Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Earthrise Diary (March 2012)

THE EARTHRISE DIARY (March 2012)

Don Diespecker

© text Don Diespecker 2012; individual © is retained by authors whose writings are included in this text.

When I am working on a book or a story I write every morning as soon after the first light as possible. There is no one to disturb you and it is cool or cold and you come to your work and warm as you write.

Ernest Hemingway

The hills across the valley of the Ebro were long and white. On this side there was no shade and no trees and the station was between two lines of rails in the sun. Close against the sides of the station there was the warm shadow of the building and a curtain, made of strings of bamboo beads, hung across the open door into the bar, to keep out flies. The American and the girl with him sat at a table in the shade, outside the building. It was very hot and the express from Barcelona would come in forty minutes. It stopped at this junction for two minutes and went on to Madrid.

Ernest Hemingway, “Hills Like White Elephants” (in Men Without Women, 1927).

…I only remember studying a map, taking a train, getting off at a station nearest to the Andorran-Spanish border, walking a short distance from one country to another, and taking a second train—ancient, cold little carriages, full of the soldiers of the Spanish Republic who were returning to Barcelona on leave.

…I tagged along behind the war correspondents, experienced men who had serious work to do. Since the authorities gave them transport and military passes (transport was far harder to come by than permission to see everything; it was an open, intimate war) I went with them to the fronts in and around Madrid. Still I did nothing except learn a little Spanish and a little about war, and visit the wounded, trying to amuse or distract them. It was a poor effort and one day, weeks after I had come to Madrid, a journalist friend observed that I ought to write; it was the only way that I could serve the Causa, as the Spaniards solemnly and we lovingly called the war in the Spanish Republic. After all, I was a writer, was I not? But how could I write about war, what did I know, and for whom would I write? What made a story, to begin with? Didn’t something gigantic and conclusive have to happen before one could write an article? My journalist friend suggested that I write about Madrid. Why would that interest anyone? I asked. It was daily life. He pointed out that it was not everybody’s daily life.

Martha Gellhorn, “The war in Spain” (in The Face Of War, 1959).

November 1937

At the end of the day the wind swooped down from the mountains into Madrid and blew the broken glass from the windows of the shelled houses. It rained steadily and the streets were mustard-colored with mud. It rained and people talked about the coming offensive, wondering when, when…

Martha Gellhorn, “The besieged city” (in The Face Of War, 1959).

Tuesday Feb 28 2012. This is such an old fashioned normal day that I feel compelled to record some of it: there was red in the dawn sky but the day in midafternoon is brilliant and sunny and makes this one of those beautiful days of soft February light. I walked down the dusty road to Richardson’s Bridge and back. I also stood on the Plains Crossing Bridge here and lamented the wrecking of my big river wall by not very big floods—it’s the worst damage ever. I sent off a mail advising some of my family and friends that the February Diary was posted yesterday. I was pleased that the ALP battling has stopped. I phoned Pam. I remembered seeing parts of the Academy Awards yesterday (I’m always moved when there are tributes to all the movie makers and movie stars who have died this past year, among them Jane Russell, Elizabeth Taylor, Ben Gazarra. And after lunch I took my copy of The Good Soldier down to the belvedere and continued reading, and then moved in and out of dappled light and assorted flying insects to read most of the first part of the book within a couple of hours. Nice. Sunny. Warm. Dry. I’m home all day. Tomorrow is the last day of summer but as I have to go to Bellingen and consult the osteopath, I can’t be here for all of the day—another reason why this day is just for reading and relaxing. I can’t remember when I last sat in the sunny garden reading for hours: it’s been a very wet and hair-raising summer. Now the dahlias are blooming beautifully just because of the sun and the dryness (although the plants are flat on the ground). The big pink lilies, those with the tenacious roots, including those at the edge of the belvedere continue to bloom splendidly.

Sunday March 25 2012. I was far too detailed in last month’s Diary and there were too many dates that referred to the month’s excitements. This month I’ll have gone to the opposite extreme. The past couple of days here have been magnificent and more summery than summer: the sky cloudless yesterday, the light perfect. The sun and a slight breeze made laundry a must and allowed me more than two hours of mowing that began at midday. The gardens—what’s left of them after the ruinous rains—have done their best: the new dahlia garden is still colourful although the plants have all collapsed in their frantic attempts to reach for sunlight (but the blooms look great). A small purple tibouchina is flowering too and the pink lilies continue. Red salvia seedlings from very old plants have made patches of scarlet along the fence line although the fence no longer exists. The young bleeding heart trees that sprang up next to the dahlias are now metres high and have won places in that light and shade part of the garden near the riverbank; the scarlet/crimson cannas that I pruned weeks ago have joined the red salvia to add more colour.

The riverside lawn is still covered in logs and smaller debris: the logs are being axed and returned to the river. When I’ve cleared some of the mess I’ll be able to repair the partly built wall there. The floods have again undercut the riverbank, however and I see that there’s now a deep hole where I moored the canoe a few months ago. Were it not for the tonnes of stone that I’ve used to build up the riverside lawn over the years and the adjacent casuarinas this corner would have been hugely damaged: the river continues ‘pinched’ against the bank on this side (which explains the worst ever damage to my old river wall) and a high flood will tear down the bigger trees. There’s not much that can be done here to prevent that.

By the end of February the unusually wet conditions had encouraged the dreaded Queensland grass to start seeding and it’s again out of control with many plants 2-m tall and offering an abundance of seeds for the birds to broadcast. It would be a simple matter to remove that grass and the bracken (digging the plants out, drying them and burning everything) and replacing the colonists with lawn grass; I need only a hundred or so volunteers to help and we’d fix the problem in no time…

As readers will see, I’ve avoided discussing most of March: too much of it has been unpleasantly wet and muddy. I’ve also steered you away from sundry problems that arose or were further exacerbated during this miserable month, but you may find footprints or traces of some of that in the writings below. Writing is always such a relief, often enough such an abiding pleasure and always a satisfying way of continuing the journey—and much the same applies to reading. I completed reading The Good Soldier but was not captivated despite Ford’s masterful writing; and I completed Barbara Kingsolver’s BIG book, The Lacuna, (set in Mexico and the USA) much of which I enjoyed, and now I’m finding my way into what may be the oldest of novels, Murusaki Shikibu’s The Tale Of Genji, a 10th/11th Century Japanese text translated into English that includes woodcut illustrations first published in 1650. Tense Kingsolver fans will be pleased to note that I best liked the first half of the book most because it reminded me of exotic places like Panama and, of all things, how to make a variety of breads.

Creative Writings

Climate Change

Russell Atkinson

Amongst the welter of facts, half-truths and misinterpretations concerning climate change a few truths are needed. One is that facts can disguise truth or obscure it altogether and data can be manipulated to ‘prove’ just about anything. In this way, the term ‘climate change’ is a misnomer. It might even be a deliberate red herring to disguise the fact that the climate is in reality, only a small factor in the danger of global warming. The problem is not that the climate is changing as it has always done, but that it is changing too fast because it is forced. Natural changes as are recorded in geological studies are slow. This gives creatures some chance to move or adapt. They may even appear to be part of an evolutionary process in the making of the planet. Consider how the great glaciers of the ice age have formed the beautiful contours and valleys we know now. They have ground rocks down to make and fertilize the earth. Forced ones are not likely to serve natural geological purposes. They are more likely to have disastrous consequences.

But this is beside the point. The truth is that more than forty years ago, before the words ‘climate change’ were so prevalent, scientists were concerned about global warming. They predicted that if global warming was not curtailed the biosphere would reach its heat limit in about 2781.

Like the changing climate, carbon is only a part of the problem. Our biosphere contains about 2,400,000 million tonnes of it, mainly circulating as carbon dioxide. Its geological form is found as calcium carbonate in the white cliffs of Dover and in corals in the Great Barrier Reef. There is no doubt that hydrocarbon in fossil fuels release carbon dioxide which, above a certain level, blocks the passage of infra-red energy from the sun, reflecting a percentage back into space but also reflects some back to the earth causing temperature fluctuations. These are facts. But the truth is that climate change and carbon dioxide is not a problem – unless we force one and create too much of the other.

The truth is that heat alone is the problem and we make too much of it - climate change, fossil fuels or whatever notwithstanding. Every addition to the huge number of people on the planet adds other quanta of heat, along with the increasing number of animals to feed them. Every internal combustion engine, every electrical motor generates heat, so every frig and TV set add to the sum total. Every light bulb generates heat, along with glass-covered sky scrapers, roads and car parks – where not so long ago there might have been forests, shrubs or grass to soak it up. An atom bomb test produces more heat in a second than all industry produces in a year. Every detonation, nuclear or otherwise, produces heat. The generation of power, nuclear or otherwise, produces immense amounts of it. An infrared photograph of a city at night shows masses of heat radiating out from underground car parks and train stations. The disturbing truth is, that no matter if a cool source of energy to fuel our vehicles and gadgets is found, which seems to be in the miracle department, it is likely that the biosphere would still reach a heat limit some time. It looks as though the only real solution is to stop the world if it is to continue.

In the meantime, something’s gotta give. Will old Mother Nature resolve the problem in some outlandish and undreamt-of way? Or will the whole structure of what we call civilization come crashing down, putting those that survive back to square one?

This brings us to another likely truth: those who express a vociferous denial of the dangers of global warming are impelled by the fear that they are in danger of loosing the indulgent life style they regard as essential to the economy and their wellbeing. The final most disturbing truth might be that this materialistic, technology-driven civilization has got itself into a double bind, a blind alley, between a rock and a hard place; a situation in which there can be no real solution to the problems material affluence has created. Maybe all we can hope for in the distant future is a reasonably acceptable subsistence.

(Russell Atkinson is a much-published author (books and articles on Hindu philosophy, memoirs, and aspects of naturopathy).

