Sunday, May 17, 2015

Taronga Zoo’s Roar and Snore a beastly business

Feeding the giraffes at Roar and Snore, Taronga Zoo. Source: Supplied
 The cackle-chorus of kookaburras wakes me just before dawn — no wonder this species of kingfisher is known as the bushman’s alarm clock. The night has been full of big-cat growls and chimpanzee chatter.

Peeling back the flaps of tent No 6, I settle in a chair to watch the rosy sun steal over Sydney Harbour. It’s almost a 180-degree panorama, gradually lightening to a sheen so golden that even the most blase of Sydneysiders would gasp at such preposterous beauty. Only the Himalayan tahrs, clip-clopping about in their nearby rock hill enclosure, have better million-dollar Mosman penthouse views than we Roar and Snore campers at Taronga Zoo.

We are not done with the kookas. During breakfast, a particularly large specimen swoops towards my lap and makes off with a chunk of orange muffin so big it makes a temporary plug in his beak.

Indigenous zookeeper Leon, who hails from the Daintree, thinks that starting the day with a bit of kookaburra action is a very good idea, so out comes his didgeridoo. He is such a master of this powerful-sounding instrument that he can play the calls of melodious magpies and kookas; Leon can make us believe we can hear bounding kangaroos and the whirring sound of the boomerang.


The view from the at Roar and Snore, Taronga Zoo, Sydney. Source: Supplied

A camper named Lauren is having a birthday and so Leon fires up a “didge” version of the famous celebratory song that makes her simultaneously laugh and cry with wonder.

The Roar and Snore package at Sydney’s famous zoo, which will celebrate its centenary next year, is such good fun that there are repeat visitors from the US in our mix this Easter weekend. They tell me it is the highlight of their holiday and the attraction, aside from those mesmerising views, is the opportunity to go behind the scenes and meet the keepers.

Creature comforts? The timber-floored tents sleep two to four persons, have lighting, and the beds are comfortable, with duvets and extra blankets; the pillows are of foam and rather flat so I would take my own next time.

Towels are provided for showers and there’s a liquid soap dispenser but BYO toiletries and maybe a dressing gown for any dashes to the lavatory during the night (tents are not ensuite but the adjacent ablutions block is amply big and very clean).

The accommodation is in two rows and tent No 6 (designated the Little Penguin; all are named for Australian creatures and our next-tent neighbour is Bilby) would be an ideal one to request for dress-circle views. There’s a seemingly endless supply of beverages (flat and sparkling wine, plus beer, juice or soft drinks) and snacks on arrival, a reasonably good buffet dinner at The View restaurant just past the male elephant enclosure, and help-yourself ice blocks or Magnums plus coffee, tea or hot chocolate back at the campsite. Allergies and dietary preferences are catered for if advised in advance.

After a continental breakfast buffet in the main canvas-roofed communal area and quick showers, we head off to visit the giraffes “back stage” with their enclosure’s keeper and queue to feed them lettuce leaves. One by one we sneak back to join the line again and get so close to the bowing, long-necked lovelies that we can almost count their supermodel eyelashes.

Then we are off to the keeper’s kitchen and storeroom at the nocturnal house where we have a chance to stroke a handful of teeny baby feathertail gliders, each barely bigger than a finger, and a juvenile male yellow-bellied glider that pops his head out of a box as if about to do a Punch and Judy show. Trotting past the front-of-house dwellers, I am quite sure a sturdy rufous owl (what big eyes you have …) winks at me.

Tigers, lions, primates, endangered bongo antelopes (happily with a new baby boy in tow), sun bears, fennec foxes, Barbary sheep, Komodo dragons, a magnificent Malaysian tapir and those ultimate pop-up performers, the comical meerkats — we have met them all, some on the walk the first evening, led by Leon with his non-invasive LED red torch, and others on a morning stroll that leads us to the Education Centre near the zoo’s main gate.

Here, an echidna, a quokka joey and a young koala named Luca await, and we learn more from Leon, Megan, Ryan and their khaki-clad colleagues about the habitats, and the curious habits, of Australian bush mammals, birds and reptiles.

After the program ends I top off the morning at the seal show amphitheatre, which is ever so corny, but the sight of Michi the California sea lion doing slippery prat falls like the most seasoned of vaudeville performers somehow seems an ideally joyous finale to a Roar and Snore escapade. Time to glide like a possum down to the ferry wharf on the Sky Safari cable car and head home.

Checklist

Roar and Snore operates Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights and during NSW school holidays or periods of extra demand, from 6.15pm to about 9.30am next day. Campers can stay at the zoo all day on a free entry pass and leave their bags at the education centre; there’s complimentary secure overnight parking in a multi-level carpark and 10 per cent off retail items at the zoo’s shops. Children must be five years or over and there are adults-only or family nights on selected dates. From $288 a person; children five to 17, from $184.50. More: www.taronga.org.au.


