Who’s Playing Where: Moreton Bay’s Gig Line-Up 27 Feb-1 Mar 2026

Moreton Bay is turning up the volume with a huge weekend of live music across Caloundra, Redcliffe, North Lakes and beyond. From touring legends and tribute acts to hip hop heavyweights and local favourites, here’s what’s happening from Friday 27 February to Sunday 1 March 2026.


LOUD! V18 | NUFFIN BUTTA, TUCANA & CHERRY NOVA

27 February 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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A high-energy live music night bringing together NUFFIN BUTTA, TUCANA and CHERRY NOVA for a stacked lineup of loud, genre-blending sounds. Expect big stage presence, crowd energy and a packed dance floor.


TOBIAS Celebrates – THE CURE

27 February 2026 | Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
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A tribute celebration revisiting the iconic catalogue of The Cure, featuring fan favourites and atmospheric classics for lovers of post-punk and alternative rock.


Toni Childs – A Retrospective

27 February 2026 | Redcliffe Entertainment Centre, Redcliffe
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The acclaimed singer-songwriter performs a retrospective of her celebrated career, delivering powerful vocals and timeless songs in an intimate theatre setting.


Rolling Loud Pre-Roll: TYGA & QUAVO

28 February 2026 | Eatons Hill Hotel – Outdoors, Eatons Hill
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Global hip hop heavyweights TYGA and QUAVO bring festival-level energy to Eatons Hill for a massive outdoor show ahead of Rolling Loud. Expect chart-topping hits and crowd anthems.


REGURGITATOR jukeboxxin’ tour

28 February 2026 | Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
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Australian alt-rock favourites return with their jukeboxxin’ tour, blending nostalgia, fan favourites and new energy into a loud, lively set.


Rose Tattoo Live

28 February 2026 | Dag Pub, D’Aguilar
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Hard rock icons Rose Tattoo deliver decades of gritty anthems and guitar-driven classics in an intimate regional setting.


DOLLY: I Will Always Love You

28 February 2026 | Redcliffe Entertainment Centre, Redcliffe
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A tribute spectacular celebrating the music of Dolly Parton, featuring beloved hits and heartfelt ballads in a lively stage production.


Country Club Night

28 February 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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A themed country music party night packed with live performances, singalongs and dancefloor-ready country favourites.


The Mason Rack Band

28 February 2026 | Thirsty Chiefs Brewing Company, North Lakes
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Blues-rock powerhouse The Mason Rack Band bring their commanding stage presence and signature sound to North Lakes for a night of live local music.


The Cosmics

1 March 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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Wrap up the weekend with The Cosmics delivering upbeat tunes and relaxed coastal vibes to close out a big few days of live music.


From tribute legends to global hip hop stars and local live favourites, Moreton Bay’s gig calendar is stacked this weekend. Whether you’re heading to Caloundra, Redcliffe, North Lakes or Eatons Hill, there’s no shortage of reasons to get out and support live music.

The Feb 22 Show

From the Nullarbor to the Tamar: Wine, Rain and the Long Way Round

Macca’s lines were wide open this week, and as usual, the calls stitched together a portrait of Australia that felt both ordinary and extraordinary at the same time.

From skiers bound for Japan to sheep on the way to Albury, from hay convoys into bushfire zones to Sauvignon Blanc revelations in Tasmania, it was a morning that moved across states and stories without ever leaving the studio.

Japan, Factories and the Price of Snow

Brendan rang in while packing suitcases — Japan for skiing, China for work.

Japan, he said, had become so affordable for snow trips that his brother had bought a place there. In his words, it had worked out “cheaper to get a joint over there and own it” than take the family skiing for a week in Australia. The strength of the yen, lift pass pricing, accommodation comparisons — all of it, he implied, had shifted the maths for Australian families who once defaulted to domestic slopes.

There was a quiet irony in it: Australians flying north for snow while their own alpine resorts battle short seasons and unpredictable conditions. For Brendan, it wasn’t ideology or tourism strategy — it was cost and practicality.

From the slopes of Japan, he was heading into a different kind of terrain: Chinese factories producing electric mobility components. That’s his line of work, he said — “spare parts specialist,” visiting plants manufacturing the small but essential parts that power e-bikes, scooters and electric vehicles.

It was a reminder that the global shift toward electrification doesn’t begin in showrooms. It begins in industrial parks, in supply chains, in component plants that most consumers never see. Later in the program, that global supply chain would resurface in a longer discussion about electric vehicles and where Australia sits in the evolving automotive landscape.

For Brendan, though, it was simply work and a bit of pleasure — skiing one week, factory floors the next. Modern Australia, suitcase open on the bed.

Wineries, Stories and the Latitude of Taste

Marcus from Tarragindi spoke about family-run wineries — the kind you won’t find in big chain bottle shops. The ones open “by appointment,” where you meet the owner or the owner’s children, and where one story leads to another.

That thread was picked up by John Howie, who shared his conversion moment in New Zealand’s Marlborough region. A glass of Wither Hills Sauvignon Blanc at an Italian restaurant changed his palate forever.

Years later, performing in northern Tasmania, he was steered toward a Tamar Valley Sauvignon Blanc when the Marlborough had run out. The revelation? The two regions sit on almost exactly the same latitude. The flavour profile — bright, sharp, distinct — felt strikingly similar.

It was less about alcohol and more about geography, soil and climate — the quiet science behind taste.