Russell’s blogsite is www.theoldestako.wordpress.com

Conversation as Caprice

Don Diespecker

A conversation is nothing more than the abilities of two or more persons to talk socially with each other; unfortunately, a conversation is sometimes much less than that: the opportunity for one talker to sabotage dialogue and reduce it to monologue. There is nothing quite like a good conversation when a minimal two of us observe both the niceties and the invisible rules for conversations. There is much that is heartening and even cozy (in the sense of convenience) in conversations or dialogues because two of us (for example) may politely create an enlivening discourse that we each are composing, a more or less equally shared dialogue in real time that is balanced, flows well and is satisfying if not enjoyable for both parties. And although the two speakers may veer away from absolute politeness and grow passionate or even heated, politeness and consideration for the other dictates that the conversation ought not lead to bloodshed or to a damaged friendship. (This narrative, as you may now suspect, is a kind of monologue. Writing is so often a solitary occupation. Sorry! None-the-less, there is nothing to stop you, the reader, from imagining your intellectual voice responding to these words).

Monologues on the other hand are solo acts and the soloist will essentially provide all of the stimuli that at least two speakers would otherwise access between themselves to enable a dialogue or conversation to be given life. In those prose fictions that we label Literature, with a capital L, authors may endow some of their characters particularly the most frequently observed protagonists with the convenient and remarkable ability of their apparently thinking in words by means of e.g., the interior monologue generally signaled by the use of the personal pronoun, ‘I’ to better inform the reader. Interior monologue and the free indirect style are the two principle means by which the thoughtful author will whisk readers into a mindset such that they may intellectually appreciate the ‘inner lives’ of the protagonists and other characters in the narrative: prose that is generally known as stream of consciousness writing. The free indirect style is represented in texts as reflective words apparently thought by a character and, as David Lodge has explained in The Art Of Fiction, ‘It renders thought as reported speech (in the third person past tense).’

There are also monologues that may have started as comfortable dialogues but which have then veered out of control because one of the speakers (one perhaps more psychopathic or deranged than is normal in polite and civilized society) has hijacked the role of the other and in the process of assuming his or her mantle has effectively snuffed out all of the ‘other speaker’s’ volubility. This sometimes ‘happens’ when there are two intending speakers present and ready to discuss or to argue intellectually and when one of them, wrongly inflamed with pathological zeal to compete or to dominate the intended conversation, will succeed in doing almost all the talking and the other person will feel necessarily obliged (i.e., chooses) to transform into the receptive and largely silent pupil. The deprived speaker having chosen to capitulate to being talked at realizes too late that s-he is increasingly challenged either to remain mute or to become sufficiently stirred to fall on the too voluble tormentor and to honorably dismember him or her.

A conversation between two people that begins with points of view being exchanged and argued and then is warped into a monologue by one half of the duo is doomed to become adversarial if not combative: the failing dialogue degenerates into a rant (a shameless monologue made by the more crazed speaker) and the other proto speaker is compelled into a resentful silence that may swell into anger and abruptly terminate following angry exchanges between the two participants. A conversation is not a competition demanding a victor and a vanquished. (Aspiring novelists who also enjoy a good conversation may be inspired by some of this discourse to create potential protagonists who not only fight each other for the individual rights to express their views, but who also reveal themselves to potential readers by showing their mettle via interior monologues or thoughtful forays by courtesy of the free indirect style).

Cozy (above) has two principal meanings (if we disregard teapot coverings): that which is warm and comfortable; or that which is convenient or beneficial as a result of dishonesty or contrivance (e.g., ‘a cozy agreement between competing firms’ as my dictionary gently puts it). Here I intentionally use cozy in the sense of a conversation being more or less between peers or equals (and cozy seems a less emotionally laden word than e.g., intimate) because for me a good conversation may be between good friends, less than good friends, and even between those never destined to become good or close friends: good conversations are possible even between politicians of opposing philosophies.

All of which suggests that if there is to be a conversation between two people it is wise for the potential dialoguers to initiate some sensible and agreed upon rules before they unbuckle their intellects and engage with each another. What those rules may be will depend on the two speakers and any number of related factors. In other words, we begin dialogues that may quickly become imperiled unless we first make clear how and what we each want in those intellectual engagements that we call dialogues and conversations; to not do so is to invite trouble (and, no, I am not about to explore dialectics).

I imagine that you the reader may now perhaps feel reasonably prepared to further read about a variety of human conversations that will seem either cozy with satisfactory outcomes or as close and raw as can be with consequences that are wretched beyond our worst dreams. I may yet revisit some of those events, but until a few minutes ago I was sitting in the sunny garden on what is virtually a summer’s day, but one quite out of time in March, while relaxing after soul destroying wet weather and floods with a good and entertaining book (Barbara Kingsolver’s The Lacuna) when I was suddenly aware of what was far more obvious in my surroundings than might be dragged from my resting memory (besides, I felt driven from my own garden by a plague of very small winged insects that insistently changed our relationship from casual to intense: it was as though we had mislaid our rules and as if the multitude of winged beasties had congregated around my head for two insectivorous reasons: number one my presence in their garden was enabling a stupendous integration or possibly re-integration of combined gnat-hood, midge-hood and mosquito-hood such that increasingly bigger clouds of these entities were united as mixed flying societies each of which could assume a collective monologue superiority over any attempt by me to negotiate a dialogue or conversation that would benefit all of them and much of myself; and two, that by my frustrated swatting and slapping presence I was fostering a new insectivorous awareness that would soon allow the beasties to not only overcome any of my revolutionary tendencies to engage in a dialogue between us likely to result in my dominating their world but that they were surely going to become so successful in their group monologue that I would soon be sucked dry and discarded—a victory for World Insects that I would have foolishly precipitated by being an unaware catalyst). (Eat your heart out, Henry James!). I so swiftly fled the garden (my garden) that insect scouts would have had extreme difficulties locating me within their lifetimes.

From the safety of my house I noticed that the old water dragon now posturing where I had recently been sitting was enjoying a perfectly reasonable relationship or a possible conversation not only with my lawn, but also with the attendant clouds of winged insects! And I realized that the wily old dragon was also snacking on the little fliers and that he was able to accomplish this feat so dexterously and with such an economy of movement that the insect mobs were surely unable to fathom what he was up to. How many tiny insect brains or neural nets or whatever it is that they use would be needed to fill a 1.5-litre central nervous system or CNS or ‘brain,’ rather like one of our human brains? I have no idea but although the beasties may each lack individual brain power we must remember how difficult it is for us, the Big Brains, to swat even one of them at any time because they’re so adroit that it’s as if they can process incoming missile strikes viz., the human hand swatting, yet be able to avoid the swat. And what if these little guys choose to join forces and create one Big CNS or ‘brain,’ or several big ones, for that matter? Imagine a single tiny target being advised by a Big Group CNS to speedily exit the area (Gnat 2386: Abort! Go to Warp Seven!). That would suggest that the littlies are ahead of us by light years! And if they are, how come I, of all people, have just intuited their game, their ability and their perceptual and motor skills? Who, me? I? Shouldn’t our top scientists be working overtime on this? If the little ones are as smart as I suspect, they might be avoiding all possibilities of insect/human conversations prior to their taking over the world. Why hasn’t this stuff been classified yet?

Anyway, to return to the dragon on the lawn: apparently the dragon possesses the necessary genes enabling him to return full-time to dry land leaving the watery world behind: he was surely starting a revolution encouraging reverse evolution and his exciting descendants would again become dinosaurs, not just little water dragon-sized dinosaurs but the real deal: HUGE dinosaurs that would thump about roaring ferociously and tearing down forests! Risk-taking but wary insects hovering close to the river presumably expect water dragons to plunder their ranks but I’m inclined to think that an apparently motionless water dragon-like figure basking on the sunny lawn well away from the river would scarcely register on tiny beasty radar. I nodded my understanding of this peculiar circumstance; the water dragon, to my surprise, seemed to cock his head querulously in my direction. Or was he? Or were his genes now in such a clamour that he was able to read my mind directly from Big Lawn? It was then that I noticed a flurry of yellow leaves whirling away from the old white cedar high above the dragon’s head. The white cedar’s small green leaves turn from green to yellow, dare I write golden, in early autumn and the tree saves them for intended flurries: an economic matter, I suppose, and I always enjoy the sight, as sad as it sometimes seems, because the leaves momentarily are almost like light snow drifting across the green lawn. This is simply one of my more romantic notions because snow never falls here although the high ground up at Dorrigo that directly overlooks this part of the Valley is sometimes snow-dusted in winter.

I imagine that the wise old white cedar tree might whisper, Thank you sweeties for your service. Time now little leaves for your lawny long sleep of change. A leafy dialogue between the leaves being let go and the tree, Fare thee well, Mother could then become a new conversation between leaves and lawn May we rest here below? Yes, welcome little leaves; of course you may: together we shall nourish and replenish Earth: something like that, perhaps because leaves do in fact nourish the lawns and the Earth...

And now that I’m sitting inside looking out I see other possibilities for these deep dialogues: between eucalypts and their yet to be shed barks, between ants and the cavities in tree trunks where branches once grew; between raindrops falling and the lawn’s quavering grass blades, Take cover below: curl and crouch! There would be no time for dialogue! Or consider the frantic signals between all the plants in the gardens and all the other living creatures there below and above when Big Ugly and Dangerous hail as big as tennis balls is imminent. Spare us O Hail for we’re all on the same side once you get down from the sky! More terrified and tormented monologues from below. Hold it! Stop where you are! Can we talk about this first?

I now suspect that many of the dialogues that might take place in Nature are merely proto or crypto dialogues, there being time only for urgent one-line monologues. There’s obviously a lot of nervous energy in Nature and that would seem to suggest that delightful summertime chats between say the passing river and a clump of sedges or rushes by the water’s edge would be out of the question: there would simply not be enough time for dialogue beyond their exchanging hasty monologue-type greetings. A promising dialogue would be stifled at birth, being at best a hurried exchange, Hey, White Water how do you do that? You talkin to me, waterweed?

