GOLD COAST ESCORT CANDEE
Delicously sweet smooth sexy treat...
Phone 0400692880
" 100% Genuine photo's of Candee "
Loves:Men, women and couples, hot steamy fun times, Naughty movies, Toys, Bi-sexual,Fantasies, Lacy lingerie, Stockings, Private picnics,Beachwalks, Watersports, Boating Sailing, Wine & Dining.
"A Dutch delight to light up your day or night"
I'm a friendly playfull and naughty.
Blonde 38 y.o , 5'8", size 10, 64 kg
In-calls: $80 Quickie $120 Half hr $200 1 hr
Outcalls: From $350 per hr
Overnight $1200
Dinner dates only: $80 per hr, min 3 hr's
Phone Candee on 0400692880
Gold Coast Australia for your infomation
The Gold Coast has a sub-tropical climate with plenty of sunshine year round (in fact an average of 300 days a year).
Average Summer temperatures range from 19 to 29 degrees Celsius (66 to 83 degrees Fahrenheit).
Average Winter temperatures range from an average of 9 to 21 degrees Celsius (48 to 69 degrees Fahrenheit) - it's no wonder the Gold Coast is Australia's favourite playground.
The floral emblum for the Gold Coast is "Banksia Aemula Proteaceae" or the "Wallum Banksia" which flowers in late summer and autumn. The name Wallum came from the word Aborigines used to describe the flower.
The Gold Coast has become one of Australia's most popular holiday playgrounds, a long way from the days when Captain Cook passed the coast in 1770 and named Point Danger and Mount Warning. The Gold Coast region was first put up for sale in 1874 when it was little more than a picturesque collection of lagoons and mangrove swamps with rivers and creeks meandering their way out to the ocean at Southport. By 1884, the Gold Coast was already becoming a popular holiday destination and Cobb & Co. started running regular coach services from Brisbane to the developing Gold Coast region. Further strimulation to the area's development occurred in 1889 when a rail link between the Gold Coast and Beenleigh was completed. The rail link was removed 65 years later in 1964.
James Cavill was instrumental in the growth of the region when he built the Surfers Paradise Hotel in the early 1920's. He purchased the land in Elston (now known as Surfers Paradise) in 1923 for a princely sum of £40 (about $200). A bridge replaced the old horse ferry crossing of the Nerang River in 1925 and in an effort to attract the more mobile and lucrative holiday market, the town of Elston (previously known as Meyers Ferry) was renamed "Surfers Paradise" in 1933 after the hotel Cavill had built 10 years earlier.
Property prices began rising sharply after WWII as there was an involuntary moritorium on development and would be developers could see an oportunity to cash in on a Post War boom. The greater region was given its modern moniker in the early 1950's when a journalist discussing the rising property values metaphorically referred to the area as the "Gold Coast". The ensuing development boom of the 1950's saw a rush to build large beachfront holiday apartments to support the now rapidly growing tourist market. By the 1960's the beachfront had all but been completely devloped and the urbanisation of the surrounding farms and wetlands began.
Gold Coast Aboriginal History
The Gold Coast region was known to local Aborigines as "Umbigumbi" and "Kurrungul". The traditional borders of the Gombemberri people of the Gold Coast extended from the Tweed River in the south along the Coomera River to Numinbah Valley. Some historians estaimate that Aborigines have been coming to the Gold Coasdt for over 10,000 years. They came to the Gold Coast from Bundjalung, south of the Tweed River, and from as far north as Maryborough in the north. They would visit the Gold Coast for festivals and tribal ceremonies, fishing, subtropical fruits and bush tucker and to harvest a special hardwood that they used to make boomerangs
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