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Clean & Cool Appliance Sales & Repairs in Geelong, Victoria | Local business



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Clean & Cool Appliance Sales & Repairs

Locality: Geelong, Victoria

Phone: +61 409 853 408



Address: GEELONG WEST VICTORIA 3220 Geelong, VIC, Australia

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24.01.2022 A good article...Foreign interests continue to play an important role in the ownership stakes with offshore interests accounting for about 13.4 per cent, or 52....6 million hectares, of Australian farmland. The UK is the biggest investor with 10.24 million hectares followed by China (9.17 million hectares) and the US (2.66 million hectares). So precisely just who does own Australias farms? Its time to find out ...



23.01.2022 Dingo tracks - running across water in a clay pan - photo taken by Greg Robertson when mustering in far north west NSW.

22.01.2022 some of the products available pick up today from the store. all in prefect working condition and local drop off available at a cost. prices from $70-300. call 0409 853 408 if interested

21.01.2022 free pick-up of unwanted appliances. call if interested or message the details 0409 853 408



19.01.2022 These tiny houses let people with incomes as low as $10K become homeowners

16.01.2022 Batsmen/women can learn an important lesson from the kingfisher...........

14.01.2022 Whirlpool heavy duty washer with warranty in perfect working order. Can deliver for a small fee. 7.5 kg capacity. $190



14.01.2022 Here's a short history lesson for you that might help you understand the true nature of the flood. This is a little hard to read but this map shows the river a...nd creek systems of the North West of Qld between Hughenden to Cloncurry. Our home station Nonda Downs was right on Corella Creek between Maxwelton and Nelia, and you can see the mighty Flinders River was our Northern boundary. We were interlaced by Boundary Creek to the east and Alicks Creek to the South and West. My grandfather NH Brown was an original pioneer of the North and he took up Nonda because of its magnificent creek systems which not only watered the station but, he believed - with all the big cool trees laced across the open downs country - also attracted the rain. We learned to live with the land but we never trusted a single wet season because the old timers had warned my grandfather what could happen - and that lesson was rigorously passed down through the generations to us. Please don't fall for the 'global warming' stuff either. That's a cop out excuse from those who have absolutely no understanding of history. There were at least three big flood events in the 1800's, one big flood (1974) in the 1900's and now 2019. We were completely smashed in the '74 flood with massive stock losses. We were evacuated by the Army when they cleared the railway siding nearby of its 70 occupants. We were taken to Julia Creek for two days and my mother, my sister Jasmine and I set up an emergency canteen at the airport to help fellow evacuees. I left my best mares standing on a small dirt mound that was built as a ramp to service trucks. I never expected to see them alive again, but they somehow made it and - running raw open sores and eaten alive by sandflies - they whinnied when they saw us. We came home two days later, landed on a bit of bitumen that was still left and caught a ride on a railway trike with the fettlers and then walked and waded the rest of our way home. The devastation was beyond words - and then another flood almost as high came down four days later. We lost big numbers of stock, we lost most of our fences and roads - and then we started all over again. Is this the biggest flood of them all? At a guess I would say absolutely not. Nonda had massive wide, silky smooth clay pans that ran east-west across the station that were formed by massive floods a long time ago. I loved those claypans. You could train picnic racehorses on them, teach horses to work cattle on them - and drive your Willys jeep really really fast on them. My father always told me that we should never forget the lesson of the claypans - how they were made, and how those massive pounding floods could always happen again. That was nature, after all, and nature has no memory. She just keeps repeating herself. The claypans were so perfect that the American Army arrived on our station after Darwin was bombed by the Japanese and pegged it out in preparation to build a new airfield for the Flying Fortress bombers for their sortees into New Guinea. All past history, of course, but I have a hunch that many people - especially the new generation of station owners - simply did not understand what this brutal, beautiful, devastatingly tough land could do to you in a flood. This might be the age of communication, but we should never, forget history. The truth is that nature is fierce and wilful and she will always do as she likes - and she will get you in the end.

13.01.2022 An oldie, but a GOLDIE!

13.01.2022 For all my friends who want to grow their own food, This book is so wonderful <3 Plus, today its free. Ive been using it for a few weeks now -- Ive learned h...ow to create a self sustaining garden. Learn how to grow the best possible self sustaining garden. Also learn how to keep food in case of a massive food shortage! All of these skills could be especially important in todays turbulent times.