Rain on the Nullarbor and the Long Haul

Glenn, a truck driver of 45 years, was edging toward retirement. He had just crossed from the Western Australian border toward Port Augusta in steady rain. The paddocks were green, humidity thick in the air.

He described sleeping in his cab with an auxiliary “ice pack” cooling unit running so the engine could stay off. Parcel freight in the trailer — he didn’t even know what was inside. Just another run across a continent where, as he put it, most freight still moves by road.

He remembered floods near Balladonia in the late 1990s — graders towing trucks through roadworks at night. The Nullarbor changes, but it also stays the same.

Sheep, Kelpies and 40 Acres

Bazza from Macclesfield was loading about 30 sheep for a regular customer near Albury. His co-pilot was Ozzy the kelpie. Also along for the ride: Banjo, an ageing Australian cattle dog.

Conditions at his 40-acre property were dry — a contrast to the rain reported further west. It was a reminder that in Australia, rainfall is never evenly distributed.

Licorice Roots and Hiroshima

Jared Gray phoned from Tokyo, listening via the ABC Listen app. His father had grown licorice root near Finley for export to Japan — eventually reaching 600 acres.

The root, not confectionery, was the commodity. Extracted for medicinal compounds and widely used in tobacco flavouring, it was described as vastly sweeter than sugar in concentrated form.

While in Japan, Jared visited Onomichi, where the licorice shipments once arrived, and travelled to Hiroshima, reflecting on his grandfather’s experience as a prisoner of war.

Trade, memory and reconciliation shared the same itinerary.

Pankind and the Hard Numbers

Judy from Hobart rang to promote Pankind’s “Put Your Foot Down” walk for pancreatic cancer.

She spoke about her own diagnosis in 2021 and said that, according to figures discussed within the organisation, pancreatic cancer carries a five-year survival rate of around 13 percent. She also stated that two Australians are diagnosed every hour and that approximately 75 Australians die each week from the disease.

Those figures were cited by Judy during the call, and listeners were encouraged to seek updated information through Pankind and official health sources.

Put Your Foot Down

Electric Cars, Range and Reality

Automotive columnist John Connolly joined the program to discuss electric vehicles. He said China is now building roughly two-thirds of global EVs and described Australia’s pure electric vehicle uptake as sitting at about 8 percent of new sales, with hybrids proving more popular.

He also raised concerns about battery replacement costs, insurance premiums and charging infrastructure outside metropolitan areas.

Later, Gordon from near Hillston offered a different perspective. His family owns three electric vehicles and charges them using rooftop solar. He cited what he described as American statistics suggesting EV fire risk is significantly lower than petrol vehicles, and said their experience has been overwhelmingly positive.

For long regional trips, however, he noted they still travel diesel.

The conversation reflected a broader national debate — less about ideology, more about practicality and geography.

The Hay Convoy to Longwood

Graham Cockrell from Need for Feed described 76 trucks delivering donated hay into Victoria’s Longwood fire zone on Australia Day.

Much of that hay, he said, came from farmers who themselves had received help in previous disasters. Communities affected by fire stood roadside as the convoy passed.

Need for Feed is a registered charity operated by volunteers, and listeners were directed to its official website for further information.

Soil, Hardpan and What We’re Doing Wrong

Calvin, calling from Kangaroo Island, argued that degraded soil structure — including what he described as a chemical-induced hardpan layer — is contributing to worsening drought and flood cycles. He believes funding should prioritise soil restoration before disasters occur, rather than focusing primarily on post-event relief.

His views reflect one side of an ongoing debate around land management, farming practices and climate resilience.

Captain John King Davis and the ANARE Club

Liz from Hobart spoke about Captain John King Davis, Antarctic explorer and captain for both Mawson and Shackleton.

After his previously unmarked grave in Melbourne was located, members of the ANARE Club organised a proper headstone with family permission. A ceremony was held last Thursday, with Davis now recognised formally in the cemetery where he rests.

Small acts of historical restoration can resonate widely.

Produce, Preserving and the 150th Bega Show

Beth in Ben Lomond described figs, peaches, plums, nectarines and pears coming in waves from a small orchard. Preserving, sharing and extending the harvest were part of village life.

Barb from Bega followed with news of the 150th Bega Show — pavilion judging, fireworks and the NSW Governor opening proceedings.

Country shows remain places where everyday abundance is displayed — in jars, flowers and livestock — not just in supermarket price tags.

Rubbish Pickers and Quiet Civic Duty

Jen from Ballarat walks Lake Wendouree each Sunday and fills bags with litter. She and another local — also named Jen — now call themselves “the rubbish pickers.”

No speeches. Just bags collected and bins filled.

Why We Live Where We Live

The morning closed with Magnus and Wendy aboard the sailing vessel Nutshell, currently in Holland and bound for Finland. Their piece described a life “where the water wiggles” — a floating home without postcode, routine or fixed horizon.

Across it all, one theme kept surfacing: movement.

Across oceans. Across paddocks. Across fire lines. Across the Kidman Way dodging emus.

And yet, always, coming back.

That’s the thing about Australia. You can wander. You can weigh anchor. You can drive the Nullarbor in the rain.

But eventually, the line reconnects.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

From the King to the Manor: What’s On This Week for February 19-25 2026

Cinemas across Moreton Bay light up this week with a global musical event and a laugh-out-loud comedy. Whether you’re in North Lakes, Strathpine, Redcliffe, or Morayfield, there’s something fresh to enjoy on the silver screen.