Perisher, Thredbo, Buller, Falls Creek and other Aussie ski resorts waiting for you

Skiing and snowboarding masterclasses will be available at Hotham, Victoria. Source: Supplied
Winter is soon upon us, casting its gloom with foreshortened days and sun-sapped skies. But it brings with it a magical silver lining: snowfall in the southern hemisphere.

The summer months have given ski resorts in Australia and New Zealand time to spruce themselves up, incorporate the latest innovations and ensure that everything is in place for the arrival of those first precious snowflakes — and the skiers and snowboarders who will follow promptly in their wake. Here’s our resort roundup to get you ski-season ready.

Perisher, NSW

The biggest news in ski circles this year is the acquisition of Australia’s largest ski resort, Perisher, by American mountain resort company Vail. While the details are still being finalised, the benefits are already being rolled out in time for Perisher’s ski season, which kicks off on June 6. Newly purchased Freedom Passes incorporate Vail’s Epic Benefits — unlimited skiing and riding for the 2015-16 season at Breckenridge, Keystone and Arap­ahoe Basin in Colorado, Park City and Canyons in Utah, and Heavenly, Northstar and Kirkwood in Tahoe, plus an extra 10 free days of skiing at Vail and Beaver Creek. (US resort access is subject to traditional holiday restrictions.) The Freedom Pass is on sale until May 31 at $749 for adults and $429 for students. ­perisher.com.au

Thredbo, NSW

This year Torah Bright, Australia’s Olympic gold and silver medal snowboarder, has partnered with Thredbo in a program to encourage people to get involved in snow sports. The Torah Bright Beginners Pack includes a beginner lift pass, lesson and an option for equipment rental. Beginner skiers and boarders can perfect their new-found skills in terrain that has doubled in size. Good news for families with teens is that kids’ ­prices will apply to everyone under 18. Better still, children under 18 ski and snowboard free next month and in September when accom­panied by a paying adult. ­thredbo.com.au

Lake Mountain, Victoria

This season’s new developments are most welcome in the Victorian town of Marysville, which was devastated by the Black Saturday bushfires in 2009. New life has been breathed into the town with the development of the Vibe Hotel Marysville; it offers a spa and wellbeing facility and serves produce sourced from the Yarra Valley at its Radius Bar and Grill. Also new in town is the architect-designed, enviro-friendly Amazing Bush Accommodation, which sleeps up to 12 and features a roof garden, climbing wall and — poignantly — a fireman’s pole. Lake Mountain’s Snowman’s Village has expanded and an additional beginner toboggan slope developed, and at Lake Mountain Alpine Resort the new Fischer Nordic Demo and Test Centre gives cross-country skiers the opportunity to test world-class Nordic equipment. The Winter Wonderland package costs $363 for two adults and two children and $80 per additional child; it includes gate entry for one vehicle, toboggan and ski hire, a 90-minute group cross-country ski lesson and a lunch voucher. ­lakemountainresort.com.au

Mt Buller, Victoria

The season starts with a bang on the weekend of June 6 with fireworks, live music and free entertainment. Visitors can fill up on Japanese, Korean and Chinese cuisine at the new Asian Food Court at the Mt Buller Chalet Hotel. The popular sled dog tours introduced during last year’s season will continue; visitors can enjoy other innovations such as the ski-in cinema, telemarking (free-heel skiing) snowgaining (high altitude orienteering) and treatments at Australia’s highest day spa, Breathtaker on High. Ski for less on Thursdays, when ski passes purchased on Mt Buller’s e-store cost $80 — 30 per cent less than usual. mtbuller.com.au

Ski by night: Mount Hotham, ­Victoria

Intermediate and advanced skiers and advanced snowboarders can polish their skills under the tutelage of hand-picked coaches at Mount Hotham’s new ski and snowboard masterclasses. Newly equipped with night lights, the nearby hamlet of Dinner Plain will offer night skiing and snow-tubing for the first time this year. Dinner Plain’s new Snow Park also offers snow tubing, ski lessons and night skiing. mthotham.com.au

Falls Creek, Victoria
Luxury ski-in, ski-out Astra Lodge will unveil a makeover that includes a new magnesium indoor pool. Inexperienced skiers are ­well-catered for: the Falls Beginner Pass ($80 for adults and $55 for children) includes an introductory two-hour ski or snowboard lesson and unlimited use of the beginner lifts for the day, and is available with equipment rental. falls­creek.com.au

Responsible skiing: Mount Baw Baw
Melbourne’s closest downhill ski resort is preparing for another bumper season following last year’s record visitor numbers. Night skiing is offered every Sat­urday during the season from 6pm to 8pm, with lift tickets ­available for $10. Envir­onmentally minded visitors can participate in a Deakin ­University survey on the mountain’s long-term en­vironmental sustainability initiatives. Con­ducted in col­laboration with the resort, the survey ­results will guide its future decision-making and ­alpine management strategies. mountbawbaw.com.au

