Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Your next holiday: Canada’s west

From spectacular scenery, fine restaurants, island retreats, ski resorts and White Christmases, British Columbia and Alberta serve up a tantalising array of tourism options.
Ice skating at Lake Louise

Vancouver

The locals call Vancouver “Lycra city” because they’re always outside exercising — walking, jogging, ice skating — in the stretchy stuff.

Like Sydney, it’s an outdoors city with a spectacular harbour and conveniently close beaches. A short ferry trip away is Vancouver Island, a wilderness of pine forests and log cabins for the rugged, chic resorts for the pampered, and Victoria, British Columbia’s historic capital city, for the urbane.

Three hours inland, you’ll find snow-sports central, Whistler, in the Coastal Ranges, as famous for the 2010 Winter Olympics as it is for employing every other young Aussie in search of a job on the slopes.

In downtown Vancouver, shimmering glass towers overshadow uber-cool inner-city terraces with gallery cafes, shops and some of country’s best restaurants. Yes, Vancouver is billed as one of Canada’s top dining-out cities. Fine food, great sights and beautiful surrounds — what more could anyone want? Here are some of highlights of this frontier city:

Grouse Mountain is an ideal first destination — whatever the season — as the views of the city are good and in the colder months it’s a fantastic introduction to the city’s wintery wonderland. It’s a 15-minute drive from downtown Vancouver to the base of the mountain, where there’s a scenic SkyRide to the peak.

During December, this snowy haven is a child’s paradise, with a Santa in residence, sleigh rides around the mountain through snow-covered forests, treasure hunts and ice-skating to the sound of cheerful carols in the background. In summer, the wildflowers are spectacular. The fee for the return SkyRide ($34.95 for adults and $12.95 for children) makes it one of the city’s great bargains.

The Vancouver Trolley Company offers red trolley car tours through the city, Chinatown and around Stanley Park, allowing you to get on and off at 23 stops along the way.

Vancouver Aquarium will enthral kids with the haunting beauty of the white beluga whales and the antics of playful sea otters, sea lions and seals.

Capilano Suspension Bridge is a 137m plank bridge crosses the Capilano River and soars 70m above the rugged Capilano Canyon, swaying perilously in the breeze.

Treetops Adventure at Capilano Suspension Bridge and Park — where a cable bridge is suspended between a series of treetops, 33m above the forest floor — offers an extraordinary aerial walk. During December, you can visit at night to experience Canyon Lights, with all the bridges glowing with 200,000 fairy lights. Cost is $25 for a family of four.

Stanley Park, Vancouver’s 400-hectare evergreen oasis, comes to life throughout December, with a display of more than a million festive lights. We spent hours meandering along a maze of illuminated paths, gasping at the splendour of the displays, warming ourselves with massive mugs of hot chocolate and munching on salty roasted chestnuts.

Whistler

Drive two hours east along the Sea-to-Sky Highway and you’ll arrive at one of the world’s great ski resorts: Whistler. If skiing isn’t your priority, visit the Tube Park and spend hours zooming down the slopes in rubber doughnut-like tubes — great for families.

For young skiers, there are also some of the best ski destinations with bear-viewing tours, escorted mountain walks, kayaking around five lakes, four championship golf courses, horseback adventures, mountain bike adventures, trout fishing, summer skiing on Blackcomb’s glacier and Zip Trekking (where you slide at high speed on a flying fox between tree platforms over a river valley and get an exhilarating three-hour tour of a 1000-year old-growth forest valley).

Vancouver Island

Just a short ferry journey away from Vancouver, Vancouver Island offers an ideal daytrip or weekend. It’s British Columbia’s whale-watching capital (killer whalers) and an ideal place to kayak with dolphins, trek through pristine forests, camp or simply stay at a lodge and enjoy a pristine beach and refreshingly cold water. If you need an urban fix, visit Victoria, BC’s capital, a laid-back historic port.

Banff and Lake Louise

Banff is a charming little frontier town high in the Rockies in the neighbouring state of Alberta. On the high street, you’ll find timber buildings with cafes, book shops and boutiques and an occasional elk wandering around as if it owns the place.

