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Author Archives: gerard oosterman

Political Erections

26 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

erections, politics

Despite having enjoyed a short stint as ‘returning officer’ at a local ALP branch some decades ago, I remain as mystified as ever about the machinations of Australian Government.

I can give you an example: The question of supplying the proposed election promises costings by both the ALP and NLP to the independents was answered yesterday. The answer that Abbott gave was way out of my league. I could not understand the language but understood enough that he could not or won’t give details of proposed election promises. There is some hiatus between treasury and opposition that I remain perplexed about.
It seems one never gets a straight answer, a simple answer that makes sense and contains some logic.
From where I stand now, it seems that the 2 party system needs a good dose of paraffin.
I do enjoy the three independents’ antics during interviews. What a relief from the election. If another election is held, I hope it will involve even more independents. They really rock.

Poor Milo

24 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 17 Comments

Milo recuperating after removal of over 70 ticks.

 

Out of the Mouths of Babes

23 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Helvi Oosterman

≈ 19 Comments

Helvi Oosterman

We took the two grandsons out for a shopping trip and lunch on Sunday. This was meant to take our minds off the election misery and poor Milo’s hospital stay. Being rightly stressed by these two happenings on the same weekend and seeing seven abandoned shopping trolleys at one intersection on our return home in this most gentile and green suburb added to my irritability.

Of course these ‘stolen’ trolleys have already previously driven one family member into an almost heart attack causing rage, so the boys responded to my complaining about ‘I don’t understand this kind of low-life behaviour’ in their own instinctive ways; Thomas by burying his head in his newly purchased book wanting to give a miss to this typical family lament, and leaving the seven year old Max to air the third-generation views.

‘They are red-neck hillbillies, lazy Bogans, stupid bullies’…and to please us, after all he is our smart people person who knows the right thing to say in any situation: ‘They are Abbott Lovers!’

If Hung is our chief political writer, little Max can be our own social commentator, our Hugh MacKay !

Some light and early hand-made relief from elections

21 Saturday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

 

 An amazing piece of engineering is Chichester Dam on top of Barrington Tops. It was built between 1917 and 1926. An enormous pipe runs from that dam to Newcastle.  If you ever get to Dungog and drive past the Ladies Bowling Club it won’t take you long to spot an enormous steel pipe snaking its way over paddocks and past small villages. This pipe is in sections, supported by many concrete stanchions.

If you are al all curious about this strange intrusion, just keep following the pipe and you should arrive at the Chichester Dam road. If you park the car and follow the pipe on foot to the dam you will have a magic walk. It is one of those hidden treasures that seem to have got lost in advertisements urging for tourists to go to Bondi or Byron Bay. The road finally takes you to the brick built gates and entrance to the area of the Chichester Dam itself.

While the building of the harbour bridge was of a much greater significance, Chichester dam is a great engineering achievement.

Here some information from a website:

The catchment for Chichester Dam  is largely within the Barrington Tops National Park, which is a declared wilderness area. As a result it is one of the most pristine catchments in Australia with large areas unaffected by human activity.

Chichester Dam statistics

 Catchment area 197 square kilometres
 Location Located at the top of the Williams River catchment
 Available Capacity 21,500 megalitres
 Surface area of dam 180 hectares
 Maximum depth  37 metres
 Average daily supply  90 megalitres
 Main Embankment Length 254 metres
 Wall Height 43 metres
 Spillway length 112 metres
 Thickness crest 3.7 metres
 Thickness bass  27.4 metres
 Full Supply Level RL(reduced level)  156.2 metres ASL (above sea level)
 Construction The wall is 254m long and 43m high, and is a ‘cyclopean’ system of interlocking concrete blocks and large  boulders, each approximately 230 cubic metres. The wall is anchored to the bedrock below the wall by 93 stressed tendons.

  
 

Chichester Dam history

Chichester Dam is the oldest water storage facility currently in use within the Hunter and was completed in 1926, although the dam provided its first supply of water to the community in 1923. Before its construction the Hunter relied on water from the Walka Water Works which drew water from the Hunter River near Maitland. Operations at Walka were interrupted by flood and drought, and the water was considered by many to be too ‘hard’.

