beach tent in wales image
kaykat21
What are some weird or amazing facts about Australia?
Answer
Newest Australian Fun Facts:
* Apparently the first European settlers in Australia drank more alcohol per person than any other community in the history of mankind.
* Australian mines (one of our most important industries, which accounts for 15% of Australia's GDP) cover 0.02% of Australia's land mass. More land is occupied by pubs. (Can't find any statistics on the GDP here. My guess is: substantial)
* In 1954 Bob Hawke made it into the Guinness Record Book: he sculled 2.5 pints of beer in 11 seconds. Bob Hawke went on to become the Prime Minister of Australia.
Fun Facts About Australia - The Latest Stories
Crocodile Slams Into Tree
Who do you think was more scared? The Australian family camping in Kakadu National Park who woke up when a three metre crocodile tried climbing up on their tent? Or the crocodile, when the family started screaming?
The poor croc turned straight around and raced back towards the water, unfortunately overlooking the tree in its way. The tree lost a fair bit of bark and there were two big wet circles where the croc's nose had slammed into the tree...
I Can't Find Uluru
A tourist from New South Wales had to stop another vehicle to ask for directions to Ayers Rock. Nothing strange or funny about it?
Well, Ayers Rock is huge (348 metres high), is the only significant feature along the only road in the area, and he was right in front of the rock with his headlights shining on it! You'd think you'd notice, wouldn't you?
Nope. He pulled over the next car coming along, to ask for directions. The car looked like a ranger's vehicle to him. Well, they were cops instead and they immediately whipped out their breathalyser... 0.116. Too bad...
Fun Facts About Australia - Animals
* There are 1500 hundred species of Australian spiders.
* If you read about our spiders you might not like this: the average person swallows three spiders a year.
* We have over 6000 species of flies, about 4000 species of ants, and there are about 350 species of termites in Australia.
* The combined mass of all termites in the world is more than ten times the mass of all people.
* Termites are also called white ants, but they're not ants, in fact not even closely related to ants.
* Australia has the world's largest population of wild camels with one hump.
* The Tasmanian Devil does exist, and it has the jaw strength of a crocodile.
* Sharks are immune to all known diseases.
* There are more than 150 million sheep in Australia, and only some 20 million people.
Fun Facts About Australia - Geography
* No part of Australia is more than 1000 km from the ocean and a beach. (The point in the world that's the furthest from any ocean would be in China.)
* Australia has the world's largest cattle station (ranch). At 30,028 km2 it is almost the same size as Belgium.
* Population density in Australia is usually calculated in km2 per person, not people per km2.
* Australians have 380,000 m2 per person available. Yet well over 90% are cramming into our coastal cities. (Don't ask me why, I sure prefer it here in the Outback.)
* We call Australian's from Queensland "banana benders", and people from Western Australia "sandgropers".
* Tasmania has the cleanest air in the world.
* The Great Barrier Reef has a mailbox. You can ferry out there and send a postcard, stamped with the only Great Barrier Reef stamp.
* The Australian Alps, or Snowy Mountains as they are also known, receive more snow than Switzerland.
* Melbourne has the second largest Greek population in the world, after Athens.
Other Miscellaneous Australian Fun Facts
* Imagine the fully welded rails of the Ghan train track weren't restrained properly: on a hot Outback desert day they would expand at 200km/hour and at the Darwin end they'd stick out 1.1 km into the ocean.
* Star gazing: under ideal viewing conditions, like in the Australian Outback, the naked eye can detect about 5,780 stars.
* The Sydney Opera House roof weighs more than 161,000 tons.
* The Great Barrier Reef is the largest organic construction on earth.
* Termite mounds are the tallest non-human constructions on earth.
* Yulara, the Aboriginal name of the Ayers Rock Resort, means "crying", "weeping". Nasty tongues say because that's what visitors do when they see their bill...
http://www.outback-australia-travel-secrets.com/fun-facts-about-australia.html
* Australia is considered to have one of the highest degrees of urban concentration in the world.
* Despite the urban concentration, Australia has an average of three people per square kilometre, making it one of the lowest population densities in the world.
* Australia's Parliament House in Canberra is one of the largest buildings in the southern hemisphere at over 300,000 cubic metres.
* The average Australian will consume 165,000 eggs in his or her lifetime.