Mt Stirling
The weather may be icy but snow camping is the hot new thing to try out at Mt Sterling. The Alpine Winter Camp is a unique type of ski-in, ski-out accommodation set above the snowline and feat­uring a central teepee for dining and socialising and seven accommodation tents on raised, insul­ated platforms. Comfort comes in the form of a potbelly stove, warm fibre pile blankets and a tasty camp menu. Four-person tents cost $130 a night and accommodation can be combined with back-country ­skiing expeditions. stirlingexperience.com.au

Noosa booming: how the holiday town rediscovered its mojo

 Main Beach, Noosa: the last summer holiday season was the best in a decade. Picture: Megan Slade Source: News Corp Australia
 The light is fading and something quite magical is happening in the treetops along Noosa’s Hastings Street.

Cars on the pedestrian-friendly boulevard slow to a crawl. A little girl’s strawberry gelato drips gently as her eyes grow wide. Even the famed holiday strip’s signature brush turkeys, loitering in the bushes like a street-gang of young toughs, seem to pause mid-scratch. Everyone looks up as strings of delicate fairy lights flick on, hundreds of metres of lights looping the length of the street, each one beaming out 24 watts of environmentally friendly optimism and bringing a sprite-like sparkle to the heart of a town where until recently gloom reigned.

“Do you like them?” asks Jim Berardo, as if there might be someone who isn’t partial to fairy lights. An American with a background in hospital administration, Berardo moved to Noosa in the late 1990s, opened two restaurants and became the driving force behind the acclaimed Noosa International Food and Wine Festival. The lights were his idea. “I got so sick of everyone saying Noosa had lost its mojo,” he says. “We needed to give it a kick.”

A car pulls up near the roundabout between Berardo’s white-on-white fine-dining establishment and his beachside bistro. A tangle of tanned limbs and bikinis piles out to pose in front of the fig tree at its centre. Over the festive season the evergreen shed its outmoded multicoloured bulbs for a dressing of 1930s-style ­teardrop ornaments and a permanent sprinkling of fairy lights. “Everyone needs a photo under the tree now,” Berardo says. “It’s like our little Opera House.”

Tourism fuels this exclusive Sunshine Coast enclave and Hastings Street is the financial engine. It’s no exaggeration to say that, two years ago, the strip was running out of gas. Restaurants sat empty. Boarded-up shopfronts littered the western end of Hastings Street and there were no fewer than 19 for-lease signs lining its length. Some locals swore they spotted tumbleweeds cartwheeling down the street after dark.

Now, cocktail-fuelled laughter wafts from the deck of Gaston Bar & Bistro and there’s not a for-lease sign in sight. Strings of icicle lights dance in a warm onshore breeze that ­carries a lingering hint of suntan lotion. The piano player at the Rococo bistro neatly detours into some Elton John glitter-rock and suddenly it feels like a party. Berardo grins. He’s got goose bumps. Noosa is back, baby.

Sandwiched between the natural bookends of Noosa National Park and the shining expanse of the Noosa River, and boasting a sheltered, north-facing beach of unparalleled beauty, Noosa has long been among the sparkliest jewels in ­Australia’s tourism crown. It’s a paradise, its small-town, eco-friendly vibe preserved through a half-century of strenuous anti-development efforts that kept buildings no higher than the tree line, traffic lights at bay and the beachfront, headland and estuary untrammelled by sprawl. A heady fusion of barefoot glamour, natural splendour and food, glorious food has lured well-heeled visitors from the southern capitals and abroad since the town swapped its hippie-surfer-haven vibe for serious continental chic in the 1980s.

But in 2011, a one-two punch of economic and environmental factors brought Noosa to its knees. The global financial crisis was a catastrophe; the town’s reliance on Sydney and Melbourne money made it vulnerable and tourists stayed away in droves. Many people offloaded their holiday homes in a bid to cut debt — property prices in Noosa Heads tumbled by as much as 40 per cent in the post-GFC years — and new developments went into receivership.

Then Mother Nature turned on the weather- dependent tourist town, unleashing a downpour of almost biblical proportions. During the peak summer season of 2010-11, endless rain put the kibosh on sunbaking, bushwalking and al fresco dining. Many southerners cut and ran for the sunnier skies of home a week into their holidays, and a trip to the beach was the last thing on the minds of flood-affected Queenslanders. A ­tsunami in Japan and the New Zealand earthquake also robbed the resort of two key sources of international visitors.

