Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Sweetest Victory

Noticing his Kangaroo cap, I said, "Hello Ken, I didn't know you were a North Melbourne man."

"Yes I am, but I’m Noel." I’d mistaken him for another of similar age and appearance. I'd been nodding to both these men for some time thinking they were one and the same.

I said he must be pulling his hair out at yet another narrow loss. North had gone down to Gold Coast after jumping them early and leading by five goals at quarter time. Noel agreed it was demoralizing, a mystery to him.

I asked how long he'd been a North supporter and he said he joined North in 1958 when he was about 16 years old. North made a public statement that if they won the premiership that year they'd buy all their members a box of chocolates. That won Noel's support. They didn’t win a flag till 1975.

I sympathized with him for the season's disappointments explaining that I was a Melbourne Demons supporter, say no more, but I had a soft spot for North since the 1970's when Ron Barassi signed to coach, and because recent 200 gamer Michael Firrito is from Gembrook, and our dog 'Snow' came from the Firrito's around when Michael was drafted.

Next day a young boy was bouncing a footy on his way to school. He said his team was the 'Hawks'. Footy crosses barriers of, class, religion, race and gender. Some women I know are fanatical.

I see the local braves training on miserable, cold, dark evenings, working to improve their fitness, skills and teamwork. All credit to them. Every week one team wins and the other loses. It is uplifting and humbling. Lessons and good habits can be carried into broader society.

I don't believe winning is everything. I'd rather be a loser who gave his all than an ungracious winner who had all the luck or advantage. But to win against the odds, when the chips are down, that’s the sweetest victory.      

  


Saturday, June 01, 2013

The Automobile Age

Amazing as it seems my lifespan has seen more than half the 110 or so years that we have been driving around in motor vehicles. This has dominated the economies of  'the west' and probably still is the dominant factor in the much talked about global economy.

This thinking came to me during an email exchange during the week with son Rob who lives in Melbourne sharing a flat with a friend. I intend to elaborate more of my thoughts in a future post but for now I copy the exchange here, hoping Rob won't mind me putting his correspondence into the public forum.

ROB

Hello

Just been the usual - yeah I got Mum's email but forgot about replying -  nothing to report here really so that's why you haven't heard from me.

Hope everything went well at Lakes, did you all end up going together on the weekend? New deck? The football is beyond complete rubbish.  I was watching it on the iPad Foxtel (thanks to your account details), but stopped mid way through to watch the Da Vinci Code, which is saying something.

Took Hao's Barina to get 120,000km service today ($700) and was also quoted $900 for replacement of a water pump for the timing compartment thing that is drip-leaking coolant. Think the mechanic profession is the way to go for $130 an hour don't you!

Have been thinking about adopting a kitten what do you think? Don't know if it'd destroy carpet and things. But it would be cool.

good night

CAREY

A few months before I parted with my Suzuki I left it at Clapperton’s for a routine service at 180,000km and when I picked it up they said they put a new water pump in cause it was leaking, and without asking me (they couldn’t) they changed the timing belt at the same time which was due at 200,000 as it needs doing every 100,000 and the major component in changing the timing belt is labour taking off water pump to get in there. Whole job cost me about $600. Good I thought for a water pump timing belt in effect a major service. Clappo charges $77 per hour inc GST. Car maintenance is a financial minefield, and we are at the mercy of the economy, how it works, and the integrity of human beings, which is hard to assess before the event. It’s hard to be sure what they actually did for Hao’s $700 service. The whole car industry is set up for profiteering from start to finish including salesmen, finance, tyres, crash repairs/insurance, fuel, road maintenance and safety and regulation enforcement. It is a major factor in capitalism and frankly it is the basis on which economies and the world runs and if I could, I would not own a car and if I was GOD I’d ban them.
 
See how you wound me up. As for football, I have no interest nor comment. Only that if I could be GOD I’d trash the AFL.
 
Dad

ROB

For the Barina they say the timing belt change is 60,000km or 4 years. It was changed in 2010 so has at least a year to go... But I might suggest that he get the whole thing done in one go, the he can forget about timing belts for 4 years. And shop around at different mechanic places.

I was getting wound up about it too, as you say society necessitates that we rip each other off in order to survive. I'm particularly bitter being fresh out of the "degree factory." This video is worth thinking about when you have the time http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEpDUeHjTtQ&feature=youtu.be&t=17s

 

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Winter Nigh

Since my last post I have purchased a new work van, a Renault Kangoo which goes well so far, touch wood. I would have gone for another Suzuki but the APV from 2005 have not been built to take a tow bar so I went for the next cheapest small van. It was a pleasant trip second half of last week to Lakes Entrance to meet up with our old mate Willy to build a new deck on the side of the house. The Kangoo is full of electronic wizardry like cruise control and CD player, aircon, digitized display showing fuel consumption, range, fuel used, average speed and so on, all at fingertip, so long as you know where the button or lever is.

