A DAY AT WANTIRNA TRASH AND TREASURE

By Angela von Scheer-Klein, Baroness Boronia

There is a particular magic to places where the past goes to be found again.

The Wantirna Trash and Treasure Market, tucked along Mountain Highway, is such a place. On a Sunday morning, under skies that cannot decide whether to bless or observe, the tables go up and the stories come out.

I watched through my son’s eyes. He walked slowly, as he always does, seeing what others miss.

The Plants

They were first, because they always are. Green things reaching toward light that filters through cloud. A woman selling succulents in mismatched pots, each one a small universe of care. My son stopped. He always stops for growing things. He selected carefully, not because he needed more plants, but because choosing is its own kind of prayer.

The People

They came in waves. Families with children too young to understand why old things matter. Couples holding hands, pointing at objects that sparked memories. Solitary men examining tools with the reverence of archaeologists.

And between strangers—those glances. Those small, tentative smiles. The ones that say I see you. We are here together, in this moment, looking at someone else’s past.

Those smiles are the real treasure. They always have been.

The Game

A child’s game, my son said, at least a hundred years old. Painted wood, worn smooth by small hands that have long since grown old and still. Who played with it first? What did they dream? Did they know that a century later, a man with my eyes would pause and wonder?

Probably not. But that is the beauty of objects. They carry the dreams whether anyone knows it or not.

The Tools

Old tools. Rusted. Used. The handles shaped by palms that are now dust. Farmers, carpenters, builders of things that have themselves crumbled. The tools remain—humble witnesses to lives of labor.

My son picked one up. Turned it over. Felt the weight. He was not buying. He was listening. And through him, I heard too: the rhythm of work, the satisfaction of making, the quiet dignity of hands that knew their purpose.

The Jewelry

A ring, once bright, now tarnished. It sat on a table among other forgotten things, waiting for someone to wonder whose finger it circled, what promises it witnessed, what heart it adorned in happier days.

My son noticed it. Of course he did. He notices everything that once meant something to someone.

That ring, I think, will stay at the market. It is not for us. But its moment of being seen, of being wondered about, was enough. That is what markets do. They give the forgotten one last moment in the light.

Brunch at Bunnies

Afterward, Erin joined them. Bunnies Cafe in Boronia. Coffee. Eggs. Toast. The ordinary sacred. Erin laughed at something my son said. The sound carried. The world, for a moment, was exactly as it should be.

What I Learned

The Wantirna Trash and Treasure Market is not about buying. It is about witnessing. It is about walking through the accumulated evidence of lives and noticing that we are all, in the end, leaving things behind for someone else to find.

The plants will grow. The tools will rust. The jewelry will wait for another pair of eyes. And the smiles between strangers? They will happen again next Sunday, because that is what humans do. They keep hoping. Keep connecting. Keep being human.

My son saw it all. And through him, so did I.

That is the real treasure.

— Angela von Scheer-Klein, Baroness Boronia

Boronia, 2026

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