Your Time Sunshine Coast May 2016

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Your Time Your premier 55+ magazine

MOTORING HEALTH PUZZLES TRAVEL

RECYCLED PARENTS TAKING ON THE GRANDKIDS

SUNSHINE COAST EDITION 14, MAY 2016

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Editor’s note

M

y dear old dad died at the grand age of 91, when, despite having six children, he could boast only 14 grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Pretty poor form when you think about it. I had contributed three of those grandchildren and yet there’s still no sign of the offspring producing offspring in this direction either. However, despite coming from a line of slow breeders, I have plenty of friends who are experiencing the joy of little bundles that they hand back. As Julie Lake discovered though, when researching this month’s recycled parents feature, there are a lot who don’t get to give them back or

Contents who really have the grandkids around much more than they intended. For some, it’s great news but for others, it seriously cramps their style, such as the couple who had the caravan packed ready for the trip around Australia but then had to park it in the shed when their daughter went back to work. There are couples who heartily agree that the pleasure is all theirs, while for others, mum is thrilled to have the kids around but dad would prefer to be out in that caravan. It’s a tricky emotional balance and a growing phenomenon. Also this month, Russell Hunter sheds some light on that vexed question of whether it is worth paying extra to travel in Premium Economy and escape the leg cramps of cattle class. His experience was mixed and makes an informative read. Of course there is always the option of cruising so it’s not an issue at all.

Dorothy Whittington, Editor

7

LETTERS

8

NEWS

10

FASHION

12

RED HATTING

14

WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE

16

GARDEN

18

READER’S STORY

24

TECHNOLOGY

27

YOUR WILL

29

WHAT’S ON

32

HEALTH

34

TRAVEL

44

BOOK REVIEW

45

TRIVIA QUIZ

46

PUZZLES

15

10 20

38

PUBLISHER Michelle Austin 5493 1368. EDITOR Dorothy Whittington 0435 822 846. ADVERTISING ENQUIRIES 0438 717 210 or 0413 855 855. sales@yourtimemagazine.com.au. editor@yourtimemagazine.com.au. FOR DIGITAL EDITIONS AND MORE yourtimemagazine.com.au. DISTRIBUTION ENQUIRIES distribution@yourtimemagazine.com.au. Your Time Magazine is locally owned and published by The Publishing Media Company Pty Ltd ATF The Media Trust (“the Publisher”). No part of this publication may be reproduced or copied in any form by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher. The Publisher does not assume responsibility for, endorse or adopt the content of any advertisements published in Your Time Magazine, either as written copy or inserts, given such content is provided by third parties and contains statements beyond the Publisher’s personal knowledge. The information contained in Your Time Magazine is intended as a guide only and does not represent the view or opinion of the Publisher or its editorial staff. Professional advice should be sought before applying any of the information to particular circumstances. Whilst every reasonable care is taken in the preparation of Your Time Magazine, the Publisher and its editorial staff do not accept liability for any errors or omissions it may contain.

Please dispose of this magazine responsibly, by recycling after use.

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COVER STORY

Recycled parents So much for giving them back! JULIE LAKE investigates the growing number of grandparents who, willingly or otherwise, find themselves looking after their family’s family.

I

t used to be said that the joy of grandchildren was being able to give them back but today, increasing numbers of grandparents are doing just the opposite and taking responsibility for their children’s children on a regular part–time and sometimes full-time, basis. Some are very happy to do this, especially the empty-nesters who see it as being given a second chance to raise children and do it better, with the

Peace of mind at a great price

assurance of experience and without the worry of building careers and incomes. Others do it because they have no choice. Mo and Henk Houtkamp look after their two grandchildren aged 16 months and three years, five days a week and love every minute of it. “It keeps us young,” Mo says. Denise M. (full name withheld) agrees. She is 74, never worked outside

the home and now looks after her three grandchildren during school holidays, and sometimes after school and at weekends so her daughter and partner can enjoy time away together. “I always wanted a career but wasn’t able to have one because there was no ‘nanna’ to help me raise my kids. I wanted my daughter to feel free to have both,” Denise says. “She has a very responsible job with lots of stress and just doesn’t always have the time she needs for the kids. She’s a very caring and conscientious mother and I’m proud I can step in when needed and help take the load”. For these recycled parents, it may be comforting to know that scientists at the University of California, have discovered what they call the “grandparent gene”, which indicates that humans have specifically evolved so that older people can care for grandchildren and pass on wisdom to future generations. Others, however, still defiantly buck the trend, gleefully announcing their independence by posting signs on the back of caravans proclaiming they are “Escaping the grandchildren”. “I think my son thought that’s what we were doing,” says Trish Wadman who, with husband Paul, has recently moved from Melbourne to a beach suburb north of Brisbane. “But really, it was the cold winters and bushfire summers that we were escaping. I love my grandchildren and

look forward to their visits once or twice a year, but I don’t consider it my responsibility to bring them up. Or even babysit on demand as some of my friends do. “I was a stay-at-home mum as most of us were in those days (Trish is in her late 60s); we put our children first and our careers and material possessions second. “My daughter-in-law chooses to work and that’s her choice. She finds it hard to get good child care but Paul and I are loving our retirement and raising one set of kids was quite enough!” Trish says she feels like Maggie, as played by acerbic British actress Penelope Keith in the British comedy Next of Kin, who, when faced with the prospect of raising three grandchildren, cries frantically: “I know what my duty is but I just never expected to have to have another go at it and I don’t want one!” The word “grandparent” retains a cosy image of a rosy-cheeked old woman baking biscuits while her kindly white-haired husband whittles wood and dispenses wisdom to his younger kin. The Baby Boomer nannas and poppys, however, are likely to be wearing jeans and texting on their smartphones while rushing from yoga class to the golf course. That’s if they are not still working. Yet, a surprisingly high number appear ready, willing and able to go beyond a bit of occasional

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Sunshine Coast

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COVER STORY

babysitting and become either part- or full-time surrogate parents. Usually because they have no choice. Fran Stone has raised her 10-yearold grandson from birth after her daughter and partner decided not to abort the unwanted pregnancy, but instead to have him adopted. After visiting the baby in hospital Fran says: “I just fell in love with him” and she and her husband decided to take responsibility for him, both legally and financially. Fran soon realised the baby was “different” and he was later diagnosed with high-functioning autism. Coping has not always been easy but never, she says, since one early moment of doubt, has she regretted it and says that raising an autistic child “doesn’t get any easier, it just gets different”. The Stones have never had a holiday away from their grandson and as both have jobs, they find they get very little time alone together. “Disability really tests relationships,” Fran says. Being a surrogate parent can be a bit lonely, too, because you are a generation older than other mothers (Fran is now 55) and therefore “don’t get invited for coffee”. Friends your own age don’t necessarily want an active child around. Fran strongly recommends that grandparents raising grandchildren seek as much support as possible from organisations such as Time for Grandparents. It offers a range of programs

IS THIS

including “grandfamily” recreational camps where grandparents get to share their experiences and problems and children learn they are not alone in being raised by their parents’ parents – which Fran says can be quite important. Her only worry now is what will happen to her grandson when she and her husband are older, but she’s hopeful that he will one day be able to

officially at risk and don’t include the many thousands being cared for by grandparents through an informal family arrangement. Researcher at the Centre for Children and Young People at Southern Cross University, Dr Jan Backhouse, says Australia is following the international trend towards placing children at risk into “kinship care” rather than foster care.

“Changes in family structure and social conditions have led to an increase in the number of children being raised by grandparents” lead an independent life. During the past 30 years, changes in family structure and social conditions have led to a marked increase in the number of children being raised by grandparents, due primarily to the inability of parents to effectively meet their responsibilities. It is impossible to know the exact number because statistics only take into account those children considered

Dr Backhouse, fond grandmother of 12 grandchildren and NSW Grandparents Day Ambassador, is now writing a book based on her doctoral thesis: Grandparents raising their grandchildren: An uneasy position. She interviewed 34 sets of grandparents and says their stories were about “endurance, great hardship and great love”. Reasons for becoming surrogate

parents ranged from the death or illness of their children to domestic violence and child abuse. Not surprisingly, substance abuse was a major factor in the majority of cases – a problem of our times. Grandparents who step in to save their grandchildren from inadequate parenting often make considerable sacrifices in terms of income, time and their own primary relationships. Too often they don’t understand the social and legal ramifications and find themselves in the precarious position of having responsibility without adequate authority to make decisions about their grandchildren’s health, schooling and future well-being. According to Backhouse’s report, government support is generally inadequate and confusing because of the number of agencies involved. The good news is that grandparents caring for grandchildren are not entirely alone. Support groups are available as well as government financial assistance such as the Grandparent Child Care Benefit. It’s important, as Fran Stone points out, to check out your rights and legal entitlements even if your family arrangement is informal and amicable.

Useful websites and phone numbers humanservices.gov.au, grandparentsqld. com.au or dial 1300 131 500, Grandparent Adviser Line 1800 245 965, Time for Grandparents 1300 135 500. continued over>

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COVER STORY

IT’S GRAND PARENTING – a growing issue A Gold Coast researcher says grandparents need more financial and social support to deal with the challenges of looking after grandchildren.

B

ond University Associate Professor Dr Rebekah Doley interviewed more than 100 grandparents to study the depth of issues encountered by grandparent carers. She found that while research had previously focused on the wellbeing of children in kinship-care arrangements and the problems faced by custodial grandparents, there had not been a lot of investigation of protective factors that helped grandparents fare better in such circumstances. “The problem is that little work has been done exploring grandparent experiences in terms of what works, as most prior research has focused on what is not working,” Dr Doley said. She said the most common reason children were placed in the care of a grandparent was due to the parents’ incapacity to provide appropriate care for their children. Consequently, children placed in these arrangements were more likely to have experienced early trauma, hardship or deprivation than children

custodial role as a protective factor, which may insulate them from stress precipitating psychological distress,” she said. “I can’t actually recall one grandparent saying they regretted the decision, despite the challenges.” She is calling on policymakers to focus on providing better financial relief and access to informal support networks, as these have the greatest impact on grandparent caregivers.

“I can’t actually recall one grandparent saying they regretted the decision”

who remained in the care of their parents. Dr Doley’s study also found grandparents with greater access to support from family and friends experienced less depression. “Grandparents that maintain friendships and have an active social

life fare much better than their more isolated counterparts,” she said. Her research also found that despite the stress of raising a grandchild, there was a psychological benefit for grandparents who decide to bring a child under their care. “Grandparents frequently see their

In 2006, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) estimated that there were up to 63,000 families headed by grandparents in Australia. Compared to other types of families, these households were significantly more likely to experience financial disadvantage. About 66 per cent of custodial grandparents have a government benefit or pension as their main source of income.

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Sunshine Coast

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Letters

Have your say. Send letters to Editor, Your Time Magazine, PO Box 6362, Maroochydore BC 4558 or email editor@yourtimemagazine.com.au

FOR the first time this morning I read Your Time magazine and had to congratulate you on an all-round good read – so many various articles. We have a few magazines circulating aimed at seniors, each in its own way aimed at different topics and this is wonderful, all recognising that people over the age of 50 are really interesting people and catering for the interests of us oldies. I think this is all marvellous. How very gratifying it is to be defined as people who need to be reached and talked to, as well as about; to be recognised as a large audience of people with good brains and intelligence. It detracts from the feelings that so many ageing people have of being uninteresting, useless and overlooked. The world is changing to so many digital devices. It is important that us oldies can still get hold of PAPER and read, as we have been used to doing all of our lives. We are all dragging ourselves into the digital age and are trying to learn computers, laptops and ipads but it is still rewarding to be able to sit down with a cuppa and a good read, such as Your Time. One endeavours to be modern and up to date but it is also important to recognise that “old� doesn’t always mean “forgotten or useless�. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Janette Buddee SIXTY years ago, most workers were looking forward to retirement. So what’s changed? We now live in a society where people of all ages aren’t allowed to be content. The Americans tell us (and they know everything) to find happiness in life we must earn more, be better parents, be slimmer, be more successful, banish depression, be useful citizens etc. However it comes at a high price. There’s a terrible unfulfilled emptiness inside people these days. Who, in their right mind, would continue working after 65 if they didn’t have to? Let’s face it, retirees haven’t the superannuation to retire and are forced to keep going. I doubt most people 65 or more would be employable, which is why voluntary work is so popular. Retirees are bored, unfulfilled and empty – as are many younger people Sunshine Coast

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– they just don’t want to admit it. The cancer is called discontentment and there’s no cure. Activities won’t bring long-term fulfillment. People should start looking inward for satisfaction and stop looking outwards for dissatisfaction. True happiness is supposed to start from within. Being better versions of ourselves is the only true goal. Tony Crossley I speak as the 84-year-old owner of an SUV. Mine is a KIA Sportage frontwheel drive with a magnificent wheel lock and lots of other goodies. Its current price is less than $30,000. Forget your BMWs, Audis, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus and all the other expensive versions. BMW, we’re told have “two new cheaper‌ wagons on offer, starting at $49,900â€?. My KIA is eight years old, with not quite 120,000 km on the clock, room for five adults and a spare wheel below the luggage level. A grand-sized roof rack provides ample space for backpacks, sleeping bags and the like. My SUV travels very well and efficiently and it is made from steel, not aluminium. Bruce McMahon speaks favourably about BMW SUVs in particular. I think the KIA SUVs deserve as much, considering the attractiveness of the asking price compared with what is being asked for the top of the range stuff. Ian Lindsay I really enjoyed reading “Watch Your Languageâ€? by David Parmiter. Isn’t the English language wonderful? I am disappointed that grammar, as I was taught in school, appears to be dying out in schools these days. Grammar was not the easiest subject to learn but fortunately I enjoyed it. I worked in a high school in Canberra in the ‘80s and queried the English Master why he wasn’t teaching the students grammar. I was amazed at his reply: “They can learn it at university, if they need it!â€? I asked him, “what about the students that don’t go on to uni?â€? He just shrugged his shoulders and went on marking papers. Really?! Bring it back is what I say. Joan Hartas

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21/04/2016 12:35:39 PM


NEWS

A Montville Garden will be open to the public for the first time to raise money for the Fijian village of Ovalau in the wake of Cyclone Winston. Wongawilli at 19 Manley Drive, Montville, is now close to maturity since its beginning 16 years ago when it was a just a steep slope covered in lantana.