We've started lighting the open fire in the evenings, and I've had a few good feeds of wild mushrooms. The autumn leaves have all but gone to ground and the days are short, we are only a few weeks to the shortest day. I picked pittosporum garneti and calendulas and climbed a tree to pick Mexican hawthorn berries today and went to my computer class. It was a bright moon coming home, I turned off my headlights and drove easily without, so good the illumination, just for fun, but quickly turned on again if a car came the other way.

Winter is nearly here. Winter is lovely. In its own way. Bees rest, weeds slow down. It's good to snuggle into a bed heavy with blankets. For a while. I'm dreaming a lot. Earthquake dream the other night, real and scary. A football playing dream another, back at Greta. A funeral dream, in the country, a lady I knew well died. Lib was with me, we argued, I stormed off before the service, took the car, Lib can walk 20k's back, then softened and left the car for Lib and walked, thinking nothing is better than walking anyway.

It's late. I watched Q+A about religion. Interesting. Bill Gates tomorrow. Martina Wainright next week, musn't miss that, will have to leave comp class early. After Q+A I watched Footy Classified, then caught up on email. Must go now to seek dreams, to fly in the unconscious, if lucky, at worst some hours of solitude, and drifting in out of with pleasant thoughts in the conscious. I think of many things and many people in the wee hours. The mind needs the dark and quiet. I love quiet.

So ends this day. Good night.


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Down to the Nitty Gritty

I so needed a haircut. Hairdresser Leanne snipped, clipped, buzzed and nudged as I told her that my last haircut was exactly two months earlier in Auckland, New Zealand. It was on the day of our flight home and I was attracted into the shop by a sign I’d seen the night before, offering 50% discount, just as the shop was closing.

It turned out the discount applied to haircuts done by students from the hairdressing school, and none were in at opening time next day, so I had to pay full fare. Never mind. The barber had enormous implants in his stretched ear lobes and was heavily tattooed, including his face, but he was congenial and gave me an excellent cut.

Leanne is a mobile hairdresser. She told me she met her husband when she was training. He volunteered to get a free haircut and was her subject in an exam. It’s amazing where a cheap haircut can lead.

They married and moved to Gembrook 30 odd years ago and Leanne worked at Lillian Granieri’s Gembrook Hair Centre, which was located in Redwood Road and also in Emerald in the main street, I think in the old telephone exchange. Lib was a customer. In those days Lib cut my hair to save a few dollars but I couldn't return the favour.

After Lib tired of cutting my hair I became itinerant and grabbed a haircut anywhere when I had a little time, or when the hot itchy feeling of a bushy head of hair in warm weather drove me to urgency.

These days I ring Leanne whose two girls went through school with our boys. She’s an avid Richmond fan so we talk footy too. She isn’t always available when I need her so I still pop into barber shops and hairdressers where I might be when the urge to be refreshed and invigourated by a clipping takes hold.

It’s one of life’s little pleasures.

Footnote - I’m told there was a men’s barber shop and billiard room in Gembrook in the 1930’s, where the supermarket is now.


Wednesday, May 08, 2013

Henryk Rejmers

Lib and I have been down to Lakes a couple of times lately, last weekend, and about a month ago. The first visit was a bit of R+R and our friend Will was going try to get to get there to look at options for building new steps/deck at the rear side as the existing were removed due to the substantial excavations that went on to do the new retaining walls. These walls are up but backfilling has not yet been done as the contractors are busy with emergency work elsewhere. The cost of the work is now tallied to $93,000 which is staggering and demoralizing, this cost shared by three families as the house is owned by Lib and her sisters.

As it turned out Will couldn't make it then so we arranged to go on the weekend just gone which was his first available opportunity. We drove down Saturday and came back Sunday. We discussed a few options with Willy and he's been given the green light to get it done asap which will be in a couple of weeks from now.

On our visit in April we met neighbour Dorothy one day who is now on her own after her husband Henryk died last year of mesothelioma, that ghastly form of lung cancer that is contracted through exposure to asbestos dust and usually takes about 30 years to manifest. Tears welled in her eyes. Henryk was 87 and had an amazing life story some of which I had heard about previously as Dorothy and Henryk were good friends of Lib's parents Molly and Bill.