And the rain didn’t stop. In 2012, the weather bureau recorded 158 rain days and the wet-weather malaise tipped into 2013. “The GFC hit Noosa hard but then the rain just killed it,” says Pascal Turschwell, a born-and-bred Noosa resident who opened Gaston Bar & Bistro on the corner of Hastings Street four years ago. ­Turschwell’s father, Luc, is credited with creating Noosa’s now-celebrated dining scene. In the 1970s, when Noosa still belonged to the surfers and the longboard-friendly point break was the primary lure, the Frenchman opened his first al fresco restaurant, Belmondo, and followed it with a 200-seat open-air venue, Cafe Le Monde, which has since become a Noosa institution.

Pascal, 40, has therefore witnessed decades of culinary activity on Hastings Street but he says the years between 2010 and 2013 were ­“definitely the worst slump” he’s seen. “The place was empty and it was doom and gloom everywhere. I think people were trying to be positive but when you’re losing 10 or 15 grand a week it’s hard.” Those who didn’t go out of business remortgaged homes and maxed out credit for a white-knuckle ride.

Not everything that goes down must come up. But, to the relief of Noosa’s 52,000 residents and the sunseekers for whom this paradise is a kind of spiritual home, those operators who kept the faith were rewarded this summer with the kind of holiday season Noosa hadn’t seen in a decade. High-end holiday rentals over Christmas- New Year were at 100 per cent occupancy. Bumper-to-bumper traffic snaked two to three kilometres back from Hastings Street and, on Main Beach, there was barely room to get a towel down. “It was absolutely chock-a-block,” says Noosa Surf Club’s Barry Leek, adding that the club’s upstairs bar-restaurant, where million- dollar views can be had for the price of a beer, had never been busier.

People were not just turning up, they were spending too, with most top-drawer restaurants booked solid for lunch and dinner for weeks on end. Tourism Noosa boss Damien Massingham was ecstatic. “It would have to be nine or 10 years since that last happened,” he says. “There was a real buzz about the place, there were ­people everywhere, having a great time. Things have definitely turned around.”

Final-quarter National Visitor Survey figures for 2014 released last month justify ­Massingham’s optimism. Interstate visitors to Noosa were up 26.6 per cent compared to the same period the previous year to 285,000, while Sunshine Coast region visitor numbers were up 15.7 per cent. This boost occurred when interstate visits for Queensland as a whole rose just 2.3 per cent. Spending by domestic visitors to Noosa has been increasing for the past two years and is now $585 million, with the Sydney market’s contribution being particularly significant — it surged 14.9 per cent to $135.3 million.

International visitor numbers are also on the rise. In the year to last September, Massingham says, Noosa has seen visitors returning from its core high-spending international markets, with the number of nights they spend back to pre-GFC levels. The high-spending US market increased its expenditure in Noosa by 22 per cent and the UK market, Noosa’s biggest from overseas, was up 22.5 per cent. Germany is at a record high, up almost 12 per cent, while the price-sensitive New Zealand market — which was in decline — is up 9.6 per cent. In total, the amount spent by international visitors increased 13.5 per cent to $172 million, the third annual increase in a row.

In total, visitors to Noosa (including day trippers, who contributed $114 million) spent $871 million in the year to last September. Massingham expects the recent bumper ­summer season to send the figures “well north of that” once the official statistics appear midyear. In fact, the town once fighting for survival is firmly on track to reach its goal of attracting a billion tourist dollars annually by the end of 2016.

Noosa’s latest reversal of fortune dates to 2013, when the town’s tourist operators took a good look in the mirror and decided the ­doldrums were no place to be. “About two years ago we started to say, ‘We can’t do anything about the high Australian dollar, the economy or high fuel prices but we can look at ways we can enhance the visitor’s stay and let’s get our backyard right again’,” Massingham says. “And I’ve got to give a lot of credit to properties that spent a significant amount of money reinvesting in their product.”

Noosa’s five-star Sheraton Resort & Spa led the way in late 2013 with a $10 million makeover that saw it relegate its original salmon-pink paint job to the 1980s, where it belonged. The 24-year-old resort is now a showpiece, a more contemporary, environmentally sensitive off-white with bright and airy spaces and a new, celebrity-chef led restaurant in Peter Kuruvita’s Noosa Beach House. In late 2013, Super A-Mart founder John Van Lieshout ­reopened Seahaven Resort, a long-time family favourite bordering almost 20 per cent of the main beach, after a nine-month, $16 million overhaul that saw the building gutted and rebuilt into a sleek, modern resort.

With the big guns taken care of, Noosa started filling in the gaps. Retailers moved in, along with accommodation like the refurbished 10 Hastings Street Boutique Motel & CafĂ©. Old-school Italian joint Lindoni’s ­Ristorante, a 26-year-old Noosa institution where Mick ­Jagger once dined, packed up its giant emblematic drip candle and owner Rio Capurso teamed with Brent Ogilvie to open a sultry, ultra-modern incarnation called Locale at the far end of the street. Betty’s Burgers, an on-trend burger shack which exhorts diners to upload ­photos of their meal to social media, opened in December in a prime Hastings Street spot that had sat vacant for three years. It was immediately packed with holiday-makers. “There’s been a massive swing towards more casual dining and we saw a great opportunity with our concept,” says 35-year-old owner David Hales. “It’s a younger scene here now — a lot of people were ­saying how great it is to come in off the beach and sit on the couch in their bathers.”

