Alliance Airlines Magazine - April/May 2020

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April/may 2020

A real Australian business magazine

Beautiful Broome

Adventure aplenty on the Kimberley’s doorstep

SNOW TIME

Ski resorts to get your adrenaline pumping

UNDER THE STARS Camping out with Mother Nature


The rarest of the rare.

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Welcome. WELCOME ABOARD As mentioned in Alliance’s last inflight magazine, we performed an important role delivering air services to transport fire and rescue personnel, including firefighters, paramedics and parks and wildlife crews, to bushfire affected regions, and return them home safely for a well-deserved rest. In total we operated for more than 70 consecutive days in 28 ports across Australia, and transported in excess of 5500 passengers. Personally, I am proud that Alliance was part of this critical and complex operation, and was most appreciative to our team for their commitment and contributions to these services on short notice. Many of our staff returned from leave earlier than planned and others relinquished leave to ensure that we could meet the requirements of the rural fire services. In February and March, as part of our workplace giving program, Alliance continued to support Breast Cancer Network Australia (BCNA) with our Hangar2Hangar 2020 corporate cycling charity event, which took place in South Australia. 26 cyclists from Alliance’s bases and departments from around Australia, as well as our supporters, came together to fundraise, ride and meet breast cancer survivors who have been supported by BCNA. We cycled around Kangaroo Island, McLaren Vale and Adelaide, and enjoyed the friendly hospitality, picturesque landscape and delicious cuisine of these regions. We were proud to support these communities and their tourism economies, and I highly recommend you to visit. Alliance’s inaugural Hangar2Hangar raised $68,000. This year we are grateful to our cyclists, sponsors, supporters, staff and community, who helped us raise more than $100,000. To show further support to Kangaroo Island, we operated two charter flights from Brisbane and Adelaide in February, with Sheehan Events, to experience the SeaLink Kangaroo Island Racing Carnival. The entire day was memorable. On both visits to Kangaroo Island I was amazed at the positivity and resilience of the local community, and their commitment to rebuilding what is one of Australia’s most beautiful tourist destinations. In January we unveiled our fourth unique livery aircraft, Fokker 100 VH-UQG, as a further tribute to Australian aviator Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith. VH-UQG, assigned to us by chance, was Kingsford-Smith’s Southern Cross Minor’s registration. Thank you for your patronage as you fly with Alliance Airlines today. We welcome your feedback at any time at media@allianceairlines.com.au Lee Schofield Chief Executive Officer APRIL/MAY 2020

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In this issue. upfront

Features

9 Alliance News

20 Snow time

Alliance provides a growing number of charters to support the Aussie tourism industry; Port Macquarie is a great place to get away and enjoy beautiful beaches and a lush hinterland; get into the vibrant town of Bundaberg in Queensland.

16 Events Calendar A wrap-up of fun things to do across the country.

18 Entertainment

Books, tours, art and more.

AusBiz. Check out AusBiz. at the back of the magazine. AGRIBUSINESS Times have changed and now many farmers buy livestock online.

Ski resorts of Australia to get your adrenaline pumping. Get into the wonderful white stuff!

MINING Proximity detection is a crucial part of mining.

24 Hanging with Mother Nature

Hit the road and explore some of Australia’s most beautiful camping spots.

PROPERTY The pros and cons of buying a holiday home.

28 The bounty of Broome

Adventure a-plenty and ancient wonders to be discovered up north in beautiful Broome.

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BUSINESS The metamorphosis of the humble gym.

APRIL/MAY 2020

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SAVOUR THE FRENCH WAY Indulge in waterfront luxury and French-inspired cuisine INCLUDES: BREAKFAST & $100 DAILY DINING CREDIT

Live the French way Sofitel Sydney Darling Harbour, 12 Darling Drive, Sydney NSW 2000 Book at sofiteldarlingharbour.com.au PARIS – SYDNEY – LONDON – NEW YORK – BEIJING – BALI


PUBLISHER’S

It’s that time of year when the weather is perfect for camping, so we’ve pulled together some awesome spots in the great outdoors that you might not have checked out. For those who aren’t from Australia, it’s often a surprise to find that we have so many great places to immerse yourself in a winter wonderland. Sure, our ski fields aren’t blessed with the kind of powder you find in Japan or the Swiss Alps, but our lovely resorts are brimming with beauty and packed with awesome things to do on and off the slopes. For this issue I headed back to one of my favourite places in Australia – beautiful Broome. There are so many things to get into up there, and the surrounding region is utterly blessed with ancient wonders. In fact, Sir David Attenborough even called the Horizontal Falls one of the great wonders of the world. In Broome you can sit inside the fossilised footprint of a dinosaur, and July to September is a great time to go whale-watching.

EDITORIAL

Publisher: Michelle Hespe publisher@publishingbychelle.com Art Director: Jon Wolfgang Miller Assistant Editor: Sarah Hinder editorial@publishingbychelle.com Sub-Editor: Shane Cubis Proofreader: Claire Hey Editorial Assistants: Olivia Bornstein, Jillian Ramirez, Maya Franks & Kaitlyn Stork

ADVERTISING

Brand & Communications Manager: Effe Sandas advertising@publishingbychelle.com

CONTRIBUTORS

Most of the fires may be out, but it’s the rebuilding of communities that we all need to be thinking about, and now with coronavirus, people are more scared than ever. We need to support our fellow Aussies. So, if you have the chance to get out there and fill your esky with local produce from a town that needs the business, get to it! Drop us a line any time – we always love hearing from you.

Jillian Ramirez Maya Franks Darren Baguley Kirsten Craze Ian Lloyd Neubauer

PRINTING

Blue Star PRINT 81 Derby St, Silverwater NSW 2128

Alliance is published by Publishing ByChelle (ABN: 78 621 375 853 ACN: 621 375 853) Level 1, 3 Westleigh Street, Neutral Bay NSW 2089 publishingbychelle.com The reproduction of any content, in whole or part without prior written permission by the publisher, Michelle Hespe, is strictly prohibited. Opinions expressed in the content are those of the contributors, and not necessarily those of the publisher. All information in this magazine was believed to be correct at the time of publication, and all reasonable efforts have been made to contact copyright holders. Publishing ByChelle cannot accept unsolicited manuscripts or photographs. If such items are sent to the magazine, they will not be returned. We apologise if we don’t get back to your email, as we do receive a large volume of communication via various online channels. Some images used in Alliance are from iStock and Getty images, and we make every effort to credit all contributors.

MICHELLE HESPE

If you would like to read the digital version of Alliance, please be our guest! Simply go to trulyaus.com – which is dedicated to exploring and celebrating all things Aussie, giving travellers the lowdown on the best places in regional, rural and outback Australia.

TRULYAUS.COM APRIL/MAY 2020

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Alliance Airlines proudly raised over $100,000 for Breast Cancer Network Australia Thank you to our Hangar2Hangar 2020 cyclists, sponsors, supporters, staff and community who helped us achieve our fundraising goal for Breast Cancer Network Australia www.hangar2hangar.com.au


Route Map.

Where we fly. Alliance Airlines is Australasia’s leading provider of air services.

PORT MORESBY

CHRISTMAS ISLAND G R O OT E EYLANDT

DARWIN

KUNUNURRA

CAIRNS

CENTURY MINE PORT HEDLAND

MOUNT ISA

CLONCURRY

THE GRANITES

K A R R AT H A

CANNINGTON

TELFER

CAPE PRESTON

TOWNSVILLE

P H O S P H AT E H I L L

B A R I M U N YA COONDEWANNA NEWMAN ULURU

ALICE SPRINGS

EMERALD

ROCKHAMPTON GLADSTONE BUNDABERG

ROMA SUNSHINE COAST

BALLERA MOOMBA

BRISBANE LEINSTER MOUNT KEITH

O LY M P I C D A M

LEONORA PORT MACQUARIE

KALGOORLIE

NEWCASTLE

EAST JAURDI PERTH

SYDNEY

ADELAIDE

key

NOTE: MAPS ARE NOT TO SCALE

MELBOURNE

KEY PRIVATE CHARTER FLIGHTS

Private charter flights

ALLIANCE AIRLINES COMMERCIAL FLIGHTS

Alliance Airlines & Virgin Australia commercial flights NOTE: MAP NOT TO SCALE

APRIL/MAY 2020

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Inflight Services Australia, an Australian company with experience delivering aviation catering, has partnered with Alliance Airlines since 2002 Sky Snacks proudly supports Banish the Black Dog Charity Bike Ride, The Cure Starts Now, Food Relief NQ, Endeavour Foundation, Hangar2Hangar - Breast Cancer Network Australia, Rosies - Friends on the Street, Food Harvest, St Vincent de Paul Society, Rotary Australia, 42for42 www.inflightservicesaustralia.com.au

* Image features business class aircraft and catering


Alliance News.

Alliance News.

Visit Bundaberg Welcome to the town that turtles call home. Bursting with fresh produce year round and just a stone’s throw from the Southern Great Barrier Reef, soak up the vibrant town of Bundaberg, overflowing with flavour and natural wonders, where you can explore the reef’s coral cays and Lady Musgrave Island onboard a luxury catamaran with Lady Musgrave Experience. Surround yourself with effervescent waters and snorkel alongside curious turtles, manta rays, tropical fish and colourful coral. Or perhaps keep your feet dry and enjoy a glass-bottomed boat tour as you spot Nemo and other marine life. On the coast of Bundaberg is Mon Repos, the largest rookery in the South Pacific for endangered loggerhead turtles. Each year from November to March, people from around the world travel to Mon Repos for the turtle

encounter tour. Watch as mother turtles lay their clutches of eggs on sandy dunes, or, some weeks later, witness baby turtles emerge from their nests and journey down to the sea at night. Tantalise your tastebuds with the fresh local Bundaberg produce that is grown, brewed, distilled and caught year-round. From sweet, juicy strawberries, zesty limes and honeyroasted macadamia nuts, to fresh, flavour-filled ginger and giant sweet potatoes, the shopping list goes on and on. Do your shopping at the local markets or road-side farm gate stalls, where the produce is handpicked by farmers. Embrace the locavore (locally grown) movement by enjoying the seasonal local café menus and creative dishes as chefs aim to showcase the freshest produce the region has to offer. Go behind the scenes on an artisan

tour with Bundy Food Tours to meet farmers, taste fresh flavours and hear the rich stories passed down by generations of farming families. Immerse yourself on an awardwinning Bundaberg Rum Visitor Experience and uncover the secret to distilling world-famous rum before sampling some of the finest blends at the Bundaberg Rum Distillery. Taste-test 14 flavour-filled drinks at the iconic Bundaberg Brewed Drinks Barrel, home of Bundaberg Ginger Beer, and learn the history behind these tasty flavours on a self-guided tour, before taking home a mixed six-pack with your handpicked favourites. Alliance Airlines flies daily between Brisbane and Bundaberg. Book via Virgin Australia virginaustralia.com.au or through your travel agent. APRIL/MAY 2020

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Image: Bundaberg Tourism

Stay in the know with what’s happening with our airline and in our industry.



Port Macquarie: a foodie’s dream holiday destination Under an hour’s flight from Sydney and Brisbane, boasting 17 pristine beaches, a lush hinterland, and a diverse variety of attractions and accommodation options, the Greater Port Macquarie region is the top-rated destination on NSW’s Mid-North Coast. From sampling top wines at cellar doors and meeting producers while you peruse the local markets, to picking up a healthy açai bowl at one of the many beachfront cafés or watching the sunset while dining at an awardwinning restaurant, the coastal town of Port Macquarie is a food lover’s dream destination. Every weekend (and some weekdays) you can check out a local Port Macquarie market. Fill your basket with fresh produce and gourmet jams at the Wauchope Farmers Market, open on the fourth Saturday of each month. At Bago, explore Russian chocolate shop Baba Lila (where owner Tash handmakes thousands of delicious chocolates every week!) and lose yourself in the largest hedge maze in NSW. Perch yourself on the grassy hill and sip local wines while indulging in a cheese platter. Brunch options are aplenty in Port Macquarie. With produce sourced locally, being spoilt for choice with local farmers and keen backyard gardeners, Drury Lane Eatery’s ever-changing menu is a must-try. Family-owned café LV’s on Clarence offers visitors fresh ingredients delivered straight from their family’s farm. If fine dining is your passion, Bill’s Fishhouse + Bar has quickly become

Image: Remy Brand

Alliance News.

a favourite with locals and visitors alike, with its focus on the freshest seafood, amazing oysters and an innovative menu. And for a sweet treat, head to Blue Cow Gelato, where you can enjoy one of the shop’s ever-changing flavours. Now it’s time to work off all that food! Start at Town Beach and walk some of Port Macquarie’s nine-kilometre easy grade coastal walk. If you’re looking for great coffee, or a light, healthy bite along the way, head on down to Salty Crew Kiosk on Town Beach, Sandbox on Flynns Beach, or COAST Lighthouse Beach on Lighthouse Beach. portmacquarieinfo.com.au | Instagram: @PortMacquarie | Facebook: @GreaterPortMacquarie | #iloveportmacquarie Alliance Airlines flies six times a week between Brisbane and Port Macquarie. Book via Virgin Australia virginaustralia.com.au or through your travel agent.

