Geelong Coast Magazine Summer 2018

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HAPPY CAMPERS On the road with local rollers

BACK FROM THE DEAD Locals who survived clinical death

ARTIST IN RESIDENCE David Beaumont’s art of darkness

WHALE OF A TIME Getting deep with tropical humpbacks

LOCAL LOVE Katie and Peter marry by the riverside

HISTORY REPEATED Castles made of sandstone

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Meet the locals dealing in the past

IN CONVERSATION

SARAH GRACE 'WE'RE HAVING A BABY BOY'

SUMMER 2018/19 AUS $5.50 (inc GST)




CONTENTS

6

34-35

44-47

Watch This Face

Something Special

History Repeated

26-37

50-52

Calendar of Events

Home Bodies

10-13

In Conversation

14-19

38-39

Whale of a Time

Local Sounds

53-57

20-24

Antiques & Collectibles

Happy campers

58-61

26-28 Life after death

Health & Beauty

30-33

64-66

Love Local

40-43

Social Network

Artist in Residence

Geelong Coast magazine is a Star News Group/Geelong Independent publication.

Geelong Coast Magazine is printed on environmentally friendly paper.

MANAGING EDITOR: Tony Galpin WRITERS: Elissa Friday, Luke Voogt, Justin Flynn, Gillian Cooper PHOTOGRAPHY: Rebecca Hosking, Lousia Jones CREATIVE: Creative Services Manager: Chris Beale ADVERTISING: Sales Executive: Elissa Friday elissa.friday@geelongindependent.com.au www.gcmagazine.com.au facebook.com/gcmaggeelongcoast @GeelongCoast ISSN: 2200-6605 ABN: 55 006 653 336 ACN: 06 653 336

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Printed using vegetable based inks on FSC ÂŽ certified paper under ISO14001. Environmental Management System framework. FSC ÂŽ Chain of Custody certification ensures traceability and verification of paper from well managed forests throughout the manufacturing process to the end user.

GEELONG COAST MAGAZINE Level 1, 78 Moorabool Street, Geelong 3220 (03) 5249 6700 All material appearing in Geelong Coast magazine is subject to copyright unless otherwise stated or it may rest with the provider of the supplied material. Geelong Coast magazine takes all care to ensure information is correct at the time of printing, but the publisher accepts no responsibility or liability for the accuracy of any information contained in the text or advertisements. Views expressed are not necessarily endorsed by the publisher or editor.


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MT Duneed prodigy Phoenix was intrigued the very first time he spotted a picture of a Rubik’s cube. Instantly he felt a “need” to learn more about the colourful puzzle and the mystery of its configuration. “After I saw some videos about it on YouTube I asked my mum to get me a cube,” Phoenix says. Now aged nine, Phoenix began “cubing” just a year ago. He began with the famous cube’s easier, scaled down 2x2 version, which lacks the full-sized version’s centre and edge pieces. Initially he kept “scrambling up” the cube's colourful squares without solving the puzzle. “I raged about it and threw it on the ground - there were pieces everywhere,” he laughs now. But after a few days watching experts at work in online videos, Phoenix learned how to solve the cube by methodically conjuring algorithms. Six months later he was competing at the Rubik’s cube world championships. His first result, 46th out of 100 competitors, was better than it looked, explains his dad, Kel Dolen. “It’s not in categories. He’s competing with the best of the best,” Kel says proudly. “Current champion Felix Zemdeg's world record for solving the 3x3 cube is 4.22 seconds. Phoenix’s personal best is 17.48 seconds, and he can solve the 2x2 in 4.94 seconds. Kel knew his son had a special talent almost immediately after buying him a 'mirror' cube, whose pieces have to be matched by their varying shapes rather than colour.

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“He’d solved it by the time we had reached the car after leaving the shop. I thought, ‘How did he do that?'.” Over the following months Phoenix progressed through the various cube challenges, all the way up to the 7x7 block - the last available in Geelong. “Once you get to that point it's a whole new world of more complex shapes, so then you have to go to

a specialist cube shop,” Kel says. Since then Phoenix has continued configuring his way through ever-harder cubes, such as 'pyramids' and 'shape shifters', all the way up to a huge 13x13 block. Now he wants to go two sizes up. “Cubes are fun," Phoenix says. "If I didn’t have my cubes I'd probably be riding my bike.”

WORDS: ELISSA FRIDAY Picture: LOUISA JONES


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THIS SEASON YOU SHOULD Explore the world from Avalon Airport Geelong's first ever international passenger flight took off from Avalon Airport on 5 December, ushering in a new era of travel for the city. With twice-daily return flights to Kuala Lumpur, Air Asia X has brought the world to Geelong's doorstep. The carrier flies to more than 130 destinations, making the flights perfect for travellers looking to explore Malaysia, or anywhere else on Earth.

Get a new look for summer with Salon Meraki Salon Meraki owner Vicky Polyzos prides herself on warm friendly service that leaves her customers walking out the door with confidence and a smile. With a busy season coming up, she urges customers to book now for colours, beauty services or styling to look great this summer. As a certified L'Oreal colour specialist, the salon also uses Pureology shampoo and conditioners, TechnoTan for tanning services, and quality waxing products. Open Tuesday to Saturday, Salon Meraki's final trading day before Christmas is 22 December and the salon reopens on 8 January.

Get into shape with Elite Bodies Training and Nutrition Whether clients want to look great for the beach, shed Christmas kilos or just be healthy and active, Ji Cottrill is here to help. The specialist trainer combines nearly 20 years working in fitness with a degree in sports science to help clients achieve optimum results. Ji focuses on both food and physical activity in helping people get the best out of their bodies and life.

Discover Geelong history hidden amongst the stones. Follow Jennifer Bantow through the mists of time as she explores the history of Geelong's buildings in her 474-page book Barro-abil: Our Beautiful Barrabool Sandstone. Jennifer teamed up with fellow local historian Ros Lewis to write the book about Barrabool sandstone, which played a major role in the foundation of Geelong. The book won the Judges' Special Prize at the Victorian Community History Awards in Melbourne.

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Keeping safe with Standby Security Since 1991 Standby Security has delivered cutting-edge security solutions with the best technology in the game. Criminals have become smarter and so have Standby, by offering the latest in alarms, fog cannons, safes and more. Standby provides 24-hour police-approved Grade A1 monitoring, allowing its professional, round-the-clock staff to immediately check a premise or send out emergency services as required.

Delicious ice-cream at Johnny's What's the Scoop With more than four decades in the food industry and his Italian heritage, Johnny Lo Ricco knows gelato and sorbet. What better way to escape the heat this summer than enjoying some of his 72 flavours of ice-cream at Johnny's What's the Scoop? And for those not in the mood for something cold, he also sells scrumptious wraps, focaccias, cakes and more at his Newtown store.

Fine furniture at Pegasus Antiques Nothing says unique like a century-old desk or chair in a favourite corner of a home something Highton's Ken Duggan knows well.

Getting fit with Kieser at Torquay Geelong Cats players and the elderly alike build their strength and protect themselves from injury using Keiser's unique training methods. Physiotherapist Richard Wallace and his team have the know-how to help, whether it's physio and rehab, strength-conditioning or a mixture of both. And with Kieser celebrating the opening of its Torquay centre in November, with $200 off new memberships, it's now even easier to get into shape.

He bought an old chair with pocket money at age 7, which sparked his love of everything vintage and led to him opening Pegasus Antiques. From southern Scotland to eastern France, from Victorian to Edwardian, Pegasus Antiques has hundreds of special items to set local homes apart.

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[in] conversation

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DO YOU HAVE SIBLINGS? I have a younger sister and younger brother. My sister's two years younger and my brother's four. We're all pretty close. Claire lives in Geelong and Steve lives in Melbourne.

HOW DID YOU GET INTO ACTING?

SARAH GRACE

I loved acting from a very young age. I really got into it during primary school and ad a great music teacher, Mr Dandy. I loved his classes and he encouraged some of us to audition for Les Miserables way back in 1995. I got a part and played the character of a little Cosette, which I loved so much.

A break-up, a new love, business upheaval and triumph. ELISSA FRIDAY talks with Geelong actress and acting teacher Sarah Grace about her new life, including a very special one on the way.

From there I did a few more musicals locally, The Sound of Music and Annie, then I started getting into the film and television side of things.

SARAH, WE WISH YOU A BELATED HAPPY BIRTHDAY. DO YOU MIND IF I ASK YOUR AGE? I actually turned 35 yesterday.

WHERE DID YOU GROW UP? In Geelong but I spent four years in Michigan during my primary school days while dad was working for Ford over there. I went to Grovedale West Primary School and Grovedale College over here. Picture:

LOUISA JONES

I also did a primary teaching degree and acting training over in the states.

WHAT ARE SOME OF THE BEST THINGS ABOUT ACTING? I really enjoy the challenge of playing different characters and stepping into their shoes. For my first TV role I played an alien who wanted to take over the world, ha-ha. In the drama series Blue Heelers I played a character who held up a cop at knife point. I then played the character Bridget, from Winners and Losers. They're all been completely different roles. Overall, I love how the industry is so collaborative and everyone's so passionate about what they do.

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WHO'S YOUR FAVOURITE ACTOR?

WHEN DID YOU SET UP YOUR ACTING STUDIOS BUSINESS?

I love Daniel Day Lewis and seeing what he’s going to do next. I also love Meryl Streep she's so skilled. They're both highly skilled and have a great sense of play and creativity in what they do, which is what I like.

I started the business as Moore Grace Acting Studios with my ex-husband back in 2004 while we were doing teaching degrees at Deakin University. We also studied acting in Los Angeles.

HOW'S YOUR HOSTING ON BAY FM GOING? I started at the beginning of last year. The format of the show's great, and it’s a really nice thing to be a part of. I love that it's Geelong-based and you get to meet so many people who are doing great things.

The idea for the business came from wanting to create a space for kids and teens and adults to really express themselves and their creativity, and especially for if they wanted to get into film and television work. Over time we realised that it was delivering more than what we had expected because it was helping the students build their confidence, too.

