Tuesday, November 24, 2009

DO YOU REALLY SAVE MONEY?

DO YOU SPEND MORE THAN $264.00 ON GROCERIES?

This month we carried out a little experiment in Grocery Shopping very similar to those done by ‘Choice Magazine’ and by the Australian Bureau of Statistics to measure the C.P.I (Cost/Price Index). By doing some local shopping first we were able to establish what was available in Linton before moving to the bigger stores with a wider range of products.


Below we provide three grocery traders and the shopping list with the total price for each
shop. We have not gone into listing individual pricings as these vary too much from day to day as to be accurate, and avoided specials. Not all the same products were available so we purchased those with close to or equivalent pricing and weight. To make things totally fair none of the Traders were aware of the experiment so could not offer any store specials or reduce prices.

As we found out the three shops differed in Olive Oil Products. Shop 1 selling 1 Litre for around $ 8.00 so the following two shops we purchased the same Extra Virgin Olive Oil with different brands but only varying by around 5c in price. Sausages bought at Shop 1 for $5.59 and again we opted for sausages which only varied about 10-15 cents each way in price, and all shops carried different brand eggs.

Vehicle costs were based on an average of 56c per.km according to RACV figures for different size/type of vehicles. This was calculated as costs associated with the purchase (over 5 years) plus insurance, registration, maintenance and fuel and all distances were calculated from the Linton Post Office.

SHOP 1
Nanna’s Apple Pie 600g
6 Organic Sausages
KR Rindless Bacon 250g
La Espanola Olive Oil 1 Litre
Kraft Parmesan Cheese 100g
Nuttelex Margarine 500g
Store Brand Cream Cheese Spread 250g
Kraft Fat Free Mayonnaise 410g
Store Brand Lemon Juice 250ml
Kraft Vegemite 150g
Store Brand Crunchy Peanut Butter 375g
Store Brand Raspberry Jam 500g
Sprite Lemonade 2 Litres
Purina Toasted Muesli 1Kg
6 Free Range Eggs
Lipton Tea Bags 50
Store Brand Wholemeal Sliced Bread 650g
Golden Circle Cream Corn 425g
Store Brand Sandwich Tuna 185g
Country Cup-a-soup 2 Serve
Pauls Full Cream Milk 2L
Morning Fresh Detergent 450ml
Store Brand Laundry Powder 1Kg

Shopping $ 83.74 + Add Car Cost 2/3 Km being 37 cents = Total Cost $ 84.11


SHOP 2 (Differences)
6 Spanish Sausages
Vetta Olive Oil 2 x 500ml
6 Olde Ballarat Eggs

Shopping $ 86.41 + Add Car Cost ……Km being cents = Total Cost


SHOP 3 (Differences)
6 Premium Sausages
Island Olive Oil 2 x 500g

Shopping $ 77.76 + Add Car Cost 58.6 km being $ 32.81 = Total Cost $ 110.57

Even allowing only for LPG fuel at 9c Km the minimum you could add on to any Ballarat purchase would be around $ 5.27. So at shop 3, and we have not even considered travelling time in the car, you would have saved $1.08.

What does all this mean? Unless you work in Ballarat or have some other reason than to just go Grocery Shopping you would have to be spending at least $ 264.00 to actually be saving any money at all, AND will your Ballarat Shop Home Deliver?

Published in the interest of saving you money in the longer term. Keep your eye out for the possibility we might also check out the Butcher, the Baker and the Candlestick Maker.

THINK YOU CAN DARNCE?

In One Act
Entertainment Reporter BOB LE BILLDEUX

So You Think You Can Dance, Australian Idol, Dancing with the Stars, Australia’s Got Talent and even Red Faces have been able to attract huge audiences on TV but that is Free. Would we pay to see the same thing live? Apparently not going by the dismally small – off the street – audience at Her Majesty’s over the last three months.

When did you last go to a Live Performance and I don’t mean going to see a bar brawl or a pub band. Where you have performers coming from afar as Launceston, Perth, Sydney and even Mt.Gambier.

Nearly every day during August, September and October at various venues but principally Her Majesty’s Theatre the Royal South Street Society hold their Annual Talent Quest.

Admittedly the word ‘Eisteddfod’ conjures up the thought of amateur performances. However in amongst the 40,000 participants performing in 10,000 individual acts there were, and I’m afraid I missed about 9,800 of them, some extraordinarily talented seniors, children and young people.

I’d missed the August performances by the time I even found out about RSSS (for some strange reason they stick Bagpipes out in February) so I wasn’t able to get to the Brass Bands, Pianoforte and Instrumentals. All that was left was Stage Bands, Dance and Calisthenics.

I was certainly not interested in the under 10 performers such as the under 6 Tap Solo or Song and Dance Solo. I think I’d rather be ‘mulesed’ by Maxine than to be forced to cohabitate with a crowd of Stage Mums egging their offspring to perform well beyond their capacity.

The first performances I was able to see were the Intermediate Concert Bands from High Schools and Colleges from all over the State. I wasn’t disappointed by their performances considering their age but it would have been nice to hear some counter melody or harmony.

