The Most Unique Boutique Stays in Australia | Australian Traveller australiantraveller.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from australiantraveller.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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A family guide to where to eat, stay and play in Sydney 09 June 2021 . BY Megan Arkinstall
Your go-to guide to Sydney’s best places to eat, sleep and top things to do with kids.
Where to eat in Sydney with kids
Sydneysiders are known for their love of eating out, and they don’t limit their choices to one type of cuisine. Sampling everything from Malaysian curries to fresh pasta dishes to sushi is as easy as flitting from one neighbourhood or suburb to the next.
Dine in or grab-and-go at this European food emporium, which serves fresh Italian-style food made with produce direct from the Bel & Brio farm. Coffee is from Bondi roasters Will & Co, and there’s freshly baked Italian pastries such as Sicilian cannoli, or savoury items such as bacon and egg brioche and bruschetta. The Marketplace stocks ready-made meals, too, so you can grab a fresh baguette and cold-pressed juice and head to the nearby waterfront lawns of Barangaroo to have brekkie with
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These isolated Sydney homes are under massive boulders which could fall at any moment, and authorities don t know what to do
SatSaturday 20
updated
SunSunday 21
FebFebruary 2021 at 10:02am
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In Greek mythology, the sword of Damocles signified perpetual peril suspended over someone s head, ready to fall at any moment.
Suzie and Joe Haddock know the story well they re living it and are, so far, on day 120.
Authorities are worried there are more on the way.
The situation is so perilous, the Haddocks are only allowed to enter their home for 10 minutes a week.
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When the northern beaches hamlet of Coasters Retreat went into lockdown on December 20, the residents were already no strangers to a life of isolation.
The suburb, across the water from Palm Beach with which it shares a postcode, comprises 53 houses nestled among the dense bushland of Ku-ring-gai Chase national park. It doesn’t have a road in or out, nor does it have a supermarket. The route to the rest of the world is on a ferry to Palm Beach.
The physical isolation has provided a safe haven for its residents most of whom are retirees from the Avalon COVID-19 outbreak. But it has also meant residents must regularly leave their relative safety to get supplies.