“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!

Brush With a Prince

Well I don’t know if he was a prince or not but he was certainly too small to be a king… However, I didn’t fancy putting him to the test in the customary way… You see I just wasn’t expecting to meet him. I wasn’t prepared. You could say I was rather shocked even.

At the time of our surprise meeting I was packing up my art paraphernalia (on the move again – to Bill and Lita’s at Tingalpa, Brisbane); I picked up my brush bag and put my hand inside to open the bag… My hand felt something cold and clammy. I jumped. He jumped. I screamed and he croaked. The prince made a dash to the garden hose where he stopped, breathless, to gain his composure and have a little think about what was going on (obviously it wasn’t going to plan). He didn’t like the shrill edge to my voice, or the click of my phone camera, and he jumped behind the outside drinks fridge. Neither did he enjoy being prodded by a long stick, but I wanted to check him out.

I doubt very much that he was a prince (they are usually green and clammy rather than brown, clammy and warty – aren’t they?). I noticed that he eyed me up and down before hopping across the width of the verandah to the edge of the foundations where he found a hole and disappeared. I expect he had wished that a hole would appear to swallow him up, especially after realising that I was no fairy-tale princess!

And last but not least… A very Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year to you!

Get ‘Em Off!

“Get ’em off,” said a voice softly from inside the room I was passing.

At the time I was busy sweeping the floor in the corridor here at Charis’s house at Seventeen Mile Rocks (I still think it’s a funny name for a Brisbane suburb). I could hardly believe my ears.

“Pardon?” I asked, putting aside the broom and going through the open doorway.

“Get ’em off, get ’em off, get ’em off,” came the voice again.

“How rude!” I said going closer to the insistent fellow.

“Get ’em off!” his voice became higher as his frustration mounted and he got into a flap.

“Certainly not!” I answered indignantly.

“Of course I love you…” he said, and my heart melted.

“Of course I love you…” I mimicked.

“Of course I love you, of course I love you, of course I love you,” he repeated.

“I love you Sally,” I replied (even though I usually call him Gregory).

At this point he became unintelligible but his mood remained unusually affectionate so I stayed close to him, thinking he must be lonely for female companionship such as mine. And such was my good humour that I even let him lick my middle finger… thrice. His tongue was exceptionally long, if thin, considering his overall size, and he gently licked all around the top of my finger in a most pleasant manner.

“It seems we will be good friends after all,” I almost cooed and let my finger stroke his nose.

Then he bit me – not enough to draw blood (things are looking up!) – which is why I call Charis’s boy Lorikeet Gregory Peck!

“Of course I love you,” I said and went back to my brushing up.

 

 

A New Meaning to Candy Floss

“You look tasty,” I said to myself. At the time I was making my way to the counter at the “Discount Store” in the Hyperdome at Loganholme, Brisbane (where, for the princely sum of  $9, I was about to buy a nice wig for Lorelle, my childhood friend, to wear during our Christmas day party – hope she will like it!). Actually, I wasn’t talking about myself when I thought, “You look tasty” (in case you’re wondering); I was looking at a big bag of some of my favourite lollies from childhood. Now it’s not that they are exactly the most delicious lollies (or sweets, or candies – if you’re not from these here parts) in the world… but they are just about the most fun to eat. So I bought the bag for $2 (a bargain, only from the Discount Store) and I couldn’t resist opening them before even making it outside to the car park.

A sweet little girl saw me open the packet as I waited for Roland to come out of the ‘gents’ and she didn’t take her eagle eyes off of me – she knew what I was going to do… she willed me on… And Roland smiled when he laid eyes on me. And the little girl laughed into her hand up at her mouth. I gave her three winks as I passed her – I couldn’t talk because my mouth was well and truly full.

A bit later, after we had arrived at my brother Bill’s in Tingalpa, I was about to sit down with all the men out in the garden (my younger brother Henry, too, was there and also Rob and Ross, Bill’s friends) when I decided to bring out the old favourites.

“Want one of these?” I asked, offering the bag of lollies to Rob. Overjoyed, he went to take one and I added, “But if you take one you must put it on properly!”

He still took it. Ross took one also… and Bill. They kindly posed for photos and seemed not to object when I admitted that the shots would be broadcast around the world on my blog. Have you guessed what kind of lollies I bought? See if you are right….

