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Late snow season holiday deals

Whether you're seeking a romantic sojourn, weekend ski break or family holiday, ski resorts in Australia and New Zealand all offer great late snow-season deals and a host of other attractions.
Skii slopes

Romantics: Thredbo, NSW

True romantics hopefully don’t need much more than their own company, but there’s nothing wrong with a home among the snow gums with snow drifts out the window and a warm fire inside. Surrounded by the Snowy Mountains, with a river bubbling through the village, Thredbo is a wonderful place for strolling, eating out and getting cosy in a stylish hotel or a well-appointed apartment. Couples in search of romance and thrills in the snow will love its challenging terrain and cruising its groomed supertrails. Also on offer is a sports and leisure centre, where romantics can peel off their ski gear, slip into their bathers and frolic in a 50-metre pool.

One of the most romantic lodging choices are the ski-in/ski-out Snowbound Chalets. Closest to the slopes, with direct skier access to the Crackenback Supertrail, they also offer open fires. The Thredbo Alpine Hotel is another good choice, with its fine service, facilities and proximity to the lifts. If things get really serious, Thredbo even specialises in weddings.

The Schuss Bar is the place to go straight after skiing, but the Alpine Hotel’s Lounge Bar is an excellent option for a romantic cocktail or vodka martini, while the piano plays in the background.

Bookings: 1800 020 589; www.thredbo.com.au

Young professionals: Mount Hotham, Victoria

Once if you’re time-poor, but wanted a quick break in the snow that would impress your colleagues, Hotham was the place for you — 50 minutes flying time from Melbourne Airport, or 85 minutes from Sydney. On arrival at Hotham airport, you would hop into a shuttle and be relaxing in your lodge and be halfway through a bottle of wine before the other snow-goers had escaped the city traffic.

Then Qantas Link suspended its flights (temporarily, we hope) at the start of this season, due to a shortage of pilots, and now you have to charter your own plane or just get behind the wheel and drive.

There are a broad range of lodging choices: apartments and snow chalets at Dinner Plain Village, which is closest to the airport; or at Hotham itself, apartments such as Zirky’s or chalets to share at Hotham Heights, right above the slopes.

The sensationally designed Hotham Heights buildings are in The Basin, right beside Hotham’s main lifts. With their multiple bedrooms, living zones, spas and fireplaces, they work well for groups of young professionals or large families. The Heights also give access to some brilliant skiing and boarding terrain. With the Village Chair just outside the front door and trails below leading to a cruisy collection of runs, such as the Playground and Sun Run, it couldn’t be better situated.

Straight off the slopes, Zirky’s bar is the place to be for tall tales and true about the day’s skiing, plus good food and wine.

Bookings: 1800 354 555; www.hotham.com.au

Teens plus (with or without family): Perisher Blue, NSW

Perisher Blue shines for families, especially those with teenagers. Snowboarding teens will flock to the terrain parks (there are four around the resort to Choose from), all with features such as half-pipes, jumps, fun boxes and rails to fly over and ride along.

These parks are in addition to the 1245 hectares of skiable terrain, 50 lifts and many apr&egrav;s-ski options, making Perisher Blue a seriously big resort by any standard — national or international.

Where to stay? Assuming the teens are still travelling with the family, Perisher has a range of catered lodges, such as The Man From Snowy River or Corroboree, both big enough for young adults to have a little independence, or The Stables, with its excellent self-catering accommodation.

If they’ve left the family behind, then Jindabyne’s The Station Resort is a good option; it’s cheaper and will be full of like-minded young skiers and boarders. There are even under-18 apr&egrav;s-ski options, including night skiing/boarding on Tuesday and Saturday evenings on Perisher’s Front Valley. Over-18s can head straight off the mountain for Jax in the Perisher Centre or find live entertainment at venues around the village, including Perisher Manor, The Man From Snowy River and The Sundeck. The Station Resort also features well-known bands.

Bookings: 1300 655 811; www.perisherblue.com.au

Young families: Falls Creek, Victoria

There’s something about being entirely surrounded by snow, with no cars in the village and being able to ski or board straight from the lodge’s front door to the lifts. There’s also something about having someone else do the cooking that really improves a family holiday.

Apartments aside, Falls Creek still has a core of family-friendly lodges that make for a welcoming and enjoyable holiday.

They include the luxurious, such as Astra, with its exceptional food and vodka bar, and the well-appointed, but slightly more sedate Attunga. In the mid-range, consider the Falls Creek Hotel, while families on more of a budget could look at lodges such as Cooroona or Ripparoo.

