Marulan for Breakfast

I’ve been in Canberra overnight for another rehearsal with Brindabella Chorus, staying with family. A month earlier we’d come down to check out the National Multicultural Festival where Brindabella Chorus were on the program. It was my first performance with Brindabella Chorus that was not part of the competition package.

The Multi Culti, as it’s locally colloquially known, is a gathering from every representative national group (and associated activities) that can be found in Australia’s national capital city. The streets are filled with stalls, many offering food along with information about the people who have prepared it. Performance groups in various national dress wander through the crowds either on their way to a performance, or relaxing after one. Even when the skies opened with a generous thunderstorm right before our performance, it was a colourful and  delightful place. As the rain stopped you could see the steam rising from the dark asphalt.
After the Sunday performance we’d driven back home chasing the same storm, purple skies darkening to night many hours before sunset.

Only three days later I drove back again, on my own this time. We’ve learned that for us, a good midway point is the small village of Marulan. It’s a fascinating place, its claim to fame being that it’s the only town in the world on the 150th meridian. It also means that in this time zone, at the equinox the days are of exactly equal length here, sunset at 6 pm and sunrise at 6 am.

With the highway dotted with brightly-lit food and fuel stops, highly visible as you approach and easily accessible as a quick lane-slip off the highway, places like Marulan can miss out on the passing trade. As a result, the food is better, the fuel is cheaper, and the relaxing break is more therapeutic. I topped up my tank then drove to Meridian Café for a light lunch.

We first discovered Meridian at Marulan a couple of years ago when we took refuge in heavy rain on our way to Canberra. Other travellers mingled with locals gave sage advice on what to expect further along the road. We sat in the warm café watching the deluge becoming even heavier outside and waited for a break in the weather to continue our journey.

Since then we’ve tried other towns as ‘pit stops’ but we’ve always come back to Marulan. Goulburn is lovely, it’s still got a strong historic feel with its wide streets and late 18th century building facades, the Paragon Café in Goulburn has glorious old-world charm and the food is great. But Marulan feels like a cosy country farmstead, it feels like home to us.

We had a good rehearsal last night. I usually can only attend online, being able to come to Canberra for a rehearsal in person is hard work but full of joy. There’s nothing like being surrounded by the music to really help you learn it well.

Next morning I knew I’d be on the road early. I’m an early riser even when I’ve been late to bed. The sun was barely up but my granddaughter was already dressed and packing her bag.

“Such a glorious view,” I commented at the vista of hills tipped with gold from the sunrise. “Look at the mist still pooled down low in the hollows!”

“That’s what we call ‘failure to load’,” my computer-savvy granddaughter remarked.

I chuckled. It did indeed look like a computer game that had started to load, then stopped with blank areas not filling in.

My stomach takes time to wake up in the mornings. With certain dietary issues (getting older really brings some shocks but it beats the alternative) it was easier for me to plan breakfast on the road. Sometimes it’s a fast-food drive-thru grabbing some bacon and eggs, nourishing but generally unsatisfying. As a result, I’d planned a fast getaway while around me the household got ready for a busy midweek day. Kids heading to school, parents heading to work.

I stayed long enough to be available should one of the kids miss the bus, but I was on the road by 8 am.

The mist had begun to rise quickly, the blue-tinted low, dense clouds warming and stretching in the early morning. By the time I got to Lake George the clouds were just resting on top of the hills on the other side of the lake, as if tethered to the wind turbines. The lake was silver with a thin stripe of pale blue on the far shore. It’s still very full of water, I wonder where the sheep and cattle are grazing now.

The highway was fairly quiet on the weekday morning, I had a good run for the next hour. There was a little excitement — traffic was slowed when we saw flashing lights ahead. A lot of flashing lights. Multiple fire trucks and some police cars, hoses being played on the carbonised wreck of a truck. No sign of a crash, it looked like the truck had simply caught fire. But all being sorted now, nothing to see here…

The Goulburn sign coming up. Advertising for various food stores and for fuel. Over the years we’ve tried them all, I’ve even written about some of them in previous blogs here. But this time I wasn’t tempted. Not today. I was enjoying the wide open spaces.

It was late morning when I finally swung off the highway for the short drive into Marulan. First to fill up. Then a minute or two down the road and I’ve gone back in time to a quieter, calmer place. I parked across the road and my stomach rumbled in anticipation as I headed up the steps.

Inside it was as welcoming as ever. Room for me, but definitely not empty. The woman behind the counter looked up and smiled. “We only saw you yesterday. Same again?”

I ordered my breakfast (brunch by now) and ducked into the loo while I waited.

It was the best bacon and eggs I’ve had anywhere on this drive. They’d slipped some slices of lightly grilled tomato onto the plate as well.

All too soon I was finished, fed, rested and ready to head off. As I left the café it was quiet outside, bees buzzing in nearby lavender bushes clearly audible over the distant hum of traffic from the highway. I debated a visit to the antique shop next door but figured it can wait until next time.

I’ll be back.

Victorian foodie country — Southern Aurora 60th anniversary tour

On our last full day aboard Southern Aurora we woke somewhere in NSW, with another early start. We were just sitting down to breakfast as we reached Albury railway station on our way back into Victoria.

Breakfast — fruit compote, yogurt, toast, cereal.

Buses were waiting for us when we got to Benalla railway station. Once again we were kept in our Covid bubbles and had each been allocated to a specific bus depending on our train carriages and dining room seating plan.

