rocks october/november 2015

124
ISSUE 21 OCT/NOV 2015 FOOD & WINE Clare Valley magic WEEKENDER Discover Toowoomba CLOSE UP With actor Abby Earl Discover more of Vietnam & Laos by pushbike S.E.ASIA PEDDLING thrgh

Upload: edge-in-flight-magazines

Post on 23-Jul-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

The in-flight magazine for Alliance Airlines, Australia.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Rocks October/November 2015

ISSUE 21OCT/NOV 2015

FOOD & WINEClare Valley magic

WEEKENDERDiscover Toowoomba

CLOSE UPWith actor Abby Earl

Discover more of Vietnam & Laos by pushbikeS.E.ASIAPEDDLINGthrough

Page 2: Rocks October/November 2015

START SUBSCRIBING TO THE MOST BLOODY COMFY AND EPIC LOOKING, MOISTURE WICKING JOCKS. A NEW LIMITED EDITION DESIGN DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR EACH MONTH FOR JUST $20!

LADS, SUBSCRIPTION UNDERWEAR IS HERE.

- CHOOSE MONTHLY OR BI-MONTHLY- NEVER GET THE SAME DESIGN

- NO COMMITMENT. CANCEL ANYTIME- FREE SHIPPING AUSTRALIA WIDE

WE’RE AUSTRALIAN & SUPPORTING WORLDWIDE - MOTOCROSS • BMX • MTN BIKE • SURF • SNOWBOARDING • SKYDIVING • BASE JUMPING • CROSS TRAINING • PUB CRAWLING • SLEEPING

WWW.KNOBBY.COM.AUTRY THE CLUB HERE

PS. REMIND YOURSELF. TAKE A PIC WITH YOUR PHONE

ONE LAST THING... WE’LL EVEN THROW IN OUR NEW BLACK STAINLESS CREDIT CARD BOTTLE OPENER.

CRACK A BEER GENTS, SHIT JUST GOT SERIOUS!

COOLNESS WITHOUT THE SHRINKAGE

START SUBSCRIBING TO THE MOST BLOODY COMFY AND EPIC LOOKING, MOISTURE WICKING JOCKS. A NEW LIMITED EDITION DESIGN DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR EACH MONTH FOR JUST $20!

LADS, SUBSCRIPTION UNDERWEAR IS HERE.

- CHOOSE MONTHLY OR BI-MONTHLY- NEVER GET THE SAME DESIGN

- NO COMMITMENT. CANCEL ANYTIME- FREE SHIPPING AUSTRALIA WIDE

WE’RE AUSTRALIAN & SUPPORTING WORLDWIDE - MOTOCROSS • BMX • MTN BIKE • SURF • SNOWBOARDING • SKYDIVING • BASE JUMPING • CROSS TRAINING • PUB CRAWLING • SLEEPING

WWW.KNOBBY.COM.AUTRY THE CLUB HERE

PS. REMIND YOURSELF. TAKE A PIC WITH YOUR PHONE

ONE LAST THING... WE’LL EVEN THROW IN OUR NEW BLACK STAINLESS CREDIT CARD BOTTLE OPENER.

CRACK A BEER GENTS, SHIT JUST GOT SERIOUS!

COOLNESS WITHOUT THE SHRINKAGE

Page 3: Rocks October/November 2015

routemap

I

Scott McMillanManaging Director

Flinders Ranges, South Australia.

Welcome to ROCKS, the inflight magazine for Alliance Airlines.

GROUP EDITOR Faye JamesASSISTANT EDITOR Riley Palmer ART DIRECTOR Guy PendleburySUB-EDITOR Alarna HaighCONTRIBUTORS Darren Bagley, Deborah Dickson-Smith, Ben SmithurstPUBLISHER Geoff CampbellPRINTER SOS Print & MediaMANAGING PARTNERS Fergus Stoddart, Richard Parker

ADVERTISING ENQUIRIESScott Hunt02 8962 [email protected]

WA AND NT SALES AGENT Helen Glasson08 9381 [email protected]

ROCKS is published by Business Essentials (Australasia) Pty Limited (ABN 22 062 493 869), trading as Edge. 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. ROCKS cannot accept unsolicited manuscripts or photographs. If such items are sent to the magazine, they will not be returned. A selection of images used in this publication has been sourced from Thinkstock, Getty Images and Corbis.

ROCKS is published by Edge10–14 Waterloo Street, Surry Hills NSW 2010Phone: +61 2 8962 2600edgecustom.com.au

A proud contributor to the communities we service.Since our inception in 2002, Alliance has been committed to becoming an integral member of the communities in which we fly. This year, Alliance launched Good2Give, a Workplace Giving program that allows staff to donate directly to charity via our payroll system. So far, the program has created a positive community spirit within the company and a shared understanding of important social and corporate values. Alliance supports three main charities – Beyond Blue, the National Breast Cancer Foundation and Yalari.

Alliance also donated a Fokker 100 as a fundraiser for Variety South Australia – a children’s charity dedicated to inspiring hope and enriching the lives of sick children under the age of 18. The aircraft was used for a special charter to watch the Crows VS Carlton in Melbourne at the MCG in June. All proceeds made from the flight’s ticket sales were donated to Variety’s various programs, which support sick children throughout South Australia.

If you are interested in Alliance’s charitable causes or are interested in chartering an aircraft, visit our website at allianceairlines.com.au or email us at [email protected]

Scott McMillanManaging Director, Alliance Airlines

Page 4: Rocks October/November 2015

Attention: FIFO Miners and Oil & Gas Employees Earning $110k-$300k

Tax–time looming or here now Slash your tax—why pay more?

Save thousands in Tax

6 reasons to appoint: :.

.. FIFO Accountants ....

1. Tax Plan your future – How we will save you Tax. We apply Tax Ruling’s (TR). Some have gone all the way to the high court. These TR’s have saved our clients thousands of dollars in tax, over twenty years ago and we still use the same TR’s now. High Court Rulings are very hard to overturn. Rulings that it is highly likely, you do not know & nor are you applying these tax rulings now. These rulings and information will first be applied to saving you tax. Then we give you 7-8 slides on your appointment for later reference.

2.Direct Rental Property Russell & I have both completed separate multi million dollar projects. This experience you can to draw from. 20 Analytical Taxation Property Points Before You Purchase. Wrong structure cost thousands, (see Right Structure) It’s not an emotional buy, it’s a rational tax based Analytical numbers buy. Cost Base, Indexed positive income, Net rental yield, Stamp duty, Income/Expenses, Loan Costs, Purchase costs, Capital Growth, Cap Allowance Div 43 write off , Taxation Depreciation. What about a 6-9 page Taxation Analysis before you buy, so why not ask us for some help?

3.Slash super fees and rescue your money from greedy Fund Managers that link their fees to your fund balance. Every time you salary sacrifice more, receive a pay rise, put a lump sum in, they get paid more! Their fees are linked to your balance. A SMSF eliminates hidden fees. “Its virtually impossible” to understand these fees Alan Kohler ABC and the Eureka Report. We recommend you subscribe as they are paid by subscriptions to newsletters & online information. Save your funds from the pending stock market crash, see point 4. 4.Impartial advice from our recommended list of PhD’s & Analysts who picked the last three crashes & warned us well before. Did your Fund Managers warn you? These PhD’s will tell you, when to buy & sell shares. Since 2005 they have out performed Warren Buffett $4.60 to $1. They are paid by subscription to newsletters that have no bias therefore we leave the Advice to the PhD’s and Analysts on...

5.Direct Gold Silver coins or bars. Massive increases coming, in precious metals. What about the huge blowout in the Gold/Silver ratio, the scarcity of silver, the enormous demand with decreasing supply. Did your Fund Managers tell you this. Why not? Quite simple they can’t get paid.

6.Exit Strategy from FIFO work—your own Business generate similar income pay only 8-15c tax instead of 31c plus. Why pay $30k-$100k in Franchise fees & 10% plus annually? A very expensive option! You can be the Boss. What business? All Business’s that suits you & we will teach you how. Workbooks, video’s, ongoing assistance, Marketing, Management, Accounting, we are the Business owners to give you proven systems. Not government agency staff, who never owned business in the real world. Challenging hard work, yes, but very Rewarding.

TAX TIME 1.Find you every dollar due to you 2015 Tax Refund or no fee.

(we have the latest tax deduction finder that is your Industry, Profession, Trade and employee specific, this means nothing is missed)

2.Save you a minimum of $3K in tax by Tax Planning or no fee.

(this means simply, if we can not show you how we will save you the $3K minimum and then apply it, you get the appointment at no cost to you.)

.Right structure for you & pay less Tax. These structures are treated differently for tax purposes, differ on asset protection and are taxed at different rates. Therefore depending on, your salary or wage, children’s age, assets ie Real Property, Married, Single, Partner. All will make a huge difference why we, would set up one structure or another. Such as, Individual, Partnership, Syndicate, Company, Family Trust, Discretionary Trusts, Self managed Super Fund (SMSF) also combined with a Family Trust, Company. Wrong structures may cost thousands to fix they may trigger a CGT event & incur state stamp duties.

Save massive amounts of hard earned Dollars in Tax. The system is unfair to employees. Business averages just 8-15c in the dollar. Think about this. If you earn $160k a year, you’re paying a whop-ping $49,547or an average of 31c in the dollar. That’s double the amount in tax that business pays. Over the next ten years when you’re trying to get ahead & save for an early retirement, it can be a real struggle. It’s not the ATO’s fault, I suggest you have a choice. You can reduce your Tax Legally, however if you do nothing in the next ten years that’s $495,470.Let face it, it is very likely in the past ten years that’s exactly what you did, nothing. Why? Because it takes time and is a pain in the arse. Look above at the dollars that’s more than a lot more painful. How-ever you could save $3—$15K pa or a lot more. That’s $30—$150,000 over ten years, I’m sure you could use the tax saved.

What we will do for you - We will Slash Your Tax & put a smile on face. No if’s, buts' or maybe’s. We will save you a minimum of $3K to 15K in Tax pa, perhaps more. Providing you act on our recommendations & answer a 5 – 7 minute simple questionnaire, so why not ring us now and watch our video online, so that you can make an informed choice.

YOUR REWARD: take 5 minutes on the plane read below and Tax Plan your way to a huge refund

FIFO Accountants Pty Ltd FIFO Tax Planning

0448 073 201

Accountants to Oil Gas and Mining for 26 years www.slashyourtax.com.au.

Tax Agent No. 00846005 ABN 48 136 589 994

Use your phone to Snap a photo of the ad and ring us when you land.

We are here to help you save Tax.

Page 5: Rocks October/November 2015

Where we fly

routemap

III

ULURU (AYERS ROCK)

BRISBANE

SUNSHINE COAST

CAIRNS

GROOTEEYLANDT

PHOSPHATE HILL

ALICE SPRINGS

TREPELL

CLONCURRYTHE GRANITES

LAWN HILL

MOUNT ISA

TELFERKARRATHA

PORT HEDLAND

COONDEWANNA

PARABURDOONEWMAN

LEINSTER

LEONORA

EAST JAURDI

MOUNT KEITHMILES

BALLERA

PROMINENT HILL

OLYMPIC DAM

PORTAUGUSTA

EMERALD

MELBOURNE

SYDNEY

ADELAIDE

PERTH

DARWIN

AUCKLAND

ROTORUA

WELLINGTON

QUEENSTOWN

BLENHEIM

TOWNSVILLE

TE ANAU

BARIMUNYA

Page 6: Rocks October/November 2015

GAS TESTING ATMOSPHERES

CONFINED SPACE SENTRIES

CONFINED SPACE RESCUE PLANS

EQUIPMENT HIRE

ISH24_A4_Ad_July2_2015_RockDims.indd 2 3/07/2015 2:59 pm

Page 7: Rocks October/November 2015

Alliance Airlines was established in 2002, recognising the growing demand from the domestic mining and energy sector for a provider of safe and reliable air transportation services to and from remote site locations. Alliance commenced operations with two Fokker 100 aircraft servicing two FIFO contracts, both of which are still serviced today.Our company has since expanded its fleet and operational capabilities to better service the continuing air transportation needs of the mining and energy sector. Alliance is a leading mining services company specialising in providing FIFO services, Ad hoc charter services & ACMI, or wet leasing, services.In December 2011, Alliance successfully listed on the ASX as AQZ.

REGULAR PASSENGER TRANSPORT (RPT)We have also introduced RPT flights listed below between:

• Brisbane and Emerald

• Perth and Karratha

• Perth and Port Hedland

• Perth and Newman

• Newman and Port Hedland

FLIGHT BOOKINGSFor customers wishing to book flights between Perth and Karratha or Brisbane and Emerald, this must be done online: allianceairlines.com.au/home

For customers wishing to book flights between Adelaide and Olympic Dam, this can be done online: qantas.com

CHARTER BOOKINGSFor corporate or private charters of Alliance aircraft, the following contacts are available: allianceairlines.com.au/charters or

[email protected], 07 3212 1501

ABOUT US

ALCOHOLPassengers are not permitted to bring alcohol on board for inflight consumption. On flights where Alliance offers a bar service, our flight attendants adhere to RSA guidelines.

SEAT BELTSPlease observe the ‘Fasten Seat Belt’ signs when illuminated. In the interest of safety, keep your seat belt fastened at all times in case of unexpected turbulence.

CABIN BAGGAGEPassengers should ensure that carry-on baggage does not weigh more than 7kg and fits into the overhead lockers.

Even though you may travel frequently, please familiarise yourself with the Safety On Board card located in your seat pocket.

SAFETY INFORMATION

OUR FLEET

FOKKER F100

FOKKER F70LR

FOKKER F50

Number 15

Passengers 100

Length 35.5 metres

Wingspan 28 metres

Engines RR Tay 650-15 Turbofans

Cruise Altitude 11,000 metres

Cruise Speed 800km/h

Range 3,167km

Passenger Detail

All economy seat configuration, 33-inch seat pitch, galley, toilet, pressurised, air-conditioned

Number 8

Passengers 80

Length 31 metres

Wingspan 28 metres

Engines RR Tay 620-15 Turbofans

Cruise Altitude 11,000 metres

Cruise Speed 800km/h

Range 3,800km

Passenger Detail

All economy seat configuration, 33-inch seat pitch, galley, toilet, pressurised, air-conditioned

Number 5

Passengers 52

Length 25 metres

Wingspan 29 metres

Engines 2 x PW125B Turboprop

Cruise Altitude 7,800 metres

Cruise Speed 500km/h

Range 2,600km

Passenger Detail

All economy seat configuration, 33-inch seat pitch, galley, toilet, pressurised, air-conditioned

safetyinfo

V

Page 8: Rocks October/November 2015

* Plus site works

P R I V A T E I S L A N D

Ratua is a private islandright in the well-preserved Vanuatu archipelago. This 146-acre jewel of unexplored nature is coveredwith lush tropical vegetation,and bordered by sandy beaches,turquoise water andamazing marine life. This eco-luxury hideaway wasdeveloped with a strong ambition to preserve an untouched sanctuary while establishingsome modern comforts.

information +678 300 20reservations +678 75 111 [email protected]

ratua island 183-124 demi-page_presse 26/02/2014 22:33 Page1

Page 9: Rocks October/November 2015

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

• Inside Mining • Agribusiness

• Investment • News & Reviews

RegionalBusinessReview+

IV safetyinfoPlease take the time to read up on Alliance Airlines’ safety information.

IX thecrustClassy American comfort food plus the latest releases

XII getawayCycle round Vietnam to enjoy a holiday with culture and exercise

0626

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

• Inside Mining • Agribusiness

• Investment • News & Reviews

RegionalBusinessReview+

18Issue 134 • Oct/Nov 2015

06 closeupAbby Earl talks to Rily Palmer about her recent role in period drama A Place to Call Home.

10 kitchenconfidential Indian-born Chinese chef Victor Chung opens up about his new Sydney restaurant Subcontinental.

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

18 food&wineDeborah Dickson-Smith heads to South Australia’s Clare Valley for a sumptuous array of culinary discoveries and cellar door tastings.

47 healthnews The latest tips, tricks and products to help you look and feel your best.

49 travelnewsHot tips, special offers and new venue launches that will have you dreaming and scheming about your next holiday destination.

VII

contents

Page 10: Rocks October/November 2015

EXTENDING THE LIFE OF YOUR ASSETS”

WA’S LEADING SUPPLIER OF CONCRETE REPAIR AND PROTECTIVE COATING SERVICES. WWW.DURATECAUSTRALIA.COM.AU

CONCRETE REPAIR & COATINGS TECHNICAL SURVEYING PROTECTIVE COATINGS TANK LININGS

PERTH: 08 6267 2370KALGOORLIE: 08 9021 5277 KARRATHA: 08 9185 6077

LIFE AFTER FIFOBen Gibbings had been working for 11 years as an RAAF aircraft technician when the mining boom drew him to a FIFO position in Western Australia. It was a chance to make good money and acquire new skills as a hydraulic fitter.

But after three years of working in numerous mine sites, the punishing rosters, living in mine camps and time away from home took its toll.

“The sacrifices outweighed the benefits. I decided to quit so I could live a normal life and start my own business,” said Ben. “Soon, I found out about a Hydraulink Mobile franchise opportunity in rural Queensland where I grew up.”

Ben returned to his hometown and now owns Hydraulink Dalby.

Like many who want to venture on their own while minimising risk, Ben was attracted to the benefits of joining a well-established business – Hydraulink. There are wide market opportunities, an existing customer base, proven systems and a well-known brand.

“Thanks to Hydraulink’s network I secured some good contracts. With Hydraulink’s outstanding support, we have been growing and progressing towards a successful future,” Ben added.

Find out how you too can turn your experience and skills into an opportunity to become your own boss and be in control of your future.

CONTACT US NOW [email protected] or call 0413 642 220

Page 11: Rocks October/November 2015

Alliance Airlines donates ‘Footy Jet’ In addition to the Workplace Giving program, Alliance Airlines also donated a Fokker 100 to help raise money for the Variety South Australia charity. Alliance andthe AFL helped organise a special footy charter to Melbourne to watch the Adelaide Crows verses Carlton game at the MCG in Melbourne in June. The flight was extremely successful and all funds raised were donated directly to Variety and its various programs that support sick children across South Australia.

Alliance Airlines launches Workplace Giving ProgramThis year, Alliance Airlines launched Good2Give, a Workplace Giving program that encourages corporate philanthropy by building relationships and partnerships within the community. Alliance has been actively involved in the Good2Give program by encouraging staff to regularly donate part of their income to their charity of choice, directly via our payroll system. The introduction of this program has improved employee morale and built a sense of community at work. Alliance supports three main charities – Beyond Blue, the National Breast Cancer Foundation and Yalari. For more information about the Good2Give program, visit good2give.org.au

Beyondblue is working to reduce the impact of anxiety, depression and suicide in the community by raising awareness and understanding, empowering people to seek help and supporting recovery, management and resilience. For more information about Beyond Blue, or to make a donation, visit beyondblue.org.au

The National Breast Cancer Foundation is the leading community-funded organisation in Australia raising money for research into the prevention and cure of breast cancer. For more information about the National Breast Cancer Foundation, or to make a donation, visit nbcf.org.au

Yalari offers Indigenous children from regional, rural and remote communities across Australia the opportunity to gain a first-class secondary education at some of Australia’s leading boarding schools through a scholarship program. For more information about Yalari, or to make a donation, visit yalari.org

The introduction of this program has improved employee morale and built a sense of community at work.

alliancenews

IX

Page 12: Rocks October/November 2015

FIVE OF THE BEST

Our Commie-bustin’, freedom-lovin’, firearm-rubbin’ US cousins love their portions big and their burgers burly. But you don’t have to leave

our shores for upscale Yank grub made by top chefs. WORDS: Ben Smithurst

Hartsyard Feed & SeedNewtown, NSW

For years, the country’s been awash with restaurants

offering high-class versions of lowbrow US staples – brisket, burgers, po’boy sambos and fried chicken. But it’s places

like Newtown’s cool, minimalist Hartsyard that take

the next step, offering American and refined

southern grub with a très hip nose-to-tail, leaf-to-root foodie

philosophy. The restaurant is run by the increasingly

noted former New Yorkers, husband/wife team Gregory Llewellyn and Naomi Hart.