The next I got to was the ‘Young Prize’ for Choral works old and new. There were no groups from this District that I’m aware of which was a bit sad considering we have a Choral Group in Woady Yaloak who would have given those performing a run for their money.

A week later I sat through Modern Solo 10 under 12. I was impressed by the ability of the dancers to put some life into the dreariest music I have ever had the misfortune to have to sit through. Think worse than Celine Dionne or Barry Manilow. Thankfully the music was nearly drowned out by the constant clicking of knitting needles coming from the stalls. I was later to find out it was actually the clashing of Talons between the Mothers in the front row.

Why is it that dancers have to have their hair pulled back so tight in a bun that you can almost hear the creaking of the roots? A few girls could only have been described as anorexic and should really have interpreted Saint Saens ‘Danse Macabre’.

Stage presentation could have been better, the choreographers are to be blamed for this not the kids’. This varied from just walking on and off through to gliding sideways into the wings somewhat like a showground duck in a shooting gallery. One girl literally flew off into the wings so fast I don’t she would have stopped until she hit Sturt Street.

What nearly brought me to tears of joy was a performance by one of the smallest competitors when she interpreted ‘Memories’ and almost brought to my feet by a ‘barely out of nappies’ brother and sister act flawlessly impersonating Fred Astaire and Shirley Temple.

In the Solo Tap and Dance for 10 but under 12 one wonders why a boy, built like a Rugby Forward chose to perform ‘I Like To Wear A Dress’ (and did). Was the number his choice or some disappointed Mother? Now that’s G.U.T.S for you.

Congratulations to Emma Rix of Ross Creek who achieved 1st Place in Country Music Solo and an Honourable Mention in Contemporary Vocal Solo.

I’m now looking forward to the competition entitled ‘Impromptu Telephone Conversation’

I’d like to go on about the ‘Nijinsky’ but that will have to wait until after the Christmas break.. Godfrey has been off his trolley this month. Hopefully he will come to his senses for the Christmas Issue. There will now be a short Interval.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

A GREAT BLOW


THE ULTIMATE BLOW

Last months high winds which brought down trees and de-roofed animal houses all over the district created havoc at my place as well. Situated on a ridge I got the full blast from the windstorm. I had just passed through Snake Valley when the first big gusts struck and for a few kilometres I was ducking falling trees and branches careening across the road in front of me like a rugby forward. (I’m sorry if I hail from the north.)

Being nearly blown off my feet, I’m big enough to withstand 200 Km/hr, as I opened and closed the front gate I was halfway up the driveway and had nearly reached the shelter of home when all of a sudden an unseen tornado hit my garden shed. Without as much as an ‘Allah Akbah’ the 9M2 structure lifted vertically off the ground and blew itself apart like a hand-grenade.

I had to gun the car up the drive to miss the dozens of bits of wall and roof and connecting pieces as they flew across the ground taking huge divots out of the lawn. Something white and fuzzy bounced across the front of the car following the horizontal rain which left a deep skid-mark in the bonnet.

The household detritus and garden tools and sheep feed stored within the building sat still for a few moments before it too began to scatter itself to the four corners of the property. The willy-willy was blowing all my stuff willy-nilly. The wind was so strong I found the heavy double bed size inner spring mattress about 40 Metres to the east and the single bed foam mattress against a tree another 40 metres past that.

Heavy tools stayed where they were but a box of white elephant donations emptied itself piece by piece along the eastern boundary. Ice-cream containers filled with what I describe as ‘things I might need’ and screw top jars of ‘smaller things I might need some time this century’ fell out of the shelving as it collapsed backwards into the void left by a shed wall. Paint tins of various sizes with contents anywhere between 2 Lt and two spoons full rolled hither and thither across the bit of flooring that was left.

As I turned towards the house with the wind astern I espied in my rear-view mirror what could only be described as a meteor shower of sheep pellets headed towards the back of the Ute. I gunned the car again this time into the carport but I was too late, like hailstones I was pelted with a mixture of poo and malt pellets.

The sheep were wondering the paddock with monstrous comb-overs. Maxine who sometimes can’t tell her tail from her elbow sported a really nice Emo style hairdo.
As usual Dumb and Dumber the two Alpacas just looked startled, a pretty normal countenance for them.

Later that afternoon I got a call from one of my neighbours to tell me that Hayu the lamb had landed on their front patio. He joked about flying pigs between gales of laughter and asked me to come and pick him up. I mentioned that he was only a foster lamb why could he not have been blown back to his natural flock. That explained the white blur and the skid mark. But I picked him up anyway, you can’t leave youngsters with strangers.

Days later I was still collecting up bits of shed a hundred metres from where they originated and sweeping dung from the back of the Ute.

Sensibly I have now purchased a 7 Metre Shipping Container weighing in at two and a half tons to replace the shed. Why don’t the retailers tell you that these lightweight metal shells are referred to as ‘blow-aways’ before they sell them to you.



But all this is not really about Max is it. So I’d better get on with her story. She’s has been acting a bit political of late in fact she has become like a university student and chosen to take to the left of politics. Somewhere between Lenin and Kevin I think.

