airnorth april/may 2016

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Issue 137 • Apr/May 2016 + RegionalBusinessReview WHAT’S ON TOWNSVILLE SKI RESORTS OIL & GAS EDUCATION We discover Groote Eylandt offers amazing adventures both above & below the water NORTHERN EXPOSURE

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Page 1: Airnorth April/May 2016

Issue 137 • Apr/May 2016

+RegionalBusinessReview

WHAT’S ON TOWNSVILLE SKI RESORTS OIL & GAS EDUCATION

We discover Groote Eylandt offers amazing adventures both above & below the water

NORTHERNEXPOSURE

Page 2: Airnorth April/May 2016

AKUNA BLUE™, DRINK HISTORY

AUSTRALIA’S FINEST STILL AND SPARKLINGARTESIAN WATER

Holly Tapp, Akuna Blue™ Brand Ambassador

akunablue.com.au facebook.com/akunablue twitter.com/akuna_blue instagram.com/akunablue

OUTthere A4.indd 2 15/03/2016 4:20 pm

Page 3: Airnorth April/May 2016

Cairns

to Manila

Kupang

The Granites

Tennant Creek

Toowoomba

Melbourne

Katherine

Alice Springs

A u s t r a l i a

McArthur River

Christmas Creek

This month’s issue takes you coast to coast, showcasing some of the first-class events being held across Northern Australia over the next few months, together with unique accommodation options.

Excitingly, we have commenced non-stop jet services between Toowoomba and Melbourne, and Toowoomba and Cairns. Residents of Toowoomba and the surrounding regions can now enjoy the sporting, shopping, dining and cultural experiences of Melbourne as well as the diverse natural treasures of tropical Northern Queensland.

In April, the sound of galloping hooves will pound through Clifford Park on Weetwood Raceday, Toowoomba’s greatest horse-racing meet, worth more than $650,000 and part of the Queensland Winter Racing Carnival. The premier race is the Weetwood Handicap, a 126-year-old event that’s expected to draw a

5,000-strong crowd and some of the state’s best horses.

Over 10 exciting days in May, Argyle Diamonds’ Ord Valley Muster will be held at venues in and around Kununurra, Western Australia. Comprised of more more than 30 events, this year features Australian restaurateur and TV personality George Calombaris and former Powderfinger frontman Bernard Fanning. The muster won the 2015 Tourism Award for Australia’s Best Regional Event and tickets will sell faster than ever this year, so I urge you to grab yours before they sell out.

Heading east, Townsville turns up the volume this month. For motor enthusiasts, Castrol EDGE Townsville 400 V8 Supercars is three days of fun-filled excitement. Live music fans have the choice of getting their groove on at Groovin the Moo, a 10-day festival packed

with some of the world’s finest musicians; or experiencing Rocket Man, an entertaining salute to Sir Elton John.

From here, we head north to Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria, renowned for its Aboriginal art and culture, and some of the best fishing in the world. The traditional owners of the Groote Eylandt archipelago are the Warnindilyakwa people, usually referred to by their language name, Anindilyakwa.

Wherever your destination across Australia’s north this May, there are plenty of memorable ways to experience the local culture – here we give you just a taste of what’s on offer.

Now sit back, relax with our inflight service and enjoy the issue.

Daniel BowdenChief Executive Officer

Airnorth reservations: 1800 627 474 or airnorth.com.au

Welcome aboard!

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Engines Two jet Wingspan 26m Length 29.9m Height 9.95m Maximum take-off weight 37,200kg Maximum cruise altitude 41,000ft/12,535m Maximum cruise speed 450kns/820km/h Passenger seats 76 Crew 2 pilots, 2 cabin attendants Passenger facilities 2 galleys, 2 lavatories, pressurised and air conditioned

Engines Two turboprop Wingspan 19.78m Length 20.0m Height 6.35m Maximum take-off weight 11,990kg Maximum cruise altitude 32,000ft/9,754m Maximum cruise speed 300kns/555km/h Passenger seats 30 Crew 2 pilots, 1 cabin attendant Passenger facilities Lavatory, cabin ground heating/cooling system

Engines Two turboprop Wingspan 17.70m Length 18.10m Height 5.10m Maximum take-off weight 7,485kg Maximum cruise altitude 25,000ft/7,620m Maximum cruise speed 265kns/490km/h Passenger seats 19 Crew 2 pilots

EMBRAER E170

EMBRAER E120 BRASILIA

METROLINER 23

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safetyinfo

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safetyinfo

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SAFETY BRIEFINGPlease listen carefully to the Safety Briefing and take the time to read through the Safety on Board card prior to take-off. This will help you familiarise yourself with the emergency exits, brace position and the location of your life jacket.

SEATBELTSSeatbelts must be fastened firmly for take-off, landing and while the seatbelt sign is illuminated. We recommend that your seatbelt be fastened at all times while you are seated in case of unexpected turbulence.

CARRY-ON LUGGAGEIf you have carry-on luggage, please stow it in the overhead locker or under the seat in front of you. Hand luggage that is not correctly stowed may cause injury in the event of unexpected turbulence.

ELECTRONIC DEVICESPortable electronic devices can cause electromagnetic interference to the aircraft systems. The interference can cause aircraft systems to malfunction. To provide adequate protection for the aircraft, please note that mobile phones must not be used at any time on board the aircraft. Other devices, such as MP3 players, iPods, CD players, portable palmtop and laptop computers, cassette players, personal electronic organisers and personal DVD and video games may be used during cruise only, NOT when the aircraft is taking off or landing.

TRAY TABLES/ SEAT BACKSPlease ensure that your tray table and your seat back are in their upright positions for take-off and landing.

DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS (DVT)It has been reported that some airline passengers have developed clots in deep blood vessels, often in the lower legs, as a result of sitting for extended periods without exercise or movement. This condition is known medically as deep vein thrombosis or DVT. If blood-clot fragments break off and lodge in other areas of the body, such as the lungs, they may cause a potentially fatal pulmonary thrombosis when the person starts walking after being immobile for a lengthy period of time.Risk factors for DVT include varicose veins, recent surgery or injury to the lower legs, malignant diseases, past history of DVT, obesity, pregnancy and recent childbirth. Anyone with any of these risk factors is advised to consult a medical practitioner prior to flying to find out how to minimise the risk of DVT.

During the flight, we recommend that you take the following precautions: • Drink plenty of fluids, especially

water, and minimise your intake of alcohol.

• Exercise on board the aircraft by moving and stretching your toes, rotating your ankles, raising and lowering each leg and massaging your calves gently. In addition, we suggest that you avoid crossing your legs during the flight.

SMOKINGGovernment regulations strictly prohibit smoking on all domestic flights. Special smoke detectors have been fitted to the toilets on board all of our aircraft. Smoking is also prohibited on the tarmac and throughout airport terminal buildings.

ON TIME EVERY TIMETo assist in maintaining on-time departures, check-in time is 45 minutes prior to departure for domestic flights and 90 minutes prior to departure for international flights. Airnorth check-in counters close 30 minutes prior to domestic scheduled departures and 45 minutes prior to international scheduled departures.

FREQUENT FLYERSAirnorth is a member of the Qantas Frequent Flyer program. Members can earn and redeem their Frequent Flyer points on selected Airnorth scheduled services.

FLYING WITH CHILDRENInfant safety belts are available on Airnorth aircraft and are distributed prior to take-off.

CHILDREN FLYING ALONEIf you have children between the ages of five and 11 (inclusive) travelling alone, we ensure they enjoy the attention of our staff on the ground and in flight.

AIRNORTH SERVICESOn our services, you can expect a snack accompanied by a selection of tea and coffee or cold refreshments. On selected afternoon services, alcoholic beverages are also available. Refer to airnorth.com.au for more details.

SPECIAL NEEDSPassengers with special needs and/or disabilities, please contact our Reservations Department.

Your safety and comfort are our priority

BELOW ARE SOME GUIDELINES TO ENSURE YOUR FLIGHT WITH US IS MORE ENJOYABLE

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airnorthnews

irnorth has commenced non-stop jet services between Toowoomba (the new Brisbane

West Wellcamp Airport) and Melbourne, and between Toowoomba and Cairns.

Operating seven return flights a week, running every day of the week except Saturday, between Toowoomba and Melbourne, and three return flights a week – on Tuesdays, Fridays

and Sundays – between Toowoomba and Cairns, this new route opens up the cities of Melbourne and Cairns for residents of Toowoomba and the surrounding regions.

Residents of the Toowoomba region will now be able to spend weekends in Melbourne, attending some of Australia’s leading sporting, culinary and cultural events; or in Cairns, the ideal

base for experiencing some of North Queensland’s extraordinary natural attractions. Indeed, a Toowoomba resident taking one of the new direct services from Brisbane West Wellcamp Airport will be arrive at their destination – whether it be Melbourne or Cairns – in less than the time it would take them to drive to Brisbane Airport, park and board an aircraft.

Toowoomba – Melbourne & Toowoomba – Cairns

New jet service operation:

Visitors will find much to love in Melbourne. There are shopping, dining and cultural experiences to discover along every street and laneway in its CBD and many of its inner suburbs.

EventsVirtually any time you visit Melbourne, your stay is likely to coincide with one of the city’s fantastic festivals or major events. Here, there are cultural and culinary happenings on throughout the year.

See & doMelbourne is packed with attractions, from laid-back laneways and lushly vegetated parks to grand libraries and museums, all wrapped up in a vibrant atmosphere.

Eat & drinkThe southern capital is a serious culinary hot spot, with everything from burger joints to swish eateries boasting big-name chefs. The city also supports a thriving bar scene.

ShopWith a mix of fashion-forward boutiques, elegant arcades and buzzing retail precincts, Melbourne is arguably Australia’s very best shopping destination.

Melbourne

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airnorthnews

Sleep on the Great Barrier ReefIt’s not every day you get the opportunity to sleep on a floating pontoon in the middle of the world’s largest coral reef! Cruise Whitsundays departs Airlie Beach, Daydream Island and Hamilton Island daily, transporting guests to its large, well-equipped pontoon on the outer barrier reef for a Reefsleep overnight adventure.

Spend the day however you like – go on a snorkelling safari, sunbathe on the pontoon deck, take a helicopter flight over the reef (at an additional cost) – but come 3pm, the

daytrippers head home and just nine Reefsleep guests remain.

After sundown, you can join a guided night dive before snuggling up in a swag under the stars (or, if you prefer more privacy, in a double room). Wake up to the most pimped breakfast location on earth.

Swim with dwarf minke whales Grab a rope, jump off the back of a dive boat and hold on tight to experience a magical encounter with the most curious of sea creatures. Queensland is the only place in the world where you can

swim with dwarf minke whales. These majestic cetaceans, which can grow up to nine metres in length, live in the northern Ribbon Reefs for just a few weeks each winter – some even coming within arm’s length during encounters.

For close experiences, head to Mike Ball Dive Expeditions or Eye to Eye Marine Encounters: both outfits offer three- to seven-day expeditions that depart Cairns to meet up with the ‘minkes’.

Keep in mind that itineraries may be changed at short notice, depending on what the whales are up to!

Picnic in the middle of the reefLive life like a rock star and enjoy a gourmet picnic on a deserted sandy coral islet (or cay) – Vlassoff Cay – that is covered by water except at low tide each day and is smack-bang in the middle of the Great Barrier Reef.

Departing from Cairns or Port Douglas, Great Barrier Reef Heli’s private charters come with breathtaking reef scenery, two and a half hours to swim, snorkel and relax, and a tropical brunch platter paired with fine Australian sparkling wine.

CairnsTropical North Queensland is as diverse in natural treasures as the cosmopolitan mix of people that call this region home.

There are more than a few clichés that ring true when it comes to the Great Barrier Reef: lily-white sand, tropical islands and Nemo. What we think makes it so special are the experiences you won’t find anywhere else in the world…

Page 8: Airnorth April/May 2016

INTEGRATED UNDERGROUND MINING SERVICES

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THERAISING BARAs leaders in underground mining, PYBAR sets performance benchmarks by delivering value through fast, effi cient and responsive service.

SYDNEYSuite 5, Level 211 Alfred StreetSydney NSW 2000

PERTHSuite 2, 47 Cedric StreetStirling WA 6021

KALGOORLIE23 Broadwood StreetKalgoorlie WA 6430

HEAD OFFICE 1668–1670 Forest RoadPO Box 2154Orange NSW 2800

EFFICIENT.RESPONSIVE.

FAST.

Page 9: Airnorth April/May 2016

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airnorthnews

Rocket Man by String FeverAugust 13Rocket Man is a unique and entertaining salute to Sir Elton John, one of the world’s most iconic popular-music figures. The show covers Elton’s remarkable career, from his first hit song through the disco era to his music for Disney film, The Lion King. You’ll also hear intriguing, often hilarious tales about Elton’s life and the stories behind many of the songs.

TownsvilleTownsville offers the perfect excuse for a tropical holiday. Come and uncover a vibrant and bustling city with an impressive calendar of events that’s sure to inspire and delight.

Groovin The Moo May 1Groovin the Moo is Australia’s largest regional touring music festival. With 12 hours of non-stop music across every genre, Groovin the Moo showcases the best of Australian contemporary artists and renowned international performers, and will not disappoint.

V8 Supercars: Castrol Edge Townsville 400 July 8–10This usually laid-back North Queensland city is sure to heat up when the V8 Supercars arrive for the Castrol EDGE Townsville 400. The three-day event features high-octane V8 Supercar racing through the streets of Townsville and, with critical Championship points on offer, the races are sure to be intense. The Dunlop Series will also take to the streets, with the rising stars battling it out in the ‘breeding ground’ for the main game. There is something for the whole family here, from the on-track action to the trackside entertainment, V8 Supercars Paddock and more.

Australian Festival Of Chamber MusicJuly 29–August 6The Australian Festival of Chamber Music presents the finest musicians from around the world in a wonderfully unique and innovative nine-day program that includes 30 concerts. There is truly nothing like it in the world: the unique mix of music, warmth and tropical environs creates a special atmosphere that entices audiences and artists back year after year.

Page 10: Airnorth April/May 2016

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The Queensland way

Retro cool

Drawing inspiration from mid-century Californian hotels and Townsville’s own backyard, the redevelopment of the Ville Resort – Casino embraces our northern lifestyle in a very cool, contemporary fashion, as seen in its 66 new ‘resort’ rooms.

ith the completion of The Ville Resort – Casino’s newly designed hotel

rooms and a new restaurant to connect to what will be a new resort-style pool, guests are seeing Townsville’s iconic property take new shape under its $35 million redevelopment.

Global design practice Woods Bagot has spearheaded the redevelopment of the Jupiters property, with the overarching goal of creating a precinct locals can be proud to call their own and a tourism destination for domestic and international visitors.

“The design team wanted to merge authentic Queensland design features with the glamour of mid-century hotels in California,” explains Anna Faunt, Associate and Architect at Woods Bagot. “Classic destinations like The Beverly Hills Hotel, alongside more modern offerings like the Ace Hotel in Palm Springs, were inspirational in creating an on-trend, luxury guest experience.”

The 66 resort rooms feature custom palm-frond-patterned carpet and v-groove timber panelling in a nod to traditional ‘Queenslander’ homes and our tropical geography. The rooms contain all the mod cons expected of today’s hotel rooms, affordability for guests and some of the best views the north has to offer.

“The view to Magnetic Island and the local natural landscape has been particularly inspiring and a big driver in the design process,” tells Anna.

“One design aspiration was to create the feel of a European pool club with day beds and bars offering guests sweeping views of Magnetic Island as they lounge by the infinity pool.”

The infinity pool will certainly be a drawcard for hotel guests, as will The Palm House – a modern market buffet to replace the current Aqua restaurant – due for completion later in 2016. Generous bi-fold doors will allow The Palm House to flow directly out onto a terraced dining area where guests can dine by the pool shaded by the deck above and surrounded by palms.

“The Palm House’s interior materiality is inspired by North Queensland, with white painted timber panelling, rattan screens and feature wallpaper in a botanical print,” says Anna. “Wooden ceiling fans further enhance the tropical retro feel of the space.”

Next to come following the completion of the Resort Rooms and The Palm House, will be a poolside precinct unlike any in North Queensland; it will incorporate a poolside cocktail bar, private cabanas, a fitness and wellbeing centre and a stunning re-make of the poolside function centre. The revamp will also include a bistro bar with a beer garden that will connect the lobby to the casino and the outdoors; a modern Asian-fusion restaurant; and a casino ‘refresh’.

A new name is just the beginning…

the-ville.com.au

The Resort Rooms 66 rooms over 3 levels,

ocean or marina views,

king and twin rooms and suites.

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airnorthnews

Best regional event in Australia

Lights. Cameras. Magic! With more than 30 events over 10 exciting days, the Argyle Diamonds Ord Valley Muster will be held in and around Kununurra from 13 to 22 May 2016.

he breathtaking ancient landscape of the Kimberley, with its magical energy,

deserves to be listed as a star attraction alongside Australian culinary, music and entertainment luminaries.

MasterChef Australia judge and decorated chef and restaurateur George Calombaris will be leading culinary creations at the Kimberley Kitchen (presented by the Kununurra Country Club Resort) on Wednesday May 18 and the Durack Homestead Dinner on Thursday May 19, both hosted by renowned food critic Rob Broadfield.

Chef Paul Iskov from Fervor will prepare the delicious. Breakfast By Fervor on Friday May 20, and the delicious. Degustation Dinner by Fervor

on Sunday May 22 – both at a secret location amid the spectacular East Kimberley landscape.

Iskov, a pioneer in the native food movement, says he is eager to discover nature’s food bowl in Western Australia’s north-west.

The muster’s biggest event and huge party, the Kimberley Moon Experience on Saturday May 21, features one of Australia’s most loved singer-songwriters, former Powderfinger frontman Bernard Fanning, who will perform with six-time ARIA-nominated Fremantle band San Cisco and country music singer-songwriter Troy Cassar-Daley.

“It’s such a privilege for us to be able to visit these sacred places and I am looking forward to playing some new

and old songs under the outback sky,” Fanning says.

Whether you are into food, sport, art or culture, or are someone who loves to travel and experience extraordinary things, the muster is set to deliver.

Awarded Australia’s Best Regional Event at the 2015 Australian Event Awards, the muster draws people from all over Australia and beyond for black-tie dining under the Kimberley stars, relaxed community celebrations, epic performances, sporting contests, creativity, arts, culture, cooking lessons, raucous comedy, music and much more.

Visit ordvalleymuster.com.au for a full list of events at the 2016 Argyle Diamonds Ord Valley Muster.

Airnorth flies to Kununurra daily via Darwin and Broome, and will be operating non-stop services from Perth to Kununurra on Thursday May 19 and from Kununurra to Perth on Sunday May 22. Don’t miss out – seats are selling fast. Book now at airnorth.com.au

Page 12: Airnorth April/May 2016

PLAN A FEW days break in Toowoomba this autumn – you’ll feel the distinct change of

season amid falling leaves and get to know the locals at some top country events from the

Weetwood Races to the First Coat Street Art Festival. Compiled by Jane Hodges

Toowoomba is the charming gateway to Southern Queensland Country, a region blessed

with four distinct seasons and breathtaking natural beauty all around. In early autumn

you’ll see the leaves start to turn in the tree-lined streets and the parks and gardens the city

is known for. By mid-autumn they’ll be fluttering to earth in shades from yellows and golds

through to reds and purples as the days grow cooler. Do as the locals do and cosy up to a log

fire and relax with a glass of local red. This is Autumn in Southern Queensland Country.

The city centre offers laneway cafes, buzzing bars and street art that would sit happily in

cosmopolitan Brisbane or Melbourne - but without the traffic jams and no-time-to-talk rush

of the locals. Here the vibe is laid back and people know how to have a good time.

There’s plenty to do in and around the city and many autumn events to plan for.

Cobb + Co Museum: One of the best

regional museums in the country, Cobb +

Co presents a colourful and interactive local

history including the story of the sturdy

horse-drawn Cobb & Co coaches which

delivered mail and people far and wide from

1866 until cars ran them out of business.

The museum is home to the National

Carriage Collection and offers the chance

to learn traditional skills from blacksmithing

and silversmithing to leadlighting and

millinery at regular small group workshops.

You can see a special exhibition of

photographs and memorabilia in the Cobb

& Co. comes to Queensland ‘Larrikins, rough

tracks and runaway horses’ exhibition until

June 30, 2016.

Autumn Leaf Trail: In the city, kids (and big

kids) will love crunching through piles of

multi-coloured autumn leaves in beautiful

Queens Park. The perfectly manicured

Ju Raku En Japanese Garden features

Japanese Maples and Liquidambars and is

the perfect spot for a picnic or simply to sit

and relax. Those up for a challenge can set

off from Picnic Point on the Pardalote Trail

or travel a little out of town to explore Crows

Nest or Ravensbourne National Parks.

Browse the Markets: Taste local produce

and meet the growers, makers and

bakers at My Local Farmer’s Market each

Thursday afternoon on the green at The

Empire Theatre in Neil Street, from 3 – 6pm.

Toowoomba Farmer’s Market happens

at the Showground the last Saturday of

month with Autumn Markets set for April

30 and May 28. Vintage and second-hand

hunters will love the PCYC Markets every

Sunday from 7am to 12.30pm at 219a

James Street; and if you’re keen on quality

handmade craft and clothing, get along

to the Queens Park Markets on the third

Sunday of the month, from 8am to 1pm.

Coat of Many Colours: No it’s not

Melbourne. The vibrant large scale street

art murals in the heart of Toowoomba’s

CBD are the result of the First Coat

Festival which returns for a third year in

May 2016. Seeing the artists at work and

joining a guided tour are great reasons

to come during the festival but you can

find your way around more than 30 walls

throughout the city anytime with the

help of a map available from Toowoomba

Visitor Information Centre in James Street.

Catch a show: The largest regional theatre

in Australia, Toowoomba’s premier stage

and music venue, the art deco era Empire

Theatre was beautifully renovated in the

late 1990s. It’s a stunning place to see a

show and regularly presents everything

from comedy to orchestral concerts.

