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![]() By Mick Roberts ![]() Jack (above) and Cecil Upton (below) at The Cataract in the 1940s
FISHING The Cataract has been illegal for over a century but try telling that to the Since the first This is the story of brothers Jack and Cecil Upton who could be found most weekends fishing the The two were born a year apart and were inseparable, the best of mates, and knew the mountain better than anyone. Born in Hobart St Bulli in 1924, Jack left school at 14 finding work at 16 in Old Bulli Pit. Ces was born a year later in the mining village of Spion Kop – or Pit Town – on the escarpment near Bulli Colliery and followed his brother as an employee in the mine. Their father Jacko, like his father, introduced young Jack and Ces to In 1995 a year before Jack’s death he recalled his first trip to The Cataract: “I was only about eight years old, and mi father took me and mi brother, Ces, who was 9, and mi friend, Dave, who was about 10, over the mountain fishin’. So, when we came back home from fishin’ in about a fortnight’s time, us boys decided to go over by ourselves. We were alright while we stopped on the track, but there was a certain part of the track that was called an old bullock track, and it petered out, and we had to walk down the bush to find our own way to the water where the river was to go fishin’. We did that but when we got to the top of the ridge we couldn’t find the track any more, and we got frightened. The three of us began to cry and we made a beeline back up the creek, and we struck the track that we had followed coming in, and we never stopped running until we were safely home - Straight down over the mountain - But, if we had’ve kept walking a few more yards or so, then we would have hit the river. I remember that as good as yesterday…” That inexperience was short lived and as young men the two brothers spent much of their leisure time “over the mountain”, rabbiting, fishing and earning an extra quid cutting pit props for local collieries. They gained a reputation as excellent axemen winning ribbons at agricultural shows and in competitions held in the yards of local pubs. ![]()
The depression years of the 1930s were tough times and the mountain provided food and recreation for the Setting camp close to the water in lean twos made from canvas or brattice from the pit, they set lines along the banks keeping one eye out for bites and the other for rangers. Their favourite base was Brown’s Cave where names dating back to the 1940s read like a who’s who of local anglers. Ces once recalled how The Cataract was “like Out foxing the Waterboard rangers was a repetitive task for Jack and Ces. They were expert bushmen and most of the time they were too skilful for the rangers. For over half a century they illegally fished The Cataract and were only caught and fined once. In the 1940s they took their girlfriends – their future wives – on a weekend fishing trip. The story goes Jack’s wife, Joyce and Ces’ Isabel made history by being the first women to be fined for entering a government water catchment area. The family tell the yarn of Ces and Jack trying to hide Joyce in a wombat hole as the ranger approached. They were fined the hefty amount of five pounds each and never took their wives to The Cataract again. However, like their dad did for them, Ces and Jack have passed the secrets of Jack’s son Allan and his 15 year-old boy They fished the Cataract until age finally prevented Ces and Jack from visiting their beloved mountain in 1991. Jack died aged 72 in 1996 and Ces aged 76 in 2001. As a befitting gesture Ces’ ashes were scattered at his beloved Cataract after his death.
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