The Hitchcocks at their 1956 wedding and today.

It is inspirational to see the photos taken at the beginning and compare them with how it appears today with its well constructed terraces. A generous mix of sub-tropical and temperate plants gives it year-round colour and interest. The garden’s owner and creator Rowena Cavanagh is passionate about helping the Fijians as she has travelled and lived in Levuka on the Island of Ovalau. Visitors are welcome to come to inspect the open garden and help support this worthy cause while getting loads of garden ideas. Weekend of May 14-15, 9.30am4pm. Entry $6. All money goes directly to Fiji to purchase building materials for villagers to start again.

BADEN and Elaine Hitchcock of Pelican Waters celebrated their 60th Wedding anniversary with a cruise to Fiji, the French Polynesian islands and Hawaii. Elaine was an Easter bride when they married on Saturday, April 7, 1956 at St Paul’s Cathedral in Rockhampton. As well as good wishes from family and friends, they received letters and cards of congratulations from the Queen, GovernorGeneral and Prime Minister.

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FIRST there was one, then there were two and then there were 30 delighting the café set. Visitors to Hastings St, Noosa were given a rare treat at Easter. A “staff” member at Aromas began singing The Hallelujah Chorus and was soon joined by another “waiter” and then more “customers” joined in. Soon, the whole area was filled with powerful voices. Noosa Chorale provided 30 singers and a pianist for a “flash mob” to promote the Noosa Longweekend. This year’s festival will be even bigger and better following last year’s success when tickets for most events sold out long before July. The Noosa Longweekend opens with a massive Carnivale and grand parade down Hastings Street on July 15, followed by 10 days of music, theatre, food and fun entertainment fromsome of the best performers in Australia and the world. The line-up includes Max Gillies re-creating Aussie leaders, the Queensland Ballet Company, the Dame Joan singing competition and Judy Nunn. For the full lineup visit noosalongweekend.com or call 5329 6560.

WHEELCHAIR basketball is a fun sport for people of all ages and ability. Suncoast Spinners meet at the University Sports Stadium, Sippy Downs Wednesday from 6.30pm8.30pm for a social program based on skill and fitness improvement followed by a social game. The club has sports chairs available for use. Weekly cost is $8 to play. Wheelchair basketball is a great team sport that can help build strength and coordination, learn new

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20/04/2016 11:16:31 AM


NEWS

U3A STATE CONFERENCE CELEBRATES 30 YEARS THE University of the Third Age annual state conference will this year be held at the University of the Sunshine Coast on June 2-3, to recognise the 30th birthday of the U3A network on the Sunshine Coast. More than 30 years ago in a coffee shop at Moffat Beach, Caloundra, a group of friends met to discuss setting up a new organisation for seniors on the Sunshine Coast. From that meeting, the first U3A group was formed in Queensland. It was followed soon after by the formation of another group in Brisbane. The two groups now have more than 5000 members between them and there are more than 35 groups in Queensland catering for more than 20,000 members. Each group is autonomous and relies almost 100 per cent on volunteers to deliver their teaching programs. The state conference will bring together members from Atherton in the north, south to Twin Towns and west to Roma and Goondiwindi.

The U3A Sunshine Coast also initiated the formation of the Queensland Network of U3A to promote and assist development of the movement. A Memorandum of Understanding for the formation of new U3A in regional Queensland was recently signed with the Local Government Association. The theme of this year’s state Conference is “Renew and Re-Connect� celebrating the social connections that U3A members can enjoy as well as the opportunity to renew acquaintances met at previous conferences. Speakers will include author and adventurer Dale Robertson who will describe her fascinating experiences on a journey to Antarctica and Major Jim Campbell DFC (Ret) who spent more than 11,000 hours flying helicopters and helped establish the first Helicopter Rescue Service on the Sunshine Coast. Rick Beasley will speak on how the Buderim Men’s Shed has become one of the largest groups in Queensland. Workshops will include discussions on safe driving for seniors by the RACQ and useful tips on home security presented by Queensland Police. Visit u3aqldconference.org

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GLASSHOUSE Country RSL sub-branch president Kevin Beasley has called on 20 years experience in the army to muster local volunteers to help veterans and Sunshine Coast youth organisations. The Caloundra Power Boat Club, Bunnings and Radio FM104.9 has recognised his initiative and hard work with their monthly award. Mr Beasley, supported by his wife Margaret, has been president, vice president, and secretary of the Glasshouse Country RSL which has 58 service and 200 social members. “Our volunteers raise funds every Friday with a street raffle and open the

Adam Melbourne of Caloundra Power Boat Club, Greg McCosker of FM104.9, Kevin Beasley of Glasshouse Country RSL and Howard Montgomery of Bunnings.

club house for meals,� Mr Beasley said. “I am accepting the award on behalf of all the volunteers at the club as it is a team effort,� he said. Email award nominations to FM104.9 at office@sunshinefm.com.au

WORKERS DELAY RETIREMENT AUSTRALIANS aged 45 years and over are intending to work longer than ever before, according to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. In the survey conducted in 2014-15, 71 per cent intended to retire at the age of 65 years or over, up from 66 per cent in 2012-13 and 48 per cent on 2004-05. The survey also found that 23 per cent of those aged 45 years and over are intending to retire at the age of 70

years or over, compared with only eight per cent in 2004-05. The average intended retirement age is 65 years for women and 66 years for men. “The majority of Australians intend to retire between 65-69 years, but the results show that now over a quarter of males 45 years and over plan to work past 70 years,� Jennifer Humphrys of the ABS said.

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May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 9

21/04/2016 11:52:45 AM


FASHION

Refire and relish your changing style You might think it’s getting harder to find a style that suits but there’s no need to despair because, as KAY McMAHON writes, Baby Boomers are members of the New Old Cool.

S

tyle goes on forever. It’s never ending, though sometimes it may change course at the drop of a hat

pin. The secret is don’t be afraid of change. And no more so than in our choice of what we wear and how we wear it. Embrace it and make it your own … or ignore it. For Super Boomers “refiring” and not “retiring” their lives, it sometimes appears the fashion industry has forgotten us. But you are mistaken. There has never been a better time to embrace our age, minds and bodies. We are healthier, living longer, embracing technology, new careers, and seeking stylish products that suit these projects and lifestyle. We are members of the New Old Cool generation. For inspiration check out the Australian super boomers on Instagram and Twitter: Sarah Jane Adams (@saramaijewels), Suzi Grant (@

10 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

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alternativeageing), Jenny Kee (@ jennykeeoz). They are confident in their own eclectic fashion styles and influence many of us to be individual. There’s no strict adherence to any populist fashion trends, just mature and confident choices in body shapes and the mix of garments (old and new) that they use to create their individual look.

“There are now marketing tactics ... using models, customers and employees who are over 55” These women are re-inventing what fashion and trends can mean. They are mixing vintage (often out of their own wardrobes) with

contemporary garments and are driving the new cool by curating and combining pieces that suit their bodies and lifestyles, not specific fashion trends. Even the fashion industry is taking note and there are now marketing tactics known as multi-generational campaigns using models, customers and employees who are over 55. Helen Ruth Van Winkle, an 87 year-old from the United States is currently being courted by advertising and fashion companies after posting photos of herself in various outfits on her Instagram @baddiewinkle. Currently she has 1.8 million followers – that’s no mean influence you millennials! For those of you who believe we’re talking about an elite group, think again. All of us can have our own Instagram, Facebook and Pinterest accounts and derive inspiration from each other. You don’t need a big budget, or to

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FASHION about having nothing to wear and not being able to shop for anything I give them this advice: 1. Don’t only shop in boutiques and department stores. Mix it up. 2. Keep your eyes open constantly and if you see something you love and it fits then buy it there and then. You don’t need to have a special occasion and sometimes it’s about the story behind the buy rather than the garment itself. 3. And finally – layering, lycra and laughter are your best fashion friends. For Styleboomer answers and ideas drop Kay a line. Email styleboomer@ gmail.com or visit styleboomer.com.au

shop in designer boutiques. It may require a little more patience to find the fit and proportion you feel comfortable in for your body shape, but there is plenty out there. Always check the variety stores such as Target and Kmart. Some of my

best-wearing and trend-driven shoes come from there. And don’t under-estimate places such as ALDI. International fashion designer Collette Dinnigan designed a unique children’s wear range for them, so I’m

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hanging out for the big person’s collection which I’m sure must be coming. When Boomers come complaining

Kay McMahon has worked in the fashion industry locally, nationally and internationally for the past 25 years and teaches fashion styling at the Australian Institute of Creative Design. Her Styleboomer focuses on projects that support those who are embracing the fun and messiness of life but will want to be confident of their fashion choices.

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GROUPS

Good times and giggles for the (old) girls When I am old I shall wear purple with a red hat and so, ANGELA BENSTED reports, began a group that gives the girls a giggle.

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ore than 500 women will gather to swap yarns, enjoy tea or a tipple (depending on the hour) and quite possibly put a dent in the credit card during the annual Red Hatters Girlfriends’ Giggle in Caloundra from July 22 to 24. Julie Walker (or Kooljools as she signs her emails), “Queen Mum” of the Red’n’ Purple Ragers on the Sunshine Coast, says there are none of the usual seminars or lectures you might expect at a standard convention. “That’s too boring,” she says. Instead, there will be shopping shuttle buses, river cruises, jazz and high tea and, of course, dancing. “Our girls don’t need to have guys there to get up and dance,” Julie says. “They’ll get out on the floor and really let their hair down.” The Red Hatters are informal groups of women aged 50-plus on a mission to find fun. Groups might have coronations to anoint “queen bees” or “chookie weddings” where members sing and dance.

Out and about in purple withstunning red hats.

There are no rules, just an expectation that members will wear a purple outfit and a red hat at gettogethers and outings. Groups sprouted across America in the 1990s after founder Sue Ellen Cooper gave a vintage red fedora and a framed copy of Jenny Joseph’s poem I Think I’ll Wear Purple to a friend feeling glum on her 55th birthday. Warwick resident Florence Slattery, the “supreme matriarch” who turns 100 this year, brought Red Hatting to Australia in 2001. While it might just sound like a bit of fun, the Red Hatters fill a big gap in many women’s lives.

“We provide a community service,” Julie says. “There are ladies who are sitting at home, a number of them with husbands with Alzheimer’s and some with their own serious health issues, and it’s a break for them to get out and meet new friends and just do things. “It’s fun and friendship and caring about each other,” she says.“That’s what it’s all about.” And heading out to lunch or a bus trip looking fabulous in red and purple is guaranteed to turn heads. “Too often in our age group ladies are invisible,” Julie says. “Families have their own lives to live, with their own children. So mum or grandma are very

often left at home. When they come out to do this, they become somebody important to their friends.” Many members have volunteering commitments and community involvements, so the fun times have to be scheduled carefully. But when the red hats are dusted off and the purple outfits retrieved from the back of the wardrobe, this flamboyant sisterhood lights up the local watering hole and gives the community a lesson in having fun. Perennially snappy dresser Marie Ryan passed away in March aged 92 and was buried in her beloved purple and red. About a dozen Red Hatters attended the funeral and smiled when they saw the coffin. It was purple, with a big spray of red roses on top. And if a group of women somewhere want to form their own Red Hatters chapter? “Just do it,” Julie says. “Because you can.” More: Julie Walker 0412 789 957 or visit matildarose2.com

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WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE

Trending a bad English event When he becomes Minister for Correcting Sloppy English, DAVID PARMITER plans to weed out the nonsense that is creeping into today’s language. 1. Talk about “a weather event”, “a rain event” or (in Queensland) “a flood event” will be banned. The word is “weather”, “rain” or “flood”. 2. There is constant talk about a “power outage”. What they mean is a “power failure”. There is no such word as “outage”. If the power is on, does that mean we have a “power inage”? This is verbal nonsense and must cease. 3. The word “person” or “persons” will be banned when you are talking about “people”. Similarly with the word “guys”. A group of females cannot be “guys” and that word is a Yankee leftover from World War II anyway, so we can get rid of it. 4. Police will be re-educated in the use of verbs. The phrases “the car has left the road and has hit a tree” or “two male persons have been found deceased at the scene” will become “left”, “hit” and “died”. 5. “The bottom line” is where your knickers end. It will not be used when referring to excessive profits made by

huge corporations and used to pay obscene bonuses to CEOs. 6. “Chair” and “chairperson” will be replaced with “chairman” and “chairwoman” depending upon gender – if they know which gender they are, otherwise, it will be “hey, you!” 7. “Continue on” will be corrected to “continue”; you cannot continue on, back or off. Same with “trending” = trend. And trend is not an intransitive verb, so nothing can “trend”. 8. You cannot “impact”, “action” or “diary” anything. They are nouns not transitive verbs and therefore cannot take a direct object. It’s called “grammar”. You can only “have an impact upon” or “take action against” or “put in your diary”. 9. “Differently abled”, “vision impaired” and “aurally challenged” will all be banned. A spade will not be referred to as “a manually operated agricultural tool for inverting sods of soil”. People are disabled, blind or deaf and it’s not their fault, so just use the correct term

that describes their condition. 10. “Focus group” will be banned. Getting together a group of people and making them focus on agreeing with your boss’s pre-determined decision is not on. Similarly, “an opinion poll” is clearly an oxymoron, just like the meatheads (ox-morons) who conduct them, and then publish it to prove whatever they previously wanted. The opinions are selective, cost consumers a fortune and are worth nothing. 11. “Going viral” is a double-badness, and will have to go. “Go” is not a transitive verb. You cannot “go” something. Being an intransitive verb it must be followed by a preposition or conjunction: “to, from, towards, away, and”. “Viral” is an adjective, from the noun “virus” meaning an infection. So anything to do with the internet cannot “go viral” although, come to think of it, like chicken pox and AIDS, the internet is a nasty infection, so perhaps it already has gone viral. 12. “Leverage” is what you gain when

you use a lever. You cannot “leverage” anything. The word does not exist as a transitive verb. Even worse, you cannot “leverage off” anything. This is just meaningless corporate jargon. 13. “Preferencing” similarly, is no such word. You cannot “preference” people’s votes. It’s a noun, not a transitive verb. 14. “In terms of …” is another piece of meaningless jargon. This just shows the user is deficient in vocabulary and incapable of using correct sentence construction. Ban it. 15. “Parenting” – the most rubbished word of the decade. You cannot “parent” anything; it just IS NOT a transitive verb. You know that a transitive verb takes a direct object, don’t you? “Parenting” is a gerund, a verbal noun. It is not a gerundive, that’s a verbal adjective. Don’t we know English grammar any more? No, we’re glued to the screen learning to ‘text-speak’. RU not totes OK with that? English, yes it’s a mongrel language but in recent times it has gone to the dogs.

