Monday, July 31, 2006

It's Never Too Early ...

... to learn to sew. My five and a half year old grandaughter, Shay, spent the day with me today. I promised her that after lunch we would do some sewing and she could use one of my machines.
We had bought her a toy electric sewing machine for her birthday earlier this year but she has since graduated to using her mother's expensive machine. As
ShellyC began using my machine at the age of seven I had no qualms about allowing Shay to do the same.

Lunch over, I set up a low table on top of 4 old Encyclopedia Britannica (first time they've been used in years) and Shay had brought a low chair with her just for the occasion. Now, what will we make? How about we make Mummy a new oven mitt since her's is wearing out? Good idea.

Sometimes having too much material to choose from creates its own problems, nevertheless Shay made her choice and I cut out the mitt. I did any curved sewing on a different machine - I wasn't getting down to use one on a table only 18 inches from the floor - but Shay did all the quilting of the fabrics. Her mastery and control of a machine is quite amazing for one so young.

Alas, I cut the first mitt too small and by the time it was finished and turned right side out, it was a good size for Shay herself. It will certainly come in handy as she loves cooking even more than sewing. I then found that an apron pattern also included one for an oven mitt, so the whole process was repeated, and one pretty mitt was finished and gift wrapped before Shelly came with Zoe and Luca to have dinner before they all went back to their place.


We had pork spareribs for dinner, and as I was putting them in to marinate, Shay asked what we were going to have for dinner. I told her "Bones." She wasn't very impressed


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Saturday, July 29, 2006

Home Sweet Home.

I know I'm a bit late with these photos, suggested by BooMama, but it's still Friday in some parts of the world.

Okay, I admit it, it took me this long to make the place halfway presentable, so I'd better post these while I can.

Front door with Bluewrens in the glass panels, and the essential security/screen door. Grandson Luca was fascinated with the blue wrens when he was about two and would spend ages just looking at them. I guess he thought they were real birds and was surprised to find two exactly the same that didn't fly away.

Kitchen with view to the deck.

Don't anyone steal my cup of tea! I like the kitchen and family room much better now that they are green, white and purple instead of the dark brown and orange that they were for about 27 years.

Family room/meals area. The table is our original dining table and teak doesn't really go with the colour scheme here, but the table extends to 7' 6" long, which is invaluable when all the family visit or for cutting out fabric.

One spare bedroom ... (carpet in this room used to be purple, exact shade of the bed ruffle. Carpet's changed but I haven't gottten around to making a new ruffle.)

... and one not-so-spare bedroom. I posted this photo a few weeks ago showing where most of Russ and Shannon's stuff is while they are overseas for 12 months.

Blogging spot, back when it was new and tidy. The printer is about to be replaced with one that also scans, and I would NEVER buy a black keyboard again, especially when it has to sit down there in the dark.

Dining room. I'm happy that I can actually find this table now that Richard has retired and stopped covering it in schoolwork.

Lounge room. Including R&S's lounge suite and TV unit on the right. Would you believe that Richard now sits on the couch where that pink cushion is and watches both TVs at the same time - sometimes on different channels and with audible commentary.

Both of the above.

The most important little room in the house. The toilet, bathroom and laundry were never meant to be this horrible pink colour - the 4 litre can of paint was meant to be an apricot shade. Too late once it's mixed! That was 10 years ago and it's still waiting for me to repaint it. Can't rush these things, you know.Posted by Picasa

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

How It All Began

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Having set a precedent by posting one of my stories last week, I thought I would post another which gives a hint as to how I came to develop my love of gardening. This story was also written a couple of years ago, long before I began blogging, and it was from this story that I took the title for my blog.



A Growing Delight


I would like to be able to say that the garden of my childhood was akin to the delightful displays of flowers, shrubs and trees to be seen in glossy magazines in newsagents and bookshops. But it wasn’t like that at all. Although possibly its very unkemptness held more delights for a child than manicured lawns, flowers in profusion and stately, shady trees. Certainly, I remember it well, from the straggly geraniums to the overgrown hedges, from the tiniest of violets to the row of massive cherry plum trees in full blossom. It was a garden that I could play in, work in, eventually help transform, and ultimately build my own garden from many of those self-same plants, several of which I still have half a century later. (see Photo above.)

