With growing prices of everything, it becomes hard to manage a house move monetarily. But if you can find reliable removalists who provide excellent services at reasonable rates, that is great. Now the question arises how you can find cheap removalists in Gold Coast? First thing you can do is ask for recommendations from relatives and friends. You can get the contact numbers of their removalists and call to ask queries. Next, you can do online research. Look for removalists who have good reviews, and their prices are affordable. Also, proximity should be a huge search factor as it will help get cheaper quotes. Read more...
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THE Harrovian has created history by becoming the first horse to secure a TAB Queensland Northern Crowns Series bonus with victory in the FNQ Amateurs Cup in Cairns on Saturday.
Jumping as an odds-on favourite, the Stephen Massingham-trained gelding pocketed $87,000 for the win and a further $200,000 bonus after prevailing in the Townsville Cup and the Cairns Cup earlier in the campaign. Across the three meetings, the 6YO gelding - ridden by veteran Australian Racing Hall of Fame jockey Robert Thompson - has secured more than $460,000 for his connections while re-writing history in the process. First introduced last year, the Northern Crowns Series offers bonuses to any horse that can secure three of the five staying or sprinting races held across Rockhampton, Mackay, Townsville, Cairns and FNQ Amateurs. Read more: https://www.northqueenslandregister.com.au/story/6388736/the-harrovian-secures-northern-crowns-bonus/ Darling Downs representative fixtures are well and truly under way, with a revised format in 2019 for the under 19 Colts and Senior men in the Tier One Queensland Country Rugby Union Championships, moving from the traditional mid-year to immediately after the Wagners Risdon Cup grand final.
After a first-week bye with Downs Rugby's grand final on Saturday August 31, the first matches were hosted at Palm Beach Rugby Club against the Gold Coast Cyclones. Downs Rugby Colts impressed with a 39-5 victory, and Downs Seniors also won 34-10. Read more: https://www.queenslandcountrylife.com.au/story/6390544/downs-moves-to-representative-rugby/ Climate change increasingly threatens communities all over the world. News of fires, floods and coastal erosion devastating lives and livelihoods seems almost constant.
The latest fires in Queensland and NSW mark the start of the earliest bushfire season the states have ever seen. What happens when climate change causes extreme events to become chronic, potentially rendering some communities unviable? This question is fuelling a new strand of global research focused on "climigration". Climigration is the planned relocation of entire communities to new locations further from harm. And it has already begun. It takes a lot to convince a community to move. But extreme events disrupt communities socially, economically and physically. Buildings and infrastructure are damaged, as are community cohesion and morale. Lives may be lost; many others are changed forever. When extreme events disrupt communities, responses usually occur in one of two ways. Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-16/radical-choice-to-confront-climate-change/11515456 Queensland's Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) is trading training for loyalty in a new program to bring in more pilots.
Their aviation mentoring program is giving young pilots an opportunity to upskill and gain the extremely high number of flight hours needed to become aeromedical pilots. RFDS aeromedical pilots are required to have completed 4,000 flying hours, with 2,000 as pilot-in-command, including 200 hours as a pilot-in-command at night. Mount Isa senior base pilot Dave Keavy said the high number of flying hours required to work with the RFDS, paired with a global pilot shortage, made finding pilots difficult. "With the current pilot shortage, [the RFDS] are finding it very difficult to find people who have the sort of hours that they need," he said. "Generally [pilots], when they've got those sort of hours, they've been sucked up by the airlines." Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-17/rfds-feeling-effects-of-pilot-shortage-launches-program/11494640 |
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