The final straw, which is ever so slowly sending me around the twist, was the anti-xenophobe project she inaugurated this week. It all started with the arrival of Fatima and Farsi the two ‘coloured’ Merino’s last month.
As soon as they arrived the locals gathered around them, stared, stffed the same place dogs do, smelt a hint of Tabouli and decided not to have anything to do with them.

Of course the locals do not include Max. I worry about her as she gets far too friendly with the wrong animals, I fear she’s going to have too much to drink one night and forever after will be unable to say with any honesty “I’m a lady I do ladylike things”.

She sauntered up to me on Saturday and dropped at my feet an article by Susie O’Brien in the Age about Kinder Pupils being urged to ‘challenge bias and discrimination’ as part of new teaching guidelines. ‘You’ve got to be kidding of course’ I thought as I picked up the partially chewed article, ‘little people don’t understand the intangible quit yet.’

But then, looking at Butch and then over towards Kebab (who will be living in the freezer soon), I thought that maybe if this lot can understand the concept of ‘funny looking sheep’ so could the under 5’s?

Oh! Bother – run out of space as usual so that story will have to wait until the final episode next month.

GODFREY ZONE

ANNE OF GRUESOME GABLES

‘It’s Edwardian’ she said waving her right arm over her shoulder as if she were doing backstroke. That was the first decent response I had received after checking into ‘Bed and Breakfast Accommodation’ for the first time in my travelling life. Up until now I had stayed overnight in everything from a one-man hutchie to Indonesian standard five-star luxury but never in a B&B. I had always equated them to dingy little dives where the almost homeless could guzzle on Metho in peace and quiet.
This one however boasted of ‘unparalleled comfort’ so I thought I might give it a try. I would learn later that unparalleled meant there was nothing to compare it with and they were bloody right. Actually my first impressions were that the place was a sort of ‘Fawlty Towers’ run by Mrs.Bucket.

Following a long verbal explanation of the rules which seemed more comprehensive than ‘Parliamentary Procedures’ she made sure her hands were on my dollars before I stepped any further into the Grand Foyer of her Edwardian owner-built hand-crafted two-storied splendiferous establishment.

The Edwardian outburst had come after I innocently asked whether the house was Victorian. She seemed quite put off that I would imply that she was that old. She assured me they had been built to the highest standards (her words not mine) as a grand family home. I still think it was Victorian even if it was into 1920’s Edwardian by the time it was finally finished. Her Father, the builder, most likely whittled all the banisters by hand on the front veranda.

Having got past the first hurdle, my Debit Card, she directed that I should ascend the staircase into ever increasing, windowless gloom before her, explaining that she could only manage stairs two feet at a time. Passing a door at the foot of the stairs I overheard somewhere in another room a gruff male voice apparently admonishing ‘Thing’ for not removing his shoes at the back door. Oh! Dear it’s the Addams Family.

Waiting for her to reach the upper landing I couldn’t block out the image of the ‘Hunchback of Notre Dame’ climbing the bell tower as she edged herself wheezing and spluttering along the rising banister. Having reached the same floor level ‘Mrs. Mine Host’ shuffled me around the corner towards a mine shaft style corridor. Walls of dark wood panelling were the prime décor of the upper hallways the type in which you would expect Lou Costello to come swivelling out.

Opening a Linen Press she showed me the en-suite which was really an out-suite. The door opened outward too, there being no space for it to open as a normal bathroom door should. This had to be closed before one could access the bedroom door, which she then progressed to do. With a large key that clearly fitted a century old lock she opened the bedroom door and ushered me in.

I’ve been called a hoarder too which I vehemently deny. I eternally recycle things and in that there is a big difference. Ornaments nick knacks and trinkets seemed to have ensconced themselves on every available flat surface and if I had a cat to swing I could have done some very serious damage.

I almost expected to come across a statue of the Virgin Mary made from toenail clippings and sleep under a doona filled with navel fluff. What made it worse was that the floorboards wobbled when you walked past which caused all the ornamentation to wobble as well. I had to literally tip-toe around the room to avoid any of these things shaking themselves onto the floor. A smell of mothballs assaulted the nose as I navigated my way around the bed. The room was taller than it was wide or long, the double bed filling a good majority of the room with the basic decoration somewhere between late Gothic and early Pentridge. There was no radio or TV in the room either to maintain the Edwardian theme throughout, they could have stretched it to at least a crystal radio set. I began to doubt my sanity, if I started with any, booking into a B&B sight unseen but it was the only one listed on the booking service advertised on the internet. All the others listed only phone numbers, and feeling uncomfortable with telephony I opted for the one that could be booked via email.

The B&B did not have the internet however. The tourist association did, and they would phone the booking through to the Thomas Edison wall phone where I wanted to stay. Not quite false pretences but certainly a bit of smoke and mirrors.
Breakfast is between 7 and 7.15 she said explaining how to get to the Dining Room and with that she scuttled out of the room as fast as a hunchback can scuttle. I struggled the window open to get some fresh air I doubt that had been tried since D-Day and then laid back on the bed to rest my aching arms.