I found a little book at Lakes house which I brought back with me. It was an account by Henryk of his story, beginning in 1925 at birth in Poland. He was the youngest of thirteen children born to his mother and father who lived in Warsaw at the outbreak of WW2 in 1939. Henryk and his family survived the bombing and strafing but Henryk was arrested in 1941 aged 16 while he was out shopping for material for his mother and press ganged by train to Germany where he was sent to a work camp. He was never to see his mother  and father again, indeed it was some 47 years before he went back to visit his siblings. He escaped the work camp eventually and travelled far, eventually being captured by police and put to work on a farm where he was when the Russians came. He wanted to get out of Russian occupied Germany get so he took off and managed to get through the Russian lines.

After quite a while in refugee camps he migrated to Australia and ultimately and worked  off his two year obligation to work where he was told with a team in the south east of  SA cutting down trees so that pine forests could be planted. The only tools they had was an axe each and a sharpening stone and a file and it was very hard work. He met and married Dorothy whose father worked in the forest camp and eventually moved to Adelaide where he worked for the Council then bought a service station. After several years this was bought out by a neighbouring company who then employed Henryk and Dorothy. They bought a house in Adelaide and lived there till the mid sixties, raising three kids. Henryk was a motor mechanic but had no trade certificate.

Morwell was the next call. Dorothy's sisters married two Italians and Henry and Dorothy visited them in Morwell where they lived, and decided it was time a move to Morwell where there were good opportunities. Henryk started work with the SEC at the power stations and sat exams to have his fitting and turning certificate approved. He worked there until retirement in the mid 1980's, when they moved to Lakes.

Hendryk had a hard working life beginning with slave labour in the German factory. For years he did not have enough to eat and suffered all manner of hardships along the way. He never saw the inside of a hospital as a patient till his mid eighties. He must have picked up some asbestos dust cleaning brake drums out as a mechanic or in the power stations where its use was extensive. A sad end to a fine man.

The inside cover of the little book I read had writing by Henryks hand-

'To Bill and Molly Meek, from Hendryk - November 1996'.

In his acknowlegements he thanks Molly and others for inspiring him to write the book. I'll never go to Lakes without fond memory of Hendryk, and Dorothy, whose house is for sale, she's planning to move to a unit closer to town where she won't need to drive if she chooses not.



 
    

Friday, May 03, 2013

Mellowing

Last Friday, the day after Anzac Day, at writing class, a discussion was had re the dawn service at Anzac Cove, which is of course held on the anniversary of the first landing on Turkish shore in 1915, in line with Anzac Day services held all over Australia.

Teacher Maria presented an opinion piece by a writer whose name escapes me- there was a big crowd in for the first class of the term and not enough handout sheets and I was late so missed out- but from memory the guts of the article was that the correspondent had no desire to visit on the day to be among a crowd of tourists who were there largely for the celebratory party atmosphere and the 'notch on the belt'.

I sympathize with the author's view. I don't like crowds for starters and I have reservation about Anzac Day anyway as a means of paying respect and remembrance to our fallen soldiers. The Gallipoli campaign was the first major military exercise of our new nation and was a disastrous failure costing 8,000+ Australian lives. I don't for a moment dispute the hardship, grit and heroism of our soldiers. As a kid in school in the 50's and 60's Anzac Day it was drummed into me. The preparations at school must have happened the day before because I think it was a public holiday then as it is now, and I recall being home on Anzac Day watching the television and being fascinated by the historical portrayal of the landing and the stories such as Simpson and his donkey.

Memorial services and marches on Anzac Day were first held in the latter years of WW1 and were used as recruiting drives for enlistment. After the war the fallen were remembered in solemnity and the day was an opportunity for reunion for veterans wishing to participate. Many did not including my grandfather who served three years in Palestine and France and who was teetotal and disapproving of the boozing at the reunions.

World War 2 followed, then Korea, Vietnam, and Afghanistan and Iraq and peace keeping force participation in various parts of the world, and Anzac Day has been expanded to include all those who suffered and served in all of these conflicts.

At class last week one member, Big John, voiced his objection to the article, calling it the most pompous thing he'd ever read. Big John said the writer came across as thinking he was above the service at Anzac Cove with the throng of young people. John said, "Good on them I say, they are only trying to connect to their ancestors. I have been there, it's the most moving experience, one that changes the lives of those who attend forever."

I remain loathsome of violence and war and the flag waving patriotism that accompanies it, which is where it hatches from its egg. Yes, I would like to visit Anzac Cove. But not on Anzac Day. I'd like to go there to contemplate the horror and stupidity of war in my own solitude, and grieve for the soldiers who lost their lives and those maimed and scarred emotionally for life. Not only for the 8,700 Australians and the 2,000 plus New Zealanders killed, but also the 10,000 French, the 21,000 from the UK, and God knows how many Turks (Wikipedia does not give a number) who were, as God knows, protecting their shores from invasion.