Opening This Week

EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert

In cinemas from 19 February 

The King is back in the building! Don’t miss this spectacular concert event celebrating the life and music of Elvis Presley. Catch it at Event Cinemas North Lakes, Springfield Central, BCC Strathpine, Limelight (Ipswich, Morayfield), Bribie Cinema, and HOYTS Redcliffe.


Fackham Hall

In cinemas from 19 February 

Get ready for a good laugh with this spoof of your favourite period dramas. Secrets, scandals, and slapstick await. Catch it at Event Cinemas North Lakes, Springfield Central, BCC Strathpine, Limelight (Ipswich, Morayfield), Bribie Cinema, and HOYTS Redcliffe.


Still Showing

Crime 101

The high-stakes crime thriller starring Chris Hemsworth continues at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Wuthering Heights 

Catch the modern retelling of the gothic romance at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, Bribie, and Redcliffe.


Whistle 

The horror continues… if you dare. Showing at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Avatar: Fire and Ash 

The blockbuster sequel is still showing at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Where to Watch

  • Event Cinemas North Lakes – Westfield North Lakes
  • BCC Cinemas Strathpine – Strathpine Centre
  • Limelight Cinemas Morayfield – Morayfield Shopping Centre
  • HOYTS Redcliffe – Peninsula Fair Shopping Centre
  • Bribie Cinema – Bongaree

From musical legends to comedy capers, Moreton Bay’s cinemas are packed with great entertainment this week. Grab some popcorn and enjoy a local screening near you.

The Feb 15 Show

Freight, Fire, and the Long Summer Between

By mid-February the country is no longer easing into the year. It is properly back at work. Trucks are running full schedules again. Agricultural shows are back on the calendar. Fire recovery has moved from emergency response to long-term repair. And the conversations feel less like holiday reflections and more like people taking stock.

This week’s calls moved carefully between memory, labour, weather and the small details that anchor a community.

Albury and the Road That Keeps Moving

Ron Fennimore was somewhere between Gunning and Goulburn when he rang. Eleven trucks under his management. Hay, cattle, general freight. The kind of fleet that keeps regional Australia supplied without much notice.

He had been in Albury the day before for the memorial of Max Luff.

Max, Ron said, was not just another operator. Founder of Border Express in 1981. A man who built a national freight company from the border country and remained connected to the region that shaped him. A significant supporter of the Albury Wodonga Regional Cancer Centre Trust.

Ron spoke about the turnout first. Drivers rearranging runs to attend. Trucks parked along the street. Old hands and young operators in the same room. In transport, reputation is everything. You either pay on time, honour your word and stand by people, or you do not last.

He described the service as packed. That, in his world, was the measure. Respect is counted in attendance.

Then he was back behind the wheel, southbound again.

Volunteers in the Ash

Robin from Boronia shifted the tone. She had been involved with four-wheel drive clubs heading into fire-affected areas around Fawcett and Yarck.

The fires were no longer front-page news, but the damage remained. Fence lines reduced to twisted wire. Star pickets bent. Access tracks washed out or blocked by fallen timber. Farmers still tallying stock losses.

The clubs were bringing trailers, tools and time. Clearing debris. Rebuilding fences. Helping with the jobs that are too big for one person but too small to attract formal funding.

Robin described the rhythm of it. Early starts. Shared lunches on tailgates. Listening while landholders talk through what they have lost and what they plan to rebuild. Recovery, she said, is not a single moment. It is cumulative.

The work is practical. The effect is often emotional.

Gundagai and the Show Ring

Jim rang from Gundagai where the annual show was underway in full heat.

He painted the scene carefully. Horses circling in the ring. Pavilion tables lined with jars of preserves and carefully folded knitting. Woodchop events drawing a steady crowd. Kids leading calves through dust under a wide sky.

Shows, he said, are not nostalgia. They are continuity. No matter what the season has delivered — drought, flood, low prices — the show goes on.

There was pride in the way he described the committee’s effort. Entries were strong. The district had turned out. The sound of generators and loudspeakers carried across the grounds.

In uncertain seasons, routine can feel like stability.

Beef, Receipts and the Supermarket Question

Andrew’s call moved into the economics of the kitchen table.

He had recently returned from Japan and observed how Australian beef is marketed there — presented as premium, priced accordingly, carefully displayed. Back home, he had been comparing prices at Coles and Woolworths, noting identical pricing across multiple items.

He questioned whether farmers were receiving fair returns and whether supermarket margins were narrowing competition. The discussion moved through export dynamics and domestic supply chains. Macca pressed him on where value is captured.

Andrew’s tone was measured rather than heated. It was about transparency. About wanting clarity in a system that feels increasingly complex.

The weekly grocery bill, he implied, is becoming a point of scrutiny.

Surf Boats at Wanda

From economics to the beach.

The Australian Surf Rowers League carnival at Wanda Surf Life Saving Club was in full swing. Crews lined up at the water’s edge. Oars raised. Sweeps calling timing against the incoming sets.

Surf boat rowing is technical and physical. Five rowers and one sweep must move as a single unit. The sets at Wanda were clean but demanding. The caller described the tension at the start line, the split-second timing required to catch a wave cleanly.

