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#hot shot transport qld
go2himtransport · 2 months
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What is Hot Shot Transport and How Does it Work in Queensland?
Introduction to Hot Shot Transport in Queensland:
Hot shot transport in Queensland refers to the urgent delivery of smaller, time-sensitive loads using specialised vehicles, ensuring fast and efficient service. This method is particularly beneficial for industries like mining, construction, and agriculture, where timely deliveries can significantly impact operations.
Advantages of Hot Shot Transport:
The primary advantage of hot shot transport in Queensland is its ability to provide quick and reliable delivery solutions. Unlike traditional freight services, hot shot transport operates with smaller vehicles, such as utes or light trucks, which can navigate through rural and urban areas with ease. This flexibility allows for faster response times and more direct routes, reducing the overall delivery time.
At Go 2 Him Transport, we specialise in hot shot transport in Queensland, offering prompt and dependable services. With over 20 years of experience, our team understands the unique challenges and requirements of the region. We ensure that your urgent loads are delivered safely and on time, mitigating any potential downtime or operational delays.
Choosing the Right Hot Shot Transport Service:
When choosing a hot shot transport service in Queensland, it's essential to consider factors such as the company's experience, reliability, and fleet capabilities. A reputable service provider will have a well-maintained fleet and a track record of timely deliveries. At Go 2 Him Transport, our commitment to excellence and customer satisfaction sets us apart. We provide personalised solutions tailored to your specific needs, ensuring seamless transport and peace of mind.
If you're looking for efficient and reliable hot shot transport in Queensland, contact Go 2 Him Transport today. Our dedicated team is ready to meet your urgent delivery needs, ensuring your operations run smoothly without any disruptions. Call us now or visit our website to learn more about our services and how we can assist you.
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The Lazy Parent’s Guide to Creating a Christmas Activities Advent Calendar
December is the best month of the year in our house.  Not because of the sweat dripping into my underpants in the 40 degree heat, but because December is when I pull out the Advent calendar.  Each morning we wake to our adorable children scratching each other's eyes out to open the envelope of the day.  Because our advent calendar isn't just a lame set of cardboard doors with pictures of Jesus*, no.  We have the always awesome Activities Advent.  
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In the sense of "Come on in, the water's fine", we'd like to encourage you to join us in the Christmas madness!  At the very least, in years to come when your kids are in therapy you can say "Remember that year when I did something with you EVERY day in December?"  (Or alternatively you can say a similar thing to your own therapist next January.)  
You'll need 24 ideas, so to help you out, here's our rough guide to a month with the advent calendar:
Start the Christmas decorating, put the tree up, stick that creepy elf on the shelf and pour yourself a stiff drink, it's time to get started.
Write a letter to Santa.  If you have a good postal service, you may even get a reply all the way from the North Pole! (aka Heathwood Mail Distribution Centre QLD 4111)
Drive around to see the Christmas lights.  Tell the kids that the police only let certain houses have Christmas light displays and they've already told you no.
Visit a local pool.  We try to take so many children that we scare everyone else away (otherwise go early).
Bake Christmas goodies.  Bonus points if you let the kids help.
Have a slide show of the best photos you've taken in the year.  Photos of the kids are always popular with the kids.  
Sleepovers, preferably at someone else's house.
Give everyone super soakers and have a water fight.  Best at a house with a pool so you can push all the kids in at the end.
Family games night.  Organise a cocktail party at the same time.  You'll need alcohol to get through a game of Monopoly with a four year old.
Boss Day.  Each kid gets a day where they get to call the shots.  So it's ice cream for breakfast, movies then 56 hours at the park.  If you can subtly convince them to buy a new movie and sit at home watching it, you all win.
Make Christmas decorations.  This is how it goes: Get on Pinterest and check out all the amazing ideas made by Mothers Who Make Us All Feel Inadequate. Go on a craft shopping spree.  Watch the children chop up all the beautiful paper into thousands of tiny pieces and then stick their heads to the table.  Cry in a corner.
Catch public transport somewhere. Buses, ferries, trains they're all just like crack for kids.  Just bring a book and get on a loop service that takes you straight back home again.
Visit a local museum or gallery.  This is where future planning optimism can get the better of you.  Sure I'll take 17 kids to the art gallery in three months time!  No worries!  What the hell was I thinking.  It's days like these you need a few spare chocolates around the place so you can do a last minute replacement.  You just have to haul your arse out of bed before the kids or you'll turn into a pumpkin.  An art gallery visiting pumpkin.
Visit Santa. This guy is going to be crawling into your living room in the middle of the night in ten days, you should at least introduce yourself.
Treasure Hunt.  Send them off on a hunt but keep the prize to yourself for a while.  Once you've had a cup of tea and before the tears start, hide the prize and tell them to "Go and have a proper look!"
Watch Christmas movies. Good luck finding a Christmas movie that doesn't make you want to poke burnt sticks into your eyes.
Breakfast out before school.  Has the added bonus of avoiding the making of breakfast.  If you can, see if you can order their lunches too.  Unfortunately your child may be judged for taking a cold Big Mac to school.
Late night feast with hot chocolate in front of the tree.  Late night = 6.30pm.
Shop for a nice present for a child you don't know and put it under the gift tree in Kmart.  Please no loom bands, the kids you are helping have enough problems dealing with Tony Abbott.
Let the kids set up their beds in front of the tree one night.  Expect zero sleep until 10pm when you finally crack and march them all back to their real beds.
Buy or make presents for siblings.  Officially known in our house as the least favourite advent activity and often accompanied by howls of "What about me?"
Picnic (see 13.)
School Christmas concerts.  These are an unavoidable part of the December madness.  Our thoughts go out to those parents whose kids are in the upper grades of primary school and who have to sit through the performances of every other grade before they can grab their camp chair and their sausage on bread and run.
Christmas carols.  Otherwise known as the true purpose for noise cancelling headphones.
*Hey Mum, our cardboard advent calendar with the pictures of Jesus we had when we were kids was totally awesome!
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