Welcome to the smallest town in Australia complete with its own motel, train station, general store, four-star restaurant, pub and a just FOUR residents.



The Queensland town of Cooladdi is located 560 miles south of Brisbane and a 90-minute drive from the nearest other settlement Charleville.



But living happily in isolation is Laurel Seymour Smith, 64, her daughter Roxanne and son-in-law Gavin Muller and their daughter Christie.



The tight knit family of four live and work in the remote outpost operating the town's only business - a quirky watering hole that resembles more a truck stop, a post office, the pub, a self-rated four-star restaurant, a motel and petrol station all rolled into one.



Laurel and her late partner Errol bought the place in 2007 - something she maintains was the best decision they ever made.



The 64-year-old said: "I was a miner driving trucks for years -this came up and we said we're looking for a complete lifestyle change.



"And before we knew it I was the postmaster, the publican, the cleaner, the cook and the happiest I've ever been, who wouldn't be, this is flamin' God's country.



"The postal run is the highlight for me - delivering good old-fashioned letters and parcels to families who live so remotely. I just love it.



"I stop in for a morning cuppa and scone and good old chin wag and then it's back on the road, they're like our extended family."



"We have little or no mobile phone coverage so if you want us call the landline, if you're lucky, you'll get through.



"This place means everything to me, and really how many 19-year-old kids want to live so remotely and yet my granddaughter Christie, she loves the place and so do her friends when they 'drop in'.



The family business - known as the Fox Trap - was handed over the Gavin, 47, and 43-year-old Roxanne. Gavin himself also used to work in the mines.



He said: "We'd come up to Cooladdi for holidays and when the chance came to move permanently I jumped at it - took some convincing the missus, Roxanne, but she came round eventually.



"Now I can't get her out of the bloody place, not even to go out for tea (dinner) in Charleville.



"One thing about living here you're never bored! Always something to do - in fact too much sometimes.



"Problem is to get a sparkie (electrician) out here is 300 bucks - I'm putting it out there for any bloke who can build who wants a year off for board and grub and as much beer as he can drink to jump on board to get Cooladdi looking the way she deserves to look - prettier anyway than she is now."



With a tennis court that has seen better days, a few cows, ten dogs, a couple of friendly cats and an ever growing chicken population, the Fox Trap be warned is not a pretty place.



Roxanne said the train station platform had become something of a tourist attraction in the town which sees temperatures reach 48C.



She said: "We call it the stop where you'll wait a bloody long time for the train to come."



And when it comes to the food on offer at the restaurant, Roxanne, the resident cook, believes their road kill menu is 'to die for'. '



Gavin heads into Charleville every week for supplies, and the family hit the 'big town' either Toowoomba or Brisbane three times a year for specialist appointments and family commitments. (Story by By Richard Ashmore/Caters News)















































































