The Sting

The sun, on its way down, still sparkled on the breaking waves but the shadows from the trees up on the beach path were inching their way across the sand; soon the long shadows would reach the straggler sun-bathers and send them packing home. The fisherfolk had already arrived, and were still coming – we were coming to join them; Roly had come up to the north coast for the surf fishing and he had arranged to meet a kindly old fisherman called Robert, who had promised to bring along a surf rod for my fishing buddy. There was no way I would be able to cast out beyond the breakers so, after the greetings with Robert and Adele, I took a long beach walk with Chris back in England – on my  mobile phone . Chris enjoys to hear the sea, the wind, and the snippets of conversation as I walk along and meet people with a “Hello” or “Isn’t it beautiful this evening?” We feel like we are together, as if we were strolling along the beach at home on a summer evening.

Every so often I said to Chris:

“Will you wait a minute while I take a photograph? I’ll send it to you and call you back…”

In that way my far away husband sees the same as I do, just a bit delayed; we saw our friend, shorts half wet from the surf and rod in hands; we delighted in seeing a little girl as she ran, ahead of her family, with the wind in the gathers of her pretty red dress; we thrilled at the waves tumbling over my feet and Chris could imagine the sand being drawn from underneath them. Maybe he even saw that last wave, the one that brought in the string – seaweed, I thought – that wound itself around my ankle and wouldn’t shake free.

“I’ve been stung by a bluebottle,” I said.

“I hope you’re not allergic,” Chris wondered.

 

I’m not allergic to jellyfish but a bluebottle isn’t a jellyfish; those small clear sacks aren’t filled with jelly – they are bladders of air that help to keep the tentacles of the Portuguese Man-of-War afloat. I am allergic to a Portuguese Man-of-War (millions of micro-organisms working as one to paralyse and kill). The pain from the sting itself was nothing in comparison to the searing agony that began ten minutes or so after the sting – something akin to molten lead in my bloodstream going up into my thigh, then my groin and abdomen…

The paramedics, Jackie and Ken, left only after the Adrenalin and antihistamines had taken effect and I could move my hands and walk around again – perhaps an hour and a half from the time of the sting. By morning even the swelling had all but disappeared – and by lunchtime there was no sign of the ordeal that had caused so much fear and panic. I went to the shops for a cool down and later… no I didn’t go down to the seas again (“To the lonely sea and the sky”) – I started a painting of Bella the wonderful golden retriever in my book, “Beautiful Bella”. Sadly, she died last June. I’ll finish it tomorrow and show you. It’s good to be alive.

Feels Like a Holiday

Have you ever been to the Sunshine Coast, Queensland? Have you ever been to my friend Lorelle’s house at Buddina? If your answer to those questions is “No” and “No”, then you should and could – it’s beautiful here and Lorelle does Airbnb so you can book online… just not for the next two weeks because I’m here house-sitting with Stefan, another of Lorelle’s friends, while she is away. A lovely German girl called Katrin is with us for a few days and we’re all doing our own thing.

My “thing” is waking early and going for a long walk or cycle ride along the path that runs parallel, but higher than, the beach; of course it gets hot so I come back for a swim in our pool; then after lunch, what could be nicer than an hour or so spent at Kawana Shopping Centre? Shopping? Well, yes, that too, but the main reason most people go to the shopping centre is for a cool down in wonderfully air conditioned surroundings (one step through the door and we all go “Ah”). You get hot again as soon as you step out and go to the car park so the pool is most welcoming after “shopping”. Then it’s time for another walk along the beach before dinner, and I delight in seeing the happy faces of the people coming off the beach – the swimmers, surfers, kite-flyers and sun bathers – or the families on bikes, or the singletons keeping fit. An added pleasure comes from taking Chris with me on my walks – on the phone!

Tomorrow morning you’ll be able to find me on the calmer estuary side of Point Cartwright – fishing! I guess it sounds like a holiday. What about work? Painting? Writing? Yes, yes, yes, I know. All the gear is out on the verandah waiting… just for a few days while I enjoy feeling like being on holiday.

