Syndyne
Shaun Galman
Wal, sadly the rules don't vary at all across any opal fields, albeit Grawin, Coocoran, Mehi etc. etc. much the same as in White Cliffs. We are all under the N.S.W. blanket regulations for the Opal Mining Act. If someone goes down a shaft there the outcome would be no different. However I can only agree that this issue certainly needs addressing somewhat, how though, given the nature of OH&S is a task I certainly wouldn't want to champion.
The more cautious, safety-minded miner in me see's a very different side -that Mbasko is alluding to with regulations always being set in place, particularly when we see tourists walking around over filled in shafts that they are often unaware of (which I've mentioned a few times here over the years). These can look just like any other old mullock heap, only have an exposed shaft hiding underneath. Many shafts in the late 70' early 80's were only covered in thin concrete caps that are now broken and collapsed in. These are often hard to even see with a few weeds and a bit of surface soil over the top (easily enough room for someone slip through). These types of things are a logistical nightmare given they are often right on the sides of roads and tracks and have been abandoned for decades.
The Grawin mullock dumps are also off-limits (you beat me to it Mbasko!). That was put in place some time ago after a few close calls with trucks and tourists -and fair enough too. My Mum and her partner lived and mined close to the Grawin dumps at their camp for ten years. They saw, and heard of a lot of close calls taking place over time.
I may have stirred up a bit of a hornets nest here, but that was certainly not my intention. It was merely just to inform of the small changes taking place here now. The old Ridge hasn't really changed for the better since 2000 as far as mining and regulations go (us locals know this all too well), but we are lucky in a way that it hasn't been stopped altogether. That is a reality that may come somewhere down the line and we all have that in the backs of our minds these days.
Cheers,
Shauno.
EDIT: Spelling correction.
The more cautious, safety-minded miner in me see's a very different side -that Mbasko is alluding to with regulations always being set in place, particularly when we see tourists walking around over filled in shafts that they are often unaware of (which I've mentioned a few times here over the years). These can look just like any other old mullock heap, only have an exposed shaft hiding underneath. Many shafts in the late 70' early 80's were only covered in thin concrete caps that are now broken and collapsed in. These are often hard to even see with a few weeds and a bit of surface soil over the top (easily enough room for someone slip through). These types of things are a logistical nightmare given they are often right on the sides of roads and tracks and have been abandoned for decades.
The Grawin mullock dumps are also off-limits (you beat me to it Mbasko!). That was put in place some time ago after a few close calls with trucks and tourists -and fair enough too. My Mum and her partner lived and mined close to the Grawin dumps at their camp for ten years. They saw, and heard of a lot of close calls taking place over time.
I may have stirred up a bit of a hornets nest here, but that was certainly not my intention. It was merely just to inform of the small changes taking place here now. The old Ridge hasn't really changed for the better since 2000 as far as mining and regulations go (us locals know this all too well), but we are lucky in a way that it hasn't been stopped altogether. That is a reality that may come somewhere down the line and we all have that in the backs of our minds these days.
Cheers,
Shauno.
EDIT: Spelling correction.
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