The buses wound their way up into Victoria’s high country where our first stop was Chrismont Wines, a cool-climate vineyard in Cheshunt.

The views from the balcony at Chrismont were gorgeous. If I lived there I’m sure I’d never get any work done. We had a birds’ eye view across the vines, to the road and mountains beyond.

rom the balcony at Chrismont Wines, Cheshunt, Victoria.

After a sampling of their best wines we all had lunch together before leaving to drive to Milawa, a small village in the heart of foodie country.

Our first encounter with Milawa was back in 1999, when our family spent a week in Bright. During our stay we drove around the Victorian Alps area as well as the gourmet areas nearby. Our cheese-loving daughter was delighted when we stumbled on Milawa Cheese Company. We’d also stopped in to Milawa Mustards and sampled some delicious relishes and mustards. As we were travelling with a family and on a tight budget, we bought mustards, relish and cheese, then stopped at the bakery for some crusty warm bread rolls. Then we drove out of town to find a quiet spot to have a family picnic on this glorious fresh local produce.

Gateau du fromage — Milawa Cheese Company stack of their best cheese wheels.

We’d told our now-adult children of our expectation to visit Milawa Cheese Company and knew they’d want us to ‘stock up’. The family favourite is Milawa Gold, almost impossible to find outside Milawa. It’s a creamy, strong-flavoured cheese, bold and with bite. Once tasted, it’s unforgettable.

We made a bee-line for the cheese counter and selected our favourites. The staff on the train had offered to store our perishable packages for us, in the fridges on board.

From Milawa we wound our way back on the buses through Wangaratta, to re-board the train in Albury.

Historic Wangaratta. Photo taken from the bus as we sailed through. Next time…

Before we left Albury there were more speeches, and a surprise (for me). I don’t know why I hadn’t realised, but the staff on board this historic train were volunteers. They worked hard, their service and courtesy was gold standard, but they were there because they loved the train and the historic railway journeys.

Waiting for dinner — all this was served by volunteers!

The journey back to Sydney could have been sombre, as our adventure on Southern Aurora was drawing to a close. But we still had dinner, and breakfast next morning, to keep our mood relaxed and golden.

Dawn somewhere around Moss Vale.
Breakfast in Bundanoon? Bowral? Somewhere in the misty highlands…

The train was taking us through a damp and misty Southern Highlands as we enjoyed breakfast next morning. After packing, we moved to the lounge car to chat to our new friends and listen to their excited arrangements for their next trip with St James Rail (stjamesrail), and Owen Johnstone-Donnet.

There are tours which take you to wonderful places; there are tours where you get to knew some wonderful people. There are tours where they spoil you rotten.
We’d just had all three. Can’t wait for more!

Journey’s end on Southern Aurora. For sixty years, this sign shone through the night between Sydney and Melbourne from the back of the train. No longer in public service, she’s now a touring train for heritage rail enthusiasts.

Violet Town — Southern Aurora 60th anniversary tour

We’re ready to journey again.
Back in our cabin again.

It was time to once again board the Southern Aurora and head north.

Dual gauge track at Melbourne’s Southern Cross station.
In Melbourne, officials came out to watch the Southern Aurora‘s departure from Melbourne on this historic occasion.
We were also on the evening news!
That’s Owen Johnstone-Donnet on the right, the St James Rail Tour Director.

Violet Town is a small Victorian country town that under many circumstances you’d blink and you’d miss it. It’s a pretty place, as many country towns are, with a railway station and level crossing. It’s reason for existence was purely as a stop on the rail line to Melbourne.

But in 1969 all that changed. On 7 February at just after 7 am, the Southern Aurora collided head-on with a goods train at an estimated combined speed of 172 km/h. Nine people were killed and 117 were injured. Both drivers were among the dead. The fireman of the goods train jumped clear at the last minute. The locomotive of the Southern Aurora and several of the leading goods carriages became airborne. Spilled fuel caught fire and added to the problems. It was an appalling mess.

Immediately afterwards, volunteers got busy searching for survivors, setting up communication and transport and providing what assistance they could.

The Southern Aurora had gone through three red signals and should have been stopped on a siding waiting for the goods train to pass. Instead, it sailed through without a pause.

What happened? It took a while to work it out, but it appeared that the Southern Aurora driver had a heart attack and was either unconscious or dead at the controls. But there should have been a back-up — the fireman and the guard should have been watching the signals in case the train disobeyed them. The fireman should have alerted the driver and/or the guard, and the guard had the ability to independently stop the train.

Passengers gathered together at the Southern Aurora Memorial Gardens
to learn more about the community response to the crash.

The inquest laid the blame with the Southern Aurora’s driver, fireman and guard. A bit unfair on the driver, since he was determined to have been dead at his post before the first signal was missed. It was believed the fireman had been boiling the kettle instead of checking on the alertness of the driver when the Vigilance Control alarm went off (after the train went through the first signal to stop) and the guard was claimed to have been dozing on and off and not watching the signals reliably. Other possible problems were not openly criticised but perhaps should have been. The doctor who cleared the driver to work even with a pre-existing heart condition. The Vigilance Control system should have been automated. The means for the guard and fireman to watch the signals needed cleaning and was difficult to monitor. And perhaps the relationship between the driver and the guard — the driver was in charge, the fireman may have been reluctant to challenge him or take control. That might have caused sufficient delay and confusion in the fireman’s mind, to allow the disaster to play out.