The house and garden, with a small orchard on either side, were set on a hilltop at the end of the Strezlecki Ranges in Gippsland, Victoria – a small State in the southeast of Australia. From the front veranda one could see for many miles across the Yannathan Flats and the Kooweerup Swamp to the blue Dandenong Ranges on the horizon. Of course, such a magnificent and uninterrupted view to the north had its downside in the form of hot northwesterly winds in the summertime. Soon after moving to the farm, Dad planted a windbreak of cypress trees down the north and west sides of the larger orchard. These grew quickly and provided wonderful wind protection as well as an impressive backdrop to the ornamental gardens he created years later. Down the south side of this orchard was a row of 10 huge cherry plum trees, already 60 years old. Both orchards contained a motley collection of apple, pear, apricot, plum, quince and fig trees. Some of the varieties are now heritage-listed such as Five Crown, Northern Spy, Rennet and Snow apples. Dad was neither gardener nor orchardist but he managed to prune the trees after a fashion and they produced good quantities of fruit for many years.

The house garden originally contained an assortment of trees and plants, long-neglected and growing wild. Close to the house were two huge Cypresses. They provided shade for the children’s sandpit and cubby house, and the White Leghorn chooks (hens) would try to roost in the branches each night. Their sleep was short-lived however as someone, usually me, would have to dislodge them with a long stick, or climb the tree and shake the branches wildly so that they would fly screeching to the ground and scuttle into the hen house for the night, safe from foxes. The cool ground underneath the trees kept the milk, butter and cheese cool in the summers when we had neither ice-chest nor refrigerator. Two wide stone jars were sunk into the ground under the trees and the perishable foods stayed cool all day. The nearest large plum tree provided similar shade for the meat and Coolgardie safes, where other foods were kept cool.

A row of Lucerne trees bordered the house yard. They were quite pretty with small grey-green leaves and white flowers followed by black seedpods, which split and fell to the ground with an audible snap during the hot weather. The ground was inches deep in seedpods fallen over the years. A very tall, spreading black wattle (Acacia) grew between the outside toilet and the hen house. So large was this tree that when covered in golden blossom in spring it could be seen from nearly a mile away. The trunk produced lots of lovely chewy sap. The cherry plum trees, covered in white blossom, could also be seen from a great distance. My sister commented recently that she has very vivid memories of seeing this long line of plum trees in blossom against a clear blue sky and the almost deafening drone of the millions of bees. She felt at the time that “heaven couldn’t be any better”. I had to agree with her. We loved those trees in blossom and enjoyed the early fruit, but the trees were so big that only the lowest of the plums could be picked and the rest eventually fell to the ground only to be squashed by people, cars and animals. By the end of summer we were very glad when they had all fallen and could be raked up and carted away. However, Mum managed to preserve enough for the following year and also made gallons of jam in the laundry copper, bottling it in brown beer bottles with the necks cut off. I’m not sure where the bottles originally came from; certainly not from Dad as he never touched alcohol, at least not until the children had grown up, and then it was only a light beer shandy at Christmas.

Two fern trees outside the back door had little round curled buds, which unfurled into beautiful long fronds. Grey thrushes sat in the trees in the morning and whistled. How I would love to hear a grey thrush now. There were two large rose bushes in the back garden, both with masses of small white flowers. One bush had really become an overgrown hedge, all intertwined with honeysuckle and wild passionfruit. Many years later one of our dogs died under this hedge from snakebite. I think Flossie was actually bitten elsewhere and crawled under the rose bush to die. In any case, Dad wasn’t taking any chances and he pulled the hedge and a lot of other things out of the garden and thus began its re-creation.

There were fuchsias with swollen red buds just waiting for a child to pop them prematurely, a chrysanthemum with masses of tiny yellow/brown flowers like buttons, and long-legged geraniums with big red flowers. Even as a small child I was allowed to dig in the garden beds and plant whatever I liked. There was one garden bed that I dug and raked so often that the soil resembled talcum powder. It was totally useless for growing plants but the hens loved it for dust baths. Beneath one rose bush grew such pretty tiny violets. It seemed a pity to leave them there unseen so I pulled them out of the ground and planted them somewhere else. Some grew and some didn’t, but my passion for propagating plants was born at the age of seven. Grandma added to this by telling me to “Plant anything. You never know, it might grow”. She would take cut flowers from a vase, bend the stems back about an inch from the end, and stick them in the ground. Sometimes the most unlikely things grew

We didn’t have a lawn, just rough grass at the back, which was tough to mow with a push mower, and the front yard was 90% oxalis. At least the clover-like leaves and little pink flowers were pretty. One plant that I hated was the big, overgrown echium, with long grey felty leaves and big spikes of bright blue flowers. It seemed to be always dry and dusty around this plant, emphasising the general neglect of the garden, and I vowed I would never grow them. Guess what I’ve now planted in my garden? Beautiful, striking, drought-tolerant echiums.