This presupposes that such would-be conversations would have to be interpreted or intuited. That in turn suggests that there would have to be something exceptional about interpreters. I reflected on exceptionalness hoping that I might have a modicum of the stuff (otherwise my understanding of Natures Conversations might be regarded as indications of approaching madness). I reflected for a long time before recalling a recent contender as responsible for my newly discovered ability. I remembered the awful affair of the Electric Roof (roofers had inadvertently driven a screw through an electrical wiring circuit when replacing part of my roof and the detouring electricity had enlivened the steel roof to a dangerous 240-v and perked up the river stone floor of my bathroom to 150-v). That incident would be a contender, surely? I had survived that, and that which doesn’t kill may sometimes make us a wee bit stronger, I think?

And now I recall another possible contender!

Recently I was idly watching TV while moodily sipping a glass of undistinguished Shiraz. The room lights were switched off and the lighting power was where it was supposed to be: safely contained within electrical wiring. It was otherwise too dark for me to have noticed the large spider in my glass of wine. When I did notice and switched on the lights the better to see what other awful phenomenon I had fortuitously survived I realized that the spider despite reminding me horribly of the Alien movies (remember how that Thing was able to hatch and spring willy-nilly onto the face of any spaceship crew-person; aaarghhh!) was now very dead and well on the way to complete deconstruction. It was old enough and ruined enough to have been disintegrating for a year or two in the bottle of wine and had definitely not fallen from the ceiling above while I was drinking. Eureka!

Although the ghastly arachnid had failed to survive the wine I had not only survived the wine fortified with spider essences without having been aware of either the spider or the changed condition of the wine. Perhaps my unawareness also indicated that spiders (venomous or otherwise) or their spidery elements could safely be ingested when taken with wine? Or possibly that may have meant that no matter how deadly the spider juice was (even when modified by wine) no harm would come to the casual drinker. Or perhaps I was intended by invisible forces to become vaccinated or inoculated and thereby protected by spidery wine? This explanation having quickly become the most appealing of possibilities is now so firmly establishing itself somewhere in my psyche that I’m ready to dismiss prior explanatory possibilities and to additionally consider that this odd inoculating event may even mean more than the prevention of some awful pathological decline: possibly it could mean that I now have additional cognitive abilities (arachnid enhanced powers!) enabling me to intuit unusual conversations verbatim as they take place in Nature!

I won’t dare suggest that you the reader should now expose yourself to either electrical stimulations or to unusual homeopathic remedies in order to better understand macro and micro conversations of all kinds. We must all take responsibility for our choices. On the other hand please ponder what the next step for me may be: my intellectual deepening may soon enable me to add my voice to many of Nature’s otherwise secret conversations! DD.

Rene

Jill Alexander

Rene is 104. She was my mother’s closest friend. From the time I was born she was always my Auntie Rene.

After my mother died in 1988 we formed a new bond. She became the mother I had lost and I became the daughter she had always wanted. She lived in a beautiful area of Victoria, British Columbia, called Cadboro Bay, one of the small villages that nestled and grew around the waterfront bays of Victoria. Her home was at the top of the hill just up from the little village. It was a lovely old stone house set on one acre of land and had peek-a-boo views of the ocean visible through the huge and magnificent oak trees on her property.

I began making regular trips from Vancouver to Victoria to visit Rene for several days at a time. This journey always followed the same pattern. I would leave my home in the morning at 9:15, allowing plenty of time to catch the 11:00 ferry. At approximately 1:30, I turned into Rene’s driveway and parked my car. As I walked toward the house I knew that she would be there standing in the open doorway waiting for me with a smile on her face. After we gave each other an affectionate hug, she always asked the same question, “Are you ready for a cup of tea?’’ While the tea was being made I would take my suitcase up the winding staircase to my own little bedroom. I came to love this little room and see it as my own: the single bed with its heavy wool blankets, the two upholstered chairs from a bygone era and the bookshelves covering two walls and filled with many old and interesting books. This space would nurture me and be my home for the next three or four days.

Tea was waiting downstairs and I would help carry the teapot, bone china cups and saucers and a plate of biscuits into the living room. We would sink into our own special chairs, similar to the ones upstairs. And sitting across from each other we began the journey into the past, with Rene sharing her vivid memories of a very deep and special friendship between herself, my mother, Margaret, and their dear friend, May.

The three were born a year apart: Margaret in1905, May in1906, and Rene in 1907. They met when they were in their late teens and were all working as stenographers in downtown Victoria. Around that time, a husband and wife team had set up a little camping business on the beach at Cadboro Bay where they provided tent cabins for people to rent out for the summer. For four years in a row (1922-1926) the three friends would rent one of these tent cabins for July and August. Their plan was a simple one. After work the three met up and took the trolley car to the very end of the line. This was only minutes away from a set of 78 stairs that led down to the beach below. Once they reached their cabin the first thing on their agenda was a swim in the ocean before fixing their supper. They would also have a swim in the early morning before getting ready for work and heading back up the 78 stairs in time to catch their trolley into the city.

On weekends they invited their friends to come and visit. The entertainment area was an outdoor wooden stage with an old beat up piano at one end. Rene would play the piano and everyone would sing and dance to all the old favourites of that era—songs such as “April Showers,” “Till We Meet Again,” “It Had To Be You,” “Always,” “If You Were The Only Girl In The World,” “Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” and “Roses of Picardy.”

As she told her story, Rene often made little asides. “I don’t know how our parents allowed us to go off like this for the whole summer,” I remember her once saying, ‘My father would often drop in unannounced just to check on us but we were usually behaving ourselves. Except for your mother! She would often disappear with some fellow down the beach. May and I would notice she was gone and say ‘Where’s Margaret?’ And off we would go to look for her and drag her back. She used to get so annoyed with us but we had to try and keep her out of trouble!’ Rene then gave a big sigh and said, ‘Those were such wonderful days—so many happy memories.’

On these trips to Victoria, I got up early in the morning, slipped out of my little room, down the stairs and out the front door without waking Rene. My destination was their beach at Cadboro Bay. I would start at one end and walk all the way down to the other end. As I walked, I imagined the three friends on this beach laughing and talking together the way they did so many years ago. Sometimes, I was sure I could hear their voices.

One morning, just as I was reaching the far end of the beach, I thought I saw something that looked like a step behind a cluster of thick vines. As I looked more closely, I realized there was a set of stairs leading up the side of the bank. Making my way carefully through the thick tangle of vines, I started to climb and without thinking I began to count the steps. As I reached the top, the count was 78.

When I arrived back at the house, I excitedly told Rene about my discovery. She was sceptical and wanted to see for herself. Later that afternoon we drove to the little road that I had found where the stairs had ended. She got out of the car, looked at the top of the stairs with the view of the ocean, and declared joyfully, “You did find our stairs!”

A few visits later, I was walking down to the beach on my early morning walk. Just as I was stepping onto the sand, I heard girls’ voices. Believing this to be the imaginary voices I had heard before, I headed in my usual direction. The voices, however, got louder. Then I saw three girls sitting on a blanket and watching the sunrise. After saying hello, they mentioned that one of them was having a birthday and that this was the way the other two friends chose to celebrate. I told them the story about the three maidens of Cadboro Bay those many years ago and how I felt this was a sign that they were keeping their memory alive for me. They loved the story and thanked me for sharing it with them.

Rene celebrated her 101st birthday in her home where I so often visited. I was able to be there with her. Soon after that, she had a fall and was not able to go back to the home she loved so much. She is now in a care home.

In December, 2011, she celebrated her 104th birthday. I continue to make the trip every six weeks to visit her. We still talk at length about the past and those wonderful days of the three best friends at Cadboro Bay. She remembers a poem that another friend, Myrta, wrote for them back in the summer of 1922 that captures one of their adventures. Rene loves to recite this poem for me every time I come to visit:

Down by the beach at Cadboro Bay

Three young maids all summer did stay

One was dark and one was fair

The other had very curly hair.

One dark night two of the three

Decided to go on a swimming spree

So after a few strokes they started to float

Out toward an American boat.

On this boat were three young sheiks

Who over the side of the boat did peek

One of them cried ‘I say what peaches’

And swam with them to one of the beaches.

Then pulling the third maid out of bed,

‘Come and see what we’ve found,’ they said.

So lighting a fire bright and hearty

They brought food and drink and had a party.

Then all too soon it was time to go,

So off to the boat the boys did row.

But all agreed it had been a grand day

Down by the sea at Cadboro Bay.

(Jill (Diespecker) Alexander is a retired business woman living in North Vancouver, B.C. who enjoys traveling, spending time with her grandchildren, doing half marathons, and writing her memoirs).

MMM 624

Don Diespecker

I often write when I walk—write in my head, I mean—and that depends greatly on the weather: dodging Darkwood Road traffic and giant puddles on wet and muddy days is not conducive to happy writing. The summer now passed and the start of autumn has been needlessly wet; this morning’s weather was beautiful: bright sunlight, impressively contrasting black shade and shadows and the dust damply inert. I greeted the eight horses I could see in the Happenstance paddock: only one, a youngster, stopped munching to look up briefly. I sauntered on, quite the flaneur thinking All The Pretty Horses, remembering that excellent novel by Cormac McCarthy (set in Mexico where the weather was drier than here). Then I looked further and saw how lushly green this valley and the surrounding hills have become following the excessive rains and that oddly suggested ‘Hills Like White Elephants,’ surely a near perfect Hemingway short story (from Men Without Women) set in a dry part of the Ebro Valley (the Ebro is Spain’s second largest river: it rises in the Cantabrian Mountains of northern Spain and flows southeast to the Mediterranean south of Barcelona). In turn that reminded me of Fiesta. The Sun Also Rises which was not only Hemingway’s remarkable first novel: it was one of the defining novels in 20th Century fiction, and also my lifelong best loved of all novels. The narrative is set largely in Paris and in Pamplona in northern Spain. ‘Hills Like White Elephants’ is set in a Spanish railway station.