Last Cast

“Farewell and adieu unto you Spanish ladies, Farewell and adieu to you ladies of Spain…”

I do so feel like singing that old sea shanty now that I have an affinity with Robert Shaw’s character, Quint, from the film “Jaws”. Oh, and I have plenty of scars to show – not shark attack scars of course, but ones acquired honourably  nevertheless (especially the swimming accident one – 45 minutes to clean up and sew at Southport Hospital many years ago!). Talking of shark attack…

My assistant and I were at the rather innocent sounding Pelican Slipway, Redland Bay, for a spot of fishing (my last for a while as tomorrow I shall be heading up to the Sunshine Coast). Roland had all the luck, catching a fine bream within the first half hour, after changing the bait from old squid (refrozen and thawed twice) to a piece of diced steak. I caught only the sun and, for the most part of three hours, I left my rod standing in the crevice of rocks; never willing to just sit and get bored, I scrambled over the rocks with my mobile phone camera.

Time passed happily enough for me, although my casting out was amateurish in the extreme and I had either to admit defeat by calling upon my aide’s strong arm or make do with short casts… with the tide going out. Apart from the once I made do with my own feeble efforts.

“Time to go, I think,” said Roland. (He had already had his prize.)

“Just one last cast?” I implored, not really thinking that it would be any more successful than the previous attempts.

The last cast was equally as short and disappointing as the many before, however, within moments there was an enormous bite on my line and my heart leapt. It was a big one – I could tell.

“Let it out,” yelled my helper, “then bring him in a bit.”

And so, with such sound advice, I brought Jaws onto the rocks and my seafaring friend fought to hold him long enough for me to take a few photographs. Those mighty jaws made short work of the fishing line and the desperate shark was allowed back into the water, albeit with a nasty big hook still in his mouth.

“Oh… Farewell and adieu unto you Spanish ladies, Farewell and adieu to you ladies of Spain…”

 

Quint’s Song – Farewell and adieu. – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVmeeYwEiQw
May 7, 2011 – Uploaded by Mc Fly

Quint’s SongFarewell and adieu. …. The best parts of the movie are when Brody, Hooper and Quint go ..

And should you like to hear the whole song, there is another version below.

FAREWELL SPANISH LADIES – A SEA SHANTY – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54JSY9uNceY
Jul 16, 2012 – Uploaded by videoblast

HERE’S TO SWIMIN’ WITH BOW LEGGED WOMEN!

Anyone for Tennis or a Spot of Lunch?

Bill was in the lounge-room watching tennis when he heard me ferreting around in the kitchen…

“Sally,” he said, “just come and look at this a second.”

I popped my head around the doorway and saw my brother chuckling.

“You know Dim Sims?,” he asked.

“I should do,” I answered, “you obviously haven’t read my flirt book yet!”

Bill ignored my comment and gestured to the television screen. I ran and grabbed my camera. If you don’t know about Dim Sims – the most delicious snack that ever existed in Australia – look at the delightful golden parcels next to the mini Dim Sims below! And after the photographs you’ll find the chapter, “What no Dim Sims?” from my book.

image1

The Dim Sims

 

WHAT, NO DIM SIMS?

 

 

One of the things I most look forward to when I return to my Australian roots is the simple pleasure of eating a hot and delicious dim sim. No, for the uninitiated amongst my readers, I have not spelt it wrongly – I don’t mean dim sum, dim dum, dum dum or any other variation of similar sounding words that may or may not describe a Chinese delicacy. Aficionados of the Queenslanders’ snack of choice (second only to pies) will know already that a dim sim is not one of those pale substitutes which have been making an appearance in snack bars recently. I refer to the meagre healthy option newcomers that, rather incongruously, look anything but healthy with their ashen complexions; they are those disappointing mouth-sized parcels of meat and binder swathed in thin noodle-like wrappings and boiled or microwaved until opaque and slimy.

In contrast, a perfectly cooked large dim sim is a glorious sight to behold: it is a deep-fried golden swag with handkerchief corners twisted jauntily into a crown at the top and sprinkled with a few glistering crystals of salt. Within the bountiful bundle is a filling made from a precious mystery recipe, which cannot be replicated by the canniest of cooks or even by mermaids such as me. I have tried but the secret remains safe because it is impossible to ascertain exactly what ingredients combine to create so unique and delectable a flavour.

