logo
Missing German backpacker found alive in remote WA outback

Missing German backpacker found alive in remote WA outback

The Age11-07-2025
National
Missing German backpacker Carolina Wilga has been found alive after 12 days lost in the remote Western Australian outback.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works
This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works

The Age

time6 hours ago

  • The Age

This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works

Chateau d'Yquem seems like it would be a dessert wine. That would make it the mother of all dessert wines, given this one of the greatest wines on the planet, intensely complex and rich, sweet and yet racy, regularly chiming in at upwards of $2000 a bottle – but it still appears to the uninitiated, thanks to its high sugar levels, to be a wine to finish the meal. So what's it doing here on the table during the seafood courses? What's it doing next to a plate of lobster? Come to think of it, what am I doing next to this plate of lobster and this glass of Chateau d'Yquem? There's a lot to unpack here. You need to understand, first, that I'm in Bangkok, a city synonymous with good food, though not always very expensive fine-dining food. You also need to be aware that this restaurant is German. Like, properly German. Run by Germans. Serving German food (spaetzle, huhnchensalat, labskaus). Very expensive, fine-dining German food. In Bangkok.

This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works
This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works

Sydney Morning Herald

time6 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

This Bangkok restaurant makes no sense at all. And it works

Chateau d'Yquem seems like it would be a dessert wine. That would make it the mother of all dessert wines, given this one of the greatest wines on the planet, intensely complex and rich, sweet and yet racy, regularly chiming in at upwards of $2000 a bottle – but it still appears to the uninitiated, thanks to its high sugar levels, to be a wine to finish the meal. So what's it doing here on the table during the seafood courses? What's it doing next to a plate of lobster? Come to think of it, what am I doing next to this plate of lobster and this glass of Chateau d'Yquem? There's a lot to unpack here. You need to understand, first, that I'm in Bangkok, a city synonymous with good food, though not always very expensive fine-dining food. You also need to be aware that this restaurant is German. Like, properly German. Run by Germans. Serving German food (spaetzle, huhnchensalat, labskaus). Very expensive, fine-dining German food. In Bangkok.

Poland's prettiest city: Krakow v Warsaw in the ultimate city smackdown
Poland's prettiest city: Krakow v Warsaw in the ultimate city smackdown