As well as the convenience of being catered for, ski lodges offer something of the traditional, hosted alpine holiday and many of Falls Creek’s hosts really know their business. The village also has the best range of restaurants in any of the Victorian snowfields.

Falls Creek has reliable snow cover, well-built terrain parks with half-pipes/super-pipes and a good mix of cruising, challenging and expert runs around the mountain. It also has an excellent snow sports school for younger skiers.

Bookings: 1800 232 557; www.fallscreek.com.au

Escape artists: Mount Buller, Victoria

It may be less than four hours from Melbourne — even less from Melbourne Airport — but Mount Buller feels like it’s a world away from the big city. Some call it Melbourne’s mountain, as it carries some of the city’s features, such as a Bourke Street, named after the state capital’s main drag. Yet Buller is every bit a mountain, with a giant ridge leading to its peak. The skiing and boarding terrain running off that ridge are sensational.

Its shape means there’s shelter in virtually any weather. The way it’s set up offers access to day trippers, who can park their car on the road to the village, then hop on a lift and be riding the mountain’s higher slopes within 10 minutes. People on a longer break have terrific choices of accommodation, with lodges such as the Austrian-style Pension Grimus or the Mount Buller Chalet Hotel on the top shelf. For the same warm mountain hospitality at more of a budget price, the Duck Inn or Ajax are good choices.

Nightlife is also strong at venues such as the Arlberg or the Kooroora. You know the night has ended at Kooroora when they play their signature sign-off song, That’s Amore, but it sometimes doesn’t get played until 3am.

Bookings: 1800 039 049; www.mtbuller.com.au

Jetsetters: Queenstown, New Zealand

Just thinking about Queenstown can make you breathless. Fly in direct from Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane during winter and you’re quickly immersed in the nightlife, the snow sports and extreme pursuits such as bungy jumping, para-sailing, abseiling and any other adrenalin-pumping activity you care to think of. Joe’s Garage is Queenstown all over: a restored mechanic’s garage in the centre of town that just happens to make such good coffee, breakfasts and snacks that it lures people, such as actor Sam Neill, from the local film set.

As the day wears on, dark and mysterious bars such as Bardeaux change their tone from easy-going apr&egrav;s-ski cosiness by the fire to buzzing in-crowd pizzazz as the night grows longer. And there’s choice to match in the mountains. Coronet Peak is the closest ski field — an easy drive along a sealed road to a well-appointed base area, from which the lifts leap up the mountain. It has some groomed terrain, encouraging runs for beginners and challenging pitches for the experts.

The other local area, The Remarkables, is a vast alpine area, where the skiing and the boarding are as good as the views across Lake Wakatipu and back to Queenstown.

Cardrona, also within easy reach halfway along the Crown Range Road between Queenstown and Wanaka, is ideal terrain for families who like to ski together.

Bookings: www.nzski.com

Beauty seekers: Wanaka, New Zealand

If you’ve seen Queenstown and find the pace a bit frenetic, then Wanaka is the mountain town for you. Its spectacular alpine beauty and lovely lake is only matched by the comfort offered by this pretty little town.

The beauty didn’t escape country music superstar Shania Twain — she paid around $20million for a 24,731-hectare sheep holding in the high country near Wanaka in 2005 and that, as much as anything, reflects the town’s evolution. Wanaka now has a broad range of accommodation, some terrific cafes, such as Kai Whakapai, and bars, such as Barluga, and two major ski fields within easy reach. There’s Treble Cone, an excellent option for accomplished skiers and boarders, and Cardrona, with reliable snow cover and abundant cruising terrain for intermediates.

There are two unique venues across the valley from Cardrona — Waiorau Snow Farm, with its groomed cross country trails, and Snow Park, a skateboard heaven in the snow for younger skiers and boarders.

Bookings: www.skilakewanaka.com

Young adventurers: Methven, New Zealand

Here’s a little country backwater that turned itself into a ski town, driven largely by nearby Mount Hutt and its invigorating terrain.

Proximity is one of Methven’s main virtues. It is little more than an hour’s drive from Christchurch airport. Cafes, bars and restaurants are modest in choice, but generally good quality. There’s a range of lodgings that includes top-shelf bed and breakfasts, such as Beluga Lodge, or budget beds at Abisko Lodge. Young travellers are drawn here by the low-cost accommodation and the apr&egrav;s-ski atmosphere at venues such as the Blue Pub, where it all starts on the veranda on a sunny afternoon, then moves inside by the fire as the day wears on.