Alliance tourism charters Alliance Airlines operates a growing number of charters in support of the tourism and events industry. These charters range from day and overnight trips to Uluru and charters supporting concerts and sporting events in regional Australia, to multi-day ‘air cruises’ around Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific for international tour groups. High-end charters are able to utilise Alliance’s exclusive 48-seat all-business class Fokker 70 jet with restaurant-quality catering and an inflight chef. Alliance’s fleet 48- and 80-seat Fokker 70 and 100-seat Fokker 100 charter jets are based around Australia. Benefits of using a charter flight include: • You set the flight schedule, rather than rely on the scheduled airlines;

• You are able to access regional and remote destinations and connect cities not served by direct flights; • Private transfers to and from the aircraft, avoiding airport terminals and security screening; • You choose the onboard service and catering and you can even brand the aircraft; • If accommodation is at a premium, your charter flight can depart immediately after an event concludes, transporting your guests directly home; • A sightseeing flight component can be built into your charter (such as over Uluru or the Great Ocean Road), or drop in somewhere for lunch en-route. APRIL/MAY 2020

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Alliance News.

The secret is out! Kununurra boasts a wide range of accommodation options, including hotels, motels and apartments, as well as six caravan parks. There are modern coffee shops and a shopping centre, and the Mirima National Park is just minutes from the town centre. Your time in town can include a visit to the two diamond galleries, which display an exquisite array of Argyle Diamonds. Local Aboriginal art galleries showcase some of the most awe-inspiring ochre and acrylic art the region has to offer, and tours are available with traditional owners. If you are chasing adventure, Kununurra prides itself on having world-class tour operators that can showcase the Kimberley’s icons from almost every imaginable perspective – aeroplane, floatplane, helicopter, boat, four-wheel-drive, bus, canoe and hiking. There is certain to be a touring combination to suit your needs and budget. Self-drive four-wheel-drive

itineraries can have you traversing the Gibb River Road, swimming in thermal pools and gorges or fishing for an elusive barramundi along the way. Take a drive to explore the historic Port of Wyndham, and tantalise your tastebuds with a Croc Pie from the local bakery before heading up to the spectacular Five Rivers Lookout, where you can see where five rivers meet in the Cambridge Gulf – and perhaps take in a strikingly beautiful sunset. The secret is out: make Kununurra your next winter holiday destination! #holidayherethisyear visitkununurra.com Alliance Airlines flies three times per week between Melbourne and Kununurra from May to August, with connecting flights across south-east Australia. Book via Virgin Australia at virginaustralia.com.au or through your travel agent.

Images: Tourism Western Australia

Now is the time to be planning your winter getaway, and where better to go than Kununurra in the East Kimberley region of Western Australia? When the weather in east coast Australia is at its coldest from June to August, over in Kununurra, the minimum is around 15 degrees Celsius and the highest temperatures hover in the low- to mid-30s. This is why the Kimberley region is on so many bucket lists. And now, with direct flights between Melbourne and Kununurra (and connections from all other east coast cities), the ‘Kimberley Express’ takes just over four hours to land you in the heart of the region. From Kununurra you can access some of the Kimberley region’s most incredible icons, including the World Heritage-listed Purnululu National Park (Bungle Bungles), Lake Argyle and the Ord River, the remote and multi-tiered Mitchell Falls, the historic town of Wyndham, and incredible station stays along Gibb River Road.

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ALLIANCE MAGAZINE


SPECIAL FEATURE

Walking, talking and dancing with Kimberley artists Immersed in creative liveliness ‘This place is where community comes together to feel good. It is where our young people can learn about our culture, and where our families share stories and celebrate!’ Indigenous artist Jan Griffiths speaks with a group of visitors on a Sunset Tour at Waringarri Aboriginal Arts. Her backdrop is a gallery displaying soft ochre-coloured paintings, sophisticated hand-printed textiles, unique hand-thrown ceramics and intricately engraved boab nuts from the iconic Kimberley boab tree. In the heart of Miriwoong country at Kununurra, among the stunning scenery of the East Kimberley, local Indigenous guides enlighten visitors about one of the oldest communityowned Aboriginal arts centres in Australia. Originally established to represent the diaspora of Kimberley Indigenous language groups, the centre was integral to the development of revolutionary artists Rover Thomas

and Queenie McKenzie. Limited edition etchings and lithographs by these iconic artists are still available for sale for the savvy collector! Today, the centre represents both established, award-winning artists and emerging talents who consider the centre much more than a place to create and sell art. It is a hub for the local community to come together, whether to have a cup of tea while watching family members paint or to discuss local cultural issues. Corroboree nights are held regularly, bringing families together to watch dancers flaunt their moves at events such as Corroboree Under the Stars, held annually during the Ord Valley Muster in May. For Jan, Waringarri Arts is a place where she can spend time with family, learn from her elders, develop her arts practice and teach her own children. Jan learnt ochre painting from her parents, both highly respected and

sought-after artists, Mr A. Griffiths and Peggy Griffiths, whose works are included in many prestigious collections. Following in their footsteps, Jan is a successful multi-disciplinary artist, working in painting, ceramics and couture fashion, always eager to show her latest works. Visitors to the centre are immersed in the creative liveliness of this place, which pulses with the energy of art, community and culture. Booking a tour adds more time for a deeper connection with local Indigenous artists while also offering the unforgettable experience of visiting Country with elders, participating in traditional activities such as artefact making or damper cooking, and viewing an incredible Kimberley sunset while listening to the moving sounds of a didgeridoo. It’s an opportunity not to be missed, which affords a rich learning experience shared by all. APRIL/MAY 2020

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Directory

Alliance Experiences

Great places to stay and awesome things to do across Australia.

King Island Escapes

Kalbarri Edge Resort

2020 Mackay Festival of Arts

135 BARNES RD, LOORANA, KING ISLAND TAS T 0417 580 550 E stay@kingislandescapes.com.au kingislandescapes.com.au

22 PORTER STREET, KALBARRI, WA 6536 T 08 9937 0000 E reservations@kalbarriedge.com.au kalbarriedge.com.au

MACKAY QLD 4740 T 07 4961 9777 E festival@mackay.qld.gov.au themecc.com.au/mackayfestivals

Immerse yourself among the raw beauty of King Island from the comfort of our Luxury four-bedroom retreat. Enjoy the breathtaking views from the red cedar hot tub and glass sauna, with access to your own private beach. Relax and reconnect at Porky Beach Retreat.

Positioned on the Murchison River where it meets the Indian Ocean, Kalbarri Edge Resort offers well-appointed rooms, a fantastic restaurant experience and outdoor activities. Experience rugged cliffs, gorges, sensational beaches, the world-famous Pink Lake, and the stunning spectacle that is Nature’s Window.

Plan your visit to the Mackay region in July for 10 warm North Queensland winter days and nights of visual arts, music, theatre, idea forums, films and creative workshops, all showcasing the beautiful Mackay region. Heading into its 34th year, the 2020 program is packed with vibrant, fun and intriguing events for all ages.

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ALLIANCE MAGAZINE


Regional News

San Diego Zoo vet assists at Taronga Zoo Kristin McCaffree, a San Diego Zoo Safari Park wildlife health technician, has been assisting at Taronga Zoo following the bushfires and drought conditions in Australia. Along with another member of the San Diego Zoo Safari Park staff, she is assisting in Taronga’s endeavor to care for injured Australian wildlife.

According to Frances Hulst, a veterinarian with Taronga Zoo: “It’s been really great to have Kristin here. She is a highly experienced registered veterinary technician, and we are so pleased that San Diego Zoo Global could provide us with the on-the-ground assistance.”

Kristin has cared for a platypus and other animals. This platypus was one of seven brought into the zoo for safety as their habitat became threatened by bushfires. If you would like to donate to Taronga Zoo to assist with wildlife rescue costs, please visit taronga. org.au/savewildlife

May 22–31

Taste of Kakadu

April – September

Kakadu National Park NT Taste of Kakadu is back with a sensational program set to immerse Kakadu National Park visitors in a stimulating journey of the senses. The 2020 program holds an impressive line-up of new experiences, plus festival favourites to celebrate the region’s incredible Indigenous food and culture. For details and bookings, head to kakadu.com.au/taste

Waringarri Art and Culture Tours

Kununurra WA Walk amongst the unique beauty of ancient Kimberley escarpments with Indigenous elders and tour guides. If you can’t make it this year, visit our SHOP and support our award winning artists! www.waringarriarts.com.au/shop APRIL/MAY 2020

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SPECIAL FEATURE

Beautifully

BAT H U R S T

Bathurst and its surrounding villages make the perfect autumn escape. As the leaves turn to rich golden hues and the weather cools down, the region celebrates its cultural heritage, and it’s also harvest season – an ideal time to indulge in local wine and produce. Out & about • The Autumn Colours Program offers visitors a rare opportunity to go behind the scenes and discover the moments, events and characters that make up the story of Bathurst. • The new Bathurst Rail Museum brings the rich social history of the region and its story as a railway town to life, including the largest publicly displayed HO scale model railway in Australia, the largest permanent wooden Brio rail setup in the Southern Hemisphere, and a historic 110-year old CBA 547 train carriage out the front which doubles as a quaint café. • The Bathurst Arts Trail takes place on the first full weekend of each month and offers free entry to all the wonderful studios and galleries in the region. Don’t miss the Bathurst Regional Art Gallery. • Stock up on local produce at the Bathurst Farmer’s Market on the fourth Saturday of each month including Fish River Roasters locally roasted coffee, Renzaglia Wine, gin from Bathurst’s own micro-distillery – Stone Pine, as well as seasonal fruit and vegetables, local honey, jams, fresh flowers and more.

Wine & dine • Forget the crowds and visit one of Bathurst’s quaint wineries. Its diverse landscape, which ranges in elevation from 700 to more than 1000 metres, makes it perfect for producing cool climate wines. Sit on the terrace at

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ALLIANCE MAGAZINE

Vale Creek while you sip on Italian varietals from sangiovese, dolcetto, barbera, and vermentino. Or Renzaglia Wines will be hosting its third annual Harvest Long Lunch on the April 12 and have teamed up with Field to Forest to celebrate all things foraged and fossicked. • Tremain’s Mill has been transformed into a contemporary dining, retail and art precinct. Enjoy craft cocktails and music at The Victoria, espresso at Doppio, or head to Osteria Roma for a traditional taste of Italy.

Lay your head • Alfred on Keppel is a beautifully restored and furnished heritage three-bedroom terrace in the heart of Bathurst. With light-filled high ceilings, a modern interior, exposed brick and floorboard throughout, as well as a gorgeous courtyard, this sophisticated terrace makes the perfect base to explore Keppel Street’s bars, cafés and vintage shopping. • With an unparalleled position on the iconic Wahluu-Mount Panorama race circuit, Rydges Mount Panorama Bathurst is the perfect place for families to unwind and explore the region. All deluxe guestrooms and apartments offer a full kitchen and ensuite with a spa bath. For more information, visit bathurstregion.com.au


Image: Nicola Bailey

SPECIAL FEATURE

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Kids having fun at the BRC Rail Museum; the Benny Bagel (with poached eggs, cardamon mapled speck, asparagus, wilted spinach and hollandaise sauce) and a sweet toast special at The Hub Cafe; Machattie Park; Painted Horse Cafe; Taking a wander through Renzaglia vineyard.

