Small town Australia: Ignore them and they will go away, forever.

in #travel7 years ago

I recently spent some time near the small seaport town of Whyalla in South Australia. Located some 384km from Adelaide the town boasts a rich heritage in steel production and ship building and is South Australia's third most populated city in South Australia behind Adelaide and Mount Gambier with almost 22,000 people. The town is literally built on steel production with massive steel mills and supporting infrastructure in an around the town and a large port accommodating for steel transport ships. It's called the Steel City, an apt name.

Recently the company that ran the steel plant went out of business plunging the town into financial chaos and an uncertain future. Well, it wasn't exactly uncertain, it was simply bleak. House prices dropped over night, businesses went bankrupt and closed and the population started relocating elsewhere to find jobs.

Enter British billionaire Sanjeev Gupta and his purchase of Arrium saving the day, and thousands of jobs, in and around Whyalla. Mr Gupta has saved 25 steel mills, car plants and engineering workshops around the United Kingdom and has fortunately turned his focus to Whyalla and Arrium. It means many jobs have been saved and I have even read that he expects the population of the city to boom to close to 100,000!...I'm not sure that will happen however if anyone can make it happen Mr Gupta can. One step at a time Sanjeev.

As you can see from the images the town sits right on the east coast of the Eyre Peninsula and offers some spectacular coastal waters for recreation and fishing as well as an excellent steel mill and supporting infrastructure. The image above shows the steel mill and a train unloading ore and the image below right is of the dock where the steel transport ships load the steel bound mainly for China. About 1.2 million tonnes of steel is produced in the mill and is distributed by rail, road and of course, sea. The image to the right shows the view over the swimming beach directly in front of the sexy blonde girl. The small yacht club is further to the left, visible in the first (main) picture above.

The town itself boasts a large and well-equiped hospital and specialist centre, nursing home, schools, sporting clubs and shopping district. The main street, pictured below, is typical of a sleepy Aussie town however there are large retail areas located away from the main street housing some of Australia's most successful businesses. The image below was taken on Boxing Day right after Christmas so there's not much traffic. During the week it's a bustling retail hub catering for every need residents and visitors may have. The people who live here lead simple lives, or at least slower ones, than those in large cities but they tend to be happy, welcoming and easy-going by nature. They enjoy their water sports: Sailing, fishing, skiing and swimming and are grateful for the fact the Arrium steel mill has been saved from ruination.

Australia is dotted with towns like this, bastions of industry and home of the working class man and woman. Through bad management, rising costs, lower demand or other economic forces they die a slow, or sometimes fast, death. I'm pleased to say that Whyalla has been saved from that fate and should thrive through the rise of the Arrium steel mill led by Mr Gupta.

If you happen to be travelling in this area, possibly on your way from Adelaide to Perth make sure you plan a stop in Whyalla. A couple of days should be enough. There is excellent accommodation options in motels, hotels and a couple of caravan and cabin parks. There is also a lot to do including boating, swimming, learning about historical ship building past and of course the steel mill. I believe tours are available of certain plants which would be interesting and there's several great look outs so take your camera.

Small towns like this tell a story, of our past , and hint at our future. If we drive right by them at 110kph the town loses the opportunity to tell its story and you lose the chance to understand the country you live in just a little bit more. The next time you are passing by, Whyalla, or any other small town, take the time to stop and understand it or buy something to help the locals make ends meet. If we don't support them they will disappear and that would be a tragedy.

Design and create your ideal life, don't live it by default
@galenkp

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Bonjour @galenkp
Quelle magnifique photographie!
C'est vous qui l'avez fait? Si vous êtes un vrai photographe! )
Moi aussi je fais des photos sur mon blog si tu t'intéresse;)
https://steemit.com/@katouna
Ravie de vous connaître :) J'espère qu'on
sera ami! ^ _ ^
Bonne journée :-D

Hi @katouna, oui, j'ai pris les photos.

I will take a look at your blog and see your photography. Thanks for your comment and I hope you have a nice afternoon.

That's dominance of unbelievable blue sky is wonderful. Need to go to Australia some day.. Thanks for sharing.

I enjoyed reading this.. the whole while it reminded me of when friends and I drive thru the glacial highlands of pennsylvania on the way to a secluded cabin.. we pass through so many small towns like this, and I always say to the guys how cool it would be to have grown up in a small town.. to learn and become the history of that small town...

And then we just keep on driving... pretty lame.

Great post, mate!

Hey @biffybirdcam that secluded cabin thing sounds awesome! You should stop in at a couple of those small towns, poke around a little and see what you can find. In Australia there’s always something eclectic or odd-ball to discover due to the nature of our humour but I always find value in stopping, even if it’s just for a pie and cake at the local bakery. Sometimes these small-town businesses rely heavily on passing trade.

Thanks for your comment mate :)

Yes, like a beer! Stop in a local watering hole, as a group of guys, people always like to start convo with traveling folks and they near always have something interesting to say... I know that'll be an easy "Hell Yea" from the fellas...

And with a powerful camera to fly around, these small towns look absolutely stunning from above!

Thanks for your powerful upvote!

Cheers!

You do aerial photography @biffybirdcam? I would love to "drone up" but my experience with flying things (that I control) hasn't always, or EVER, ended well. I have crashed a couple of planes that took a while to build so have set a self-imposed ban on future flying adventures. I'd cry if I crashed my $3000 Phantom 4 drone or whatever they're called. That's why I don't have one! I leave it to the professionals.

