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

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Monthly Archives: October 2012

The Castle: Episode 4 – Lessons

29 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Sandshoe

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

squats, The Castle

Blowin’ in the Wind

Story and Illustration by Sandshoe

Black walked in swaggering. He was cooked. A day at the beach represented ‘what people do’.

“Went to the beach.” He was as self conscious as a flag and pulled away from around his neck the striped towel he wore as he would an ill fitting evening scarf.

Where she had stopped half way towards the interior room and glanced behind her when she heard Black about to come in, she was motionless.

“You got badly burnt,” she said.

Black recoiled and sneered. He made a noise of disapproval.

“You are badly burnt.”

Black sat down on an upended crate installed inside the door of the front living room to furnish it with a one-seater. He sprawled against the exposed framework of the wooden wall. He lolled his head. He raised his head, screwed his eyes almost shut, eyeballing her. He declared her wrong.

“Alright,” she said, “you’ll know about it tomorrow.”

She felt confused, but didn’t show it.

“I don’t burn. I can’t.” Black’s head fell forward. He feigned sleep.

She recovered her aplomb.

“All right,” she said and returned her attention to the walk across the bare boards of the room. Everywhere in The Castle’s interior was bare. She called back easily as she disappeared through the door into a baffle of sunlight accommodating a mezzanine floor above her.

“Must be the Red Indian in you.”

A tense expulsion of vented breath split the air. She heard Black scrape the upturned crate so it fell over when he stood.

She wasn’t frightened by Black’s impetuous movements. They were full of grace. The exclamation made her turn around and walk back into the front room to hear what Black was suggesting. He was leaning forward in front of the small mirror hung on a wall post. His legs creased forward, his knees bent the better to see his face full on and side to side, he swung his face wide to the view of the mirror’s reflection. “I am,” he mused. He turned to her, defenceless. “I never knew I could burn. I thought I couldn’t.”

Black sauntered immediately behind her as they both turned and headed towards the doorway into the interior room, the heart of the renovation furnished with bench seats either side of a wooden table. She skirted the table to access her room on the other side of the table, before she lay down to sleep through the rest of this afternoon’s heat threw the cushions onto the floor off her single divan bed, ready for evening loungers. Black ran up the ladder to the enclosed mezzanine that made a loft over the fireplace. He sang in the private consideration of space he shared with Suse.

Mismatched and partnered individuals meet and find a way to live together in squats. There is only one antidote for homelessness, housing and The Castle was an adventure, their roof overhead, a haven, sleeping place and – like a found object of the greatest value – companionship. None of the residents were keen to leave regardless while the meaning here was – so – different from the rhythms of the city streets and their neighbours. The resonance of the property was theirs and eccentric. The place was home everything aside. There was a lifestyle challenge. Parties were irresistible. The music was good. One length of power cord trailed through the entrance door past the end of the cement driveway and the levelled ground of the build site next door ran a stereo and boiled an electric kettle. The owner fallen from rank and who knows what directories through financial calamity had fled some time previous to the squatters’ occupancies and the power account lapsed.

This is where writing you depend on instinct to communicate an authentic claim to know something, perhaps a character very well, but story certainly. You need to know the story. An expansive sleight of hand to indicate direction or occasion – generate opinion – garners belief in it. You’ve got to give a little.

The Busker walks noisily in through the front door and espouses to himself he made some money. As he proceeds, he takes a packet of chocolate biscuits out of an army bivouac bag he slings through the doorway into his room. It is his ritual he stand in the doorway and rustle the cellophane paper of the packet of chocolate biscuits he buys any day coins are thrown by passers-by into his guitar case. Other residents straggle in. The Busker in his room tells of his fortune like a town crier. Evening would close in soon. The squatters will view the darkening gully tree tops through the window of the Busker’s bedroom. They drape as their mood and comfort takes them across the Busker’s double bed, sit  cross legged on his floor, cram alongside massive stereo speakers on a table. They guffaw, shout to nobody, enjoin, tell stories, recount memorable incidents without concern over the volume of the music. Some will keep a clear head. They will leave to turn in earlier than die-hard others. The heat of this night will intensify.

