Six months of 2026 are now gone. I've made good progress with the PhD research but writing it up is more slower. The trip out west was great and I'm looking forward to the next six months of 2026 when I say goodbye to my swinging 60s and embrace my slower 70s. To party, or not to party?
Ancestral footsteps
| The Big Opal, Eulo |
There is not much out there now and it is still incredibly remote. An airconditioned car was obviously better than a Cobb & Co Coach although the bumps and potholes in the road may have been the same.
On the way we stopped at Miles and had dinner at the pub where Max's Mum and Dad met during the war. He was a soldier stationed out there and she was the barmaid behind the bar (her father was the publican).
In Charleville we went to the secret American WW2 army base and did the tour. Amazing how much history is out there that probably most of us don't know about.
| Russian rocky road, Dirranbandi |
Speaking of bakeries, some of the pies we had were creative and delicious. Just glad that they are not local, as I could be tempted more often.
Books
Any trip with me usually means I come home with more books and the western road trip was no different. But only two and both focused on my family history around Eulo and Thargomindah.
The opal fridge magnet had my name on it as did the pink yabby in support of breast cancer fundraising.
Enjoying all the background reading for my PhD on incarcerated women in colonial Queensland.
So many ideas to follow up on my own family history once I get this finished (possibly submitted in 2028, although I have until 2031).
Hopefully there will be a few pockets of personal family history between now and then.
Conferences
In September there is the NSW & ACT conference in Port Macquarie where I am giving a talk on using digital archives. That will be a road trip down the coast and back, probably by an inland route for something different.
The AFFHO conference in Wellington next February sounds like it will have quite a few Queenslanders there. So I will need to think about booking airfares and accommodation as I don't want to miss out. FOMO is a terrible thing.
Family History Month and Nick Vine Hall Awards
Just a reminder that August is AFFHO's Family History Month so keep an eye out for some great events. Due to the timing of my trip I will only get the last few days of August and of course, the closing event which is usually a fantastic speaker. No details yet.
| The Big Watermelon, Chinchilla |
Who will do the announcement this year in my abscence still to be decided.
Resources
If you just want to sit back and learn some new tips, don't forget FamilySearch have free webinars each month. Of particular interest this month is on 16 July Using the FamilySearch Catalog Effectively and on 30 July Using Google Maps for Family Hitory. You can also view earlier webinars if you missed one or need a refresher.
What's new in Trove in June 2026 - I love these updates as they illustrate just how much is in Trove in all the various categories. This month there is a WW2 focus which is interesting. Follow the link.
The Digitising Our Collections
| The Big Yabby, Moonie |
Talks
I'm doing an update on Scottish resources for the Genie Chats group this month. Plus I'm working on my presentation for Port Macquaries and a Legacy Family History webinar for after my return from Europe.
I've decided not to give presentations in 2027 - firstly my PhD will be in crunch time and secondly, I will be over 70 and quite probably should think about retiring and just go to events as a spectator.
A novel idea but given I gave my first talks back in the early 80s, I'm just about talked out!
What's coming up
After the disappointment of having our flights to London cancelled in June and having to abandon our road trip around England and Scotland, I fully expected that my August trip would also be cancelled as it flies through the Middle East. But just notified that it is still on and I leave in four weeks. Wow. So not prepared. This trip is a bus trip around the UK and Ireland then across to Europe for four weeks.
Until next time, happy researching, stay safe and take care, Shauna