The clacky-heeled socialites skewered by Prue and Trude, the snobbish alter egos of TV’s Kath & Kim, as being the type to holiday in “Noorrsa” in its late 1990s heyday have been replaced. The mood is more relaxed: organic is pushing gourmet off the shelves, “social dining” is the new buzz phrase and there’s a focus on fun-not-formal street food. “There’s been a big change in the kind of people coming here now,” says Berardo. “We’re seeing a lot of families with parents in their 30s and a couple of children. People who had holiday homes here for 20 years, who brought their children here, are now getting up there in age and so they’re passing on the properties to their sons and daughters and there’s a new generation coming through. Which is fantastic because it means there’s a new life for Noosa — a new ­permanent life, not just a short-term one.”

Noosa is still a long way from reaching peak beard, but the hipsters responsible for remodelling the inner-city suburbs of our capital cities are circling. High-end fine-dining is still taken care of with places such as Berardo’s and mod-Japanese superstar Wasabi Restaurant & Bar. But those so inclined can also have quinoa and lychees in a mason jar for breakfast, buy a fair trade tea towel or vintage teakettle from the eccentric gift shop Lamington, then head up the hill to Village Bicycle for tacos and craft beer and out to Captain Sip Sop’s Barber Shop & Outfitters for some low-fade styling.

This changing of the guard was overdue, says Noosa newcomer Ben Walsh, who opened the debonair new cocktail bar and restaurant Miss Moneypenny’s on Hastings Street in November 2013. “You would come up here and it was like stepping into a time machine,” says the former Sydneysider. “It would be the same stuff all the way down the street — at 6pm every night the white tablecloths go down on the tables, the menus are all pretty much the same, the ­cocktails are from the ’80s.” Harvey Wallbangers are not on the menu at Miss Moneypenny’s. The $1.2 million fitout is city-slick and the cocktails, such as the ­Istanbul Old Iced Tea made with gin, quince liqueur, elderflower and Turkish apple tea, are cutting-edge.

Walsh ran bars in Sydney’s Kings Cross and the Hunter Valley but had a hankering for a sea change. “I kept coming up here looking but around 2010-11 it wasn’t looking good,” he says. “I kept a close eye on it until I realised things might be on the turn.” He took on a 500 square metre patch of dirt where the old Ma Mensa restaurant had sat derelict for two years and started from scratch. The result, he says, sits comfortably in the new Hastings Street: it has high-end appeal without being pretentious or intimidating. “You don’t come in here to hear the clinking of glasses,” he says. “You come in to hear conversation and people having fun.”

It’s lunchtime in mid-February and the sun is high over Main Beach, where the teeming crowds of the festive season have thinned but not disappeared. The place is still buzzing, a fact that caught Lorraine Banks, owner of beachfront stalwart Bistro C, unawares. (She waited until what is typically a quieter period to close for a major revamp and opened two weeks later to find it still “flat chat”.) Shane McCauley is the only person on the beach wearing a suit. The co-principal at Richardson & Wrench Noosa is sitting under a spiny pandanus tree in front of his office on the beach side of Hastings Street. He’s eating a sandwich and talking ­happily about the resurgence of the town he’s called home for 13 years.

After bottoming in early 2013, Noosa’s ­prestige real estate market has begun clawing its way back to its halcyon days in the mid-1990s. “In the last 12 months we’ve seen an increase in the number of property sales and, in the last six months, we’ve seen an increase in prices,” McCauley says. Over the summer, R&W Noosa sold three beachfront penthouse apartments — one for $7.15 million — and shifted a two-bedroom apartment in the centrally located Mantra French Quarter Resort for $660,000 — the highest price in the 20-year-old building’s history. “We haven’t seen those prices ever — and they’re purely investment,” he says. “Tourists used to comment all the time on all the for-lease signs but now the streets are vibrant and there’s obviously confidence back in the Noosa market.”

Despite the buoyancy of local realtors, figures from the Real Estate Institute of Queensland’s latest quarterly Market Monitor show there is still a way to go. While the housing market in Noosa is slowly picking up, the apartment ­market continues to decline. The median unit price in Noosa Heads dropped a further 3.5 per cent last year and is now 29 per cent below the levels of five years ago.

When Hastings Street first switched on its $200,000 worth of tree lighting — funded by local businesses — it went beyond simply slapping camouflage makeup on a bruised face. It was, says Bob Ansett, the spry 81-year-old former car rental boss who’s lived here since 1995, part of the recovery process for the once-depressed precinct. “It changed the mood of people,” he says.

