Leaving Casterton and travelling 18 kilometres along the Casterton–Naracoorte Road, you’ll pass through Red Cap Creek. Redcap was the name of one of the members of the first Indigenous cricket team, which travelled to England in 1868. That pioneering team embraced the opportunity with courage and determination, embodying the belief that life can offer:
“Wings to show you what you can become,
Roots to remind you where you are from.”
In this edition of Casterton Connections, interviewer Lois Lowe shares a genuine, insightful, and honest conversation built on trust and rapport with Shane Gill, who was born in Redcap.
Born in 1961, Shane is the sixth child of Jack and Verna (Bobbie) Gill. He fondly recalls a simple childhood filled with the antics and adventures shared with his siblings, extended family, and the neighbouring McArlein, Shannon, Foster, and Crossley clans.
Like many others at the time, Shane left home in 1972 at the age of eleven to attend boarding school. Over the next eighteen years, his “wings” carried him through a wide range of experiences, people, self-discovery, and even to meeting his wife, Heather. Yet, his connection to his “roots” remained deeply embedded in his sense of home.
For the past thirty-five years, the Casterton district has been fortunate to have Shane and his family return to where it all began. While he is well-known in the community in many ways, listeners will get a deeper glimpse into the chameleon-like nature of this much-loved local. Shane openly embraces his slightly eccentric and eclectic personality.
Like sands sifting through an hourglass, this interview reveals the many grains that colour Shane’s days—family, nursing, community, travel, and music. It resonates with honesty, courage, humour, and a compassionate, non-judgemental approach to life and people.
So sit back and enjoy the banter, the warmth, and the clear friendship between Lois and Shane, as she explores the layers of a man who walks to the beat of his own drum, while giving so much to so many.
A local whose life experiences have spread his wings, yet who has always stayed true to the values and respect rooted in where he came from. A heartfelt connection to place and people that will always feel like “home.”