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The Most Unique Boutique Stays in Australia | Australian Traveller

The Most Unique Boutique Stays in Australia | Australian Traveller
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Audit finds Van Dairy Group farms failed to meet operating effluent requirements

Print text only Cancel Australia s largest dairy farming business is facing fresh questions over its farm standards, after it was issued with environment protection notices and had an operating licence suspended because of overflowing effluent systems.  Key points: The Tasmanian Dairy Industry Authority found 83 per cent of Van Dairy s 23 farms failed to meet the effluent code The audit found the dairy farms have increased herd sizes but hadn t appropriately scaled up its effluent system The business says the most urgent repair work will be completed within the next fortnight Officers from the Tasmanian Dairy Industry Authority (TDIA) visited all Van Dairy Group farms between February 22 and 26 this year to assess whether the Farm Dairy Effluent Management Code of Practice was being complied with.  

Gruesome mass discovery of dead Tasmanian devils prompts plea for action

Gruesome mass discovery of dead Tasmanian devils prompts plea for action Posted ThuThursday 11 updated FriFriday 12 Locals in Woolnorth say 10 Tasmanian devils have been found dead in five days. ( Share Print text only Cancel The Greens have pleaded for federal government intervention after a spate of bloody Tasmanian devil deaths on roads in the far north-west of the state. Key points: Locals in Woolnorth say 10 Tasmanian devils have been found dead in just five days on or near the Van Dairy property Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson is calling for the Save the Tasmanian Devil program to be reinstated It s not clear how the devils died

Aboriginal activist Emma Lee: tackling Tasmania's fraught and bloody history

Normal text size Very large text size When she was at her lowest, before becoming the sort of person who has the ear and admiration of premiers and governors, Emma Lee worked at a petrol station. It was 2011. She was 38. She’d “crashed and burned”, as she describes it, losing her first marriage, her money, her mojo. After a successful career as an archaeologist, and a manager at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, her whole world had shrunk to the grey concrete forecourt at Woolworths Caltex in her home town of Wynyard, on Tasmania’s north-west coast. For 18 months she healed, slowly rebuilding herself and, from behind the kiosk counter, finding the inspiration for a new approach to Aboriginal rights – a method that would, only four years later, start to bear fruit with then Tasmanian premier, Will Hodgman.

Oatlands, Richmond, Stanley: Three heritage towns throw light (and luxe) on Tasmania's dark history

Save Share Ghost tour guide Peter Fielding, dressed in a raven-black top hat and frock coat, leads a band of history enthusiasts to the old “hanging” jail at Oatlands, a heritage town in the Tasmanian midlands famed for its 138 Georgian sandstone buildings. Thirty years ago, in the depths of an economic slump and rural drought, this former military barrack a little over an hour’s drive north of Hobart had the air of a ghost town. Today, with a heritage tourism and foodie revival under way, the ghosts need a little conjuring. “Men were hanged in public. Launched into eternity!“: Ghost tour guide Peter Fielding guides ghost tours in Oatlands, Tasmania. 

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