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Roxanne Muller: My husband wanted to move out this way because he reckons it's God's country. We moved from Moura, which has a population of around 2,000.You work seven days a week with your family. Do you ever want to take a holiday or go away somewhere?
To tell you the truth, it doesn't worry me to go on a holiday. It sounds crazy but I'm a person who has never wanted anything. I just love spending time with my family. My ambition in life was to see my children grow up enough to support and take care of themselves. I never drank, I never smoked, I raised my children, gave them nothing but the best.
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Holidays and that material stuff doesn't matter at all. Money doesn't worry me. You can't take it with you. You just take things as they come day by day and thank the Lord, not that I'm Christian, but thank God I'm alive and I can breathe air. There's always someone out there that's got it worse than me. I'm just lucky I've got healthy children and they've got children who are going to have children of their own.Do you and your husband have romantic nights or days off to spend time with just each other?
No not really, not since we've been here. My husband does a lot of holidays by himself. I go kangaroo shooting with my husband a few nights a week.What do you do with a kangaroo once you've shot it?
My husband has to dress it out properly for human consumption then put it in a cold room and then every week it gets transported to a factory. I don't eat it. It goes to Brisbane and then they do the processing of it from there.What would you say is the best thing about living in Cooladdi?
Quietness, laidback lifestyle. It's stress-free. It's probably done my health really good, moving from where I was to here.And the worst?
The worst is probably that you have to travel a long way to see a specialist. My husband has to see three next week and we have to travel all the way to Brisbane. And mobile reception coverage—there's none here. Also internet and TV are all satellite. I've had no internet service for four weeks. People don't realize how lucky they are in the city. Here's it's not cheap and if someone has an accident and there's no mobile coverage they can die.
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The nearest police station is 88 kilometers from here. If we got held up or something you'd try and do as best as you do like city people. Try and prevent it from happening. If we get sick or someone gets hurt, you can ring the doctor and ask for a consultation over the phone. So if it's an emergency, the doctor on the other end will guide me through. If somebody needs help quick then they'll probably get a helicopter out here in a hurry.How does gossip spread in a town of three?
Just from people passing through. It's funny, everyone knew my children, saying, "Oh yeah, I saw Christie at a party on the weekend," you know. It's like neighborhood watch. Kids then think they can't step outside the boundaries because they know they'll get caught. There's always someone out there that'll dob you in.Do you think you'll stay in Cooladdi for the rest of your life?
I'd like to stay here but it's up to my husband. I just go with the flow. My kids hope we keep the business until we die.
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Christie Muller: Four years, from year ten to year 12.How did you feel when your family bought the place and they told you you'd be moving to a town where no one else lived?
It didn't bother me because I'm a country person. I did have to drive about 35 kilometers down the road to the bus stop to catch the bus to school [in Charleville, 100 kilometers away] but I enjoyed living there and I still go out there.Did you ever get sick of seeing your family?
No. We'd do different things like go pigging and shooting with my dad.What's pigging?
We had dogs and there's wild pigs and you chase them. Then we sell the pigs which go on to be made pet food and things like that.What else did you do for fun in Cooladdi?
Go fishing, horse riding, camping. We had little camp ovens out the back and we'd make a little fire and that and do a camp oven. We had property neighbors that lived around one kilometers away that we'd see sometimes.When you're a teenager you want to do things like date, hang out with friends, party. Was it possible to do that when you were living in Cooladdi?
Yeah, I had a boyfriend from school when I was living there and he'd come out to the Fox Trap on the school bus.What did you guys do on your dates?
Go pigging. Pretty much everyone out this way does it. We'd do clay targets as well—these targets that get flown out of a machine and you have a gun to shoot them.What was your favorite thing about living in Cooladdi?
The isolation, no phone service, peace and quiet. You don't have to worry about being around anyone else because it's only your family. You can do your own thing. Kind of, like, you can't do what you want, but you can, if that makes sense.It's relaxing living there. When I'm in the city, I miss the freedom of being in a small town, being secure and not having any traffic. I don't think I'd ever be able to live in a city like Brisbane.Having gone to big cities, do you feel like you missed out on any experiences living in Cooladdi then?
No, not at all.Follow Emma on Twitter.