33 Enmore Road hartsyard.com.au

MeatmotherRichmond, Vic

Melbourne is no stranger to quality American viddles: places such as Ike’s Rack Shack (Carlton) and Miss

Katie’s Crab Shack (Fitzroy) wear their influences in their

names. But for carnivores, none can beat Richmond’s Meatmother. Think 12-hour oak-smoked slabs of beef

brisket, pork and ribs – offered with mac and cheese and/or

chipotle slaw. Wash it all down with an American craft beer

which, unlike its domestic beer cousins, is nothing at all like sex in a canoe.

167 Swan Streetmeatmother.com.au

Chuck Wagon 175North Adelaide, SA

Here you’ll find American-style street and classic fast food

bundled up with funky décor and enough fully licensed

options to poke a Chevy Tahoe at. The menu includes an

avalanche of wings and there’s also the daunting Chuck

Wagon’s Commando Burger Challenge: a sweet bun

containing six 160-gram patties (with double cheese per patty),

six pieces of bacon, plus lettuce, tomato, onion and garlic aioli.

And fries for two. Knock it over in 20 minutes and it’s free – and

your name goes on the wall. 175 O’Connell Street

chuckwagon175.com.au

Miss Kitty’s SaloonInglewood, WA

Specialising in US and Canadian cuisine (hello poutine, goodbye low

cholesterol!), Kitty’s specialties include double-smoked

Memphis dry-rubbed pork ribs, chicken ’n’ waffles and proper southern corn breads. Think lots of timber, saloon doors cheap Mexican beer and an

open kitchen. Not to be confused with LA’s own

Inglewood, the gangsta-rap-spawning suburb immediately

west of South Central and Compton; drive-by shootings are especially discouraged.

882 Beaufort Streetmisskittyssaloon.com.au

Red HookBrisbane, Qld

A decade ago, the only laneway bars in the country worth their hangovers were

exclusively in Melbourne. Now Brisbane’s in on the act,

a fine example being Red Hook, a New York-style

street-food diner tucked away in Gresham Lane. Pile

into NYC hot dogs (with kransky), brisket burritos, lobster rolls and gourmet

burgers so ’Murican they cry when Bruce Springsteen

comes on. Open for breakfast and late-night

dining and drinks.88 Creek Street

red-hook.com.au

WHERE

TO EAT

& DRINK

CLASSY AMERICAN COMFORT FOOD

X

thecrust

Page 13: Rocks October/November 2015

thecrust

XI

One of Tassie’s most beautiful sites had a chilling history long before the infamous, tragic events of 1996. For two decades from 1833, Port Arthur was the antipodean destination for England’s worst convicts and those who misbehaved there were simultaneously starved, gagged and blindfolded. At least 1646 convicts are buried there and several tours – including an Isle Of The Dead Cemetery Tour, a Ghost Tour and a creepy late-night Paranormal Educational Experience for budding paranomal investigators – dig up their past (not literally). portarthur.org.au

Anyone who thinks the scariest prospect in Freo is being clobbered by the Dockers’ Ryan Crowley all hopped up on banned substances needs only to visit Fremantle Prison at night. Fremantle Trams Tours’ The Ghostly Tour departs every Friday evening at 6.45 and returns at about 10.30, taking in the old gaol, as well as The Roundhouse and the notoriously haunted Fremantle Arts Centre. It’s by torchlight – spooky! – but at least you stop for fish and chip at Cicerello’s halfway through. visitfremantle.com.au;fremantletrams.com/tours/ghost-tours

On the night that Reg and Olive Ryan moved into their new Junee digs in 1963, the fog was thicker than soup and they were being burgled. Or they thought they were being burgled – because, on approach, all the lights were on. Only when they got nearer, the windows blacked out. Nothing unusual to see here: their manor, the Monte Christo homestead, has been called Australia’s most haunted house. They’ve found dead cats in the kitchen, been told “it will be alright” by ethereal apparitions and had countless kids throw tantrums on the staircase… in a spot where a child once died. Their tours are booked out months in advance – but why not stay the night? montecristo.com.au

SPOOKY ACTION (NOT) AT A DISTANCE

PORT ARTHUR PARANORMAL

INVESTIGATION

MONTE CHRISTO HOMESTEADJunee, NSW

Port Arthur, Tasmania

FREMANTLE GHOSTLY

TRAM TOURFremantle, WA

FOR A RELATIVELY YOUNG COUNTRY, AUSTRALIA HAS ITS SHARE OF

HAUNTED LOCALES. LET THESE BRAVE GUIDES BE YOUR, ER, GUIDES…

Page 14: Rocks October/November 2015

XII

getaway

Page 15: Rocks October/November 2015

t must be nudging 40 degrees. It has to be. Sweat is flowing in rivers down my back, proper Mekongs of perspiration – despite the fact it’s only 10 o’clock in

the morning. The humidity is up there too – somewhere

around the 150 per cent mark by the feel of it. The road below me is actually melting, the tarmac turned soft and mushy under the baking hot sun.

And up ahead is the biggest challenge we’ve faced yet: a 10-kilometre climb through the Vietnamese foothills, a stretch of inclined road that will take us high up towards what’s known as the ‘Lao Alps’. Trucks are making slow progress up the slope; ramshackle markets cling to the cliff up on the pass.

All you can do is pedal. Click the gears down low, take a slug of water, and pedal. Don’t think about how far there is to go. Don’t think about the heat. Don’t think about the humidity. Just pedal.

Like a sluggish, overweight Tour de France peloton, we too have support vehicles and we’re only about half a kilometre into the climb before they’re needed.

This is day three of a two-week cycling journey through South-East Asia, a trip that will take us from Hanoi in northern Vietnam to Luang Prabang in central Laos. It will include some powerful days in the saddle, with 50- and 60-kilometre rides being the norm as we make our way through rice paddies and mountain villages en route to our final destination on the Mekong River.

Day three is the big test. After a few days of checking out the sights of Hanoi and warming up the legs with a gentle 20-kilometre cycle, today we’re undertaking an impressive 80 kilometres. It starts off gently enough as we pedal through flat rice-paddy country near the Vietnamese town of Mai Chau, but quickly turns ugly as the sun heats up and this 10-kilometre climb of hell unfolds in front of us.

It isn’t long before we have a casualty. Like a sluggish, overweight Tour de France peloton, we too have support vehicles and we’re only about half a kilometre into the climb before they’re needed. One of the guys, our backmarker, puts his feet on the ground and declares his challenge over. He and his bike are swept up by the support truck and he does the rest of the climb in engine-powered, air-conditioned comfort. Poor guy.

The rest of us struggle on, one pedal push after another. But the heat is searing and, one by one, the group dwindles, until the last cyclist throws in the towel and we’re

getaway

XIII

Page 16: Rocks October/November 2015

all up in the truck, motoring towards the top of the mountain. There we’re deposited back onto the melting tarmac and allowed the unearned reward of a 10-kilometre descent down the other side, the thick humid air flowing past as we cruise down towards our night’s accommodation in the valley below.

You see some things on a cycling trip through South-East Asia. You see choking knots of traffic in the cities. You see clapped-out scooters carrying families of five. You see heavily laden trucks belching clouds of toxins from their exhaust pipes. You see farmers tilling fields, water buffalo grazing in paddocks, old men lounging under trees.

The peloton discuss the pros and cons of allowing a newbie – Lance somebody – to join them.

Our accommodation each night ranges from the standard to the rustic. The further you get from Hanoi, the more basic it becomes. We might well be staying at the nicest hotel in every town, but sometimes that simply means a bare room with a rattling fan. Sometimes it means sleeping on the floor of the village chief’s hut.

One night we reach the border town of Na Meo and there’s no electricity – the whole town has been without power for the last three days. Another day there’s a truck that’s broken down in the middle of the road that holds us up for a few hours before it’s moved. We stay in the one-horse town of Sam Neua in Laos and are shocked to find, at the end of a dusty road, a huge inflatable Angry Birds jumping castle that every kid in town is playing in.

We stay in the one-horse town of Sam

Neua in Laos and are shocked to find, at the

end of a dusty road, a huge inflatable

Angry Birds jumping castle that every kid in town is playing in.

getaway

XIV

Page 17: Rocks October/November 2015

Each passenger is billeted out with a

local family spending the night underneath a mosquito net on the wooden floor of a hut.

From the village of Nong Khiew we rest our weary legs and take a boat up the river to Ban Sop Jam – an even smaller village where each passenger is billeted with a local family, which means spending the night underneath a mosquito net on the wooden floor of a hut.

The road conditions are just as varied. Some days it’s hills, seemingly endless climbs with the brief reward of a downhill. Some days it’s flatter. Slightly. Some days there are cars and trucks and scooters on the narrow mountain roads. Some days you don’t see anyone for hours. Complete silence until we pull over to the side of the road to eat lunch, and a few local villagers poke their heads out to see what’s going on.

Most things on this trip are organised for us: the bikes are provided, the food and water is provided, the accommodation is sorted, and the support vehicles are always there. The only thing we have to supply is a helmet and pedal power.

Finally, after 14 days of riding, we cruise into Luang Prabang – a city that feels like a modern metropolis after the places we’ve been staying in. There are people. There are pubs. There’s air-conditioning. And the best thing of all: no hills.

STAYAll accommodation, food, water, transfers, bike hire and support vehicles for this trip are organised by World Expeditions. For more information on this and other cycling trips in Asia, go to worldexpeditions.com

EAT Don’t leave Vietnam before you’ve tried pho, the famous noodle soup. In Hanoi, give Pho Gia Truyen (49 Bat Dan, Old Quarter) a go.

DOTake a wander through the night markets in Luang Prabang to pick up any last-minute souvenirs.

getaway

XV

Page 18: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 19: Rocks October/November 2015

1

planner

Planner OCTOBER

08

OCTOBER

23OCTOBER

23OCTOBER

31NOVEMBER

7OCTOBER 23–25Castrol Gold Coast 600, QldRev-heads, get ready for three days of high-octane V8 supercar races through the streets of the Gold Coast. Each night, there’s performances by international music acts. This year, Cold Chisel will pump up the party with a live show on Saturday night.V8supercars.com.au

DECEMBER 14–30Lights of LobethalThe Adelaide Hills come alive with the spirit of Christmas.lightsoflobethal.com.au

OCTOBER 1–31Malaysia Gourmet FestivalSpices, satay, seafood and curry: this festival showcases the best of Malaysian cuisine. migf.com

DECEMBER 28–JANUARY 3The Falls Music & Arts FestivalImmerse yourself in a world-class line-up of artists and entertainers for the New Year’s holiday. fallsfestival.com.au

OCTOBER 28–NOVEMBER 1Salon Mondial du Chocolat Celebrate chocolate and cocoa along with 120,000 chocoholics and renowned chocolatiers.salonduchocolat.fr

OCTOBER 23–25CheeseFest, Adelaide, SAAustralia’s largest cheese festival runs over three delicious days. It’s literally one big cheese party packed with cheese-themed talks, tastings, cooking sessions and ‘picnic trails’. Live bands and acrobats perform on both days and there’s face painting for the kids.cheesefest.com.au

OCTOBER 31–NOVEMBER 1Tallangatta Fifties Festival, VicBreak out the leathers, bobby socks and beehive hairdos for this ’50s-themed rock’n’roll festival. Enjoy free music in the park; a bite at one of the food stalls; browse the market, packed with retro memorabilia; and check out the restored classic cars lined up along the main street.tallangattafifties.com.au

NOVEMBER 7–8Bitter and Twisted, Maitland, NSWIf the thought of sampling more than 50 boutique beers, sipping Hunter Valley wines and nibbling on gourmet delights isn’t enough to excite you, the fact that live music, market stalls and various roving entertainers complete the happy picture, should.bitterandtwisted.com.au

aheadlook

whereelse

EVENT OF

THE MONTH

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

planner

Melbourne Festival,Victoria8–25 OCTOBER

Melbourne Festival 2015 looks set to live up to its reputation as one of Australia’s best international arts events, with a huge variety of dance, theatre and live music performances, visual arts exhibitions and multimedia experiences on the line-up. Among this years’ offerings are a critically acclaimed, ‘chilling and ingenious’ adaptation of George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984, and the world premiere of an ‘operatic theatre’ version of John Marsden and Shaun Tan’s compelling illustrated book The Rabbits.festival.melbourne

© S

teph

en M

owbr

ay

Page 20: Rocks October/November 2015

What to packOur faves for the month...

Uniden two-way hand-held radio, $79.95 uniden.com.au

Kathmandu satchel, $119 kathmandu.com.au

staffpick

2

whattopack

Page 21: Rocks October/November 2015

Happy Plug earphones, $34.95, happyplugs.com.au

Kambrook Soup Simple, $99.95 kambrook.com.au

KNOBBY subscription underwear

$20/month, knobby.com.au

Mens Territory Half Button Shirt $49.95 rbsellars.com.au

Womens Mina Vintage Short $49.95 rbsellars.com.au

Mens Derby Vintage Cargo Short $59.95 rbsellars.com.au

Mens Briggs Hand Crafted Work Boot $299 rbsellars.com.au

3

whattopack

Page 22: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 23: Rocks October/November 2015

THE WORLD AT MY FEETTom Denniss, Allen & Unwin, RRP $32.99This autobiography is an inspiring account of Australian scientist/athlete Tom Denniss’ experiences as he completed the fastest circumnavigation of the world on foot. The story of his epic trek describes near-death incidents over 622 days and 26,232 kilometres.

100 DAYS OF HAPPINESSFausto Brizzi, Picador, RRP $29.99Lucio Battistini has been kicked out by his wife and is sleeping in his father-in-law’s bakery when he’s given the diagnosis: inoperable cancer. With 100 days to live, Lucio is on a short journey towards death and the tale of his ‘last days’ is told with humour and a good dose of romance.

KINGDOM OF THE STRONGTony Cavanaugh, Hachette Australia, RRP $29.99In this thrilling detective novel by acclaimed crime writer Tony Cavanaugh, ex-cop Darian Richards is back to solve the open case of the death of Isobel Vine. His presence will stir up a hornet’s nest of damage. Will Darian be able to close the case this time around?

THE WALK (3D)DramaMake sure you take your anti-vertigo pills before you see The Walk. It’s the heart-stopping true story of French high-wire artist Phillippe Petit’s daring illegal wire walk between the two World Trade Center towers in 1974. Starring the irrepressible Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Phillippe, along with heavyweight Ben Kingsley and relative newcomer Charlotte Le Bon, The Walk in 3D is set to be a nerve-wracking spectacular with plenty of stomach-turning action and freaky special effects. In cinemas October 15. thewalkmovie.tumblr.com

download

EntrainApp Store, freeGoogle Play, free

Designed by a clever and caring crew from the University of Michigan, this app makes your jet lag its enemy. Entrain helps you monitor your body’s circadian clock and lets you know what amount and strength of light you’ll need to adjust as fast as possible to your new time zone. Epically useful.

DURAN DURAN: PAPER GODSLegendary English rock band Duran Duran are ‘hungry like the wolf’ for their new album, Paper Gods, to reignite their celebrity fire – which it might, because the new songs are being heralded as their best work since Rio. The sound captures the duality and conflict that has always been at the heart of their music. Visceral and daring, the album mixes hard-edged, contemporary pop with a darker, more experimental side to create a body of work that is epic in its scope. Boom shaka-laka-laka! duranduran.com

GALANTIS: PHARMACYThis much-anticipated album by Swedish electronic music duo Galantis has space cadets staring up at the night sky and letting loose a joyful tear or two. The tracks ‘Runaway (U & I)’ and ‘Peanut Butter Jelly’ are proving to be favourites, with catchy throwaway lyrics, galactic synths and tripped-out house rhythms. If a cocktail of feel-good pop, memorable anthems and strange cat images does it for you, check out Pharmacy on iTunes or at soundcloud.com/wearegalantis

SnapseedApp Store, freeGoogle Play, free

When it comes to image-editing software, Snapseed sits at the top of the pyramid. Its photo-fixing basics, such as contrast, colour correction and straightening, are easy to access and control, but special effects are where this baby really shines. Effects such as ‘grunge’, with 1,500 settings, lets you add character to your images and tweak them in a myriad ways.

theCHIVEApp Store, freeGoogle Play, free

If you’re not on theCHIVE, you’re missing out on some serious procrastinating. It’s the ultimate time-wasting app and is perfect when you need a break from all that hard thinking. theCHIVE website and app incorporate ‘the world’s largest photo blog’, with galleries of art, epic fails and hilarious GIFs. Immensely entertaining and easy to use!

listen

watch

read

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

staffpick

5

entertainment

Page 24: Rocks October/November 2015

The new S 1000 XR lets you experience sports touring like never before. With a powerful 118 kW (160hp) 4-cylinder engine and a kerbside weight of just 228kg, the XR has a seating position that puts you in control. Two riding modes (rain and road), ABS and

traction control are standard, while options include cornering ABS, additional riding modes and quick shift (up and down), as well as cruise control and electronic

suspension adjustment. Book a test ride at bmwmotorrad.com.au

BMW MotorradS 1000 XR

bmwmotorrad.com.auThe Ultimate

Riding Machine

Page 25: Rocks October/November 2015

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

CRACK THEATRE FESTIVAL NEWCASTLE, NSWOCTOBER 1–4Invading vacant spaces and transforming them into experimental performance arenas, emerging and established artists will occupy the streets of Newcastle during the Crack Theatre Festival, part of Newcastle’s This is Not Art (TiNA). Experimental artists flock here to test out new material, collaborate and stage all manner of theatre, film, circus, physical performance, music, stand-up comedy and art pieces, many of which don’t even have genres yet.

cracktheatrefest.com

SEMAPHORE MUSIC FESTIVAL, SOUTH AUSTRALIAOCTOBER 2–5Head to the seaside for a laid-back long weekend of lilting melodies and booming beats. Whether you’re into country, jazz, blues, rockabilly, folk or alternative styles, the annual Semaphore Music Festival will have your feet tapping and your body grooving. Bring along the littlies, too: the Semaphore Waterslide Park, carousel, playground, skate park and sideshows are all a short walk from the festival action.

semaphoremusicfestival.com

RUSSELL BRAND TREW

WORLD ORDER, VIC

October 17 at Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne

Thought-provoking and hysterical in equal measure, Russell Brand continues his

attempt to create a Trew World Order with his hotly

anticipated tour Down Under. Brand will kick off

his tour in Melbourne, after which he’ll continue on his

quest to give power back to the people with shows

in Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and Sydney. Book tickets at

premier.ticketek.com.au

7

cultureclub

staffpick

Page 26: Rocks October/November 2015

HUNTINGTON ESTATE PRELUDE WEEKEND Huntington Estate, Mudgee, NSWNovember 21–22Renowned for its annual chamber music festival, Huntington Estate Wines is this year offering an additional Prelude Weekend. Taking place over the weekend prior to the main festival, this three-concert ‘taste of Huntington’ pairs the music of festival headliners such as Wolfgang Holzmair, Lise Berthaud and the Goldner String Quartet with the estate’s delectable food and wine. huntingtonestate.com.au/festival

SUNSHINE COAST FASHION FESTIVALEvent Centre Caloundra, Sunshine Coast – October 17Put on your stilettos and brace yourself for the glitterati as some top fashion talent makes its way to the Sunshine Coast. The event will showcase homegrown designers alongside international fashion heavyweights such as Sunflair and KUR Collection, and provides you with a rare opportunity to buy direct from the catwalk.

sunshinecoastfashionfestival.com

Friday Nights at NGVEVERY FRIDAY,

OCT 2–NOV 6 AT THE NATIONAL GALLERY OF VICTORIA, MELBOURNE

The popular ‘Friday Nights’ series is returning to the NGV International for the final weeks of the Masterpieces from the Hermitage: The Legacy of Catherine the Great exhibition. Enjoy after-hours access to one of the world’s greatest art collections alongside live indie, pop, jazz, folk and rock music (Laura Jean, pictured, is scheduled for October 30), DJs, pop-up talks and an array of great food. Book on 03 8662 1555; tickets regularly sell out, so get in quick! ngv.vic.gov.au

© Fletch

er Ph

oto

grap

hy

8

cultureclub

Page 27: Rocks October/November 2015

15-6387 SP PRESS_275x210mm FA.indd 1 15/05/2015 10:14 am

Page 28: Rocks October/November 2015

ROBBIE WILLIAMSOCTOBER 9–28

NEIL DIAMONDOCT 27–NOV 16

TOUR

Tickets and tour dates available online now.

