Monday, February 9, 2015

THE EARTHRISE DIARY (Jan/Feb 2015 incl part Dec 2014)


THE EARTHRISE DIARY (Jan/Feb 2015, incl. part Dec 2014)

DON DIESPECKER

© Text, Don Diespecker (2014, 2015); guest writers retain their ©.

Survived a robbery yesterday, held up at gunpoint, but we are unharmed, praise God, and my car was not stolen either.

Julie Craig: Email, January 6 2015.

I'm just happy that through the turmoil, e.g., wars & upheavals & moves of our lives that Mum and Dad treasured the slides & letters and I’m glad they printed out so well!
Louise Diespecker Lee: Email, February 2 2015.

CHARIVARI
December 2014. Scrambling, A Sort Of Monologue:
It’s been a long day and I’m skulking about at the end of it the ancient caretaker tottering through the sunset gardens noting the darkening foliage the sky all grey-black near the hastening twilight and the Polaroids still on while nursing a health issue and dusk within minutes will be a solace. Lots more cloud now. I lurch on further and to the house intending to view some TV News only minutes away. I ease out of my work boots. I arrange the pillows. I lie down gratefully. I click the remote hopefully. Sigh. This feels good: it’s just the best place for me to be, luxuriantly, calmly, close to relaxed and pleasingly far from any reality that’s notably taut or at all stressful; healthy old age is great and old age with demanding side effects considerably less than great. Soothed I sit up a little and unwisely glance through the bedside window seeing the green foliage going black in shadows the river slipping by grandly the blur of an image moving bulkily over the bridge or is that two or maybe three moving images of hulking small cattle those recent arrivals in the Deer Park paddock across the road the miniature cattle the daring Dexters? Alas and ye gods it is indeed the undersize Dexter Cattle like strange and pushy little ghosts in the half light searching and having made it to the far side of the river and now apparently returning bellowing annoyingly as in, Now that we’ve bridged our way to the other side of the river what shall we do next? Bellow louder? Yes of course bellow louder. Sigh. It’s the chutzpah Dexters that seemingly punch above their weight. Don’t panic it’s not worth it. Remain calm. Where’s my disappointing smart phone with that dodgy battery I was sold as being new and is there enough juice in it to call the owners of the dynamic mini herd: had I charged the damn thing sufficiently? Yes I had. I leave a message. Breathing carefully so as not to disrupt the relaxed pace I’d been about to get used to I rise delicately and slide back into the work boots once more the pulse shifting a notch to rev me up just a little and with pressure in the old pump increasing too of course. Downstairs again I totter breathing and re-breathing air most recently breathed by myself and heaven knows who else presumably also the cattle and when you think seriously about it there’s every reason to suppose that the air that repeatedly we all breathe has been similarly used and re-used for an awful long time by almost anyone you can think of: by friends, enemies, family, lovers, notables of all shades by the hundreds or thousands like assorted Borgia’s or Ptolemy, Hitler, Winston Churchill, Stalin and sundry others springing to mind in light fading at warp speed, air for heroes air for villains. Oh. Oh I say! Yes curse there’s one of the little beasties head down snortingly and actually pawing at the turf my turf my Big Lawn the sacrosanct green grass of home! It’s nothing less than a standoff! Ten thousand devils and what bad timing and what nerve and such annoyance all of it mine because once upon a time I’d perhaps had a yen to be the cape guy in a bullfight having read Hemingway’s Death in the Afternoon and here it’s already early evening and matador man or should that be toreador far from ready and entirely without cape. Could dash back and dig out the old doctoral gown recently rediscovered in the closet the grey silken parts moth-holed in places the maroon gown not quite the right shade of red though it might very well be of a colour that would nicely soak up blood preferably not mine and me without a sword and though my delightfully fashioned and somewhat medieval doctoral black bonnet might suit me dashingly the young bull if that’s what it is and twilight turning dark now and my uncertainty of the Dexter’s gender the four footer might very well see me as enemy of the herd. What to do? I drag out the recalcitrant phone and find the right number and call the owners and leave a message and when next I look up the Dexter has neatly vanished perhaps to rejoin the restless rest of the Dexter Mob. Though I look about warily and searchingly there’s no further ranging on the Earthrise spread. I shake my head wonderingly. Is the herd again together in the road and dodging traffic and is this my lucky day or what? The faltering phone coughs up a text. The owners a la the cavalry are on their way. I withdraw backwards advancing steadily to the rear my steely gaze scanning the murk my brain’s visualization department cutting in positively with scenes portraying myself now gliding not scrambling slightly more cheerily whilst steadily making an unbloodied return to my bed.  
January 10 2015. Sort Of Flying, A Kind Of Monologue:
I’m seeing a most peculiar something while sitting at the belvedere at breakfast time: winged insects I think falling or maybe even tumbling in sunlight over the river like well lighted specks of amber-colored snowflakes perhaps falling whilst also seemingly flying from side to side and round about. And I’ve even been trying to photograph some of this odd action. I haven't been smart enough to explain it though. And there’s no-one else here to confirm this so it’s truly what I’ve been seeing and yes, my vision for objects moving or not moving and at some distance is as good as anyone’s and possibly because too, I’ve also had two cataract ops and I can see insect silken strands probably initiated by spiders and see them at a distance and I’m pretty sure many my age simply couldn’t see that see what I’ve been seeing: I don’t mean to seem demeaning or to boast: it’s just that my eyes have been seeing quite splendidly since May 1929 and before the New York Stock Exchange Crash and before the Empire State Building was built and in the year Erich Maria Remarque published All Quiet on the Western Front and the same year Thomas Mann won the Nobel Prize for Literature remembering too that 1929 was the year Anne Frank and also Martin Luther King were born. I have old eyes that also are well-seasoned eyes and I assure you I can see the snow-like flying blobs falling from somewhere above. None of this is hallucination benign or otherwise.  