A more reliable source with a greater capacity to store water was required for both a growing population and the industrial development of the region, which included the Sulphide Corporation at Cockle Creek (1896) and the BHP Steel Mill at Port Waratah (1915). In 1915 the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works advised the NSW Government that a storage dam be built on the Chichester River. Land was gazetted in 1916 and houses for construction workers were erected at Dusodie.

The workers’ health was improved by the provision of a doctor, reticulated water from the Chichester River, hot and cold showers, and a sanitary service. Dwellings were made for families, while single men slept in barracks of about ten beds each. The men erected their own reading room, dance hall and billiards room for Dusodie’s one thousand residents. In the hill above the dam site, a terrace was excavated to allow concrete making plants.

A nearby sawmill supplied timber, which was hauled on wooden tramlines, while a quarry supplied stone and gravel. Two steamdriven cableways, each spanning 335-metres across the gorge, delivered concrete and materials to the workforce. Sand was transported from Newcastle in steam-powered Sentinel trucks, while horse-drawn vehicles carried pipes and other materials.

Upgrades and modifications

As our oldest dam, Chichester has been extensively upgraded and modified to meet changing demands and ensure safety and reliability of supply. Major works include:

  • 1965: spillway lowered by 2.75m to increase flood capacity
  • 1985: dam post-tensioned with cables, spillway relocated to centre of the dam wall and returned to original height
  • 1995: seepage potential reduced under the northern abutment
  • 2003: improved drainage system for foundations installed and the left parapet wall raised to prevent overtopping in major flood

 

Lawns and Dungog Lady Bowlers

19 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

balls, bowling, Ladies, lawns

 

One of the more lasting impressions of my distant past are memories of our neighbour, Bill Miami. Bill Miami was of Italian descent but adopted out to an orphanage as a baby. At least, that was the story told by others. He never spoke about it and why would he? Our family who had only recently arrived in his neck of the woods, Revesby, were his new neighbours for many years to come. Bill was married and also had six children when we arrived. So with twelve kids all-round, there was plenty of activity. Never a dull moment, as they say.

My memories of Bill were his fondness for keeping his lawn. During an industrial accident he had lost four of his fingers which left him just his thumb on his right hand. Despite this handicap Bill would spend hours each week-end on his knees prising out unwanted grasses. He wanted a stable mono-grassed lawn. Every now and then he would stand up, overlook his little pile of unwanted weeds and proceed with rolling compressed tobacco between his open palms. The cigarette paper was held between his lips. After the ‘ready rub’ was loosened to satisfaction he would roll it into the cigarette paper and light up. These were probably his moments of greatest joy and satisfaction.

We had a lunch yesterday at the Dungog Ladies Bowling Club. We walked in and as expected, it was suitably empty with just a few ladies bowling outside. One lawn was perfectly cut and groomed. The other lawn was artificial lawn, perfect for bowling. Not a man in sight. I felt I was treading on a very hallowed but flowery carpeted ground. The bowling club was from the 1965 era. At least that is what the honour rolls seemed to indicate. You know those brown maple veneered boards with scrolls and golden lettering? There were lots of names of lady champion bowlers dating back from 1965. There were champions from single, doubles, triples and foursomes.

We walked into the restaurant part of it, all still decked and decorated out from the opening date of 1965, I suspect. They had those tables and chairs with splayed legs, soft vinyl covers on the chairs. Plastic embroidered table cloths and huge menus. We had sizzling pork, vegetables with oyster sauce and a chicken-chilli dish. We were the only customers.

While we were eating our meal, some lady bowlers walked in silently, all in correct white attire and with small cases that must have held their bowling balls.

It reminded me so much of the days of Bill Miami and his lust for lawns and ciggies.

Garbage Bins and Social Intercourse at St Henri

16 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 25 Comments

Tags

intercourse, marriage

Social meetings and Garbage cans.