Exhibitions Tarnanthi (TAR-nan-dee) is the inaugural Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art. Aiming to challenge existing preconceptions of Aboriginal art, the festival includes exhibitions, workshops, artist speeches and the hotly anticipated art fair on the opening weekend. Presented by the Art Gallery of South Australia from October 8 – 18. tarnanthi.com.au

If you didn’t make it to Sydney for the preeminent Archibald Prize, fear not. From October 2–November 15, you’ll have the opportunity to see some of the country’s leading celebrities at the Art Gallery of Ballarat – not in the flesh, but as depicted by some of our country’s top artists. Ballarat, first stop on the Archies’ touring exhibition, will accommodate the latest crop of Archibald Prize portraits – the beautiful, the abstract and the controversial –

before they make their way to Armidale. artgalleryofballarat.com.au

Flirtatious and confronting, Bare: Degrees of undress showcases photographic portraits of some of Australia’s most recognisable icons – among them Billy Slater, Germaine Greer, Dame Edna Everage and Megan Gale – all revealing a little bit of skin. On show at the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra until November 15, Bare reveals the powerful nature of the body and how it can be used to express individual character. portrait.gov.au/exhibitions/bare-2015

Remember me: the lost diggers of Vignacourt is a collection of images captured by Louis and Antoinette Thuillier – a local farmer and his wife – during the First World War. Having set up a photography studio in the small French town of Vignacourt, the couple took thousands of photographs of allied troops as they passed through on their way to and from the front line, among them many Australians who fought on the Western Front. On display at Western Australian Museum in Albany until November 29.museum.wa.gov.au

CHET FAKEROCT 30–NOV 7

10

cultureclub

Tarnanthi’s Bush Footy Kemarre Alparra Sports Weekend 2014 by Dinni Kunoth Kemarre Anmatyerre people, Northern Territory.

© M

osse

nson

Gal

lerie

s

Two soldiers awarded the Military Cross: Sydney Hubert Carroll, 4th Machine Gun Battalion (right), and an unidentified 4th Brigade Headquarters staff officer, June–July 1918. Photograph by Louis Thuillier.

Page 29: Rocks October/November 2015

Linatex® Premium Rubber, the best protection against long-term wear and tear for your mining equipment. This means less downtime and a lower total cost of ownership. To put it simply, Linatex® lasts. To find out more visit linatexlasts.com

Copyright © 2015, Weir Minerals Australia Ltd. All rights reserved. LINATEX, RED RUBBER and the Linatex red colour are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Linatex Ltd. WEIR is a trademark and/or registered trademark of Weir Engineering Services Ltd. 156387/0415.

weirminerals.comLINATEX®

Premium Rubber ProductsLINATEX® It’s our trademark. Since 1923.

RED RUBBER™

PRODUCTS

15-6387 SP PRESS_275x210mm FA.indd 2 15/05/2015 10:14 am

Page 30: Rocks October/November 2015

12

Victor Chung, of the newly opened Subcontinental restaurant in Surry Hills, New South Wales, discovered his passion for cooking at an early age and has been on a culinary journey ever since.

Born into a traditional ‘Hakka’ Chinese family that had relocated to India in the 1940s, it was natural for Victor to explore Asian influences in cuisine.

“For as long as I can remember, I’ve always had a thing for food,” he says. “I love the way it brings people together.”

He honed his culinary skills, learning about global cuisine

and getting hands-on experience at home, where members of his family often cooked Indian-inspired dishes.

After receiving an advanced diploma from a culinary school in Kolkata, India, Victor relocated to Australia in 2002 to pursue a career as a chef, and has been living here ever since.

Although he grew up cooking Indian cuisine and has since tried his hand at French and European fare, his true passion is for Asian.

The menu he has designed for Subcontinental, located on the lower level of Longrain restaurant

in Surry Hills, “brings South-East Asian influences to carefully sourced ingredients with fresh, zingy flavours”.

For Victor, a new dish is often the product of collaboration and a more spontaneous, creative approach. “In the kitchen, we play with ingredients that we have extras of,” he says. “I like engaging with all my chefs from every level and welcome their input ... and before you know it, we’ve created a great dish.”

Today, the dishes he creates reflect his own philosophy, that of the ‘Asian table’, which seeks

For chef Victor Chung, Asian cuisine is an enduring passion. At new Sydney restaurant Subcontinental, he concocts fresh, fragrant dishes with Indian, Bengali, Nepali and Sri Lankan influences.

Asian inspirationkitchenconfidential

Page 31: Rocks October/November 2015

13

to refute the conventions of more traditional Asian-style cooking.

He encourages individuals who want to live the Longrain way to “eat fresh, healthy, tasty food and whatever the season has to offer”. Sounds good to us!

Away from the kitchen, the chef says that when he’s not cooking for – or cleaning up after! – his labrador puppy, he grows his own vegetables in a home garden.

Victor says his next goal is completing a cross-country road trip from Sydney to Perth.

BENGALI CURRY OF KING PRAWNS, SPINACH, COCONUT & TURMERICServes 4 (sharing style)

Ingredients• 20ml grape seed oil

• 5–6 curry leaves

• 1 bay leaf

• 3 whole cardamom

pods, bashed until the

pods open

• 10g ginger and garlic

paste, pounded

• 200g onions, chopped

• 100g tomatoes, diced

• 2 whole green chilli

scuds, split lengthwise

• 5g garam masala

• 2 tbsp mango powder

• 5g turmeric powder

• Black salt to taste

• 100ml coconut cream

• 300ml fish stock or

chicken stock

• 8 king prawns

• 100g spinach

• 1 small red chilli,

julienne (to garnish)

Method

1. Heat a heavy-based skillet or saucepan, add oil and

heat.

2. Fry the curry leaves – be careful, as the oil may spit.

3. Strain the curry leaves and save the oil for the rest of

the cooking process.

4. Sit the fried curry leaves on a paper towel until

required.

5. Add the bay leaf and crushed cardamom pods.

6. Add the ginger and garlic paste and cook until it’s

lightly browned.

7. Add chopped onions and cook until translucent.

8. Add tomatoes and green chilli, and cook until the

tomatoes begin to disintegrate.

9. Add the garam masala, mango powder, turmeric

and salt.

10. Add the coconut cream and then the stock.

11. Pour all the ingredients into a blender and blend

to a smooth sauce.

12. In the same skillet or saucepan, add 1 tablespoon

of the reserved oil. Sauté prawns until half-cooked.

13. Add salt to the prawns, then throw in the spinach

and stir until wilted.

14. Add the curry sauce to the pan and simmer until

prawns are cooked through.

15. Place prawn curry in a serving bowl.

16. Garnish with fried curry leaves and red chilli

julienne (seeds removed).

Rapidfire

What’s your favourite dish on the current Subcontinental menu?That’s like asking me to choose my favourite child ... I like all my dishes!

As far as traditional and cultural research goes, what country would you like to visit and why?Japan: I love the simplicity of Japanese food. The way it’s presented and the striving for perfection fascinate me.

What’s the most unusual food you’ve eaten?Cow stomach – ‘shaan kong’ – a delicacy that I’ve only eaten in my hometown, Tangra [Chinatown], in Kolkata. I’ve never seen this delicacy anywhere else.

Page 32: Rocks October/November 2015

Though she plays reckless character Anna Bligh in A Place to Call Home, in reality Aussie actor Abby Earl has her feet planted

firmly on the ground. Riley Palmer talks with the talented starlet and learns what drives and inspires her.

“When I was at WAAPA [Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts],” begins an effervescent Abby Earl, “my parents came to see me in my first play at drama school. I remember they cheered like they were at a netball game.”

Laughing affectionately at the memory, she explains, “I’m the only one that’s ever performed in the history of our family – we’re a very sporty family – so I don’t think they knew the decorum of the theatre.” Self-assured enough to see the humour in her parents’ faux pas, Abby thought it was wonderful.

For going on three seasons, Abby has lit up the small screen as the fiery and spirited Anna Bligh in hit period drama A Place to Call Home. By now, her parents have grown accustomed to performing-arts protocols but are still demonstrably proud of their daughter.

“The first time they came on set when I was in Sydney filming, they cried the whole day, they were so proud,” Abby recalls. And as their daughter is one

of Australia’s rising stars, they have a lot to be proud of.

Yet with all the red-carpet glamour and award nominations – among them, a nomination for ‘Most Popular New Talent’ at the 2014 Logies – Abby remains refreshingly grounded. She’s committed to honing her craft, driven in her decision-making by the desire to have ‘integrity’ in everything she does – a notion that’s been reinforced by mentor and co-star Noni Hazlehurst.

“As [I was] the youngest on the show and not only that, the youngest girl, Noni really took me under her wing from the beginning,” says Abby. “One of the first things she said to me was, ‘Learn everyone’s names. Even if the crew is 120, learn their names. And treat everyone how you want to be treated.’”

Abby jokes that Noni has been teaching her life’s important lessons ever since Noni was on Play School. “She’s [been] instrumental to me developing as a professional [actor] and as a

OUTACTING

14

closeup

Page 33: Rocks October/November 2015

Abby lights up the small screen as the

fiery and spirited Anna Bligh in the hit

period drama A Place to Call Home.

Page 34: Rocks October/November 2015

professional woman,” she says, praising Noni’s strength of character, assertiveness and grace. “She’s the cat’s pyjamas; I really love her.”

Another source of inspiration for Abby, as an actor and a woman, is veteran US star Meryl Streep. “I know it’s a bit cliché to be so enamoured by Meryl Streep but when someone is that consistently good as an actor, I think they deserve much more than just cliché recognition,” she says.

Abby’s impressed by Streep’s integrity as an actor. “She’s always chosen her roles very deliberately – and that’s something that continually has to be in the back of your mind: What am I saying with this role? What am I saying to young girls? And young boys, for that matter,” Abby says.

Despite their significance, actors aren’t the only motivating force for Abby. She has a long list of writers, directors and screenplays that inspire her – including American playwright Arthur Miller, contemporary TV drama True Detective and, perhaps surprisingly, Abby’s own character on A Place to Call Home.

“I try to take something from every character I play,” she explains. “With Anna, I really respect her fire and the way that she won’t censor herself or compromise her morals or emotions. I’m a very emotional person and I used to really second-guess myself, so I just love the way Anna backs herself.

“She’s one of my favourite characters to play because you can’t help but smile when you’re Anna,” Abby says warmly. “She’s a real gift.”

While the character is a gift to play for Abby, her rendition of Anna is a gift to watch for audiences – so much so that a myriad of the show’s fans petitioned to have it reinstated after it was axed last year.

Abby says she was deeply humbled by her viewers’ support. That the difficulty of that experience didn’t dampen her enthusiasm underscores her commitment to the craft. Despite the unpredictability and setbacks of an acting career, Abby’s in it for the long haul.

“You know,” she confides, “I’m as happy on set as I was when I was eight years old, in my room, quietly performing to my pillow.

“You have to remain in love with it, because life’s too damn short.”

Fast 5 with FRANKIE J. HOLDENWe take five with fellow A Place to Call Home star and veteran Aussie entertainer Frankie J. Holden, aka Roy Briggs.

1. What drew you to the show’s script?I was born in 1952 so I have memories of growing up through that period. It was a lovely time in Australia’s history – there was a post-war boom; there was an optimism and it harks back to a simpler time. I love that we’re recreating that part of Australia’s history and I also love the fact that it is set in a rural town.

2. How do you get into Roy’s character?I tend to put the character on when I put the wardrobe on. I also have a phrase that I use to get me speaking as Roy, something from the script: “That’s what it boils down to.” I repeat that a few times until I find the right pitch and broad Australian accent Roy has.

3. What can audiences expect from Season 3 of A Place to Call Home?Roy, who is pretty hard and bitter, softens up. There’s also a little bit of romance on the cards for Roy and Elizabeth.

4. An industry stalwart for some 40 years, what inspires you to keep performing?As a performer, you have this impetus to keep finding things within yourself. It enables you to be continually learning and constantly stimulated.

5. You were a reporter on The Great Outdoors: what’s your favourite place in Australia?My favourite place is home: the Sapphire Coast. I live at Pambula Beach, about five minutes from Merimbula.

16

closeup

While the character is a gift to play for Abby, her rendition of Anna is a gift to

watch for audiences.

Page 35: Rocks October/November 2015

THE best ACCOMMODATION IN THE PILBARAIf you’re looking for short or long term accommodation in the Pilbara, you can’t go past The Ranges Karratha. Surrounded by the picturesque and peaceful Karratha Hills, our luxury resort-style neighbourhood equipped with a large swimming pool is the perfect base for work and leisure.

Enjoy the serenity and quiet while you make use of our business facilities, with complimentary WIFI and FOXTEL available in all of our 73 spacious one bedroom apartments. Conveniently located only 1.5km from the Karratha CBD, it is just a short hop into town for the business district or expos. We are also one of the most secure accommodation complexes in the Pilbara.

K A R R A T H A

1300 639 320www.therangeskarratha.com.au

We look forward to seeing you soon!

Page 36: Rocks October/November 2015

andRIESLING

RIDING

While away a day (or three) in South Australia’s glorious Clare Valley, tasting some of the nation’s best Rieslings –

along with some fine local produce – en route.

The Clare Valley is a pretty little pocket of South Australia that, considering its size, yields a remarkable variety of red and white wines.

Famous mainly for the Riesling produced here, the trail through the valley itself is only about 35 kilometres long and, if you drove straight through without stopping, it would probably take less than 15 minutes. Along the way, however, you’ll pass about 40 cellar doors – so the drive usually takes visitors a lot longer.

Prior to hopping into a hire car and heading north from Adelaide, my

knowledge of this wine region was limited to a couple of decent mid-range reds from Taylors Wines and Annie’s Lane.

What I soon discovered was an incredible range of boutique wineries run by passionate vintners, many of whom have moved here from other wine-growing regions around Australia, lured by the valley’s distinct climatic conditions, its rich history and, perhaps more than anything, its strong sense of community.

At boutique winery Shut The Gate, the first winemaker I meet tells me, “The valley is quite unique, with various

Famous mainly for the Riesling produced here, the trail

through the valley itself is only about 35 kilometres long

and, if you drove straight through without stopping, it would

probably take less than 15 minutes.

18

food&wine

Page 37: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 38: Rocks October/November 2015

microclimates throughout, and some parts receive far more rain than others, which means vineyards are able to grow a wide variety of grapes here.”

Shut The Gate Wines is owned and managed by winemakers Rasa Fabian and Richard Woods, who moved here a few years ago from the Hunter Valley.

“Here in the Clare Valley, we are able to pick and choose parcels of fruit from all over the valley in collaboration with a selection of vineyards and, not being limited to the market constraints of a large wine corporation, we’re able to make the kind of wine that we’re personally passionate about,” Rasa says.

And she is, without a doubt, passionate about wine. I learn more about wine and winemaking from Rasa in our 90-minute chat than I have in my life up to this point.

Over a picnic of pâté, soft cheeses and relishes from Shut The Gate’s café, I also learn that there are two distinct varieties of Riesling grapes grown in the Clare Valley.

Fruit grown in the Watervale part of the valley produces a soft, rounded Riesling that has citrusy, tropical and sometimes floral flavours. Fruit from the Polish Hill area produces a sharper, more focused wine.

The next stop on my wine trail is about five minutes up the road. The award-winning Kilikanoon winery, established in 1997, produces some glorious Watervale

Clare Valley

Shut The Gate Wines.

20

food&wine

Page 39: Rocks October/November 2015

START SUBSCRIBING TO THE MOST BLOODY COMFY AND EPIC LOOKING, MOISTURE WICKING JOCKS. A NEW LIMITED EDITION DESIGN DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR EACH MONTH FOR JUST $20!

LADS, SUBSCRIPTION UNDERWEAR IS HERE.

- CHOOSE MONTHLY OR BI-MONTHLY- NEVER GET THE SAME DESIGN

- NO COMMITMENT. CANCEL ANYTIME- FREE SHIPPING AUSTRALIA WIDE

WE’RE AUSTRALIAN & SUPPORTING WORLDWIDE - MOTOCROSS • BMX • MTN BIKE • SURF • SNOWBOARDING • SKYDIVING • BASE JUMPING • CROSS TRAINING • PUB CRAWLING • SLEEPING

WWW.KNOBBY.COM.AUTRY THE CLUB HERE

PS. REMIND YOURSELF. TAKE A PIC WITH YOUR PHONE

ONE LAST THING... WE’LL EVEN THROW IN OUR NEW BLACK STAINLESS CREDIT CARD BOTTLE OPENER.

CRACK A BEER GENTS, SHIT JUST GOT SERIOUS!

A SURPRISE PACKAGE FOR YOUR PACKAGE

Page 40: Rocks October/November 2015

www.casa.gov.au/dgapp

Make sure your luggage is safe. Download the app to check what you’ve packed isn’t dangerous.

Download the app today!

Can I pack that?

NEW DG APP

?

Carrier

dangerous goods.

Before flying, ask yourself:Can I pack that?

Page 41: Rocks October/November 2015

Rieslings, with three on offer at the cellar door tasting.

Winemaker Barry Kooij is another migrant from the Hunter Valley. He moved to this family-owned, family-run vineyard a few years ago and is happy to work in a region in which there are so many local varietals to blend.

Another five minutes up the road, I step back in time at Sevenhill, the oldest winery in the Clare Valley. It was established in 1851 by Jesuits from Austria, who brought cuttings with them and created the winery that still flourishes today. .

The place is steeped in history – in fact, the recently canonised Mary McKillop (St Mary of the Cross) hid out here during the period in which she was ex-communicated by the church. Two of her brothers were studying here at the time.

Guided tours of the property, including the old college, church and catacombs, are available and there is a selection of sports equipment on site for visitors to use in the winery’s beautifully landscaped gardens.

This image & below: Underground cellars and the church at Sevenhill Winery.

23

food&wine

Page 42: Rocks October/November 2015

My next stop on the Clare Valley trail is the township of Clare itself and very funky Seed Winehouse + Kitchen. It’s mid-afternoon by this stage and I’m looking at one of the most beautiful plates of food that’s ever been presented to me.

Co-owner and chef Guy Parkinson is the creator of this magnificent dish: a salad of fresh and pickled radish and beetroot, with goats’ cheese, sprinkled with rather delicate looking edible flowers.

Guy moved here from the Hunter Valley with his partner and co-owner Candice Leighton a few months ago and already the restaurant has become so popular that it’s booked solid most nights of the week.

This is more or less the end of my wine trail and luckily, my lodgings for tonight are not far away, at the Clare Country Club. So I have a few hours in which to digest my late lunch before indulging again for dinner on site at Conners Restaurant & Bar.

It’s been an enlightening day.

Cycling the Riesling TrailOne of the best ways to explore the Clare Valley is by pushbike. It is rolling countryside without many hills, so cycling it doesn’t require much athleticism. Bikes are available for hire at places throughout the valley, including the Clare Country Club. rieslingtrail.com.auAlternately, book yourself on an all-inclusive guided tour, such as the ‘Tour de Riesling Rail Trail – Cycling Clare Valley’ gourmet tour. tourdevines.com.au

Where to stayClare Country Club is centrally located just outside the township of Clare in a leafy bush setting. It has spacious rooms, a large swimming pool and a wonderful selection of food and wine on the menu at Conners Restaurant & Bar. clarecountryclub.com.au

Clare Valley Jet-SettingOn the back road north, between Leasingham and Sevenhill, you’ll find the historic little town of Mintaro – and majestic Martindale Hall. The somewhat frivolous heir to Martindale Station, Edmund Bowman, built the hall in 1879. He surrounded it with a polo ground, a racecourse, a boating lake and a cricket pitch on which the English XI played at least once.