‘Heavens to Betsy’ I said to myself (that’s the worst swearing I’m permitted in this story), was this a Tiffany Lampshade made from broken beer bottles hanging from the ceiling. I stood up on the bed to examine it more closely and found it was actually patchwork macramé with netting inserts. Above that, almost out of sight, sat the fire detector. It seemed so high up that it could only be set off by a passing cloud of volcanic ash. The heater light set so high in the bathroom, at least 11 feet from the floor could only have been useful to moths or maybe an earth circling satellite.
I had been in the place for just over an hour and already the walls seemed to be closing in on me and felt a bit like the ‘Prisoner of Zenda’, I could feel in my water that the stream of pleasure I wanted this week-end was going to strike a few rapids. Shrugging off the initial reception I proceeded to the out-suite for a shower. The little Negro jockey holding the roll of toilet paper next to the toilet was a quaint touch although I do feel he would be more comfortable on the front lawn. Maybe political correctness drove him to hide in the dunny.

I undressed and squeezed myself into the half-telephone booth or maybe double coffin called a shower recess, remember this room was converted from a Linen cupboard, not a mean feat for someone who prefers a shower recess the size of a shipping container. I sort of ‘Pop and Locked’ myself dance-style with a cake of soap in each hand. Bending over was out of the question as my bottom hit the eastern wall at the same time my forehead hit the western taps. Maybe we should have this style of shower recess in Victorian Prisons, nothing could happen if you dropped the soap.
I turned 90 degrees and tried again. This time when my rear end stopped my top half was through the curtains and outside the recess. I was now looking straight into the bowl of the toilet. Aha! Maybe I could wash my hair this way and rinse the soap away with the touch of a button. Having sighted the contents of the bowl I recoiled back into the shower recess. How I hit my head with my left foot and got my tongue stuck in the floor waste I’m still too stunned to work out. I must start getting serious again – this story is supposed to be a drama.

Alighting from the shower I commenced the process of drying myself only to realise that my feet and elbows were hitting the walls with such regularity in the tiny bathroom/out-suite/closet that I feared the neighbours might begin complaining about the drummer next door doing a boogie-woogie in the bathroom. Moving back through the airlock to my room I noticed a little ceramic panel attached to the door which announced that I was spending the night in the ‘Rose Room’. I felt quite pleased about that as I actually rose the next morning.

By the time I fell onto the bed again I was so hot and bothered that I felt I had wasted my time trying to relax. Maybe tomorrow night I should just stand out in the street and get run over to save a bit of time. I don’t know how but I did manage to drift off a little warmed by the afternoon sun. As I did begin to slumber all I could think of was ‘It’s Edwardian you know!’

At 7.00pm the beep of the watch alarm woke me to begin enjoying this stage of the week-end. Dressing in middle-class finery (Tracksuit and Joggers) I wandered down to the local Bistro. Apart from myself there was an aged couple that looked old enough to have arrived with Captain Cook and a relatively young couple, which means half my age, with a boy about six and a girl about nine. I overheard the conversation with the waitress that it was the Dads Birthday. This might explain why the little girl was dressed like a Fitzroy Hooker and the boy, resplendent in a purple velvet cape, being either an effeminate Super-hero or an apprentice Vampire. It appeared to be a fancy dress party, it had to be, Mother was dressed like Kath Day-Knight or was it that she was dressed quite normally and the kids had just dressed up real pretty for Daddy’s birthday. The only thing I didn’t hear her say was ‘Look at moi, look at moi’. Mum’s Afro would have looked better on either of the kids. But who am I to judge? In a certain light I’ve been told I look rather like a flattened cow-patty.
Passed tea without further incident, so it says in my Diary, and then noted that I waddled toward the Theatre Royal for a ‘meet-and-greet’ session before the CNAV Conference (Catering for the Near After, Victoria) started for proper. An offering of Coffee and Creams with Nibbles and Nuts was on the schedule of events and I had visions of sitting in a Grand Olde World theatre flanked by gorgeous coffee coloured nymphets with creamy complexions nibbling on nuts.

This was not to be so. What I encountered was being squeezed into a tiny Coffee Lounge needing a lot of cream to lubricate our thirty bodies into it, and then, by the condition of the interior start to panic if anything scampered up my track pants and began nibbling on nuts. The room must have been the original ticket box as it could not fit more than three two-seater tables and a lounge for an expected 30 overnighters. And that’s all that happened. The nymphettes looked like 1930’s schoolteachers complete with buns and the men, all sporting well proportioned beer-guts Sumo-wrestling to the Food tables. It was described in the timetable as an ‘ice-breaker session’ where we could meet and mingle with like-minded twats.

In half an hour I was exhausted by the overcrowding and holding coffee cup with one hand over my head with the other holding my nuts. We sort of managed to rub noses with other guests for a while until we were plunged into darkness by a power failure and I could only tell who I was conversing with by either the smell of mint or garlic.

