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New Zealand town offers Australians cheap holidays

A New Zealand town is offering discounted holidays to Australians who need a break after the recent spate of natural disasters.
Napier's Inner Harbour at night

The people of the seaside city of Napier, on the east coast on New Zealand’s North Island, have combined forces to launch the ‘Give an Aussie a Break’ campaign, which offers cheap package deals to all Australian citizens.

Napier Mayor Barbara Arnott said her townspeople were desperate to help people affected by the recent floods and cyclone by sharing their idyllic city for a few weeks.

“We have seen the devastation the recent floods along eastern Australia’s have had on their communities and we feel Australian’s deserve a break,” Ms Arnott said.

“Our community has donated to the various flood relief funds, and now our local council wants to give Australians a break.

“We would love to share our piece of paradise with all our great Aussie friends, so we’ve put together some special holiday packages that include discounts on airfares, accommodation and attractions.”

For more information on the Give an Aussie a Break campaign, and for the chance to win an all expenses paid trip to New Zealand, click here.

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Spa review: Noosa Springs Resort

Tucked away in the national park just a few kilometres from Hastings Street, Noosa Springs Resort is the perfect spot for some holiday indulgence.
Noosa Springs Resort

As a couple we opted to sample the excellent looking spa, but there is also a first-class golf course for any husbands looking to play a few holes rather than humour their wives by relaxing in the luxurious facilities.

Arriving at lunchtime, we booked in for the Half Day Spa Escape. After slipping into our swimmers we were guided to the impressive Romanesque hydro-massage pool. The pool comprises something of an obstacle course of therapy, where you make your way past various water jets that pummel and massage you from toe to head as you make your way round.

As you pass along the first stretch, you are eased in as gentle jets tickle your feet and ankles. Next, stronger jets massage your calves and thighs. But it is at the end of the first length that the big guns are deployed. Two huge underwater jets target your gluts with such force you can practically sit in the water on top of them — quite a sensation.

Next comes a giant tap a metre out of the water that shoots an intense spray that thunders down on your back. Depending on how you like it you can position yourself either under water or out to control the intensity. Then there are the massage chairs where gentle jets work your lower back and arms before a stand up station works the rest of your back.

With our bodies well and truly loosened up we retired to the sauna and steam room to sweat out toxins before moving to the well-presented couples’ massage room for our hour-long treatments. Under the expert hands of our masseuses, we were treated to a gentle Swedish massage working out the knots and stiffness from our whole bodies, starting with our feet, moving up the legs, working the back and shoulders, the arms and hands and finally the neck and head. Fully relaxed and recharged, we enjoyed a fruit refreshment and headed on our way.

For more information, visit www.noosasprings.com.au.

The $145 per person package includes: thermal suite with hydro massage and steam experience, infrared sauna and blitz shower (55 minutes); choice of a full-body massage (55 minutes) or tropical enzyme boost facial (55 minutes) or sugar scrub (55 minutes); as well as complimentary fruit juice or herbal teas.

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Going potty: Keeping your winter garden blooming

Pink flowers winter garden

Autumn’s leaves have fallen, the garden is looking bare, and those pots of bright blooms in the supermarket look terribly tempting. Should you … or shouldn’t you?

The case for buying potted bloomers

Potted flowers will usually stay bright and blooming for longer than a bunch of flowers. With luck your potted bloomers will give you colour and cheer right through the winter months.

Place your pots by a sunny windowsill (most potted bloomers prefer sunlight), keep them moist and give them diluted liquid plant food every three weeks. Follow the instructions on the fertiliser bottle or packet as a guide, but add twice as much water. Most potted bloomers are in pretty small pots, so it’s possible to “burn” the roots by giving pot plants too much tucker.

You can even plant most potted bloomers out in the garden when they’ve stopped flowering or even before if you want an “instant” bed of beauty. But do check to see if they are perennial — living for years or decades or even longer — or annual, which means they’ll go to seed in spring and then die.

Primulas are annuals; polyanthus can struggle to survive another year or two but usually don’t; pansies can be short-lived perennials in good conditions but again, will probably die when planted out unless your thumbs are particularly green.