Following the inquest a number of improvements were made, notably to the Vigilance Control system, which now requires both driver and fireman to cancel it once triggered. The various factors which contributed to the Violet Town crash have been analysed and are no longer possible. Train travel these days is much safer as a result.

Due to the length of the train, it was unable to simply drop us off at Violet Town and wait. Instead, we were  dropped off at Euroa railway station and took buses to Violet Town to have a good look at the Southern Aurora Memorial Garden there. We were met by local officials who explained what they have done here by creating the Southern Aurora Memorial Gardens.

The headlines of the day. This accident led to a lot of improvements in train safety nationwide.

The Gardens have a theme of Helping Hands, to honour all the people who stepped forward to offer assistance. Staff, passengers, injured, whole, locals, travellers — people just stepped up. The paths at the Memorial Garden are embedded with positive words reflecting the best of the human spirit. Courage. Hope. Generosity. Kindness. Love.

A central feature of this memorial is a sleeper carriage from a similar set to the ones involved in the accident. There are murals around the park, depicting various scenes from the 1969 incident.

The gardens are a place of peace, remembrance and recognition of what we all can do together when we step up to meet needs.

This is a small town where something big once happened. People came together to help under horrific and extraordinary circumstances and this should always be remembered.

The official notice is on the old Southern Aurora sleeper car in the gardens.

Puffing Billy — Southern Aurora 60th anniversary tour

Our food-filled adventure on Southern Aurora took a different turn in Melbourne.

While Southern Aurora waited for us somewhere at a siding in rural Victoria, the tour group was spending Anzac Day 2022 on the historic Puffing Billy steam train in Victoria’s Dandenong Ranges.

We had an early buffet breakfast in the hotel. Plenty of choice, and freedom to move around and make our selections, so we felt no impetus to eat everything put in front of us as captive diners. As a result, I was beginning to feel less over-full as we set out from Southern Cross for Belgrave, on the Victorian METRO rail service.

When we got to Belgrave we left the suburban train and walked down a ramp through leafy bush to the Puffing Billy platforms.

The Puffing Billy station at Belgrave.
There she is!
Loading up. We were a train load of enthusiasts.

This narrow-gauge line was opened in December 1900 as a way to open up the remote areas in the Dandenong Ranges. It quickly became a tourist attraction, but it was a vital supply line to the people who chose to live in these hills. Not just mail and newspapers, but equipment, tools and even livestock. It made living in the Dandenong Ranges a viable concern. However, it was an expensive one and was eventually downscaled in importance as a result. When a landslide blocked the line in 1953, it was the final blow and the line was closed.

Public interest stepped in, boosted by media coverage. The Puffing Billy Preservation Society was formed and a combination of volunteers, CMF (Citizen’s Military Forces, these days called the Reserve Army) and also with a nod from the state government, bypassed the landslide and got the line reopened in stages.

At 11 am at Belgrave there was a short Anzac Day remembrance, and then we boarded the train. Again, in keeping with staying in our own Covid bubble as far as possible, we were allocated a carriage.

Fern fronds for peace.
They were a bit sad by the time we got up to Lakeside, but there were plenty of fresh fronds to replace them.
Simple, but heartfelt. Remembrance message chalked on the side of the engine.

Puffing Billy’s carriages are open at the sides, a wide sill on each side with horizontal bars ensuring people can’t fall out, even if they choose to sit on the sill with their legs hanging out (surprisingly permitted along the first section of track where we were going).

The open carriages allowing people to sit on the sills, if they choose.
…and we’re off! Thanks, mate.

As we wound up higher into the Dandenongs we could see small villages along the track, some of which were still having their Anzac Day services. People not involved with the services were waving to us as we passed, the little steam train clearly a local favourite.

Riding on the sills as we go over the trestle bridge is apparently a ‘thing’.
Starting our wind up into the Dandenongs.
Ours wasn’t the only train doing trips.
The Anzac Walk parallels the train track.

There was a walking track for part of the way along the line as well, the commemorative Anzac Walk. QR codes allow walkers to hear the stories of the Emerald Anzacs who served. The vegetation varied between tall timbers or groves of palms.

The view of Melbourne from up in the Dandenongs.

Up at Lakeside we had lunch organised for us all (of course! More wonderful food!). We had some interesting speakers over lunch. One man, Graeme Legge, represented Emerald RSL (Returned Services League). He was born in Emerald, grew up there, his father served in WWI. He told us that 32 local Emerald men died in WWI and local communities developed the Anzac Walk to commemorate their sacrifice.

 We had some time to wander around the beautiful and historic station, looking at some of the displays on the history of the Puffing Billy, before our return trip later in the afternoon.

In the small museum at Lakeside you can learn more about the history of Puffing Billy.
Happy engineer.
Yours truly, grabbing a moment on the footplate.
Beautiful countryside. Plenty of fern fronds.

Back in Melbourne we took advantage of the complimentary dinner that our tour host had arranged for us, although we still didn’t have room for much.

Back at Southern Cross in time for dinner.

After dinner we decided to forgo the bright lights of Melbourne and instead avail ourselves of the free wi-fi (sadly lacking on the train) and catch up on emails.

Sitting with legs out the window is definitely not permitted on Southern Aurora.

Back on Southern Aurora tomorrow!

