• The Pig’s Arms
  • About
  • The Dump

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Monthly Archives: March 2011

Kisses and French Dressing

06 Sunday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 16 Comments

My remaining five  mysteries

By Helvi Oosterman

As you have all been waiting, with bated breath no doubt, for my remaining five mysterious things; no more suspense, here they are. To please dear Asty, I’ll start with something ‘sublime’ and leave the more mundane mysteries last:

6. Why are so many men cagey about shaking hands with females, whilst at the same time happy to pump their mates’ arms almost to a breaking point? Here I stand with my extended hand only  to be conveniently ignored. Are we girls a lower caste, or are the men afraid to appear too intimate with us. After all the French men hug you and plant not one but four kisses on one’s cheeks without fear of retribution. Swearing when there are females  present is another baffler. Don’t tell me the old story about ‘ladies’; we only have them in England, and they go together with the Lords…

7. I also like to know who ever came up with this unforgivable term, a ‘naughty’ or it’s brother ‘nookie’ when referring to making love. He wasn’t a Frenchman, that’s for sure.

8. We had lunch with some newish friends; the quiche was very good and the desert was divine. There was a salad to go with the main, but it wasn’t dressed, the vinaigrette was missing; what to do? Follow the hostess and sprinkle some oil from one bottle and a few drops of vinegar from another. But this is not the same as having a real vinaigrette made to proper quantities of oil, vinegar, salt, pepper, French mustard, pinch of sugar, some fresh herbs and even garlic if you so prefer. Is this two-bottle custom from middle ages?

9. While we are talking food I have to ask what is this calling some cheeses ‘tasty’? Are the other cheeses tasteless, perhaps? I have a husband who sometimes still buys those packets of pre-sliced processed ‘cheeses’, these slices are individually wrapped and at times very hard to get to. I suggest that he eat them with wrapping and all; they both taste the same more or less.

10. Now we are coming to the one mystery which I actually hate, really the only thing I hate, the flies. Why are there so many flies in the Australian bush? My dreams of picnics on the river were killed by millions of flies as soon as we took the tucker out. One Christmas I decked the table on the veranda with my best linen and tableware; as soon as the prawns arrived we all had to run inside as the flies swarmed from nowhere to attack the food. On my dad’s farm in Finland we did everything outside during summers, we had our coffee breaks, lunches and at times even dinners al fresco. We were not bothered by flies. I know the northern part of my fatherland is made inhabitable in summertime by mosquitoes , but that is a story for another time. I remember visting Bali when it was still pretty dirty and when the food scraps and other rubbish littered the place, and of course plenty of unclean water for flies to breed in, yet hardly any about…

I hope you can show some light into my little mysteries; be truthful or inventive, all explanations thankfully accepted!

You are nothing but a Latte Sipper

05 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 24 Comments

You are nothing but a Latte Sipper

latte

March 4, 2011 by gerard oosterman

The world even in its normal state and without dire future climate changes is on a roll: floods, earthquakes, fires, airports are frozen, planes can’t take off, cars are bobbing about in raging torrents, people clinging to trees and revolutions are toppling tyrants. All this is happening almost as a daily event. No sooner do we climb out of our bed, switch on the telly, and it starts again. Some sparkling ABC journalist is interviewing either a bearded climate expert or a shiny faced business expert, both telling us the world is getting better or getting far worse. The weather girl isn’t all that optimistic either: storms in the Illawarrah, hurricanes are reforming and there is a map where there are little zig zags or windy signals flashing ominously. Nervously we search for weather warnings on the net. El Nina is going berserk.

Politically, we are divided not just by poor or rich, the left or right, the moderately accepting or the fanatically opposing: No the criteria for the good or bad for any of us now depends totally on our preferred beverage. The battle lines are now drawn on what might be found at the bottom of our beloved Wedgewood beaker or the Royal Leerdam wine glass.

The masked shaman poring over the bleached and knuckled bones of our coffee dregs or corks, the veiled future teller at her tea leaves. All now are studiously peering into the remains of our daily imbibement.  This latest has  turned us into a divided nation, not based on just political leanings as in the past. All of a sudden we are judged by our liquid habits.