But I doubt I ever will go there. I can grieve the fallen from here. And I prefer to carry my loathing of war and violence with me daily. I would prefer to see national reverence for Remembrance Day, which marked the end of the conflict, and is appropriately named.

However, I am mellowing. Big John is entitled to his opinion. So are those who choose to go to Anzac Cove on Anzac Day.

Just as I'm entitled to mine. I'm no wowser, but when I see retired Major General Cosgrove advertising beer on the television in the lead up to Anzac day, I can't help but feel I'm not in step. Thankfully.




    

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Chook Drama

Not long after we returned from NZ Lib's chook Myrtle went AWOL. On the first day of its absence I was concerned at lock up time when Henny hungrily followed me to their pen but Myrtle was nowhere to be seen. She'd been scarce for a day or two and reluctant to go in the previous couple of evenings so I thought she must be broody and have a nest somewhere.

Oh well, Foxy Loxy'll have a nice supper, I'll get another young bird, a brown one like Elvie's. She says they don't get broody as much as black ones.

A couple of days later I spotted Myrtle briefly, eating some of the bread I'd left out for Henny.

You little bugger.

No sooner had I seen her with some amusement on my part that she's survived than she was gone again, not to be seen for another couple of days. This time I'd returned from my walk and put the dogs dishes down to feed them then turned and walked a few paces back towards the shed when I heard a flapping noise and a dog squeal. Turning around I saw bully Myrtle hopping into Snowy's breakfast. She has it all over Snow who runs the other way when she employs the charge she learned from Rooster Lemon, whom you may recall met his demise last year.

You horrible savage chook.

I shoohed the thing away for poor Snow and stood guard while she ate her food. Pip is oblivious to all Myrtle's aggressive tactics and therefore the chook does not trouble her. There's a pecking order with the chooks and the dogs and Snow's at the bottom.

Over the next couple of weeks I looked high and low in the garden and shed for Myrtle's nest a number of times, and crawled under the house with a torch more than once looking for the stash of eggs. It was baffling me. Then one day I saw Myrtle on the deck, I had been nearby and hadn't seen her approach, then she disappeared again so quickly. So for umpteenth time I looked under and behind everything and being more thorough than previously I got down low and looked into the back of Pip's kennel. Sure enough there was the black feathered fool. As I reached in to pull out the bedding the stench hit me. There was a dozen and a half eggs in there some of which were broken.

You stinking horrible idiot chook.

I threw everything into a garbage gag, bedding and all. Rotten eggs exploded as I did this and it still stank to high heaven so I triple bagged it and put it in my neighbour's bin - they have moved out and their house is for sale so that was OK. Pip's kennel has a flat roof with a bit of carpet on top and I'd seen her lying on top of her kennel. I thought it was because of the warm balmy weather, but I now knew better, and also why a fox hadn't got it.

Within a day or two Myrtle was back to her normal nutty self; harassing, aggressive, noisy, always after food when you walk out the door. Both chooks are now laying in the shed, next to the fridge, against the back wall. I don't mind that. It's a stretch to get the eggs but at least I know where they are.

  

Monday, April 29, 2013

Back in the Hunt

In the footy tipping Round 5 I had 9 winners from 9 games to claw back 3 on Rickyralph, who slipped up on Collingwood, Richmond and West Coast.

I feel like the the big game fisherman slowly reeling in the mackeral soon to be gaffed.

I had $2 on my multi 9 tip. It paid $45 only in total as there were some shorties in there like Geelong, Sydney, Hawthorn and Brisbane, and the others were less than or around even money.

Besides the collect it was nice to see Collingwood smashed by the Essendon steamroller. Essendon will get theirs soon enough I reckon but not next week as they play the GWS in what could be some sort of record AFL deficit. I reckon GWS will set a record for long odds.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Footy Tipping

Rickyralph has jumped me this year. After 4 rounds he leads 26 to 21. He had a perfect 9 in round 2 followed by two sevens, leaving me floundering.

In our criss cross emails this week he mentioned the passing of his dog Dodge, at 14 years of age from liver disease a few weeks ago. Dodge started getting very thirsty some months ago and when he went off his food altogether it was time to call in a vet friend to put him to rest.

Rick is still grieving and I feel great sympathy for him. He and Dodge had a special bond that humans and dogs can have but the depth of which is uncommon. Rick has aged from 47 to 61 over Dodge's life and inevitable as everything is it still leaves a great emptiness I'm sure, as I have often imagined should I lose my girls.

I have great determination though to improve my tipping and take the title for the third successive year. At this point there are 18 rounds yet to go.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Good Harvest

Towards the end of a difficult season I can report that the last month has provided a bountiful harvest at Hanna's where I grow most of my vegies. Corn, beans, carrots, zucchini, button squash, tomatoes potatos, silver beet have all been delicious and herbs like parsley dill, basil and rocket and have been plentiful too and also shared with my friends. There's some good pumpkins that'll last a while, hopefully through to when pumpkin may go to $5kg like it did last year. We had some parsnips and capsicums too, in small amount.

