PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE
SEPTEMBER 22-28, 2021
CLARE BOWDITCH HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS
WAYNE SCHWASS FLYING THE FLAG OF LIFE
CAMBERWELL PARK VIEWS
THE PEOPLE’S GARDENS MELBURNIA NS REFLECT ON 175 YEARS
STONNINGTON & BOROONDARA
Book your private appointment:
C o mp i l e d b y
HAILEY COULES
The editor’s desk
One of the highlights of my past week was flicking through a new book by Melbourne authors Sophie Cunningham and Peter Wilmoth, Wonder: 175 Years of Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria. This beautiful coffee table book, which also includes stunning images by photographer and former Age picture editor Leigh Henningham, provides a fascinating insight into how this 38-hectare urban oasis came to be and just what it means to millions of Melburnians. And, as Effie Mann writes, recent lockdowns have only heightened our love affair with this special place. ●
STYLES AHEAD \ Enhance your bedroom space
BABY STEPS \ Australian brand Bobux is celebrating
with a fresh bedhead like the Isabella Headboard in
30 years of making gorgeous children’s footwear. Their
a gorgeous scalloped design from uber-stylish brand
industry-leading designs and tech have been providing
Merci Maison. ● mercimaison.com
bubs with a comfy start. ● bobux.com.au
THE EDIT Things we love about Melbourne
OUR COVER \ The Royal Botanic Gardens Photographed by Leigh Henningham
MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to domain.com.au/domain-review General inquiries \ 1300 799 109 \ editorial@domain.com.au Editorial producer \ Hailey Coules Group picture editor \ Kylie Thomson Senior designer \ Colleen Chin Quan Graphic designer \ Emma Staughton National managing editor \ Alice Stolz Chief executive officer Domain Group \ Jason Pellegrino Real estate sales director \ Ray van Veenendaal \ 0438 279 870 ray.vanv@domain.com.au Retail sales \ retailsales@sales.domain.com.au
Is your mag missing? Distribution \ distribution@domainreview.com.au
REVIEW Domain Review is published by Domain Holdings Australia Limited and is printed by IVE, 25-33 Fourth Avenue, Sunshine VIC 3020. All material is copyright.
STONNINGTON & BOROONDARA
Acting editor \ Rachel Wells
NEW SIPS \ Bring a little Mexico home with the new
ON SHOW \ Add a little extra flair to your serving range
tequila range from Cazcabel, which is offering Blanco,
with Maxwell & Williams’ Mezze collection. Dip bowls,
Coffee, Reposado and Honey flavours as part of its
cake stands and cheese knives come in a range of greys
launch. From Dan Murphy’s. ● cazcabel.com
and pastel colours. ● maxwellandwilliams.com.au
DOM A IN REV IEW
3
“We’ve been inside our homes for more than 200 days, and it’s made me rethink what is beauty and what feels like home to us.”
LOCKDOWN LIFE
SHE IS APHRODITE
Taking comfort COVID-19 has kept singer Clare Bowditch off the road and her ‘year off’ has thrown up surprising challenges. Wo r d s
A
ustralian singer-songwriter, author and public speaker Clare Bowditch is leaning into the prolonged comforts of home, and while she should be on tour promoting a new album that won’t be released until next year, she’s embracing all the moods that come with lockdown life in Melbourne. “I thought I would pump out seven albums at home, but that hasn’t happened,” says Bowditch, who did manage to knock down a wall, add wardrobes and repaint some of the rooms in her Thornbury home.
JA N E R O C CA
“I’ve been writing songs and fiddling around, but I haven’t done what I thought I would achieve if I had a year stuck at home,” she says. “A lot of my mental space has been dealing with being at home and the reality is it’s been a very disrupted time.” Bowditch will use her storytelling nuance to remind us why local design and creatives really matter when she hosts The Design Files Awards on October 21 – a virtual affair, alas. “Design is so optimistic, and it is something we experience all the time
– from the way lighting falls to the way colours work together in our homes. It’s a beautiful thing,” she says. “Right now, we can’t clap for creatives, we can’t tell them how much we appreciate what they do so this is our chance to say we need you and we love what you do. “We’ve been inside our homes for more than 200 days, and it’s made me rethink what is beauty and what feels like home to us.” Her world came crashing down when her mother passed away from pancreatic cancer last August, and while Bowditch culled many items from her home over the years, she welcomed with open arms some sentimental pieces that belonged to her mother.
