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Letters from America

Post #64 Wednesday 29 November 2017 – November trip to Canberra

November 26, 2017 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Adventure, Art, Letters from America, Travel, Urban landscape, Wildlife

  Letters from America

Wednesday 29 November 2017

It was a lovely visit to Canberra this month.  On the morning I was due to leave Canberra it was raining very softly, exactly the way it doesn’t rain in Sydney (where it shamelessly buckets from all directions).  I took a walk near where I was staying and saw many lovely things including this fine sculpture – an enormous sheet of steel unfolding up the hillside.  And this trip, when I walked in the evening, I saw more bunnies on the lush Canberra lawns than I have ever seen anywhere.  It was like walking into a Beatrix Potter story.  The Canberra bunnies were out and about, mostly in pairs, quietly feasting in the dark.  They were so fluffy and almost tame.  Back in my day I think it was a bit of a heavy myxomatosis scene and there just weren’t a lot of bunnies anywhere at all (sigh).  Such a treat to see them abundant and healthy now in a place where there is lots for them to eat.

xx MG
enjoying gentle vertical rain in Canberra from time to time

 

Post #61 Sunday 12 November 2017 – St Albans excursion and a perfect omelette

November 11, 2017 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Adventure, Cooking, Country, Letters from America, Travel

  Letters from America

Sunday 12 November 2017

I had an excellent adventure up to St Albans yesterday.  With the recent rain the valley was quite green. I visited an old friend who keeps some animals up there.  He also runs a small wholesale nursery enterprise which specialises in cactuses and succulents (super popular in the inner city so that is good business).

The young beasts in these photos were my welcoming party when I arrived.  The couple of jerseys who appear in these photos apparently were rescued from a local petting zoo when it closed down, together with more than 40 goats (goats not shown :-)).  The jerseys were, as you might expect with their history, very placid and happy to be petted.

 

We spent a very pleasant afternoon walking about and talking. I managed to forget to take home my gift of a tray of local peaches (my old country friend’s nick name for me is Peaches), but I did not forget to take home the several dozen eggs for me and my Sydney girlfriends which were collected on the farm when we walked about.  So I have a photo here of what the box tray looks like for a dozen such eggs, packed under the excellent label The Master’s Farm.

I’m not really an egg person, but when I got home late Saturday night I had an omelette – first choice, with a soft red wine – first second choice 🙂  It was just a perfect omelette made from fresh eggs laid and collected that day.

Yours in the paddock, MG xx

Post #48 Sunday 23 July 2017 – The Quadrangle

July 23, 2017 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Adventure, Flowering trees, Gallery, Letters from America, Selfie, Urban landscape

  Letters from America

Sunday 23 July 2017

Yesterday I went to a small event at Sydney University.  It was held to celebrate the planting of two new flowering trees in the Main Quadrangle.  These trees replace the old jacaranda which graced the Quad for years but which had expired.

It was a glorious day and the sandstone buidings looked beautiful.

The alumni organisation gave commemorative bagdes to guests (including to your glamorous aunt MG).

So this picture is a selfie – my phone camera insists on putting rays in which gives me a halo (oh dear).

Here is one of the trees, the flame tree.

And here is the badge.  It has a stylised depiction of the contrasting colours of the flame and jacaranda flowers.

 

MG xx
in an almost perfect world

 

Post #27 Monday 8 May 2017 – McElhone Stairs and the black and white cat

May 7, 2017 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Art, City, Letters from America, Pets, Urban landscape, Wildlife

  Letters from America

Monday 8 May 2017

This is a 1944 painting by Sali Herman of the McElhone Stairs.

These Stairs are at the end of Victoria Street and lead up from Woolloomooloo to Potts Point.   I have often walked these stairs down to the City or to Lady Macquarie’s Chair and the Botanic Gardens and sometimes just to do a circuit alongside  HMAS Kuttabul which is at the bottom of Potts Point.  I think the Stairs date from the 1870s.

Sali Herman distorted his painted view to make the Stairs much wider and steeper looking than they are.  And he made the figures smaller to add to the effect.  The male figures in the bottom right are uniformed, perfectly suited to 1944  (though there are always uniformed service people about with the local naval base and the dock).  The house on the right is a fine house also from the 1870s, with very fine detail in  the balconies and ironwork.   I think there have been continuing battles with successive owners over the tackiness of renovations that get done from time time to the heritage listed building (the down pipes got painted a shiny gold not so long ago :-)). On the left at the top of the Stairs is an enormous ventilation pipe – which is a structure of 1930s engineering, quite impressive!