I've put in some brocolli here at home and a row at Hanna's and some at the farm, and over the next few weeks should get some broadies in and garlic too. The silver beet and parsley should pick into the winter and I've put some seed in as well, and seedlings tend to pop up all over the place by themselves too. I've never done very well with onions, but I'll try some.

I'm lucky to have had Hanna's place, it has good deep easily worked red soil. I'm sure wherever I go in the future, as long as I'm able, I'll be growing vegies. I love the work getting them in and going, and the harvesting, and especially the eating. The limiting factor in my recent years has been a lack of time and little sunny open position both at the farm and here. We became very tree and shrub orientated through the nineties and noughties, responding to demand. We over planted certainly, and with a lot of stuff that is now no longer wanted by the market.

I can't say the same about a honey harvest, it's been another miserable year.  I have yet to pack the bees down for winter, but I fear they'll be very light on for stores. I may give the bees away. I went to the trouble of setting the shed up to extract honey but for poor return. I put all the tools and accumulated 'stuff' in the wood shed. My electric uncapping knife did not agree with the new switch board we had put in when we had our solar system installed, tripping the circuit breaker continuously which makes knife unuseable. The sheds are still in disarray and I'm hoping for a couple of weeks yet of fine weather to reorganise everything and get the firewood under cover. It's scattered all over the place.

I'm losing enthusiasm for many things, working bees is one of them. AFL footy is another. Business leaves me cold. I have no desire to catch up on bookwork and plan new strategy for next season and take on the big tasks of necessary garden renovation.

All I really like to do is grow vegies, take walks, watch birds, read books, and write, which is why I'm telling you this. Life is about leaving things behind as we go down the road. Not wise to deny it. Once I was a baby, a child, a teenager, a young man. The body ages but the spirit grows. Everything changes. I must. My profile talks about a simple life. It's time to live it.

But there'll be winter vegies, and spring is just round the corner. And a federal election. How dreadful.


 

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Elise Petit (2)

I'm very pleased to say that I located Elise through facebook and learned that she did get her purse back. She emailed me as follows. It made me feel happy.




hi!!
Sorry for the response times.
I'm backpacker and I haven't often internet...

THANK YOU VERY MUCH for my wallet. I thought it was lost but Australian people are very honest and nice.
It was mportant for me, i had my french credit card, etc...
You saved my travel!!! 
I asked your phone number at the policeman but he didn't want to give it me.

Sorry for my english... 

Thank you a lot!! Have a good day!!
Fortunately that people like you still exist!!


Updated to Elise Petit March.

Friday, April 05, 2013

More (Creeping City)

I have wondered how it is that for many years the block of land on the corner opposite St.Silas church on the Pakenham road has remained vacant.

Not for much longer.

I have picked wild carrot flowers on this plot for many years
The backyard of the house in background ( my old friend Ida's) has been subdivided off  and  all trees and shrubs removed prior to more construction.
 
I do not resent this development which is smack bang in middle of town and inevitable, sad as it is in my selfishness that that the landscape along my walk is changing so rapidly. You would think there would have been a building on this site at sometime previously given its central location, but not so in my 32 years in Gembrook. I must ask one of the Gembrook lifetimers. I have been asked to do a talk for the Gembrook senior citizens on April 10, so there'll be an opportunity then. My friend Joyce Begg who gave me the invite grew up on the property on the other corner (where now the community centre stands) which was a dairy farm in her childhood. I'm flattered to be asked so I accepted. I can choose my own topic and should be OK with a general talk about my activities and livelihood at Chamomile Farm. I loathe public speaking but can't seem to get away from it.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Elise Petit

Returning from New Zealand on the evening of Thursday 28 Feb, I barely had time to open and deal with the build up of mail both hard copy and electronic an catch up to speed with various areas of work before the NHPEM function on 3 Mar to celebrate 20 years of the museum in the current building which was opened in 1993. As current president it was required of me to make a speech, not my strong suit by any means and something that is forefront in your mind as it approaches. It was a relief that the day was a great success due to the work of my museum colleagues who had been tireless in their preparations during my holiday absence.

On Monday 4 Mar, I took my morning walk with my two dog pals whom I had missed so much while I was away. On the way back down the hill 'Pip' was determined to sniff in a hedge of lonicera in front of Orford Cottage, and relaxed as I was with the relief of the previous day's function now behind me I indulged her and 'Snow' even more than normal. I noticed a tatty looking object under the hedge and picked it up. It was a small purse made of soft material which seemed damp making me think it had been there some days as it had rained before we returned from NZ but not since.