“While grieving mum this past year, I have enjoyed bringing her signature blue and white pottery pieces into my place – colours I really associate with her in my house,” Bowditch says. “I’ve put them together in the way she would have, so I can feel that cosy feeling she always gave me. This year has been about learning to feel her in my home.” Her memoir Your Own Kind of Girl still tops must-reading lists. It’s a moving expression of her struggles that led to a nervous breakdown in her early 20s and how she learned to overcome her panic attacks. Last year she worked on Tame Your Inner Critic for Audible and yes, there are plans for another book. (She’s writing two, and doesn’t know which one will win out.) “I had one acute episode of mental health that brought me to my knees,” Bowditch says. “I was so broken I thought I could never recover. I was lucky to have a home to go back to and be in the tender care of my parents, siblings and their friends. “In my recovery, a book that saved my life was Self Help for Your Nerves. I learned how to deal with my anxiety back then, and I said I would write this book one day. My next book will be something different, but the memoir was the hardest book I ever had to write.” ● THE DESIGN FILES DESIGN AWARDS \ October 21, 7pm. ● tdfdesignawards.com
DOM A IN REV IEW
5
COVER STORY
The people’s gardens
S
Kevin Sheedy: “I made the gardens my office.”
6
DOM A IN REV IEW
LEIGH LEIGHHENNINGHAM HENNINGHAM
For 175 years, the Botanic Gardens has been a place for first dates and devising game plans.
top any Melburnian on the street, and chances are they have a story to share about time spent at the Royal Botanic Gardens. For 175 years, under its lush canopy of heritage trees, the community has celebrated milestones, mourned loved ones, sought solace, satisfied curiosity and enjoyed music and theatre. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a scientist or whether you love nature, or you’re just coming to read a book, the botanic gardens can be the perfect place to do that,” says botanist Tim Entwisle, the gardens’ director and chief executive. “And sometimes, when you come to do one of those things, you end up learning or discovering something else entirely.” A place for meeting and connecting, the 38-hectare urban sanctuary also connects two vastly different cultures. On the land once used for hunting, fishing and ceremonies by the Boonwurrung and Wurundjeri tribes of the Kulin Nation, European settlers gained approval from Sydney in 1846 to establish the gardens in the fledgling settlement of Melbourne and started planting familiar trees and shrubs to remind them of home. The hallowed grounds recently inspired the first lines of musician and writer Nick Cave’s first novel and were the open-air “office” of Essendon AFL great Kevin Sheedy when working on his game-day plans. The gardens hold a different meaning and provide a unique experience for everyone, says Entwisle, and that is the key to their allure. “Everyone sees the gardens slightly differently,” he says, “and that’s the wonderful thing about these gardens ... it’s many things to many people.” Entwisle, who once spent his university holidays working at the gardens, took on his current role in 2013. He says botanic gardens mesh culture, nature and science in a way that no other setting can.
Wo r d s
EFFIE MANN
“That’s the wonderful thing about these gardens ... it’s many things to many people.” go, but they are public property, and so people are very invested in the gardens,” Cunningham says. “At the same time, the gardens have a very important scientific conservation history and future.” Cunningham, an avid tree lover, says writing the book opened her eyes to the gardens’ scientific work, programs and collections – stories of the Indigenous history of the land, a banksia collected by Joseph Banks and samples of seaweed from the 1600s, among other treasures.
“People’s relationship with the gardens is the central theme of the book, but I can’t look at the gardens without thinking about trees and water and the exciting and heroic and inspiring work they’re doing to make sure that the gardens will cope with the fairly dramatic changes we can expect in the future.” ● WONDER: 175 YEARS OF ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS VICTORIA \ Available September 29. ● rbg.vic.gov.au
Nick Cave at the Royal Botanic Gardens in 2014, planting a tree named in his honour.
