Thursday 31 December 2020

Melbourne + Sydney make New Year's Eve awesome...

rocking New Year's Eve...

via GIPHY

starfish shaped like a ravioli...

new camera arrived...

current 2020 tone in the room...

shaping new thoughts re Emily D...

a little boy and a joey...

2020 is melting...

Twitter anniversary...11 years...

Wednesday 30 December 2020

summer rain at Yalgoo...

when time has no meaning...

pink-eared duck...

Croatia earthquakes...

black kookaburra...

Roman wall + a bookshop...

shiny motorbike...

Hastings foreshore trail...

Hastings mangroves...

historical society sculptures...

O'Toole Memorial Walk mural...

Hastings foreshore...2020 signs...

Hastings...roses...

Hastings main street...beautiful and eerie...

Hastings main street...empty...

Hastings morning walk...just green...

Tuesday 29 December 2020

Ronni Kahn...

emus in Tasmania...

NOTE: There is an Emu Bay Road through Deloraine in northern Tasmania. The road joins up with the Bass Highway.

our footprints...

I watch light...

comfy furball...

Peninsula Wide + new council...

Mongolian girls and golden eagles...

trees - a cosmic miracle...

holiday factory...

my book title?...

NOTE: The cleansing refers to the fact I ousted many clothes that don't fit this morning...too big...That morphed into a significant donation to the Salvos...Guthega is my lingering connection with 'From Snow to Ash' - Anthony Sharwood...I'll never forget how he used this name of an Aussie town to express his passions from time to time...

 

cleansing morning...

Monday 28 December 2020

leading into 2021...

pigeon sign...

Bella and Jock...

passing visitor...

bees sleeping flowers...

play-acting in fun...

this year of the plague lands...

hair sculpture...

Pompeii unveils more secrets...

Archaeologists in Pompeii, the city buried in a volcanic eruption in 79 AD, make the extraordinary discovery of a frescoed hot food and drinks shop that served up the ancient equivalent of street food to Roman passersby. 
Traces of nearly 2,000-year-old food were found in some of the deep terra cotta jars containing hot food which the shopkeeper lowered into a counter with circular holes.
This antique hot-food eatery is known as a thermopolium.

Russell Falls...

reality of art...

Wycliffe Well...

kaleidoscope of shadows...

9 degree summer morning...

a little wild gold...

late December...chilled...

Sunday 27 December 2020

Merryneum...

forest garden...

shredding...

holiday percussion...

long-nosed dragon...

evolving into the new year...

distant drops of sunshine...

a sleeping furball and a painting...

A World of Calm...

this peacethis peace by Robyn Cairns
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rob Cairns' this peace poetically highlights features of a journey we all take, either consciously or subconsciously...seeking that elusive, maybe utopian light we like to understand embodies our personal concept of peace...That peace maybe scrambled with grey and crossed wires. It may even be a little scarred with an industrial skyline or rust. But somewhere, if we take the time to notice, there is the zen glide of a pelican uplifting us and trees regenerating us. For me, Rob's journey is fragmented, halting...short poems connect loosely...The Mungo interlude seems stark, as if not quite the indulgence I expected for an ancient dreaming place...But this is Rob's journey...not mine...I borrow what is meaningful to me, and remember classrooms must have daydream windows. (After all, I am a teacher.)

View all my reviews

Saturday 26 December 2020

Boxing Day cricket...

Boxing Day heist...

Telstra payphones...

Peery Lake...

It's like an ocean in the middle of nowehere.
The closest towns are White Cliffs (55km south-west) and Wilcannia (110km south).

I love Boxing Day...

new camera...

Boxing Day message...

Friday 25 December 2020

to the Andrews family...

long Christmas Eve drive...

Carols by Headlights...

Christmas cheer from Safety Beach Sailing Club...

ho...ho...ho...for Victoria...

sleigh bells have passed...

Christmas Day wishes...

Thursday 24 December 2020

Christmas and journeys...

first Christmas...

fun royal name...

Song of Joy flash mob...

outback Santa via Aldi...


Christmas light...

a Christmas Eve threat or a promise?

Wednesday 23 December 2020

Christmas to an aboriginal community...

an unusual vintage Christmas card...

native Christmas plants for each Australian state...

giant parasitic Christmas tree...

fruit-stealing season...

no homeless dogs...

cicadas played backup...

from my sea world to you...

Tuesday 22 December 2020

Christmas reindeer in Docklands...

Biscottini Café Bar...

retro country store Christmas...

phonecalls...

Monday 21 December 2020

Go to your happy place. Often...

A World of Calm...

Good King Wenceslas...

earthquake near Douglas Park...

Sunday 20 December 2020

Amos muses on a distance...

penguins watch Melbourne lights...

First posted this on 21st April with Shu Ting's poem

Then on 7th June 

a furball and Christmas...

give Mrs Claus a role...

fresh philosophy between the wars...

Colbinabbin silo art...

Australian cooperatives...

gauzy sunlight...

Saturday 19 December 2020

my children are awesome...

a chat and a glass of wine...

reflecting on the past...

poetic memories of the Palace Theatre...

** My poem was originally published on my Gemma's Greyscale Territory - 11th April, 2008 

remembering Sydney's Palace theatre...

I have featured details of the old Palace on my Gemma's Greyscale Territory blog... 

