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Why Terence Darrell Kelly’s neighbour is clearing out

<p><em>Images: 7NEWS</em></p> <p>The neighbour of accused Cleo Smith kidnapper, Terence Kelly is so scared of what will happen once police leave the area that he’s packing up and leaving.</p> <p>Ever since Cleo was found at the home 18 days after she went missing, there has been a strong police presence at the Carnarvon property.</p> <p>Detectives and forensic officers have been at the Tonkin Crescent house each day, but security guards have also protected the house from vandalism or vigilante attacks while Kelly is in custody and police carry out their work.</p> <p>Kelly’s neighbour believes once police and security presence stops, the duplex could become the target “revenge” attacks and vandalism.</p> <p>“The house will be smashed,” he told 7NEWS.</p> <p>“A lot of people are disappointed and angry about what has happened, so there’s a greater chance that once the police are gone, we expect something will happen.</p> <p>“100 per cent sure they will come here and smash the house.”</p> <p>As he was packing up on Thursday, Kelly’s neighbour showed 7NEWS through his property, which is a mirror image of the home next door where Cleo Smith was held captive.</p> <p>The two bedrooms are positioned away from the common wall, which is hardly sound proofed, with only fibro and a timber frame separating the living rooms of the two properties.</p> <p>“I find it hard to know that it was right next door to me. It took me a while to absorb it.”</p> <p>Kelly was described as the perfect neighbour. He didn’t drink, didn’t smoke or take drugs and the two would occasionally chat when taking the bins out. Kelly would keep an eye on his house if he was away.</p> <p>Kelly’s neighbour has been offered a new place to live in wake of what allegedly happened next door.</p> <p>Police have stripped Kelly’s home gathering evidence, all but the sleeping bag which still remains missing.</p> <p>Police tape is set to come down once a final sweep of the home has been done. Those who have become accustomed to street presence have growing fears about what might happen next.</p>

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You can now stay in Downton Abbey’s iconic Highclere Castle

<p>The iconic castle from hit TV show<span> </span><em>Downton Abbey</em><span> </span>is now available to rent,<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.airbnb.com.au/rooms/38373507" target="_blank">courtesy of Airbnb.</a></p> <p>The Highclere Castle will be available for a one-off stay for two lucky fans of the show for just $270.</p> <p>The experience is being offered as the motion picture<span> </span><em>Downton Abbey</em>hits cinemas.</p> <p>The castle covers 100,000 square feet and has a total of 300 rooms that showcase the history of the building.</p> <p>The lucky winners get to explore iconic rooms that they know from the show, including the Drawing Room and the Library.</p> <p>They also will enjoy drinking cocktails in the Saloon, followed by a traditional dinner with the Earl and Countess of Carnarvon in the State Dining Room. It is here you'll be waited on by your own butler.</p> <p>The next day, you’ll be treated to a private tour of the extensive grounds.</p> <p>Lady Carnarvon has described the experience offered as “truly unique”.</p> <p>"It's an absolute privilege and pleasure to call Highclere Castle my home and I am delighted to be able to share it on Airbnb for a truly unique stay," she said in a statement.</p> <p>"Highclere Castle has been in the Carnarvon family since 1679 and has an incredibly rich history. I am passionate about the stories and heritage of Highclere Castle, and I am looking forward to welcoming our future guests."</p> <p>Scroll through the gallery to see what the historic Highclere Castle looks like.</p>

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Exploring the secret ravines of Carnarvon Gorge