PENNY STEPHENS
“You don’t get that in a park,” he reflects. “A visit to a museum gives you part of that, but not all; a gallery doesn’t give it to you either. But a botanic garden, when it’s done well, can bring it all together.” A new book by Melbourne authors Sophie Cunningham and Peter Wilmoth, Wonder: 175 Years of Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, marks the historic milestone, offering a glimpse into the myriad ways the gardens resonate within their community. Told through personal reflections and anecdotes – shared by those who have tended garden beds, designed the landscapes, lived next door (in the case of the Governor, Linda Dessau) or simply visited and developed their own connection to the land – the book weaves a gentle narrative capturing the history of a much-loved Melbourne icon. The storytellers include expert botanist Neville Walsh who shares his delight at discovering a new wattle species and imparts his wisdom about the Victorian Conservation Seedbank, which holds 45 per cent of the state’s plant species to safeguard against extinction. And Robert Field, a private collector since boyhood, whose donation of thousands of cacti revived the Arid Garden after vandals destroyed it in 2013. We hear from leading arborist Charlie Carroll, who, along with his team, is responsible for 6500 trees,
including 37 National Trustregistered Significant Trees, and refers to the gardens as a “tree zoo”. Also, Andrew Laidlaw, the gardens’ landscape architect for 24 years, who is passionate about the site’s Indigenous roots. But it is a history that cannot escape realities. Wemba WembaWergaia man and historian Dean Stewart, who developed the gardens’ popular Aboriginal Heritage Walk program, acknowledges the “great sorrow” and loss of the land for its traditional owners, recalling the stories passed down to him of William Barak and William Buckley. Alongside stories from scientists and garden enthusiasts are interviews with musicians, artists, historians, political figures and members of the public, including the volunteers. Combining Cunningham’s interest in science and horticulture with Wilmoth’s vast experience profiling key Melbourne figures, the authors began collaborating on the book as the global pandemic was unfolding, which further highlighted the crucial role gardens and nature play in human wellbeing. It also turned out to be a welcome distraction, says Wilmoth. “We wrote the book during that long lockdown last year, and it was such a lovely distraction to be writing about something so beautiful at a time that was pretty soulless.” The garden design we recognise today, predominantly the work of visionary director William Guilfoyle in the late 19th century, and enhanced by those who followed, including Laidlaw, is captured beautifully by photographer Leigh Henningham, a former picture editor at The Age newspaper. “We wanted to engage with the fact that the gardens aren’t just a place to
What the gardens mean to Melburnians
husband [to be] Tony was at the gardens, at Taxodium Lawn, from which, prophetically as it turns
Kevin Sheedy AFL ambassador, premiership player & coach
out, you could see the tower of
“I made the gardens my office … to sit and relax and get your
Nick Cave Songwriter, performer, film score composer & novelist
clear thinking together and your
“The gardens taught me the art
planning. I’ve been going there
of solitude. They became a portal
since I was five, and I’m now 73.”
to a sort of astonishment with
It was just a magnificent place
Government House.”
the world. There are places of
Linda Dessau Governor of Victoria
reverence and sanctuary and
“One of my first ‘dates’ with my
places for writing.”
imagination and ... wonderful
DOM A IN REV IEW
7
MENTAL HEALTH AFL great Wayne Schwass is determined to prevent suicides. Wo r d s
O
LI N DA PE A R C E
n the silver anniversary of his greatest footballing achievement, 1996 North Melbourne premiership player Wayne Schwass can reflect on both a special time on the AFL calendar and a significant moment in his life. Looking back to that day, the coveted medallion around his neck amid an outward show of what the mental health advocate has since declared to be fake joy while secretly harbouring suicidal thoughts, his recollections come in two parts. “I was able to cope with three mental health conditions – anxiety, depression and obsessive-compulsive
8
DOM A IN REV IEW
disorder – and also be living in the middle of a four-year battle with suicidal ideation, but I was able to perform as an elite athlete because my training allowed me to do that,’’ says Schwass, who thanks his ex-wife Rachel and long-time doctor Harry Unglik for their unwavering support. “But as I got older, I realised that I didn’t have the training or the education to make sense of what I was going through, and I certainly didn’t have a language that allowed me to communicate with my support network. They’re things I have now.’’ Schwass is teaching and driving generational change through mental
Flying the flag of life
Reece Plumbing. In 10 hours it provides the tools which Schwass says it took him 26 years to build. Schwass, 52, says it is an “upstream approach” that is preventative rather than reactive. “We want to keep people healthy in the first place, and the way that we do that is by educating people so that they can develop their own language, ability and confidence to pro-actively look after mental health.’’ Schwass no longer watches much footy, but this is grand final week, and the flag-winning Roo will be watching it from afar on Saturday, perhaps with a rare beer or two, and as a vastly different person from the 2006 version standing on the podium and feeling a dark sense of panic. ●
Former Kangaroo and Swans player Wayne Schwass in his AFL days.