At the bottom end of the smaller orchard was a row of huge sugar gums whose smooth white bark sometimes took on the colours of the setting sun, which we appreciated as a lovely diversion for a few minutes whilst milking the cows in the evening. The washing was hung on long lines in this orchard and sometimes the cows would have to walk under the washing on their way to the cowshed, occasionally carrying away a piece of clothing on their horns.

The lucerne and cypress trees, and all the fruit trees not only provided fruit and shade, but their branches became whatever a child’s fantasy could make of them, and many hours were spent daydreaming in some favourite perches, hidden from the world.

After Flossie died from snakebite under the hedge, Dad cleared it and many other overgrown shrubs and trees, erected new fences, dug garden beds and planted new shrubs and trees. But he didn’t stop at the garden edge; he continued out into the main orchard, where he mowed the grass, removed a few old trees and replaced with them with elms, ashes, camellias and rhododendrons. With the backdrop of the dark green cypress windbreak and the cherry plum trees the whole area soon developed into a spectacular showplace, which we nicknamed “The Park”, and was much admired by visitors and greatly enjoyed by the whole family. Even I didn’t mind spending a whole day mowing and trimming all the new lawns. The new plants in the garden like photinia, viburnum, jacaranda, mint bush, Chinese lanterns, weigelas, fuchsias, hebes, roses and creepers were underplanted with a variety of annuals. These were bought from the nursery, either by the dozen and wrapped in newspaper, or you could buy ten dozen in a wooden tray, called a ‘flat’. By this time, my brother had his own business, carting cattle, and he used to sweep the straw and manure off the decks of his trucks about three times a week into a big heap. These sweepings became the most wonderful compost after a few months, and when spread on the garden several inches deep, produced pansies with stems nearly a foot long. It took me a while to work out why all the native plants died – the soil was too rich for them - but I didn’t like them much anyway, then. Most of the plants had to rely on the rain for water, although I watered the annuals with a bucket and jam tin with holes in the bottom. I must have mislaid many tins because I always seemed to be hammering nails through yet another one. They weren’t the only things I mislaid in the garden. After badgering Dad to lend me a saw to cut back a large fuchsia, he finally gave in and handed over a lovely little saw, saying “Now you will be sure to put it back, won’t you?” I assured him that I would, naturally. Three weeks later I found the saw out on the tankstand where I had left it. Mum and I scrubbed the rust off with steelwool, liberally coated and polished it with fat, and replaced it in the garage. I don’t THINK Dad was any the wiser.

Rarely a shopping trip went by without me bringing home yet more plants, mostly annuals, for the garden. A well-thumbed copy of Yates Garden Guide became my bible as I dreamed of all the flowers that I wanted to grow. The first lady I boarded with during my year in Melbourne gave me two tiny pieces of ivy geranium to take home. I looked at them and thought “They will never grow.” Not only did they grow but we had to keep cutting them back with hedge clippers and carting them away by the barrow load. Those two little cuttings began my love affair with pelargoniums, and ivy geraniums in particular. Today, when pruning my own plants, I vow that I will not plant any more cuttings, but by the end of the day I usually have a polystyrene box with a hundred or so cuttings.

Plants of all description began to multiply in the garden at home, especially anything that could be propagated by cuttings or division. One polyanthus would become six the next year and fifty the year after. I simply couldn’t bear to throw anything away that might grow.

My love of gardening began way back as a child when I was given the freedom to try growing things for myself. I am thrilled that my small grandchildren take such delight in establishing their gardens, encouraged very much by their mother who is a keen gardener and a qualified florist.

Whilst I have some reservations about the ‘garden makeover’ programmes on TV, I think any program that encourages people to think about plants and create an interest in gardening, is not only good for them, but good for the planet as a whole.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Even Grey Clouds Have Silver Linings ...

... and sometimes a few other colours.


































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Monday, July 24, 2006

Happy Birthday, Russell

Just because you've gone overseas, Russ, it doesn't mean you escape the embarrassment of me posting photos for your birthday.


We hope you have a wonderful birthday, and a fantastic year in Belgium and wherever else you may travel.


Thank you for being the loving and caring son, brother, uncle and friend that you are.


We love you and wish you happiness always.


