11.04.07
Posted in Uncategorized at 7:05 pm by admin
Hi and welcome to the Heat Beads® blog, ‘Sizzle’. We want to encourage our Heat Beads® customers and passionate BBQ audience as much as we can and to get you to share your personal experiences and secret tips with Sizzle and the rest of the blogosphere. This is the venue to share your contributions and things started to help others who read the blog, to learn and enjoy and perhaps go from occasional barbecuers, to BBQ experts.
So let us know what you’d like to see on the blog.
Maybe it’s stories about your best BBQ ever, the strangest BBQ you’ve ever used, places you’ve BBQ’d, events, what you personally use as a barbecue, what gets the best results, cooking times, methods, setups, recipes, marinades, salad dressings, foods to cook and more, more, more.
It could be your overseas experiences, tips your mother taught you, preparation for cooking, cleaning, accompanying dishes or drinks, the strangest thing you’ve cooked, the simple, the complex, the unusual, photos,….basically anything that takes your fancy and has to do with BBQ-ing,
We’ll start the conversation but hope to have you guys keep it going.
Look forward to hearing from you.
‘Sizzle’
Permalink
02.04.07
Posted in Events, Oxfam Trailwalker at 1:24 pm by admin
The Heat Beads® Hot Shoe Shufflers - Lee, Merilyn, Vanessa and Rob - shuffled over the finish line having raised over $18,000 for Oxfam.
We thank all our sponsors for your generous support of the Heat Beads® Hot Shoe Shufflers and Oxfam Australia Trailwalker.
Check out the massive difference your support will make to Oxfam Australia’s work to overcome poverty and injustice in over 26 countries around the world, including Indigenous Australia:
$35 can pay for materials to build a public well in Sri Lanka, providing fresh water for 20 to 30 families.
$40 can pay for a South African peer educator who uses song and theatre to help educate communities about preventing and living with HIV and AIDS.
$70 can provide a family in Laos with access to clean, safe water from a ‘Gravity-Fed’ water system.
$100 can buy a bicycle. In Mozambique and Zimbabwe, volunteer carers use bikes to cover more distance and help more villagers in a fraction of the time it would normally take.
$1500 can buy a well for a school and help improve the health and education for hundreds of children.
If you’d like to continue to support Oxfam, you can donate or get involved at www.oxfam.org.au
Final total:
$18000.000
Permalink