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Echuca Mobile Massage in Echuca, Victoria | Medical and health



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Echuca Mobile Massage

Locality: Echuca, Victoria

Phone: +61 418 310 040



Address: 258 EYRE ST 3564 Echuca, VIC, Australia

Website: http://www.echucamassage.com

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25.01.2022 It's the remarkable natural phenomenon created when the rising full moon reflects off the exposed mudflats at low tide, creating the illusion of a staircase r...ising to the moon. Catch the Staircase to the Moon today through Saturday and tick it off your North West Bucket List! www.australiasnorthwest.com/bucket-list Away with CJ #NWBucketList #WanderOutYonder #BroomeTime Western Australia Australia.com



24.01.2022 It pays to look up from your computer as you never know what could pass you by! The day she captured this spectacular waterspout, Pamela Pauline was at home wor...king on her computer at Mona Vale, NSW, when she looked out the window and spotted a sailboat on the choppy waters. 'The sky became very, very dark, and this waterspout just came out of nowhere,' she says. 'I grabbed my camera and started shooting, thinking to myself, 'I'm glad I'm not out on the water!'' Pamela recalls that the sailboat quickly took its sails down, and the waterspout dissipated within a couple of minutes, but says 'it must have been terrifying for them'. A waterspout looks like a slender tornado, but is usually smaller in diameter and much less intense. A series of factors combine to allow local concentration (or convergence) of the airflow. This causes vigorous updraughts to 'tighten up' into spinning columns. Waterspouts tend to form when the air is humid and unstable. They're usually seen at the base of the large, cumulus clouds, with much of the visible part of the funnel made up of tiny droplets reaching down from the cloud base. Although waterspouts are generally not as violent as tornadoes, the speed of the rotating air still makes them a serious threat to boaters. Pamela's amazing photo is the September feature in the 2021 Australian Weather Calendar - http://ow.ly/m3Ch50CbZKA So next time you're looking down at your computer or phone, remember to look upyou might just see something worthy of a place in the calendar! #BOMCalendar Pamela Pauline Photography

24.01.2022 Take a minute to think about this. The experts that are telling people what do to currently, are the same experts that believe the following. *Adding fluori...de to drinking water is for your ‘health’ *There is nothing wrong with Spraying food with poison and allowing them to be sold. *They allow gmo foods to be grown and then sold to families. *They do not acknowledge vaccine injuries. *They don’t have a problem with toxic filled sunscreens. *Thinks eating organic meat and veg is harmful and dangerous *They do not talk about the importance of a healthy immune system. *They think that masks are going to protect you from a virus. *They encourage the healthy eating chart that is linked with multi national food companies. *They Encourage a flu vaccine that has not been independently safety tested. *They are waiting for a vaccine that also will also not be throughly tested for long term implications. *think that a large percentage of the population being chronically sick is normal *The health minister is not a qualified medical professional. *They Do not acknowledge that one of the largest causes of death is misdiagnosis and medical error. *Thinks that type two diabetes cannot be reversed through diet. *They Believe that EMF radiation isn’t harmful. *And prescribing opiates is in the public’s best interest, while criminalising cannabis. But hey, we better listen to them about this current health ‘concern’, because they are the experts and they know best.

23.01.2022 baby you’re scaring the horses...



23.01.2022 HAPPY SUNDAY Take that Parrtjima Light Festival !!!! - " Anything you can do, I can do better!" - MOTHER NATURE by Ingooeland - who said - " I feel bles...sed getting the chance to witness this rare and special display at Uluru and I am proud I was able to capture this unique moment. It is still as magical to me as it was that moment." #ABCmyphoto See more

22.01.2022 For those who need a breath of fresh air...

18.01.2022 Walla-beee waiting here no matter how long it takes. : dana_young93 (via Instagram) : Adventure Bay, Bruny Island.... @hobartandbeyond #discovertasmania