The Advertiser

time08-08-2025

  • The Advertiser

Poland's prettiest city: Krakow v Warsaw in the ultimate city smackdown

Wawel Royal Castle in Krakow. Picture: Shuttertock By Amy Cooper and Mal Chenu Updated August 8 2025 - 9:57am, first published 8:00am Both carry the scars of a brutal history, but their charm and beauty shine through. Is Krakow truly the belle of the Baltic-or does Warsaw's gritty resilience win the day? Its a tough one, but our duelling experts can help you decide. Subscribe now for unlimited access. or signup to continue reading All articles from our website The digital version of Today's Paper All other in your area KRAKOW: Amy says go medieval or go home Warsaw, what is it good for? Mal's about to tell you, but even his shiniest Polish polish can't disguise the truth: when it comes to scenic superiority, these two cities are Poles apart. While Krakow escaped WWII with its beautiful historical buildings intact, the German blitzkrieg razed poor Warsaw. And then afterwards, the city's Soviet-era rebuild took its aesthetic cues from Stalin, a man who never met a bleak brutalist block he didn't like, thought walls were just for hiding microphones in and whose main contribution to architectural design was his own face. Eyesore Warsaw? That's a bit strong, but let's just say that Paris and Prague have nothing to fear. They should, however, tremble before gorgeous Krakow, effortlessly out-prettying Europe's grandest old cities with its medieval magnificence, fairytale castles, soaring spires and cobblestoned charm. Krakow's Old Town is a massed gathering of masterpieces from the past 1000 years, where Renaissance, Baroque, Gothic, palaces, mansions and churches jostle for your attention around the giant Market Square, one of the largest medieval town squares in Europe. Its original centrepiece, the glorious Cloth Hall, dates back some 600 years and could well be the world's oldest shopping centre. Across the square, the twin towers of St Mary's Basilica crown an interior extravaganza of arches, carvings, statues, gold for days and a star-bedazzled blue ceiling. Medieval Wawel Royal Castle stands guard up on the hill, complete with a dragon's den - once home to the fire-breathing beast defeated by 8th-century ruler King Krak. Today the city's name still celebrates the legendary hero who told the dragon to Krak off. The Old Town alone could enchant you for days, crammed as it is with historical sites and art. But there's so much more to see that even if you were up at the Krakow dawn every day, you'd still struggle to squeeze everything in. Oskar Schindler's Enamel Factory is a museum telling his story alongside Poland's Nazi invasion in dense and devastating detail, and the Pharmacy Under the Eagle commemorates its owner Tadeusz Pankiewicz, who risked life and limb to help residents of the Jewish ghetto. There's a subterranean museum hidden four metres below Market Square where genuine archaeological digs include medieval cemeteries complete with the funereal fashion of the time - anti-vampire burials. Even farther down and just outside town, Cracow Saltworks Museum has underground chapels and lakes along with salt sculptures and chambers in a giant, labyrinthine salt mine 1000 years old and deeper than the Eiffel Tower's height. And although it sounds like it was named by a toddler, Planty Park is most certainly planty - a four-kilometre necklace of verdant gardens encircling the Old Town and made for strolls amid fountains and flowers. Verdict: Stunning but never shallow, Krakow takes Pole position in this Slavic showdown. WARSAW: Mal says resilience is beautiful In the dictionary listing for "resilience", there's a picture of Warsaw. If you ever wanted to visit a city that literally rose from the ashes, this is your guy. Warsaw's meticulously rebuilt Old Town. Picture: Getty Images Two World War II events define the character of Warsaw. Against impossible odds, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising by Jewish resistance in 1943, and the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 by the general populace were heroic and ill-fated slaps at the brutal Nazi occupation. As a German report stated: "The resistance fought to the very last bullet." After the uprisings were put down, Hitler ordered the ghetto - and then the city - to be razed. By January 1945, 85 per cent of the city had been destroyed. The horrors and bravery of these seminal events are articulated at the Warsaw Rising Museum, one of the city's most popular and poignant attractions, and by the Warsaw Uprising Monument in Krasinski Square, among others. Ravaged by six years of war, the exhausted Varsovians set about rebuilding. The city's Old Town was returned to its former glory using paintings and records. The Old Town dates back to the 13th century, so this was quite a reno. Now a World Heritage Site, the Old Town's stunning squares were carefully re-created. Sprawling Castle Square features Royal Castle and Sigismund's Column, which commemorates the national hero responsible for moving the capital of Poland from Krakow to Warsaw. Old Market Square hosts the Museum of Warsaw, a pretty wall sundial and a bronze statue of Syrenka, the "Mermaid of Warsaw". Syrenka has been the city's symbol and protector for centuries, and monuments and carvings of the feisty, sword-wielding, fish-tailed heroine can be seen throughout Warsaw. Another revered Varsovian heroine is Marie Curie. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win two and the only person to win in both physics and chemistry. Her estimable accomplishments can be studied at the Maria Sklodowska-Curie Museum, housed in the tenement where she was born. Royal Baths Park occupies 76 hectares in the centre of Warsaw, and you can hear free piano concerts in front of the Fryderik Chopin Monument every Sunday. A little way down the Royal Route, Wilanow Palace and its adjoining 45-hectare park is filled with furnishings, and art retrieved and reinstalled after the war. All this is just a sampling of the myriad treasures awaiting you in the Polish capital. Krakow is a mere fraction of Warsaw, and indeed Australia - Krakow has a Kosciuszko but theirs is a 35-metre-high artificial mound. It also has a salt mine, which is symbolic of the work Amy has to do spruiking the clear runner-up in this Polish polemic. Verdict: Gritty, gutsy and gloriously reborn, Warsaw is the comeback queen of Europe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store