Ansett and his wife Josephine rise every day at 5.30am to jog the five kilometres from their ­Sunshine Beach home through the Noosa National Park to Main Beach, where they join a fluid crew that may include former Pacific ­Dunlop CEO Rod ­Chadwick, Queensland tourism tycoon Murray Charlton or Formula One driver Mark Webber for a swim in the bay before breakfast at Cafe Le Monde. Ansett was the driving force behind Friends of Noosa, a high-profile group of cashed-up locals including Flight Centre’s ­Graham Turner and former Toll Holdings chief executive Paul Little, who came together to fight the forced council amalgamation that occurred in 2008. They argued that the former Bligh government’s decision to lump Noosa with the Sunshine Coast Regional Council was a mistake that resulted in lost business opportunities and depleted services, and didn’t take into account Noosa’s unique character and anti-high rise development policies.

They fought hard and won. On January 1, 2014, after a referendum that showed 80 per cent of residents supported de-amalgamation, Noosa broke free. “When we succeeded in regaining our right to govern, almost instantly there was a change in the atmosphere,” Ansett says. The new council instigated an online ­training ­program, Welcome to Noosa, aimed at boosting the quality of customer service and Noosa was ready to turn a fresh face to the sun.

When you live in paradise you must be ­prepared to defend it. Well before sustainable development became a catchphrase, the Noosa community fought to protect an environment that local surfer and author Mike Davis describes as “the place where God kissed the planet”. The community has weathered attempts to carve up Noosa National Park with roads and sand mines; it’s prevented high-rise buildings in Hastings Street, and fought off efforts to put a Club Med on Noosa Spit (now protected public parkland). When Main Beach started to disappear due to erosion caused by a 1970s development blunder that saw the entire river mouth artificially relocated, a pumping system was installed to routinely replenish the sand. Noosa is a survivor.

“The best thing to come out of the hard years is that Noosa has reinvented itself,” Jim Berardo says. “It’s still not cheap, but it has morphed into a kinder, gentler, more welcoming place. It is still strongly opinionated about its future and where it’s going to go, hence the fight we had for the de-amalgamation. Some people think that’s ­elitist — most people just think it’s protecting this priceless jewel that we all share and love. Whether you have money or not, you can still go out in Noosa National Park and hit the first break there and be in heaven.”
source:theaustralian.com.au


Australian - RIMBA resort is Bali’s lush and breezy new hideaway

One of the six pools at RIMBA. Source: News Corp Australia
RIMBA, Jimbaran, southern Bali.

At the Three Monkeys Pool at RIMBA, we swim one afternoon in water scented with floating frangipani petals and marvel at our good fortune. The pool’s namesake trio of stony simian statues send cascades gushing from their spouts. A smartly uniformed pool attendant is fluffing up fresh towels in wicker lounging pods so curvy and groovy they could have been freshly uplifted from the latest furniture expo in Italy. He asks if we would like juices delivered poolside. Honey, pear, apple and rosemary, perhaps? We stay for an hour. The pools is exclusively ours. It is what you could call a lucky dip.

This newish 282-room resort at Jimbaran in south Bali, which adjoins its mother-ship AYANA, is full of pleasant surprises and with a tariff unlikely to dent any holiday budget. Arrivals are greeted with trays of soda water infused with lemon and rosemary. There’s time to chill and look around the high-ceilinged open-sided lobby with its conversation nooks and, just beyond, a reflecting pool with two circular sunken pits; it seems as if those seated therein are floating on water and these features rate among Bali’s most popular selfie spots. Banished by RIMBA’s hip designers are the thatched roofs and teak furnishings we associate with traditional Balinese resort vernacular and, in their place, are myriad quirky features, from weathered boards and organic, textured surfaces to twinkling lighting installations. All is airy and roomy with a flow-through feel that progresses through cool breezeways to lush gardens and an aquatic universe of koi-filled ponds, swimming pools tiered to mimic the rice paddies of Bali’s mountainous realms, and a soundtrack of splashing waterfalls.

That exclusive afternoon in the Three Monkeys Pool, we wonder if the resort has somehow emptied itself of the guests milling around the comprehensive breakfast buffet offerings at the To’Ge all-day garden restaurant. But most have scattered, quick as skinks, to the other five swimming areas, which come with names such as upper, lower and cabana, including one equipped with waterslides for families and another with semi-submerged recliners and bird cage-like seating. Those guests staying in the wing of 11 ground-floor lagoon-access rooms are quietly dipping in the equivalent of their own private pools.

It is an altogether different vibe to the AYANA, which has terraces of 78 pool villas in its inventory mix and Bali’s most famous seaside watering hole, Rock Bar, reached via an inclinator car. RIMBA guests have access to its neighbour resort’s multitude of restaurant and recreational facilities, including a golf course, and a free shuttle trolley runs between the two so there is an interconnected expanse of things to do and places to dine, almost like a little village — albeit one on a 90ha clifftop integrated site so flowered and green that it feels like a botanic garden ablaze with the carnival colours of bougainvillea and hibiscus.