APRIL/MAY 2020

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Entertainment.

Entertainment.

by: sarah hinder & maya franks

podcasts

books

TED Radio Hour

Everything you love about Ted Talks, minus the visuals. Listen to compilations of fascinating talks. Host Guy Raz interviews individuals who give talks to contextualise and explain the complex topics discussed on the show.

Good Boy, Jennifer Finney Boylan

April 2020, Celadon Books, memoir This memoir tells the story of Boylan’s life through the lens of the dogs she’s owned. As a transgender woman, the dogs on her journey have helped her to better understand herself and the world around her.

The Octopus and I, Erin Hortle

April 2020, Allen & Unwin, fiction Set in small-town Tasmania, Hortle’s debut novel follows protagonist Lucy as she recovers from major surgery and comes to terms with her new body through a surprising connection with the local octopuses.

tour

Joel Creasey

March 9–June 5 around the country Following a sold-out successful season in New York, this young talent on the Australian comedy scene returns for an Aussie iteration of his Messy Bitch tour in big-city and regional locations around the country. joelcreasey.com.au

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ALLIANCE MAGAZINE

Anzac Girl, Kate Simpson & Jess Racklyeft

March 2020, Allen & Unwin, children’s This true story of Sister Alice Ross-King, who sailed to war as a nurse in 1914 and became the most decorated woman in Australia, includes extracts from Alice’s actual diaries kept during the war.

theatre

Single Asian Female

April 23–March 9 in Adelaide SA Michelle Law’s hilarious comedy follows the story of a Chinese-Australian family running a restaurant, The Golden Phoenix, on the Sunshine Coast, when the two generations of Wong women meet at a crossroads. statetheatrecompany.com.au

A Plate to Call Home

Seasons 1-4 available Gary Mehigan knows it’s not just about the food – it’s about where it comes from. Just as food producers deliver farm to plate, he delivers the scoop on just how they do it.

Ladies, We Need to Talk

Seasons 1-3 available Host Yumi Stynes talks everything to do with female health and sexuality – without holding back. Look out for new episodes each week on Tuesdays.


SPECIAL FEATURE

Indigenous communities benefit from latest BEL sponsorships Bamaga Enterprises Ltd (BEL), an Indigenous community company, recently announced more than $50,000 worth of sponsorships and scholarships for the Northern Peninsula Area (NPA). The funds will support special education students, medical assistance, university and TAFE studies, and fitness training courses.

The Challenge Games BEL is funding more than $5000 to send five students and three staff members to this year’s Challenge Games in late July. Ralphine Sauer, Head of Special Education at NPA College, said last year was the first time the school participated in the initiative and that the students loved every moment. “The sponsorship will assist with travel and accommodation costs for the Games in Townsville,” said Ralphine. “The students get to participate at their own level and make friends with like-minded and like-ability students.” (Raymond Mooka and Zippora Phineasa with the Challenge Games Trophy, pictured right).

Building community skills through scholarships Congratulations to Yanetta Nadredre and Sylvia Satrick, who will receive $5000 per year for their university studies. Yanetta is undertaking a Bachelor of Business Administration at the University of Technology Sydney. She has an impressive track record in volunteering in the community and has mentored more than 100 women and children in Aboriginal communities. Yanetta wishes to continue her work of empowering Indigenous people. 31-year-old Sylvia is studying a Bachelor of Public Health at Charles Darwin University, and currently works at NPA Family and Community Services. Sylvia will be studying online

while working and raising her three children. “I want to be able to educate our people regarding health issues so everyone can take care of themselves and we can lower mortality rates,” Sylvia says. “This scholarship means I can concentrate more on studying rather than financial support. And when I finish my studies, I can give back to the community.” Additionally, Danielle Atu (pictured right) will receive $1000 to complete her Certificate III in Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Primary Health Care this year. She is studying at the TAFE Queensland Cairns Campus. Like Sylvia, Danielle works at NPA Family and Community Services and wants to support her community. “Here in the NPA, everyone is family and many people get sick. Sometimes access to doctors and nurses isn’t consistent, and we need more of those types of people,” Danielle says.

Keeping the community fit and healthy BEL is sponsoring Celestina Poi Poi and Leandra Newman from Steel Fitness Bamaga to complete a Les Mills Instructor three-day training course. Celestina says the gym wants to offer the community a different approach to fitness. “Our feedback, especially from women, is that they’re interested in Les Mills group exercise classes, so we want to make training as enjoyable as possible.”

BEL will also install air conditioners in the houses of Bamaga community members Rex Adidi and Monica Amey to assist with their medical conditions. The air conditioners will enable the proper operation of Rex’s dialysis machine, while Monica will benefit from a healthier breathing environment. As part of its Socio Support Policy, BEL provides financial support across several categories. The organisation has re-invested more than $2.5 million of its profits in sponsorships, donations and community infrastructure since its establishment in 2002. For more information, visit www.bament.com.au or phone 07 4069 3533. APRIL/MAY 2020

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Winter Getaway

High up in the mountains of NsW, Victoria and Tasmania, these ski resorts are the places to be when the temperature drops and the powder settles. WORDS: Jillian Ramirez

W O N D E R L A N D S This place has so much more to offer than your typical ski resort. Not only can you ski and snowboard, you can try fat biking (offroad snow bikes) and snowtubing, or take it slow and enjoy a scenic helicopter or ski lift tour. Every Thursday in July and August is a Night Show & Fireworks extravaganza, when Falls Creek village comes alive with impressive performances from synchronised skiers and snowboarders. fallscreek.com.au

CH A R L O T T E PASS SNOW R E SORT, NSW

Situated in the heart of the NSW Snowy Mountains, Charlotte Pass is only accessible by oversnow transport. The kid-friendly resort sits at 1765 metres above sea level, making it the nation’s highest resort. Which, of course, means some of the most consistent snowfall, delivering some of the best-quality natural snow around Australia. charlottepass.com.au

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Image: Fabio Olivera

FA L L S CR E E K A L PINE R E SORT, V IC

HO T H A M A L PINE R E SORT, V IC

A four-and-a-half-hour drive from the heart of Melbourne, Hotham rests among the Victorian Alps of the Great Dividing Range. It’s the only ski resort in the Southern Hemisphere where the village is located on top of the mountain. If you’re up for a cool eco-adventure, try the Alpine Nature Experience, where you snowshoe to a secluded spot and enjoy a gourmet meal (cheese fondue!). There’s also the option to stay overnight in a luxury snow dome. mthotham.com.au


Winter Getaway

PE R ISHE R SK I R E SORT, NSW

Image: Perisher

The largest snow resort operation in the Southern Hemisphere has four areas – Perisher Valley, Blue Cow, Smiggin Holes and Guthega – each with its own unique wintery charm. The resort has the highest terrain, the greatest number of lifts, and the most reliable snow in Australia. In Perisher Village, there’s an abundance of cafés, local stores and restaurants. You can grab a quick bite on the snowfields from one of the kiosks located at each of the four mountain bases, or indulge in everything from barbecue to à la carte dining – complete with picturesque views. perisher.com.au

APRIL/MAY 2020

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T HREDBO A L PINE RESORT, NSW

Winter Getaway

This mountain has something for all ages. Beginners will love the purposebuilt area designed to master skills in a safe environment, intermediates will enjoy the longest runs Australia has to offer, and advanced players will get a thrill from on- and off-piste challenges, powder bowls and the natural features of the mountain. Another treat for all ages: you can keep skiing into the evening with flaming flares or glowsticks and end the night with a fireworks show. The resort’s restaurant, Eagles Nest, is Australia’s highest eatery at 1937 metres above sea level. thredbo.com.au

MOUNT BULLER SKI RESORT, VIC

Located just three hours from Melbourne, Mt Buller has three terrain parks, each suitable for different skill levels. In the village there are more than 30 restaurants, cafés and bars, as well as a spa, cinema and fitness centre. Burton Cattleman’s Rail Jam is also held in the village, where Australia’s best snowboarders compete in Australia’s longest-running rail event. mtbuller.com.au

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BE N L OMOND SNOW SPORT S, TA S

MOUN T B AW B AW SK I R E SORT, V IC

This one-stop-shop family-run business offers the basics: skiing, snowboarding and tobogganing. It’s best known for the Ben Lomond Snow Sports Ski School, which is where you want to be if you’re just learning to ski or snowboard. All the group lessons are geared towards total beginners, so don’t be afraid to fall over. skibenlomond.com.au

It takes two-and-a-half hours to drive from Melbourne to Mt Baw Baw, making this the closest ski resort to an international airport. It’s small but mighty, fitting lots of activities into 35 hectares of downhill terrain. The intimate village feel makes it a safe space to ski for the first time or the ideal spot to further hone your skills. mountbawbaw.com.au


Credit: Destination NSW

Discover Griffith - one of Australia’s most liveable country towns, according to the Weekend Australian Magazine. Located in the heart of the NSW Riverina, Griffith is a vibrant regional centre servicing a population of 52,000. Griffith is bursting with life and energy. The main street is dominated by Italian cafÊs serving great coffee, pizza, local wine and house-made gelato. The people are friendly, the boutique shopping is impressive and the wine is divine. Make time to Visit Griffith - a great place to explore, a great place to live.

visitGriffith.com.au


Adventure Travel

Top camping spots around NSW & Qld In Australia we are lucky enough to have a campsite to suit each and every type of camper. here’s a list of some great options to add to your bucket list. WORDS: Maya Franks

Image: Jesse Lindemann/TEQ

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NOAH BEACH CAMPING AREA, CAPE TRIBULATION QLD This camping area just south of Cape Tribulation Village provides a unique and wonderful camping experience. Just 50 metres from the beach, the nature surrounding this campsite provides shelter from the elements. Both functional and beautiful, the rainforest next to the shore provides shade from the sun and protection from the wind. It’s also close to Noah Creek, providing a freshwater ecosystem to explore. parks.des.qld.gov.au

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LAKE LYELL, LITHGOW NSW Just a 2.5-hour drive from Sydney, manmade Lake Lyell awaits your next camping adventure. Here you can fish, water-ski, four-wheel-drive, swim, canoe, kayak, picnic and jet-ski all in one place! When fishing on the lake, look out for rainbow trout, brown trout and Australian bass. lakelyellrecreationpark.com.au

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LITTLE BEACH CAMPGROUND, BOUDDI NATIONAL PARK NSW Camp right by the beach in this small but popular camping area. With both the sea and bush easily accessible from the campsite, there’s no shortage of activities and nature to enjoy. Perhaps take a surf in the morning followed by an afternoon stroll along the Bouddi Coastal Walk. nationalparks.nsw.gov.au

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BOREEN POINT CAMPGROUND, BOREEN POINT QLD This idyllic campground is just far away enough from Noosa to give it a real wilderness feel. It’s a 25-minute drive to town, so you can still enjoy all the area has to offer. There are kayaks and paddleboards available for rent and a general store down the road. noosaholidayparks.com.au

COCKATOO ISLAND WATERFRONT CAMPGROUND, SYDNEY NSW If you’re after a casual weekend getaway to reconnect with nature, Cockatoo Island is the perfect spot. This award-winning campsite is on an island in the centre of Sydney Harbour, just a quick ferry ride from Circular Quay. You can either bring your own tent or rent a camping package from the Harbour Trust. Perfect for new and seasoned campers alike. cockatooisland.gov.au

Image: Vanessa Levis/Destination NSW

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Image: Noosa Everglades/TEQ

Image: The Legendary Pacific Coast/Destination NSW

Adventure Travel

APRIL/MAY 2020

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Image: Dee Kramer/Destination NSW

Adventure Travel

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CARRINGTON FALLS CAMPSITE, BUDDEROO NATIONAL PARK NSW Take in the sights and sounds of nature while camping in the scenic Minnamurra Rainforest. Make sure to check out Carrington Falls and listen to the soothing sound of water rushing past. With walking paths, swimming holes and lookouts all nearby, there’s plenty to explore around this campsite. nationalparks.nsw.gov.au

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BOODEREE NATIONAL PARK, CAVE BEACH CAMPING AREA, JERVIS BAY NSW This spot is perfect for light-weight campers. The national park offers a wide range of activities including swimming, fishing, snorkelling, bushwalking, cycling and boating. Perfect for getting away from the hustle and bustle, Cave Beach has been recognized by Australian Geographic as one of the best secluded beach camping areas in Australia. visitnsw.com

1770 CAMPGROUNDS, 1770 QLD Located in a bay inside Round Hill Headland, this secluded and stunning campground has a white sandy beach and a place to dock boats. While staying at 1770, you can enjoy reef fishing, estuary fishing, mudcrabbing, golfing, paddleboarding, surfing and bushwalking. 1770campingground.com.au

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Image: Destination NSW

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Image: Jewels Lynch Photography

Explore

BROO

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Explore

Once you make the epic trek to this WA resort town and its magical surrounds, you won't struggle to find reasons to return.

