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Inside the fairytale castle hidden in the Australian countryside

Inside the fairytale castle hidden in the Australian countryside Alice Murphy For Daily Mail Australia © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo Less than a half hour s drive from Canberra is an extraordinary manor that looks to have been plucked straight from the pages of a fairytale. Just like a storybook castle, Tour Rouge - French for Red Tower - is hidden behind wrought iron gates which open onto a winding driveway that leads to the front door, an opulent style inspired by the grounds of Italian villas. Standout features of the four-bedroom house in Carwoola, 26 kilometres from the Australian capital on the NSW border, include a Tuscan tower, solar heated swimming pool, sprawling sun terrace, three-acre gardens and a luxurious open-plan living space that could pass for a spread in Architectural Digest. 

Alec Baldwin says lockdown taught him that we need less in our lives

Alec Baldwin says lockdown taught him that we need less in our lives Brian Marks For Dailymail.com © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo He has been lying low in recent days following controversy over his wife Hilaria Baldwin s invented Spanish heritage. But Alec Baldwin returned to social media on Sunday with a philosophical anti-materialist tweet inspired by his time in lockdown. The 62-year-old 30 Rock star said his time at home had taught him that less was more when it came to his life.  © Provided by Daily Mail Less is more: Alec Baldwin, 62, shared that lockdown had taught me that we need less in our lives in a tweet Sunday following the controversy over his wife Hilaria s invented Spanish heritage; seen together in March in NYC

Closed borders and JobKeeper caused $39million in crops to be wasted

Closed borders and JobKeeper caused $39million in crops to be wasted Brett Lackey For Daily Mail Australia © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo Crop losses in Australia caused by closed borders and a lack of migrant workers have amounted to more than $39million worth of crops being lost in just the last five weeks, farmers say.  New figures from the National Crop Loss Register, which allows farmers to logon and report their crop losses, show that paddocks full of produce are going to waste because there are not enough workers to harvest them.  Since international borders were closed in March 2020 to halt the spread of coronavirus, the seasonal workforce which farmers rely on to plant, pick and pack their crops has dried up - leaving 26,000 jobs vacant.

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