The most spacious guestrooms at RIMBA are top-floor Premium View Suites in greyish and earthen tones with long balconies furnished with a daybed, separate living and sleeping spaces, walk-though dressing room and jaw-dropping marbled and mosaic-tiled bathroom with a window wall. Comprehensively chic, from top to toe.
Dining: What the rather staid Chinese restaurant Ah Yat lacks in atmosphere, it reclaims with its inventive menu, which features abalone “medicinal” specialties created by Beijing-trained chefs and seafood plucked from on-site saltwater tanks. Weekend dim sum brunch at Ah Yat is the best fun, with about 50 creative choices, including xiao long bao dumplings. Other meals are taken at To’Ge, a design destination in itself with wooden-slatted ceiling, Scandi-style chairs and encircling ponds. At AYANA, the pick is Kisik Seafood Bar & Grill by the beach, near Rock Bar, where lobster is served in a sand-floored setting.

Everyone’s talking about: The Unique rooftop bar is a fab place to hang out for sunset cocktails and snacks served by staff carrying cinema usher-style trays who weave around the poseurs parading about the lap pool that segments the two storeys. There are wraparound views west to the Indian Ocean and southeast across the Uluwatu Hills. Order the surprisingly tasty gummy bear-infused martini, which comes with two of the chewy little critters hanging on the side of the glass, then move on to frothed lemongrass or lychee mixes and icy Bintang beers. If staying on a Saturday, don’t miss the Sunset Ritual Performance from 5.30pm around the lobby’s sunken lounge pits: live music, fire-dancers and a fiesta vibe.

Day spa: RIMBA’s tucked-away six-salon spa has much less of a wow factor than AYANA’s standalone facility, which features an Aquatonic Seawater Therapy Pool of gushing jets, areas of different temperatures and underwater massage; there are two Spa on the Rocks pavilions at ocean level.

Stepping out: Sea and sand? It is 197 steps down to Kubu Beach on the AYANA side (there is a shuttle trolley stop above) but the tough access is discouraging for many guests so once you land, it feels like a private cove and the ocean is beautifully clear. From RIMBA you are within reasonable reach of Seminyak bars and eateries and close to the terrific Jenggala ceramics outlet. For a view of the surf head to La Lucciola and take an upstairs table to peer over the palms or hang out at Ku De Ta or Potato Head beach clubs (all are cab rides away).

Hot tip: RIMBA and AYANA guests can join the priority queues down to Rock Bar; no bookings are taken so arrive well before sunset peak hour and take hats and sunscreen. There is a DJ at sunset and, from Thursdays to Saturdays, late into the night.

Essentials: RIMBA Jimbaran Bali, Jalan Karang Mas Sejahtera, Jimbaran; +62 361 846 8478. The resort is 10km from Denpasar Airport. There is a best-rate guarantee on the website; book by June 30 for 15 per cent off, from about $US145 a double. Seasonal specials of 30 per cent off suites also apply.


rimbajimbaran.com


How to remove a card from Apple Pay on Apple Watch

Apple Pay on the Apple Watch allows owners to make a mobile payment without having to remove their iPhone from their bag or pocket. Apple has taken measures to secure this process by requiring a user to wear the Watch on their wrist during the transaction. This security is not foolproof, leaving some Watch owners wondering if they should remove their credit cards from the wearable device. Thankfully, this process of credit card removal is easy.


WonderHowTo showed how the wrist detection Apple uses to secure Apple Pay can be circumvented by removing a person’s Watch and quickly substituting fingers for the wrist. If you are concerned about this potential vulnerability, you can secure your credit card by removing it from Apple Pay on your Watch.
Removing your credit card from Apple Pay on the Watch only takes a few minutes to complete. Just tap the Passbook icon on the Watch Home screen and find the card you want to remove. Press firmly on the card using force touch and tap Delete to remove it from Apple Pay.
You also can use the Watch app on your iPhone to remove a credit card as follows:
  • Launch the Apple Watch app on your iPhone.
  • Tap on My Watch to open the Watch-specific settings
  • Scroll dow and tap on Passbook & Apple Pay.
  •  Tap on the card you want to remove.

  •  Tap on Remove Card.


  •     Tap on Remove in the popup menu to confirm the deletion.

Apple Watch Lost or Stolen

If your Apple Watch is lost or stolen then you need to go to iCloud.com to remove the ability to make payments using credit and debit cards on your Apple Watch. Log into iCloud, click Settings, choose your device, and click Remove Device. Alternatively, you can also call your bank to suspend or remove your cards from Apple Pay.

