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Australia’s worst ever bushfires

They are Australia’s worst ever bushfires. Two massive fires in Victoria engulfed towns north-east of Melbourne and in Gippsland, killing at least 181 people, injuring dozens more, and destroying hundreds of homes.

Show your support, share your story, and find out how you can help…

It’s reported that at least 750 homes have been destroyed, and nearly 4000 people have registered themselves as homeless so far.

Find out how you can help.

Andre Rieu: ‘My song to save the bush’

The virtuoso is using his music to ease the sorrow of our bushfire victims.

Leaders and other officials from Australia and around the world offer their words of support and condolence.

Aussie celebs reveal their personal connection to bushfire disasters and send messages of hope and consolation.

Plus! Read how Aussie stars rally in support of bushfire victims.

Super mum fights bushfires

With her face smeared with ash and soot, Brooke Bishop still manages to muster a smile. The stay-at-home mum, who also happens to be an Army Reservist, didn’t hesitate when the call for help came through on Sunday 8 February.

Adventurer dies trying to save his Harley

Arthur was an adventurer who had already cheated death twice, but tragically died in the full force of the inferno that engulfed Kinglake.

For more on the bushfires, don’t miss next week’s Woman’s Day (on sale February 16).

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Australia’s worst ever bushfires: How you can help

Thousands of Australians are suddenly without homes as a result of devastating bushfires in Victoria. It’s reported that at least 750 homes have been destroyed, and nearly 4000 people have registered themselves as homeless so far.

Here’s how you can help these survivors…

  • Visit www.redcross.org.au

  • Phone 1800 811 700

  • Visit any NAB, ANZ, Westpac or Commonwealth Bank branch

  • Visit any Bunnings store

  • By direct deposit to the Victorian Bushfire Relief Fund, BSB 082-001, Account number 860-046-797

  • If you need information on the bushfires, call 1800 240 667

  • If you are concerned about family and friends, call 1800 727 077

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Be a green fashionista

Image: Getty

Thanks to sustainable fabrics like bamboo and pre-loved vintage treasures, fashion is having an absolutely fabulous green makeover. Pamela Allardice browses online boutiques that marry style with eco-savvy.

  • Fab frocks Ultra-feminine design meets comfort in the soft bamboo knit wrap dresses from Bamboo Boutique (www.bambooboutique.com.au), with an honourable mention to the uber-cool Enamore collection of organic cotton and hemp shifts, printed in retro-inspired designs using low-impact vegetable inks (www.ecogirl.com.au). Other standouts are the eclectic Gladragz (www.gladragz.com.au), which uses recycled fabrics to make cheeky micro-minis and zip-dresses; the flirty Hussy silk-bamboo slips from Frockaholics (www.frockaholics.com.au), which look great layered over leggings; and the understated yet elegant Purepod hemp-soy cross linen tunics at Mooble (www.mooble.com.au).

  • Green jeans Unfortunately, cotton is one of the world’s most heavily pesticide-sprayed crops, but several new brands of jeans use all or part organic cotton instead. For those brave enough to work skinny jeans, try Nudie (www.mycatwalk.com.au); Bono’s wife, Ali Hewson has launched Edun, a jeans label that provides sustainable employment in poverty-stricken communities and supports fair trade (www.edunonline.com); Loomstate (www.tobi.com) is a rising star on the eco-fashion scene, with their relaxed-cut, casual yet flattering jeans proving why.

  • Hats on Designer Jo-Anne Rolfe creates delightful straw hats, squishy berets and fanciful cocktail headpieces from vintage fabrics and hand-fashioned flowers (www.vintagedesigns.com.au). Fair-trade site Taraluna (www.taraluna.com.au) has a selection of cute cloche hats in eye-popping colours; they’re made from recycled silk sari scraps which would otherwise be discarded.