<p>In the sandstone country of Queensland's Central Highlands, the walls are closing in.</p> <p>The tiny gorge - a side gorge of a side gorge - is narrowing, and high cliffs angle over our heads. Even the searing sun can no longer find us down here.</p> <p>Simon Ling stops and scans the pebbly creek bed.</p> <p>"There are no footprints," he says. "Nobody else has been through here. We could be the first people in here this year."</p> <p>And yet, just half an hour ago, we'd been walking among a steady stream of people through Carnarvon Gorge.</p> <p>Four hundred kilometres inland from the city of Rockhampton, Carnarvon is arguably the most striking natural feature in Queensland's outback.</p> <p>White cliffs rising up to 200 metres above Carnarvon Creek enclose the 30-kilometre-long gash in the rugged hills.</p> <p>Two major Aboriginal art sites adorn the rock walls, and endemic fan palms rise from the banks, bursting open like fireworks against the cliffs.</p> <p>But to think of Carnarvon as a single nick in the land is to underestimate it.</p> <p>The wide central gorge is stitched with side gorges, and it's inside many of these that Carnarvon's prime attractions are found.</p> <p>Many of the side gorges are marked and accessed by trails, but there are others as anonymous as they are spectacular.</p> <p>Which is why I'm here with Simon.</p> <p>A former Brisbane chef turned ecologist, Simon has been living around Carnarvon for 15 years, and guiding visitors through it for a decade.</p> <p>"Carnarvon was always my favourite national park, and this is more up my alley in terms of things I'm passionate about."</p> <p>The inevitable guiding line through Carnarvon Gorge is the walking trail that leads almost 10 kilometres along its banks to Big Bend, passing each of the gorge's major features along the way.</p> <p>As the day's first light strikes the cliffs around the gorge mouth, Simon and I are already hiking along their base.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35630/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (204)"/></p> <p>As we walk, dragonflies play over the creek and a water dragon comes down to drink.</p> <p>Small lorikeets, one of around 170 bird species recorded in the gorge, whirr overhead.</p> <p>"These are the smallest lorikeets in Australia," Simon says. "They're like budgies on speed."</p> <p>This day, the main gorge is simply our freeway to smaller things.</p> <p>The bulk of the marked side gorges are bunched along the first half of the trail, though we ignore most of them because we're seeking our own hidden gorge.</p> <p>But even Simon can't resist a stop at the Art Gallery.</p> <p>Lining a 60-metre section of cliffs, this Aboriginal art site contains more than 2000 paintings and ochre stencils depicting the likes of boomerangs, animal tracks, nets and figures of hands.</p> <p>As sunlight creeps along the wall, a series of engravings also comes into relief.</p> <p>"Central Queensland is prolific in art sites, but somehow it's just not as famous as Kakadu or the Kimberley," Simon says.</p> <p>Past the Art Gallery, we step off the track and effectively disappear.</p> <p>Sides gorges fork and fork again as the wide main gorge constricts into a narrow shaded tunnel.</p> <p>Cool winds funnel through the side gorge, chilled by rock walls that never see the sun.</p> <p>One wall is painted green with moss, and a large log remains wedged between the cliffs overhead from a surging flood months before.</p> <p>"This is one of the reasons I've been here so long," Simon says. "Every side gorge has a unique character, and after every flood, things change.</p> <p>"The walls stay the same, but the creeks are different."</p> <p>There are other things that are changing around Carnarvon Gorge also.</p> <p>This evening I head to adjoining Bandana Station where, last April, the 17,500-hectare cattle station began sunset tours fronting the gorge cliffs.</p> <p>On a rise looking over the station homestead to the cliffs, a fire is roaring.</p> <p>Wine and beer are poured, guests are sitting on logs, and grazier Olivia Evans is talking about her six-generation connection to the region.</p> <p>For Olivia, bringing tourism to Bandana has been a plan 11 years in the making, and finally the idea came from the station's most striking feature: its view.</p> <p>Beyond the station's pastures, the sandstone escarpment unfurls like a ribbon, though late-afternoon cloud has crept over the range, threatening to steal our sunset.</p> <p>But as Olivia's father, Bruce, recites a Banjo Paterson poem, the sun peeps below the cloud, briefly lighting the cliffs as brightly as the fire.</p> <p>Slowly the light fades and the world disappears. Carnarvon is done for another day.</p> <p>By dawn the next morning, I'm inside the gorge again, setting out alone to explore the remainder of its natural treasures.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35631/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (205)"/></p> <p>The best hiking advice I've been given is to walk to the furthest point - Big Bend - in the early morning, then venture into the side gorges as I return, making the long trek in the cool of the day and breaking the walk back with stops in the cool side gorges.</p> <p>From the Art Gallery, through sections of riverbank smothered in fan palms, it's about four kilometres to the second of the gorge's major art sites.</p> <p>In an enormous overhang, Cathedral Cave has similar ochre stencilling, with new imagery such as pendants, suggesting trade, and a rifle depicting early contact with Europeans.</p> <p>By the time I turn at Big Bend, the sun is boring into the gorge, its heat radiating off the white cliffs.</p> <p>The narrow side gorges are now just as appealing for the relief of their shade as their beauty.</p> <p>In Wards Canyon, I step into the cover of Australia's only inland stand of king ferns, confined to a 40-metre stretch of this side gorge.</p> <p>At the Amphitheatre I don't just walk up to the cliffs, I walk into them, squeezing through a narrow crack that balloons into a 60-metre-deep sinkhole.</p> <p>Trees lean over the cliff edge far above, casting silhouettes against the bright sky.</p> <p>I remember Simon's words from the previous day: "You get animals falling in there occasionally. A koala fell in once."</p> <p>My final detour is into a side gorge named Moss Garden, climbing to a pool encased in cliffs that are a shagpile of moss.</p> <p>A chill breeze blows over the pool like a puff of natural air-conditioning, and the only sound is the dripping of water.</p> <p>So near to the heat and fierce light of the main gorge, the gentle scene feels almost like an installation, a natural water feature designed to soothe in this gorge that has as many faces as it has bends.</p> <p>Have you ever been to Carnarvon Gorge?</p> <p><em>Written by Andrew Bain. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></strong></a>.</em></p>

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