Then I reminded myself of another railway station in Spain, Irun, which is also in the north on Spain’s Atlantic coast. As I walked I recalled February 1951 when Jan Tierolff, a Dutch painter, and I arrived at Irun from Hendaye as a couple of young backpackers (think Bayonne, Biarritz and Saint-Jean-de-Luz on the French side and Irun and San Sebastian in Spain—these places not far removed from Pamplona). Two Spanish policemen took an immediate and severe interest in our being on their turf. They directed us to accompany them through the station and outside into the wilderness of the Irun marshalling yards. Jan and I speculated wildly: were these armed guys in comical patent leather hats about to execute us for reasons never to be made clear and possibly as punishment for our daring to hitchhike in their territory? We were aware of it being a mere 12 years since the end of the Spanish Civil War and Franco was in power. Slowly and very carefully the Law explained that they wanted to change some of our foreign money for some of their pesetas: we were pleased to oblige. Then we took the train to Madrid.

As I continued walking along Darkwood Road I became aware that I was now thinking of another quite different visit to Spain in the summer of 1957, in a Morris Minor ‘Tourer.’ I forget the year in which the car was produced but will always remember that the licence tag was MMM 624. Pam and I were living in London in those days and I had returned home early in 1957 after working on civil engineering contracts for several months in Iran and could at last afford to purchase a motorcar.

The small convertible was painted dark green, rather like the green racing colours that identified British racing cars. I recently had been searching for something specific via Google, remembered the summer holiday in France and Spain that year and the Morris Minor cars. My father, Durbyn, (in 1957 my parents were visiting from South Africa) had studied the small badge depicting a bull on the little car’s bonnet with great interest. ‘A bull,’ he said thoughtfully. ‘Have you considered calling the car El Toro?’

I think we made the crossing on the ferry between Newhaven and Dieppe and then drove on to Paris. Durbyn and my mother Grace sat in the rear seat, Pam and I in the front. ‘Tourer’ meant that the little car had a canvas hood that could be folded back for open air traveling in the countryside: it was a proper convertible. There weren’t many of those models in those days and I added a box of Morris spares to our luggage in the boot. We arrived auspiciously in Paris at the start of the afternoon rush hour and I cheerfully attempted to drive the wrong way down a one-way boulevard. Every motorcar driver deserves to have such hair-raising experiences because doing what I attempted represented a very steep learning curve indeed and French drivers delighted in deriding ignorant foreigner drivers, particularly those in vehicles displaying GB plates. Similarly, parking anywhere in Paris even in 1957 was always a difficulty and the simple solution was to find a friendly person with a lock-up garage who would oblige me by locking the inoffensive little Morris away in the dark while we more comfortably navigated much of the Left Bank on foot. After all, Paris is a city best seen when walking.

It was at that time that we discovered Muscadet, a pale, dry wine best served chilled. I clearly recall a family dinner: the wine seemed the colour of a pale green river and its taste reminded me of grassy meadows at sunrise (it was that sort of wine). We enjoyed Paris and saw the sights and ate some fine food and then we left early one morning to escape the morning rush hour and went south toward Orleans. We all fitted comfortably and had a minimum of luggage and the little car went well, dashing down the French roads that I’d not traveled on since 1951, like the highway south of Paris. In 1951 Jan and I then thumbed our way to Limoges in one attempt: one of the best lifts we had ever managed; it was inside the cramped quarters of a truck whose affable owner was driving to a distant market with a pig in the back.

El Toro in 1957 was much more comfortable and we cut across the Massif Central of France and into those beautiful regions, provinces and departments—some with long, winding rivers: Lot, Auvergne, Gironde, Cantal, Haut Loire, Aveyron, Correze.. We wanted to visit the Lascaux Caves and so we stopped at the small town of Montignac in Aquitaine (it’s between Périgueux and Sarlat in the Dordogne Valley) and stayed in a small hotel surrounded by old leafy trees. Montignac is a small town and a favourite of mine. (When I returned to Montignac with my cousins Jill and Gene and our friend Ilse Vogel, in 1998 we visited Lascaux II. The original caves have been damaged by carbon dioxide emitted by humans (some of it mine) and by fungi and are no longer open to the public).

We continued our 1957 journey and were fortunate to find a good hotel on the beach in the northeastern corner of Spain where the food was wonderful and the range of wines was impressive. The maitre d’ used to spearfish when off duty and his catches always went to the dining room. One day we made a visit to Cadaques, the coastal town where Salvador Dali had once lived; and on another day we drove down to Barcelona to visit both Gaudi’s masterpiece, the Sagrada Familia cathedral (begun in 1883) and also the Monumental Bullring to see a bullfight! My mother closed her eyes for much of the bullfight; I don’t think any of us really enjoyed the bullfights, but the cathedral was visually splendid. There will be no more bullfights at Monumental: the Parliament of Catalonia banned them in 2010 and the ban will take effect this year…

I often recall some of the many images associated with El Toro:

Somewhere in the Dordogne after having bought a VERY BIG quantity (about 2-kg or more) of perfectly ripe strawberries very cheaply as well as bread and cheese in a nearby town we picnicked beside a rural road which had a marvelous avenue of old oaks along it and where we had an excellent lunch, largely of fraises. Winged insects took a great interest in the contents of the big brown paper bag that smelled so sweetly.

I remember that when I parked El Toro outside the museum (art gallery) in Toulouse in the bright sun the little British car looked completely foreign and almost alien next to the Citroens, Peugeots and Renaults.

In four years we drove the car several times in France (once ferrying her by air from Lydd to Le Touquet), Germany (where I quickly learned not to try passing slow traffic on the Autobahn because I instantly became very slow traffic to the avenging hordes of Very Fast German Sedans that had never experienced speed limits on such roads), Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg, (and not forgetting tiny Liechtenstein), Denmark and Sweden (The Swedes drove on the left in those days, too). DD.

Three Summery Moments In Autumn

1. Mowing is frequently a meditative experience and sometimes it’s also an opportunity for writing or composing in my head. Yesterday afternoon (March 29) there were again flurries of leaves from the white cedar tree and the lightest of breezes to cast them across Big Lawn—enough for me to interrupt the Diary composing (in my head) and to see instead. Yesterday’s mow was like that: aestivating.

2. The old track that runs between the carport and Big Lawn cuts through an older riverbank (the house is also founded on this old bank) and is presently overgrown with tradescantia and giant maidenhair. In a sunlit patch I found a small swarm of tiny flying insects moving at speed. The blurry cloud of buzzing wings was a remarkable sight because the crowd of about 30 insects was moving in a space not much larger than a cantaloupe and the very rapid changes in direction were made at speed and in every imaginable direction—all without mishap. I stepped closer. My presence seemed to slow the insect’s movements. They danced for want of a better word in a shaft of sunlight next to a giant maidenhair fern. When I stepped back the speed of the fliers increased again. I wondered about the significance of what I’d seen.

3. The dahlias despite being flattened by the rain looked almost their best on March 30 and I counted 16 of the Mrs Rees blooms. The bleeding heart tree saplings next to the dahlias have grown to 3-m in this, their first season; nearby the pink double hibiscus has a flush of new flowers and on the riverbank the first of the white tibouchina are flowering.

Saturday March 31 2012. Thunderstorms last evening spoiled the illusion of yesterday’s mini summer and further diminished the dahlias, but it’s a grand day this morning. Happy birthday to Pam Diespecker!

Monday, February 27, 2012

The Earthrise Diary (February 2012)

THE EARTHRISE DIARY (February 2012)

Don Diespecker

© text Don Diespecker 2012; individual © is retained by authors whose writings are included in this text.

Today I've felt a real shift in the seasons; autumn is nigh. The first red and orange leaves appear so striking in amongst the sea of green foliage that is this valley. The rain has been fairly regular here through the summer and as far as the eye can see has made the ground a vast patterned blanket of variegated green. Friends who garden are reaping bumper crops and lately we have been the lucky recipients of some of their surplus...peaches, apples, dark skinned plums, swedes, turnips, tomatoes and broad beans. The sky is more readily moody and changeable and I've needed to throw a shawl over my shoulders in the mornings. The birds too, feel the shifting of the seasons. They know. King Parrots are now back on the verandah and demanding their daily dose of 'wild bird seed mix'! They haven't been around for many months and yet I recognize a few familiar faces and they recognize mine, which makes me feel wonderful...

Petra Meer: Journal, February 8 2012.

Errata: My (flood time!) carelessness led to two typos in the January 2012 Diary. In Petra’s An afternoon by the Latrobe River, Victoria, A small fairy perches close by should have read, ‘A small fairy wren perches close by’; and between the scree and freedom should have read ‘between the debris and freedom’. My apologies.

Insert on Tuesday February 21 2012: most of February is slipping by at speed. The most recent ‘flood’ has been about three almost but not quite separate events splashed together. Had I not made notes at times when there were flooding rains or the car was imperiled or Darkwood Road was transforming into a 1-m deep raging torrent or the view of the flooding river from the bathroom window was so hair raising (in floods it appears to be coming hugely downhill, unstoppably at approximately eye level and provokes in the observer palpitations and a sense of doom), this February Diary might never have been written; I kid you not. These past few weeks have not been marked by the most spectacular or the highest of floods—merely the longest-lasting one in my experience—and, I now realize, it is the long-lastingness and the uncertainty of the long-lasting that disturbs the psyche sufficiently to make me think disloyally of deserts and hot sun or possibly idling in a far-away place like Paris. The flooding of roads and bridges makes it impossible for one to live a normal life for days at a time and that’s what is so unsettling when the weather goes crazy. And I hasten to add that despite the usual flood alarms and threats there is no place where I really would rather be because most of my time here is marked by experiences that are good, stimulating and appreciated. As I write there is again rolling thunder in the early afternoon and the likelihood again of yet another storm (the one last evening knocked out the power (between 17:00 hours on Monday and 01:50 am on Tuesday) again, circled this area for hours and dumped more unwanted storm rain to soak everything, further damage Darkwood Road and threaten houses and motor vehicles with damage from Big Hail (fortunately, there was no hail on this occasion). These long-lasting soaking rains have all kinds of consequences and are also effective in troubling the calmest of minds: everyone and every thing is affected: great trees collapse, wild life is killed, properties are damaged; yet it seems that all of us living in this Eden have dodged a series of bullets—once again. In the northwest of NSW tonnes of food, medicine and fodder continue to be flown into flood-affected areas every day and for some downstream towns and properties, the worst flooding is still to come. Airdrops and being marooned for weeks is the expectation for thousands of people less fortunate than we are here in the Darkwood.

