Michael Pound, a life in agriculture
Michael Pound’s long and fascinating life has been closely connected to an agricultural career of great diversity and skill. He also embraced house restoration, landscape renewal, community involvement, and life as a family man. To all, Michael is known as a “really good bloke”.
Michael, now in his 90s, has had a long history with Shoreham, an association that was established long before he and his wife Margaret permanently moved to their 1960s house, “Grange Lea” in old Shoreham.
Margaret was a direct descendant of the Dowling family, who settled in Stony Creek (Shoreham’s original name) in the 1860s. Margaret’s father Christopher West purchased 125 acres from the James Byrne estate in 1952 to fatten cattle and undertake other mixed farming.
Michael often travelled to Shoreham at this time to assist Christopher with the many tasks associated with the farm.
This continued till 1982, when most of the property was sold due to the new road (Frankston-Flinders Road) dividing the property, Farming became untenable. Michael and Margaret later purchased the remaining few acres with creek frontage.
Michael has a lifelong love of agriculture. After finishing school, he completed a course in herd testing and dairy supervision and joined the State Department of Agriculture. He was then seconded to the CSIRO to assist with the testing of cattle for pleural pneumonia, a severe respiratory disease.
In this line of work, he spent a lot of time travelling around the state giving advice to property owners.
In his 20s, he “went bush”, spending several years working on horseback on large cattle stations.
Later, he obtained a job with Dalgety’s, a large Australian and international pastoral company. This involved long trips throughout Australia and visits to such countries as France, Vietnam and South America. His mission, using herd testing, insemination and embryo transplants was to improve and expand the genetic base of cattle in Australia and in the countries he visited.
By this stage, Michael had married Margaret and they had three children, Bernard, Jeremy and Angela. Michael was away from home a great deal and decided that this was not compatible with his role as father and so he resigned from Dalgety’s, sold their house in Croydon and moved permanently to Shoreham.
In his 60s, he worked at Redhill Estate for more than 10 years part-time, promoting their wines around the Peninsula. Michael continued to explored his love of agriculture by joining the committee of the Redhill Show on which he served for many years.
After a long and arduous major renovation of “Grange Lea”, which was in a dilapidated condition after being used as a hay shed, Michael and Margaret then embraced the difficult renewal of the steep banks of their section of the spring fed Stony Creek.
Community involvement in Shoreham was always important to the family. They were involved in tennis, Thai Chi, entertaining family, grandchildren and others. They loved their proximity to the Pines beach with swims, walks and exploration.
Michael still engages with all things agriculture by closely following ABC TV’s Landline and notable rural papers such as Stock and Land and The Weekly Times.
Michael Pound has lived a long, rich and varied life. This short article covers only his important endeavours. Shoreham is fortunate to have characters of the ilk of Michael as part of its community.
Wildlife carer Jennie Bryant
Off Western Port Highway some 30 km north-east of Shoreham, there’s a scrubby bush block with a fence decorated in a few metal images of koalas, but no sign. Blink and you’ll miss it.
This is home for 71-year-old Jennie Bryant and her patients. Jennie is neither a vet nor a nurse, but has dedicated more than 40 years to looking after injured wildlife, koalas in particular. In 2013, she received an Order of Australia medal for her volunteer work.
“Jennie’s a local hero,” says Mornington Peninsula Koala Conservation (MPKC) president, Dirk Jensen.
“I don’t know what we’d do without her. She’s the only one here with that much experience in managing koalas and their very specific needs.”
Local vet Dr Matthew Ray agrees. He’s a co-owner of the Westernport Veterinary Clinic with branches in Hastings, Somerville and Balnarring. Jennie regularly brings in wildlife for assessment and surgery.
“Her accumulated knowledge is invaluable,” he says. “We feel we get much more from Jennie than she gets from us. When we look at a koala, we often need to tap into her experience of what’s normal and what’s not.
Mornington Peninsula Koala Conservation estimates there’s been a 70 per cent decline in koala numbers on the Peninsula over the past 20 years.
