Love is for the Birds

Many of you will disagree that love is “for the birds”, assuming that you understand the term to mean worthless or trivial; however, if you met the birds at Belivah (our friend Roland’s district in Brisbane) you would see that I’m not knocking love at all. Peter and Pauline Scaly-Breasted Lorikeet are a couple wildly “in love” and they do everything together. They fly upon my knee (sonny boy) for a breakfast of bread; they hang about on the verandah when I’m painting (and almost get under my feet); and they wait patiently outside the screen door from the kitchen until someone decides to feed them. And when they’re not dining or seeking attention from the residents they sit in the frangipani trees and exchange sweet nothings in each other’s ears.

It’s no wonder I had to paint them. This could be the start of a new series. The smaller painting – a Christmas present for Mason (and much quicker to paint) – depicts a brightly coloured Rainbow Lorikeet, of which there are up to fifty or so who visit Roland’s feeding table every day.

The Discount and the Little Boy in the Rainforest

Chris and I were up at Mapleton on the Blackall Range (Sunshine Coast hinterland, Queensland) when I noticed a garage selling discounted petrol at under $1.30 a litre. I pulled in and Chris put $20 worth in the tank. I was prepared with my saved Woolworths receipt (over $30 spent) in my purse as I went up to the counter.

“Will a Woolworths voucher be alright for the discount?” I asked the heavily tanned and bearded Australian (not a lady!).

“No, sorry,” the man said shaking his head.

“Coles?” I asked. I had a Coles receipt too (it pays to be prepared).

“Nope,” he smiled.

“Well, how do I get a discount?” I persevered.

“Just spend a bit of money in the shop,” he said dryly.

It seemed he didn’t mind us leaving the car at the petrol pump while we did some shopping at the garage, which we thought was rather quaint.

“Let’s buy some bananas – they’re only $2.50 a kilo,” I suggested.

A few minutes later we returned to the petrol checkout with our receipt for a kilo of bananas (a girl served us at the grocery counter).

“How’s that? Good enough?” I asked, giving the bearded man my docket.

He looked at it and chuckled to himself.

“Is that alright?” I asked.

“Well, you’re supposed to spend $30 but I don’t suppose my boss will give me the sack – I’ve been working here for eight years,” he said with resignation.

Then the man produced a small package and placed it on the counter.

“Oh!” I said, thinking it was for me, “What’s that?”

“It’s my pie!” piped up the chap standing behind me.

Still laughing, we left the shop and got into the car, at last vacating the spot at the petrol pump.

Before long we reached  Mary Cairnscross Reserve and rainforest where first we stopped at a picnic table to have our lunch. Three bush turkeys fought for position on the area around our table and, ignoring Chris’s protestations, I answered their pleas with crackers and the fat from around the ham.

Some time later we were on a path deep in the rainforest when we met a very tall middle-aged lady accompanied by half a dozen children of primary school age. We guessed she was a child-carer, perhaps associated with a larger group we had come across earlier.

“Did you see anything in the forest?” asked a precocious little boy wearing a big sunhat.

“Oh, do you mean wildlife? I responded.

“We saw a snake,” he nodded.

“Oh no, we haven’t seen anything like that, but we were looking out for the small red wallabies we saw last time we were here. To be honest,” I turned to face the tall lady as I spoke, “my eyesight isn’t quite as good as it was…”

“Me too!” exclaimed the lady in her very deep voice. “My sight has got so bad that when I was in my paddock recently I thought I saw my little dog and I called out, ‘Darcy, come here boy. Darcy, come here!’. My daughter said, ‘Mum, why are you calling Darcy?’ And I said, ‘Because he’s there in the middle of the paddock.’ ‘No, Mum,’ she said, ‘that’s not Darcy – it’s a magpie!”

The children didn’t think it was as funny as we thought it was. On our own again a little while later Chris and I spied one of those red wallabies and a reptile – not a nasty snake but a lizard dozing on a log.

Father Christmas Scales the Verandah

Chris and I were out on the verandah, admiring the stunning sunset, here at Janine and Brad’s house when I noticed Father Christmas climbing up the outside of the verandah. I know, he’s not due to arrive just yet but the world is a big place and he’s pretty old. So don’t tell the kids that I’ve seen him on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast and pretend that you’re simply looking at some photographs of the stunning sunset yesterday.