No Danger of Starving — Southern Aurora 60th anniversary tour

We’d boarded this special anniversary run of Southern Aurora the evening before. A few wakeful moments but we slept fairly well and woke to dawn light streaming in our window, and southern NSW countryside flashing past. Just in time for breakfast. Because we’re early risers, we blessed being allocated to the first sitting.

The mist lay low on the paddocks as NSW countryside flashed past our window. Our table mates were a little late, there were a few missing heads in the dining room for the first breakfast sitting at 7 am.

We rolled in to Albury Station soon after breakfast (for us). The second sitting was going to be later, it had to wait until after the morning border crossing ceremonies.

Albury Station, NSW, in the early morning.

With the early morning sun splashing gold over the heritage-listed Italianate station buildings, we gathered to hear some short speeches including one from sitting Federal MP, Sussan Ley. She mentioned the previous MP, Tim Fischer, who was well-known for his obsession with trains, including Southern Aurora. Tim’s funeral train also passed through Albury, paying respects for the many years of hard work he put in there. According to his wife Judy, Albury Railway Station was one of Tim Fischer’s favourite places. We certainly admired it for its architecture, its planning and the amazing length of it — 455 metres, the longest in Australia!

Still travelling — the Boomerang Bag that also went round Europe twice.
Albury Station, NSW. The longest platform in Australia! April 2022

We left Albury just as “second breakfast” began. Although it was for other passengers and not us, we were finding that the food on offer, both the quality and quantity, was making us feel like well-fed hobbits. Instead of thinking of food, I took the opportunity to attempt a shower, in a tiny cabin bathroom of a train on the move.

The trick to showering on the train is to strip off in the cabin, outside the bathroom. Leave your clothes within reach outside the bathroom door. Toiletries (soap, shampoo etc) can fit neatly on the shelf under the mirror. Go into the bathroom, close the bathroom door, then slide the shower curtain around to also cover the bathroom door. There was a very thoughtfully-provided grab rail to hold onto when the train was going around a bend. Because the bathroom is so tiny, it’s easy to reach whatever you need.

I was sitting in the lounge car sewing when we pulled in to Violet Town to be met by some local dignitaries for the occasion. Southern Aurora has a special connection with Violet Town, which I will go into in a later episode.

We left Violet Town just as the first sitting of lunch began. Lunch? Who’s got room for lunch? But it was so delicious we managed to force it down. Other passengers at nearby tables were exclaiming in delight at the food. “As good as ever,” they said. “These St James Rail tours are about the food as much as the adventure.”

We weren’t going to starve, then.

It was mid-afternoon when we finally arrived in Melbourne, at Southern Cross Station (formerly Spencer St Station). We were to spend two nights in Melbourne in a hotel across the road from the station, but coming back to the same compartment on Southern Aurora after that. The staff (who had been waiting on us with such professionalism for our meals) were going to stay on the train while it parked at a siding somewhere out in the country. I hoped they were going to get some well-earned rest.

Southern Cross Station, Melbourne. April 2022

We left our bigger bag in the cabin and took a change of clothes in our smaller bags to the hotel.

And at the hotel, we met our first glitch. They were not ready with all the rooms. Despite knowing how many were arriving, and when, despite the bookings having been made several months ahead, they were not ready. We actually didn’t mind very much because being fed so well and so frequently, we had a sort of detached attitude soaking into every pore. But the hotel staff were profusely apologetic, and invited us to partake of their Swiss-influenced ‘death by chocolate’ happy hour.

It’s amazing how much chocolate you can still stuff in, even when you are full as a tick.

While we were tasting little pots of mousse or indulging in chocolate truffles, our tour organiser Owen was working hard on our behalf. He couldn’t get us into rooms any faster, but he did manage to gain a concession.

“I’ve asked them to compensate you in some way for the inconvenience of having to wait for the room,” he began.

I downed another chocolate truffle. Inconvenience? Oh, yes, I suppose so.

“They’ve offered you a complimentary dinner in the dining room,” he beamed.

Dinner? Where would we put it?

“Tonight or tomorrow night, what is your preference?”

“Tomorrow. Definitely tomorrow.” We were very much in agreement. Maybe by tomorrow night, we’ll be able to squeeze in a morsel of food.

Our room was finally available, so we dropped off our bags and headed out to explore Melbourne. Along the way we decided to find something very light for dinner. Soup. We headed for Chinatown which we found was packed. Really packed. There were long queues outside some places. We weren’t keen on crowds (Covid makes a person a bit paranoid) so we kept moving on.

Melbourne, April 2022

Finally we found one place that seemed to have room. We had to wait, but that was okay. As we waited, I realised that it was the same place we’d visited in February 2020, just as the pandemic was starting in China. Back then, Melbourne’s Chinatown was almost deserted. We’d been the only customers for dinner in this very restaurant. Back then, we’d been served by an older Chinese woman who treated us like beloved children who needed to be nourished. And here she was again! Of course she did not remember us, but we remembered her.

A quieter Melbourne Chinatown, February 2020

I felt so bad for her when all we could order was one bowl of soup each.

She didn’t know that we were in no danger of starving.

Art Deco Delight – Hydro Majestic

In the early days after Federation, the Hydro Majestic was THE place to visit, an exclusive playground for the wealthy and influential.