The building was made famous in 1975 in the ethereal Peter Weir film, Picnic at Hanging Rock, as the setting for Mrs Appleyard’s boarding school for girls. martindalehall-mintaro.com.au

Seed Winehouse + Kitchen.

Seed Winehouse + Kitchen.This image & far right: The majestic Martindale Hall

24

food&wine

Page 43: Rocks October/November 2015

RBS0011OutThereMagFA.indd 1 15/09/2015 4:43 pm

Page 44: Rocks October/November 2015

I CHOOSE TO PUT IN THE HARD YARDSIn my game, you can’t take your eye off the ball. I choose to see things through from start to finish. Which can mean staying for weeks, months, even a year. I’ve learnt that if I want to be at my best on site, I need to have the best people around me. CHOOSE YOUR DESTINY.

Visit questapartments.com.au or call 1800 334 033

Page 45: Rocks October/November 2015

For a long weekend full of family fun, with great scenery, food and wine thrown in, head to the hills beyond Toowoomba and the glorious Granite Belt, writes Faye James.

SouthernQueenslanddiscoveries

Page 46: Rocks October/November 2015

ust a short drive from the newly built and superbly plush Wellcamp airport, you find yourself in the heart of

Southern Queensland’s countryside: the Darling Downs. Explore quaint towns such as Toowoomba, then drive a little further into the Granite Belt, where the air’s pristine and there are countless fine wines and culinary delights to sample.

We spent three nights in this wonderful setting – here are our recommendations.

Day one10am First stop is

the local zoo on the corner of Gatton-Clifton and Baines roads. Darling Downs Zoo, celebrating its 10th birthday this year, is privately owned by experienced animal handlers Steve and Stephanie Robinson. A

small, friendly zoo, it showcases an array of spectacular creatures from Africa, South America and South-East Asia, as well as native Australian fauna – the highlight for us is the exhibit of rare white lions. Daily events include Asian monkey talks, big-cat feeding, introductions to the birds and monkeys of South America, baby croc encounters and opportunities to have your picture taken with one of the resident snakes. Our kids simply love the animals on show and the homely nature of the zoo. The perfect stop-off for little ones. darlingdownszoo.com.au

weekender

28

A small, friendly zoo, it showcases an array of spectacular creatures from Africa, South America and South-East Asia, as well as native Australian fauna.

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

Page 47: Rocks October/November 2015

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

For further information, please visit our website www.andrewsairportpark.com.au or contact your local branch

SMOOTHER FLIGHTS START AT

BECOME A MEMBER AND SAVE UP TO

20% OFF YOURAIRPORT PARKING

BRISBANE

MELBOURNE

ADELAIDE

FREE courtesy shuttle to and from your terminal

24 hour undercover or outdoor security parking

Car detailing and servicing available

Be rewarded with FREE parking & car washes

BRISBANE

(07) 3268 4222

ADELAIDE

(08) 8340 5200

MELBOURNE

(03) 9334 5777

Page 48: Rocks October/November 2015

Noon Next stop is lunch at local eatery

Picnic Point Café and Restaurant, which serves up breakfast, lunch and, on weekends, dinner to hungry guests who’ve been rambling about the heritage-listed Picnic Point Lookout and Parkland – 65 hectares (160 acres) of verdant land. We tuck into fresh home-cooked fare that, while simple, is tasty and satisfying, before heading off for a long walk. Trekking the parkland trails, flanked by foliage and dotted with fabulous lookout points and

sparkling waterfalls, is something the whole family can enjoy. picnic-point.com.au

3pm Time to settle down for the afternoon.

We’ve chosen a retreat with a historical past: Vacy Hall Historic Guesthouse. Bought as a wedding present for the daughter of a wealthy 19th century pastoralist, this stately former home is the perfect place to rest for the night. There are roaring log fires in the guestrooms and a gigantic family room big enough for

five makes us feel at home instantly. The quaint garden has tranquil seating areas as well as nooks and crannies for the kids to explore. Home-cooked breakfasts can be served on the terrace or in-room and are sublime. No visit to Toowoomba would be complete without a night or two at this character-filled retreat. vacyhall.com.au

6pm For dinner, we head out to the highly

recommended Sofra Turkish Cuisine, downtown. With a distinctively Turkish interior and menu, this establishment lures a lot of locals, who come here for huge plates of sizzling meat, seafood and hearty authentic fare. We sample the seafood platter, a generous serving of grilled, chunky fresh fish, plump prawns, melt-in-the-mouth calamari and mussels, along with salad and pickles. The freshly baked house breads are amazing, as is the selection of grilled meats. You won’t go hungry here, that’s for sure. sofra.com.au

weekender

30

With roaring log fires in the guestrooms and a gigantic family room big enough for five, our family feels at home instantly.

Above: Vacy’s Hall Historic Guesthouse.

Below: Picnic Point Lookout.

Page 49: Rocks October/November 2015

MADE TO ESCAPE.VISIT WWW.BLACKWOLF.COM.AU OR CALL 1800 227 070

FACEBOOK.COM/BLACKWOLFGEAR

ALL BLACKWOLF PRODUCTS NOW COME WITH A LIFETIME WARRANTY*

*YES IT REALLY IS A LIFETIME WARRANTY. REGISTER ONLINE. RETAIN YOUR PROOF OF PURCHASE. FOR MORE DETAILS SEE BLACKWOLF.COM.AU/WARRANTY

Page 50: Rocks October/November 2015

weekender

32

Day 210am Toowoomba is a

town steeped in history and there’s no better place to learn about it than at the Cobb+Co Museum, home to the National Carriage Collection, where you can view historic vehicles from the horse-drawn era. There are also ‘pop-up exhibits’ on various themes: when we visited, it was Indigenous history and biodiversity. There’s also the Energy for Life Discovery Centre – perfect for little ones. Ours also loved the Coach Stop play area, where kids can mount horses and climb inside carriages, dress up in period costume and play freely. cobbandco.qm.qld.gov.au

Noon For lunch, we head to the Park House

Café, opposite Queens Park, its fresh ingredients sourced directly from farms in the Lockyer Valley and the Darling Downs. We tuck into tasty fare made from top-flight seasonal, local ingredients. There’s a great kids’ menu, too. More importantly, the location means your children can play in the park while you settle in for a relaxing lunch. parkhousecafe.com.au

2pm About 90 minutes’ drive from the Park

House brings us to Stanthorpe; 13 kilometres north of town, we find wonderful family-owned business Sutton’s Farm, a fully functional apple orchard that produces everything from apple juice, cider, brandy and vinegar to what could be the best apple pie you’ll ever taste. We take the kids over to the orchard to pick apples fresh from the trees and taste the plump, juicy fruit, and they really get stuck into it. Far from being disapproving, owners Dave and Roslyn are super-friendly and kind throughout, welcoming our exuberant offspring with open arms. suttonsfarm.com.au

3pm Next, we head to the Granite Belt’s

original farmhouse cheesemakers, Stanthorpe Cheese. Their artisan cheeses are made using the finest alpine milk from a single herd of Jersey cows, which produces sensational cheese. Their most famous product is the Brass Monkey Blue: it’s soft, creamy and sweet, and punters travel far and

wide for it. Our daughter devours the Thulimbah cheese, which is deliciously creamy; we take home a packet of that and the Stanthorpe Pepper, a crumbly, spicy cheese. stanthorpecheese.com.au

4pm If you’re looking for an authentic

log-cabin experience, check in to Happy Valley Country Retreat, set in native Australian bushland. The cabins are simple, yet cosy, each featuring its own fireplace so you can warm up next to a crackling log fire when the weather’s chilly. Head on down to reception and you can meet the friendly owners and sample craft beers from the Granite Belt Brewery, on site, before moving on to a sumptuous dinner at the restaurant. We recommend their delicate scallops and the Tenterfield pork belly, but whatever dish you choose, its key ingredients will be sourced from local producers. Best part about dining here? The kids’ room, which allows parents peace to enjoy a good meal without the usual “I’m bored” whine. happyvalleyretreat.com.au

Above right & below: The inner

workings and fine food offerings

from Happy Valley Retreat.

Head on down to reception and you can meet the friendly owners and sample craft

beers from the Granite Belt Brewery.

Page 51: Rocks October/November 2015

VALE BREWING. ALWAYS IN

GOOD COMPANY.

DRINK RESPONSIBLY

Page 52: Rocks October/November 2015

weekender

34

Day 310am After breakfast we

decide to check out some local scenery and head to Girraween National Park. Famous for its granite landscape, the park spans 11,800 hectares, protecting an array of native flora and fauna. Girraween’s varied terrain includes eucalypt forests, heath and sedgelands, criss-crossed by trails. Walks range from 15-minute strolls to challenging five-hour hikes, with amazing scenery along the way.nprsr.qld.gov.au/parks/girraween

Noon Hungry for some lunch, we head

to Queensland College of Wine Tourism. As well as being a famous training college, it is open for gourmet lunches and regional wine tastings. The food is simply superb here. We sampled their degustation lunch with matching wines and enthusiastically devoured every morsel. Think you’ll find the best wines in the Barossa or Margaret River? Think again. qcwt.com.au

3pm We’re off to meet the co-owner of Symphony

Hill Wine, Ewen Macpherson, who’s won several awards in recent years for his fine Granite Belt wines, particularly his Shiraz. “Our own vineyard is the highest of the region, allowing us to produce our flagship wine, the Reserve Shiraz, a style of wine that is unique in Australia and is totally different to Shiraz grown at lower altitudes,” Ewen says. He’s right: the wines we sample are full of character and flavour and quite unlike anything we’ve tasted before. “We are pioneers in a wine region not previously known for world-class wine,” he asserts. “And for every challenge that comes our way when marketing a new wine region, we

see an even bigger opportunity to introduce simply stunning wines that change the way people think about Australian wine.” symphonyhill.com.au

4pm We’re off to meet Tim and Michelle Coelli

from Twisted Gum Wines, who welcome us to their classic 1920s Queenslander with wraparound verandahs and views to the vines and hills beyond. The Coellis’ small vineyard focuses on producing premium-quality grapes using sustainable agricultural practices, which makes the resulting wines very bespoke, with a fresh, distinctive flavour. Michelle is particularly proud of Twisted Gum’s crisp whites and their hugely popular Pink Moscato. twistedgum.com.au

5pm Another fabulous local winery is

Ballandean Estate, which has been operating for more than 80 years

and offers 100 per cent estate-grown boutique wines. Guests flock here for Ballandean’s top-quality drops, Not surprisingly – the Granite Belt terroir of rich volcanic soils and cool high-altitude terrain – makes for exceptional wines. The estate produces a large range of interesting varietals, several incorporating ‘alternative’ grape varieties such as Fiano, Sylvaner, Saperavi, Durif and Nebbiolo. ballandeanestate.com

6pm For dinner, we head to renowned Italian

restaurant Anna’s. Originally, this was owner/chef Anna Pompetti’s family home, but in 1985 she converted it to a restaurant serving authentic Italian cuisine. Portions here are gigantic so make sure you show up hungry – or share a lasagne between two or three people. The service is a little slow, but when the food arrives, it’s well worth the wait. annas.com.au

The Coellis’ small vineyard focuses on producing premium-quality grapes using

sustainable agricultural practices.

Page 53: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 54: Rocks October/November 2015

For further information please visit www.mahindra.com.au

Photographs may show overseas models or illustrate non-standard equipment. #1.2 tonne payload for Single Cab 2WD Genio with standard light truck tyres at 60psi. Max GVM 2980 kgs for all models. *Pricing valid until 30th September 2015 or while stocks last. All prices are GST inclusive. Please check your operators manual prior to operation. See your dealer for details. DMM3714.

QLD - BRISBANE (07) 3205 9225 SUNSHINE COAST (07) 5476 2200 GOLD COAST (07) 5523 7474 KINGAROY (07) 4164 9288 WIDE BAY & BURNETT (07) 4164 9288 CAIRNS/ATHERTON (07) 4091 4777 TOWNSVILLE (07) 4729 5299 PROSERPINE (07) 4945 9111 MACKAY (07) 4961 8585 TOOWOOMBA (07) 4638 5822 WARWICK (07) 4661 2533 NSW - SYDNEY NORTH PENNANT HILLS (02) 9479 9555 SYDNEY EAST KIRRAWEE (02) 8545 8921 SYDNEY SOUTH CAMPBELLTOWN (02) 4631 8888 ARMIDALE/URALLA (02) 6772 9444 BALLINA (02) 6618 1700 BOMBALA (02) 6458 3522 GOULBURN (02) 4823 1000 GRIFFITH (02) 6964 1111 LEETON (02) 6953 3600 LISMORE (02) 6621 4116 MAITLAND 1300 652 605 NARRABRI (02) 6792 1816 NARROMINE (02) 6889 1011 QUEANBEYAN (02) 6297 6333 TUGGERAH (02) 4350 4333 TWEED HEADS (07) 5523 7474 VIC - MELBOURNE (03) 8339 2344 BALLARAT (03) 5339 8436 BENALLA (03) 5762 7766 FRANKSTON (03) 9784 4495 KYABRAM (03) 5852 2533 WANGARATTA (03) 5721 4428 ACT - MITCHELL (02) 6201 1800 WA - BUNBURY (08) 9721 1000 CANNINGTON (08) 9350 9696 WANGARA (08) 9408 2500

Available in both Single Cab and Dual Cab

The New Mahindra Genio is our next step in redefining convenience and comfort in the commercial transport space. Born of ideas to take your business places, the Genio deliversa payload of 1.2 tonne# with a 2.7metre tray (Single Cab). Powered by the Austrian designed mHAWK Turbo Diesel Engine.

Coming Soon!

MAHINDRA AUTO DEALER NETWORK

Page 55: Rocks October/November 2015

windowseat

Port Douglas, QueenslandNamed in honour of former Premier of Queensland, John Douglas, the town’s previous names included Terrigal, Island Point, Port Owen and Salisbury.

Port Douglas

For further information please visit www.mahindra.com.au

Photographs may show overseas models or illustrate non-standard equipment. #1.2 tonne payload for Single Cab 2WD Genio with standard light truck tyres at 60psi. Max GVM 2980 kgs for all models. *Pricing valid until 30th September 2015 or while stocks last. All prices are GST inclusive. Please check your operators manual prior to operation. See your dealer for details. DMM3714.

QLD - BRISBANE (07) 3205 9225 SUNSHINE COAST (07) 5476 2200 GOLD COAST (07) 5523 7474 KINGAROY (07) 4164 9288 WIDE BAY & BURNETT (07) 4164 9288 CAIRNS/ATHERTON (07) 4091 4777 TOWNSVILLE (07) 4729 5299 PROSERPINE (07) 4945 9111 MACKAY (07) 4961 8585 TOOWOOMBA (07) 4638 5822 WARWICK (07) 4661 2533 NSW - SYDNEY NORTH PENNANT HILLS (02) 9479 9555 SYDNEY EAST KIRRAWEE (02) 8545 8921 SYDNEY SOUTH CAMPBELLTOWN (02) 4631 8888 ARMIDALE/URALLA (02) 6772 9444 BALLINA (02) 6618 1700 BOMBALA (02) 6458 3522 GOULBURN (02) 4823 1000 GRIFFITH (02) 6964 1111 LEETON (02) 6953 3600 LISMORE (02) 6621 4116 MAITLAND 1300 652 605 NARRABRI (02) 6792 1816 NARROMINE (02) 6889 1011 QUEANBEYAN (02) 6297 6333 TUGGERAH (02) 4350 4333 TWEED HEADS (07) 5523 7474 VIC - MELBOURNE (03) 8339 2344 BALLARAT (03) 5339 8436 BENALLA (03) 5762 7766 FRANKSTON (03) 9784 4495 KYABRAM (03) 5852 2533 WANGARATTA (03) 5721 4428 ACT - MITCHELL (02) 6201 1800 WA - BUNBURY (08) 9721 1000 CANNINGTON (08) 9350 9696 WANGARA (08) 9408 2500

Available in both Single Cab and Dual Cab

The New Mahindra Genio is our next step in redefining convenience and comfort in the commercial transport space. Born of ideas to take your business places, the Genio deliversa payload of 1.2 tonne# with a 2.7metre tray (Single Cab). Powered by the Austrian designed mHAWK Turbo Diesel Engine.

Coming Soon!

MAHINDRA AUTO DEALER NETWORK

Page 56: Rocks October/November 2015

Dental Relocation and Infrastructure Support Scheme is funded by the Australian Government and administered by Rural Health Workforce Australia.

Government grants are available for registered general dentists who want to work in private practice in a location more regional, rural or remote than their current location.

Look what’s on offer:

• Relocation grants of $15,000 to $120,000

• Infrastructure grants up to $250,000

The 2016 Funding Round is: • 22 February–24 March 2016

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK.

Open to opportunities in rural Australia?

To see if you’re eligible:Visit: www.rhwa.org.au/DRISSEmail: [email protected]: 1800 475 433

Real Estate

If you are thinking of Buying or Selling property in Bali talk to the people that will give you the same quality of advice and service as you would expect at home. We can organise your next holiday

rental villa or if you are going to do FIFO from Bali we can arrange

long term rental and even rent your villa out whilst you are away.

Life can be a whole lot better and cheaper flying in and out from

Bali. Investment returns there over 15% are common place.

Email: greg.smith @elders.com.au or phone 0822 3781 1198

BALI OFFICE NOW OPEN

of service, reliability, integrity and commitment

175 YEARS

Page 57: Rocks October/November 2015

1 Stay in the present and when you lose your calm, exhale – “when in doubt, breathe out”. Stress exists when you perceive a gap

between a challenge and your ability to meet that challenge. A resilient person will either reframe the thought to improve their perspective, or return to the present and seek help to resolve the threat.

2 Invest in yourself. Exercise for 20 minutes most days of the week; catch the sleep wave before 10.30pm most nights and get

up at the same time seven days a week; consider a relaxation practice; and never miss breakfast. A resilient lifestyle is key to building ‘match fitness’ for business.

3 Be optimistic: practise mindfulness. A resilient leader is able to view his or her world with a mindset of realistic optimism.

It’s very difficult to consider your thinking style with a busy, frantic mind. So the starting point is practising mindfulness for one minute, three times a day through slow, focused breathing.

For more information visit resiliencei.com

Mela-no-more?The new Skin Cancer Early Detection Tool from Skin Patrol uses easy-to-answer Yes/No questions and aids such as a magnifying window and colour chart to help you check worrying skin spots at home. At just $20, it’s an investment you won’t regret.

Watch the video and buy the tool at iamskincancer.com

Liquid healthKarma Wellness Water, with its unique cap technology, the KarmaCap, stores powdered vitamins and nutrients that stay unmixed until you open and consume the drink, maximising freshness, quality and performance. The drink contains 90 per cent less sugar than other vitamin drinks and provides up to 100 per cent of the recommended daily intake of nutrients, minerals and vitamins. We can’t wait to try some.

Karma Wellness Water is available nationally at selected cafés, convenience stores and pharmacies, and in other specialist venues (such as fitness and sporting clubs). RRP $4.45 for a 600mL bottle. drinkkarma.com

WORK IT

HEAL

TH N

EWS

AUTHOR AND FOUNDER OF THE RESILIENCE INSTITUTE, STUART TAYLOR, SHARES HIS TIPS FOR KEEPING WELL BY STAYING RESILIENT AT WORK.