In winter, it serves as base for three ski resorts: Lake Louise (63km away), Sunshine (16km) and Mt Norquay (10km). But for those who don’t like snow, summer is the ideal time to visit with either Banff or Jasper National parks, both on the town’s doorstep. Two of the largest parks in the Canadian Rockies, both have healthy populations of grizzly bears, moose, caribou and wolves.

Hot springs bubble to the surface at Banff and the Solace Spa at Fairmont Banff Springs hotel is world famous. Here you can soak in a pool filled with hot mineral water under a great glass dome, contemplating the mountain peaks, before slipping outside for a quick roll in the pristine snow in winter or a frigid pool in summer.

It’s an imposing Scottish-style baronial hotel with lofty, vaulted halls and fossils in its flagstone floors. Located at the junction of two glacial valleys, with commanding views, it’s a palatial labyrinth of columns, minstrel galleries and huge leaded windows, with 700 guest rooms, 12 restaurants and 35 shops.

Less than an hour’s drive away is Lake Louise, a spectacular stretch of turquoise water framed by awe-inspiring mountains. On the waterfront is the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, a good base to go trekking around the lake or just sit on the terrace and admire the view.

White Christmas in Canada

Discover a winter wonderland on a five-day Canadian guided holiday with Trafalgar Tours. The adventure begins in cosmopolitan Vancouver and continues on the Snow Train to Jasper with its private sleeping compartments, gourmet meals and the 360-degree mountain views from its famous dome cars.

In Jasper, the land of a million Christmas trees, there are guided walks to mesmerising frozen waterfalls and ice-covered trees. Heritage log cabins at The Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge combine luxury with the essence of the Rockies, complete with roaring log fires.

The tour continues along the spectacular mountain drive, the Icefields Parkway, before stopping over at The Fairmont Banff Springs hotel in the very heart of the Banff National Park. After a visit to Lake Louise and the Chateau Lake Louise hotel, it’s on to the famous wine country of the Okanagan Valley and a visit to Victoria on Vancouver Island.

Travel essentials

Trafalgar

Visit Tourism Vancouver, Hello British Columbia, Vancouver Island and Banff and Lake Louise.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

22 Britannia Road

22 Britannia Road

22 Britannia Road by Amanda Hodgkinson, Fig Tree, $32.95

There is no shortage of stories inspired by the terrors of World War II and the Nazi occupation of Europe, but Amanda Hodgkinson’s debut novel is so much more than that — beneath the story’s wartime bunker is a complex, intriguing and, in snatched moments, deeply sensual love story punctuated with dark surprises at every turn.

Silvana and Janusz seem made for each other when they first meet in small-town Poland in 1937. Barely into adulthood and immediately giddy with sexual attraction, they are eager to explore their lust as it develops into love.

Silvana, a pretty peasant girl with a strained relationship with her tragic drunken mother, easily loses her heart to Janusz, who has a natural bent for fixing mechanical things, but whose upwardly mobile family is eager for him to go to university and study law or enter the priesthood.

Yet this is not to be. Marriage follows a surprise pregnancy and the couple’s upbeat new life in a flat in Warsaw is cut brutally short by the war. Janusz heads off to fight, leaving Silvana and their baby son, Aurek, in the wrong place when the Germans invade.

What happens to each during the shambolic war and how that plays out when they are finally reunited on British shores provides the framework for a compelling and powerful study of love and loss in its many guises.

Told in alternate chapters, which jump both between each of our protagonists and forward and back in time, the author also manages to create a sharp sense of dramatic tension as painful secrets of unspeakable wartime trauma are revealed.

At the end of the war, Silvana and her son are discovered living like animals in the forest and this theme of the sanctuary of nature in its wildest forms runs through the book. When Silvana comes together with her husband in a new and strange land, nothing is the same and the scars of what each has endured seem to conspire to tear them apart.

Hodgkinson’s language is precise and spare, reflecting the uncomfortable situations that our pair continually find themselves in, but her imagery is dense and evocative, making the emotional subtext of the novel resonate long after the final page.

About the author

Books were an essential part of growing up for Amanda, whose parents ran a second-hand bookshop in a village in southern England. “I was 10 when we had the bookshop and I began to read obsessively. That was when I decided I wanted to write,” says Amanda, 47.

22 Britannia Road is her first novel. “It took me several years to write. I was working at the same time and I had my two daughters and family to care for. But the last year I spent on [it] was different. I gave up work, ignored the housework and wrote every day. During the final two weeks, I wrote through the day, slept for a couple of hours, then got up in the night and began again. I think that kind of devotion and passion is what a book needs.”

