“But once sport got going, everyone enjoyed it a lot more”— Ash McClymont, Year 8 Boarder
Before some boys arrive at Toowoomba Grammar School, they have already spent years working in ways that would surprise many.
They have driven tractors, ridden motorbikes across paddocks, helped muster livestock and worked in the yards alongside adults. They check fences and watering points and carry responsibility from a young age. It is part of life on the land. It is expected.
Meet Ash McClymont, one of several students who has completed much of his schooling remotely through distance education, in his case via the Longreach School of Distance Education.
Ash grew up on his family’s cattle and sheep station, 110 kilometres west of Longreach. Properties like “Dalkeith”, which has been in the McClymont family for generations, stretch wide and flat. It is a long way from the green of the Toowoomba Grammar School ovals.
His classroom was a room at home. Lessons came through online sessions, “basically a big Zoom meeting,” he said. At times that changed, with students travelling into Longreach for in-person clusters before returning home again. For most of the term though, learning was independent and close to family.
Ash had a head start in some ways. His mother is a teacher and runs an online health and fitness business from the property. He is also the youngest of four, with older siblings who have already made the move to boarding, each bringing their own experiences with them.
Even with that preparation, the shift from “Dalkeith” on the Silsoe Road to Australia’s second largest inland city is real.
“Out there, there were no trainings unless you really wanted to go,” Ash said. “Here it’s training every week, twice a week and it’s pretty full-on.”
Boarding is often described as a home away from home. It does not replace home and it is not meant to but over time, routines form. Faces become familiar and the boys you live with become close. For many, they end up feeling like brothers.
It does not happen all at once.
For boys arriving from more isolated backgrounds, the change is more than just being away from family. It is a different pace, a different structure and new expectations around sport, co-curricular life and sharing space with others. Even the small things take getting used to. Meals, routines, noise.
It can feel like a lot.
At Toowoomba Grammar School, that is well understood. The School has long welcomed boys from rural and remote communities and knows that not everyone arrives at the same starting point.
Corfe House plays an important role in those early months. It is where the youngest boarders begin, supported by staff who understand just how important that first stretch can be. There is structure, guidance and a steady presence as boys find their feet.
Homesickness is part of it.
“Probably half of Corfe got really homesick at some stages,” Ash said.
Alongside that care, there are practical ways the School helps boys settle. Extra time in sport, opportunities in the arts and music and simply getting to know the campus, including the P.B. Hauser Aquatic Centre, all help build confidence and familiarity, all prior to them entering Years 6 or 7.
Director of Boarding, Mr Nick Byron, said that approach has been shaped over many years working closely with boys from geographically isolated areas.
“This is something we have been doing for a long time and we understand the unique needs of boys coming from remote communities,” he said.
That support begins before the first day of term. “We run a transition sleepover in November for boys we have identified as being more isolated. They spend an extra day at school, meeting staff, getting a sense of the place and connecting with boys who have similar interests. It also gives them the chance to identify a trusted adult early on.”
Those early moments matter.
“We can also give them a taste of what sport and co-curricular life will look like, even offer a few coaching tips they can take away,” Mr Byron said. “Just as importantly, they have time to build friendships before they arrive. They head into the Christmas holidays already knowing people, so instead of wondering what it will be like, they are looking forward to coming back.”
Now in Year 8 and living in Boyce House, Ash can already see that shift.
“In Year 7 I found it really hard, but Year 8 is easier because you’re used to the routine,” he said.
The classroom feels different now too. Where he once worked independently at home, he now has teachers nearby, structured prep and other boys alongside him.
“At home it’s sort of up to you, but here you’ve got teachers all around you and help sessions if you need it. That really helps.”
There is a family connection as well. His father, Paul McClymont, attended Toowoomba Grammar School from 1993 to 1997, following in the footsteps of his uncle and Ash’s great uncle, Arch Avery, who was also a student from 1966 to 1970. Paul still shares stories of his time as a boarder.
For Ash though, the experience is his own.
Home is still in the dusty paddocks west of Longreach, on a station that stretches far beyond the horizon. But over time, something else begins to form alongside it.
Not a replacement.
Just another place that starts to feel familiar and in that space, the echoes of home are never far away.
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