In the dark corners of the ballroom, through a fug of cigar smoke, the figures could only be seen as silhouettes, if at all. The rich, the powerful, the movers and shakers of the country came here in the early days of Australia’s Federation to indulge in luxury and relaxation, many registering as “Mr and Mrs Smith”. The earliest days of the exclusive hotel had been as a health spa, but the novelty soon wore off and the place was reinvented as a discreet hideaway. It is said that at 4 am a bell would ring, warning guests that it was time to return to their own rooms before sunrise.

The well-known entrepreneur draper Mark Foy acquired and developed this spectacular property as an exclusive, world-class refuge. The best furnishings, staff and produce from around the world were accumulated here for a place of decadence and indulgence.

We first stayed here five years ago, for one night on our way to a one night stay at Jenolan Caves. Then it had just re-opened after refurbishment. Some areas were unavailable, others still had wet cement.

The drop-off into the valley (photo taken in 2015, currently inaccessible).

The views are spectacular here. The Hydro Majestic is a string of collected buildings perched on the edge of the cliffs above Megalong Valley. On our first visit I’d arrived alone, mid-afternoon, and started taking photos. Jeff was travelling by train up to the Blue Mountains from Sydney, leaving direct from work. I watched his train pull in to Medlow Bath railway station, just across the road from the hotel. Then together we sat in the lounge and watched the misty sunset fill the valley. We’d booked in to dinner and went in early, hoping to get out onto the balcony to take some photos unhindered by the internal window reflections.
“Sure,” the head waiter said in response to our request. “You’ve got half an hour before dinner, the door to the balcony is just over there.”

February 2015, in the foyer of the restaurant. The maitre d’ obliged by taking our photo.

We’d dressed for dinner (as you do at the Hydro Majestic, if you choose) and gratefully opened the door to the balcony. The golden mist poured down through the mountains and glowed in the valley in the coming sunset.

The view from the balcony — through the window of the foyer.

Click. The door closed behind us with the finality of a one-way escape. We were on the balcony with no way back. The door wouldn’t open.

We’d just stepped onto the balcony…

There was only one way to go — forward. There were steps leading down from the balcony. We followed the path.

If we turned left, we’d have to walk much further to get round to the front of the building. But turning right seemed closer.

The path led down, past some tree ferns to our left and a stone wall to our right. How to get back? I checked my watch — our dinner booking was still fifteen minutes away.

To our left, the sunset was changing the mist in the valley to a deeper gold, tinged with mauve. I paused to take more photos with the only camera I had — my mobile phone.

‘We’ve still got a few minutes…’

We came to a flight of steps which looked like something out of a fairy tale. It was now five minutes before our dinner date, but again we had to stop and take photos.

The path ahead was wet cement. A tennis court became our escape route, and we finally got back to the dining room just in time.

High tea with an Asian flavour.
Yes, this is dessert. The ‘pot’ is tinted white chocolate, it was filled with a swirled berry mousse topped with fake soil of crushed freeze-dried berries, we think. It was delicious!

On our visit in November 2020, we realised how much more had been opened up. However, the path we’d taken inadvertently in 2015, and in our dinner finery, was now closed to the public for safety reasons. I managed to slip through a gate and get a few photos, but there was, sadly, no access to the old staircase.

No way through in 2020. Hopefully soon to be made safe again.
My fairytale staircase, photo taken at full arm stretch through a fence.

We stayed for several days this time and took a history tour which was fascinating. Due to Covid many areas were closed but we were allowed to sit in these spaces and drink in the atmosphere, if not the cocktails. At night we explored Cats Alley and heard stories of ghosts, of creaking floors and imagined guests sneaking back to their rooms in the early pre-dawn to avoid public scandal of high political figures.

A relic from the past.
Cat’s Alley, with glorious views over the valley, and handy to the menfolk in their testosterone-filled salon nearby.

There is not just a grandeur about the Hydro Majestic, there is also a sense of luxury, of security and a hint of the sort of salacious gossip that was undoubtedly whispered by the women in Cats Alley, the ones who knew all the secrets.

The view from Cat’s Alley. A lovely place for a quiet tete a tete.
Also a lovely place to sit and write about murder and intrigue.

The hydrotherapy ‘cover’ was shed after just a few years, but the name, and the reputation, lingers on.

Spring is Sprung — Wildflowers of Royal

For nearly two months, our road access has been limited and when we need to go to “the mainland” as we call the city, it involves a much longer drive. But as we emerge from winter, the signs of new life are all around us.

Fringed lily — a special find!

When you live in a place like this, you get to know the secret spots, the wildness. The Aboriginal people described six seasons, and the flowering of certain plants would herald a season change. Each area had its own signals for season and its rules to follow. The time of Ngoonungi, for example, is heralded by the flowering of the waratah, and signalled time to move towards the coast. That’s supposed to be September and October, but with climate change the seasons are starting differently, flowers are out of their proper time. The waratahs began to flower this year in August.

Waratah — highly visible.
Gymea lilies in bud.

Also notable in our area are the Gymea Lilies. The name sounds so pretty and sedate, like something you might find as a potted plant in a Victorian palm court. The reality is far more shocking. These bright red, untidy flowers the size of your head grow at the end of a stalk that can be 6 metres (20 feet) high. The base of the plant looks like flax, with lime-green strappy leaves in a clump from which the single stalk rises through winter with a tight bud at the top. Then at the end of winter the bud bursts open in a glorious splash of crimson. In the wild they are not known anywhere else but on Sydney sandstone, but they are so amazing to look at that the plant has been cultivated and exported more widely. There is nothing coy or polite about this plant. It screams its existence as it dominates the landscape. When the flower stalks are spent, they darken and blend in with the tree trunks around them. If fire comes through they will briefly flare again perhaps, or drop to the forest floor to decay and feed the next generation. The heat of the summer days splits open the seed capsules and the seeds fall to the leaf litter below.