  • Easy tops and Ts EnviroMental’s well-priced 100% organic cotton t-shirts feature quirky captions and come in a wide variety of colours (www.enviromental.com.au); bamboo tops and tees from Bamboo Body (www.bamboobody.com.au) are luxuriously soft and incredibly long-wearing. Global Conduct (www.globalconduct.com.au) sells delicately scalloped fair-trade crocheted tops, just perfect for a cool evening; high-end organic cotton lingerie, and camis from Misoh (www.misoh.com.au) ensure you’re sustainably clad from head to toe; while the lightweight renewable merino microfibre used to make Icebreaker hoodies (www.mooble.com.au) makes them perfect for travel.

  • Artful accessories A green fashionista’s dream, Hemptydoo (www.hemptydoo.com) carries hundreds of eco-chic treasures, like hand-knitted recycled denim shawls, hemp wool scarves and funky hemp beanies. Byron Bay-based Bird Design (www.todae.com.au) uses water-based dyes to make buttons which can add sustainable style to any garment; the New Internationalist site (www.newint.com.au) stocks a large and lovely range of fair-trade handwoven scarves and pashminas.

  • Bags and shoes Kara’s Smith’s handmade, one-of-a-kind bags are made from bright and beautiful recycled fabrics and come with all sorts of cool details, like recycled buckles and buttons (www.karasmith.com.au); Bellingen-based Teresa Cowley (www.teresacowley.com.au) designs purses from exquisite vintage materials, with gorgeous accents like velvet flowers, brooches and ribbons. Earth shoes (www.gaiam.com.au) are made from vegan-friendly micro-fibre and feature a shock-absorbing sole and negative heel technology that keeps feet stable – a must for anyone who’s on their feet all day. And if peep toes and stiletto heels are more your style, there’s no shortage of innovative and adorable designs at Vegetarian Shoes and Bags (www.vegetarianshoesandbags.com).YOUR SAY: Do you consider ‘greener’ fashion alternatives when buying clothes or accessories? Tell us your thoughts.

YOUR SAY: Do you consider ‘greener’ fashion alternatives when buying clothes or accessories? Tell us your thoughts.

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Jennifer Aniston — My 40s feel “worthy of some fun”

The former Friends star turns 40 this month and looks forward to putting a decade of highly publicised heartache behind her.

Born in Los Angeles and raised in New York City, Jennifer shot to fame for her portrayal of Rachel Green in the US sitcom smash hit Friends — a role for which she won an Emmy Award, a Golden Globe Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award.

With popular US soap actor Yannis Anastassakis, aka Victor Kiriakis from Days of Our Lives, as her father, Jen had Hollywood stardom running in her veins. Graduating from the Rudolph Steiner School and Manhattan’s Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, Jen featured in several off-Broadway productions before moving to LA in 1989 to pursue her acting career.

After the amazing success of Friends Jen starred in several Hollywood productions such as Bruce Almighty, Office Space, Rumor Has It, and the romantic comedies Along Came Polly and The Break-Up. Her latest anticipated box office hit to be released in early February, He’s Just Not That Into You is based on the self-help book of the same name by Greg Behrendt and Liz Tuccillo.

Jen’s highly publicised love life has spanned her entire career but reached its pinnacle when she married Hollywood heart-throb Brad Pitt in 2000 in a lavish Malibu ceremony. After five years of what seemed to be marital bliss, the couple divorced with reports speculating that the split was due to Jennifer’s refusal to have children. Jen denied this in a Vanity Fair interview, stating, “…I’ve always wanted to have children and I would never again give up that experience for a career.” Rumours emerged that Brad had fallen for Mr and Mrs Smith co-star Angelina Jolie towards the end of his marriage to Jen — Pitt and Jolie now have six children together.

Jen was linked to fellow comic actor Vince Vaughn and has been in an on-again-off-again relationship with musician John Mayer since. After a commitment ceremony over the new year, this relationship seems to have turned sour for a second time, but Jen sees her 40th birthday as a chance to start afresh. She told MTV News recently, “I just want to have fun this year…I see my life in decades. This one feels worthy of some fun because I feel like I’m getting through a decade that was… let’s just say I’m ready to say ‘See ya!’ to this last one.”