No worries on the vote mate. I am relatively new here and know how hard it can be to become established. I have worked hard and have had the help of my bro, the most excellent and esteemed @tarazkp, so have found some small degree of success bit by bit I think. I haven't invested money into steemit, just my time, thoughts and opinions and have managed to build up my voting strength through hard work and consistency. I also do some cool things which helps having something interesting to blog about. Besides, I'm an Aussie, and as such am universally loved around the globe :) (Ok, so not really loved so much, just liked a lot!) :)

I'm going to check out your blog and might follow and see where it leads me.

All the best.

"Besides, I'm an Aussie, and as such am universally loved around the globe :)"

HAHAH you got me dying over here in America! Cheers!

Another one of those posts where I just feel to urge of dropping everything and leave for Australia tomorrow haha. No but seriously, going there the next year or so is a must, a shame I have not been there yet :)

If you like travel, vlogs, self-development etc feel free to check out my channel, otherwise I see you around!

Also, love this "Design and create your ideal life, don't live it by default", enjoy Thursday!

Hey @williamwest thanks for your comments. I’m glad to hear you’re coming to Aus next year. Loads to see and do so don’t spend all of your time in the pub drinking...Only some of it! Seriously though, it’s an amazing place. I’ve travelled the world and a lot of Australia and I can say that we have just as much to offer as other places. Sure our history isn’t as deep but what we lack in age and history we make up in humour, eclecticism and quirkyness and you’ll find a lot of that in small towns and out of the way places. That’s the true Australia.

My saying at the end of my posts is something Inpicked up along the way. It means that you have to go to life, it won’t come to you. Living by default is getting your opinions fed to you by the media and government propaganda rather than seeking the answers and your own reality. Living by default is sitting in the couch living vicariously through the television or absorbing the death, doom and gloom media outlets feed the world. The saying is quite deep when investigated. Thanks for liking it. I’m proud of it.

A lot of the so called rust belt in USA is hurting too. It's hard for heavy industrial areas to make a comeback

Yeah. Whyalla almost died, literally overnight. I guess the constant drive for better profits takes its toll. A good thing Gupta came along. Whyalla’s future looks set for years to come. Time will tell I suppose.

It's sad for all the towns that didn't have a Gupta come and save the day.

Even in the larger cities there's been some industries disappear, and people that have been doing the same job for 20-30 years, have no other skills, and up shit out of luck.

Great story of the town. When we travel to QLD we don't ever stop by any town, except guitar town. Even if we do, we hardly explore it. Just take a bite, petrol and toilet. Great advice to exploring smaller towns. cheers.

Also do you have a polarizer on your lens? What lens are you using? Cheers!

Hi @foovler, sorry I missed this comment. No polarizer. Just a setting on my Panasonic. TZ110.

Oh nice little travel camera. My next purchase would be something like it. Cheers looks great.

It's been a good little unit. Not as compact as I'd like but nowhere near as big as a digital SLR. I'm touring the UK in June and July so hope to get some great images.

Nice! Hoping to travel soon myself. SLR can be cumbersome especially FFs when traveling.

Yep. I also like the fact this TZ110 is a little more point and shoot which makes it easy. I don't want to spend the whole time changing camera settings when I'm away.

Small town Oz is the heart and soul of the country, as it is in many countries. Its sad to see them suffer and joyous to see them boom

Looks like it is Summer Down-under! The town looks quite scenic.

Sure is summer. Gets hot here. The day I took these photos (26th Dec) it was 38 degrees Celsius. (100.4F).

I wouldn't say I would like to say those temps here but I would take a portion of that warmth and mix it with the admittedly chilly conditions were are having in Jerusalem at the moment.

We all need to accept the conditions in which we live. It’s not always hot like this here. It’s actually a really nice climate most of the time. I tend to like it cooler than hotter despite living my entire life here.

yeah I read somewhere that the Adelaide area has a Mediterranean climate but I think unlike a real climate like that you guys CAN get some Summer time rainfall which is an added bonus. Take it from me.

Yes, our climate does resemble that of the Mediterranean areas. We get a little rain but South Australia is the driest state in the driest continent on the planet so not too much. We always welcome it when it rains. (Except for when it happens the day after we wash our cars) :)

I can understand that.

Nice photography. The place is so cool.
Want more pic. Thanks for sharing...

Really its true line
The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page.
Awesome lol.

Indeed a very interesting tour ride, angel picture can also, really very beautiful work @galenkp .

Here's a little bit about Africa. Feel free to upvote if you enjoyed it
https://steemit.com/uyo/@berylwills/my-heritage-my-culture

Wow, this article gripped my attention as the Gupta family have caused HUGE political controversy in South Africa. I was relieved to read that Sanjeev Gupta is not related to them at all! Good luck Whyalla.

Yeah, different Gupta's I think. :)

I had no idea it was such a beautiful town. Gorgeous images. Small towns in Australia have to keep reinventing themselves to survive. I saw so many ghost towns on my trip to the Outback. They were fascinating but sad to see so many people who had to shut up shop and leave.

It’s a little gem in the middle of the bleak and featureless west coast. My photos don’t do it justice really. Sure, it’s very hot in summer but it has a lot to offer a traveler. I used to own an investment property in Whyalla actually, was always rented for a good return and when I sold it I made a 50% return over purchase price. That’s a seriously good return in only 18 months.

The people who live and work in these small towns are accommodating and happy to talk. Generally hard working and very grateful for what they have. Our tourist dollars are essential to their town’s existence.

Yeah. I try to spend some money in the little towns when I travel. Congrats on your imvestment.

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Great post @galenkp love hearing about South Australia, reminds me of home!

Travelling is such a privilege and I love it...But coming home is always good. I love Adelaide. :)