These moving blobs are also decidedly alive! Whether or not the blobs are also again rising up I cannot determine from here at this time.  All of what I can see is at an altitude of maybe 8-10-m over the water: the action seems to be non-existent beyond 10-m of altitude. Is that not strange?  Nature can always be relied on to provide surprises for us to see and ponder and Earthrise surprises are frequently presented: one need only be present, eyes and ears open, nostrils flaring, the quiet bio-machinery of the brain as alert and as ready to respond from the un-lighted and unseen (at least by this seer) universe between the ears. And now by way of ending this visual memory days after beginning it I add another two incidents of aerial gymnastics that are free of artifice or exaggeration and for the record: I have seen in these last days of January 2015 first a duo of white butterflies bobbing in the light close to the belvedere and against the background of the river still high after a near flood: the butterflies moved so fast and so energetically that they compelled my viewing and having already seen prior to this spectacle no less than three white butterflies together bobbing, moving at tremendous speed whilst also traveling laterally through the trees between here and the house in brilliant light. You might think that such accomplished flying up and down and from side to side and around about while also navigating across the garden could only be accomplished without collisions of any kind by creatures having wonderfully complex and efficient central nervous systems akin to the ones used by us humans but of course these beautiful little insects simply do not have such equipment and we who do with our great big bulging bicameral brains could not do any of those aerial gymnastics because we’re just not that competent to do so yet we tend to see ourselves as perhaps the smartest beings in the known universe. Isn’t that odd?  I so much enjoy these natural wonders and mysteries. Please don’t tell me if you’re able to explain these phenomena. Thank you.
January 13 2015. Seeing Connections:
Ants use the black PVC so-called poly-pipe the one laid out presently that’s conduit for river water that I pump up to my storage tank except that the ants probably aren’t thinking (if they’re able to) water, they seem simply focused on travel, on transporting themselves, on Getting There and to some specific location rather than wasting time struggling aimlessly to get Somewhere Else but I’m guessing now. It’s pretty clear to me that these ants are purposeful: they’d probably suffer anxiety were they to sit around drinking the ant equivalent of coffee: they’re always busy, always active. And not forgetting that if you and I were ants wanting to travel from A more or less to B we might be faced with what frequently would look like insuperable difficulties and, being ants, would probably feel obliged to shrug that off and to then press on regardless. Blades of grass would be hindrances; fallen leaves and twigs would have to be surmounted as if huge logs, and tiny puddles following rain would require our either walking on water or taking the long way around: the tiny ants are smart enough to use human artifacts for convenience and to save their precious time. Although ants surely don’t have the elaborate biological equipment we humans possess they surely know a good opportunity when they see one and a black plastic pipeline from the perspective of ants is a happily convenient Super High Speed Highway. The ants know how to use such highways and perhaps have in mind neural maps that enable their accurate journeying across vast local grass forests (i.e., the Earthrise lawn). Perhaps they use the sun as a reference point or possibly the pipeline on the grass as platform provides enough viewing height for the ants to see the way ahead simply because the pipeline (or the antline?) provides clear or certainly clearer lines of sight. And I have yet to see one of the ants fall off these smooth plastic highways. How can I move the pipeline when I need to and what do I do if the highway is heaving with ant traffic? Perhaps I’ll be able to move my pipeline without mishap and injuries when the little insects are asleep? They surely sleep occasionally? I’ll have to be quiet and very careful. For all I know the ants might have watchmen or guards, big bull ant cops, Security. Then what will I do? 
January 29 2015:
This is an important day for me: Dad’s memoir, “Bear Fat,” is at last published as an Amazon/Kindle eBook and because I edited its several parts the book is included in “my” list (the 20th of such books) at the end of this Diary and with my thanks to Kerry Smith who enabled this while electronic communications (those on the other side of the Pacific rather than on these shores) were wobbly and when also masterful electronic wrestling of the cover title was needed to enable clear and unimpeded images of the family seen in the (1903) cover photo. That old photo is itself remarkable (a miniaturized version is included in the book’s metadata) because it shows the images of a sizeable number of the 500 guests who posed or were poised for the photographer in the Adstock House (UK) gardens on August 3 1903, in much the same time that the Wright brothers were creating aeronautical history. The author of the memoir, then not quite seven years old, scowls wildly in the right hand corner of the photo. I imagine each of those many people pictured would have had their own stories to tell, too. (See a larger reproduction of this crowded scene in the previous Diary {Nov/Dec 2014}: Rudolph Diespecker (1858-1920) and Elizabeth Diespecker (1867-1928), my paternal grandparents, are seated in deck chairs in the gardens of their new home, Adstock House, Buckinghamshire, UK together with four of their sons in front of them (bottom right corner of group), Denny (1892-1948), Louis (1895-1969), Durbyn (1896-1977) and Jean (1898-1959); (Dick, the fifth son, 1907-1973).
I remind myself that these have been the second edits for this eBook following edits I made in the 1990s when first transcribing Dad’s manuscripts. Musing on these past events I also remind myself that both Durbyn Charles, my father, and my mother, Grace Kerr Singer (1898-1974) were born in the old Transvaal of President Paul Kruger when the Transvaal was also known as (English translation), “The South African Republic” and also as “The Transvaal Republic.” In those times the Transvaal was one of the two so-called “Boer Republics,” the other having been the Orange Free State and that on October 11 1899 the Boer Republics declared war against the British. My mother’s parents were both Scots; Grace’s father was a building contractor (both my grandfathers were contractors who spent most of their lives in South Africa). When the Second Boer began the Diespecker boys and their mother embarked for the UK (initially to Glasgow and relatives) as did the Singer children and their mother, Sarah, who similarly left South Africa and traveled to Scotland for the duration: neither family were aware of the other. 