A few months ago we moved to a small community of 38 town-houses all set on a meandering private ring road. The settings of the town-houses are somewhat staggered but close enough to warrant our love of ‘privacy’ with the help of either blinds or curtains. However, there are a few recalcitrants brave enough to defy the rule and blatantly allow open curtains, enabling a peek into a world of domesticity that would otherwise be kept well hidden.  Indeed, since our arrival and our Euro-inherited open curtain/blind policy there are now some cracks appearing in the maintenance of that privacy. Yesterday, I noticed an open curtain and a man sipping a glass of wine while preparing food. He was wearing a beanie.

One domestic event enabling social intercourse amongst the inhabitants of this little village named “St Henri” is during the day prior to Garbage collection. The private ring circuit does not allow for larger trucks to pass through easily, so all those familiar garbage wheelie bins have to be taken to the front of the Street. The larger bins are coloured yellow for recycling trash such as plastic and glass bottles, also all paper and carton. The smaller red bins for real garbage including those stale odiferous plastic trays that most foods are increasingly sold in, especially meat.  The garbage bins are solid and are on wheels. They also have a specific identity number on the inside of the lid synchronising bins with owners or renters and registered with the Shire. Woe those who will lose their bin. A hefty $ 160, – replacement fee will be enforced. Early in the evening, all the red coloured bins are standing at attention on the road, like those red uniformed Beef Eaters guarding a Palace. On Thursday morning, they will be empty, waiting to be strolled back again by their owners for the next week.

Our town-house is a bit at the back. This is great because it involves a much longer walk to the street with the garbage bins, allowing a greater chance to meet someone doing the same chore.  Of course, during bitter cold, wet and windy weather, not many have been keen to stop and chat so far. Most are working. Stopping with a garbage can in tow does not provide the most ideal opportunity. Even so, it is better than nothing. Most of the people here seem to be either single women or single men, many with kids. Also some, like us, are not the 9am-5pm crowd, having sold a previous house or farm, and using a six month tenancy to settle down to a more permanent abode in the future. In fact, I think most of the people here are in transit and renting. Heaven knows what marital battles have been played out or are still ongoing.

 A few weeks ago I managed to ‘jumper lead start’ a car with a flat battery. It was for a single woman with 2 kids on her way to school and work. She has now swapped to the other side of our little road to a much larger place, double story with3 bathrooms and double garage. She promised to invite us over soon. I noticed that her car that needed the jump start is  for sale. She now drives a new 4 wheel drive car, metallic grey in colour. Perhaps a marital settlement has come through. Who knows?

 We were also invited to a mid-year residents Christmas party and sausage sizzle. A nice gesture, wasn’t it? The private ring road does enable kids to play around and even though cars are driven to and from individual garages or car spaces, it feels very safe and remarkably noise free. A little boy knocked on our door and asked if that ‘boy with the bike’ could come and play outside. He remembered one of our grandsons who had played with him the previous week during school holidays.

‘St Henri’ in Moss-Vale is a nice place and as a small community, seems to be working.

Shaving Internet Users Clean

13 Friday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 29 Comments

 

The worst thing that has overcome us lately is to trust the written word. When we moved, we wanted the e-mail, internet and phone pronto. The magic word nowadays from the smarmy merchants of the techno-connect world is ‘bundling’ which of course is not far removed from bungling.

We were amazed to hear we could not get a landline and internet from’ Yes Optus’ at the address we had moved to. They, the Yes Optus team, suggested wireless ‘Yes’ fusion plan with a phone through the computer and all calls except mobile free for a modest $ 79. – Per month. It includes all national and international calls and up to 2GB of data usage’. Now, I would not know a mega-bite from a gig-bite or what the $0.15 cents per MB meant when you go over the 2GB. It did not sound too excessive. We liked the idea of a free phone including all calls and particularly liked the ending of their letter enclosed with the delivery of a box with all the gizmos, with, ‘We’re delighted to have you with us’. ‘Yes Optus’.

The next thing was a bill clearly showing their delight. It wasn’t $ 79.-. It was $ 723.45. With 5307 MB over the 2GB at 0.15 cents per MB. I pleaded that for $20 more we could have got the ‘Yes’ fusion plan for 7GB of Data.