NICK WILSON/ALLSPORT
health education. His first major venture after retiring in 2002 from a 282-game career with the Kangaroos and Sydney was the not-for-profit Sunrise Foundation, which delivered mental health programs to more than 5000 Melbourne secondary school students. In 2017, he founded PukaUp “to create the environments for every person to have authentic and genuine conversations about mental health and emotional well-being’’, and which is the vehicle for Schwass to address suicide prevention. In conjunction with Melbourne University’s Centre for Wellbeing Science, and technology partner alffie, PukaUp has developed the science-backed, evidence-based Foundations of Wellbeing program, a 10-module digital offering being rolled out in workplaces such as
If you or anyone you know needs support call Lifeline on 131 114, ● pukaup.com
or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 46 36.
Sell it, rent it or just sit tight Follow your home on Domain to see what your next move should be.
Visit domain.com.au/owners DOM A IN REV IEW
9
FEATURE HOUSE CAMBERWELL \ 28 WINGAN AVENUE 5
3
3
Every kid within cooee of Highfield Park has a better name for that slab of green – it’s the Dragon Park. With a huge dragon head and tail you can climb through, and a castle fort and climbing ropes and a dogs’ off-leash area and a place for the grown-ups to stand around drinking coffee from Dish and Spoon, this is the place for all to meet. Having become a social scene unto itself, the park is working its magic on surrounding streets, with renovations all around. The owners of this elegant house were quick off the mark in 2011, transforming their post-war property into a home that offers everything for a happy childhood. The design by Anderson Homes has proved ahead of its time. With a pool, spa, basketball mini-court, barbecue terrace and pedestrian gate to the park, it has defied lockdown to preserve most of the freedom that restless bodies need. Formal and casual living areas plus a first-floor rumpus room ensure plenty of room to sprawl. In 2019, the owners built a store room and wine cellar and added a gym to the garage. Looking sharp in grey render, the house cuts a dash on Wingan Avenue, which runs along Highfield Park’s eastern flank. The central hall opens into the front lounge, which has a gas log fireplace in a tiled pillar. Across the hall, the main bedroom has an en suite (renovated in 2019) and walk-in wardrobe. Follow the hall past the laundry and powder room to the open-plan area, lustrous in Tasmanian oak with sliders to the terrace. The family section has a gas log fireplace. The
FINAL WORD
white stone kitchen has a Smeg range and walk-in pantry. Under the stairs is the climate-controlled 500-bottle cellar. The covered terrace is a glorious place in any season, with electric heating to keep everyone cosy while the Smeg barbecue does its duty. There’s a clear line of sight to the solar-heated pool and spa in the landscaped grounds. The first floor has four double bedrooms, one with a shower en suite. The main bathroom has a shower, bath and separate toilet. The retreat opens to a balcony overlooking the park. ● ALISON BARCLAY property@domainreview.com.au
Agent: Jellis Craig, Mike Beardsley 0476 777 004 Price: $2.95 million-$3.245 million Auction: noon, October 2
Hover your camera over the code to see Domain listings in Camberwell
10
DOM A IN REV IEW
“WITH A POOL, BASKETBALL COURT AND ENTERTAINING AREAS, THIS HOME HAS AN X-FACTOR. IT OPENS INTO HIGHFIELD PARK, SO YOU GET THAT EXTRA LAND THAT YOU DON’T HAVE TO PAY FOR.” MIKE BEARDSLEY – AGENT
SOUTH YARRA \
terrace. The former dining room is now a
324/471 MALVERN ROAD
second bedroom, though this could be re-converted for meals or working from
2
1
1
PRAHRAN \ 108 PUNT ROAD
open fire, built-in wardrobe and full width balcony, has been triple glazed, while at the
4
2
1
home … and being endlessly distracted
rear of the property the living space opens to a private, north-east facing garden with
by the view. Gaggenau appliances grace
A massive palm and arched balconies
entertaining deck. Access to the garage
With a sparkling city panorama from its
the marble kitchen, and chic freaks
lie beyond the white picket fence of this
is via Gladstone Street, although many
terrace, this apartment deserves cocktail
will appreciate the fully-tiled marble
c1880s terrace, creating aesthetic charm.