PAST EPISODES, READERS

Episode 1 – November 2010 – is here  https://pigsarms.com.au/2010/11/22/the-castle-episode-one-the-florist/

Episode 2 – April 2011 – is here  https://pigsarms.com.au/2011/04/02/the-castle-episode-2-wooden-%E2%80%93-it-%E2%80%93-be-%E2%80%93-nice-%E2%80%93-to-%E2%80%93-get-%E2%80%93-on-%E2%80%93-with-%E2%80%93-your-%E2%80%93-neighbours/

Episode 3 – February last – is here  https://pigsarms.com.au/2012/02/16/the-castle-episode-3-fruhlingsrauschen/

Cooking on Charcoal

28 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Vivienne

≈ 35 Comments

Tags

charcola, hibachi

Cuisine  from VIVIENNE

We have turfed the gas burning BBQ and gone back to the hibachi.  The BBQ was not just old but some burners would not burn or were very uneven and I was sick of cleaning it with little to show for the effort.  Various wasps were often deciding it was a great spot to turn their mud collections into chimneys and it had become decidedly unfriendly.  It was despatched to the tip last year.  The old hibachi was not looking too good either so it too went.  It had not been made of the correct materials and had rapidly gone rusty.  A new hibachi was finally found – much better construction but unfortunately without adjustable height.  But it does a great job.

It has been put to good use but one does have to plan ahead (as usual with too much of what I do !).  It has been great for family gatherings.   So I am sharing a few things which are excellent when cooked over coals, slowly.  This involves, mainly, meat on a stick.   I use the bamboo ones – they won’t catch fire either.  By the way, all the advice about soaking in water before using on a gas BBQ is rubbish – they still burn.  Years ago I soaked a pile of them (you have to weigh them down as they float) for 18 hours – made no difference.

Prawns and scallops

Prepare green Aussie prawns and scallops and thread two or three of each on the stick.  In a mortar smash up 3 cloves of garlic with a heaped teaspoon of Murray pink salt (just how much depends on how many seafood sticks you intend cooking).   In a saucepan gently melt about 150 grams of butter (for 12 sticks roughly) and add garlic/salt mix and cook very gently to infuse and then add finely chopped parsley.  When the charcoal is ready place seafood sticks on the grill and baste or spoon garlic mix.  Cooking will take longer than you expect but results are very yummy.

Lamb

Try doing it souvlaki style on a stick (marinade overnight with lemon, garlic, salt etc).  Or perhaps more like an old fashioned kebab with onions and red capsicum and mushrooms.  Or, marinade in a tandoori mix.  I regularly have my butcher bone out a leg of lamb and I portion it and freeze for later use in curries or satays.

Chicken

Chicken on a stick over charcoal is excellent.  Use boned skinless thighs and do not cut chunky.  You can marinade and cook and add a satay sauce (make your own or even use the rather good Ayam canned one).  Actually you can cook it many ways – do whatever takes your fancy (honey/lemon or just salt and pepper).

Quail

I am about to do this very soon.  Split them in two or just flatten the whole little bird out.  As you cook it baste with lemon, a little salt and plenty of thyme.  Quail are not expensive here – I can buy a six pack of the large variety for $21.

Salads

Prepare two or three suitable salads and make sure you have some cold beer and appropriate wines handy.    Our last get together over the hibachi began at 1 pm and ended hours later.   It was delicious and lovely.  But remember to start the heat beads at least three hours before you want to begin cooking.  See, you do have to plan ahead!

Finally

This is meant to help inspire you to be a little different.  You won’t have any flame ups or worries about whether you are going to run out of gas.  I always have the ingredients in the freezer so only need to ensure I have some decent salad stuff.  With prawns you can use a few different additions (spicy salt, three different peppers and piri piri – grind in your mortar and sprinkle over prawns while cooking).

Calamari goes very well over charcoal.

My first hibachi went into use back in the 70s on the balcony of our unit in Sydney.  I used to cook fresh sardines and lamb satays (not together though!).  Fresh sardines are in the fish shops right now but do not buy them if they look a bit squashed.