JOIN THE AWW BOOK CLUB

In 30 words or less, tell us what is great about a book you are reading at the moment. Post your review below, email [email protected], or write to The Great Read, GPO Box 4148, Sydney, NSW 2001.

The best critique will be printed in the June issue of The Weekly and the writer will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95.

Please ensure you leave an email address you can be contacted on in order to be eligible for the prize.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Gok Wan launches Australian style tour

Gok Wan launches Westfield Australia tour

To the delight of fashionistas, everyday women and fans of the TV showHow to Look Good Naked, UK fashion guru Gok Wan launched his Westfield Style tour on Wednesday.

Kicking things off at the Pitt Street Mall Sydney store, Gok got his tour off to a cheeky start by de-robing four models to reveal the latest autumn-winter trends, which were body painted on.

He said his tour would help women feel more comfortable with their bodies and the clothes they wear.

“Our brave lasses showed us that when we strip fashion right back, it’s all about embracing your body shape and dressing for it,” he said.

“By accentuating your God-given curves everyone can look fabulous! We can’t wait to show all the Aussie ladies who’ll visit us on tour how to make the most of what they’ve got ? ‘cos if you’ve got it, flaunt it!”

Known as “Fairy Gok Mother” his tour promises to empower women to dress for their body shapes giving them some seasonal style hints along the way.

Gok will visit 10 Westfield centres across NSW, ACT, SA, Queensland and Victoria.

Tour details:

NSW and ACT

Thursday, March 31, Westfield Parramatta from 6pm to 7pm

Friday, April 1, Westfield Miranda from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Saturday, April 2, Westfield Belconnen from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Sunday, April 3, Westfield Kotara from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Tuesday, April 5, Westfield Hornsby from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

SA

Wednesday, April 6, Westfield Marion from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Queensland

Thursday, April 7, Westfield Chermside from 6pm to 7pm

Friday, April 8, Westfield Carindale from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Victoria

Saturday, April 9, Westfield Southland from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Sunday, April 10, Westfield Fountain gate from 12.30pm to 1.30pm

Related video:Gok reveals the worst bra crimes you can commit.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Can natural remedies cure arthritis?

Can natural remedies cure arthritis?

Thinkstock

Twenty years ago, Stephen Eddey was confined to a wheelchair, unable to walk and in constant agony due to his arthritis.

Today, he is living a normal life, completely pain-free and he credits natural medicine for helping him get his life back.

In pictures: Surprising things that cause headaches

Stephen was in his early twenties when he was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis, a form of arthritis that affects the spine and pelvis. Within months he was paralysed by the pain and spent six years in and out of hospital, relying on a wheelchair to get around.

As the years went by, his condition got so bad he decided to turn to what was then the shady “dark side” of medicine: natural health. Shelving his scepticism, Stephen went to see a naturopath, who put him on a healthy diet with surprising results.

“I had been in hospital and a wheelchair for years and nothing helped,” Stephen says. “So I went to what was then considered one of those ‘crazy’ naturopaths and he put me on a new diet.

“After about a month I thought, ‘Oh finally, these pills are starting to work after six years.’ Eventually I forgot to take them. In the past, forgetting my pills would have crippled me. In the past I had been in so much pain I would dissolve my anti-inflammatory pills in water so they would be absorbed quicker and ease my pain faster.

“But this time it didn’t make a difference when I forgot the pills so I stopped taking them all together. After about a month the new diet kicked in and the pain just went away.”

Today, Stephen says he is “100 percent fine”. He walks easily and no longer suffers from any form of joint pain. After his positive experience with a naturopath, he decided to become one himself, studying for a bachelor’s degree in complementary medicine and a master’s degree in health science. He is currently the principal of Health Schools Australia and is keen to share his experiences with others so they experience some of the relief he has found.

“People don’t know about what natural medicine can do for them,” Stephen says. “I advise them to go and see a natural health professional. What have you got to lose? You can waddle around and complain about your arthritis all day or you can do something about it.”

Arthritis Australia president emeritus Dr Mona Marabani is pleased Stephen has found relief using natural medicine, but has some words of warning for others expecting to be miraculously cured.