Check the autumn program at

empiretheatre.com.au

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airnorthnews

A town for all seasonsAs the capital of the Darling Downs region, Toowoomba is the gateway from Brisbane, the Gold Coast and the Sunshine Coast to the western downs. Mountains, lakes, waterfalls, rainforest and scenic country drives are some of the natural attractions in Toowoomba and surrounds.

Felton Food Festival April 10Local farmers selling their produce,

cooking demonstrations, food stalls

and entertainment at Felton, just

thirty minutes from Toowomba.

feltonfoodfestival.org.au

Toowoomba Weetwood Raceday April 16

Join the locals for a Calcutta dinner, the

excitement of the races and fashions on

the field at Toowoomba’s premier racing

event. weetwood.com.au

The Woolshed Classic Motorcycle Rally 30 - 2 May Jondaryan Woolshed hosts a long

weekend of vintage motorcycles for the

enthusiast! jondaryanwoolshed.com.au

Hampton Food & Arts Festival May 15 Art, food and plenty of local cheer mix

well at this annual favourite.

hamptonfestival.com

First Coat Street Art Festival May 20-29

Watch as artists from around the world

transform Toowoomba’s CBD into a

vibrant outdoor art gallery. firstcoat.com.au

Destination information: southernqueenslandcountry.com

Getting there: Airnorth flies to

Toowoomba’s Brisbane West

Wellcamp Airport.

Time your visit to take

in an autumn event

Page 13: Airnorth April/May 2016

16 Speargrass Rd, Kununurra WA 6743 | (08) 9168 [email protected] | www.waringarriarts.com.au

Celebrating Art and Culture

Art & Culture Tours

Mon 16 - Wed 18 May4:00 - 6:00pmincludes meeting artists, bush tucker tasting and sunset location$75 adult, $35 child 5-15 yrs

WARINGARRI ABORIGINAL ARTS

Share a rare experience Connect to a timeless land rich in culture

Tickets via Waringarri Arts and Kununurra Visitor Centre

Corroboree Under the Stars Thur 19 May 5:30 - 8:30pm with ground cooked beef & damper supper film screening $35 adult, $10 child 5-15 yrs $75 family, $250 groups of ten

Kununurra Visitor Centre75 Coolibah Drive, Kununurra WA 6743

08 9168 1177 or 1800 586 868www.visitkununurra.com | [email protected]

Page 14: Airnorth April/May 2016

Contract Paramedic Services

If you are looking for the best trained and most experienced paramedics in Australia, look no further than St John Ambulance in the Northern Territory. Only St John Ambulance can provide the type of training and intense daily incident experience to produce the best “battle hardened” paramedics. Talk to our paramedic contract division about providing… • Turnkey paramedic services• Trained crews• Specialist equipment• Treatment facilities• Vehicle conversions• First aid kits & supplies …everything to meet your emergency response needs.

Call (08) 8935 2502 St John Ambulance Australia (NT) Inc.

First Aid for all TerritoriansBattle hardened

Integrity | Respect | Quality | Dedication | Compassion

St John Contract Paramedic Full Page 210x275 Ad with 5mm Bleed

www.ContractParamedics.com.au

Ambulancemore

Page 15: Airnorth April/May 2016

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GROOTEOur clumsy fisherman Roderick Eime finds plenty

to get excited about on Groote Eylandt

Reeling’em in on

ang! I’m on. Even clumsy fishos like me

will know the satisfying tug of a healthy game fish when it latches

on – and so the fight begins.“Get ’im in!” Nick urges me as I fumble

with the reel. I haven’t put on my waist bucket, so the end of the rod starts to dig into my tender bits as I struggle to land what I’m certain is my biggest fish ever.

Nick Darby is my professional fish guide and the younger half of the father-and-son team who manage the sport fishing

operations here at Groote Eylandt Lodge in Northern Territory’s Gulf of Carpentaria.

“Don’t back off, keep the line tight …”Whatever it is, it has plenty of life in it

as I pull on the rod and reel it in a couple of metres at a time. Nick has the net and the gaff hook ready and seems almost about to leap over the side with his weapons to get this monster on board.

A flash of silver teases me in the clear waters below as the animal fights to the last. But then, all of a sudden, the agitated antics of my fish are gone and I’m left

Contract Paramedic Services

If you are looking for the best trained and most experienced paramedics in Australia, look no further than St John Ambulance in the Northern Territory. Only St John Ambulance can provide the type of training and intense daily incident experience to produce the best “battle hardened” paramedics. Talk to our paramedic contract division about providing… • Turnkey paramedic services• Trained crews• Specialist equipment• Treatment facilities• Vehicle conversions• First aid kits & supplies …everything to meet your emergency response needs.

Call (08) 8935 2502 St John Ambulance Australia (NT) Inc.

First Aid for all TerritoriansBattle hardened

Integrity | Respect | Quality | Dedication | Compassion

St John Contract Paramedic Full Page 210x275 Ad with 5mm Bleed

www.ContractParamedics.com.au

Ambulancemore

Page 16: Airnorth April/May 2016

with a massive deadweight, like I’ve hooked a refrigerator.

“Bugger!” is not what Nick said, but it was a loud expression of disappointment all the same and he took the reel from me to land whatever had taken over my lure. A couple of minutes later, I could see what it was – and it was angry. A shark, perhaps nearly two metres long, had taken the fish before I could get it close enough to the boat.

“You have to be quick,” Nick reminded me. “These guys will have your fish as quick as a flash.”

So, in the space of the next hour, we managed to land a couple of 10-plus kilogram GTs (giant trevally), a queen fish or two and the odd decent snapper and nanoguy. We keep the last two for the kitchen, but the queenies and GTs go back. Annoyed as I am that we lose so many fish to sharks, I am buoyed by the knowledge that so many sharks and fish are a sign of a very healthy marine ecosystem.

Now I have to confess, despite numerous golden opportunities over the years, I’m still a dunce when it comes to fishing, but here in the waters off Groote the fish are so keen, you have to bait your hook behind a tree. And even if the ravenous whaler sharks get every second one, there’s still plenty in the tub at day’s end.

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“You have to be quick,” Nick reminded me. “These guys will have your fish as quick as a flash.”

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FAST FACTGroote Eylandt, meaning

‘large island’, owes its unusual

spelling to the archaic Dutch

language used by explorer Abel

Tasman when he charted the

island in 1644.

Page 18: Airnorth April/May 2016

Come and join us for an unforgettable helifishing adventure

HELISPIRIT.COM.AU | CALL 1800 1800 85

Cruise the gorges and wetlands of the mighty Ord River

TRIPLEJTOURS.COM.AU | CALL 08 9168 2682

KUNUNURRA – THE KIMBERLEYIN THE AIR, ON THE WATER AND UNDER THE STARS

Relax in stylish, award winning accommodation set amongst tropical gardens

FRESHWATERAPARTMENTS.NET.AU | CALL 1300 729 267

Kununurra The Kimberley_AIRNORTH_210x275.indd 1 1/09/2015 3:01 pm

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Groote Eylandt Lodge is located just outside the only substantial township on Australia’s fourth largest island, Alyangula, where the big bulk carriers tie up to load their cargo of manganese ore every couple of days. This valuable, coal-like metal has been mined here since 1964 and is a vital ingredient in modern steel-making. Royalties are paid to the local Anindilyakwa Land Council (ALC) and some of these funds are used for community projects and developments like Groote Eylandt Lodge.

Right now, any slack in the lodge’s capacity is taken up by the FIFO boys who rotate through Darwin, so there’s always a healthy crowd at the bar and in-house Seagrass Restaurant which, by the way, is more than happy to cook your prize catch for your dinner.

Nick and his dad, Andrew, won the contract to operate the game fishing and maintain the two state-of-the-art, twin 150hp boats custom-built in the USA and decorated with local indigenous motifs.

Now, while fishing may be the big drawcard, it’s certainly not the only thing going for Groote Eylandt and the lodge. Nick introduces me to Scott Wurramarrba, a minor mountain of a bloke with a barbed-wire beard and a shearer’s handshake. He’s the real deal.

Nick and his dad, Andrew, maintain the two state-of-the-art, twin 150hp boats

custom-built in the USA and decorated with local indigenous motifs.

Groote Eylandt

Groote Eylandt

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Come and join us for an unforgettable helifishing adventure

HELISPIRIT.COM.AU | CALL 1800 1800 85

Cruise the gorges and wetlands of the mighty Ord River

TRIPLEJTOURS.COM.AU | CALL 08 9168 2682

KUNUNURRA – THE KIMBERLEYIN THE AIR, ON THE WATER AND UNDER THE STARS

Relax in stylish, award winning accommodation set amongst tropical gardens

FRESHWATERAPARTMENTS.NET.AU | CALL 1300 729 267

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“The nose is a bit of a giveaway,” he jokes, pointing to a large, but unusually slender nasal appendage, “my dad was Greek.”

With that we jump in the troopie and head off for a tour of the island and its indigenous sites. Scott’s trusty dog, Lady, takes her place in the back seat. Groote Eylandt, as I am about to learn, is home to some of most sought-after East Arnhem Land traditional art. We make a beeline for a rock art cave site that Scott confesses is older than anybody knows. It’s a well-documented site, currently well clear of any mining operations, and is sign-posted from the road.

“Sometimes I just come here and chill out,” Scott says, his piercing eyes surveying the scene. “The connection with the country

is strong here and after an hour or so just being quiet, I feel quite… energised.”

The roof of the cave is vast and covered almost to every corner with all manner of depiction. Dugong, crocodiles, dolphins, turtles and fish are painted in vivid ochres, interspersed with images of canoes and figures hunting.

My ad-hoc tour includes glimpses of the townships and some of the remote settlements made up of just a few shacks and shanties. Scott relates some of the clan stories to me as we drive.

“Sure, there are some things we need to sort out as a community,” he says candidly, “but as you can see, there’s plenty here to work with. There are other sites too, but I can’t show you those. Sorry.”

Groote Eylandt, as I am about to learn, is home to some of most sought-after East Arnhem Land traditional art.

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Phone: 1300 146 743 [email protected]

www.cicadalodge.com.au

A sanctuary of elegant comfort, located in the heart of Australia’s Timeless North just 29kms from the historic township of Katherine, the Lodge provides a level of excellence in accommodation,

service and dining.

Quote “TOPEND” at time of booking.

Phone: 1300 146 743 [email protected]

www.cicadalodge.com.au

A sanctuary of elegant comfort, located in the heart of Australia’s Timeless North just 29kms from the historic township of Katherine, the Lodge provides a level of excellence in accommodation,

service and dining.

Quote “TOPEND” at time of booking.

Often called the ‘Crossroads of the North’ because of its location, Katherine is the fourth largest town in the Northern Territory and is located 312 km south-east of Darwin on the Katherine River.The Katherine Visitor Information Centre is fully accredited and operated by the Katherine Town Council. Visit our online booking site to make all of your tour and accommodation bookings online: www.visitkatherine.com.au before you arrive, or come on into our centre and see one of our friendly staff and we’ll keep you busy on your holiday.

Welcome to Katherine!See our land..... help us share our story!

Katherine Visitor Information CentreCnr of Lindsay St and Stuart Highway Katherine NTPhone: 08 8972 2650Email: [email protected] Web: www.visitkatherine.com.au

The Katherine Visitor

Information Centre

Djakanimba Pavilions.Djilpin Arts welcomes you to our new architect designed

guest facility Djakanimba Pavilions Beswick, a new standard in remote accommodation.

Come and experience community life knowing that your room rate is going straight back into supporting remote

Indigenous art, culture, training and employment.

E: [email protected]: (08) 8977-4250

W: www.djilpinarts.org.auBeswick/Wugularr Community

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FAST FACT

At 2,285 square

kilometres, Groote is the

fourth-largest coastal island

of Australia and is surrounded

by waters protected by

indigenous treaty.Call toll free 1800 877 O77or visit GrooteFishing.com.au

Staying at Groote Eylandt Lodge:

• Waters Edge Accommodation

• Seagrass Restaurant & Bar

• Day Spa

• Art Centre & Cultural Experiences

• Conference Suite

GROUP SAFARISCORPORATE RETREATS

PRIVATE CHARTERS

one of the most exciting fishing grounds in the world

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21

FACT FILETo plan & book your fishing adventures visit: grootefishing.com.au

Groote Eylandt Lodge, managed by Metro Hotels, has 74 waterfront cabins and bungalows overlooking the gulf. Deluxe, water’s edge cabins with spa baths and private balconies are the accommodations of choice.The lodge also provides business and meeting facilities, a wellness spa, gym and a swimming pool. grooteeylandtlodge.com.au

Nearby, guests can play a round on the 9-hole golf course or swim in the community pool. A small shopping village is located in Alyangula centre.

Airnorth flights from Darwin to Groote Eylandt (GTE) take approximately 1.5 hours. On arrival there is a lodge shuttle service (charges apply). airnorth.com.au

Adjacent to the lodge is the Anindilyakwa Arts and Crafts centre where superb bark paintings and the most exquisite and intricate woven items are displayed and for sale.

I catch centre manager Lorna Martin as she’s packing some large pieces into her four-wheel drive to deliver to an excited buyer.

“We’re working hard on an artist development program,” she says, “which mostly means making sure the many talented artists here have access to good

materials and somewhere comfortable to sit and do their work.”

While Groote may have its challenges, the 16 local Anindilyakwa clans have a secure financial base with which to develop not only the lodge and its many offerings, but robust cultural experiences that can stand on their own.

And remember, even if by some miracle you do not catch a fish on Groote, it’s still a far better day than any you’ll spend in the office!

“We’re working on an artist development program, which means the talented artists here have access to good materials and somewhere

comfortable to do their work.”

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Perth skyline at sunrise, as seen from Kings Park.

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windowseat

Perth, Western AustraliaFor more than 40,000 years

before European colonisation, the Perth area was inhabited by the Whadjuk Noongar people,

as evidenced by modern archaeological findings from the region. A community of hunter-gatherers, the Noongar people

occupied the southwest corner of Western Australia, including

Rottnest, Carnac and Garden Islands. The islands and the Swan

Coastal Plain wetlands were particularly important to their people, for spirituality and also

as a source of food.

Captain James Stirling established Perth in 1829 as the

administrative centre of the Swan River Colony. It became a city in

1856, and then a Lord Mayorality in 1929. The city is named after the

Scottish town of the same name, due to the influence of Sir George Murray, Member of Parliament for Perthshire and Secretary of State

for War and the Colonies.

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TWEENS IN THE

TROPICS

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TWEENS IN THE

TROPICSA family guide to Townsville

25

getaway

From croc encounters and maritime history, to bushwalking, kayaking and koala-spotting on Magnetic Island, there’s plenty

to entertain tweens on the beautiful Townsville coast.

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ownsville is the gateway to Queensland’s Tropical North, an area known mainly for its easy access

to the Great Barrier Reef and tropical rainforests, and it’s positively bursting at the seams with attractions and activities for families.

Here are a few recommendations from local children, published on Bound Round, the travel guide app for kids, by kids.

TOWNSVILLE’S UNDERWATER WORLD

Townsville’s most well known attraction for families is Reef HQ Aquarium, where kids can stroll through an underwater viewing tunnel to explore the world’s largest living coral reef aquarium and all the creatures at work and play within it. It’s almost as though you were scuba diving.

The aquarium has a wide array of interactive activities for kids including fish feeding, predator and turtle shows, and a behind-the-scenes look at Reef HQ’s Turtle Hospital.

If you want to learn more about the work being done to protect the

Great Barrier Reef, it’s also worth visiting the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), 37 kilometres south of town, which welcomes kids for guided tours.

TROPICAL NORTH HERITAGE

The Museum of Tropical Queensland, right next door to Reef HQ Aquarium, explores life in the tropics from pre-historic times. Kids can find out about life on board

an old sailing ship or see dissected animal parts close-up.

The museum’s Great Gallery is dominated by a replica of HMS Pandora, the ship sent to capture HMS Bounty and her mutinous crew. You can join the Pandora Gun Team each day at 11am and 2.30pm at the museum to learn how to load and fire cannons like they did in the 1790s.

At the Maritime Museum of Townsville you can learn all about the region’s most famous shipwreck, the SS Yongala, which sunk off the Townsville coast in 1911, with a

Reef HQ Aquarium

The shipwreck of SS Yongala

Overlooking Townsville

26

getaway

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93 Konkerberry DrivePO Box 20

Kununurra, Western Australia, 6743

Phone: +61 (08) 9169 1133Fax: +61 (08) 9168 1188

Freecall: 1800 852 144 (within Australia)

Email: [email protected]. kimberleyfinediamonds.com.au

Tennis Star Alicia Molik

Page 30: Airnorth April/May 2016

FCS are happy to announce that our

NATA ISO17025 Scope has recently increased

to include Pressure Transducers, Pressure

Recorders, Pipes, Valves & Fittings.

ALL CERTIFICATES SUPPLIED IMMEDIATELY ON COMPLETION OF WORK www.fcsnt.com.au

2/21 College Rd Berrimah, NT 0828

Ph: 08 8947 4700Email: [email protected]

We continue to be the trusted name in equipment calibration, metering and Hydro Testing Australia wide.

Life/Work balance got you down?

Shirley ButterworthEmotional Clearer/Counsellor

• 12 Years of experience with FIFO lifestyle challenges• Private and Confidential Business Location• Skype/Phone sessions available

I look forward to hearing your story…… Phone: (07)4039 2405

No need to bottle it up! Set Your Soul Free…And be in the driver’s seat of Your life!

Page 31: Airnorth April/May 2016

tragic loss of all 122 passengers on board.

The Army Museum of North Queensland is located inside the Jezzine Barracks complex, near the old Kissing Point Fort just north of the city centre. The museum has a great collection of wartime memorabilia from battles pre-dating Federation to more recent conflicts in Korea and Vietnam.

Ten minutes from the city centre is Cape Pallarenda Regional Park. Once a quarantine station and World War II military camp, it’s now a good place to let the kids run amok and learn about Townsville’s military history.

BACKYARD TO BUSH

Escape the heat and hustle of downtown Townsville to nearby Queens Gardens. This lush botanic oasis is set against a dramatic backdrop: the pink-granite monolith of Castle Hill, also worth a visit for the amazing views you’ll get from its peak.

Set on 11 hectares of natural bushland, Billabong Sanctuary houses more than 100 species of Australian animals, specialising in the fauna of North Queensland, such as the saltwater crocodile and the equally scary-looking Southern cassowary. Here, kids can participate in a number of hands-on wildlife experiences, some furry, some scaly – from feeding kangaroos to cuddling a koala, holding a baby crocodile or getting wrapped in a python.

MAGGIE ISLAND

Hop on a ferry for the 25-minute trip from Townsville to Magnetic Island. Take one of the many hiking trails that allow visitors to explore Magnetic Island National Park and there’s a good chance you’ll spot a koala in the wild. Koalas were introduced to the island in the 1930s and conditions are so perfect for them that they have thrived.

If you want to get a bit closer, visit Bungalow Bay Koala Village, where you can get up close and personal (and take selfies) with locals of the furry, feathered and scaly kind.

Imag

e cou

rtesy

of ou

rnak

edau

strali

a.com

.au

This image,left and below: Magnetic Island and native wildlife.

Queens Gardens

Hop on a ferry for the 25-minute trip from Townsville to Magnetic Island.

29

getaway

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One of the best ways to get up close and personal with the island’s marine life, including the resident dolphins and turtles, is to hop in a kayak. The water around the island is smooth as a pond and crystal-clear. Magnetic Island Sea Kayaks hires out kayaks and stinger suits and also offers a range of guided kayaking tours.

THE HINTERLAND

Townsville’s hinterland offers a whole different type of scenery to that of the Townsville coast. Travel through lush rainforest along a winding, cliff-hugging road to Hidden Valley Cabins – a little oasis of loveliness.

Here, you’ll get opportunities to spot platypus in the wild in a nearby creek and the odd wallaby hopping around the resort grounds.

Nearby Mount Spec in Paluma Range National Park is a maze of streams and waterfalls, and a lovely spot to go birdwatching. Look out for honeyeaters and brush turkeys – if you’re lucky, you might also spot a golden bowerbird decorating its nest.

ABOUT BOUND ROUNDFor more recommendations on activities for kids, in Townsville and the rest of Australia (and the world), get your kids to check out Bound Round, the kids’ travel app by kids, for kids. The app is full of fun facts, games and video guides to all the best activities and attractions, narrated by local kids – the experts on what’s fun in their home town. Boundround.com

Nearby Mount Spec in Paluma Range National Park is a maze of

streams and waterfalls.

31

getaway

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OUTthere is published by Business Essentials (Australasia) Pty Limited (ABN 22 062 493 869), trading as Edge, under license to MGI Publishing Pty Ltd. Reproduction in whole or in part without prior written permission is strictly prohibited. Opinions expressed are those of the individual contributors and not necessarily those of the Publisher. Information provided was believed to be correct at the time of publication. All reasonable efforts have been made to contact copyright holders. OUTthere cannot accept unsolicited manuscripts or photographs. If such items are sent to the magazine, they will not be returned. Some images used in OUTthere are from Thinkstock and Getty Images.

From the editor...

facebook.com/OUTthereMagazineAustralia

@OUTthereMagAus

Winter is coming...We’re feeling the mid-year chill, but all the more reason to rug up and make the most of our favourite winter destinations!

We recently visited top ski resorts and inside we have some tips to help you make the most of your time on the slopes.

Don’t fancy skiing? The Hunter Valley Wine & Food Festival is coming and is sure to delight the gourmet traveller in you.

Wherever you plan to go, may you enjoy the season and enjoy your flight.

