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No doubting any of that.If you are in your twenties, Melbourne is the ultimate party town.Free Festivals wirh live bands over summer, (now) at different locations every weekend, Brunswick festival last week, St Kilda festival tomorrow. Moomba, comedy festival, many others.
Amazing live scene, clubs scene in the many lanes, theatre scene -way bigger than anywhere else in Australia.
Tennis, international tourists everywhere, Grand Prix, cricket, AussiecRules, Melbourne Cup. Huge crowds everywhere.
Ah God's own country anything West of the SA/WA border and the big plus is a defunct Lib/Nat set up and a big and with magnificent mark in the wheelhouse in control for whatever time frame he wants.@wayneL when people ask me what's Perth like, I say a great place to live, but you wouldnt want to visit, as boring as bat$hit as you would say.lol
With regard bushfires, we should be ok now that Scomo can give us his undivided attention and the East Coast doesnt need him for bushfire and flood mitigation. Lol
What a bunch of babies, now they have Lowe letting them down on interest rates, OMG what next.
Best move you ever did coming over here to the West.lol
@wayneL when people ask me what's Perth like, I say a great place to live, but you wouldnt want to visit, as boring as bat$hit as you would say.lol
With regard bushfires, we should be ok now that Scomo can give us his undivided attention and the East Coast doesnt need him for bushfire and flood mitigation. Lol
What a bunch of babies, now they have Lowe letting them down on interest rates, OMG what next.
Best move you ever did coming over here to the West.lol
Yes but that is a blessing in a lot of ways, one you only go to see them when you want to and two the only ones who visit you, are the ones that really want to see you. ?I lived in Perth for a little bit. I liked it. Great place IMO. Far more affordable to live as well. My complaint, though, is that its so far removed that it makes it difficult to come back to the East coast for a visit (family).
hahaha yes! I agree. It can be a blessing if you like that removed presence. I am looking to go back soon to see friends, but it's the cost that has held me back a little. Flights post-covid got a little silly. Should be able to visit this year though and looking forward to it. It's a great lifestyle out there too if you like taking a boat out, beaches, or 4WD/camping.Yes but that is a blessing in a lot of ways, one you only go to see them when you want to and two the only ones who visit you, are the ones that really want to see you. ?
Works great unless you are the needy type. ?
If choosing to travel back East, rather walking or riding a sweat machine, there has always been car, train and air to travel on.I lived in Perth for a little bit. I liked it. Great place IMO. Far more affordable to live as well. My complaint, though, is that its so far removed that it makes it difficult to come back to the East coast for a visit (family).
Personally I don't mind Canberra.I an a fan of Melbourne myself, and one of the rare few that also likes Canberra.
Therein lies the answer Foreigners always stand out and sometimes out of place !!!!!!Many moons go when we were thinking of places to move to, we thought Canberra looked very good on paper.
We drove in and though underwhelmed initially, we thought we would give it a go for a few days.
The first night we went to a well regarded restaurant in "Civic". The first thing we noticed that almost all of the customers were dressed in white shirts and ties (and female equivalent thereof)
Throughout the night we were chatting and bantering with the waiter, as we usually do. As he came for our dessert order, he suddenly paused and said, you're not from around here are you?
It was precisely at that point that we decided that Canberra wasn't for us... LMAO
Many moons go when we were thinking of places to move to, we thought Canberra looked very good on paper.
We drove in and though underwhelmed initially, we thought we would give it a go for a few days.
The first night we went to a well regarded restaurant in "Civic". The first thing we noticed that almost all of the customers were dressed in white shirts and ties (and female equivalent thereof)
Throughout the night we were chatting and bantering with the waiter, as we usually do. As he came for our dessert order, he suddenly paused and said, you're not from around here are you?
It was precisely at that point that we decided that Canberra wasn't for us... LMAO
We have in my lowly estimation exactly that happening just out of Midland. Hundreds of houses being built on a swampy couple of hundred acres. Perhaps in 50 or so years it will be a slum. Hardly a hand span between the houses.The worst is that the (lower) quality of migrants we are attracting now will directly compete with our own in trouble renters.more nightmare and crime ahead.don't worry,you will get used to ghettos and crime.western Europe did.
Just be wise where you purchase ppor and investment properties
The media and the public have been bashing Lowe lets just hope for their sake it doesn't back fire and they create a mini putin of banking who could have the last laugh ultimately ?RBA all but confirms March rate rise as households struggle with record mortgage payments
haha. I'm not sure I've noticed that (everyone in white shirts and ties), though it depends when you're walking around. Canberra is definitely a town full of gov workers, with a few defence, or firms supporting them. Good news is that you can live outside of the ACT border and can still get to work relatively quickly due to main roads. I know a few people who live about 45min away from the canberra centre in 'rural NSW' on a large property. They have their gov job but get to live with a lot of space.
It's not for everyone, but I don't think its that bad haha.
There's lawyers for this!The joys of renting and not keeping up the maintenance.
Woman crushed while sleeping as ceiling of rental property collapses
A real estate agency and a Queensland landlord are in hot water after a woman was injured when the bedroom ceiling caved in as she slept.au.news.yahoo.com
A woman says she’s now too afraid to sleep after the ceiling collapsed on her in the middle of the night in a rental property on the Gold Coast in a shocking case that has raised questions around the neglect and responsibility of landlords.
Since the incident in October, which left Ms Ware with head, neck and back injuries requiring pain medication and physiotherapy, the New Zealander says she’s suffered mentally.
“I’ve had terrible anxiety, nightmares, hypervigilance and sleeplessness,” she explained. “I’m constantly waiting for something else bad to happen.. I revisit that night every time I close my eyes.”
Tragically it’s not the first time a ceiling had collapsed in the property with an elderly relative narrowly missing being hit when the roof collapsed in another bedroom. Ms Ware’s sister said she had raised issues with the property manager around cracking and sagging in the ceilings at every inspection over the last “three or four years”, the Courier Mail reported.
“I kept contacting Ray White and asking them what was happening with it but they kept saying they were waiting for a response from the landlord,” she told the publication.
The joys of renting and not keeping up the maintenance.
Woman crushed while sleeping as ceiling of rental property collapses
A real estate agency and a Queensland landlord are in hot water after a woman was injured when the bedroom ceiling caved in as she slept.au.news.yahoo.com
A woman says she’s now too afraid to sleep after the ceiling collapsed on her in the middle of the night in a rental property on the Gold Coast in a shocking case that has raised questions around the neglect and responsibility of landlords.
Since the incident in October, which left Ms Ware with head, neck and back injuries requiring pain medication and physiotherapy, the New Zealander says she’s suffered mentally.
“I’ve had terrible anxiety, nightmares, hypervigilance and sleeplessness,” she explained. “I’m constantly waiting for something else bad to happen.. I revisit that night every time I close my eyes.”
Tragically it’s not the first time a ceiling had collapsed in the property with an elderly relative narrowly missing being hit when the roof collapsed in another bedroom. Ms Ware’s sister said she had raised issues with the property manager around cracking and sagging in the ceilings at every inspection over the last “three or four years”, the Courier Mail reported.
“I kept contacting Ray White and asking them what was happening with it but they kept saying they were waiting for a response from the landlord,” she told the publication.
Can the owner claim it as a deduction?There's lawyers for this!
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