* Melbourne's motto is Vires acquirit eundo (We gather strength as we grow)
* Melbourne has a public holiday for a horse race each year: The Melbourne Cup.
* Melbourne has the largest remaining tram public transport system in the world.
* Australia's first television station was Channel 9, which opened in Sydney in 1956.
* The most medals Australia has ever won at an Olympic Games was in the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, a total of 58 medals.
* One in every four persons is either a first or second generation settler to Australia, a trend started after World War II.
* The average number of people per household in Australia in 1971 was 3.31, in 2006 this number has decreased to 2.6.
* The average family has 1.65 children.
* The average Australian will consume 18 beef cattle and 90 sheep in his or her lifetime.
* 22% of adults will never have children.
* 16.2% of adults will only have one child.
* 88% of Australians live in an urban area - this high concentration may be due to the arid conditions further inland.
* The first ever car to be mass produced in Australia was the FX Holden (model 48-215). This was produced at Fishermans Bend, Victoria in 1948.
* The median age for brides is 28.9 years of age (2006).
* The median age for grooms is 30.9 years of age (2006).
* 34% of men will never marry (2006).
* 32% of women will never marry (2006).
* The Great Barrier Reef is the longest reef in the world at over 2010 kilometres.
* Kalgoorlie in Western Australia is the largest electorate spanning 2,225,278 square kilometres.
* Australian women won the right to vote in 1902.
* Main source of immigrants to Australia is from the UK and Ireland totalling 6.35% of all immigrants.
* The second largest source of immigrants is from Australia's neighbour New Zealand; making 1.70% of all immigrants.
* Australia is known as the smallest continent in the world.
* Australia is three times larger than the largest island (Greenland) in the world.
* The oldest skeleton to ever be found in Australia was believed to be 60,000 years old. It was that of an Aboriginal male, traces of ochre (a ceremonial paint used by Aboriginals) were also found.
* The first ever meeting of the Australian Labor Party (also the first political party to form in 1891) was held under a gum tree at Barcaldine, Queensland.
* Uluru (Ayers Rock) is over 8 kilometres in circumference.
* Australia's first radio station was built in 1912.
* The average Australian will consume half a tonne of cheese, eight tonnes of fruit and ten tonnes of vegetables.
http://www.australianhistory.org/australian-facts.php
http://www.americangirl.com/travel/australia/facts.html
* Australia is the world's largest inhabited island and the smallest continent.
* Australia is the largest continent occupied by one nation and is the least populated.
* Australia is the only English-speaking country to have made voting compulsory in federal and state elections. It results in a voter turnout of 95 per cent.
* The world's largest electorate (2,255,278 square kilometres) is Kalgoorlie, Western Australia.
* The secret ballot box, the most prized symbol of democracy, was pioneered in Victoria in 1856.
* Between the towns of Ooldia and Nurina in Western Australia, is the world's longest straight stretch of railway, 478.4 kilometres in length.
* From 1897 to 1905, Kings Cross, Sydney, was called Queen's Cross.
* The Great Barrier Reef is the longest coral reef in the world, extending over 2,012.5 kilometres.
* Tully, in Queensland, is the wettest town in Australia with an average annual rainfall of 355.6 centimetres (11 ft, 10 inches).
* Western Australia is three and a half times as big as Texas.
* Lake Eyre, 16 metres below sea level, has the lowest elevation. It is also the driest area.
* The oldest daily newspaper in the southern hemisphere is the Sydney Morning Herald (1831).
* The Australian coastline totals 36,735 kilometres.
* Marble Bar, Western Australia, recorded the longest period of extreme heat of above 37.7 C. for 160 days from October 1923 to April 1924.
* The average Australian can expect to eat during his or her lifetime: 17 beef cattle, 92 sheep, 406 loaves of bread, 165,000 eggs 8 tons of fruit, half a ton of cheese and ten tons of veggies.
* Australia's record 24-hour rainfall of 907 mm (36.28 inches) occurred at Crohamhurst, Queensland, in 1893.
* No part of Australia is further than 1000 kilometres from the sea.
* Between 1788 and 1856, 157,000 convicts were sent to Australia. This is only one-third of the total sent to the United States.
* Fifty percent of the continent has less than 300 milli
Newest Australian Fun Facts:
* Apparently the first European settlers in Australia drank more alcohol per person than any other community in the history of mankind.
