in the move to Giru we were accompanied by my younger brother, our family had reached its final size of five.
At Giru father's mind turned to the opportunities that might be available to his children as they grew up. There was no local high school and attendance involved a bus trip to the town of Ayr, 80km away and not particularly well regarded for its academic excellence.
Father found a job with the local Regional Electricity Board in Townsville and we moved again at the end of 1967. Once in Townsville father took the opportunity denied him when he was younger and went to night school to gain his Senior certificate and then he attended lectures at the newly opened James Cook University (where I also studies years later).
University study agreed with my father and he gained his degree in electrical engineering in record time for a part time student, his future in the regional board seemed assured.
But in the meantime my father's long term concern for the people he described as "the workers" had come to the fore, he joined the Australian labor party and after nearly a decade of working within the party structure in 1980 he stood for and won the seat of Townsville West in the State Parliament. His political career spanned until he decided to retire in 1998.
Initially the ALP was in opposition, but when they won government in 1989 he was successively minister for Manufacturing and Commerce, to which small business was added in 1990. Later in 1990 the portfolio was reorganised as Business, Industry and Regional Development. In 1992 he became Minister for Lands, holding the position until 1995.
Against the opposition of entrenched business interested father introduced the concept of industrial parks or enclaves to the cities of Queensland, the idea being to site industry where ready access to road, rail and air was available whilst at the same time being out of the path of likely urban development, the idea being to avoid the kinds of tensions that develop with residential sprawl 20 years down the track - history is now proving him correct. Father also, over the entrenched opposition of his own department, introduced a system of electronic recording of real property title into Queensland, a system since adopted by other States.
To bring motorcycles back into the story, the 70s and 80s were the period when the power output of motorcycles went completely crazy, my father could not understand, given his own experience, why any motorcycle needed nearly 100hp, in short he fell into bad company and with several other politicians he commenced to have legislation drafted to prevent the registration in Queensland of any motorcycle of over 750cc capacity and also of any motorcycle of more than 70hp.
It is probably fortunate that most people do not even know that such legislation was ever contemplated, my sister, brother and I successfully torpedo's it before the drafting was ever complete. Father had provided a 'backgrounder' to a local journalist who knew me and telephoned me with the details. I discussed the matter with my siblings and together we visited our parents and let slip that we were aware of the proposed legislation and that if it ever saw the light of day the three of use would take a very public stand on our then unlawful motorcycles. At the time I owned a XS750 Yamaha (which would have been "legal", but I also owned my R100RS and a GPZ1100 Kawasaki. My sister at the time owned a CB1100R and my younger brother owned a Ducati 860.
Roll forward to 2014,I still own the R100RS, I also have an R65 and an XT350 - depending on the gods of eBay I may own a KLE500 in the next 5 days. my brother owns a Blackbird, a Triumph Daytona and a K100 and my sister has a a couple of monsters and a 916, between her and her partner they also own a shed full of ancient Bultacos, a beautifully restored Ducati 750 sport and a brace of "vintage' TZ350 and 250 racers, that they keep regularly "exercised".
So, did we inherit the motorcycling gene from our father?