Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeFeaturesYouth guidance awarded

Youth guidance awarded

AUSTRALIA DAY HONOUR: Millicent Girl Guides and Scouts leader Heather Lowndes has been awarded the Wattle Range Council’s Australia Day Citizen of the Year Award for her long service to the community.

MORE than three decades of selfless community service have resulted in top honours for Millicent resident Heather Lowndes.

The long-time Girl Guides and Scouts instructor will receive the 2017 Wattle Range Citizen of the Year Award at Millicent’s official Australia Day function.

Ms Lowndes has clocked up 26 years as a guide leader in her hometown of Canberra and in Millicent and almost eight years at the helm of the Scouts.

After joining the national guiding organisation at eight years of age, Ms Lowndes became a leader of a Canberra group at 18 years old.

“My father had been involved in Scouts for years and I guess my interest came from that,” she said.

“It was in the early ’60s when I joined and that was really the heyday of the organisation.

“There were a lot of members and all the halls were being built then.”

Ms Lowndes moved to the region from the capital territory to complete a degree in forestry in the early ’80s.

However, after meeting her future husband, Ms Lowndes remained in Millicent and joined the guides group as a leader.

“I was not sporty at all and that’s the main way people get involved in their communities,” she said.

“I was not working because I had a young baby, so you do what you know.

“When I first started with Millicent, the leaders were Gwen Kitto and Faye Hunt, and we had meetings at the old hall behind the museum.

“During my time as leader I had four boys so at the end of 1985 I left the guides.

“You cannot justify being a guide leader with boys, so I was a cub leader for five years.”

Ms Lowndes remained with the Scouts until 1994 and ultimately rejoined the Girl Guides in 1999 where she has remained since.

“I have seen hundreds of girls go through the program under my leadership and it’s wonderful to see so many girls get so much out of it,” she said.

“I have a lot of fun too and it’s great to have a bunch of girls that may not have common interests get together and cooperate.

“Scouts follow a much more rigorous, prescriptive badge system, whereas guides have a very girl-centred program.

“The girls quite often run the nights themselves.”

Ms Lowndes said the female-orientated and female-only organisation aimed to provide training in life skills, leadership and decision making through projects and activities.

“I try to get them camping, there’s a bit of a push to do kayaking at the moment and the girls are really enjoying sewing which is a surprise,” she said.

“I also like to get the girls to the big camps in Sydney, Tasmania, Hindmarsh Island and Iron Knob.

“We were in charge of the state camp in Lucindale, and we had the whole region planning that one.

“We’re hoping to get another camp in April.”

As well as leading the Millicent Guide Girl Shooting Starz and the Scouts, Ms Lowndes serves as the guides’ regional manager, learning partner and regional outdoor assessor.

“As regional manager, I oversee the Millicent, Mount Gambier, Naracoorte and Bordertown groups,” she said.

“The learning partner sees me helping new leaders getting through training.

“I have always served other people, and I have always worked in the community and done some sort of volunteering.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

BESS project location rejection

THE District Council of Grant has formally opposed the location of a battery energy storage system (BESS). Elected members discussed at large its stance...

Turner awarded

More News

Precision and compliance

AllBuildSA knows that precision matters when it comes to disability housing, which is why they deliver specialist, NDIS-compliant home modifications designed to support clinical...

Vic and SA to clash in epic showdown

Familiar football faces will get their boots back onto home soil as Glenelg Football Club (SANFL) and Coburg Football Club (VFL) bring a major...

Help ID mystery photo

MOUNT Gambier History Group is hoping locals can help name people in a large number of photos. By the looks, this photo was taken at...

Silas a winner

This week 28 players took part in the Millicent Bowls Club 2-4-2 game. The winning team for this week was John Silas from the...

Branxholme rodeo mega pic gallery

THE 12th Branxholme Rodeo has put on a top show for its spectators with riders coming from South Australia, and New South Wales to...

Pentanque tournament a hit

More than 60 teams attended the 24th Annual “Coonawarra Vignerons Classic Clash” Petanque Tournament held over the 14 and 15 February and despite the...

Trophy goes to Harkness and Coperman

At Robe the weather was fine and the field was 82. In First Div the very predictable local, Gordie Fleming won with 36 points,...

Candidate questions

Each week SA Today has posed questions to current candidates for the seat of MacKillop . This week's question was around coastal erosion and infrastructure...

Victory for Varcoe pair

On Sunday the 15 February, 12 couples took part in the Annual Mixed Pairs competition. Each game, including the Grand Final, was played over...

Honour the role of women in the country

A fifth-generation sheep farmer, an occupational therapist, an agtech entrepreneur and a country vet are the 2026 Victorian AgriFutures Rural Women’s Award finalists. The award...