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Ab Rootliep
Interviewee:
Ab Rootliep, born 1928
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 3 Sept 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
Ab
Rootliep is one of the volunteers at the Hills Tourist Information Centre.
He arrived from Holland in 1966 to settle in Castle Hill and has become
an unofficial, unpaid but not unrecognised tourism ambassador for the
Shire.
I retired
from my job in 1993 and in the first one or two years we did a bit of
travelling but after a couple of years I thought I want to do a bit more,
make myself useful and get out of the house a few times a week. In 1996
I was taken on as a volunteer at the Maritime Museum, which I am still
doing today. About the same time, I also knew that in Baulkham Hills they
were looking for volunteers to man the Tourist Office which is now located
in Dural, the tourist Centre in Dural. I was accepted as a volunteer and
I have been doing it for a number of years now and enjoy it very much.
So
can you tell me a little bit about the work that you do at the Tourist
Information Centre?
If someone
walks in the door and asks me what can we see, what can we do here, can
you suggest a few things we should do for walks or for driving around
– we do have a few people dropping in who are totally lost and they have
to get from here to Windsor but don’t know how to get there. We have the
odd overseas visitors, of course, who are passing through and they would
like some guidance of where to go, what to see and we have all sorts of
questions - people wanting to go to a nice restaurant, we may have some
young lady coming in looking for a place for a reception for a wedding,
all different things. In addition we also have next door to the Information
Centre we have an old historic home called The Pines, Roughley House.
That house is open to visitors to go through, with a guide of course,
so when I feel that when some of my visitors might be interested in seeing
an old Australian home, I usually take them through and they’re quite
thrilled to see it all. The gentleman who lives there, he is a direct
descendant of the old Roughley family who settled here in the mid 1800’s
and he is the last one of the line, so he still lives in that house. He
was born there 87 years ago. Delightful man, and he is always very, very
pleased to meet people, no matter where they come from. The house dates
back, according to the records, to 1856. Clive Roughley's grandfather,
he was the first one who came into this district and what Clive has done,
he has left it basically as it was when he was still living in it with
his family.
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Sydney Hills Visitor Information Centre 2006
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we also do in the summer months, once a month we have an open air Jazz
Concert at the house in the garden, so we get also involved in that. We
provide the tables and chairs and tea and coffee and people can come there
and spend a Sunday afternoon bringing their own picnic lunch and listening
to jazz. A very, very pleasant way of passing the time here.
How
much of your time is involved in the Visitors Information Centre. How
often do you go there?
Well I do
it once a week, usually on Saturdays from 10 to 4, six hours. We have
a number of volunteers, I’m not sure how many we have now, maybe 12 or
so, so the idea is that every day there is a different person looking
after the Visitors Centre.
In
terms of other volunteering activities that you are involved in, you already
told me about the Maritime Museum, but you’ve only sketched on it. Tell
me a little bit more in detail what you do there.
I do two
jobs. One day a week I am a guide, taking people around on the couple
of warships that we have and the second day I work as assistant to the
manager of the Welcome Wall which is dedicated to migrants and settlers,
anyone at all who came to this country and who would like to have their
name recorded on this wall. So I am involved with a lot of the administration
of that and I do talk to people over the phone. I just remembered in ’96
and 1997 I worked for two years as a volunteer with the St Johns Ambulance
Brigade who had a section which trains volunteers to assist schools with
providing assistance to young children in the primary school age with
reading skills. We were allocated a child who had difficulty in reading
or comprehension and then we, as a volunteer, were placed with that child
for an hour a day, maybe two hours on a one to one basis and help the
child with improving their reading skills and spelling skills. I enjoyed
it when I did it.
Of
all the time, the days in a week, how many days would you spend on volunteering
activities would you say?
I do two
days a week at the Museum and one day at the Visitors Centre in Dural,
so three days a week I am busy volunteering. I am working with a very
nice group of volunteers and we have great fun I think.
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