Saturday, 15 February 2014

At the Coal Face

Sunday, 16 February 2014, 11am

This was another educational episode in my efforts to document the fight against Big Coal and Gas. I spent four days in the oppressive heat of central NSW near Narrabri looking at the work of the activists in the Pilliga State Forest against coal seam gas and the Maules Creek mob fighting the expansion of the Maules Creek Mine and the Boggabri Mine (and a few others) into the Leard State Forest.

While Sarah attended a meeting in Narrabri, I trucked off to the Pilliga Protection Camp, arriving about midday on Monday. The first drawing was obvious and straightforward – the camp itself, which I completed within a couple of hours of arriving.


“Pilliga Protection Camp”

What to do next wasn’t quite so obvious. I took the opportunity to join an expedition to check on the welfare of a protester that had locked on to a semi near the drilling rig. After a drive of about 20km into the bush we arrived at the site where Carmel had been freed and was having an escorted pee before being taken away in a paddy wagon. I was immediately approached by a cop who told me to put my camera away (which they’re not empowered to do) and some words were exchanged about Carmel’s welfare, which was found to be OK when she emerged from the bush. Managed to squeeze off a pic of Carmel being taken away as we left, but no opportunities for arting as we had been told to move on or risk being arrested –


After returning to camp, I attempted to draw some people in camp, but found their constant movement problematic and ended up rubbing it out. I spent the rest of the afternoon sitting in the shade and trying unsuccessfully not to sweat too much as I listened to the camp chatter and asked stupid questions.

Three people turned up who had been arrested that morning. They came to get their gear and leave before they were arrested for breaching their bail conditions by being within 50km of the Pilliga.

As evening approached the temperature dropped and the whisky started to work. I was attracted by an Ironbark in the light of the setting sun. It was drawn on the panel I’d previously erased and had a dirty backgound –


“Ironbark”

After this I sat down and chatted in the camp, trying to get to know some of the activists. I met up with Frida, one of the artists from Bimblebox, who had dropped by to pick up her tent after being arrested the previous day for locking on.

Eventually I noticed a group of camping chairs that attracted me as an interesting composition, so I went off to get my gear. When I got back Dave was sitting in one of the chairs, so he was included. Dave was a (relative) local, as were about half the protesters at the camp. He was one of those arrested that morning, but was staying on after convincing the cops that he needed to rest before moving on.


“Dave from Dubbo”

A while later I noticed the moon and Jupiter and thought a nocturne was in order. As I walked back to get my gear again, I was hailed by Bruce Copeland from the local Gomeroi Mob – “Come and sit with us, brother”. As good a place as any to draw the sky, so I sat down and got to work. His mate Monty leaned against his ute right in front of me, so was included, to the gain of the composition –


“Jupiter over Black Monty”


That was enough for one day and eventually I retired to sweat out a night in my tent, though not before a memorable encounter with a chemical toilet. I discovered after downloading that there were no poo tickets, then I couldn’t work out how to get it to flush in the dark. Bent down over the bowl, I finally found the lever and sprayed my face with shit water as it flushed. I stumbled off to my tent looking for water and tissues with my pants around my ankles. I survived.

Next morning I decided to set off to draw the water piping laying along the road to the well sites, prior to burial. I knew I wouldn’t be able to get anywhere near the drill rig. Ten km down the road I was stopped by a cop who told me I could go no further, even if I was just a harmless artist. Two helmeted Santos (Santossers) looked on and smirked. I asked if it was OK if I stopped back the way I’d come and draw the road, he said no problem. I kicked myself later, I should have asked if I could draw him and his companions. No doubt he would have refused.

I found this side track fairly active –


“Pilliga Plumbers at Work”

I had now used half my panels and wanted to keep the other five for Maules Creek, so thought I’d just sit around and chat until I had to meet up with Sarah later that day. Bruce had other ideas.

He approached me with a proposition:
1.      Do his portrait.
2.      Give the portrait to him.