Sali Herman’s painting of the McElhone Stairs

Here is a really interesting image of the Stairs taken in 1927 in a silent film that was miraculously discovered in the 1950s and reprinted. I think it also captures that sense of the Stairs having a great size, which is exactly what Sali Herman’s painting was after.

The photo shows a very spare environment.  Woolloomooloo, at the bottom of the Stairs, was a dockside slum district.  It is still home to relatively deprived people with a lot of house commission homes built in the 1970s and 80s, following the amazing green ban campaign and federal government intervention to save the area from the worst forms of rapacious Sydney property development.

I love these Stairs for their own sake.  But I also have loved them because of a small animal spirit who has occupied the Stairs for a very long time.

Over the years I have taken quite a few photos of this cat, even though it was not mine, it didn’t seem to belong to any person so much as to the place.  I had a real affection for her.  Here are some pictures, the ones I found on the phone anyway.

She frequently dozed in the sun on a broad sandstone rocky outcrop next to the Stairs and that is where her minder left her food and water.

And I was very sad to see today this little sign at her usual sunning place.  The woman in my photo above with the lilac shirt, was her minder, Hill, who had herself  lived on the streets a few times in her life.

It’s a clever photo, it even lines up the wires running along the wall behind her sunny spot on the sandstone.  And the cards and flowers were touching.  I did not know she had been living there as long as 15 years, no home, just her minder diligently feeding her on the street.

Farewell philosophical cat.


MG xx

Post #26 Saturday 6 May 2017 – Darlinghurst Gaol

May 6, 2017 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Adventure, Birds, City, Food, Letters from America, Urban landscape, Wildlife

  Letters from America

Saturday 6 May 2017

I went up to Oxford Street at lunch time today to see a good friend from the country who was down in Sydney for work. It was another glorious day.  I wish I had worn lighter clothing.   After work was done we strolled along the walkway shaded by trees and high sandstone walls next to the Art School that occupies the grounds of the old goal (the old East Sydney Tech). Then we stopped in at the cafe there which is tucked away inside the walled grounds.

It’s a secret spot.  Here’s the side entrance we used to duck in.

Today there was something unusual at the cafe.  The shiniest, proudest, most engaged with humanity crow I have ever seen.

He was actively mining the cafe environment for food and when there was none he got creatively destructive.  I mean, it was not enough to trash the miniature cactus pot plant decorating the cafe table by throwing it onto the floor, it also had to be stabbed a good number of times, back and front, with the beak first.

There was a crow commentary carried on throughout.  The noise was so varied and expressive.  At the end of a gravelly phrase when the bird seemed really put out by the food situation the voice would drop to a gurgling growling sometimes sing song series of notes.  This bird must have learnt to speak this way from interacting with a  human or human family. What a forceful presence!  Completely dominating his environment with noise and movement, constant enquiry  and fearless interaction with people.

My country friend observed maybe the crow was the ghost of some former inmate, a guy whose death had never been avenged, who had been knocked off by Roger Rogerson back in the day when Rogerson did time in Darlinghurst Goal.  So the crow persists.  Unweary cipher.

from the David Attenborough school of natural history, Darlinghurst division, MG
signing out for the evening,

stay lively  xx

Post #16 – New York New York

February 24, 2017 by MG 2 Comments

Posted in: Adventure, City, Letters from America, Travel

Letters from America

OK I have absolutely no reason to post this except maybe, I love it, and except maybe, I have some kind of cold or flu thing and I am stuck at home with the flu feeling sorry for myself.

And of course this is everything that Sydney isn’t in January! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRv7G7WpOoU

Casey Neistadt is a live wire.  He’s the one with the sunglasses.
The jaded New York  cops do a perfect cameo pretending to reprimand him and his accomplices…
You can see more of Casey Neistadt’s exploits on his youtube vlog, which he posted daily for about 18 months up to late last year.

Have a good day cyber friends.

MG xx

Post #15 – Adventure to the Shoalhaven River at Oallen Ford

February 17, 2017 by MG 2 Comments

Posted in: Adventure, Country, Letters from America, River

Letters from America

This week’s adventure was a visit on Wednesday 15 February 2017  to a crossing of the Shoalhaven River called Oallen Ford.  The crossing is far inland near the old town of Braidwood.  Braidwood itself is south east and about 70 minutes from Canberra.