* Australian mines (one of our most important industries, which accounts for 15% of Australia's GDP) cover 0.02% of Australia's land mass. More land is occupied by pubs. (Can't find any statistics on the GDP here. My guess is: substantial)
* In 1954 Bob Hawke made it into the Guinness Record Book: he sculled 2.5 pints of beer in 11 seconds. Bob Hawke went on to become the Prime Minister of Australia.
Fun Facts About Australia - The Latest Stories
Crocodile Slams Into Tree
Who do you think was more scared? The Australian family camping in Kakadu National Park who woke up when a three metre crocodile tried climbing up on their tent? Or the crocodile, when the family started screaming?
The poor croc turned straight around and raced back towards the water, unfortunately overlooking the tree in its way. The tree lost a fair bit of bark and there were two big wet circles where the croc's nose had slammed into the tree...
I Can't Find Uluru
A tourist from New South Wales had to stop another vehicle to ask for directions to Ayers Rock. Nothing strange or funny about it?
Well, Ayers Rock is huge (348 metres high), is the only significant feature along the only road in the area, and he was right in front of the rock with his headlights shining on it! You'd think you'd notice, wouldn't you?
Nope. He pulled over the next car coming along, to ask for directions. The car looked like a ranger's vehicle to him. Well, they were cops instead and they immediately whipped out their breathalyser... 0.116. Too bad...
Fun Facts About Australia - Animals
* There are 1500 hundred species of Australian spiders.
* If you read about our spiders you might not like this: the average person swallows three spiders a year.
* We have over 6000 species of flies, about 4000 species of ants, and there are about 350 species of termites in Australia.
* The combined mass of all termites in the world is more than ten times the mass of all people.
* Termites are also called white ants, but they're not ants, in fact not even closely related to ants.
* Australia has the world's largest population of wild camels with one hump.
* The Tasmanian Devil does exist, and it has the jaw strength of a crocodile.
* Sharks are immune to all known diseases.
* There are more than 150 million sheep in Australia, and only some 20 million people.
Fun Facts About Australia - Geography
* No part of Australia is more than 1000 km from the ocean and a beach. (The point in the world that's the furthest from any ocean would be in China.)
* Australia has the world's largest cattle station (ranch). At 30,028 km2 it is almost the same size as Belgium.
* Population density in Australia is usually calculated in km2 per person, not people per km2.
* Australians have 380,000 m2 per person available. Yet well over 90% are cramming into our coastal cities. (Don't ask me why, I sure prefer it here in the Outback.)
* We call Australian's from Queensland "banana benders", and people from Western Australia "sandgropers".
* Tasmania has the cleanest air in the world.
* The Great Barrier Reef has a mailbox. You can ferry out there and send a postcard, stamped with the only Great Barrier Reef stamp.
* The Australian Alps, or Snowy Mountains as they are also known, receive more snow than Switzerland.
* Melbourne has the second largest Greek population in the world, after Athens.
Other Miscellaneous Australian Fun Facts
* Imagine the fully welded rails of the Ghan train track weren't restrained properly: on a hot Outback desert day they would expand at 200km/hour and at the Darwin end they'd stick out 1.1 km into the ocean.
* Star gazing: under ideal viewing conditions, like in the Australian Outback, the naked eye can detect about 5,780 stars.
* The Sydney Opera House roof weighs more than 161,000 tons.
* The Great Barrier Reef is the largest organic construction on earth.
* Termite mounds are the tallest non-human constructions on earth.
* Yulara, the Aboriginal name of the Ayers Rock Resort, means "crying", "weeping". Nasty tongues say because that's what visitors do when they see their bill...
http://www.outback-australia-travel-secrets.com/fun-facts-about-australia.html
* Australia is considered to have one of the highest degrees of urban concentration in the world.
* Despite the urban concentration, Australia has an average of three people per square kilometre, making it one of the lowest population densities in the world.
* Australia's Parliament House in Canberra is one of the largest buildings in the southern hemisphere at over 300,000 cubic metres.
* The average Australian will consume 165,000 eggs in his or her lifetime.
* Melbourne's motto is Vires acquirit eundo (We gather strength as we grow)
* Melbourne has a public holiday for a horse race each year: The Melbourne Cup.
