ENTERTAINMENT, EVENTS AND COMMEMORATE


Entertainment - Supporting local talent, we have regular entertainments Friday night, Saturday night and Sunday Afternoon, entry is free and everyone is welcome

Special Events and Commemorate - We offer a number of free community, and paid ticketed events throughout the year. Keep a look out here for future events.

Commemorative Services are held for ANZAC Day, Remembrance Day and Vietnam Veterans Day.
Our Museum has an extensive collection of wartime memorabilia from the Boer War through to recent conflicts and peacekeeping operations.

Paint and Sip with Lynne

Paint and Sip with Lynne
Friday 19th April, 7pm
$66 per person (includes first house wine/coffee/tea/soft drink)
Come along for a creative night of painting, fun, laughing and learning.
Lynne, your host and talented artist will guide you through blending, shading, highlighting and stroke work. Helping you create your masterpiece.
This is a beginner friendly class, no experience necessary. You'll be guided step-by-step and also given the freedom to take the creative reins.
Included:
All painting materials are provided such as canvas, easel, paints, brushes, and apron.
Take home your own finished artwork on a 30×40 stretched canvas.
A time full of fun and enthusiasm while you gain artistic tuition from a professional artist! First drink included (there after drinks and nibbles at bar prices)

What to bring:
A thirst for painting and trying something new


Messages from Beyond the Physical Realm

Saturday 20th April, 3pm to 5pm - only 80 seats available.

Come join us for an afternoon filled with messages from the other side and one's higher self. 

Connect with medium Melissa Paris from Mystic Soul Visions who will bring through messages from loved ones in spirit, providing comfort and healing. Psychic Kylie from Psychic Butterfly will be tuning into soul energy to provide messages of clarity.

This event is an opportunity to experience the power of love that transcends the physical realm.

What to Expect: Prepare to be captivated with a variety of messages from the spirit realm and soul energy. While not everyone may receive a personal contact, each message conveyed will be uplifting, brimming with love, and offering profound healing to all in attendance.

A psychic uses their extrasensory perception to interface with their sitters/clients soul energy. A medium uses their extrasensory perception to interface with the spirits in other dimensions.

After the event: For anyone that books into Poppies Bistro for dinner afterwards, Kylie will continue to chat with these dinners. Offering complementary readings.
Melissa will be offering private individual readings to a limited amount of people. A booking link will be emailed to all those that book into the group event.
Legal Obligation: Psychic readings are subject to interpretation and should not be taken as absolute. All readings given by our Psychics are for entertainment purposes only, and no guarantee can be given as to the accuracy of a reading. Readings do not replace Professional/Medical/Legal/Business opinion and advice. It will not force you to follow a particular course of action, or attempt to exert any form of control over your free-will and common sense. The contents of a reading are not legally binding. Any decisions made, or action taken by you as a result of your reading are your sole responsibility and have not been forced upon you. We assume no legal liability for any damages, losses, or other consequences of any client decisions, subsequent to, or based on readings provided. Please use your own common sense and judgment at all times. It is only with the complete understanding and acceptance of the above that your reading will take place.
Tickets are non refundable

Khristian Mizzi

& Greg Champion,

Saturday 27th April, 7:45pm doors open for 8:30pm start
Winner of the 2021 Australian Folk Alliance awards -
'SOLO ARTIST OF THE YEAR' , Kris Mizzi has captured the hearts of audiences around the country with his moving songs and imaginative stories

Greg champion - Songwriter, singer, comedian and prominent radio personality Greg Champion captures what it is to be Australian through his unique combination of comedy, sports parodies and country/folk music.

$15 general admission.
$12 (financial) RSL members. (valid card to be presented on the day)
Schedule:
3pm - Bar Open
6pm - Show doors open for dining patrons
7:45 - Show doors open for non-diners
8:30ish - Show start


SOLD OUT: Drag Bingo, Diner and a Show

Friday 10th and 17th May, 6:30pm - Dinner and Bingo - $59
  • Dinner, Bingo and Show, a fabulous night out for the girls (or boys)....
    Our fabulous drag queen Della Katessen will be your host, bringing an extra dose of glamour and excitement.
    Get ready for joyful costumes, mesmerizing dance performances, and of course BINGO with all the hilarious banter that will keep you entertained.
    Bingo winner receive Perfectly Queer prizes and dessert on the house. Don't forget to get your photo take with Della..