Jun Inoue Makes a Splash at Assin

27 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Assin, Jun Inoue, performance art

medium

medium

.

Finished Work

Last week, FM and Emmjay went to a performance art event in one of FM’s favourite  fashion houses – Assin in Paddington, Sydney (also based in Melbourne).  This was curiously the first time Emmjay and FM had actually seen art in the making.

Jun Inoue performed at Assin in Melbourne and produced a wonderful triptych piece that reminded us of a combination of large scale calligraphy and street art.  Unfortunately we had to go after a couple of hours, but we returned to see the completed work.

FM and Emmjay would like to than Assin’s owner Ms Fernanda Kasjan for her kind invitation.

Ms Fernanda Kasjan – and her beautiful Pisces tattoo.

Video taken on the redoubtable iPhone 4s…… not great, but there, none-the-less and processed with Apple iMovie using steady cam.  Soundtrack provided by the artist as he worked.

On this Day

27 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 34 Comments

Tags

Hits, This Week in Pop History

Happy Birthday, Algy !

Playlist by Algernon

Merv, Granny, Manne, Foodge and all the patrons of the Pig’s Arms send a very happy birthday wish to our tireless playlist builder, Mr Al Gernon.  Happy 39th !

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

Volare – Dean Martin

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

Que Sera Sera – Doris Day

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkMVscR5YOo

It’s now or never – Elvis Presley

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zTNZ_5an44

Blue Bayou – Roy Orbison

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2I16SwYD3kA

I have the Right – the Honeycombs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJWBpq2dCF0

Lady Godiva – Peter and Gordon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDdI7GhZSQA

Hey Jude – The Beatles

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MilfP2fVLhU

Banks of the Ohio – Olivia Newton John

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OK5q1bU59Ic

Popcorn – Hot Butter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SXWgC0SLCA

Can the Can – Suzi Quarto

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tW3HN_pvbE4

I do I do I do – ABBA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSxWfvkxFc0

Let’s stick together – Bryan Ferry

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UaJAnnipkY

Born to be alive – Patrick Hernandez

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSycAuQb4n8

Eye of the Tiger – Survivor

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

I got you babe – UB40 and Chrissy Hynde

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_SS-TyXhhU

La Bamba – Los Lobos

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JH3WvI_S6-k

Venus  – Bananarama

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmBij5GkF-s

Desire – U2

The P?pli Kids

26 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Sandshoe

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

P?pli Kids, street art

Report by Sandshoe

I’ve not heard of The P?pli Kids before and picked up this up from Facebook. From the wall of a community activist in Cairns. Rumour seems to have it the Kids are in Townsville. I say rumour because rumour seems hip.

Myself, honestly, I’m trying to work out just where they do fit in, spring from. I just watched this vision and it blows me away for its creativity and the insight it gives so what’s the go with cans of paint and explosive dance mixes, getting together and inhabiting spaces in the street.

Walking around alleys and behind the facades of grey cement and cream sandstone, red brick and cement mortar joined-up buildings, you know there is rarely anybody going to be there in the first place in these dirty corners of industrial waste and urban land some of us walk around to see and which comes first…the paint cans or the waste. It is all waste until it is used. It is all abandoned until reclaimed, ordered in some way, lit, made visible, painted, inhabited, displayed.

Ladies and Gentlemen for One Day Only – Owen Campbell Live in Pitt St Mall

25 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

blues and roots, Owen Campbell

From Owen Campbell’s New Album Sunshine Road – hear a few more clips and grab a copy at http://owencampbell.com.au/

From Owen Campbell’s New Album Sunshine Road – hear a few more clips and grab a copy at http://owencampbell.com.au/

 

http://owencampbell.com.au/

Words for Our Time

24 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 47 Comments

Tags

cubists, modern cubists, www.cubists

Milk

Painting and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

Q: What is Cubist?

A: Someone, who analyzes, breaks up, and reassembles objects, in an abstracted form, is often, in today’s information and tolerance society, identified, and labelled, as being “Cubist”.