17.01.2022 The beautiful #EastMacDonnellRanges! The cousin of the West MacDonnell Ranges. If you're keen to get off the sealed roads and onto the dirt, this is the place... for you! The East MacDonnell Ranges stretch 150 km east of Alice Springs and hide some of Central Australia’s most famous outback landscapesgaps, gorges, bush walks, Aboriginal rock carvings, amazing geological formations and pioneering history. Visitors can head out on a day trip, or stay at @rossriverresort or historic @haleriverhomestead. Learn more about visiting the East Macs on our website linked below . Thanks for sharing @danjamesjackson https://bit.ly/31YiRCO See more

16.01.2022 Love a desert sunset and red dirt! Cecelia Rezina captured this amazing shot at Lajamanu - about 500kms from Katherine in the Top End. What do things look lik...e at your place this afternoon? : Cecelia Rezina via Weather Obsessed

16.01.2022 Bills Gates, ID2020 & Vaccine Microdots.

14.01.2022 THE QUEEN OF THE STIRLINGS The flowers of the rare Eastern Queen of Sheba (thelymitra speciosa) are gorgeous, but did you know the leaves are also very inte...resting? These pictures were taken by Terry Dunham in the Stirling Range National Park over the past week. He said the spiral leaves in the first photo are a great example of the leaf structure of these stunning orchids. The Eastern Queen of Sheba belongs to the spiralis complex of sun orchids that we have here in WA. Terry Dunham / The Wildflower Society of Western Australia (Inc.).

14.01.2022 Sometimes life just works out... Spotted in King River, WA, yesterday evening. : via ABC Great Southern



14.01.2022 Spinning The Globe And Flying Where It Lands!

12.01.2022 Looks like a painting, doesn't it? These were sent to us from Lockey, who calls himself a "tourist on a tractor". He spent his youth farming in regional Austr...alia, but has worked in Sydney and overseas for the last 30 years. A few months ago, his brother asked him for a hand sowing across a few big old stations. "I laughed at the time but will be forever glad that I was silly enough to take him up on the offer," Lockey said. "As I've found that you may get booked, bogged and buggered off to the point of near madness; but then you get to see the sun setting over the paddocks on Pier Pier Station (50km from Coonamble), hazed slightly by the dust from the seeder ... and you start to realize how wonderful the world is - not a bad way to have to self isolate during #covidtimes at all...." Thanks for the pics and poetic musings, Lockey! : Michael Locke

11.01.2022 A farmer had some puppies he needed to sell. He painted a sign advertising the 4 pups and set about nailing it to a post on the edge of his yard. As he was driv...ing the last nail into the post, he felt a tug on his overalls. He looked down into the eyes of a little boy. "Mister," he said, "I want to buy one of your puppies." "Well," said the farmer, as he rubbed the sweat off the back of his neck, "These puppies come from fine parents and cost a good deal of money." The boy dropped his head for a moment. Then reaching deep into his pocket, he pulled out a handful of change and held it up to the farmer. "I've got thirty-nine cents. Is that enough to take a look?" "Sure," said the farmer. And with that he let out a whistle. "Here, Dolly!" he called. Out from the doghouse and down the ramp ran Dolly followed by four little balls of fur. The little boy pressed his face against the chain link fence. His eyes danced with delight. As the dogs made their way to the fence, the little boy noticed something else stirring inside the doghouse. Slowly another little ball appeared, this one noticeably smaller. Down the ramp it slid. Then in a somewhat awkward manner, the little pup began hobbling toward the others, doing its best to catch up... "I want that one," the little boy said, pointing to the runt. The farmer knelt down at the boy's side and said, "Son, you don't want that puppy. He will never be able to run and play with you like these other dogs would." With that the little boy stepped back from the fence, reached down, and began rolling up one leg of his trousers. In doing so he revealed a steel brace running down both sides of his leg attaching itself to a specially made shoe. Looking back up at the farmer, he said, "You see sir, I don't run too well myself, and he will need someone who understands." With tears in his eyes, the farmer reached down and picked up the little pup. Holding it carefully he handed it to the little boy. "How much?" asked the little boy... "No charge," answered the farmer, "There's no charge for love." Author Unknown