The beauty of the Shoalhaven River is a bit of a secret, especially the deep gorges it carves inland.  Instead of coming here the tourists go up to the Blue Mountains for spectacular views of gorges, waterfalls and high rock outcrops.  Next time I will post some photos of the Shoalhaven Gorge.  Today it’s just the crossing at Oallen Ford.

Here is a picture of the old foundations for the crossing, which was just a causeway over the river you could drive across when the river was shallow enough.  You would be driving over the concrete base these foundations supported, through a few inches of water.
Here is the new bridge that replaced the crossing.  The bridge was opened relatively recently, I think in the middle of last year.

Can you see the little blip of human under the bridge in the river on the right?

That little blip is the wiry man in the photo below who had been panning for gold underneath the bridge.  We had a chat and he kindly fetched from his campervan to show me, the gold he had got in his panning the day before:  three grams.  He spread the flakes out in a pan for me to see.  They were lovely.

We had a bit of a yarn about working outdoors and how much more desirable it was compared to working in front of a screen all day.  He said it was hard to get a good return from panning these days because there are so many people doing it now.  He had a few places in Victoria though, where he could prospect reliably and he said he would take his van down into the high snow country soon.

You can of course, feel the serenity.

Here are a couple of snaps of me  The first one is me getting a bit of sunshine sitting on one of the foundation blocks in the river:

The second one shows me washing my hands in the river, which I don’t remember doing or why I was doing it.

I walked up the river a little way.  My gold panning friend had told me there was a lovely freshwater beach to be seen 500 metres or so along.  And yes there was a lovely beach.  I just regretted I hadn’t bought my swimmers.  I would have gone without clothes myself but I didn’t think it would really have been the right thing to do with the handful of gold fossickers dotted around the river front.  It would have attracted unnecessary attention.

Here is a picture of the beach outlook:

And a picture (a bit overexposed alas) of the shore across from the beach.  You see the line of grey material up on the ridge?  Its an impressive load of flood debris deposited high up on the bank.

Which brings me to floods.  Here is  a photo of the new bridge under water last year.  The bridge was designed to tolerate a one in twenty year major flood event.  And it seems to be doing OK  The bridge is five metres above the old ford so what we can see in this photo is a huge amount of water.  The Shoalhaven River was totally impassable on a routine basis and I understand that is why we don’t see much of any significant industrial or agricultural development or connections between inland regional NSW and down to Nowra, then further down to Bateman’s Bay.  Historically though the game sheepfarmers in the Braidwood and Goulburn regions did persist in using this road across the Oallen Ford down to the port at Jervis Bay, even in the face of the huge floods.  And back in the day, the road was called The Wool Road.

The road was being upgraded on the day we drove down, to widen the shoulders.  It was noticeable that the healthy looking blonde road sign workers we see in Sydney (the Scandinavian backpacker sex goddess types) were not manning the signs at the roadworks on the Bungonia Road to Oallen Ford.  The sign handlers we saw on the day were weathered blokes with semi sleeve tattoos or equally weathered women in hats and gear.

Probably the best thing about this adventure though was not the lovely river and the interesting infrastructure – old and new, and not the quiet but friendly gold panner either, but a completely unexpected thing.

While I was at the pebbly river beach I could hear a croak croak croaking bird call which sounded very familiar but which I could not pick.  So I followed the sound a bit further up along the river and spotted the source high up in a vast gum tree which had some scraggly dead branches coming out near the crown.  On one of these branches was a familiar silhouette – the perched Dollarbird, or simply “roller”.  The bird put on a short display of the beautiful rolling flight for which it is named, showing the white circle markings on its wing for which it is also named  (because the markings are reminiscent of the US silver dollar).

I didn’t get any snaps myself so here are two pictures from Google of the bird in flight:

So that was a very nice experience for me.  I did not realise these birds came so far south.  I had only known them to go as far as the Central Coast.  I had spent some time on the Central Coast intermittently in the past and had become quite fond of seeing these birds when they came in summer.  They very often perched on electricity wires along the road.  When you zoomed past them in the car you would only catch a brief glimpse.

Although they have this majestic habit of rolling flight they always seemed comic to me too. This is another photo from Google, of the bird in its very distinctive perching posture:

To me he looks a bit like a Sesame Street character with his eyes set way back on the side of his face.  Also the bristly aspect around his beak and chin is a bit Sesame Street, specifically Cookie Monster.  The really comic thing though is the colour of the beak.  The margin round the base of the beak is a bit indeterminate and it looks as though it’s one big squash of peachy colour on the front of the bird’s face.  Especially when you see the bird from the car flashing past.   It makes me think the bird has just had his face in a jar of apricot jam.  Joyful soul.