ME WORDS: Michelle Hespe | Photos: Tourism Western Australia

WITH A VIEW

Stepping off the plane into a warm Broome evening is akin to being enveloped in the balminess and delicious scents of Asia. This large coastal town of almost 14,000 people – a melting pot of nationalities – is considered the gateway to the Kimberley. Mix this with an abundance of the some of the best seafood in the country, and you have a remote culinary hotspot surrounded by sensational scenery and the kind of adventures that regularly top bucket lists. From walking in dinosaurs’ footprints and whale-watching to riding a camel on a beach at sunset and eyeballing horizontal waterfalls, Broome is nothing short of enchanting. Everyone takes things at a leisurely pace in Broome, including the cabbies. “Isn’t it a beee-ewdy of a night, hey hon?” my driver says as I slip into the back seat. She follows this up with a big smile and a slow shift into gear as she cruises into town. “Now where are you off to, darlin’?” I give her my hotel’s address and lay back into the seat. She turns the radio up and, as fate would have it, the Eagles’ ’Take It Easy’ rolls from the speakers. This town might well be considered a mere stepping stone into the vast, ancient outback, but the visual charm of Broome, defined by the red Pindan soil that meets white sandy beaches before dipping into strikingly bright turquoise waters, make it a treasured destination.

H AI L I N G A H I S T O RY My taxi driver knows her stuff, and after letting me relax, she launches into a quick history lesson: “In the early 1880s, the governor of Western Australia, Sir Frederick Napier Broome, I think, said they were gonna set up a town on the north-west point of Roebuck Bay, and it was to be called Broome.” Sir Frederick Napier Broome did indeed establish Broome in 1883.  APRIL/MAY 2020

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Explore

PREVIOUS PAGE: Aerial view of the Horizontal Falls, Talbot Bay. FROM TOP: Gantheaume Point just after sunrise; Boat tour of the Horizontal Falls.

Image: Horizontal Falls Seaplane Adventures

Yawuru people had been living in the area for more than 40,000 years, but after white settlement, many were killed while others were forced to work as skin divers. Thousands died alongside the Chinese and Japanese pearl divers who flooded in for work. Broome became known as the ‘Queen City of the North’ because between 1889 and 1891 the price of mother-of-pearl shell escalated to incredible heights, and by 1898 Broome was the main cargo port for north Western Australia. World War II hit and the town’s pearling industry came to a grinding halt as men rushed to war and the Japanese population were forced into camps. After four separate air raids Broome was decimated, and it wasn’t until the war ended that residents returned to rebuild their homes and lives. The town rose from the ashes and a new market in cultured pearls began to evolve, changing the face of the industry forever. South Sea Pearls are now recognised as the finest in the world, and they, alongside tourism, fuel the town’s economy – as can be seen downtown, where every second store

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ALLIANCE MAGAZINE

is a pearl jeweller and every other a café or restaurant. “It’s a great town – you’ll love it,” my driver says as I leave her with a hearty wave. “Now go and enjoy yourself, darlin’!”

BEER O’CLOCK The enjoying-myself process kicks off with a wander down to Matso’s Broome Brewery, formerly the Union Bank of Australia, located in a notorious Chinatown red-light district (then, not now). The building was turned into a store run by the Matsumoto family and renamed Matso’s Store. It was later purchased by Lord McAlpine, Broome’s late-20th century patron, who moved it to Hamersley Street, where it sits today. I soon come to realise that Lord McAlpine had something to do with nearly every building and piece of land in town. I arrive at Matso’s to find the place buzzing with ‘barefoot stompin’ groove’, as the band calls it. I drink my mouth-tingling ginger beer and indulge in a delicious plate of cold meat slices, cheese and fresh bread while people dance with abandon, showing off their bare tanned backs and arms. This is winter in Broome.

G E T T I N G H O R I Z O N TAL After a peaceful night’s sleep, I wake early to the sound of a few very loud and happy king parrots, obviously as excited as I am by my upcoming trip across the Kimberley to see what Sir David Attenborough calls “one of the greatest wonders of the natural world” – the Horizontal Falls. As our tour group glides over the Kimberley in a seaplane, there’s another ancient creation to behold with every moment. After an hourlong flight, the plane dips and gracefully glides into a gorge where it lands like an agile seabird beside lightly bobbing pontoons.


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Kitted out in life jackets, we climb aboard a speedboat and position ourselves on thin mounds of seats with a steel bar in front for balance. The boat speeds off at rocket pace into the gorge, heading for our destination. They are called ‘waterfalls’, but this natural phenomenon is actually created by intense tidal currents hurtling at a million litres per second through two narrow gorge inlets as water banks up against one side of the narrow cliff passage, to be repeated again on the turning tide. Our driver has a lot of fun powering us around in circles before taking on the waterfalls at high speed again and again. Sun on my face, all I can do is hold on and yelp in joy as we’re spat so easily in and out of the ancient gorge. After a pontoon-cooked fry-up of bacon and eggs, we climb back into our seaplane and take the coastal route back to Broome, where we’re all delighted to look down upon several whales cavorting in the deep waters, large turtles floating about like happy locals and a couple of scarily big saltwater crocs sunning themselves on the coast.

A N O T H E R D A Y, ANOTHER UTOPIA After waving goodbye to my fellow Horizontal Falls mates, I’m whisked off to Broome’s sister paradise, just over an hour up the highway. Ramada Resort by Wyndham Eco Beach Broome was the brainchild of Broome local Karl Plunkett. He formerly owned a couple of backpacker hostels in Broome, and one day while fishing on Eco Beach with some mates, decided he would build WA’s first eco-beach retreat. In April 2000 Cyclone Rita destroyed the original, more rustic retreat on Eco Beach, and Karl subsequently spent 18 months on an incredibly impressive rebuild. The super-stylish eco-friendly resort consists of 25 luxury villas; 30 safari-style Eco Tents (which Karl designed himself and

FROM LEFT: Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm showroom, Dampier Peninsula; Enjoying a beer at Matso’s Broome Brewery.

now sells worldwide); a main lodge housing a reception area, restaurant, café, infinity pool, souvenir and general store; and a warehouse-style yoga studio overlooking the beach. The retreat is completely selfsustainable, using 240 solar panels across 24 of the villas to store the sun’s energy for evening use. Remaining energy is then passed through a grid and fed into a large shed to be stored in battery format, ready for use wherever power is needed elsewhere on the property. The retreat is virtually empty during the day as everyone is getting into in one of the many activities, such as whale-watching, mud-crabbing, fishing, cliff-top walking or cave exploration. A few people lounge around the pool, basking in the sun like lizards.

WHALE OF A SURPRISE I feel so energised by the past day’s activities, the fresh air and an exquisite dinner of threadfin salmon at the retreat’s restaurant, that I’m up at 4.30

the next morning and running along the beach as though I’m five years old, and can’t wait to find out what’s around the next corner. With ancient rock formations on one side and the silently lapping ocean water on the other, the sun rises and spreads her warmth across the paradise that is Eco Beach. At 10am a group of us take a dinghy out to one of the retreat’s fishing boats, and with our skipper Dave we embark on a two-hour whale-watching trip. At different times we see at least eight whales playing in the ocean and throwing their tails about – then, when we’re least expecting it, a whale reveals the entire top half of its body within three metres of the boat. We all gasp as its mouth and barnacled body rise in a solid grey mountain beside us, before disappearing under the boat. We stand stock-still, cheese and crackers in hand, and after a few seconds, let out a collective sigh, then praise Moby for having the manners to keep swimming and not up-end us into the (apparently) shark-infested waters.  APRIL/MAY 2020

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Image: Garry Norris Photography

Explore

FILLING SOME BIG FOOTPRINTS

FROM LEFT: Aerial view of Gantheaume Point; Dinosaur footprint at Gantheaume Point.

BROOME TIME Back at my first stop, I decide some ‘Broome Time’ is in order, and so after exploring the charming central township and stopping by Sun Pictures, the world’s oldest picture theatre gardens, and taking a stroll along the beguiling flat expanse of Cable Beach, I head to Bali Hai Resort and Spa, which has one of the oldest spas in Broome. The spa has seven treatment rooms, each nestled within an abundance of luscious tropical gardens. After a Balinese Coco Hot Oil Wrap, during which I float around in a warm, perfect place that must surely have been Heaven, I shower in the outdoor bathroom while ambient Balinese music plays softly and the palms rustle quietly. Now that Broome Time has taken a sleepy hold on me, I meander at a happy snail’s pace back to Cable Beach and join hundreds of people watching another gorgeous sunset. As night falls I head out for a drink, and some friendly locals insist that I join them, as they don’t want me sitting alone. We eat some delectable tapas, drink great wine and talk about our lives and various Kimberley adventures.

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One of the men was a pearl diver for 25 years, so he recounts stories of the old days, when the water was so clear he could watch his colleagues ascend at different heights while sitting on another boat, their individual bubbles gently carving out a path above them. My last day here is Sunday, so I stroll into town for the Broome Courthouse Markets. Local produce including food, handmade crafts and clothing is showcased outdoors in a park space, which I cruise around while lapping up the live music and friendly vibe. I pop in for a quick lunch at Zanders at Cable Beach, as I’ve heard so many great things about the food and top position on a grassy knoll above the sand. It doesn’t disappoint. The restaurant has a lovely laidback feel but the food is worthy of a fine dining experience. While thoroughly enjoying the grilled barramundi burrito bowl, I come to understand why so many people come to Broome for seasonal work and decide to stay on. It does get extremely hot from November until March, but the monsoon rains roaring across the beach and through the mangroves must be an incredible sight and experience.

After that quiet breather, I’m picked up in a bus that takes a group of us to the home of Broome Hovercraft Eco Adventure Tours. We board a bright yellow Jetsons-style craft and, after we’re belted in, the hovercraft rises two feet in the air and we slip gracefully down the driveway to the flat sands of Roebuck Bay. We zoom across the bay to our first stop – the site of some famous dinosaur footprints – as the sun makes its languorous descent towards the horizon. Standing below bright red and orange craggy cliffs above the rocky beach of Gantheaume Point, our guide asks us all to stand in the footprints of a juvenile herbivorous dinosaur so that we can get a good visual idea of his steps. As we look at one another standing in the enormous footprints, more than a metre in diameter, we quietly imagine the long-necked creature making its heavy-footed way across the mud flats where its path has remained fossilised for 130 million years. We reboard our Jetsonmobile and cruise out to the mudflats, where I prepare to savour my final sunsetlit view of bountiful Broome. Once outside, our guide flicks open a barbecue table and, with a wellrehearsed flourish, spreads a white tablecloth and presents an array of beautifully prepared nibbles. Everyone cheerily pours their BYO drinks as we stand in the middle of Roebuck Bay, toes warmed by the squishy grey mud. Glasses are raised to one another, for choosing to be in such an incredible place at an incredible time, and to Broome, who, on cue, reveals her much-photographed, spectacular illusion of a staircase ascending from the rippled tidal flats, all the way up to a perfectly golden sinking sun.