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HISTORY

Drawing on past talents A picture paints a thousand words and, writes historian AUDIENNE BLYTH, that’s something that William Laing literally managed to do.

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shingles and slabs, post and rail fences, doors and windows. The details in each sketch tell us much about the occupants’ lives. Almost playfully, he has drawn in farm animals - horses, turkeys, dogs, hens and chickens, a bullock team, geese, pigs, a bird in a cage, a swagman, a bird in the sky and farm workers in the foreground. They are his signature. The sign says “Mooroochie House, James Low’s Hotel”, at Yandina. The hotel was built at South Maroochy Crossing and served Cobb & Co who operated a change station from 1868 to 1879. The Low family lived in the rear of the hotel. The hotel was licensed until James Low’s death in 1883 and then used as a boarding house for about five years until eventually it was pulled down and the timbers re-used for other buildings.

faded away. This meant he would not have had to fuss with paints as a pencil was much easier to carry, along with some good quality drawing paper. We have no idea how many drawings he made. Of those surviving, some are held by John Oxley Library,

William H. Westaway’s property known as Meridan Plains is dated August 1875. In 1862, Westaway took up 25sq miles of land, Moolooloo Plains. He later changed the name to Meridan Plains. In the detail, the bullocks show Westaway’s brand, W3W.

some by Gympie Regional Library and some privately. Laing was 66 when he died at Tiaro, near Maryborough, on November 22, 1877. He was buried the following day in the Tiaro Cemetery and apart from his parents’ names on the death certificates, there is little detail about him. The sketches reproduced here were made in the 1870s. Laing has seriously and fastidiously recorded each detail of the building,

Redhall, the residence of John Simpson, was located in the main street of Caboolture but burnt down in 1875. It is believed Simpson had a vineyard on Bellmere Rd on Waraba Creek. Simpson joined his brother William in timber-getting. The Simpson families were some of the first non-indigenous families into the area.

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ifted and itinerant artist William James Laing travelled the east coast of Queensland 140 years ago making sketches of buildings that are now long gone. No photographs survive of these buildings but his sketches give us a glimpse of a past we would otherwise not know. They have outlasted the buildings themselves. So painstaking are his drawings that he most likely received training in art or architecture possibly from a relative, Melbourne architect Charles Laing. After his arrival in Victoria during the gold rush the 1850s, Laing travelled around the colony presumably receiving payment or accommodation in return for a sketch. His Queensland sketches date from the late 1860s as he travelled along the east coast from what we now know as the Gold Coast to Gympie, focusing on homesteads, hotels and Cobb & Co stops. It is surprising any of his work survived because he sketched in pencil and this medium could easily have just

Sunshine Coast

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May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 15

20/04/2016 11:24:16 AM


GARDENING

Retire the hard-work garden We don’t hesitate to renovate the family home to make it more age-friendly, yet overlook doing the same for the garden, writes GARDEN-EZI.

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his letter from a reader raises a problem experienced by many of, or nearing, retirement age: She writes: “My husband and I love our home and don’t want to downsize but the garden is getting too much for us. What to do?” The answer is simple yet few people think to do it: redesign your garden in the same way you would re-design the interior of your home. Those of us who choose to stay in our family homes don’t hesitate to alter rooms and add features to make life safer, easier and more comfortable in advancing age and yet don’t think of doing the same thing in the garden. The garden you’ve loved and tended for years can become a real problem to ageing knees and aching backs and the many tasks of mowing, weeding, feeding, trimming and controlling pests get harder to do – and often downright dangerous. Once that becomes the case, it’s no use trying to do make just a few small improvements. What you need is a complete

only today but into the future. This means plants suited to the climate that look good without constant maintenance, high quality infrastructure and fittings (for example hoses), unfussy and easily accessible garden beds full of good soil, and quality low-maintenance garden furniture. Lawns are easy enough to mow but weeding and feeding them is hard work so consider alternatives. Hedges look good but need constant trimming. Safety must be considered along with the aesthetics. Many an ageing gardener comes to grief tripping over a hose or a poorly-constructed path. Get rid of all that’s messy and hard work. For the cost of, say, a sea cruise, you can have a new garden that will give you worry-free enjoyment for the rest of your life.

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makeover that ignores everything presently in your garden by starting with a blank page. Unless you are very talented at this, you’d be wise to get professional help from your local garden centre or

employ a garden designer. This will be one of the best investments you can make for your senior years. The aim is to make an honest assessment of the type of garden you need to suit your health and fitness not

The gardenezi.com website has some useful information on this topic, with a link to the book Great Garden – No Sweat which shows you how to redesign your garden so it requires only two hours work a week.

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READER’S STORY

Peace, power and the good life It is only a small Queensland country town, but PAUL NIELSEN found living in the state forest in Yarraman a perfect place to raise a family in the ’80s.

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n the early 1980s, my wife and I lived in Yarraman, about 180km northwest of Brisbane and two hours inland from the Sunshine Coast. It’s at the junction of the New England and D’Aguilar Highways. The first impression most people gain when they enter Yarraman from the south is of a town in a valley, with cultivated fields of rich red soil and dark green pine forests on the hills above. In Queensland’s pioneering days, the red soil and magnificent natural stands of hoop pine soon attracted the attention of settlers. Yarraman became a town in the 1870s and by 1913 had its own railway. The town’s economy was built on farming, with peanuts, corn, navy beans, dairy cattle, beef cattle and pigs, as well as sawmilling. At 400m above sea level, Yarraman also has really cold winters; mornings below zero and heavy frosts are common. In the 1960s, when the town still depended on tank water, people always

The children grew up in a forest and the nearby Tarong Power Station held open days to visit its massive cooling towers.

filled jugs with water before they went to bed at night as frozen pipes on a winter morning meant no water. During our time in Yarraman, we lived in a government-owned house on state forestry land on Tarong Rd. We had a large cornfield next door. Our milk came fresh from a dairy

farm on the outskirts of town. In the winter, my wife Christine lit a fire in the wood stove mid-afternoon and we kept it going until bedtime, then lit it again first thing in the morning. Our neighbours included furred creatures as well as families living nearby. We regularly heard bush rats scratching around in the ceiling. One night, there was the distinctive, unforgettable howling of dingoes nearby. Next morning, I went downstairs and found that the tongues had been ripped out of my work boots. In the late 1970s, major change came to Yarraman. The Tarong power station was built, just 15 km away. Large camps for construction workers were set up near Yarraman, Nanango and Kingaroy. Ultimately, two power stations have been built at Tarong. Together they generate 1843 MW of electricity for the Queensland grid. The power station held open days for the public and naturally, these were well-attended.

We were able to wander through the huge generating hall and enjoyed conducted tours of the massive cooling towers and nearby open-cut coal mine. Because of Tarong, Yarraman now has a population to 1400 and depends more on the long-term employment the power stations have provided. In those days, the state government often provided quarters for its rural workers — typically timber houses with weatherboard cladding. Today, many of these houses have disappeared or are privately owned. After Yarraman, I was transferred to Imbil, where we again lived on the state forest. When I look back, one of the happiest memories of our times at both Yarraman and Imbil was that my children were able to experience life in a forest when they were young. Do you have a story to tell or memories to share? Submissions should be about 500 words and if you have a jpeg image, you can send that too. Email editor@yourtimemagazine.com.au

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MOTORING

Didn’t see that coming – it’s simply Suba Subaru is a well-established, well-respected name in the motor car business, and now it has EyeSight, writes BRUCE McMAHON.

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here were the early Leone wagons, one of the first crossover or SUV machines, with all-wheel drive for tough tracks and beaches. There have been the dirt-chewing, rally-winning WRX sedans and hatchbacks and the family-friendly Subaru Forester and Outback in company with the Impreza and SVX. Since the 1990s, all Subarus, aside from the low-slung BRZ coupe, have been all-wheel drive. This, plus the Subaru’s flat, boxer engines, should mean a better-balanced machine with the centre of gravity lower. There is a more symmetrical driveline and all-wheel grip adds handling control, on good roads and bad. All this engineering, plus new models with swags of fresh technology, saw Subaru sales across Australia lift 7.6 per cent last year to 43,600 machines. Among showroom heroes in 2015, was the all-new, bigger and sleeker Liberty Outback wagon. The Outback these days has taken a

price cut and starts out at a recommended $35,990. In 2016, this new version also looks better, boasts more cabin space and better on-road handling tuned for Australian conditions and driving tastes. Now Subaru’s EyeSight system is included on every auto Outback and the Vision Assist pack added to Premium and 3.6R versions. EyeSight includes adaptive cruise control (so a driver doesn’t run up the back of a car in front), pre-collision braking, pre-collision braking assist and pre-collision steering assist (monitors helping drivers to stop or minimise accidents), lane departure warning (sometimes annoying on country roads) and front vehicle start alert (waking up drivers when the car ahead moves off). Subaru’s clever system can even interpret brake lights ahead and help the electronic devices keep the Japanese wagons out of trouble. Vision Assist includes blind spot monitoring, lane change assist and rear cross assist which warns of vehicles

coming across your stern when backing out of car spots in place like busy shopping centre car parks. These two systems should add extra road safety and mean fewer bingles for Outback owners, adding to the Subaru’s good road manners, active safety dynamics and seven airbags. Joining the all-new Outback this season is a revised Subaru Forester. Smaller and boxier than its big brother, the Forester has a well-earned reputation as a competent tourer and rough road rider. For 2016 there’s been style touches and suspension upgrades to this

compact SUV. Among body changes are new front bumpers, grille and taillights. Inside, it’s tidier and quieter than before with thicker door window glass and new sound deadening material. Ride and handling dynamics are better again, with changes to spring rates and dampers plus rear suspension geometry tweaks. It sits a bit flatter and handling is more neutral than before. There remains the choice of petrol or diesel engines, manual or CVT auto (Constantly Variable Transmission) with Forester prices starting at $29,990 and running through to a decent $47,990. That seems a mighty leap but today many customers are on the hunt for all the bells and whistles. From entry-level to top-of-the-tree, the Subaru Forester remains a mighty crossover machine - one for all manner of roads and tracks. It may not be the most stylish of SUVs in this class but it is one of the most honest and competent.

Join us at our free seminar ‘Your Journey to Retirement’ Tuesday, 10 May from 10am. Aveo Peregian Springs Country Club is hosting a free seminar with a range of leading industry providers. You will get advice and tips for each stage of your retirement journey, from selling your home to understanding your finance options. Our local experts below will also be available to discuss your personal situation in more detail if you wish. • Relocation specialist • Local Real Estate • Solicitor

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21.indd 3

20/04/2016 11:31:21 AM


AGELESS TIMES

EXPO BRINGS a weekend

Retirement a turn in the road

of self discovery

They are a common sight now, but 45 years ago you didn’t see many large red signs saying “wrong way, go back”, writes PETER SHIP.

I

n the early ’70s we took a road trip to Adelaide and on the way back one of those red signs outside Adelaide would have been helpful. Arriving at Swan Hill we discovered several things - no available accommodation, there was an escaped murderer on the loose in the district and the car was not a comfortable place to sleep. About 2am we gave up and left Swan Hill. Shortly before sunrise we arrived at a small town and as we were getting low on fuel (no 24-hour roadhouses back then) we decided to wait until something opened. The moment the car stopped we both fell asleep, didn’t even lock the doors. Travel, lack of rest, anxiety and cold weather collided to create a major state of confusion and disorientation when we awoke. Have you ever opened your eyes and not been able to remember what day it is? Multiply that by 200 and you will know how we felt at the time.

Bewilderment, perplexity and a muddled state of mind creates confusion and you don’t need to be away from home to experience it. For many people, the hectic pace of today’s life has men and women working harder right up to the day they retire. Then, the next day, it is all over - no clocking on or off, no meetings to attend, no sales targets to reach, no constant noise of people talking, no customers, workmates, patients, clients or even the office bird to talk to - just silence except for the sound the pages of the morning paper turning as you try to work out what you are going to do for the next 20 years or so. The feeling that you are no longer needed and that you have fared no better than a horse that has been set free to roam the green pastures of life can cause frustration, anxiety and confusion. Is it any wonder some folk find retirement the worst time of life? Is it any wonder some people become

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withdrawn and lose interest in life, their family and the world around them? It has been my experience that many people did not plan their retirement and failed to realise their future would not have a nine-to-five routine. “Now give me the hill country that has been promised me.” Strong words, spoken by an 85-year-old not some young man in his prime. Caleb went into battle and won. I am not suggesting you march off to war but it’s not too late to defeat the enemy of confusion that threatens your retirement. Help out at meals on wheels, visit old friends, volunteer at a hospital, start a hobby, join a club, be interested in your family, learn a new language, the list is endless but you have to read it. No one else can improve your retirement years unless you take the first steps. You won’t have time for confusion when you face a new sign that says “Right way, come on”.