Saturday January 28 2012. I wrote and redrafted at a frantic pace yesterday in order to have a draft of the January Diary to post. I also spoke on the phone with Petra who kindly emailed the Latrobe River piece and sent it to me as copy I could include in the Diary and I also added some more information about my heritage [Petra Meer lives close to the Yarra River at Warburton, VIC]. All done fast and I hope not too carelessly. The Diary was duly posted. Leif returned in the late afternoon from Bellingen with his passengers Brian and Victoria and with much shopping which he had done for his colleagues at Dreamtime (DT). All I’d asked for was some eggs. When I checked the route from the house to the front gate this morning I had a look at the big eucalypt limb that fell yesterday just beyond my gate (Leif sawed it while I was coming down to meet him). Lionel Campbell came walking down the road, umbrella in hand, having walked from Bishop’s Creek and waded over the flooded deck of Carver’s Bridge (next to DT). He and I have similar backs and he was able to confirm the good back-fixing reputation of a Bellingen osteopath.

There are light showers today. A BIG tree came crashing down somewhere nearby and was heard at DT because I had a call from Leif later who had heard that some observers had seen what they thought was a misalignment of the bridge here. After peering through the window and a light drizzle I was pretty sure the bridge was OK but I tottered down to the road to check and the Plains Bridge although not yet revealed by the falling flood still appears to have the same position and alignment. I met Di and her son and Monica in the road and the four of us confirmed that the bridge was more or less where it’s supposed to be—then the Dreamtimers kindly added some stones to the partly filled-in trench next to the concrete swale in front of my gate (while the old busted back rustic watched gratefully). Otherwise it’s been a quiet showery day and I’ve been working slowly through it, resting by lying down when I can and being extra careful of The Back.

The notes for the next two days (below) were also sent to interested persons outside this area:

Sunday January 29 2012. When the rain stopped, more or less, on Sunday a number of drivers came down to the area in front of my house at 1655 Darkwood Rd. The road has been badly damaged (approximately from near the fire station down to Plains Bridge). The over-deep storm water drains/gutters on the south side have been deeply gouged and the roadside is flush with the gutters (there are now no verges). This section is dangerous to all drivers. Storm water has entered the road in large volumes: principally runoff from the high ground, south side; and from the overflowing Deer Park paddocks (north side) opposite my gate. Elsewhere, all of the gutters have overflowed and carried debris across the road surface. The last few metres before the bridge approach is reached were impassable because the remnants of the road had piled up (like dunes). A ute became bogged and was hauled out by a 4WD vehicle. Later some vehicles (principally 4WD) came down to the bridge (mostly from upriver) and crossed; most continued on down the valley (i.e., they did not immediately return). Some vehicles (not 4WD) made the journey from this area to Thora and returned safely)

Monday January 30 2012. A Council ute with flashing light hurried across the bridge here, heading west at breakfast time (07:00 approximately); it was closely followed by the Council grader. The grader quickly provided a level surface (from the mounds of road remnants close to the bridge). Many of the gouged sections of the road were quickly filled in. The grader continued west. The road was then effectively open to traffic (although locals here had no information on the downstream bridges). I walked across the bridge, down to Richardson's Bridge, crossed without difficulty, noted that water (ankle deep) was still flowing over the east side approach and returned home. A number of vehicles during the day used the road in both directions. The sun shone for hours.

(From a mail to a friend: Monday Jan 30 2012. I was glad to receive your message last evening at the end of a crowded day--everybody from far and wide manifested in the 'road' (or what's left of it) outside my place. One crowded ute even managed to get bogged in the gravel dunes blocking the bridge approach (the gravel once was road, further up the hill).

The good news is that the NRMA is allegedly on the way. I've been up to Dreamtime and finally have brought the car down to the gate here. The first thing I found when I got to the gate this morning was that most of the big trench next to the swale has been filled in by my friends at Dreamtime, an action that is much appreciated. Stone by stone things are changed.

I'd better go out to meet the NRMA man from Bellingen: he has an excellent reputation for fixing difficult things. Will he be able to 'fix' the resistant car hood? Can he find a way? I've explained that I'm just a little wary of driving the car with the hood/bonnet locked shut--in case I slide into the ditch or whatever and need to access plugs, battery, oil, magneto and so forth).

Tuesday January 31 2012. Carl Foster duly arrived and was here for nearly 2-hrs. He tried every trick in the book and finally cracked the code and the hood was released under his delicate fingers and he re-adjusted everything. Praise the Lord and Carl Foster: the man's a genius and fixed the problem. The sun was shining and a number of drivers had passed in each direction. I wanted to go to Coffs but couldn't get away until midday. The sky by then was filled with huge clouds and the sunny day disappeared. I did some shopping in Bellingen. The one thing I wanted wasn't available: zinc tablets (the Healing Centre would phone me when they obtained the next lot). A thunderstorm broke. I got wet. It was only summer rain, though. Bellingen was very humid. I drove home in the hot car and had a nice meal made from FRESH FOOD! It tasted so good I even had a glass of Shiraz to wash it down.

The thunderstorm aftermath continued into the evening: light showers. By then I was a bit weary...and retired to bed, without having completed my correspondence for the day. I dozed. The rain persisted and the showers became suspiciously more like what we call 'Flood Rain' up here. At 11 pm I got up and jumped into my wellingtons, grabbed an umbrella and 2 torches, and set off for the gate: the gutters were roaring with storm water again—all the rain having become instant runoff—and the re-made 'road' was deteriorating again and the storm water was raging over the swale. I fired up the old Honda and drove it up to Dreamtime (again) in the rainy dark, parked outside Victoria's house and staggered home. The frogs sounded like prides of lions ferociously feeding. I went to bed again, watched some TV, tried to sleep, but had a terrible sleepless night. At 2 am I heard either a tree or a big branch break nearby and crash down (but I couldn't find it the following morning).

This Wednesday. February 1 2012 morning at 6-6.30 I checked the road down to the bridge: as expected, it was deteriorating again and the bridge is again submerged. I feel less than terrific but I'm OK, just dopy from lack of sleep—the premonition reporter in me stays thoughtfully awake in the midst of breaking news (or something like that).

The day progressed into a sunny summer morning; the road seemed more or less intact, water (much reduced) still flowed down the roadside gutters and seeped or filtered through the 'new' surface (between my gate and the Plains Bridge) made by the grader. I drove from home to Bellingen and returned without mishap, but this drive was made in the afternoon between midday and 2:30 pm. When I left home it was clear that thunderstorms were building and the light was deteriorating. On my return and during thundery rain/showers in Bellingen I was driving into the thunderstorm rain/showers, but without difficulties. The section of Darkwood Rd., described above, was breaking up again when I drove off the bridge and up to my driveway (where a trench previously gouged between the road proper and the concrete swale at my entrance had been filled with dense stones (by myself and neighbours and other locals) and remained covered by the 'new' road made by the grader. I could see that the now full gutters/storm water drains were hazarding across the road surface, breaking the 'new' road surface (that had not been compacted). The river from the bridge to in front of my house and further downstream was turning brown as the 'new' road continued to deteriorate and wash down into the river.

Friday Feb 3 2012. The bridge became visible again this afternoon. I chatted with Marie and Daniel. I realized I was also able to see through the misty air to the forested hillside downstream: the bloodwoods were again flowering.

Sat Feb 4 2012. BSC sent a front-end loader to clear the road. The Plains Bridge was clear and I walked down to Richardson’s Bridge. Although there was still too much water running over the far side approach, that didn’t deter 4WD drivers. Some drivers were eager to get out, especially 4WDs and they crossed without difficulty.

Sun Feb 5 2012. Kept I again walked to Richardson’s early: the bridge deck was clearing (although half of the deck had the river still running over it) and the water was ankle deep on the far approach. At home I worked in garden clearing white cedar branches. In the afternoon I worked on “1937” then went to Dreamtime and brought the car down. There was good moonlight this evening.

Mon Feb 6 2012. It was a clear and sunny day. I was up early after another sleepless night and drove to Coffs (the worst part was getting out of the gate and over the swale in Darkwood Road). At Fitzroy Motors I ordered a new spark plug cable then went to Park Beach Plaza where I did my shopping as usual and returned home.

Tuesday Feb 7 2012. I traveled by road to B’n again where I had my monthly chelation therapy; it was a relatively dry day and an almost clear morning. There were difficulties with loose old veins again but I finished early and returned home tired, failed to complete the necessary items on my list, other than petrol for the car and a quick visit to the PO (before chelation). There was a message from Simon Willman of Reconstruct builders. We agreed tomorrow would be a good day for his visit/inspection (re the insurance claims) and that the morning would be best.

Wednesday Feb 8 2012. I phoned the builder’s number at 09:20 to ask if Simon was on his way; the secretary would find out and get back to me, but that didn’t happen. Simon phoned me at 12:40 from Port Macquarie where there were difficulties for some of their building sites (trees down following a storm). He was to begin his return journey and phone from Bellingen but that call didn’t arrive until almost 6 pm by which time the river was again rising and there were increasing showers. Long story short: Simon arrived safely in a big Pajero 4WD after negotiating flooding roads and Richardson’s Bridge. He made his inspection, was considerate, and then left. After he left I walked down to the bridge at the end of a shower that was prolonged and heavy. The bridge would flood again in the night, for sure. I met Victoria at the bridge returning home. Then I took the opportunity to take the Honda over the swale, into the road and up to Victoria’s garden again. I was tired from lack of sleep but was much more relaxed when I’d moved the car to high ground.

