The finders,two metal-detecting enthusiasts from Shark Bay on the north-west coast,will auction their “world treasure” with a reserve price of $100,000.
The gifting economy can save money,help the environment and build community.
Holly Ogden,33,began her sunflower painting odyssey during COVID-19 lockdowns with her work now displayed across buildings throughout Fremantle,Scarborough and Margaret River.
A Coburg woman went yarn bombing in honour of her late daughter Macey,to mark what would have been her 18th birthday.
It’s a tiny,transparent hermaphrodite that has hitched its wagon – for better or worse – to one of the world’s oldest and most enigmatic creatures.
Frank Lumanovski thought he’d lost a treasure trove of family heirlooms this week. But with the help from his local garbos and a councillor,he was able to pull off a remarkable rubbish rescue.
Laura Carney’s father was killed by a distracted driver in 2003. When she found his bucket list she knew what she had to do.
Flower grower Les Baguley was determined to be ‘the biggest and the best’ flower grower in Australia,until he realised other things mattered more than money.
The winning WA ticket was sold to a syndicate of 20 plant operators in a town built for gold,who each decided to put in $100 as a spur-of-the-moment bid to win.
Molly Schmidt was 15 when she looked out the passenger window on a country road,and scribbled an idea in a notebook. Twelve years and plenty of sweat later,a big win.
They were about 120 kilometres east of one of the country’s most challenging four-wheel-drive routes when their car caught fire. Luckily,they kept their heads.