St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School #5 in Top 10 Most Expensive QLD Schools

Did you know that St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School ranks #5 in the list of the Top 10 most expensive schools in Queensland?



Here’s a rundown of the State’s priciest schools.

School FeesExtraTotal
Brisbane Grammar School$28,230$1,220$29,450
Brisbane Boys College$24,724$2,444$27,168
Brisbane Girls Grammar School$26,555$0$26,555
Anglican Church Grammar School$23,944$1,990$25,934
St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School$24,560$0$24,560
The Southport School$24,438$0$24,438
Somerville House$23,940$0$23,940
St Aidan’s Anglican Girls School$22,120$1,735$23,855
Clayfield College$19,165$2,665$21,830
St Peter’s Lutheran College$20,360$516$20,876

A 2021 National School Fees Report from Edstart showed that 40 percent of private schools across the country did not increase fees for the incoming school term whilst Queensland’s average school fees increase for 2021 was down to 1.19 percent compared to 1.87 percent for 2020   

Photo Credit: Edstart

Despite the annual trend of increasing fees, around 7 percent of Queensland schools also had a minimal increase for 2021 as a relief to families. 

Such was the case of St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School. In a statement to enrollees, the administrative officers said that families will receive discounted rates for 2021’s first semester for full payments made before the start of Term 1.  

Photo Credit: St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School/Facebook

“The effect of this discount is that all families will be issued tuition fees based on 2020 levels for the first half of 2021,” the statement read.

“This does not apply to boarding fees or any other charges. The School has an all-inclusive fee policy. The fee covers the cost of all compulsory activities including tuition, QGSSSA sport, technology, year level camps, class excursions and a range of facilities used in the course of a normal school day.”



However, Edstart CEO Jack Stevens said that non-government schools wouldn’t be able to sustain flat fees or lowered fees in the long run due to mounting expenses like administration compliance, increased staff and facilities upkeep. Mr Stevens said that these factors will more than likely drive school fees up in 2022. 

Edstart, launched in 2016, is a payment provider helping families and students manage the cost of education. 

Sirianni’s in Ascot Turns Over Business After 5 Decades

A popular grocery store in Ascot has changed hands five decades after it opened. Sirianni’s on Alexandra Road, which was managed by a family of immigrants from Italy, has been turned over to the Hopper Group.

The new owners run various IGA stores in suburbs like Maroochydore, Milton, New Farm and St Lucia. Hopper Group also owns Greenslopes’ bRED bakery and the Hawthorne Garage grocery.

Tony and Rose Sirianni officially ceased to be the owners and operators on the first week of December 2020. 



Tony’s parents, Napoleone and Elisa Sirianni, opened the grocery shop in 1965, and introduced produce like zucchini and artichokes to their customers.

Tony and Rose, as well as Tony’s brother Ugo, expanded the business in the 1990s with a deli, pies and Italian ready-to-eat meals prepared in the store’s kitchen.

Ugo, sadly, passed away two years ago.

Photo Credit: IGA Ascot/Facebook

“From humble beginnings, the Sirianni Family worked together over the past five decades to create a family-owned grocery store that prides itself on quality food and personal customer service,” the family said in a Facebook post to announce the turnover. “It is now time for our family hand over this unique business to new owners.” 

“We know that a lot of you have been customers for many years and some even who recall the original store,” Mr Sirianni added.

Photo Credit: IGA Ascot/Facebook

” Although the store was rebranded a number of times over the past 55 years…our customers have always referred to this store as Sirriani’s.  We have been endeared by so many members in our local community and as such, we have a lifetime of memories.” 



Meanwhile, Tony and Rose will help out their son, Leo, who runs another Ascot grocery store on Racecourse Road but he is also planning to retire from the business in a few years.   

New Cafe and Catering on Racecourse Rd in Ascot to Open Doors in 2021

An award-winning cafe is coming to Ascot’s Racecourse Rd in 2021.

Frigg Cafe Racecourse Rd will be twin owners Maria Elita & Toula Scott’s third Frigg venue after Labrador and Manly West. Taking over the former site of Journey Cafe & Bar, the cafe is set to bring to Ascot its well-loved healthy breakfast and lunch. And if you have any upcoming event, Frigg Cafe has got you covered with their catering service, delivery and pick-up.