You may also find your climate is too warm for bulbs to bloom again, unless you put them in the fridge to chill for six weeks.

Potted zygocactus, on the other hand, will live and bloom despite extreme neglect for decades. Just water when they start to wilt and potted African violets will delight you for years, as well as provide leaves to give to a friend so they can grow their own, too. Just plant the leaf stem in African violet potting mix and keep moist.

Potted orchids will bloom for decades if you put them outside in dappled sunlight (no frost) and keep them moist, though they may not bloom every single year, and probably not the first one after flowering indoors. But don’t throw them way — just find them a sheltered nook by the shed or on the edge of the patio, and water when you remember. You may be delighted by a giant stalk with a head full of blooms emerging in a year or two.

The case against buying potted bloomers

Many potted flowers for sale now will be at their absolute prime — the flowers are open and totally tempting. But that also means they may be past their best in a week and, as mentioned before, some of them may die completely come spring. Potted bloomers are also much more expensive than potting up your own seedlings or bulbs.

It’s really a matter of weighing up how much happiness you’ll get per dollar — and how many dollars you have to spend. If money were no object I’d fill the lawn around my study with potted cyclamen and primulas just now — a gaudy clash of many colours is exactly what I need. On the other hand, I can mooch down the path to admire the red and pink nerines I did remember to put in this summer and enjoy their beauty instead.

Just remember, if you buy potted bloomers now check what sort they are. Consider whether they’ll bloom again next year if you keep them or plant them out. Give them a sunny spot, water and tucker to keep them flowering longer. And next February or March think of the flowerless days of mid-winter and vow to make sure next winter is bright and blooming … cheaply, with flowers of your own.

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Zara Australia collection

From 9am Wednesday the countdown will be over, Zara’s first Australian store will open its doors in Sydney.

The store, located on Pitt Street within the new Westfield Sydney, offers a customised fashion range in woman’s, men’s and children’s clothing.

A Melbourne store is also in the works to be opened on Bourke Street within weeks.

Zara will stock the latest trends in garments and fabrics that are appropriate for the autumn-winter season and their collection will be constantly updated twice weekly with new merchandise being delivered to the store.

Flick through these images of what you can expect to see in the new Zara store in Sydney from 9am on Wednesday.

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

Zara’s customised fashion range

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True Confessions Agony Aunt: Why won’t he put me first?

Morgage strife

Image: Getty, posed by models

I have been in a relationship for four years. My boyfriend has three children who are 19, 16 and 14 years old who live with their mum in the same village as my boyfriend.

We live 150 kms apart and I don’t want to move to live with him until we buy a house together but he has now told me that he cannot force the sale of the house if his ex-wife has not agreed the sale and also if the youngest son is below eighteen years old.

I don’t want to get a mortgage on my own and he won’t take his name off the title of the house his ex wife lives in as he pays that every month. He says that once his youngest son has left home his ex will sell the house and they can split the profit but I think that if he really loved me he would persuade her to sell now.

He says he still loves me but he cancelled the weekend he was supposed to come to my house due to work pressure. We don’t see enough of each other because he sees his kids one weekend at the flat he rents and he either comes up to see me the other weekend or occasionally I go down to see him.

I know I could get a job near him but I feel I’m doing all the work here and I don’t know if I want to sell my house.

How do I sort this problem out with him? I still love him but don’t want to move down there until the house is sold so that we can move forward as a couple.

If you want to stay with him and your relationship to move forward you must accept that and also put some more effort in yourself.

It sounds as if he’s putting in most of the work here in juggling you and his family and trying to fit everything in but rather than being supportive you’re being picky – if he had to cancel a weekend because of work pressure why didn’t you make the effort to go to him?

Stop and think about this before you criticise him and if necessary take it down to the time you both spend on each other in relation to your actual leisure time and then ask yourself honestly if you are putting all the effort in.

You could rent out your current house if you don’t want to sell it, especially since you seem confident you could get a job near him and look at your future together as a family.

His children have gone through the breakup of their parents’ marriage and you want to add to their stress by demanding that their home is sold.

