A Science Workshop on southern hemisphere VLBI (Very Long Baseline Interferometry) was held on 30 October 2024 in Perth and on-line, to focus on southern hemisphere VLBI science and its critical links to current and next-generation radio astronomy projects. At the start of the meeting the history of southern hemisphere VLBI was reviewed, which included mention of the Southern Hemisphere VLBI Experiment (SHEVE), conducted in 1982. This was the first imaging VLBI run in the Southern Hemisphere, using the stations shown above. Murriyang, the Parkes 64m radiotelescope, and the 26m Hartebeesthoek dish, have not changed, but there have been changes to the rest of the array! The Tidbinbilla DSS-43 is now a 70m dish, but back in 1982 it was still the original 64m diameter. The Alice Springs antenna was a 9m Landsat downlink station , no longer used for VLBI. The Hobart antenna was a 13.7m dish, also no longer operational. And the Fleurs antenna, also 13.7m in diameter, was one of the two dishes later moved to Marsfield! (Image credit: Astronomical Journal)