Beautiful sunshiny day trip adventure.  I look forward to more in the near future.
MG xx

Post #14 Saturday 10 December 2016 – Prior Art and West Side Story

December 10, 2016 by MG 3 Comments

Posted in: Adventure, Dance, Letters from America, Music, Travel

Letters from America

In the early days of my glamorous aunt I thought I should do a search to see whether anyone else had used that phrase before.

There really wasn’t much in the search results:  one or two desultory 1950s photos of a well turned out woman meeting the queen.  Right.

There was not much else –  except this old photo, which an American woman had posted on the death of her aunt at age 82.  Her post described the young woman in this photo as “my glamorous aunt”.  You can decide for yourselves.

 my-glamorous-aunt-with-cigar

For me it seemed this woman was totally my glamorous aunt.
She may only have been 19 or 20 but she had the drill.
She smoked that Cuban cigar with style, hamming it up to the delight of her 8 year old nephews (?)
She was wearing a satin outfit in the middle of the day and it worked perfectly well.
Or was it a swim suit?  Was she just doing her thing with the cigar and the children in the hot weather for the sake of it  – and the water and the swimming were entirely optional?

The scene in the photo feels to me like a  joyful slice of West Side story.

There is a Latin expressiveness about this image – the  lips, the weight on one hip, the theatricality of shoulders, and  the boys lean along a diagonal line just like a Hollywood male chorus from an another era.  It’s feels like a moment in a dance musical.  It feels like it could be Miami or Cuba or New York – it just feels alive.  I really like it.

Which reminds me that I like the Symphonic Dances of West Side Story.
If you are interested, in this clip the great man himself conducts – it’s probably too theatrical conducting for some tastes (but I say so what?  if you are the genius who composed it you can do as you choose):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srb2EyvTSGw&list=RDsrb2EyvTSGw#t=303

It may just be the Romeo and Juliet connection (West side Story _is_ Romeo and Juliet), but it’s the dance theme too.  So I can’t help connecting Prokofiev’s Dance of the Knights (the Montagues and Capulets).  It is popular dance music I really adore.
Here is a link:

 

Post #11 Thursday 24 November 2016 – A word from the sponsors…

November 24, 2016 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Letters from America, Pets, Urban landscape

Letters from America

Well this isn’t really a word from the sponsors but it is a post to mark a pause in proceedings.  As some of you know I wasn’t too well during the last week or so.  That means there wasn’t a lot in the way of action, adventure let alone one single post to the website.  Even my regular lorikeet visitors found it a bit testing when their human just lay inert in bed instead of leaping up in the usual way to provide the usual feasts.  Here is a series of pics of the lorikeets showing their concern.  One enquiring soul seeming to think the feasts could be behind the mirror:
lorikeets-no-1lorikeets-no-2lorikeets-no-3

 

So it was a dull time for me being unwell, but there it is.

I did some modest excursions though, just locally, when I thought I was recovering.  One for instance, involved going down to Rushcutters Bay through the laneways in Elizabeth Bay.  On that excursion I came across an interesting local parking sign of the sort I would expect to see in St Peters  rather than in Elizabeth Bay (where the demographic is 80% female over 70).   I mean how would the senior women reach up to make those prescient pre-election additions to the sign?no-stopping-trump

 I also made a short excursion down to Woolloomooloo using the Butler Stairs from Victoria Street down into Brougham Street.

butler-stairs-no-1

Butler Stairs are very pretty sandstone stairs, less well known than the more magnificent stairs at the end of Victoria Street, the McElhone Stairs.

butler-stairs-no-2 In  the time I have lived in the neighbourhood the landing in the middle of the Butler Stairs has been a preferred place for French backpackers, who lounge around there smoking, playing music,  and chatting in the afternoon and into the evening. Generations of French backpackers come and go and knowledge of the meeting place on the landing  just gets passed on time and again.  This enduring knowledge might perhaps be a modest local songline for Gallic wanderers.

butler-stairs-no-3-smaller

MG xx

Post #7 Monday 7 November 2016 – Summer evening

November 7, 2016 by MG Leave a Comment

Posted in: Harbour, Letters from America

Letters from America

On my evening walk tonight, a calm luminescent outlook.
Hope everyone is having a peaceful time before the US election.

bridge-and-opera-house-evening-7-november

 

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