A 45-minute drive from Methven, Mount Hutt has some gentle beginner’s terrain, easy-riding runs for intermediates and powder for accomplished riders.

Bookings: www.nzski.com

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Jodi Gordon: My life is in ruins

The Home And Away star is left reeling as scandal tears her world apart, Sarah Blake reports.

The party is over for Jodi Gordon, with her boyfriend Ryan Stokes ending their relationship and negotiating the settlement of their multi-million dollar home.

In a moment of madness – when police reportedly found her cowering in Sydney gangster Mark Judge’s home after making a triple-0 call under the delusion that armed intruders were threatening her life – Jodi set off a disastrous series of events.

Now, after reportedly confessing to police that drugs had been used in the hours before the bizarre scene, the Logie-winning Home And Away star’s reputation is set to be further rocked by new revelations about her hard-partying lifestyle.

Signs of Jodi’s sad decline were evident to one Sydney businessman in September last year. Jodi, 24, was on a night out at the Piano Room in Kings Cross – the club owned by John Ibrahim, whose brother Fadi is currently fighting for his life after being shot just over a week ago.

“I wouldn’t call her badly behaved,” the businessman says. “She was charming if a little flirtatious, which is why I was quite shocked when she offered one of my clients a line of cocaine.”

While her image has taken a beating, Jodi’s relationship with Ryan is the most painful casualty.

Removalist vans were last week seen at both the luxury home she has shared for the past two years with Ryan, and at an Elizabeth Bay apartment Jodi bought in January.

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Gordon’s Aussie lover tells: He has no respect for women

In the wake of chef Gordon Ramsay’s treatment of Tracy Grimshaw last week, the Aussie woman who claims to be his former lover tells Katherine Chatfield that he has a problem with women.

Despite Tracy Grimshaw “unreservedly” accepting Gordon Ramsay‘s apology on A Current Affair last week after his foul-mouthed tirade against her, Gordon’s alleged ex, Julie Vidovic, has a message for Tracy – and any other women he comes into contact with: “He’ll do it again,” she tells Woman’s Day.

When Julie first heard of Gordon’s obscene comments about Tracy, she says she wasn’t surprised in the least.

“It was in keeping with his manner,” says Julie, 42, who says she had an affair with Gordon for six months last year. “I truly believe he has no respect for women. He has an obsession with referring to women as farm animals, and as pigs. When we were together there were a few things I found distasteful [about his behaviour], that were denigrating to women.”

That certainly seemed to be the case last week when footage was broadcast on A Current Affair of Gordon referring to a Channel Nine make-up artist’s “fat a***,” making a rude comment about Livinia Nixon’s weather reporting and making suggestive remarks about “rubbing olive oil on nipples” to a visibly disgusted Elise Mooney while she interviewed him for the show.

That, says Julie, was bold proof of Gordon’s attitude to women. “When we were together, he’d make off-the-cuff comments, demeaning other women about their weight or looks. No man who respects women refers to them like that.”

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Michael Hutchence’s mum: My fears for Tigerlily

As tragedy strikes her family again, Patricia Glassop tells Julie Hayne why she’s so worried about the granddaughter she hasn’t seen in three years.

Like any other adoring mother and grandmother, Patricia Glassop keeps mementos of her family around her home. Pictures of her late son Michael Hutchence adorn the walls next to photos of Tigerlily, his only child.

Patricia’s loving photographic timeline of Michael’s life ends abruptly in 1997 – when her rock star son died suddenly.

As Tigerlily approaches her 13th birthday, you’d expect the cherished mementos of happy Christmas Days, birthday parties and family holidays to continue. But the tragic truth is that Patricia hasn’t seen her precious granddaughter in years, and barely knows her.

“I don’t know what her favourite colour is, what movies she likes or what fashion she’s into. I don’t know anything, yet she is my grandchild, my son’s daughter,” says Patricia, speaking exclusively to Woman’s Day.

Now Patricia’s greatest fear – that she may never see her darling Tiger again – has become a tragic reality for her husband and Tiger’s grandpa, Ross Glassop.

Her voice breaking, Patricia reveals that Ross passed away from respiratory failure on Mother’s Day this year without being allowed to say goodbye to the little girl he adored.

“Ross was an airforce pilot and not easily reduced to tears. But when he spoke to me about the possibility of dying without ever seeing or talking to our Tigerlily again, he would just break down.

