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Have you ever celebrated Christmas in July?
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No.
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Not yet.
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But you might?
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Yeah, I hope so.
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Would you ever think about having Christmas in the winter here, when it's cold?
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No, not really coz Christmas is in December.
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Yes, absolutely. We have a party every year.
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Do you. What kind of stuff do you do?
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We have a group gathering.
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There's about four couples. We rotate houses.
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We have the turkey, the ham, the prawns, big party, lots of drinks, celebrations, presents.
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It was our first time over here and you celebrate it in July
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so we put up a Christmas tree in our house and we got a couple of Christmas CDs we've
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still go.
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And we had dinner and it was good.
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So you get two Christmases every year?
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Absolutely.
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Sounds like a good deal.
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Sensational.
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When it is Christmas time, what kind of food do you eat?
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I'm English originally so I always have the Christmas roasts, some ham, some chicken.
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Barbecue on the beach, not traditional Christmas now for me.
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In Australia I come on the beach for barbecue with friends.
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We try to stick to something like salads and cold meats, things like that.
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Lots of plum pudding. That's the most important thing and we used to have the little coins
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in there but a few of us started swallowing them so mum stopped putting them in.
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Oh, just anything, just Aussie stuff.
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You know, ham, chicken...
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Anything else?
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Just whatever mum cooks, eh.
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Pie. I like pie. I always eat pie.
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And then just have seafood for lunch and then go for a surf or something.
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So it's great.
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Chicken.
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Probably have a big table full of people over and have Christmas pudding, roast turkey,
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warm roast dinner.
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Do the traditional like winter dinner time.
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Because it's always so hot here in summer in December and you tend to eat more salads
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ands tuff in hot weather,
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so yeah, have a typical English roast.
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Now another story about winter in Australia right now.
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When you think Australia, you probably think this stuff - surfing because it's hot.
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Well, let me tell you, in winter Australia can get kind of cold and in the Australian
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alps, between New South Wales and Victoria, it actually does snow.
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Now Faye comes from a place where it never snows, so how's she going to go when she grabs
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some of these and goes skiing for the very first time?
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Faye is from the Republic of Fiji Islands. She grew up in Suva City.
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She's the eldest of four children and now lives in Melbourne with her family.
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When Faye was growing up her mum worked as a flight attendant and her dad was a seafarer.
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So we didn't have the most traditional family set up where we'd have parents at home in
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the morning and in the evening and in the weekends.
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And so I grew up with my grandmother on a university campus and I really miss that place
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because I actually got to graduate from that university.
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When I was in university I was hired as a research assistant to do a number of geoarcheological
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trips,
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so I started to gain an interest in research and in general travelling and that's something
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I'd like to do more of.
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A typical day for me would be waking up in the morning, helping my siblings gather their
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stuff together and get ready for school.
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Drop them off in the morning, come back, do a bit of housework.
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I've actually stopped work for a while and chosen to be in the house helping my parents
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out while we're here in Melbourne.
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After I'll stay here and hope to pick up career-wise when we do go back to Fiji, or we'll see what
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opens up here in Australia.
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Dinner-time.
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Will you say grace?
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I'd like to ski because I've never tried it before and it looks like a lot of fun
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and if I do fall, hopefully it will be in some very soft snow.
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I think I'll be pretty cold with being in the snow however I think I'll be very excited.
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Yeah, I'm very excited about it all at the moment. It's good.
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I'll be getting lessons from an instructor first and yeah, I'm looking forward to my
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first solo ski.
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There's no snow in Fiji at all so the closest we get to a white winter wonderland is probably
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what we see on television and so I'm very excited about being in that much snow for
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that much time. And actually skiing.
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If you'd told me that I was going to be standing here in the snow learning how to ski a couple
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of months ago I would have not believed you but yeah, I'm so thankful I'm here and it's
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all very new and I'm super excited.
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Put one foot in between …
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Skis together, still holding yourself there.
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There you go.
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Cut, little cuts ...
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It's not as easy as everyone's making it look, but yeah ...
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Building the confidence levels a bit.
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It's been good.
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Okay.
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Okay, so we're going to go down.
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It's going to be very slippery, and we're going to enjoy that sensation, and then we're
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just going to push out to manage the speed.
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Okay.
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Then push out and when you land dead centre arch, right in the middle of your foot.
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Learning to ski, I can honestly say is a bit nerve-racking but when you learn it properly,
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and when you have a good instructor, it's all worth it.
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It's so much fun.
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Yes. I'm just glad I haven't fallen over yet.
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That was pretty good. I enjoyed that.
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I think it's going to work a little bit more.
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That's good. That's really good.
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Keep going.
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Fantastic.
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Look back at your curve there.
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That was really good.
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I think I could tackle a bigger run on my own.
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So long as I know the emergency stop I should be fine.
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I'm six foot two so I've got a long way to fall down if I do fall down while skiing.
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However, I am interested in finding out what it is all about.
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This is awesome. Bulla Mount Bulla!
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Tackling the bigger slope on my own will be quite a challenge but I think as long as I
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stick to the basics and have an instructor maybe nearby watching over me I should be
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all right.
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Yeah, but I'm very excited, looking forward to it.
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I'm actually pumped although I'm a bit unsure about this slope because I haven't been down
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this slope before
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and it's the highest one so far but I'm pumped, and I just want to get in there and do it.
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I've still got butterflies in my stomach but I know I can do it.
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I was a bit nervous but I held it in there and just remembered the emergency position
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and I think I was pretty sure of myself, and I hope it looked that way.
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But yeah, I had fun.
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That was my first fall. Let's try this again.
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This is cool.
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I mean the beach is awesome but the snow is something different and I'm having heaps of
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fun.
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This has really opened my eyes again and this experience has taught me that I need to learn
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a lot more about the world and yeah,
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this was awesome and I can't wait to see more of Australia, that's for sure.
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Faye did really well there. I am very impressed.
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Now, agricultural shows happen all around Australia.
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They're all about fun, food, animals and prizes.
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Selby is about to go to the Royal Adelaide Show and try and win a prize for his girlfriend,
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Stephanie.