Getting all the guests in on the Catch Up is a really nice collaborative community. It’s a bit of a different skillset but improvisation applies in radio, too. It’s been good to learn from the team.

Sarah in character.

YOU MUST HAVE BEEN THRILLED WHEN GRACE ACTING STUDIOS WON THIS YEAR'S GEELONG BUSINESS EXCELLENCE AWARD FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE. It is our first award and we're really excited about it. It was good to get that recognition for the team. It was a long application process, which I worked on with my really great marketing manager. Offering exceptional customer service is what we have been working on. We're dealing with pretty awesome customers though, overall.

Picture: Louisa Jones

WHERE DID YOU AND YOUR NEW PARTNER, LOCAL HAIRDRESSER ADAMO DI BIASE, MEET? WHAT’S NEW SINCE REBRANDING TO GRACE ACTING STUDIOS? My ex-husband and I broke up a few years ago and I re-branded to Grace Acting Studios. I have a fantastic team within the business and it's been a real growth period. I love it more than I ever thought I would. We now specialise for kids and teens, from grade one up to year 12. I love having the creative control over where we are headed. I really enjoyed stepping up, from what was a managerial to a leadership role.

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We were actually in a production of Annie back in 1997 when we were kids. It's hilarious to think of that now. Much later on I was watching a show he was in at GPAC and we caught up afterward in the foyer. He was also interested in doing some acting classes. Our businesses are located close to each other, so we'd often catch up for lunch and over time found that we had a lot in common. We started off as friends, then became a couple, and later we decided to start a family.


CONGRATULATIONS ON EXPECTING YOUR FIRST BABY.

WHAT DO YOU BOTH LIKE DOING IN YOUR SPARE TIME?

I’m 24 weeks along at the moment, and it’s been really great.

I started yoga four years ago and love it. I must say it’s been good during pregnancy.

I didn’t get morning sickness, which I was really thankful for. It's all been really smooth sailing so far, and I’m really enjoying it. It’s really so lovely knowing you have this little person with you all the time.

Also, we're addicted to watching Game of Thrones. We've only just recently got into it, so we feel a bit out of date because everyone got into the series quite a while ago, ha-ha. You could say we're catching up.

We're having a boy, but we're keeping the name a secret for now.

Adamo also enjoys teaching his dance classes and he’s also in a theatre production at the moment, which he has a lot of dialogue for.

Clothes have been a bit tricky, as I’m growing all time.

YOU BOTH MUST BE EXCITED FOR PARENTHOOD AND THE FUTURE. I don’t think anything really ever prepares you. I do really like people sharing their stories with me. You can never really prepare, but we're really excited.

SARAH, DO YOU HAVE ANY GUILTY PLEASURES? It would have to be ice-cream and pasta. Baby likes pasta!

Sarah Grace and partner Adamo Di Biase.

We make a very good team. I’m pretty lucky with Adamo - he'll be hands-on and a really great dad. Family means a lot to us and we're entering into a time of our lives where it really is the centrepoint for us. In terms of the business, it’s in a really good spot and I’m looking forward to it evolving.

Picture: Louisa Jones

Pictures: Louisa Jones

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WHALE of a time


He’d mingled in Monaco, lounged in London and partied in Paris, but photographing whales in the tropical waters off Tonga was a whole new world. Geelong’s DARRYN LYONS exclusively shares the experience, and his mesmerising trip images, with GC.

IT was my incredible passion for photographing the natural world that drew me to Tonga and its humpback whales. I signed up for a private weeklong whale-photography trip with Matt Draper, a world-renowned underwater photographer from Byron Bay who's known as The Whale Whisperer. He has a skipper living at the Vava'u island group, which is Tonga's whale nursery.

I signed up for a private week-long whale-photography trip with Matt Draper...The Whale Whisperer

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I didn’t expect to feel fear but when you're in the middle of the ocean, it's just their enormity... While they're in the nursery, the whale calves suckle around 100 litres of mum's milk daily, putting on 100kg a week. Then when they're ready they swim with their mothers all the way to the feeding and mating grounds in Antarctica - amazing!

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To prepare for the trip I did my own dive training for about six weeks. Several months before I’d had a serious shoulder operation and was worried I'd have to cancel but the swimming was actually pretty good for my healing. I packed the latest and greatest camera kit - a Nikon 850 camera and a 16-35mm lens - and arrived in Tonga where I joined a group of three other photographers in their early 20s. They were built like fish and swam like fish, too.

We were on the boat by 5.30am the first day, looking for spray from the whales' blowholes. We eventually found them after travelling 20 to 30km offshore.


Let's just say I was extremely apprehensive about getting in with the whales. I didn’t expect to feel fear but, when you're in the middle of the ocean, it's just their enormity - they were the size of two double-decker buses. My biggest fear was a whale breaching and landing on me with 600 tons of down-force. I was incredibly intimidated and didn’t go on the first swim because I was too nervous.

In the idyllic waters of Tonga with Matt 'The Whale Whisperer', an internationally renowed photographer who led Darryn's tour.

I went out on the day's second swim but felt like a bit of liability to the others. I was trying my hardest but felt like a lead weight. Then when I was about 10 metres from the boat it turned around to take off, which gave me a panic attack and made me swim back. It was the first of my several panic attacks that day. It was disappointing when the skipper said, 'From a safety perspective, Mr Lyons, you're out for the day'. I understood his reasoning and complimented him on his decision. I was still too nervous to go in the water on day two but on day three I thought, 'If I don’t take this opportunity now I’ll never do it'. So I got in the water and it was the best swim of the whole trip.

>>>

Kitted out to get up close and personal with some of the biggest animals in the world.

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Matt and I swam to within a metre of a mother whale and her calf. Mum had one eye on its baby and the other on me. It was extraordinary. The whales emerge from the bottom of the ocean with incredible grace and power, aiming toward the sky. You could liken them to an emerging submarine in a Hollywood movie.

You feel so inconsequential, but I quickly stopped thinking about things going wrong. It’s hard to describe the way such an experience affects your life, your soul. It was so soft, tranquil and so beautiful, Even I felt like a whale whisperer. Their eyes said it all, like they had some sort of subliminal communication. It was nothing like us. I've heard fish chewing coral on the barrier reef but whale sounds are extremely loud, like a choir. It was beautiful.

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The whales emerge from the bottom of the ocean with

incredible grace and power It was an extremely spiritual experience and deeply emotional. Yes, I did cry. And the images from the trip are some of my greatest ever. I've photographed everything overseas from war zones to catwalk models and World Cups but, as far as nature photography goes, this is the best I’ve done. On a trip like this, you would maybe expect to come back with one picture, and I came back with 4 or 5 quite extraordinary pictures which will be in my Sydney gallery. I'd recommend anyone putting this trip on their bucket list, and you don’t really even need to be a photographer - just the experience will stay with you the rest of your life.

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LUKE VOOGT finds out how with Prestige Jayco’s Tony Spence and three local families hitting the road and exploring our great country.

Happy CAMPERS By LUKE VOOGT Mod cons and resort-style camping grounds are revolutionising the world of caravanning.

Gone are the days when caravaners rested their weary eyes atop a foam mattress, according to Tony Spence. “It just doesn’t cut it anymore,” he says. “People want a comfortable night sleep.” Innerspring mattresses, showers, toilets, air con, flat screen TVs, microwaves and full-sized fridges and freezers have become virtually standard in most caravans, Tony says. Some models even have washing machines, generators, solar panels

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and satellite dishes for “watching Foxtel in the outback”, he says. Combined with upgraded suspension and electric brakes, these features allow “outback caravaners” to camp in comfort in the most remote parts of Australia, Tony says. “People are doing much more free camping now days - they’re staying on the side of a road or in a free camping area. But caravan parks have changed too, with some resembling resorts or amusement parks perfect for mum and dad caravaners, Tony says. “As soon as you go through the gates it’s like a little world for the kids to play and explore.”


Empty nesters in their 40s and 50s and grey nomads from 60 to 80 and older have worked hard and want to have some fun exploring Australia by caravan, Tony says. “Go make some memories and have your own style of adventure. You’ve only got a certain amount of time until you get too old!” And sometimes it can be on for young and old, too - just ask the Bennett family. Justin Bennett grew up camping, so he wanted his three children to travel Australia like he did, according to wife Hayley.

Mary-Faye and Garry Wilson get ready to adventure in their latest caravan.

Hayley, Darcy, Justin, Milla and Bodhi Bennett with their caravan at Warrnambool.

“There’s so much to see in Australia!” she says. “It’s so nice to get the kids away from the devices - they just love bike riding around the caravan park, kicking the footy, swimming and doing arts and craft.” Several years ago the Ocean Grove couple bought a camper trailer to go adventuring with their first two children. “The kids saw a fair bit of Australia in it,” Hayley says. “But it took too long to set up especially with weekend trips.”

So they bought a new caravan in time for the birth of Darcy, 2, complete with an en suite and three bunks. “We ordered it when we found out we were going to have a new edition to the family,” Hayley says. “It’s amazing - it’s so well set up for a family.” Now Darcy is hitting the road alongside older siblings and fellow “water babes” Milla, 8, and Bodhi, 6.

>>>

Sunset at Condoblin.

Eden, New South Wales.

Justin Bennett paddleboarding with son Bodhi on Nelligen River.

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Eden, New South Wales.

“Our kids are stoked if we go to a caravan park with jumping pillow or a water slide - we don’t need to go to Disney World,” Hayley says. The family have travelled all over eastern Australia and hope to head to the Northern Territory and Western Australia. But even a weekend down the Great Ocean Road or at nearby Barwon Heads is a great escape, Hayley says. “We’re so lucky living where we live - we have the best of everything. “It’s so convenient - you can take your kids to the caravan park during the week and take them to school each day.” The couple caravan regularly with their two best friends, who live nearby and have young families of their own. “Our kids are going to grow up with memories of travelling with friends,” Hayley says. While the Bennetts take the whole family on the road, Ray and Anita James travel a little lighter as a couple.

Ray and Anita James out and about in Coffs Harbour, New South Wales.