Usually presented in a paper bag as a take-away repast, the modest, yet understandably confident, dim sim is best eaten with one’s hands rather than a knife and fork. I always begin at one of the perky twisted corners and peel it back to reveal the steaming and succulent mix that is the filling, which, if the dim sim has been cooked properly, is more than likely to be too hot to eat immediately. Therefore I am forced to deprive my taste buds of one of their most consummate pleasures for a minute or two longer. The exquisite agony of anticipation that follows is accentuated when I turn my attention to nibbling on the mouth-watering top corners. The whole upper section is firm and crisp, as is the outside skin of the beautiful sun-coloured sack, but as I work my way down, the inside layer has a tender yielding softness that has become imbued with the smell and flavour of the aromatic and luscious filling. The familiar redolence evokes memories of earlier successful dim sim dalliances and I am unable to resist; I blow on the hot concoction before savouring my first bite into the perfect assemblage of cabbage, herbs and, I’m not absolutely sure, but I think it is pork. Strange as it sounds, cabbage never tasted so good!

Not one dim sim, large or small, was to be found in the food hall at Kawana Shopping Plaza on my recent visits. Suddenly, where for years rows of golden dim sims had sat appetisingly alongside their Chiko roll cousins on hot trays in warming cabinets in all the snack bars and eateries, it was evident that many small and wet grey things had usurped them. The pallid and insipid, fat-free malingerers appeared to be the only alternative of type to the popular and inexpensive favourite of my youth and I wondered if the diet-police were in force on the Sunshine Coast. I thought perhaps a state-wide campaign had been waged and won against the dear old dim sim during my nine-month absence – it could even be nationwide for all I know! My favourite soft vanilla ice-creams dipped in molten chocolate disappeared in a somewhat twilight zone manner from Wynnum Plaza one year and never came back; it occurred to me that dim sims may have suffered the same fate, merely for being utterly delicious, which also means a tad fattening. I conjectured that some higher authority had probably deemed the deep-fried snack to be unhealthy and far too tempting for a population that the government considers too fat.

Most of us remember the great firsts in our lives such as our first day of school, our first kiss, our first boyfriend, and our first manly boyfriend. If you were a child brought up in the bush at Gumdale, as we Porch children were, there are an awful lot of firsts you remember: some were momentous events like the joy of turning on a kitchen tap in our new house – the first in our road to be connected with running water from the town supply – when our neighbours still had outside tanks; and then there are the things of less significance such as the first time Dad brought home a family tub of Kentucky Fried Chicken. I remember it now as if it was yesterday. Umm… Crisp and spicy, soft and succulent. We didn’t have a clue what part of the chicken we were tucking into to but it tasted incredible. So it was with my first dim sim, bought from the fish and chip shop down the road from my old primary school at Wynnum central; it tasted every bit as scrumptious as it looked and smelt – it set the standard for all subsequent tastings. Nobody worried about us getting fat on dim sims in those days, but then, we didn’t have them very often. And now I cannot have one at all!

I have been yearning for those crisp golden bundles of cabbage ambrosia ever since I realised there were none to be found north of Brisbane. Even the oh-so-soft in the mouth Woolies’ iced-buns do not quell my longing for the deep-fried savouries.

A short while ago, after a fretful night and dreams of diet-police, I awoke with the sun as usual and set off early for my jog walk into Wynnum and along the seafront to Manly; I did not have breakfast as I aimed to find a nice dim sim for that purpose on my travel, if indeed my suspicions were unfounded and they hadn’t been banned from every snack bar, take-away, fish and chip shop and café in Queensland. Each likely establishment I encountered on my search throughout Wynnum central shopping area was noticeably devoid of anything resembling the former most popular snack in this state after meat pies – as I told you, everybody in Australia loves pies. There would be an uprising if there were no pies to be found in Brisbane, but, evidently, the same could not be said of the missing dim sims.

“Do you have any dim sims?” I asked a teenage girl serving behind one counter.

“Dim sims?” she asked dimly, as if she had never heard of them before.

“You know,” I said rather impatiently, “Those round yellow things with cabbage inside. You sold them last year. Every take-away sold them last year and all the previous years!”

