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Story and Artwork by Sandshoe.
The bottle-o speaks severely with himself; the sunshine on the surface of the restored although stagnant creek is so silver, and among the leaves and creaking branches of the gum trees gold, it obscures an afternoon caterwaul of birds on wing above them.
The bottle-o is farming the industrial bin behind the bakery. The Morning Loaf recycles nothing. The giant bin against the back wall fills each week, left open, and dominates a carpark that is its vicinity, the picnic tables over the commemorative bridge, and the tourist attraction of a gaol converted to a men’s toilet.
There is the street between us. Emptied of commerce and the cars of recreational travellers strolling its pavement bakery-side in the direction of, and from their cappuccinos and chocolates, foccacias toasted sandwiches, and ‘antiques for sale’. Biscuits. Even the sales agents have given it a rest.
“I’ll tell you what I’ll do for you,” and “I can’t understand that, but here is what I’ll do. For you.” That was on Friday – another entrepreneurial shouter on the pavement at the bakery’s door.
That big old sun came up a particular morning glowing orange through the trees and John Shaw Nielsen’s imagery from The Orange Tree slid to mind as if into a projector as I walked out of the side door of the garage from looking around, attempting to see sense among abandoned once-treasures of owners, tenants, and lodgers-their remnants just a couple of empty suitcases. My attention caught by the orange burst, in the excitement of the delight I remember for the first time I am in Shaw Nielsen country. He lived in the South East and I feel his orange tree to my very bones. I regarded the rising sun with a feeling of watching living sculpture where all around is stilled.
The bottle-o has been practising his profession for 30 years. He loves bottles with a passion. He liked the water bottles I have run across the road eagerly with to offer him when we first met. He has been spoken to improperly in front of me. We were standing beside the car park bin sharing reminiscence about the Keep South Australia Beautiful campaign (KESAB). I had run across the road with two small bottles and a flavoured milk carton. An occasion to greet my newly met friend as much to contribute to the collection. His face suffused with the rush of the blood of embarrassment I wonder as all the more hurtful because he was conversing with me when he was chastised for ‘still doing that’, as if he exercising a nervous habit of degradation. The young thing drove off in her powerful vehicle. He pushed his wheelbarrow up the street and I still want to disappear up the street in the same direction and never come back other than to the Orange Tree.

I have settled back and caught up with a listen to the contributions to the page here by Vectis Lad of the Everly Brothers…Abandoned Love. And from Warrigal, Tom Petty w/ Stevie Nicks…Don’ t Come Round Here No More. What a pleasure.
I was searching for a contribution and just because it’s true that we are what we have learned, I offer a song my sister taught me when she came home from the University with it and we sang it together. I was about 10. I like this version with its lyrical maturity and the audience sing-along.
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If anything, PPM and M seem to have gotten better with time – long time passing. A beautiful rendition.
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I like the story, ‘shoe, congratulations. Have read it a couple of times. The Bottle-O reminds me of some of the characters from where we moved about six months ago. Benign chaps who potter around, some pissed from opening time ’til midnight, always ready to say “Gidday, who’s it goin’?” In these parts the council ha seen that recycling is a little earner, so we have bins for that. We are about to get bins for green waste, so that the stuff that doesn’t fit through the chipper, or is unsuitable for the compost can get collected. Hence the demise of the Bottle-O!
PS don’t worry about the spelling. I have at least two errors per post, which the spelling checker in Firefox manages to sniff out!!
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Lovely artwork again ‘Shoe! And a nice story, though I’m still searching it for shaggy dogs… haven’t found any as yet… looking, looking…
😉
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Sandshoe, what a mean thing, the one in her big car, she’s got no right to embarrass Bottle-O…
You be his friend Sandshoe, you are a good woman 🙂
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It was the fixated death stare that likely may have pierced his heart Helvi. I thought that if I described just how mean, piglets might faint, our little tails crumpled as we fell. We have shared so much tenderness in comments attached to stories about our tradesfolk. 🙂
Helvi, he ‘doesn’t come around much anymore’. There’s a song isn’t there? He told me as he beetled past-looking at the ground-he ‘wouldn’t be this way for a while’. Same song, I think.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Come_Around_Here_No_More
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bN9OHDssYSE
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bN9OHDssYSE
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For us, some many years ago now, it was the rabbit-o. He used to come along with his covered Hillman ute and had the rabbits strung from a rack inside the canopy. The kids were fooled into believing it was chicken. But as suspicion grew I finally admitted my deceit. Now it is real chicken but I tell them it is rabbit.
They check the bones for proof and still feel somewhat dubious. I can’t fool them with prawns though. They definitely don’t believe prawns are rabbit.
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Nice ,well told story Shoe. The painting is very good too. Almost a Cezanne like inspired work with the blue little flower decoration on the wall.
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It’d be a raw prawn that tried to convince anybody that it was a rabbit, Gez. Or an artist with a massive stretch of the imagination and some. How funny you are.
I will look at Cezanne. Thank you for that thought. Just as I stumbled on recognising the strong influence on my writing of Neilson (a realisation since I have been here), I might see something in what you reference regards your thought.
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It is so curious that moving into new environments as a romantic prone to fancy filled thoughts, seeing the existence of past lives in, perhaps the history of a rock on the side of a road, we discover so much about ourselves we knew naught of before or little. I like the way creative expression somehow can at moments reveal oneself to onself. Not that I am suggesting all or any creative artist is self knowledgeable.
When I started having a go at illustration I wanted just to show someone what something looked like. Specifically I had in mind (at that far distant time) an artist who would take my ideas and transform them into wonderful and magical elaborations to accompany stories I would write. Very soon, illustration became my personal code, a diary by which to establish recall and no-one else could interpret it. Next it’s something of a road map.