Faye James and the OUTthere team

OUTthere is published by EdgeLevel 4, 10–14 Waterloo Street,Surry Hills NSW 2010Phone: +61 2 8962 2600edgecustom.com.au

GROUP EDITOR Faye [email protected] EDITOR Danielle Chenery SUB-EDITORS Alarna Haigh, Merran WhiteART DIRECTOR Guy PendleburyPRODUCTION MANAGER Brian VentourCONTRIBUTORS Darren Baguley, Michael Benn, Claire Bond, Deborah Dickson-Smith PRINTER SOS Print & Media

ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Scott [email protected] NATIONAL ACCOUNT MANAGER Peter [email protected] ADVERTISING MANAGER Robert [email protected], SA and NT SALES REPHelen Glasson, Hogan MediaPhone: 08 9381 [email protected]

PUBLISHING DIRECTOR Geoff CampbellMANAGING PARTNERS Fergus Stoddart, Richard Parker

1

Page 36: Airnorth April/May 2016

Study a world-class MBA that works around your roster.Be rewarded with a life-changing experience.

The 12-unit modular UWA Business School MBA degree allows you to build your business acumen, advance your career and study while you work.

Our MBA is renowned for its fl exibility. Features include fully online study options, intensive mode teaching and international partnerships with leading Business Schools.

We also off er a 4-unit, fully online Graduate Certifi cate in Business which may be taken either as a standalone qualifi cation, or as an entry pathway to our MBA for those without an undergraduate degree.

In addition to the generalist degree, specialisations are also available for those wishing to focus in particular areas such as Leadership, Resources, Finance, Entrepreneurship or Social Impact.

What’s more, an MBA from UWA comes with the weight of a World Top 100 University and a business school with double international accreditation.

To fi nd out more, speak to a specialist from ourMBA team on (08) 6488 4999 or visit mba.uwa.edu.au

UWAM0559 2015-11-10T17:53:33+08:00

Page 37: Airnorth April/May 2016

31

Mini-mag inside featuring all the latest news & views from around Australia, including:

• Inside Mining • Agribusiness

• Investment • News & Reviews

RegionalBusinessReview+

16Issue 137 • April/May 2016

37

10 cultureclub What’s happening around the country, from art and music to theatre and cinema.

14 kitchenconfidential Chef Julien Pouteau hails from France, but his cuisine spans the whole Mediterranean.

16 getawayDeborah Dickson-Smith discovers that the Hunter Valley’s kid-friendly attractions almost rival the region’s number of cellar doors.

20 food&wineThe Hunter Valley Wine & Food Festival is back and now spans two whole months... so you have no excuse for missing out.

27 flavoursCheck out all the latest news on the food scene around Australia.

31 weekenderOUTthere heads to Dubbo and finds a safari-like zoo, 19th-century gaol, lively town and all manner of unexpected family pursuits.

37 discoveryWe explore Australia’s top ski resorts and offer top tips to make the most of your time there.

47 healthnewsFind the latest news for healthy living, including why you should never skip breakfast and what supplements are good for travellers.

contents

3

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Situated 80kms to the north of Darwin are the Tiwi Islands; home of the Tiwi people and also to some of Australia’s premier barramundi fishing lodges.

All lodges provide a high quality, professionally-guided catch & release fishing adventure situated in a spectacular, pristine wilderness environment.

Dominant fish species include Barramundi, Mangrove Jacks, Threadfin Salmon, Saratoga, Golden Snapper, Black Jewfish, Queenfish, Giant Trevally, Spanish Mackeral plus 40 or so other species of quality river, creek and reef fish.

AUSTRALIA’S PREMIER FISHING LODGES

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5

calendar

Calendar APRIL

02

APRIL

10APRIL

17APRIL

08MAY

21APRIL 10Felton Food Festival, QLDThe annual Felton Food Festival is a celebration of authentic country life, showcasing everything the Felton Valley is famous for: delectable produce, stunning landscapes and real country living. Enjoy delicious food, browse market stalls, take a crop tour or meet a local farmer.feltonfoodfestival.org.au

JUNE 8–19Sydney Film Festival, SydneyHeld in venues throughout Sydney, this 12-day festival screens feature films from around the world.sff.org.au

JUNE 29–JULY 27Gay Pride Berlin, GermanyBerlin’s Christopher Street Day is one of Europe’s biggest gay and lesbian parades and street parties. csd-berlin.de

JUNE 10–12Barunga Festival, Katherine, NTThis festival celebrates the rich cultural history of the Central Australian town of Katherine. barungafestival.com.au

JUNE 29Battala del Vinos Held annually in the Spanish town of Haro, this saint’s day is all about covering everyone and everything in wine. wine-fight.com

APRIL 17 & 23Gauchito Gil’s Malbec World DaySunday April 17 is Malbec World Day, traditionally an Argentinian celebration of that nation’s most famous grape variety, the Malbec, This year, the celebrations are taking place Down Under, in Melbourne on Sunday April 17 and in Sydney the following week. Expect lots of tango dancing and empanadas. gauchitogil.com.au

APRIL 08–MAY 14Em Rusciano, nationwideGet ready to laugh out loud because Em Rusciano is one funny lady. Due to popular demand, she’s has added more shows to her countrywide tour. The ‘Em Rusciano is NOT a Diva’ tour includes a full band performance and makes mention of her time on Australian Idol. emrusciano.com.au

MAY 21Bass in the Grass, DarwinWith the likes of Angus & Julia Stone, Bliss n Eso and Boy & Bear in the line-up, this festival is going to be one of the highlights of Darwin’s cultural calendar. Suitable for music-lovers of all ages and tastes, it includes performances from electronic and pop artists as well as punk and metal bands. bassinthegrass.com.au

aheadlook

whereelse

EVENT OF

THE MONTH

Our top pick of events coming up around the country...

calendar

The Variety Cycle, east coast of AustraliaAPRIL 02–16

In this hardcore charity cycling event, participants pedal all the way from Sydney to the Great Barrier Reef to benefit kids who are sick, disadvantaged or have special needs. Participants can take the full 15-day option or choose from smaller challenges that range between one-day, two-day and seven-day routes, so it’s suitable for cyclists of all skill and fitness levels. The event is in its third year and offers the perfect mix of challenge, cycling and charity. thevarietycycle.com.au

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What to packOur fave holiday essentials...

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FT6 16.1MP waterproof/shockproof camera, $328, azurite.com.au Casio Oceanus Smart Access

titanium watch, $1299, watchcentre.com.au

6

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Leatherman Skeletool, $159, leatherman.com

JBL Clip bluetooth splashproof speaker, $79, jbhifi.com.au

Blackwolf Kronos 30L, $119.99, blackwolf.com.au

Stephanie Johnson makeup travel bag, $88, stephaniejohnson.com

LED Lenser headlamp, $47, ledlenser.com.au

staffpickKorjo multi-USB

travel charger, $34.99, korjo.com

7

whattopack

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Australia CooksKelli Brett, HarperCollins, $49.99Celebrate true Australian produce with this recipe book that encapsulates a journey across regional Australia. Its seasonal recipes include instructions on how to make Maroochy River mud crab

cakes to Bruny Island baked eggs, and so much more. Dinner will never be boring again.

Mindfulness and Surfing, Reflections for Saltwater SoulsSam Bleakley, Quarto UK, $19.99Saltwater cures everything, so where better to experience a soul-soothing meditation than out in the ocean? Sam Bleakley explores surfing – including lunar cycles,

river surfing and the Taoism of nature – revealing an acute awareness of what the oceans can tell us about our place in the natural world.

The Silent InheritanceJoy Dettman, Macmillan, $32.99Dettman weaves a mysterious story in this fictional novel about a woman named Sarah Carter, who’s living in suburban Melbourne, hiding from her past. When one of her daughter’s classmates is

abducted Sarah’s fledgling sense of safety is destroyed and her past threatens to catch up with her. Sure to grab your attention!

MargueriteM, DramaThis delightful French film, directed by Xavier Giannoli, tells the story of Marguerite Dumont, whose army of ‘fans’ encourage her to follow her dream to sing by visiting her castle to watch her performances. Only problem is, Marguerite can’t carry a tune and the audience is really only there for a bit of a laugh. Nominated for 11 César Awards, it stars Catherine Frot (Haute Cuisine) and Christa Théret (Renoir). In cinemas now.

download

One Minute CloserApp Store, free

Google Play, freeDesigned by a FIFO worker for FIFO workers, this app helps you stay connected with home. Featuring an countdown timer to let your loved ones know how long it will be until you’re home, and a calendar that lets you manage and share your roster with family and friends, this app helps bridge the gap between home and away.

Adele: When We Were YoungThe second single from Adele’s latest album 25, titled ‘When We Were Young’, is just as addictive as the first (‘Hello’). In an interview with Nick Grimshaw on BBC Radio 1, Adele named ‘When We Were Young’ as her favourite track from 25. The song takes you on a melancholic journey that makes you want to call long-lost friends for a trip down memory lane.

Cameron Daddo: Songs From The ShedThis new EP from Cameron Daddo includes six original tunes and a newly recorded duet with Max Merritt (made famous in Max Merritt and the Meteors; a 1975 hit was ‘Slipping Away’). The EP reflects Daddo’s love of country music with a couple of up-tempo country rockers thrown in the mix. The album’s name is inspired by the spot where Daddo fine-tuned the songs: his hillside home in Los Angeles’ Topanga.

Hotel TonightApp Store, freeGoogle Play, free

Need a hotel at the last minute? This app allows you to book a room in 10 seconds while taking advantage of discounted rates. It arranges hotels into categories, so you can find the room you need faster. The hotels included on the app are a hand-picked selection of top-rated hotels at a bargain rate.

MovesumApp Store, freeGoogle Play, free

A basic step counter that will inspire you to move more, Movesum is a built-in pedometer on your phone. It links how many steps you’ve taken with what you’ve eaten – so you know what you need to burn off. Set yourself goals and feel the pride when you reach your target.

listen

watch

read

EntertainmentThe latest and greatest things to hear, see and read...

staffpick

8

entertainment

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16-7718 WARMAN Press_285x220mm_IMM_OL.indd 1 29/01/2016 11:15 AM

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CULTURE CLUBGOT A THING FOR THEATRE? LOVE LIVE MUSIC? ENJOY GREAT GALLERIES? READ ON FOR WHAT’S HAPPENING THIS MONTH...

SYDNEY FILM FESTIVAL: PROGRAM LAUNCHMAY 11Sydney Film Festival director Nashen Moodley will showcase the range of films that will form this year’s Sydney Film Festival. This free event will be held at Customs House Library, 31 Alfred Street, Sydney, from 6pm to 7pm and is the perfect introduction to the full festival, on from June 8 to 19. sff.org.au

DISNEY ON ICE PRESENTS MAGICAL ICE FESTIVAL, NATIONWIDEJUNE 2–JULY 17Just when you thought that Frozen mania was fading, this year’s instalment of Disney on Ice is bringing the magical winter wonderland of Arendelle to life. Arendelle and its residents Elsa and Anna, snowman Olaf, Kristoff and Sven were made for Disney on Ice, really, with producer Nicole Feld saying Disney on Ice has been waiting for a film like Frozen for 30 years. The Little Mermaid, Tangled and Beauty and The Beast round out the show, which is presented by hosts Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck and Goofy. disneyonice.com.au THE 20TH BIENNALE OF SYDNEY

March 18–June 5The 20th Biennale of Sydney’s title this year, ‘The future is

already here – it’s just not evenly distributed’, was inspired by a sci-fi writer. Let that set the scene for a festival feast

a feast of thought-provoking art. Works will be presented in seven different venues, dubbed “embassies of thought”.

One of these will be Cockatoo Island, the Embassy of the Real, which will display major works by Korakrit

Arunanondchai, William Forsythe, Camille Henrot, Lee Bul, Chiharu Shiota, Ming Wong and Xu Zhen

(produced by MadeIn Company). biennaleofsydney.com.au

cultureclub

10

staffpick

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REVIVE RETREAT, SMITHS BEACH, YALLINGUP (MARGARET RIVER REGION)

May 13–17Set on Western Australia’s pristine south-west coast, the Revive Retreat for women includes coastal hikes, surfing lessons, yoga, pilates, meditation, seminars and cooking

lessons to help you commit to a healthier and happier lifestyle. It’s about learning to bring back balance through

nourishing your body, getting back into shape, ditching the yo-yo dieting, breaking bad eating habits

and kickstarting a new, healthier life. reviveweightlossretreat.com.au

MAD SYD: Tomorrow’s meal, Sydney Opera House

April 3MAD SYD will be a gathering of international chefs and culinary thinkers discussing ideas on the future of food at the Sydney Opera House’s Joan Sutherland Theatre. MAD (the Danish word for ‘food’) is a not-for-profit organisation that aims to build a community of cooks, purveyors, thinkers and food enthusiasts with an appetite for knowledge and a desire to create a better world through better meals.  sydneyoperahouse.com

March 23–April 17THE BEST OF MELBOURNE INTERNATIONAL COMEDY FESTIVAL

If laughter is the best medicine, then consider the Melbourne International Comedy Festival an intensive health retreat. This year the festival includes comedy legends Ciel and Brit Jeff Green; multi-talented YouTube juggernauts Alex Williamson, Neel Kolhatkar and Frenchy; huge ticket-selling, critically adored phenomena Joel Creasey and Em Rusciano, and critics’ and audience favourites Alice Fraser and Emily Tresidder.comedyfestival.com.au

cultureclub

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HILLTOP HOODSAPRIL 2

SARAH BLASKOAPRIL 7–23

TOUR

Tickets and tour dates available online now.

Exhibitions Whiteley: Other Places Brett Whiteley Studio, Sydney Until May 8Brett Whiteley’s travels to New York, Fiji, Tokyo, Tangier, London and Paris are superbly documented in this exhibition of his works in charcoal, photographs and paint, many of which have not been exhibited before. Showing at the Brett Whiteley Studio in Sydney, these works are presented with the artist’s 1989 late Paris series ‘Regard de Cote’, works Whiteley created after revisiting the city three decades later. artgallery.nsw.gov.au 200 Years of Australian Fashion, NGV, MelbourneUntil July 31 Fashion-lovers, rejoice. This exhibition displays more than 120 works from 90-plus designers. It’s the first major survey of Australian fashion in this country from the time of early settlement to today. Showing at the National Gallery of Victoria, it includes outfits drawn from the NGV’s own collection and that of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, along with pieces from other key collections, and a number of private loans. The opening weekend includes pop-up design talks and a symposium exploring the question: What is Australian fashion? ngv.vic.gov.au Great tales in Asian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia, AdelaideFrom March 25This stunning exhibition tells epic stories from Asian culture through paintings, textiles, screens and woodblock prints. Showing until November, it includes highlights such as scenes from The Tale of Genji, alleged to

be the world’s first novel, written in the 11th century by lady-in-waiting Murasaki Shikibu. artgallery.sa.gov.au

Rosemary Valadon: A Sensual World, Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, BathurstApril 1–May 8This exhibition is an exploration of award-winning Australian artist Rosemary Valadon’s work over the past 25 years, from her earlier series reinterpreting myths and stereotypes of women (‘Goddess’, ‘Finding the Feminine’ and ‘Wicked Women’) to her most recent large still-life panoramas, imbued with the richness of regional life in historic Hill End. bathurstart.com.au

WE WILL ROCK YOUAPRIL 30–JANUARY 17

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Above: The green mountain (Fiji) 1969 by Brett Whiteley, oil, collage on cardboard, 137 x 122cm.

© W

endy

Whi

teley

India, Krishna and Radha on the Jamuna river, early 20th century, Rajasthan, Kishangarh, cotton cloth, pigment, gold, silver and mica shellac, 231.0 x 254.0cm; Van Dam Bequest Fund 2012, Art Gallery of South Australia.

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ART | CULTURE | WILDLIFE

• Lodge accommodation• Ferry transfers• Tiwi art & culture• Top end fishing• Guided sightseeing• Coastal exploration

TIWI ISLANDS

Northern Territory

Enjoy a taste of remote island life in the Tiwi Islands, only a short ferry trip or 20 minute flight from Darwin. Get to know the Tiwi people, meet the artists at the art centres, hear the dreaming stories, fish the pristine waters and experience amazing bird, fish and wildlife encounters in this beautiful, untouched country. This 4 day tour truly captures the essence of the Tiwi Islands.

Inclusions: SeaLink ferry or flights ex Darwin, scenic flight on Tiwi Islands, guided sightseeing and fishing by boat and on foot, traditional welcome ceremony, art centres and museum, screen printing workshop with local artists, all meals, non-alcoholic drinks, and remote lodge accommodation, optional full day wetland and creek wilderness adventure (available on the 4 day tour).

A personalised, small group experience available on selected dates from June – September 2016.

$2425PP

$3225PP

3 days

4 days

Discover the Northern Territory’s beautiful Tiwi Islands.

Find a Tiwi art treasure, venture onto untouched waterways teeming with native fish, birds and wildlife and relax at a waterfront Island lodge.

sealinknt.com.auFor more information call 1300 130 679 or visit

TIWI ISLANDSULTIMATE TOUR

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French native Julien Pouteau heads up the dining experience at the luxurious InterContinental Sydney Double Bay.

The dynamic and passionate young chef started his career on his home turf, France’s Brittany region, where he completed culinary school and an apprenticeship. He then took on chef roles in a number of leading hotels and Michelin-star restaurants across France.

In 2010, Julien moved to Australia and joined the InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) as Executive Sous Chef at InterContinental Sydney in the CBD. His mandate was to refresh the hotel’s food production and presentation with innovative flair. He set about building an energetic team who could elevate the hotel’s culinary reputation.

His pioneering spirit and leadership skills, coupled with world-class cooking flair and an eye for plating, are why Julien was selected to head up the food division – and set the culinary tone – for the restaurants of the InterContinental Sydney Double Bay.

His ambition is to deliver dining experiences on par with Sydney’s best restaurants, with a focus on healthy options and premium local ingredients, and a push towards celebrating ‘homemade’ cuisine with in-house pickling, curing and preserving as well as cooking on a Japanese-style robata (‘fireside’) grill.

“Eating well is one of the greatest pleasures in life; it is good for the body and soul.”

We speak to Julien Pouteau, Executive Chef at the InterContinental Sydney Double Bay, about his greatest love in life, food.Fr

ench

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WAGYU BEEF RUMP CAP, WITH SALSA AND BBQ CORN

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Beef and salsa ingredients: • 4g lemongrass, finely chopped

• 5g garlic, finely chopped

• 2g chilli, finely chopped

• 2g ginger, finely chopped

• 10ml grapeseed oil

• 350g wagyu beef rump, cap on

• 1–2 avocados

• 5g small tomatoes

• 5g Spanish (red) onion

• 10g lime

• 10g Maldon Sea Salt Flakes

• Bunch coriander

• 5ml La Barre Extra Virgin Olive Oil

BBQ corn ingredients: • 320g ketchup

• 280g tomato paste

• 160ml whisky

• 160ml malt vinegar

• 40ml Worcestershire sauce

• 30ml molasses

• 6g celery salt

• Black pepper, ground

• Cayenne pepper

• Salt

• 1kg corn, fresh, on the cob

Beef preparation1. Make spice marinade by combining lemongrass, garlic, ginger, chilli and grapeseed oil.

2. Score the top of the wagyu rump cap. Rub spice marinade over the wagyu rump cap

then let it sit in the marinade for one hour.

3. Place beef in a vacuum bag, sealing in a vacuum-pack machine to remove all air from

inside the bag.

4. Set a circulator with water; set the temperature to 58 degrees Celsius and place the

beef in the water bath; let it slow-cook for three hours.

5. To make the avocado salsa: dice the avocados, mix with lime juice. Dice Spanish

onion; remove the seeds of the tomato and dice the flesh. Add onion and tomato

to the avocado. Finish with olive oil.

BBQ corn preparation1. Combine all the ingredients (except corn) in a bowl, add salt and pepper to taste.

2. Cook corn in boiling salted water for 3 minutes, then remove and coat in the sauce,

and grill until charred and caramelised. Season to taste.

Final presentationTo finish the beef, sear on a robata grill. Serve with the avocado salsa and corn.

Rapidfire

What’s the last meal you cooked at home?“I am fortunate to have a spacious kitchen at home. My last meal was a mushroom brioche beef fillet. I rolled a beef fillet and pine mushrooms in a buttered brioche dough, baked it for one hour and shared with some friends with a great pinot drop!”

What ingredient couldn’t you live without? “Cheese. Of all kinds.”

WHen you’re not cooking, how do you spend your time?“Running, exploring and spending quality time with friends and family.”

What’s your favourite dish on your current menu? “The carrot-glazed short rib is my favourite dish on our current Stockroom menu. The beef is slow-cooked, brushed with our house-made sticky carrot glaze and cooked on the robata grill. DELICIOUS!”

What’s the most unusual thing you’ve ever eaten? “A monkfish liver at Le Chateaubriand restaurant in Paris. Cooked the same way as foie gras, it was outstanding.”

As far as traditional and cultural research goes, what country would you like to go to? “I would like to go to Greece. I have lived in the South of France for a few years and fell in love for Mediterranean cuisine: the produce is amazing – cooked simply, it’s juicy and full of flavours.”

Explain the creative process of coming up with a new dish. Does it unfold organically or do you spend a lot of time planning?“I always try to get the best of the moment, taking into consideration the season and my producers’ availability. My kitchen is a place where I like to involve all the chefs in the creating process, sharing ideas and developing dishes together. Most dishes need to be tested a few times before they reach greatness.”

What adventure can we expect to see you embark on next? “Anything, as long as there is food involved!”

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The Hunter Valley’s wine country is more family-friendly than you might think, and it’s easy enough to mix things up and keep everyone happy on a valley weekend.

16

THE HUNTER VALLEY

Hunter Valley Gardens is a vast

landscaped park that spans 25

hectares (more than 60 acres)

and incorporates 10 feature

gardens, so there’s plenty of

running around to be had.

The Storybook Garden is a

particular favourite of younger

children: it features nursery-rhyme

characters; topiary shrubs in

the shapes of animals including

horses, ducks and teddy bears;

and a hill to tumble down with

Jack and Jill.

