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General News

6 February, 2023

Vale business doubles

THERE’S a mini-boom happening in Korong Vale. The number of businesss in in the main street will double when Jenny Bligh moves her discount store into the old Proctor’s General Store later this month after 30 years in Wedderburn. And the...


Vale business doubles - feature photo

THERE’S a mini-boom happening in Korong Vale.

The number of businesss in in the main street will double when Jenny Bligh moves her discount store into the old Proctor’s General Store later this month after 30 years in Wedderburn.

And the reputedly-haunted Scully’s Korong Vale Hotel has new publicans with Max Scott and Craig Thompson taking over the lease from previous licensee Anne MacDonald.

Jenny, who started Bounty Discounts in February 1993, first traded from the old butchery before moving into Wedderburn’s old bakery and then her current High Street premises 14 years ago.

However, with that shop one of three now for sale, and the owner wanting vacant possession, Jenny looked nearer her home for new premises.

“I’ll still do deliveries of orders into Wedderburn every Thursday as well as picking up copies of the Loddon Herald that are always quickly snapped up by Korong Vale people,” she said.

Selling everything from hats and fascinators to toys, gifts and stationary, Bligh’s Discounts has become a Wedderburn institution over three decades.

“I’ve had a few locations over the years and many customers who keep coming back,” Jenny said.

“When I needed to look for new premises, the opportunity to move the shop to Korong Vale came up. Now the packing starts to be into the new premises later this month.”

Jenny said preparations had also started at the former Proctor’s store, that closed earlier this century.

Meanwhile, Max and Craig have already started brightening up Scully’s Hotel.

An early addition to freshly-painted walls has been a photograph of Annie Scully who had the hotel built in 1891.

Local resident Yvonne Cashen arranged with Wedderburn Historical Records Museum to have a photograph of the hotel’s namesake framed for display. Max, a diesel mechanic, and former sawmill worker Craig swapped Gippsland life for the ‘Vale last month.

Their first weeks have been spent stripping up to four layers of wallpaper from walls and painting the hotel in heritage colours.

Korong Vale’s population hit a peak of about 600 people in the 1930s when a large rail workforce sustained the town

Railway rationalisation in the 1980s saw the town’s population decline and the school closed in 1998.

The last Census put Korong Vale’s population at 143.

The town continues to have its own tennis club although the bowls side went into recess this season.

And life at Scully’s Hotel also includes a darts team in the Loddon association.

Yvonne said the new publicans had quickly become part of the community, keeping the hotel as a meeting place for locals. “They’re wonderful,” she said as families sat in the beer garden or under the historic verandah on the hotel’s famous couches.

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