1. Any information?... - 25th June, 2007

2. Weird tales of the Palace Theatre, Sydney - 25th June, 2007

3. Palace Theatre Shows early 1900's - 25th June, 2007

4. More Questions on the Palace Theatre Sydney - 26th June, 2007

5. The Salt of the Palace  11th April, 2008 - my free verse, capturing legends and spirit of the Palace Theatre

my year in books...

snow rumpled countryside...

Friday 18 December 2020

From Snow to Ash...

from tree to giant hand...

poetic explosion...

defiant army of cloud...

Thursday 17 December 2020

colourful moment on a grey day...

rainbow lorikeet seeks apricots...

6 eagles a-waiting...

Veggie day becomes Reading Day...

it's Veggie Day...

Wednesday 16 December 2020

some praise for Australia Post...

Beethoven's 250th birthday today...

book surprise...


 

the year of the mask...

hide and seek...

Christmas cleaning frenzy...

Tuesday 15 December 2020

a train and a canal...

Monday 14 December 2020

Bill Harding...

There are times when snippets from a long-ago past creep up on you...uninvited it may seem, but somehow having a circumstantial purpose...filling in gaps waiting to be filled...

Tonight has been one of those times...

For some unknown reason, I decided to check out an old school acquaintance...I knew he had secured fame and fortune as a writer, but in recent years, there seemed to be little evidence of his work.

At the age of 15, he was writing for the Mavis Bramston Show on TV. This was an unusual attainment for a schoolboy. But William was never your regular schoolboy.

I first met him at Yagoona Public School...He seemed a bit of a loner as I was...I smiled when he walked... He appeared to bounce from his toes and a wisp of very dark hair on his head bounced along with him...

To get out of home as much as possible, I attended Yagoona Baptist Church very regularly...I walked there...And often passed near where William lived not far from the church...

Sometimes we said 'hello', at school, in the street, but I don't remember any great dialogue...

High school days...I travelled from Yagoona station to Birrong and would see him/bump into him sometimes on the Yagoona station platform...He travelled by train to a select school I believe, but I cannot remember which one...We chatted a little about writing, but little else...

Years passed and I was working casually in the theatres in Sydney to support my University studies...The casual work involved walking/running from one Hoyts theatre to the next to be available at movie intervals...On one walk/run, (by Hyde Park? St James' station?) I saw William...at least, I thought it was him...in a long coat, head bowed, and minus the positive bounce in his walk...I was so sure it was him, but I hesitated to speak...He did not seem to be in a good place...quite dishevelled...I kept walking and regretted that choice for a long time later...I began to convince myself that he may have needed help...and I ignored him...My shyness can be quite a burden, even a curse...

Since those days, I have heard that he has become a successful screenwriter...But not till tonight, when for some odd reason I decided to research him, did I find just how successful the boy I knew as William Salmon, now Bill Harding, has become...

Excerpt from 'Two Lives in the Cross' - co-written with John Paramor. (John wrote his story and Bill wrote his)

John and I have been happily unmarried for 44 years, half of which we’ve lived together and for most of that time we’ve lived in or around Kings Cross.  

My prior encounters with the Cross had been eye-opening but minimal; the first and most glancing caught through the tram window en route to the Stadium at Rushcutters Bay with the girl who lived across the road from me in Yagoona and our accompanying mothers to see the Mouseketeers. Helen and I brought our precious ears to wear during the performance. The place, even passing through, looked lively. 

 Then there was quite a hiatus. I next saw the Cross by night, this time through the window of a TV producer’s Mini Minor heading along Darlinghurst Road in a southerly direction; bejewelled in neon, the place looked even livelier and otherworldly and sexy with promise various, pretty much immediately delivering on its unwritten mission statement. On this occasion I made footfall, our destination being dinner at the Belgrade, a cheek by jowl, cheap and cheerful Yugoslav restaurant in a Surrey Street terrace. At the next table a trench-coated stripper surmounted by a half-metre beehive of curls and daisies wrapped in protective plastic ate pola-pola between shows. 

In the closing stages of Bill's story, I was surprised to read the following comment:
I was seventeen and everything within sight, hearing, smell and taste seemed different to what I was used to – and all a vast improvement. Half a century later the site continues as a restaurant, having segued through many a cuisine to find itself today dishing out mozzarella as the Buffalo Dining Club...
I found out at fifty I’d been adopted. My birthmother worked at one stage at the Arabian Café in Darlinghurst Road and what evidence exists suggests her impregnator was a merchant seaman passing through.

Bill claimed that he did not know he was adopted till age 50? That is so odd...I knew he was adopted when I was a teenager...My mother told me...Perhaps my mother had spoken to his adoptive mother...


For more details of Bill's writing - theatre, film and TV, see HERE and HERE

P.S. It may happen that Bill finds this post...He would be puzzled about who I am...He knew me as Pamela Button. I never liked/felt comfortable with any part of my name, so happily divested one name and became Pamela Adams when I married. That has become my teaching name. But still, the name did not seem to be me. In a new life, about 14 years ago, (now tragically closed early 2019), I met a man whose surname was Wiseman and I've always loved the name Gemma. Too easy to become Gemma Wiseman - my pen name that I still use. 

a view of Bunnings...

Ningaloo Marine Park...

'Ningaloo' is from the Wajarri language meaning 'promontory', 'deepwater' or 'land jutting into the sea'. 

exhausted teachers...

more silo art...



 

remembering Tasmania...

Sunday 13 December 2020

coat hangers and nests...

Gyrfalcon...

Christmas beetles...

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