October 31st 2015. From this date forward nothing would be the same for me.
Prior to this day my fiancé, Mick, and myself had been busy planning our future together. We had moved to Kojonup, a small town in the Great Southern region of Western Australia. We had bought a block and demolished a house ourselves – a tough and dusty experience that only reinforced our relationship. We were determining the final plans for our home together and looking forward to getting out of the house we were renting. Four months beforehand, Mick proposed on a sunny June day atop a granite outcrop overlooking my parents’ farm, and, of course, I had said yes. We had ordered “Save the Date” cards and jumped with joy and excitement as we started making wedding plans. And, unbeknown to us, we had already started the family we were planning.
October 31st 2015 started like many Saturdays. As a veterinarian, I was on call and was off to work. Mick, a plumber, had the day off and decided to visit my parents. When we said goodbye that morning, neither of us could have expected it would be the last words, the last kiss and the last embrace we shared together.
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I always knew there were many spots you could not call 000. But I thought you could always call 112. The theory of course is that dialling 112 will use any network your phone can find, not just the network you are signed up to (eg. if you are signed up with Vodafone your phone will still connect to Optus or Telstra networks). I guess it doesn't really surprise me to hear that there are spots where no network has coverage though. Australia is a big country. I guess people who live so remotely should carry satellite phones.
I'm glad this is raising awareness. As stressed in earlier comments, we do not live remotely. Ironically in this situation living remotely would have been a blessing - we would already have a satellite phone and likely long range radio that enabled direct access to the RFDS. Many identified mobile black spots are not in remote areas - they are in major cities and on major transport routes to popular holiday destinations. Ultimately if people feel it's unfeasible to improve mobile coverage then the entire Australian population who travel away from a landline should also have a satellite phone
Phone companies can't resolve black spots in highly populated areas, so I don't know how they'll get around the more remote ones - although a tower would be a good start.
I have a black spot in my home - the entire home including back and front yards and I live in the middle of Caboolture, Qld - hardly remote. It's this reason alone, we've been forced to put in a landline, just so we are contactable. Just crazy they haven't sorted this sort of stuff out.
Big hugs to this woman though, what a truly horrendous loss! <3