* Melbourne has the largest remaining tram public transport system in the world.
* Australia's first television station was Channel 9, which opened in Sydney in 1956.
* The most medals Australia has ever won at an Olympic Games was in the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, a total of 58 medals.
* One in every four persons is either a first or second generation settler to Australia, a trend started after World War II.
* The average number of people per household in Australia in 1971 was 3.31, in 2006 this number has decreased to 2.6.
* The average family has 1.65 children.
* The average Australian will consume 18 beef cattle and 90 sheep in his or her lifetime.
* 22% of adults will never have children.
* 16.2% of adults will only have one child.
* 88% of Australians live in an urban area - this high concentration may be due to the arid conditions further inland.
* The first ever car to be mass produced in Australia was the FX Holden (model 48-215). This was produced at Fishermans Bend, Victoria in 1948.
* The median age for brides is 28.9 years of age (2006).
* The median age for grooms is 30.9 years of age (2006).
* 34% of men will never marry (2006).
* 32% of women will never marry (2006).
* The Great Barrier Reef is the longest reef in the world at over 2010 kilometres.
* Kalgoorlie in Western Australia is the largest electorate spanning 2,225,278 square kilometres.
* Australian women won the right to vote in 1902.
* Main source of immigrants to Australia is from the UK and Ireland totalling 6.35% of all immigrants.
* The second largest source of immigrants is from Australia's neighbour New Zealand; making 1.70% of all immigrants.
* Australia is known as the smallest continent in the world.
* Australia is three times larger than the largest island (Greenland) in the world.
* The oldest skeleton to ever be found in Australia was believed to be 60,000 years old. It was that of an Aboriginal male, traces of ochre (a ceremonial paint used by Aboriginals) were also found.
* The first ever meeting of the Australian Labor Party (also the first political party to form in 1891) was held under a gum tree at Barcaldine, Queensland.
* Uluru (Ayers Rock) is over 8 kilometres in circumference.
* Australia's first radio station was built in 1912.
* The average Australian will consume half a tonne of cheese, eight tonnes of fruit and ten tonnes of vegetables.
http://www.australianhistory.org/australian-facts.php
http://www.americangirl.com/travel/australia/facts.html
* Australia is the world's largest inhabited island and the smallest continent.
* Australia is the largest continent occupied by one nation and is the least populated.
* Australia is the only English-speaking country to have made voting compulsory in federal and state elections. It results in a voter turnout of 95 per cent.
* The world's largest electorate (2,255,278 square kilometres) is Kalgoorlie, Western Australia.
* The secret ballot box, the most prized symbol of democracy, was pioneered in Victoria in 1856.
* Between the towns of Ooldia and Nurina in Western Australia, is the world's longest straight stretch of railway, 478.4 kilometres in length.
* From 1897 to 1905, Kings Cross, Sydney, was called Queen's Cross.
* The Great Barrier Reef is the longest coral reef in the world, extending over 2,012.5 kilometres.
* Tully, in Queensland, is the wettest town in Australia with an average annual rainfall of 355.6 centimetres (11 ft, 10 inches).
* Western Australia is three and a half times as big as Texas.
* Lake Eyre, 16 metres below sea level, has the lowest elevation. It is also the driest area.
* The oldest daily newspaper in the southern hemisphere is the Sydney Morning Herald (1831).
* The Australian coastline totals 36,735 kilometres.
* Marble Bar, Western Australia, recorded the longest period of extreme heat of above 37.7 C. for 160 days from October 1923 to April 1924.
* The average Australian can expect to eat during his or her lifetime: 17 beef cattle, 92 sheep, 406 loaves of bread, 165,000 eggs 8 tons of fruit, half a ton of cheese and ten tons of veggies.
* Australia's record 24-hour rainfall of 907 mm (36.28 inches) occurred at Crohamhurst, Queensland, in 1893.
* No part of Australia is further than 1000 kilometres from the sea.
* Between 1788 and 1856, 157,000 convicts were sent to Australia. This is only one-third of the total sent to the United States.
* Fifty percent of the continent has less than 300 milli
Help with backpacking in the UK?
Meghan M
A close friend of mine and I are planning to go backpacking in England, Ireland, and Scotland. We don't care much for seeing popular sites, but are looking more for the nature aspect of these places. We want to go hiking and camping. I was wondering if anyone could give me some advice or suggestions about how much money it'll cost or where to go :) Thanks!