Flowering from August are the tiny dancing ballerinas of the blueberry ash, Eleocarpus. They hang on the tree like corps de ballet from Swan Lake but soon change to small, purple berries.

On the side of the road, all these flowers in profusion.
Watch where you put your feet! Colour is everywhere.
A touch of sunshine.

Flannel flowers were always highly prized in my childhood. With their creamy-white star shapes and grey-green foliage, they seem so insignificant and plain, until you touch them and you can feel the soft, velvety fabric feel that gave them their name. On close inspection you can see the pale green tips to each petal, and an echo of the same pale green in the centre of each flower. The daisy-like flowers point to the sky and a profusion of flowering occurs in spring and continues through to Christmas. However, in some secret places, I have found flannel flowers almost the whole year round. When the plant has finished flowering, it is almost impossible to find, even when you know where to look. Often there are other white flowers that distract and confuse — white spider flowers, for example. For me, the flush of flannel flowers lifts my heart because my favourite times are the warmer days, and flannel flowers give me notice to prepare for holidays and sunshine.

Fabulous flannel flowers!
Eucalypt flowers like a bridal veil.


From the late winter flowering of “eggs and bacon” which continues through the summer, to the various wattles which light up the bush with gold that looks so much better where it grows then even in a photograph. As a child I wanted to bring some home to my mother, who loves flowers. The springy, tough branch wouldn’t pick easily and I had to twist it, to wrench it free (losing a lot of the fluffy yellow blossoms in the process). When I arrived home with an armful of flowers for my mother, she immediately ordered me outside with it. Wattle drops flowers when in a vase, and my mother also blamed much of her asthma problems on wattle flowers. We now know, erroneously.

Wattle in bud — macro photo.
Deep inside a wattle bud — microscope photo.

At any time of the year, wattle is in flower, one variety or another. It is so distinctively Australian, our “green and gold”, like the sunshine of summer.

Fragrance is not something we usually associate with Australian flowers, but wattle, and even eucalypt, has a strong honey perfume when in flower. Australian honey (made by European honey bees which were imported in the early days of colonisation) has a stronger flavour than the delicate European floral honeys.

Many Australian native animals, birds and furry creatures, often feed on the abundance of nectar from many Australian flowers. Waratahs and Gymea lilies can visibly drip with nectar. And if you ever get the chance to get up close and personal with a brushtail possum you can smell the honey on its breath.

In our backyard, which has remnants of native trees and shrubs which we never cleared, the Christmas bush is in the first white flush of flowers. Most people know the Christmas bush as a profusion of tiny salmon-red bracts, overflowing vases on the Christmas dining table. But the true flowers are the white buds which cover the trees from September.

Christmas bush flowering early. The salmon-pink bracts come later.

As we drive through “the bush” we watch the seasons ebb and flow. There is always something in flower at any time of the year, and we watch the landscape change in colour and form, and mark the passage of time.

Flannel flowers on Sydney sandstone.

‘Send ‘Er Down, Hughie!’

RAIN. After months of fires, we have rain. It’s not enough to break the drought, it only reduces the fire risk rather than removing it, but it’s rain. Blessed relief, delightful moisture, filling parched throats, water tanks, dams and the thirsty land. Under these circumstances, the invocation, ‘Send ‘er down, Hughie!’ is uttered to the skies with a grin.

Teams of sewers working to make pouches for injured wildlife in care.
A mammoth effort around the country. Some groups are even posting pouches from overseas!

I have driven through it only short distances. Other areas have had more rain than we have, but nowhere has had too much — always a danger after so long without. Sometimes there has been a roll of thunder across the skies, as if ‘Hughie’ is deciding where to send ‘er next.

Puddles! The first rain also brings the saponin-rich froth from the Australian native trees.
The dripping gutter is making circles of suds.

We’ve seen footage of young calves experiencing rain for the first time. The joy of a child who has never felt rain on his face, water falling from the sky. We’ve fallen asleep to the patter of rain on the tin roof and the delightful trickle of it filling the rainwater tank.

Many areas have been badly burned, but this is Australian forest. We will get regrowth except in areas which were burned repeatedly before recovery could begin.

A burnt area begins to regrow as soon as the rains come.
New life in bare ground — a baby Banksia serrata, its seed released by fire.

Wildlife which has survived is being fostered, with a view to eventual release when the forests have recovered.

A ringtail possum clings to the building’s brickwork.
Many animals have been displaced this fire season. Many have died.

Through the drought we’ve been handfeeding lorikeets and providing g drinking water on tables and on the ground. We’ve seen small skinks desperate to reach the drinking water, and many birds have drunk and bathed in our makeshift bird baths. The nectar mix which we’ve fed birds while the flowers have been less abundant has also fed honeyeaters and even a friendly possum or two. A few over-ripe mangoes delighted the baby lorikeets which visit our table.

Special nectar mix for nectar feeders like these rainbow lorikeets.
They have been missing their usual food sources because of the drought.



Rainbow lorikeets love the rain — around water they are like over-excited kids at a water park. Often the first we know that there is rain, is the sudden boost in sound of ecstatic birds, playing and delighting in the rain.