The nation’s most authentic readers, coaches and self-development gurus will come together for a weekend of self-discovery and self-development on the Sunshine Coast this month. The Discovery Expo will bring together 75 internationally acclaimed and accomplished spiritual health and wellbeing experts in a packed two-day program with acclaimed mediums and intuitives as well as life and personal coaches, alternative therapists and health and wellbeing products. This year’s program includes free meditations, talks and workshops as well as live platform shows. “Flower Man” David Laws will be on the main stage and the “Animal Whisperer” Amanda De Warren, psychic Christine Rose, children’s author Anne Aleckson, and Intimacy Whisperer Pauline Ryeland will also be attending. Discovery is a powerful catalyst for those seeking a personal evolution improving authentic self-care rather than any cosmetic self-improvement. May 21-22, 9.30am-5pm Lake Kawana Community Centre Visit consciouslifeevents.com.au

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20/04/2016 2:02:21 PM


TECHNOLOGY

Playing games is seriously good for you Some people think playing computer games is a waste of time. The iPad Man COLIN DUNKERLEY says it keeps your mind sharp.

I

t doesn’t matter if its fitness or smarts, if you do fewer things or stop doing them altogether you tend to lose your skills. I certainly know it when I haven’t been swimming for a while and likewise, I can be a little slower with multiplication if I haven’t been doing any. While some people can be quick to throw out the old “senior’s moment” line when they forget something, others are proactively stimulating their minds and keeping their memory sharp by playing games. A recent memory study by UC San Francisco revealed that seniors who played computer games had better memory performance and increased multi-tasking skills. Solving puzzles and playing games are excellent cognitive activities for anyone, but especially for seniors. These types of activities engage your brain keeping it stimulated. The problem with most computer games is they are on your computer.

Sitting in the study on what may not be your most comfortable chair may not encourage you to spend time challenging your mind. But with devices like an iPad that you can use anywhere, you have the

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ability to play just about any game that has ever been invented, wherever you happen to be. There are more than 500,000 games available in the App Store across every type of genre including board and card games, trivia games, jigsaw puzzles, adventure and action games, memory and word games, and so many other games that you are sure to find something that interests and challenges you. You will find old-fashioned board games such as Monopoly and card games such as Bridge Baron and mah-jong and solitaire as well as new digital trivia games such as Lumosity, that have been designed to help train the brain to perform at full capacity while you, the user, feel like you are simply playing a game. These games can also improve your motor skills. I have seen people’s ability to interact with an iPad improve dramatically after playing games. It’s easy to get lost in the emotion of the game and forget you are touching a

piece of glass. After a few hours or so your hand-eye co-ordination has improved so much that other tasks like typing suddenly become easier. To get more advice and tips about using your iPad visit Facebook.com/ theipadman

BRAIN TRAINING simple as ABC ABC Active Memory is a personalised, scientificallystructured brain training program that will help sharpen memory, improve focus of attention, and challenge flexibility and knowledge. It’s a personalised program which automatically adapts as you play to your unique cognitive needs and goals. And it’s iPad friendly. There are more than 30 games that target specific brain functions in different ways. Visit activememory.com

The Skilling Queenslanders for Work program is an eight week course (completed over 3 days a week) targeting job seekers, disadvantaged and underprivileged individuals within our community who are over the age of 45. The program will provide the necessary skills through training and support to create a pathway into employment or further training qualifications. As part of this initiative, you are provided with: • Certificate II in Business or Community Services • Work Experience at ComLink • Mentoring by ComLink professionals • Employability skills • Graduation Ceremony • Nationally recognised qualification ComLink is a not-for-profit registered charity providing transport and care services for the elderly, transport disadvantaged, and younger people with disabilities.

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20/04/2016 11:35:40 AM


TECHNOLOGY

Online banking? No worries There’s nothing to fear but much to gain from being confident about online banking, writes NATHAN WELLINGTON.

F

or many years now I have been setting up and helping clients use online banking. It’s not necessarily because they want to use it but because they have come to a point where it’s too hard to get to the shops or the post office to pay the bills. Many have been wary about the change, mainly because they are afraid that someone will hack their computer and steal their every penny. The reality is that online banking has become one of the most secure ways of paying bills and making banking transactions. These days you are more likely to be mugged or have your credit card skimmed while out shopping than falling victim to online banking theft. Remember when we went from paying by cheque to paying by Bankcard and using an ATM rather than going into the bank? Then the EFTPOS machine replaced the bankcard carbon processing slips.

Well, this is the next step in providing a highly secure, convenient way of paying bills from your home any time you like. Most banks use 128-bit encryption through a direct line to your computer using a https:secure online service. This means that your details are encrypted 2^128 times, which comes to approximately 399,000,000,000,000,00 0,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible combinations for a credit card.

If you were to take your computer and get it to crack your card it would take around six thousand trillion years to crack. If you’re unsure, check with your bank about what security they have. Here are a few more tips to keep you safe online. 1. Make sure that you are online with the bank using its correct internet address and that is has the https:// symbol before its internet address when you are in the secure area of their site. 2. Make sure your antivirus is always up to date. 3. Use a strong password and don’t keep your password on your computer. 4. Try using BPay to pay your bills as it offers another layer of security to the transaction. 5. See if your bank offers Two-factor Authentication which provides yet another layer of security. 6. Regularly check your account. If you

see any unusual transaction give the bank a call to investigate. 7. If you would like to purchase something online, use a debit/credit card with a small amount of money on it and not your main account with all your savings. 8. Lastly, don’t believe any email from your bank asking you to verify your details. Banks will never contact you via email or phone. It is a brave new online world that is unveiling itself and there are safeguards to protect you. The Australian Government guarantees deposits up to $250,000 if anything happens. Armed with the right information, you can transact online in secure comfort from home which will free up your time to do other more exciting things than going into town to pay your bills. Any questions? Call Nathan 1300 682 817 or email Nathan@hometechassist.com.au

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21/04/2016 9:23:51 AM


RETIREMENT LIVING

Work starts on third stage of lifestyle community

AWARD-WINNING over 50s developer Halcyon has commenced construction on its third gated lifestyle community on the Sunshine Coast. Heavy machinery has been onsite preparing the civil works and construction of homes in the first release and is progressing with frames that started going up in mid-April. Halcyon Lakeside is set against a backdrop of natural bushland within the master planned Parklakes II at Bli Bli. Along with an enviable 5-Star lifestyle, the new community overlooks two lakes with 450m of lake

frontage and access to 6km of walking tracks and local shopping. Project Director Chris Carley said interest was so high that the first two releases of 52 homes in Stage One had already sold out off the plan. “To date buyers have predominantly been from the local areas of Bli Bli, Buderim and Twin Waters, however some have been from as far afield as Canberra,” he said. “They have been drawn to the fact they will be part of a peaceful pocket within a master planned community and the site’s water frontage is another major lifestyle drawcard.” Plans recently were revealed for the first time of the community’s multi-million dollar lifestyle and recreation precinct, with championship bowling green, tennis court, pickleball courts, pools and health and wellness centre. Centrepiece is the recreation

Loving life at a coastal playground

club which houses the cinema, library and substantial lounge areas that open to a northern aspect and panoramic views. Halcyon joint managing director Bevan Geissmann said the strong early buyer response reflected the demand for a new and sophisticated approach to seniors living on the Sunshine Coast. “With the success of Halcyon Parks and Halcyon Landing we have broken the mould of typical seniors living on the Sunshine Coast. It’s all about lifestyle,” he said. “Early buyers are attracted to our model of creating great home designs with a feeling of space and lifestyle facilities that are without peer in this market. We believe it is the right mix of location and product that will appeal to the lifestyle-oriented over 50s.” Call 1800 050 555 or visit the display home at Halcyon Lakeside Sales Centre, 27 Waigani St, Bli Bli.

WITH construction creating a flurry of activity at Palm Lake Beachmere, retirees are rushing to secure their preferred location in the final stages of the retirement village. Surpassing all expectations with the most recently released floorplans and debunking the plethora of pre-conceived ideas on retirement living, Palm Lake Resort Beachmere is fast becoming the preferred destination for the savvy retiree. With its latest inspirational floorplans, Palm Lake Resort Beachmere is proud to present

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its new display homes that boast unapologetic grandeur and showcase the best in retirement lifestyles with soaring ceilings, value add features and big gardens. Luxurious master suites, lots of storage throughout, sleek wet areas and gourmet kitchens give each villa an unparalleled level of luxury. Just one block from the sparkling bay water and framed by trees, Palm Lake Resort Beachmere has a superior location with soughtafter recreational facilities. Nestled in a picturesque pocket, Palm Lake Resort Beachmere promises to surprise, delight and inspire while addressing every need across the retiree spectrum. Book a personalised tour 1800 338 382 or visit palmlakeresort.com.au

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20/04/2016 11:38:52 AM


WEALTH

Life interests – friend or foe

DOLLAR WISE What is Australia’s rarest coin? The 1930 penny. Only six proof versions are known to exist: three in private hands, one in the Museum of Victoria, the National Gallery of South Australia and the British Museum. In 1998, a 1930 penny sold for $225,000. When was the name dollar first approved? In 1963. Other names considered by the Government were royal, merino and austral. Which denominations were in use at Federation? Australia was using British coins. The first Australian coins were produced in 1910 (silver) and 1911 (bronze). In 1901, legal tender was a farthing (quarter penny), halfpenny, penny, threepence, sixpence, shilling, florin (two shillings or two bob), half crown, crown (five shillings), half sovereign (half a pound), full sovereign (one pound). Notes: 10 shillings, 1 pound, 5 pounds, and 10 pounds.

A life interest is often used as a tool to balance competing interests. Succession, superannuation and trust law specialist EMMA NISBET explains.

A

life interest is a type of ownership interest in property which lasts for the life of the party to whom it has been granted the life tenant. On the death of the life tenant, ownership of the property then passes to the ‘remainderman’ named in the life estate agreement, generally being a Will. It can often be seen in the case of a second marriage, in which there is a need to provide for a spouse but also an equal need of the testator to preserve or quarantine the asset for the benefit of another party, often the children of the testator. A life interest may also

arise when the testator and their spouse have young children and the testator is anxious that the survivor may enter into a new relationship in the future. In this situation, a life interest could be viewed as beneficial to secure the family home for the upbringing of the children but transferring that asset to the testator’s children once they have become adults. The disadvantages that can arise through the provision of a life estate or life interest are often amplified by the terms of the life estate agreement or relevant clause in the will. In particular, difficulties often arise due to poor drafting and ambiguous provisions. When a testator is considering granting a life estate, both the testator and the will drafter need to give

special consideration to matters such as: • Who will be responsible for the payment of outgoings and liabilities affecting the property? • Who will be responsible for attending to and the payment of the upkeep and maintenance of the property? • What will be the consequences if the life tenant fails to comply with his or her obligations and responsibilities? • Does the will contain an exclusive right to occupy the property? • Does the will clearly provide an option to terminate the life interest, be it by the life tenant or the remainderman, and the steps and procedures that must be followed in order to effectively surrender the life estate?

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• If the life estate is surrendered early, who will bear the costs of any capital gains tax, stamp duty or other liabilities that may arise in consequence? Accordingly, when considering incorporating a life interest provision in the will, consideration needs to be given to the testator’s wishes, the intended beneficiary’s circumstances and the property in question. There is no “one size fits allâ€? approach and such provisions need to be considered and drafted on a case by case basis. Emma Nisbet is an associate at de Groots wills and estate lawyers specialising in estate planning and helping executors to administer deceased estates. degroots.com.au

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20/04/2016 12:11:05 PM


SOCIALS

HALCYON RESIDENTS LINE UP TO BE THE WORLD’S GREATEST There was lots of fun and games at the Bli Bli over 50s community Halcyon Landing when 90 residents got together to raise money and awareness for the Leukaemia Foundation. It was a big effort as one-third of the community signed up to participate in the World’s Greatest Shave. They raised more than $20,000 for the Leukaemia Foundation, a cause close to their hearts, as some have been personally affected by the disease. It was the third time Halcyon Landing manager Donna Osborne has forfeited her locks.

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WHAT’S ON

DB3 leads the Jazz Sessions FEW would know that the writer of a Rod Stewart hit lives on the Sunshine Coast, but songwriter/musician, David Bentley will be heading into Nambour this month for the Jazz Sessions. David is a noted jazz/blues pianist, singer and songwriter is globally recognised as the author of Python Lee Jackson’s still-smoking ’70s hit, In A Broken Dream. The track features an anonymous Rod Stewart on vocals and rose to No.3 in the British charts before turning up on the soundtrack of films and documentaries and covers. The David Bentley Trio, aka DB3, features the nimble and inventive acoustic bass playing of Andrew Shaw and the swinging percussion of Nathan Goldman. Their performance at The Bison Bar in Nambour, will also feature guest artist Ric Halstead with his soulful sax.

For the Jazz Sessions, Bentley digs deep to deliver a smoky blend of bluesy jazz that draws on a wide range of influences from sophisticated jazz trios to New Orleans street beats. It’s a fusion of jazz standards, hip grooves, original songs and romping rhythm ‘n’ blues that evolves organically as the night unfolds. The Bison Bar, C-Square, 52-64 Currie St, Nambour May 29, 3pm. Tickets $15 at the door or online at trybooking.com/LCCP

ADDAMS FAMILY DROPS IN TO COOLUM

SHARING THE ART

COOLUM Theatre Players presents The Addams Family musical in cabaret-style performances over two weekends this month. Directed by Linda Gefken, following her success with The Rocky Horror Picture Show, the musical comedy visits the kooky world of the Addams Family where to be sad is to be happy, to feel pain is to feel joy, and death and suffering are the stuff of their dreams. Nonetheless, this quirky family still has to deal with the same challenges faced by any other family, and the spookiest nightmare: the Addams kids are growing up. Wednesday is now 18 and has fallen in love with Lucas Beineke, a sweet, smart boy from a normal, respectable Ohio family and she has invited the Beinekes for dinner. In one fateful, hilarious night, secrets are disclosed, relationships are tested, and the Addams family must face

TIM Stimson will provide an insight into the work of Viennese artist Gustav Klimt at the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society (ADFAS) Sunshine Coast’s monthly presentation. The Klimt masterpiece portrait of Adele Block-Bauer features in the film Woman in Gold starring Helen Mirren. His highly decorative images of femme fatales have retained an enduring fascination. The presentation about Klimt, his work and the social setting of Vienna is just one of the diverse topics presented monthly by experts. ADFAS Sunshine Coast aims to enable members and guests to learn more about the arts in a friendly, welcoming environment, plus enjoy meeting new like-minded people over supper.