HEALTHY L C

HO

ICE L NUTRITIO

N L

Go alkalineWhat’s on the menu at the world’s longest established detox clinic? Chefs from the internationally renowned FX Mayr Health Center in Austria have created a cookbook offering 100 delicious seasonal recipes. Following the success of The Alkaline Cookbook, The Alkaline Cure focuses on restoring bodily balance and rediscovering a life at one with natural rhythms. If it’s popular with Gwyneth Paltrow, Uma Thurman and Elle Macpherson, we reckon it’s worth checking out. Viking, RRP $29.99

39

healthnews

Page 58: Rocks October/November 2015

www.abergeldie.com

Regional infrastructure specialistsAbergeldie have been providing Australia’s regional communities with infrastructure for over 20 years

� Trenchless waste/potable water pipeline renewal � Water/wastewater treatment plants and pump station construction

� Local road, bridge, highways and tunnel construction

� Rail station upgrades and civil works � Structural rehabilitation for water, civil and marine infrastructure

� Industrial process and materials handling facilities

� Large diameter mine ventilation shaft design and construction

� Mine infrastructure

MARINE

MINING

TUNNELLING

ENGINEERING

ENERGY

WATER

PIPE RENEWAL

Regional infrastructure specialistsAbergeldie have been providing Australia’s regional communities with infrastructure for over 20 years

150902 OutThere Mag Full Page Ad.indd 1 3/09/2015 5:36:35 PM

Page 59: Rocks October/November 2015

NEW YEAR’S ESCAPEWe’re not sure you can get a better vantage point for the New Year’s Eve celebrations on Sydney Harbour than Cockatoo Island. Not only is it beautiful and beyond trendy but there will be no long bus rides home and no crowds to shoulder your way through. Get a few mates together, chip in some moolah and you could party for five nights in a private house or apartment with harbour views – or save your money for cheese and beer and opt for glamping or camping. On-island activities are included in the rates, and there are speciality food outlets and bar facilities on site. cockatooisland.gov.au/stay/NYE-2015

TRAVEL NEWSOUR HOT PICKS FOR THE MONTH

Sydney SeaplanesSeaplanes are an icon of Rose Bay and the treat of a lifetime for that special someone. Take off on a Sydney Seaplanes scenic flight over the Sydney Opera House and stunning Bondi Beach, relax with a decadent day spa package at Bells at Killcare, or fly up to Sydney’s Northern Beaches for a glamorous degustation dinner at Jonah’s Whale Beach. Very spesh. seaplanes.com.au

GETAWAY L O

F L THE L M

ON

TH

L

41

QUAD-BIKING CULTUREThe Worimi Conservation Lands in Port Stephens encompass the massive dunes of Stockton Bight, the largest coastal moving sand mass in the Southern Hemisphere. What better way to celebrate this bit of trivia than by riding from bush to beach to desert on a 400cc quad bike? Aboriginal-run Sand Dune Adventures offers a variety of quad-biking tours up and down slopes up to 30-metres high. On some tours, experienced Aboriginal guides give hands-on introductions to the local culture and history; other tours just get you safely tearing it up. sandduneadventures.com.au

Page 60: Rocks October/November 2015

Make the most of your free time by asking FishingEarth how, where and

when to maximise your fishing charter.

FishingEarth.com 0447 789 777 [email protected]

• Game Fishing Charters • Fly Fishing Adventures

• Fishing Lodge Adventures • Mother-Ship Charters

• Corporate Events & Charters • Barramundi Fishing Charters

• Father & Son Fishing Adventures

We’ll make it happen!

Page 61: Rocks October/November 2015

travelnews

43

Elements of ByronRelax in elegance while communing with the natural beauty of Byron Bay at Elements of Byron, a luxury resort that, on completion, will incorporate 193 private one and two-bedroom villas on 22 hectares of oceanfront paradise at Belongil Beach. Due for partial completion by Christmas 2015, Elements has been designed to complement the rainforest, beach and lakes on site. On arrival, you’ll be welcomed past water and fire elements into a contoured main pavilion, the curved roof of which symbolises the sand dunes along the resort’s beach frontage. Three separate pavilions make up the central resort complex and leisure facilities, and encompass a signature restaurant and lobby bar, poolside bar and kiosk, gymnasium and five-suite garden spa. Weaving throughout the resort grounds is a large lagoon pool (with kids’ paddling pools and a heated outdoor spa) and there are numerous additional water features as well as a sunken fire pit. Feminine, organic materials and forms have been employed to invoke relaxation and connection to the earth. Mmmmm… soothing. elementsofbyron.com.au

TRAVEL NEWS

TOP STAY L T

OP STAY L TOP

STA

Y L

Creation tourNSW is leading the way for Indigenous tourism, offering more authentic experiences of Indigenous culture than any other state in Australia. Ngaran Ngaran Culture Awareness on the South Coast invites you to walk and listen to sacred Dreaming stories of their culture. The two-day Gulaga Creation Tour includes two nights’ shared accommodation, local Indigenous food, traditional Aboriginal ceremonies, dance and didgeridoo performances. ngaranaboriginalculture.com

Heart and SolIf you love living in Sydney’s Hills District but hate commuting to trendy suburbs for decent eateries, Sol Café in Baulkham Hills could be your social-life saver. Huddled in a quiet nook along Old Northern Road, its comfortable, rustic ambience is the perfect pocket of calm in which to enjoy a leisurely Sunday brunch. Sol Café is the realised dream of owners Soleil and Pavel, whose seasonal breakfast, brunch and lunch menus are inspired by their Middle Eastern and South American heritages. The sweet-corn fritters are devine and the Middle Eastern bruschetta with home-made za’atar is just about the best thing ever. facebook.com/sol.cafe.fresh

Must do!

ZIP IT UP!The world’s longest roller-coaster zip-line is waiting for you in Ourimbah State Forest on the NSW Central Coast. The TreeTop Crazy Rider Xtreme runs for a kilometre through bushland, twisting around gum trees and diving through 40 slaloms. If that sounds too fierce, you can run the 330m-long Pioneer Crazy Rider and give yourself a pat on the back.

Make the most of your free time by asking FishingEarth how, where and

when to maximise your fishing charter.

FishingEarth.com 0447 789 777 [email protected]

• Game Fishing Charters • Fly Fishing Adventures

• Fishing Lodge Adventures • Mother-Ship Charters

• Corporate Events & Charters • Barramundi Fishing Charters

• Father & Son Fishing Adventures

We’ll make it happen!

Page 62: Rocks October/November 2015

~ BONUS INCLUSION ~

TWO COMPLIMENTARY DRINKS!

Page 63: Rocks October/November 2015

TRAVEL NEWS

Capri in the sunThe new Capri by Fraser, Brisbane officially opened its doors earlier this year. The stylish new property located on Albert Street in the CBD features a fully equipped gym, striking pool, sauna and acclaimed in-house restaurant, Asana by Pete Evans. Relax in the thoughtfully designed suites, which feature a king-size bed, kitchenette with Nespresso machine, 48-inch smart TV and generous bathroom with Malin + Goetz amenities. The winter package includes: • Bottle of sparkling wine on arrival• Free car parking• Buffet breakfast for two at Asana by Pete Evans• Fast and free wi-fi Rates start at $279 per night for a Capri Club Room.Visit brisbane.capribyfraser.com for bookings.

GETAWAY L O

F L THE L M

ON

TH

L

45

Dinosaur stampede!Witness the last track race of outback north Queensland’s dinosaurs at The Dinosaur Stampede in Australia’s dinosaur capital, Winton. The facility at Lark Quarry Conservation Park has recently reopened its razor-toothed mouth after a major refurbishment and offers 55-minute guided tours of the 95-million-year-old evidence at 10am, 12 noon and 2pm daily. dinosaurtrackways.com.au

Cycle the WhitsundaysThey say that four wheels move the body, but two wheels move the soul. Club Croc Hotel in Airlie Beach is out to help, with a range of new mountain-bike-friendly services, including rooms that accommodate bikes, bike

parking spots, information on regional cycling trails and events, free track maps and a bike wash-down station. What better way is there to explore this tropical

region? clubcroc.com.au

Page 64: Rocks October/November 2015

STAY & PLAY!Self contained accommodationcaravan and camping sitesFREE • Splash Waterpark• Gymnasium• Pancake Breakfast• Free WiFi hotspots• 18 Hole Mini Golf• Aqua Aerobics• Heated and Cold Spas• 2 Resort Pools

(one heated)• Movies under the stars• Barbeques• Day/night Tennis• Adventure Playground• 2 Jumping Pillows

7 AUSTRALIAN & 13 QUEENSLAND TOURISM AWARDS

ONLY 7 MINUTES TO CAIRNS CITY CENTRERESERVATIONS: 1800 COCONUT • www.coconut.com.au

E: [email protected] • 23-51 Anderson Road, Woree, Cairns, Qld

The Drilling Manual, Fifth Edition

Australian written, internationally applicable. Comprehensive, expert information about drilling best industry practice.

Well-illustrated, practical information in clear terms about the “what,” “how,” and “why” of drilling.

An ideal resource for small and large drilling operations; hydrogeologists, geos, environmental, geotechnical, civil and mining engineers.

PO Box 742 LANE COVE NSW 2066Ph: (02) 9428 3444 / +61 2 9428 3444Fax: (02) 9428 3555Email: [email protected]: www.aditc.com.au

Australian Drilling Industry Training Committee Ltd

Order your copy of this New 2015

edition NOW

Page 65: Rocks October/November 2015

travelnews

47

TRAVEL NEWS

Parks in your pocketTired of digging through your glove box for that tattered map of parks and camp sites? Well, the Department of Parks and Wildlife has come to the rescue and released the ParkFinder WA app. You can search more than 100 sites within 150 different parks in Western Australia by map, park name and location. You can also filter search results by available activities, facilities and dog-friendliness, and find alerts for closures, hazards and upcoming camping vacancies. Available on iTunes and soon, on Android. dpaw.wa.gov au

What apearlerThe Dampier Peninsula’s newest restaurant, Shell, is serving up a slice of local history in the form of fresh pearl meat sourced directly from the oldest operating pearl farm in Australia, Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm. Shell is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner (bookings essential) and dishes showcase local produce and seafood. Why not book in for a scenic flight or a pearl farm tour while you’re there? cygnetbaypearls.com.au

Top Stay: DoubleTree by Hilton, NorthbridgeThe latest of three new DoubleTree by Hilton properties under construction in WA is scheduled to open in the vibrant Perth suburb of Northbridge in early 2017 (the other two are located on the Perth waterfront and in nearby Fremantle). Prepare to enjoy all the hallmarks of a DoubleTree by Hilton stay, from the signature warm chocolate-chip cookie on arrival (you’ll want to check in again for another one) to the array of fine amenities and premium services, all within arm’s reach of Perth’s art and entertainment centre.

TOP EAT! L T

OP EAT! L TOP

EA

T! L

WA

DIRECTFLIGHTSBusselton will soon be an even more bustling town, thanks to a $59.7 million expansion of Busselton Regional Airport. From mid-2018, you’ll be able to fly directly from the east coast to the south-west, where you can taste the best of the region’s wine and food, tour through seemingly endless old-growth karri forests or take in a stunning Western Australian sunset from the deck of a private yacht. geographebay.com

Page 66: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 67: Rocks October/November 2015

RegionalBusinessReviewIssue 6 – Oct/Nov 2015

AGRIBUSINESS MINING INVESTMENT PLUS...

The latest news, information and innovations from the agriculture industry

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

Top tips from the experts on how to make the most of your hard-earned cash

Conference destinations

Motoring review

Must-have boys’ toys

Seasonal flavours

Where the money lies in agribusiness investment

Greenerpastures

Page 68: Rocks October/November 2015

At first glance, Iceland and Canberra are so similar it’s surprising that Julia Gillard beat Björk to the title of Australia’s first female PM. Both get very cold. Both are full of people (pollies/Icelanders) who speak what sounds like gibberish (polliespeak/Icelandic) to non-locals. And both have sent berserkers overseas to aggravate foreigners and on raiding missions… although so far the Vikings have had a bit more success than Nick Kyrgios.

Also in common: the new Land Rover Discovery Sport.

Its international launch was on the Arctic island of ice and fire; its local launch was in our capital city of roundabouts and fireworks. And what Canberra lacks in glacier-scarred landscapes, it makes up for in proximity to crappy Australian country roads.

This is Land Rover’s replacement for the outgoing Freelander, the Ned Stark of four-wheel-drives: a vehicle popular right until its demise. Australians were buying Freelanders at healthy volumes right until the end. But while the Disco Sport isn’t quite as stylish as its fashion-forward, soon-to-be-facelifted Range Rover sibling, the slightly smaller Evoque, Land Rover hopes it will perform similar sales tricks for them.

autoreview

2 RegionalBusinessReview

Posh Spice’s Evoque took Range Rover to the stratosphere. Can the slick new Disco do the same for the marque’s bucolic cousin?

WORDS: BEN SMITHURST

LAND ROVER DISCOVERY SPORT

Page 69: Rocks October/November 2015

which is firmly in the Evoque’s $54,000–$81,000 playground. And what a well-appointed playground it is, worth of a posh birthday party for any of the Beckham’s stupidly named celebrity sprogs.

Around the world, Rover sells around 120,000 Evoques… every year. That’s a lot.

Well, good news for them: even if it’s not perfect, the Disco is good – probably good enough to improve significantly on the Freelander’s result for the foreseeable future.

“It will be interesting to see how many buyers come looking to get into an Evoque and end up in a Discovery Sport – and vice versa,” mused Jaguar Land Rover MD, Matt Wiesner, in Canberra. Good question. Because this is a worthy proposition. And comparably cheap. And, equally significant, comparably much more masculine than the chintzy Evoque: a vehicle famously designed with ‘help’ from Posh Spice.

The Disco’s six-speed manual 2WD, 2.2L 110kW, 400Nm TD4 turbo diesel entry version starts at $53,300 (the higher volume 140kW/420Nm 2.2L TD4 turbo diesel, with its nine-speed auto, bumps to $55,800), with the range topping 2.2L SD4 HSE Luxury version beginning at $69,000. In between, a 2.0L Si4 petrol auto punches 177kW and 340Nm at $59,000. All of

Climb behind the wheel and the first thing you notice is a feeling of roominess, brought to the fore by a determined lack of clutter. The dash, head unit and cabin all agree with Land Rover’s design remit, which is to say they’re square. It’s all clean, straight, perpendicular lines, which feels premium, even if the preponderance of plastic below the standard pinch-and zoom 8-inch screen feels unavoidably cheap.

The seats, all of which are leather, are reasonably supportive at the torso but

3RegionalBusinessReview

Page 70: Rocks October/November 2015

noticeably too flat in the bottom, meaning you will slide laterally while cornering. But the extra length (it’s 234mm longer than the largest Evoque, with which it shares its platform) benefits rear seat legroom (81 of those extra millimetres is squeezed between the axles). Most important, this vehicle’s drawcard 5+2 seating is unique in this class. That’s genuinely useful.

Nor are there many complaints on-road, but for some brand-familiar busy handling and a smidgeon of rack rattle. Dynamically, it’s not in the ballpark of BMW’s X3 or Audi’s Q5, but the Disco is acceptably flat through corners, at all speeds, with brainy stability control

denying either drift or understeer, even on uneven Canberran gravel.

Its dynamics are artless, then, rather than stylish, but it is always confident, even if the turbo diesels can be caught out if you drop revs in a tight uphill corner or slow turn. With a 0-100km/h time in the diesels from 10.3s to 11.7, variant depending, this is no race track pretender, but nor does it try to be; despite the sluggish sprint time, its mid-range heft is more than satisfying. Meanwhile, you’d mock its nine auto gears as overkill, except the shifting is as buttery as a Sara Lee croissant. As a package, it’s fine.

Predictably, the Discovery impresses even more off-road. This is Land Rover’s

remit. While 3mm lower than the Evoque, impressive rear-wheel articulation, 600mm creek-crossing ability, and unflappable hill-descent control more than make up the difference. Neither the Evoque nor the Freelander can match it.

So far, so sensible. Until you get to ticking the options.

Be careful. Pricing is scary. An example: all new Disco Sports are white – unless you chip in a minimum $1300 extra, and more likely $2600, for a colour that actually feels premium.

The five-plus-two seating is an extra $1990. It’s $540 for heated windscreen (although it heats the washer jets too! Cool), $640 for heated front seats ($124 to include the second row), $600 for privacy glass and $540 extra for the clever depth sensing option if you fancy that impressive 600mm wading depth. This is undoubtedly the least likely Land Rover to ever leave sealed roads, but it is rudely capable.

For all that, standard kit ain’t bad. You get “full-grain” leather, seven fast-charging five volt USB ports, navigation, keyless entry, rear camera and rear parking aid, autonomous emergency braking and more. It’s just that, because this feels almost like a Rangie, you expect more.

“It’s the world’s most versatile and capable premium subcompact SUV,” Weisner boasted. “I think it’s a unique offering in that space.”

Eh, he’s probably right. But the thing about spaces is that assumptions can be dangerous. You’d think Canberra and Iceland would be supremely different, but it turns out that they’re almost identical.

Not so Land Rover and Range Rover. They’re different for a reason. But not as different as they were before. 8/10

Land Rover Discover Spor t SD4 HSES P E C I F I C A T I O N SPrice: from $35,490Engine: 2.2L 4cyl turbo dieselPower: 140kw, 420NmTransmission: 9 speed auto0–100km/h: 10.3sThirst: 6.3L/100kmWeight: 1775kgPrice: Approx. $61,100

“You’d mock its nine auto gears as overkill, except the shifting is as buttery as a Sara Lee croissant.”

autoreview

4 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 71: Rocks October/November 2015

WE’RE LEAVING OUR COMPETITORS IN THE DUSTGRT’s innovative range of polymer products and revolutionary road construction systems are proven to save money and the environment. As the instant infrastructure experts, GRT build, manage and maintain environmentally friendly haul roads, hard stands, lease pads and more. To find out how GRT can help you save money and the environment with your next project, visit globalroadtechnology.com today.

1300 DUST FREE

37% OPEX SAVINGSIndependent Cost Benefit Analysis, 2014

TOP UP YOUR BOTTOM LINE

Page 72: Rocks October/November 2015

YOU’VE JUST STRUCK A WEALTH OF OIL AND GAS KNOWLEDGE Rigzone and OilCareers have joined forces. Together, we are the most powerful resource an oil and gas professional can tap into. Global industry jobs, news, data, events and expert analysis — it’s all at your fingertips.

Discover Oil and Gas

Want to get DISCOVERED by theworld’s top oil and gas recruiters?

Upload your CV to Rigzone.com

Page 73: Rocks October/November 2015

We bring you the latest news, innovations and opinions as Aussie agribusiness transitions from the mining boom to the dining boom.

agribusinessYOU’VE JUST STRUCK A WEALTH OF OIL AND GAS KNOWLEDGE Rigzone and OilCareers have joined forces. Together, we are the most powerful resource an oil and gas professional can tap into. Global industry jobs, news, data, events and expert analysis — it’s all at your fingertips.

Discover Oil and Gas

Want to get DISCOVERED by theworld’s top oil and gas recruiters?

Upload your CV to Rigzone.com

Page 74: Rocks October/November 2015

MORE THAN 80 TECHNICIANS

NATIONWIDE TO SUPPORT YOU

Get in touch after touch down:

TO STAY AHEAD OF THE GAME, YOU NEED THE UAS BUILT FOR PERFORMANCE, NOT PLAY

...don’t waste your time with toys

Falcon8 InsideMining_Dec2014.indd 1 28/11/2014 3:39:12 PM

Page 75: Rocks October/November 2015

Australian agribusinesses, ruled by weather, face substantial income uncertainty – which is why Ruralco’s Seasonal Finance loans, backed by rural finance giant Rabobank, are as handy as well-timed rainfall.

9RegionalBusinessReview

agribusinessreport

SEASONAL FINANCESUSTAINING FARMERS

Page 76: Rocks October/November 2015

ustralian farmers are a hardy breed: like the sun-bleached Australian landscape, they know the ravages of

Mother Nature at her fiercest. Season by season, the land and the people living on it and working with it are at the mercy of the elements; while the enduring timetable of planting, raising, reaping, harvest and sale continues.

While the land sustains herds and raises crops, the uncertainty of income for primary producers is constant. Not only are Aussie farmers devoted to their work, their profession holds an iconic status in the nation’s identity. Whether they live in the cities or on the land, Australians share a deep love and affinity for the beauty and hardships of this continent of extremes.

For about 50 years, the Australian economy rode high on the sheep’s back to prosperity and by the 1950s, the wool industry and primary producers had given Australia one

of the highest living standards in the world. Today, the potential for Australian primary producers, at home and in the international sphere, to supply the Asian middle classes is being acknowledged both nationally and overseas.