“Oh, those. I haven’t seen them for ages. We have these other dum sim things here,” and she pointed to about three hundred pallid grey things in their rows of different shapes. “Lots of people like these”, she added.

“No, thank you, I’m only interested in dim sims. Are you sure you haven’t any hidden away in the freezer by any chance?” I knew I was clutching at straws if she could not even remember them from nine months ago without prompting.

The last question perplexed the simple lass so I pressed on. To my surprise, there were similar responses from each snack bar and take-away I visited. I could not understand why there were no dim sims and why people were either very relaxed to the point of indifference about the loss of them, or they seemed to have no recollection that such a delight ever existed.

With no ground for confidence other than my natural optimism, I felt sure I could count on finding dim sims at my favourite little café, where oft times last year and other years I had succumbed to one of the enticing golden bundles, which huddled in the big glass warming-cabinet facing the passers-by. The two tables were still there outside on the pavement for eating while watching the world go by. As I approached the counter it was impossible not to notice the large squat man with the big square head sat at a smaller table standing adjacent to the entrance. Nearly filling the little table in front of the man with the enormous head was a huge oval meat-plate piled high with steak and chips (or French-fries, si vous preferrez); a token lettuce leaf and a thin slice of tomato on the side served as both a nod to healthy eating and a salve to the conscience. Rather unkindly, I linked the gigantic meal with the giant head and the walking sticks propped against an arm of his chair; then I admonished myself for joining the ranks of my bête noire – the despised diet-police.

A tiny grandmotherly Chinese lady hid meekly behind the towering glass-fronted counter while I peered in. I didn’t recognise her; she may have been the new owner, or perhaps, more likely, she was an elderly relative stepping in. My heart sank yet again when I noted that all the warm eatables on display were grey, and there was no sign of the yellow beacons I yearned for.

“Do you have any dim sims?” I asked without holding out any hope by this time.

English was not her forte, and “dim sims” probably, sounded very much the same as dum sims to her. She must have thought me blind or stupid because she responded with a wave of the hands that suggested all the grey titbits inside the cabinet were varieties of what I had just said.

“What are they?” I queried futilely in an effort to keep some sort of conversation going.

“I make,” she said proudly and with a hopeful smile – she understood the art of conversation. Then the eager little lady patted her tummy; we both laughed and we both knew she would make a sale.

The man with the square head jumped up from his lofty meal to act as interpreter and arbiter of taste. He assured me that the grey things shaped like half-moons were the best things since dim sims. Mindful of the claims, but doubtful that my unsophisticated palate would appreciate the subtlety of flavour offered by the healthy options; I left with two microwaved wet things.

When I arrived back at Henry’s twenty minutes later the once steaming grey mouthfuls I had bought as a breakfast treat for us both had become cold and shrivelled up; the opaque exterior had hard creases resembling skin that had spent too long in water. I was fearful that if I zapped them again in the microwave they might explode.

“What’s this?” Henry asked as he prodded the embryo-like grey thing with the dry crumpled skin – he adopted the dubious sneer of one who had not yet noticed the invasion of the dim sim snatchers.

“This is what you get when you ask for dim sims nowadays.” I had to laugh.

“Incredible,” my brother tutted.

“That’s exactly how the man with the square head described them too,” I giggled.

“How do I eat it – with my fingers?”

“Well, we won’t burn our fingers. Here goes!” We each took our first bite. Henry’s face spoke volumes.

“Would you prefer some toast and …” I didn’t have the chance to finish.

“Bonghy? Yes please, Sally. I’m glad we think alike.” Henry raised his right eyebrow in the fashion of the Simon Templar character from “The Saint” and we burst out laughing.

After that experience I dismissed the idea of having any more dim sims for breakfast. I had, more or less, come to the conclusion that the golden oldies were now obsolete and off the menu forever.