You’re being totally inflexible about the mortgage – he’s paying it at present and expects a fair share of the profits when the house is eventually sold – and completely unsupportive about his parental responsibilities.

It’s amazing that he still wants anything to do with you but if you want to be part of this family stop putting yourself first and help him.

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Magazine girls prefer pain to flat shoes

Magazine girls prefer pain to flat shoes

They cause more injuries to women than contact sports but it takes more than a cautionary tale, or even a nasty fall to get some women to climb down from their towering high heels.

Women in the magazine world — coined “clackers” for the sound their heels make on the floors of publishing houses in the cult film The Devil Wears Prada — are highly susceptible to the dangers of the killer heel.

In pictures: This season’s hot colour – white

Though stilettos and platforms may subject their wearer to discomfort, injuries and even permanent orthopaedic issues, the amount of shoe-induced injuries being seen by NSW paramedics, teamed with anecdotal evidence sourced from the ACP building, suggest women are accepting the risks and choosing glamour over safety and comfort.

National development manager for Hearst/ACP fashion titles Ann Billington learnt the dangers of this the hard way.

Ann’s incredible collection of stilettoed designer footwear which she estimates amounted to an investment of $30,000, ultimately cost her a great deal more.

An operation to remove painful bunions from Ann’s feet flagged the end of her heel-wearing days 18 months ago.

“I had a fabulous collection of heels and as a result of wearing the wrong shoes, I ruined my feet and now I have to wear flats all the time,” she says.

Ann has now sold most of the shoes that caused her bunions, but despite the damage they caused, she has no regrets about subjecting her feet to horrifying heels and perilous points for so many years.

“I don’t regret the shoes, I regret having the operation,” she says. “I wish I still had my bunion and I could wear my heels… but I’d be in a lot of pain.”

Though Ann is much more comfortable when she walks, she’s disappointed with how it has changed her.

“I’m not me anymore,” she says. “I was always somebody who loved wearing heels and spent all my money on them. I can’t wear flamboyant outfits that only look good with heels any more, I have to be more sensible.”

But The Weekly’s style director Judith Cook assures any outfit can still look chic sans heel.

Throughout her illustrious career in fashion and magazines Judith has seen her share of injuries caused by wearing heels and has even had some herself. Now advocating the flat shoe she assures us there are some stylish alternatives.

“I definitely think you can look chic in a flat shoe — I mean look at Coco Chanel and the gorgeous flats she brought in.”

Judith advises teaming a flat shoe with a longer skirt for the more mature, or a very short skirt for younger wearers. And while flats may carry a reputation for being boring, the choice is no longer limited.

“You don’t buy a boring flat shoe, you buy something with a bit of interest,” Judith says. “We all like brogues and there are plenty of designer flats with embellishments like bows and sequins. They’re incredible.”

Related: High heels more dangerous than sport

But still, there’s always a need for a sky high heel, Judith says, listing occasions like Fashion Week and weddings.

“It’s extreme torture sometimes, but I could never say to anyone they should never wear them,” she says.

Your say: Have you ever suffered any heel-related injuries?

Video: Taking the pain out of high heels

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David Arquette ‘sick’ of talking about Courteney Cox

Courteney Cox and David Arquette.

Courteney Cox and David Arquette at the premiere of Scream 4 in Los Angeles last week

David Arquette ‘sick’ of talking about Courteney Cox By Kerry Warren

Courteney Cox’s estranged husband David Arquette has vowed to stop talking about their marriage woes.

The 39-year-old actor has given dozens of candid interviews about Courteney, 46, since they separated last October after 11 years of marriage.

In pictures: Most shocking royal scandals

He has since revealed intimate details of their relationship and publicly dissected why it fell apart. He now says he has spoken about the split so much it bores even him.

“I’m sick of it myself,” David told Us Weekly. “I think I’m trying to talk about it so much so you guys get sick of it.”

David told the magazine he initially spoke out to correct the lies the media was reporting, but it quickly got out of control.

“All of this started because there are lies out there a lot of the time, and I wanted to be honest and speak my mind,” he said. “Now it’s evolved into so much, but we have a movie that came out yesterday and it’s on people’s minds I guess.”