There was identification in the form of credit and debit cards and a French railway pass in the name of Elise Petit, along with various other paperwork suggesting the owner of the purse had recently been in West Australia, and an amount of cash stuffed in with the paperwork, disorganized and dishevelled.

I knocked on the door of Orford Cottage and asked the lady whom I know quite well if she knew of an Elise Petit. Where I found the purse in the hedge was adjacent to where visitors to their house park their cars and I thought it may have fallen out of a car and somehow been kicked or knocked into the hedge. It was a good way off the road, unlikely to have got there by falling from a car passing along Launching Place Rd. Elise Peteit was not known by the the lady of the house so I took the purse with me and rang the police at Emerald when I got home, thinking the purse may have been reported lost.

The constable suggested I look for a mobile phone number in the purse so he could contact the owner straight away. There was none, but I gave him he name of the owner of the purse so he could check to see if there had been a report of its loss. I told him I'd drop the purse into the police station that afternoon. After I finished talking to him I counted the money in notes and coins and made the contents more tidy after a thorough search for contact details. There were all of odds and sods including cotton buds loose along with other paraphenalia.

I went to the police station that afternoon and handed the purse in. The police woman examined the contents of the purse and quickly went to get rubber gloves after seeing the cotton buds. I think this was some sort of protocol to prevent her getting Aids or some other infection, not that such had entered my mind as I had examined the contents earlier. She counted the money, notes and coins $171.70, and filled out a lost property form asking me questions about where I found it and my personal contact details. There were new forms she said which were unfamiliar to her. It took a long time it seemed to me who wanted to get about my business as quickly as possible. I couldn't just hand it in and leave, I had to wait while she went through the form as I had to sign it when she was finished. I could not help but be alarmed at her slowness and lack of urgency making me acutely aware that she was being paid for every minute while I was not. Eventually I was given a copy of the PALM Property form 1346860 and left. I told her I'd like to hear if the purse was returned to its owner as I could imagine the stress a tourist would feel at the loss of bank cards and cash, and it would be nice to know if there was a happy ending.

That night I recounted this to Lib. A few days later Lib asked me did I hear if the purse was returned to its owner. "No, I've heard nothing." A few days later she asked me again. The reply was the same. I found my copy of the PALM Property report and had a close look at it. There's a yes/ no tick box mid way on the form which has the words (without question mark) 'Wish to Claim'.  The No box was crossed. There was another yes/no tick box along side it with the words ' Forward details to finder' It was also crossed in the No box.

I was not asked these questions. The police lady had marked them of her own volition, and I had not examined the copy of the form when it was given me, I had quickly left. I told Lib that I will never hear if the purse was returned to its owner as the form had been filled out to that effect, without my sanction. What happens to the cash if Elise Petit did not contact the police I know not. Perhaps eventually it goes to the police Christmas fund or government revenue.

Life is a learning experience. Should I hand in found lost property again I'll pay particular attention to the paperwork as it is being done. If by some miracle of the internet Elise Petit gets to read this post I hope she gets her purse back with the cash. I've tried to find her by my own means unsuccessfully.

Just how her purse got into that unlikely place remains a mystery.


* This had a good ending. I contacted Elise through FB and she thanked me for the return of purse. See post April Elise Petit (2)







Tuesday, March 26, 2013

AUCKLAND and HOME

We left Whitianga on the Wednesday for drive back to Auckland, stopping for lunch at a delightful town the name of which escapes me just now. Dinner that night was excellent in a Japanese restaurant across the road from our hotel. Afterwards we went to a live comedy show two doors up from the restaurant where 10 comedians performed one after the other. It was terrible with foul language and crude jokes about the worst things you could imagine.

Next morning before driving out to the airport we went up the sky tower, supposedly the tallest free standing structure in the southern hemisphere. We watched a few brave souls do a sky dive down on a controlled speed descent on a couple wires. Not for me.

View from top. That wire in the middle is one of those the sky jumpers use.
Rob and Gord picked us up at Tullamarine about 6.30pm. Almost on cue there had been 60ml of rain in the previous couple of days, the first for many weeks and the hot weather had abated for a while.

Monday, March 25, 2013

WHITIANGA

We left Piahia on Sunday 24 Feb. I looked at the map saw what I thought was our destination at Whangarei only a couple of hours away so we took a back road through some fairly remote bush and picked up a coastal tourist road where we got back onto bitumen. The scenery was superb. After a while we were back on a major highway. Some Kiwis on our yacht trip in the Bay of Islands were from Whangarei and when they asked me where we were going next and I told them they said, "Why are you staying there, it's not on the coast and isn't really a tourist town, it's NZ's northernmost city." I said the agent worked out our itinerary.