There was pride in the discipline. Early training sessions. Travel between states. Families on the sand watching closely. The culture of surf life saving running alongside competition.

The boats are heavy. The effort visible. The sport remains resolutely physical.

Cabargo and the Long After

A letter from near Cabargo carried the morning into deeper reflection.

The writer described properties around Wandella and Yowrie, on the edge of Wadbilliga National Park, still carrying the imprint of the Black Summer fires. Some homes rebuilt. Others not. Insurance negotiations stretched over years. Fences replaced slowly.

The detail was specific. The way certain gullies burned hotter. The speed at which the wind changed direction. The silence afterward.

Recovery, the writer suggested, does not follow a timetable. Bush regenerates unevenly. People do too.

The tone was steady, not dramatic. That made it more affecting.

Looking Up from Coonabarabran

Dr Duncan Steele shifted the lens skyward.

From observatories near Coonabarabran, astronomers study the southern sky — the Magellanic Clouds, Alpha and Beta Centauri. He spoke about long orbital cycles and Milankovitch theory, about how planetary patterns influence climate over vast stretches of time.

It was not an attempt to dismiss present-day concerns. It was about scale. Human debates sit within much larger cycles.

Looking up, he suggested, can steady perspective.

Snowfields and Changing Winters

The conversation turned briefly to the alpine resorts — Thredbo and Perisher — and the variability of snow seasons. Businesses reliant on winter tourism watching forecasts closely.

There was no dramatic claim, just recognition that adaptation may be required. Seasonal industries have always lived with uncertainty. The margins, perhaps, feel tighter now.

Holding the Threads Together

By the time the calls slowed, the map had stretched again.

From a memorial hall in Albury to burnt paddocks in Victoria. From show rings in Gundagai to surf boats at Wanda. From supermarket aisles to observatories under clear country skies.

Freight still moves. Volunteers still turn up. Shows still open their gates. Families still read their receipts carefully. The sky remains where it has always been.

For a few hours on a Sunday morning, those threads are spoken aloud.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

Weekend Arts Edit: Revues, Recitals, and New Exhibitions from February 20-22, 2026

This weekend is a major turning point for local galleries: it is your last chance to see the optical illusions of Imperfect Pattern in Strathpine, while Redcliffe Art Gallery launches its first major solo exhibition of the year. For music lovers, the hinterland comes alive with opera in Maleny and classical strings in Montville.


How Soon Is Now?

21 February – 2 May 2026 | Redcliffe Art Gallery, Redcliffe
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Opening this Saturday, this major exhibition by Bruce Reynolds brings together exquisite cast relief works and linoleum collages. It celebrates the physical in an increasingly digital world, drawing references from antiquity and the built environment.


Imperfect Pattern

13 December 2025 – 21 February 2026 | Pine Rivers Art Gallery, Strathpine
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This is the final day to view this mind-bending exhibition. Don’t miss Lincoln Austin’s monumental corflute sculpture and other optical artworks that disrupt traditional symmetry before the gallery bumps out for its next show.


Shakespeare by Voxalis Opera

20 February 2026 | Maleny Community Centre, Maleny
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Experience the drama of the Bard through the power of opera. In this intimate recital, Voxalis Opera performs extraordinary excerpts from masterpieces like Verdi’s Macbeth and Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette, sung by some of Queensland’s finest classical voices.


Believe: A Musical Revue

21 February 2026 | Burpengary State Secondary College, Burpengary
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Local talent takes the stage for a vibrant revue exploring themes of passion, purpose, and belief. Featuring a live band and a cast of energetic singers, it promises to be an uplifting night of community theatre.


Experience Lacemaking

21 February 2026 | Pine Rivers Heritage Museum, Whiteside
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Watch history come to life in this hands-on demonstration. Members of the Queensland Lace Guild will be on site to showcase the intricate, historic art of bobbin lacemaking, offering a rare chance to see how these delicate textiles are created by hand.


Gelli Plate Printing Workshop with Robin Jensen

22 February 2026 | Bribie Island Community Arts Centre, Banksia Beach
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Get messy and creative at the Bribie Arts Centre. Robin Jensen leads this workshop on “gelli plate” printing—a fun, immediate method of mono-printing that uses textures, stencils, and botanical elements to create unique, layered artworks.


Trove: A Three of Cups Group Exhibition

11 February – 8 March 2026 | Redcliffe Art Society, Redcliffe
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Discover the “treasures” of local artists. Trove is a diverse group exhibition by the Three of Cups collective, exploring personal history and memory through painting, ceramics, assemblage, and more at the Old Fire Station Gallery.


Intro to Lindy Hop

21 February 2026 | C.C.S.A. Hall, Caloundra
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Put on your dancing shoes! Swing Patrol brings the joy of the 1920s and 30s to Caloundra with a beginner-friendly workshop. Learn the basic steps of the Lindy Hop in a high-energy, social environment.


Contrasts 2: Diverse Music for String Quartet

22 February 2026 | St Mary’s Anglican Church, Montville
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Spend a Sunday afternoon in the historic St Mary’s Church. The Riverbend Ensemble returns with a program that spans centuries, featuring works by Telemann, Philip Glass, and Rebecca Clarke that highlight the versatility of the string quartet.


Beachmere: The Collective Memories of a Seaside Village

14 February – 31 May 2026 | Bribie Island Seaside Museum, Bongaree
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Take a nostalgic trip down memory lane. This newly opened exhibition captures the essence of Beachmere’s history through the stories and photographs of the locals who have called this seaside village home.