She says the vast majority of complementary therapies are not backed up by scientific research, and therefore are not guaranteed — or even likely— to work. Despite this, she encourages arthritis suffers to experiment with natural therapies as long as they tell their doctors.

“We at Arthritis Australia are not for or against complementary therapies, we are for anything that may help people with arthritis,” Dr Marabani says.

“We recognise that people may want to try these things but the most important thing from our point of view is that people let their doctors know because some of them may interact with medications.

“You’ve also got to be aware that you can’t expect too much of these things. Not a week goes by when there’s not a new ‘miracle cure’ being touted for arthritis and largely they’ve proven to be a disappointment.”

Dr Marabani also advises against adopting extreme diets to relieve arthritis symptoms.

“No food has been proven to improve arthritis and lots of people go to extraordinary extremes with various fad diets that claim to cure arthritis,” she says.

“The take-home message is that a healthy, balanced diet and avoiding obesity about the only things that are proven to influence arthritis.”

Related: Tea lovers warned of arthritis risk

Arthritis is commonly thought of as one disease but it is actually an umbrella term for more than 100 medical conditions that affect the musculoskeletal system.

Arthritis sufferers experience pain, stiffness, inflammation and damage to joint cartilage, which can make even the most basic tasks impossible.

An estimated 3.85 million Australians suffer from some form of arthritis, and 2.4 million of these are under the age of 65.

National Arthritis Awareness Week runs from March 27 to April 2, 2011.

For more information about arthritis, visit Arthritis Australia.

Your say: Have you had any success treating arthritis with natural medicine?

Video: An investigation into the pain-relieving effects of rosehip.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Princess Diana had ‘back-up’ wedding dress

Princess Diana's 'back-up' wedding dress revealed

Princess Diana and Prince Charles at their 1981 wedding

The designer of Princess Diana’s famous wedding dress was so worried the gown would be leaked to the public before the big day she secretly designed a second gown, details of which have been revealed for the first time.

Elizabeth Emmanuel was thrilled when the young Lady Diana Spencer commissioned her to create a gown for her 1981 wedding to Prince Charles.

The dress Elizabeth made for Diana became one of the most famous wedding gowns of all time, but the designer has now revealed it wasn’t the only frock made for the occasion.

In pictures: The most amazing royal wedding dresses

Elizabeth ordered a second dress made in secret so Diana would have another option if information about her first choice was published in the media.

“At the time we wanted to make absolutely sure that the dress was a surprise,” Elizabeth told People magazine. “Had the secret of the real dress got out it’s possible that Diana would actually have worn this one.”

The back-up gown is made from the same ivory silk taffeta as the dress Diana did wear on the day and features the same voluminous ruffles around the neck, but without the antique lace.

Elizabeth designed it “in case of emergency” and had her seamstresses secretly make it, but never ordered the finishing touches — such as beading and embroidery around the skirt — to be completed.

Diana was never told about the stand-by gown because Elizabeth didn’t want to unnecessarily worry her.

“We didn’t try it on Diana. We never even discussed it,” Elizabeth said. “We wanted to make sure that we had something there; it was for our own peace of mind, really.”

Elizabeth said she didn’t envy the designer chosen to create the gown for the upcoming wedding of Diana’s son Prince William to Kate Middleton. Elizabeth didn’t know who is working on Kate’s dress, but said she has no idea how they plan to keep it a secret.

“They’re keeping quiet on the designer this time, probably to avoid all the hassle that we had,” Elizabeth said. “It was really difficult and we didn’t have to contend with cameras in phones etc, like you have today. How do you keep something secret like that? I have no idea.”

Prince William and Kate Middleton are due to marry in London’s Westminster Abbey on April 29. William celebrated his stag night last weekend, inviting 22 friends to a private party at a country estate outside London.

All guests were sworn to secrecy and have refused to reveal what occurred during the evening.

Related: Princess Diana’s Britain

St James’s Palace has confirmed the party took place, but did not release any further details.

“I can confirm that Prince William’s stag party happened this weekend,” a spokesman told the UK’s Daily Telegraph. “It was an entirely private event and we don’t intend to make any further comment.”

Your say: Do you think Prince William should have had a wilder stag party?

Video: Has Kate Middleton chosen Alexander McQueen to design her wedding dress?