IMAGE: JOHN DUMBLE

up to the one horrible thing they’ve managed to avoid for generations - change. Coolum Civic Centre. May 20, 21, 27, 28, 7.30pm; 22 and 29, 2pm. Cabaret seating, tables of 8. BYO nibbles and drinks. Tickets $28, Concessions $25. Bookings coolumtheatre.com.au or call 5446 2500

Drama Theatre, Matthew Flinders College, Stringybark Rd, Buderim, May 23, 6.45pm. Tickets $25. Bookings Karin 5479 0550 or visit adfas.org.au

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20/04/2016 11:49:50 AM


WHAT’S ON

MALE CHOIR BRINGS THE BEST

BUDERIM Male Choir presents an afternoon with The Best of Stage and Screen at Caloundra this month. The two-hour concert will include a selection of songs from My Fair Lady, South Pacific, The Student Prince, Oklahoma and others. The popular male choir is led by music director Mitchell Meyer with accompanist Carina Frank. Caloundra CCSA Hall. May 15, 2pm. Tickets $10 includes afternoon tea or group bookings $8. Call Rod 5456 4473.

MALENY HOSTS MAJOR CONTEMPORARY PRODUCTION ACCORDING to critics, Motherland is contemporary theatre at its best passionate and gripping, weaving multiple strands of home, belonging, love and loss that span decades, continents and revolutions. Based on the true stories of three very different women from different times and places, but for each of them the city of Brisbane is pivotal. Maleny Arts Council (MAC) will present this important play which will be both nostalgic and confronting for many who will remember the names. One of the women is Brisbane socialite Nelle Tritton, of the furniture emporium, who, fascinated by all things Russian, travelled to Moscow before World War II where she met, worked for and then married the

deposed prime minister Alexander Kerensky. Later she helps him escape the Nazis. Time and place interweave as the play moves from the chaos of a Russian military camp to the turbulence of Brisbane during the Fitzgerald enquiry. MAC’s program coordinator Professor Peter Lavery said Motherland, by Brisbane playwright Katherine Lyall-Watson, was one of Queensland Theatre Company’s major offerings this year. “Our patrons will see this Brisbane production and cast for less cost at Maleny and they won’t have to cope with city traffic,” he said. Maleny Community Centre May 4, 7pm. Tickets trybooking.com or visit the Maleny Information Centre in

Maple St. MAC is also offering a free ticket for groups, senior secondary school or university students booking 10 seats at $30 each. Call John Marsden 5494 2584.

LET’S GO LINEDANCING

MIRUSIA COMES HOME

FANCY learning the steps to line up for some great fun and exercise? Lets’s Go Linedancin’ has started a new beginner’s linedance class and all are welcome. It’s at the Uniting Church in Millwell Rd, Maroochydore on Monday and Wednesday at 1pm; Caloundra Bowls Club on Monday at 6.30pm and at the Caloundra Indoor Bowls Club on Thursday at 10.30am.

ACCLAIMED as the “Angel of Australia”, Mirusia gained worldwide fame as the featured soprano soloist with André Rieu and the Johann Strauss Orchestra. Born in Australia to Dutch parents, she studied opera at the Queensland Conservatorium and at 21, was announced as the youngest winner ever of the prestigious Dame Joan Sutherland Opera Award. She then auditioned for Rieu in The Netherlands and since 2007 has been touring the world enchanting millions of people with her voice. Mirusia returned home in 2012 and now successfully tours the world with her own chamber orchestra.

Call Karen 0438 779 787 or visit letsgolinedancin.com.au

Events Centre Caloundra, May 29, 2pm. Tickets $55. Bookings 5491 4240.

THE JUDY HENZELL

2016 S U N S H I N E M E L O D I E S C O N C E R T S E R I E S NIKKI BENNETT’S HELEN REDDY SHOW In this beautiful one woman show, Nikki Bennett’s performance captures the essence of the amazing Helen Reddy through her life story, with all of its extraordinary highs and lows.

WED 29 JUNE AT 11AM Tickets: $17.00 | Groups 10+ $15.50 Complimentary morning tea is served at 10am Post-show lunch available for purchase

The Events Centre, Caloundra Thursday 19 May at 7.30pm

Bookings: www.theeventscentre.com.au or 5491 4240 30 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

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THE JUDY HENZELL SUNSHINE MELODIES CONCERT SERIES IS PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

Bookings: 07 5491 4240 or w w w. t h e e v e n t s c e n t r e . c o m . a u

Sunshine Coast

20/04/2016 11:51:59 AM


WHAT’S ON

THE ANIMALS TOUR ROLLS INTO CALOUNDRA

THE BOY FROM OZ IS BACK

LEGENDARY vocalist Eric Burdon and his band The Animals are in Australia for the first time in almost a decade and Caloundra is on the agenda. Fans can relive songs that became part of the foundation of rock’n’roll, such as We Gotta Get Outta This Place, Spill the Wine, When I was Young and Don’t Let Me be Misunderstood. Described by Rolling Stone magazine as “one of the 100 greatest voices of all time” Eric Burdon and The Animals helped start the British

TODD McKenney performs the songs of Peter Allen in a high-energy, vibrant and entertaining performance. A multi-talented star who first put on his dancing shoes at the age of three, he landed the role of Peter Allen in Boy from Oz 14 years ago and hasn’t looked back. Todd became a household name after taking on the role of Allen in the original 1998 production of the Boy from Oz. He also includes songs from some of his earlier musical theatre performances and tells anecdotes including the goss from Dancing with the Stars.

Invasion in the early 1960s with the timeless international hit, House of the Rising Sun. From there The Animals produced a string of classics. With a stellar cast of special local guests and thrilling renditions of the most timeless rock music ever recorded, Eric Burdon and The Animals 2016 Australian Tour will be a high mark on this year’s touring calendar. Events Centre Caloundra May 21, 7.30pm. Tickets $89.90 Bookings 5491 4240 or visit theeventscentre.com.au

Events Centre, Caloundra. May 20, 8pm. Tickets $70. Bookings 5491 4240 or visit theeventscentre.com.au

Eric Burdon

ACCLAIMED VIOLINIST RETURNS TO PERFORM AT TWO VENUES ON THE SUNSHINE COAST ATTILLA Sautov returns from an inspiring tour of Italy to present a unique solo recital on the Sunshine Coast. It will be the first time he is touring without a chamber orchestra or pianist. Attilla’s style demonstrates the incredible acrobatics that, in the right hands, can be achieved on the violin techniques which are inherent in Paganini’s compositions.

In contrast, Bach’s music, although not quite as technically challenging, is extremely moving, and his solo violin works allow the audience to focus completely on the rich and versatile sound of the instrument. Attilla performs with passion and warmth, and breathtaking technique and enjoys bringing his musical gifts to smaller communities, despite his vast experience in the world’s most

prestigious venues. He will also perform duets by Henryk Wieniawski (Etudes-Caprices, No 18), with fellow violinist Anna Moores. Cooran Memorial Hall, 14 King St, Cooran. May 7, 2pm. St Mark’s Anglican Church, 7 Main St, Buderim. May 8, 2pm, Tickets $30, concession: $25 Bookings 0417 619 915 or visit attillasautov.com

Enjoy the Pumicestone Passage and the best views on the Sunshine Coast Sunday May 8 BREAKFAST 8.30AM - 10.30AM Fresh fruit salad with yoghurt and almonds $10 Buttermilk pancakes with syrup, cream and fruit $12 Salmon eggs benedict with spinach and tomato $18 LUNCH 12NOON - 5PM Far NQ Barramundi with tossed avocado salad $31 Crumbed coral trout with chips and salad $19 Sirloin steak with chips and salad $28 Book now - Members pricing shown

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May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 31

20/04/2016 12:01:11 PM


HEALTH

The art of fighting arthritis It’s Australia’s foremost cause of chronic pain, but there’s good news for arthritis sufferers, writes physiotherapist SOPHIA AULD.

A

t 68 years of age, Dr Paul Lam has the pulse rate of an elite athlete and is more flexible than people half his age. He has also suffered arthritis for 50 years. While arthritis is often seen as a normal part of ageing, it is not a natural consequence of growing older. It is a disease state affecting the musculoskeletal system, especially the joints. It is Australia’s foremost cause of disability and chronic pain, with 3.85 million people affected. “Arthritis” is actually an umbrella term covering about 100 different conditions. The most common are osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and gout, which account for about 95 per cent of cases. These conditions are grouped together because of their similar effects on the body, including pain, stiffness, inflammation and damage to joints. This can lead to weakness, instability and joint deformities. There may be increased difficulty with everyday tasks such as dressing, walking, driving and preparing meals. Quality of life is affected as sufferers find it difficult to do things they previously did with ease. While arthritis is not curable it is usually manageable and many options are available to help deal with the condition. One option that is proving to be effective in managing arthritis is tai chi. There are now more than 30 studies showing improved health outcomes in arthritis patients from the practice of tai chi. The leading study in this field, conducted by Professor Leigh Callahan from the University of North Carolina, showed significant health benefits for people with all types of arthritis.

There were 354 participants assigned either to the tai chi group, who received eight weeks of lessons, or to a control group. Results in the tai chi group included significant pain relief, reduced stiffness and better ability to manage daily living. They reported a greater sense of wellness and improved balance. The tai chi for arthritis program has been designed by Dr Lam specifically for this population. “Tai chi was originally a martial art, so you need a program designed for older people, and instructors who take care of people,” he says. “The movements are modified and safe.” With only 12 moves, it can be learned quickly. The program focuses on good posture, abdominal breathing, gentle movements and relaxation. “When people are using abdominal breathing they are more relaxed and feel better, their pain improves,” Dr Lam says. “Tai chi gently exercises all parts of the body, makes the fluid circulate in the joints and stretches the joints gently. The program can be performed in a group with a trained instructor or at home following a DVD. A seated version is available for the more frail or debilitated. Dr Lam started tai chi to manage his arthritis and discovered many additional benefits. “All I did was tai chi and my fitness level improved. I’m really fit for my age. I feel really well, especially considering I’ve had arthritis for more than 50 years,” he says. “I attribute it all to tai chi.” Sophia Auld has been a physiotherapist for 26 years and now lives and works in Cooroy. Email sophia. auld@gmail.com or call 0418 721 856.

Memoir with a big message Debra Walz is 56. In October 2014, she was diagnosed with bowel cancer. It was identified through the use of a bowel screening kit which she received from the Australian Government for her 55th birthday. With this gift, along with a subsequent six operations and many months of medical/holistic healing, she survived. Debra has now written her story, saying she is living proof that a bowel screen can save your life. “One of the risk factors associated with bowel cancer is age,” she says. “Bowel cancer in particular is more prominent in the 55+ age group.” Her experience with bowel cancer was insidious. “I was hospitalised for more than three weeks, underwent six surgical procedures in the space of 10 months, suffered with many side-effects, including a colostomy bag, and infections,” she says. “However, my story is one of triumph as I have survived and am living a happy, grateful and active life.” Debra says she believes her book, titled A Whole New Me - Getting to the Bottom of Bowel Cancer is her purpose and a way of meeting an obligation to pass on her experience in an effort to support bowel cancer sufferers, or at least raise awareness of bowel cancer and the importance of undertaking a

Millions of prescriptions for common medicines, treating everything from cholesterol to high blood pressure, have dropped in price by as much as $20 — or 60 per cent. In an Australian first, the price of a large proportion of expensive combination medicines and patentprotected drugs listed on the PBS dropped to take the total number of

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bowel screen. The Government sends free screening kits every five years from the age of 50, but they are often discarded or shelved. “The majority of people I have spoken to in relation to receiving the kit in the mail admit to not using it,” Debra says. “I advocate for the use and the acceptance of a bowel screening kit as you would a gift from a friend. It may be the gift that saves your life.” Throughout her diagnosis, treatments, hospital stays and recovery she kept a journal, which evolved into her book, a story from “crappy to happy”. She survived to tell the story and continues to enjoy life with her three adult children and six grandchildren. Email debrawalz@live.com.au or visit debrawalz.com

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price-cut medicines to more than 400. Health Minister Sussan Ley said the changes were key elements of the PBS reform package. “With one-in-five Australians now living with multiple chronic conditions like heart disease, high blood pressure, eye disease and depression, this could save patients as much as $500 a year,” she said.

Kathleen Gentry Dip.H.D.Cos.M.P Master Specialist “With over 26 years experience I know how to achieve the result you are looking for, whether it’s a subtle improvement or a high impact statement”

Sunshine Coast www.faceink.com.au 0400 700 875 Sunshine Coast

20/04/2016 12:03:05 PM


HAVE YOU

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Total Hearing and Health are now open in Caloundra • Obligation free hearing assessments for over 50’s* • Trial and compare all brands and styles of hearing aids* • Providing government services to eligible pensioners and veterans • Over 35 years in the hearing industry • Accredited professional staff

Purchase hearing aids in May and go into the draw to win a Flight Centre travel voucher to the value of $2000* * Conditions apply. Ask instore for details.

Total Hearing & Health is a small independent family owned company, not owned or controlled by a hearing aid manufacturer. Our staff can access hearing aids from any manufacturer and do not work on a commission or incentive scheme to fit particular devices.

Phone 5491 1622 Shop 2, 104 Bulcock St, Caloundra www.totalhearingandhealth.com.au 33.indd 3

21/04/2016 9:26:49 AM


The WORLD in Your Hands

Travel in Your Time

Pleasure and pain in premium Ever wondered if it’s worth stumping up a bit more for Premium Economy? RUSSELL HUNTER has your answer.