10.01.2022 Sorry for the radio silence I’ve been flat out exploring around @discovermountisa and have only now just had time to catch up on editing. I’ve had some of the... best camps out here. This was on the road to Camooweal where we had a great free camp. We actual drive a few kms out of town to see the NT border. The night skies out here were as good as they get. @queensland See more

09.01.2022 Believe it or not this photo was taken from outside my caravan where I spent the night. I shot the stars out here at night. Had a small fire and had a great d...inner at the pub. I highly recommend a trip out this way to experience a good old country pub and touch on the outback feeling. Loving my time all around this region. @sqcountry See more

08.01.2022 Morning! We thought we'd kick off your day with an amazing shot of Uluru. Those colours! : Todd R Murphy via ABC Alice Springs

08.01.2022 LET THERE BE LIGHT! Wow! Such dramatic scale at Standley Chasm Angkerle Atwatye in the West MacDonnell Ranges How awesome is it !!??... Travis Mills @trav__mills

06.01.2022 There are times when you read a very special Aussie story, that it’s worth Sharing with everyone.~ FROM ~ Garry Linnell's article in The New Daily. It’s 1932 an...d Australia is in the grip of the Great Depression. One in three workers are unemployed. Decrepit shanty towns hug the outskirts of the big cities. A scrawny rabbit caught in a trap will feed a family for a week. Country roads are filled with broken men walking from one farmhouse to another seeking menial jobs and food. On the outskirts of the South Gippsland town of Leongatha, an injured farmer lies in bed unable to walk or work. World War I hero Captain Leo Tennyson Gwyther is in hospital with a broken leg and the family farm is in danger of falling into ruins. Up steps his son, nine-year-old Lennie. With the help of his pony Ginger Mick, Lennie ploughs the farm’s 24 paddocks and keeps the place running until his father can get back on his feet. How to reward him? Lennie has been obsessively following one of the biggest engineering feats of the era the construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. He wants to attend its opening. With great reluctance, his parents agree he can go. So Lennie saddles up Ginger Mick, packs a toothbrush, pyjamas, spare clothes and a water bottle into a sack, and begins the 1000+ kilometre trek to Sydney. AloneThat’s right..A nine-year-old boy riding a pony from the deep south of Victoria to the biggest and roughest city in the nation. Told you it was a different era. No social media. No mobile phones. But even then it doesn’t take long before word begins to spread about a boy, his horse and their epic trek. The entire population of small country towns gather on their outskirts to welcome his arrival. He survives bushfires, is attacked by a vagabond and endures rain and cold, biting winds. When he reaches Canberra he is welcomed by Prime Minister Joseph Lyons, who invites him into Parliament House for tea. When he finally arrives in Sydney, more than 10,000 people line the streets to greet him. He is besieged by autograph hunters. He becomes a key part of the official parade at the bridge’s opening. He and Ginger Mick are invited to make a starring appearance at the Royal Show. Even Donald Bradman, the biggest celebrity of the Depression era, requests a meeting and gives him a signed cricket bat. A letter writer to The Sydney Morning Herald at the time gushes that just such an example as provided by a child of nine summers, Lennie Gwyther was, and is, needed to raise the spirit of our people and to fire our youth and others to do things not to talk only. The sturdy pioneer spirit is not dead let it be remembered that this little lad, when his father was in hospital, cultivated the farm a mere child. When Lennie leaves Sydney for home a month later, he has become one of the most famous figures in a country craving uplifting news. Large crowds wave handkerchiefs. .Women weep and shout goodbye. According to The Sun newspaper, Lennie, being a casual Australian, swung into the saddle and called ‘Toodleloo!’. He finally arrives home to a tumultuous reaction in Leongatha. He returns to school and soon life for Lennie and the country returns to normal. These days you can find a bronze statue in Leongatha commemorating Lennie and Ginger Mick. But Australia has largely forgotten his remarkable feat and how he inspired a struggling nation. Never taught about him in school? Never heard of him before? Spread the word. We need to remember and celebrate Lennie Gwyther and his courageous journey. It's a great story. God knows we need these stories now, more than ever. See more