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Elizabeth Taylor’s lovely lashes a ‘genetic mutation’

Elizabeth Taylor's lovely lashes a 'genetic mutation'

Elizabeth Taylor was famous for her violet-coloured eyes, which were perfectly framed by thick, luscious eyelashes. But not many people know that what appeared to be the work of several generous coats of mascara was actually a genetic mutation that caused the Hollywood legend to be born with a double row of eyelashes.

Elizabeth’s parents were said to be horrified when a doctor told them their baby had a “mutation”, but quickly reconsidered their dismay when the physician explained how it would affect the little girl.

In pictures: Elizabeth Taylor’s amazing life

“Well, now that doesn’t sound so terrible at all,” Elizabeth’s mother, Sara Sothern, said to herself when she was told about her daughter’s disorder, journalist J Randy Taraborrelli wrote in his biography of the film star, Elizabeth.

Current medical research suggests Elizabeth’s extra eyelashes were caused by a mutation at the FOXC2 gene. The mutation causes what is medically known as distichiasis, a rare disorder that causes an “accessory row” of eyelashes.

While it seems like a sexy affliction, distichiasis can actually cause a series of problems, including eye irritation, watery eyes and an eventual reduction in vision.

Your say: Do you know anyone who has unusual eyelashes?

Video: Remembering Elizabeth Taylor

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Katy Perry’s mum hates her flashy cleavage

Getty

It’s no secret that Katy Perry’s mum, evangelical Christian preacher Mary Perry Hudson, is less than impressed by her daughter’s image, but now she has revealed exactly what she has an issue with.

In a proposal for the book she is planning to write about her daughter’s career, Mary said she has a problem with her daughter’s cleavage being on public display, the New York Post reported.

“No mother wants to see the top of her daughter’s boobs,” Mary wrote about Katy’s suggestive outfits that she says have affected her Christian ministry.

In the proposal she explained her horror when she once saw Katy backstage at a concert.

“Katy stepped out from behind the changing doors in a tiny risqué costume,” Mary wrote in the proposal.

“No mother wants to see the top of her daughter’s boobs … My first instinct was to order her back behind those doors and demand she put something else on … However, I had no problem letting my eyebrows say what I wouldn’t allow my mouth to utter.”

She says she also has issues with Katy’s racy lyrics and her “foul-mouthed” husband, Russell Brand.

Mary said she was in two minds when Katy’s career first took off and while she could have become a church leader due to her following, the singer’s lyrics weren’t quite what she hoped for.

“I recognised the psalmist gift in her performance,” Mary wrote. “Yet she sang out, ‘I kissed a girl and I liked it’, while thousands joined her. One part of my heart soared … The other part broke for the thousands of hungry souls being fed something that didn’t nourish their spirit, but fed their flesh.”

Comparing their parent-child relationship to the likes of Billy Ray Cyrus and Miley Cyrus, and Jon Voight and Angelina Jolie, Mary said she can’t compete with the money, the fame, the network and the people surrounding her daughter.

She reportedly makes it clear in the proposal that “this memoir is … not Christian proselytising or a Katy Perry tell-all”, but a note about target markets.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Elizabeth Taylor late to her own funeral

Elizabeth Taylor late to her own funeral

Elizabeth Taylor was late to her own funeral last week — at her own request.

The 79-year-old actress was laid to rest in a small and private ceremony at Los Angeles’ Forest Lawn Memorial Park on Thursday.

In pictures: Elizabeth Taylor’s amazing life

As per Elizabeth’s final wishes, her casket arrived 15 minutes late to the funeral, which was attended by a small group of family members and close friends.

“She even wanted to be late for her own funeral,” a family representative said in a media release.

Elizabeth’s casket was closed and decorated with her favourite flowers: gardenias, violets and lilies-of-the-valley. She was buried near her long-time friend Michael Jackson in the cemetery’s Great Mausoleum.

The funeral took place just one day after Elizabeth passed away in Los Angeles’ Cedars Sinai Medical Center of congestive heart failure. The speedy burial is believed to be partly due to Elizabeth’s strict Jewish beliefs, and partly to avoid a media circus.

The funeral was conducted by Rabbi Jerry Cutler and lasted for one hour. Elizabeth’s son Michael Wilding, daughter Liza Todd, grandson Tarquin Wilding and actor friend Colin Farrell gave readings and another grandson, Rhys Tivey played ‘Amazing Grace’ on a trumpet.