Locally, there has been a shift in the government’s acknowledgement of the sector as a major beneficiary of forecast Australian growth. Former head of Treasury Ken Henry’s White Paper Australia in the Asian Century pointed to the need for policymakers to look at ways to take advantage of opportunities in the agriculture sectors. Once again it is time for agriculture to thrive.

The need for agribusiness to be supported through policy, research and development is essential to this push. So, too, is the need for farmers to be able to access suitable finance with which to fund their activities as they persevere through seasonal constraints.

Seasonal Finance is a loan for primary producers designed to cater for the unique needs of farmers. Ruralco

Finance is pleased to offer a program for the following core agricultural sectors: livestock, grain and cereal cropping (winter and summer), irrigated cotton growing and dairy.

With close to 50 different rural businesses making up the company, Ruralco understands the needs of the farmers they support. Funding for agriculture is not like a car loan and the facility reflects this, with loans available starting at $20,000 and going as high as $500,000, and (with additional approvals) even more.

Trusted by generations of people on the land, the Ruralco network, with more than 150 years’ experience, has firsthand knowledge of agribusiness and can assess and facilitate loans; Rabobank is the credit provider behind the service.

Ruralco Finance’s Seasonal Finance Lending team has the authority to assess and approve client applications up to $500,000. Loans above this amount are available but are subject to additional approvals.

agribusinessreport

10 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 77: Rocks October/November 2015

Ruralco Seasonal FinanceManage your cash � ow to maximise your opportunities.How we can help you.Ruralco and Rabobank understand agribusiness. We also understand how important access to a � exible cash management facility is when your business is often in� uenced by seasonal and market conditions.

That’s why we’ve combined our expertise and knowledge to provide you with a � nance facility that helps fund your seasonal and working capital requirements when you need it. So if you want to purchase livestock or farm inputs through a Ruralco business, contact Ruralco Seasonal Finance on 1800 775 061 or visit our website to � nd out how we can help.

• Competitive variable interest rate, you only pay for what you use.• No application fee, no ongoing fees.

www.ruralco� nance.com.auPhone: 1800 775 061

Ruralco Seasonal Finance is issued by Rabobank Australia Limited ABN 50 001 621 129 and administered by Ruralco.

Ruralco Holdings Limited ABN 40 009 660 879 Australian Credit Licence 393 894

Ruralco Seasonal Finance is issued by Rabobank AustraliaLimited ABN 50 001 621 129 and administered by Ruralco.

Page 78: Rocks October/November 2015

Securing finance is simple: property ownership, the commercial value of the plant and equipment, as well as livestock and grain in storage, are all considered by Ruralco Finance as security against the loan. Valuation of these assets can be performed by relevant, experienced Ruralco specialists: property agents to assess land value, a livestock manager to ascertain the commercial value of livestock and so on, as appropriate.

If you need to purchase breeding stock or farm inputs through a Ruralco business, the Seasonal Finance product can help. The facility is available for a period of 12 months and lets you capitalise on opportunities as they arise; allowing you to grow and develop your business confidently in the knowledge that Rabobank is the credit provider.

The approval process takes 10 days from the receipt of an application to

notification of its outcome. There is no application fee, so if you are interested in the product you can make an enquiry without being out of pocket. Every borrower must be a registered business with an Australian Business Number.

Whether you are thinking about expanding your business, need to purchase feed for stock or are looking to diversify your property with a herd, Ruralco Finance understands the unique needs of agribusiness and farming throughout the nation. The Ruralco network is represented across Australia, which means it has a broad, well-integrated knowledge and a thorough understanding of regional issues nationwide.

Ruralco operates through a national footprint of businesses that specialise in providing rural customers with products and services in merchandise, fertiliser, wool, livestock, real estate,

risk management, water, grain, finance and insurance. The Ruralco network of businesses is recognised across the country. A shared passion for meeting the needs of customers and communities underscores what it means to belong to the Ruralco group.

The Ruralco network is represented

across Australia, which means it

has a broad, well-integrated knowledge and understanding of regional issues

nationwide.

Fast facts:• over the next 10 years, I expect the drone to become a core piece

of in-house equipment, much like the quad bike, that enables

individual farmers to cover more area, more effectively

agribusinessreport

12 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 79: Rocks October/November 2015

CAN150813M

At AUSCOAL Super, we’ve taken another step forward.Today, you’ll know us as Mine Wealth + Wellbeing. We believe life is about wealth and wellbeing in equal measure. That the future is shaped by all the little decisions you make today. That life’s about the journey, not just the destination. That’s why we’ve introduced new wealth and wellbeing options to enable you to achieve your goals.

No matter who you are, no matter your background. We can’t wait to see you grow through life.

For more information visit mine.com.au

Growing with you, for you.

Mine Wealth + Wellbeing  | 13 MINE (13 64 63)  | mine.com.au

AUSCOAL Superannuation Pty Ltd ABN 70 003 566 989 AFSL 246864 Trustee for the Mine Wealth and Wellbeing Superannuation Fund ABN 16 457 520 308.

Page 80: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 81: Rocks October/November 2015

FLAVOURSFROM NEW HAPPENINGS TO FAB PRODUCE, WE UNEARTH THE LATEST TABLETOP TREATS.

Home bakingTHE COOK AND BAKERIN THEIR FIRST BOOK, The Cook and Baker, Sydney cook Cherie Bevan and New Zealand chef and baker Tass Tauroa, of popular Oxford Street, Sydney bakery-café The Cook and Baker, have compiled 110 foolproof recipes that offer everything you need to take your home baking up a notch. Your nanna’s traditional recipes have been modernised and refined, but still stay true to your early memories of home baking. Try concocting the exquisite hummingbird cake or a delicate red velvet cake, or the gluten-free flourless mandarin-marmalade cake. Delectably delicious.

The Cook and Baker is out now through Allen & Unwin, RRP $49.99.

South Bank, BrisbaneBRISBANE’S SOUTH BANK is sizzling in popularity with the addition of vibrant Zeus Street Greek to Little Stanley Street. Zeus Street Greek celebrates the very best of Australian-Hellenic flavours in up-to-the-moment Greek street-food style that delivers rich and zesty flavour combinations to suit any palate.Zeus is the culinary love child of Costa Anastasiadis, the original founder of Crust Gourmet Pizza, and George Kyrprianou from Pony Dining in Sydney and Brisbane. They follow what they call the ‘Zeus Philosophy’: using time-honoured methods and family recipes to make real food with integrity, taste and freshness.The menu includes authentic casual Greek food, such as a signature slow-cooked lamb with Aegean slaw, smoked eggplant, onion and parsley. If you’ve got a sweet spot for Greek desserts, leave room for the loukoumades – donuts with honey, cinnamon and walnuts, and bougatsa – a vanilla-bean-infused custard wrapped in filo pastry. And there’s no need to feel guilty afterwards, as Zeus Street Greek is committed to being green and makes all deliveries on its exclusive fleet of zero-emission scooters. zeusstreetgreek.com.au

ZEUS STREET GREEK

15RegionalBusinessReview

f lavours

Page 82: Rocks October/November 2015

Providing the public with some of the freshest produce grown on the Fleurieu

Peninsula and Kangaroo Island, Willunga Farmers Market is a true example of the success community spirit can achieve.

Rain, hail or shine, the markets go ahead and the atmosphere is always lively, with plenty of entertainment and a huge array

of seasonal produce.

WHERE: Corner Main Rd and St Peter’s Tce, Willunga SA.

WHEN: Every Saturday, 8am–12:30pm.

WILLUNGAFARMERS MARKETMCLAREN VALE, SA

These mildly sweet vegetables, related to both cucumbers and melons, are pure bliss mixed with apple and baked inside a pie; they also work their smooth magic in a casserole or julienned in a stir-fried noodle dish. Their ugly exterior hides a versatile interior that’s high in Vitamin C and will take on the flavour of whatever it’s cooked with, without losing its firm texture. If you’re lucky enough to have a choko vine growing in your yard, keep in mind that the fruit, leaves and roots of it are all edible.

FRESH PICKINGS

Taste of Melbourne, November 12–15 Margaret River Gourmet Escape, November 20–22

Destination: Flavour

Golden prize liquorNeed a drink for a special celebration? China’s number one-selling premium spirit, Wuliangye, is said to have magical qualities that bring good health and happiness to those who drink it. We can’t vouch for that, but now it’s available in Australia, we can confirm it has a unique, sweet fairy floss flavour that’s offset by savoury notes and a hint of tropical fruits. The premium liquor is a blend of five organic ingredients: glutinous rice, rice, wheat, corn and ‘broomcorn’ (which must be where the magic comes from).wuliangye.com.cn/eu

Steve Snow at Pinetrees LodgePinetrees Lodge on the magnificent UNESCO World

Heritage-listed Lord Howe Island is serving up five days of two-hour cooking masterclasses with

celebrated Australian chef Steve Snow. Best known for developing his two-chef’s-hatted restaurant, Fins, in an empty property in Brunswick Heads, and later for winning ‘Best Seafood Restaurant in Australia’ and ‘Best Regional Restaurant’ at

Beach Hotel in Byron Bay, Steve’s masterclasses are guaranteed to produce tasty dishes and be an inspiration for your home cooking. The Pinetrees package includes five nights’ accommodation, a

Steve Snow five-course dinner with matching wines and more. Find out more at pinetrees.com.au

Masterclass

Lunch tours for foodiesQueenies Food Tours combine together three of our favourite things: consuming world-famous cuisine, exploring Melbourne’s CBD, and having a bunch of like-minded foodies with whom to enjoy the experience. Queenie’s Food Tours’ new offerings let you eat your way around Melbourne’s top foodie spots in the CBD and the vibrant inner city precincts of Fitzroy and South Melbourne, guided by a dedicated local foodie.Bookings for any of Queenie’s Food Tours can be made directly via queeniesfoodtours.com

16 RegionalBusinessReview

f lavours

This month we’re loving: Chokos

Page 83: Rocks October/November 2015

CUSTOMISE THE WHOLE DESIGN: Bands, dials, hands, logos, case colours and packaging.

Above and underground safe mine approved watches.

MENTION THIS AD and get free set ups for orders of over 50 watches.

DESIGN ASSISTProduct SelectionBased on your brief we can assist in the selection of suitable watch styles, logo placement, qualities and colours to maximise results.

We take into account the environment that the watch will be used, quantities required, function, budgets, user demographics and compatibility with your logo and branding.

Product DesignBased on your branding requirements we assist in watch model selection, dial choice and position, method of branding and packaging.

Order now at: minerswatch.com.auContact: [email protected]

miners watchbuilt tough for mining

REWARD YOUR STAFF WITH A GIFT THEY

CAN USE … DAY AFTER DAY

Your logo here!

Page 84: Rocks October/November 2015

BLA

/09/

MM

/EXT

Pipe Repair Bandages

UltimatePipe Repair

With NATO Certification

New larger size RAP304 – 100mm x 9m

www.piperepair.com.au

SPECIFICATIONS

CERTIFICATIONS NATO certified, Potable Water

RESIN MAKE UP Water-activated Polyurethane

HEAT RESISTANCE 150°C

BONDS TO MOST PIPES Steel, Polypipe, PVC, Fibreglass, Copper

SETS 20-30 minute cure. Sets under water.

CHEMICAL, FUEL and OIL RESISTANT Acid lines, Oils, Gas, Sea water, MDISC

STRENGTH QUALITIES Internal Pressure up to 2500kPa (360psi)

Smarter ways to work.blackwoods.com.au | 13 73 23

LS535 RI_BW_FullPageAd_Update_3_Sep15.indd 1 14/09/15 4:13 PM

Page 85: Rocks October/November 2015

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

insidemining

BLA

/09/

MM

/EXT

Pipe Repair Bandages

UltimatePipe Repair

With NATO Certification

New larger size RAP304 – 100mm x 9m

www.piperepair.com.au

SPECIFICATIONS

CERTIFICATIONS NATO certified, Potable Water

RESIN MAKE UP Water-activated Polyurethane

HEAT RESISTANCE 150°C

BONDS TO MOST PIPES Steel, Polypipe, PVC, Fibreglass, Copper

SETS 20-30 minute cure. Sets under water.

CHEMICAL, FUEL and OIL RESISTANT Acid lines, Oils, Gas, Sea water, MDISC

STRENGTH QUALITIES Internal Pressure up to 2500kPa (360psi)

Smarter ways to work.blackwoods.com.au | 13 73 23

LS535 RI_BW_FullPageAd_Update_3_Sep15.indd 1 14/09/15 4:13 PM

Page 86: Rocks October/November 2015

HDPE PIPELINES | STEEL PIPELINES | CIVIL INFRASTRUCTURE | RENEWABLE RESOURCES

www.mpcgroup.com.au

630– millimetres in diameter of HDPE pipe ploughed in a world first for the industy.

4,000– kilometres of HDPE pipe installed on Australia’s largest CSG Gathering Network.

17.8– kilometres of HDPE pipe installed in a single day.

ADVANCED

Page 87: Rocks October/November 2015

“Long-term mine planning and engineering involves generating models that include a dizzying array of variables”

WITH COAL and iron prices plumbing pre-global-financial-crisis depths, and most other commodities giving owners and investors a roller-coaster ride, the mining industry is focusing on production costs more than ever. High costs may be able to be ignored when commodity prices keep on going up but as they continue to slide, mine operators are scrutinising every part of their businesses with magnifying glasses, looking for savings, productivity increases or both.

Cutting-edge IT One means by which savings can be achieved is better utilisation of existing resources. One company, AngloGold Ashanti, is using one of the latest information technology tools available – GEOVIA MineSched™ – to improve scheduling and planning, thereby improving productivity and profitability at its four open-cut mines in Africa.

Driven by the company’s mine planning hub (MPH) in Perth, the project was an ambitious one right from the start.

“Long-term mine planning and engineering involves generating models that include a dizzying array of variables: the shape of the pit, amount of material available, economic projections, schedules, equipment required and process flows for cutbacks, drilling, hauling, blasting, stockpiling and waste disposal,” says AngloGold Ashanti’s senior manager of mine planning, Jason Vos, in a case study.

“This all must be accomplished with transparency, accuracy, easy auditability and the ability to run multiple ‘what if ’ scenarios.”

Before the deployment of MineSched, AngloGold Ashanti’s MPH team of five full-time and one part-time engineer would use a mix of Excel spreadsheets, complex software scripting and macros to run planning scenarios. Every time the

team wanted to run a new scenario, or run multiple scenarios, it required a new round of data processing. If the software could not generate a scenario for some reason, it would crash without producing an answer of any sort.

Once MineSched had been set up, AngloGold Ashanti was able to use the cutting-edge software to “create and repeatedly recreate long-term schedules to explore multiple options. MineSched blends materials from mines, stockpiles and multiple processing plants, producing extensive reports with graphical results in just minutes”, says Vos.

MineSched is able to create schedules that meet grade and material ratio targets while applying practical constraints, and variables can be changed on the fly. Without any customisation or scripting required, it can handle schedule changes, complex material-handling work flows and multiple process flows.

COMMODITY PRICES ARE DRIVING A FOCUS ON COST REDUCTION AND PRODUCTIVITY, WRITES DARREN BAGLEY.

TRANSPORTSPECIAL REPORT:

& LOGISTICS

21RegionalBusinessReview

spotlight

Page 88: Rocks October/November 2015

Salts, asphalt emulsions and mulches are some of the newer ways in which companies

are attempting to deal with dust.

“With MineSched, we can now create several well thought-out mining operation scenarios each day,” says Vos.

The MPH team also found that relatively simple budgets and schedules can be created at the touch of a button and take between three and 10 minutes to run. The equivalent operation for the largest sites takes just 45 minutes to run.

“We are always looking for tools to provide more accurate schedules and budgets ... that both reduce costs and help maximise productivity, leading to increased profits. MineSched proved to be the ideal solution,” explains Vos.

Better dust controlAnother way mining operations are seeking to save money is by using new technology to tackle old problems, including that perennial challenge – dust control. Mine sites are harsh,

dry and dusty environments; anyone who has been on a mine site will be familiar with the fleet of water tankers that typically drive around and around the site, sprinkling water to ‘lay the dust down’.

Salts, asphalt emulsions and mulches are newer ways in which mining companies are attempting to deal with dust; however, water is still the most common dust suppressant.

As a solution to mine sites’ dust problems, however, water has numerous drawbacks. It evaporates quickly – especially in hot, dry conditions – which means large amount of water and frequent applications are needed, which in turn means high labour and equipment costs. Often, mine sites damp down dust using salty water, which is corrosive and negatively affects any metal parts that are in contact with the treated material. Watering also makes the haul road surface more unstable, leading to ruts and potholes

that require more maintenance, which increases costs further.

One of the more innovative dust-control systems available is the polymer-based GRT:7000 from Global Road Technology (GRT). GRT:7000 binds both fine and sand particles to create a stable interconnected structure. It works not only as a dust suppressant but as a soil stabiliser, reducing maintenance costs and providing an improved driving surface for vehicles. Depending on site conditions, one application of GRT:7000 can last for months. GRT products are compatible with a wide variety of soil types, so little or no material needs to be brought onto the site.

According to GRT and a report conducted by Environmental Resources Management consultants, GRT:7000 poses no threat to the environment – the products will not break down easily from UV exposure, enzymes and soil microbes; nor will they wash away in rain. The agents used in the product are non-corrosive and have no impact on vehicles or equipment; and the product can be applied using existing water application infrastructure.

22 RegionalBusinessReview

spotlight

Page 89: Rocks October/November 2015
Page 90: Rocks October/November 2015

Trucks travel across Australia every second of every day. They deliver every item on the shelves of every supermarket. Super

heavy haulage operators deliver whole machinery, vehicles and parts to mining operations, while small trucks may provide food, furniture, and supplies to remote outposts across the country.

With more than 329,000 heavy rigid and 93,500 articulated trucks registered in Australia, trucking provides services, jobs and vital connections to communities everywhere. And our freight task is growing. In 2012–13, trucks moved 203.6 billion tonne kilometres of freight – the largest freight movement recorded for Australia’s road transport industry to date – and it continues to trend upwards.

We’re also proud to have made great strides in the industry’s safety record. Despite increases in both the number of vehicles on the road and the freight task, road fatalities and fatal crashes have fallen massively, and continue to do so. Of course, until we know that every road

user is reaching their destination safely, there are improvements to be made.

Major changes over the last 20 yearsThe trucking industry has come a long way in the last few decades.

A huge change has been the emergence of a single peak body for the trucking industry – the Australian Trucking Association.

Formed in the wake of the Grafton truck-bus crash in 1989, the ATA has overseen the implementation of heavy vehicle accreditation programs, mandatory speed limiting for heavy vehicles, the development of a national regulator, and improved training standards for heavy vehicle drivers.

We’ve also seen the introduction of Chain of Responsibility legislation across Australia. Under this legislation, any party in the supply chain can be held to account if they do not take all reasonable steps to prevent fatigue and speed breaches.

Parties can include everyone from the truck driver through to company directors and even a trucking business’ customers, so it’s important to make

sure you consider your Chain of Responsibility obligations when utilising road transport services.

In terms of our vehicles, truck productivity has doubled in the last 40 years. Because of the introduction of higher productivity combinations like road trains and B-doubles, we use half the number of trucks to move today’s freight task than we would if we were still using 70s technology.

They’re much safer, too. Modern trucks have adaptive cruise control, blind spot detection technology, and pretty much any safety technology you’d expect to find in a high-end sports car. And because trucks are now so driver friendly, we’re also seeing greater interest from female drivers.

Changes (technology, safety, automation etc) to the industry occurring in the next 20 yearsThe freight task is continuing to grow, and trucking businesses and manufacturers are working hard to continue providing new ways for our industry to meet it.

In the short term, the quickest productivity gains will come from regulatory improvements – approvals for a new combination design, better access for combinations in appropriate areas and appropriate consideration of curfews etc to improve heavy vehicle traffic flow.