Theirs caravanning adventures began with a seven-week trip to Fraser Island for Ray's 50th birthday last year. “It’s something we’ve always wanted to do, see Australia and have a journey,” he says. When Anita offered Ray the choice of a party or a caravan trip, he told her “let’s go away” in a “heartbeat”.

Sapphire Coast, New South Wales.

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“A party only lasts a night,” he says. “A seven-week holiday - that’s something I’ll remember forever.” With Anita also in her 50s and both the couple still working, they fell in love with the lifestyle and adventure of caravanning. “Every town we stopped at there was something unique,” Ray says. “For example, we had magnificent seafood straight off the pier at Lakes Entrance.” For $50 a night they stayed at a Maroochydore caravan park like a “cruise ship on land”, featuring a resort-style pool, pool bar and an "African safari" tent, Ray says. “You find out about those things when you’re talking to people on the road - there’s a real bond among (caravaners). “You wouldn’t even know about that place if you flew into the state and went straight to your motel. “I remember when I was a kid caravans were dodgy and for people who couldn’t afford good holidays or homes. “Caravans and caravan parks have come so far. It’s just a huge way of life now.” Ray also avoids his fear of flying while enjoying the freedom of caravanning. “We could go to the Murray and just pull up along the river somewhere,” he says.


Nambucca Heads

Prestige Jayco Geelong took the couple to Warrnambool when they purchased their first motor home in 2017.

East Geelong’s Garry and MaryFaye Wilson struggle to think of their favourite camping spot after more than 40 years of caravanning.

“Before that we had no experience at all - no tents, no camping, no nothing,” Ray says.

“I wouldn’t have a bloody clue to be quite honest,” Garry says from the couple’s latest campsite in Creswick.

“They treat you like you’re friends.”

“We try to get somewhere different all the time.”

Recently, the couple upgraded to a caravan. “We try to get away somewhere local every second weekend and are looking to do longer trips,” Ray says. While Ray and Anita had only just begun their love affair with caravanning, other local couples are still happily on the road together after decades of travels.

Garry and Mary-Faye are approaching 70 but still have plenty of travelling to do. “I’ll go long as I can mate!” Garry says. “There’s always something different happening everywhere you go.” The couple have found a good spot at Condobolin, NSW, to avoid winter’s chill.

Darcy, 2, Milla, 8, and Bodhi, 6 enjoy a boat ride at Lake Mulwala.

Milla Bennett dives into a caravan park pool at Hastings Point.

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... have your

own style of adventure.

You’ve only got a certain amount of time until you get too old!” “It’s just far enough north to have warm weather without travelling thousands of kilometres,” Garry says.

Currently they are staying with family friends that Garry grew up with in Portarlington.

They have been as far north as tropical Cooktown, Queensland.

They bumped into the family, now living in the Netherlands, at a Mildura caravan park three years ago, Garry says.

“It was magnificent,” Garry says. The couple has seen “a heck of a lot” of changes in caravanning, Garry says.

Mary-Faye Wilson and sister-in-law Heather Reynolds at Christmas Creek.

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“They love coming out here.”

“We started with a little homemade thing, which was tent on trailer.”

The Wilsons love meeting people on the road and talking about caravan makes and models.

But their latest caravan, of dozens over decades, features a toilet, shower, solar panels and even a washing machine.

“You’ve all got that common bond,” Garry says.

“If you’ve got it there you might as well use it,” Garry says.

“We met one nasty person out of maybe 300 this year - the people are just magnificent.”


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LIFE after DEATH

What happens when someone comes back to life after being clinically dead? LUKE VOOGT goes beyond the grave with a scuba diver, an MP and a paramedic to find out. AFTER being dead for minutes, the first thing Lara’s John Wilson remembers is waking in pool of his own blood from his saltwaterravaged lungs.

Lara diver John Wilson survived being clinically dead after drowning in 2012, but refused to let it stop him doing what he loves.

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“I remember lucidly seeing the blood everywhere on the back of the boat,” the 38-year-old says. “On a white rigid inflatable boat the blood stands out.” John had been diving for 10 years before his brush with death off the coast of Point Lonsdale on 20 April, 2012.

He and a boatfull of friends had planned to dive at a shipwrecked late-1800s steamboat. John was using equipment that recirculates expelled oxygen, unlike regular scuba equipment which expels a diver’s breath into the ocean.

He had no idea he was slowly suffocating as he sat on the edge of the boat, before pitching forward. “I’m basically breathing this dangerous cocktail of carbon dioxide,” he says.

The gear allows deeper and longer dives, he explains.

“The only thing I can remember, out of any of it, was it was just dark.”

John checked the gear twice before getting on the boat, but an associate accidently shut a vital cylinder when they put it on the boat, he says.

John’s diving mates thought he was “messing around” as he hung head-down in the ocean, swallowing saltwater.


Lara diver John Wilson survived being clinically dead after drowning in 2012 but refused to let it stop him doing what he loves

They mistook his death throes for him kicking to get underwater, until a crew member realised something was wrong. “She ripped her gear off and jumped in the water,” he says. Together they pulled the 115kg, 180cm-plus diver onto the boat and resuscitated him. “They had a big job getting my dead ass back on the boat,” he says. Ironically, a couple of women on the boat participated in a rescue

course John had taught a few weeks earlier.

“uncomfortable“ pain of a ventilator after.

John felt “nothing” drifting in and out of consciousness on the boat and in the ambulance.

“It’s like someone is reaching underneath your ribcage and trying to pull (it) out through the front of your body,” he says. But miraculously the incident left little permanent scaring on John’s lungs, allowing him to “dive straight back in” a month later.

“It’s almost like a rebirthing because you’ve got no concept of what’s happening,” he says. As medical staff moved him to intensive care, following a secondary drowning, he heard one say, “you’d better call his parents”. He remembers the

John Eren back at work in his Melbourne office after suffering a heart attack.

“I knew if I didn’t get back into the water and get diving straight away ... I would have walked away from the sport,” he says. 27


It’s almost like a rebirthing because you’ve got no concept of what’s happening,” he says. The Bay City Scuba owner loves diving, which he says for most humans is the closest thing to “zero gravity”. “You don’t hear any mobile phones, there’s no people talking to you, it’s just peace and quiet.” Fellow Lara resident John Eren was lucky to be at University Hospital Geelong when he clinically died for three minutes on 16 September, 2016. John’s wife and two of his sons watched as he lost consciousness from a heart attack after a few minutes sitting in emergency.

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“My peripheral vision started to get dark,” the Member for Lara says. “I looked at (my son) and said I’m going to faint. I hit the floor dead.” His face alternated between red and purple as medical staff revived him, his family told him after. “Before their eyes they thought they were going to lose their dad,” he says. He remembers staff wheeling him into an operating theatre, where a surgeon inserted a stent through

his groin and into his heart.

some pretty tough things.”

“I’m lying there watching the monitor screen thinking this is all a dream,” he says.

He felt helpless and grew sad as he thought of leaving his family behind and not having the chance to retire and travel more.

Earlier, John’s wife had turned their car around when he had chest pain on the way to visiting his dad in Melbourne for Father’s Day. John tried to wind down the window as he felt “something heavy” trying to “break out” of his chest, nausea and an ache in his left arm, he says. “I was petrified because I knew that there was something really wrong. I’ve never had this panic before and I’ve been through

“I knew at that point I might die, and then you think, ‘Hang on I’m too young to die’,” he says. “Your body fights it with all it can and I think that’s what got me to the hospital.” In a silver-lining Geelong’s hospital was “full of middle-aged men going for a check-up” following the MP’s heart attack, he says.


John’s family history put him at risk, with his mother and uncles suffering heart problems, he says. He urges anyone with severe chest pains to phone triple zero and says he is “forever indebted” to the hospital’s staff. But surviving a drowning or cardiac arrest is “quite uncommon“, according to Herne Hill paramedic Nathan Ross. Even rarer are callouts where paramedics revive somebody who is clinically dead, the 40-year-old says. “You remember them very clearly. In my 18 years (as a paramedic in Victoria, Northern Territory and Western Australia) it’s happened only (a few) times.” Normally paramedics either prevent the patient from deteriorating to that state or arrive too late, Nathan explains. He remembers reviving an elderly man who suffered a heart attack in Flinders St, Melbourne, just 18 months into his career.

very often, but we don’t,” he says. He remembers his excitement at saving a life when the man started breathing. But his colleague brought him back down to earth, tapping him on the shoulder and reminding him that many patients still die in intensive care after revival. “Especially the elderly,” he says. Luckily the man survived. He sobbed uncontrollably as he and his family met Nathan in hospital. “The first thing he said was thank you,” he says. Saving patients’ lives and meeting with them afterwards are some of the most rewarding moments of the job, he says. “You don’t want anyone to go through that but it’s a very moving experience, that’s for sure.” The father-of-two says his job would be harder without the support of his kids and “tolerant” wife.

“He probably would have been unconscious for about two minutes without electrical activity in his heart,” he says.

“My little boy thinks I’m a hero - he actually said the other day that he wants to be a paramedic.

“The call must have come through when we were just around the corner.

“But he also said, ‘if you were a gardener I’d probably want to be a gardener instead’,” he adds with a laugh.

“It gave us the time to get our hands on the man’s chest quickly - it was exactly what he needed.“ He admits being nervous at first, despite training constantly to defibrillate and revive patients.

For Nathan knowing he has “done everything correctly” is the best way of dealing with the trauma of “horrific jobs”, along with family support, exercise and occasional counselling, he says.

“I guess the community thinks cardiac arrests are our bread and butter, and that we go to them

“You never really leave the job you’re still studying and thinking about the shifts of the week.”

Herne Hill paramedic Nathan Ross.