Changemakers: Crafting a Difference

4 February – 17 May 2026 | Pine Rivers Heritage Museum, Whiteside
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Explore the powerful intersection of craft and activism. This exhibition showcases how makers throughout history have used textiles and banners to advocate for social change and protest injustice.


This weekend is a perfect example of the region’s diverse cultural offerings. You can start your Saturday learning the energetic Lindy Hop in Caloundra or the delicate art of lacemaking in Whiteside, and finish it with a thought-provoking new exhibition in Redcliffe. Don’t forget, if you haven’t seen the optical illusions at Pine Rivers Art Gallery, Saturday is your absolute last opportunity.

Weekend Planner: Top Kids’ Activities for 20–22 Feb 2026

The big ticket item this weekend is the Drive-in Movie in the Park at Narangba featuring the Minecraft movie—a guaranteed hit for gamers of all ages. Active families can head to the skate park in Redcliffe for SCHEMA or check out the gymnastics open days at The Y in Caloundra and Mango Hill.


Drive-in Movie in the Park: The Minecraft Movie

20 February 2026 | Ferrier Road Park, Narangba
More Info

Grab the popcorn and pile into the car for a nostalgic drive-in experience. Ferrier Road Park transforms into an outdoor cinema for a screening of The Minecraft Movie (PG). It’s the perfect Friday night treat for families, combining the magic of the big screen with the comfort of your own vehicle.


SCHEMA at Redcliffe Skatepark

21 February 2026 | Redcliffe Skatepark, Redcliffe
More Info

Watch the locals shred or join in the action yourself. SCHEMA brings the community together at Redcliffe Skatepark for a day of skating, music, and good vibes. It’s a great opportunity for teens and older kids to connect with the local skate scene in a supportive environment.


The Y Gymnastics Open Day

22 February 2026 | Caloundra & Mango Hill
More Info

Have an energetic child who loves to tumble? The Y is opening its doors at two locations—Caloundra and Mango Hill—for a free open day. Families can tour the gym, meet the coaches, and let the kids try out the equipment on the circuits.


100 Club Raceday

22 February 2026 | Sunshine Coast Turf Club, Caloundra
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Enjoy a relaxed Sunday at the races. The 100 Club Raceday offers a family-friendly atmosphere on the lush lawns of the Sunshine Coast Turf Club. It’s a chance to dress up slightly, watch the horses, and let the kids run around in the open spaces.


Park Tales: Pop-Up Library Fun

20 – 22 February 2026 | Various Parks
More Info

Take storytime outdoors! The library team visits local parks for sessions filled with stories, songs, and craft.

  • Friday: Norfolk Lakes Park (Narangba) & The Hills District All Abilities Park (Arana Hills).
  • Saturday: Spinnaker Park (Newport).
  • Sunday: Roderick A Cruice Park (Dayboro).

Library Programs: Playtime, Rhyme Time & Storytime

20 – 22 February 2026 | Various Libraries 

Escape the heat (or rain) with these free indoor sessions.

  • Playtime (Fri): Unstructured play for under-5s at Albany Creek, Caboolture, North Lakes, and more. Details
  • Baby Rhyme Time (Fri-Sun): Songs for babies at Deception Bay, Strathpine, Arana Hills, and others. Details
  • Storytime (Fri-Sun): Stories and craft for toddlers at Bribie Island, Woodford, Burpengary, and more. Details

Redcliffe Markets

22 February 2026 | Redcliffe Parade, Redcliffe
More Info

A Sunday ritual. Browse the stalls for fresh produce, unique toys, and clothes while the kids enjoy the street performers and the nearby lagoon. It’s the perfect way to spend a relaxed morning by the water.


Imaginariums: Beneath the Blue

Until 31 May 2026 | Bribie Island Seaside Museum, Bongaree
More Info

Dive into the secrets of the sea. This interactive exhibition is designed for children to explore the marine environment through play and discovery, making it a great educational stop if you are visiting Bribie Island.


This weekend is packed with variety. Friday night is sorted with the drive-in movie at Narangba, while Saturday offers a cool vibe for older kids at the Redcliffe skate park. Sunday rounds things out perfectly with active options like gymnastics or a relaxed day at the races.

Legends of Rock: Ross Wilson and The Honey Sliders Headline on February 20-22, 2026

The Sunshine Coast is the place to be for Australian rock royalty this weekend, with Ross Wilson and Alex Lloyd playing back-to-back nights at Kings Beach. Meanwhile, Redcliffe takes a trip down memory lane with a recreation of The Beatles’ famous rooftop concert, and heavy metal fans descend on Caloundra West for Fleshfest.


Ross Wilson & The Peaceniks

20 February 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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A true legend of Australian music, Ross Wilson (Daddy Cool, Mondo Rock) brings 50 years of hits to Caloundra. From “Eagle Rock” to “Come Said The Boy,” this is a chance to see a two-time ARIA Hall of Fame inductee perform the songs that formed the soundtrack of a nation.


Alex Lloyd

21 February 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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The hits keep coming at Kings Beach. On Saturday night, multi-platinum singer-songwriter Alex Lloyd takes the stage. Known for his soulful voice and the anthem “Amazing,” Lloyd will be performing tracks from his extensive catalogue in an intimate pub setting.