I explained that I was trying to tell the story of the action, had limited panels and that I intended to exhibit the work. If he could find me something else to draw on I would be happy to give him a portrait. When he heard that it would be shown, he was happy to let me keep it. So he set himself up, I asked him to leave his shades on and this is the result –


“Bruce Copeland - Speaking for Gomeroi”

Bruce turned out to be the nephew of a gent I’d already drawn for the Dying Darling series – Uncle Alan Hall. His real nephew that is, not a nephew in the aboriginal sense. Small world. The Gomeroi are very active in the fight in this area, especially since some of their sacred and burial sites had been trashed in the fossil fuel stampede.

I was going to sit down and take it easy for the rest of the day, but after receiving a call that the cops were on the way to bust the camp, thought I’d leave to avoid having to unpack my car. As I was leaving, Dr. Mehreen Faruqi, NSW lower house Greens MP, turned up. I was to meet her later at Maules Creek. Her account of her visit can be found at http://www.mehreenfaruqi.org.au/a-tale-of-environmentalism-and-police-intimidation/

After a cold shower in the truckies’ showers at the back of the Shell roadhouse in Narrabri, I lay down in the shade in a park to read and wait for Sarah’s meeting to finish.

We headed off to Maules Creek that afternoon and were made welcome by the large group of activists. Sarah caught up with a lot of her mates while I looked unsuccessfully for something interesting to draw. The camp had just been relocated to Cliff Wallace’s farm ‘Wando’ after they were kicked out of their previous camp in the State forest by the local council, following an occupation of over 500 days.

That night about twelve activists set out to do some ‘scrubbing’ around the Maules Creek Mine. This involved blocking the roads with logs dragged out of the bush. At one stage they met up with the security guard, and while he was busy removing some logs, they crept around and threw some logs on the road behind him. Then the cops arrived. The scrubbers were later retrieved without incident after the cops left.

At this stage Sarah and I decided to set off to do a drawing of the mine. We were pulled over just inside the forest boundary by a cop in a 4WD, who checked our rego, breathalysed me (unsuccessfully), asked if we were there to pick people up, then started to hint that he’d like to check our car for roadworthiness. After explaining that we had a very obsessive mechanic that kept us poor, he decided not to bother. I explained that I was only there to draw and he let us continue on.

Issuing defect certificates is one of the main tactics of the police. Every time they see a suspect in a car, they pull them over and defect their car, trying to keep them immobile and cost them money. Several cars were defected in our two days there.

A couple of K’s later a cop car came the other way, turned behind us and followed us all the way to the mine site, where I pulled over to draw. He assured us that we weren’t there to draw, but indeed ‘to cause trouble’ and gave us a ‘move-on or else’ order. So we returned to camp creatively unfulfilled.

That night, after a very hot and unmotivated day, I did a quick sketch of the evening meeting –


“Meeting at Maules Creek”

I was attracted to the tarp in the foreground. Di Martin had turned up to record events for a ‘Background Briefing’ program on Radio National on the local fossil fuel and biodiversity offsets schemozzle, to be broadcast on March 16. She is second from the left in the back row.

The next morning we managed to draw the mine without any problems, as there’d been no actions to stir up the ants nest that night. As I finished, the company security guard pulled up. He admired my drawing before wishing us ‘Avagooday’. The map was overlaid afterward and shows the extent of the two mines’ incursion into the forest. There are other smaller mines as well, which are not marked. Precious little of the forest will remain. The map will be ‘pushed back’ in the painting.


“Scar - Plan and Elevation”

We drove on to Boggabri to attend a meeting with the Gomeroi elders where an agreement between various environmental groups and the Gomeroi was signed, followed by a friendly BBQ laid on by the Maules Creek Mob.

Thursday evening I persuaded two activists, Dani and Kat, to pose for me in the outfits they’d made for an upcoming action, specifically protesting the decimation of the local bat population. They couldn’t hang upside down for long, so each portrait was restricted to about four minutes. Kat was amused that I’d given Dani big boobs. It wasn’t intentional. Really.


“Dani and Kat - Bats Behaving Badly”

I had hoped to do a portrait of Muzza, long term organiser who had been at the protest from the start, but he decided to play hard to get and we left the next morning with one panel undrawn. We managed to avoid the police that had set up nearby to defect as many of the protester’s cars as they could.

After all we’d seen, it was a sobering drive home.

Further reading -