“It’s totally cruel and unnecessary. I’ve lost my husband and now I have a granddaughter who doesn’t even know her beloved Grandpa Ross has died. We have been completely cut out of her life by Bob Geldof.”

Several months before Ross’s death, Patricia wrote to Bob – Tigerlily’s legal guardian and father to her controversial half-sisters Peaches, Pixie and Fifi – begging him to let Tiger speak to her grandpa. “I explained that Ross was seriously ill, but I never heard back.

“Now it’s too late. I don’t understand how any man could do that. It isn’t only hurting us, it’s hurting Tiger as well.”

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Nikki Webster: I was fat, broke and depressed

The darling of the Sydney Olympics tells Lucy Chesterton how being ripped off by a trusted advisor left her fighting to regain her career and self-esteem.

Looking at Nikki Webster posing confidently for the camera, it’s difficult to believe her practised showgirl smile hides years of personal betrayal that robbed her of her innocence – and most of her money.

With her life and her career now headed back on track, Nikki opens up to Woman’s Day about the dark times that pushed her to the edge.

Fleeing Australia after she says she was duped out of her hard-won earnings by someone in her inner circle, Nikki battled deep depression and some serious body image issues alone in Los Angeles.

“When I went to LA by myself I would call my parents constantly, sitting in a little apartment by myself sobbing and thinking I couldn’t go on any more,” Nikki remembers.

“I had so many low moments. It still gives me shivers when I think about it.”

While she will not name the person she says she trusted with her career and finances, her frank admission that she was fleeced displays a lost innocence, and a deep wariness of people with “greedy, jealous agendas”.

“I was ripped off financially – to an extreme degree – but money is money, and what you remember isn’t the money you lose, but what happened to you,” she says. “People who were very close to me completely destroyed my faith in who I was, and from that point I learnt to distrust people…”

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Bega tragedy mum: I’m in love… and pregnant

A year ago, when Karen Bell’s three children were murdered by her husband, she could see only darkness ahead. Now she tells Glen Williams why she’s finally able to move on.

Only a short while ago, we knew Karen Bell as a woman of unspeakable sorrows – the mother of three beautiful children who were murdered by their own father.

Today, as she talks exclusively to Woman’s Day, some of her anguish has faded. Karen, 34, is in love again – and having a baby.

“This is a joy I haven’t felt for such a long time,” Karen reveals, holding back tears that reveal the disbelief she feels at her life turning around.

“This just happened. I wasn’t planning on it. I didn’t think I’d ever fall in love again.”

June 27 will mark one year since Karen’s estranged husband Gary Poxon committed the ultimate senseless act of vengeful cruelty. He took their children – Jack, 8, Maddie, 7, and baby Bon, 16 months – and killed them by running two hoses into his four-wheel drive and filling it with lethal carbon monoxide. Poxon also died in the car that day on the NSW far south coast.

Karen was in the throes of fleeing her abusive marriage when the tragedy happened. When Woman’s Day first met her late last year, she was still fragile with unrelenting grief. The thought of one day loving again or mothering another child was a faint glimmer.

“It will take a while just to learn to trust someone again,” she told us. “To love again is going to be quite challenging.”

Then Dean Gray came along – a humble, hard-working house painter; a stoic bloke of few words, but a man big enough to show Karen some much needed tenderness…

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 15, 2009.

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Brad and Ange living in separate houses… as Jen moves in

The superstar couple are not even sharing the same home any more after Brad secretly meets up with Jen.

New pictures have cast further doubt on the relationship of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, with neighbours revealing the pair are no longer sleeping under the same roof.

Following the shock revelation by one of Jennifer Aniston‘s chauffers that he recently ferried her to a secret 1am meeting with the movie hunk at New York’s Gramercy Park Hotel – that lasted two hours – things have deteriorated between Brad and Ange.

While the driver told US magazine Star that Brad and Jen merely talked in the hotel’s secluded 18th floor Private Roof Garden Club, it has now been revealed that Brad and Ange, who are parents to six children, reside in separate homes on their sprawling 10-hectare compound on Long Island, New York.

British newspaper The Mail On Sunday reports Brad has been living in the multi-million dollar estate’s main house with Maddox, 7, Pax, 5, Zahara, 4, Shiloh, 3, and 11-month-old twins Knox and Vivienne, while Angelina has taken up residence alone in a much smaller beachfront villa just metres away.

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Madonna wins the right to adopt three-year-old Mercy

After a lengthy legal battle with Malawi’s high court, Madonna will become a mother once again to an African orphan.