Related: Elizabeth Taylor leaves millions to AIDS charity

The funeral ended years of speculation about what Elizabeth’s plans were for her final resting place. Some people claimed she would be interred next to her parents at Los Angeles’ Westwood Village cemetery, but others insisted she would honour a promise to her ex-husband Richard Burton by requesting she be buried next to him.

Richard was one of Elizabeth’s great loves and the pair were married twice. During the height of their relationship, Richard and Elizabeth reportedly agreed to be buried next to each other in Pontrhydyfen in Wales. This burial option seemed unlikely, however, as Richard ended up being buried in Switzerland, reportedly for “tax purposes”.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

How to personalise hand-me-downs

Thinkstock

eBay’s style director recently described reusing clothes as “the height of chic”. Here’s how to customise your hand-me-downs to make them fashionable and fantastic for the next generation.

Add fad

An old shirt or singlet can be made funky and new (not to mention completely unique) with a few embellishments. Stick buttons, sequins, beading or rhinestones on with fabric glue, tie little knots with coloured string or sew lace or ruffles onto sleeves and necklines.

Shape

To change the shape of baggy hand-me-down tops, sew elastic around the bust to tighten it. For a billowing skirt, tack it up in various places with cotton to create a gathered gypsy skirt.

Creative cutter

Sew together old pockets from shorts or jackets to make a funky belt, use the lapel from an old dinner jacket to make a sexy backless waistcoat, or turn old, laddered tights into useful hair ties.

Dye

For faded or discoloured clothes, use fabric dye. Make sure the clothes to be dyed are clean first and that you follow the instructions on the packaging. Alternatively, use bleach to give a coloured T-shirt the tie-dye effect. It’s great for the kids’ dress-up box.

Think vintage

Remember that fashions tend to come back around. If you have lots of clothes that nobody would want now but that could be wearable one day, pack them away neatly in a “vintage” box. Your daughter will thank you in 10 years’ time when you hand that treasure chest of authentic, trendy items over to her.

Old bag

Sew patches onto stains or unwanted logos on old bags to make them good as new. Alternatively, you could change the strap or attach badges, brooches or beaded safety pins to it.

Push the button

Change boring buttons on shirts to shiny or coloured ones to make them more feminine. Now, with the help of a thin belt, your daughter can turn her dad’s old business shirt into a cute sundress!

Scissor chic

Cut off jeans or long pants to make cute shorts or capri pants. Use tailor’s chalk to mark the line to cut, turn up the ends once, then iron. Repeat and sew the fold in place.

Sew

Embroider patterns such as flowers or butterflies onto collars of shirts, lapels of jackets or the back of singlets, making sure you sketch in the pattern first with tailor’s chalk. You could also use fabric pens on handed-down T-shirts to create a modern, abstract design.

Tailor

To alter old clothes to fit a new owner, turn them inside out and ask the owner to put it on. Pull in loose seams and pin so that it fits comfortably. Take it off the wearer, alter the seams with needle and thread and finally, remove the pins.

This article is brought to you by Vanish Napisan. To find out more on how to keep whites “crystal white”, head to www.vanishstains.com.au.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5040

Kate Ritchie’s ready for a baby

Kate Ritchie's ready for a baby

The pitter patter of tiny feet may not be far away for the actress and her husband.

But is there another reason Kate is positively glowing right now? Could the former Home And Away and Underbelly star be basking in the joyous discovery that she’s going to be a mother? Her manager will not comment on pregnancy talk but Kate has been spotted buying baby clothes, which she says are for “a friend”, has cut back on exercise and has refrained from alcohol recently.

When Kate, 32, stepped out last Wednesday as ambassador for Ski Activ Digestion yogurt, she was wearing a loose fitting dress, provoking more speculation.“She’s obviously in a very happy place in her life right now,” said one guest at the function. “She was literally glowing.”

Kate, who tied the knot with Stuart in a beautiful and intimate ceremony in Tasmania last September, also seems to be doing all she can to disguise her body.

“Kate usually wears either tighter-fitting dresses or jeans,” reveals a source. “She has a good body, but she’s changed her wardrobe almost completely lately, which makes you wonder what she’s hiding.”

Related stories


Advertisement