During school holiday periods,

the gardens are open for longer

hours and usually host extra

park activities for kids, such

as petting zoos, face-painting,

jumping castles, Easter egg

hunts and Christmas light shows.

huntervalleygardens.com.au

hen you’re travelling with the family, it’s a smart idea to find somewhere the kids are going to enjoy before you treat yourself. That way, they’ll expend some energy and when you then visit your first cellar door, they won’t be moaning and groaning while you’re attempting to weigh up the merits of a Shiraz versus those of a Shiraz Viognier, and decide whether

it’s necessary to buy both. Here are some top tips for Hunter Valley trips.

The adjacent Hunter Valley Aqua Golf & Putt Putt is also a highlight for offspring. What kids don’t love a game of putt putt?

This place has the added attraction of allowing visitors – for a small fee – to hit lightweight golf balls into a lake. If your ball lands in one of the floating target nets, you can win vouchers for local cellar doors, restaurants and hot air balloon rides.

It’s worth taking a stroll through the Village Shops next to the gardens, where you’ll find interesting little shops selling all sorts of goodies, such as the Hunter Valley Christmas Shop, Hunter Valley Chocolate Company and (not to be missed), the British Lolly Shop.

Horseriding through vineyard territory with Hunter Valley Horse Riding & Adventures is something even the grown-ups will enjoy – a pleasant meander through the trees that takes about an hour and a half, with spectacular views of the vineyards in the valley below. The stables cater for beginners and experienced riders, and even offers pony rides for smaller kids.

Hunter Valley Horse Riding & Adventures also operates an off-road four-wheel drive evening adventure, which is an exciting opportunity to see some of the native wildlife, as many of the local species are more active at night.huntervalleyhorseriding.com.au

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One cellar door worth stopping in at with the kids is the one at Wandin Valley Estate, where there’s plenty of space outdoors for little ones to run around, including a cricket ground and pavilion, while the grown-ups sample wines. There’s even an activities table, set up permanently just inside the cellar door. wandinvalley.com.au

Hunter Valley Zoo is a fantastic interactive wildlife centre where you can feed kangaroos and wallabies, hold a few reptiles and cuddle up to koalas. There is quite a wide variety of exotic and native animals here, including monkeys, American alligators, Tasmanian Devils, dingoes and lots of birds. huntervalleyzoo.com.au

Foodies will enjoy a vineyard tour with NSW Segway. The experience starts at the Hunter Valley Resort & Brew House Pokolbin with a half-hour Segway training session before you get to go off-road and roll through the surrounding bush. On tour, you’re likely to see kangaroos, foxes, hares and wombats, but you’ll need to be quiet so you don’t scare them away. EastCoastXperiences.com.au

It’s an early start – usually around 4am, but hot air ballooning over the beautiful Hunter Valley with Balloon Aloft is an experience you will never forget. The balloon glides swiftly and silently above the valley, and you drift over vineyards, with kangaroos scattering in your shadow.

The Hunter Valley Cheese Factory has a number of cheese tasting experiences to choose from, from mild to smelly, as well as other dairy delights including gelato and chocolate.

A high fence with an imposing gate surrounds the

Valley’s Golden Door Health Retreat (pictured right).

Inside, you’ll find hushed tones, gourmet (organic) meals,

massage therapists, yoga instructors and dieticians. And

ever-so-soothing silence. There is no alcohol, here, and

no drugs; no food except that provided by the retreat;

no sugar, no salt and no mobile phones.

You can stay at this glorious retreat for as little or as

long as you like, with some guests choosing to come

just for a weekend, others for a serious detoxing stint

– sometimes staying as long as 10 weeks.

Each morning at the Golden Door, you’ll be woken

at 6am for a tai chi class on ‘Meditation Hill’, looking out

over Hunter Valley vineyards as the sun rises – along

with a few hot air balloons. Serious exercise is usually

done in the mornings here, with afternoons kept free

for relaxation – and your choice of spa treatments at

Elysia Spa.

Some days, the morning activity might be a hike

through the vineyards; other days, a session of deep

aqua-running in the pool followed by a stretching class

and guided meditation. You will emerge looking and

feeling healthy and relaxed. goldendoor.com.au

Day spas can also be found at a number of Hunter

Valley resorts: check out the Spa at Chateau Elan and

Ubika Spa at Crowne Plaza Hunter Valley.

Where to detox in the Hunter Valley

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© H

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Cypress Lakes Resort is a good choice for families, offering one-bedroom to four-bedroom villas, all with kitchenettes or full kitchen and laundry facilities, as well as three outdoor swimming pools, tennis courts, a day spa and the resort’s 18-hole championship golf course. It’s very conveniently located in Pokolbin, affording easy access to family-friendly attractions such as the Hunter Valley Zoo and Hunter Valley Gardens. oakshotelsresorts.com/cypress-lakes-resort

Crowne Plaza Hunter Valley has deluxe king and twin rooms, spa suites and multiple-bedroom self-contained villas. Leisure facilities include the Ubika Spa, an 18-hole golf course, a 25-metre outdoor heated pool, a fitness centre and the on-site Kidzone and Water Dragons Kids Club. crowneplazahuntervalley.com.au

Mercure Hunter Valley Resort is situated in the heart of Pokolbin, right next to Hunter Valley Gardens and a short walk to the Village Shops. It has a wide range

of accommodation options – 72 rooms, each with a private balcony or terrace – and an outdoor swimming pool. mercure.com/gb/hotel-6941-mercure-hunter-valley-resort

Carriages Boutique Hotel (pictured below) has 10 luxurious rooms set on an award-winning vineyard. In winter you can relax on a squashy sofa with a bottle of wine in front of a roaring log fire; in summer, take a dip in the pool and try your hand at tennis. Sleep on crisp white sheets and wake up to a fresh breakfast basket at your door. thecarriages.com.au

Where to stay

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Ph: 02 4998 4000 | BROKE ROAD, POKOLBIN NSW 2320 | www.hvg.com.au

Visit Hunter Valley Gardens and experience all the award-winning

delights that Australia’s largest display garden has to offer.

The Gardens also host over a dozen annual events such as, Christmas Lights Spectacular, Snow Time in the Garden, Mega Creatures and more.

www.hvg.com.au

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THE NEWLY renamed Hunter Valley Wine & Food Festival now spans both May and June, giving foodies and wine-lovers more opportunities to sample everything the region has to offer.

The Hunter Valley is well known for its year-round food and wine offerings, but throughout May and June, dozens of special events allow Festival-goers to get up close and personal with the region’s chefs and winemakers.

It’s an excellent opportunity to find out more about the valley’s wine, learn how to cook flavourful new dishes and get expert tips on pairing wines with food.

This year’s festival includes a huge line-up of events, everything from progressive dinners to chef-led cooking classes and street parties.

Allandale WineryThe Lovedale Long Lunch, to be held on the weekend of May 14 and 15, is a leisurely ‘progressive lunch’, during which guests get to discover – and celebrate – the epicurean wonders of the Lovedale area.

Some of the Hunter Valley’s leading chefs will team up with seven of Lovedale’s finest wineries, including Allandale, Emma’s Cottage, Saltire, Tatler and Wandin Valley, to create and host the various courses, with local performers providing the entertainment. Whether you attend Saturday’s or Sunday’s Long Lunch event, you’re guaranteed a wonderfully decadent day of drinking and dining. lovedalelonglunch.com.au

Whispering BrookThe annual Whispering Brook Olive Long Table Luncheon has become one of the region’s most popular events. Guests start with a tutored walking tour through the olive grove, then are seated at a long table in Whispering Brook’s olive grove (weather-permitting) and served Mediterranean-inspired dishes devised by chef Andrew Wright to showcase Whispering Brook’s premium extra virgin olive oil. The guest speaker at this year’s luncheon will be

leading cardiologist Professor Len Kritharides, who’ll talk about the health-promoting qualities of the Mediterranean diet and of extra virgin olive oil. The lunch will be accompanied by live music.

The $139 per-person ticket price includes lunch with matching wines, olive oil and olive tutorials. whispering-brook.com

Brokenwood WinesThis year, Brokenwood Wines and The Cellar Restaurant have teamed up for The Grazing Blaze, a bonfire supper and wine-tasting among the vines at Brokenwood’s iconic Graveyard Vineyard on Saturday June 11.

Chef Andy Wright will cook grazing-style dishes over burning canes, adding beautiful smoky flavours to the food. Brokenwood will match each dish with one of its latest-release wines. With live music and fireside seating, you can relax and enjoy the sunset. Tickets are $70 per person. brokenwood.com.au

Margan Margan is hosting several Wine & Food Festival events this year, including a Meet the Farmer Dinner on Saturday June 25 from 6pm, which sees Margan join forces with five local food producers to present a fantastic dinner showcasing the best Hunter Valley produce and the people behind it. It’s $99 per person for the four-course degustation.

Margan is also running a series of Garden to Plate Cooking Schools on May 20, June 3 and 24. Each will consist of a garden tour and harvest with horticulturalist Pat Hansson, followed by a hands-on cooking session and a delicious lunch matched with Margan wines. The cost is $85 per person,

The original Margan 100-metre-meal, held daily at Margan during June, promises to be agri-dining at its finest, with everything on your plate and in your glass produced on site, most of it within 100 metres of the restaurant. It’s $45 per person for one course, including wine.

Wine & Food FestivalHunter Valley

The hugely popular Hunter Valley Wine & Food Month has grown so big since its humble beginnings that it’s now too large to fit into one month, writes Deborah Dickson Smith.

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food&wine

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It’s an excellent opportunity to find out more about the valley’s wine, learn how to cook flavourful new dishes,

and get expert tips on pairing wines with food.

21

food&wine

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Look forward

YOUR INVESTMENT IS SECURE WITH DHA

INCOME GUARANTEED

When you invest in a DHA property, you get a guaranteed rental income¹ for up to twelve years, and because DHA is backed by the Australian Government, it’s secure. Visit dha.gov.au/lookforward

Attention: Investment is subject to DHA’s lease terms and conditions of sale. Investors retain some responsibilities and risks including property market fluctuations. Prospective investors should seek independent advice. ¹ Rent may be subject to abatement in limited circumstances.

Page 57: Airnorth April/May 2016

Other festival events at Margan this year include the Annual Barrel Hall Sale, the White Label Lunch and Trophy Wine Trails. margan.com.au

Bimbadgen EstateBimbadgen will highlight the evolution of Hunter Valley beef this year, using Hunter Natural free-range, hormone-free, grass-fed beef as the basis for an ‘edible experience’ called Beef-olution, in which guests will get to enjoy four sample-size beef dishes made with ingredients sourced from the Bimbadgen Estate garden and matched with award-winning Bimbadgen wines. Tickets to Beef-olution are $90 per person. bimbadgen.com.au

RidgeviewOn Saturday June 18, Ridgeview will host an Ocean to the Paddock event: a delicious seven-course degustation with matching wines for $125 per person. The winery’s Chef’s Plate will be available Thursday to Saturday between noon and 5pm throughout May and June; it’s $39 per person for two courses and a glass of wine. ridgeview.com.au

Crowne Plaza Hunter ValleyHunter Valley Wine Festival, Saturday June 4.

The fourth Hunter Valley Wine Festival takes place on the picturesque grounds of the Crowne Plaza Hunter Valley, with an extensive array of wine, food, beer and cider on offer, accompanied by live entertainment. It’s an opportunity to see everything the region has to offer in one day, with top drops from some 40 Hunter Valley wineries on show.

The event is family-friendly, with plenty of activities, including miniature train rides, face painting and a bouncy castle, to keep the kids happy while you sample fine regional wines. Funds raised at the event will be donated to the local Rural Fire Service.

Crowne Plaza Hunter Valley is offering a special Hunter Valley Wine Festival Weekend Package from $285 per night; it includes a night’s accommodation, breakfast and festival tickets. crowneplazahuntervalley.com.au

Ridgeview will host an Ocean to the Paddock event: a delicious seven-course degustation with matching wines.

food&wine

Hunter Valley

Previous page: Margan; This page: Ridgeview

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Upper Hunter Wine & Food Affair: Saturday May 7, DenmanThe Hunter’s Best Street Party happens every year on the first Saturday of May along Ogilvie Street in Denman, which is transformed for the occasion into a ‘wine and gourmet feast extravaganza’.

Here you’ll get to sample world-famous Upper Hunter wines as well as an amazing selection of street food and gourmet takeaway. The line-up of live entertainment includes local band Kyda Rock and The Voice finalist Holly Tapp; a monster wood-chop contest with more than 25 competitors; and a low-level fly-over aerobatic show by Paul Bennett.

There are plenty of activities for the kids, too, with laser tag, zorb balls and entertainment courtesy of Sparkles the Clown.

Entry is $10 per adult, $5 per kid, and includes an unlimited all-day ride pass. upperhunterwineandfoodaffair.com.au

A Taste of Wollombi: Sunday May 29 and Sunday June 26.Wollombi’s main street will come alive with stalls offering jams, honey, oils, olives, homegrown vegetables and homemade fresh cheeses to taste and buy, as well as jewellery, candles and wood crafts.

There will be live music all day, so bring your picnic rug and find a sunny spot on the grassy slopes outside the historic Wollombi Tavern – and don’t forget to sample their famous Dr Jurd’s Jungle Juice. visitwollombi.com.au

The Verandah RestaurantRenowned Hunter Valley chef Matt Dillow will be running his hugely popular Spanish paella classes again this year, every Sunday in June. In Matt’s class you will learn how to cook Spanish jamon, then tuck into a feast of jamon served with crusty bread and Hunter Valley sparkling wine, paella served with sangria, and Spanish-style churros with chocolate dipping sauce. Tickets to the class and feast are $90 per person. verandahrestaurant.com.au

Visit winecountry.com.au for a full list of 2016 Hunter Valley Wine & Food Festival events and venues.

There will be live music all day, so bring your picnic rug and find a sunny spot on the grassy slopes outside the historic Wollombi Tavern.

Wollombi

The Verandah

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SECRET SANCTUARY

Pimalai is one of those rare resorts whose architecture has been designed entirely around the natural contours and lush vegetation of over one hundred acres of grounds leading to 900 meters of pristine sandy beach. Indulge in luxury in one of our elegantly designed pool villas, set high in the lush hillside allowing you to be as close as possible to nature. From your villa, all you will see is what has been there for thousands of years; virgin forest enveloping steep hills climbing into a blue sky. The tranquility of the place, the abundance of flora, the exquisite views, the fiery sunsets, all combine to maximize the sensation of being in a heavenly place. Indeed the name of the resort “Pimalai” translates as heavenly. Enjoy a private romantic dinner on your terrace, sip champagne while dipping in your pool, or perhaps a soothing massage* in your villa’s sala…Live, laugh, love and indulge in moments that will be remembered long after the holiday is over.*Complimentary in villa massage for guests who stay in March & April 2016, and from May to December 20th, 2016

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FLAVOURSFrom new happenings to fab produce, we unearth the latest tabletop treats.

Home bakingGREAT AUSTRALIAN COOKINGTHE GREAT AUSTRALIAN COOKBOOK features 165 recipes contributed by an impressive line-up of 100 of Australia’s culinary legends, including Stephanie Alexander, Matt Moran, Neil Perry, Kylie Kwong, Frank Camorra, Maggie Beer and Margaret Fulton, along with local food heroes from all over the country.

“The Great Australian Cookbook is an affectionate snapshot of Australia and the food we love to eat,” says co-editor Helen Greenwood. “These celebrated chefs and beloved cooks, dedicated farmers and fishers, wondrous pastry cooks, and hard-working bakers and food-makers bowled us over with their willingness to share their thoughts, time and recipes. The happy result is a book for all Australians who want to cook with, and for, love.”

The Great Australian Cookbook is out now, RRP $49.95.

Victoria Park, Perth THE NEWLY OPENED Dutch Trading Company, home to the best craft beer selection in Perth plus affordable Dutch-influenced food, is already piping hot and popular! The venue’s fit-out is a comforting hybrid of modern home kitchen and ye olde Dutch-style pub, with some intriguing Dutch paraphernalia on the walls.

The Dutch Trading Company’s selection of rare craft beers on tap is extensive and includes brews from Victoria’s Black Dog Brewery, Tasmania’s Moo Brew, New Zealand’s Tuatara Brewery and many more on rotation, depending on availability. Order the Double Dutch Rudder (a truly enormous beer-tasting platter) for a couple of swigs of each of the 18 beers on tap. There are also some experimental ‘beer cocktails’ on offer for more adventurous types.The Dutch-inspired bar menu includes offerings such as a kilo of Louisiana steamed prawns, beef-cheek bitterballen, a ‘Double Dutch Burger’ (two patties with Dutch smoked gouda) and

local mussels steamed in wheat beer, as well as sharing plates – try the cheeseboard with quince jam and house-pickled vegetables, or hot ’n’ spicy chicken wings with blue cheese dressing.

Check the Dutch Trading Company out at facebook.com/dutchtradingco or get down there for a trivia night now.

DUTCH TRADING COMPANY (DTC)

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flavours

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The Mornington Farmers’ Market showcases an array of fresh, seasonal produce from

regional Victoria, including the Mornington Peninsula. Get there early for a breakfast of organic sourdough and local cheeses, or for the community-run barbecue, then fill your

car boot with organic fruit and vegetables, homemade conserves, free-range eggs

and savoury snacks. The local farmers are more than happy to chat with you about the

provenance of their produce.

WHERE: Mornington Park, Schnapper Point Drive, Mornington Vic.

WHEN: The second Saturday of every month, 9am–1pm.

MORNINGTON FARMERS’MARKET

MORNINGTON, VIC

Pomegranates are luscious, delicious and packed full of vitamins.The name comes from the Latin words pomum granatum, which means “seeded apple”. Experts trace its origins back to northern India and Iran. The Spanish conquistadors brought the pomegranate to America in the early 1500s. The seeds are what you want from this succulent fruit. After you crack one open, you’ll find plenty packed into little compartments that are separated by bitter-tasting, whitish membranes. Each seed is surrounded by a transparent red pulp that is sweet yet tart - that’s the tasty stuff.

FRESH PICKINGS

Taste of Tamworth, April 1–10 The Hunter Valley, May 15–June 4

Destination: Flavour

[Top eats]Love Moroccan food? Book a seat at Afous, arguably Sydney’s best Moroccan/Spanish eatery. It’s located right on the Spit Bridge, so you can enjoy fabulous views along with hearty classics such as lamb tagine or lighter bites from the tapas menu. When you walk through the door, you’ll be greeted by the owner Omar Majdi, who warmly welcomes you to his home while splashing your hands with rose water. Cooking classes and catering services are also offered. afous.com.au

Cardini’s Original Caesar DressingWith all natural ingredients, no preservatives, no added sugar and less than 1g of carbohydrates per serving, Cardini’s Original Caesar Dressing delivers the true taste of a classic Caesar salad.

Allegedly, this now-legendary salad was created by Caesar (Cesare) Cardini, who ran a restaurant in Tijuana, Mexico, that was popular with Hollywood stars including Jean Harlow and Clark Gable during the Prohibition period of the 1920s. On a hot fourth of July, 1924, with the kitchen unprepared for a full restaurant, he gathered up the ingredients he had available, tossed them together with a flourish in the middle of the crowded restaurant and invented, almost by accident, his famous salad. The rest is history!Cardini’s Original Caesar Dressing is available nationally through Coles, Woolworths, IGA and other independent supermarkets, speciality delicatessens and fruiterers; RRP $5.30 for a 350mL bottle.

Pizzini Wines, the makers of modern Italian wine styles, run hands-on cooking classes in their purpose-built A tavola! Cooking School near Bright, Victoria, about three and a half hours’ drive out of Melbourne.The kitchen is equipped for up to 10 participants per class, and each class runs for approximately four hours.

Masterclass

You might choose to: • master the art of making different types of pastries

and puddings, savoury and sweet; • learn to make perfect pasta, gnocchi and risotto; • become an expert at preparing an array of entrée-

sized dishes, such as dumplings, gyoza and various tapas;

• enhance your vegetarian repertoire; or • learn the best way to roast a pig on a spit.

Find out more or book your place in a class at pizzini.com.au/pizzini/pizzini-cooking-school.php

28

flavoursf lavours

This month we’re loving: POMEGRANATES

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Page 64: Airnorth April/May 2016

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Page 65: Airnorth April/May 2016

For the perfect weekend escape, we explore Dubbo and the Western Plains.

Words: Deborah Dickson-Smith

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weekender

UNCOVEREDDUBBO

Dubbo

Page 66: Airnorth April/May 2016

aronga Western Plains Zoo is reason enough to take a holiday to Dubbo, but there are plenty more. From a

gaol that’s no longer a gaol to a beach that’s not really a beach, this historic country town has plenty of activities and attractions to keep visitors of all ages and sizes entertained. Curious?

Dubbo is about five hours’ drive west of Sydney, over the Great Dividing Range in the Macquarie Valley, at the junction of three major outback routes: the Newell, Mitchell and Golden highways.

The area was first settled in the early 1830s and quickly became a major pastoral region, with a number of large cattle and sheep stations established in the area throughout the 19th century.

This history can be explored in a number of ways throughout Dubbo, and a good place to start is at the Old Dubbo Gaol. The gaol is fully restored to its 19th-century glory, and they’ve added some animatronics and hologram exhibits to bring its stories to life.

You can walk through the gaol and experience the eerie silence of solitary confinement, view the dreadful living conditions and witness examples of prison labour, as well as inspect actual prisoner records and find out about their crimes. You’ll meet the Condemned Man and guides will tell you stories about the Ghost of Dubbo Gaol, the executioner and the gallows.

Another great way to explore Dubbo’s history is on a Heritage Walk. This guided walking tour winds its

way through the centre of Dubbo, where you’ll see historic buildings and hear stories of the characters that used to live here – such as one Kate Leigh, also known as ‘Flash Kate’, who used to run the town’s casino and went on to become a queen of the Sydney underworld (remember Underbelly: Razor?); or Old Dubbo Gaol’s most notable escapee, Johnny Dunn, who once, allegedly, rode with bushrangers Ben Hall and John Gilbert.

