Car trip
December 9, 2011
Surely travelling over two hundred kilometers just to have a meal is somewhat eccentric, n’est ce pas? Yet, we did this last Thursday. It was to celebrate both our son’s and Helvi’s birthday with a dinner in Newtown’s King Street. Leaving in the afternoon and against the outgoing traffic it’s not all that bad and, apart from meeting up with daughter and partner, son and grandson Thomas, we just love the buzz of southern side of King Street, Newtown. It is, in our opinion, a stretch of road unique in Australia.
The architecture is a jumble and mix of nothing particularly outstanding. I mean it is not Avenue des Champs-Elysees, but is unique in the sense that it is totally alive. The amount of traffic is such that it is perpetually at a standstill giving ample opportunity for pedestrians to cross and even walk along the cars without much risk or any danger. The battle between the cars and pedestrians will surely finally have to resolve itself by simply banning all cars. At the moment there is still a balance and somehow symbiotic. Cars can still park after 6pm, unload those to go shopping or seek sustenance in a café or restaurant of which there seem to be plenty. We were certainly driven by hunger by the time we arrived.
It is a forever changing scene in Sydney. We turned off after having gone through the notorious smelly tunnel, into The Princess Highway. “Princess Highway” surely a misnomer? Where is the Princess? It brought back shades of my introduction in 1956 to the often rather optimistic naming of places that after inspection did not live up to their promise. “Palm Beach” but it did not have palms. “Blue Mountains”, yes, but where are the mountains? Tourist brochures still today names Goulburn “Lilac City”, where is the lilac?
Princess Highway has only ugly ones, probably hiding in the plethora of car yards that litter as nowhere else in the world. We drove past what we thought was a new airport, but, which turned out to be a huge IKEA shop. It is so big, that you need a fold-up bike with GPS to take you around and plenty of water.
It was with great relief we drove into King Street and found a parking within 50 metres of the restaurant that our son had booked for 6pm. It’s a hugely popular Thai restaurant with the added lure (we were told) of she-males as waitresses. We did not see any; it must be one of those rumours spread by clever marketers to make the restaurant popular. They were all slim and terrifically attractive girls, good and quick with forever scanning the customers for any possible requests or orders. The name of the place starts with a D, something Duang & Doh and is always chockers for lunch and dinner. It’s next door to a dress designer shop called Magdalena Duma. It is run by the daughter of a Polish-Jewish refugee and some time ago I wrote a piece about that shop as well. That’s what Newtown does to you. It is not dull. I suppose that stretch of old Sydney is what Balmain used to be like before the million dollar lawyers brigade took over.
If I ever became Lord Mayer I would till my dying days, banish all car yards away from our main roads to industrial specially designated areas. Can you imagine Rome’s, Paris or Amsterdam’s roads cluttered by car yards? Next, an obligatory course to be undertaken by all business owners in aesthetic looking and modest advertising signage. I just loathe the instantly world-wide recognizable typical Australia to be so terrifyingly ugly while hiding so much that is so mouthwateringly beautiful.
Our Thai meal was a glorious mixture of shared sea-food with lychees, vegetables with beef, chicken with vegetables, all with snappy and bright green snow peas, whole basil leaves, ginger and mint with chili and boiled rice. No wine, in fact, most of the patrons just seemed happy with bottled water. Afterwards we drove home in the rain with a stretch of very narrow lanes because of M5 highway work. Great big double bogey trucks muscling into my space. Geez, I hate that night driving with the rain shimmering on the road reflecting images that limit vision and at the same time those huge road trains thundering by within inches.
It was a great birthday dinner, well worth the 200 plus Kms.

If you visited Newtown I hope you had body guards, sort of just worse than growing up in Balmain but not much
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I went to Newcastle for a cup of coffee once. Did the same for someones 30th as well. Both return trips.
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I went to Newcastle once but it was closed, made Adelaide look busy 🙂
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Good account of the day Gerard. If it is only 100 kms from home to Newtown, I would have gone for lunch and avoided driving home at night, let alone in a wet night. Still, that’s me. I do hope you have something special lined up for Helvi’s birthday. By the way Some Like it Hot is on ABC 2 tonight. My favourite film – I’m going to record it and make a DVD. I have it on an old video which sits forlornly in a drawer.
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Viv, some people do work like our offspring and their partners, so during the week it has to be a dinner… 🙂
Tomorrow’s Christmas party will have our oldest and dearest friends attending, so that will be nice, then a dinner or a lunch with our new friends here….
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Of course – silly me. But I am so lucky because both daughters arranged to have the day off. Looks like Gerard has let the cat out of the bag now.
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A return ticket to Europe,( first class,) with a credit card tucked inside her passport, Paris is waiting for you Helvi. And I’ll vacuum the house.
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By wet night Vivie, do you mean your incontinence pad?
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That’s a big dog you have there Roger, our Milo would be scared of him/her…
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Harry WAS a Shar-pei , about 30 kgs. More rolls of skin made him look big, but was a softie. He got a cancer , the size of a golf ball, on his bum and had to put him down. His son, Barry (behind him blurred ) has the same cancer and in the same spot ? Both hog the gas heater in winter .
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I thought there was another dog behind Harry…oh dear, both of having having cancer, so sad…
Milo, our Jack Russell, is a show-off, he barks at the dogs that are bigger than him, but licks (kisses) anyone smaller than him…
People ask us if they can pat him…go for it ,we say…they think that he’s the JR on the Commonwealth Bank ad…we let them think so.