The pressure of fame on her love life has taken its toll with Jen also recently saying, “It’s not fun. You could end the date and shake hands with them and realise it doesn’t work, and all of a sudden you’re a new couple.”

Jen turns 40 on February 11.

Your say: Send Jen your birthday wishes here…

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Starving for attention

I am a broken-hearted widow. I lost my zest for life in 2004 when my dear husband was suddenly taken from me.

We had rented all our lives and had nothing to show for all our hard work as we gave everything we had to our children — having grown up poor, we wanted our children to have the best of everything.

My son bought a house and took me to live with him. The move from the inner-city to the Central Coast was hard to adjust to as I became isolated from friends and family.

I only ever received a few calls from friends and family as standard rates to the Coast were quite high. My daughter was the only one who rang each day to check on me, but she was absorbed by her young family. My son was not one for conversation and I often felt he thought he had done enough just providing a roof over my head.

Years quickly passed and my day-to-day routine grated on me. My husband used to take care of my every need and now I was alone and hated having to fend for myself.

I started to fake a few illnesses for sympathy and even staged a fall to show how frail I had become.

My son was sympathetic at first, until he met a young lady who seemed to know my game. My son had been burnt so many times and deserved happiness but I was determined to make him choose me.

Being a rather large lady, I was ordered by my doctor to lose weight for my health. So I began eating right and exercising. The weight started to fly off, and my son commented on how well I looked. He was amazed at how my life was back on track.

Soon he began talking to me about marriage which terrified me as I did not want to be alone. I started to eat less and less food, even to the point I once fainted.

My son asked me what was going on and I told him I had severe depression and had lost the will to live.

My son put so much effort into helping me that he neglected his partner and she left him. I continued not to eat much as I loved the pity and attention and loved fitting into smaller clothes.

Today I am still thin, but now I have really made myself frail.

My son and daughter rally around me but have also started to resent me. I know I have become a burden and, as horrible as it seems, I don’t care enough to change.

Names in this story have been changed. Picture posed by model.

Your say: Have your say about this true confession below…

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Too easy: The Food Coach’s one-rule diet

By Judy Davie

Sometimes sticking to a diet is just too hard if every meal from breakfast through to dinner is itemised.

If you want to lose weight but still have a bit of freedom with what you eat, following this one simple rule is an effective way to help you shed those kilos:

Nothing white… except for cauliflower and low-fat dairy.

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An ex-pat’s travel guide to the Northern Territory

The Northern Territory has several iconic frontier destinations. Here are some savvy tips from two experts on how to turn a wilderness experience into a holiday of a lifetime.
Northern Territory

Remote and less assesible by definition, wilderness destinations often look picture perfect in postcards. In reality, they can throw up challenges similar to TV’s Survivor series.

Every wilderness holiday will have its ups and downs. It’s a matter of getting the balance right and choosing a tour or a place tailored to your expectations and needs. At some destinations, the awe-inspiring landscape may come with extreme heat, humidity and dust, crawling critters, mozzies and sometimes a deficit of life’s little luxuries. Think carefully about the levels of discomfort you are willing to endure and weigh this up with the amount of money you’re prepared to pay. Home comforts in the outback often come with a high price tag. Take on too much and you’ll pine to be back home. Sanitise the whole experience and you may as well watch a travel show on TV. Get the balance right and it could turn out to be unforgettable.

“Wherever you intend to travel in Outback Australia make sure you allow the time to do everything that can be done to make the most of your truly unique holiday – don’t rush it — take the time to enjoy it fully,” advises Les Cox, Managing Director Aussie Adventure Holidays.

“One way of ensuring a great holiday and peace of mind is to join an small group escorted tour, such as the one based at Kakadu’s Hawk Dreaming, writes Mike Dolan, travel editor of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

It comes as no surprise to see a wedge-tailed eagle soaring above “Big Bill’s Place”. Its other name is, after all, Hawk Dreaming. Bordered by ancient outcrops of red sandstone and a network of lush green billabongs, this enclave is one of the Northern Territory’s best-kept secrets, a gem of a place that gives visitors an insider’s view of this World Heritage-listed national park.