But that’s not all. Get a bit closer will youse? We changed to the 7GB promptly and got a discount of 40% on the bill, still left us to fork out $ 479. – Boy was we ropable.

But that’s not all.

I had initiated an online account with a usage meter letting us know how we were going with those fucking mega-bites. It was a nervous few day of watching the graph but we were keeping well within 7 GB and started to relax a bit. We had used 70% of data and only 5 days left. Even had the audacity of taking a few days off to stay at Summer-Hill without computers, when after return I noticed the usage had reached 100% and with still 2 days to go, I was again almost doubled up with ‘Yes Optus’ rage.  The usage was going ahead full steam and we were not even using the computer.

But that’s not all.

It turns out that some bastard; any bastard really can use this system if the “wire free” or Wlan has not been disabled. Like any ratbag in this 36 town house estate could calmly open his laptop and get access through double brick walls and acres of tiled bathrooms and peruse all the shaved havens he (or she )could muster at the Oosterman’s ‘Yes Optus” Fusion plan expense. Not a word about this little scam in any “Yes’ fusion booklets. No ‘Yes Optus’ warnings of any kind to disable the Wlan or ensure protection through pass words.

 We now drive to the library and get free internet till tomorrow when the new month starts. The moral of the story is that no matter what one chooses in life. It all seems destined to suck money out of unexpected corners. Most people like ‘wire free’ but, I can tell you, unless you embed it with pass words or, preferably disable the ‘wire free’ and ‘cable connect’ direct to the modem you could easily end up broke, sleeping in a railway tunnel. Not a word that neighbours can access one’s internet.  Amazing technology.

There is a shop in Hurstville’s Westfield which sells mobile phones with ‘free dermal injections’ including ‘music streaming’. It’s all getting too much.

What happened to the world of ‘Smokey Dawson?’ We are all “Yes Fused.” and will be lucky to get out of it alive.

Cabbages and Lasagne

09 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 26 Comments

Tags

cabbage, lasagne, potato

 

Has anyone ever tried the combination of pasta with cabbage?  (8th Aug,2010)

 This morning, waking up with dread, having read the previous day’s poll on leering Big Ears chances of getting in government, we spent the day with coffees while dressed in morning coats, refusing to get dressed. It’s all so grim. We contemplated a good walk but decided on a trip to Bowral and have lunch. It’s not always one had turned seventy the day before and not having had the kids congratulating at the crack of dawn.

I treated myself on this birthday by buying a new pair of reading glasses yesterday. You know those instant ones you buy at the chemist for $5.99? They turned out to be worse than the ones I had been wearing. The old ones had the lenses fogged up by scratches from coins and key rings. My key-ring now has an added gadget, a remote for the garage door behind which we have stored the majority of stuff for when we finally move next door to Bowral. Anyway, yesterday’s glasses were minus– 2, today’s are -3. A lot better.

The lunch was at Berkelouw’s bookshop café. A rare opportunity to peruse books and eat, cleverly combining a couple of needs. Milo was tied up outside with people queuing for their turn in patting him. The lunch was lasagne, lovely, but not as nice as Helvi’s. The trick with good lasagne is to keep it moist, not let it dry. Yet, at the same time a crust on the outside is a must. Lasagne is never easy.

At the same time, we all know that the humble potato and milk will keep us in good health indefinitely. This, according to an item on last week’s TV about the dangers of mono-agriculture and the growing of a single crop excluding variety. The potato was brought back from South America by Columbus. The western world has never looked back since. Apparently there are hundreds of different varieties of spuds. The Irish made the fatal mistake of growing just a single variety and when a bug or virus discovered the Irish grown potato it caused  the wilting of the plant and subsequent starvation of thousands of Irish during the ‘potato famine’. Tough agricultural lesson!