January 31 2015. It’s the last day of January; already a twelfth of the year has rushed wetly by. Saturday afternoon. The sun shines on the full river: there’s been an impressive rise following thundery showers these past days. Dad’s memoir is available ‘live’ on the Amazon/Kindle websites. Such a busy rainy month for me: this and that difficulty, especially the necessary readings and re-readings of the Bear Fat text. Those writings began in 1950: I’d asked Dad would he please write some of our family history; there was so much of it and it was always puzzling for me to figure out who was who. I was 21 and poised for Europe, that rite of passage Big Trip; Durbyn was 54, he and Grace settled at home in Durban, my sister, Deirdre, married and living nearby with husband Alex and their daughter, Julie (and later with their son, Christopher, born in 1951, by which time I was in Europe). Dad said he would begin writing; I knew that he would: so much of his life had been transparent and good to read about and he would explain who was who in that greater family of many cousins. 
The text isn’t as long as one might imagine: DCD had lived in the UK and in British Columbia as well as in South Africa and he was the only one of the five sons (four of them born in South Africa) who also died in South Africa. I know that some of what was not written about in the memoir would have filled several long books because over about ten years of my digging through the family’s history I learned quite a lot about that history, some of it discussed in other of my books.
I raise my glass. I make a toast to Durbyn, to my mother, Grace and to my sister, Deidre, all of them now having departed (each in South Africa). I hold the chilled glass close to see the beaded bubbles rising. I squint through the glass one-eyed seeing the Valley’s blurred green forests as cold misted bands of color, the Bellinger’s white water rapids in front of my house, the downstream view rippling blue and waving through the frosted glass. I reflect on all the conversations we now could never have. From the windows I watch the brown fruit pigeons in the bleeding heart leaf trees next to the house. The sun is shining this late summer afternoon; Barber’s violin concerto plays on the radio; the river runs by.   
February 3 2015. Wet Walking: Tuesday morning is dark and rainy. I like dark mornings, they’re good practice for starting everything in the dark. Getting up and out of bed is easy. I know by touch where my stuff is and get dressed easily: and no falling over or staggering. Dressed, booted, downstairs I go with great care. The curtains are dull white in the murk and I open them all. Just one tablet these days that eases my otherwise taut plumbing taken an hour before breakfast; shaving whilst watching early light growing and glowing upstream, shaving without any mirror; time to hear five minutes of the ABC RN News, those running the Government in an inexplicably weird reality, collective elephants in all their rooms and who would be a Canberra politician, not for all the tea in China; a nice prayer for this place in this troubled time in this troubled world and away I go through the wet grass and the wet gardens a fine drizzle falling; the 2-m high dahlias doing their best having been unattended for more than a year and now finally tied, supported and now magically flowering. I put up my Parisian umbrella the little one telescopic because it’s light, easy to carry and it keeps most of me dry. Were I to call this piece something it would be Gardens in the Rain a title I like and puts me in mind of Debussy of course and France Long Ago. Walking down crunching the metal road to the bridge and across no traffic just me and the French umbrella the drizzle heavier quickly and turning light rain so I’m walking in low cloud such that were I above up at Dorrigo say I’d be looking down here into the valley seeing only a sea of settled cloud yet there’s sun shining somewhere and as I crunch along in the Wet the horses in the big Happenstance paddock look up and stare longer than usual I suppose seeing the dripping umbrella all the horses dripping too and the same nags otherwise used to seeing me funny how things French now toy with my memory thinking of Paris that last time with cousins Jill and Gene going to the museums the galleries the expositions especially the Pompidou with that bursting roomful of Gauguin pictures I know so well all bright and glowing with life but the place lamentably closed for renovations and here and now I’m wondering does Gauguin go with Debussy not that it matters in this murk anyway the horses near up to their withers oddly like brown misted barrels rolling through tips of paddock grasses on this drippy morning watch out for the occasional car coming downstream or should I say down the road heading right at me or maybe they’re used to seeing me most mornings just stepping aside to the verge that Council mowed only yesterday but not much not comprehensively in front of my place too many hazards there like that unsuccessful roadside concreted drain of a ditch sort of a light that failed if you think of it in an abstract way oh those abstract painters no not any I’m fond of I’ve always preferred painters that make sense like Renoir like Monet and I recall now going out to Giverny in the summer the house and the gardens and hold on it’s still summer right here in the everlasting present though it doesn’t look it now there’s only gloom and the cloud-shrouded shape of the high ground misted so I wonder who might make a fist of painting that right here right now maybe he of the golden haystacks and the water lilies Paris so filled with paintings what a feast this wet day reminding me of sunlight far away in the everlasting beauty of my favorite city finding in my mind now Monet, Manet on a good lawn, Gauguin, Bonnard and Sisley and Signac and Seurat, Pissarro too and as well Utrillo their pictures their paintings and not forgetting for a moment Toulouse-Lautrec and Cezanne and Vuillard oh hello I don’t entirely remember getting all the way down to Richardson’s or even returning without noticing but strongly suspect I did anyway whether noting my passage or not noting a bloke can get carried away on mornings like this: days of thin rain oh yes that’s right the horses seen again seen twice rolling the river’s direction all dripping all brown as wet barrels.      

