26 November 2025

Has Canberra lost its sense of fun and adventure, or is it simply a sign of the times?

| By Tim Gavel
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diver jumping off diving platform

Canberra diver using the Civic Olympic Pool diving platform. Well, those days are gone … Photo: File.

Growing up in Canberra, a plunge off the 10-metre platform at the Civic Olympic Pool was a rite of passage for many.

The sight of the utterly nervous making that trek up the stairs before taking a tentative step onto the board was entertainment in itself.

The plunge into the pool was icing on the cake.

People of a certain age still speak fondly of the platform dive (or jump) as if it were akin to a major event in their lives, as they overcame their sense of fear.

But it wasn’t for everybody. It definitely wasn’t for me. I must admit that, having arrived in Canberra in my late 20s in the 1980s, my risk-taking days had long passed.

But we now live in different times, and it’s doubtful that opportunity will ever return, with public insurance making anything with potential risk prohibitive.

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I now read on the Civic Olympic Pool website that the 10-metre board is for club use only and is not available to the public.

I don’t know the reasoning, but having witnessed a few near misses over the years, I would assume the risk for the inexperienced is too great.

You don’t blame pool management. I would do the same thing given the litigious nature of the world these days, but it is tangible evidence of the society we live in.

Another rite of passage for many Canberrans who were prepared to take a risk was the Birdman Rally, staged at Regatta Point every March.

The Birdman Rally: we’re ready for another crack! Photo: ArchivesACT.

People constructed homemade flying machines before running and jumping off a six-metre launching platform into the Lake.

The $10,000 cash prize went to the flying craft that went the furthest. Some didn’t go far at all, especially those constructed with cardboard.

An estimated 100,000 people lined the shores to watch the fearless plunge into the Lake.

But in 1992, it became a victim of rising public liability insurance costs, and the event was no more.

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I did notice there was an election pledge last year to bring back the Birdman Rally, but there is little evidence that it will actually happen.

Another of life’s milestones for the youth of Canberra was the water slide at Big Splash, as many took their tentative first steps in overcoming the fear of cannoning down a tube into the water.

I watched my own kids take that first nervous step before it became passe and the search for greater challenges began, but it was an important early test.

Big Splash Waterpark. Photo: James Coleman.

Sadly, with Big Splash not opening this summer and continued uncertainty over the park’s future, many will miss out on this part of growing up in Canberra that had been taken for granted.

Perhaps the ways in which we overcame fears and sense of fun in our time have been overtaken by other pastimes.

As I watch kids on e-scooters flying past at various speeds, I do ponder the risks they are taking. The risk is likely just as great, if not greater, than jumping off the high tower at Civic Pool or plummeting into the Lake with a handmade, cardboard craft. Maybe the risks associated with the excitement and rite of passage still exist in our city, but they have just taken on a new shape from those of old.

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Walter James6:20 am 27 Nov 25

And yet every weekend people are mountain biking, trail running, rock climbing, indoor bouldering, camping, fishing, picnicking, enjoying the incredible adventure play grounds, kayaking in lakes and rivers, skiing at corin in winter, swimming in the cotter in summer. There are go-karts, axe throwing, escape rooms, live music venues, and indoor trampoline venues. Honestly I think sometimes people just like to whine. Times change, interests evolve, but at the end of the day we are all responsible for maintaining our imagination and sense of adventure. You dont actually have to look too far in this city of ours to find some fun, adventure, or something that will get the andrenaline flowing.

Not to forget the Gibraltar falls that now have been vlosed for multiple years

Bennett Bennett5:39 pm 26 Nov 25

Canberra has too many rules and regulations. Whilst they are important, surely they can be relaxed in certain circumstances. But cancel the world search!!!!!!!… cause apparently Andrew Barr thinks the ACT has other economy outside of federal public service. So, uh, where is that? I ask you. But do you care? Maybe you are part of the problem too!

We live in a progressive jurisdiction – we continue to vote for a Government that increases regulation on things like alcohol consumption, nightlife hours, noise restrictions, public safety and the like; a Government that increases cost of living (reducing our ability to spend on fun stuff) to deliver progressive policies; a Government that puts an emphasis on collective welfare over individual indulgences (some of the things I really enjoy – eg. driving my V8 engine car – are politically incorrect now); a Government that strives for long-term outcomes, reducing short-term spontaneity (redevelopment increases density, less public parking in Lonsdale St, the city centre being a construction site for the tram, etc.).
Yes, Canberra has indeed lost its sense of fun – we voted for it.

When Barr and his lap dog Steel finish building on all the sports grounds/car parks there will be no sport or excitement in Dullandboringville.

Too right. I can’t understand why it’s OK for property developers to build over basketball courts, bowling greens, tennis courts, indoor sports centres, school ovals, etc – But they protect empty weed infested green space like it’s the Amazon rainforest, when in reality it’s mostly bindis, thistles, and abandoned shopping trolleys.

I believe Fitz’s Challenge ride also died due to insurance costs. Great ride that drew many riders from around the country and world.

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