We’re proud to have made great strides in the industry’s safety record. Despite increases in both the

number of vehicles on the road and the freight task.

TOP OBSERVATIONS FROM AUSTRALIAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATION.

The current state of the haulage and logistics industry

24 RegionalBusinessReview

advertorial

Page 91: Rocks October/November 2015

Safety is the priority for the industry and it’s telling that safety gadgets like adaptive cruise control and blind spot detection technology become standard in a new truck long before the average family car.

Other technologies being tested and introduced include curve speed warnings (which calculate the safe speed for upcoming corners depending on the current weather conditions), forward collision warning systems (some of which include automatic braking when a collision appears imminent), and a range of fatigue assessment systems.

On a different note, some manufacturers are also discussing concept trucks that don’t need drivers, with several platooning trials already happening around the world. These are unmanned heavy vehicles that automatically follow the vehicle in front, which is under the control of a professional heavy vehicle driver.

And to go one step further, the US recently saw the launch of its first road

legal self-driving truck, which has been licensed to operate in Nevada.

These new technologies are being tested for safety. It’s not good enough for these systems to just respond to instructions – they need to react to evolving situations and cope with the unpredictability of on-road conditions. It’s a time of change and it will be fascinating to see these technologies are develop over the next few years.

Problems facing the mining industry and solutionsAs populations and demand increases, so does the amount of freight we need to move. However, unless the industry can get productivity improvements – like improving access to larger, safer combinations, and fixing first and last mile access issues – we’ll also see a big increase in the number of trucks on our roads.

This isn’t the best outcome for anyone. By using larger combinations, we can

reduce our impact on the environment and road surfaces. It’s more economical and also safer – drivers for these combinations are trained to a higher level, the trucks are newer and fewer vehicles are required for each job.

Our biggest job is in increasing access and acceptance of these vehicles so we can achieve these gains.

The industry faces an aging driver population. Truck drivers are largely middle aged or older, with few young people looking into the industry as a viable career. We need to promote road transport and improve its appeal for young people, though careers advice, training programs, and providing opportunities for young drivers to get real hands-on experience.

We also need to improve both on-road and end-of-journey facilities to encourage more women to join our industry. The mining industry has set an example for the rest of us to follow when it comes to employing a diverse workforce.

25RegionalBusinessReview

Page 92: Rocks October/November 2015

Fleet Management System

UNRIVALLED PARTNERSHIP//

The Hitachi EH5000AC-3 mining truck and EX8000-6 backhoe excavator.

From the factory to the pit, Hitachi’s ultra-class hydraulic excavators and electric drive mining

trucks are engineered to maximise the productivity of mining operations. Our flagship machines

deliver unmatched performance and reliability when it comes to loading and haulage.

The most powerful and productive combination yet.

Page 93: Rocks October/November 2015

DEMAND RISING FOR NSW COALStephen Galilee, CEO of the NSW Minerals Council, has announced that exports of New South Wales coal have increased over the past nine months.

Figures released by Coal Services show that exports to Taiwan are up 21 per cent and exports to Korea have risen by eight per cent in the same period.

But its exports to India that really have commentators excited.

“We are seeing the rise of India as a new growth market for the quality NSW thermal coal,” Galilee said, “with exports to the country doubling so far over this financial year.”

Exports of NSW coal to India have reached 7.7 million tonnes, up from 3.2 million tonnes, and it seems that market

opportunities are only likely to grow further.“The most up-to-date forecast from

the International Energy Agency (IEA) predicts global electricity demand could double between 2009 and 2035 as more people gain access to electricity and household energy consumption grows in the developing world,” Galilee said.

“On this assessment, the IEA says coal will meet more of the increase in global energy demand than oil or gas over the next five years, and will still provide around a quarter of world energy by 2040,” Galilee said.

“Ongoing export demand and the emergence of new markets indicates solid long term prospects for our state’s coal sector; on-ground that means jobs and investment. That’s why it’s so important we get the policy settings right here in NSW.”

RIO TINTO ANNOUNCES $1M THINK TANKRio Tinto has signed a $1 million partnership agreement with international policy think tank Perth USAsia Centre, in the form of a $250,000 investment per annum for the next four years.

Rio Tinto is the first major corporate investor in the Centre’s core programs, which promote stronger relationships between Australia, Indo-Pacific countries and the United States through policy development, research, education and network-building programs.

“Situated as it is in the same time zone as Singapore, Hong Kong and Beijing, Perth – with its economy deeply integrated with the region – provides a unique vantage point from which to address Australia’s interest in Asia and its expanding partnership with its longstanding ally, the United States,” said Perth USAsia Centre CEO Gordon Flake.

IMARC 2015 INTERNATIONAL MINING AND RESOURCES CONFERENCEMelbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre

Coming to the Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre in November, IMARC is Australia’s only event to unite the global mining community. Gain insights from world leading experts in technological and innovative advancements in mining.

Experience the world’s largest mining investment forum, connecting miners with money and investors with opportunity; Mines and Money Australia – where deals get done.

Learn about global best practice and direction of mining policy that shapes the regulatory environment in the region.

Participants attend IMARC to connect with the drivers and thinkers, the ‘brains trust’ of the global mining industry at Australia’s only major forum where mining leaders, policy makers, financiers, technical experts, innovators and educators all come together under one roof. Attendees of the various networking workshops will have ideal opportunities to meet with industry leaders. With 3,000 decision makers and hundreds of exhibitors from 35 plus countries, IMARC delivers the global mining industry to Australia.

IMARC is organised in collaboration with Austmine, AusIMM, AMMA, the Victorian state government and Mines and Money.

Imarc 2015 International Mining and 2nd Annual Resources Conference & Expo runs from 10 - 12 November 2015 with workshops running on 9 & 13 November 2015. For registrations & enquiries phone +61 3 9008 5946 or email [email protected], or you can visit www.imarcmelbourne.com for more information.

27RegionalBusinessReview

news+views

Page 94: Rocks October/November 2015

Ad

vertorial

ABERGELDIE COMPLEX Infrastructure has recently appointed Greg Taylor to the role of Chief Executive Officer. He will commence in mid-September 2015. The founder and current CEO of Abergeldie, Mick Boyle, will then move into an Executive Chairman role and focus on strategy, business acquisitions, joint venture relationships and international opportunities.“I am turning my focus to some major growth opportunities for the company,” said Mick Boyle. “The appointment of Greg Taylor as CEO will allow me to pursue those opportunities whilst ensuring the Abergeldie management team gets the support it requires to continue to provide the complex infrastructure this country needs.”Greg Taylor has over 25 years’ experience in leading and delivering some of the most challenging, demanding and complex infrastructure projects around Australia and Asia, including tunnels, pipelines, stadiums, complex gas systems, materials handling, waste to energy plants, water/wastewater treatment plants, waste treatment, recycled water and desalination.“I look forward to working with Mick Boyle and leading his highly respected team through the next growth chapter for Abergeldie Complex infrastructure” said Greg Taylor.The appointment of Greg Taylor is the outcome of a six month recruitment process to find the right person to take Abergeldie’s already successful management to new levels of achievement as the company continues to expand.“Greg Taylor has a relationship contracting style and a personality that will fit well with the culture of Abergeldie: what we like to call The Abergeldie Way,” said Mick Boyle. “He has an outstanding reputation, especially in the water and tunnelling industries, and I am looking forward to working with him at Abergeldie.”

To learn more about Abergeldie go to www.abergeldie.com or for any enquiries with respect to this Press Release please contact Abergeldie Marketing Manager, Erin Shilton on 0439 031 895.

NEW CEO APPOINTED BY ABERGELDIE COMPLEX INFRASTRUCTURE

Greg Taylor, CEO, Abergeldie Complex Infrastructure

“We’re excited to partner with a visionary company like Rio Tinto, which has a major global footprint and tremendous expertise throughout our region. This is a terrific endorsement of our efforts to promote strategic thinking, policy development and stronger relationships across the Indo-Pacific.” 

Rio Tinto’s chief executive – Iron Ore, China, Korea and Japan Andrew Harding has emphasised the importance of looking beyond Rio Tinto’s usual horizons for “alliances that can add value to the business in the future”.

URANIUM-BREATHING BACTERIA NEW HOPE FOR CONTAMINATED SITESA team of scientists at Rutgers University has discovered a new type of bacteria that “breathes” uranium, and that they hope could be used to help clean up sites at which uranium has been processed.

“After the newly discovered bacteria interact with uranium compounds in water, the uranium becomes immobile,” said Lee Kerkhof, a professor involved with the study. “It is no longer dissolved in the groundwater and therefore can’t contaminate drinking water brought to the surface.”

The bacteria can breathe both oxygen and uranium, a rare ability that presents a unique opportunity that requires further research by the US Department of Energy.

SECTOR ON THE REBOUNDAfter a period of dramatic decline in revenue and exports, several major Australian mining industries are expected to bounce back in 2015–16, albeit from a low base.

According to IBISWorld senior industry analyst Spencer Little, “it is anticipated that 2015–16 will offer a much rosier picture for some of the nation’s largest industries, but black and brown coal mining may struggle to recover.”

Little added that “key commodity prices are set to rebound, while additional capacity in several key industries is also expected to come on line in 2015–16”.

IBISWorld expects world iron-ore prices to strengthen in Australian dollar

terms following consecutive years of large price drops, which should assist Australian iron-ore miners as production volumes continue to rise. Iron-ore mining revenue growth in 2015–16 will likely be driven by the expansion projects of Rio Tinto.

OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION IS ALSO SET TO BOUNCE BACK.“Additional capacity in the oil and gas extraction industry is projected to come on line in 2015–16, including some of the first east coast LNG export facilities,” said Little. “These gas projects are expected to contribute significantly to capital

expenditure in the mining division in 2015–16 and also drive strong export growth.”

IBISWorld also predicts strong growth in uranium revenue and exports. Despite ongoing environmental concerns, the continued expansion of nuclear electricity generation facilities, particularly in China, India and South Korea, has driven global demand for uranium oxide.

“The continued depreciation of the Australian dollar is expected to contribute to uranium revenue and export growth,” said Little. “Australia’s total uranium production and export volumes are likely to rise due to new mine developments and several expansion projects.”

28 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 95: Rocks October/November 2015

Leading underground mining contractor PYBAR Mining Services has returned to Noranda Pacific P/L’s Lady Loretta zinc-lead-silver mine in far north Queensland following its successful bid for an eight month slot hole drilling contract at the project.

PYBAR previously completed a highly successful development mining contract at Lady Loretta in 2013.

The company commenced its new contract in May, undertaking drilling with its Redbore 50 Boxhole borer.

 PYBAR CEO Paul Rouse said:

“We’ll be striving to uphold our prior performance at Lady Loretta to deliver another successful project at the mine. Regardless of the scale of the project, we’re focused on setting the industry standard across all our operations.”

PYBAR successful in boxhole / slot hole tender at Lady Loretta Pictured: Redbore 50 Boxhole borer

29RegionalBusinessReview

Page 96: Rocks October/November 2015

What sort of trends have you noticed since the mining boom in Australia has come to an end? Obviously market demand for mining machinery has been drastically affected as a result of low commodity prices, coal and iron ore in particular. But I think it’s like in most markets in the world: in general there is still a level of available business in all sectors. In Australia, the construction market has also suffered, and quite significantly in Western Australia and Queensland. A portion of it is also driven by associated mining works and compounded by the lack of large infrastructure projects. Globally there are some signs of increases in the market, particularly in construction in places like North America and Europe. Generally however, demand for equipment is not great.

What are your key markets globally?At HCA, our responsibility is just Australia, but all of our mining equipment gets distributed from our parent company in Japan. In terms of mining markets, we have a strong presence on every continent. Generally, the stronger markets in terms of demand are North and South America, Asia and Africa.

Who are HCA’s main competitors here in Australia?In the mining markets, they are predominantly Caterpillar, Komatsu and Liebherr Group.

What determines the brands HCA acts on behalf of?The brands we represent are global associations we have, and all serve to

add value to the company. For instance, Hitachi Construction Machinery Japan acquired Wenco, a Canadian company, because it provided fleet management and high-precision guidance systems for the mining industry, which complemented our pre-existing products. This was something we required from a total-solution product offering perspective; at the same time,

WORDS: RILEY PALMER

DIRECTOR OF CONSTRUCTION, FORESTRY AND MINING SALES FOR MARKET-LEADING EQUIPMENT COMPANY HITACHI CONSTRUCTION MACHINERY AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (HCA), GILBERTO PAULETA IS WELL PLACED TO SHED SOME LIGHT ON THE CURRENT TRENDS AND THE TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES COMING OUR WAY

A WELL-OILED MINING MACHINE

The Hitachi EX8000-6

30 RegionalBusinessReview

miningprofile

Page 97: Rocks October/November 2015

we required fleet management and high-precision technology to embark on our autonomous projects. So the acquisition of Wenco was the simplest way of achieving the requirement and acquiring the necessary expertise.

As technology becomes more sophisticated, we are seeing the automation of more equipment. Is this something HCA supports?We’ve got a research project on autonomous dump trucks that we started a couple of years ago. In the future automation will definitely play an important role, in that the equipment will bring more efficiency and safety to mine sites. While a lot of our competitors entered the autonomous realm many years ago, we think the technology that is available now – particularly with regard to speed and processing of information – has allowed for us to progress, where 10 years ago it was a lot more difficult. So now is a better time to embark on projects like that.

Do you see a downside to automation?It will be a learning curve. At the moment I can’t really see any but as with anything, I’m sure we’ll probably find some downsides once it’s implemented. I think the positives will well outweigh the negatives in terms of safety, efficiency and human error. But our focus right now is really research.What are HCA’s views on the environment and sustainability?Our parent company, Hitachi Ltd., has very strong views on sustainability, and bringing together the different technologies they develop is very important. At the same time, we really push social and environmental responsibly in our group of companies. Environmental

equipment-related projects in construction and mining usually go hand-in-hand with regulations like [those governing] engine emissions. But there are other areas for us to branch into, for instance, sound emissions. We recently started working with our factory on providing sound-attenuated equipment, predominantly for the Hunter Valley, which is quite exciting. At HCA we also have environmental initiatives, sponsored by our Managing Director, relating to energy usage in our branch networks, recycling and fuel usage.

Where do you see Australia’s mining truck market going in the next five years?We’ve recently introduced AC drive (electric drive) trucks from Hitachi in Japan, which use our own propulsion system. So while we’re relatively new with that product in the market, we’re very pleased – we’ve been very, very successful. We are globally the market leader on the excavator product, and that’s really where we want to take the mining truck product as well. In terms of development, it continues. In terms of autonomy, we will see – but our research project is on track so we’ll hopefully have a commercial solution in the next three years or so. We really see a great future with the mining truck market. Of course, the market is not great at the moment, but that’s the nature of the industry and it’s just a matter of time before it comes back up.

What are HCA’s goals for the next five years?I think there are two main goals. One is to really improve our share in the dump truck product to a market leading position. The other area of the business we are continuously seeking to improve is our level of customer service. We’ve already made great inroads in that regard over the past 10 years, but it will continue to be a long-term goal to provide total customer satisfaction.

MINING MACHINE

Fast facts:

• Prior to joining HCA, Gilberto worked on a

12-month emergency infrastructure

project in Mozambique following its

civil war.

• Hitachi Construction

Machinery Global (HCM) was

established in 1970, when Hitachi, Ltd.

separated from its construction

machinery division.

We recently started working with our factory on providing sound-attenuated equipment, predominantly for the Hunter Valley, which is quite exciting.

Gilberto Pauleta

The Hitachi EH5000AC-3

31RegionalBusinessReview

miningprofile

Page 98: Rocks October/November 2015

Visit mining.sandVik.com to find out more.

deVeLoPed WitH You engineered for Youin an unpredictable mining industry, sandvik dr461i delivers dependable penetration in the world’s hardest mining conditions.

developed in close collaboration with our customers, sandvik dr461i is automation-ready and packed with proven technology to guarantee reliability.

discover how sandvik dr461i can help you meet your safety, reliability and productivity targets.

DR461i Oct-Nov ad.indd 1 15/09/2015 12:28:43 PM

Page 99: Rocks October/November 2015

Port Hedland, Western Australia

snapshot

33RegionalBusinessReview

Page 100: Rocks October/November 2015

Life in rural, regional and remote Australia is complex: natural wealth creates opportunity but

distance and isolation present challenges.

FRRR’s unique tax status combined with our extensive networks means we can direct support where it is most needed.

Last year, the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal provided more than 750 grants to help local groups implement local solutions to local issues.

From education to the environment, health to the arts, our collaboratively-funded small grant programs help unlock potential. But we can only meet about a third of the requests for support.

www.frrr.org.au

@FRRR_Oz

03 5430 2399

Learn more about how you could help connect more rural communities with resources and networks to help them build a strong vibrant future.

I S O L A T I O N

Sometimes even the most vibrant communities need a helping hand.

Page 101: Rocks October/November 2015

35RegionalBusinessReview

GOTTA HAVE IT WE UNEARTH THE BEST GOODS AND GADGETS JUST FOR YOU

AMPL BackpackPrice:US$239Website: ampl-labs.comFinally, a solution for the must-be-constantly-connected commuter! The AMPL Backpack has been designed with an integrated charging port in every pocket, enabling you to charge up to seven devices simultaneously, all the while keeping them safe and dry with its shock-absorbing sole and water-resistant fabric.

TL3 Racing SimulatorPrice: $75,000 Website: motionsimulation.com/tl3The world’s most advanced professional simulator, Motion Simulation’s highly anticipated TL3 is the next best thing to racing on the tracks. Equipped with a 6 million-pixel wraparound screen that spans more than 2.5 metres, a fully adjustable racing car cockpit and hydraulic pedals, the TL3 gives you the most realistic experience possible.

Page 102: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

Varia Rearview Bike RadarPrice: US$ $199.99 [taillight only], or US $299.99 [bundled with the radar display unit]Website: garmin.com/en-USPaired with Garmin’s radar display unit, Varia’s radar taillight transmitter has the capacity to detect approaching vehicles from up to 140 metres away. A first-of-its-kind for bikes, the tail-light increases in brightness as vehicles approach, making things safer for cyclists and other road users.

Page 103: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

Philips FL3X Wireless SpeakersPrice: requestedWebsite: ifa.philips.com/news/sound-on-the-go/fl3x-and-pix3l-bluetooth-speakersSmall in size but big on sound, this Bluetooth speaker is perfect for people on the move. The FL3X is flat at first look but if you’re after a little more bass, simply pull out the speaker’s sides to expand it and create a richer-sounding bass. Water, shock and dust-resistant, it allows you to enjoy your favourite tunes wherever in the world you are.

Page 104: Rocks October/November 2015

Toxfree provides a comprehensive range of waste management and industrial services to the oil and gas industry. We pride ourselves in tailoring innovative solutions for our customers, ensuring safe, reliable and sustainable outcomes. Our focus is simple; solve our customers’ problems, and do it safely.

What can we solve for you?

PROUDLY SUPPLYINGWASTE MANAGEMENTSOLUTIONS TO THERESOURCE INDUSTRY

safe.reliable.sustainable 1300 toxfree www.toxfree.com.au

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.

Page 105: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

39RegionalBusinessReview

goTennaPrice: US$149.99 for two devicesWebsite: gotenna.comGranted, it’s a niche problem, but on those occasions when you’re off the grid or simply can’t get phone reception, goTenna enables you to remain connected by creating a low-frequency radio wave network. It also allows you to download and access maps while you’re offline– similar to a GPS – and to ping other goTennas.

Blundstone’s 980 Underground Mining BootPrice: $459Website: blundstone.com/auPurpose-built to overcome issues commonly associated with mining boots –leakage, material failures, lack of support, excessive heat, and discomfort –Blundstone’s 980 Underground Mining Boot recently

won the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences (MAAS) Award and Best

in Category (Product Design – Commercial and Industrial) at the Good Design Awards, and

it’s not hard to see why.

Victa Classic mowerPrice: RRP $399Website: victa.com/au Become the master of your backyard with Victa’s Classic lawn mower. Boasting a fuel-efficient engine, aerodynamic design and RapidStart™technology ignition system, this classic lawn mower will have your garden perfectly manicured in no time.