Thursday Feb 9 2012. The bridge here was flooded again in the night. I continued writing “1937”. At lunchtime I photographed the road damage and sent pictures to the BSC. These were the captions: “Both pictures taken from same position approximately at 1:40 pm on Thursday Feb 9. In 363 there is a red matchbox on top of the large sub-base stone with smooth face (2nd from camera), i.e. these heavy stones/rocks were not washed down the road but are parts of the road sub-base.” “In 364 storm water from the concrete gutter on the south side of the road (closest to Earthrise) has cut a trench across the road. The previously washed out section of the road adjoining the bridge had been filled with dense stones by neighbours and did not wash out. Water still covers most of the bridge deck on this western side: the far end (east side) of the bridge deck is dry. The bridge was flooded during the night following long-lasting heavy showers yesterday afternoon/early evening (Wednesday, Feb 8), i.e., both pictures were taken while the flood was falling.”

After lunch my neighbour Leif visited and there was much to discuss.

Friday Feb 10 2012. I saw Leif leaving together with his trailer and bikes (his journey was successful and he phoned later in the afternoon from Coffs). This morning was fine and sunny, and the river level fell to about 18-in. below deck level. Traffic moved again in both directions. It was a beautiful morning (which deteriorated by the time I was ready to leave. There was water, i.e., the river on this end of Richardson’s and on both approaches. I walked up to get the car and Victoria was driving down at noon. By the time I’d loaded the recyclables and was heading out the clouds were increasing. I was held up at Guesses Bridge where the BSC was (grader) spreading new aggregate and the roller was compacting it on the incline at the bridge. I was delayed at Boggy Creek where the road was being re-bitumenized—what a day to be doing that. I went straight to the tip and disposed of my bag of stuff, then to the shops and PO; the sky by this time was ominous. I got home safely in light rain.

Saturday Feb 11 2012. I walked down to Richardson’s Bridge. There was some water to contend with and several vehicles came to cross. It became crowded and passengers were exchanged and one or two crossed and then returned (very odd, I thought). Later it was very quiet indeed and I began to wonder where everybody was—perhaps I had become the last Darkwood resident and everyone else had left? I had the car here but when I heard a severe weather warning on the 6 pm News I got up and hurried to Victoria’s and brought the car down to shelter here from possible large hail—no storm eventuated. I chatted with Victoria.

Sunday Feb 12 2012. After a beautiful moonlight night, some early morning clouds and later a nice morning, the clouds fluffy, enough blue sky for me to feel positive, I walked to Richardson’s: the approaches and the bridge were all clear (a couple of inches of water on the far concrete approach). I met Doug and Mandy at the bridge here on the way back. I’ve been picking up a few of the many new stones on the upstream (side of the Plains Crossing Bridge) beach. Nick called from Ottawa. There was no power from 08:40. It was a warm and humid rather quiet morning. There were two cars at lunchtime; picnics perhaps (so the Darkwood has not been entirely deserted). I walked up to Victoria’s with some of the surviving dahlias where I also met her brother. Later I settled and finished reading Roth’s novel An American Pastoral. At last! It’s a fine piece of writing and also was too detailed and overlong for me. Leif visited about 5 pm. And I chatted with Billy Browning who phoned about the riverbank (weeding) project and when the power came on he sent me the form by email.

Monday Feb 13 2012. Early I carefully closed the hood/bonnet of the Honda so as not to lock it irreversibly into an impossible to open position and set off for Coffs Harbour and the Honda servicing workshop: I was intent on having the spark plug lead replaced. I passed through a heavy shower for a couple of k’s near the highway. The sky was beautiful with big fluffy clouds again (some of them with dark bases). For days (or weeks?) the sky has been an amorphous blob of grey and black from horizon to horizon; now the clouds are separate and this separateness makes for a stunning cloudscape; at last there are some distinctive boundaries. The maintenance folks had mistakenly thought I also wanted a 180,000-km service but I said, No, I hadn’t (yet) asked for that because there are still some 1,000-km or so to complete. Despite all care when the work was completed the bonnet was closed in such a way that it locked and couldn’t be opened when I reached home at noon after shopping… I was dismayed, but mollified when I telephoned at 2 pm: I would return the next day, have the bonnet problem rectified and also have the BIG service. I drove the car up to my neighbour’s garden again to avoid (if that were possible) the Bush Rat Attack (bush rates will nest atop warm engines if they can, but they won’t risk that if the bonnet is open)…

Tuesday Feb 14 2012. I was up early again at about 04:00.and then tottered up the road listening to the birdsongs and watching the sky lighten. Again, there were magnificent great clouds and blue sky. I hoped for a successful visit to Coffs and resisted exploring the worst-case scenario (opening forcibly the bonnet, the bonnet would be damaged; there would be no essential spare parts to repair the opening mechanism; a temporary measure would have to be rigged with wire or something woeful-looking; the bonnet would have to be opened in order that the car be serviced)… Alas, I had to wait my turn to fit in with those who had already made servicing bookings. Off I went to the Coffs CBD with my emergency mobile switched on. Below (in Creative Writings) there is a fuller account of this day spent in Coffs Harbour.

Wednesday Feb 15 2012. Being glad to be home yesterday afternoon I had a quick meal and moved to my bed where I settled gratefully.

Friday Feb 17 2012. Greatly daring I decided to attempt to mow the Big Lawn and so I very carefully moved the mower down to the belvedere and managed to get going without dislocating my back. The grass wasn’t quite dry, but the sun shone and there was a small breeze and that helped. When I mowed I adopted a near horizontal stance so that I wouldn’t have to bend my legs much and this enabled me to mow successfully for two hours. Viva!

Saturday Feb 18 2012. Again, the sun shone and the clouds were magnificent. I mowed the rest of Big Lawn (another 2 hours). Viva! Viva!

Sunday Feb 19 2012. There was more wonderful sun and the river was lower. I watched a medium-sized goanna park in a sunny spot in front of the house and consume something that looked very limp and long dead. I cleared more of the rubbish and moved it to the riverside garden and also recovered some stones and moved them to the uncompleted wall and uncoupled poly pipelines and moved those up to the east deck. I was attacked by an aggressive log during this cleanup and have an impressive head wound. Leif came down earlier and we worked together on the edit of his review.

Monday Feb 20 2012. I left early for my regular trip to Coffs and did the shopping: the sky was again partly filled with enormous clouds before the sun came out. It was uncomfortably hot. There would certainly be a storm. My tour of inspection was less than exciting: work everywhere and the stench of death still lingered in several areas of the gardens.

Tuesday Feb 21 2012. It was one of those nights: the power had failed in the late afternoon as the thunder boomed and the thundery showers started. I listened to the radio (battery/dynamo) and lit a candle then slept sitting up. I’d wanted to see Q and A on ABC1but the power remained off and it was only when the bedside light and the radio connected to the power came on (around 02:00) that I realized that I’d missed all of the programming. The showers had stopped. I had breakfast and filled in forms and went to Bellingen; the road was OK and I had a rare trip to town without becoming involved in crowded traffic flows and sent a bank cheque off to the builders who will repair the damage here.

Thursday Feb 23 2012. I mowed some of the Riverside Lawn, cut some of the downed trees and logs left by the flood with the axe and the machete, and returned some debris back to the river.

Friday Feb 24 2012. There is much sun and shadow today. I realized before sunrise this morning that this is indeed the end of summer. Everything in the gardens is green. I want to remember some of the summer that wasn’t quite summer—at least from this month.

Remembered Summery Moments:

≠When I was mowing for the first time in many weeks I stopped to watch a collection of yellowing leaves from the old white cedar that’s always breaking and shedding limbs over Big Lawn; it was a summery autumnal event. I always think, farewell my lovelies when I see these leaves being released,

≠On days when it was raining and I was moving the canoe and tools up to the house I saw two snakes on different afternoons, one small red-bellied black and one slightly bigger brown. I shrank from the brown snake—I’ve seen so few anywhere. The snake hesitated near my feet (which I’d thoughtfully clad in wellingtons), but moved on calmly through puddles…to my relief.

≠The young bleeding heart tree right outside the window where the radio is has only now attracted a solo brown fruit pigeon and he or she has the developing small fruits all to its self. Where have all these pigeons gone?

≠I was standing at the window looking out at the flood the other afternoon and watching the rain falling on the leaves of that same bleeding heart tree. The larger leaves were all wet and had beads of water forming and then falling, but the newly emerging small young leaves that had opened were dispelling the raindrops. How could they be waterproof, I wondered?

≠On that Friday afternoon when I met Daniel and Marie at the bridge and the bridge was re-emerging from the flood I noticed for the first time that the bloodwoods were flowering in the heavy air and there was some mist rising from the forest on the hillside—just the best way and at the right time to see bloodwoods in flower.

≠Two afternoons ago when I was crawling around the fallen dahlias that had collapsed and tying labeled tags on the identifiable plants I found some near-perfect examples of each of the blooms almost at ground level. The dark red of Mrs Rees, in particular stood out: they couldn’t be seen from above though, they were hidden and were available for viewing only to old guys crawling.

≠I’ve always enjoyed February light because it’s softer and there hasn’t been enough of it this year; and it’s always beautiful especially in the afternoon near the river: and golden.

≠The smell of death has been fading. I’ve several times seen the largest (and perhaps now the only) dragon sunning himself on Big Lawn well away from the riverbank. I imagine he’s as fed up with the high river level as the rest of us. Might this imply a dramatic evolutionary shift, I wonder? Might more and bigger floods inspire the little water dragons to leave the riverbank and become much bigger dinosaurs again?