Located on the traditional land of the late “Big Bill” Neidjie, Kakadu’s legendary Gagadju elder, Hawk Dreaming is the base of AAT Kings/Aussie Adventures small-scale tours. With only eight tents, a wash block and a lodge (with dining room and comfortable library/lounge), this is how Big Bill wanted it — small (a maximum of 16 guests), intimate and far from the crowds of “Kakadu central”. Close to Arnhemland, this safari-style camp couldn’t be better placed to visit Kakadu’s highlights. From here, the three-day guided tour takes guests to Barramundi Gorge in the south of the park, the Aboriginal art galleries at Ubirr Rock and the magnificent Jim Jim Falls, where, during the Dry, you can laze on beaches of fine white sand and swim in crystal clear lakes. Then there are the spectacular flood plains around Cannon Hill, a picnic on the leafy banks of the East Alligator River, a visit to a six-metre high cathedral termite mound and a cruise on Yellow Waters at Cooinda.

Just as you think the day is over, there’s the sunset stroll back at Hawk Dreaming, where, on the right day, the waters of the billabong turn gold and crimson as the resident four-metre croc glides by on his last patrol of the day. All in all, this is one of the Top End’s top treats. Affordable at $999 per adult ($799 per child) for three days (all meals included), it operates during the Dry (May-October, departing Darwin on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays). The camp is comfortable and beautifully located, the meals freshly prepared and hearty. Yet most of all, the guests love the camp’s peace and seclusion, just as Big Bill would have wanted.

Visit: www.aussieadventures.com.au

Alternatively, you may wish to visit Kata Tjuta (formerly the Olgas), the twin sister of Uluru, another extraordinary destination, says Mike Dolan.

In a country with a landscape of awe-inspiring rocks, the domes of Kata Tjuta are right up there with the best on offer. Incredibly, though, many first-time visitors to this part of Australia’s Red Centre, 400 kilometres south-west of Alice Springs, are unaware of Kata Tjuta’s lofty status in the pecking order of Australia’s rock formations.

Formerly named the Olgas (after a 19th-century European queen), this magical range in the Northern Territory would be the No. 1 attraction if it was just about anywhere else, but thanks to its proximity to the most famous monolith of all, Uluru (Ayers Rock), around 50km east, it’s often not given the time it deserves. That’s despite the fact that it has 36 distinctive domes (Kata Tjuta means “many heads” in the local Aboriginal language) and Mt Olga, at 546 metres, is nearly 200 metres higher than Uluru.

Over the years, a few things have changed: the bone-shaking red dirt access road has been replaced with smooth bitumen and a boardwalk prevents people tramping over the vegetation as they take in the view from the dunes. What hasn’t changed is the opportunity to immerse yourself in Kata Tjuta’s haunting landscape by either watching its domes turn blood-red at sunset or walking through the Valley of the Winds at dawn. Strolling through Walpa Gorge in the late afternoon is another highlight.

Experience all three and you’ll find out why Kata Tjuta is so special. One of the best ways to see Kata Tjuta is to set off when the stars are still bright in the sky, as this gives you time to drive the 35km from Yulara, the village that services the national park, to the dune viewing area before the sun rises. Set on a ridge, at the end of a 300-metre boardwalk, the lookout provides a superb panorama of the range rising above the red dunes and the desert plain, dotted with desert oaks, low shrubs and wild flowers. As the first rays hit the highest domes and skim across the dunes, the colours intensify and the landscape glows.

Then, not long after sunrise, drive to the Valley of the Winds, the 7.4km walking loop that takes around three hours and is rated by many as the best walk in the park. On offer is a rugged Central Australian landscape in which the mighty domes and deep gorges dwarf mature silver-barked gums. Starting early is essential as it gets very hot, very quickly. Not only is the sun merciless, but it also turns the domes into great radiators.