05.01.2022 Letter to the Prime Minister. Dear Mr Morrison, Since you are now shaping up as the Prime Minister who intends to liquidate Rural Australia, here's a little so...mething that might appeal to the former whiz-bang tourism marketing man in you. This is a photograph of a wedding party near a drought stricken town in western NSW. It's a real wedding too, not the fake made-for-TV variety that you might have created for one if your Australian tourism campaigns when you were making them way back then. It's a wedding held during a dreadful dust storm not long after two young people have committed their lives to each other. Study it carefully, because these photographs of a bride and groom standing on the dusty paddocks of a former family farm remind us what our love connection with the land really looks like. According to the photographer, Jayde Cliff from Jayde Creative Co, people from local farms and communities turned up at the wedding with hope: hope that it will rain one day, hope that things will turn around - and hope they might somehow find a highway out of hell. The photographer is a local girl who travelled home for the wedding on a farm not far from where she grew up. What she saw on that wedding weekend however horrified her. She wrote about the spirit of the people at the wedding in her poignant FB post: "They have so much hope in their hearts... and community spirit.." And that's exactly the point, Prime Minister. You are not one of these people who chose to live and work amongst the heart of rural Australia, and you never will be. Those of us who are part of them through history or blood or geography fully understand their toughness and ability to endure such unimaginable hardship. These are the same qualities that the people of rural Australia famously took to the trenches, the same qualities we used to pioneer this nation, the same dogged qualities we used to make this nation great. We know about courage and hope and try because It's bred into our blood and our bone, and it defines who the people of rural Australian really are. The only farmers that will be left after such a brutal drought are going to be the very best, the farmers you should be fighting to save so they can feed us in the future. And - in exactly the same way - the only livestock still left are going to be the very finest genetics, the kind that we as a nation can never afford to lose. And yet you and your jelly-backed and poorly informed 'advisors' have apparently made the gutless decision to simply walk away because, as you said, "There's no magic wand, you can't make it rain, no need to panic, let's all just focus on the budget surplus instead .." Well, Mr Morrison, if we were in a war I wouldn't want to have you fighting in the trenches beside me. You are much too chicken-hearted for me, Sir, as simple as that. If you don't want to have a go, then that's your business, but you have no right to deliberately prevent our great Australian farmers from trying to have a go and find ways to survive and make it through. Why won't you LEND our farmers the money they need to keep their stock alive? You lend it to University students as a HEC's debt and they pay you back when they graduate and get a good job. It will rain again one day and farmers will be making money again and they can do exactly the same. In any case, you certainly dole it out to every other shindig you can find overseas and then you distinguish yourself by giving money to the Moon or to Mars or whatever planet it was. Whatever happened to doing the decent thing and helping your own people instead? You and your Treasurer, Mr Frydenberg, might have turned your backs on us and left rural Australia to die, but let me assure you of this: come the next federal election every farmer in Australia will not forget how badly - how brutally - you have treated us. We will march to the cities in our tens of thousands and we will call out Coo-ee on every street corner the same way our courageous forebears did when they walked in from the bush to enlist in WW1 - and we will, I promise you, finally settle the score. Kind regards Heather Pascoe (Farmer from the Deserts of the Darling Downs) Photo: @jayde creative co photography

03.01.2022 An ancient river system awaits at Nitmiluk (Katherine) Gorge... https://fal.cn/AdventureRegion Photo: Jarrad Seng Photography with Nitmiluk Tours in Tourism Top End

02.01.2022 A technicolour sunset in the Mallee Grant Smyth took this astonishing photo in Sea Lake at its most stunningly beautiful. ... - Grant Smyth, or @gtsmyth13 on Insta

02.01.2022 Have you experienced a beautiful spring sunrise in South Australia as yet? This stunning reflection shot was taken by photographer Ben in the Murray River Na...tional Park Share your sunrise photos below : @bendwoods via The Frames - Riverland Luxury #abcmyphoto

02.01.2022 "When the Darling River finally flowed again, after several months of being bone dry." This entry is titled 'Welcome Home Darling' and has been entered into the... Open Colour category. Give it a like to help it out in the People's Choice category. If you know someone who would appreciate the photo be sure to share it.

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