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Contents

Feels like home
The owners of Trebeck couldn’t believe their luck when they found the beautifully renovated home near Bowral’s Bradman Oval. They show us how they have made it even more personal.

Playing with fire
Potters Steve Harrison, Sandy Lockwood and Meg Patey explain how they used smoke, ash and flames to create their very different styles of wood-fired ceramics for a joint exhibition.

Lease of life
Duck Foot Farm’s Justin Hartley wanted to farm organic vegetables in the Highlands but couldn’t afford land. Two years on, he explains how leasing land helps both him and the landholders.

 The secrets of success
Bowral Blacks Rugby Club is fighting fit as it celebrates its half century, regularly attracting big crowds to games at Burradoo’s Eridge Park. We look at the club’s history and how it staged a comeback.

Garden harmony
The Harp, one of Sutton Forest’s oldest properties, also boasts one of the village’s prettiest gardens, complete with formal lawn garden, woodland walk, kitchen potager and orchard.

Blooming delicious
Most people have eaten a zucchini blossom or sipped chamomile tea, but stunning blooms from many other plants – including dahlia, magnolia, peony and lilac – are equally delectable.

Saving for the future
The National Trust’s No Time to Spare exhibition has an urgent agenda: drawing people’s attention to heritage buildings and locations that could be lost.

Sitting pretty
Intricate garden benches made from cast iron and wrought iron don’t just provide a place to sit. Tony Sheffield photographed examples that decorate gardens around the Highlands.

Schools of thought
The heads of 10 schools tell us what makes their school special.

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