Pretty darned useless

5 11 2006

I’m really not very good at playing pool, but my husband convinces me to play against him every so often. So this afternoon we dropped into the local pool hall and had about 7 games. Usual result – he won them all.

But to add insult to injury, he played one game wearing my glasses to “prove” that my problem was in my head and not my eyes (he won that one too), and *then* he played with his eyes closed! He’d line up his shot then shut his eyes. Guess what? He won that game too!

So frustrating… no wonder I don’t enjoy the game…





Weekends away should be compulsory

23 10 2006

Weekends away without mobile phones, computers, email, newspapers, TV, etc. should be compulsory. Add in two good friends, some brilliant wine and food, gorgeous spring weather, a delightful location, and you couldn’t ask for more to relax you and just chill.

We drove down to Bridgetown on Saturday morning with our friends, listening to a compilation of some great music from the 60s. The weather was delightful – quite hot, actually. After a detour to show them where we intend building (they were impressed!), we checked into the Bridgetown Hotel and had lunch. The hotel rooms (like the pub) have all been refurbished, and are very very classy. Minimalist – but classy. High quality materials and fittings, and a luxurious feel to them.

Lunch was as good as usual – the Bridgetown Hotel does a great feed! (We had a superb dinner there too on Saturday night, as well as a full breakfast on Sunday morning – it was all good!) The food’s not cheap, but it’s excellent quality, with great presentation, and big servings – the price doesn’t really matter under those circumstances. Oh, and breakfast was included in the room price.

After lunch we walked across the road to the Blackwood Valley Wine Show. What a bargain that was! $5 entrance fee got you access to 150 wines of the region – and all you could drink! You helped yourself from the bottles laid out on the tables, and could have as much or as little as you liked. Excellent nibbly food was also part of the deal, served by a couple of high school boys.

Our favourite reds (and we tried to stick to the local wines, not those from Margaret River or elsewhere in WA), were the Sunnyhurst 2004 Shiraz (gold medal), Killinchy 2005 Shiraz (silver) and our old favourite, the Two Tinsmiths 2004 and 2005 Cabernet Sauvignon (silver).

I’ve never been to such a casual wine show! The idea of helping yourself went out the door 20+ years ago in Perth, and no doubt, over time as it gets bigger, there’ll be much more control in later years. But it will be nice to say “Remember when you could come in and have as much great wine as you wanted in 3 hours for $5?”

There were quite of lot of people there, though it really was a small gathering compared to other shows we’ve been to. And the really neat thing was that we saw some people we know from Perth (now living part time in Bridgetown), who introduced us to others who we’d heard of but not met, who still live in Perth but get down to Bridgetown most weekends. So that’s increased the network of those we know in the area.

After the wine show finished at 4:30pm we walked back across the road to the pub (how convenient is that!), and had dinner there later that evening, followed by an hour or two of playing Euchre sitting out on the old upstairs verandahs (3m wide!). It had been hot all day, and there was a great thunderstorm while we were playing cards – thunder, lightning, heavy rain – the works! It was great!

On Sunday morning we had a late breakfast (fully cooked brekky too!), then went down to the farmer’s markets to buy some produce. Not much was left, so we got what we could, then headed out of Bridgetown and back to Perth.

Well, they don’t call the South West Highway the Harvest Highway for nothing! It took us about 5-6 hours to get back… we stopped at Wattle Ridge Winery near Greenbushes to pick up some cleanskins (the cleanskins are their 2004 Two Tinsmiths Cabernet Sauvignon), at Donnybrook for more fresh produce, at the Brunswick EziWay for bread (though they were out, so we got family pies instead), at Wokalup for HaVe Cheese, at Harvey for a light lunch (like we needed it – NOT!) and a wander around the gardens and river walk at Stirling’s Cottage. And then back to Perth laden with too much food, a lot of fresh produce, some wine, and a very relaxed state of being.

Highly recommended.





We got it at last

20 10 2006

Some 13 months since putting down the deposit on the 4400 square metres (about 1.1 acres) of land down south that we want to build on, settlement FINALLY came through on Thursday afternoon. Whoopee doo!

And we’re going down there this weekend with friends for the Blackwood Valley Wine Show – so it’ll be good to show them the property as they’ve heard so much about it from us in the past 12 months or so.