The much publicised multi-purpose art-deco theatre was exactly that. The Foyer area in which we found ourselves was divided into three small rooms of coffee tables which incorporated a coffee bar, wine bar and sidewalk café. The café counter also served as ticket office, multi-flavour ice-creamery, cake shop, souvenir stall and candy bar. All of this contained within a small area the size of a walk-in closet. I did not get to see the auditoria beyond the mock leather panelled doors. But I did notice that it was a Disco on Friday, Movie Theatre on Saturday, Thursday a Bingo Hall, and reserved for the ‘Church of the Happy Clappers’ on Sundays.

I know that some towns, even around here, have progressed little further socially than the Stone Age and to prove the point the town I was staying in was promoting on posters and banners ‘A Festival of the Wheel’, but for some of us who have progressed can at least boast of a town with a Computer Museum. I’ve decided to donate my computer to them in favour of a new one in the near future. I have not yet seen my existing model on display anywhere. Three horizontal wires with coloured balls.

At least sitting here in the coffee shop, my face pressed up against the outside window pane by the crowd, I can see a fairly modern, well established Library with a steady stream of visitors. It seems some councils have risen above the mire of pre-history and actually loan out their own collection of books. Next to that a newly built edifice. Why is it that Government Departments have to keep moving into more expensive real estate whilst at the same time claiming they have no money. There are perfectly good landmarks all around Victoria sitting under-utilised, unrestored and even un-occupied. I detest seeing cheap shops despoiling once beautiful picture palaces, in fact next to the Library on a corner is a marvellous old Art-deco building, obviously an ex-bank office which houses the worst of showrooms, those selling carpets, called the ‘Rug Vault’.

One can probably tell that I have a ‘Masters Degree in Whinge and Whine’ what better occupation for a grumpy old arsehole who never has a good word for anyone. Oh, except for myself of course.

I predict that by 2050 when I am really old and grumpy we Socialists will be greeting our Comrades under the beloved Red Banner and proclaiming the Peoples Democratic Republic of Happy Valley when local councils and the states will be abolished and we’ll all stand united behind our Dear Leader Kevin Rudd III.
I have even written a new Anthem for our Republic which is sung to the music of the Mickey Mouse Club.

Who's the leader of the land
That's made for you and me
K-E-V-I-N-R………U-D and D again.
Hey! there, Hi! there, Ho! there
You're as welcome as can be
K-E-V-I-N-R………U-D and D again

K-E-V-I-N-R………U-D and D again

K-E-V-I-N-R………U-D and D again

Forever let us hold our banner
High! High! High! High!

Come along and sing a song
And join the labor clan
K-E-V-I-N-R………U-D and D again

And so, bringing myself back from fantasy land to the present story I thought the first day had passed eventfully. Oh, No!, Oh, Yes! More trouble was brewing on the horizon. The fortune cookies did not foretell what would happen next, but it would be very soon and very traumatic.

Driving back to Fawlty Gables which just happens to be a little closer to its real name and parking the car I instantly went into panic mode when I felt in my pockets. Where were the room keys? Quick, check pockets again, check centre console and under seats, check pockets as if some miracle might make them appear there, floor mats, glove box, spare tyre compartment as if some idiot would put them there anyway and then front of underpants, no sign of any keys. I don’t normally break into a sweat, at night, in winter, but I did and I began shaking like an outbreak of Parkinson’s. I knew that Morticia Bucket was going to be most displeased. Rule 14, Clause 7 Para 6(b) had been broken ‘Thou shalt not lose thy room keys’.
I drove back to the Coffee Jar check there, back to the hotel Bistro to check.

‘Yes, we had found them on the floor and rung the B&B’, said the publican.

‘Oh! Bother!’ said I aloud. It was actually a lot worse than that but I have to keep this thing ‘G’ rated for the readers.

‘The husband Gomez had driven down in his PJ’s to pick them up, they were most displeased’ said the publican. Funny, I thought, that’s exactly what I assumed they’d say. ‘He had driven down to pick them up about an hour ago’ he continued. That explained the clap of thunder and flash of lightening I had seen and heard earlier at the ‘Coffee Closet’.

Summoning up every ounce of courage at least worthy of a ‘Mentioned in Despatches’ I returned to the B&B. Morticia’s Gables seemed to loom out of the dark, silhouetted against the full moon, dark and menacing. I parked the car, lightening flashes seemed to strike the rod on the roof, thunder, flickering house lights, and everything but the rain was in place as I got out of the car.I trod purposefully quiet along the path through the gate and the stairs to the front door. Do I ring the doorbell? Do I have to? Unfortunately yes, my bloody keys were on the other side of it grasped in the claws of Mrs.Bucket. It seemed an eternity before a light flickered behind the coloured glass of the front door, it opened, and a blood curdling voice came from within.

‘My husband and I don’t appreciate Guests who lose their keys’ seemed to reverberate through every one of my bones. It was dressed in a pink corduroy gown over an even more pink flannelette nightgown above, and I do not kid you, fluffy slippers that resembled either Gargoyles Talons or she was barefooted. The head was studded with rollers and all that was missing were the slices of cucumber. The marks where they had been were evident. Saying nothing more she stood to one side, dangled the keys in front of my face to take and permitted me to slink up the stairs with my tail between my legs.