neighbourhood attractions are within
soirees and its own Instagram account.
bathroom-laundry. The basement car
Inside Bourne Place, the wide arched
walking distance. ●
Its home is The Hawksburn building, built
space has storage. ● ALISON BARCLAY
entrance hall is one of the only period
in 2015 and now a haven for downsizers
details remaining after a recent renovation,
and professionals. Ilario Cortese designed
which has seen blackbutt floors, brand
the interior, whose chocolate-brown
JOANNE BROOKFIELD
new bathrooms and gourmet kitchen with
marble finishes, oak flooring and excellent
Agent: Kay & Burton,
stone benches, 120-centimetre Smeg oven,
Agent: Marshall White,
storage make the minimal maintenance
Matt Davis 0412 466 858
integrated Liebherr fridge and breakfast
Fraser Cahill 0400 592 572
a pleasure. The living area has full-length
Price: $775,000-$850,000
bar transform the double-level property
Price: $1.85 million-$2 million
glazing and sliders to the north-facing
Private sale
into a stylish pad. The main bedroom, with
Expressions of interest
TOORAK \ 6 MONOMEATH AVENUE
“You can open it all up, have people
CAMBERWELL \ 7 ACACIA STREET
include walk-in pantry, laundry chute, drying cabinet, powder room and storage.
inside, have them outside, it’s a fantastic
5
3
2
entertainers house,” says agent Jack Edgar.
4
2
2
Agent Richard Winneke notes the appeal of the location: “it’s a family friendly
There’s also a double lock-up garage, with Spread over three levels, the flexible
cellar and storage, plus off-street parking
This Californian bungalow, with blond
neighbourhood with local football and
floor plan lends itself to a family’s various
for another two vehicles. ●
hardwood timber floors adding a touch of
cricket club around the corner plus a few
the Hamptons aesthetic to the interiors,
minutes stroll to either St Dominic’s or
bathroom adjacent to the cinema room
has been fully renovated. Three bedrooms
Hartwell primary schools.” ●
could work as a teenagers’ retreat, quarters
upstairs share a bathroom, while
for ageing grandparents, guests or even a
downstairs the main has twin walk-in
work-from-home zone. There are another
wardrobes and en suite. Formal living and
four bedrooms (main with en suite) and
dining rooms plus a home office create
a third bathroom and laundry on the top
additional space, while the expansive
Agent: Jellis Craig,
life stages. A lower-level bedroom and
JOANNE BROOKFIELD
JOANNE BROOKFIELD
floor, while in between the entire level is
Agent: RT Edgar, Jack Edgar 0428 222 430
family zone looks out to the covered
Richard Winneke 0418 136 858
dedicated to living and dining, with glazed
Price: $5.35 million-$5.75 million
terrace, north-facing hedged garden and
Price: $2.7 million-$2.9 million
doors leading to front and rear terraces.
Expressions of interest
gas-heated pool and spa. Other features
Forthcoming auction
DOM A IN REV IEW
11
18 Nash Street Glen Iris An architecturally designed contemporary renovation has introduced style, livability and plenty of natural light to this three bedroom family oriented domain. A sophisticated kitchen comes complete with a huge walk in pantry, Miele appliances and a stone island, while a convenient study is readily equipped with bespoke cabinetry and desk. The main living room features an open fireplace and opens to the rear garden. Also features ensuite main bedroom, laundry, zoned heating and parking.