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[local] love

Words: ELISSA FRIDAY Pictures: LOUISA JONES A meeting in Melbourne, a riverside proposal, and an ominous forecast for their big day - Katie Pettingill tells how she tied the knot with love-of-her-life Peter Boyd. 30


thought I didn’t like him." Peter eventually asked Katie out again, and was relieved when she answered 'yes'. THE PROPOSAL “When we first met we walked along the Barwon River to begin getting to know each other,” Katie tells. “Peter’s proposal began when he told me he'd won vouchers to go out to breakfast. Then he pretended to get a cancellation of the booking call from the cafe. "I asked why they cancelled and said I'd call them back but Peter stopped me and suggested going to breakfast another time." Katie became suspicious when they went for a walk along the river instead. “Along the way he asked me, 'Do you remember that this is where we came when we first met? “Then he got down on one knee, proposed, and awaited my answer. I was in shock." THE RINGS Katie "never" wears jewellery. "I'm allergic to everything but gold,” she explains, "so I said to Peter, 'If you ever get me a wedding ring get me something small. "Of course, he got me a huge rock, princess-cut diamond with a yellow-gold band ring." Peter’s ring is a plain yellow-gold band.

WHERE THEY GREW UP Katie was raised in Grovedale, while Peter spent his formative years in Werribee. The couple now lives together at Bannockburn with their pet Labradoodle, Murphy. WHERE THEY MET Pictures: LOUISA JONES

“It was in a bar in Melbourne,” Katie remembers. “I noticed a spare seat next to

where Peter was sitting, so I asked whether it was free and I sat down." Soon after they exchanged contact numbers and began texting each other daily. “We were actually texting every day for a couple of weeks," Katie says. "Peter asked me on date but I turned it down because I had something on that day. He 31


[local] love THE WEDDING PLANNING “We did a lot of it ourselves,” Katie says. The couple also had help with planning from both their parents and Katie’s bridesmaids. The ceremony was held in Peter’s parents’ large backyard. HENS AND BUCKS “Peter went to play indoor archery and have a barbeque. They went to a brewery afterward and then a few bars in Melbourne,” Katie recalls. “My hens’ party was a surprise but I knew we were getting a party bus to Melbourne. “It was a masquerade party, which started off in Geelong at CQ bar, at The Pier, and afterward we got on the bus, which took us to nightclubs and bars." THE DRESS One of Katie's friends made the novel suggestion of travelling to Sale for the dress search. “The lady at Val’s Bridal Boutique was so lovely,” Katie says. “All the dresses I picked out I didn’t really like but she picked one out for me. I put it on and knew it was the one. At that point shop owner Val cried with joy.” Katie bought the dress off the rack even though it was too small. "I decided I'd lose weight to fit into it." The dress was an ivory-coloured strapless A-line with lace trimming. “I ended up losing too much weight, 15kg in about six months give or take, so then I had to get it taken in,” she laughs.

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I decided I'd lose weight to fit into it...


BRIDESMAIDS AND GROOMSMEN Katie chose five firm friends as her bridesmaids. “My bridesmaids were Janelle, who has been my friend since primary school, my friend Michelle, who I met in my first real job, Michele and Lisa, both of whom I met in high school and became close friends with just after high school, and my friend Anisha, who I met at my first job working at McDonald's when I was 15." The bridesmaids were dressed in a "laid back, Bohemian style", Katie explains. “We chose a rusty blush colour for them because I wanted them to wear a girly colour. They wore flower halos and their hair down. “Peter’s auntie, Mickelina, was the seamstress and she fixed-up all the dresses and suits." The groom wore a bright blue suit, which the groomsmen's outfits complemented with light grey and a blueish tinge. They all wore bow ties, with the groom's in white and the groomsmen's all blue. PHOTOGRAPHY Geelong photographer Louisa Jones had plenty of ideas. “Louisa was great in selecting locations for us. She found a beautiful spot down by the river that we loved,” Katie says. The couple also chose a few of the locations. Family photos were taken in the backyard, while Inverleigh provided a backdrop to some of the day's other images. FLOWERS “We wanted all-native flowers and we also had a florist make the centrepieces at the reception. “We went to a flower farm about four days before and my bridesmaids and I made bunches for them to hold, and also for decoration and reception centrepieces." A florist created Katie’s bouquet, halo and the bridal party’s centrepieces.

We had the ceremony outdoors and every day the weather forecast was predicted for rain all day...

THE RECEPTION Rydges Geelong was the venue of choice for the pair's Bohemianstyle reception. “We had the ceremony outdoors and every day the weather forecast was predicted for rain all day," Katie says. “The night before it was predicted to rain and the morning of the wedding it was torrential rain.” But upon arrival in a vintage bus the Sun came out and everything dried up, including the mud. “The boys worked really hard in the morning of our wedding. They spent at least an hour mulching, putting bark all over the mud, to make it all dry,” Katie says. The couple had their wedding dance to Feels Like Home, by Chantal Kreviazuk. THE CAKE “We had no idea what to do for the cake,” Katie admits. “Peter’s auntie Rosa made our wedding cake and we let her do whatever she wanted. “She made a red velvet cake, with flowers on top, hand-made from icing." 33


[something] special

Kate McRorie-Williams serves another happy customer. (Louisa Jones) Salon Eve's hairdressers, like Emily Bedford, are determined to nail their client's desired look. (Louisa Jones)

ALL about EVE “As a determined girl, I’m always challenging myself to set goals and opening up a business was no different,” she says.

“Hairdressing to me over the years has never been just a job,” she says.

“Most people who know me know I never do anything half-hearted.”

Some of the amazing new artwork at Salon Eve. (Louisa Jones)

Fast-forward six years Barbara’s salon has just undergone a facelift into a “beautiful masterpiece”.

comfy chairs and a stylish, spacious interior, the new salon is a pleasure to work in, she says.

With depth-defying artwork, big

But the renovated salon is just a

“To see the smile on their faces when they walk out, that’s a great moment for a hairdresser.” The salon has a range of vegan, sulphate-free and Australian-made premium haircare products, and Barbara is committed to

Become a regular weekly customer!

environmental sustainability. Her team includes experienced hairdressers, who she says are great mentors for her younger staff. The team do hair for men, women and children of all ages and with Salon Eve now offering Salon Pay, getting a new look is now more convenient than ever. “We are not afraid of a challenge and we are very accommodating to our clientele,” Barbara says.

A girl without braids is like a city without bridges -Roman Payne

A: Shop 1/127 Shannon Ave Manifold Heights T: 5298 1547 W: www.saloneve.com.au Saloneve1 34

12403405-LB49-18

bonus for the hairdresser of 13 years, who loves meeting clients and “nailing” their desired new look.

BARBARA Ferrante has never looked back since opening Salon Eve in 2012, at age 23.


[Something] Special

Leader in LINGERIE CHEZ Ma Belle Lingerie remains Geelong’s go-to spot for professional bra-fitting after 25 years in business. Along with the fitting service, Chez Ma Belle Lingerie also offers nightwear along with maternity, mastectomy and surgical garments. Owner Fran Rowlands took over the store from her mother, Adriana, in 2016. Adriana opened the store in 1993, when it was situated in Little Malop Street. With the help of her trusted staff, Adriana built a devoted following of women throughout Geelong, Melbourne and country Victoria. Fran gave the brand a revamp after taking over the business, with the store’s customers welcoming the change.

“We pride ourselves on giving our customers one on one service that will add to their experience and have them feel fabulous when walking out the door,” Fran says. “Chez Ma Belle is a valued part of the Geelong community and we’re proud to be involved in 2018 Westfield Geelong Catwalk for Cancer supporting the Barwon Health Foundation and The Andrew Love Cancer Centre.”

Chez La Belle Lingerie is centrally located in Geelong with a range of quality brands.

Chez Ma Belle stocks a range of quality brands such as Simonè Perele, Prima Donna, Chantelle, Berlei, Triumph, Fayreform and Amoena. Aiming to give women of all ages the right support needed to live life comfortably, Fran and staff invite shoppers to “pop in and see the team today”. Chez Ma Belle Lingerie is at 37 Yarra Street, Geelong.

12403331-CG49-18

Fran and staff pick and choose the brands they stock based on quality and what their customers

want and need.

CORSETRY LINGERIE MASTECTOMY 37 Yarra Street, Geelong Vic 3220

NIGHTWEAR SURGICAL

Phone: 03 5229 3768

Email: shop@chezmabelle.com.au 35


CALENDAR of EVENTS 9 December

24 December

Hog Toy Run

Geelong Carols by Candlelight

About 1500 Geelong motorcyclists will get on their bikes in the spirit of Christmas for the 26th annual Hog Toy Run.

'Tis the concert to be jolly when Geelong Carols by Candlelight returns to the revamped Johnstone Park on Christmas Eve.

The charitable riders will collect donations, toys, non-perishable food and vouchers for Bethany Family Services, Geelong Hospital Children's Ward, Cottage by the Sea and The Sanctuary Counselling Service. The ride leaves Deakin Waterfront Carpark and finishes at Princess Park Queenscliff, where there will be entertainment, food and auctions. Deakin University waterfront carpark, Central Geelong

14 December to 27 January Torquay Hotel Summer Series Melbourne rock legends The Living End lead a big line-up of contemporary Australian bands in a dozen gigs on the Surf Coast this summer.

Some of Geelong's best artists and choirs, a local concert band and the Mik Maks will perform at the free event, which has been a family-favourite since 1965. Johnstone Park, Central Geelong

29 December Rip to River About 1500 runners, and those getting a head-start on their New Year's resolution, will hit the beach in the Rip to River. Arguably the oldest fun run in Australia, Rip to River is the biggest annual fundraiser for Ocean Grove Surf Life Saving Club. Competitors and social trotters alike will run 10km from 'The Rip' at Point Lonsdale to Ocean Grove, near Barwon River. Pt Lonsdale Beach, Point Lonsdale

From classic Aussie anthems like Prisoner of Society, to new track Don't Lose It, The Living End will have the mosh pit jumping on Boxing Day. San Cisco and Cosmic Psychos will also feature among the gigs at Torquay Hotel over December and January. Torquay Hotel, Torquay

31 December to 1 January Bluestone Blues Festival Bluestone Blues Festival hails in the New Year with an impressive line-up of classic and original music from Australian legends and emerging artists down the Hamilton Hwy. Marco Goldsmith, Simon Kinny-Lewis Band, Catfish Voodoo, Dollar 20 Blues Band and Louis King all feature in Sleepy Hollow Blues Club's 23rd annual festival. Liars Klub will bring in the New Year while Wayne Jury 4, Rhythm X Revival, P J O'Brien Band and McNaMarr Project will play a recovery session on 1 January. Murgheboluc Reserve, Murgheboluc

16 December to 13 January Big Bash League Big hitters, wily spinners and lightning-fast bowlers come to Kardinia Park for an all-out slog-fest when the Big Bash League returns to Geelong this summer. The T20 fixture features two Geelong double-headers, with Melbourne Renegades' men and women cricketers both playing on 3 and 13 January. The Renegades will also take on Brisbane Heat on 16 December at Geelong Cricket Ground in the Women's Big Bash League. Kardinia Park Stadium, South Geelong 36


18 January to 13 February

26 to 28 January

Les Miserables

Geelong Festival of Sails

After an absence of six years Jean Valjean and his compatriots return to Geelong in a local production of musical-theatre classic Les Miserables.