How did this ever come about? When did it all start? Can’t we just carry on without the lament of; “you are nothing but a latte sipper?”  Or, the war cry from the others, the tea drinking brigade, shouting from roof tops, “if it aint broke don’t fix it.” Only as little as two years ago it was ‘chardonnay’ drinking that carried the wrath of the right. This issue has become blurred where now both sides, including even Queenslanders, accuse each other of belonging to the Chardonnay set, irrespective of left or right..One would not want to stand in the shoes of the sommelier trying to predict future trends in wine consumption.

Does this coffee drinking somehow point to a form of unruly benevolence bordering on socialism that the knee sock wearers& tea drinkers are so suspicious of? Does latte sipping encourage riotous behavior?

 Years ago, someone remarked rather disdainfully,” Who are all those people sitting around drinking espresso?” “Haven’t they got something better to do?” This coincided when more and more shopkeepers started to display their wares spilling out on the footpaths. They were truly revolutionary times. Local councils were at their wits end trying to figure out the laws governing the public use of footpaths versus shopkeepers trying to make a quid. At first, only moderate and narrow bits of footpaths were allowed to occupy merchant’s wares. When this did not cause any breakdown of society or rioting pedestrians, more of the footpaths were given over to boxes of tomatoes, buckets of flowers and even hardware, including stepladders, wheel barrows. And so, the coffee drinking on the footpath was born.

These were also the times when dogs were still allowed to generously deposit their wares on the footpaths as well. It wasn’t uncommon to see brown foot-marks leading to the news agency on a Saturday morning.

Ah, they were such easy going times. Tolerance and community sharing and caring were still the norm.

Those walks to the news agency combined with the Vietnamese croissant shop are becoming a thing of the past. The piles of papers spilling out from News agency are becoming thinner. Instead, the tapping on our laptops in the solitary confinement of our home office are becoming the norm, and sadly without those flakey croissants.

But, the one thing that is not getting less and much to the chagrin of many still, is our relentless latte sipping. History tells us that this humble bean’s first entry into Australia were with those brave Afghans that helped Australia establish its first overland telegraphy between Adelaide and Darwin back in 1870’s. Ah, how they coped with heat and dust, the dark brew giving sustenance in the void of the outback desert.

It remains for historian to fill in the puzzle how this beverage got lost and how tea sipping became the norm. Alright, I concede that the vile habit of ‘Instant Coffee’ ingratiated itself just after the war. Real coffee was lost and when it reappeared it would be seen as something related to sub-ordinance or the opposite, subservience.  Communism was hinted at during the Menzies period, and to be feared. But soon after, the Reffos from the Balkans and Hungary were reintroducing it, disturbing the peace of afternoons with tea and the munching of lovely 1916 invention of the SAOs during Bingo.

 Here and there in Sydney’s underworld regions of inner-west and Palmer Street the coffee drinking became more and more brazen. Now, some sixty years later, coffee has become mainstream. Yet, pockets of resistance are still around. We must remain vigilant.

Remain the shout; stand up ever proud; “we are the Latte sippers.”

Tags: Coffee, Sydney, gansters, Leerdam, Balkans, Hungary
Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit | Leave a Comment

The Small Monster Blocks

03 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Blocks, Monster, Painting

Small Monster Building Blocks

Painting and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

The ant with his whole world carried on his back struggles at life. The world is heavy, the only way to make it easier is to make blocks. Each of these blocks contains a task that needs to be done. Publicity is a block, keeping the house clean is a block, preparing classes is a block, the maintenance of pets is a block. Once each of these blocks is constructed and set in motion, it will carry on automatically, not halted by anything but the largest obstacle. In this way the ant has learned the use of tools, extending his six legs with autonomous blocks. Small monster blocks.

Headin South

03 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Mark in Bands at the Pig's Arms, Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Australia, music, Warrigal

By Warrigal Mirryuula

Headin’ South of The Mason Dixon Line It’s different down there.