    Dinner includes a two course meal.
    Choose from:
    Entrée:
    • Pear & Prosciutto, Rocket Tart
    • Arancini Balls with cheese and herbs (V)
    • Main:
    • Roast of the Day with seasonal veg and red wine jus (GF)
    • Tempura Flathead with chips, salad and aioli
    • Chicken Parmigiana with chips and salad
    • Gnocchi with mushroom, pumpkin, sundried tomatoes, in sage and white wine (GF/V) 
    • Book Now

Regular Entertainment - Free Entry

Friday

Watch this Space

Saturday
Karaoke: 
On Cue Entertainment
6th April from 7pm - Late

4th May from 7pm - Late
Come along for a fun filled night that is entertaining on many level...
Watch this space...

Sunday

Acoustic Sundays          1pm to 4pm          A Great Relaxing Afternoon

Danny Spencer
7th April

Danny Spencer is amazing on guitar and vocals. 

He has performed with some of the biggest names in Australian music including being a regular member of the bands of both Jimmy Barnes, Leo Sayer, Jon Stevens, Rogue Traders and Richard Clapton. 
Brunsy
14th April

Big Vocals and his own spin on some huge classics. Brunsy will keep you singing along and wanting more. 

Jeff Pattison
21st April

Jeff Pattison, singer, guitarist and entertainer

A talented solo act, a multi gene artist, from acoustic sets to rocking it out playing electric guitar. 

You will be up and dancing and calling out for more.  

Spare Change
28th April

Commemorations

These are ticketed events. Please contact the RSL or see booking link

Commemoration

An integral part of what we do. On ANZAC Day, Remembrance Day and many other important commemorative dates throughout the year such as Vietnam Veterans Day, RSL volunteers participate in and coordinate commemorative activities of many types
HOW TO COMMEMORATE
The Commemorative Ritual has four parts:
The Ode
Written in 1914 by Laurence Binyon, the Ode is the fourth verse of his poem, For the Fallen. 
It was used at commemoration ceremonies by the British Legion soon after World War I and in 1920, was adopted as "The Ode" in all British Commonwealth countries.

“They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. 
At the going down of the sun and in the morning. We will remember them.”

Excerpt from Laurence Binyon’s poem, “For the Fallen”

Last Post
Should be sounded immediately after the last line of The Ode is repeated by those in attendance.
In earlier times when English troops fought in Europe, Retreat was sounded when it became too dark to fight and the soldiers retired to the nearest town or village where they spent the night. Sentries were placed at the entrances of the camp or town. When the Duty Officer marched the sentries around the town to man their posts he was accompanied by a bugler who sounded "First Post" when the first sentries were posted and "Last Post" when the camp was finally made safe by manning the last entrance.
At a funeral or commemoration service sounding "Last Post" symbolises that the dead soldiers have ended their journey through life.

The Silence
Shortly after the end of World War I George Honey, a Melbourne journalist in London, was dismayed that, in the noisy celebrations that marked the end of the War, no thought had been given to the human sacrifice that had made the celebration possible. He suggested that all people should stand in silence for five minutes in memory of the Fallen. Tests by the Guards showed that five minutes was too long and King George V accepted that The Silence should be two minutes in length.
In 1997, our Governor-General issued a proclamation recommending that The Silence be for one minute, which is what we observe today.

Lest We Forget
The final line of Rudyard Kipling's hymn The Recessional is a warning of what might become of us if we forget the power of The Lord. The phrase was adopted for commemoration services to warn us that, if we forget the sacrifice of those who died in War, we are likely to repeat the futility and obscenity of armed conflict. The expression is normally used to mark the end of The Silence and serves as a cue for Reveille to be sounded.

Reveille
Reveille is the bugle call that awakens servicemen and women at the start of the day. There are several Reveille calls, any one of which may be sounded at dawn. During the day the shorter, more raucous, "Rouse" is sounded. In commemoration services it signifies the resurrection of the dead soldier into the after life. 

The Wearing of Medals

War Medals may be worn only by the persons upon whom they were conferred and in no case does the right to wear war medals or their ribbons devolve upon a widow, parent, son or relative when the recipient is dead. Modifications of the above rule are permitted in connection with Remembrance and ANZAC Day ceremonies when relatives who desire to avail themselves on those days only, of the distinction of wearing the decoration and medals of deceased relatives, may do so ON THE RIGHT BREAST.

War medals (with certain exceptions) are worn on the left breast of the coat or in a corresponding place on the dress, as the case may be. War medals are worn to show the Sovereign’s head. War medals (or Campaign medals) are worn in the order of the dates of Campaigns for which they have been conferred, the first being obtained being farthest from the left shoulder. It is a Federal offence to wear medals and/or decorations for which you are not entitled.