Yesterday it rained again but I went out for my usual jog-walk anyway – you know how much I enjoy singing in the rain. I was in Wynnum, walking under the shelter of shop awnings whilst waiting for the rain to abate a little when I saw the now familiar sight of the square-headed man at the café that no longer sells the old-style dim sims; unfortunately, the name ‘Meathead’ had planted itself in my mind and I felt guilty for being so uncharitable. The man with the voracious appetite occupied exactly the same spot as the day before and he was eating the same gigantic breakfast on an oval meat plate; there was another enormous slab of cow served with chips piled high and a nominal salad on the side, the only difference was the addition of a single raw onion ring. Meathead’s eyes met mine and I smiled a greeting and said something almost unwittingly, and which I soon regretted. I am afraid it was the same old cliché that people in similar situations to me invariably rattle off without great consideration; a harmless enough thing to say one might think, and yet I wince as I enlighten you. It was, and I will never say those words ever again – “You must live here!”

This was the opening he had been waiting for. It was his one opportunity. Meathead’s reaction formulated before my very eyes, but I was too naïve to grasp that I had unlocked Pandora’s Box and too slow to make a pre-emptive move. He started with a smile and I was taken in momentarily. I sat down opposite him out of politeness after he began his sentence; I remembered reading somewhere that disabled people prefer to speak to others at eye level to themselves. If only I hadn’t read that particular article! If only there had not been a chair for me to sit upon (there certainly wasn’t room for another plate)! If only! His sentence had no end, there was no apparent pause for breath, and therefore no chance to break in; there was no way out for me without appearing rude. His smile was fleeting; it lasted only as long as it took to tell me that he lived across the road and always ate breakfast at the same place in the open air to catch the morning shoppers “for the company”.

I was tied to my chair by my upbringing and staring right into Meathead’s face; it looked much better when I was standing. Pointing to his apartment across the road, he went on to tell me that it was three floors up and, “what with my knees being so bad…” I considered his three hundred pounds in weight and I put on a sympathetic face. He didn’t pause to let me speak, perhaps fearful that I might make my excuses and leave (which I would have). Sensing that I probably wondered if he had ever been married (he was right) he carried on, and as he did so, his mouth began contorting and I saw that his piggy eyes were the palest and coldest of blues. He revealed that his wife was a “brownie” and I wondered what kind of man would refer to his wife in such a way; I began to suspect he was one of those nasty “Bogan” people that Xavier had told me about – a Morlock in my perception. The revered wife had, apparently, “never been accepted” and died in their house when it was burnt down. Inside my head I screamed in panic, “Oh dear. Let me out of here!”

Meathead continued to spit out his story but my ears refused to listen any more whilst my eyes and my mind went into overdrive. His yellow teeth were a good deal too sharp and pointy, betraying too much of the carnivore about him. His hair was very black for an older man and he had a fringe down to his eyebrows that accentuated the square-ness of his already square head. His long oily hair was straight and stuck flat to his scalp for the first four inches before it jutted outwards over his wing nut ears and trailed in thin rat’s tails over his shoulders. In his left ear he wore a gold sleeper embellished with a miniature skull that moved freely around the golden ring with each vigorous turn or nod of his head, and there were many. But I didn’t think he looked like a pirate or even a Hell’s Angel – we mermaids are intuitive, and we are usually right. It gradually dawned on me that the vitriolic fellow at the table was not a man at all, but a troll presiding from his vantage point over all the comings and goings that he could see, including the meek little Chinese lady, who cowered behind the counter at the café. The moment that the troll included swearing in his diatribe against humanity I felt freed of any moral or social obligation to stay; at that point I emulated the Bee Gees when they walked out on an unpleasant interviewer – like them, I stood up with dignity and calmly walked away without saying a single word. Meanwhile Meathead continued ranting what must have been one of the longest sentences in history.

 

This morning the sun was shining and my world was a rosier place. I took a different route on my constitutional and thus avoided meeting the “fat controller” (another way I regarded the troll). I entered the town centre from one of the streets farther up in the grid, so I had the advantage of seeing his sentry post from the opposite direction at a safe distance; he was there again like a judge at his bench, and a gavel in each hand; but he didn’t see me as I crossed over and disappeared down the hill to the seafront. Incidentally, had Meathead turned around he might not have recognised the strange looking woman wearing an ugly baseball cap from Brunei, dark glasses and long plaits.

