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How an outback town with no traffic lights attracts city professionals
Key takeaways
- Kelsea Hogan and Billy Wootton say moving to the outback has brought their family closer.
- It might sound like the start of a comedy film but, in the remote Queensland town of Julia Creek, it's a true story.
- More than 1,600 kilometres north-west of Brisbane, with a population of just 550 people, the quaint rural village is now home for 30-year-old Jack Pixley, who manages the local pub.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Kelsea Hogan and Billy Wootton say moving to the outback has brought their family closer. (ABC News: Abbey Halter)
Link copied Share Share article. A publican, two paramedics, and a couple of backpackers rolled into the outback, leaving their city lives behind.
It might sound like the start of a comedy film but, in the remote Queensland town of Julia Creek, it's a true story.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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