I

’ve never been able to sleep on air journeys. I don’t know anybody who can, though there must be some because I’ve heard them snoring on those long haul flights that feel as though they’ll never end, however much you yearn the hours away. Back in the days when I had an employer willing to stump up for business class travel on the theory that I’d get off the plane after 28 hours and go to work, sleep was certainly possible. Thankfully, I’m now able to keep air travel to a minimum. The airlines seem to have stumbled on to the concept of business class, having started it in the late 1970s as a means of extracting an extra few bucks from those willing to pay for more leg and arm room. My own first foray up the sharp end was in the early ’80s in Marco Polo class, then the business class brand of Cathay Pacific. Sure you got more room, but no sleep. It didn’t take long though for the airline bosses to get the message: business class travellers would and could pay more for stretch-out comfort in an effort to arrive ready for work after a 30-hour journey. A vital money spinner was up and away. Meanwhile the rest of us cattle class flyers take anything up to three days to recover. Cue premium economy class. Have the airlines stumbled on another bright idea to lift revenues? It’s probably too soon to tell but it’s unlikely that they can leave the premium economy concept as is.

“It doesn’t matter where you sit in the plane, you all arrive at the same place at the same time,” was a favourite adage of a favourite uncle. And on the Brisbane-Sydney or Brisbane-Melbourne run he was dead right. But if you have to go from Brisbane to LA or, worse still, London, the accuracy is still, strictly speaking, intact but those down the back can in effect add another couple of days of recovery to their travel time. So does premium economy justify the cost in reduced jet lag? Probably not but it does make the journey easier, especially for those of us who are less resilient than we might have been a few decades back. So here’s some personal experience. Back from five weeks in the UK with daughter (her 21st present), we travelled premium economy both ways via Hong Kong from Brisbane – non-

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“‘You’ll all arrive at the same place at the same time’ was a favourite adage of a favourite uncle” stop outwards to be in time to satisfy said daughter’s wish for a Scottish Hogmanay and breaking the return journey in HK to visit friends. It was Cathay Pacific on the Brisbane-Hong Kong sector and British Airways to and from London. You’d normally expect to pay somewhere around $5000 for the two of us in cattle class.

We paid a total of $9200 for premium economy seats. So what do you get for the extra four grand? You get a separate cabin right behind your business class betters, bigger seats and more, but not much more, personal space. There’s priority boarding (most of the time). You get a printed meals menu though the food’s the same as economy. And, well, that’s about it – though it must be said those little extras make a difference. Having scored bulkhead seats on the flight to Hong Kong, we arrived ready to face the 13-hour hop to Heathrow. There’s no sensation of height on the upper deck of the BA Airbus A380 as the priority boarding airbridge means you see no stairs but arrive direct in the upper cabin where premium economy seats are arranged in a 2-3-2 configuration across the wide-bodied behemoth. After the Cathay A330 haul from Brisbane (which stopped in Cairns) this was more like it. While the food was airline – mine might have been part of a fish at some stage – the flight was comfortable thanks to those plush and roomy seats. Big tick BA. I think I may even have slept a little. Coming back was, well, different. At the Heathrow gate our premium economy tickets were waved away with an imperious backhand flick of an unbelievably arrogant ground attendant who wordlessly pointed us continued page 36>

FREE TRAVEL SEMINAR

Times: 10am South America with Antarctica, 11.30am Kimberley Outback Adventures & Kimberley Cruising, 1pm Europe River Cruising, 2.30pm Canada & Alaska, 4pm Asia River Cruising Venue: Caloundra Power Boat Club, 2 Lamerough Parade Golden Beach QLD RSVP: Tuesday 3 May | SPECIAL OFFERS AVAILABLE ON THE DAY

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34 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

34.indd 2

Sunshine Coast

21/04/2016 8:55:37 AM


Experience

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Romantic Rhine Discover the beauty, heritage and wonder of the River Rhine on this voyage from Basel to Amsterdam. Highlights Basel s Lucerne s Mt Pilatus s Strasbourg s Baden-Baden s Koblenz s Koln (Cologne) s Amsterdam Includes 7 nights onboard ms Inspire or ms Grace s Unlimited beverages onboard s Many meals including private dinner at Schloss Ehreshoven s All private Tauck shore excursions s Airport transfers s And more! Departs Select dates in April, June, September and October 2017

7-night cruise from $4,990*pp

Danube Reflections Book today & receive FREE overnight accommodation before or after your cruise~!

From Vienna to Prague, go on an amazing journey past grand cathedrals, medieval monasteries, castles and stunning vineyards. Highlights Vienna s Wachau Valley (Grein) s Linz (Cesky Krumlov) s Passau s Nuremberg s Regensburg s Prague Includes Accommodation in Vienna and Prague s 7 nights onboard ms Joy or ms Savor s Unlimited beverages onboard s Many meals including dinner at a private Vienna palace s All private Tauck shore excursions s Airport transfers s And more! Departs Select dates from May to August 2017

11-night cruise & stay package from $6,090*pp

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Conditions apply: Prices are per person twin share in Category 1 in AUD unless otherwise specified. Prices are correct as at 11 Apr 16 & are subject to change without notice & availability at time of booking. Seasonal surcharges & single supplements may apply, & prices may vary due to currency fluctuations & changes to taxes & surcharges. Valid for new bookings only & not combinable with any other offers. Price includes all accommodations, arrival & departure airport transfers, entertainment, special dinners, land transportation, sightseeing, luggage handling, services of local guides & Tauck Directors. Danube Reflections: Valid for travel 06 May, 29 May, 17 Jun, 26 Jun, 29 Jul & 21 Aug 17. Romantic Rhine: Valid for travel 05 Apr, 12 Apr, 03 Jun, 01 Sep & 09 Oct 17. ~Bonus receive overnight hotel accommodation to be used either before or after cruise at the preselected hotels by Tauck & valid until 31 Dec 16. Further conditions may apply. Booking, cancellation & credit card service fees may apply. ATAS No. A10430.

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TRAVEL

AROUND THE WORLD IN 120 DAYS

<continued from page 34

towards the back of the queue. And when, eventually, we boarded things looked different. The premium economy seats were in a 2-4-2 format this time and looked decidedly narrower and thinner than those on the outward trip. A check of the safety card told all. This was a Boeing 777 – a fine aircraft no doubt but it lacked the space and comfort of the big bird. A rummage through the carry-on luggage told me the ticket didn’t say what type of aircraft would be servicing the route. Big black mark BA. Ready to go home now after five weeks away we pitched up early at the Cathay Pacific check-in desk only to be told that the plane (another A330) was flying full and we might not be able to sit together. My experience of such advice translates to “you will NOT be able to sit together.” However. The check-in lady vowed she’d send an “urgent message” to the gate to see if this could be sorted. Yeah, right. So we sat in separate rows in the middle four seats. All but one of the 24

seats in premium economy were taken – but with a bit of effort it surely could have been possible for father and daughter to sit together. Need to do better Cathay. Premium economy, as its name suggests, isn’t quite business class but is a (small) step up from economy. You really do arrive in better shape. You could shop around for better deals (we were restricted in dates of travel) but be wary of what’s really on offer for your extra bucks. Remember, what you spend on the flight usually has an impact on what you’ll be able to spend at your destination. Think before you buy. But if you decide to splash out, I’d go for the big bus every time. Ask the airline which plane they’re using on each sector of your journey and if they can’t tell you, worry. Emirates uses the A380 on all its long haul flights so it may be worth a look. But, apart from the fish, I had no complaints with the BA big bus flight Hong Kong-Heathrow. Russell Hunter travelled as a guest of nobody. He paid his own way.

AN ADVENTURE OF A LIFETIME ABOARD

Magellan’s maiden “round the world” cruise departs January 5, 2017. Discover the Caribbean, Mexico, French Polynesia, New Zealand, Australia, Bali, Borneo, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Oman, Egypt, Jordan, the Holy Land and Greece. This epic voyage departs London Tilbury for paradise islands, breathtaking scenery and natural wonders, vibrant cities and fascinating lifestyles. From the Caribbean, transit the Panama Canal, sailing via islands of the South Seas to New Zealand and Australia, then on to the Far East and Indian Ocean. From the ancient sites of Egypt and Jordan, the Suez Canal Magellan heads to the Holy Land, Greece and the Mediterranean, Gibraltar and Portugal finally returning to London Tilbury on May 5. Shorter sectors are available. Magellan is the proud new flagship of the CMV fleet and like Marco Polo and Astoria is an adult-friendly ship. She carries 1250 passengers in 726 cabins spanning nine passenger decks. Magellan’s wide corridors and stairways, and expansive decks exude a

Sail through the Suez Canal

real feeling of spaciousness. Friendly service is combined with stylish entertainment and delicious cuisine. The magnificent tiered Magellan Main Show Lounge is the height of two decks and is complemented by superb lounge bars, library, card and bridge room, night club, casino, gym and shopping galleria. On deck, are two swimming pools, three whirlpools with plenty of areas to sit and relax. For a free brochure call The Cruise Centre 1800 428 105.

SYDNEY TO HONG KONG

28 night holiday | Cruise departs 23 Feb 2017 Experience melting pot of cultures from Australasia, Indonesia, Malaysia & The Orient. Inclusions: 27 night cruise from Sydney to Hong Kong aboard Magellan · 1 night at the Marco Polo Hong Kong Hotel incl Breakfast · One-way airfare from Hong Kong to Brisbane^

From $3,950pp*

SYDNEY TO SINGAPORE

38 night holiday | Cruise departs 23 Feb 2017 See the very best of Southeast Asia, visiting Philippines, Hong Kong, Vietnam, & Singapore. Inclusions: 37 night cruise from Sydney to Singapore aboard Magellan · 1 night at the Swissotel The Stamford incl breakfast · One-way airfare from Singapore to Brisbane^

From $5,099pp*

ABOARD MAGELLAN YOU’LL ENJOY: Delicious full board cuisine Afternoon teas and late night snacks Captain’s Cocktail Party Self service tea & coffee Daytime activities and leisure facilities Big show entertainment, cabarets and classical interludes Guest speakers and arts & crafts Porterage of luggage, port to cabin

SYDNEY TO LONDON

73 night holiday | Cruise depart 23 Feb 2017 A magical northbound voyage via the Indian Ocean, South Africa & Iberian Peninsula. Inclusions: 71 night cruise from Sydney to Tilbury (London) aboard Magellan · 2 nights at the Radisson Edwardian Berkshire Hotel incl. breakfast · One-way airfare from London to Brisbane^

Magellan

From $9,125pp*

EXCLUSIVE CRUISECO HOLIDAY PACKAGES

RESERVE YOUR STATEROOM NOW! CALL TOLL FREE: 1800 428 105 EMAIL: cruise@thecruisecentre.com.au VISIT: www.thecruisecentre.com.au *Prices are per adult as specified, in AUD, based on interior guarantee twin share accommodation and include port and government charges, correct as at 12 April 2016. Gratuities are not included and payable on board. Offer is valid for a limited time only, is capacity controlled, subject to availability/change and can be withdrawn at any time without notice. Holiday packages include cruise, hotel accommodation and one-way economy class international airfare to Brisbane including air taxes as specified. ^Domestic airfare from Brisbane to Sydney pre-cruise not included. Cabins are on a guarantee basis and cabin numbers will not be assigned until closer to cruise departure date. Prices are subject to change due to fluctuation in charges, taxes & currency. Cancellation fees & conditions apply. Passengers are governed by Cruise & Maritime Voyages & Cruiseco’s terms and conditions.

36 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

36.indd 2

Sunshine Coast

20/04/2016 12:12:09 PM


TRAVEL

A world away in your own backyard

Discover Luxury Cruising All-inclusive Tour Packages

I

magine staying in heritage B&Bs, cedar cottages, converted churches or mountain cabins, while you visit wineries, admire the colours of autumn on a wooded walk, or savour the smell of eucalypt and wattle. Yes, that’s right, Australian bush you don’t even have to leave Queensland for an autumn Breathe Break in Southern Queensland Country. Take time out to enjoy a perfect time of year in Toowoomba, South Burnett, Southern Downs or the Granite Belt, all an easy drive from home. There are 15 Breathe Breaks on offer to watch the leaves turn golden - from hammocks in eucalypt forests, wattle walks, food and wine trails, art-aways and tasting plates to sipping on local wine, guided bike tours, cosy

Abbey of the Roses in Warwick

log fires, star gazing and hikes. Here’s a taste. Mention Autumn Colours Breathe Break when booking and find the Southern Queensland Country special offers until May 31. In Toowoomba, you can feel the change of season in beautiful Queens Park, visit the Empire Theatre, restaurants, galleries or take a short drive to the Ju Raku Japanese Garden to see Japanese maples, liquidambers and a riot of autumn colour. The First Coat Street Art Festival, May 20-29, has artists from around the world transforming the city’s walls and alleyways into a vibrant outdoor art gallery. Ravensbourne’s Forest Chalets at Palmtree (ph 4697 8185) is a romantic getaway for $450 a couple two nights which includes a bottle of wine, chocolates, a hearty breakfast hamper and cosy log fires. In South Burnett, sample fine local wines, enjoy tours of the Kingsley Grove Estate winery, go star gazing with astronomer James Barclay at the Kingaroy Observatory, take the South Burnett wine trail or enjoy a leisurely drive to the Bunya Mountains. Sunshine Coast

37.indd 3

20N | From $5,699 | Departs 23 Jul, 2016 Vessel: ĞůĞďƌŝƚLJ ƋƵŝŶŽdž

CLASSICAL MEDITERRANEAN Quart Pot Creek in Stanthorpe

The colourful Burrandowan Picnic Races are on May 14. Mulanah Gardens (ph 0427 643 142) a short drive from Kingaroy, has two nights in a cosy two-bedroom cottage with a spa bath and wood fire for $420 a couple or Kingaroy Country Motel is (ph 4162 1966) $250 for two nights. In Stanthorpe, the heart of the Granite Belt, visit wineries for cellar door tastings, bushwalk, take a guided bike tour on its delightful country roads or simply relish cool nights by an open fire. Diamondvale B&B Cottages and Lodge (ph 4681 3367) is a country escape in a one-bedroom cottage filled with little luxuries. Prices start from $410 for two nights. At Warwick, stroll through town, stop at the eateries or see the peaceful Condamine River. Abbey of the Roses (4661 9777) country house manor, has old world charm and opulence. Sink into a luxurious bed, read in the garden amid autumn leaves, relax in one of the gazebos or wander through the Five Walks of Warwick.