We arrived at Whangarei about lunch time and pulled up to find the name and address of our motel in the bag in the boot. 'Beach Resort Motel' Whitianga it said. "Where the hell's Whitianga," I said to Lib, fumbling for the map, to find Whitianga was 4 or 5 hours drive away on the Coromandel Peninsula well and truly the the other side of Auckland. So we steered our Nissan Tida along the highway and arrived at the town of Whitianga about 5.30pm.

It was obviously a big tourist town with many new buildings in wide streets, an air of prosperity was immediately felt but with relatively few people about, not like Piahia which was busy with tourists from all over the world. The population multiplies in peak season which we had fortunately missed. This time our accommodation was spacious, had excellent cooking facilities and was upstairs with a great view of the bay.

Five minutes by car from Whitianga, a nice spot for lunch
A little further on the road to the next bay
We were here for three nights and two full days exploring the coast and finding so many quiet little bays and white sand beaches. This place is a little piece of paradise. Like the other places we stayed, there were no fly screens on the windows and no aircon. Neither is needed in the north on the coast; it doesn't get too hot and there are few flies if any and mozzies either, and no moths came in at night. You just opened the windows and let the breeze in.

Next bay



There were hot springs on this beach

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Irony 2

I looked up the dictionary to refresh on the word Irony. It's a tough one to grasp and I don't really get it.

Try this - Conveyance of meaning (generally satirical) by words whose literal meaning is the opposite.

Or - A situation or utterance (as in a tragedy) that has a significance unperceived at the time, or by the person involved.

Or - A condition in which one seems to be mocked by fate or the facts.

Perhaps I shouldn't use the word at all. In the previous post I don't think the fact I sailed on a yacht built by/for Sir Peter Blake and then a few days later was reading an account of a bloke who interviewed  the man was ironic at all. Simply a coincidence. Certainly it does not fit the above dictionary explanations of irony. I must ask Maria at writing class to explain to me (again).

Monday, March 18, 2013

Irony

Nor would this go where I wanted. A view from 'Lion'
For some reason I can't get this further down where I wanted it

We have looked at the word irony in my writing class more than once over the years. It's a word my son Gordon uses regularly, I think mostly in the wrong meaning, but what the heck. For some reason I just can't retain the meaning of irony and I'm too lazy to go looking up the dictionary just now. I will tomorrow and maybe due to this post it will finally sink in to my poor ageing brain which has had its share of binge drinking and concussion (football) over time.

However it is ironic that I should meet a man in Beaconsfield some days before our NZ trip who gave me a book he wrote ten years ago when he was aged 50. Peter Sweeney is his name, a journalist working out of Perth for most of his working life but Berwick born and now residing thereabouts. It was a chance meeting, his book titled 'Half Time' (He intends to live to 100) is one of three he has written.

On our day sailing trip we walked down to the wharf half an hour before the ferry left for Russell about 20 minutes away (big ferry fast speed) as instructed to do so. The Maxi yacht Lion left from Russell as its port had more water depth than Piahia which is why it was a base for whalers and sealers and therefore vice and whoring and drunkenness one hundred or so years ago, reportedly the wildest location in the South Seas.

The crew of Lion were three, a skipper with the gift of the gab,competent, as were the other two, an attractive and strong lady and a man about my own stature who had incredibly powerful forearms from years of 'grinding' on the winches that enable swift changes to the sails on these racing yachts. The skipper told the history of the yacht with almost reverential tone to it's original owner who had it built, Sir Peter Blake.

It was a nice day as we headed out. Dolphins rose and played, dozens of them all about. The crew told us not to look at the dolphins as we hadn't paid for a dolphin tour. It was magic to see these beautiful creatures in such numbers and so close you could almost touch.

The skipper explained that the conditions were not ideal for sailing and the motor would need to be used quite a bit if yesterday was repeated. We didn't mind, it was just nice floating over the blue water. After a couple of hours under sail at reasonable clip with lessons given to the tourists in the work of grinding to change sails we pulled up at the 'Isle of the Princess' for a one hour break. A few swam ashore, Lib and I took the inflatable dinghy which did three trips to get everyone off.

A highlight was a pair of little birds Lib and I saw on our way up to the lookout. Black with a bit of white, I said to Lib they had the beak of a robin, but were not like anything I'd seen before. I asked a couple of Kiwi people if they knew what it was, both replied negative, and I asked the crew member with the huge forearms who also didn't know, but said he did believe a type of  rare bird had been released on the island because of the lack of predators there and a program to save this endangered bird. Later in our motel we were watching the tourist TV channel and a segment came on about the Stewart Island Robin which had been bred and released here and there, and was the little bird we had seen.