By Warrigal Mirriyuula

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vppbdf-qtGU

ZZ Top La Grange

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ithYo2pCCyc&feature=related

Lynard Skynard Sweet Home Alabama

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGBPJQYOFDQ

The Atlanta Rhythm Section Jukin’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gDhR1R3S0s

The Allman Brothers Band Stormy Monday

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UYJeibgbVs

The Amazing Rhythm Aces Third Rate Romance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiYfQSD4Xao

Jimmy Buffett Come Monday

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4NTn3Pn05A

The Dixie Chicks Long Time Gone

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ct_lSAgJDXs

The Cate Bros. In One Eye

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XluWvWa8pIc&feature=related

The Charlie Daniels Band A Few More Rednecks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6efQ_GyQW3o

Ry Cooder How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lhn2ITL8uOY&feature=relmfu

Allan Jackson Small Town Southern Man

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ticcOE_0sLw&playnext=1&list=PL8ED95C1FD1B13EB9

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Southern Accent

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkxGdTeeIJ8&feature=related

The Neville Brothers & Friends Tell It Like It Is

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUYGyIk37bc

Gloria Estefan & Miami Sound Machine Anything For You

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7q5hD9cRQ9k&feature=fvst

Ray Charles Georgia On My Mind

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gQEDwjhaDE

Robert Cray Smokin’ Gun

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIdIqbv7SPo&feature=related

Bill Withers Ain’t No Sunshine

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMFMf9cN64U

The Georgia Satellites Keep Your Hands To Yourself

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAPo0EMfdLw&feature=related

Stevie Ray Vaughn Cold Shot

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPWo38JHuQ4

Jim Stafford Swamp Witch Hatty

Cheer up Man

03 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Art, Lehan Ramsey, National Gallery, Roman archtecture, The Hague

home sweet home

There is nothing like home. You can imagine the people’s plight on being stuck renting on a 6month lease basis. I can’t understand how anyone can cheerfully change their home being at the mercy of a 6 month lease.

Yet, before we came out here, renting was the norm and most people would spend their entire lives just in one property.  I ‘earth-googled’ our old address back in The Hague. Sure enough it is as if we left it yesterday. The street is unchanged, the doors and windows still the same, and not a brick has changed. No doubt, all those living there are renting the same as when we lived there. Perhaps, central heating and bathrooms have been added and kitchens with hot water. We lived on the top floor. At the bottom floor there were gardens and many of those lucky bottom dwellers kept chickens. A city still had chickens and veggie scraps were collected each week by horse and cart.

Yet, going back to Revesby whose architecture is far more recent, all has changed and our house hardly recognizable, the walls covered with colour bond weather board and a solid terra cotta tiled roof instead of the cement tiles that were put on when built originally… Many of the houses have had stories added, some with columns holding up little Romanesque like triangle bits of roofing or other odd bits of architecture.

Coming across some old photos of my first year here in Revesby, I can hardly believe how time has passed, and yet, I don’t think I have hurried the years unnecessarily.  Have I stood still but the houses and surroundings changed? Would this, not having moved from Holland, have produced the reverse?

You’re getting old with retrospection a sure sign, many would argue, as if years ahead for them are still numbered in multiple of decades. Yet, reading the obituaries’, it is not uncommon for people to cark it quite happily at the age some of us are in now. Makes you think, doesn’t it?

Cheer up, old man. The best is yet to come.

Painting by Lehan Ramsay

Just look at Lehan’s lovely painting of the Pig’s Arms and The Pink Drink. It graces our wall but should be hanging in Canberra’s National Gallery.

It would cheer up anyone.

12.1 We Drop in to the Mire

01 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

Australia, cricket, Father O'Way, fiction, humor, humour, Sandy O'Way, science fiction

Pictures by Warrigal

We drop in to the Mire, that’s the planet the Haggins’ live on, on the way to meet Alexrod, convenient hey. Mire revolves around a star called god knows what. God Knows What is around about the size of the sun. Don’t just some things run in your favour when you are out in space, fantastic.

Throwdough Haggins

So Gordon has told me that the Habits, that’s the Haggins tribal name, believe in magic, you know, goblins and sorcerers and all that airy fairy nonsense that we all know ain’t true however some folk, some planets do.  The Habits live in Inhobitable. They are always having parties, loud music and of course plenty of ale. Sound like my kinda guys however Habits are smaller then us so things are a bit cramped for us apes on Mire. Gordon suggested I try a 3 wishes deal with the Habits to test the water. You know,  one the two then the punch line. So okay lets try.