Photo Credit:  Frigg Cafe & Catering / Facebook

Frigg Cafe takes pride in turning simple breakfast and lunch into something that reminds you of home. Their breakfast menu includes the classics such as Hickory Smoked Bacon burger (Big brioche bun with hickory smoked bacon, melted cheese, and BBQ sauce), The Big Frigg (hickory smoked bacon, two eggs your way, pork sausage, grilled mushrooms,baked beans, and grilled tomato), Allo Avo (a mountain lightly smashed fresh avocado served with lemon and olive oil, topped with soft Danish feta), and Mighty Thor (Frigg’s own savoury grass fed beef mince, piled on sourdough toast and served with two fried eggs and Lea and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce). 

Mighty Thor – Photo Credit:  Frigg Cafe & Catering / Facebook


Photo Credit:  Frigg Cafe & Catering / Facebook

If you decide to drop by for a satisfying lunch, some of the hearty meals includes the  Classic Cheeseburger (100% Australian grass fed beef patty on a brioche bun, melted cheese, lettuce and tomato sauce), Big Fat Club sandwich (grilled chicken, melted cheese, hickory bacon, cos and tomato double decker on tasted light rye with Aioli), and Chicken Parmi (classic chicken Schnitzel with tomato passata, hand cut leg ham and melted cheese, served with chips and side salad).

Photo Credit:  Frigg Cafe & Catering / Facebook

The cafe also offers healthy bowls Acai Lover (served with granola and fresh fruit, and topped with coconut and chia seeds) and Choc Yoghurt Protein Bowl (fresh Greek yoghurt blended with chocolate protein powder and served with granola, seasonal fruit, coconut, and a hint of local honey).

Frigg Cafe which can accommodate up to 80 customers is slated to open either at the end of January or early February.




Dandelion & Driftwood to Reopen at a New Location in 2021

Have you missed dining at Dandelion & Driftwood? Following its closure in Hendra two years ago, the cafe is all set to mark its return in 2021! 

Owners Peter and Penny Wolff have not revealed the new location but they’ve confirmed the reopening in a Facebook post. 

“We bring good news to you all. Our beloved D&D will be opening a new location in 2021. In this glorious big space!” the post stated



Reports disclosed that the new site will not be far off from the pair’s Wolff Coffee Roasters site on Gerler Road. The wait will not be too long as the new D&D could open its doors by February 2021.

Photo Credit: Instagram

Dandelion & Driftwood opened its specialty coffee and tea shop in 2010. As it consistently provided great-tasting food and drinks, as well as excellent customer service, locals flocked to the cafe regularly. Weekend lines and crowds were ever-present as the Wolff’s built their reputation with awards and recognitions.

Some say Dandelion & Driftwood significantly influenced and changed Brisbane’s cafe scene. Its closure in 2018, however, wasn’t the end.



Dandelion & Driftwood branched out at the Brisbane International Airport. Due to COVID-19, however, operations have been temporarily halted on site with the decline of travellers. Whilst this was a blow to the Wolff’s, they were also in the midst of planning their new cafe. 

Penny shares how the new site is coming together in the video post below and you can likely spot the cafe’s new location.

Meanwhile, Dandelion & Driftwood continues trading via Uber and at the company’s headquarters on Gerler Road. 

For updates on the cafe’s progress and reopening, follow their Instagram page

Nyrambla: Learn the History of the Ascot House Used as a WWII Intelligence Base

Along the tree-lined Henry Street in Ascot stands Nyrambla, the hillside house which was formerly used as a United States-Australian intelligence base for codebreakers during the Second World War. The house is drawing much interest today because it just hit the market following the death of its owner, Brisbane socialite Andree Daws, in August 2020.

But the gorgeous structure hidden amongst tall trees next to some of the most expensive houses in Brisbane has such a rich history. Here’s the story of the historic house called Nyrambla. 

Photo Credit: Paz Avalos/Google Maps

The Owners and Dwellers

Built in 1885 for Henry P Abbot, the manager of the Australian Joint Stock Bank, the original property was over 15 acres, which stretched across Henry and Yabba Streets and had separate stables and servants quarters.