After a great lunch we sailed off again. The wind picked up and the resultant sailing was magnificent with the maxi  leaning so far over you'd swear it would capsize as it sped across the water at great speed. The crew and us tourists alike whooped it up in the excitement in what was a fantastic experience.

The irony? After we left Piahia I read Peter Sweeney's book. In one chapter he talked of interviewing Sir Peter Blake the renowned sailor. An amazing man, he won the around the world race at his third try, he won the America Cup. He was killed shot dead by pirates sailing up the Amazon river at age 53, so Peter Sweeney informed me.

I enjoyed Peter Sweeney's book and related to his thoughts and feelings on many scores, in fact most.

It was not possible to photograph when she really got going as it was hang on or go overboard






Wednesday, March 13, 2013

PIAHIA

From Opinono to Piahia was a short hop of a couple of hours from the West Coast to the East through farmland that seemed to increase in productivity, population and traffic. Piahia surprised us, it's a tourist town highly commercial in the Bay of Islands area, busy and crowded with people spilling from all manner of campers and vans and rent cars like ours on the foreshore onto the beach and into restaurants and ice cream shops.

Our hotel was a little of the main st and regrettably again had no cooking facilities in its excellent motel unit that was ours for 3 nights. Making up for this was the biggest and best bed I have ever slept in, a king size you seemed to be lost in. We did a load of washing in the hotel laundrette and emailed Gord who was looking after the watering at home and the chooks. We'd put the dogs in a kennel, not wanting to overload Gord, especially with all the thunderstorms activity and the shot gun blasts in the distance that occur regularly and sends dogs into panic, particularly if we aren't there.

Friday our first of two full days we took the coastal tourist drive to the north east calling in at numerous picturesque bays small and not so small, at one of which we had our picnic lunch which is a favourite activity of Lib and I these day followed by the read of a book, in my case in the nearest shade available, and in Lib's in full sun lathered in sunscreen.

We'd seen an advertising hoarding of  a day sailing trip on a sixteen berth yacht with gourmet lunch so on returning to Piahia that afternoon we decided to book for the next day only to find it was booked out. Plan B was the big tourist booking office near the wharf which also had a day sailing sign and book we did, $110 a head including lunch. I think it was the best $110 I have ever spent. We were on the Maxi yacht 'Lion' which was built by Sir Peter Blake I think in the 1980's and came second in an around the world event that Blake was determined to win and which he did at his next try in a slightly lighter and faster boat he had purpose built. This is the bloke also that won the Americas Cup for New Zealand after Australia's win at Fremantle in 1983. A serious and famous sailor.

I'll write more about this memorable day sailing in the Bay of Islands next time, but I just want to get a few photos up now and hit the sack.

This sort of scenery is everywhere



The yacht stopped at this 'Isle ot the Princess' for an hour
 
The view from the lookout, The big yacht central is 'Lion'





Thursday, March 07, 2013

OPINONI


Lib and I left Opinoni two weeks ago on Thursday 21 Feb. On that morning we walked the shore of the river looking for a lucky stone for our friend Raelene. Years ago at lakes Entrance we found a stone on the beach at Lakes Entrance while walking with Raelene and her husband John. Raelene carried her stone as acharm all over the world till she lost her handbag one day I think in Morocco. So we have another for Raelene and we hope she likes it.

We stayed in the 'studio' apartment behind me, two nights
Looking towards the Ocean from the jetty

Opinono is on the west coast. Highlights were the Tane Matua Kaurri tree, 2000 years old it is estimated, and the Koutu boulders (good feed of oysters off the rocks), picnic lunch one day at a remote beach. We loved the area. 
'God of the Forest', Tane Matua

Hippy Geologist - we bought a painting at his gallery

Geologist said these boulders, there were several quite round were 6 million years old

Looking across the tidal river

Friday, March 01, 2013

Home And Tired As

Lib and I returned from our NZ holiday last night. It was highly successful and without mishap. We loved the scenery and the mild temperatures and the general laid back pace. We restricted our travel to the north of the north island after arriving in Auckland on 18 Feb. We had a hire car and spent 2 days in Opinono, 3 in Piahia, and 3 at Whitianga and an overnight stay in Auckland at beginning and end. I'm too tired now but over the next week I'll put up some photos and talk about some highlights, which were numerous.

For now let me just say it was a total pleasure to drive about 1500km over 11 days and not see one speed camera. Average Jo doesn't have to have a fishing licence and nobody on the boats wore life jackets as far as we could tell. There was a feeling of freedom, probably accentuated by our holiday mood. The economy is strongly tourist orientated and they certainly make you feel welcome, right down the pecking order to the cleaners and maids and burly bartenders.