Hang on, I’m the one paying $90.00 a night for this, I should be the Piper calling the tune. Let’s wait to see what tomorrow brings. Bed and Breakfast what a treat, I looked forward to breakfast. Maybe sausages, a lovely slice of bacon and two pert bouncy little fried eggs will soothe away the night’s angst. MMMmmmmmmmm.

In the middle of the night I think the whole house ‘settled’ for I kept waking to a series of creaks that seemed to vibrate throughout the bed and was that something hovering at the end of my bed or just the shadow cast by a passing car.

The thought of brilliantly cooked sausages or ham greeted me at the same time as the sun peeked playfully through the lace curtains and my alarm watch beeped gently on the side table. A groan, a satisfying stretch and my eyelids slowly creaked open. What a wonderfully description for a wonderful morning. The sudden realisation as to where I was turned my thoughts of a leisurely rise into more of an unwanted chore.
I had but 15 minutes to dress and carry myself to the Breakfast Room. I quickly laundered myself in the out-suite, jumped into whatever came to hand and rushed down the stairs as if I were about to miss the last bus to work. Coffee or Tea, a choice of two Cereals and a help yourself toaster with a limited supply of bread, and gold-wrapped butter slices. The table didn’t groan under the weight of a hearty breakfast for a houseful of guests. Where were the other guests? Had they failed to exhume themselves from their beds. The coffee was instant hardly 23 beans filled my cup. So were the cereals, instantly dumped back where they came from. I could have got better buttered toast at home. The butter was too cold, shredded the toast rather than bathed it and was slowly compressed with what one might call a bread and butter rissole. It’s a pity that breakfast wasn’t itemised separately on the tariff. The bed I valued at about $50 so I figured this cup of coffee and bread rissoles had just cost me about $40. I could have made it myself for under $2. I shouldn’t be too harsh however, maybe Sunday’s breakfast might run to more than $3.

I sighted the husband Gomez this morning hovering on the other side of the glass petition which divided our breakfast room from his anatomy table. An ideal position for ensuring nobody took any more than there allocated ration of food. With cup in hand I think he was checking that I didn’t put too much butter on my toast or maybe counting the sugar cubes in their bowl. Why is it that hotels, motels and guest houses insist on freezing the butter before placing it on your table or breakfast tray?

The instant 7.15 struck on the mantle clock Morticia swept into the room and swept out again with the remains of my table under her wings. It would be 10am before I needed to swap one spot for another and report to Castlemaine Goal for the Conference. A walk perhaps?

Out on the front lawn a middle aged guy dressed in white pyjamas was standing on one leg and waving his arms in the air whilst mumbling something like ‘Wax On – Wax Off’. I did a circuit of the residential block without striking any other human beings and returned to my room via a tour of the remainder of the house to familiarise myself a little more thoroughly. There were three other bedrooms three times the size of mine but apparently all booked as I had been advised that the house would be full for Saturday night, or maybe they thought I was a Leprechaun going by the size of the bathroom. Mine might have originally been the Maid or Nanny’s room.

In the late afternoon and the end of the Conference day activities I decided I might relax with the local rag and read about the goings on in this town until it was time for the Conference Dinner cum Awards Presentation Night. The lounge was furnished with deep, body consuming lounges with wooded arms and dark timbered side tables. In the corner I spied an old Pye Black and White round-shouldered TV set next to a wooden cabinet radio with a speaker face resembling cathedral arches. I didn’t turn on the TV not seeming to be in the mood to watch the original screenings of Gilligan’s Island. The light fittings throughout would suggest that electricity came after the house was completed as their art deco look suggested, the radio and TV slightly later.

I was sitting quietly in the Lounge reading when over the top of the magazine I was sure that I saw Baby Jane sweep down the staircase looking for Joan Crawford. Looking to the stairs I realised that my imagination was running riot and I don’t think I’d have paused from my flagon of red even if Bela Lugosi ran into the room swinging a headless chicken.

By the time I returned after the Official Face-feeding I had shickered myself into an earlier night than usual. I found it hard to fall asleep and having no paper upon which to make notes for this story had to resort to the margins of my ‘Time’ magazine. I’ve gone down the white tie of Obama and now writing around the hem of Hillary Clinton. But I digress again.

The other residents of the B&B were as elusive as the Lintonian Aristocracy only being sighted when opening their doors to peek at passing strangers. The corridor actually reminded me of a row of giant Cuckoo Clocks.

In the middle of the night I got up for a little light relief, passed out the bedroom door and was confronted by what I thought was young Pugsley crouched in the corner of the corridor, or was the Golem that creature from Lord of the Rings. Popping quickly into the out-suite I did what I had to do and raced back to the safety of the doona. The next morning I discovered that the little huddled figure was in fact a vase of plastic flowers on a low table which I hadn’t noticed before.
The last time I was ever that horrified was when I saw my partner lathered in night cream and sleeping with a brick under her head so as not to disturb the highly inflammable birds nest hair-do which was the fashion of the time.

The imagination plays nasty tricks on you when you think of spending a night in a big old house where many people have decided to move inconveniently on to the spirit world. I lasted through the second night secured in my room with terrifying noises coming not from the house where it might have been Lurch being admonished by Uncle Fester for putting the bins out in the wrong spot, but the nefarious hooligans after closing time at the pub, putting the frighteners on people who retire before 10pm on Saturday night.