The 50-year-old has won an appeal overturning a ruling which barred her from adopting because she wasn’t a resident of the country — the same law that was overlooked for her controversial adoption of David Banda in 2006.

The singer will soon be collecting three-year-old Chifundo Mercy James from the orphanage where they met last year and flying her to London to join the rest of her children, including fellow Malawian adoptee, David.

“I am ecstatic,” Madonna said in a statement. “My family and I look forward to sharing our lives with her.”

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Men’s health: What he needs to know

Nag your man

Men are usually pretty good at looking after their cars, their families and their mates. But sometimes they need a little more encouragement to look after their own health.

So the aim of Men’s Health Week (June 15 – 21) is to raise the level of awareness about men’s medical issues, and encourage our fellas to look after themselves a little better and take more responsibility for their own health.

“Our concerns are that men don’t look after themselves or go to their G.P. nearly as much as women,” explains Dr Robert Walters – a Tasmania-based G.P with a special interest in men’s health.

“They have particular problems in expressing their worries about mental health issues, yet can suffer with them exactly the same as everybody else.

“Women can help by listening when men do finally open up about matters of the heart and mind, and encourage men to seek help from their G.P. – even accompany them if needed.

“It’s important to find a G.P. you can talk to and establish an ongoing relationship with.”

Here Dr Walters answers some questions and shares his advice about some common men’s health issues:

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Anti-depressants: the real story

The drug millions of Aussies are taking – what it does for weight, sex and you!

More than 12 million anti-depressant scripts a year are prescribed in Australia – and rising. But are we taking mood-enhancing meds too far?

Next time you’re at an office lunch, chances are at least one or more of the people sitting around your table are taking Zoloft, Lexapro, Prozac or one of the dozens of prescription drugs currently on the market.

These days there are “happy” pills to treat everything from that severe, can’t -get-out of bed, “dark place” depression, to pre-menstrual depression, right down to anxiety, head-in-the clouds vagueness or even poor concentration.

Today anti-depressants are the number one drug Aussies are taking to help them beat their mood problems, and in turn reduce stress, work and relationship issues in their life.

According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, a staggering 20.7 million prescriptions for mental health related medications were filled under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) in 2006.

Among other drugs, this included about 12.3 million antidepressant scripts and 1.8 million anti-psychotic drugs, both rapidly increasing in popularity.

Whilst anti-psychotics were once popularly perceived to be treatments for schizophrenia, in reality today they are also commonly prescribed for anxiety, severe depression and a variety of other psychological problems.

But we have to ask ourselves whether popping a pill for every modern malaise is the answer, given a recent meta-analysis of 47 studies, which showed that antidepressants were no more effective than a dummy pill.

Aussie doctors are divided over the recent research, which included the blockbuster brands Effexor, Zoloft, Cipramil, Aropax and Prozac.

Some doctors agree perhaps depression is being over medicalised.

But Professor Ian Hickie from the Brain Mind & Research Institute in Sydney, argues that medications DO have a place.

“Firstly, the people in these studies were not severely depressed patients, because severely depressed patients are excluded from trials. And for these patients we have 40 years of evidence which show antidepressants do absolutely have clear benefits.”

“Secondly, the study also completely ignored the fact that suicide rates have dropped steeply in countries where antidepressants are now in widespread use.

“And thirdly, we have to remember that even mild depression causes a major increase in suicide risk.

“Seeking no treatment for any kind of depression is a bad option. Because often those people with mild depression one day go on to moderate or severe depression the next day. This does not always mean drugs, but in many cases they can help.”

Professor Hickie says if you notice signs of depression in yourself or others (do the mood IQ test below) then don’t delay in getting treatment.

“There is no reason to put up with untreated depression, or for people to be scared of taking a pill if they need to. People take a tablet for anything else, but there is still clearly a stigma that depression is a character flaw, or something other than a clear biochemical illness. But depression is something people can’t snap out of or be jollied out of. It is an illness – a major one, that is often life-threatening.”

And evidence shows drugs may also mean less chance of recurrence.

“Other studies show that people who are on depression medications for 6-12 months and recover are much less likely to have the depression recur within the next two years.”

Professor Gordon Parker from the Black Dog Institute agrees the meta analysis research was flawed, because participants in clinical studies are generally only mildly depressed, did not use drugs or alcohol and didn’t have suicidal thoughts.

“Psychiatrists don’t see people like that in real life. It’s the same flawed logic as prescribing an antibiotic for a common 24-hour cold and the results were compared with placebo treatment after a week.”

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