Those with two mornings may like to start the Valley of the Winds walk before dawn. Once in the entrance gorge, you’ll see the black silhouettes of the domes etched by blazing stars and then feel the arrival of the softest caress of wind as the sky above turns cerulean with a hint of pink.

Either way, after the early start, it’s back to Yulara for food, rest and escape from the midday sun, before setting off mid-afternoon to Walpa Gorge, where you can get up close to the walls of the domes.

Sheltered between the sheer rock faces of Mt Olga and Mt Walpa is an easy 45-minute stroll to the narrow head of this gorge. This is where Kata Tjuta really imposes itself, as the dome walls tower above you. The gorge is best seen in the afternoon as sun floods in through the westerly opening.

As the shadows start to slide down the walls of the gorge, make your way out and over to the nearby sunset viewing area. From there, the classic “postcard” view is right before you. As the sun sinks towards the horizon, just like at Uluru, the domes go through a series of colour changes, climaxing on the best of days in a blood-red glow.

Darkness descends while I’m driving back to Yulara, but there is one last view to be enjoyed. From the main road, about 50km from the sunset viewing area, the domes of Kata Tjuta can be seen silhouetted against the fading dusk sky. Although only specks on the horizon, their form is as distinctive as ever.

See some of Australia’s inspiring landscapes on an adventure of a lifetime on an AAT Kings tour. Choose from a wide selection of escorted tours that includes Northern Territory Small Group Adventures at www.aatkings.com.au or visit your travel agent.

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Drowning nightmare: My 0-0-0 miracle

By Lucy Chesterton

Pictures: Andrew Jacob

In a desperate race to revive her son, Alice and her mum followed the 000 operator’s instructions and saved his life…

Woman’s Day Make My Day: $500,000 worth of wishes come true…

Name: Alice Bartlett

Her dream: To start afresh in a new home without a pool after her son’s near-fatal accident

Ready for his first day at school, lively four-year-old Jaidyn Bartlett proudly shows off his new uniform, complete with khaki hat flopping over his eyes. It’s a moment every mother treasures for ever ? and for Jaidyn’s beaming mum Alice, this milestone is all the more special after she nearly lost him in a pool accident.

Alice, 26, and her mum Stephanie, 50, stood watching helplessly as their precious boy fought for his life in a Sydney hospital, locked in a three-day coma.

Stephanie’s voice cracks as she recalls the moment she realised something terrible had happened to her grandson, while Alice still feels the terror at seeing Jaidyn’s tennis racquet floating in the family’s backyard pool.

“I saw a dark patch on the bottom and I realised it was the denim shorts he was wearing,” says Alice.

Terrified, she jumped into the water, desperate to save her son. “I jumped in and put my hands down, searching, and my arm touched his arm underwater. I remember pulling him out. He was grey.”

See more about Jaidyn’s rescue on Triple Zero Heroes on Sunday, February 8 at 8pm, on Seven.

For the full story, and to see how we made Alice Bartlett’s day, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale February 2).

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Brad and ange show off the twins

The entire Jolie-Pitt brood touch down in Japan…

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have finally shown off their adorable six-month-old twins Knox and Vivienne, after five mysterious months out of the spotlight.

Dressed like a mini-me version of his famous dad, son Knox almost stole the show as the family touched down at Japan’s Narita Airport for the premiere of Brad’s latest movie The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button.

Despite having endured an 11-hour flight with six kids, the couple appeared relaxed as they walked to a waiting car, but Ange admits their jet-set lifestyle is taking a toll.

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Baby news for Tom and Katie?

Is there something Tom and Katie aren’t telling us? Suri could soon become a big sister…

Hollywood is abuzz with speculation that Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are expecting their second baby.

Tom, 46, was spotted with a protective hand on 30-year-old Katie’s belly as they left trendy LA eatery The Ivy — the restaurant most favoured by spotlight-loving celebrities — leading many to believe Tom’s display was confirmation the pair have a sibling on the way for daughter Suri, 2.

“It was identical to how Tom used to stand with Katie when she was pregnant,” one witness told a US magazine. “And the way they looked at each other! There was a feeling that they were sharing something very special.”

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