday life
22:14was quite
22:15different.
22:21Across the
22:22parched plains
22:22just out of
22:23Kadena,
22:24where pioneer
22:24farmers once
22:25laboured,
22:26the festival
22:27is taking
22:27a strange
22:28turn.
22:42We're here
22:43at the
22:43graveside
22:44of Emily
22:45Annie
22:46Price.
22:48A cemetery
22:49isn't your
22:50typical festival
22:51venue,
22:51and this
22:52dressing of
22:53the graves
22:53event is
22:54unique and
22:55quite a
22:55Cornish
22:56thing to
22:56do.
22:57Anyone
22:58can nominate
22:59an ancestor,
22:59and then we
23:00hear a story
23:01of their
23:02life.
23:03Emily's
23:04life was
23:05tragically
23:05cut short.
23:07During her
23:08second
23:08pregnancy,
23:10Emily
23:10succumbed to
23:11the illness
23:11of toxemia.
23:13Pastie
23:13maker June
23:14Ladner is
23:15in her
23:15Uniting
23:15Church role
23:16today.
23:17She tells
23:18me the
23:18early settlers
23:19battled so
23:20their kids
23:20could have
23:20a better
23:21future.
23:23Her
23:23untimely
23:24death was
23:25a profound
23:26loss to
23:26the family
23:27and the
23:27community
23:28that had
23:28known
23:34earth.
23:34We've
23:35had
23:35grandchildren
23:36and great
23:37grandchildren
23:37who've
23:38turned up
23:39because
23:39this is
23:41their family
23:41story.
23:42This is
23:43where they
23:43come from.
23:44This is
23:44who they
23:45are.
23:46They're
23:47able to
23:47say who
23:48they are
23:48because
23:49the family
23:50and community
23:51connection
23:51has been
23:52kept alive.
23:53At each
23:54grave a floral
23:55tribute is laid
23:56and a citation
23:57read.
23:57Are the
23:58Cornish
23:58a religious
23:59people?
24:00Historically
24:01they're
24:02superstitious.
24:04They're
24:05fae.
24:06They have
24:06premonitions
24:07that are
24:08right.
24:11And there
24:12are probably
24:12more saints
24:13names of
24:15towns in
24:16Cornwall than
24:17there are
24:17anywhere else
24:18in the
24:18world.
24:19Even
24:20though Emily
24:20Price wasn't
24:21Cornish, the
24:22ceremony is
24:23open for
24:24anyone.
24:25Her
24:26descendants
24:26tell me it's
24:27quite a
24:27moving
24:28experience.
24:29We're
24:30here to
24:30honour
24:31Emily
24:31Price who
24:33is my
24:34great
24:35grandmother.
24:37My
24:37grandfather
24:38never knew
24:38where his
24:39mother was
24:40buried until
24:41he was 45
24:41and he drove
24:43past the
24:43cemetery while
24:44he farmed
24:45the land
24:45out here.
24:46Pup was
24:46beautiful.
24:47He's up
24:47there watching
24:48us today.
24:51And do
24:52you think it's
24:52a little bit
24:53odd to have
24:54a ceremony
24:55like this
24:55dressing graves
24:56as a part
24:56of a
24:57festival?
24:58No, I
24:59don't.
24:59It's history.
25:01History's got
25:02to come from
25:02death and
25:04life and
25:06it's an
25:07evolving cycle
25:08isn't it of
25:08life?
25:10Yeah, it's
25:11what builds
25:11the community
25:12and keeps
25:12it going.
25:15History and
25:16community are
25:17coming together
25:18in Kadena
25:18today.
25:19The whole
25:20festival's really
25:21opened my
25:21eyes to what
25:22it means to
25:23be Cornish.
25:27And it's
25:27impressive to
25:28see after 50
25:29years of
25:29celebrating,
25:30that identity
25:31is a heritage
25:32everyone can
25:33share, Cornish
25:35or not.
25:42The mines
25:43might have
25:43closed long
25:44ago and the
25:45times are
25:45definitely
25:46changing, but
25:47I've got a
25:47sense that
25:48that Cornish
25:48spirit of
25:49hard work and
25:50community will
25:51live on here
25:51for many years
25:52to come.
26:01Now that's
26:02really something
26:03to dance about.
26:04And I'm
26:05told this
26:05one, the
26:06furry dance
26:07is as
26:07Cornish as
26:08it gets.
26:16I really
26:17hope to see
26:18that this
26:19festival continues
26:20to flourish
26:20and grow.
26:22I hope to
26:23follow in
26:23Dad's footsteps
26:24and make my
26:25mark on the
26:25committee one
26:26day.
26:29Our state
26:30was virtually
26:31built on the
26:32wealth that
26:33come from
26:33these mines
26:34so there's
26:36just a lot
26:37here and
26:38it's something
26:39to be cherished
26:40I think.
26:43It's there
26:44for them to
26:46appreciate,
26:47to value
26:48and to
26:49continue with
26:51Canewat Lowenda.
26:52I just hope
26:54it continues.
27:09I'm going to
27:10keep practicing.
27:21Next time, I'm in Gainville.
27:25A Queensland town that's crazy about citrus.
27:29It pretty much is a state of oranges.
27:32State of oranges.
27:33Four, six, two, one! Four, six, two, one!
27:36And where I give it my best shot to fit in with some of the locals.
27:43Down it goes.
27:45I can't feel my lips anymore.
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