Creative Writings

I include here a maiden review written by my neighbour Leif Bambridge. He explores some of the themes and some of the motivating characteristics of certain protagonists in recently read novels. Because several very different books are discussed this review may perhaps also be considered as a feuilleton, a notion that also appeals to Leif partly because feuilleton derives from feuille, a leaf… (Leif is also a gardener).

The Ungood People

Leif Bambridge

Allow me to introduce myself: “I’m not a man of wealth or taste”. I live next door at Dreamtime and have been a neighbour since Don arrived to establish Earthrise in 1984. I have a very tentative grasp of even the most basic social niceties (despite Don’s aggravating assurances that he considers me to be “a thoroughly decent sort of chap”). He doesn’t realize that some occasional chainsaw work and mechanical work (car and pump emergencies) is only the result of my inability to free myself from my primeval genetic programming. This tells me that total exclusion from the group means certain death.

Don has invited me to write a book review. I acknowledge the need for misanthropic hermits like myself to have some access to the opinions of people whose taste I respect before purchasing a book or having to wait for an interlibrary loan to eventuate. But because appreciation is such a subjective thing I reckon that if a reviewer were to list his 10 favourite authors and rate the book on a scale of 1 to 10 in a number of categories (e.g., language, style, strength of the story, insight into the human condition, understanding of emotional provocation, readability), then some trees could be saved.

There are, however, exceptions such as the review given Blood Meridian by the ABC Book Club that was so intriguing that I knew I had to read the book. Don, bless his heart, had read Blood Meridian and presented me with a copy and also invited me to review it (suddenly I was subtly cast in the role of critic or reviewer!).

Cormac McCarthy, the author of Blood Meridian (1985), is one of America’s finest writers and Blood Meridian is widely considered a masterpiece. The book’s genre is Western. Don’s projection is so intense that he has difficulty understanding that anyone who can read and write does not necessarily harbour a secret desire to be published. To be fair, I believe he may think that to write may help to release demons, mine in particular.

I was not disappointed by Blood Meridian, it was everything the blurbs promised and more: hell on Earth, a 3D technicolour production, Hieronymus Bosch-like depictions covering thousands of square miles of mud, blood, deserts and mountains; and murder most foul—all of those described in language so exquisite that almost every page seemed a poem in its own right. Important themes in the story frequently turn on the Judge, surely one of the most appalling and enigmatic characters in fiction. The Judge is erudite, an artist, chemist, charismatic leader, joker, nudist and philosopher, yet his behaviour is akin to that of Hitler, Stalin and Pol Pot: he obliterates any possibility of the existence of morality. It may be a case of “Allow me to introduce myself. I’m a man of wealth and taste. Don’t you know my name?” (Mick Jagger).

The era in which this amazing story is told is that of the Mexican War, 1846-1848 (after which the US acquired New Mexico, Texas and California). Set in the Texmex country in the post-war 1850s the narrative probably and unfortunately has some historical basis, but the horror is so relentless that the story projects a sense of total unreality. I am reminded now of Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1902) And I can hear someone saying, “The horror the horror”! Maybe it was Kurtz.

In an attempt to inspire me, no doubt, Don gave me a copy of a book review of Blood Meridian to read, but when I found that that critic had gazumped my idea of drawing comparisons between The Judge (an albino) and Moby Dick it just depressed me.

Thus I have been reading in other directions and have recently devoured the wonderful Stieg Larsson Millennium trilogy (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo; The Girl who played with Fire; The Girl who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest) and Ford Maddox Ford’s The Good Soldier, which I’ve also been invited to review.

My emotional response to The Good Soldier (1915) was intense.

The book is magnificent. Its language, its insights into human nature, philosophy and psychology are what I crave in a book. The complexity of its planning and structure confound me in the same sort of way that the workings of my computer does. Don’t get me wrong: it’s an easy read. Only four, all too human characters, are involved in all too human activities. However, in the view of the character Dowell: Society must go on, I suppose and society can only exist if the normal, if the virtuous, and the slightly deceitful flourish, and if the passionate, the headstrong, and the too truthful are condemned to suicide and madness (p 236).

The author claims it is a true story written in 12 months after he had worked on it in his head for 10 years because he had promised to keep it secret until all the real-life protagonists were dead. The story is told through a ‘narrator,’ (who is also one of Ford’s four protagonists) and provides a brilliantly innovative touch revealing the chronologically disjointed sequence of events in the order in which he became aware of them. Initially I found him (the narrator/protagonist) a sympathetic character but as the book progressed his innocence, naîveté, gullibility and pathetic self-deluded hero-worship so concerned me that I was forced into some serious introspection. The narrator’s almost obsessive class- consciousness floats like an ambience around the concept of ‘good people.’ You meet a man or a woman and from tiny and intimate sounds, from the slightest of movements, you know at once whether you are concerned with good people or with those who won’t do (p 34).

I know a good book deserves more than one reading, but this one demands it. Yesterday having just read Zoe Heller’s wonderfully insightful introduction in the Vintage Classic edition I feel compelled to change my position on book reviews.

I was surprised to read that Ford Maddox Ford had published Joseph Conrad and also collaborated with Conrad in the writing of novels. More about these unexpected aspects of Ford can be read in Julian Barnes’ definitive review in The Guardian (which is also in part a biography of Ford). As this online summary explains: “Ford Maddox Ford’s personal life was deeply complicated, made worse by his own indecision and economy with the truth. No wonder unreliability, shifting identities and the turmoil of love and sex are the hallmarks of his greatest novel” (The Guardian).

Ford may not have been a perfectly honest person, but as a writer he was brilliantly insightful and perceptive of the frailties in human nature and the stultifying social restrictions of his time. LB.

Leif Bambridge reads too much and despairs of ever being able to read even a small portion of everything worth reading.

(Ford Maddox Ford’s The Good Soldier (TGS) was first published in 1915. References in this review to TGS are from the (London) Vintage (Random House) edition, 2010).

A Day Out

Don Diespecker

I began the day apprehensively at 04:00 hours on Feb 14 because that was when I was wide-awake and well enough motivated to get up and get going after a hot shower and breakfast. It was still dark. I took my time. I had to drive the car (the wounded Honda of the locked bonnet) safely to the Honda agents and their Maintenance workshop in Coffs Harbour. I hoped the bonnet would stay put and not playfully break loose and smash back into the windscreen during the journey (there was little danger of that, but the long days of flooding, sundry related dramas and an impressive lack of sleep had made it so much easier for me to be paranoid). Because the bonnet was ‘locked’ securely closed (an open invitation to those pesky local bush rats to play the squatter’s game and to nest beneath the hood atop the warm engine) I had moved the car back up the hill to Victoria’s garden. I left Earthrise in the soft light before sunrise and tottered up the road. It was dry and the river level was nicely down and the early birds were singing cheerfully so I hoped the day would remain fine and that no rain would fall.

All went well. I reached Coffs without incident. I handed over the keys and the Workshop guys took the ailing Honda into the workshop just before 08:00. I was obliged to accept the reality of necessarily waiting my turn for the Honda to receive her TLC treatments because there were those other car owners who had had their vehicles booked in for days. I switched on my emergency phone and gave the car carers my mobile number and wandered apprehensively away toward the CBD. At least I’d made it to Coffs: so far, so good. In the Workshop the crew would be faced with what was for me a horrible problem: the decrypting of the ‘jammed’ or otherwise inoperable releasing mechanism(s) of the bonnet. I imagined the Honda being placed over an inspection pit, of skilful team members surgeon-like inserting upwardly long implements from beneath the car and thereby releasing the mechanism that had to be released for the hood or bonnet to open. Would new parts have to be ordered (hopefully, not from distant Tokyo)? Would there be something of a temporary nature affixed to enable me to open and close the bonnet? How could the bonnet be freed in time for the maintenance crew (there would have to be a number of them, all bustling) to effect all the minutiae of servicing the veteran 1987 vehicle before the Shop closed for the day (I, of little faith, had an overnight bag in the car boot and was prepared to stay in Coffs for as long as was needed)? Perry several times said that it was ‘no problem’ and hope sprang: I began believing that I had brought the old Honda to the only place in the Southern Hemisphere where the difficulties could be resolved.

Whenever I have to be in Coffs for a length of time I always go first to the CBD. I started at one of the coffee shops in the Palms Centre (a large shopping complex in the CBD with a variety of stores and the central PO and containing one of the few outlets offering gluten-free muffins (and not forgetting the strong fair dinkum fresh coffee). I always head there when the car receives her life sustaining treatments. I have to confess, dear readers, that this old rustic is now a guy who is much less comfortable than when a young person in built environments where there are throngs of people. At home I’m very comfortable with the river, the forest, and wild creatures; at home, despite obvious dangers, all is green and beautiful. The Palms Centre is not unattractive, but it is entirely built and generally is also heaving with droves of humans. Old rustics have to adapt. I fancied a life-sustaining banana and blueberry gluten-free muffin and a cup of real coffee because the day would be long and I would necessarily have to avoid falling asleep and falling down. I waited my turn and paid for the items and sat at a small table where I immediately became part of The Breakfast Crowd. It was just after 08:00. The coffee was excellent and I drank the whole cup (a teacup-sized cup of, I think, espresso without any sugar). The effect of this Big Hit on my antique CNS was impressively electrifying. There were ample seats and tables at the café so I sat tight and enjoyed the ride. Many who were obvious workers in the Centre or from close by came for the coffee and some take-away food, so the café was not unduly crowded. I realized what a lot there was to see and I was reminded of breakfasting in Europe surrounded by busy groups of people—phenomena so rare in the Darkwood as to be almost non-existent.

