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Freckleface

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Posts posted by Freckleface

  1. I have been trying to remember the name of the pub, it is the Full Pitcher down in Ledbury. Well worth a visit if you ever find yourself in that lovely part of the country. £6 for a lovely steak.

     

     

    How many years ago was that?

     

    I ask because the menu for the Full Pitcher in Ledbury is available on line and I can't see any £6 steaks lol

  2. Not all of them FF, if you sign an agreement you get nothing more, I earn $18.01 an hour if I work Boxing day or New Year's day I get $18.01, maybe a bit different over East unless

     

    my employers are not doing the right thing !!!

     

    I was quoting the National Award. If you are covered by that and not be paid correctly under it you should contact the Fair Work Ombudsman.

     

    Edited to add - the loading applies to all hours, not just those on public holidays.

  3. Absolutely which no doubt explains the disparity in eating out in the 2 countries. The UK does have a way to go to catch up but the way the exchange rate is going it won't be long lol

     

    I'm not sure the exchange rate will impact very much on someone earning pounds and living in the UK unless they are saving to move to Aust.

  4. It's an interesting take on it really, today the UK minimum wage is equivalent to $13 but 3 years ago it was only amazingly $9.10 but if it the exchange rate goes to what it has been for many years before it would be $16.25. As has been said many times you can't just look at these things simplisticly. In a few months the person in the pub in the UK could be earning pretty much the same as the person in the pub in Australia.

     

     

    Noting however that casual employees in Aust covered by the national minimum wage also get at least a 25 per cent casual loading.

  5. I wouldn't come back for that reason but I certainly don't hate the lovely crisp winters days. I actually find winters here very similar to Melbourne, maybe not as cold here lol

    I suppose that might be true if you are comparing the winter temperature in the middle of the day in the UK to the winter temperature in the middle of the night in Melbourne. :biglaugh:

  6. I was just laughing about this thread with my MIL who managed a pub near Manchester in the 1960's.

     

    She said even back then food was delivered frozen and just had to be warmed up or thrown in the deep fry lol. She thought it was wonderful when the brewery said she didn't have to cook from scratch anymore.

  7. As well as the options already mentioned you could consider a Sydney Harbour dinner cruise for something a little bit different. There are lots of different options from fairly inexpensive to ones that provide a show as well as dinner.

     

    If you google Sydney Harbour dinner cruises you'll find lots of different companies and can check out their menu options, prices etc. We have taken friends on the Sydney Show Boat a few times but there are lots of others as well.

     

    The city lights look beautiful from the water and the cruises can be fun - we have always enjoyed the ones we have been on.

  8. If you are living in Perth (which your location says you are) that item should be fairly easy to tick off your list lol. Have you travelled outside the Perth area at all during your time in Australia?

  9. It's even worse than that as immigration announced a while ago that they were linking to the tax office to ensure sponsored employees were being paid the correct rate. I'm assuming this is random checking, but still. Is be looking for another employer.

     

    These types of checks can be automated now and I expect this is why the immigration and tax departments are linking up. This cross check is just one in a long list that have been put in place in recent years.

     

    To the OP - an employer who is willing to commit fraud isn't one I would want to be associated with. You would be better off looking for another sponsor before you get caught up in the fall out (when this deception comes to light).

  10. As long as the barista is a hipster and attitude to match with the oblatory facial hair in place all good. Although not entirely convinced a TAFE course to be a barista is quite the same as a four year degree in Viticulture and Oenologist studies but that's just me.

    No doubt being a barista though is far cooler and adds to the nations GDP.

     

    I prefer to judge the skill of a barista by my enjoyment of the end product.

  11. So just how do you define (good) coffee? Like I say, 7/11 does it for me and I've even gone apeshlt 'cause Jake has spent mega bucks on Maccona when Aldi hits the spot for me. Like everything else, coffee is subjective and perhaps well illustrated by the fact that not so long ago,(in my lifespan) it was fairly cheap and most folk had their eyes glued to the tv, advertising the merits of the "tetley men" or the "PG tips chimps"

     

    I hate to place a "personal" slant on this thread, (despite my first response seeming to miss the mark) but aren't you all victims of marketing, otr heaven forbid, some kind of snobbery?

     

    When the time has come that a drink of coffee can cost as much as a brekky (Howard take notice) then sureely that is indicative, not so much of a good "drink" but of marketing strategy and the consumers willingless to be sucked into yet another "fad"? Coffee is already on it's way out and tea is making inroads. I seee more shops selling tea producst than I see selling cofffee products, it just needs an entrepreneur to market tea on the same level/platform as coffee and he/she will have suckered yet another generation of "cool people" :rolleyes:

     

     

    A good coffee delivers a harmonious balance of aroma, acidity and body and tastes and smells devine. I think a good barista is the same as a good wine maker. Both ensure the elements of the coffee/wine are balanced and that no element predominates at the expense of the others.

    Marketing has nothing to do with it for me. You could market tea with the best campaign the world has ever seen and I still wouldn't enjoy it.

  12. One of my sponsored staff had a similar problem after arriving from NZ. They were on a temp visa in NZ so the reciprocal arrangements between Aust and NZ didn't cover them and they had been out of the UK for 3(?) years so weren't covered under the arrangement with the UK either as they were no longer considered residents by the UK either even though they were British citizens.

     

    My memory is a bit foggy as it was a few years ago but I think they ended up having to take out some sort of insurance.

  13. The biggest employer in Canberra is certainly the Federal Govt but a significant proportion of people are employed by either the ACT Legislate Assembly or the private sector both of which employ non citizens.

     

    There is a lot of building activity and a high turn over of property. I think the biggest hurdle in securing a role for a migrating building surveyor would be a lack of knowledge in relation to local building legislation, technical codes and construction standards. Your OH will have to be able to convince prospective employers of his ability to quickly acquire this knowledge given it is fundamental to the work.

  14. I'm not a doctor but I think if you have managed to get yourself home and hop onto the net to write about your experience you are probably OK physically.

     

    In your position I would probably be more in danger of an aneurism brought on by being angry that I couldn't catch them and give them a smack around the head.

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