The Beatles Rooftop Concert: The Honey Sliders

21 February 2026 | Redcliffe Entertainment Centre, Redcliffe
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Led by the talented Danny Widdicombe, The Honey Sliders are renowned for their respectful and detailed recreations of classic albums. In this show, they bring The Beatles’ final public performance—the legendary Savile Row rooftop concert—to life, playing the Let It Be album and other late-era gems.


Legends of Motown

20 February 2026 | The Events Centre, Caloundra
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Get ready for a night of soul, choreography, and timeless harmonies. This high-energy tribute celebrates the Motown era, featuring the hits of The Jackson 5, The Supremes, The Temptations, and Marvin Gaye. It’s a polished production designed to get you dancing in your seat.


FLESHFEST 2026: A Gathering of the Damned

21 February 2026 | Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
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For those who prefer their music loud and heavy, Fleshfest returns. Featuring a brutal lineup including Product of Neglect, Grip Down, False Front, and Insect, this is the premier event for the local metal and hardcore community.


An Unfiltered Lunch with Cam & Fatty

20 February 2026 | Caloundra RSL, Caloundra
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Join NRL legends Cameron Smith and Paul “Fatty” Vautin for a no-holds-barred lunch. Expect hilarious stories, insider footy talk, and plenty of banter as two of the game’s biggest personalities take the microphone.


Luke O’Shea and Lyn Bowtell: Love & Laughter Tour

21 February 2026 | Maleny RSL, Maleny
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Two of Australia’s finest country singer-songwriters join forces in the hinterland. Golden Guitar winners Luke O’Shea and Lyn Bowtell combine their storytelling skills and distinct voices for a show that oscillates between poignant ballads and side-splitting humour.


Rumours – Fleetwood Mac Tribute

20 February 2026 | Bribie Island RSL Club, Bongaree
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Experience the drama and the melodies of one of the world’s best-selling bands. Rumours captures the sound and spirit of Fleetwood Mac, delivering faithful renditions of “Go Your Own Way,” “Dreams,” and “The Chain.”


VOXNEON – Synth Anthems

20 February 2026 | Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
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Before the metalheads take over on Saturday, Friday night at Norton is all about the 80s. VOXNEON delivers a live show dedicated to the electronic hits of the New Wave era—think Depeche Mode, New Order, and Pet Shop Boys with full laser production.


Anthology: The Definitive AC/DC Collection

20 February 2026 | Redcliffe Entertainment Centre, Redcliffe
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For those about to rock in Redcliffe, we salute you. Anthology is a live concert experience that covers the full history of AC/DC, from the Bon Scott era to the Brian Johnson hits, featuring bagpipes and cannons for full authenticity.


Klub Mode ft NAN’s FAVs DJ Set

20 February 2026 | Kings Beach Tavern, Caloundra
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Following the live bands, the Tavern kicks into party mode. “Nan’s Favs” brings a high-energy DJ set to the coast, perfect for those wanting to keep the vibe going late into the night.


Oliver Keys

21 February 2026 | Bribie Island RSL Club, Bongaree
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Enjoy free live entertainment at the Bribie RSL. Oliver Keys brings his piano skills and diverse repertoire to the lounge for a relaxed Saturday night session.


The contrast in Caloundra this weekend is stark: you have the smooth, classic hits of Ross Wilson and Alex Lloyd at the Tavern, while just down the road at Norton Music Factory, it’s 80s synth on Friday followed by hardcore metal on Saturday. Whatever your musical taste, the coast has you covered.

What’s New to Stream This Week: 19–25 February 2026

A busy week is ahead with major returns on Netflix, new drops on Apple TV+ and Prime Video, and fresh additions across Disney+, Max and Stan. Here’s what’s coming to streaming services in Australia from Thursday, 19 February to Wednesday, 25 February 2026.


Netflix

19 February 2026

The Night Agent: Season 3

The thriller series returns with new missions, bigger risks and deeper conspiracies in play.


Watch


The Swedish Connection

A new release that leans into intrigue and hidden agendas, where alliances shift quickly.


Watch


20 February 2026

Firebreak

A tense new title built around pressure, danger and the consequences of a situation spiralling out of control.


Watch


Stan

19 February 2026

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning

The action franchise escalates again with high-stakes missions, impossible odds and big set pieces.


Watch


24 February 2026

Fury

A gritty war film focused on survival, leadership and the brutal realities of combat.



25 February 2026

Memories Of Murder

A celebrated crime thriller that follows a relentless investigation as pressure mounts and clues run cold.



Apple TV+

20 February 2026

The Last Thing He Told Me

A mystery-driven drama where secrets unravel and a woman is pulled into a dangerous search for the truth.


Watch


Disney+

23 February 2026

Paradise: Season 2

The series returns with new twists and escalating stakes as relationships and power dynamics shift.


Watch


Max

23 February 2026

The Wonderfully Weird World Of Gumball, Season 2

More surreal adventures return in a new season packed with offbeat humour and colourful chaos.


Watch


24 February 2026

Splitsville

A comedy-drama that digs into relationships, break-ups and the awkward fallout that follows.


Watch


Prime Video

25 February 2026

The Bluff

A new release built around deception and high stakes, where the smallest mistake can cost everything.