I'll be spending six months over seas.
Answer
hi~here is a *huge* variety of countryside here, so its really ideal. just bring some waterproofs! are you aussie or kiwi?
try the visit britian site, to get an idea of the countryside in different places. to reccomend... well... i come from devon, in the south west, popular for brits to holiday in, as well as foreign tourists. its great; very varied, beautiful county. i go back all the time to camp; its never boring. it has a coastline north & south. the south is gentle, sandy, warm & sunny, & called the english riviera; it has palm trees growing in peoples' gardens. in the middle of the county is a huge wild, ancient, stunning moor; dartmoor. its where the hound of the baskervilles is set, & utterly beautiful. the north has the atlantic coast, good for surfing. its wilder, rockier. there are big sites, as well as the smaller, quieter ones, in the uk. i camped a couple of weeks ago- just me and one other tent in a £3 a night site! utterly silent at night, it was ace : )
devon's next to cornwall, the most westward county, also popular place w campers. both have vivid histories, & loads of books set in them (eg, lorna doone, & all the daphne du maurier books, set in cornwall).
cheapest campsites are £3, average is about a fiver upward. dont pay more than £8 each a night. i assume you dont want the massive, hideous ones with bars, pools & shrill chlidren running everywhere?! this is an invaluable site- you can search by town or county, bt also by things like 'allows fires' etc http://www.ukcampsite.co.uk/articles/view.asp?id=4
also handy for finding tiny sites- what they call 'certified sites' http://www.campingandcaravanningclub.co.uk/siteseekersearch/aspx/search.aspx which are the small, tap & loo in a field type sites ; )
make sure your tent is waterproof. ive bought ones from northface etc which are 'showerporrof', & leaked & soaked me. the uk rains A LOT. i bought a macpac £500 tent, used for a week, on ebay for £200. it was almost mint. plus, it also weighs under 2k, so's easy to carry. down sleeping bags are lighter then manmade; whatever you get get zero rated or below, as you can cool down easily, but you cant warm up in the middle of the night, miles from nowhere! plan for the worst, too, & get dome or tunnel shaped tents, which withstand wind the best. fingers crossed for sun, tho!
about 99% of the uk's coast is open to the public, & has dedicated coastal paths, which are very popular to walk along. devon, cornwall & south wales are perfect to visit; loads of campsites, varied scenery, & beautifuls coasts & beaches, nice weather. cornish coastal path~ http://www.geniusloci.co.uk/images/cornish_mining5.jpg a
it might sound weird, but i love filling my ipod with a load of book and play podcasts, & going for an epic walk. the bbc radio station radio 4, which you can hear for free, has loads of weird and wonderful programmes as podcasts~ check it out: http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/programmes/
you could also consider wild camping, ie not at a campsite, which will be free, of course http://www.thehappycampers.co.uk/campsites/wildcamping/ http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2007/mar/31/saturday.camping.green
camping of all kinds has increased a lot, so there are loads of guides ~ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/campingholidays/7811088/Britains-best-small-campsites.html
if you go to the desktop version of google co.uk (not com) & do a search, there's then an option down the left side to see only options from the uk, so easier to search for 'best small campsites' etc, as obviosuly, a lot of articles dont have 'uk' in the title!
do also please consider wales. its a separate country in the uk (no need for extra visas), but its stunning and unique
for food, i go to a supermarket every 3 days, & get hummous, yoghurt etc, which last a day or two, depending on the weather. avocadoes, tomatoes, feta bottled in oil etc are easy, long lasting fillings for sandwiches. i get flat breads (soft tortia wraps), as they go stale slower. bags of nuts are good snacks. mid price supermarket, so you can see prices http://www.sainsburys.co.uk/sol/food_and_drink/food_and_drink_home.jsp?GLOBAL_DATA._searchType=0&pageRef=food_and_drink_landing_page.page
it will rain at times, so if youre stuck in a tent, books, or a kindle, are essential. bring a tupperware box to keep electricals in, as condensation builds up in tenst and just killed my last ipod -_-
oh, & all towns have charity shops (thrift stores), which are handy as you can pick up cheap clothes etc when yours wear through.