Dubbos’ biggest drawcard is, of course, Taronga Western Plains Zoo, a sprawling open-range zoo that you can walk, ride or drive around. One of the best options is to hire a bike; and the zoo has bikes for all ages, even bikes with baby seats for the real littlies.

The zoo is home to hundreds of species, including rare and endangered animals. The kids will love spotting giraffes, rhinos, elephants and big cats, and it’s an awesome experience to see them roaming freely in wide open spaces – almost like being on safari.

Throughout the day there are plenty of keeper talks and animal

Dubbo’s gaol (above) and courthouse (left) date

back to 1887.

You’ll see lots of Dubbo’s historic buildings and hear stories of the characters that used to live here.

32

weekender

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Page 69: Airnorth April/May 2016

kneeboarding or tube rides.Another great place to get wet is

the Dubbo Aquatic Leisure Centre, which has an Olympic-size swimming pool, a kids’ pool and (best of all) an aquatic playground with twin water slides. In the centre of town, Elston Park Water Park is another place to cool down in summer.

If you’d rather burn energy than get wet, head to Flip Out Dubbo indoor to learn how to bounce and flip like a pro, or simply jump around madly on indoor, wall-to-wall trampolines.

For a more subdued day out, find your inner peace at Dubbo Regional Botanic Garden. Located in Elizabeth Park, it’s made up of four different gardens, the most famous of which is Shoyoen, the Japanese Garden.

The garden was gifted to the city by Dubbo’s sister city Minokamo,

Japan, and was designed by students from the Kamo Agricultural and Forestry High School. There are cherry trees, camellias and Japanese pine trees, dry garden landscapes of rounded stones and raked gravel, a waterfall, streams and a lake stocked with Japanese koi carp.

Other garden sections here include Oasis Valley, which features plants from Australia’s diminishing ‘dry rainforests’, the Sensory Gardens, which are planted with flowers and foliage designed to stimulate all five senses, and the Biodiversity Garden, which displays local plants in natural habitats.

Wondering where to make a pit stop? Try Hollydene Estate at 3483 Golden Highway, Jerry’s Plains. The cellar door is open daily from 10am–4pm. hollydeneestate.com

encounters to watch out for but to get the real safari experience, stay overnight at Billabong Camp or with a view of the zoo’s African Savannah section at the Savannah Cabins or in one of the luxurious African-inspired Zoofari lodges.

The mighty Macquarie River provides a wide range of outdoor activities, from cycling along riverbank cycle tracks to kayaking and other watersports on the river itself.

Riverbank Park is a prime spot for a family picnic and a stroll along the river from the centre of Dubbo to Sandy Beach. Running through the park is Tracker Riley Cycleway and Walking Trail, a 13-kilometre loop that runs along both sides of the river.

Sandy Beach is a popular swimming hole, even if the beach is not actually sandy, but made up mainly of gravel – it’s a shallow entrance to the river so it’s safe swimming spot for swimmers of all ages.

To explore the Macquarie River on a wider scale, call in to Adventure Watersports and hire a kayak or stand-up paddleboard, or if you’d rather a faster pace, try waterskiing, wakeboarding,

The kids will love spotting giraffes, rhinos, elephants and big cats, and it’s awesome to see them roaming freely in wide open spaces.

35

weekender

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Cold winter holidays can really heat up when you head to the snow and pull on your ski gear, as OUTthere discovers.

TOPski resorts

37

discovery

Page 72: Airnorth April/May 2016

ven though over 100 million people worldwide are affected by different forms of hair loss, thinning hair is a signifi-cant source of insecurity for

many people. Observing this stark sign of ageing in the mirror, cleaning dozens of hairs from the bathtub, failing to style your hair well for the day ahead… These daily reminders of ageing lead to loss of self-esteem and confidence.

Scientists from Oxford, UK promise that they can help keep your hair thick and healthy. Their pill TRX2® is currently one of Europe’s best-selling hair supple-ments and is sold in over 100 countries. TRX2® is a food supplement based on natural compounds and, compared to medicinal products, has no side effects. Also it does what it says.

“Your hair will look much bigger; it becomes heavier and thicker. You main-tain your healthy hair,” says Dr. Thomas Whitfield, biochemist and founder of Oxford Biolabs.

Hair treatments often promise a lot without delivering, but TRX2® is backed by cutting-edge science and has been thoroughly tested. Three of the key in-gredients in TRX2® — zinc, selenium and biotin — are officially recognized by the European Commission as contributing to the maintenance of normal healthy hair.

The effects can be impressive. According to a pre-clinical study* conducted by scientists, TRX2® works for 87% of men and women.

Start TRX2® as early as possible in order to see your results sooner.

TRX2® is suitable for men and women of all ages. The crystalline white capsules come in a brown glass bottle, which holds a one-month supply and costs from AUD$75 (USD$69) if ordered online.

The manufacturer offers a money-back guarantee when ordered via TRX2’s offi-cial website, and ships worldwide.

For 2016, Oxford Biolabs introduces a new, advanced TRX2 topical solution, for a double impact on hair issues - from the inside and from the outside. There’s a special offer for our magazine readers when ordering via the TRX2 website: www.trx2.com.

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HOW A PILL CAN BOOST YOUR HAIR AND SELF-CONFIDENCE

38

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ustralia is largely a land of sunshine, but it also gets cold enough to cover our southern mountains in

bountiful white snow.Victoria is home to the nation’s

largest number of ski resorts, including Lake Mountain – 120 kilometres from Melbourne – Mount Hotham, Falls Creek and Mount Buller. Sydney’s nearest ski fields, Thredbo and Perisher, are about six hours’ drive from the city in Kosciuszko National Park, while Tasmania has Ben Lomond Ski Village and Mount Mawson.

In contrast to most other ski destinations around the world, the Australian ski season kicks off in June (with an abundance of festivities), and it’s typically Aussie because you get to ski between magnificent snow gums.

Mt Hotham, Victoria---------------------------------DAY 1---------------------------------Do: The trickiest part of a skiing holiday with kids is getting organised, so we spend our first day in Mount Hotham doing just that. Driving up the mountain in the snow has the little ones very excited, so we continue the extra 12 kilometres to Dinner Plain, where hiring gear’s a breeze.

The enticement of Dinner Plain is the small village and snow park, perfect for beginner skiing. We layer up, strap on our snow boots and build snowmen, fly down the tube and take to the small slope. Now we might be ready for whatever the next few days have in store.Eat: While ski trips—certainly those with kids in tow—used to come with low expectations of food quality, times have changed and Hotham is leading the way.

Lunch at Dinner Plain needs to be a warm affair of nourishing comfort food, and so we head to Mountain Kitchen for soups and homemade pies.

Dinner at Yama Kitchen and Bar is a must back on Hotham and while it serves fine food, kids are welcomed with a small version of the adults’ menu. We share plates of deliciousness in this Japanese-inspired eatery.

Australia is largely a land of sunshine, but it also gets cold enough to cover our

southern mountains in white snow.

© Charlie Brown Photography

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discovery

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---------------------------------DAY 2---------------------------------Do: Time for lessons to brush up on the dusty skiing skills. One child heads to ski school, where the instructors are super patient in guiding little legs through the basics. Graduating to the best kids’ slope, Big D, is the ultimate thrill for ‘L-plate’ skiiers.

Adults can have tuition too, and you can choose from a group lesson suited to your skills or book in an intensive one-on-one session. “Stop overthinking it!” is the catchcry of our tutor. It’s a good tip for all beginner and intermediate skiers because thinking too much about sliding down the side of a mountain is never a good idea and invariably means you end up doing exactly that. Lessons complete, we eagerly practise our new skills along a range of ski runs.

Known as the more advanced of the ski resorts, Hotham is actually a good all-rounder and surprisingly well-suited to families. Whether you’re on a green (beginner), blue (intermediate) or black (advanced) level, Hotham has some fun in store for you. Eat: If you’re dropping kids off at the daycare centre or ski school, both located at the Big D, the easiest breakfast option is The General. Known for some of the heartiest food on the mountain, this café (which turns into a roaring bar at night – handy to know if

you come back without the rug rats) is as casual as a bacon-and-egg roll.

Lunch breaks up a tiring day on the slopes, with Zirky’s accommodation and dining complex providing a big buffet. Dinner is a full-stomach affair at the popular beer hall, Arco, where you can order amber ale by the litre and meat aplenty. Meals here are not for the faint-hearted (or for kilojoule-counters).

---------------------------------DAY 3---------------------------------Do: If the kids are up for more skiing and the weather is behaving itself, hit the slopes again and enjoy all your new skills. We do some easy runs with the children in the morning before lunching, snow-playing and returning our gear.

The weather has turned on us, with a snowstorm to blame for closing many lifts and the fog making visibility poor. The kids are keen to play in the freshly dumped snow so we check out the Hotham Snow Stuff Park, home to the mountain’s sled dogs – if you miss their tours, you can pay to pat and play with these beautiful creatures.

Toboggans and snowmobiles are available for hire here, too, so we take turns racing down the small hill, with snow softly floating onto our faces.

Hotham might have just become our new favourite winter holiday destination.Eat: The Summit Bar & Café at the Snowbird Inn is a favourite among

© Destination NSW

© Destination NSW

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discovery

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Hotham regulars, particularly hipsters, with its quinoa porridge, homemade beans and eggs every which way headlining the menu.

Before heading back down the mountain, it’s important to have a good feed, and this is your chance to try a new spot for pizza or soup – perhaps that place you’ve heard other skiers rave about or the café you’ve been eyeing off over the past few days.

Thredbo, Perisher and Jindabyne, NSWJindabyneDo: Thredbo is 496 kilometres and the Perisher Valley is 493 kilometres from Sydney, and many holidaymakers opt to stay in Jindabyne (34 kilometres from Thredbo and 31 kilometres from Perisher) due to budget and availability – accommodation in Thredbo can cost up to double the price of Jindabyne, and in Perisher it can be triple.

Jindabyne, in the heart of the Snowy Mountains, is also accessible by both car and train. Perisher’s Skitube Alpine Railway starts 20 kilometres from Jindabyne at Bullocks Flat Terminal; it takes 20 minutes to get to Perisher and a further 10 to reach Blue Cow. Eat: C.B.D. Coffee Beats Drinks in Jindabyne is a quirky café serving drinks in jam jars and Tracie’s Cafe is a no-frills eatery perfect for brunch. If you’re hankering after a Sunday roast with all the trimmings, The Bowlo Bistro at Jindabyne Bowling & Sports

Enjoy stunning sunrises everyday at Hotham.

© Destination NSW

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the novelty of being picked up in a snowmobile every day.Eat: When not dining in the lodge, there is plenty to choose from within Perisher’s four main ski areas – Perisher Valley, Mount Blue Cow, Guthega and Smiggin Holes: family-friendly Wildbrumby, The Man from Snowy River, Burning Log Restaurant, The White Spider Restaurant, and the Sundeck Hotel are firm favourites.

ThredboDo: If staying ‘on the mountain’, you walk out of your chalet, pick your skis up at the front door, click on your boots, take a couple of steps to the chairlift and away you go. If visiting on a weekend, watching the fireworks and Saturday night flare runs (and night skiing) are a must. Advanced skiers can sign up to take part in the weekly flare run at Valley Terminal.

Thredbo is also a mecca for nature walks and the national park is perfect for seeing Australia at its whitest and brightest. Being in a national park, it’s bursting with wildlife including wombats, possums, echidnas and wallabies.Eat: Thredbo is a more European-style resort and coffee snobs swear by Central Road 2625, while those wanting a heartier meal can’t go wrong at Bernti’s Tapas Bar & Cafe. Kareele Hutte actually overlooks the Supertrail piste but you have to ski down afterwards, so don’t overindulge! Terrace Restaurant, with its cool retro flavour, is another find.

Club is a good option. Spice-lovers can either eat in or get a tasty takeaway at Namaste Indian Cuisine.

PerisherDo: There’s a friendly rivalry between Perisher and Thredbo: staying at the resorts themselves is classed as ‘on-snow’, so is more expensive, but doing this also means less time travelling and more time skiing!

Muddles Lodge in the Perisher Valley is a luxury ski-in, ski-out log private log chalet on the mountain perfect for families or small groups. As well as having its own resident chef, Donna Tuckwell, it also boasts outstanding views, a private outdoor hot tub, loft playroom, storage facilities, easy mountain access via the Interceptor Chairlift and North Perisher T-Bar – and the kids adore

Staying at the resorts themselves is classed as ‘on-snow’, which means less time

travelling and more time skiing!

Sunset on Blue Cow, Perisher.

© Destination NSW

© D

estin

atio

n NSW

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discovery

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Page 78: Airnorth April/May 2016

$1,000,000

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With a senior sales and marketing roles in the sporting goods, liquor industry and B2B. I started my own business so I could stop travelling and spend more time with my family. I wanted to meet the challenge of running my own business and hopefully have more control

of my destiny. From my experience I saw that there would always be a need for signage and having bought signage in my corporate life.

I was looking for a business I can own and be the business owner, not a manger. I was primarily looking for a business that can run and operate smoothly, and with the right support,

one that wouldn’t be so dependent on the owner. I liked the idea of dealing with other businesses andnot retail stores. I wanted to ensure I had flexibilityand create more time for my family down the track.

After 25 years of corporate life, I wanted the challenge of running my own business. I had exposure to buying/selling businesses and the Transworld brand seemed to be a good fit. Their business model has enabled me to be

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Page 79: Airnorth April/May 2016

$1,000,000

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Signarama & EmbroidMe

Australian Team

Signarama

EmbroidMe

Experimac

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Head Office

Signarama opens 1st location in Melbourne

Signarama hits 50 stores

1st EmbroidMe store hits $1,000,000 in annual sales

EmbroidMe hits 50 storesSignarama hits 100 storesTransworld opens 1st location

Head Office establishedin Chatswood

1st Signarama store hits $1,000,000 in annual sales

EmbroidMe opens 1stlocation in Sydney

UFG purchases 410 sqm facility

Experimac opens 1st store in Sydney

Our Australian Success Story!

Almost two decades of continued growth...

United Franchise Group is committedto your continued success.

Your SignaramaEmbroidMe ExperimacTransworldStore opens!

Signarama

EmbroidMe

Experimac

Transworld

Australia’s MartketLeading Signs and Graphics Franchise

• 100+ Stores Nationally• Full training and Ongoing

Support• Mon – Fri

• 50 + Stores Nationally• Growth Industry• Mon – Fri

• Key Areas Available• Full training and Ongoing

Support• Innovative Concept• Stunning growth in the

USA

1. Business Brokerage2. Franchise Consulting3. Franchise Development

3 Income Streams

#1 Retail Franchise –Specialising in branding uniforms and workwear

One-of-a-kind concept specialising in selling and reparing pre-owned Apple ® products

Global Network of:150 + O�ces 400 + Sales Agents

With a senior sales and marketing roles in the sporting goods, liquor industry and B2B. I started my own business so I could stop travelling and spend more time with my family. I wanted to meet the challenge of running my own business and hopefully have more control

of my destiny. From my experience I saw that there would always be a need for signage and having bought signage in my corporate life.

I was looking for a business I can own and be the business owner, not a manger. I was primarily looking for a business that can run and operate smoothly, and with the right support,

one that wouldn’t be so dependent on the owner. I liked the idea of dealing with other businesses andnot retail stores. I wanted to ensure I had flexibilityand create more time for my family down the track.

After 25 years of corporate life, I wanted the challenge of running my own business. I had exposure to buying/selling businesses and the Transworld brand seemed to be a good fit. Their business model has enabled me to be

active in the market in gaining listings, enquiries, provide a platform for growth and definitely form long-term business relationships.

Rhod Webb – SAR City North Steve Mellier – EME Norwest

Shane Kealley – TBA Concord

What our franchisees say about our brands...

For Franchise informationCall (02) 8878 0400

United Franchise Group Timeline 4 Market Leading Franchise Brands

New Release for 2016

Recently launched in 2015

EmbroidMe

Page 80: Airnorth April/May 2016

A HOME AT SCHOOL

A Uniting Church school for boys, K-12 – Wahroonga, Sydneywww.knox.nsw.edu.au

COME AND SEE US ACROSS RURAL NSW THROUGHOUT 2016• TOCAL, Paterson, 29 April - 1 May • Mudgee Field Days, 15-16 July • AgQuip, Gunnedah, 16-18 August• Boarding Schools Expos - Dubbo, 13-14 May; Griffith, 16 June; Wagga Wagga, 17-18 June; Narrabri, 29-30 July

Knox ad Rex OutThere - April 2016 - new branding.indd 1 3/03/2016 3:51:40 PM

Page 81: Airnorth April/May 2016

Three top healthy travel essentialsWhether you’re travelling by land or flying, a work daytrip or a long-awaited holiday, being on the go can leave hair and skin feeling lacklustre. But there are some beauty ‘travel essentials’ that’ll have you glowing from the inside out.

High-quality H20There’s no getting around the fact that high-quality spring water is a health and beauty essential. But not all waters are the same. Look for aqua that is mineral-rich, straight from Mother Nature and not simply filtered tap water. Thirst can often disguise itself as hunger, so if you’re on the go, be sure to carry a refillable bottle of high-quality spring water with you for regular hydration (rather than buying the disposable kind, which only add to landfill). findaspring.com/category/locations/oceania

Hair, skin and nail supplementNo matter what we put on the outside, it’s what goes within that can have the biggest beauty benefits. Qsilica’s award-winning One-A-Day supplement is a 10-second beauty routine that nourishes hair, skin and nails from within thanks to formulated natural ingredients, such as zinc, selenium and biotin, as well as colloidal mineral silica. It’s an ideal travel companion: simply take one every day, with food. $34.95RRP (30 tabs), $69.89 (90 tabs). Available from your health food store, pharmacy or online at qsilica.com.au

Essential fatty acids Essential fatty acids (EFAs), like vitamins, cannot be made by the body and so must be included in the diet. When we travel, healthy diet plans often take a back seat, making supplementation even more important. EFAs, in the form of fish oil or evening primrose oil, can boost brain function, and also help foster softer, smoother skin and even healthier hair. Try Efamol Efalex Formula, $24.95RRP (120 capsules) or $44.95 (240 capsules) from your health food store or pharmacy. planethealth.com.au

Extra virgin coconut oilFlying high can wreak havoc on your hair, as can city water supplies, chlorinated pools and even the sun. Extra virgin coconut oil has been used by islanders for centuries as a healthy hair must-have, helping to soften dry ends. Its anti-fungal, anti-inflammatory and anti-viral properties also make this fragrant oil ideal for eating straight off the spoon. Simply take a tablespoon of oil and sweep it through the ends of your hair last thing at night, rinsing it off during your morning shower. You can find a good-quality coconut oil, such as Loving Earth Cold Pressed Coconut Oil at your local health food store or online. $15.90RRP (400ml) lovingearth.net

A HOME AT SCHOOL

A Uniting Church school for boys, K-12 – Wahroonga, Sydneywww.knox.nsw.edu.au

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HEAL

TH N

EWS

Naturopath Narelle Plapp’s five top tips for a healthy breakfast

Many people skip breakfast due to their busy lives and a lack of time in the mornings. According to experts, however, eating breakfast is integral to both mental and physical health. In fact, people who eat breakfast consume fewer kilojoules throughout the entire day – however this does depend on what is eaten and how healthy it really is.

Narelle Plapp, naturopath and founder of Food for Health, says that to get the most out of breakfast, there are a few things to keep in mind.

1Eat breakfast like a kingHave you heard of the saying, ‘Eat

breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a pauper’? People are more likely to maintain their weight and have a better-functioning digestive system if they eat this way. Breakfast should include a balance between healthy fats, protein, carbs, fibre and little refined sugar.

2Breaking the fastA larger breakfast takes time to

prepare, but remember that breakfast is ‘breaking the fast’ so you should give your body the fuel it deserves and yourself the time to prepare. Getting out of bed a little earlier will

make all the difference to whether you have time to make and eat a healthy, wholesome breakfast.

3Drinking waterDrink a glass of warm water

with a squeeze of lemon or lime 30 minutes before you eat; it will get your gut enzymes active. Gut enzymes (digestive enzymes) break down our food into nutrients so that our bodies can absorb them.

4Including proteinEat protein! Protein keeps you

fuller for longer. Foods that are high in protein and great with breakfast are eggs, Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese, milk, baked beans, bacon, salmon, nuts and some grains, including quinoa, to name a few.

5Preparation is the keyBe prepared by having a fridge

full of healthy options. My fridge always has: eggs, smoked salmon, avocado, milk, full-fat yoghurt and berries. My cupboard always has: rolled oats, Food for Health seed boosters, quinoa, fruit-free clusters and fibre-cleanse muesli.

Visit foodforhealth.com.au for more information.

healthnews

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RegionalBusinessReviewIssue 9 – Apr/May 2016

AGRIBUSINESS MINING EDUCATION PLUS...

The latest news, information and innovations from the agriculture industry

Helpful insights and fascinating facts about the Australian mining and resource sector

Insights into some of the best education institutions in the country

Motoring review

Digital innovation

Agribusiness events

And more...

DEEPTROUBLE

DEEPER DEPTHS USUALLY MEANS AN INCREASE IN RISK, BUT DOES IT HAVE TO? WE EXPLORE THE POSSIBILITIES

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DID YOU LIKE the old Mitsubishi Challenger? An SUV built on the bones of the tough Triton ute, it was rugged but unrefined, like a swig of frontier rotgut whiskey.

But like frontier livin’ in general, it turns out that ‘rugged but unrefined’ is a hard day-to-day prospect when there are more comfortable alternatives. Meaning: SUVs that don’t feel like they’ve been built to equip ISIS, drive from pole-to-pole or pioneer Mars.

Tough is admirable. But tough and comfortable wins every time.