Watch


With The Night Agent back on Netflix, a new Apple TV+ mystery in the mix, and plenty of variety across Max, Disney+ and Stan, this is a strong week to refresh your watchlist — whether you’re after action, suspense, drama or something lighter.

Moreton Bay Movies: Crime 101 & Wuthering Heights Open for February 12-18, 2026

Cinemas across Moreton Bay light up this week with star-studded blockbusters and returning classics. Whether you’re in North Lakes, Strathpine, Redcliffe, or Morayfield, there’s something fresh to enjoy on the silver screen.


Opening This Week

Crime 101 

In cinemas from 12 February 

High-stakes action comes to the region. Watch Chris Hemsworth and Mark Ruffalo face off in this tense heist thriller. Catch it at Event Cinemas North Lakes, Springfield Central, BCC Strathpine, Limelight (Ipswich, Morayfield), Bribie Cinema, and HOYTS Redcliffe.


Wuthering Heights 

In cinemas from 12 February 

Margot Robbie stars in this stunning new take on the classic love story. Passion and revenge collide. Catch it at Event Cinemas North Lakes, Springfield Central, BCC Strathpine, Limelight (Ipswich, Morayfield), Bribie Cinema, and HOYTS Redcliffe.


Whistle 

In cinemas from 12 February 

A new horror thriller for those brave enough to watch. Catch it at Limelight Cinemas Morayfield and HOYTS Redcliffe.


Scream: 30th Anniversary 

In cinemas from 12 February 

The classic slasher returns for a limited time. Catch Ghostface at HOYTS Redcliffe.


War Machine 

In cinemas from 12 February 

Adrenaline-fueled sci-fi action. Catch it at HOYTS Redcliffe.


Still Showing

Is This Thing On? 

The comedy hit continues at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, Bribie, and Redcliffe.


Shelter 

A moving drama still screening at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Iron Lung 

The viral horror hit continues at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Avatar: Fire and Ash 

James Cameron’s epic is still drawing crowds at North Lakes, Strathpine, Morayfield, and Redcliffe.


Where to Watch

  • Event Cinemas North Lakes – Westfield North Lakes
  • BCC Cinemas Strathpine – Strathpine Centre
  • Limelight Cinemas Morayfield – Morayfield Shopping Centre
  • HOYTS Redcliffe – Peninsula Fair Shopping Centre
  • Bribie Cinema – Bongaree

From edge-of-your-seat thrillers to timeless romance, Moreton Bay’s cinemas are packed with great entertainment this week. Grab some popcorn and enjoy a local screening near you.

The Feb 8 Show

Ore Trains, Ocean Crossings and the Long View of Summer

There is a particular texture to a February morning on the program. The holidays are over. The heat has settled in properly. Fires are burning in one state while another waits for rain. People are back at work, back on highways, back in boats and on beaches, carrying the season with them.

This week the lines stretched from the red dirt of Western Australia to the cold valleys of Utah, from Bass Strait crossings to million-dollar race wins, from seedless pumpkins to the first steps on the Moon.

Australia, as ever, was wide awake.

One Hundred and Forty Tonnes Before Dawn

Craig was somewhere between Wiluna and Leonora, running south along the Goldfields Highway with 140 tonnes of iron ore behind him. All up, he said, the rig weighs about 195 tonnes. It was still dark. Thirty degrees already. Cows wandering across the road.

He works fly-in fly-out. Four weeks on, two weeks off. A month at a time in the West, then home to the Gulf for a break. Twelve-hour shifts, sometimes twelve and a half. This was the last run of his swing before flying out on Monday.

Out there, the traffic is mostly other road trains and mine vehicles. Not much else. No suburban rush hour. No coffee queues. Just heat that sits in the cab and the long ribbon of bitumen through scrub.

When asked what he could see out the window, the answer was simple: bush, darkness, and the need to stay alert for livestock. With that much weight behind you, you do not get second chances.

Three Kayaks and 320 Kilometres of Water

Photo Credit: Visit Victoria

From the open highway to open ocean.

David rang from Roydon Island, just off the northern tip of Flinders Island in Bass Strait. He and two friends call themselves the Strait Crackers. They had launched from Port Welshpool, paddled to Wilsons Promontory, sheltered in Refuge Cove, then crossed to Hogan Island, on to Deal Island, and down toward Flinders.

Three exposed crossings. Around 320 kilometres in total. About two weeks on the water, depending on the weather.

They carry freeze-dried meals, water, beacons, plan A, B and C. They wait for weather windows and do not launch if the forecast looks wrong. “You’d be crazy,” he said.

Their longest crossing had been 65 kilometres. Tailwinds at times, small sails up, some “spicy moments” but nothing unmanageable. The trick is respect. If it turns, you hold ground, ride it out, reassess.

David is an outdoor education teacher in Kangaroo Valley. Every few years he plans something bigger than routine. One of his teammates, Paul McMahon, is an apple farmer in Pozieres near Stanthorpe. Apple season is underway. The crates are being packed while he is out on Bass Strait.

The destination now is Whitemark, and a pub. After weeks of salt, spray and rationed food, that sounded like a fitting reward.

A Horse Nearly Lost, Then Found

Des rang with the kind of excitement that comes only rarely.

His horse, Axius, had nearly been put down as a foal after suffering a broken jaw from another horse. Instead, he survived. Carefully managed. Lightly raced. Five wins from nine starts.