Office Products

Working it

Some fabulous products that will turn your office into a bright and cheery space. Compiled by: Maya Franks

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1. artistically driven Having a beautiful workspace is important, and studies prove that having artwork on the walls can boost productivity. Daydream about the beach from your desk with this beautiful print from Olive Et Oriel. Dimensions are 42 centimetres by 59.4 centimetres. $60, oliveetoriel.com

2. tree of knowledge Spruce up any space with this realistic-looking lemon tree. If you’re wanting to add a bright pop of yellow colour to your office while lifting the room with greenery, this little tree packs the perfect punch. $389, templeandwebster.com.au

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3. add some sparkle 4

Why drink still when you can have sparkling whenever you please? Soda Stream allows you to sustainably and cost effectively access sparkling water all the time. With the push of a button, choose from three levels of carbonation and enjoy sparkling water in just seconds. $199, myer.com.au

4. pop of colour Keep your desk colourful. These delightful little boxes are perfect for storing treats, office supplies or anything you can think of. Even if you don’t put anything in them, they simply add a pop of excitement to any workspace. $298, jonathanadler.com APRIL/MAY 2020

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Office Products

5. stand up! The ProPlus™ 36 Varidesk turns any desk into a standing desk. It comes in a two-tier design with an upper display surface and a lower keyboard and mouse deck. The Varidesk is made from best-in-class materials, has a five-year warranty and is shipped fully assembled. The 36-inch model comes in white, black or dark wood. $550, vari.com

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6. Neat & Tidy

7. colour your day

8. PICK ME UP

Keep your files and your business cards tidy with this leather organiser from the artisans at Kundra. These products not only make wonderful additions to any office space, but also make a great gift for hard-to-shop-for co-workers. From $69.95, templeandwebster.com.au

Colorstrology is the perfect coffee table book for your office, combining concepts from astrology, numerology, and colour theory. With a vibrant cover, this book is filled with fun personalised information for every astrology fan who stops by to check it out. $28, amazon.com.au

One of the most innovative portable espresso machines on the market, the Nanopresso brews a high quality espresso, wherever you are. All that’s required is ground coffee and boiling water; the rest is taken care of by the easy-to-use manual pumping system. $91.90, wacaco.com

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Office Products

9. sorted Getting organised is the key to success, and the LifePlanner makes it easy. Keep track of your calls, appointments and meetings in style. Erin Condren offers a wide variety of highly customisable options. From $55, erincondren.com

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10. let there be light

11. something in the air

12. CUT IT OUT

Don’t get left in the dark. This lovely lamp from Temple & Webster makes an aesthetically pleasing addition to any office space. This retro-style light is available in a few different colour schemes, but our absolute favourite design is pictured here. $99, templeandwebster.com.au

Next time someone cooks fish in the microwave, you’ll be prepared. This oil diffuser from Alchemy Produx is both whimsical in its appearance and smells simply amazing. Choose from a range of scents that best fit your tastes. $49, alchemyprodux.com

These top-tier wireless headphones from Bose boast precise noisecancelling technology. The stylish headphones are sturdy, impactresistant and connect via Bluetooth. The best part is that they have 20 hours of battery life. $499.95, bose.com.au APRIL/MAY 2020

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THE PLACE TO FIND REAL AUSTRALIAN STORIES


Office Products

13. light the way Tip Lamp is an example of simple, functional design with careful attention to detail. Offering direct as well as ambient light, the lamp’s adjustable head and arm feature an opal diffuser and dimmer function that alter the volume of light. $479, top3.com.au

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14. bright ideas

15. green and handy

16. creative cuffs

This customisable journal is high quality, inside and out. With a cool artistic hard cover and filled with sheets of lovely, smooth paper, this little notebook was made to hold all your best and brightest ideas. $43, papier.com/au

This bamboo stainless steel travel mug is anything but ordinary. If you want a travel mug that’s eco-friendly, leak-proof, and well made, look no further. Say ‘no’ to single-use cups for good with Ankhtive. $29.95, ankhtive.com.au

These adorable, bespoke sterling silver cufflinks featuring children’s drawings are the perfect gift for a colleauge, or something to add to your own office get-up. They’re also a nice talking point and will bring a smile to many a face. $221.22, giftslessordinary APRIL/MAY 2020

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Office Products

17. get rolling

The Studio Roller is an innovative way to display information in the office or home. A simple, functional wallmounted bracket seamlessly dispenses kraft paper to write ideas and daily tasks. $260, georgeandwilly. com

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18. ALL BOOKED UP Shelves looking a little dull? Give your office a makeover with these modern bookends. Made of semi-precious agate stone, there aren’t many organisational tools that look this good. $150, mattblatt.com.au

19. rAISING THE BAR This bar cart will turn your office into the go-to spot for a post-work drink. It has a sleek-looking

stainless steel finish and a 16-kilogram capacity. $199, templeandwebster.com.au

20. WALK THIS WAY Transform any office walkway into a cosy haven with this warm-toned rug. Complete with a vintage look, this durable and soft rug will provide the perfect mix of colour and boho-chic to make your hallway pop $149, templeandwebster.com.au APRIL/MAY 2020

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wowflowers.com.au

WOW Flowers, created by the Worn Out Wares family is a boutique floral studio that specialises in weddings and events. Located in the heart of Singleton we’re open seven days a week, and by appointment

WOW Flowers. 41-43 George Street Singleton, NSW Ph: (02) 65 721 866 enquiries@wowflowers.com.au Image: Raquelle Loraine Photography

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AUSBIZ NEWS

NOW LEASING NT

Now Leasing NT has been raising the bar in property management in Darwin since opening in November 2015. Joely Sullivan and Jo Griffiths have gone from starting up and running the entire business to now employing a small team, and consider themselves the first choice in property management in Darwin and its surrounding areas. Recently expanding its office space within Darwin Corporate Park and with an ever-growing team, the company’s success shows that even in a challenging market these ladies are improving their business by thinking outside the box and doing things differently. Joely and Jo are regarded as the most well-informed property managers in the Territory, regularly investing in training and technology. If you are looking for reliable property management, visit nowleasingnt.com.au or call today on 08 8984 4404.

Explore everything mining in Mackay The Queensland Mining and Engineering Exhibition (QME) will return to Mackay this July 21–23. QME will feature more than 230 suppliers showcasing leading products and solutions for the mining industry, as well as a free-to-attend seminar series, which will feature industry experts speaking across a number of key themes, including operations and maintenance, health and safety, and workforce and industry outlook. QME is free to attend for those that work in and for the mining industry. Register now at qmeexpo.com.au

Developing Boys into

‘Men for Others’ Saint Ignatius’ College Riverview is a Catholic boys’ school in the Jesuit tradition, located in Lane Cove, Sydney. In Jesuit parlance, “men for others” are those who are committed to justice and understand the value of serving others to help create a better world. Developing such men is a prime objective at Saint Ignatius’ College Riverview. While the learning facilities, sporting opportunities and pursuit of the arts at Riverview are world class, it is our pastoral care that truly sets us apart. Providing care and connection for each individual is at the heart of the College. It is here that our young men develop conscience, compassion and a “faith that does justice”.

Find out more and see if we’re coming to your town as part of our 2020 Boarding Roadshow: www.riverview.nsw.edu.au/boardingroadshow APRIL/MAY 2020

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AUSBIZ NEWS

GUILT-FREE G&T

The new low calorie, lower ABV craft G&Ts from Manly Spirits are all about natural ingredients, sophisticated flavours and Instagram-friendly design. Packaged in bespoke glass with signature Fibonacci patterning on the bottles, these miniature versions of their sibling 700ml bottles stand out from the crowd, thus catering for the more sophisticated drinker who doesn’t compromise on flavour when purchasing RTD beverages. The Pink G&T also has the added benefit of having zero sugar, and low calories – ideal for the health-conscious consumer. “We were finding that people who enjoyed our premium gins at home were having to compromise when it came to bringing drinks to a barbeque, dinner party or picnics,” says Vanessa Wilton, co-founder of Manly Spirits. “If you appreciate high quality, craft gin, why should you have to compromise when you are choosing a nofuss, ready-to-drink option?” Available at all good retailers or online at manlyspirits.com.au

RAISING THE LUXURY BAR

Marsden Hotel Burwood’s has introduced a collection of unique dining experiences, inspired by Europe’s food and drink precincts. The indulgent offerings, which include an artisan patisserie, upmarket restaurant and an awesome rooftop bar has this hotel raising the bar on accommodation for the business or leisure traveller. The hotel’s restaurant, Onyx Grill, boasts a curated menu where meat is the star attraction. The focus is squarely on quality steaks, including grass-fed angus and grain-fed wagyu, as well as in-house dry-aged meats. The kitchen was created to be predominantly powered by wood fire, and has been fitted with a mibrasa grill and charcoal oven, which helps to enhance the natural flavours of the ingredients. The super stylish rooftop Skye Bar boasts a champagne bar, and a delicious bites including oysters, antipasto and charcuterie boards. The sleek rooms and suites (some with generous modern baths) embrace simplistic luxury with a colour palette of cream, black and grey, with striking black marble and gold accents. Don’t head off without enjoying a fresh and flavourful breakfast at the Artisaint café, where a pink onyx communal table makes for a beautiful centrepiece. marsdenhotels.com.au

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SPECIAL PROMOTION

Parkes major projects continue to grow with the expansion of North Parkes Mines, Inland Rail and the Clean TeQ Sunrise Project. With these additional regional projects, Kitson Manufacturing Solutions (KMS) has continued its long list of wins over the past 12 months, going from strength to strength. In terms of growth, KMS recently moved to a larger workshop located on Matthew Street in Parkes to ensure the company is keeping up with the business demands of the marketplace. Managing Director Glenn Kitson says: “In 2005, I walked into this shed on three separate occasions to ask PYBAR for a job. On my first two attempts I was turned away, but persistence does pay off, and after my third attempt I was offered a Fixed Plant Fitter position. “As a teenage boy, I always wanted to work in the mining industry, and 14 years ago I was given that opportunity. With a vision, dedication

and a lot of hard work over the last six years, I have been working towards scaling and growing KMS.” KMS currently employs 12 full-time local employees and upwards of 20 sub-contractors for maintenance works. As a regional-based company, KMS are fortunate to have skilled workers onhand, with many of employees based in Parkes, Forbes and Trundle. In addition, KMS recently employed a local first year Apprentice, allowing the company to educate and guide the future workers of these major projects, as well as employing local farmers that have been impacted by the recent drought with work during this time. KMS’s focus for 2020 has been setting up a dedicated workshop facility to meet the requirements of major projects across NSW, and the company now has the capabilities for steel fabrication of all project sizes. In addition, there’s an onsite workshop mechanical engineer that supports

Image: Kerry Fragar

Kitson Manufacturing Solutions – going from strength to strength

its engineering requirements along with drafting and certification. “With a highly qualified team, who will go above and beyond for our clients, KMS is vison is to become a leading supplier,” says Kitson. For further information on KMS, please get in touch. Email: admin@kitsonsolutions .com.au | Website: kitsonsolutions. com.au | Facebook: @ kitsonmanufacturingsolutions APRIL/MAY 2020

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Making the Right Choice

Interview with the CEO of Choice Hotels Asia-Pac, Trent Fraser Choice Hotels Asia-Pac began in Australia in 2002 with the acquisition of the Flag Motels group, and it is now are a wholly owned subsidiary of the parent company Choice Hotels International. The brands under the Choice Hotels umbrella in Australasia are Ascend Hotel Collection – an upscale, boutique hotel offering, Clarion Hotels – upscale, full service hotels, Quality Hotels – midscale hotels across metro and regional locations with high quality amenities. Comfort Hotels – a mid-scale brand offering a clean, comfortable night’s sleep in predominantly regional locations with additional amenities such as breakfast restaurants. Econo Lodge is the economy option for a great night’s sleep while on the road for work or travel.