T’igh Food

There has been a lot of excitement in Belivah recently – some of my fine-feathered friends from the country have had a taste of their first T’igh food!

 

Good Golly…

“Just thought I’d call to ask how everything is going, Sally,” said my friend Janine from Maroochy River (where I house sat recently).

“Oh, I’m fine,” I replied, “but I’m glad you called because I was going to call you. I’m afraid the painting of Molly isn’t very good.”

“I’m sure it’s alright Sally. You’re so good at painting animals. So long as we can recognise Molly’s face it will okay,” Janine was optimistic.

“No, I don’t think so. There aren’t enough pixels in the photograph and it’s too dark. I had to lighten it and then there wasn’t any colour left. Can you send me another photo of Molly?” I asked despondently. (I didn’t add that, to make matters worse, the printer at Roland’s place had run out of coloured ink!)

“Oh my goodness!” Janine gasped, “she’s a bit too old now. I’ll have to see if Mum has one on her mobile and I’ll send it to you.”

So that’s how we left it and I stopped painting frangipanis to look at the result of my failed attempt at painting Molly. I had spent two afternoons on the tiny painting to no avail – it didn’t even look like a dog to me – rather more like a koala!

I took the painting inside and propped it on the kitchen worktop where Roland joined me in appraising the unfinished painting.

“Maybe I can fix it up – perhaps if I alter the nose and lighten it,” I suggested.

“Yes, I think that might do it,” encouraged Roland, “and a bit more light under her nose. Truly though, I don’t agree with you that it’s like a koala. I can see it’s a dog.”

“Well maybe it’s not so much like a koala now,” I conceded, “but it bears no resemblance to Molly the dog, as far as I can make out from that dark photo Janine sent me. No, it’s more like an old man.”

“What rubbish!” Roland disagreed.

“But I’ve seen little old men that look like that!” I expostulated.

“That’s just because you live in Dawlish,” our old friend said dryly.

It took a second or two to consider what he had said and then I burst out laughing. To tell you the truth I’m still giggling to myself as I write this.

And if you’re wondering about the Little Richard song….

Good Golly Miss Molly Lyrics

from The Essential Tracks

New! Highlight lyrics to add Meanings, Special Memories, and Misheard Lyrics…
Play “Good Golly Mis…”

Good golly Miss Molly, sure like to ball.
Good golly, Miss Molly, sure like to ball.
When you’re rockin’ and a rollin’ can’t hear your momma call.

Good golly Miss Molly, sure like to ball.
Good golly, Miss Molly, sure like to ball.
When you’re rockin’ and a rollin’ can’t hear your momma call.

From the early, early mornin’ till the early, early night
You can see miss Molly rockin’ at the house of blue light.
Good golly, miss Molly, sure like to ball.
When you’re rockin’ and a rollin’ can’t hear your momma call.

I am going to the corner, gonna buy a diamond ring.
When she hugs me and kiss me make me ting-a-ling-a-ling
Good golly, Miss Molly, sure like to ball.
When you’re rockin’ and a rollin’ can’t hear your momma call.

SONGWRITERS
JOHN MARASCALCO, R. BLACKWELL

PUBLISHED BY
LYRICS © PEERMUSIC PUBLISHING

Read more: Little Richard – Good Golly Miss Molly Lyrics | MetroLyrics

 

 

Hell’s Teeth!

“Hell’s teeth!” Chris thought as he saw the little dog scamper under the table.

(Or perhaps he thought “Les dents de l’enfer!” because we were in Brittany, although I doubt that Chris is good enough at French to think of such expressions in that language.)