When Mr Abbot retired to Sydney, he rented out his imposing two-storey home to Patrick Perkins, the Queensland brewer. By 1925, Mr George Willoughby Whatmore, the manager of the Austin cars automotive group, bought the Nyrambla. 



Mr Whatmore, a member of the Council and a champion cyclist, was the grandfather of Ms Daws. But his death in 1929 saw Nyrambla’s transformation as a large house, which was converted into six flats. 

Its front side used to be alongside Yabba Street but as the house split off, the Henry Street side became the main entrance even today.

Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland
Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

There were more additions to Nyrambla over the years. In place of stables and servants quarters were the swimming pool and tennis court. 

Other famous inhabitants of the Nyrambla flats included ABC presenter Blair Edmonds, farmers market operator Jan Power and Queensland actor, director and writer Bille Brown until Ms Daws acquired the property.

Today, Nyrambla is a nine-bedroom, six-car garage site with seven bathrooms, two sunrooms and a guest wing with a spacious living room area on the second floor.

Photo Credit: Lost Brisbane/Ray White Real Estate/Facebook

In 2013, Ms Daws converted part of the house into an art studio for her husband, Lawrence, whose paintings are displayed at art galleries across the country as well as in London, Scotland and China. He still continues to paint today at 93 years old. 

Ms Daws’ son Rick Roberts has lived in this house since the 1980s and has decided to put Nyrambla in the market. 

The Allies’ Intelligence Base

In 1942, the Allies requisitioned the Nyrambla as a top-secret facility after U.S. General Douglas MacArthur made Brisbane their headquarters. MacArthur, along with Australian General Thomas Blamey, made frequent visits to this house at the height of the war in the Pacific.

Photo Credit: Ozatwar.com

For the next three years, the 18 enlisted servicemen and six officers of U.S. 837th Signal Service Detachment and members of the Australian Women’s Army Service (AWAS) and cryptanalyst from the Australian Cypher Section worked in the back garage to decipher intercepted Japanese codes using a Typex machine and IBM tabulators. The decoded messages were transmitted to Allied bases from all over the world.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Historical accounts stated that one of these intercepted messages was Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto’s itinerary to Rabaul in 1943. The Allies were able to intercept his aircraft, killing the commander of the Japanese fleet.



Following this feat, Colonel Harold Doud renamed the 837th Signal Service Detachment to the Special Intelligence Service.

In 1988, former U.S. servicemen returned to Nyrambla for the unveiling of the plaque by the front entrance.

Photo Credit: Paz Avalos/Google Maps

Ascot High Street Racecourse Road Loses 35 Retail Shops

Once a bustling retail destination, Ascot’s Racecourse Road has had an exodus of shops in recent months due to a triad of unfavorable factors: the road closures at Kingsford Smith Drive, the COVID-19 pandemic and the rising cost of rent. 

Reports cited that retail buildings around the precinct are now filled with “For Lease” signs as 35 stores, or about a third of the retail shops in the area, have shut down. 



To entice new tenants, Racecourse Road landlords are offering big rental holidays with free rent for the first six months and half the rental rate for the next six months, amidst continued roadworks and the uncertainty of the pandemic.

Photo Credit: Facebook

Garry Grant, who has been running his news and magazine shop since 2005, said that the situation in Racecourse Road started going downhill when the Kingsford Smith Drive project began. In five years’ time, Grant said that his business dropped to 40 percent.

Fashion house owner Kathy Bucceri said that this high street district used to be where the ladies spent their weekend lunches or coffee breaks in between a day of shopping. Since the roadworks, however, regulars who shopped at the retail stores and dined at the restaurants stopped coming.



Bucceri’s shop has been in the same location for 20 years and benefitted from the clients of the nearby ANZ Bank. But since the bank’s closure, the affluent customers that frequented her store also disappeared. 

Photo Credit: Facebook

But other shop owners remain hopeful that things will turn around as Kingsford Smith Drive is nearing its completion and pandemic lockdown restrictions are easing off.

According to one trader, landlords re-leasing their buildings should pick a good mix of shops and eateries to become more competitive with other shopping precincts.  Appeals to the Brisbane City Council to upgrade the street with more trees and better landscaping are being initiated.

Eagle Farm Becomes the Hub of the Biggest Virtual Dinner Party For Melbourne

Did you know that Melbourne will have its last Saturday night of lockdown on 17 Oct 2020? To celebrate this high point and be one in solidarity with the Victorians, Eagle Farm will become the catering hub of the biggest virtual dinner party happening simultaneously in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney.