The Birds (In Other Words)

Basics for Survival on an Island Called Coochiemudlo

It’s rather exciting to leave the mainland and head for a beautiful island – isn’t it? For those of you who are slightly nervous of anything out of the ordinary, here are some helpful hints to island survival (especially off the coast of Brisbane, Australia).

Firstly, you must be armed with a new pistol (only available on the mainland… priced very reasonably at all IGA stores). Be prepared to jump on the nearest available water transport, preferably the big blue barge, seeing as it’s more of an adventure to travel with vehicles (and cheaper!). But do not expect friendly banter from an old man in a wheelchair (not if he is engrossed in a book, anyway).

Learn to swim before embarking on your island incursion; failing that, do not wade out too far (and take off your best shorts as the water is tidal). Also, whilst on the beach take the opportunity to learn how to load your pistol and work out which way to hold the pistol (thumb on the trigger is not advisable).

Do not be frightened when one hundred chooks and ducks make a beeline for you as soon as you open the gates to the land of purple and pink railway carriages – the birds think you are bringing food (next time bring some stale bread). By all means observe large furry animals in cages but keep your gun handy…

Eat what the natives eat – there are plenty of ice-creams at the kiosk or at Red Rock Cafe – and do what the locals do (they seem to love swings, slides and jungle gyms – or is it Jungle Jim’s?).

By the way, as you will see from the photographs, it helps if you’re only three…

The Strange Sight of the Man With a Mower on the Beach

It happened on Coochiemudlo Island, South East Queensland…

A Poor Fish

 

Laughing cloudover Coochiemudlo

 

Coochiemudlo Island

 

 

 

 

 

 

The location – in the waters off beautiful Coochiemudlo Island.

The Skipper

 

 

 

 

The skipper – Cap’n Birdseye.

Note the double image – we had hit a wave.

My fish

The first fish – my big bream! My dinner!

Breaming with pride

 

 

The Captain’s grin… and his little bream. For the Captain’s table!

Flathead

 

 

 

 

 

 

The hammerhead shark – returned to the sea.

Half a fish

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Two big bites – firstly the bream, then the shark that took half of him!

 

 

Poor fish

 

Another skipper getting ready for departure

 

 

Waiting to come back in to land at Victoria Point.

 

 

 

And after the gutting, scaling and decapitation…

Veggie dinner

I couldn’t fancy eating fish for dinner. Next time they’re going straight back into the sea.

 

A Bird in Your Ear

Roland really is a bird-man (not like the one in the miserable film called “Birdman” which I saw on the plane – well, I didn’t like it); no, our friend doesn’t attempt to fly but he is beloved by the bird population of Belivah, Brisbane.

A mother magpie with her chick (which sounds like Sweep from the old “Sooty” show) calls around at breakfast time for tidbits of bacon rind, and then again at dinner time for steak fat or chicken gristle (umm, lovely!). No bomb-diving from this attentive mother – she knows which side her bread is buttered. Throughout the day they don’t fly far from their beautiful woodland home – they flit happily from one shady bough to another, walk on the lawn or cool down in their special bath.

In the afternoon a butcher bird first sunbathes on the railings, then he flies through the open verandah and onto the boughs of the white frangipani tree; Roly knows the butcher bird’s antics and the butcher bird waits for the bird-man to respond. He goes to the fridge and finds a bite-sized morsel, prepared earlier, and throws it to the waiting recipient. The butcher bird catches the meat in his beak and Roland smiles to himself.

The rainbow and scaly-headed lorikeets descend in a huddle on the outside table where some stale bread, softened with water, looks delicious; then a pair, very much in love, fly off for some privacy in the perfumed boughs of the frangipanis… Roland calls them “the lovebirds”.

A Dog’s Dinner

Actually, yesterday’s visit to Vanessa and Kendall’s house wasn’t a dog’s dinner in any sense – we had a lovely afternoon tea of cheeses and biscuits – but Roland’s sister and her daughter happen to have four dogs between them… Hector, the young Staffordshire opportunist, amused us by taking his place at the table whenever a chair became vacant. His antics did him no good (except to draw attention to himself), whereas Boris’s more subtle tactic of leaning against my leg and licking my foot was a tad more successful. Ssh…