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Sorry Roger, for being so insensitive, I just realised that Harry is no more, you wrote after all ,Harry WAS…
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The only good dog is a hot dog, with the lot 🙂
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Happy Birthday Helvi. May you have another 4000 of them!
I hope the dinner and the company fussed over you.
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It was our son’s Birthday, mine’s tomorrow…
I wish Gez would put the bloody Navigator on when travelling in the ever-changing Sydney…
Only the good ones die young, JG.
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Happy birthday for tomorrow then!
How old Helvi?
So? Gerard is one of those “No dear, I DO NOT NEED the silly navigator” kind of guys?
One wrong turn off George street and the next thing you know you are driving to Newcastle!!
But we’ll all had them…those “Bonfire of the Vanities” wrong turns.
😉
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When things calmed down we made a pact to put on the Navigator every time we leave Bowral.
When the Dutchman knows best, we drive towards Snowy Mountains from Canberra instead to the farm, or we do a detour to the Airport when leaving friends at Ramsgate….
How old…a day older than yesterday….OK, a year younger than JG Cole,which makes it: 45.
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I am my dad’s son, as Warrigal once remarked.
When living on the farm in Holland and after my parents decided to go and live there as well, they were coming over to visit us. After waiting for hours they finally arrved. Dad all red and looking flustered. ” What happened “, I ventured to ask? ” Sssht” mum said, “don’t talk now!”.
It turned out they got so hopelessly lost, they came via Germany!.
Yes, I have promised to have the Navigator on when we leave Bowral. I am the Mr McGoo when it comes to driving.
Did I tell you I have to be in Court on the 21st of Jan 2012 for having driven through a YELLOW light! Legal advice please!
I haven’t had a traffic or driving charge for the last 30 or 40 years.
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Gerard, just looking at your picture…..I am trying to get a sense of you, trying to read the lines on your face, the map of your life…….that sort of thing,
and I was wondering,
why do men of your generation, of your Northern European blood, fancy the beard with no moustache look?
I am curious.
😉
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.
The cartography of my ‘map of life’ is still ongoing with terrain and aesthetics proving to be an ongoing and shifting problem.
Yes, there are those Dutchmen without moustaches and I have often been advised to grow one and improve on the rather ‘Amish’ look. I suppose when studying my facial features, you might come to the same conclusion, there is limited space between nose and lips to grow a moustache of any substance.
Helvi just told me she likes me without the mou but agrees wholeheartedly about the lack of area. She knows about aesthetics coming from Alvar Aalto country.
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Ah Gerard, a most vexing question indeed….one plaguing men (and some woman) for centuries. So you believe the question centres on “space”? Surely nature has not overlooked you? I say, trust in nature Gerard, and let it grow….wild and impetuous, awkward and wanton!!!
And then take a pic to show us!!!
Aalto huh? Though I find some other chaps more to my favour, Aalto is indeed an incredibly important architect. He sought to reconcile the “natural” – the psychological
and biological – with the Modern, which was just then flexing its technological muscle.
It is a fascinating argument Gerard……..one that has, in one form or another, consumed half of my life.
The other half, of course, with that most pressing question – moustaches!
I eagerly await your pic!.
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“wild and impetuous, awkward and wanton”, is that how. your beard is growing, JG? Just like Mungo McCallum’s…. Oh no,I allready told him to tidy it up.
I too have fascination with peoples’ photos, the dear Mods allowed me to comment on the Authors’ pics on the old UL…lately only twice…
Be brave, put yours up, we are ALL curious 🙂
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Alas, J.G Cole
The hair growth has become erratic, while still spontaneous on top, facially it has dramatically slowed, indeed become patchy. Are raging hormones the culprit now, or simply ageing?
Indeed, you are right, there are some females endowed with hair. I spotted one a while ago wearing a dress made of jute or hessian loading coke into a boot. I received a somewhat stroppy response about this expose on the Pigs Arms. 🙂
Today, a big day. A celebration of longevity in both friendship and much marital bliss. Soon we will be on our way to Balmain to enjoy a yearly event of friends getting together. ” There aren’t as many as there was a while ago.” Time sweeps all before it…
The chicken has been marinating all night, precious spices, fresh coriander. Mustn’t forget to install the navigator.
About mr McGoo. I went and took some photos of the intersection where I was charged with having gone through a yellow light. I went to a shop where you can get the camera to unload a special card and off that card get real photos printed, an extremely complicated task!
I proudly showed Helvi the photos of the intersection. ( I get obsessive about things at times). ” Nice pictures, Gerard….. but that was NOT the intersection….
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🙂 Helvi, I have come to realise that as I grow older…..hair is a complex thing! As it thins and disappears from my skull I find it reappearing in the most extraordinary places – my ears!!! What cruel and devilish perversion is that?!?!?!
Imagine too…..if I were a man!!!
🙂
Ummm, I don’t know how to put my pic up.
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JG, what does the gay community think about hair loss? [groan]
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Gerard, hahaha,hahh!hHh
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Hung, no idea. You’d have to ask someone who is gay.
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I’m gay, yeah, really happy and I have lots of hair. Just joking with ya old son.
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I’ll ask grandson No 1, when he was about four years old he claimed he was gail (gay) and promised to marry his male cousin J…. a very progressive family 🙂
J was horrified and said that he preferred girls, they were prettier, especially in pink…
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Hi Gerard , try wearing Polarised sunglasses in heavy rain with traffic at night. It takes the glare away .
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