The online isolation degustation, organised by Urban List and Gathar, will feature a four-course dinner curated by Masterchef star Danielle Dixon and prepared by talented chefs across Australia. 



Featuring premium ingredients from Australian and Victorian farmers and providores, the dishes include the following below, which you can opt to delivered to your home or the home of a family in Melbourne: 

First CourseSeared ruby tuna with Australian Avocados yuzu puree. Served alongside marinated Victorian heirloom tomatoes and wild rice puffs (gf, df).

Vegetarian option: Sesame crusted tofu with Australian Avocados yuzu puree. Served alongside marinated Victorian heirloom tomatoes and wild rice puffs (gf, df, v).
Second CourseHay smoked Victorian free-range Bannockburn chicken served with a corn custard, Victorian black barley and burnt onion jus to finish (gf).

Vegetarian option: Butter roasted pumpkin with Yarra Valley feta, bull horn pepper and hemp seed pesto (gf, v)
Third CourseBavarois dessert made with Melbournes iconic Koko Black chocolate and Victorian alpine strawberries with native pepperberry and a hibiscus syrup drizzle (gf, v).
Fromager D’Affinois Cheese Fourth CourseFromager D’Affinois double cream cheese with a carrot apricot marmalade topped onto a buckwheat cracker with baby celery shoots (gf, v).


Whilst enjoying the course, you’ll be serenaded by homegrown talents, learn from chefs and listen to pairing notes from the experts via video streaming from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. 

All you need to prepare for this dinner party is a good internet connection and device, your oven (for reheating) and your appetite. 

Eagle Farm
Photo Credit: Gathar

Tickets to the isolation degustation will be up for grabs until Monday, 12 Oct 2020. The Eagle Farm caterers will be able to deliver food within 30 kilometres of the suburb.

Devour Cafe in Ascot: Fresh Food, Hot Coffee to Enjoy on Market Day with Missy Mae

Did you know that there’s a newly-opened corner cafe on Lamington Avenue opposite the Doomben train station in Ascot? Devour Cafe & Pantry specialises in gourmet cheese toasties and heaps of flavourful, preservative-free pantry sauces. If you’d like to try what this foodie hub has to offer, the morning of Friday, 11 Sept 2020 would be a good time to drop by.  

This new Ascot eatery proudly makes dietitian-approved, handcrafted meals from scratch using the freshest ingredients. Dan Hernandez is the owner and chef running the kitchen. 



“If we can’t make it we will make sure to find the best products out there so we can provide a quality service with the best quality products. “

Photo Credit: Devour Cafe & Pantry/Instagram

The newest cafe on the block will be hosting its first-ever fresh food and produce market with Missy Mae Flavour Finders from 7:30 and 11:30 a.m.  

“We’ll have an even bigger selection of the freshest, farm direct flavours in south east Queensland, so come on down and snaffle up a basket full of goodness (and don’t forget the coffee will be hot and the toasties are on tap),” Missy Mae said on social media. 

Photo Credit: Missy Mae’s Flavour Finders/Instagram

Devour Cafe & Pantry serves a rotating menu every week. For busy locals with no time to spare in the kitchen, this cafe has your healthy food sorted out. Just ask Dan and the staff for the menu.

Follow the store’s Instagram page for updates on trading hours and other activities. The cafe is also a pet-friendly site. 



Ascot Wildlife Carer Louise Dingle Recognised as Local Legend for Saving Animals After Devastating Bushfires

For her efforts in saving and protecting wildlife in her community, Ascot’s Louise Dingle has been recently honoured in LG Electronics Australia’s Local Legends Program

The Local Legends Program is meant to recognise individuals in the community who have gone above and beyond to make positive contributions through their time, actions, talents, and dedication to others. The Local Legends Program lauded her actions that not only preserves Australia’s fragile ecosystem but also teaches children about the importance of wildlife care in the community. 

A proud mum to one son, Qantas flight attendant, and pro bono refugee therapist, Louise spends her free time helping protect the precious wildlife in the country. In the last 10 years, she has worked to save and protect the wildlife in her community. It all began when she noticed the number of animals getting injured during new runway construction at the airport. 