Sails will fill Corio Bay over the Australia Day long weekend in Geelong's celebration of everything yachting and boating.

Footlight Productions recreates one of the best-known musicals of all time with Geelong-based actors. Geelong Performing Arts Centre, Central Geelong

Festival of Sails, first held in 1844, is the largest annual keel boat regatta in the Southern Hemisphere with more than 300 yacht entries and 3000 competitors annually. Royal Geelong Yacht Club, Central Geelong

7 February Troy Cassar-Daley - Greatest Hits In 30 years of music Troy Cassar-Daley has notched up 36 Golden Guitars, four ARIAs and 31 number one singles on the Australian country charts.

26 January Australia Day City of Greater Geelong's Australia Day celebrations return to Rippleside Park with more than 40 free activities and displays for families to enjoy.

He comes to Geelong Performing Arts centre, when he hits the road in 2019 for his national Greatest Hits tour. Cassar-Daley will sing his songs and tell the stories behind them in a way only he can. Geelong Performing Arts Centre, Central Geelong

Musicians, magicians, giveaways, costumes, rides, puppets, emergency service displays and more, it's all part of Geelong's annual celebration. Rippleside Park, Rippleside

26 to 27 January Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race Local lovers of pelotons will rejoice when thousands of elite cyclists come to Geelong for the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race over Australia Day weekend. The internationally-endorsed elite men's (174km) and women's (113km) races return, with 4000 amateur pedallers also set to take on 35km, 65km and 111km courses in the People's Ride. The event takes in some of the most spectacular scenery in Geelong, Bellarine Peninsula and the Surf Coast. Various locations in Geelong, Bellarine Peninsula and Surf Coast

21 to 23 February Bennelong Acclaimed as "ravishingly beautiful", "utterly searing" and "a benchmark in Australian dance creativity", Bennelong is Aboriginal theatre at its best. The show explores the life of iconic Aboriginal figure Woollarawarre Bennelong, who served as a diplomat between the Euroa people and the English, after they landed in 1788. Director Stephen Page brings the story of Bennelong to life through dance language, soul-stirring soundscapes and exquisite design. Geelong Performing Arts Centre, Central Geelong 37


[local] sounds

LIBBY STEEL By JUSTIN FLYNN LIBBY Steel is carving a name for herself in the local music scene and she has many music reviewers excited. After winning the triple j Unearthed competition to open the 2018 Queenscliff Music Festival in November, the 23-year-old realises the huge gig could have been the big break she's been awaiting. “I’ve worked really hard to get to this stage and now this feels like

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the next level,” she says. “It’s a different calibre of event so it really opens up doors for me.” Geelong Coast caught up with the young songstress in between studio rehearsals with her band. Libby, who hails from Cobden but is now living in Torquay, has had a number of smaller gigs, including supporting Taylor Henderson and playing at the Australian Open. She has been dabbling in song

writing and she says her music reflects her playful and youthful side. “It’s something that I’ve always loved doing and I still don’t really think they’re anything special - it’s just the thoughts that come out of my head and it’s made me more confident,” she says. “You just hope that people understand and appreciate it. My kind of writing is based around what I’ve personally experienced

so it’s a bit youthful and a bit playful.” Libby describes her music as “playful pop”, but is reluctant to pigeon-hole herself to any specific style. “Every song is so different,” she says. “It’s hard to narrow it down to one genre. I’ve got one jazz track and one pop song and a bit of everything.


I love music as a whole and I don’t want to narrow myself down to one genre just because I have to.

The beauty of music is you can just do what feels right. “I love music as a whole and I don’t want to narrow myself down to one genre just because I have to. The beauty of music is you can just do what feels right.” Libby has managed to score rotations on national and international Radio. Tracks such as Bones, Fever, People, and The End have been well received by critics. Libby is also an accomplished

model for G-star Jeans and is an ambassador for Uncle Jack watches. Libby pauses after being asked what she enjoys doing outside of music. It’s not a long pause, but you can tell she is thinking. She says she enjoys sports and surfing, but the conversation quickly comes back to music. Growing up in Cobden, Libby

says pursuing a career in music “wasn’t exactly encouraged”, but after studying a professional communications degree at RMIT, is now solely focussed on her music. “The opportunity that Queenscliff and triple j Unearthed have given me is amazing and it opens up that new doorway,” she says. “For me this is going to be my life, this is what I love and it’s taken me a long time to realise that.”

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[artist] in residence

ART OF DARKNESS Words: Justin Flynn

An overwhelming urge to paint often wakes David Beaumont at 2am. So he rises from bed and goes to his Queenscliff home studio where he works in the dead of night.

William Buckley’s tale fascinates him. Beamont has won wide acclaim for his series on Buckley, an escaped convict who escaped death and lived with an Aboriginal community for decades.

It’s peaceful then, Beaumont says. He can hear himself think. He travels in his mind back to some of his happy places - Lake Mungo, the Flinders Ranges, or the Little Desert - and the painting begins. “Mungo is a really special place,” he says. Landscapes fuel his passion but Beaumont is also an accomplished portrait artist.

Beaumont was working in a factory in Ballarat when he realised he could paint. That was more than 20 years ago. “I wish I could tell you this romantic notion that I've always drawn and painted as a child but it wasn’t the case,” he says. “I just started drawing instinctively. I don’t know why. It was kind of like a strange reaction to the orderly nature of working in a factory. Now nearing 59, Beaumont has enjoyed an amazing 2018. He’s been a finalist in no less than six significant Australian art prizes, including the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize. He was also a finalist in the Hadley’s Landscape Prize - the world’s richest for landscapes.

I just started drawing instinctively. I don’t know why...

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[artist] in residence

“I’ve got a head full of ideas of things I want to paint for the rest of my life,” he says. “I’m very lucky to be able to earn a living from my art. “For people to purchase my art over many years now. I can’t tell you what that feels like. It’s extraordinary.”

He's in talks with film-makers about retracing the footstep of Buckley from the Mornington Peninsula to Buckley’s Cave at Point Lonsdale. Beaumont plans to undertake the entire trek on foot without food or money, relying on bartering away his sketches to get by.

Beaumont points to one of his paintings adorning the walls and floor of his Queenscliff studio.

He regularly escapes to Mungo or the Little Desert for days on end to paint.

“That’s house paint and spray enamel,” he explains.

“I’ve got a nice little spot where I can camp and work there,” he says.

“It’s just a bit of pigment and oil on a bit of wood or canvas. “These are the things that occupy an artist’s mind. How do you transform those things into something that has resonance, emotional and visual?” Beaumont likes to be outside his comfort zone.

“The Australian landscape, there’s nothing like it anywhere in the world. “There’s just a harsh honesty about it. That inspires me. It speaks to me, the Little Desert, Mungo, Flinders Ranges, Swan Bay...

“I don’t go for the cliched landscape. I try to look to see what’s not obvious. A lot of artists will paint The Rip, the heads, the bay, but that’s just a little too obvious for me. “It speaks to me in a way that’s not cliched.” Beaumont, married with two adult sons, says he's happy in Queenscliff. “I live a good life. I do what I want to do and I’m happy. “I have good people around me and I’m very lucky.” Beaumont encourages anyone with the painting urge to try their hand. “If you want to paint, paint,” he says. “Nothing’s stopping you. That’s all there is to it.”

It's been a huge year for David Beaumont, who has been a finalist in no less than six significant Australian art prizes. (Justin Flynn)

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David Beaumont at work in his Queenscliff studio.

I don’t go for the cliched landscape. I try to look to see what’s not obvious.

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[history] repeated

Jennifer Bantow and the book she co-write with Ros Lewis, Barro-abil: Our Beautiful Barrabool Sandstone.

Castles made of SANDSTONE Once it was literally the building block of local architecture, now it's the subject of local literature. JUSTIN FLYNN meets the woman who wrote the book on the history of Barrabool sandstone's use in local construction.

UNDERNEATH Barrabool’s sloping hills hides a highly regarded greenish, even-textured stone. Barrabool sandstone was worked in quarries around Ceres from the 1850s and has been used for many prominent public buildings in Melbourne and Geelong and regional Victoria. Currently there are 11 Heritage Overlays in the Barrabool Hills within Surf Coast Shire, mostly protecting buildings of local stone.

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Jennifer Bantow OAM knows a thing or two about Barrabool sandstone. Jennifer teamed with Ros Lewis to produce a book, Barro-abil: Our Beautiful Barrabool Sandstone. “We started 10 years ago - it was originally going to be a booklet,” she says. It isn’t a booklet, instead a glossy full-colour 474-page testimony to the Barrabool sandstone’s origins and history. “The geology fascinates me,” Jennifer says. “It’s the geology that causes the beauty.” Barrabool sandstone has played a major role for the foundations of a number of buildings.


Sacred Heart cathedral, Bendigo.