Related: Scream 4 review

David and Courteney have been thrust back into the spotlight this week with the release of Scream 4. The couple met on the set of the first film in the horror franchise in 1996 and married three years later. They have one child, six-year-old daughter Coco.

Your say: Do you think celebrities should give tell-all interviews about their relationships?

Video: Courteney Cox’s first post-split interview

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ANZAC tributes

ANZAC tributes

The students at South Coogee Public School wrote these poems to honour our soldiers.

Anzac day is the day that soldiers went to war

Never ever did they give up

Zealous soldiers fighting for their country

All the soldiers did their best to fight the war

Courage they used to fight the war.

Determination they used.

Always they were determined to fight the war

Young soldiers they were separated from their family

With their hair slightly whiter, their step not quite so sure

They march proudly as they did a year before

They’re the ones who showed courage all the way

They’re the ones who made our lives as good as today

From the rugged hillside of Gallipoli to the sand of Almein

To the death of some, those memories will remain

The airmen and sailors who died at bay

Those fighters will be remembered o this day

They fought and fought through jungles and sand

And other mysterious and unbrown lands

Their blood lies in all different trails

Their courage never ever did fail

Fathers, sons, and all who died

While mothers and daughters all but cried

When a bugle call them to cross that great divide

They will wait on the other side

Lest we forget

We remember the people in the Anzac war by closing our eyes for a minute of silence on the 25th of April. My dad is in the army and knows some people who, sadly, died. Soldiers pretended they were 18, when they were only 14, to fight for our country. We also make cookies to celebrate the joy of the war being over.

We also have a parade, and my dad goes in it every year. My family wakes up at 6:00 of the exact time for the minute of silence at Coogee RSL. Last of all, we make black and red poppy flowers.

LEST WE FORGET

ANZAC day is a day of remembrance. To me, it means to thank those who sacrificed their lives for us for our freedom and for us to have Rights.

My dad is in the Army and I am proud because he protects and saves our country.

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The happiest baby in the world!

The happiest baby in the world!

Little Joseph Henry gave his mum and dad a huge smile…from the womb.

Excitedly watching the ultrasound screen, Louise Henry couldn’t wipe the smile from her face as she waited to catch the first glimpse of her unborn child. At 17 weeks pregnant, she was overjoyed to see her baby’s face, hands and feet for the first time.

But as she and her husband Sam beamed at the blurry image before them, neither one could believe their eyes – their little man was smiling right back at them!

“Your primary concern at that stage is that you have a healthy baby, but to see the foetus smiling was absolutely fantastic,” says Sam happily.

And when their gynaecologist explained he’d never seen such a young baby smile in his entire 40-year career, the proud parents knew they had a very special child on the way.

“It was wonderful to see and we hoped it was a reflection of how safe and secure he felt,” says Sam.

Now, at three-months-old, Joseph is still a little bundle of joy. The gorgeous bub giggles happily at home and his parents have no trouble getting him to turn on the charm for the camera. And while the little chap isn’t too worried about anything more than his next feed and clean nappies, everyone who’s seen the scan has been blown away by his apparently cheerful countenance.

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Harry and Chelsy set a date

The palace prepares a royal wedding feast!

The two are making wedding plans, but Harry doesn’t want to steal the limelight from his brother just now.

Come April 29, when William and Kate are declared husband and wife, Prince Harry will officially become the most eligible royal bachelor in the world. But there’s still only one girl on the 26-year-old prince’s mind.

After seven tumultuous years and a recent eight-month separation, Harry’s romance with his on-off girlfriend Chelsy Davy, 25, is back on track and more passionate than ever.

“Now that they’ve spent some time apart, Harry is convinced that she’s the one,” a source close to the couple tells Woman’s Day. Not wanting to steal the limelight from William, Harry is keeping his plans quiet for now, but the insider says he and Chelsy “have made a secret pact that they’ll marry in two years”.

Trainee lawyer Chelsy quit Britain for her native South Africa last June, tired of sharing Harry with his military duties.

“She understood it was important to him, but it still made her angry that he was away,” says a friend of Harry. “The relationship cooled off, but they stayed in touch.”

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