12
DOM A IN REV IEW
3
Auction Inspect Carla Fetter Adam Walker Armadale
a 2b 2c 1e
Thursday 7th October at 12pm Contact Agent 0423 738 644 0403 123 456 9864 5000
DOM A IN REV IEW
13
Keep kicking goals!
Here at Chisholm & Gamon, we are wishing our beloved Managing Director, Torsten Kasper every success for the Dees on Grand Final Day. 57 years in the making and 38 years since our business was founded, we hope the Melbourne Football Club writes its way into the history books like we have with our success in real estate. The team at Chisholm & Gamon are all behind you!
14
DOM A IN REV IEW
And as the Demons set up for their big win, as always, our team are available to help you prepare for your successful leasing/sales campaign. Best of luck for the big bounce Torsten and all the other Dees supporters! Keep kicking goals! From Sam Gamon & the team
THE LOCAL DIRECTORY SPRING 2021
networkclassifieds.com.au
PLUMBING
ELECTRICAL SERVICES J.L Hutt Electrical Specialising in all electrical installations: Extensions/ Refurbishments, Stove/Oven/Hot Water Repair, Switchboard upgrades, House Rewires, TV/Phone/Data, Safety switches. Free quotes. 24 hour service. Lic 17824. Contact: Jason 0411 300 772 www.jlhuttelectrical.com.au
ELECTRICAL SERVICES J.L Hutt Electrical
Specialising in all electrical installations: Extensions/ Refurbishments, Stove/ Oven/Hot Water repair, Switchboard upgrades, House Rewires, TV/Phone/ Data and Safety switches. Free quotes 24 hour service.
Lic 17824. Contact: Jason 0411 300 772
RENOVATIONS DBU3721 EXTENSIONS s NEW BUILDS CAMPIS.COM.AU
WINDOWS
Windows 1 We specialise in the supply
and installation of replacement windows and doors – timber, aluminium or PVC. Our staff are fully qualified ensuring quality work. No job too big or too small. Member of MBA and HIA. To replace your old, tired, rotting windows please call us for a free, no obligation measure and quote. Contact: 9703 1530 www.windows1.net.au
CONCRETING First Class Concrete Paving
All types of concreting including: Garages, Driveways & Pathways, Unit Sites, Crossovers, Plain & Coloured Concrete, Exposed Aggregate, Excavation Drainage and much more. Phone Marcus for a Free Quote. Contact: 0499 559 957
9850 6611
SABINO - SPECIALISING IN ALL CONCRETE WORK Plain & Coloured, Driveways, Steps, Verandas Shed/Garage Slabs, Maintenance & Plumbing
Ring anytime: 0418 596 381
CALL ANE ELECTRICS TODAY OUR SERVICES INCLUDE Switchboard upgrades ŽǁŶůŝŐŚƚ ŝŶƐƚĂůůĂƟŽŶƐ ^Ɖůŝƚ ƐLJƐƚĞŵ ƐĞƌǀŝĐĞ ͬ ŝŶƐƚĂůůĂƟŽŶƐ All electrical service and repairs REC 17959
PLEASE CALL JESSE ON 0412 827 875
TO ADVERTISE ON THIS PAGE PHONE 1300 666 808
get better results
V
Reblocking/Underpinning
Garden Services
• Full Insurance • 100% Computer leveling • Building permit supplied • Since 1999 • Pump to be used Call Sam for a Free Quote 9324 8575 or 0409 237 487
V
Roofing
10 year Guarantee. Call now for a FREE quote: 0405 817 173 V
Rubbish Removal
AARON & JOHN’S DEMOLITION & RUBBISH REMOVALS
12496279-SN22-21
12492292-HC19-21
V
Heritage Woven Wire & Gates are Powdercoated in 8 standard colours. They are also available in a galvanised finish. Gates come in 7 different pedestrian and driveway styles. For your local distributor please call: 1300 360 082 Fax: (03) 9308 5822
Melbourne’s most trusted gardening services provider
Email: sales@emuwire.com.au • www.emuwire.com.au
TRUE COATINGS • Renovations • Repairs & Maintenance • Renderer of Fencing • Roof Painting • Driveway Painting • Fence Painting • Wall Paper
DOMESTIC | COMMERCIAL | INDUSTRIAL
Hours of Operation Mon-Fri: 8am – 8pm | Sat: 10am – 4pm | Sun: 10am – 5pm Phone: 0422 221 553 | Email: truecoatings@hotmail.com | Website: truecoatings.com.au
12467127-DL43-20
• Painting • Rendering • Interior or Exterior • Feature Walls • New Homes
• • • • •
Lawn mowing Edge trimming Pruning Hedge trimming 8FFE SFNPWBM
• • • • •
1SF TBMF HBSEFO NBLFPWFST /FX UVSG JOTUBMMBUJPO Pest and disease control Leaf blowing and vacuuming Removal of HSFFO XBTUF
One call, We do it all!