It’s the geology that

causes the beauty. The Wesleyan church and the Temperance Hall in the township of Ceres and the Anglican church near Barrabool are on the Register of the National Estate. The register also contains the very early Denominational school made of rubble sandstone (1847) and an Aboriginal quarry for Cambrian greenstone. Neuchatel (1854), originating from pioneer vignerons who began in 1842, is on the Victorian Heritage Register. The former Customs House (Jennifer’s favourite) and Bendigo’s Sacred Heart Cathedral (Ros’ favourite) are prime examples of structures being built with Barrabool sandstone.

>>>

Former Telegraph Station, 83a Ryrie Street, Geelong, built in 1857.

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Geelong Customs House, 57-59 Brougham St, Geelong, built in 1856.

When there’s beautiful surroundings, the context

makes people happier. Barro-abil: Our Beautiful Barrabool Sandstone brings together information about Barrabool sandstone that has not been published, or has been published but scattered in various resources that have not emphasised the stone itself. The story starts from the stone’s geological formation and continues through extraction from the early quarry sites to the building and description of the many structures where the stone was used.

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The story includes the geologists, quarrymen, stonemasons and architects who identified the stone, quarried, crafted, sculptured, designed and constructed the structures described in the book. “There’s no other sandstone like it,” Jennifer says. “The Customs House in Geelong is so beautifully proportioned and visually very complete and perfect in my opinion.”

Jennifer is passionate about preserving heritage architecture and both she and Ros are National Trust volunteers. Jennifer recounts the days when she was a school teacher. “We had one part of the school that was traditional; high ceilings, windows, made of brick and bluestone, and a fireplace,” she says. “The other part was a concrete building. “It was amazing that the kids’ behaviour changed depending on what building they were in. They seemed more inspired when they were in the first building. “When there’s beautiful surroundings, the context makes people happier.”


Temperance Hall, Ceres.

The book has sold out, but there are plans for a reprint if demand is strong enough. “The Barrabool hills have always been a magnet for artists,” Jennifer says. “The beauty of the buildings and the unusual texture and lushness of the stones ... it’s just mesmerising.” Barro-abil: Our Beautiful Barrabool Sandstone was awarded the Judges’ Special Prize at the Victorian Community History Awards held in Melbourne. “We loved doing the research,” Jennifer says. “We kept getting endless samples of Barrabool sandstone. The research just went on and on and on. “It (the award) was a total surprise.” The judges were impressed. “A coach tour conducted by the authors in 2003 was the catalyst for the publication of this lovely book. Chronologically organised within themes, eleven chapters comprehensively review buildings constructed from the distinctive sandstone of the Barrabool Hills in the hinterland of Corio Bay. Chapter sections also include entries about the Aboriginal people of the Barrabool Hills, and brief biographies of the surveyors of the land and the architects

and sculptors who designed and created buildings and memorials from the sandstone. While concentrating on the Geelong district, the book goes far beyond to encompass many buildings in Melbourne constructed from the stone. Recognition of the distinctive qualities of Barrabool sandstone underpins the importance of recording and, where possible, conserving homes, churches, other public buildings, and cemetery memorials created from the stone. This 474 page publication, printed on quality paper, has a bibliography and index, and entries are linked to their Victorian Heritage Register numbers where applicable. The many images reproduced in this fine book demonstrate the beauty of the architecture characteristic of the Geelong district.”

Barrabool sandstone still in the ground.

Barn, near Ceres.

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[shades] of geelong

The only place for

WINDOW FURNISHINGS THERE’S really only one place to go when a home or office space is in need of a spruce up. Shades of Geelong has been operating for more than four decades and offers quality and customer service that’s unmatched anywhere in Geelong, the Surf Coast and Bellarine Peninsula. Shades of Geelong has top-ofthe-range curtains, blinds and awnings with a huge range of colours, designs and materials to fit any type of decor.

office renovation is made easy by the team at Shades of Geelong. Some of the products and services on offer are: Norman planation shutters; sheer curtains; blockout and privacy roller blinds; preferred supplier of Zip Tracks; traditional and casual roman blinds; panel glides; honeycomb blinds; woodstyle and aluminium venetians; drapes and motorisation. Give the showroom a visit at 62 St Georges Road, Corio, check out shadesofgeelong.com.au or phone 5275 3801.

Whatever design you have in mind, you can be sure the team at Shades of Geelong will have the right product for you. All work is guaranteed and with a local factory and showroom, you can be sure your business is staying in Geelong.

Shades of Geelong's David Spehar has the experience and range to help with any window furnishing requirements.

Shades of Geelong will guarantee a written and online quote within two working days and Saturday and after-hours appointments are always available. With quality products and friendly, expert service, the next home or

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[home] bodies

NEW frontier Dianne Dimitrievski in her new Armstrong Creek home with sons Ed, 4 and Will, 7.

YOUNG families and investors are helping realise the potential of Armstrong Creek. GILL COOPER speads to the buyers and sellers buidling a community the size of Ballarat on Geelong’s southern doorstep.

Serren Savy and Tim Debenham are typical of the new faces pioneering the growing estates of Armstrong Creek. Serren and Tim lived in Glen Iris before deciding to build in the area’s Warralily estate. “I loved the spot we were living in but the traffic was really starting to frustrate me,” says Tim, 34. “My family has had a holiday house in Barwon Heads since 2003, so I’d always been pretty familiar with this area and liked it. “It was getting far too expensive to buy where we wanted to live in Melbourne, so we checked out

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the area and ended up buying a block.” Serren, 30, grew up in the country before living in Melbourne for almost 10 years. “I loved the country feel of Armstrong Creek but with the city conveniences of Geelong not far away. At the time affordability was also a factor, as was proximity to the beaches,” she says. “We moved here when I was three months pregnant, rented, then moved into our place two weeks after Gus was born.” Minimal stamp duty and the regional First Home Owners Grant of $10,000 helped the couple break into the local property market. But Tim commuted to Melbourne for two-and-a-half years before landing a job this year with the Geelong Indy, GC’s sister newspaper.

Working locally without hours commuting has helped Tim connect with the community, he says “I’ve joined Torquay Golf Club and have met people through that while also connecting with people professionally. I expect this to evolve once Gus is getting more into his sports and schooling. “Warralily’s perfect in terms of how close it is to the coast as well as the conveniences of Geelong, from a dining/bars/retail perspective. “There are great walking tracks in the area for pushing a pram while walking the dog at the same time with no need to stress about traffic and busy roads. “We have friendly neighbours who we know we can trust and will look out for our home when we’re away.” Serren agrees.


“I really like the walking tracks, playgrounds and safe streets,“ she chimes in. “When Gus was first born I feel like I walked hundreds of kilometres around here because he slept well in a moving car or pram! “While out walking I liked how people actually looked you in the eye, smiled and said, ’Hello’. It’s such a friendly place. We chat to our neighbours and feel a good sense of community.” Dianne Dimitrievski and young sons Will and Ed, aged seven and four, are newer-comers to Armstrong Creek. They’re quickly learning their way around the new community after setting up house at Warralily in July, Di says. “It’s busy times for us but we do feel very safe and comfortable living here.” Originally from Melbourne, Di and her former partner bought the home together in 2016 while living at Belmont. The investment proved to be a wise move, Di says now. Di originally came from the western side of Melbourne, living at Newport. She previously

worked in project marketing for off-the-plan apartments and residential development in the CBD, so she’s familiar with the ebbs and flows of real estate. “I knew right from the beginning this was going to be a great place to raise a family. It has such a strong, friendly, community feel. “Now I’ve even moved my parents down to Bell Post Hill. They are a part of the Macedonian community there. We’re all happy living in Geelong. “We bought in Armstrong Creek as an investment because we could see the amazing potential this place would have. Armstrong Creek is very convenient, close to town, amazing parks and facilities and surrounded by some of the best beaches in Australia.

While the new residents sort their lives at Armstrong Creek, others are beavering away to make the dream become reality. Estate manager Ben Stewart says Warralily has sold more than 3000 lots since 2010 as part of its $1 billion development. Almost 650 of the estate’s lots were sold in the last financial year alone. “Construction is now underway on three stages of the broader 870-lot Grange precinct, including 149 home allotments and transformation of the Whites Road entry,“ Ben says.

“When I was living in Melbourne we had to plan well ahead to visit the Surf Coast. Now no planning ahead’s required - we can be there in 10 minutes. “It’s a good place to live now but will be even better once the Armstrong Creek Town Centre is completed. I’m looking forward to us being able to walk down the street from home and eat at a wide variety of restaurants and cafes.” Gus leads parents Serren and Tim into their new frontier at Armstrong Creek.

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Grange will extend west across Surf Coast Highway to blend with Warralily’s existing Coast, Promenade and Central precincts. “It’s amazing to see how the neighbourhood will take shape, especially now the boundaries of the Grange Village Park are being defined,” Ben says. “You get an amazing sense of the scale that will be delivered.” With 7000 residents now in place, Warralily will eventually accommodate a community of 15,000 residents and a full array of community services. A Woolworths supermarket has opened, an ALDI is on the way while 15 other businesses including eateries, medical and dental clinics, a chemist and gym have also opened at Warralily. McDonald’s and a 7-Eleven fuel outlet add to the conveniences. “The neighbouring state-of-the art P6 Armstrong Creek school with integrated special needs is already open and construction of a secondary campus is on its way,“ Ben says. “Next year the community will welcome the new sports pavilion, netball courts and sport fields, along with council’s integrated

children’s and community centre. “Families settling into the area will benefit from a vibrant retail hub alongside sport and recreation, education, childcare and community facilities rapidly coming on line.“ Demand is also growing for rentals, say property agents. Armstrong Real Estate’s Sammy Brittain says the area’s rental market has “definitely increased over the last few years”. “Our agency has been steadily expanding along with the growth of homes and infrastructure throughout the area,” she says.

“We’re seeing young couples stating families, elderly couples downsizing or settling after travelling, couples in their 30s waiting for their own homes to be built, and even students moving from on-campus accommodation at Deakin University. The lifestyle of being between the beach and the city, and the employment opportunities, are drawing people to the area,” she says. “And having a brand new home to move into is very attractive for tenants.”

“There’s been high demand for the area. Our rental figures have continued to grow and our open for inspections have hit record levels.” The agency leased 26 properties in October, with the average marketing period only 11 days, Sammy says.