12.01.2022 Secure funding for your farm by connecting with investors who believe in sustainable farming.

11.01.2022 Heres a short history lesson for you that might help you understand the true nature of the flood. This is a little hard to read but this map shows the river a...nd creek systems of the North West of Qld between Hughenden to Cloncurry. Our home station Nonda Downs was right on Corella Creek between Maxwelton and Nelia, and you can see the mighty Flinders River was our Northern boundary. We were interlaced by Boundary Creek to the east and Alicks Creek to the South and West. My grandfather NH Brown was an original pioneer of the North and he took up Nonda because of its magnificent creek systems which not only watered the station but, he believed - with all the big cool trees laced across the open downs country - also attracted the rain. We learned to live with the land but we never trusted a single wet season because the old timers had warned my grandfather what could happen - and that lesson was rigorously passed down through the generations to us. Please dont fall for the global warming stuff either. Thats a cop out excuse from those who have absolutely no understanding of history. There were at least three big flood events in the 1800s, one big flood (1974) in the 1900s and now 2019. We were completely smashed in the 74 flood with massive stock losses. We were evacuated by the Army when they cleared the railway siding nearby of its 70 occupants. We were taken to Julia Creek for two days and my mother, my sister Jasmine and I set up an emergency canteen at the airport to help fellow evacuees. I left my best mares standing on a small dirt mound that was built as a ramp to service trucks. I never expected to see them alive again, but they somehow made it and - running raw open sores and eaten alive by sandflies - they whinnied when they saw us. We came home two days later, landed on a bit of bitumen that was still left and caught a ride on a railway trike with the fettlers and then walked and waded the rest of our way home. The devastation was beyond words - and then another flood almost as high came down four days later. We lost big numbers of stock, we lost most of our fences and roads - and then we started all over again. Is this the biggest flood of them all? At a guess I would say absolutely not. Nonda had massive wide, silky smooth clay pans that ran east-west across the station that were formed by massive floods a long time ago. I loved those claypans. You could train picnic racehorses on them, teach horses to work cattle on them - and drive your Willys jeep really really fast on them. My father always told me that we should never forget the lesson of the claypans - how they were made, and how those massive pounding floods could always happen again. That was nature, after all, and nature has no memory. She just keeps repeating herself. The claypans were so perfect that the American Army arrived on our station after Darwin was bombed by the Japanese and pegged it out in preparation to build a new airfield for the Flying Fortress bombers for their sortees into New Guinea. All past history, of course, but I have a hunch that many people - especially the new generation of station owners - simply did not understand what this brutal, beautiful, devastatingly tough land could do to you in a flood. This might be the age of communication, but we should never, forget history. The truth is that nature is fierce and wilful and she will always do as she likes - and she will get you in the end.



10.01.2022 This young photographer looks at the ways womens problems are aestheticized and ignored.

10.01.2022 Why if solar & wind are so cheap do they make electricity so expensive? 1. Inherently unreliable so need expensive additions (eg natural gas, hydro, batteries) 2.Transmission is much more expensive. This is true globally for physical reasons http://ow.ly/6Kkv30ldrt4 #auspol

06.01.2022 Celebrated Australian performer Barry Humphries returns to Geelong in June to take audiences on a revealing, FUNNY and moving trip through his colourful life and theatrical career.

04.01.2022 Here are the 25 greatest Australian films so far this century. To get these results, we conducted the largest poll of Australian film critics in history.

03.01.2022 For all my friends who want to grow their own food, This book is so wonderful <3 Plus, today it's free. I've been using it for a few weeks now -- I've learned h...ow to create a self sustaining garden. Learn how to grow the best possible self sustaining garden. Also learn how to keep food in case of a massive food shortage! All of these skills could be especially important in today’s turbulent times.

02.01.2022 Sex, Satan and surrealism: The unsettling erotica of Michael Hutter NSFW.

02.01.2022 Robin Williams (Rated R) "Was the human body designed by committee?"

02.01.2022 WOW... breathtaking scenery from Mt Anne in the Southwest National Park thanks to Heath Whiley who says: Summer is on its way, the perfect time to see the Warat...ah flowering in alpine Tasmania. The Mt Anne day walk in Tasmanias South West National Park (and World Heritage area) is an absolutely stunning hike. Mt Anne stands at 1423 metres and involves a full day walking. From the car park at Condominium Creek, it is a solid hike up to the appropriately named High Hut which is at approximately 1000 metres. There is ample space to pitch a tent so a night or two up here is highly recommended for basing yourself on the mountain and enjoying the expansive views over Lake Pedder. From the hut, things start to get a little more challenging, as the track becomes steeper and starts to involve a bit more scrambling over rock. After an hour or so you will find yourself at the 1289 metre high peak of Mt Eliza however, and from here you enter a new world the alpine plateau which is covered in cushion plants, pandani, alpine flowers and many small tarns. You can also follow Heath via his website: https://heathwhiley.net/

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