And so the Challenger has been replaced by this. The new Mitsubishi Pajero Sport remains an SUV shell dropped onto a Triton ute chassis – albeit the next generation version of that ute – and, most importantly for fans of the Challenger, it retains its ability. But it’s also been through some sort of automotive version of that excellent and much-missed British reality show Ladette to Lady, where fist-fighting, tits-out harridans are transformed into prim English roses.

Hence the new name. It goes with Pajero Sport’s polished new deportment.

Choosing ‘Challenger’ over ‘Pajero’ makes sense for now, even if it’s a curious long-term choice. Mitsubishi CEO Osamu Masuko admitted last December that a successor to the current model Pajero, with its 17-year history, will not be developed (although

the current Pajero will continue for a good while).

In the meantime, ‘Pajero’ has cachet here – although less so in Spanish-speaking countries where the word means, ahem, ‘wanker’ – and this model slots into Mitzi’s ranks just beneath the traditional Paj.

Well done, Mitsubishi, because nameplate aside, this is a worthy and well-considered update to a model that failed to meet expectations, its agricultural roots remaining too obvious for local tastes.

There’s nothing wrong, per se, with putting an SUV shell onto a tradie-vehicle chassis, especially if any leaf springs have been consigned to the parts bin. In fact, lots of manufacturers do it, from Isuzu’s MU-X to the Ford Everest to Toyota’s Fortuna to the Holden Colorado 7.

The reasons are obvious: it’s easy and cheap because most of the engineering has been done; and SUV sales – particularly – have gone so far through the roof in recent years that they’re a danger to passing air traffic. Buyers get proper 4x4 functionality, including off-road capability, and the heft to drag a van around the country.

All of which is true here, and all of which is not bad for a vehicle with an entry point of $45,000 for the baseline GLX version.

As well as that chassis, the Pajero Sport shares the Triton’s solid 2.4 litre

2 RegionalBusinessReview

EMERGESWORDS: MICHAEL BENN

autoreview

The Mitsubishi Pajero is doomed. But for now, long live the Pajero Sport!

A NEW CHALLENGER

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PAJERO SPORT SPECIFICATIONS

Price from: GLX $45,000; GLS $48,500; Exceed $52,750 (plus on-road costs)Engine: 133kW/430Nm 2.4-litre MIVEC turbo-diesel/8-spd sports automatic, 8.0L/100kmKerb weight: 2,045 (GLX), 2,060kg (GLS) or 2,070 (Exceed)Payload: 650kgTowing Capacity 3.1 tonne (braked)

3RegionalBusinessReview

autoreview

Tough is admirable. But tough and comfortable wins every time.

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MIVEC turbodiesel engine. Despite having three variants – the GLX, the mid-spec GLS ($48,500) and the top-line Exceed ($52,750) – the new Sport also shares an eight-speed auto gearbox and Super Select 4WD system.

All but the entry-level GLX get a locking centre differential, helping you to make the most of the 133kW peak power (at 3,500rpm) and 430Nm of torque (from 2,500rpm), should you wish to abandon the bitumen. And it’s capable of tackling serious inclines, mud-holes and scrabbly descents.

So far, so like the old Challenger.It’s during everyday driving that

the Sport’s leaps and bounds over the previous model Pajero become apparent.

During highway driving, on road tyres, it’s unfussy and quiet inside, with the typical diesel torque generated by that single-spec 2.4L motor a dismissive rebuff to ascents and overtaking requirements. Or it is once you’ve gotten up to cruising speed; unsurprisingly, this is no 911 off the line.

The new exterior will polarise buyers, its slashed, almost Lexus-ish cheeks stuffed with walnuts for the winter, but the Sport is aerodynamically quiet, with minimal wind noise.

Like any ute-based SUV worth its salt, the Pajero Sport has also pitched any thought of leaf springs over the back axle – here, they’ve been exchanged for a three-link coil-sprung layout – and the comfort it adds to daily driving is class-leading. The pay-off is a certain wallowiness, but the relative Clive Palmer-ness of its body roll can be forgiven in what is now a genuine family vehicle.

In the end, this is what Mitsubishi has achieved: unquestionable family SUV status. Triton capability overwhelmingly remains. Comfort arrives at the table. It’s reflected in the interior

fit and feel: stylish dash, well-designed cockpit, solid switchgear, with leather trim on the top two specs. Touches such as the reversing camera, digital radio, seven-inch touchscreen with voice control and keyless entry/push-button start are standard in Sport models across the board. The boot is enormous – note that there are only five seats – and cup-holders abound.

The Challenger is officially dead but ironically, the Mitsubishi Pajero Sport is more of a challenger to its many rivals in a highly competitive category than its predecessor ever was.

autoreview

4 RegionalBusinessReview

The relative Clive Palmer-ness of its body roll can be forgiven in what is now a genuine family vehicle.

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Matthew Hayden Mahindra Brand Ambassador

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I’M PROUD TO BE PART OF THE JOURNEY WITH MAHINDRA

Page 88: Airnorth April/May 2016

WORDS: CLAIRE BOND

THE FLOW ON EFFECT OF INNOVATION IN WATER

MANAGEMENTIMPROVING PRODUCTIVITY IS CENTRAL TO ECONOMIC

PERFORMANCE. HOW CAN THIS BE ACHIEVED?

mproving productivity in agriculture is central to Australia’s economic performance – indeed, the federal government

has pinpointed our agricultural sector as a key pillar of the nation’s economy.

Increased farm productivity brings better returns to farmers and greater competitiveness in domestic and international markets.

Access to sufficient supplies of useable water is integral to such productivity, and where supply is scarce, it is traded as a commodity, adding to farm costs. The disruption to rainfall patterns resulting from climate change and from weather systems such El Niño contribute to the uncertainty farmers face each season.

It’s hardly surprising that Australia, a dry continent, ranks highly when it comes to the adoption of innovative technologies and systems for monitoring and managing agricultural water resources. Our farmers are making the most of oft-scarce water

resources by looking to innovations in technology: everything from sensors that monitor soil moisture levels to recirculating water in hydroponic systems and cutting-edge methods of crop irrigation.

While sophisticated irrigation systems are most often deployed by the intensive cropping industry – primarily in sectors such as viticulture and horticulture – the iconic Aussie stockman has also jumped on board, using automated technology and systems to improve outcomes for livestock and pasture crops.

The hours spent travelling to and from bores and troughs in distant paddocks, to check that stock-water levels are adequate or to resolve problems with flow, can now be bypassed thanks to ‘smart’ automated systems that allow for water monitoring via an online platform.

Farmers can view real-time sensor readings of soil moisture, water levels and other key variables from wherever

they are via laptops, tablets and smartphones. They can also switch to a camera view of the water trough. Depending on the reading, the farmer can alter the flow of water through an irrigation line or into a trough remotely via the click of a mouse.

Inadequate telecommunications infrastructure and slow, erratic internet connections across many parts of rural Australia is a problem for the many farmers wanting to employ the new digital technology. Fortunately, automated agricultural systems are becoming more sensitive to these limitations.

Regional Manager of Total Eden Water Engineering Services, Andrew Chittick, who works with such systems, is confident ‘data drought’ and connectivity obstacles can be sidestepped.

“It doesn’t matter what your access is like – solutions can be tailored to fit,” he assures. “These systems are ‘intelligent’ and can be designed to

agribusiness

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operate with radio frequency, cloud/mobile access or satellite.

“Remote management of irrigation – bores, pumps and troughs – is becoming a reality for many properties and it reduces their labour costs significantly,” Chittick says.

According to Chittick, many of Australia’s dairy farmers have been early adopters of automated agricultural technology, but more and more broadacre farmers and other agribusiness owners are interested in the efficiencies such technology offers.

“People think that irrigation is just about pumps and pipelines but it is so much more,” says Chittick. “The sensors … we are installing measure the soil moisture uptake profile, where the water is in a field, or the location of a centre pivot. [This] assists the farmer in the decision of when or when not to irrigate and exactly how much.”

With systems helping crop producers optimise water use, outcomes for harvest improve

dramatically, Chittick assures. “Better water management equals

better crops – and so much can be done from the comfort of home,” he says. “You don’t have to travel out to the field to get an accurate picture of the health of your plants.”

Although many farmers are starting to invest in technology, and the federal and state governments are encouraging innovation – through, for example, Australian Government Department of Environment grant schemes such as the On-farm Irrigation Efficiency Program – there is still a widespread perception that the upfront cost of upgrading existing farm equipment and systems to include new automated technology is prohibitive.

Total Eden works through various scenarios and options to ensure that farmers ‘buy smart’, advising that they lease or rent irrigation equipment rather than tying up capital in it.

“When a potential customer sees the cost to convert a single paddock

– and they have 100 paddocks – you can see their enthusiasm fade pretty quickly,” Chittick admits.

However, there are many ways to reap the benefits of the new agri-technology without outlaying a fortune, he assures.

“For example, rotating equipment through paddocks utilising a roving automated irrigation schedule eliminates the need to cover every inch of land with equipment.”

“Farmers can ‘buy back lifestyle’,” Chittick adds, “by adopting a few simple measures that maximise water use, saving labour, water and time.”

For small-scale farmers looking to strike a balance between farm work and ‘lifestyle’ without sacrificing productivity; or for large-scale agribusinesses seeking to maximise efficiency and yield while cutting labour and input costs, the new technology and systems streamlining water and irrigation management are a welcome development.

“REMOTE MANAGEMENT OF IRRIGATION – BORES, PUMPS AND TROUGHS – IS BECOMING A REALITY FOR MANY PROPERTIES

AND IT REDUCES THEIR LABOUR COSTS SIGNIFICANTLY.”

agribusiness

7RegionalBusinessReview

WHAT IS A DROUGHT?

A drought is a prolonged, abnormally dry period when there is not enough water for users’ normal needs. Drought is not

simply low rainfall; if it was, much of inland Australia would be in almost perpetual drought. Because people use water

in so many different ways, there is no universal definition of drought. Australian Bureau of Meteorology

Page 90: Airnorth April/May 2016

In Australia, securing water supplies

for urban areas and for agriculture

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In Australia, securing water supplies

for urban areas and for agriculture

has always been a priority. Ours is a

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flood and from torrential cyclones to

devastating fire.

Water solutions need to be flexible

and multi-disciplinary, we need

infrastructure that can cope with

adversity.

Total Eden’s water solutions network is

an integral part of the industry, we can

deliver robust infrastructure, and work

with customers in tailoring solutions to

unique circumstances.

We strive to meet the evolving needs

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WHERE THERE IS WATER, THERE IS LIFE

Page 91: Airnorth April/May 2016

AGRICULTURAL EVENTS ROUND-UP

INTERNATIONAL NUT AND DRIED FRUIT COUNCIL (INC) WORLD CONGRESSThe International Nut and Dried Fruit Council (INC) World Congress, now in its 35th year, is billed as ‘the world’s greatest nut and dried fruit industry event’.The annual INC Congress attracts delegates from around the world – dried fruit and nut producers, processors, distributors and marketers, leading academics and industry experts – for a lively exchange of information, ideas and business cards.

The conference component includes keynote speakers, roundtables, seminars and satellite sessions, as well as sessions and meetings tailored for members of the dried fruit industry and those of almonds, macadamias, pecans, walnuts, cashews, pistachios and peanuts.

Here, you’ll get the latest industry stats and forecasts on crops, supply, consumption and market dynamics; new research findings on the health and nutritional benefits of dried fruits and nuts; and updates on food safety science and regulations.

Lunches, cocktail parties and extracurricular activities give delegates ample opportunity to network with fellow industry members; learn about the latest trends, challenges and opportunities; and discuss the sector’s hot topics with global decision-makers.

The Congress ends with a gala dinner in the Grand Hyatt’s ballroom at which the INC’s coveted Golden Nut Award will be announced. Tours of San Diego’s attractions have been scheduled for non-attending guests.For more information and/or to register your place for this year’s INC Congress, visit nutfruitcongress.org/sandiego2016

INTERNATIONAL NUT AND DRIED FRUIT COUNCIL (INC) WORLD CONGRESSWHERE: San Diego, California, USWHEN: May 30–June 1, 2016

IAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE/AGRITECHNICA 2016WHERE: Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre, VictoriaWHEN: May 24–26, 2016

IAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE/AGRITECHNICA 2016Irrigation Australia Limited’s annual gathering of industry heavyweights shares the spotlight with the first-ever Agritechnica Australia over three exciting days in late May. The annual gathering hosted by peak industry body Irrigation Australia Limited (IAL) will see 3,000-odd irrigation experts converge on Melbourne to discuss issues impacting the industry’s ‘prosperity and wellbeing’.

This year’s IAL Conference will address 10 key themes, including urban irrigation, new technology and efficiency investments, in keynote speeches and seminars helmed by national and global industry leaders, hands-on workshops and technical tours.

The accompanying free expo will be awash with cutting-edge innovations, emerging technologies and new products from top irrigation equipment manufacturers and suppliers, and key

service providers. You’ll also get to meet and mingle with expert advisors, product developers and influential reps from all levels of government. The extracurricular program includes networking drinks and an industry gala dinner.

The inaugural Agritechnica Australia, to be held alongside the IAL Conference, is a forum for sharing knowledge about how new agricultural tools and technology can help Aussie farmers ‘produce more with less’. A free exhibition will showcase the latest developments in precision agriculture, sensor tech, automated farm equipment and protected cropping – drones, driverless tractors and ag-bots; RTK navigation; biotechnology and biosecurity solutions; and closed ecological and ‘vertical farming’ systems. Check out high-tech ag solutions from around the world and discuss their finer points with experts in the field.For more information or to register for the IAL and/or Agritechnica conferences, visit irrigationaustralia.com.au/conference

9RegionalBusinessReview

events

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From miner to manager...Dragon are hiring

As a fly-in fly-out miner, working on remote mine camps Australia-wide can get tough! Provision of work may not always be available to you and organizing shifts amongst site managers can be stressful. The mining industry will often afford you with unsocial shift structures and this is where Dragon Labour Hire come in…We specialise in the recruitment of construction-based jobs across Australia that are both sought after and financially rewarding. From carpenter and foreman jobs to project and site manager jobs, Dragon has the work that fits to your circumstances. Our database holds a

list of some of the key players within Australia’s industry, so whether it’s a temporary or full time position you’re after, we can find you the right projects.Dragon Labour Hire are interested in motivated and trade qualified individuals to join our dynamic team. We undertake projects of all sizes and a great deal of high end construction projects. We foster constant development and opportunity to all of our employees. Whether you’re in business operations and want to partner up or if you’re looking for professional development, you’ve come to the right place.

Dragon Labour Hire can assist

in providing the right job for you!

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Page 93: Airnorth April/May 2016

Helpful insights and fascinating facts about the Australian mining and resources sector.

insidemining

From miner to manager...Dragon are hiring

As a fly-in fly-out miner, working on remote mine camps Australia-wide can get tough! Provision of work may not always be available to you and organizing shifts amongst site managers can be stressful. The mining industry will often afford you with unsocial shift structures and this is where Dragon Labour Hire come in…We specialise in the recruitment of construction-based jobs across Australia that are both sought after and financially rewarding. From carpenter and foreman jobs to project and site manager jobs, Dragon has the work that fits to your circumstances. Our database holds a

list of some of the key players within Australia’s industry, so whether it’s a temporary or full time position you’re after, we can find you the right projects.Dragon Labour Hire are interested in motivated and trade qualified individuals to join our dynamic team. We undertake projects of all sizes and a great deal of high end construction projects. We foster constant development and opportunity to all of our employees. Whether you’re in business operations and want to partner up or if you’re looking for professional development, you’ve come to the right place.

Dragon Labour Hire can assist

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Page 94: Airnorth April/May 2016

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MINES ARE LOCATED FAR FROM COMFORTS AND, WHILE MINING JOBS ARE LUCRATIVE, CONDITIONS ON SITE CAN BE HAZARDOUS FOR HUMAN OPERATORS. IS REMOTE TECH THE ANSWER?

WORDS: DARREN BAGULEY

REMOTECONTROL

Mining by

13RegionalBusinessReview

spotlight©

Leica

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Page 96: Airnorth April/May 2016

© 2015 Caterpillar

Civeo’s Coppabella Village.

It is possible for automated machines and systems to take over many of the more dirty, difficult and dangerous jobs in mining.

LONG THE province of science fiction writers, operating a mine by remote control with maintenance staff the only humans on site may be closer than many of us think.

Whether it is big-ticket items such as autonomous haul trucks, drones, remote-controlled jumbos and drill rigs, or high-tech sensors scattered all over the mine site, safety concerns and increased productivity are driving research into and adoption of remote technology at a breakneck pace.

Mining equipment, technology and services (METS) sector peak body Austmine CEO, Chris Gibbs Stewart, believes the advent of remote technology is nothing short of “a major step change” that will alter the industry forever.

“The miner of the future will need data skills and their IT background will be just as important as their mining engineering background, because the big-step changes in mining today are all about automation, robotics, simulation, visualisation and remote monitoring,” she says. “Of course, overlaying all this is the data-collection ability inherent in all those technologies.”

Safety is a major driver in the development of remote technology in mining that makes it possible for automated machines and systems to take over many of the more dirty, difficult and dangerous jobs in mining, freeing human workers to take on less risky roles – such as monitoring and managing the site

(with its potentially harmful large machinery, unstable rock faces, explosions and other dangers inherent in mine sites, whether they’re underground or on the surface) from a cool, clean and comparatively risk-free remote location.

According to Gibbs Stewart, a lot of these new technologies “[are now being] controlled by someone sitting in an air-conditioned office several hundred kilometres away from the mine site”.

“It really is how mining is changing,” she says. “Most of the big companies operating in Western Australia now have their remote operations centre in Perth.”

What companies are also discovering as they deploy this new technology is that as well as

14 RegionalBusinessReview

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being safer, it’s more efficient and improves productivity.

Following the downturn in commodity prices over the past couple of years, mining companies are looking at ways to drive down their costs, and new technologies enabling remote working are one of the main ways to do that, says Gibbs Stewart.

The slowdown also gives companies the opportunity to make those changes, she notes. When prices are good and there is strong demand for the product, the emphasis is on maintaining or increasing production – no company wants to shut down a site to implement a new technology that may or may not work.

Nevertheless, many of the productivity increases achieved using remote technology are hard-won through intensive research and innovation, says CRCmining Chief Opportunity Officer Kevin Greenwood.

Greenwood cites, as an example, a recent CRCmining research project that used an innovative method to help automated, remotely controlled bulldozers’ performance match that of ’dozers driven by skilled human operators.

“With something like a bulldozer, when you take a human off the machine and operate it remotely, the productivity drops substantially – by about 40 per cent. So some of the research we’ve been doing is trying to work out why this happens,” Greenwood explains.

“What we found out is that a good bulldozer operator relies on a bunch of different sensory inputs as they’re operating the machine. They can hear and see what it is doing, of course, but also feel things – like the pitch and angle of the machine.”

CRCmining’s bulldozer project team was able to recreate the sensory input received by bulldozer operators on mine sites by attaching a ’dozer driver’s seat to a remotely located platform similar to those you might find in a high-end computer-game simulator.

By experimenting with the feedback – dialling up or down the sensations the driver experiences, CRCmining researchers were able to determine the main sensory inputs a ’dozer operator needs to do the job remotely.

Over time, the researchers were able to use these simulated sensory cues – visual, auditory and motion – to improve the productivity of the remotely controlled bulldozer to the point where it exceeded that of a machine with a real-live operator sitting on it.

All this technology is in the process of being implemented in Caterpillar’s remote-controlled ’dozing solutions, Greenwood says, but is not quite out on site yet.

Another remote technology CRCmining is hard at work on uses fibre-optic sensors to figure out what’s happening out on the mine site. The advantage of fibre optics, says Greenwood, is that it is a distributed sensor system.

“It can be put in place all along the areas you’re trying to measure,” he explains.

Flexible, energy-friendly fibre optics have many potential applications in mining, Greenwood says.

“One project we’re working on currently is using fibre-optic technology to monitor conveyors. It measures the noise level on the belt idlers, so it’s like having thousands of microphones along the path of the conveyor,” he explains.

“And we’re finding we can predict the failure of components such as idlers.”

On mine sites, this technology promises to provide personnel with the data they need to schedule timely maintenance – such as to replace a worn part before it breaks rather than waiting for it to fail and then having to replace it, with all the lost production and safety issues that entails.

“It’s early days, but research is advancing very rapidly and it’s looking very positive,” Greenwood says.

With the pace of technological change in the mining sector quickening, one thing Stewart and Greenwood agree on is that the speed of innovation will also increase. Currently, it takes about 15 years for a completely new technology to be adopted, and Stewart says this cycle “really needs to be sped up”.

“We need to work on accelerating the innovation,” he says.

Many of the productivity increases achieved using remote technology are hard-won

through intensive research and innovation.

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16 RegionalBusinessReview

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With over 57 sites nationally and servicing over 20,000 customers, Toxfree provides solutions for some of Australia’s leading businesses and government organisations throughout Australia.

itachi’s new ZW-5 wheel loaders has seen the range extend significantly upwards in capacity, bringing the efficiency and reliability of Hitachi wheel loaders to large quarries and the lower end of the mining market. The biggest model in the range is the 397kW ZW550-

5, with an operating weight of more than 47 tonnes and bucket capacity of up to 7.2m3. Other new models in the range are the ZW370-5 (289 kW, 34T, up to 6.2m3) and ZW330-5 (213 kW, 27T, up to 5.0m3).

With a broad range of Hitachi and John Deere wheel loaders, customers can choose a machine that directly caters to their job-site requirements and task demands. Wheel loaders are suitable for a wide range of applications across various industries due to their dynamic design, advanced technological features and myriad of optional attachments. Frank Gili, General Manager of Construction and Forestry Sales, from Hitachi Construction Machinery Australia says the machines share a number of features that enhance productivity, ease of operation and maintenance.“The addition of these larger models makes our industry-leading wheel loader design available to a new range of customers in different applications,” Frank says. “Like the rest of the models in the range, those at the big end are all about getting the job done as quickly and efficiently as possible, with no compromise on safety or comfort. For customers in the quarry and mining sectors where work happens around the clock, this level of reliability and ease of use is essential.”