An aerial view of Warralily as it expands across Armstrong Creek.

Brothers Will and Ed make good use of their new local playground.

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[antiques & collectibles]

A FAMILY AFFAIR HIGHTON’S Ken Duggan was just seven when he bought his first antique with saved pocket money.

got involved. He was a natural and just took to it easily,� Ken says.

The old chair sparked his love affair with antiques, which he now prizes over modern furniture.

Pegasus Antiques’ “huge amount� of stock spreads through 30 display rooms and a large open area.

Pegasus Antiques opened in Ken’s home 36 years ago but now occupies a “fabulously huge“ warehouse at Newtown under the management of Ken and son Joel.

“We tend to buy from the 1800s to 1900s, covering the Georgian, Regency, William V, Victorian and Edwardian eras. We source from southern Scotland and Lyon, France,� Ken says.

“Dad had actually pointed out this very warehouse when I was about five,“ Joel remembers.

“We also restore and alter furniture including raising desk drawers, lengthening beds to accommodate our taller generation, and to become useable furniture.“

“He said, ‘I’ll own that building one day’, and we all laughed.� Ken and Joel have worked together in the business for around two decades. “Joel was a teenager when he first

Above: Ken and Joel Duggan with some of their antique furniture.

Pegasus Antiques is at 550 Latrobe Boulevard, Newtown, visit pegasusantiques.com.au or phone 5221 8290.

s !NTIQUES SOURCED FROM THE 5+ AND &RANCE s DISPLAY ROOMS s !NTIQUES FROM S S s 4RADITIONAL &RENCH POLISHING s 2ESTORATION SERVICE

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Left: An 1880s desk at Pegasus Antiques.

TEXT TO COME

/PEN $AYS -ONDAY 3ATURDAY AM PM 3UNDAY PM

550 Latrobe Blvd, Newtown, Geelong. (03) 5221 8290 53


[antiques & collectibles]

CERAMICS and much more MOORABOOL Antique Galleries’ two floors of intriguing objects range from furniture to silverware and almost everything in between. But the business is widely renowned for Australia’s largest range of antique ceramic items, along with a reference library containing more than 2000 books on ceramics. “We have ceramics from every period and place,” says owner Paul Rosenberg. “But we’re not just here to sell things. We’re here to share our knowledge, too.” Moorabool Antique Galleries’ regular high teas in the reference library serve guests on fine China as they discuss the ceramics on display. “I’d hate to do a stocktake,” Paul says. “We’ve never counted but we must have over 10,000 pieces on show.” Moorabool Antique Galleries has become something of a family tradition, with Paul operating the business in the footsteps of his father.

The 60-year-old business sticks to the “proper definition” of antiques, he says. “That means more than 100 years old, which includes the Georgian and Victorian eras. “We have a very wide variety of goods, which mirrors the diversity of our clientele. Our stock ranges from very affordable small gifts through to major pieces that we’ve sold to organisations like the National Gallery of Victoria and Geelong Art Gallery, even international institutions. “We have something for everyone.”

Paul Rosenberg and father John toast the success of Moorabool Antique Galleries with some of its extensive range of fine China.

Paul nominates his stock of “really old stuff”, dating back thousands of years, as the store’s point of difference. The oldest item is an “incredibly rare” 5000-year-old pottery bowl. “Surprisingly, it’s not expensive at all,” Paul explains. “Older in age doesn’t necessarily mean more-expensive.” Moorabool Antique Galleries is at 16/18 Ryrie Street, Geelong.

12404478-SN50-18

“I still meet customers who bought

things from him,” Paul smiles.

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[antiques & collectibles]

Graeme Acton with one of his antique Samurai swords.

WAY OF THE Samurai GEELONG military antiques collector Graeme Acton has dealt in many swords since his first acquisition 30 years ago.

like copper or brass with inlays of silver, gold or copper and have many designs and shapes,” he explains.

But one type in particular has captured his imagination and found a special place in his central Geelong antiques store and museum.

“Even rarer types might have fine inlays of material such as coral, pearl shell and cloisonne enamel.“

“Most of the swords I found over the years were machine-made but among them were sometimes older Samurai blades used during World War II,“ Graeme says.

Graeme’s ability to date the swords and even read inscriptions chiselled into their handles allows him to provide highly specialised valuation and restoration services.

“They have traditionally-made, hand-forged blades in a special iron called tamahagane, which is folded many times to create a unique grain in the metal.“

“I can also advise on ways to obtain a collector’s licence to legally own and collect swords. I’m happy to help anyone wanting to start a collection.”

Japanese swords are now collected as objects of art, Graeme explains, but their highly detailed fittings are collectables in their own right.

Graeme invites anyone interested in the swords and other militaria to visit his Armor Antiques & Military Museum, at 200 Moorabool Street, Geelong.

“The sword guard, or tsuba, like most sword fittings was made from iron or other softer metals

“It is one of the biggest collections of its type on display in Australia,” he declares.

ARMOR ANTIQUES & MILITARY MUSEUM

12372350-HM03-18

NEW UPSTAIRS MUSEUM NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

We buy and sell:- antique swords - guns – helmets – badges –uniforms - medals - books - authentic Samurai armour Services offered: - Medal mounting and framing - Valuations on most militaria. Museum with many rare Militaria items from around the world

200 Moorabool Street, Geelong T: 5221 8662 M: 0416 941566 E: armorantiques@hotmail.com

www.armorantiques.com

Open Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm Closed Monday & open most Sundays 55


[antiques] & collectibles

Let there be LIGHTING PETER Hames’ Oakwood Restorations has evolved over the past 18 years to be more than just a supplier of fixtures and fittings for period-home projects. With a background in textiles and design, Peter operates P.J. Hames Lighting within the business as his “passion project.“ Peter consults with clients at their homes or businesses, arriving with brochures and fittings to show how the right lighting can transform any room.

“Whether it’s a standout piece that demands attention or a subtle reflection of the decor, lighting is at the heart of interior design,“ he says, “but the wrong lighting choice can ruin the harmony of a room. “I source antique, vintage, modern and reproduction lighting from Australia and overseas and authentically restore it. I also create bespoke lighting that can look antique, decorative, industrial or understated.“

Browse through our wide selection of home GHFRU WR ÀQG MXVW ZKDW \RX KDYH EHHQ VHDUFKLQJ IRU 3DNLQJWRQ 6W 1HZWRZQ Ph 03 5229 9547 RDNZRRGUHVWRUDWLRQV FRP DX 12403373-SN49-18

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Peter has access to specialist suppliers so he can deliver modifications such as adjusting the length, finish or shading of lights to suit individual decor requirements. His lighting expertise is an extension of his flair for interiors, particularly blending contemporary and period decor. “The mistake people often make is thinking I’m limited to styling period homes and spaces only. In fact, I also consult on a variety of

modern architectural homes, offices, cafes and hairdressers.“ Renovators looking for supplies will find lighting from the 1850s to 1950s at Oakwood Restorations, along with other inspiring items ranging from fireplaces and tiles through to pressed metal and hardware in a variety of finishes. Oakwood Restorations is at 331 Pakington St, Newtown, phone 5229 9547 or visit P.J. Hames’ Facebook page.


[antiques] & collectibles

QUIRKY COLLECTION on the hill BELLERINE Collections has been intriguing shoppers since recently opening near the top of the Moorabool Street hill in Geelong. “Quirky” has emerged as a popular description of the business following its relocation from the river end of Bellerine Street. Reviews on the store’s Facebook page have been glowing. “The shop is very well set out and changes weekly with new, interesting collections,” posted a shopper who described herself as now a “regular visitor” at Bellerine Collections.

“Interesting place,” posted another visitor,” well-worth going for a squiz.” A third called the store “a great find”, admitting she could “not resist a purchase at such a reasonable price”. Bellerine Collections stocks a selection of products, ranging from antique and retro glass and china though to quality gifts for men, women and children. The items provide plenty of inspiration to find a talking piece for any room, even any ‘man cave’ in need of appropriate decor. Interior and exterior lighting is a specialty, while browsers will also find handmade gift cards, Australian and local pottery, baby gifts, soft furnishings, mirrors, furniture and garden-ware. Also, retro music fans will enjoy the store’s selection of vinyl LPs and 45s, cassette tapes, CDs and pianola rolls. Anyone wanting to understand the buzz about Bellerine Collections can visit the store at 243 Moorabool Street.

GIFTS COLLECTABLES RETRO LIGHTING VINYL VINTAGE

-//2! " //, 3 4 ' %%,/.' s / PE N D AY S s - O N 4 H U s & R I s 3 A T s 3UN 12402265-ACM49-18

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[Health] & Beauty

FINDING the BALANCE SPECIALIST trainer Ji Cottrill combines nearly 20 years of experience with a degree in sports science to help clients achieve optimum results.

Under-18 weightlifing champion Chloe Smallman training at Elite Bodies.

“I’m also a high school teacher and really enjoy working with teenagers,” Ji says. Ji’s concerned about a “misconception” that teenagers should avoid weight training. “Low-impact weight and strength training is in fact of very low risk for teenagers,” he explains. “The key is finding an excellent coach who understands good movement, patterns, and progressive overload to achieve the best results.“ Ji says nutrition is essential to training outcomes, so he encourages clients to develop a “good relationship” with food.

girls can develop poor relationships with food. I install the message in teens that food is required as fuel, and without the food we won’t get the results we want.

“In particular, I find that teenage

“There are no shortcuts.“

BE FO RE

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AF TE R

Ji says “star pupil“ Chloe is an example of what the right balance of strength training and diet can achieve. After three years of building a strong, lean physique with Ji, she has won Australian junior

powerlifting titles, including the 142.5kg deadlift at the aged of 16. More information and consultations are available by contacting Ji at Elite Bodies Training and Nutrition on 0431 372 257 or via its Facebook page.


[Health] & Beauty Richard Wallace shows Mark Brown the cutting-edge equipment at Kieser's new Torquay centre.