We will recover from the fires. It takes time, we need to be patient, but the rain is the beginning.

It’s no surprise that Australians of all species love to dance in the summer rain!

The Ghosts of Christmas Past

What is it about Christmas celebrations in a hot climate? We insist on clinging to the traditions of a colder place and serving up the bone-warming, steaming, fat-laden dishes designed to keep the winter chill at bay and a body alive until the first blessed shoots of spring emerged, months later. And we do this when the temperature outside is climbing above body heat; when the fires are raging on the hills and the beach beckons.



Summer Santas in the sun.

Here is a classic example of Christmasses from the past. Any resemblance to family members past and present is purely coincidental. Haven’t ALL Aussie families got memories along these lines?


We woke after sleeping in various unusual places, the result of a house literally bursting at the seams (I mean, have you seen the west wall? It’s falling off the house, there’s a gap you can see daylight through). The sounds of neck bones and other joints being cracked back into submission were drowned out by the clash of pans and clamour of hysterical activity from the kitchen. Breakfast? No chance. Christmas dinner preparations were underway.


Nobody could decide, months ago, WHICH hot meat to consume for Christmas dinner. Surprisingly, there was to be no traditional goose, although someone at the last minute bought a turkey buffet breast (‘it’s only the breast, it’s not huge or anything’) to supplement our repast. As if it would be in need of padding out!


So as one aunt rubbed salt into the scored skin of what looked like half a pig, another had her hand inserted so far up the chicken’s rear end you could see her fingers rippling under the skin, like some science fiction alien invader, as she prepared chicken galantine. To do this, you must remove the spine and rib cage through the neck, leaving the chook (Australian slang for chicken) intact so it can become a skin for more stuffing. Unfortunately, she chose a flavour-basted chook, the ones prepared by butchers with many small cuts made in the skin and flesh, through which ‘flavour’ is injected. And as she tried to separate the bones from the flesh of the raw chook, small rips kept appearing, which she stitched up with kitchen twine and an upholstery needle. The end result after stuffing looked less like a chook and more like one of Dr Frankenstein’s more novel experiments.

There was also a lamb roast, almost obligatory for any Australian celebration, although the teenage daughter had attacked it with a carving knife to leave deep gashes in which entire cloves of garlic and branches of rosemary had been stuffed. It now more resembled Birnam Wood trying to break into Dunsinane Castle, having been badly wounded in the process.


And the ham! It, too, was to be baked and glazed. The only problem was that although another ham had already been cut into for Christmas Eve supper, one of the uncles had decided to begin slicing the larger ham ‘because it made bigger slices’. And having finally wrested control back from the uncle, mother proceeded to begin the sad attempt of glazing and decorating an already butchered ham.
Then the inevitable — how can one small oven succeed in roasting seared pork with crackling; a gentle slow roasted galantine, a turkey buff breast that could have come from a pteranodon and a HUGE pre-loved ham with chunks of pineapple and glacé cherries mountaineering using toothpicks as crampons? Five roast dishes, three different temperatures, one domestic oven.


’That’s why we always start early,’ announced mother, desperate to regain control. ‘Dad — fire up the Weber!’


The Weber is thankfully family-sized. By this I mean a small family could live in it. So while Dad struggled to get the heat beads lit, Mum heated up the oven. ‘We’ll cook the chicken and the pork in the oven, the turkey and the lamb can go in the Weber, and the neighbours have kindly offered to cook the ham in their oven. But of course, this means they’re coming for Christmas dinner as well.’


’Do they know what they’re in for?’ I heard someone ask, to be silenced by a glare from Mother.


‘Don’t be so cynical — it’s Christmas!’


Somewhere in there, the kids were clamouring to open gifts. Dad’s comment of, ‘I need a drink!’ led to the champagne being opened early, still warm. The family crammed into the living room, sitting on any safe horizontal surface including the floor, with the surfaces unsafe for sitting on already laden with pre-lunch nibbles, to sustain us through the arduous task of gift opening.


Eventually after many yells, both aunts and Mother arrived apronned and sweaty from the kitchen, to be handed a glass of warm champagne. ‘Well, isn’t this nice!’ said mother, as she flopped onto the arm of the couch. ‘Hang on — the oven!’ as she disappeared kitchenward.


Once Mother was hog-tied to the couch with her own apron strings, we could begin. The youngest child of reading age was delegated to hand out the gifts, one at a time. Each gift had to be opened with the entire family breathless with anticipation, then the receiver would hold the gift up high and announce in rapt delight, ‘Look — socks!’ Then the snap-happy uncle who had bestowed the gift had to take a photo of the recipient wearing the socks, another photo of the recipient smiling, and then explain how to work his camera so someone could take a photo of him with the sock-wearing recipient.


And so it went. Every so often it was discovered that Mother or one of the aunts had slipped the leash and escaped back into the kitchen, hidden in the clouds of steam from the cauldron containing the pudding, being given the five hours of boiling it should have had months ago. Cries of, ‘Mum!’ or ‘Aunty! Get back out here!’ were frequent, interspersed with mutinous muttering about Uncle’s camera. Only by now, more cameras had emerged, with photos now being taken of every recipient, ‘…for Aunty June who cannot be with us today.’

At last the gifts had all been handed out and the tree now looked much barer, while the floor was littered with mingled gifts and paper.
Time to set the table.