“The reasons are multiple,” Dirk says, “the main ones being the increasing numbers of visitors and residents here, and the destruction of native habitat through private land clearing. Then there’s inappropriate fencing, dogs, cattle and cars. Most of the sick and injured koalas end up with Jennie.”
By her own admission, paperwork is not Jennie’s forte, so nailing exactly how many koalas Jennie has rescued is hard. She estimates it’s anywhere between 40 and 100 a year. Multiply that by 40 and the figure could be as high as 4000, if not more.
Most have sustained such horrific injuries they die. Less than half recover sufficiently for release back into the wild.
“People call me eccentric,” Jennie says. “But I was just born differently; I can’t turn away from any creature needing help.”
There are more than koalas at the Koala Rescue and Rehabilitation refuge outside Tyabb.
When the SCA visits, there are Cape Barren geese, corellas, a tawny frogmouth, a long-necked turtle, and a shingleback skink, all in different phases of recovery.
Some are in enclosures scattered among the gum trees. Others are in the corrugated iron outhouse Jennie calls the hospital, and it’s here we sit down to talk. It’s a riot of donated incubators, cages and blankets, a fridge full of medicine and milk, piles of remaindered food and strange noises.
A recently-hatched kookaburra, its mouth open, looks up at Jennie. Someone found the egg lying on the ground with no nest in sight. Across the room a peregrine falcon that Jennie thinks was hit by a car is recuperating in a cage.
Jennie’s two pet poodles vie for attention. And her partner, 78-year-old Laurie French, wanders in and out to report on the goats and sheep they’re raising. She ribs him about interrupting us.
For all Jennie’s dust dry sense of humour and passion, it’s clear the couple are exhausted, and live on next to nothing but the drive to nurture.
The Bendigo Bank helps out with donations. The Westernport Veterinary Clinic helps out with complex cases. Three nights a week, Laurie picks up trolley loads of free, expired or damaged fruit and veggies for the wildlife from Aldi in Hastings.
But Jennie estimates her out-of-pocket costs for things like special food, vitamins, lice and worming treatment, property maintenance and fuel run to north of $10,000 a year.
Volunteer wildlife carers, advocacy groups and local vets know Jennie’s mobile number. And she can’t keep up with the increasing demand for help.
“People call me eccentric,” Jennie says. “But I was just born differently; I can’t turn away from any creature needing help.”
As soon as she gets a call about a creature in distress, Jennie heads off in her battered old ute. Often that’s between dusk and dawn when marsupials go looking for food.
“Last week there was a kangaroo on the road without a face but still breathing,” Jennie says. “I couldn’t put it down fast enough. The pain would have been excruciating. You can’t unsee that and it haunts you.”
Dirk Jensen says most wildlife rescuers and carers only last a few years. “It’s 24/7, and it takes a huge toll psychologically.”
Local animal welfare groups have recorded 50 eastern grey kangaroos and swamp wallabies killed on Peninsula roads over summer - December 2024 through to the end of February 2025.
Eighteen koalas have died the same way between October and February - a period which includes their breeding season. Many more have been injured.
“Jennie is at her wit’s end,” says the koala group’s vice president Belinda Eden.
“Koalas are territorial. She’ll get them well enough to release only then to find their home has been impacted by tree removal or is surrounded by high-speed roads, sometimes both. The end result is that these koalas end up returning to care, or dead. We need changes to planning laws to stop unnecessary vegetation removal and road safety initiatives in place now.”
Time is running out for Jennie and her patients.
“I’ll never stop looking after creatures, but I just want tie up a few loose ends in my life,” she says. “Laurie has a heart condition and I’m not getting any younger. It’s time to hand the baton on.”
Jennie wants to see a fully funded wildlife hospital built on the Mornington Peninsula.
And longtime local kangaroo awareness campaigner Craig Thomson is right behind her.
“Several years ago, we estimated the cost to build a centre would range between $2 and $5 million,” he says. “It wouldn’t need to be built all at once, but could start with a surgery and grow over time.”