FAMILY HISTORY

See A BRIEF LOCATER also APPENDIX A (Transcription of 1990s Notes by the late Joan Evard-Ray (1916-1995): Our Great-Great-Grandfather Carly, her family and the Atherden family) (In THE EARTHRISE DIARY NOV/DEC 2014).
APPENDIX B: (Transcription of Joan’s Notes on Our Great-Great-Grandfather William Bradley).
William Bradley was the son of William and Sarah (Durbyn?), born March 14 1796, baptized at St Matthew, Bethnal Green, April 10 1796; married at St Bartholomew, the Great West Smithfield, London, December 12 1819, died at Milnthorpe, Westmorland, November 14 1878. He was the Mayor of St Alban’s, Hertfordshire in 1868 and was a JP. He married Ann Thompson born October 17 1797, baptized at St James, Bristol (Somerset).
William had a brother, John who according to a family story made and lost a fortune in the tin mines in Cornwall and had a sister Sarah Mary who married: (Arnold?).
You will see on his marriage certificate his father William and either his mother or sister, both Sarah, signed. I saw the registers of St Matthew’s Bethnal Green but the only other Bradley was a John, I can’t remember if it was for a marriage or a child’s birth, perhaps old Williams brother, hence his son John, too.
Ann Thompson’s baptism at St James Bristol couldn’t be traced; it may perhaps have been at an outlying parish. Their children were:
1.     Maria Phillips b 4 September 1820 m a Robinson of Doncaster, nearly all of her sons were doctors or dentists. She was the nigger in the woodpile as far as great grandfather Edmund was concerned! There was a “cousin Frost” referred to so often by Harriett, though I don’t know where she came in, who left Edmund some money but Maria apparently objected and it was put into Chancery and he saw none of it.
2.     William b 10 December 1822 died 25 July (?) through an accident, buried at Norwood Cemetery.
3.     John George b 28 December 1823 d 5 April 1844, buried at Norwood.
4.     Eliza Eleanor b 10 March 1825, d 2 January 1902, baptised St Leonard’s Shoreditch, buried Burton, Westmoreland, married William Stagg.
5.     George Augustus b 30 September 1826, drowned October 1833.
6.     Harriett Kelsel b 26 December 1827, d 17 January 1859, buried Norwood Cemetery, married Joe Foster of Doncaster. Joe Foster pops up several times. After Harriett’s death he married her younger sister, Emily, as it was illegal at that time to marry your deceased wife’s sister they were married in Switzerland. Also, in the 1851 Census records he is listed in Edmund’s household as a warehouseman aged 20.
7.     Edmund Durbyn b 24 March 1829, Wilmer Gardens, baptised St Leaonard’s, Shoreditch, d 29 November 1897, buried West Street Cemetery, Durban.
8.      Natal, had married Elizabeth Marry Atherden Carly at St Giles, Camberwell, 10 October 1850.
9.     Henry b 6 March 1831 baptised at St Mary’s Newington, buried Wanganui, New Zealand. I don’t know whom he married: he had two children, Meredith and Emily (who married an Alec McNeill, his father was a Sir John McNeill, an equerry to Queen Victoria; his daughter, Ena McNeill, married the Duke of Argyle and became the stepmother of Victoria’s daughter, Louise. They don’t concern us of course.
10.  Emily Ann b 16 September 1836, baptised 9 April 1837 at St Mary’s Newington; married Joe Foster, referred to above.
11.   Frederick Augustus b 27 November 1841, baptised at St Mary’s Newington, died in Durban March 1917, had married Phoebe Olney. He was an engineer on the Natal Government Railways in Pietermaritzburg. He had also been in the United States, their only surviving son, Herbert, stayed on there and married and had a son, Frederick; they were in Trenton, New Jersey. Frederick and Phoebe also had a small son, Augustus who died having had haemophilia from Phoebe’s side of the family and a great grandson in Johannesburg who also had haemophilia and had died when he was six or seven. I saw the original of William’s will at Somerset House: he left personal effects valued at under 4,000 pounds and a codicil leaving Frederick (above) an extra 1,000 pounds, presumably to equal the 1,000 pounds he gave to Edmund and Henry when he kicked them out, having said he would not leave them anything in his will! He also had shares in the Suez Canal Company!
I am surprised to see I haven’t Edmund’s birth certificate; however, I saw the entry of his baptism in St Leonard’s, Shoreditch on microfilm at the Guildhall Library where his father was registered as Gentleman. Last time I was in England in 1986 I spent my time between Guildhall Library in London and Canterbury Cathedral Library where I found all of the Atherdens!
APPENDIX C (Transcription of Joan’s NOTES on Our Great Grandfather Bradley’s Family):
Edmund Durbyn Bradley b William Gardens 24 March 1829 baptised at St Leonard’s Shoreditch, London, (died 29 November 1897, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, West Street, Durban, Natal had married Elizabeth Mary Atherden Carly, b 19 March 1829 at 7 Bolingbroke Row, Walworth, London, d 3 March 1882, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, Grahamstown, Cape Colony). Their children were:
1.     William, b 78 Wood Street, City of London 22 November 1851d 28 December 1885, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, King Williams Town Cape Colony. He was a true Cockney (Wood Street is right opposite St Mary le Bow so he was definitely born within the sound of Bow Bells. Wood Street was flattened in the Blitz (just a church tower was left standing in the middle of Wood Street (I’ve forgotten which church).
2.     Sarah Eleanor b at 9 Parsonage Road, Newington Butts, Surrey 16 April 1854, her grandparents Bradley’s home, died at Grahamstown, 21 September 1862 of diphtheria, buried at the Wesleyan Cemetery, Grahamstown.
3.     Mary Alice b De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, Surrey 9 March 1856, d Grahamstown, 14 August 1862, diphtheria, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, Durban.
4.     Harriett Foster b De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, Surrey 13 September 1859, d Durban, 14 December 1932, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, West Street, Durban.
5.     Edmund Dane b on board RMS DANE at sea 9 degrees 5 mins North& 18 degrees 54 mins West 22 June 1862 d of typhus fever (typhoid fever?) 17 March 1873, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, Grahamstown.
6.     Ann Elizabeth b Grahamstown 11 May 1867, married 1 December 1890 Rudolph Solon Diespecker (stated as Louis Rudolph Diespecker on marriage certificate) b July 5 1858, died Wynberg, (Cape Town) 25 May 1920). Elizabeth died Victoria, BC, Canada, February 29 1928.
7.     Frank Atherden b Grahamstown 12 February 1870. (Harriett would never talk about him but I found out from an old letter that he was committed to Town Hill Mental Hospital, Pietermaritzburg and had apparently lived out his life there. He could have been only about 26 years old as it was in his father’s lifetime. Now perhaps it would have been something that could have been dealt with without sending him to ‘Maritzburg).
Appendix D (Transcription of Joan’s NOTES on her Grandmother McGregor’s family):
Harriett Foster Bradley married 28 February 1883 at Commemoration Chapel, Grahamstown to Alexander McKirdy McGregor b Rothesay, Island of Bute, Scotland 32 October 1852 d 9 December 1889, buried Wesleyan Cemetery, West Street, Durban. Harriett died 14 December 1932 buried Wesleyan Cemetery, Durban. Their children:
1.     Edmund William McGregor b King Williams Town 13 December 1883 d 11 January 1940, buried (as above), married 14 April 1910 to Frances Elizabeth Imeson. Their children, William Alexander Thomas b 11 April 1911 d 19 July 1972 (two sons and I daughter Phyllis Doreen b 27 January 1916 d29 October 1987 (7 sons and I daughter: Ray Doris b 8 December 1920, 2 sons).
2.     Alexander Durbyn Bradley McGregor b London 21 November 1885 d 20 January 1952, married Mildred Elen Nimmo b 14 October 1916; their children were Trelss b 19 January 1918 d 22 March 1943; Atherden (Den) Nimmo b 3 October 1919, I son and 1 daughter; Milton b 11 July 1928 d August 1928; Llpyd b 8 May 1929 d 2013 (two daughters, Trelss and ?); Alexander Hay b 11 March 1934 (?)
3.     Jane Eleanor Atherden McGregor b Thomas Street, King Williams Town 20 July 1887 d 7 December 1888, King Williams Town
4.      Harriett Foster McGregor (Buntie) b King Williams Town 20 May 1889 d 11 August 1970 at Durban (Married 21 June 1911 to René Schneider (name changed to Evard Ray, René’s two grandmother’s names, b 1 June 1883 died Lourenço Marques, Mozambique 16 April 1916). Their children: Alphonse Durbyn Alexander (Alex) Evard-Ray b Durban 27 April 1912 (d?) and Joan Madelaine Evard-Ray b Durban 18 March 1916 (d Kloof, Natal, 1995).