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With a network of more than 300 hotels in the Asia-Pac region, and more than 7,000 hotels internationally, Choice Hotels is wherever you need to be. What advantages does Choice Hotels offer for travelling professionals? In addition to our significant regional and global footprint, Choice Hotels also offers a global loyalty program, Choice Privileges. The program has over 43 million members globally and offers guests the ability to earn points on every stay, and use those points to redeem free nights in Choice hotels across the world. Alternatively, Choice Privileges members in Australia and New Zealand have the option to convert their points to either Qantas Frequent Flyer points, Velocity


SPECIAL PROMOTION

Points, or Air Points with Air New Zealand. Choice Privileges members also enjoy perks such as free parking, free, WiFi, free late checkout, access to exclusive promotions and discounts – including 5% off the best available rate on choicehotels.com. Membership is free, and points do not expire. Tell us about the growth of the Ascend Hotel Collection? We're particularly proud of the growth of our upscale Ascend Hotel Collection brand, which guests can now find in every mainland capital city in Australia, and it is continuing to expand across New Zealand. In the last twelve months we have welcomed number of new hotels to this collection across the region, including the CH Boutique Hotel, located in central Tamworth, which offers premium hotel accommodation just minutes away from the major, iconic attractions and popular restaurants of this regional hub. The latest hotels to join the Ascend Hotel Collection in Melbourne include The Alto Hotel on Bourke, Ascend Hotel Collection, a boutique property, housed in the heritage listed former Australian Railway Union building which was built in 1914. Alto Hotel on Bourke is the first carbon neutral hotel in Australia and hotel staff have a strong focus on providing friendly guest service in a warm, welcoming environment and implementing environmental initiatives throughout the hotel in an effort to reduce environmental impact. Two recent additions in New Zealand include The Classic Villa in Christchurch, and The Honest Lawyer in Nelson. The breathtaking Italianstyle historic hotel, The Classic Villa is conveniently located in central Christchurch, boasts multiple awards including winning TripAdvisor’s Certificate of Excellence consecutively from 2011 – 2018. The Honest Lawyer, located on the Monaco Peninsula

in Nelson, is an impressive ‘Olde Worlde’ English-style country pub on the waterfront. The hotel features picturesque grounds and views overlooking the stunning Waimea Estuary and mountains. The Domi Serviced Apartments, Ascend Hotel Collection, is a brand new, upscale apartment complex, next door to the recently redeveloped "The Glen" shopping centre. The property is ideally located near shopping precincts, business hubs, as well as Monash & Deakin universities What new initiatives and projects are on the horizon for Choice Hotels? Choice Hotels Asia-Pac continues to remain focused on expanding our local and global footprint. Recent

and upcoming openings across the region include Quality Apartments Dandenong; Quality Suites Willow on Square, Palmerston North, New Zealand; Quality Inn Ashby House, Tamworth; Quality Hotel Sunshine Haberfield, Sydney; Quality Inn O’Connell, North Adelaide; Quality Hotel Carlton and the Comfort Inn City Centre, Armidale. We’ve also opened Econo Lodge in Lilydale. And the Econo Lodge Border Gateway in Wodonga Choice Hotels International has been offering great accommodation experiences across the globe since the 1930s, and is one of the largest, most successful accommodation franchisors in the world, with more than 7,000 hotels in more than 40 countries. APRIL/MAY 2020

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AGRIBUSINESS: LIVESTOCK

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The stock auctioneer at the local saleyards is synonymous with the bush. But with smaller stockyards consolidating into larger centres, plus a growing trend towards internet auctions, are their days numbered? Words: Darren Baguley

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Image: blue cinema

IS THE FUTURE OF LIVESTOCK MARKETS ONLINE?


AGRIBUSINESS: LIVESTOCK

Few scenes are more evocative of the Australian bush than a saleyard full of livestock and a crowd of willing buyers – just ask any politician seeking to improve their image in the eyes of country voters. But just as rural Australia has been changing, so has the way we trade rural produce. Blockchain is quietly revolutionising grain sales, internet shopping is changing the face of retail, and online developments are changing the way we sell livestock. There are several sites available for this, but the most successful is AuctionsPlus. It is certainly the business with the longest heritage, having started in 1986 as a project of the Australian Meat and Livestock Corporation (AMLC), now Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA). According to AuctionsPlus CEO Angus Street, both organisations had the vision of seeing livestock traded electronically and were far ahead of their time. “A lot of people see us as a startup, but even though we’ve seen exponential growth recently, we’ve been around 32 years. The first sale took place in 1987 and it took two kilometres of telecoms and a generator for the fax machines. When we did get into the Internet era, we had to deal with slow speeds from dial-up, data black spots and creating technology that simply didn’t exist at the time.” In its modern form, Street says AuctionsPlus is “like eBay for cattle and sheep with a twist”. Livestock are assessed on-farm by accredited, rigorously trained assessors who undergo regular and random audits to ensure assessment is uniform, consistent and meeting the expectations of both buyer and seller. Sellers pay $7 a head for cattle and 90c a head for sheep. And, just like eBay, stock can be relisted for free if they don’t sell. A buyer has 48 hours from delivery to raise any issues regarding assessment, animal condition

and so on. Street explains, “We have a dedicated integrity unit that monitors the platform, user management and dispute resolution.” As well as one-off stud sales, AuctionsPlus has two auctions weekly – Tuesday and Thursday Sheep and Friday Cattle – which attract 467 attendees, on average. The company has created a national marketplace that stretches from outback Queensland through New South Wales to Victoria and South Australia. According to Street, the company is “probably the number-one provider of interface stud sales, and facilitates the sale of $870 million livestock annually.” Alongside the growing success of online livestock sales, the other major trend is consolidation of country town

and city saleyards into larger regional groupings; for example, the NSW Central Tableland Livestock Exchange (CTLX) amalgamated Bathurst, Blayney and Orange saleyards. According to Garry Edwards, Managing Director of AAM Investment Group, the manager and operator of the Regional Livestock Exchange (RLX) portfolio, there are several drivers behind the move to consolidation. “It’s a combination of factors around cost, freight and efficiency,” he says. “If there’s a greater number of buyers, there’s more competition, which results in higher prices for sellers in general. It’s also easier for large buyers such as processors to fill a truck in one transaction at a large centre, and for buyers the cost of labour and 

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Just as rural Australia has been changing, so has the way that we trade rural produce.

APRIL/MAY 2020

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AGRIBUSINESS: LIVESTOCK

FAST FACTS • The Australian cattle herd was 26.2 million head as at 30 June 2017, and the Australian sheep flock was 72.1 million head (ABS Agricultural Commodities 2016-17). • In 2017, adult cattle slaughter totalled 7.2 million head, down 2 per cent year-on-year. Australia exported 69 per cent of total beef and veal production (DAWR, ABS). • In 2017, lamb slaughter totalled 22.4 million head, down 2 per cent year-on-year. Sheep slaughter totalled 7.5 million head, an increase of 8 per cent (ABS).

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transport is the same to attend a sale no matter how many animals acquired. “For sellers, their stock is under a roof and on a soft floor, which leads to improved environmental and animal health outcomes. For example, weight loss at the new facilities has been reduced by 2 per cent. If you’ve got a 500 kilogram animal, less 2 per cent is 10 kilograms, and it very quickly adds up if you’re selling 20, 50, 100 or more animals.” Edwards also argues that, unlike local government which can struggle to justify spending ratepayers’ money on a facility that is used sometimes only once a month, companies such as RLX can afford to be more expansive.

“Our investors are super funds, and they take a long-term view. So with CTLX, it was designed to be a 20- to 30-year project, and we were able to build something quite modern and depreciate it over a long time.” Perhaps not surprisingly, Edwards is sanguine regarding the impact of online auctions: “The online platforms have been around for nearly 30 years. In recent years they have got more publicity, but they still only handle 4-5 per cent of transactions. Australiawide, 62 per cent of livestock goes through physical facilities. “The advantage physical facilities have is high clearance rate – 99 per cent of animals sell because the physical 


David Dare Parker P05381.037

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AGRIBUSINESS: LIVESTOCK

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Advances in technology and the increased emphasis on animal welfare and ethics will see the business grow exponentially.

environment drives excitement. We use online systems to stream out to people who may not want or need to attend in person, so people can increasingly get the best of both worlds.” One thing both Street and Edwards agree on is that traditional saleyards will still be around in 50 years. Street argues that online has definite advantages, such as “no freight charges, no expensive yard fees, no slippage in terms of weight and just generally better outcomes in terms of animal welfare because the animal stays in the paddock until it’s sold. In addition, as a seller you’re in control, you shift from price-taker to price-maker. “[Nevertheless, there is] always going to be a need for physical saleyards. However, generational changes, advances in technology and the increased emphasis on animal welfare and ethics will see the business grow exponentially.” Edwards says that volume will be key: “We’ll see more amalgamations, whether that’s driven by councils or private investment. The number of animals being sold hasn’t changed much in 25 years, so it all comes down to the dispersion. There’s a definite link between cost efficiency and volume, and the other thing about a large facility is that it’s a very transparent marketplace with everything from feed lot buyers to restockers.” APRIL/MAY 2020

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Tiny Surveyor Pre-Marking Robot Mark lines from the comfort of your car! Tiny Surveyor is a robotic pre-marker tool that will save you time, increase safety and enable you to mark out road lines automatically. With the ability to interface to any GNSS or total station for precise height measurements, the Tiny Surveyor is a versatile and reliable tool that works for eight hours on a single charge. Key benefits: • Up to 10 times faster than marking out on foot • Increase safety by following the robot from a car • Reliable, repeatable 2-3cm accuracy • Works as hard as you do with 8 hour battery • Versatile to accommodate different spray can sizes • Compact, portable design makes for easy transportation • Use with your existing GNSS and optical survey equipment • Works with a variety of standard file formats Visit our website to register for a demo roadshow near you in 2020! Get in touch today:

1300 867 266 info@positionpartners.com.au www.positionpartners.com.au Australia • New Zealand • SE Asia


SPECIAL PROMOTION

Robot helps get Brisbane’s new runway ready ahead of schedule Brisbane Airport’s new parallel runway project is almost complete and set to become operational in July this year. Putting the final touches on the $1.1 billion infrastructure project involves marking out the runway line work so that pilots and other airport personnel can taxi on and off safely. With more than 50 kilometres of lines to mark out, the contractors predicted a 5–6 week timeframe because traditionally line marking is labourintensive work and involves surveyors walking along the design and marking points at intervals along the way. With the help of an innovative robot called Tiny Surveyor, distributed and supported in Australia by Position Partners, the team was able to save at least four weeks of work as the robot completed all the pre-marking in a fiveday period. Using an on-board, high precision GPS unit and a tablet for the operator to control the system, Tiny Surveyor automatically lays out a digital design quickly and accurately, to save time and increase safety. “We look at it from an overall health and safety aspect and that’s what technology is about: making jobs and infrastructure projects safer and more efficient,” said Paul Coughlan, Head of Infrastructure Development and Project Director New Parallel Runway, Brisbane Airport Corporation. “Productivity, speed and accuracy

are the three main benefits of using Tiny Surveyor on a project like this,” explained Karl O’Toole, Geospatial Applications Specialist at Position Partners. Tiny Surveyor is ideal for other line marking applications such as roads, sporting grounds, fencing and car parks. It can be used with either GNSS or total station positioning to give accurate results. For more information on renting, purchasing or getting a demo, contact Position Partners on 1300 867 266 or visit positionpartners.com.au APRIL/MAY 2020

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MINING: PROXIMITY DETECTION

DON’T STAND SO CLOSE TO ME

Proximity detection is the new technological frontier when it comes to preventing death and injury on mine sites. Words: Darren Baguley

The majority of operators are eager to improve their safety as long as the technology is intuitive, simple to use and non-obstructive.

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MINING: PROXIMITY DETECTION

For many years, a mine was the most dangerous workplace in Australia. But a relentless focus on safety has seen mining drop two places to Australia’s third-most dangerous industry. According to Safe Work Australia’s Key WHS statistics Australia 2019, mining is now behind Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing and Transport, Postal and Warehousing (with a rate of 3.7 fatalities per 100,000 workers). While mining accidents such as the fatality at the Henty Gold Mine in Tasmania earlier this year grab headlines, miners are more likely to be injured or killed in accidents such as vehicle collisions, being hit by moving objects, being trapped between stationary and moving objects, and being trapped by moving machinery.