Kieser opens at TORQUAY PHYSIOTHERAPIST Richard Wallace is working one client at a time on Kieser’s mission of ‘Building a stronger Australia’. After beginning in Switzerland 52 years ago, Kieser now has nearly 150 centres in Europe. Kieser Australia arrived in 2006, with 13 centres now operating across Melbourne, Geelong and Sydney. A new centre opened at Torquay in November. “We saw a need in the Torquay area for physio, rehab and therapeutic strength training with the growing and ageing population,” Richard explains. “Kieser’s fusion of physiotherapy and strength and conditioning utilises an evidence-based, best-practice formula that sets us apart from other gyms and physio

clinics. Our strength-training programs are designed and overseen by specially trained medical professionals, and are safe and specific for individual needs. “Training at Kieser is very different to a traditional gym because of our Swiss-engineered equipment, non-intimidating environment and time-efficient programs that can be completed in 30 minutes, twice a week. “We work with a variety of people in the local community, from sport clubs such as the Geelong Cats to local health professionals and health insurers. We’ve also developed a program with GMHBA designed to delay or prevent joint replacement surgery as well as improve post-surgical outcomes for clients with osteoarthritis.”

Exercise scientist Jess Kirkman and Richard Wallace outside Kieser Torquay.

Anyone wanting to save $200 on a foundation membership at Kieser Torquay should visit kieser. com.au or phone 4216 6900.

THE KIESER HIP AND KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS PROGRAM PREVENT. DELAY. REHABILITATE.

NOW OPEN Kieser Torquay 96 Surf Coast Highway Torquay VIC 3228 Tel 03 4216 6900 Kieser Geelong 51 West Fyans Street Newtown VIC 3220 Tel 03 5221 7555

12-week program led by a Physiotherapist Designed to delay or prevent joint replacement surgery, or improve post-surgical outcomes For GMHBA members, the program will be fully funded by GMHBA*

Terms and Conditions: To qualify, a client must be a GMHBA member for 12 months or longer and hold valid hospital cover. Clients will require a referral from a medical practitioner to access the program. Offer is limited to the first 150 GMHBA members.

www.kieser.com.au 12402258-LB49-18

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[Health] & Beauty Taylor Sadeghi, Vicky Polyzos and Hannah Mahoney at Salon Meraki.

SALON celebrates expansion SALON Meraki Colour Specialists has celebrated its second birthday with an expanded team.

and strive to provide the best professional service we possibly can.”

“Don’t hesitate to call because we may have a spot available,” Vicky advises.

Owner Vicky Polyzos recently employed passionate qualified hairdresser Hannah Mahoney while introducing waxing and spray-tanning to the business menu.

As a certified L’Oréal colour specialist, the salon also uses Pureology shampoo and conditioners, TechnoTan for tanning services, and quality waxing products.

Pureology packs, other products and salon gift vouchers are available as Christmas gift ideas.

“The salon’s busier than ever and bringing a whole new clientele to Vines Road,” Vicky says.

The girls urge their clientele to book appointments now for colours, beauty services or styling to look great over the festive season and summer break.

“We value everyone who walks in

“We’re happy to help anyone choose the right product for themselves or that special someone,” Vicky says. Vicky prides herself on the salon’s standard of service, with friendly, warm smiles greeting each client.

Open Tuesdays to Saturdays, Salon Meraki’s final trading day before Christmas is 22 December. The salon reopens on 27 December before closing for the new year on the 29 December and opening again on 8 January. More information is available by visiting salonmeraki.com.au or the salon’s Facebook, or by phoning 5298 3465.

77 Vines Road - Hamlyn Heights | 5298 3465 www.salonmeraki.com.au Monday closed | Tues 9-5.30pm | Wed 9-6pm | Thur 9-8.30pm | Fri 10-6pm | Sat 8-2pm | Sunday closed

12362154-RC39-17

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[Health] & Beauty

Spirit of

Shanti Arwen treats a client at Procare Geelong.

THERAPY OFFICIALLY a myotherapist, Procare Geelong’s Shanti Arwen has developed a wider reputation as a medical soft-tissue therapist across a range of treatments. Shanti’s adept at everything from trigger-point therapy, deep-tissue massage and lymphatic drainage through to dry needling, muscle energy technique, pregnancy massage and postural analysis. “These old fingers of mine know so much more than I do,” she laughs serenely. “I really love my hands-on rehabilitation work.” Shanti attributes her “spiritual compassion” for her journey to myotherapy through healing disciplines including nursing, Ayurvedic medicine, remedial massage and aromatherapy. “I allow space for the body to heal itself,” she explains. “I create space in muscle fibres so nerves and vessels can

communicate and pulse effectively, space in muscular systems for joints and bones to restore, and space in a quiet room for the mind to allow the body to operate the way it knows how. “I’m very clinical when it comes to hygiene and dry needling but I prefer to work in a tranquil, home-like space within a clinic.” Shanti describes working at Procare as “an absolute joy”. “We hear the phrase ’dedicated team’ all the time but I really am working with a dedicated team and our patients know this. “We’re all dedicated to our craft, our patients and each other. We’re deeply connected as a family within the family of Geelong and we work together hand in glove.” Contact Shanti at Procare Geelong on 5243 3819 or visit pro-care.com.au for more information.

12404991-JF49-18

“At Procare, we’ll get you moving.”

UÊ"ÃÌi «>Ì Þ]Ê Þ Ì iÀ>«Þ]Ê> `ÊÊÊ ÊÊÊÀi i` > Ê >ÃÃ>}i° UÊ/Ài>Ì i ÌÊ vÊ ÕÃVÕ Ã i iÌ> Ê Ê «> ° UÊ,i ivÊvÀ ÊL>V Ê> `Ê iV Ê«> ° UÊ*iÀà > Ãi`Ê«> Ê > >}i i ÌÊÊ ÊÊÊ«À }À> ð UÊ ÊÀiviÀÀ> Ê iViÃÃ>ÀÞ° UÊ*À Û>ÌiÊ i> Ì Ê ÃÕÀ> ViÊÊÊÊÊÊ ÊÊÊ>VVi«Ìi`°

13 Francis St, Belmont Geelong, 3216 (03) 5243 3819 | pro-care.com.au 61


12406527-SN49-18

THINKING OF SELLING? Speak to your agent about listing on realestateview.com.au.

Be seen everywhere.


[what's] cooking

EBONY & IVORY celebrates EBONY & Ivory’s Jurgen Schlotzer and Ninni Stagno are celebrating their first year in business after taking ownership of the venue in 2017. “Hospitality is absolutely new for me but the food industry isn’t,” Jurgen says, “and Ninni has 10 years of hospitality experience but this is the first business he’s jointly owned.“ Jurgen handles the administration duties while Ninni works the front of house, including making the venue’s signature coffees. “We have a very good coffee grinder and every cup’s freshly ground,“ Jurgen says. Ebony & Ivory offers restaurant and cafe areas, along with a beer garden that can hold around 30 people. The versatile spaces provide options for meetings, business lunches, coffee and cake gettogethers, and small functions for up to 75 guests. “There’s privacy for a romantic dinner, too,” Jurgen says.

Our summer menu includes lighter sauces with the dishes, and an emphasis on homecooking in the style of Ninni's brother's mum's Sicilian cuisine, Jurgen explains. The popular steak dish and aquapazza will continue on our menu. We ve had them on there since day one. We'll also continue serving our home-made pasta, gnocci and fettucinne because that s what we are and what we pride ourselves on. It's made fresh daily in our the kitchen. Chicken cacciatore and fish acquapazza are just some of the most-ly traditional Sicilian dishes on the menu. The dessert menu also features house-made specialties, with Jurgen recommending the vanilla slice or Portuguese tart in particular. “Our pastry chef also makes flourless cakes and bakes muffins every day.“ Ebony & Ivory is at 189 Moorabool Street, Geelong.

Ninni enjoying the relaxing fireplace area at Ebony and Ivory.

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cafe, restaurant, catering, functions + celebrations 189 Moorabool St, Geelong | Ph: 5221 6072 OPEN 7 DAYS Mon-Sat 8am to 11pm Sun 10am-3pm 63


[social] network

Melbourne Cup day at the SPHINX HOTEL 1

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1. CAROLYN AND NIKITA JOHNSON. 2. FRED GROOTVELD. 3. JARRED AND COOPER DAHL. 4. ELISE DAHL AND LIZ POWELL. 5. YVETTE MENZEL AND MICHELLE URQUHART. 6. AVA REDMOND, KERRIE SEXTON, KELLY NORTH AND KEZZA SUNSHINE. 7. ROB MCKINLEY AND ANN POOLE. 8. MARK AND MILLY EDEBOHLS. 9. COLIN AND ANNETTE HARRIS. 10. MILLY EDEBOHLS, MILICA BOZINOVSKA AND DRAGICA TEMELKOVSKA.

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[social] network

Charles Rose cocktail party for the GEELONG CUP CHARLES ROSE together with the Geelong Racing Club’s cocktail party to celebrate bet365 Geelong Cup. 1

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Pictures: ELISSA FRIDAY

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[social] network

NATIONAL WOOL MUSEUM

retro cocktail party 1. ABBEY JANE AND

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LEXI DEROCK. 2. CAVELLE MCKENZIE AND TOM MOLYNEUX. 3. ALARD PETT, STACEY CARMICHAEL, GRANT COLLINS AND BENJAMIN MITCHELL. 4. DONNA BARNARD AND JENNIFER BROMELEY. 5. JOEL CARNEGIE, TESS JANUS AND PADRAIC FISHER. 6. KIYANNA TODD AND SIMON TODD. 7. MANDY LOVETT AND SUE RITTMEYER. 8. MARIE ALLAMAN,

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PAUL ESSEN, DAMIEN KENNY AND CAROLE SARASA. 9. SINAED MAXWELL AND ELIZA-MAY TOLHURST. 10. THOMAS BYRNE, CHRIS ROURKE, NARDIA BRANCATISANO, MARK AIRD AND BEN VAN NIEWERK. 11. WENDY LEEKE, LYNN MARTIN AND SANDRA LOAIZA.

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