Well dear reader that’s about it for this story. Not a lot happened after that. Sunday Breakfast didn’t surpass the three bucks I set for it, the daylight allowed me to banish thoughts of vampires especially now that I had a string of Garlic around my neck.

I quite simply packed up and fled the scene as quickly as was polite to do. I don’t think the smoke from my tyres stopped until I was a few kilometres out of town. Who said that Ford Ute’s cant do 0 to 100 in less than 5 seconds?

Monday, September 14, 2009

BLOW FLIES




Have you ever woken up a bit startled by a dream that you just had? It doesn’t happen that often but about a month ago I had one dream that was more like a nightmare.

Looking out the bedroom windows I espied five of my flock each painted with a word. BLOW, FLIES, HOME, GO, NOW. Except for grammar I thought it read reasonable well for a flock of sheep that have never even been to pre-school. Even Dalai and Panchun the two Alpacas were there but stood apart from the flock as usual – there words BUONOS NOCHES didn’t seem to fit the sign anywhere.

And then Hayu the lamb sauntered across from behind the house. I think the protest was actually aimed at him. He was sporting a rather crudely drawn target icon on his rump. It was probably sprayed on by Roast who has always been jealous of the lamb because he’s more horny than he. Hayu went to go into the middle of the line but was beaten back half way across the paddock. Finally, on returning to the line, Maxine, who wore the word GO realised her error and changed places with Betty who wore HOME and the sentence read much better.

Maxine then marched towards Hayu and pointed her left foreleg at the poor little fellow announcing that “we will decide who nibbles our grass and the conditions under which they nibble it.”

‘Ear, ear’ bleated Casserole. I drowsily reached for my Dream Interpretation Book and looked for a meaning. Not Mary’s little lamb, stranger, not related to the rest of the flock. Just wandered in and began eating their grass and drinking their water. What a hide. Besides they claim he has a strange accent, obviously a bloomin’ migrant from the wrong side of the fence. Perhaps the flock might even begin complaining about the amount of Malt Pellets Hayu received from Centrelink compared to them.

Hayu right from his arrival had to be given his own bowl for food as none of the other residents wanted a bar of him and were denying him access to the normal services available on my land. They don’t even invite him to share their carrots and apples. What seems to worry them most is that he seems to always sit and chew his cud five times a day facing the West. All hell will break loose when two new ‘coloured’ Merino’s, Farsi and Fatima, arrive next week if I don’t nip this problem in the bud right now.

Suddenly it struck me…….how stupid could I be…..how stupid were they. I called out to them. It’s BLOW-INS stupid…..not Blow Flies. Blow-ins.
GODFREY ZONE

P.S One other bad dream I had recently was after I had laid Pindone for the rabbits. As a socialist pacifist it’s very hard for me to even think of killing anything. But that night I dreamt of seeing hundreds of Bugs Bunnies floating towards the clouds singing songs from ‘Watership Down’.

P.P.S I’ll have to stop Kebab the Whether from travelling in the back of the Ute. He was listening intently to my CD’s while driving around last month and now I find out that he wants to trade in his guitar for a Wurlitzer and a Sigmund Romberg Songbook.

WHAT'S MANHOOD?



(Readers should be advised that this story contains animals and adult themes. It may also contain traces of nuts.)



The next important step in the learning curve of moving from being a Pitt Street Farmer to a fair dinkum Happy Valley resident was it now came time for the inaugural shearing of the alpacas.

The sheep were bad enough. Somehow by being an obsessive compulsive has allowed my animals to work out every regular move I make. Visitors, feeding time, noisy machines, feeding time, burning off, feeding time, and so on.

So it was to be with the alpacas. The very moment I do anything different such as encircling the small yard with hessian they immediately expect something dastardly is going to happen. So one has to do these things well in advance so as to put them at ease and make them think all is normal. Dali and Panchun had no idea that anything was up until I refused to re-open the yard gate for them after feeding.

The hummed and ‘aaahed’ as usual until the van arrived with two strangers aboard. Complaints and inquisitive looks turned to consternation and horror as the two men approached them.

I had not heard about having the Alpha male go first, so it was brown ‘Dali’ who would picked to feel the effects of clippers and snippers first. That’s right, neutering was on our mind as well. He actually was quite laid back about it all, even being spread-eagled in the dirt didn’t seem to worry him. Laying there taking it all like a man, even though ten minutes later he would no longer have a libido.

When released Dali headed off into the wild blue yonder feeling a bit lighter and cooler, all three sets of human eyes now turned to Panchun.

Like a Hitchcock suspense movie the moment of shearing was building up from quite elevator music as he was lowered to the ground to the stab stab stab of Bernard Hermann's shower scene in ‘Psycho’. The bloodied knife being replaced by gnawing shears.

Like Dali two years of fleece fell to earth, Panchun’s black locks gradually denuding him. Concurrently with the process of shearing Panchun let go with every orifice and soiled himself, spitting at anyone in reach and screaming blue murder. He didn’t let up even after we let him go.