I was sitting facing Coles Supermarket. People of all ages went in and out to do their shopping. Some seniors moved slowly with big wheeled shopping trolleys and some carefully pushed ahead with walking frames. I imagined how it would be for me to have to walk that carefully and delicately while also transporting shopping items. Some male shoppers of my age group, I noticed, walked faster because they carried rucksacks on their backs. It was perhaps easier for seniors to use the supermarket facilities several times a week and to carry away with their limited means a relatively small number of purchases each time they visited rather than attempting one big load (a week’s worth of shopping, say). I doubted that many of the elderly I could see would have motor vehicles in the attached parking station; some, in the ways that they dressed, for example, seemed to indicate that they perhaps could not have afforded their own transport. Shopping was generally so much easier for me, I thought, because I was able to push a loaded trolley out of the supermarket once a week to my car in a big car park (at Park Beach Plaza) and to then drive home.

Near me sat those I thought must be regulars: I guess they came frequently to the café to enjoy a modest breakfast: a cup or a pot of tea, perhaps toast or a muffin (my coffee and a muffin cost me $7:40; was that affordable to most people every day, or only on some days?). My small table was next to a pillar and I discovered several magazines racked inches away together with a copy of the Sydney Morning Herald. I remembered cafés in Europe, particularly the breakfast room of the popular big hotel next to the Cathedral in Vienna where the newspapers were bound to sturdy pieces of varnished wood the broadsheets always as smooth as though just ironed for easy reading.

Although I had surely noticed on previous visits I was surprised to see how many in the passing parade were amazingly overweight; dare I say obese, very obese. Those who were so noticeably overweight appeared to me to be generally young (most probably in their twenties and thirties and forties) and mostly female. I don’t mean any of this as a criticism: I was simply surprised to see so many who were so hugely overweight that buying clothes to fit, I imagined, would surely be a substantial problem. And I further realized that I seldom see obese people in the Darkwood or in Bellingen.

As I finished my powerful beverage I wondered how the world’s coffee drinkers have so far not caused coffee to be the rarest substance on Earth: so many of us like the stuff and there are many who like it well enough to use it several times a day (I used to start my day with a full coffee pot but now indulge what was once an old habit only on Saturday mornings because busy blood vessels do not benefit from caffeine). Knowing that the day was young and that I was obliged to last undamaged throughout its course I reluctantly left the café and began a tour of the Palms Centre. I had already seen many of the coffee people at cafés within the CBD and also inside the Palms Centre so I made a temporary detour to the Book Warehouse further down the street and away from the big shopping centre.

When I returned to the Palms Centre I moved upstairs in search of a quiet location where I might be fortunate enough to be allowed to sit and read. Between the escalators and the Big W I found such an open place, one clean and well-lighted: there was bench seating and some more comfortable easy chairs and because the area was so much like areas or concourses in airports the feelings that go with crowding were much reduced (further, this concourse-like area may also be imagined as a proto hotel lobby). Shoppers strolled in from the adjoining parking station, others waited patiently for the big department store to open: the pace of the shoppers here was slower, the space less bustling; sunlight streamed in and the canopies of nearby trees were visible through the windows. I was not the only person sitting and looking vacantly at the people traffic. I could perhaps sit and read or I could relax a little and pretend to be waiting for something: the department store would open, the women who worked photographing babies and children would increasingly work the slowly enlarging crowd of Mums with Babies. In other words I could again simply sit idly and watch the watchers, some of whom were of course also watching me watching them (if we were to sit or stand watching in such ways in the Darkwood all of us would surely arouse suspicion). I read a little, my reading speed enhanced now by the head electric and the continuing wash of caffeine through my revved up CNS. I was attempting to find stories that were at least as interesting as the cover blurbs had suggested in the fat paperback anthology, The Australian Long Story; alas, I started badly (the story I chose was well written but not interesting; the characters were not memorable; the epiphanies seemed absent or findable only as epiphanic moments; the themes were dull; but it was I who was at fault: I couldn’t get excited about the story because it was hellish dull and boring (sorry, iconic author). Feeling like a wretched and wrung-out literary critic I abandoned the morning read and toured the department store that now sells many of the popular books—and at reduced prices—that once were available only in bookshops and then I wandered back to the Workshop.

Lunchtime was nigh and my car’s turn had not quite come up (it looked lonely and neglected and like a long-suffering patient silent but courageous outside the ER); and further stoical waiting was required of me. I retraced my steps and again threaded my way through the growing crowd at the Palms Centre. There would be no further coffee for me: a milder and less alarming cup of tea would be more appropriate. There were now many more people in the vicinity of the café than I’d seen earlier. Only two tables away from me an elderly woman sat reading a paperback while drinking her cup of tea; nothing else demanded her attention. Then I became aware of a young guy dressed in what looked like riding leathers (but he was without a helmet); he stood between where I was sitting and the supermarket cheerfully eating a kebab and like me, was people-watching. Which one of us looked more out of place, I wondered? He’d have looked perfectly normal in Darkwood Road, where I live, but his appearance was almost alien in the Palms Centre. Then I became aware of a well-dressed person (collar and tie and shirtsleeves) who I imagined probably worked nearby. He appeared quickly with a steaming cup and saucer in hand and went directly to one of the big lounge chairs situated close to a low coffee table. His drink looked like a latté that was liberally sprinkled with chocolate (I hope he may forgive me my idle curiosity if he reads this). There was surely sugar at the bottom of his enticing cup: he briskly jiggled rather than stirred his spoon deeply where presumably the Good Stuff was concealed and then sipped from the spoon (my apologies again, sir, but I was fascinated). The spoon jiggle was so measured and brisk and his apparent need (sorry) so compelling that this definitive action seemed perhaps part of a ritual. In this unusual way the customer eventually changed from spooning to drinking before finally picking up the spoon again to remove all of the chocolate from the depleted cup and to ingest it in the specific way in which he had begun. The ritual (sorry) completed he stood immediately with the cup, saucer and spoon, returned it to the top of the counter and disappeared briskly into the crowd. Had I rudely spied on a double addiction, one for both caffeine and chocolate? Had he too experienced electrification of the psyche as I had? Thoughtfully I took my cup and saucer to the counter and headed for the park-like trees I had earlier seen from upstairs. The trees were growing in a small park close to the Centre where I had experienced so many people. Thankfully I was able to walk on green grass and then sat on a bench (the trees were smooth-barked and grey with twisted branches implying character and it was safe for me to sit close by—most of my big trees at home tend to drop big death-dealing branches at any time of the day or year).

Readers will be pleased to know that my reading pleasure was so much improved by being outside in a green environment that I felt more kindly disposed toward the iconic author of the story I had started reading inside at breakfast time, but although I finished reading this story I unfortunately was unwilling to change those negative views arrived at earlier: it was still a hellish dull read despite having been written by a famous writer, sorry (the long story is a form I also love to write).

Buoyed by having completed the published long story I jauntily set off again to see more of the CBD but my wandering was less rewarding than I’d have liked and I soon returned to the more open but even busier space on the second floor of the Centre to rest in an inviting lounge chair. Nearby another senior citizen sat reading his book: he was engrossed. I wondered if perhaps this was a favourite haunt of his, one chosen for its reading comfort. And then he left looking pleased and satisfied. Was he perhaps a man who had no suitable reading space at home? (Or, was he, like me, idling in town while his old Honda was being serviced?). The more I thought about this the more it made sense: we were in a big relatively open space, one that also contained invitingly comfortable lounge chairs. Although it was also noisy and filled with movement the light was good for book reading. If there are no laws prohibiting it, reading one’s book in a shopping complex seems a harmless and rational pastime. Maybe there should be more of it?

A passing Workshop employee stopped to tell me the good news: my vehicle was being worked on as he spoke; progress had appeared appropriate; my early return to see for myself was a welcome suggestion. Following this encouraging news I prepared to leave but paused when my still over-active CNS detected some unexpectedly strange behaviour: some elderly folk, as they came close to where I was sitting were looking distinctly displeased as they approached and then passed me. My electrically- and caffeine-enhanced visual acuity and speed-of-light perception that now enabled instant triangulation and targeting had turned parts of my CNS into a fast-tracking computer, possibly. I looked about covertly: the observed powerful looking or should I say staring was not being directed at me: all the examining made by certain passing shoppers was distinctly disapproving ranging from, I would say, askance to withering. I dared to move my head and redirect my gaze: nearby a young woman sat waiting for her friends: she wore what may have been black lace (?) stockings but I couldn’t be certain of this without dislocating my neck or going cross-eyed. The nature of these stockings must have been sufficient, I supposed, to inspire at the very least some degree of disapproval by certain shoppers: the impartial observer would probably need to look twice in order to determine the nature or material (or both) of the unusual or unexpected hosiery and others in the traffic flow, less impartial, having made their initial observations were going to be unenthusiastic or even hostile at perceiving what they (for whatever reason) did not like the look of…(sorry). I thought at the time that although I might never discover the true nature of that apparel I felt perfectly OK about those stockings (?): indeed, they enabled a chic attractiveness for their cheerful and unaffected wearer (who soon left together with her arriving friends). Reading one’s book in that public place seemed universally OK; wearing black lace stockings (if that’s what they were) was decidedly not OK for some (conservative?) older shoppers.

I tore myself away from this unusual learning situation and hurried to the Workshop: the efficiency of my old Honda had been restored: the locked bonnet/hood was now liberated and working in the way intended; and the machine had been serviced. I paid the bill and left: everybody was happy.

Much of my day out had been experienced within a built environment crowded with people, many of them shoppers and now my psyche could again settle into its normal operating speed. The sky was filled with magnificent great clouds and there were blue spaces between them and no rain fell.

I set course for home, the engine purring my heart singing. DD.

The link to Russell Atkinson’s blogsite and to some of his writings is: www.theoldestako.wordpress.com

Epilogue: I’ve been asked why my canoe has been hauled up to the west side deck and tethered to a post next to my front door and couldn’t resist saying that the canoe was Plan B—my means of escape if the flooding should again reach the top step of the house (as it last did in 2001). I hope it won’t come to that. Best wishes to all from Don at Earthrise on the sunny afternoon of February 27 2012.