“So Throwdough, you like the party time hey, must go through a lotta beer?” I ask with great interest, well sort of.

“Lots of beer Sandy” he replies.

See the beer on Mire is called Oink Lager and the name says it all. Tastes like bats piss but hang on what does bats piss actually taste like? Yuck! And what sort of person would drink bats piss? I think I might change the subject, I’m feeling ill and I’m the one writing this.

Sandy O’Paramatta

“Look, on my planet we have this great technology. You just chuck this in here, fill with water and it makes beer, 25c per 375 ml bottle, waddya say?” I pitch like a car salesman on Parramatta Road.

“Just this stuff and water, Sandy is that right?” replies Throwdough.  “Well, hmm, well, no, hmm, hmm no, no oh no, hmm, oh no,  I’ll have two more of them.”

So with that Throwdough and Dildough handed over their cards. We left minus six home brew kits, oh and enough supplies to last them a century. I’m sure though the Habits will do as much as they can with addictive substances.

Viv having a break, literally

Back onboard the Julian we now start to head for Automaticus Tellericus, reset the password on the One Card and grab the bail. Easy for sure, well not really.  Meeting my brother is going to be very interesting.

“I’ve ordered the Vivienne 59 for tea Sandy” chirps Belinda who walks in with Helvi.

“Hi Helvi, kill anyone today?” I quip hoping it’s taken in jest.

“No but if you want me to” grins Helvi.

“Anyhoo, what’s a Vivienne 59?” I request

“Some blokes name Ross Jogan, you know, curry it’s your favourite” says Belinda.

“Ready to fight Sandy or still shaking at the knees?” declares  Helvi

Daves jigger

Dave the Guitar Droid goes “Hey, It’s. Shakin All Over”

“When you move in a-right up close to me
That’s when I get the shakes all over me
Quivers down my back bone
I got the shakes in my thigh bone
I got the Quivers in my knee bone
Shakin’ a-all over
”

“Well perhaps not Dave” I say rather limply “ but a good rendo.”

“Girls, battle plans okay, lets go.” I float and with that the battle council gathered. They are well armed and well trained. Us’, well, we are just a pack of losers. However we have the Julian, the best spaceship in the galaxy but not necessary in the universe. Lets try and overlook that.  This is complex fiction and I don’t want to lose you.

Helvi and Al Foyle with Catherine and Neville take charge. Ships are launched and deflector shields are activated. We are on silent mode. The ship runs on minimum power. Warrigal, the chief sensor,  is flashing his torch at his tranny trying to get some sort of

Silence is Deadly

positive response, under the quilt, late at night, yeah. Noise of any kind a this time is not welcome. I can’t help myself and I take my part in all this very seriously, as you all know, none more dedicated than me, oh yes. So I says, you know, I says, you know,  to the command group “Hey listen, I need to fart, but, look, you know silent is deadly” I announce to the delight of the crowd.

The Command group is thrown in to Chaos, “Oh, no, Sandy wants to ffffaaarrrtttttt’……”

Central Computer calling…..

Warning!

Warning  again!!

Look I’ve told you, there is a warning of some description. !!!

Look, don’t keep pressing the escape key, it won’t help. !!!!

I’ve issued a bloody warning what else do you want?

I think I’ll shut down.

The ATM and a dying Uncle Toby

01 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

ATM, credit cards, Dying, Gangsters, Oats, Uncle Toby

 

 Surely, nothing can be more satisfying than when standing at an ATM and those glorious notes start to appear through the narrow slot, which then continue on their outwards travel to finally end up firmly clasped into one’s  waiting palm. Isn’t it amazing that by feeding a machine a plastic card and a few numbers, the machine produces money? I am always put into a good mood when this wonder of technology happens. It’s almost as if the machine is saying, “You have been a good boy, here is your reward.” It’s so reassuring to know the world is OK and all is well.

Apparently, our bank card technology is inferior to the rest of the world and gangsters make their way to Australia by the plane- load to capitalize on this inferior technology and cash in by copying the card number, even pin numbers. They somehow manage to delve into your transaction by sticking something above the key pad, and bingo. Next your account is empty. I believe the identification methods overseas doesn’t involve our system of pin numbers  and are far superior, less easily corrupted. This is why gangsters became so miffed over there, that, like bees to honey, they start to invade our shores to take advantage of our less sophisticated weaker systems. Next time you see someone loitering near your ATM, be alarmed and very frightened.