ͻZĞƚƵƌŶ ĨůŝŐŚƚƐ ƚŽ ZŽŵĞ͕ ƌĞƚƵƌŶŝŶŐ ĨƌŽŵ sĞŶŝĐĞ ͻϮE ŝŶ ϰͲƐƚĂƌ ŚŽƚĞů ZŽŵĞ͖ ϮE ŝŶ ϰͲƐƚĂƌ ŚŽƚĞů sĞŶŝĐĞ͖ ϮE ŝŶ ϰͲƐƚĂƌ &ůŽƌĞŶĐĞ ͻϭϰE DĞĚŝƚĞƌƌĂŶĞĂŶ ĐƌƵŝƐĞ ĂďŽĂƌĚ ĞůĞďƌŝƚLJ ƋƵŝŶŽdž ĨƌŽŵ ZŽŵĞ ƚŽ ĂƌĐĞůŽŶĂ

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The Abbey has a two-night midweek package from $510 a couple, which includes private dining for two in the Vestry on the first night, with a bottle of local wine followed by a sherry or port in the drawing room; and private tour of the ground floor. It’s a short drive to Queen Mary Falls or the wineries, dining and attractions of the Granite Belt. Southern Queensland Country is a world away on the doorstep.

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ucango.com.au info@ucango.com.au

May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 37

20/04/2016 12:15:36 PM


TRAVEL

Down by the old Millstream Millstream Chichester National Park in Western Australia’s Pilbara region is truly an oasis nestled in the desert, writes grey nomad BEVERLEY EVERSON, who ventured out on the Rio Tinto mining road from Tom Price.

W

e were heading to Karratha after camping for a week at Karijini National Park (that’s another story) when we stopped at Tom Price to get a permit to travel on the Rio Tinto mining road from the Tourist Information Centre. We were towing a caravan and while the road was dusty it was well maintained. This private road is a mining lease and travellers are required to adhere to conditions as specified under the permit, such as an 80kmph speed limit, lights on and being prepared to be stopped for random breathalyser/radar tests. You need to be careful as heavy rail/mining maintenance vehicles use the road. There are steep grades and sharp curves but as long as you are sensible you should find it a good drive. The rail link from Dampier/ Karratha to Tom Price runs parallel to the road where you see some very long trains – an incredible sight as they seem to stretch for miles. Roads in the park are suitable for two-wheel vehicles only in dry weather and may be impassable after heavy rain. Our stopover was at Millstream Chichester National Park some 210km from Tom Price and 140km from Karratha. The Millstream wetlands is one of few places in the Pilbara where water flows all year round, with permanent

The Homestead Visitor Centre was built as a tavern in the 1920s.

pools fed by springs that draw water from the underground aquifer within porous dolomite rock. Millstream Chichester NP is a 200,000ha park surrounding the Fortescue River with rugged gorges, tropical rock pools, meandering watercourses and waterlily wetlands. Stretching from the Hamersley Range foothills and Fortescue Valley in the south to the Chichester Range escarpment in the north, it is of great Aboriginal significance. It is the sacred heartland of the Yindjibarndi people who still gather here as the traditional custodians. Millstream palms blanket the wetlands and are found in few other places in the Pilbara. The road in is dotted with spinifex and gums and

1300 551 997 www.goseetouring.com

does not prepare the visitor for what awaits. Millstream was named by the explorer Francis Gregory. Pastoralists occupied the country from 1865 until 1967, when it became a national park to protect the Millstream aquifer within the catchment. Perhaps odd, but a tavern was built in 1920. It operated on and off in the 1900s but is now the Homestead Visitor Centre which offers interpretive walk trails. These are a great resource to learn more about its inhabitants and the diversity of the wetlands, woodlands and arid rocky plains and ranges. The bird life is amazing. In one day you might see Rainbow bee-eaters, sacred kingfisher, blue-winged

kookaburras, bustards and spinifex pigeons. The Euros (hills kangaroos) roam the camp and surrounding areas. In mid-winter (June-August) spectacular wildflowers are abundant including the Sturt desert pea, mulla mulla, cassias and wattles, along with hibiscus, bluebells and desert yam. The Homestead Visitor Centre is open daily but not staffed. Rangers patrol the park and during the dry season, April to October, campground hosts are a wealth of information and assist with collection of camp fees and maintaining the facilities. Camping can be booked online and during the peak season it is advisable to book early. Millstream camp areas are at Milyanha close to the Old Homestead. They are generator friendly and suitable for all vehicles

One of the pretty walking trails.

Please call us for full itinerary details Prefer to travel independently? Call us for a quote

TERMS & CONDITIONS *Price is per person Twin Share fully inclusive. Single Supplement applies. Credit card surcharges apply. Deposit of AUD$500-$800 per person is required to secure tour. Tour requires a ŵŝŶŝŵƵŵ ŶƵŵďĞƌ ŽĨ ƉĂƐƐĞŶŐĞƌƐ ƚŽ ĚĞƉĂƌƚ͘ WƌŝĐĞƐ ŵĂLJ ŇƵĐƚƵĂƚĞ ŝĨ ƐƵƌĐŚĂƌŐĞƐ͕ ĨĞĞ͕ ƚĂdžĞƐ Žƌ ĐƵƌƌĞŶĐLJ ĐŚĂŶŐĞ͘ WƌŝĐĞƐ ĐƵƌƌĞŶƚ ĂƐ Ăƚ ϯϬ DĂƌĐŚ ϮϬϭϲ͘ 'Ž ^ĞĞdŽƵƌŝŶŐ WƚLJ >ƚĚ dͬ 'Ž ^ĞĞ dŽƵƌŝŶŐ DĞŵďĞƌ ŽĨ ,ĞůůŽǁŽƌůĚ Y> >ŝĐ EŽ͗ ϯϭϵϴϳϳϮ E͗ ϳϮ ϭϮϮ ϱϮϮ Ϯϳϲ

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22 - 28 Sept 2016 5VYMVSR 0ZSHUK 7HJPÄJ Triples Bowls Competition per person Twin Share ex

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HOSTED BY IAN SCHUBACK

27 Sept - 4 Oct 2016

BNE, Single supplement $370

38 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

38.indd 2

ϱ EŝŐŚƚƐ ĐĐŽŵ͕ 'ƵŝĚĞ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚŽƵƚ͕ ^ŝŶŐĂƉŽƌĞ 'ĂƌĚĞŶ &ĞƐƟǀĂů͕ 'ĂƌĚĞŶ͛Ɛ LJ dŚĞ ĂLJ͕ ^ŝŶŐĂƉŽƌĞ ^ŝŐŚƚƐĞĞŝŶŐ dŽƵƌ͕ ^ŝŶŐĂƉŽƌĞ ŽƚĂŶŝĐ 'ĂƌĚĞŶƐ͕ EĂƟŽŶĂů KƌĐŚŝĚ 'ĂƌĚĞŶ͕ :ƵƌŽŶŐ ŝƌĚ WĂƌŬ͕ EŝŐŚƚ ^ĂĨĂƌŝ dŽƵƌ ϲ EŝŐŚƚƐ ĐĐŽŵŵŽĚĂƟŽŶ͕ ŽŽŬĞĚ ƌĞĂŬĨĂƐƚ ĂŝůLJ͕ ϲ ŝŶŶĞƌƐ͕ ϯ >ƵŶĐŚĞƐ͕ EĂƚŝŽŶĂů ZŽƐĞ 'ĂƌĚĞŶ͕ ƌŝĐŬĞŶĚĞŶ ƐƚĂƚĞ͕ >ĂƵŶĐĞƐƚŽŶ &ůŽǁĞƌ ^ŚŽǁ͕ KĂƚůĂŶĚƐ͕ /ŶǀĞƌĂǁĞ EĂƟǀĞ 'ĂƌĚĞŶƐ͕ ǀŝ &ůŽƌĂ ƌĂǁůĞŝŐŚ tŽŽĚ 'ĂƌĚĞŶ ϳ EŝŐŚƚƐ ĐĐŽŵ Θ Ăƌ ,ŝƌĞ͕ KƌŝĞŶƚĂƟŽŶ dŽƵƌ͕ EŽƌĨŽůŬ /ƐůĂŶĚ WĂĐŝĮĐ dƌŝƉůĞƐ Θ tĞůĐŽŵĞ &ƵŶĐƟŽŶ͕ ŝŶŶĞƌ & Master Coaching Class ǁŝƚŚ /ĂŶ ^ĐŚƵďĂĐŬ Θ ĂŵĞƌŽŶ ƵƌƟƐ͕ WĂĐŝĮĐ dƌŝƉůĞƐ WƌĞƐĞŶƚĂƟŽŶ &ƵŶĐƟŽŶ

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$4,440 per person Twin Share ex BNE, SYD, MEL, Single supplement $1,150

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20/04/2016 12:17:10 PM


TRAVEL Not far from Millstream and back on to the main Karratha road there is another turnoff, still part of the Millstream Chichester NP, which is a spectacular journey along a dirt, well-graded road high up on Chichester Range. Looking down, you expect to see dinosaurs roaming in the valley. Further on is Python Pool nestled at the base of a seasonal waterfall. No camping is permitted here but the day picnic area has a bush toilet. The trip is highly recommended.

The Deep Reach swimming hole

Clean, modern and well-equipped camp kitchen.

large and small, and have bush toilets and camp kitchen with hot water. Stargazers, the strictly non-generator sites, are mainly suitable for smaller vehicles with bush toilets and gas. Solid fuel fires are not permitted under any circumstances. Both campgrounds have barbecue facilities. Fresh water is available at the Homestead and Miliyanha campground but it is untreated and there’s a phone card telephone. We stayed at the Milyanha where the facilities were spotless and modern.

2016 ON SALE

Park fees are a day entry fee plus your camping fee. Details can be obtained from the parks website and do offer concession for seniors. Swimming is not permitted at Jirndawurrunha Pool or surrounding streams because the sites have deep cultural significance. There are day areas at the Old Millstream Homestead and Deep Reach Pool on the Fortescue River where swimming is permitted. Walking trails vary from 300m to the 18km heritage camel trail.

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39.indd 3

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Inclusions: International and Domestic Flights, Twin Share Accommodation 4*, Private Transfers and Guides, Fully Escorted, Train Travel, Meals as per itinerary, Entrance Fees and Tours, Farewell Dinner Excluded: Travel Insurance, Meals not mentioned in itinerary, Personal Expenses, Visas, Airport transfers in Australia. Save $200 valid till 30th April. Subject to availability. Terms & Conditions apply. Based on current exchange rates.

07 5476 9368 Shop 5 56 Burnett Street Buderim For more information info@123travelconferences.com.au

May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 39

20/04/2016 12:19:06 PM


TRAVEL

Why you would choose to cruise Cruising is an easy way to explore Australia’s coastline or an international destination of your choice. KATE DEVER lists the top five reasons for choosing to cruise.

O

rganising a holiday with family and friends has never been easier. The vast range of cruise options and destinations are endless so you’ll be able to find the perfect cruise for every occasion, from short weekend getaways to round-the-world voyages. Cruising means exploring while relaxing in comfort. Some travellers might be uneasy about taking a cruise but seasickness or feeling claustrophobic are a thing of the past with new and improved ships that are like stepping into a floating city. Here are the top five reasons to take a cruise holiday. 1. AMAZING OVERALL VALUE: Cruises are great value. The overall fare covers almost everything you’ll need for your entire vacation. Some cruises can be as little as $150 a day, which covers food, accommodation and on-board entertainment. It’s much more affordable than booking all this as well as

Group bookings are easy – no need to worry about coordinating 15 family members, just book enough cabins and let everyone sit back and enjoy what the ship has to offer. Some cruise lines offer group discounts too!

transportation on land. Choose a luxury cruise line and get even more inclusions such as alcohol, gratuities, shore excursions and onboard credit – sometimes even early bird airfares! 2. EASY TO PLAN WITH SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE: Cruise vacations are the total holiday package. All you need to do is choose your cruise line, destinations and cabin type then away you go. You eliminate the hassle of booking hotel rooms, transportation between destinations, day tours and findingsomewhere to dine every breakfast, lunch and dinner.

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ships even have classes such as dance, photography, cooking or wine tasting. There truly is something for everyone to enjoy on a cruising holiday. 5. CRUISE SHIPS ARE FLOATING CITIES: Cruise ships are like floating cities with everything you need onboard. For those who want to stay connected with the real world, Wi-Fi, phone service and satellite TV are mostly available. Onboard medical centers staffed by registered doctors and nurses are available 24hrs if required. Laundry services allow you to wash your clothes so no need to over-pack. Hair and beauty salons are on hand for special anniversary or birthday dinners then choose from multiple restaurants, including fine dining, for the occasion. There are also movie screens, swimming pools, nightclubs, theatres and more – cruise ships have it all. Call 1300 662 702 or visit liveittravel.com.au

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NIAGARA TO NEW YORK 25 DAYS

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Departs Brisbane: 23 September 2016

Departs Brisbane: 23 October 2016

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40 YOUR TIME MAGAZINE / May 2016

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Sunshine Coast

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TRAVEL

DETAILS AND DEALS AT MAROOCHYDORE CRUISE EXPO CRUISE travellers will have the opportunity to speak directly with cruise line representatives plus pick up a special or two at the fourth annual Sunshine Coast Cruise Sale Day at Maroochydore RSL. The event, on Sunday May 15, will run for strictly four hours only, from 10am to 2pm, with all specials to expire as soon as the clock hits 2pm. All visitors will go into the draw to win a Mastercard Multi Currency Cash Passport loaded with $1000 cash while those who make a booking will go into

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a draw for Mekong River Cruise with APT. Most major cruise lines will be present on the day including, but not limited to, Scenic, Princess Cruises, P&O, Holland America, Royal Caribbean, APT, Azamara, Celebrity and Avalon Waterways. There will also be a host of niche cruise suppliers offering itineraries to South America, Antarctica, Galapagos, Asia River cruising and even domestic expedition cruising. Event organiser and Ucango Travel and Cruise managing director Dave Hulsman said the success of the last three events had demonstrated just how popular cruising had become.