Some good news yesterday

6 10 2006

After more than a year since we put a deposit down on the block of land down south that we want to build on, I finally got a call yesterday from the real estate agent letting us know that titles should be released within 2 weeks. Yippee! Once we get that bit of paper we can start REALLY thinking about designs and planning and all that stuff… soil surveys, site surveys, architects/designers/builders, sustainable and accessible housing, and so on. We have no illusions about the building process and the time it is likely to take (probably around 2 years), and we’re very aware that building in the country is going to cost more than building a similar house in the city. But it’s what we want to do and where we want to live. And it was nice to get some good news after the stresses and angst of the past few months (a subject for some other time).

However, there is one fly in the ointment… Two weeks ago we found out that a developer has put in an application to the Shire to build a gravel quarry within sight and sound of our property! We are not happy about this on SO many levels, and have lodged our objection with the Shire, and every politician and environmental authority we can think of.





It’s a *very* small world!

5 10 2006

I met up with a first cousin of mine last night. Not unusual, you might think. But it was. We hadn’t seen each other for some 11 years (since our mutual grandfather’s funeral in Nov 1995, we believe), even though we live in the same city. Life somehow gets in the way, which is really no excuse, but that’s how it is. When we were kids, our respective families would share the kids – we’d go to them for a week of the school holidays and they’d come to us for another week. I guess it gave both sets of parents some time off parenting. So we sort of grew up with these cousins, and of all the cousins (not that there are many), my sister and I were closest to these ones on our Mum’s side of the family.

So how did we run in to each other?

Long story, but a guy I’ve known FOREVER married a girlfriend of mine some 15 years ago or thereabouts. She and I keep in pretty good contact and she told me her step-daughter (his daughter) was now 23 and a professional musician and was playing at a venue in Fremantle last night to launch her new CD. My girlfriend was going to be away so she asked if we’d like to go along and add some support. Which we did. This is not something we’d normally do, especially on a mid-week night.

And guess who was playing as a session muso in her band? My cousin! Really weird. Here are two very different branches of my life coming together in the one place – a place where we wouldn’t normally go – without either side knowing that there was a mutual connection.

Serendipity? Coincidence? I don’t think so…





Down south for the weekend

25 09 2006

We drove down south early on Saturday morning for the annual general meeting of owners of the place where we purchased our block of land. The meeting was a typical AGM, with certain personalities pretty obvious (every crowd has them…).

The meeting was followed by a sausage sizzle where we met some of our new neighbours-to-be. A nice crowd with quite a few common interests – we’re going to like living there!

Driving back to Busselton to stay overnight, I only saw 11 cars in the entire 75 minute trip! Reason: The Eagles were playing (and defeating) Adelaide in their elimination final!





I’ll give you “tweety bird”!

20 09 2006

I love the sound of birds chirping in the morning as I drift in and out of consciousness around 5am, preparing mentally for the day in front of me. And as spring is here and the mornings are getting lighter, the early morning bird chorus is a delight.

But what’s with a bird starting its song at 11pm??? And not stopping…

For some time now (not just full moon when I know some birds get confused with the amount of light), there’s this one bird nearby that wakes up sometime around 11pm and starts in on his/her song. Twitter, twitter, cheep, cheep. Delightful at 5am. Rage inducing at 11pm when I’m trying to get to sleep!

Grrrr….





What shifted in the universe this week?

8 09 2006

Something is happening in the Land Down Under…

We lost TWO massive Aussie icons and personalities this week – Steve Irwin on Monday, and today, Peter Brock. I know Pluto got downgraded from a planet to a “minor planet” or something equally insignificant in the past couple of weeks. But I’m not aware of any other shift in the universe that might have caused a ripple.

Both men were pursuing what they loved when they both died so tragically. And according to all news reports, both died instantly or damned close to it.

And both deaths have brought some web servers in Australia to their knees as people scrambled to verify the information that they heard or read about. I know that when I first saw mention of Steve Irwin’s death on Monday on News.com.au some 10 minutes after it was posted, the first thing I did was go to the ABC’s website to verify the information. Nothing there for about 2 minutes, then some 5 minutes later the website went down for at least an hour. As did the websites for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. Wonder how they’d cope if something REALLY big happened…

Losing these two icons so tragically and in the prime of their respective lives brings home the preciousness of life and the need to live every moment.





Laying low for a while

2 09 2006

Except for football and pretty general stuff, I’m gonna be laying low for a while and not posting much. Lots of personal stuff happening which is taking priority and most of my energy. Might write about it one day, but at the moment I can’t for all sorts of reasons, not least of which is anger.





Wixing your mords…

13 08 2006

Well, “mixing your words”.

Heard a good one the other day when a two-finger keyboarder was trying to say “hunt and peck” – it ended up as “hunk and pet”, which I think is *much* more interesting!