They took him to the Gold Coast, almost as an afterthought, for a three and four-year-old race. He ran third, carrying 60 kilos with Nash Rawiller aboard. A week later they had a throw at the stumps in a much harder race. Des managed to get odds of 100 to one early in the week, not even sure the horse would gain a start.

He did. He won.

A million-dollar race. Trained by Kieran Ma, largely prepared out of Bong Bong by Johann Gerard-Dubord, ridden this time by Tim Clark. Prize money of $579,000 for the win. Des owns five per cent.

He described it not as triumph, but gratitude. “More thankful than excited,” he said. There was no jealousy among friends and family. Just delight.

The horse now heads toward listed and group races. For Des, it already feels like the Melbourne Cup.

Honeysuckle Creek and the First Steps

Michael rang from Kiama to clarify something that matters to those who remember July 1969.

It was Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station, near Canberra, that first received and broadcast Neil Armstrong’s descent onto the Moon and the first minutes on the lunar surface. Not Parkes, at least not initially.

The camera on the lunar module had been installed upside down. Engineers at Honeysuckle Creek worked out how to invert the signal properly before transmission. Later the dish was relocated to Tidbinbilla. Today there is a plaque marking where those first images were sent to the world.

It is the kind of detail that sits quietly in Australian history. Not flashy. Just precise.

Rates, Debt and a Drought in Utah

Kieran Kelly joined from Utah, sitting in sunshine where there should have been four feet of snow.

He spoke first about interest rates. A quarter of a percent rise, he argued, is symbolic rather than decisive. He recalled Paul Keating’s idea of the “announcement effect” — shock the system to change behaviour. One per cent in a single hit would send a clearer message than incremental adjustments.

Australia’s national debt is heading toward $1 trillion. The interest bill alone about $27 billion this year. That, he warned, is a burden passed forward.

Then he looked out his window.

In the Wasatch Mountains, mid-winter, there was no snow. Ten degrees and sunbathing weather. Golf courses open. Deer grazing on lawns normally buried under drifts. The lowest precipitation in fifty years.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

He described it in Australian terms: like Darwin passing through an entire wet season without rain. No build-up storms. No monsoon. Just dry heat rolling on.

Insurance companies are refusing fire cover in parts of the valley. Timber houses sit among trees. Businesses that rely on ski tourism are struggling. Even whispers about future Olympic viability.

The drought there is not dramatic in the way floods are. It is simply absence.

Sharks, Science and Caution

Back home, the shark discussion continued. Bull sharks in Sydney Harbour are not new. What seems new is their apparent increase in attacks.

Water temperature shifts, turbidity after heavy rain, changing prey patterns — there are theories, but no consensus. A paramedic from the Mid-North Coast called to clarify the practicalities: in a shark bite, the immediate priority is catastrophic bleeding control. Tourniquets save lives. But so does keeping the patient warm. Hypothermia impairs clotting.

It was a reminder that debate sits alongside real people dealing with consequences.

At Bondi, the North Bondi Ocean Swim Classic went ahead. Other swims had been postponed. Swimmers will always return to the water.

Seedless Fruit and Seeded Doubts

Wendy from Stanley in Victoria wondered aloud whether seedless pumpkins and zucchinis signalled something deeper. She had seen crops without seeds, watermelons bred for convenience, strawberries that do not produce runners.

Was diversity being narrowed too far?

A horticulturist from Ballarat reassured her. Stress, poor pollination, extreme heat can all disrupt seed formation. It does not mean vegetables are disappearing. Plants still want to reproduce.

Still, the conversation drifted to grandparents’ gardens. Rhubarb, spuds, apricots, quinces. The memory of abundance grown at home rather than bought at supermarket prices.

In an era of rising costs, the backyard patch feels less nostalgic and more practical.

Letters from Santa Barbara and Beyond

Chris Morris wrote from Santa Barbara. As a boy he had grown up in Woomera, his first girlfriend the daughter of a US Air Force master sergeant stationed at Nurrungar Tracking Station near Island Lagoon.

Forty-six years later, he searched her name online. Found her. Flew to California. They married during COVID in a government-run ceremony conducted from a toll booth in Anaheim, with three minutes allowed for photographs before the next couple arrived.

Marriage in a car park. First love rediscovered. The world is stranger and kinder than it sometimes appears.

Jude and Judd wrote of 388 days without electricity on a small farm outside Perth. An outdoor shower bolted to a bush pole. Solar panels eventually installed. Eight years without television. ABC radio as companion.

There are many ways to live.

Patches and Persistence

Jennifer from Kings Langley spoke of sewing patches onto her trousers and shirts, making shopping bags from old drapes, wearing clothes decades old.

Her father once turned worn woollen skirts into overalls on a treadle machine. Waste, she said, is the real problem.

In a week of discussions about debt, drought and disappearing snow, there was something grounding in the act of mending what you already have.

Holding the Line

From iron ore trucks before dawn to kayaks on Bass Strait, from racehorse miracles to Moon landing corrections, from Utah drought to backyard vegetables, the morning held together through detail.

The country is not one story. It is thousands of them, overlapping.

Drivers watching for cattle at 30 degrees in the dark. Teachers paddling toward Whitemark. Owners checking racing results. Engineers correcting signals from space. Paramedics wrapping blankets around trauma patients. Gardeners worrying about seeds.

It is all happening at once.

And on a Sunday morning, for a few hours, it is all spoken aloud.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.