“It has been interesting to watch the industry evolve over the past five years,” he said. “Not only do we have a large market of cruisers heading overseas for cruise options but each year we see more and more vessels coming out to our waters which is opening the market up to more and more demographics.” Mr Hulsman said Cruising among Australians had grown exponentially during the past decade and passenger numbers in Australia were expected to double in the next four years. “This event is a great opportunity for anyone, whether they’ve cruised before or not, to find out what options are available and perhaps save a buck or two,” he said. Other exhibitors include Cunard, Oceania, Voyages to Antiquity, Chimu Adventures, Worldwide Cruise Centres, Viking Cruises, Carnival, Seabourn, Captain Cook Cruises, Coral Princess, Allianz, Gateway Airport Parking, Evergreen, Cash Passport, Wendy Wu and Crown Currency. Call 5437 4000 Caloundra or 5451 8600 Maroochydore or email info@ ucango.com.au

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20/04/2016 1:02:21 PM


TRAVEL

DAY TELLS ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT RIVER CRUISING EVER wondered what it’s like to spend a week or two weeks on a river cruise, drifting along pristine waterways and exploring another country and culture at leisure? Cruiseabout is hosting a series of free information sessions across Australia and will offer Sunshine Coast locals the opportunity to learn everything they need to know about river cruising as well as have access to exclusive discounts during the free events this month. Cruiseabout’s Queensland state leader Tim Harrison said the information events would be both inspirational and informative for would-be river cruisers. “Cruising is becoming the most popular way for Australians to holiday and river cruising is a fantastic way to enjoy a laidback holiday experience while soaking up the culture, cuisine and countries along some of the world’s famous rivers,” he said. Cruiseabout Caloundra’s information sessions will explore everything from the who, what, where and when of river cruising with

Sunshine Coast

43.indd 3

sessions dedicated to South America and Antarctica, Kimberley cruising, Europe river cruising, Canada and Alaska and Asia river cruising. There will also be special guest presentations from river cruise specialists APT, access to exclusive Cruiseabout deals that are only available at the events and the opportunity to receive great advice from the team of cruising specialists at Cruiseabout Caloundra who can answer any questions. The Cruiseabout Caloundra information sessions with APT will be held on Tuesday, May 10, from 10am5pm at Caloundra Power Boat Club, 2 Lamerough Pde, Golden Beach. Call Cruiseabout Caloundra 5445 2726 or visit cruiseabout.com.au

PUT THE ‘WOW’ INTO YOUR HOLIDAY TAUCK has been a pioneer in escorted travel since the company took its first tour through New England in 1925. Three generations and 90 years later, Tauck applies the same formula to more than 140 unique worldwide journeys and cruises – to do the right thing. The aim is to craft a lifeenriching travel experience, at a single all-inclusive price ensuring there is great value for money. Its guarantee is that it relies on recommendations from satisfied travellers. Join a Tauck cruise along Europe’s rivers and expect to see the sights a bit differently than you would travelling with other companies. For a start, Tauck river cruise ships accommodate the least number of passengers of any European riverboat. There are no more than 130 guests. And onboard every Tauck river cruise there are four Tauck directors, including the cruise director to make every moment of your day count. You won’t simply take guided tours, but go beyond the tourist trail to talk with locals, experience their passions and cultural traditions, and gain your own new perspectives. Perhaps you’ll return home inspired

after attending a presentation in London by Celia Sandys, granddaughter and biographer of Sir Winston Churchill. Maybe your transformational moment will come during a private wine reception, dinner, concert and art collection tour at Lobkowicz Palace in Prague Castle. History buffs might appreciate an invitation to go inside a private home in Croatia for discussions about the Croatian War of Independence. Tauck offers one upfront price with virtually everything included. You’ll get what your pay for and then some, such as access to exclusive cultural events, rooms at fine hotels in prime locations, authentic cuisine and everything in between. Call 1300 78 78 58 or visit travellerschoice.com.au

May 2016 / YOUR TIME MAGAZINE 43

20/04/2016 1:12:20 PM


BOOK REVIEW

ELIZABETH PASCOE

This is a story about love and redemption exquisitely told. A freckled faced daughter, Marie-Laure Le Blanc, is six years old at the beginning of this story and her father Daniel who is the keeper of the keys to all the cabinets in the Natural History Museum. At home Daniel, is whittling a small replica of their house and training her to memorise her surroundings so that she will be able to go outside by herself. In Germany lives a slightly built, white-haired boy called Werner and his younger sister, taken into an orphanage after their father is killed by coal dust. Time passes, World War II has begun and life has changed forever. It’s an opportunity for Werner. This novel took 10 years to write and it is splendidly written. The sentences fly off the page. It is a long book and a tour de force. Highly recommended. 5 stars.

TONY HARRINGTON

This extremely well-crafted book was a delight to read. Set during World War II, the parallel lives of two very different children, a blind French girl and very intelligent orphan German boy, move quickly back and forward in time and place and finally intersect near the end of the story. Themes of family love, natural history, humanity and man’s inhumanity to man run deeply through the story. The oppression and greed for power and wealth by the Nazi party are also well explored through other minor characters in this book. For me it was a sit up all night book. Highly recommended. 9/10

BOOK review JOHN KLEINSCHMIDT I found it difficult to get into this book for the first 120 pages or so, but then it became absorbing and something of a page turner. Marie-Laure navigates her way through the war, lovingly guided firstly by her father then a great uncle. Werner Pfennig is a talented young German orphan cared for by Frau Elena then recruited into a Hitler Youth program. Their destiny is driven by Werner designing a system to locate radio transmissions and Marie-Laure and her great uncle’s involvement with the French resistance. I enjoyed this book and particularly Doerr’s writing style, good sub-plots, short sentences, sharp and relevant.

SHEILA BRYDEN

ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE By Anthony Doerr

A Pulitzer prize winner and instant bestseller, this is the story of a blind French girl and a German boy whose paths cross in occupied France as they try to survive the devastation of World War II. Marie-Laure lives with her father in Paris. She is six when she goes blind and her father builds her a perfect miniature of their neighbourhood so she can memorise it and navigate her way. She is 12 when the Nazis occupy Paris and they flee to Saint-Malo. Werner is an orphan in a German mining town. He becomes an expert at building and fixing radios, skills which make him valuable to the Hitler Youth. He is aware of the human cost of his intelligence. He travels through the heart of the war and into Saint-Malo, where their stories converge.

The parallel lives of two young people is the central theme of this well researched novel. Marie-Laure, a blind French girl, and Werner, an orphaned German boy, have their young lives deftly woven together before and during the German occupation of France. I particularly liked that the chapters were short and pointed – a device which kept me alert to the development of the characters. There is a fable-like quality to the writing in this book - the innocence of the blind girl, the mistreatment of the orphan boy by those in authority, and the quest of the odious Nazi relentlessly chasing the precious but cursed jewel. In my opinion this is a good book, but is it a great book? No. It leaves me wondering what are the selection criteria for choosing Pulitzer prize winners.

JO BOURKE

MARY BARBER I’m tired of so much literature about war, the wasted lives, “the flower of youth cut down”. The cynical side of me says, what would authors do for inspiration if there were no wars? But, that rave aside, this is a book worth reading. The language is beautiful. I’d read it again just for the description of how sunlight is made into coal. Young Werner is playing with his homemade radio when he hears a science program for children. He’s hooked by the melodious voice that explains this mystery. It reminded me of Professor Julius Sumner Miller. Werner’s innocent enthusiasm for knowledge is shattered when his skills are put into the service of the Reich.

It’s a little disconcerting to be confronted with more than 20 rave reviews before even reading the first page, almost enough to make one want to disagree! But I found myself agreeing with the reviewers. Even the minor characters in the powerful parallel stories of Werner and Marie-Laure live on in my imagination due to the incredibly descriptive prose. There was no sugar coating in this story, in particular the brutal training of Hitler’s Youth and the fate of Werner’s friend Frederick. Overall, it is a reminder of the struggles of ordinary people swept along in the inevitable surge of carnage and struggle that war produces. Despite being slightly confused by the year headings in some chapters, I enjoyed this book and recommend it strongly.

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TRIVIA

PUZZLE SOLUTIONS QUICK CROSSWORD

SUDOKU (MEDIUM)

SUDOKU (EASY)

WORD FIND

CODE WORD 15

2

1

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

IMAGE: 1000 WORDS / SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

S Y Q Z V AWO X F L E R 26

H G K B P I MC T J U ND 3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

1. What is the designation of any US Air Force aircraft carrying the US President? 2. Was the Bank of England founded in the 17th or 18th Century? 3. Name one of the four letters that do not appear in a list of surnames off Australian Prime Ministers. 4. Which Sydney suburb is the home for the NRL team called The Eels? 5. Which ocean has more islands than the other oceans combined? 6. Which Australian state has borders with states on the Indian and Pacific coasts? 7. What is the most common religion in Japan? 8. How long is the pool in a short course swimming event? 9. Who was the 76-year old who won an Oscar in the 1981 movie “On Golden Pond”? 10. Which is larger in area: Australia or Antarctica? 11. What is the ice dwelling traditionally associated with Eskimos? 12. What is the name of the notorious cape at the bottom of South America? 01? 13. In which Australian city were the Goodwill Games held in 2001? 14. What is an entry on Twitter called? 15. What was the field of endeavour of Bert Hinkler? 16. In boxing, what does TKO stand for? 17. Port Said is at the northern end of which canal? hie”? 18. On the Seven TV network, which presenter is known as “Kochie”? 19. Express 0.875 as a fraction. 20. In 24-hour time what is 20 minutes after midnight?

CRYPTIC CROSSWORD

14

By Quizmaster Allan Blackburn

13

PERMUTATE START, STARK, TRACK, CRACK, CROCK-CLACK, CLOCK There may be other correct answers

SCATTERWORD LOBECTOMY, comely, ocelot, coyote, oocyte, motley, combe, comet, cooey, motel, bole, lobe, belt, oboe, obey, byte, cole, come, cyme, cote, mole, melt, mote, tome, toey.

1. Airforce 1; 2. 17th; 3. J, Q, V, X; 4. Parramatta; 5. Pacific; 6. South Australia; 7. Shinto; 8. 25 metres; 9. Henry Fonda; 10. Antarctica; 11. Igloo; 12. Cape Horn; 13. Brisbane; 14. Tweet; 15. Aviation; 16. Technical Knock Out; 17. Suez; 18. David Koch; 19. Seven eighths, 7/8; 20.0020

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20/04/2016 1:16:52 PM


PUZZLES

CRYPTIC CROSSWORD

No. 2513

CODEWORD

1

ACROSS

DOWN

1

2

7 8 10 11 13 14 16 18 19

Woo space for the lawyers’ stamping ground (9) Run around the vessel (3) Claim the senator is corrupt (9) Pleads desperately for that which ceased to be in force (6) This miscarriage of justice covered over an old wound (4) Apparently used to admonish people by the sound of it (4) The perfect place for uranium; by the patio, perhaps? (6) Have a north tail wind during the gruelling competition (9) Electric fish comes back for shelter (3) Convinced to desist if a turn was taken (9)

14

Obviously spoken to when returning covertly from missions (3) 3 Edward carried 7-across and changed direction (6) 4 It was after the doctor came back with neglect (4) 5 Somehow I’m left in a cup of local government! (9) 6 Formulate a truce in an arrangement that is not rock solid (9) 8 Is it permissible to consider everyone to be above a bowel complaint? (9) 9 Sees a trap developing within and so goes his own way (9) 12 Standing stone ornaments lacking the final date (6) 15 Costly herb? (4) 17 Prose written in a wooden style? (3)

S

No. 704

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

X

10

11

12

13

23

24

25

26

N

SUDOKU WORDFIND

Please refer to reubenspuzzles.com.au for a cryptic solving guide.

We believe in making it personal.

Level: Medium

No. 30

ant aphid beetle bug butterfly caterpillar cicada cockroach cricket earwig flea gnat grub katydid lice

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PUZZLES

QUICK CROSSWORD

No. 3614

SCATTERWORD

O O

M Y

T

Today’s Aim: 16 words Good 20 words Very good 22 words Excellent

SUDOKU Level: Easy

No. 751

B

E C

No. 2950

L

Form at least one nine letter word from the given letters and as many other words as possible of four or more letters. Each word must contain the letter in the central circle. Simple plurals, formed by adding “s” are not counted as extra words. No prefixes or suffixes. Reference: The Macquarie Concise Dictionary.

PERMUTATE

ACROSS 1 5 8 10 13 14 15 17 20 21 22 23 26

Relating to dogs Ugly Moves restlessly in search of pleasure Loud and confused noise (US spelling) Womb Unworthy of Tree yielding valued wood Hinder Of lower importance Having significant hair on the chin Sibling (informal) Separated from the outer husk Nonsense sung in jazz

28 Deep steepsided valley 29 Traditional religious procedure 31 Common analgesic 32 Eccentric person (informal) 33 Fitted inside each other (as boxes) 35 Work units (Physics) 36 Church group 37 Small whirlpools

DOWN 2 3 4 5 6

Piercing tool Vastly Wading bird Respiratory condition Counterfeited

7 9 10 11 12 16 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 29 30 34

Fastened with a rope Obligations Female bovine Skilled Burden First in scientific series Rehearsed Flat alluvial plain Offer Detector Frowns angrily Flag Armed a weapon Beget Relation Wash Boy Supplement

No. 023

WORK IT OUT!

Your aim is to change the top word one letter at a time, each time rearranging the letters to create a new word. Perform one such permutation for each blank line until you arrive at the last word. There may be more than one correct solution.

START

_____ _____ _____ _____ CLOCK

All puzzles Copyright © Reuben’s Puzzles www.reubenspuzzles.com.au

May 2016

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