The incident happened a couple of years ago when we were staying with my brother-in-law Glynn and his wife Roly, and we were visiting some good friends of theirs from down the road. In hospitable fashion the friends had brought out a loaf of bread, various cheeses and some meat pâtés to accompany the wines. Unfortunately, the bread, which looked very wholesome and seedy, was, as it transpired, rather old and tough, and too hard for the delicate dentistry practiced in dear old England. This, we discovered only after taking out first bites (after which I quickly developed a nibbling and sucking technique); alas, Chris had already fallen foul of the devilish bread, which, in something of a “tug’o’war”, would not tear without taking one of Chris’s crowns with it. This I didn’t realise until a short time after I saw the little French dog run under the table and Chris shooing away the insistent dog away from his foot…

Having bent down to retrieve something from under his shoe, Chris caught my eye and revealed an incomplete set of teeth in his flashing smile; surreptitiously, he pointed at the disappointed dog and opened his palm to show me a crown, now all the more treasured because he had come so close to losing it to a hungry canine. Not that the dog was particularly partial to eating teeth, surely, he must have thought the crown was one of the large seeds in tough old bread to which he had become accustomed. And while all this was happening the group of delightful French folk chatted and laughed, and no doubt threw hard crusts of old seedy bread under the table. They may well have wondered why the dog was more interested in Chris’s shoe… for Chris didn’t tell the party about his little problem. Luckily English people have stiff upper lips, which come in handy when you’re trying to hide your missing crown!

Recently I have had cause to be reminded about Chris and his close shave. One morning at my brother Henry’s place I took my first bite of what I considered to be an innocent bowl of puffed wheat cereal when I felt something odd – a small movement in my mouth – and I soon realised that my new veneer had dislodged. Even smaller than a grain of puffed wheat,  the veneer rested atop a pink table-mat on Henry’s table cloth until I could think of a safe place to put it (and meanwhile I did the housework).

The top of the table was as shiny and clean as the the wooden floor when I suddenly thought of my veneer. Panic! All mats and table-cloth put away, surfaces done and dusted and no sign of anything remotely like a tooth. I put on my glasses and went down to floor level to search with a fine-tooth comb. Nothing. What did I do with the table-mat? At last, after much “chomping at the bit”, I decided to check the rubbish bag (only newly changed that morning)…

“Hell’s teeth!” I said to myself (with a slight Australian inflection because I’m in Australia) as I recovered the veneer looking like a piece of discarded puffed wheat. I daresay I was smiling to myself  with relief – no need for any stiff upper lip, I was on my own (and it’s not a front tooth!).

If You’re Into Pina Coladas and Being Caught in the Rain…

Inspired by recent experience, here is my version of a song similar to  “The Pina Colada Song”:

I am into my cycling, it is my daily routine
No matter the weather, we’re quite a hardy team
Now the clouds were aforming, as my breakfast went down
This was early this morning, but I didn’t even frown cos…

If you like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
You don’t mind getting soaked, you see it as a gain
If you like showers with your clothes on, it’s a joy and a jape
I may be peculiar, but for me it’s escape

Didn´t think about all the washing, well you know what I mean
Because me and my red bike, had fallen for the self-same alluring dream
We like looking at flowers, don’t care if you think we’re mad
We are into spring showers, can that really be so bad

Yes, I like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
Although I´m not into dead cane toads, being carried down the drain
And I’m rather worried about hailstones, in Oz the size can be great
And I don’t care for lightning, think we´ll plan our escape

So I didn’t wait with high hopes, in that beautiful place
I dropped the phone in an instant, I tried to keep up a pace
Had to leave the lovely lilies, and the ball-hunters too
And I laughed for a moment, because I already knew…

Luckily, I like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
And my feet in the water, as I ride over the drain
Taking off my sunglasses, because ahead I can’t see any shape
In the absolute downpour, that came with me, in escape

If you like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
You don’t mind getting soaked, you see it as a gain
If you like showers with your clothes on, it’s a joy and a jape
I guess you must be peculiar, if you call it escape

And now for Rupert Holmes “Escape”:

Lyrics

I was tired of my lady, we´d been together too long
Like a worn-out recording, of a favorite song
So while she lay there sleeping, I read the paper in bed
And in the personals column, there was this letter I read

“If you like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
If you´re not into yoga, if you have half a brain
If you like making love at midnight, in the dunes of the cape
I´m the love that you´ve looked for, write to me, and escape”

I didn´t think about my lady, I know that sounds kind of mean
But me and my old lady, had fallen into the same old dull routine
So I wrote to the paper, took out a personal ad
And though I´m nobody´s poet, I thought it wasn´t half bad

“Yes, I like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
I´m not much into health food, I am into champagne
I´ve got to meet you by tomorrow noon, and cut through all this red tape
At a bar called O’Malley’s, where we´ll plan our escape”