CREATIVE WRITING

LOST PATIENT 117
KERRY SMITH
It’s just plain bad luck or good luck, depending on your point of view.  There are many of us who have aortic aneurysms and most don’t know about it until the aneurysms burst or rupture which is usually fatal.  I was just lucky that my dentist was upgrading her records about ten years ago and when she heard I was suspected of a heart murmur as a child she refused to clean my teeth until I had that checked out.  It turned out not to be a heart murmur but a bicuspid aortic valve (two flaps instead of three) that was giving a ‘different’ sound.  One percent of the population suffers from this glitch and many have to have the valve replaced when they get older because it wears out or causes leakage.  My valve is fine but the physicians discovered that the ascending part of the aorta was enlarging (an aneurysm). Regular checkups over the past several years have revealed that it was getting bigger until early this year it had grown to 53-mm diameter, the point at which the medicos think something should be done. I have had an ascending aortic aneurysm cut out and replaced by a cylinder of Dacron.
They lost Patient 117 today: he had vanished from his room and no picture to show to the new nurse that has been searching for him for most of the afternoon. He must have slipped out. Absconded. Signed off.  Released him-self. Either way he's gone.  
Can't blame him really. Hospital’s not a place to hang around. It's not a homely sort of environment. So many changes of staff that you no sooner get to know their names and there's a new team being handed over. You form a brief relationship then they're gone; bring on the new as they plug you into the machine for your "vitals".
They change shift at 7.30-am and again at 7.30-pm. The handover takes place in front of the patient which is nice because you get to be reminded what is wrong with you and what they are doing about it. Occasionally they write it up on a piece of plastic screwed to the wall but they forget to update that so each day is a bit like Groundhog Day as you wake up to the same information.  
There's a book of course, a folder for each inmate. A name, number and date of birth that matches the plastic-coated bracelet strapped to each shaven arm.  There're the names of the medications, what's been done, when it's been done and who it’s been done by and any tests that have been carried out. Quite a comprehensive document if it's kept up to date.  But there’s no photo. So they lost the guy in room 117 because they don't know what he looks like.
It's dinnertime. Five o'clock in the afternoon with the sun streaming through the window so maybe he’ll turn up for a feed. If he's like me it’s a mystery meal as he's already forgotten what he ordered over 24-hours ago. It’s turkey with gravy and veggies tonight. The smallest turkey I have ever seen. Spatchcock-size really but tasty. Some veggies, a dab of potato mash a splash of salt-free gravy and the meds again. 
Two Panadols now and a Beta-blocker for supper, just before bed. Ravi the Fijian Nurse has been around at the end of his 12-hours shift: the only bit of continuity I have had in my stay so we are old mates now and tonight he sits and tells me about his Dad's battle with diabetes and heart disease. It's a pancreatic problem evidently and as I listen I feel his concern for the genetic time bomb in his family that will impose it on him, too.  
As we talk an alarm goes off, one I have never heard before. Strident and high pitched. The nurse across the hall is bathing her patient and the patient presses the wrong button. The whole unit is on immediate alert. Ravi's phone lights up and he has to explain it’s a false alarm. The nurse opposite is embarrassed but at least we know the alarm works! Ravi remarks that everyone will be calling up to see what the matter was. He is a lovely young fellow and has been great to me. Very popular with the staff and has infinite patience with his trainee sidekick Jose from UTS.  
Dinner over. Meds handed out. Vitals checked and it's just gone 7-pm. Almost time now for the handover to the night shift ... a story in itself! And time again for the ABC TV News.
The Land of the Living
(Email sent to family and friends, December 5 2014)
KERRY SMITH
I am sitting in Ward1 looking out the window trying to finish this email before I fall asleep. I have started this on Day 3 for me. They judge your progress by days after the operation so I shouldn't expect too much. Day 1 was Tuesday.  
Day1 was lost to me as I was not too aware of things around me but I do remember Susan and Cameron and Suzanne and Phill coming in which was lovely. I was well drugged and hence spent most of the time drifting in and out of consciousness. I hear lots of beeps and people shuffling around the ICU-unit. There are lots of tubes and wires leading from myself to a multitude of machines with displays that flicker in the night. I had no pain at all (though my comfort was restricted by all the tubes and wires) and otherwise things were OK.
Day 2 was another matter. It started off well with a drowsiness that I could just not overcome but by nightfall the noise of the ICU was such that I simply could not get to sleep. Staff had gathered around the central office right outside my room and it was hot too and one of the nurses took my fan for one of the other patients and that made my room much hotter. I was getting stressed and uncomfortable.  
By 9.30 pm the noise was horrendous. The ICU was full after Monday's operations and there were staff everywhere. I was getting hotter by the minute and then my heart decided that it would go into free fall. My blood pressure went sky high, my pulse was racing and my oxygen levels fell. My pulse was going up and down at will and one minute was thumping away in my head and the next, non-existent. It felt like my heart was shaking my body by the neck. After several tries at different drugs they got it under control without having to put me on a pacemaker so by about 2-am things had settled down again.
Day 3 saw me out of ICU with the stomach drains removed and some of the other stuff taken out which was much more comfortable. They transferred me to Ward1, Room 106 that was much quieter. They were still giving me some powerful drugs for pain that caused me much grief. I can't imagine why people take these things for fun. Every time I closed my eyes I was off on another trip. Visions like movies that morphed from the original picture into crazy stuff; faces that changed from the original (often known) into random faces that melted like candle wax into other scenes. By nighttime I was wondering which was reality (but that was stopped by the surgeon who had me back on normal painkillers after that). Even then it took a day for the visions to subside; imagine driving like that!
Day 4 got much better as the drugs wore off. The old constipation from the drugs was not improving though and it's only after some heavy un-block that I am almost back to "normal" today. Is this too much information?  Sorry. Some like the details but others should skip the parts they can't stomach (to coin a phrase).  
Day 5 finds me in much better health. I am walking five or six times a day and have just done two flights of stairs with the delightful physiotherapist with the wonderful Irish accent. Susan and Denise have visited and I have eaten a normal lunch, the first normal meal. Things are looking up. My appetite is much smaller now and hopefully it will remain so. According to the nurse this morning I have lost about 4-5kg although how she would know is not clear as they didn't weigh me when I came in but I will take any weight loss I can get!
I can't tell you how much all your wonderful texts, calls and emails have meant to me. It's a bit humbling and very comforting to receive your love and well wishes. I don't want to go through this again but if I did have to then I would like a team like you behind me. Thank you all for your support.  
I have become known for my long-winded emails so I should end now. This has taken several goes to get it finished as I get sooooo tired but I feel better now that it's finished. It's certainly better being on the bright side of life.
Much love from Kerry.
Kerry Smith is a retired teacher who lives in one of the best parts of the world and loves to travel with partner Susan in their off-road caravan to parts remote and beautiful.