As SON .....









... BROTHER and UNCLE,...



... FRIEND and PARTNER.Posted by Picasa

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Upmarket - Downunder

Remember this photo from a little while back, which showed the excavation under the deck in preparation for making an enclosed area to store garden equipment?

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Well, this is how it's looking now. Richard has been painting the house walls and under the deck and the difference it's made to the light down there is amazing. Pity the inside of the house wasn't painted so meticulously...lol. The two small doors lead to storage areas under the house (crawl space, I believe it's called in the USA), but I'm sorely tempted to purchase 'Ladies' and 'Gents' signs for each door!

Signs of Spring

Although we're still five weeks from the beginning of Spring, and not much appears to be happening above ground in the garden, there are definite signs of the change of seasons. Trees are starting to bud or even flower, bulbs are flowering and other bulbs and perennials are shooting. The bees are busy among those shrubs already in flower.

Claret Ash in flower.


Flower tassles on the Garryia Eliptica.


Grevillea budding and the odd flower.


New purple, pink and cream tulips shooting.


Native Correa. Can you see the bee in the bottom right corner?


Jonquils


Perennial wallflower (Autumn Joy) about to burst and flower for the next four months.


Afternoon sunshine on the Hop Bush.

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A green that we haven't seen for a few years.

Friday, July 21, 2006

The Heart of the House

Lee-ann has posted a lovely story about the happy memories she recalls of life with her mother, grandmother, aunts and cousins. A time of love, support, warmth, fun and laughter - all the things that money can't buy.

I hope Lee-ann won't mind if I print one of the stories I wrote two years ago about a room which I fondly remember as being ...



THE HEART OF THE HOUSE


If ever a room could be described as being the heart of the house, then our kitchen certainly deserved that title. One of four main rooms in a weatherboard house built for 200 pounds (about $400) during the Great Depression, it was the centre of most family activities for nearly 40 years. It served not only as kitchen but also dining room, family room, playroom, laundry, bathroom and sick bay at various times. Whilst it underwent a number of changes of paint, floor coverings, furniture and windows through the years, it nevertheless remained the heart of the house.

When we arrived at the 100 acre Victorian dairy farm in 1946, the house consisted of a kitchen and a lounge room, with a bedroom opening directly off each of them. The rooms were quite large by today’s standards with 10ft high ceilings. The bedrooms measured 14ft x 12ft.6in, and lounge and kitchen were also 12ft.6in wide, but even longer at 18ft. That extra six inches in width in all rooms was a source of annoyance whenever new linoleum was purchased as it came in rolls 6ft wide. This meant that the lino was laid with a join down the centre of the room and two 3inch strips down each side. These strips had a habit of lifting, catching furniture legs and the broom alike. Built onto the back of the house at one side was a small bedroom, known as a sleepout, and on the other side was a laundry-come-bathroom. In between was a concrete veranda, which opened directly into the kitchen. Across the front of the house ran a wooden veranda. The front door was never used by visitors and only rarely by the family. Indeed, there were no paths which led to the front door; everybody entered through the back door into the kitchen.

In the early days we had no electricity, no radio or television and no refrigeration, but we did have a telephone, connected to the manual exchange on the next farm. Our phone number was Heath Hill 9. Even the water was not connected to the house. The previous owner’s wife had to walk outside and draw water directly from one of several corrugated iron tanks. The first task Dad undertook was to run a pipe and tap through the kitchen wall so that Mum had water on hand.

The only furniture in the room was a cabinet, with leadlight glass sliding doors, in which the food was kept, and a dresser with shelves and cupboards underneath for crockery and other utensils. The plates stood on their side in grooves between the shelves and the cups hung from hooks along the front. In the centre of the room was a large wooden table which served as both working and eating area. Around the walls were a few mismatched wooden chairs and two long wooden benches, which was the easiest way to seat a growing family of nine people.

High above the wood stove in the corner was a mantelpiece on which stood the clock, boxes of matches and a tin of string, pot holders, the fly sprayer, and a number of white candles in chipped enamel holders, liberally coated in beads of solidified wax, ready to light the way to bed at night. The mantelpiece, which was adorned with a scalloped edging of baize, the same waterproof material that covered the table, also held a few ready-to-hand medicines like pink packets of Aspros, which were sealed in a strip of waxed paper, Rennies for indigestion, and blue packets of little chocolate squares – the dreaded Laxettes. There were bottles of Cod Liver oil, Dexsall, peroxide and eucalyptus, jars of Vicks Vaporub, green Zambuck ointment and sometimes a tin of Rawleighs ointment to rub on bruises.

