9:56 am today

What it's like to live in the town hosting the triple-murder mushroom trial

9:56 am today

By Daniel Miles and Bec Symons, ABC

Claudia Davies has spent nearly 20 years running a small cafe in Morwell.

Claudia Davies has spent nearly 20 years running a small cafe in Morwell. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

On a regular Wednesday morning in late April, it's easy enough to find a park along Morwell's main street.

But this week is no regular week.

The regional Victorian town, just shy of two hours' south-east of Melbourne, has found itself at the centre of an international media spotlight as it plays host to the triple-murder mushroom trial.

The otherwise unassuming Gippsland town is awash with journalists, bloggers, podcasters and more - notebooks and microphones at the ready to capture every detail aired in court.

But for those who live in Morwell, it feels less like a case of the circus coming to town, more like an unusual sideshow.

In fact, many didn't even know the trial was on.

"I'll be honest with you, I only realised because I went down to the local council [building] and couldn't get a park," Latrobe City Business Chamber president Peter Ceeney said with a laugh.

Media representatives from Australia and abroad have travelled to Morwell to cover the mushroom trial.

Media representatives from Australia and abroad have travelled to Morwell to cover the mushroom trial. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

Welcome to Morwell

Morwell is normally home to about 15,000 people, though numbers have edged up slightly this week.

Erin Patterson's trial has thrown a new spotlight on Morwell, a town better known for coal power, an old paper mill and a few handy sportspeople.

Hotels and motels had their house-full signs ready well in advance, as the few accommodation options in town quickly filled.

Ray Burgess runs the local newsagent.

He wasn't expecting a rush on pens and paper despite the pundits coming to town.

"If I look out the front door to the left, where the legal precinct is, yeah, it's certainly busier down there," he said with a wry laugh.

"There seems to be a bit of a police presence and there's cameras and things … there's definitely some folk around."

Ray Burgess says there has been a flurry of activity in Morwell's legal precinct this week.

Ray Burgess says there has been a flurry of activity in Morwell's legal precinct this week. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

Burgess is a local character and one of the first people you would call for an update via the town's bush telegraph.

But he said things have stayed relatively quiet when it came to the trial.

"There are a few new faces around in the street, but I don't know how long the excitement will last," he said.

Sushi rolling out the door

At Claudia's Cafe, a small single-front cafe just down the road from the courthouse, business has been less-than-booming.

Like much of the town, Claudia's has been steady - if a little quiet.

Chatting with one hand on the coffee machine, owner Claudia Davies said she was hoping the trial would give her tills and the town at least a temporary boost.

Claudia Davies says her cafe has a loyal client base.

Claudia Davies says her cafe has a loyal client base. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

"I'd imagine we'll get a little busier, we're only about 100 metres from the court," Davies said.

Davies has run Claudia's for 18 years and of late, has been doing it hard, like many hospitality venues.

She said she hoped to put away a little bit of the extra mushroom trial money to go towards her taxes.

"The town's just sleepy, that's the way it is," she said.

Across town, Christina Gu has been prepping for the arrival of the world's media and their lunch breaks.

"My boss will put more staff on and when we're doing the morning preparation, we're going to make more sushi and have more staff in the kitchen," she said.

After living in Morwell for a decade, Gu said she was looking forward to meeting new people and hearing fresh perspectives.

"I want to know their idea of our town, our food, and why they come," she said.

"I'm getting excited for everything."

Some Morwell residents say the mushroom trial's media pack made finding a park on the main street more difficult.

Some Morwell residents say the mushroom trial's media pack made finding a park on the main street more difficult. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

The consistent factor among the residents was a sense of pride in their little town.

Each hoped for a glimmer of hope to come from the town's moment in the media spotlight.

"Like most country towns, it has its issues but it really is a pretty little town," Burgess said.

Weekend wanders

Outside the courtroom, life will continue much as usual for Morwell's residents - just with a few more newsy tourists than normal.

Plenty in town remain blissfully unaware the court case is even under way.

The Morwell Tigers will host Wonthaggi Power at their home ground this weekend.

A few extra drinks have been ordered, but that's for a past players' function, not an expected media scrum.

"We haven't got any changes with the trial coming up," Tigers president Michael Stobbart said.

If anything, he said he hoped the attention on Morwell might shine a light on the region's real challenges, like crime.

"I haven't really noticed anything different around town," he added.

Some Morwell residents have said they were surprised to learn the trial was happening this week.

Some Morwell residents have said they were surprised to learn the trial was happening this week. Photo: ABC News / Danielle Bonica

Not that there's nothing else happening.

The town's rose garden, an international award winner, is still putting on a few blooms even as winter creeps closer.

And for those journalists lingering through the weekend, a stroll through the local gallery might offer some unexpected inspiration.

Two exhibitions are on show with free entry, including a collection celebrating wit and pun.

Safe to say, the headline writers should feel right at home.

- ABC