đŏ ((ŏ(! 'ŏ.!, %./ŏđŏ ++"ŏ /$%*#ŏđŏ ++"ŏ %*0%*# đŏ (!4%ġ,+%*0%*#ŏđŏ % #!ŏ0%(!ŏ.!ġ ! %*# đŏ ((!5ŏ $ *#%*#ŏđŏ 100!.ŏ (! *%*#ŏ".+)ŏĸāĂĀ đŏ ((ŏ05,!/ŏ+"ŏ.++ü*#ŏ * ŏ .,!*0.5
12504269-BL30-21
Where Quality Counts, Look For… EMU WIRE INDUSTRIES
REBLOCKING
• Demolition Specialists • Backyard Cleanups • Concrete Broken or Cut & Removed • Tree Lopping & Removal • Rental Cleanups • All types of dingo work. • Deceased Estate Cleanups We Take Anything Away
CALL 1300 666 808
Trades & Services
Call Joe 0498 375 094 - 7 days
Roof Restoration Specialists
ADVERTISE with us and
12505301-HC31-21
Specialist in • Lawn mowing • Edging Pruning / Hedge Trimming • Regular Maintenance • Rubbish Removals • Tree Lopping • Gutter Cleaning
The best Reblocking & Underpinning
Specialising in all types of electrical work including: • Switchboard Renewal • Bathroom and Kitchen Rewiring • Repairs and Renovations • New Lighting
NICK 0418 356 268
0419 548 931 Con
EXTREME
B A LW Y N E L E C T R I C A L CONTRACTORS
REC 3205
All aspects of the garden covered.
V
Electricians
V
Let us tidy it for you.
AMAZING GARDEN SERVICES
Concrete Products & Services
V
www.jlhuttelectrical.com.au 12392877-LB29-18
GARDEN A MESS?
Call 0434 525 311
$BMM PVS GSJFOEMZ UFBN UPEBZ
1300 687 846
G6133636AA-dc2Jul
Tree Lopping/Surgery
DAWSONS $20 MILLION INSURANCE
TREE SERVICES
• LARGE TREE SPECIALISTS • HEDGE TRIMMING EXPERTS • STUMP GRINDING • MULCH AVAILABLE • CONSULTING ARBORIST • No Fuss • No Mess • No Stress
9720 5111 Find work locally in the
www.musthm.com
12495465-DL22-21
Contact: 0499 559 957
Since 1972
12447720-LB18-20
Phone Marcus for a Free Quote.
Garden Services
Employment section of Network Classifieds.
12496966-LB23-21
excavation drainage and much more.
V
12454160-SN32-20
& coloured concrete, exposed aggregate,
Builders & Building Services
V
12446933-SN17-20
& pathways, unit sites, crossovers, plain
Trades & Services
experience. Domestic, Commercial and Industrial. Burst pipes, tap and toilet repairs, tanks, blockages, roofing and re-guttering, gas fitting, hot water installations, kitchen and bathroom renovations, new homes and extensions, back flow testing. Contact: Ian 0418 994 654. info@baywestplumbing.com.au
12509895-HC36-21
concreting including: garages, driveways
Baywest Plumbing 25 years
12480029-NG06-21
First Class Concrete Paving All types of
12411802-RC09-19
CONCRETING