So I waited with high hopes, then she walked in the place
I knew her smile in an instant, I knew the curve of her face
It was my own lovely lady, and she said, “Oh, it´s you”
And we laughed for a moment, and I said, “I never knew”

“That you liked Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
And the feel of the ocean, and the taste of champagne
If you like making love at midnight, in the dunes of the cape
You´re the love that I´ve looked for, come with me, and escape”

“If you like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain
If you´re not into yoga, if you have half a brain
If you like making love at midnight, in the dunes of the cape
I’m the love that you’ve looked for, come with me, and escape”

Written by Rupert Holmes • Copyright © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc

“The Fishing Spot” and “The Mystery” ~ Two New Paintings

“The Fishing Spot” is an acrylic painting of Ashton’s Wharf at Maroochy River, Sunshine coast, which is where I used to walk to of a nice morning and return to for the beautiful sunsets of an evening. “The Mystery”, also an acrylic painting, depicts a young woman walking towards a hole in the tree-line, which just happened to be in the middle of the panoramic view from the verandah of Janine and Brad’s house where I house sat in Maroochy River; the hole in the trees fascinated both my niece Loretta and me – it drew us into the landscape.

“I know why it’s there,” said Loretta as we neared the row of trees with the hole.

But I’m not going to tell you the reason, you’ll have to look at the painting and work it out for yourself (just to make life more interesting!). I think Loretta looks very picturesque herself in her red hat and dress against the background of green – and she’s a bit mysterious, too, in that she is facing the trees rather than the viewer. Like my niece, look inside the hole and you will find the answer to the mystery of the hole.

 

Posted in Art

No Fish Today…

“Shall we pack it in then?” I asked.

“Let’s just have one last cast before we leave,” answered our fishing mad friend Roland from Brisbane.

“Righteo,” I agreed cheerfully, “but I think I’ll revert to the chicken giblets, even if they are a bit old now. At least they stay on.” (Well sometimes they do!)

When you’re staying with a fisher-person, and you enjoy fishing yourself, you simply have to make the most of fishing opportunities, which is what happened this morning. We agreed to make an early start and leave around seven in order to beat the heavy traffic heading for the city. I was ready at half-past six but we set off at about ten past seven. Being a tad later than planned made no difference at all – we still met the heavy traffic (which peaks between the hours of five to nine in the morning these days). It took an hour – twice as long as the non-peak time between nine and two o’clock – to reach my brother Bill’s place at Tingalpa.

“I don’t think you’ll catch anything at Wynnum,” commented my older brother with a smile. “I’ve never heard of anyone catching anything from the jetty.”

“We might be the exception,” I suggested and Roland acquiesced.

Out of curiosity Bill went down to the jetty with us and helped us carry the bait and tackle box.

“There’s not much water,” Bill observed, ” no more than six inches, I’d say.”

“Maybe there’s more at the end,” I offered and walked to the end.

I looked beyond the barnacles and oysters enjoying the fresh air from below the steps and was heartened to see that there was a little more water past the rugged rocks.

At last, after thirty minutes or so of pleasant banter but fruitless fishing we decided to pack up and try somewhere else.

“It might not be so windy at Gumdale Creek,” suggested Bill.

And it wasn’t. The tide was out but at least it wasn’t windy, and there was shade under the roofs of the specially designed fishing decks at the creek. The first, and best deck (owing to the cutting table and tap), was already taken by three fishermen so we had to make do with the less desirable one.

A couple of hours passed and there were cries of jubilation from the first deck. I looked across and thought I saw them landing a huge lobster…

“Is it a lobster?” I asked.

“No, it’s a tree,” one of the fisherman called back, “but it’s the first thing I’ve ever caught here!”

They were good-natured chaps – fisherfolk are usually nice friendly people – however, I suspected that they had lost heart. My suspicions were confirmed when they left a few minutes later. Roland and I seized the opportunity and dashed over to the prized first fishing deck with the big silver table for dissecting both bait and catches.

We dissected a few raw prawns, once fresh but now twice frozen and thawed; and some chicken giblets, long since fresh and frozen and thawed thrice; and some diced raw chicken breast (age unknown to me). We kept on sending out the bait into the middle of the creek, where it appeared deepest, and the water rose steadily, but still there were no catches. The lines tugged and the bait dissappeared yet no fish were tempted to take a good bite… not on small hooks, medium sized hooks, whale hooks or sneaky double hooks.