I had not had breakfast and I was on the way back from Manly, and flagging from my exertions, when the desire for food hit me. As luck would have it, at the very moment hunger struck I was standing right outside the take-away café on the corner opposite the drinking fountain near the wading pool. What a coincidence! I’d long since given up on the notion of finding any dim sims but there were still chiko rolls. Hopefully, I had one dollar and twenty cents in my pocket and I wondered if it would be enough. A chiko roll is another deep-fried savoury snack and looks like a large spring roll. In fact, I prefer spring rolls nowadays but I always buy at least one of the dim sim cousins when I am in Australia because I enjoy the nostalgia. I could not tell you what is inside a Chiko roll – it is another secret recipe, not that I know the secret, of course – but I can tell you they are quite nice, though not as delicious as dim sims. Nothing is as sumptuous as a golden dim sim, especially when there are none to be found anywhere!

At one of the tables outside the café a couple of hunky senior boys on school holidays eyed me up and down, and I felt embarrassed; I quickly undid my weird plaits and took off my baseball cap and sunglasses before going inside.

A tall Vietnamese girl greeted me with a beautiful smile as I entered.

“Good morning! Isn’t it a lovely day? And what can I do for you today?” she asked chirpily in an Australian accent with a slight Vietnamese twang that must have come from her parents.

“Well, what I’d really love you don’t appear to have, and you probably won’t remember what they are anyway, so I’ll just have a Chiko roll please”, I returned her infectious smile.

“It’ll take a few minutes,” she said.

The girl with the sunny disposition disappeared momentarily and returned from the kitchen in thoughtful mode.

“I was thinking about what you just said, tell me, what is it that you really love and we don’t have?” She looked as though she was truly interested.

“Dim sims,” I answered, half afraid that I was going to disappoint the delightful girl because she would not be able to help me.

“I knew it! I knew it!” she said with glee.

“You seem to be the only person who remembers them from last year,” I responded, happy at last to meet a normal person with a memory greater than that of goldfish.

“Of course I remember them. They were our best sellers! You didn’t know the factory burnt down then?”

“So that’s it! Thank you so much for solving the mystery! I wonder why nobody else told me. I don’t live here anymore and it’s nine months since I was here last. Do you know if they are rebuilding the factory?”

“I’m not sure but I would think so. Don’t you think there would be some kind of public uprising if Australians couldn’t get their dim sims?” she winked.

I took my steaming hot breakfast over to the tables under the trees on the seafront. Oddly enough this morning’s fresh chiko roll tasted every bit as good as the first one I ever tried. But it wasn’t quite as good as a dim sim, naturally!

Vixen and Cubs – A Painting

The first cub came into being as I painted in my brother Bill’s porch while it rained, the vixen appeared as I fought with the wind in Bill’s gazebo, and the little cub crept out from the undergrowth as I finished the painting in the shade of Roland’s verandah while the sun shone brilliantly outside.

I used acrylics on a canvas about 3’x2′.

 

My Big Brother Bill

Bill is my big brother, although he’s not as big as our younger brother Henry or as tall as our baby brother Robert (no longer a baby but a fireman, musician and piano tuner). There have been times in my life when I’ve bemoaned the fact that I’m the middle child of five children – not the wonderful firstborn, not the beautiful first daughter, not the cherished baby of the family – I didn’t even have to speak very much until I went to school (believe it or not I was an extremely shy and quiet little girl… with a quick temper). I didn’t get to do anything first – nobody fancied the plain, flat-chested twelve year old at Bill’s fifteenth birthday party – and the youngest two gave me none of the kudos or respect that the eldest two took for granted. I was just the middle one – and the artist in the family.

I have been staying here at Bill’s place in Tingalpa, Brisbane, the past week; and, owing to the heavy rain, yesterday I was painting in his front porch (rather apt for a Porch person). Now when I’m painting I get rather engrossed and forget about eating and drinking, so after a couple of hours or more in my own little world the front door opened and Bill popped his head around.

“I thought you’d like a nice cup of tea,” Bill smiled and placed the tea beside me on the arm of a chair before going back inside to watch “Judge Judy” (we Porch siblings all like “Judge Judy”).