Are you concerned about using Apple Pay on the Apple Watch because of this potential compromise? Or is it too complicated for a thief to pull off? Share your opinions in the comments.
source:http://www.iphonehacks.com/2015/05/how-to-remove-card-from-apple-pay-on-apple-watch.html

    Hide your cluttered Mac desktop with a click


    My Mac desktop is usually cluttered with documents, downloads, and photo thumbnails. Not only does this make it hard to find exactly what I am looking for, but it also looks like crap. Moreover, everyone can see what’s on your desktop, and sometimes that may not be the most ideal of circumstances. If you want to quickly hide your desktop or avoid its cluttered appearance, Shade is a great solution. 

     Hide your Mac desktop with the click
    Download Shade (iTunes link) from the Mac app store. Shade is a free application that uses a drop-down screen to hide the desktop with the click of a button. Once installed, open the application and you will see a small intro box and the Shade leaf icon will appear in your Mac toolbar.


    Shade is very simple to use. Whenever you want to hide your desktop, simply click the Shade icon and the drop-down “shade” will immediately hide your messy desktop. Messy on the left – Shade on the right.

     You can change the default Shade image by dragging any wallpaper or image right onto the Shade icon in the toolbar. This will change that default plant image to whatever you dragged to the icon.  This process can repeated endlessly; just make sure to choose an image of appropriate desktop size.

    It should be noted that any items downloaded or saved to your desktop will go to your regular desktop. No desktop items can be added or seen on your Shade. To remove the shade, click on the icon in the toolbar, and your regular desktop will be revealed.

    Shade is a quick and easy way to avoid desktop clutter and hide desktop items without having to actually clean it up manually. Of course the only way to really clear your desktop is to remove items from it, but Shade is nice alternative.
    source:http://www.iphonehacks.com/2015/05/hide-cluttered-mac-desktop-with-a-click.html

    Here’s how Galaxy S6 camera stacks up against iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus

    The Galaxy S6 (and Galaxy S6 edge) have been receiving ravishing reviews from various publications. The latest Galaxies are easily the best smartphones Samsung has ever manufactured.

    Samsung has also been highlighting how good the 16MP f/1.9 rear camera on the Galaxy S6 is. But how exactly does it stack up against the excellent 8MP shooter found on the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus?

    We take a look at some of the comparison done by other publications to find out.
    The Verge

    According to The Verge, the Galaxy S6 camera is “fast, reliable and takes great photos,” and is “easily the best camera on any Android phone ever.” The shooter is also able to hold its own against the iPhone 6 Plus and is able to consistently shoot decent pictures irrespective of the situation.


        On the whole, the S6 holds its own against the iPhone, and we wouldn’t hesitate for a second to use it as our primary smartphone camera.

    The comparison images from the website shows that the white balance of both handsets differ significantly, they are both able to produce usable photos in various conditions.

    Business Insider

    In their comparison, Business Insider found that the Galaxy S6 is able to take brighter photos than the iPhone 6 Plus in low-light, but the latter is still able to produce better images as they are sharper.

    They even pitted HTC’s latest flagship — the One M9 — against the iPhone 6 and Galaxy S6, but the 20MP module on the handset fell flat on its face due to its tendency to over-expose photos.

        The overall winner? The iPhone 6. It took the best photos overall, especially indoors and in low light. The Galaxy S6 was also quite good, coming in very close to the iPhone in most settings. The HTC did spectacularly well in a couple of outdoor settings, but overall seemed to have problems with exposure.

    CNET

    Unlike Business Insider and The Verge, CNET pitted the iPhone 6 against the Galaxy S6 and the HTC One M9. The publication echoed the same thoughts as Business Insider: While the Galaxy S6 took brighter shots in low-light, the iPhone 6 managed to capture more details and produce sharper images.

    As for the iPhone, its biggest strength is with low-light environments. Though it won’t have the brightest exposure in the end per se, its photos are sharper and look more natural. It also reduces the amount of lens flare beaming from different light sources. In addition, its white balance captures the purest and cleanest white hues.

    Overall though, the publication found that the cameras on the iPhone 6 and Galaxy S6 are equally good, while that on the HTC One M9 is a disappointment.

    All in all, the M9 proved a disappointment, while the Galaxy S6 and the iPhone 6 were pretty neck-and-neck. Personally, I’d give the Galaxy S6 the slight edge, since I’m partial to its saturated tones that come off bright without looking too unrealistic (a characteristic that plagued Galaxy cameras before).

    -----------------------------------
    It looks like Samsung has finally managed to catch up to Apple in terms of camera performance on its devices. Do keep in mind though that the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are six-months old at this point, and the next iPhone is only six-months away at this point, while the Galaxy S6 is going to be Samsung’s flagship handset for the next one year.

    source:http://www.iphonehacks.com/2015/04/roundup-galaxy-s6-camera-stacks-up-against-iphone-6-plus.html