
Meet the Uber of funerals
It’s the Uber of funerals – a revolutionary start-up that’s gaining national attention for disrupting the death industry in Australia. Picaluna is a new two-sided
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It’s the Uber of funerals – a revolutionary start-up that’s gaining national attention for disrupting the death industry in Australia. Picaluna is a new two-sided
“The coronavirus lockdown has changed the way we farewell our loved ones – and in some ways, for the better”. Those words are how Sandra
With funerals now restricted to a handful of people due to COVID19 Government measures, Picaluna is doing everything possible to ease that extra distress for
The MD of an Australian funeral company says those in the industry who engage in price gouging, take advantage of emotionally vulnerable families and hide
Picaluna has been featured in a news report about Australia’s funeral industry. Read the article on news.com.au. WHEN Greg Inglis lost his mother a few years
Original article here: Manly Daily website John Beverley was an artist behind the collectable Arnott’s tins Sarah Swain, Manly Daily November 28, 2017 AN
Picaluna MD Greg Inglis gives you the run down on Picaluna – in just 90 seconds. Picaluna is a network of civil celebrants and professional
Picaluna had the honour of helping to farewell iconic Aussie musician Iain Shedden. The great and the good of Australian music joined in the ceremony
In Australia about 160,000 people die each year, generating 1.1 billion dollars for the funeral industry, but now some non–traditional players are saying there’s a
Do you want a fabulous funeral? Local holistic celebrant and independent funeral planner Sarah Tolmie wants people on the Central Coast to have exactly that.
Greg Inglis is the business brain behind Picaluna with a background in hospitality, events and sales in a range of diverse companies. His experience includes
Sam Aulton’s husband and young daughters weren’t ready to say goodbye when the 46-year-old died in hospital last December of complications associated with breast cancer.
From the Newcastle Herald Lola Rus-Hartland offers Hunter Valley families a unique service. She walks with them in the final stages of life towards death,
Greg Inglis holds in his mind a clear image of his mother’s memorial service. Randwick racecourse in Sydney, a couple of weeks after her cremation.
Did you know that most Australians would never choose to have a standard funeral at a chapel? Which begs the question – how would you