People, who are really Cubist, are known to be totally dismissive of cultural and societal norms, to distort knowns, to be formally inaccurate; further, they have a total disregard for proper shading.

These days, with the popularity of The World Wide Web, Cubism is casting a dismal, and slightly mildewy, shadow upon people, who know better: who have outgrown the unsophisticated, and uncouth, behaviours of those previous generations, who didn’t know better.

Cubism is the tool, of the unenlightened. People, who are really Cubist, are really, really, not getting it. That’s why, they do it.

(historical sources and references: Wikipedia)

Not Copping It Sweet – Jailing the Scientists

23 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 26 Comments

Tags

Abruzzo earthquake, Brisband floods, Christchurch, Fukushima, insurance companies, L'Aquila, natural disasters, Victorian bushfires

Abruzzo earthquake damage

The ABC today ran an interesting and somewhat alarming story about six seismologists being jailed in Italy for failing to provide adequate warning of a magnitude 6.8 quake that devastated the ancient town of L’Aquila in April 2009 – killing 300 people and injuring 1,000 more.

The furore over the sentencing and imprisonment was described from the point of view of the scientific community being up in arms and making ugly noises about the imprisonment being a major disincentive for any scientist  – or I suppose other professionals like engineers to provide advice to government in case the advice results in a pear-shaped disaster.

It raises several issues –

  • the culpability of professionals for their advice – regardless of whether they could have accurately foreseen the consequences or not;
  • societies’ desire for laying the blame and making somebody pay for the bad things that can and do happen to individuals, and
  • insurance companies’ comparative appetites for risk and profit.

We have seen comparable post-disaster witch hunting in Australia in the terrible Victorian bushfires and the Queensland / Brisbane floods where government officials have been shown the blowtorch on the belly for making – or conversely not making decisions that might have had less severe outcomes.  Professional careers have been ruined as well as lives lost and there is not much coverage of the psychological damage wrought on professionals who may suffer terrible guilt mingled with entrenched denial of culpability for the caprices of nature.

The scientists at the heart of the L’Aquila earthquake matter were essentially criticised for having met a few days before the major quake when small tremors had been experienced – and having issued cautious warnings – that presumably the locals ignored.  Neither of these mishaps is difficult to understand.  The ABC piece speaks of Italy as having the most seismically active regions in Europe with hundreds of tremors each year.  And the assertion is that few of these small tremors precede major quakes.

It’s easy to imagine that a scientist who frequently calls “wolf” just in case – causing massive scale evacuations to no good effect is pretty soon going to be facing the same gun as those recently incarcerated.

But in truth, when dealing with mother nature, nobody, not even the best scientists with the most experience and state of the art equipment, data and computing power can really tell the future.  So it should not be open for anyone to not just apportion blame, but to mete out punishment to a scientist for being, at the end of the day, merely human and having interpreted equivocal information in a way that time judged to be incorrect.

While the police and judiciary in L’Aquila and say, New Orleans have sought to bang heads in the name of retribution for the dead and suffering populations in their boroughs, there seems to be little appetite amongst the Japanese for payback to the executives, engineers and scientists who clearly were responsible for the design, operation and maintenance of the Fukushima – and other nuclear reactors – disasters in waiting for which they were able to plan and have contingencies in place.  Curious.

While public officials and politicians may be content to sheet home the blame for the extent of damage caused by natural disasters in the man made environment, insurance companies  – for whom the threat of the same is pure oxygen – blame is directly linked to profit.  These monsters will happily take the cash from punters for decades, and when the shit hits the fan, they are genetically predisposed to try to apportion as much blame to the victims – or other insurance companies’ customers as possible – All in the name of profit.  Nothing to do with ameliorating the disaster.

Witness the hair-splitting of disgraceful insurers over the definition of floodwater versus storm water in their slimy attempts to defraud policy holders of their due entitlement to compensation.

Pity the poor people of New Orleans who have lived through one of America’s worst natural disasters.  Whole devastated districts remain, years after the events because even those who were insured – and who received some kind of payout for having their homes and possessions destroyed cannot rebuild because the insurance companies have refused to re-insure any property in these particularly low-lying neighbourhoods.  The boroughs where live the poorest Americans.