HOLDUP!
JULIE CRAIG
My friend Lawrence and I were driving back to his brother's home in Douglasdale (Johannesburg). Law asked if I could stop off at the local supermarket, one that - incidentally - I no longer shop at. After we came out we drove off to his brother Neill's home about 2-km away. We were talking and I was not vigilant. Usually I check to see nobody is following me. I do this because I used to do trauma counselling for victims of crimes; I'd worked from various local police stations. I should have known better than to slip up because I've been well trained. 
When we arrived at his brother's home, in a cul-de-sac, Law got out and opened the back door to take out his shopping. The next moment there was shouting; I couldn't understand what was happening until I saw the gun in the man's hand. He was waving the gun and shouting at Lawrence. There was a second man at my window and he was shouting, "Give me your money! Give me your bag! Where is your BAG?" Meanwhile Law was also shouting, "DON’T SHOOT! Jesus is watching! We've just come from church!"
I told the man my bag was in the back of the car. I also gave him a valuable-looking zircon ring (R20 from a Chinese shopping mall!). I wasn't frightened. A sense of calm overtook me and I was silent. I knew I had to give the man what he was demanding. If I didn't, I could be shot. The man with the gun took Law's watch. 
The neighbors had heard and seen what was happening outside their home: "We've called the Armed Response people – they’re on their way, just down the road!"  
The man at my car window then grabbed my car key and threw it under the car. Both robbers panicked. They ran off to their car, parked outside the cul-de-sac. I was shaken, but got out and searched for the car key. 
The people who had sounded the alarm came out of their property and offered help. The car key was bent; I supposed the robber had quickly done that with his foot because the metal is very hard. "The car key is bent; I can't get it into the ignition!" The man took the key, went inside, and with ease he straightened it. 
Shock was setting in as well as overwhelming gratitude. We were both alive and my car hadn't been stolen. The men hadn't even taken Law's wallet and he had a fair amount of cash in it. All I’d lost was R20 and a ring: a total loss of R40. We had every reason to be thankful we were alive.
The amazing thing was that I was told on New Year's Day that God's Angels were protecting me and this I knew but had thought no more of the remark. The woman had given each of us a bag in which she’d placed odd objects. The bag that I’d chosen had an angel made of glass sanded by the sea as well as feathers (symbolic of angel wings) and butterfly shapes (symbolic of the fact that angels were continually protecting me). It was only on Sunday January 4, three days after she had given us these things that I realized how prophetically she had spoken. The angels of God were there with us and with those people who sounded the alarm, too.
Julie Craig lives in Johannesburg, the biggest city in Gauteng, known commonly as the "gangster province where armed robberies and hijackings are commonplace."

MAKING GOD LAUGH
SHARON SNIR
I’m a city gal. Born, bred, schooled and even married (at least once) in Sydney. I can negotiate peak hour traffic, park my car in a shoebox, drink my café latte on the run and carry fifteen bags of shopping in one fell swoop.  
One year ago exactly we sold our suburban North Shore home, gave away most of our possessions and decided to live in Israel for 6-months.  It is said that if you want to make God laugh tell him your plans and God must now be holding his belly after hearing my plans.
On returning home we thought we were going to housesit for a few short months and then move into our new home bought off the plan eighteen months earlier. Can you hear Him giggle? The construction company and the Council decided to have a standoff, ten paces and the first one shoots the other one dead. The Council won. The construction company went into an obstinate sulk and stopped work. And we are left without a permanent place in which to live, couch surfing in the homes of family and friends.
One warm spring Sunday whilst enjoying a picnic in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney we noticed a little blue cottage with a For Sale sign. Boldly knocking on the door and apologizing for the interruption but asking whether we could have a look, we bought the house three days later.
This 112-years old cottage with its large level garden and wide array of fruit trees has turned my life around in ways I could never have imagined.  To begin with I have given up manicured nails for the sheer joy of digging out and removing an old privet tree and planting in its place a Tahitian Lime. I walk outside still wearing my T-shirt from the night before and revel in the dew-soaked grass drenching my feet and covering them in specks of soil and threads of dry grass. Kneeling down I begin to weed around a row of azaleas and marvel at the number of snails that are hiding inside the foliage and decide today that I’ll find a good way to get rid of them. Me. Who never even thought of gardening but focused on raising five children and on studying and practicing my chosen career.  I lose myself in an old lemon tree that’s bulging with young green lemons. I notice tiny yellow buds forming toward the tips of the branches and many lemons just falling on the ground, another thing to look into and learn what this means. And before the sun becomes too hot maybe it’s a good time to plant the three new rose bushes bought at a Wentworth Falls nursery simply because the fragrance made me buckle at the knees as I was walking past looking for blueberries to plant beneath the old pine tree where nothing other than azaleas, camellias and blueberries grow in the pine-acidic soil.
Time slips by but I remain engrossed in digging wide holes and filling them with water before gently removing the English Rose from its black plastic pot and making sure that it’s planted facing in the right direction. The heat of the day returns me to another reality and I realize I have not yet washed or even drunk a glass of water. My back aches and I am filled with a joy and satisfaction I have rarely known through physical work. One look back at the morning’s work before I step back in time and to a tiny blue cottage that found me long before I knew I was ready for it. 
Oh! And these days God and I seem to enjoy a good laugh, together!
 Sharon Snir is a teacher, author and psychotherapist.

Further Factual Words:

Lt. LC Diespecker, MC and the Sopwith Camel
Artillery observation also required a crew of two.  It was a complex business.  The wireless equipment was too bulky and heavy for planes to carry both a transmitter and a receiver, so the aircraft flew with a transmitter only. A plane would service a particular artillery battery, and before takeoff the battery's target was confirmed.  Once in the air the observer had to identify his battery and the target.  He would then transmit a message ordering it to fire.  He could usually differentiate shells that belonged to his battery by measuring the time from when they had fired till the explosion in the vicinity of the target (Wikipedia).
I’m one of those people who like nothing better than to write stories mostly fictional or fictive stories that I’m sometimes able to fashion into novels (I also enjoy non-fiction writing: essays about my life here at Earthrise and some family history and military history, for example). I particularly like to imagine fictional possibilities suggested by factual documents like letters or old photographs) or triggered by random thoughts passing, scarcely glimpsed ideas attached to retrospection or reflection or even by ideas arising suddenly as by-products of the evening news or documentaries or movies on TV: by anything visual because TV is always a catalyst. It’s the writing that arises from my mind and my having some ability to write and to write creatively, and imaginatively that’s hugely meaningful; it’s what I most enjoy doing, often doing that quickly thus ‘capturing’ the notion before it eludes me. (Before I switch off this excellent Turing machine today, I remind myself, I’ll open a new file that I want to become a second sequel to Happiness, my blood pressure and excitement permitting).
In the previous Diary (November/December 2014) I had also written a few words about the writing process and discussed what we might now think of almost as a couple of frontline ‘dispatches’ (letters to the Victoria Colonist, a Victoria, BC newspaper which published them May 18 and July 17 1917) and written by my late uncle, Louis C Diespecker (1895-1969). Louis was at that time a bombardier in the 1st Canadian Artillery Brigade in France. In 1916 2nd Lt. Louis Diespecker won the Military Cross for “conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty.”
Additionally I quoted from a book by Nina Straus (“The Astrological Author” (ND) and appended in The Literary Almanac; The Best of the Printed Word; 1900 to the Present. New York: MJF Books, 1997). In terms of the extract that I’d quoted, Louis might have been described as ‘a Pisces author’ because he was born March 10 1895: ‘Pisces authors are the notorious dreamers of the literary world. Interested in companions, renunciation, the beginnings and endings of the human time cycle, they absorb the collective unconscious and display sensitivity to human suffering. “I believe” is the Piscean watchword, leading to visionary fatalism or to the transformation of the commonplace.’       
Late last year (2014) there began an exchange of emails between several of us cousins. A researcher in the UK was seeking information on alumni of the Royal Latin School (Buckingham) who had served in the Great War (1914-1918), including Louis Cyril Diespecker. The researcher was John Mellors. John contacted Alex, the son of the late Richard Diespecker (Richard was the son of Louis Cyril Diespecker and the brother of Louise Diespecker Lee). Louis Cyril and his brothers had been pupils at the RLS between 1903 and 1908 and there was mention of a “L. Diespecker” who had been awarded the Military Cross. Might there be descendents who could help? Alex had contacted his aunt, Louise. Information began flowing. Also, Louise had selected some of the icons and memorabilia left her by her parents: old photos on glass plates were processed as black and white photos that could be transmitted via email. As described above, one of those 1903 pictures shows some of the 500 people present in the Adstock House gardens on August 3 1903 including our grandparents and four of their five sons, Denny, Louis, Durbyn and Jean (the fifth son, Dick, was born in 1907).
Our adventurous family used once to be more close-knit and now is far apart in Canada, the USA, Africa, the UK and Australia. In 1903 the Wright Brothers had only just drawn the world’s attention to Flight: ‘Orville (1871-1948) and Wilbur (1867-1912) were the US brothers who pioneered powered flight. Inspired by Lilienthal’s gliding they perfected their piloted glider, 1902. In 1903 they built a powered machine and became the first to make a successful powered flight, near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina’ (The Wordsworth Dictionary of Biography). Air travel 112-years later is now the most convenient way for us to meet, to commute, to visit; our emails with photo attachments of people and documents seemingly with their auras and excitements whiz even more speedily around the world.
With all of that in mind I remembered that until a few weeks ago I used sometimes to wonder how my Uncle Louis, when serving in the Artillery in France, had become a flyer in (I had thought) the RFC, the Royal Flying Corps. We have all been exchanging family and official information with pleasure. Much of this new family information has been impressively found and then shared by John Mellors. There was reference to and information originating in the RAF Museum in the UK. I decided to send a query to the Museum. What might the procedure have been (for an Artillery Officer in 1918 to learn to fly and to become an RAF Officer?
Peter Elliott, Head of Archives Royal Air Force Museum, replied:
Thank you for your enquiry. Many RFC pilots initially flew as Observers before going on to train as pilots. Your man's service in the Royal Field Artillery suggests that he could well have flown on artillery cooperation duties. This is confirmed by his RAF service record showing that he was an observer before being posted to No.1 School of Aeronautics in May 1918, then to No.198 (Night) Training Squadron in July. A note on the file reads, "to wear wings from 19/10/18".
In the early stages of the war prospective pilots had to obtain a RAeC certificate - at their own expense - before training as military pilots. By about 1916 there were military schools training ab initio pilots and it was not essential to obtain a RAeC certificate, but many pilots did.
Yours sincerely, Peter Elliott, Head of Archives, Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon, London, NW9 5LL. 
I was very pleased to receive this information and also startled: I ought to have realized that Louis as an Artillery Officer would likely also have flown over battlefields as an observer. In 1948 and 1949 I was a part-time member of the Active Citizen Force in South Africa and had trained in the South African Artillery. One of my duties had been to assist in such observation and data collection. In those post-war times our observations of target areas and the fall of shot were made when appropriate from high ground and from a distance. At that time in the 1940s it had not occurred to me that during the Great War (1914-1918) such observations had been made from British and Allied aircraft in France:
[Daily] reconnaissance and observation flights were an absolute necessity for the British gun batteries. As in reconnaissance flights, artillery observation required the planes to fly steady, predictable routes.  In addition to anti-aircraft fire and enemy fighters, observation aircraft suffered a third danger, and this was from the artillery shells themselves.  They typically flew at an altitude similar to the apex of the artillery shell's flight, and they flew along a line between the guns and their targets.
“It was not unusual for the pilot or observer to actually see the shell as it stopped at the top of its climb before plummeting downward.  It was not unknown for the planes to be hit by those shells” (Wikipedia).    
A British biplane used for observation over battlefields in France in 1917 or 1918 would have had two cockpits, plus wireless, camera equipment and likely have been slow in flight. I can just about imagine a WW1 biplane with its pilot and observer flying over the battlefield while being fired on. What could be more dangerous?  I don’t know what type of plane Louis flew in (as observer).