It seems that banks are keen on profits but not so keen to upgrade. Instead of a better more advanced technology warding off potential criminals, we get those messages on the ATMs with “Who is watching?” together with “Always cover your Keypad.” This makes me somewhat paranoid, especially when I turn around and see an old lady with a walking frame watching me .Could she just be pretending to be old?  Or is she going to knock me down with her walking frame and steal my notes?

 Even more challenging is to key in the pin numbers while covering the key pad. At my bank there is a picture of a Jack Russell that jumps up. Is there some clue there perhaps? I try and cover the whole machine and block out as much to the outside world as possible, even look up into the machine to see if there is some device spying on my card. I find that if I remember the outlay of the keypad I can indeed type in the 4 pin numbers and keep the pad totally covered. It requires practice but at least nothing gets stolen or copied and the Jack Russell picture vanishes as an extra bonus and encouragement.

When I finally have the money and receipt I still linger and nervously stash the money in my wallet. I then walk away, carefully avoiding looking the old lady in the eye. You never know! I then look around to see anything suspicious going on elsewhere before ripping the receipt in shreds and putting it in my pocket as well.

 It all makes for a very suspicious world and somehow takes the previous happy glow off this whole transaction. I don’t dare to leave the receipt in that little slot below the key-pad even if ripped up. There must be a good reason for all the banks to warn to keep the keypad covered up. Surely, any good credit-card forger/hoodlum could decipher and get something out of my torn receipt?

I can’t imagine what the sophisticated tourist would make out of those ATM warnings? Last week there was a lot of media focused on the billions made by banks on ripping off their own customers. The focus was on banks using ATMs as a cash cow which gets milked every time you use it away from you own bank. I must say I have difficulty defending that one on behalf of customers though. Provided you always use the allowable number of ATM’s withdrawals and use your own bank’s provided ATM, the transactions are free… I knew about that years ago and always make sure that there are no charges by using my own bank’s ATM.  Anyone who had the good fortune of overseas travel would know we are provided with more banks and their branches that you can poke a stick at. Try walking around Amsterdam and find a bank with an ATM. You might think a brightly lit window is an ATM but getting closer you could easily be tempted into a different kind of happy transaction all together. Be careful of Amsterdam as well!

 However, I am more than willing to concede I am of a generation where we were all brought up on a very healthy dose of frugality. It went together with drinking water and eating Uncle Toby’s Oats for breakfast. Sadly, both frugality and drinking water have disappeared and Uncle Toby is dying

Newer posts →

Patrons Posts

  • The Question-Crafting Compass November 15, 2025
  • The Dreaming Machine November 10, 2025
  • Reflections on Intelligence — Human and Artificial October 26, 2025
  • Ikigai III May 17, 2025
  • Ikugai May 9, 2025
  • Coalition to Rebate All the Daylight Saved April 1, 2025
  • Out of the Mouths of Superheroes March 15, 2025
  • Post COVID Cooking February 7, 2025
  • What’s Goin’ On ? January 21, 2025

We've been hit...

  • 769,075 times

Blogroll

  • atomou the Greek philosopher and the ancient Greek stage
  • Crikey
  • Gerard & Helvi Oosterman
  • Hello World Walk along with Me
  • Hungs World
  • Lehan Winifred Ramsay
  • Neville Cole
  • Politics 101
  • Sandshoe
  • the political sword

We've been hit...

  • 769,075 times

Patrons Posts

  • The Question-Crafting Compass November 15, 2025
  • The Dreaming Machine November 10, 2025
  • Reflections on Intelligence — Human and Artificial October 26, 2025
  • Ikigai III May 17, 2025
  • Ikugai May 9, 2025
  • Coalition to Rebate All the Daylight Saved April 1, 2025
  • Out of the Mouths of Superheroes March 15, 2025
  • Post COVID Cooking February 7, 2025
  • What’s Goin’ On ? January 21, 2025

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 374 other subscribers

Rooms athe Pigs Arms

The Old Stuff

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 374 other subscribers

Archives

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle
    • Join 280 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...