In reaction to the prevalence of such injuries, the Australian Mining Equipment, Technology and Services (METS) has responded with a range of innovative proximity detection (PD) and collision avoidance (CA) technologies in an effort to reduce – and potentially eliminate – these hazards. While some commentators have lumped both technologies in together, Hexagon’s MineProtect global director Sean Perry stresses that PD and CA are two very different technologies. “Object detection or PD is using radar and other sensor technology to detect the presence of physical objects and people around the vehicle, and to detect equipment and people. “CA is predicting paths or vectors of where objects will be in the future

– we’re using technology that has come from the aerospace industry – and it’s often visualised as a red carpet rolling out in front of equipment. The faster you go the longer the carpet has to be.” Currently PD and CA technologies are divided into three different levels, which were determined by the Earth Moving Equipment Safety Round Table (EMESRT), a global initiative involving major mining companies which was established in 2006. Since its formation, EMESRT has established nine levels of Incident Preventative Controls, but it is levels 7 (Operator Awareness), 8 (Advisory Controls) and 9 (Intervention Controls) that are the most relevant. Level 7 provides a form of  APRIL/MAY 2020

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MINING: PROXIMITY DETECTION

situational awareness that helps machine operators see their entire surroundings while operating; Level 8 provides operators with audible and visual alarms to alert them to potential dangers; and Level 9 is a system that is able to detect potential hazards, provides warning, and as a last resort can take action to prevent a collision. There are a number of Level 7 systems on the market, fewer Level 8 and no true Level 9 systems currently available. According to Newtrax’s regional vice-president of APAC, Simon Waghorn, systems vary considerably between vendors, and the application and type of mining. “A PD system deployed on the surface in an opencut mine will typically use GPS, but in an underground environment GPS is not available and different technology is used,” he explains.

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“Newtrax specialises in underground applications, and we use a system of multiple radio frequency tags attached to people, vehicles and fixed assets to accurately determine where risks are apparent between 10 metres and 100 metres, and talk to each other to effectively form a peer-to-peer network independent of Wi-Fi, 4G or any other form of network.” By contrast, Hexagon’s Perry says his company “also uses tags for individuals, while vehicles use radars – long range 50-plus metres, short range 3-5 metres, and cameras for less than three metres. The Hexagon system is also network-independent, communicating using vehicle-tovehicle ultrawide band. There are also cameras, and if the system detects an object it will automatically prioritise that camera view. The system

doesn’t use Wi-Fi or 4G, it uses radio and GPS, but if customers want the system to report back to base there needs to be some sort of public or private network available.” While PD and CA systems promise much, particularly in the future as Level 8 and Level 9 systems become more available, there are still several challenges when it comes to deployment and implementation. According to Waghorn, “There are several challenges from both a technological and a human perspective. Mines are an extremely harsh environment. For example machines smash into the sides of tunnels and systems need to be robust enough to cope with that. Geologically there are huge variations from mine to mine and areas within a mine, so the technology needs to be able to cope with considerable variation. “The performance of the system needs to be consistently accurate, as false positives can lead to the operator ignoring the technology. Nevertheless, the majority of operators are eager to improve their safety, and as long as the technology is intuitive, simple to use and non-obstructive, they’ll use it.” Perry agrees that acceptance onsite is a challenge, adding that a lot of sites aren’t making use of the data the systems are producing. “These systems are creating gigabytes and gigabytes of data, and it’s important for companies to try to get some value out of that data,” he says. “A mine might record x-number of incidents avoided, but it’s critical that management receives feedback from that data in a way that it can be used to resolve issues. For example, data may show there is a haul road intersection that has a lot of traffic with heavy and light vehicles. That’s a risk. Is there a way to minimise that risk?” 


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MINING: PROXIMITY DETECTION

FAST FACTS • There were nine fatalities in the mining industry in 2019. • There is a wide range of PD technologies available, including radar, RFID, GPS, ultrawideband and electromagnetic.

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While there is an argument that PD and CA systems may become redundant in the not-so-distant future, Waghorn argues, “The reality of a human-free mine in the next 20 years is almost inconceivable. There will probably always be a mix of autonomous equipment and humans within the underground workings because humans are needed to lay the infrastructure. Running fibre for networks, building underground 4G networks and installing ventilation for diesel vehicles – these will need to be done by humans, so as autonomous equipment becomes more prevalent the need for humans in some parts of the mine will actually increase.” Given the nature of the mining environment, with factors such as poor visibility, physical barriers and the heavy presence of mobile machinery of all types, the use of PD and CA systems is only going to increase as the technology becomes more capable and cost-effective.




PROPERTYBIZ

HOLIDAY HOMES: CASH COWS OR MONEY PITS? The pros and cons of owning a holiday home are far-reaching, but with solid homework and the right approach, Australians are reaping the rewards of short-term rentals. Words: Kirsten Craze

APRIL/MAY 2020

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HOME TO OVER 75 STORES

87 BAYLIS STREET, WAGGA WAGGA NSW 2650 | T: 026931 7277

wagga-marketplace

@wagga.marketplace

WAGGA M ARKE TP L AC E .C OM


PROPERTYBIZ

Thanks to the sharing economy and property portals such as Airbnb, Stayz and Booking.com, an increasing number of short-term rentals are earning more than the average office worker does in a year as Aussies seek out holiday ’homes’ over hotel rooms. While the exact number of so-called holiday homes is hard to determine (some otherwise primary properties only play the part seasonally), the last census noted that the Central Coast and Shoalhaven areas, both within close proximity to Sydney, were home to the largest concentration. Matt Knight, buyer’s agent and director of Precium Property, operates across the Shoalhaven area. He says that while a popular rental can rake in thousands of dollars a night in high season, as well as brownie points with friends and family, they can also cost owners a pretty penny. “If you don’t build the rental income, it will end up costing you money each year. Bad management, or a home being overused by family, can result in $10,000 to $30,000 a year in negative cashflow,” he explains. Other common pitfalls of owning a holiday home include owners not taking into account extended vacancies between peak seasons and the ongoing costs of maintaining the asset. “Management fees, cleaning, council rates, maintenance and insurance are significant ongoing costs to factor in. Then there’s providing linen and keeping the gardens well kept, which are also important and cost money. The best properties are expensive for a reason,” Knight says, adding that buyers should also check in with their accountant to determine the ultimate cost of income and capital gains taxes. Today’s holiday homes are well-oiled machines, and while the motivation behind buying one is often about sun and fun, Christian Sergiacomi of Pacifico Property in Byron Bay says the dollar is still a major driver. “I’ve had clients who never needed to rent their homes out. It’s amazing though, even if they don’t need to, even if they have all the capacity in the world, there’s a reason they’ve made it to that point – because they like the dollar. Some have asked, ‘How much did you say that house next to me was?’ When I tell them they can get $35,000 a week, they suddenly change their tune!”

However, Gold Coast buyer’s agent Tony Coughran of Simply GC says it’s not just about money. “I had a client living on the land who bought because they wanted a beach holiday home for their family to use in the holiday periods, and rent out in the downtime,” he says. “So they’re not banking on an absolute return, but they’re picking up a lifestyle return. It’s about weighing up the lifestyle benefits. Like any investment, if you want to spend $60,000 on a pool it might only add $45,000 in value to your home, but you make up the balance in laughs, good time and memories.” 

IMAGES: PACIFICO PROPERTY IN BYRON BAY, NSW. APRIL/MAY 2020

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PROPERTYBIZ

TREAT IT LIKE A BUSINESS

DO YOUR HOMEWORK

While fun, holiday homes offer a taxable income stream, so handle them like a pro. “Short-term rentals are like long-term investments, but they do require a little more focus, similar to owning a small side business. If you want a purely passive investment, this probably isn’t it,” Knight explains. “Treat it like a business and profit from the peak season. Don’t give in to your cousin who suddenly becomes best buddies and wants to stay the week of Christmas – and don’t take up all the peak periods yourself. The more you treat it like an investment in the early years, the better the financial rewards and the more freedom you will have later on.” Sergiacomi says another good move for holiday rentals is a stylish backyard studio: “Using them for Airbnb is a brilliant business model because they’re rentable all year, as it’s mostly couples staying in them and they’re not confined to school holidays. Where it’s a big wedding venue, like Byron Bay, every guest needs somewhere to stay, and they’re not usually having big parties at your place.”

If it looks too good to be true, Coughran says, it just might be. “Interstate buyers need to establish what holidaymakers really want in a location. Consider the level of the unit, the aspect and its size. It can make a big difference if you know what you’re doing,” he explains. “A lot of interstaters are paying an unnecessary premium and the selling agents love it. Some of them are buying properties that are B- and C-grade, not A-grade. Get your money going further, otherwise you’ll be eating into your capital growth.” Other things to research, particularly when buying an apartment with amenities, include body corporate acceptance of short-term rentals, whether the sinking fund covers beachside hiccups such as concrete cancer, and just how pricey the strata fees are.

IMAGES: HOTELESQUE HOLIDAY HOMES.

CONSIDER A NICHE People want a holiday experience to remember, and it can start with the accommodation. "Australian tourists are happy with ‘quirky’ 

“Treat it like a business and profit from the peak season.”

APRIL/MAY 2020

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and will tolerate older homes as long as they are clean, well decorated and fun,” Knight says. Then there are the successful listings with owners who think outside the square by offering things such as pet-friendly accomodation, themed decor, backyard glamping or eco-living. But, in a mainstream destination, Coughran says it’s even more important to stand out. “Buyers should be looking at the fundamentals of the property (is it going to increase in value?), but also make sure it has a significant point of difference,” he explains. “Draw people to rent your property as opposed to the dime-a-dozen homes on offer.”

PRESENTATION IS KEY A picture tells a thousand words when it comes to booking a holiday, so how you look online and what you can offer is vital, according to Monique Eyles and Steve Keir of Hotelesque, a luxury concierge service for high-end short-term rentals. “Presentation is key, with many owners setting up their holiday homes more like a hotel, so it’s best to pay attention to styling,” Eyles says. “Remove unnecessary items, as the modern traveller is far more discerning; they don’t like a massive amount of owner belongings. Use storage options in the home, or lock off a room for your personal items. “Also make sure everything is working perfectly and create a guide of how to operate things in the home.”

HIRE THE HELP

Images: A. Wogas

“Many owners start out looking after their holiday homes but realise it can be a lot of work, and sometimes they’re not located close enough to easily support it when things go wrong,” Eyles says. “Being on call for broken appliances is not what owners dream of.” Keir adds that being on call for a last-minute booking request or late-night call for help just doesn’t suit time-poor people. “We’ve found one person’s ‘clean and perfect’ is not always up to someone else’s standards. At Hotelesque we have been honing our cleaning skills for more than 5000 guest stays – that gives us certainty that the guest will not be disappointed. We call that Hotelessence,” he says.

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AGRIBUISNESS: NUTS

NUT JOBS

Meet the farmers who work for peanuts… well, pistachios, walnuts and hazelnuts anyway. Words: Ian Lloyd Neubauer

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AGRIBUISNESS: NUTS

Rising input costs. Price gouging by supermarkets. Vegan protestors and the worst drought in living memory. Farmers in Australia have never had it so tough, with more than one in four saying they are likely to exit the sector, according to the University of Canberra’s latest Regional Wellbeing Survey. Vignerons topped the list, followed by fruit, vegetable and rice growers. But in any market, there are winners and losers. And in this case, the winners are totally nuts. Since 2011, the annual farm gate value of our nut industry has nearly quadrupled to $1.3 billion, according to the Australian Nut Industry Council, and it’s showing no signs of slowing down. By 2030, it’s projected to hit $3 billion. “The whole industry is booming and the reason is pretty straightforward – the plant-based food trend,” says Jolyon Burnett, CEO of the Australian Macadamia Society. “Whether it’s paleo, gluten-free or vegan, nuts pretty much tick every box, and the health benefits of eating nuts are getting better documented all the time. Ten years ago, 70 per cent of Australian GPs said they didn’t consider nuts to be part of a healthy diet because they made you fat. Today, that figure has flipped on its head and 70 per cent of GPs recommend nuts as part of a healthy diet.” So is growing nuts commercially a walk in the park? To find out, AusBiz speaks with three farmers growing three different nuts in three different states.