In 1918 Louis was trained to fly the Sopwith Camel biplane, the most prestigious (single cockpit) fighter aircraft that reputedly was also difficult to fly (as well as difficult, at first, to learn to fly). This remarkable airplane was being manufactured for operational flying on the Western Front but during the summer of 1917 supplies of the aircraft were switched to British home defence to counter daylight raids by German Gotha bombers. “When the Germans switched to night attacks, the Camel proved capable of being safely flown at night, and the home defence aircraft were modified with navigation lights to serve as night fighters” (Wikipedia).  
Further, “For the first time on an operational British-designed fighter, two Vickers machine guns were mounted directly in front of the cockpit firing forward through the propeller disc with synchronization gear(Wikipedia).  
See detailed Sopwith Camel information via Google/Wikipedia.  See also Active Citizen Force (South Africa).  
MY EBOOKS
(1) Finding Drina is a light-hearted sequel to my two print novels (not available as eBooks) published in one volume as The Agreement and it’s sequel, Lourenço Marques. Finding Drina is written in three parts and in three different styles that also are intended homage pieces (to GG Marquez, Ernest Hemingway and Lawrence Durrell); thus this little book is also meta-fiction (novella, about 30-k words).    
(2) The Earthrise Visits is an Australian long story set at Earthrise (about 20-k words): an old psychologist meets a young literary ghost from the 1920s (his girlfriend meets her, too) before a second old literary ghost, unaware of his spectral state, arrives unexpectedly.  
(3) Farewelling Luis Silva is an Australian dystopian long story partly set in Australia, Portugal and France (about 23-k words). A sniper meets an Australian Prime Minister, an old lover and a celebrity journalist; three of them meet a terrorist in Lisbon where there is a bloody assassination.
(4) The Selati Line is an early 20th century Transvaal train story, road story, flying story, a caper story and also a love story sequel to The Agreement and Lourenço Marques, lightly written and containing some magical realism. A scene-stealing child prodigy keeps the characters in order (novel, about 150-k words).   
(5) The Summer River is a dystopian novel (about 70-k words) set at Earthrise. A General, the déjà vu sniper, the Australian Prime Minister and the celebrity journalist witness the murder of a guerrilla who had also been an Australian university student; they discuss how best to write an appropriate book about ‘foreign invasions’ (novel, about 70-k words).  
(6) The Annotated “Elizabeth.” I examine and offer likely explanations as to why my uncle published a mixed prose and verse novel in which his mother is portrayed as the principal protagonist and I suggest why the book Elizabeth (published by Dick Diespecker in 1950) is a novel and not a biography, memoir or history (non-fiction, about 24-k words).   
(7) The Overview is a short Australian novel set at Earthrise (about 32.5-k words) and is also a sequel to The Summer River.   
(8) Scribbles from Earthrise, is an anthology of selected essays and caprice written at Earthrise (about 32-k words). Topics are: family and friends, history of the Earthrise house, the river, the forest, stream of consciousness writing and the Earthrise dogs.   
(9) Here and There is a selection of Home and Away essays (about 39-k words). (‘Away’ includes Cowichan (Vancouver Island), 1937 (my cabin-boy year), The Embassy Ball (Iran), At Brindavan (meeting Sai Baba in India). ‘Home’ essays are set at Earthrise and include as topics: the Bellinger River and floods, plus some light-hearted caprices.
(10) The Agreement is a novel set in Mozambique and Natal during December 1899 and the Second Anglo-Boer War: an espionage yarn written around the historical Secret Anglo Portuguese Agreement (1899). Louis Dorman and his brother, Jules, feature together with Drina de Camoens who helps draft the Agreement for the Portuguese Government. British Intelligence Officers, Boer spies and the Portuguese Secret Police socialize at the Estrela Café (about 62-k words). 
(11) Lourenço Marques is the sequel to The Agreement. Mozambique in September 1910. The Estrela café-bar is much frequented and now provides music: Elvira Tomes returns to LM from Portugal and is troubled by an old ghost; Drina and her companion return with an unexpected new member of the family; Louis faints. Joshua becomes a marimba player. Ruth Lerner, an American journalist plans to film a fiesta and hundreds of tourists visit from the Transvaal. Drina plays piano for music lovers and plans the removal of an old business associate (novel: about 75-k words).
(12) The Midge Toccata, a caprice about talking insects (inspired by Lewis Carroll’s Alice stories). This book has a splendid new cover designed by my cousin, Katie Diespecker (fiction, caprice, about 26-k words).
(13) Happiness is a short novel set at Earthrise. The ‘narrator’ is again the very elderly ex-ATA flier who unexpectedly meets and rescues a bridge engineer requiring urgent hospitalisation: she gets him safely to hospital in his own plane. She also ‘imagines’ an extension to her own story, one about a small family living partly in the forest and on the riverbank: the theme is happiness. Principal protagonist is a 13-years old schoolgirl, apparently a prodigy: she befriends a wounded Army officer and encourages his plans. Her parents are a university teacher and a retired concert pianist. The family pets can’t resist being scene-stealers in this happy family (novel, about 65-k words).
(14) The Special Intelligence Officer is part family history as well as a military history and describes the roles of my late grandfather in the Guerrilla War (1901-1902) in Cape Colony. The Guerrilla War was the last phase of the Second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). The title of the book is taken from Cape newspapers of the time: Capt Rudolph Diespecker was a District Commandant; his responsibilities included intelligence gathering that led to the capture, trial and execution of a Boer Commandant who was wrongly framed as a ‘Cape rebel,’ when he was legally a POW (Gideon Scheepers was never a Cape rebel, having been born in the Transvaal (the South African Republic,) one of the two Boer Republics (non-fiction, about 33-k words).
(15) The Letters From Earthrise, an anthology of my columns and other essays and articles written for the Australian Gestalt Journal between 1997 and 2005 (fiction and some non-fiction, about 70-k words).
(16) The Darkwood is a dystopian novel set at Earthrise in the not too distant future (about 80-k words). Earthrise is again central to other themes.
(17) Bellinger; Along The River is an anthology of personal essays relative to my home and the property, Earthrise, and the river at my doorstep (aspects and descriptions of the river, including flooding) (nonfiction, about 28-k words)
(18) Reflecting: an anthology of personal essays about the gardens, butterflies, a caprice, and other motivating factors at my home, Earthrise: mostly non-fiction (20,300 words)
(19) Idling: is a collection of personal essays about seeing; a military history essay; a speculation about lawns; a working visit to Griffith University; periods of enforced idleness as “Don’s Days Out” in Coffs Harbour (mostly non-fiction; about 35,600 words).
(20) Bear Fat A Memoir by Durbyn C Diespecker (1896-1977) with Notes and a Biography Edited by Don Diespecker. This partial memoir  (that I’d invited in 1950) was written by my father between 1950 and 1969 and describes aspects of his life in South Africa, the UK and British Columbia, Canada (non-fiction; 47,900 words). 
 Thank you to my guest writers, Kerry Smith, Julie Craig and Sharon Snir; and thank you to my cousin, Louise Lee, for permission to use materials from her Family Collection.
Best wishes to all Diary Readers from Don. 
Don Diespecker (don883@bigpond.com)



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