Ascor wildlife carer Louise Dingle

Her admirable dedication to preserving the wildlife became even more prominent during the tragic bushfires that happened in early 2020. Louise responded quickly by mobilising her community, network, and the refugees she works with to help rescue injured marsupials and other species that lost their homes. She and her group of volunteers kept the animals hydrated and warm before calling the RSPCA to organise care for them. 

Organising Wildlife Care

Louise took inspiration from her father who was always giving back to the community. Having lived in Rockhampton, she would often see kangaroos getting hit by cars. 

This was basically why she felt she needed to do something when she noticed that animals were getting wounded during demolition works for the second airport runway. The injured animals would run away from the bulldozed areas of land and head towards the roads where people drive past them. 

She recognised the issue and did something about it. 

Using her space as a resource, she started the rescue of injured animals for rescue or rehab. In some unfortunate cases, the animals would have to be euthanised, but even so, Louise felt that it’s important to lessen the time the animals spent in pain before they get euthanised. 

Since she’s working as a volunteer therapist with refugees, she managed to get their help in supporting the wounded animals. The refugees often help in moving the animals to the vet or to RSPCA or help bundle them up to keep them warm before transport. 

“The support was overwhelming and the refugees I supported found a sense of purpose,” Louise said. 

“They often said to me that helping heal an animal helped heal them too.”

People in her neighbourhood, as well as her fellow flight attendants, also lend a hand in sewing and knitting warm clothing for the animals that needed to be kept warm. 

“So, I had all of these people who gave up their spare time to help out and they were usually really keen to help out too.”



Sense of Achievement

In her volunteer work as a wildlife carer, Louise finds achievement in having rescued hundreds of animals, especially the joeys and the baby possums. 

Louise is also glad that she’s able to raise awareness through her Facebook page

“Since the fires, people need to realise that what you see in the suburbs now is actually a really important habitat,” Louise said. 

“We lost so many animals in the devastating bushfires and what we see in the suburbs are truly important to Australia and to the DNA chain replenishing itself. 

“Therefore, what I’ve been able to do through my online platforms is raise awareness around the importance of suburban wildlife.”

 Louise is also happy that children in her community are growing up attached to the wildlife in the neighbourhood. 

“It’s lovely to see, especially during isolation,” she said.

Next Steps for the Initiative

Louise hopes that people would learn to the difference between a baby ring tail possum and a rat, and this is what her initiative is working on as its next step. 

“If you see their tail curling, it’s a possum then what you have is protected fauna. Our fauna is actually protected by the crown,” said Louise. 

“If you see a baby ring tail possum, just get a cloth or t-shirt and pop it in a box then ring the 24-hour RSPCA line. From there just sit with them for an hour or two. Act as the go-between of injury and rescue.”

Louise also wants to see people refraining from using rat poison as this sometimes kill possums that ingest poison left out for rats. The dead possums then get eaten by owls and eagles that also die because of the poison. 

“I just wish Australians who live in the suburbs of Brisbane or Sydney would stop using rat poison. It’s a painful death for the rats and it’s a painful death for owls and eagles.

“We need to realise that we’re in their territory.”

BCC Uses Bugs for Pest Removal in Ascot

Brisbane City Council is holding off on toxic pesticides in preventing a pest invasion in Ascot, choosing instead to pit bugs against bugs to naturally get rid of the destructive moths that have been attacking poinciana trees. 

Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner announced the natural pest control trial in Ascot to protect about 19,000 of these beautiful flowering plants. 

The council will release native wasps “about quarter the size of a pinhead.” These wasps are known to lay eggs in looper moth eggs, which prevents the pest species from developing into caterpillars that feed off the trees, causing defoliation.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons


In the early cycle of a looper moth’s life, they hatch in leaves on the ground then migrate up the tree trunks. These caterpillars are active at night but quiet and unnoticeable during the day. 

The council will also use weevils and beetles to attack aquatic weeds and vine weeds that clog and choke the waterways. Some of these natural pest killers were sourced from NSW, such as jewel beetles. 

Photo Credit: annawaldi/Pixabay

“We know that your enemy’s enemy is your friend and in this case it’s weevils, wasps and beetles that are helping look after our native vegetation,” the mayor said.