SOUTH AUSTRALIAN PISTACHIOS “I have a great deal of sympathy for any farmer doing it tough, because us nut farmers are growing something the whole world wants to eat. We can’t keep up with supply,” says Chris Joyce, Director of Nut Producers Australia in South Australia’s Riverland region, 

DID YOU KNOW? • People who eat nuts every day reduce their mortality by 20 per cent, according to the Harvard Medical School. • Peanuts are actually legumes, not nuts. They can be eaten safely by expectant mothers.

APRIL/MAY 2020

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AGRIBUISNESS: NUTS

“If you look at the prices of other nutritious health foods, walnuts are more affordable.”

the country’s biggest pistachio grower. But the cost of establishing a nut farm is a major disincentive, Joyce explains. “Pistachio trees need six years to mature, which means you need deep pockets and to find a way to feed your family for at least five years. In the sixth year, you just cover your costs.” Birds – and figuring out how to scare them away – pose another challenge for nut farmers. “There are a variety of scaring techniques: guns, cannons, sound recordings; the big orchards use light aircraft,” Joyce says. “At a minimum, you need one person working four hours a day to protect 20 to 30 hectares of nut trees. That means you can’t grow nuts commercially on a hobby farm because the cost of scaring birds makes the whole thing unfeasible.” There are currently about 1000 hectares of pistachio trees planted in Australia and another 1200 hectares of immature trees in the ground – with all additional output slated for China. “Right now about 45 per cent of

all Australian pistachios go to China, and that’s a result of two things,” Joyce says. “The hard work done by our industry to have all tariffs for our nuts abolished, and Trump’s trade war. China has slapped tariffs of 40 to 50 per cent on nuts from the US, which is our main competitor. So, you can guess who’s become China’s favourite origin for nuts.”

VICTORIAN WALNUTS Philip Farnell didn’t do much research before he bought Wellwood Wallace, a 60-hectare walnut farm near the Victorian city of Ballarat, in 2014. “I just fell in love with the place,” he says. Fortunately for Farnell, the gambit paid off. As one of only two Australian Certified Organic walnut growers in the country, his produce sells for four or five

times the price of regular walnuts – and will continue to track north. “If you look at the prices of other nutritious health foods, walnuts are more affordable given their high concentrations of the vitamins omega-3 and omega-6,” he says. “Comparatively speaking, walnuts are still too cheap.” In this robust market, one would think Farnell is laughing all the way to the bank. But that’s not the case, he explains: “Walnut trees are very thirsty. The cost of water today is about $850 per megalitre and climbing. It’s a major drawback, as are equipment costs. “You need very dedicated machinery for shaking and harvesting trees that can’t be used for any other crop. We’re also about to invest $375,000 in a computerised irrigation system that reads moisture levels in the soil. It’s a  APRIL/MAY 2020

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AGRIBUISNESS: NUTS

huge amount of money but it’ll save me a huge amount of time.” Farnell’s advice for anyone thinking about investing in a walnut farm? “You need to do your research and not jump into it like I did,” he says. “I wish I’d known more about what a big investment it would be and that the returns, even on an existing farm, would be spread over 20 years. I don’t regret buying – it’s a beautiful lifestyle – but I’ve had to forget about early retirement.”

TASMANIAN HAZELNUTS Australian hazelnuts are so much fresher and tastier than the imported varietals sold in supermarkets that most growers have never seriously contemplated exporting. “The market is booming now that hazelnuts are seen as an alternative protein source that’s both cheaper and healthier than meat,” says Carol Bracken of Tamar Valley Hazelnuts, a farm in north-east Tasmania with 5000 trees. “So we don’t have to accept global prices.” But will the bottom drop out of the domestic market when the million hazelnut trees planted by confectionery company Ferrero Australia in the Riverina region of NSW begin bearing fruit this year?

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Bracken thinks not: “Ferrero won’t be selling their hazelnuts in Australia. They will crack them open here and ship them overseas to their processing plants, then ship some of the hazelnut meal back to their Nutella factory in Lithgow. It’s complicated, you see.” Tamar Valley Hazelnuts sell through their virtual and online farm gate store, and to retailers in Tasmania and Victoria. Business has been good – but they have grown tired of the work and are looking for an exit. “We’ve invested quite a lot to build it up to a successful business,” Bracken says, “but the property needs more investment in processing, more irrigation and more trees. We’ve been at it for 10 years and are ready for a change. So if you’re interested, let me know – we’re putting it up for sale.”


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BUSINESS: GYMS

SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST A fresh look at the front line of the gym industry, to see how it’s working out. Words: Ian Lloyd Neubauer

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In 1847, circus strongman Hippolyte Triat opened the world’s first commercial gym in Paris – a vast dome of cast iron and glass filled with dumbbells and barbells, where the wealthy exercised for exercise’s sake. As bizarre as it was, the concept caught on. Today there are an estimated 200,000 gyms around the world, including almost 3500 in Australia. And with so much focus on healthy living, 200 new gyms are slated to open in Australia every year, according to an IBISWorld industry report. But growth in the number of new memberships in Australia isn’t keeping up with the number of new gyms. “At the moment we have around 20 per cent of Australians with gym memberships, 6 per cent actually go to a gym regularly, and that leaves 80 per cent of the population doing whatever,” says Barrie Elvish, CEO of peak industry body Fitness Australia. “So we are not targeting those people.” Justin Tamsett of Active Management, a consultant in the fitness industry, puts it like this: “As an industry, we’ve helped the fit get fitter and helped the fat 

APRIL/MAY 2020

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BUSINESS: GYMS

Named after the length of its classes, F45 has taken the fitness industry by storm. There are more than 500 franchises in Australia and 1300 more around the world. get more embarrassed to get fit. So how do we decrease the intimidation factor of gyms to welcome people in?” The answer, market research dictates, is a new breed of gym that incorporates technology, sports science and innovative customer service models to attract new members and future-proof profit. Here are three gyms setting the pace.

THE 45-MINUTE GYM With 2700 different exercises used to create challenging workouts that change every day, F45 was ahead of its time when former equities trader Rob Deutsch opened the first outlet in Sydney in 2011. It ticks off more than half of the Top 12 Fitness Trends for 2020 identified by Fitness Australia, including ‘functional’ training that mimics everyday movement, bodyweight training, high-intensity interval training and small group classes led by registered professionals. Named after the length of its classes, the brand has taken the fitness industry by storm. There are now more than 500 F45 franchises in Australia, another 1300 more around the world, and plans to open as many as 10,000 new venues in the US alone. “The reason they grew so fast was probably the low barrier to entry compared with other franchises,” says Tamsett, referring to F45’s simple equipment – free weights, pull-up bars, kettlebells and the like – and annual turnover of $400,000 per studio. “Their timing was also perfect because they came in at the front end

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of the influencer marketing trend.” Last year, actor and fitness icon Mark Wahlberg bought an undisclosed stake in the company. At the time, he said, “I’m a fitness fanatic and I fell in love with F45 after I walked into a gym and saw people from all walks of life, all levels of fitness, working out together.” And in January, Bloomberg reported F45 had taken steps to list on the New York Stock Exchange. F45 declined to comment, but if Deutsch’s previous statements are anything to go by, it’s a done deal. “We’re the fastest-ever franchise rollout in Australia and we believe in the world,” he said.

THE NO-THRILLS GYM Fitness and Lifestyle Group, the company behind Fitness First, Goodlife Health Clubs and Jetts Fitness, is the largest player in the sector, with almost 30 per cent of industry revenue – a billion dollars per year.

The second biggest player, with 15 per cent of industry revenue and 520 outlets, is Anytime Fitness. Established in the US in 2002, the company revolutionised the fitness industry with self-service gyms that have no full-time staff – only casual cleaners and personal trainers who are available on demand. Bored receptionists have also been taken out of the equation. Instead, members let themselves in – any time of the day or night – with keycards. The no-thrills model has made it possible for Anytime Fitness to open gyms in country towns like Mount Isa and Narrabri on the North West Slopes of NSW, where people are 16 per cent more likely to be sedentary than city-dwellers, according to the National Rural Health Alliance. “Our mission is to ‘Improve the self-esteem of the world,’” says Anytime Fitness CEO and Co-founder


BUSINESS: GYMS

Chuck Runyon. “It may sound like an audacious goal but we’re very serious about it. We’ll soon have 4000 gyms open in more than 30 countries. Each of those gyms supports a small community of like-minded individuals who are determined to enjoy healthier, happier lifestyles.” Anytime Fitness has mastered the art of acquiring new members. Now it’s working on mastering the art of retaining them. “We built the franchise by focusing on convenience, affordability and a friendly, supportive atmosphere. That’ll never change,” Runyon says. “But we’ve sustained our growth by expanding our benefits for members, specifically our new group training sessions and our mobile app. It’s like having a personal trainer in your pocket.”

THE SPA GYM “Feels like a spa, works like a gym.” That’s the mantra at Shelter, a luxurious high-tech health club that opened in the Sydney suburb of Double Bay last year. The focus is on spin classes – gym-talk for stationary bicycle workouts – though Shelter also offers hybrid spin-boxing classes, private infrared saunas and a smoothie bar with wacky ingredients like hydrolysed collagen and hemp protein. It also has the only freshwater ice bath in

Australia – a form of therapy used by professional athletes to accelerate recovery after exercise and injury. “When I lived in New York I’d train at SoulCycle, sauna at HigherDOSE, practise cold baths at AIRE in Tribeca, box at Gotham in the West Village, and loved my juices from Juice Press,” says Co-founder Ben Mills. “I questioned why someone hadn’t integrated these models that fall into the health and wellness space, and why no one had done so in Australia. Why couldn’t you leave a gym with the same feeling as you do leaving a day spa?” A recent poll by Finder.com showed that more than 44 per cent of gym members rarely go to their gym, with wasted fees adding up to $1.8 billion per year. Shelter is among the gyms that have dumped this old pricing model. Instead, it sells single passes for $40 or discounted packs of 5-50 passes you can buy on-site or using your phone. “We’ve developed our own app,” explains Mills. “It’s a pretty seamless booking process.” APRIL/MAY 2020

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PUZZLES

CROSSWORD

13. Large antlered animal

23. Golfer’s two under par

15. Comedian, ... Murphy

24. Grace

16. Shouted

25. Resource

18. Actor, ... Pattinson 19. Rot 21. Nauseous 22. Settles (debt)

APPLE JUICE CARAMEL CHOCOLATE COFFEE CORDIAL FIZZY DRINK

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GLASS ICED TEA LATTE LEMON SQUASH LEMONADE MILKSHAKE

ORANGE JUICE RICE MILK SMOOTHIE SOFT DRINK SOYA MILK TUMBLER

W O R A N G E J U I C E C

Y S S L R A H S R A P N K

H S A U Q S N O M E L A K

E U P E T A L O C O H C K

M I L K S H A K E M B K O

E M O A W I E W T P I J N

D O Y I L K C T L R T H I

A O A D D G E E D U E D R

N T M R E J J Y M E E R D

O H I O L U Z B F I C B T

M I L C I Z L F T D L I F

E E K C I E O E H A R K O

L U E F R C A R A M E L S

SOLUTIONS:

20. Ability to govern

L U E F R C A R A M E L S

11. Segregates

E E K C I E O E H A R K O

9. Movie performer

17. Sport parachutist

M I L C I Z L F T D L I F

6. Heaven’s ... Gates

16. Period of time

O H I O L U Z B F I C B T

14. Command to dog

Find all the words listed hidden in the grid of letters. They can be found in straight lines up, down, forwards, backwards or even diagonally. Theme: DRINK UP.

N T M R E J J Y M E E R D

5. Communicative

A O A D D G E E D U E D R

12. Collapse (4,4)

WORD SEARCH

D O Y I L K C T L R T H I

4. Military student

E M O A W I E W T P I J N

10. Polar vessel

Y S S L R A H S R A P N K

3. Rock-pool crustacean

H S A U Q S N O M E L A K

2. Italian sparkling wine

8. Trattoria staple

E U P E T A L O C O H C K

1. Unload (suitcase)

7. Fracture

M I L K S H A K E M B K O

DOWN

1. Normal

W O R A N G E J U I C E C

ACROSS


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