HITACHI PUSHES THE BOUNDARIES

For customers in the quarry and mining sectors where work happens around the clock, this level of reliability and ease of use is essential.

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DEEPTROUBLE

AS MINERS AND MACHINERY GO DEEPER UNDERGROUND IN MINES THAT HAVE BEEN IN OPERATION FOR DECADES,

THE RISK OF SERIOUS INJURY OR DEATH INCREASES.

WORDS: DARREN BAGULEY

19RegionalBusinessReview

safetyspecial

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Mines are getting deeper, stresses are getting higher and underground mining as a whole is getting more dangerous.

ustralia is a developed mining environment, and while Australian underground mines may

not have the longevity of Sweden’s Garpenberg (operating since 1354 – perhaps even earlier) or Bolivia’s Potosi (operating since 1546) deposits, many are ageing, and going deeper and further as a result.

Despite the technological advances of recent years, such as hydraulic pit props, the deeper a mine goes, the higher the geotechnical risk. And it’s also not just about technology. Leading occupational health and safety specialist Dr Marcus Cattani warns that we should never lose sight of the human factor when it comes to workplace health and safety.

According to CRCMining’s Chief Operating Officer, Kevin Greenwood, “Mines are getting deeper, stresses are getting higher and underground mining as a whole is getting more dangerous. So the question is whether it’s possible to design excavations that can resist or absorb the geological stresses so as to prevent cave-ins and maintain the integrity of shafts and tunnels.

“It’s increasingly a concern because it’s a larger and larger problem for the industry – and we have to be able to solve those problems. [Meeting] the challenge, however, presents a whole new world of design of mines and design of ground support.”

Getting humans out of and away from potentially hazardous machines underground completely is a fast-

growing trend; however, even with automated machinery and ‘intelligent’ IoT systems, there is still the risk of machine-to-machine damage occurring, or of someone on the mine site being harmed or killed by an autonomous machine merely as a result of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

One technology that has the potential to reduce this risk greatly is that of collision avoidance and automatic stopping systems. Already, the United States and South Africa have made it mandatory for mine sites to implement collision avoidance

and proximity detection systems to improve worker safety. A move to make this technology compulsory has been proposed in Queensland, too, but as yet, it is not in force.

A focus of CRCMining is finding viable ways to make underground mining safer, such as changing the formulations of materials or the way technology operates so as to eliminate or reduce the risk.

The company has done a lot of work on blasting compounds, Greenwood notes

“In Australia, we use ammonium nitrate explosives which produce noxious fumes,” he says.

Greenwood says CRCMining is working on a new formulation that has characteristics similar to those of ammonium nitrate explosives, and “may turn out to actually be less expensive to produce, but does not produce the noxious fumes.”

The use of such a compound would greatly reduce the risk to underground miners as well as the

safetyspecial

20 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 103: Airnorth April/May 2016

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Page 104: Airnorth April/May 2016
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“Not only is it safer, but the extraction rates are higher and the energy use is much lower, making it more productive all round.”

time to empty a mine after a blast. “There’s always an amount of time you lose when you blast,” says Greenwood, “and there is always the risk of noxious fumes getting trapped [in an air pocket or some other sort of anomaly].”

Another technology CRCMining developed to help make working in underground mines safer – the oscillating disc cutter (ODC) – is already in production.

The ODC was licenced to Joy Global in 2006, with the company now marketing it as the Dynacut.

The ODC was developed in a bid to reduce the process of having jumbos go in to drill a blasting pattern, blasting etc. “It’s dangerous because it’s blasting,” says Greenwood, and after you’ve hauled out all the ore, you need to do it all over again.

“CRCMining’s research was trying to eliminate this process completely by going to a cutting process that works more like the techniques used in coal mines. This has proved to be really

exciting new technology. Not only is it safer, but the extraction rates are higher and the energy use is much lower, making it more productive all round.”

Technology such as better engineering and design, collision avoidance and automatic stopping systems, improved blasting compounds and new ways of cutting shafts, are safer or will increase mining safety underground. Nevertheless, Dr Cattani warns that the dismissal of ‘people skills’ such as leadership and good communication in the mining industry is a significant contributing factor in safety issues.

Dr Cattani, whose eight-step The JOURNEY Program™ has become a model in safety leadership training since it was released in 2012, believes

that ultimately, leadership is critical. “In OH&S, the trend is to put the

emphasis on the leadership team,” he contends. “That team will have to have an understanding of safety and how effective the company’s measures are. To do this they will have to be involved in management of risk of injury, and that’s been shown over and over again to be a useful thing.”

While this has been a trend in companies that really ‘walk the walk’ on safety, Dr Cattani sees that a new trend in work health and safety legislation is to emphasise and define the role of the leadership team, and he believes this cannot help but have a positive impact on the assessment of risk on mine sites.

23RegionalBusinessReview

safetyspecial

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Mass MiningMass OppOrtunities Sandvik’s complete product offering for mass mining is the superior choice for your underground drilling, loading, hauling, crushing and materials handling needs.

Backed by world-class automation and process management capabilities as well as industry-leading clean energy initiatives, Sandvik equipment is the safest, most productive, and technologically advanced on the market.

Visit our booth to interact with our underground mining experts and see the latest in mass mining technology and equipment at Mass Min 2016 in Sydney.

sanDViK MiningPartS SaleS 18001 7263845 | General enquirieS 13001 [email protected] | www.MininG.SandVik.coM/au

Mass MiningMass OppOrtunities Sandvik’s complete product offering for mass mining is the superior choice for your underground drilling, loading, hauling, crushing and materials handling needs.

Backed by world-class automation and process management capabilities as well as industry-leading clean energy initiatives, Sandvik equipment is the safest, most productive, and technologically advanced on the market.

Visit our booth to interact with our underground mining experts and see the latest in mass mining technology and equipment at Mass Min 2016 in Sydney.

sanDViK MiningPartS SaleS 18001 7263845 | General enquirieS 13001 [email protected] | www.MininG.SandVik.coM/au

Page 107: Airnorth April/May 2016

andvik has a complete offering for mass mining, from underground drilling, loading and hauling, to crushing, screening and the latest in automation and clean energy technology.

As a Platinum Sponsor of the 7th International Conference and Exhibition on Mass Mining (Mass Min 2016), we will be showcasing our world-leading equipment and technology at the Australian Technology Park in Sydney, May 9-11.

On display will be the new DD422i development drill rig, as part of its official Australian launch. The DD422i has recently completed successful trials underground at Northern Star’s Jundee mine site in Western Australia receiving exceptional feedback from contractor Byrnecut. See our Underground Drilling experts at Mass Min 2016 to find out more about the DD422i’s revolutionary drilling and boom control system, highly ergonomic cabin, improved carrier and wide range of Automation levels.

Sandvik’s TH663 truck and LH621 loader will also be on display at Mass Min 2016, representing the latest in underground loading and hauling technology and launching Sandvik’s collaboration with Volvo Penta engines. See our

machines in action underground through our live streaming channel, broadcast from Northparkes Mines in NSW.

As leaders in underground fleet automation systems, our ‘Automation Chair’ display is not to be missed, as we demonstrate automated operation of our load and haul equipment in Sandvik’s test mine in Finland, without leaving the Sandvik booth at Mass Min.

Sandvik’s Optimine Monitoring system technology will also be showcased at Mass Min, with a live streaming channel from Finch mine in Canada demonstrating real-time data collection across Sandvik’s underground loaders, trucks, drill rigs and road headers.

MASTER OF ALL TRADES

Sandvik has a complete offering for mass mining, from underground drilling, loading and hauling, to crushing, screening and the latest in automation and clean energy technology.

25RegionalBusinessReview

advertorial

Page 108: Airnorth April/May 2016

egional and remote communities now have new options in smart repeater technology that puts a halt to

poor quality mobile reception. No carrier network can hope to cover

100% percent of the population all of the time. But with current technology mobile users with marginal service can now take matters into their own hands.

The Cel-Fi third-generation smart signal boosters address the challenges of poor indoor mobile coverage. It automatically adapts to the indoor environment to maximise cellular coverage, now supports LTE, provides greater gain, and uses patented echo-cancellation algorithms for stronger signals in the coverage area.

“This legal device gives those thousands – maybe tens of thousands - of Australians

affected by poor reception, good mobile coverage, not just in rural areas but in urban areas affected by poor signal strength. It also allows people to take advantage of the benefits of 4G broadband by maximising data bandwidth. The device can have an instant and dramatic effect.” said General Manager for Cel-Fi Australia’s distributor, Scott Hampton.

“People are increasingly relying on their mobile phones as their primary mode of communication, making indoor cellular coverage more critical than ever before,” said Mr Hampton.

Speak to Powertec today and ask for contact details of a telecommunications expert in your area.

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Page 109: Airnorth April/May 2016

IN THE MIDST OF A CYCLICAL DOWNTURN, SOME OF THE TOUGHEST DECISIONS OIL AND GAS EXECUTIVES HAVE TO MAKE WILL BE ABOUT

INVESTMENT IN INNOVATION.

OIL&GAS

WORDS: DARREN BAGULEY

GOES DIGITALINNOVATION

specialreport

27RegionalBusinessReview

Page 110: Airnorth April/May 2016

Any innovations implemented now are what will set oil and gas companies up for even greater profitability come the next boom.

THERE IS NO doubt that the resources and energy industry is in the midst of a cyclic downturn. According to the Australian Government Department of Industry, Innovation and Science’s Resources and Energy Quarterly (December Quarter 2015), this financial year, “Australia’s export earnings from resources and energy commodities are forecast to decline by 4 per cent to $166 billion as an increase in export volumes, particularly LNG and iron ore, are more than offset by lower prices.

“LNG export volumes are forecast to increase by 45 per cent to 36 million tonnes following the commissioning of the Queensland Curtis LNG project and the start of production at the Gladstone LNG project.

“While the Australian dollar is assumed to depreciate, it is unlikely to mitigate the effect of lower prices on Australia’s export earnings.”

Such an environment presents

companies with challenges but also opportunities. Lower prices reduce revenue but the general slowdown gets companies off the ‘get it out of the ground and ship faster, faster, faster’ treadmill.

This means that oil and gas company management needs to walk a fine line between cutting costs and increasing productivity, and investing in innovation. Any innovations implemented now are what will set oil and gas companies up for even greater profitability come the next boom.

The latest issue of Lloyd’s Register’s energy, oil and gas Technology Radar research series, ‘Innovating in a New Environment 2015’, argues that “Dropping or postponing a project today may help the bottom line in the short term, but it could impair the company’s ability to find and exploit new reserves of oil and gas tomorrow. Downturn or not, the reality remains that future reserves will

be harder to reach and ever more expensive to get out of the ground.

“Business leaders in the industry are not shying away from making tough decisions, judging by the large number of major development projects being shelved – and, as this study finds, the technology innovation initiatives being put on ice. Cost reduction and improved operating efficiency are the watchwords for oil and gas innovation today.”

While oil and gas innovation is far from frozen even in today’s difficult environment, it is indicative of the environment that 47 per cent of the oil and gas executives interviewed for the LRE report say they have fallen short of their innovation goals – double the amount cited in the 2014 report.

It is not all doom and gloom, however. While the bar remains high for new investment in expensive production technology, the digital revolution that has

specialreport

28 RegionalBusinessReview

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OUR NEW RTP NUTRUNNERWelcome to the revolution in heavy duty bolting.

Atlas Copco has released the RTP pneumatic nutrunner for the Oil and Gas, Mining and Energy markets.

The RTP is a reliable, durable and fast solution for all bolting applications including flange related applications, wheel work and maintenance.

For information or to set up an on site demonstration call us or email on

1800 801 [email protected]

Page 113: Airnorth April/May 2016

The adoption of simulation and visualisation technologies have been major trends across all resource industries for some time now.

OUR NEW RTP NUTRUNNERWelcome to the revolution in heavy duty bolting.

Atlas Copco has released the RTP pneumatic nutrunner for the Oil and Gas, Mining and Energy markets.

The RTP is a reliable, durable and fast solution for all bolting applications including flange related applications, wheel work and maintenance.

For information or to set up an on site demonstration call us or email on

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already changed the way many other industries operate is finally making inroads with the resources sector.

The adoption of simulation and visualisation technologies have been major trends across all resource industries for some time now – even during the heady years of the boom. In particular, rapidly maturating advanced data technologies are now having an impact. These technologies are generally not expensive to deploy, can readily be outsourced to providers such as IBM’s Watson cognitive computing system and offer near-term gains in efficiency improvement.

Digital and data underpin some of the key initiatives technology leaders are hoping to push in their firms, with one of the major projects coming out of Australia’s largest oil and gas company, Woodside Petroleum.

Beginning in 2014, Woodside has established the Woodside Innovation and Technology Hub (WITH) under Silicon Valley veteran Shaun Gregory. Speaking at an event in Perth in August 2015

that was widely reported by the ABC and other outlets, Gregory has credited artificial intelligence (AI) technology with giving the company a competitive edge in tough market conditions.

Gregory asserts that Woodside’s analytics platform is now larger than Twitter’s and that a search for data that once would have taken days now takes just seconds because the AI is so efficient.

At the event, Gregory also revealed that the company is developing algorithms that will be able to predict when a system requires maintenance or a component has a high probability of failure.

“[Algorithms] are making a prediction, they can also self-analyse how successful they are,

so they track their own success rate and they can publish themselves ‘that I’m not good enough’,” Gregory said, according to the ABC website.

Because of this process of feedback, monitoring and evolution, in a matter of months the algorithms had become much more efficient and were now up to 85 per cent accurate.

Gregory reportedly said, “The biggest thing we have seen in the past 12 months has been digital and the evolution of computing, artificial intelligence, big data analysis. We now predict that events are going to happen in one week, one month, three months’ time and intercept the failure before it happens, so you get a whole lot more efficiency and maintenance and increased production.”

31RegionalBusinessReview

specialreport

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Insights into some of the best education institutions in the country.

education

Page 115: Airnorth April/May 2016

33RegionalBusinessReview

advertorial

tudents embarking on a Master of Business Administration (MBA) know they are in for years of hard study.

But what new students may not expect is to make enduring friendships and have a ball at bars, cycling trips and other social events.

At The University of Western Australia Business School, the MBA Social Club gives its members the opportunity to escape from the stresses of study and chat like old friends.

UWA MBA students Adrian Bland, Tarmianne Marshall and Tomy Hwang founded the club three years ago.

The club’s goal, explains Hwang, was to help students to make strong friendships.

“Our core purpose has always been about making friendships that last. We understand how important it is to network in your professional life, but sometimes people also need a friend who understands the issues and can be confided in when

the going gets tough,” Hwang said.“Friends outside university often don’t

understand the stress of papers being due, group assignment dynamics, and the looming threat of exams. The club provides a social outlet whereby everyone is experiencing the same stresses and challenges. Instead of making networks, you can walk away having made some genuine friendships,” Marshall added.

“The inaugural ball (held in 2015) was by far our largest and most ambitious event. We filled the Astral Ballroom at Crown Perth, and it was a fabulous night.”

Beyond social events, UWA MBA students also have access to a range of professional development opportunities.

UWA MBA Career Services Manager Tracey McClurg believes it is important for students to gain a range of skills in

networking, CV writing, interviews, case studies and other areas which help MBA graduates land sought after jobs.

“Employers are looking for future leaders who are strategic thinkers, have a strong sense of integrity and also

have inner strengths such as intellectual curiosity and a clear set of values,” McClurg explained.

With the vast majority of UWA MBA students working full-time while they study - and often looking for promotions or to move into new industries – the combination of flexible study, professional development opportunities and an active social club means that

students can enjoy their time at the UWA Business School.

To learn more about the UWA MBA, visit mba.uwa.edu.au

THE MBA WITH A GREAT SOCIAL SCENEBARS, HIGH TEA, CYCLING AND AN MBA BALL — UWA’S SOCIAL SCENE HAS IT ALL

Beyond social events, UWA MBA students

also have access to a range of professional development opportunities.

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advertorial

35RegionalBusinessReview

t’s been a huge year for talented singer, Jeremy Beamish. Relocating from the Gold Coast just a year ago, Jeremy is now in his senior year at Downlands

College, a newly elected Cultural Captain and is also about to play the lead role in Les Misérables.

Downlands was top of the school options list as Jeremy’s mother, Liza Beamish, is a Downlands Past Student with fond memories of her time at the College. However it was the strong Arts program and inclusive, welcoming attitude of everyone they met that made the decision a lot easier. 

Jeremy is particularly excited about being awarded the role of Jean Valjean in the upcoming College musical Les Misérables. 

“To be cast as the lead in Les Misérables is a huge compliment. There are so many really talented singers and performers at Downlands, so it’s quite an honour to be given such an integral role like Jean Valjean,” said Jeremy.

Downlands Head of the Arts and Musical Director, Mr Shane Tooley, is

also a Past Student of the College, and said he chose this particular musical for a few reasons. 

“I selected Les Misérables because of its powerful storyline and music, and it was a natural choice for the vast array of talent we currently have on offer. It is the world’s most beloved musical, and I believe it will be the musical students talk about well after our final performance,” Mr Tooley explains.

Choosing a challenging musical is only one part of Mr Tooley’s upcoming plans for progressing Performing Arts at the College. 

“We have already made a few changes in Performing Arts, including new ensembles and a Middle School Drama Club.”

“Combined with the Dance Troupe which was introduced in 2015, and our existing ensembles, I believe we have one of the strongest and most diverse co-curricular Performing Arts offerings available,” Mr Tooley said. 

The diverse Performing Arts program at Downlands is only one of the many choices available to students. The College boasts one of the broadest academic curriculum on

offer within the Darling Downs, along with an extensive range of co-curricular activities and sport to cater for many interests.

While making the most of the opportunities presented at school, Jeremy and his brother, Ben, also write and perform their own songs as ‘The Beamish Boys’. They have already enjoyed success, having written a song for the 2018 Commonwealth Games sizzler reel; featuring on the television program Sunrise; and founding their own company, Next Generation Music.

As for Jeremy, he already has his future planned out, “I would love to be a professional singer. I love performing and writing songs, so I hope one day to tour the world doing what I love”. 

BREAKING NEWS: Former Wallaby and Downlands Past Student, Garrick Morgan, has been appointed as Director of Rugby for 2016. Garrick will oversee coaching and plans to build one of the best Australian school rugby programs at Downlands College.

TEENAGE STAR MAKES HIS MUSICAL MARK ON DOWNLANDS

Page 118: Airnorth April/May 2016

Open DaySaturday 21 May, 2016

Register at www.nudgee.com

St Joseph’s Nudgee CollegeA Brisbane boys’ day and boarding school for Years 5 to 12 in the Edmund Rice Tradition

[email protected] · 07 3865 0555

Page 119: Airnorth April/May 2016

fter more than 18 months’ construction, the Knox Grammar Senior Secondary Academy (KSSA) threw open its doors for the first time.

The KSSA is more than a new building, in the six months since it opened there has been a massive transformation in the culture and ethic of senior students at Knox.

“The Academy has been designed to meet the specific learning needs of Year 11 and 12 students as they transition from school to the more independent world of future studies,” said Knox Headmaster John Weeks.

The Academy provides many new innovative opportunities, especially for Boarders. For example, the new Year 11 and 12 library in the KSSA has extended opening hours from early in the morning until late in the evening, with specialist staff available to provide extra tuition and academic support.

The facade of the Academy has been designed in the style of ‘Scottish Baronial’ architecture but inside the building you will find flexible learning spaces, new technology and passionate, creative teachers dedicated to the boys’ academic success.

Some of the key features of the KSSA include a large Seniors Hall used by students for group and individual study, recreation and for meetings with students and staff;

a modern library; a 150-seat lecture theatre and state-of-the-art Science labs. The facility also has modern Finance and Legal Studies classrooms, including a space that has

been modelled on a corporate boardroom. “The facility does illustrate that ‘Knox is

innovation wrapped in tradition’,” said the Headmaster.

A key inspiration for the design of the Academy was ‘Social Learning Theory’. This concept, developed by Stamford University psychology professor Albert Bandura, says that behaviour is learned from the environment through the process of observational learning.

Over the spring school holidays, the KSSA was also open for boys in Year 12 to use as a place to prepare for the HSC examinations, and many boys took up this opportunity.

The feedback from Knox staff has also been wonderful, with the teachers enjoying working in a fresh, modern workplace, with new spaces to try innovative teaching practice, such as team teaching.

For more information and to watch a video about the KSSA, visit www.knox.nsw.edu.au/kssa. To book a tour of the new Knox Senior Secondary Academy or the Knox Boarding House, please contact Mr Martin Gooding, Head of Enrolments, on 02 9473 9768 or [email protected].

INTRODUCING THE KNOX SENIOR SECONDARY ACADEMYSTUDENTS AND STAFF RETURNING TO KNOX GRAMMAR IN WAHROONGA, SYDNEY, AT THE START OF TERM 3 HAD AN EXTRA SPRING IN THEIR STEP WITH THE OPENING OF A GROUND-BREAKING NEW FACILITY.

A key inspiration for

the design of the Academy was

‘Social Learning Theory’. This concept says

that behaviour is learned from

the environment through the process of

observational learning

37RegionalBusinessReview

advertorial

Open DaySaturday 21 May, 2016

Register at www.nudgee.com

St Joseph’s Nudgee CollegeA Brisbane boys’ day and boarding school for Years 5 to 12 in the Edmund Rice Tradition

[email protected] · 07 3865 0555

Page 120: Airnorth April/May 2016

Discover what you can do

At TAFE NSW Riverina Institute we understand that studying on campus, or in a classroom, isn’t always possible. That’s why we offer a

collaborative online learning environment with exceptional support. You’ll learn with state-of- the-art online technologies, extensive resources and a connected online learning community.

So why not discover what you can do online today! Call us or visit our website for more information on the huge range of courses available.