Now he is pinning his hopes on a project that could be funded by private donors and the public on Shire council owned land in Tuerong, along the lines of Kanyana Wildlife in Perth.
“But even if this got the green light, it will be many years before it would be up and running. In the meantime, the wildlife we all love rely on people like Jennie Bryant.”
HOW YOU CAN HELP
If you see injured wildlife, please call Wildlife Victoria on 03 84007300.
Firefighter Malcolm Nicolson
On September 12, 2024, the Shoreham Rural Fire Brigade (SRFB) celebrated 75 years as a volunteer run service. As firefighter Andrew Young told the Shoreham Community Association’s AGM in August it all started after someone raised the idea in a meeting at the Old School Hall, now the Community Hall.
In 1949, the little community started raising funds for equipment. There are now 17 firefighters serving Shoreham and Point Leo.
We spoke to Dr Malcolm Nicolson, who has been a brigade volunteer for an incredible 40 years. He’s the longest serving captain of the brigade and one of its longest serving firemen. He and his partner Lee still live in the mud brick house they built in Shoreham in the late 1970s.
Their son, Calum, is following the family tradition of giving back and is also a volunteer firefighter. Read the full story.
Runner Ben Johnston
Running long distance has been a relatively new hobby for me. It started in 2020 when I had agreed with my brother over the holiday period that we should aim to do a marathon together. The pandemic commenced, lockdowns meant the family and I were based in Shoreham full-time, and although Shoreham was always special to me (and my sanctuary), my love for Shoreham and running really was forged. Exploring with my running buddy Jonathon became the norm on Saturday mornings along am long dirt roads, with views of amazing houses, vineyards and local wildlife.
Fast forward to April 2024, I found myself in Boston competing in the 2024 Boston marathon, my first international major and fifth marathon. I loved it, not just the race but I have never endured a city so passionate and encouraging for all runners and support crew. From the expo, to a shakeout run (easy run pre-marathon) with over 1000 runners, to a city all wearing Boston jackets or Boston strong apparel, this was my tribe. People spend years trying to qualify and achieve seemingly for many a life long goal and I could be part of it all. It was a privilege.
The race wasn’t my best, a surprisingly hot Boston day (and I hate any heat), but one thing I have learnt is that the race is one day amongst hundreds of training sessions through the hills of tucks road, the Merricks trail, Main Ridge hills (more hills), and speed work at Point Leo. I love it and our area is one of a kind.
We found Shoreham in 2015 and although we are not full time yet (anyone who has met me has to listen about my desire to move down full time with the family), we do come down most weekends. From Pt Leo Surfing life saving, to Balnarring football club and supporting the SCA, I have a real passion for the local area and community it offers. A bit like Boston, I certainly have found another tribe I love.
Jean Downing turns 100!
Shoreham resident Jean Downing turned 100 years of age in December 2023. It was lovely to see the community come together to wish Jean a very special birthday (pictured right), and even cutting the ribbon for our new bus shelter which was four years in the makinng.
Jean has lived a full and busy life with generosity and purpose. She has raised a large family, run the family business, been a sheep farmer, worked as a social worker in a variety of services assisting people and advocating on their behalf. She has actively supported social issues and contributed to her community and society in many ways.
Looking a place for herself and her children to spend their holidays, Jean chose Shoreham, purchasing a property in the early 1960s in Prout Webb Road, close to the beach and bush and away from main roads. Thereafter, the Downing family were regular visitors during the summer holidays until Jean decided to live permanently in Shoreham. She has been an active member of the community, joining a local book group, playing tennis and golf and always interested in changes, developments and improvements.
Community advocacy has been an important part of Jean’s life. She has fought for better footpaths for older people along the beach front, Cliff Road and Steen Ave. A shelter at the bus stop and seats at the beach have also been on her wish list for Shoreham, together with better use of the Community Hall. Jean proposed the idea of regular morning teas to the Shoreham Community Association. These have been appreciated by local residents and the Shoreham Nursing Home for almost a decade. Her daily swims are legendary. She is a highly valued and respected member of the Shoreham community.