After each meal the dishes were washed in a tin dish on the table. One Saturday, Mum asked Dad if he would buy a new washing up dish when he was in the local town that morning as the old one had sprung a leak. When he came home, she asked where was the dish. “Oh”, he replied, “I’m so sorry. I forgot all about it”. At 3 o’clock that afternoon a truck drove up to the house. On the back of the truck was a stainless steel sink on a set of three cupboards. Mum took one look at it and burst into tears, she was so happy.

The kitchen walls had been stained a dark brown colour, which was depressing all year round. It was dark and gloomy in the winter and hot and oppressive in the summer. After a few years Dad could stand it no longer and painted the kitchen yellow with brown trim. Two or three colour changes followed over the years.

The floor was covered in green and orange patterned linoleum, laid in 1936 judging by the newspapers we found underneath when we replaced it many years later. For some reason Mum always had a strip of coir matting running from the back door to the lounge room and another in the area of the sink and stove. I’m not sure why she persisted with these mats – perhaps she felt they cut down on noise and may have been warmer, although certainly rougher, to walk on than lino – but each day they had to be rolled up, taken outside and shaken and swept. This was one of my hated jobs when I was old enough to do it. However, as small children we made good use of the coloured patterns on the matting. Orange or red stripes became roads for toy cars, and green squares were paddocks for the stuffed animals or gardens for the dolls. The space under the big wooden table became anything that a child could imagine. Best of all was when it was a cubby house with a couple of sheets thrown over to reach the floor.

Originally the kitchen had a tall sash window with white net curtains caught back at each side. Through the window we could look out onto the orchard and beyond to the cowshed. I still remember the feeling of comfort and security as we watched through the window as the rain formed big puddles on the gravel paths or stormy winds tormented the fruit trees in the orchard and the tall gum trees in the bush beyond.

If the kitchen was the heart of the house, then the stove must have been the heart of the kitchen. All cooking and heating of water was done on the wood stove, which always had a glossy black shine to it from vigorous applications of Zebo stove polish and the hearth in front of the stove and surrounding fireplace was regularly ‘painted’ with a red-ochre mixture. Not only did the stove cook three meals a day, year in year out, but it toasted the bread, warmed the room, boiled the water, dried wet clothes, boots and shoes, heated the flat irons to press the clothes, and drew people like a magnet to its enveloping warmth. I read many books at night curled up on the end of the hearth leaning on the warm fireplace. After I had left school and was working on the farm, on cold winter mornings Mum and I would each pull a chair up to the stove after breakfast and sit with our feet in the oven reading the daily papers. The big wide oven not only cooked wonderful roasts, puddings and cakes, it also dried socks stuffed with newspaper, warmed boots and shoes, and even dried the next morning’s kindling wood during very wet weather. A big black kettle was constantly on the boil, and the sounds of the kettle whistling, accompanied by small wisps of escaping steam, and the steady ticking of the clock on the mantelpiece, was very relaxing in the mid-afternoon when the housework was finished and there was a lull before the late afternoon activities of preparing to milk the cows and cooking dinner.

As there was no electricity for many years, at night the room was lit by a kerosene pressure lantern, which gave a brilliant light in such a large room and made a gentle hissing sound. Dad always lit the lamp as Mum didn’t like having to pump it to the required pressure in case it exploded. If for some reason Dad was away from the farm at the end of the day, Mum would light another smaller lantern, which only lit up about half of the room. I always felt uncomfortable when she used that lantern, not only because it wasn’t as efficient as the larger one, but also emphasised the fact that Dad was away and home felt a little less secure as a result.

As the years passed changes were made in the kitchen. New windows, cupboards, and a gas fridge and stove were added, although it was only during the hot summer months that the wood stove was relieved of its duties. A radio and electricity gradually arrived, the coir matting disappeared and the children grew and no longer played under the table. But it was still the room where everyone gathered.

Long hours were spent around the dinner table at night as Dad talked about his childhood in England or his early days in Australia, including his time in the Army during the war. After dinner we would sit around and listen to radio programs like the Jack Davey quiz shows, The Amateur Hour, The Quiz Kids, or any of the BBC shows like Take It From Here, A Life of Bliss and Much Binding in the Marsh, and later on My Word and My Music, or the Sunday night plays. We would often work on jigsaw puzzles or play card games, Snakes and Ladders or Ludo, and of course, there was often homework to do. A large piece of masonite was sometimes laid over the table so that we could play table tennis or Bobs. Dad usually joined in these activities with us while Mum sat darning socks and jumpers, or replacing missing buttons from shirts and trousers. In later years Dad and I played Scrabble, often until the early hours of the morning while listening to the Test Cricket from England.