The sun burned through the sun screen cream on my arms and I was getting hungry when we became convinced that the creek was home to several gigantic and clever old mud crabs who were experienced at denuding any sized hooks of any old bait. And that’s when we were going to “pack it in”…

A moment later we heard some people coming along the bush track and a teenage boy appeared.

“You’re welcome to come here,” Roland beckoned with his hands outstretched to show our deck had a desirable big table, “we’re just about to leave.”

The boy was followed by another lad, a man and woman, and a stroppy girl.

“You’re welcome to come here because we’re going,” Roland said again, this time to the adults.

Before long pilchards were chopped on the table and three rods were cast out. The friendly adults were teachers from Darling Point Special School and the three teenagers were in their last year of school – they were on a school outing. In no time at all the teacher reeled in a Moses Perch, small but feisty, and the boy Matthew was rewarded with a bonny (and perhaps bony) bream just minutes later.

“Would you like to try our pilchards?” asked the kindly teacher.

“I was hoping you’d offer,” I laughed.

The same fat old crabs in the middle of the creek stole our fresh pilchard heads. Roland and I left before becoming any more frazzled. Sadly for us, we can’t say that there were no fish today. Actually, we were pretty chuffed that the kids were having such fun and success. On our way back to the car we looked at each other and said in unison, “Next time we’ll bring pilchards!”

And did you know there was a song called “No Fish Today”?

 

 

 

 

Kid Creole & The Coconuts – No Fish Today (Live) – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECX1I2xx8gQ

Aug 28, 2011 – Uploaded by parkhill62

Kid

Lyrics for No Fish Today by Kid Creole And The Coconuts

I’m sorry, Ma’am, No fish today (Oh lord, I’m poor What am I gonna do?

I got a child and a mother, Two little sisters and a brother, Don’t be cruel, It’s not like you) I’m sorry Ma’am, No fish today Well I sailed out on the sea With an early morning breeze Like I always have And the salmon came along But I ran into a storm Before I had my catch Well I got what I could get At the price of getting wet Then I headed back The Authorities agreed That if anyone should eat It should be the upper class (Oh lord, I’m poor What am I gonna do? I got a child and a mother, Two little sisters and a brother, Don’t be cruel, It’s not like you) I’m sorry Ma’am, No fish today I’m neither right nor wrong I am just another pawn In the royal hand Don’t expect me to rebel This is not a fairytale I’m no superman See I got to be this old Because I do as I am told And I understand Though they’d never miss the dent Of a half a dozen shrimp Why should I take the chance? (Oh lord, I’m poor What am I gonna do? I got a child and a mother, Two little sisters and a brother, Don’t be cruel, It’s not like you) I’m sorry Ma’am… Now if I were in your shoes I myself would find the food For my family So if all your people starve Then the fault’s not in the stars And it’s not in me I’m sorry Ma’am, No fish today No fish today… No fish today… No fish today…

What’s Not to Love About a Mason?

I was hanging out my washing when a very dashing Mason called around. It’s true that I was expecting him, however I was afraid he might not remember me after such a long time… But no, he smiled and I gushed with love, and we rushed into one another’s arms. We kissed and kissed – the feeling was entirely mutual – and then we went to the beach at Victoria Point for a bit of fun on the sand.

Like me, he wasn’t keen to walk in the sea (owing to fifty-million jelly fish at the water’s edge) so we held hands and simply enjoyed looking out to sea at the visiting dolphins. He wasn’t afraid, just sensible; he showed his bravery later when he chased off some large ibis birds. He wanted to impress me – I could tell – and soon I was duly impressed by his athleticism, his love of heights and his great skills of strength and balance.

Surely this Mason is a rarity? He is no ordinary “Worshipful Master” – he doesn’t have a funny little dark blue apron or a light blue apron, for that matter; he doesn’t have a secret handshake and he doesn’t spend lots of evenings out with “the boys”. He doesn’t give a darn about golf or crosswords. He’s not even an old boy…. Perhaps needless to say, my Mason is Roland’s four year old grandson and I love him.