hi~here is a *huge* variety of countryside here, so its really ideal. just bring some waterproofs! are you aussie or kiwi?
try the visit britian site, to get an idea of the countryside in different places. to reccomend... well... i come from devon, in the south west, popular for brits to holiday in, as well as foreign tourists. its great; very varied, beautiful county. i go back all the time to camp; its never boring. it has a coastline north & south. the south is gentle, sandy, warm & sunny, & called the english riviera; it has palm trees growing in peoples' gardens. in the middle of the county is a huge wild, ancient, stunning moor; dartmoor. its where the hound of the baskervilles is set, & utterly beautiful. the north has the atlantic coast, good for surfing. its wilder, rockier. there are big sites, as well as the smaller, quieter ones, in the uk. i camped a couple of weeks ago- just me and one other tent in a £3 a night site! utterly silent at night, it was ace : )
devon's next to cornwall, the most westward county, also popular place w campers. both have vivid histories, & loads of books set in them (eg, lorna doone, & all the daphne du maurier books, set in cornwall).
cheapest campsites are £3, average is about a fiver upward. dont pay more than £8 each a night. i assume you dont want the massive, hideous ones with bars, pools & shrill chlidren running everywhere?! this is an invaluable site- you can search by town or county, bt also by things like 'allows fires' etc http://www.ukcampsite.co.uk/articles/view.asp?id=4
also handy for finding tiny sites- what they call 'certified sites' http://www.campingandcaravanningclub.co.uk/siteseekersearch/aspx/search.aspx which are the small, tap & loo in a field type sites ; )
make sure your tent is waterproof. ive bought ones from northface etc which are 'showerporrof', & leaked & soaked me. the uk rains A LOT. i bought a macpac £500 tent, used for a week, on ebay for £200. it was almost mint. plus, it also weighs under 2k, so's easy to carry. down sleeping bags are lighter then manmade; whatever you get get zero rated or below, as you can cool down easily, but you cant warm up in the middle of the night, miles from nowhere! plan for the worst, too, & get dome or tunnel shaped tents, which withstand wind the best. fingers crossed for sun, tho!
about 99% of the uk's coast is open to the public, & has dedicated coastal paths, which are very popular to walk along. devon, cornwall & south wales are perfect to visit; loads of campsites, varied scenery, & beautifuls coasts & beaches, nice weather. cornish coastal path~ http://www.geniusloci.co.uk/images/cornish_mining5.jpg a
it might sound weird, but i love filling my ipod with a load of book and play podcasts, & going for an epic walk. the bbc radio station radio 4, which you can hear for free, has loads of weird and wonderful programmes as podcasts~ check it out: http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/programmes/
you could also consider wild camping, ie not at a campsite, which will be free, of course http://www.thehappycampers.co.uk/campsites/wildcamping/ http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2007/mar/31/saturday.camping.green
camping of all kinds has increased a lot, so there are loads of guides ~ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/campingholidays/7811088/Britains-best-small-campsites.html
if you go to the desktop version of google co.uk (not com) & do a search, there's then an option down the left side to see only options from the uk, so easier to search for 'best small campsites' etc, as obviosuly, a lot of articles dont have 'uk' in the title!
do also please consider wales. its a separate country in the uk (no need for extra visas), but its stunning and unique
for food, i go to a supermarket every 3 days, & get hummous, yoghurt etc, which last a day or two, depending on the weather. avocadoes, tomatoes, feta bottled in oil etc are easy, long lasting fillings for sandwiches. i get flat breads (soft tortia wraps), as they go stale slower. bags of nuts are good snacks. mid price supermarket, so you can see prices http://www.sainsburys.co.uk/sol/food_and_drink/food_and_drink_home.jsp?GLOBAL_DATA._searchType=0&pageRef=food_and_drink_landing_page.page
it will rain at times, so if youre stuck in a tent, books, or a kindle, are essential. bring a tupperware box to keep electricals in, as condensation builds up in tenst and just killed my last ipod -_-
oh, & all towns have charity shops (thrift stores), which are handy as you can pick up cheap clothes etc when yours wear through.
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Title Post: What are some weird or amazing facts about Austrlia?
Rating: 95% based on 9878 ratings. 4,5 user reviews.
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Thanks For Coming To My Blog
Rating: 95% based on 9878 ratings. 4,5 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
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