One of the major differences between the New Orleans and L’Aquila disasters was the response of the disaster management authorities after the events.  The incompetence of the Bush-appointed managers and the President himself in taking a leadership role was perhaps the lowest point in an epically bad presidency.  But the strengths of the Churches and welfare agencies and the massive resources in the US economy to assist the people of Louisiana proved to be decisive in the end.  Not much has been said about the fate of the people of L’Aquila after the quake.  The ABC piece said that this is the third time that the ancient town has been flattened and one wonders, like it is for the  good folk of Christchurch, whether enough is now enough.

It is some comfort – perhaps small comfort to see the victims of these terrible disasters coming together to support each other, but there is a similar look on both the faces of the insured and the uninsured alike.  The look is a mix of apprehension about the steep mountain they will both need to climb and the appreciation of the care and support they afford each other.

So is there any justification for punishing scientists and engineers who time later proves to have “got it wrong” ?  Will it raise the dead or the buildings ?

Lait to the Debate

21 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay, Poets Corner

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Lait, Lehan

Lait

Painting and Poem by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

achieve
approve
arise
backlash
barrage
beach-side
better
brands
business
car oil
cast
cheesecake
cogent
collapse
commercial
complacency
conformity
co-operation
critique
danger
deep
deep down
degrading
desire
direction
domestic
economic
emaciated
embrace
engagement
eroded
escalating
escape
family
for granted
finished
forge
fresh
hard-fought
hen
hit
home deposit
injury
laugh
leave
legs
luxury
manifesto
materialism
money
names
negotiating
ok
overdrive
partnerships
pass
pathetic
power
property
purely
reality
rear their heads
re-ignited
reinforce
relentless
remarkable
rigid
rise
rooted
run
sacrificed
self-fulfilment
shackles
show
shower
significantly
squeezed
starvation
steam
stifling
strident
structures
subjugation
subtle
taking
task
tension
tough
transform
under 40
unequal
unheard of
verbiage
vigilant
violence
virginal
virtual
wildly
work
wrong
yearned

Bullying arrests.

20 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Arrests, Bullying, Canada, London, Ontario

Canadian police arrest schoolgirls for bullying

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-10-20/canadian-police-arrest-eight-schoolgirls-for-bullying/4324322

Map:         Canada

Eight teenage girls have been charged with criminal harassment over bullying at a high school in Ontario, the latest in a string of high-profile and tragic incidents in Canada.

Police in the city of London, 200km west of Toronto, said the girls were arrested after an investigation into physical, emotional and online bullying of another girl at the school.

They were charged and released on a promise to appear in court. They have also been suspended from school.

“Bullying will not be tolerated in our community. The behaviour exhibited by these students is reprehensible and will be appropriately dealt with by the criminal justice system,” London Police Service said in a statement.

Police said they made sure the victim was supported and safe before they dealt with the accused bullies.

The arrests follow news last week of the suicide of Canadian teen Amanda Todd, who killed herself after years of bullying, including sexual exploitation on the internet. Todd posted a YouTube video about a month before her death to share her unhappiness and torment.

It was the latest in a string of suicides by bullying victims in Canada which have garnered widespread media attention and sparked a backlash against bullying.

On Monday, a member of parliament called for the creation of a House of Commons committee to come up with a national bullying prevention strategy, and schools, police forces and provinces have launched projects or pledges to stop bullying.

In the London incident, the bullying was reported both directly to teachers and on the school’s anonymous website portal, and immediately acted upon, said Bill Tucker, director of education at the Thames Valley District School Board.

Mr Tucker said he believes the bullying had been going on “for some time” before it was reported.

The high school held an assembly on Friday morning to address bullying and show students how seriously incidents were being taken, Mr Tucker said.

He had also been in contact with parents of two of the arrested students, and been encouraged by their reactions.

“They have been supportive of the process and the results and are committed to having their daughters learn from this,” he said.

Reuters

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