Amazingly, the meat was all ready at the same time. Unfortunately, the family were not. As a result, the kitchen was full of dishes of meat in various stages of cooling to salmonella-loving temperatures while the vegetables were being cooked. The table had been decorated with a large vase of Christmas Bush, loving hand-crafted centrepieces at every place; several glasses per place and a Christmas cracker each. Candles burned with a fierce glow, adding even more to the sweatbox feel, now being enhanced by the pudding in its boiler. No room for the food! And also, no room for the children, who were to be seated at a complex array of play tables, card tables and an old door on trestles, all covered with a plastic tablecloth.

NSW Christmas Bush in the local park.


We will gloss over the bustle to and fro, of the undressing of the table sufficiently to allow some food to be placed there. At last people were seated and it was discovered that the platters could only contain small tokens of the magnificent roast denizens, all designed to be carved to an audience. So the family trooped into the kitchen, trampling small children underfoot, to watch the ceremonial carving of the roast pork, the turkey buff breast, the chicken galantine which now filled an entire baking dish on its own and the massacred lamb, its rosemary branches now seared and blackened as if by a bushfire. We had a sense of anticlimax as we went back to the dining table, each carrying a plate loaded in the kitchen. We carefully arranged ourselves so we could all sit AND reach the table somewhere, when the neighbours arrived, carefully balancing the enormous ham, the cherries and pineapple barely holding on. ‘That pesky parrot next door was out loose, it attacked us for the fruit as we came round here. Where will we put it?’ So again, we had to troop out to the kitchen to watch the magnificent ham being carved.


The amazing retro glazed ham. Who wants hot baked ham in a heatwave?

‘We didn’t want to arrive empty-handed, so we went out and bought some barbecued chicken,’ they explained, as they produced still more food.


We rearranged ourselves once more to accommodate the neighbours, now even more a feat of Tetris than before.


‘Hang on! I’ve got to get a photo of this!’ Uncle jumped up, followed by several other family members each with their camera.


‘Hold on, we can’t all take photos at the same time — who will be in the picture?’ Uncle complained. So everybody but Uncle sat down again while he took the photo. But trying to get a photo of so many hungry people, and have ALL of them with eyes open, facing the camera and smiling – not easy. At last it was achieved. Then the next person had to take their photo. And the next. Then Uncle noted, ‘You know — in every photo of Christmas tables, I’m never in the photo…’ so the neighbour kindly offered to take photos for all the camera-owners who were feeling left out. It took some time to give the neighbour a crash course in how to operate a dozen different cameras and even longer to again get photos where everybody was smiling, eyes open.



At last it was done.


‘Time to pull the crackers, everybody!’

Again, forks poised to mouths were put back on the plates. We picked up our crackers, and once more there was some fiddling while we arranged ourselves under Aunty’s direction. It appeared to be an ancient, mystic family ritual that required crackers to all be pulled at the same time, with hands crossed over so we all looked like strait-jacketed asylum inmates. Of course, the resemblance was increasing every minute.


We’re crackers at Christmas in Australia.

At last, crackers pulled to satisfaction, we had to put on the hats. Some of these were small enough to slide over the baby’s wrist while others could have been worn as a hula skirt by Fat Bastard.


Uncle took photos of everybody wearing their hats. This was much quicker now, because eyes rolling to the ceiling and middle fingers hoisted skywards now were seen as acceptable. This was the informal shot.


At last, we began to eat.


‘My meat’s cold,’ remarked Dad. ‘Hey, does anybody else want their plate warmed up?’ He carefully clambered out from his spot, unseating two people to each side of him in the process, who then figured that as long as THEY were up, they may as well heat theirs up, too. And the process continued around the table, like a nuclear chain reaction.


‘Don’t wait for us, just start.’ Dad yelled through the steam from the kitchen, which meant that OF COURSE we all had to wait. 
By now the sun was low on the horizon, lunch was still allegedly underway and the children were, to put it mildly, getting restless. ‘Mum, Warwick is poking holes in the plastic tablecloth.’

‘I am not! It was you! Besides, they’re disposable anyway…’

The tablecloth was duly inspected, to find that ALL the kids had been quietly poking holes in the edge, perhaps out of hunger and sheer frustration.
 At last the plate heaters returned and again, carefully eased back into their seats like contortionists. At which point Mum leaned across to Uncle and said, ‘Are you SURE you have enough food there? You didn’t get any of the turkey, and we got it for you especially.’


Uncle, to his credit, said he’d get turkey for his second helpings. Mother meanwhile was glaring around the table to make sure none of us were about to starve.


Just then the timer went off somewhere in the foggy kitchen. ‘The pudding’s done!’ Mother shrieked, knocking over two more relatives precariously poised on either side of her.


‘It will keep! Sit down!’ and the adult children on either side of her dragged her down into her chair and helped up the fallen relatives.
People at last began to eat, to the murmured litany of mother complaining, ‘I don’t know why you treat me with such disrespect, I’ve been slaving away in the kitchen all day and what thanks do I get…’

A glorious Christmas cake, home-baked to a family recipe.
‘Merry Christmas’ ingeniously improvised with jelly snakes and scissors.


Every dish had to be tasted, by everybody present. All the children complained that the food was too spiced, too sweet, too different and please can we leave the table? Sweat streamed down every face, vast amounts of fat and carbs were consumed, belts were loosened and everybody insisted, ‘Next year we’ll just have seafood and salad!’

And it was like this every year.