It was the room where all of the family gathered for tea on Christmas nights after we had all married and left home. Mum particularly looked forward to that night all year as she loved being surrounded by her children, sons/daughters-in-law and grandchildren. If the walls could speak they could tell many tales of family life, mostly happy, some sad, and even a few arguments. It saw birthdays, anniversaries and other celebrations, and it was where my husband asked Mum and Dad if we could get married.

Houses and lifestyles have changed over the years, but wouldn’t it be wonderful if every child could have such a room to remember with pleasure throughout their lives.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Nothing to do with blogging, but .....

... does anyone else turn on their computer in the morning to find increasing numbers of emails advertising every type of pharmacuetical known to mankind, especially viagra and valium, as well as new businesses that I should buy into and lotteries that I'm certain to win?

I'm truly fed up with it. Does anyone know how I can prevent it? If I change my email address, which is very inconvenient, it will only be a matter of time before they start again.

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Grey Skies and Rain ...... LOVELY!

Is there a cosier sound than rain on the roof when you are snug and warm in bed? Well, perhaps not on a Saturday morning if you were planning to play sport, work in the garden or some other outdoor activity, but I think most Australians are happy accept whatever rain falls.

We have just finished getting Russ and Shannon's house ready for rental and this rain will freshen the gardens up beautifully. Mind you, after all the material I put through the mulcher back here yesterday, I didn't think there could be anything left in the garden over there.

The agent came yesterday and was very impressed with the place, so hopefully we'll soon have some good tenants (much better than the last lot - I'M JUST KIDDING, Russ/Shannon).

These shots were taken from my deck this morning.

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Today we are 'officially' halfway through Winter, and some Prunus are in flower, jonquils are out and other bulbs, including tulips, are shooting. Decidious trees are budding (see Claret Ash on left of first photo). A few more weeks and we can prune the roses - always very late in Canberra due to the frosts. Lawns are continuing to grow, but slowly enough that we don't have to mow them.

I have thoroughly enjoyed my 'virtual' walks through many northern hemisphere gardens in recent weeks and they've given me much inspiration for the coming spring and summer. Thank you, dear friends.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

A Bit of THIS ... and a LOT of THAT!

At 3 o'clock on a wintery, Sunday afternoon my camera thought it was time I stopped being lazy and took some more photos. Alas, there wasn't much to take except -

... some green grass on the lawns we sowed down a few weeks ago,



and the tireless gardener at work, in temperatures only slightly warmer than the Swiss Alps in mid-winter!

But back in the house I found all this in one bedroom. How did it get here? It's a good deal of the contents of Russ and Shannon's house, which they moved over here last week prior to their departure for overseas. I guess one positive aspect is - I won't have to vacuum the room for at least a year!! There's certainly no room to sleep in it, but it's amazing just how much stuff will fit into one small room. The rest of their furniture and belongings are spread throughout the rest of the house, in the garage and under the house. I think it may take about 5 years to find it all when they return.

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Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Goodbye and Hello

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This morning we said "Goodbye" to our son, Russell, and his partner, Shannon, who have left Australia to spend 12 months overseas. Apart from some travel in Asia and Europe, much of the time will be spent in Belgium where Russell will coach hockey teams.

We look forward to hearing about their experiences through
Shannon's blog. We wish them safe travel, the joy of experiencing new cultures and the pleasure of making new friends. God bless you both and keep you safe. We love you both.
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Tonight we said "Hello" to our daughter, Sara, who returned home after spending 8 months playing hockey in the Netherlands, and her boyfriend, Josh, who has spent the last 5 weeks travelling Europe with Sara. We hope it doesn't take them too long to acclimatise from summer back to winter. Welcome home, Sara and Josh.

(Photos obviously not taken in the middle of an Australian winter.)

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Saturday, July 01, 2006

The Dawn of a New Day

Some days we're blessed with scenes like these at both ends of the day. These shots were taken yesterday morning from the back deck. The red sky in the morning gave us hope of rain - and we got it, a whole 1.25mm (5 points). About all it did was wet the morning paper. Still, we enjoyed the sunrise.





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