Page 106: Rocks October/November 2015

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

THE ULTIMATE(FREE) GUIDE

FOR URBANEXPLORERS

SYDNEY

FASHIONDESIGNFOOD LIFESTYLE PERTH

FREMANTLE

MT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGE

LEEDERVILLE SUBIACO WEST PERTH

PERTH CITY

PERTH CITYMT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGE

MT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGEPERTH CITY

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

LEEDERVILLE SUBIACO WEST PERTH

FREMANTLE

FREMANTLE

Page 107: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

41RegionalBusinessReview 41RegionalBusinessReview

CoolboxPrice: US$199Website: coolbox.ioWhile the premise of tinkering hasn’t changed over time, the nature of the toolbox certainly has. A crowd-funded project, the fully-fledged Coolbox is functional – in that it holds all of your tools – but, with a 12-volt 5000mAh rechargeable battery, a retractable 10-foot (3m) extension cord and 3-way splitter, a tablet stand, an LED floodlight, a whiteboard, a power bar, USB ports, Bluetooth speakers, a digital clock and a bottle opener, it is also much, much more.

Moov NowPrice: RRP US$99.99Website: welcome.moov.ccDubbed the ‘Siri of sweat’, Moov Now combines artificial intelligence and gameplay to offer you real-time coaching software in addition to the more conventional attributes of wearable fitness devices, such as step tracking. The device’s pioneering 3-D motion sensors read your body’s form to help you get the most out of your workouts.

9.

ShelfPackPrice: US$350Website: shelfpack.com/index.htmlShelfPack, by McKaba Luggage, is practically a portable shelving unit that keeps your luggage orderly but removes the burden of unpacking. While it looks like a normal wheeled suitcase from the outside, it has four retractable ‘shelves’ on the inside that can be erected to keep your stuff organised and accessible. The whole case weighs 7.71kg.

10.

Page 108: Rocks October/November 2015

Life in rural, regional and remote Australia is complex: natural wealth creates opportunity but

distance and isolation present challenges.

FRRR’s unique tax status combined with our extensive networks means we can direct support where it is most needed.

Last year, the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal provided more than 750 grants to help local groups implement local solutions to local issues.

From education to the environment, health to the arts, our collaboratively-funded small grant programs help unlock potential. But we can only meet about a third of the requests for support.

www.frrr.org.au

@FRRR_Oz

03 5430 2399

Learn more about how you could help connect more rural communities with resources and networks to help them build a strong vibrant future.

I S O L A T I O N

Sometimes even the most vibrant communities need a helping hand.

Page 109: Rocks October/November 2015

35RegionalBusinessReview

GOTTA HAVE IT WE UNEARTH THE BEST GOODS AND GADGETS JUST FOR YOU

AMPL BackpackPrice:US$239Website: ampl-labs.comFinally, a solution for the must-be-constantly-connected commuter! The AMPL Backpack has been designed with an integrated charging port in every pocket, enabling you to charge up to seven devices simultaneously, all the while keeping them safe and dry with its shock-absorbing sole and water-resistant fabric.

TL3 Racing SimulatorPrice: $75,000 Website: motionsimulation.com/tl3The world’s most advanced professional simulator, Motion Simulation’s highly anticipated TL3 is the next best thing to racing on the tracks. Equipped with a 6 million-pixel wraparound screen that spans more than 2.5 metres, a fully adjustable racing car cockpit and hydraulic pedals, the TL3 gives you the most realistic experience possible.

Page 110: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

Varia Rearview Bike RadarPrice: US$ $199.99 [taillight only], or US $299.99 [bundled with the radar display unit]Website: garmin.com/en-USPaired with Garmin’s radar display unit, Varia’s radar taillight transmitter has the capacity to detect approaching vehicles from up to 140 metres away. A first-of-its-kind for bikes, the tail-light increases in brightness as vehicles approach, making things safer for cyclists and other road users.

Page 111: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

Philips FL3X Wireless SpeakersPrice: requestedWebsite: ifa.philips.com/news/sound-on-the-go/fl3x-and-pix3l-bluetooth-speakersSmall in size but big on sound, this Bluetooth speaker is perfect for people on the move. The FL3X is flat at first look but if you’re after a little more bass, simply pull out the speaker’s sides to expand it and create a richer-sounding bass. Water, shock and dust-resistant, it allows you to enjoy your favourite tunes wherever in the world you are.

Page 112: Rocks October/November 2015

Toxfree provides a comprehensive range of waste management and industrial services to the oil and gas industry. We pride ourselves in tailoring innovative solutions for our customers, ensuring safe, reliable and sustainable outcomes. Our focus is simple; solve our customers’ problems, and do it safely.

What can we solve for you?

PROUDLY SUPPLYINGWASTE MANAGEMENTSOLUTIONS TO THERESOURCE INDUSTRY

safe.reliable.sustainable 1300 toxfree www.toxfree.com.au

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.

Page 113: Rocks October/November 2015

mustpack

39RegionalBusinessReview

goTennaPrice: US$149.99 for two devicesWebsite: gotenna.comGranted, it’s a niche problem, but on those occasions when you’re off the grid or simply can’t get phone reception, goTenna enables you to remain connected by creating a low-frequency radio wave network. It also allows you to download and access maps while you’re offline– similar to a GPS – and to ping other goTennas.

Blundstone’s 980 Underground Mining BootPrice: $459Website: blundstone.com/auPurpose-built to overcome issues commonly associated with mining boots –leakage, material failures, lack of support, excessive heat, and discomfort –Blundstone’s 980 Underground Mining Boot recently

won the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences (MAAS) Award and Best

in Category (Product Design – Commercial and Industrial) at the Good Design Awards, and

it’s not hard to see why.

Victa Classic mowerPrice: RRP $399Website: victa.com/au Become the master of your backyard with Victa’s Classic lawn mower. Boasting a fuel-efficient engine, aerodynamic design and RapidStart™technology ignition system, this classic lawn mower will have your garden perfectly manicured in no time.

Page 114: Rocks October/November 2015

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

THE ULTIMATE(FREE) GUIDE

FOR URBANEXPLORERS

SYDNEY

FASHIONDESIGNFOOD LIFESTYLE PERTH

FREMANTLE

MT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGE

LEEDERVILLE SUBIACO WEST PERTH

PERTH CITY

PERTH CITYMT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGE

MT LAWLEY HIGHGATE NORTHBRIDGEPERTH CITY

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

CLAREMONT COTTESLOE WESTERN SUBURBS

LEEDERVILLE SUBIACO WEST PERTH

FREMANTLE

FREMANTLE

Page 115: Rocks October/November 2015

boystoys

41RegionalBusinessReview

CoolboxPrice: US$199Website: coolbox.ioWhile the premise of tinkering hasn’t changed over time, the nature of the toolbox certainly has. A crowd-funded project, the fully-fledged Coolbox is functional – in that it holds all of your tools – but, with a 12-volt 5000mAh rechargeable battery, a retractable 10-foot (3m) extension cord and 3-way splitter, a tablet stand, an LED floodlight, a whiteboard, a power bar, USB ports, Bluetooth speakers, a digital clock and a bottle opener, it is also much, much more.

Moov NowPrice: RRP US$99.99Website: welcome.moov.ccDubbed the ‘Siri of sweat’, Moov Now combines artificial intelligence and gameplay to offer you real-time coaching software in addition to the more conventional attributes of wearable fitness devices, such as step tracking. The device’s pioneering 3-D motion sensors read your body’s form to help you get the most out of your workouts.

9.

ShelfPackPrice: US$350Website: shelfpack.com/index.htmlShelfPack, by McKaba Luggage, is practically a portable shelving unit that keeps your luggage orderly but removes the burden of unpacking. While it looks like a normal wheeled suitcase from the outside, it has four retractable ‘shelves’ on the inside that can be erected to keep your stuff organised and accessible. The whole case weighs 7.71kg.

10.

Page 116: Rocks October/November 2015

HV TESTING

PERMIT TO WORK

EEHA INSPECTIONS

SPECIALISED RESOURCES

MECHANICAL SPECIALISTS

ELECTRICAL & INSTRUMENTATION PRECOMMISIONING & COMMISSIONING

Authorised Engineering Organisation with Transport for NSW

Speak to EPS Group Australia about your project today.Call 1300 EPS GROUP or visit www.epsgroupaustralia.com.au

Page 117: Rocks October/November 2015

JUST AS ‘OILS AIN’T OILS’, GLOVES AREN’T GLOVES WHEN IT COMES TO MINING PPE.

PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT

WORDS: DARREN BAGLEY

HV TESTING

PERMIT TO WORK

EEHA INSPECTIONS

SPECIALISED RESOURCES

MECHANICAL SPECIALISTS

ELECTRICAL & INSTRUMENTATION PRECOMMISIONING & COMMISSIONING

Authorised Engineering Organisation with Transport for NSW

Speak to EPS Group Australia about your project today.Call 1300 EPS GROUP or visit www.epsgroupaustralia.com.au

specialreport

43RegionalBusinessReview

Page 118: Rocks October/November 2015

iners, farmers, construction workers – anyone spending a

lot of time outdoors working with their hands – knows the value of a good set of gloves. Not only do they provide protection from the elements, a good pair will protect the hands from oil, chemicals and other solvents, prevent grazes or burns, and enable a better grip than bare hands can.

From the perspective of management, providing personal protective equipment (PPE) to keep workers’ hands safe is an important workplace health and safety (WHS) obligation, and can save time and money by minimising workers’ compensation claims.

For many years, the basic pair of riggers’ gloves – lined for winter use and unlined for summer – has been the mainstay of PPE. While some PPE managers seeking to save money still opt for a ‘one-type-fits-all’ glove that is often not much more than a slightly updated riggers’ glove, others are taking a more nuanced approach and are sourcing gloves optimised for particular tasks or roles. Some protect against specific hazards, such as vibration; others are designed to be discarded after use.

Materials are also changing. Leather has reigned supreme for decades and it is still popular, but synthetics offer some advantages, and more and more PPE managers are willing to consider them.

The move towards specialised gloves does have a certain logic. Everyone has had the experience of doing a job with whatever tool was ready to hand, then finding that using the ‘right tool for the job’ makes the task a whole lot easier. Indeed, it’s axiomatic that workers work more efficiently when their

equipment is designed specifically for the task they’re undertaking. Having the right gloves for the job also helps prevent injuries by making it less likely that workers who are frustrated with trying to do a job that requires dexterity will take off their gloves ‘ just to get the job done’.

According to the Ansell Limited white paper ‘Why Single-Use Gloves Make Sense in Industry: An Efficient Solution to PPE’, “Equipment that suits its task streamlines processes, thereby

allowing the work to be done faster, with a reduction in fatigue related injuries… This may be particularly so with hand protection, since maintaining a degree of grip and dexterity needs to be balanced with keeping workers’ hands safe from oil and other chemicals.”

Ansell has introduced a new range of single-use gloves that provide protection for workers for an array of jobs that require higher degrees of tactility, suitable for workers undertaking tasks requiring

specialreport

44 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 119: Rocks October/November 2015

MINE // QUARRY // PROCESS PLANTS

TRUSTED BY AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST RESOURCE COMPANIES

GIVE US A RING!

(08) 9302 3744

BEEN PINGED?

Full audit & safety upgrades for:

[email protected]

Page 120: Rocks October/November 2015

FIXAPIPE® pipe repair kit is ideal to temporarily fix a wide range of broken, corroded or cracked pipes, including metal, concrete, fibreglass, polyethylene, ceramic, stainless steel, copper, rubber and more.

Easy to use with clear, simple instructions, FIXAPIPE® sets in minutes, reducing downtime and labour and enabling you to get back to work sooner.

Featuring tamper-proof packaging, you can rest assured FIXAPIPE® is kept sealed and secure at all times. www.fixapipe.com.au

13 73 23 blackwoods.com.au

13 12 68covsparts.com.au

1300 774 557globalspill.com.au

Available from:

Is your pipe repair budget getting a bad wrap?

ASK FOR

FIXAPIPE ® TODAY!

Ask your supplier about FIXAPIPE® and find out how much you can save

Oct-Nov Inside Mining Ad A4 with bleed V2.indd 1 14/09/2015 12:10:38 PM

Page 121: Rocks October/November 2015

“there’s no doubt a good pair of leather riggers’ gloves can be a manual worker’s best friend, winter or continually damp conditions can show up the limitations of the base material.”

dexterity. The single-use range of Microflex gloves by Ansell is able to be worn as protection during a particular task and then discarded once the task has been completed. The gloves offer a protective solution that helps keep operating costs down. They are easy to slip on and to remove, and have a high degree of strength so are unlikely to break on the job. The Microflex range is built with a textured grip for use in slippery applications, and offers a high-visibility option for situations in which improved safety is needed.

Another example of a specialist glove finding its way into the mining industry is the anti-vibration glove. Vibration from using heavy-duty power tools and other vibrating machinery can lead to Hand-Arm Vibration Syndrome (HAVS) a condition that, potentially, could require the amputation of fingers or a hand if left untreated.

Safe Work Australia has developed a fact sheet on HAVS and warns that those most at risk are “workers who regularly use tools such as jackhammers, chainsaws,

grinders, drills, riveters and impact wrenches”. They report.

HAVS, states the fact sheet, is a collection of disorders such as carpal tunnel syndrome, tennis elbow and ‘vibration white finger’. Symptoms may include tingling and numbness in the fingers, and/or loss of strength or pain in the hands or arms. These symptoms stem from vibrations, which cause “disrupted circulation in the hand and forearm and/or damage to nerves and tendons, muscles, bones and joints of the hand and arm”.

While there’s no doubt a good pair of leather riggers’ gloves can be a manual worker’s best friend, winter or continually damp conditions can show up the limitations of the base material. If not properly maintained, leather gloves can become rigid, clammy and cold in chilly weather and when there is increased moisture in the air.

Synthetic leather gloves offer workers all the advantages of leather but are lighter and thinner, and dry very quickly. These features add up to the comfort and flexibility you’d

expect from leather, and there’s no compromise on essential qualities such as resistance to tears and abrasion and so forth.

Because synthetic leather gloves have a multi-layer construction, it’s also a lot easier for their designers to include useful extra features such as knuckle guards, magnetic nail-holders, anti-vibration foam-padded palms, impact-absorbing back-of-hand protection and non-slip silicone-dotted palms.

FIXAPIPE® pipe repair kit is ideal to temporarily fix a wide range of broken, corroded or cracked pipes, including metal, concrete, fibreglass, polyethylene, ceramic, stainless steel, copper, rubber and more.

Easy to use with clear, simple instructions, FIXAPIPE® sets in minutes, reducing downtime and labour and enabling you to get back to work sooner.

Featuring tamper-proof packaging, you can rest assured FIXAPIPE® is kept sealed and secure at all times. www.fixapipe.com.au

13 73 23 blackwoods.com.au

13 12 68covsparts.com.au

1300 774 557globalspill.com.au

Available from:

Is your pipe repair budget getting a bad wrap?

ASK FOR

FIXAPIPE ® TODAY!

Ask your supplier about FIXAPIPE® and find out how much you can save

Oct-Nov Inside Mining Ad A4 with bleed V2.indd 1 14/09/2015 12:10:38 PM

specialreport

47RegionalBusinessReview

Page 122: Rocks October/November 2015

The new Cavex® 700CVX hydrocyclone from Weir Minerals can achieve up to 50 per cent higher throughput capacity in comparison with any other competitor cyclones in the 26 inch diameter range due to its larger inlet and vortex finder configuration.

The Cavex® 700CVX hydrocyclone also provides a higher throughput than the Cavex® 650CVX hydrocyclone from Weir Minerals, in a smaller, more space efficient body, making it ideal for new installations. It is also perfectly suited and sized to fit into existing cyclone clusters for easy retrofitting to increase capacity.

Mark Lockyer, Weir Minerals Global Product Manager hydrocyclones, said: “The need to increase throughput to maintain production levels is a reality for much of our industry, with many mines having to process more ore than they have in the past.”

“In these conditions increasing throughput is essential. Sites that can achieve higher

throughput with minimal capital expenditure certainly have a competitive advantage.”

“Cavex hydrocyclones have been highly-regarded for their proven efficiency and high capacity performance for decades.”

“We are committed to ensuring our products stay in step with our customers’ needs, which means developing solutions to maximise throughput both within current plant set ups and in greenfield operations. The Cavex 700CVX hydrocyclone delivers on this commitment, and like all our products is backed up by our extensive global service and aftermarket support.”

Cavex® CVX hydrocyclones are designed to withstand severe abrasion caused by the rotational flow of solids and slurry. The unique shape of the Cavex® hydrocyclone range features a laminar spiral inlet geometry that allows the slurry to follow a natural path without encountering any shelves, edges or corners. This reduces turbulence inside

the hydrocyclone which helps maximise separation efficiency, hydraulic capacity and wear life, while minimising localised wear in the feed chamber and vortex finder.

Other features of the Cavex® 700 CVX hydrocyclone include fabricated steel or cast ductile casing, replaceable elastomer liners up to 45mm thick, ceramic lower cones, rubber lined steel vortex finders, rubber or ceramic spigots, rubber lined steel overflow pipe or air core booster caps.

Weir Minerals delivers end-to-end solutions for all mining, sand and aggregate transportation, milling, processing, waste-management and comminution processes across a range of industries and in more than 30 different countries.

For more information, please contact the Weir Minerals Australia Cavex® Hydrocyclone team on 1300 927 626 or [email protected]

Introducing the Cavex® 700CVX Hydrocyclone:

Maximise throughput within your existing cyclone cluster footprint

advertorial

48 RegionalBusinessReview

Page 123: Rocks October/November 2015

ANALYST

OPERATIONS

TRUCK DRIVER

MINER

ENGINEER

NURSE

CALLING ALL ADVENTURERSJoin the only global yacht race crewed by people like you, no experience required.

Train in Sydney to take on the world’s toughest oceans. Sign up to the Clipper 2017-18 Race for a single leg, combine several or circumnavigate the globe.

clipperroundtheworld.com/australia | +61 (0) 2 9363 2020

APPLY NOW

The Clipper 2015-16 Race arrives in Australia this summer, visiting Albany, Sydney, Hobart and the Whitsundays.

Follow the race online or play the Virtual Clipper Race.

Page 124: Rocks October/November 2015

CALL BOSE DIRECT: 1800 663 004 quoting code QA149BUY ONLINE: www.bose.com.au FIND A RESELLER: reseller.bose.com.au

VISIT THE BOSE STORE SUBIACO, WESTERN AUSTRALIA139 Hay Street, Subiaco - Phone: (08) 9388 0099 OR CALL 13 BOSE (2673) FOR OTHER BOSE STORE LOCATIONS

© 2015 Bose Corporation. All rights reserved. QuietComfort 20 headphones available in Black or White. 21 day risk-free trial and free shipping refers to purchases made by phoning 1800 663 004, via www.bose.com.au or from a Bose store. 21 day risk-free trial and free shipping is not available when purchasing from other authorised Bose resellers. Samsung and Samsung Galaxy are trademarks of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. iPhone, iPod, iPod classic, iPod nano, iPod shuffl e, and iPod touch are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. e trademark “iPhone” is used with a license from Aiphone K.K.Samsung is a trademark of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Android is a trademark of Google Inc. Available for delivery in Australia only.

Shut out the world and lose yourself in your music – or let the world in.

It’s your choice with the first in-ear noise cancelling headphones from

Bose®. The QuietComfort® 20 Acoustic Noise Cancelling® headphones

let you enjoy better sound every day, everywhere you go. Turn on noise

cancelling to reduce surrounding distractions and focus on your music.

Or, at the touch of a button, activate Aware mode to hear what’s happening

around you. Proprietary StayHear®+ tips provide a soft, secure fit. The inline

microphone and remote let you switch easily to calls on your iPhone or

Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

Available for either iOS or your Samsung and Android™ devices

QuietComfort 20Acoustic Noise Cancelling headphones

NEWCOLOURS

All you want to hear is your music.

BOSE_3112 2015-09-18T16:07:14+10:00