1300 TAFE RI (1300 8233 74) rit.tafensw.edu.au/online

Whether you’re on a computer, or any other mobile device, you can now learn when and where you want.

Page 121: Airnorth April/May 2016

advertorial

39RegionalBusinessReview

Discover what you can do

At TAFE NSW Riverina Institute we understand that studying on campus, or in a classroom, isn’t always possible. That’s why we offer a

collaborative online learning environment with exceptional support. You’ll learn with state-of- the-art online technologies, extensive resources and a connected online learning community.

So why not discover what you can do online today! Call us or visit our website for more information on the huge range of courses available.

1300 TAFE RI (1300 8233 74) rit.tafensw.edu.au/online

Whether you’re on a computer, or any other mobile device, you can now learn when and where you want.

hen Helen Coles started her online educational journey, little did she know that

on completion of her Diploma she would be awarded the TAFE NSW Riverina Institute 2015 Outstanding Student Achievement Award and continue on to be recognised at the NSW Excellence in Surveying and Spatial Information Awards as TAFE Student of the Year.

Based in Brisbane, Helen enrolled in the Diploma of Spatial Information Services which is delivered from Riverina Institute’s National Environment Centre on the outskirts of Albury, New South Wales.

Helen’s goal was to provide herself with further career options in the field of spatial science.

“Throughout my career I have used Geographic Information Systems software for mapping, however I always suspected the software I was using was capable of so much more”.

“I began researching spatial education available to off-campus

students. The online diploma offered by Riverina Institute had no equal. The subjects available are outstanding, providing a thorough education in all areas expected of a spatial career”.

Helen attributed her achievements while studying online to the quality of training she received from Riverina Institute while getting continuous support from her teachers.

“The teachers who guided me through my studies at Riverina Institute are all first class in my opinion”.

Riverina Institute has many success stories like Helen’s when it comes to online learning.

Our expert teachers maintain strong links to industry, which means Riverina Institute adapts and customises training to provide industry-current skills.

No matter what stage you are in your career, business and life – starting or upgrading your career, returning to work, needing new workplace skills, learning new skills to fuel your personal interests – our online learning options can offer you educational solutions that support

your personal career growth.At Riverina Institute we have focused

our online courses on areas in which we specialise, where we have a point of difference from other educational providers.

Courses range from Civil Construction, Water Operations and Spatial Technologies to Community Services, Aged Care and Disability Support. There is a vast array of business courses ranging from Certificate II in Business to Advanced Diploma of Leadership Management, Human Resource Management and Public Safety (Emergency Management).

We aim to provide access to education for everyone, no matter where you are.

To see our full range of online learning options please visit our website at www.rit.tafensw.edu.au/online or you can call our customer service staff on 1300 8233 74 to discuss your training needs.We look forward to meeting you online at Riverina Institute.

YOUR WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY STARTS WITH ONLINE LEARNING AT TAFE NSW RIVERNIA INSITUTE

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Education Advertisement

Page 123: Airnorth April/May 2016

A culture of welcome, inclusion and kindness is emphasised at Stuartholme and boarders’ learn the life-long skills of communication and respect.

advertorial

41RegionalBusinessReview

ome to 160 Boarders, Stuartholme is small enough for each student to be personally known, yet large

enough to offer extensive opportunities. As Brisbane’s only Catholic girls’

boarding school, Stuartholme’s boarding community offers students a rich experience of cultural and social diversity with girls coming from rural and remote areas of Qld and NSW as well as many corners of the globe including Dubai, Madagascar, China, and PNG.

A culture of welcome, inclusion and kindness is emphasised at Stuartholme and boarders’ learn the life-long skills of communication and respect.

Principal, Kristen Sharpe explains that a key to making the girls feel comfortable in their ‘home-away-from-

home’ is to make sure they are still connected to their families, no matter how far away.

“We have fully embraced the use of technology to keep parents and students connected,” Kristen said.

An online learning system is accessed by parents who can review their daughter’s progress in real time. Academic results are uploaded regularly allowing parents to monitor their daughter’s progress throughout the year, not just when reports are issued.

In keeping with its emphasis on education of the whole person, Stuartholme offers girls an extensive co-curricular program including equestrian, rowing, netball, water polo, music and drama as well as social justice and service learning opportunities.

Boarders can volunteer at a refugee homework club at Yeronga State High School, Orange Sky Laundry and also at an annual Sony Camp for disabled children.

Boarding families stay in touch with this vast array of activities through regular updates on a Boarding Community Facebook page as well as the School Facebook page.

As Andree Rice, Deputy Principal Mission and Boarding comments, “Parents feel so much more connected through the use of our Facebook page. They can see the way that Stuartholme Boarding is extending their daughters and encouraging them to be the best they can be.”

Find out more on the School website www.stuartholme.com

STAYING CONNECTED

Page 124: Airnorth April/May 2016

“There is a strong sense of belonging, I feel like I am part of a community.”(Year 12 student, Marist College Ashgrove)

Boarders are the ‘heart and soul’ of our College

We strive to ensure that boarding at Marist is a safe, rewarding and socially satisfying experience where boys from a diverse range of backgrounds learn to live, play, work and pray together.

Marist is unique in that most of our 200 boarders are resident seven days a week during term time. This means we’re able to offer an exceptionally wide range of academic, sporting and recreational opportunities. The consistency, camaraderie and care provided by this model is something parents have told us they want for their sons.

Only seven kilometres from Brisbane CBD, the College is located on 22 hectares of land rich in native flora and fauna. We offer state-of-the-art music, drama, learning and sports facilities, a brand new Olympic-size heated water sports complex as well as recently refurbished boarding residences.

Book a tour of Marist College Ashgrove today - phone 07 3858 4507, email [email protected] or visit us online www.marash.qld.edu.au

MARIST COLLEGE ASHGROVEA Catholic boys’ day and boarding College in the Marist Tradition since 1940

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ory McHugh (shown right) comes from a large family who

have attended Marist College Ashgrove. He was selected as College Vice Captain in his senior year and, as a student leader and boarder, was actively involved in school life. We recently asked students to reflect on their time at the College. This is what Rory had to say:

What did you like most about attending Marist College Ashgrove? “Boarding has definitely been one of the most memorable and enjoyable aspects,” reflects Rory. “I have loved being able to live, study and play with my closet 50 mates 24/7.”

“I feel immense attachment to the school. This place has been my home away from home for five years. It has made up the most part of my identity as a person and a man and for that I am deeply grateful. I will forever have fond memories of this place and lifetime friendships to hold on to. Words can’t really say or show it but the pride is extremely present within me and intertwined into my DNA.”

“As a boarder I’ve been involved in College activities to the tenfold compared

to day students. The education at school is very diverse, there’s a wide program that supports everyone and is so much more than learning the maths textbook from back to front. Its religious, communal, intellectual, social and a good system that honestly does develop good young Marist men. I think that pastorally as well as academically the school offers a brilliant and balanced education.”

How do you think Marist compares to other schools? “Our school spirit is super strong. Positive school culture is one of the things I’ve noticed differentiates us from other schools. Tradition here is that everyone’s involved in the success of the school. If you didn’t make the team, you’re still there every weekend to support and back your mates. That’s the big thing here, no matter what you’re doing or who you are, you’ll always have the school behind you believing in you, wanting you to strive and get the A or score the try. Our diversity in people and cultures is supported immensely well. And I have the greatest respect for our teachers, they are just so generous, kind and eager to help out with

school work, general life assistance, sports and social activities.”

What’s been your most exciting experience? “It’s been thrilling being part of the Swarm (Marist’s sports crowd). When we lift and everyone goes crazy, yelling war cries and chanting loudly to support the boys, and then the team lifts and we get the win! It’s such a sweet feeling recalling those moments.”

Your favourite activity? “As awesome as the sports, my favourite activity is the MATES ministry program. It’s this brilliant set up where different grades and our school collectively get out into the wider community and help others in need of support. It’s been a societal eye-opener, rewarding me with a deeper understanding and view of society outside the grounds of the school.”

Rory’s brothers, uncles and cousins have attended Marist. Does he wish to keep this family tradition alive? “Absolutely,” he says, “If I were to have a son one day, I would send him here. I think it’s an experience all boys should go through in life, if possible. At least, it’s something I wish for my blood to do. It’s a place where I can be proud of who they’ll become, what they’ll learn, their faith development, memories and friendships gained, definitely something I’d want for my son.”

HOW DO STUDENTS VIEW LIFE AT MARIST COLLEGE ASHGROVE?

“There is a strong sense of belonging, I feel like I am part of a community.”(Year 12 student, Marist College Ashgrove)

Boarders are the ‘heart and soul’ of our College

We strive to ensure that boarding at Marist is a safe, rewarding and socially satisfying experience where boys from a diverse range of backgrounds learn to live, play, work and pray together.

Marist is unique in that most of our 200 boarders are resident seven days a week during term time. This means we’re able to offer an exceptionally wide range of academic, sporting and recreational opportunities. The consistency, camaraderie and care provided by this model is something parents have told us they want for their sons.

Only seven kilometres from Brisbane CBD, the College is located on 22 hectares of land rich in native flora and fauna. We offer state-of-the-art music, drama, learning and sports facilities, a brand new Olympic-size heated water sports complex as well as recently refurbished boarding residences.

Book a tour of Marist College Ashgrove today - phone 07 3858 4507, email [email protected] or visit us online www.marash.qld.edu.au

MARIST COLLEGE ASHGROVEA Catholic boys’ day and boarding College in the Marist Tradition since 1940

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Dubbo Christian School was established in 1983 and offers Bible-based and Christ centred schooling for children aged 3 years to Year 12 in Sheraton Road Dubbo in beautiful surroundings with great facilities. K-6 schooling is also offered at Wellington Christian School, which is managed by Dubbo Christian School. We are delighted to now also offer boarding for Years 7-12 students from rural and remote areas.

BOARDING FACILITIES (7-12) 2016 POSITIONS AVAILABLE

Call us to arrange a school tour anytime!

www.dubbocs.edu.au

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ubbo Christian School commenced managing Pumula Lodge at the beginning of 2015 and can

now offer boarding at this 16-resident student hostel situated just 5 minutes from the school. Boarding is available for students in Years 7-12 from rural and remote areas who attend Dubbo Christian School.

Features of Pumula Lodge include 5-day boarding, full-time Christian house-parents, with pastoral and academic support. Also, transport is provided to and from Dubbo Christian School each day.

Dubbo Christian School commenced in 1983 and is set in beautiful grounds in Sheraton Road Dubbo. With a passionate and committed staff and a 570-strong student cohort, facilities include a 900 seat auditorium, Library Resource Centre and Gymnasium as

well as pre-Kindergarten programs. We offer a full curriculum and senior studies program, providing an enriching schooling experience right through to the HSC.

The purchase of land surrounding the school will allow us to meet our strategic master-planning goals for further expansion. In 2014 we took over the operation of Wellington Christian School – a small school in the picturesque town of Wellington, just 30 minutes down the Mitchell Highway.

A visit to Dubbo Christian School today reveals a caring learning community seeking to live out our

mission ‘To provide quality schooling which is Bible-based and Christ-centred’. We are blessed with a positive, caring school culture that flows out of our commitment to Christ. We’re about partnering with parents to prepare students for life after school in terms of academic preparation and whole of life preparation through service, faith and character.

Picture your family as part of the great Dubbo Christian School learning community - call us on 6882 0044 (ext 153) if you would like to find our more, or take a look around our school and boarding facility.

DUBBO CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

We’re about partnering with parents to prepare students for life after school in terms of academic preparation and whole of life preparation through service, faith and character.

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FRENSHAM

+61 2 4860 2000 [email protected]

MITTAGONG NSW 2575 AUSTRALIA

www.frensham.nsw.edu.au

Contact the Registrar to enquire re:

SAMPLE BOARDING – 15 & 16 September 2016Scholarships, including ACER, and Educational Grants

CHARACTERLEADERSHIPACADEMIC ASPIRATION

A member of the UK Boarding

Schools’ Association

STEM: F1 in SchoolsEngineering Challenge

Cambridge UniversityGlobal Perspectives

Year 9 ChallengeJamieson Programme

Fit for the FutureThe Centenary Pool

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rensham is an outward-looking and forward-thinking boarding school that provides a rigorous and personalised academic

programme, with meaningful, lifelong and valued connections.

In an inspiring culture and spectacular living and learning environment, girls are challenged and supported to develop the skills and willingness to make a difference in the world. Frensham has an unwavering commitment to inspiring girls to be fit for the future – physically, mentally and in terms of their character and values in action.

Parents confirm that the key drivers for selecting Frensham for their daughters are: recommendations from past students and current or past parents ~ values and culture of the school ~ academic standards ~ character and leadership development ~ teacher quality ~ high expectation of students ~ fitness and wellbeing focus ~ personalised approach.

Frensham’s academic programme and studies environment are focused on best-practice and ‘next practice’ in a global context. We expect to be measured by our strength in three key areas: quality of teachers, quality of professional learning and resources for teachers, and quality of the personalised approach to the support and guidance of students - and we have outstanding teachers - in the classroom and, equally importantly, in our Houses.

World best-practice confirms that the best teachers have strong academic records and good qualifications but they must also be really good people who ‘like and have the ability to be an inspirer of children’.

Frensham takes advantage of opportunities to build links internationally for students and staff while also personalising the curriculum to meet individual student

and whole-school needs. Our unique Jamieson Programme sees all of Year 9 participate in the Cambridge *IGCSE Global Perspectives course and Year 10 complete the high level AS General course, also offered through Cambridge.

Core to our approach to teaching and learning is the deeply considered support of each girl’s growth on an individual, personal basis; progress and achievement are monitored closely, in a data-driven approach to enhancing understanding of individual talents and needs.

Defining qualities of academic excellence include intellectual curiosity, discernment, courage and grit.

Unique Features:• Frensham’s Sturt Campus, provides

world-class, innovative and inspired interdisciplinary STEM programmes in the areas of science, technology, engineering, the arts, mathematics, entrepreneurship and design.

• 310 individual music lessons (for 340 girls) are taught weekly by a college of professional tutors, supporting an environment where independent study

and practice of instrumental and vocal music are integral to daily life.

• A bonus for Frensham is full involvement in the weekly Sydney-based Girls School Sports competition (IGSSA), with home grounds to accommodate extraordinarily high participation in team sports.

• At 102 years old, Frensham is one of the largest boarding schools for girls in the world and House life is central to the School experience for every girl.

For rural and regional families:• Frensham provides world class

education in a spectacular setting.• Three new former School of the Air

boarders started in Year 7, 2016 (from Broken Hill, Mt Isa and Hillston - in a cohort of 30 boarders).

• In Year 12, 48 of the total enrolment of 57 girls are boarders.

Frensham is a boarding school, not a school with boarders, unique in Australia with more than seventy percent of the total school enrolment of 340 girls in residence.

PREPARING GIRLS FOR THEIRFUTURE NOT OUR PAST...

Defining qualities of academic excellence include intellectual curiosity, discernment, courage and grit

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FRENSHAM

+61 2 4860 2000 [email protected]

MITTAGONG NSW 2575 AUSTRALIA

www.frensham.nsw.edu.au

Contact the Registrar to enquire re:

SAMPLE BOARDING – 15 & 16 September 2016Scholarships, including ACER, and Educational Grants

CHARACTERLEADERSHIPACADEMIC ASPIRATION

A member of the UK Boarding

Schools’ Association

STEM: F1 in SchoolsEngineering Challenge

Cambridge UniversityGlobal Perspectives

Year 9 ChallengeJamieson Programme

Fit for the FutureThe Centenary Pool

*International General Certificate of Secondary Education

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T +61 8 8334 5000 E [email protected] www.aquinas.edu.au

Aquinas Catholic residential college is for tertiary students who are looking to reside with others and who have positive ideals and a determination to succeed. Situated close to the Adelaide CBD, it is a home for students who attend South Australia’s three universities.

Enrolments are now being accepted for the 2017 academic year.Contact us today for more information

Aquinas Catholic College

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quinas College is a Catholic Residential College which provides a home for over 200 tertiary students who

study at one of South Australia’s three major tertiary institutions; the University of Adelaide, Flinders University, and the University of South Australia.

Aquinas College provides an opportunity for young women and men to develop their talents to their full capacity, to form critical minds and compassionate hearts, and to become effective leaders mature in faith and committed to justice in this world.

Aquinas College is named after Saint Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican medieval philosopher whose giant intellect dominated philosophical discussion for many hundreds of years. He was a fine teacher and encouraged students to ask questions and seek truth.

While the students live their own lives, the security, stability and

convenience offered by the College and the sharing of common interests are certainly a significant factor in the high academic success of Aquinas students.

Academic support is provided in several ways. As well as the College tutorials, peer support is available in most subjects from students in the same year or students who have recently completed courses. Academic reviews are conducted by College staff and former Aquinas College students. In these reviews students are given the opportunity to reflect on their academic progress and to seek guidance if needed. Recognition is also given to all who do well; prizes are given to the top student in each area of study and Academic Scholarships are awarded to the top students of each year level.

In keeping with Catholic social justice teaching, Aquinas College aims to promote “a faith that seeks justice” in all students. An Outreach Programme

enables students to engage in activities that help others who are less fortunate than themselves. This commitment can take a variety of forms and may include: advocacy, community awareness raising, fundraising, tutoring, or the provision of direct service such as volunteer work in a soup-kitchen, hospital or other charitable organisations.

Aquinas provides a safe and family like environment where students are encouraged to not only focus on their studies and future careers, but also to live a healthy and ethical lifestyle through personal fitness, social activities and sporting opportunities.

Enrolments for 2017 are now being processed. More information can be obtained through the Aquinas College website, www.aquinas.edu.au or contact the College Admissions Officer on 08 8344 5000 or [email protected]

AQUINAS COLLEGE: SITUATED ON MONTEFIORE HILL OVERLOOKING THE ADELAIDE OVAL

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CRANBROOK IS A WORLD CLASS SCHOOL WHICH ENCOURAGES AND ENABLES ALL OF ITS STUDENTS TO EXPLORE, ENJOY AND FULFIL THEIR POTENTIALSet on a beautiful campus overlooking Sydney Harbour, Boarding at Cranbrook offers boys a supportive home with exceptional facilities and expansive sporting grounds. Our Boarding Housemasters and their families live on site in our two boutique Boarding Houses and prepare our boys to fulfil their talents, flourish and exercise influence in a rapidly evolving and challenging world.

Boarders are at the heart of Cranbrook life: they contribute generously to School, grow in confidence and experience, enrich their horizons and discover their talents.

For further information please visit www.cranbrook.nsw.edu.au

Cranbrook is an Anglican independent day and boarding school for boys, Pre-school to Year 12 in Sydney’s eastern suburbs.

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ranbrook School is an Anglican independent day and boarding school for boys, Pre-school to Year 12 located

in Bellevue Hill in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs. Our two Boarding Houses promote a close, family-like environment so boys feel confident and secure.

Leadership, cross-age interaction, camaraderie and a strong sense of belonging to their ‘home away from home’ are cultivated as the boys experience boarding together. The recent renovations of the Boarding Houses has not only ensured our boys experience exceptional facilities but has enhanced this strong sense of identity and pride in their House.

The sense of belonging and being part of the boarding family develops quickly for the boys as they are immersed into the many weekend boarding activities. Archie Hyles, a Year 7 boarder from Bookham, joined Cranbrook at the beginning of this year and has quickly

settled into boarding life. He attributes this to the ‘the boys in the House making you feel at home and part of the family. The older boys look out for you in and around the school.’

With access to exceptional facilities and learning opportunities, boarding offers a whole education that empowers boys to recognise their own unique potential. Supported by an outstanding boarding academic team, the opportunities for learning beyond the classroom are extensive. Talking about his own experiences as a Cranbrook Year 11 boarder and Second Head Prefect is Ben Clarke from Port Macquarie who stated:

‘Boarding really opens up every opportunity to get involved in all aspects of school life and helps you find your niche; not only what you enjoy but what

you are really good at. Boarding is about learning new things, getting out of your comfort zone, and finding out what kind of person you can, and want to be.’

Boarders can easily access the early morning extension classes and

academic clinics available at school. With no travel

time to factor in to their timetable the boys can put extra effort into their study, sport, music or any of the other co-curricular activities they

are interested in. Cranbrook’s Director of

Boarding, James Boyd, said: ‘Boarding at Cranbrook provides

not only a level of academic advantage but also empowers the boys to recognise their own unique potential and learn valuable life skills such as independence, confidence, resilience, compassion and companionship. All of which are essential for life beyond school.’

BOARDING AT CRANBROOK: IDENTIFYING, BELONGING AND ACHIEVINGCRANBROOK IS A WORLD

CLASS SCHOOL WHICH ENCOURAGES AND ENABLES ALL OF ITS STUDENTS TO EXPLORE, ENJOY AND FULFIL THEIR POTENTIALSet on a beautiful campus overlooking Sydney Harbour, Boarding at Cranbrook offers boys a supportive home with exceptional facilities and expansive sporting grounds. Our Boarding Housemasters and their families live on site in our two boutique Boarding Houses and prepare our boys to fulfil their talents, flourish and exercise influence in a rapidly evolving and challenging world.

Boarders are at the heart of Cranbrook life: they contribute generously to School, grow in confidence and experience, enrich their horizons and discover their talents.

For further information please visit www.cranbrook.nsw.edu.au

Cranbrook is an Anglican independent day and boarding school for boys, Pre-school to Year 12 in Sydney’s eastern suburbs.

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We’re around for the long haul. Our Project has a 40 year lifespan, which means multi-generation employment opportunities.

It also means we are investing in Darwin infrastructure, supporting local businesses and contributing to community groups.

More than 1000 local Northern Territory businesses have been awarded Project work, including 52 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander-owned businesses securing over A$ 100 million of contracts to date.

For us it’s more than a 40 year capital investment. It’s an investment in people.

INPEX.com.au

Ichthys LNG Project

INPEX | Will Power

PROVIDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR GENERATIONS.