I smiled to myself. The cup was a bit big but I did fancy a cup of tea now that I came to think of it. And I while I drank my tea I considered what a wonderful big brother Bill has been to me… He always came to my rescue. Whenever I cried as a child he would whisk me off to our tree-house – the one he made with Dad – and he would cheer me up with tickles. When, as a five-year-old on the way home from school, I had accidentally cut a boy’s head open in a stone fight Billy took me and the boy to his mother’s door, and I didn’t have to say word…

“I want to apologise on Sally’s behalf,” Bill said, “she didn’t know what she was doing.”

Athletic as a boy, Bill could walk on his hands and do chin-ups on the door frames; he could drive at fifteen and bought a beach-buggy – we all used to jump on and scream with delight amid the smoke and the roar of the engine (in the garden, of course – he got his license on his seventeenth birthday). First he loved bicycles, then engines, then engines and girls. He grew up to be handsome and muscular, with dark curly hair and lovely bowed legs.

Bill is still handsome. His hair is white now, but remains thick and curly (when he allows it to grow); he wears glasses, which detract slightly from his sparkling brown eyes and long lashes, but they give him a kindly look. He loves his garden, and making and fixing things.

My big brother is your Australian macho “can do” male but with improvements over former models – he is modern. I have noticed he helps Lita clear dinner things from the table and he makes his sister cups of tea… Ah, dear Bill – my hero – still coming to the rescue. It’s quite nice being a younger sister.

I carried on with my painting and soon I was too engrossed to think about anything but the fox cub on the canvas…

 

“On the Rocks”

Not me, I’m not “on the rocks”; well, I was on the rocks, but not in a washed-up sense… more of a fisher-woman sense (not fish-wife, I hasten to add!). What I noticed – apart from the fact that the fish weren’t biting – was that fisher-folk like their drinks on the rocks. Call me peculiar if you like but I found all the bottles and cans hidden in and around the rocks rather fascinating and picturesque . You have to find something to do when the fish aren’t hungry!

Meanwhile in Australia…

It’s a funny old thing when a very English friend, in England in the winter, sends you an amusing list of what it’s like to be in Australia when it’s hot (especially as I’m in Australia in the heat). Although, in truth, it hasn’t been all that hot really and, yes indeed, I have seen plenty of people in long sleeves when it was a bit breezy (but still at thirty degrees Centigrade!). I smiled and nodded to myself as made my way down the list. Now I’m off to bed. The temperature is only 22.5C at present so I shall definitely be needing the duvet (doona = Aussie term) on tonight!

Thank you David for sending this…

Meanwhile in Australia

You Know It’s Hot In Australia When!

1) The best parking spot is determined by shade not distance

2) Hot water comes out of both taps

3) You learn that a seat belt buckle makes a pretty good branding iron

4) The temperature drops below 32c and you feel chilly

5) You discover that in January and February it only takes two fingers to steer a car

6) You discover you can get sunburnt through your windscreen

7) You develop a fear of metal door handles

8) You break a sweat the instance you step outside at 7am

9) Your biggest bicycle accident fear is “What if i get knocked out and end up lying on the road and getting cooked”

10) You realise asphalt has a liquid state

11) Farmers are feeding there chickens crushed ice to prevent them from laying hard boiled eggs

12) The trees are whistling for dogs

13) While walking back barefoot to your car from any event, you do a tightrope act on the white lines in the carpark

14) You catch a cold from having the aircon on full blast all night long

15) You learn that Westfield Shopping Centre’s aren’t just Shopping Centre’s, they are temples to worship Air-Conditioning

16) Sticking your head in the freezer and taking deep breaths is considered normal

17) A cup full of ice is considered a great snack

18) A black out is life threatening because your aircon and your fans no longer work.

19) No one cares if you walk around with no shoes on

20) You keep anything in the fridge, including potatoes, bread and clothing

21) People have enough left over beer cans to make a boat and compete in a regatta. (S.A joke)

22) The effort of towelling yourself off after a shower means you need another shower right away.

23) You will wait patiently until the day it starts raining to go on a run.

24) You worry your ceiling fan is spinning so fast it will fly off and Kill You

25) You Laugh because this list is so accurate

Meanwhile In Australia.

In the Spa!

In the Spa!