Drawing pictchas is sure fun.
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Piglets, I feel very sentimental in regard of the publishing here at the Arms of this illustration from somewhere in me, that found its way out some years ago. I have adapted it for us here though by Photoshop manipulation of its colour, and some of the bleed of its ink that feathered a hungry blotting paper. The original is bright in strong reds and strong yellows, greens and blues.
Photoshop is so time consuming. O, to be adept at it, understand its capabilities in full. One of the least appreciated of the programmes when I first started computing were the graphics components (I thought when I discovered Clarisworks graphics on a Mac).
It entertained me years back to read some stick in the mud declare sorrow in respect of the likely (in their perception) demise of artistic expression in a world provided with graphics programmes on computers. Nay, I say, it is the culture we live in that poses a threat. 🙂
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My grammar is almost a stammer
I want to take a hammer to errors and a rubber…
🙂
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Interesting shoe. Gold gum tree branches , silver creeks, abandoned treasure and a big orange sun.
I’m sure that there’s a song lurking in there, just waiting to be released.
Here’s a Bob Dylan song: Everly Bros version. There is a beautiful Irish sound at the beginning: Irish Ulliann pipes
It mentions treasure as well as “being abandoned”. It is about failed love and has some prolific lines including, ‘ treasure can be found by those who search even when their gods are dead and their queens are in the church’.
Please except this as a tribute to your story 🙂
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Dear Julian
I am too emotional as result of your response to find any more words initially. I feel like weeping for all that you canna always spell and am in an open library carel. See ya later alligator.
Kind regards
Christina
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Maybe that has not come out right, Vectis Lad. I am very touched by what you have said, I love the Everly brothers to my very bones, and of course what more can I say … I have to come back to this with an earphone. 🙂
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carell… speaking of spelling, I thought I submitted this with my spelling of Neilsen as ‘Neilson’, believing the latter is correct but anyway, that’s a slip or an editorial correction of great wisdom.
I will have to look at my copy in Sent email.
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car-r-el … I need a Milo (not a terrier like the Oostie’s however lovely their Milo is, but a steaming hot cuppa).
🙂
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What a lovely picture (print?). I can’t help noticing the wood-burning fireplace. Is it your new home?
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I was visiting my daughter and her small son Voice when I drew the original – as I was when I drew the illustration now attached to the sonnet ‘Monkey-Do and Ducky’. Interested persons, go to ‘Home’, find on the RHS the sub-heading ‘Rooms at the Arms’ and my folder ‘Sandshoe’.
I have described something of that time in the comments attached to ‘Monkey-Do and Ducky’. Mine were romantic sentiments in reference to environment and the enjoyment I felt in the circumstance found there. Again, this illustration of a character snug in front of a fire in a room of their own in their own home, sweet home, is imaginative. The address was bare, briskly cold, there was no fireplace.
My rental here has caused me disappointment, Voice, in respect of a fireplace among some other set backs I am addressing.
I doubt I could describe how happy I am this little picture has been described as lovely. The original Voice of this has been scanned, printed, photocopied, scanned and photoshopped. 🙂
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Yes, I remember reading some where that you’d managed to goad the RE agent into action. It’s the first cold week for the year in Sydney. Heating is a priority.
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I got my leccy bill today. My dear big now departed friend Doug Thoreson – who I just so miss sometimes – was my inspiration to two-fold prove to myself I could bring my leccy bill right down to somewhere near his goal of always under a hundred dollars, and if I could do it I would have somehow made a statement of tribute. I had so often been Doug’s teacher. It was an act of humility in some ways.
Humility is flown. I am jubilant. $92.17. That is always cooking for myself, but once in three months (when I bought a piece of battered fish) and running a light to read in the often early hours of the morning I have found myself waking. O, not so much these darker earlier evenings and mornings when the foggy mist is beautiful and wet sometimes quite well after scheduled sunrise.
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Voice, this is even more significant because one of my rooms in my big house has multiple globes to counter the potential of shadows in a high ceilinged room and three that are service rooms, a kitchen, a dining room and a study have mutiple globes… the kitchen has a strip of directional lighting same I put into a kitchen in another life …and the fans in the WC and the bathroom are wired so I cannot turn on a light in them without the fans going on as well. There is a verandah light I have briefly turned on when driven to just gawk. The verandah and the front of the house in the glow look lovely. 🙂
I have persisted in always turning off the light moving from one room to another…forsakeing my passion for lamps other than one in my study…using the extractor fan in the kitchen as much as it is needed…using hot water to wash dishes when I have run it and not topping it up…using boiled water to make a hot drink when the water is boiled and not re-heating it out of habit if it has gone cold. I can’t have wanted a hot drink all that much. 🙂
I knew I needed to strip down on these things so as to afford heating. And to support my shed. It is one big shed.
Voice, I hope you are as snug as snug as snug. 🙂
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Lovely indeed. There are some people whom I regard as very important and it is best to be friends with them – in the past that included the bottle-O, the milko and the garbo. Today for me it is the Tip-O who also happens to be my very very important woodman-O, my mechanic, my butcher and my deli-family. There’s more but that’ll do for now.
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I cannot credit our wonderful fortune in our town where I live that we have an experienced bottle-o. His passion for “a lovely bottle” is a delight alone.
When I first saw we have a genuine bottle-o, I felt that crazy yearning of a small child wanting to grasp a loved friend, but too small to do that even on tippy toes, no matter how big one tries to make oneself, or the older child just tongue-tied by love. So important.
I really love Vivienne that you have listed your own insight on specialness in a village, it’s the who’s who list of what makes it work…and there’s more.
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Lovely stuff shoe, yo 🙂
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Thank you Hung and yo back atcha. 😉
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