With a sound like the screams of a woman running from the hairdressers clutching her bald skull Panchun didn’t stop running until he hit the boundary fence. He felt the shears but felt nothing of a bit of him disappearing into a bucket. Not only had they lost their hair but some mean bugger had also stolen their manhood as well.

The indignity of it hit Panchun like a well aimed Mallet and all he could do was flop to the ground, groin pressed into the dirt in an attempt to protect what he no longer had.

Even to this day they are both so traumatised by the event that whenever they settle down to feed and lower their head into the feed trough they seem to experience some sort of flashback and both will pop their heads up quickly, with a startled look, eyes wide, as much as to say ‘Wazzat?”

Maxine has been treading on my toes regularly in an attempt to get me to buy her a ‘puter’. I’ve got a spare one in the shed and a good monitor but I’m still searching for a keyboard with typing keys big enough to manipulate with her hooves. She won’t let up, she knows it will upset Betty who kind of thinks she’s the local Baa Bara Cartland. I think Maxine wants to do a column too but I’m resisting the idea. Why should I give up my space for her?

I think I’ll ask her to audition for the job first and find a good excuse for her not to proceed with her unrealistic ambitions.

GODFREY ZONE


THOUGHT FOR THE MONTH

Why is it that Phone Technicians, Electrician and Plumbers are all striving to keep the name ‘Diggers’ alive.

Every time I want to do something around the house it seems they’ve got to bury it. One example is gathering water from the guttering around the carport and directing it to the downpipe in one corner, but then going underground for about a meter and a half before rising up again nearly to the same height to empty the water into the rainwater tank.

Are these the normal rules or are they all in search of Lasseter’s Reef.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

HYPOCHONDRIA AND DEATH


It might just be me slowly sinking into what used to be called senile dementia. I’ve been having a few bad experiences lately trying to keep up with the increasingly strange experiences with my farm animals. Who was it that first said ‘It’s either me or them’

As I write this it is a beautiful, crisp Victorian country winter having survived the frost and pea soup fog of the morning the sun is out and the birds have stopped shivering. I dread the early hours for it is then that Maxine or one of the other critters will meander up to the front door just to say hello or send me some cryptic message. I’m never sure when I’m half awake whether it’s the fog of my failing eyes or my petrifying brain from which they emerge.

One morning last week I was greeted by Maxine wearing a pair of my Y-fronts over her nose and mouth with the leg holes tucked behind her ears. Where she found them is beyond my reckoning but there she was fully protected I assumed against Swine Flu. I’d had a bit of an inkling that something was going on when she constantly decimated any hay bales I left laying around leaving herself huffing and puffing in the process. But she is a very experienced hypochondriac. Through the Bird Flee outbreak even the battalions of local Cockatoo’s, as gregarious as they can be, dared to land anywhere near her.

I remembered reading to them about the Three Little Pigs for it is just now that I’ve seen Maxine searching all the corners of the property probably in search of a little house made of sticks to check out if the occupants are running a fever or not. She has yet to realise there is a pile of bricks behind the shed.

A neighbour did warn me about reading them bed-time stories, especially the one about ‘Mary and her little lamb’. This one caused my Mary to look at her newborn twins and wander if she might need an optometrist as she seemed to be seeing double. The ‘white as snow’ bit also caused her consternation as she’s a black-faced Suffolk and her new off-spring looked like two emaciated Blue Heelers.

I don’t like ending stories on a sad note but if I am to remain chronological in my meanderings then it has to be so.

Yesterday afternoon at feeding time, after separating out the alpacas and corralling the sheep so they didn’t hassle each other, then tying up the goat so he couldn’t hassle the alpacas or the sheep, I noticed the horses where nowhere in sight. I fed the various groups and was hand-feeding Bill when behind me came the thunder of hooves. The Clydesdale, who just adores bread, pushed in to get a share of Bill’s dinner. Giving her a good whack on the rump and reinforcing that with ‘p… off’ she backed away.

What I did not see was that her hind legs had caught themselves up in Bill’s tether. As she backed away he was pulled under her back legs like the rabbit on a greyhound track. The mare becoming startled at suddenly noticing something hairy between her legs lurched wildly off. Unfortunately Bill went with her at an astonishing speed and was subsequently strangled by his own collar wrapped around the horses’ hooves.

Mercifully it was a quick end, the mare sensing something awful, hung around Bill’s body for at least an hour occasionally sniffing it. Maybe she knew something terrible had happened, who is to know. Well, as Ned Kelly said ‘such is life’.

Late last night I lowered him into the ‘Pit of Death’, lit an incense stick and played Bill Grogan’s ‘Goat Song’.

But before everyone lights candles and starts singing ‘Kumbaya’ it may be wise to know my misadventures will still continue next month.

GODFREY ZONE

A THOUGHT FOR THE MONTH

Who in their right mind would carry political correctness to such an extent that a recent sale described a high quality horse whip as a Horse Pacifier?
Pacifiers for Americans are Dummies to us.
Dummies to us are Americans.
Now I’ll just go and pacify myself a milkshake.

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