Home » Chinchilla Melon Festival

Chinchilla Melon Festival

Four tonne of melons and seven days of events are the culmination of a very successful Chinchilla Melon Festival. A biennial event, the Festival is a great economic boon to the small country township of 3,500 in Queensland’s south east corner, an easy three hours north west of Brisbane, along the Warrego Highway, between Dalby and Miles.

The Chinchilla Melon Festival celebrates the fact that Chinchilla produces approximately 25 per cent of Australia’s melons.

Local melon growers, Dennis Dickman and his wife Jan, visited the USA a number of years ago and noticed there was a melon festival being planned in Rush Springs, Oklahoma, a town similar in size to Chinchilla. Returning to Chinchilla, in the grip of another dreadful drought, the community welcomed the idea of an event such as the Melon Festival to lift its spirits. That was in 1994.

Celebrating Chinchilla’s melon growing, the Festival is designed to be fun, and to interest young and old alike. Novelty events, such as melon skiing, melon bungy, a two kilometre melon bolt, pip spitting, melon juicing and melon ironman events, are hilarious. A busload of young UK visitors put up a great effort in all melon competitions, but unfortunately followed in the footsteps of their latest English cricket team!

The Big Melon competition creates statewide interest, with many competitors from other melon growing areas such as Bundaberg, Kingaroy, South Burnett areas and the Lockyer Valley. The 2001 winner was from Bundaberg, weighing 87 kg. This year local grower Dennis Dickman won with a 63.6 kg melon, the fourth time he has won the event. This year’s drought was the main reason for lighter melons in the competition.

Brisbane ABC’s Spencer Howson was also a competitor and brought his effort all the way from ABC’s Toowong Studios in Brisbane, however he has much to learn! The Harvest Company bought the winning 63.6 kg melon for $5,000 at auction, proceeds going to the local Blue Care organisation. Visitors from as far afield as Buderim, Maleny and Brisbane watched multi award winning chef, David Pugh, from Restaurant II in Brisbane, recently returned from a special assignment in Washington, USA, give a cooking demonstration and lunch.

Alison Alexander, Brisbane based food consultant, judged the cooking competition. Former local girl and multi award winning apprentice chef Christie Fromm, was a star, winning a number of the Chef sections. It was great to see keen and strong competition in the children’s section too. Other events that added to the fun atmosphere were the Battle of the Bands, golf and bowls competitions, poets’ breakfast, procession and family concert, with a great fireworks display.

The crowd was estimated to be in the vicinity of 5,000, with many committed to returning in 2005 for the next Festival.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Looking to the future

    Looking to the future

    Flinders Lane will be abuzz for two days this month with Townsville Youth Council – supported by Townsville City Council – set to deliver a free festival focused on the…

  • WA leads the way as people to the regions

    WA leads the way as people to the regions

    Ten million people now call regional Australia home, and Western Australia is leading the way with its regional population growing faster than the cities, according to a deep dive into…

  • Sewer grant sought

    Sewer grant sought

    Fraser Coast Regional Council will seek Queensland Government funding for two major water and sewerage projects with capacity to support more than 11,000 new homes across the region. At its…

  • Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors across NSW have called for waste levy to soften the blow of fuel price increases. More than 60 Councils from across NSW have issued a call for the NSW…

  • Lismore four years on

    Lismore four years on

    Four years on: How Lismore is building back and setting a national benchmark. When the 2022 flood inundated Lismore, it was not simply another extreme weather event. It became Australia’s…

  • A golden celebration

    A golden celebration

    Cockburn Libraries will mark a major milestone in 2026 – 50 years of serving, supporting and connecting the community. Spearwood Library opened its doors on 23 March 1976 as one…

  • Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Fuel supply constraints and rising costs are putting councils and communities under increasing pressure across Australia, with implications for essential services and community infrastructure. The Australian Local Government Association is…

  • Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Adelaide Hills Council is pleased to advise that Nathan Daniell has formally been elected Mayor following confirmation of results from the supplementary election. Mr Daniell has served as a councillor…

  • Community mourns beloved former mayor

    Community mourns beloved former mayor

    The NSW local government sector is deeply saddened by the passing of former Lismore Mayor Jenny Dowell OAM, a widely respected and much-loved leader who dedicated her life to serving…

  • New-look reserve reopens

    New-look reserve reopens

    Toongabbie’s Sue Savage Reserve has reopened after a $4 million upgrade featuring a new skate park, BMX pump track, fitness equipment, an amenity building, park furniture, drainage upgrade, landscaping and…