I would add ‘cabbage’ to the list of a life sustaining food. The Chinese have prospered not just from being the most industrious and hardworking nation, but also for their fondness of cabbage. We have recently re-discovered the cabbage and add it in a shredded form to almost everything we cook.  For any future economic collapse or double dipping recession; be prepared. The cheapest vegetables are generally potatoes and cabbages ( remember gabbage?) and with some cow’s milk we are guaranteed to stay alive and survive for decades.

 Think about it!

Of Wine and Powder rooms

05 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Clive James, Germaine Greer, Lady Parlours

 

It is some years ago now that wine drinking was almost unknown. Plenty of beer but little wine. It was even less usual for women to be seen drinking at all. Certainly in pubs, women were only allowed in well hidden ‘Ladies lounges’ or ‘Lady Parlours’ as they were sometimes called. They would coyly sip a sherry or a pony of shandy. It was also unheard of that women would frequent public toilets, or at least that’s what the general impression was when sauntering around parks, city streets, or railway stations.

I remember, as a curious youth I would try and observe women drinking alcohol from outside the street looking into those mysterious Ladies Lounges. Indeed, in Sydney’s Oxford Street, there was one wine bar. I have forgotten its name. Believe it or not, both men and women could be seen to drink there together. It was the infamous group called ‘The Sydney Push ‘.It was decades before its time and breaking all the boundaries.

There was drinking, dalliance and cavorting of all sexes and in the same room.  Lorenzini’s Wine Bar and Repin’s Coffee Shop were places of very early mixed and same sex meetings of a variety of painters, writers, criminals, poets and prostitutes; however, of greatest notoriety, was the Royal George Hotel in Sussex Street. Clive James, Germaine Greer, Frank Moorehouse and many luminaries or not so illuminating of the time, used to do the rounds of all the ‘in’ places.

Of course, that was during the period that one had to fork out a penny to go to a public toilet. Those toilet doors were heavy and made from solid wood  with fortified hinges that were spring loaded ensuring they would always clap shut. No free rides, no matter how big the urgency.  The penny would be put into a large shiny contraption bolted on the door. It had a kind of knob that you would have to turn in order for the penny to drop and to release the locking mechanism. I dare say ‘, the penny has dropped’ might originate from those toilet doors. Of course, that famous poem; HERE I SIT, BROKEN HEARTED, spent a penny and only farted, must have come from that period of paid bowel and/or bladder relief as well.

Those conveniences for us blokes were called ‘Men’s Toilet.’ It wasn’t so for women. Indeed, one of the most baffling and curious differences from our previous life in Europe and here, was the segregation of the sexes in public places such as hotels, at social events and toilets. There were apparently no women toilets in Australia, only ‘Powder rooms’, ‘Rest rooms, or even ‘Ladies reserves’  ,of course they were euphemisms for women toilets.  Why the name ‘toilet’ was alright for men but considered offensive or unpleasant for women remains shrouded in a historical cloud. Those ‘Ladies Reserves’ were mainly in parks such as The Domain of Sydney. There used to be some kind of wire netting fence around those establishments, indicating some kind of ‘reserve’. What sort of stigma was attached to women using toilets?

 I imagined a whole army of women furiously powdering themselves and eating sandwiches afterwards in the ‘rest room’.  The last thing, the society of that time would consider and contemplate, was the very idea of women doing what men did, use toilets. That is all gone now and even slowly being replaced with unisex toilets. Where will it all end?

Our manner of wine consumption has changed beyond recognition. Pubs and hotels are now vying for all sexes as never before. No stigma for a woman to enter and ask for a gin and tonic. Our wine production is also of world class. Some years ago Hardy’s opening up and exported their wine technology and expertise to France was the cherry on the cake. Millions are now clamouring for Jacob’s Creek worldwide. Mention Australia overseas, and most likely you will get a smile and ‘ah your wine’ as a handy entry in animated conversation. During the seventies it was ‘Cold Duck and Barossa Pearl ‘with Port and Sherry next, sold in glass flagons, soon after replaced by those handy bladders in carton boxes, a worldwide first. The most staggering change has been the acceptance of screw tops on wine bottles, while doing away with the traditional cork. It’s not corkage that gets charged in restaurants, it’s ‘screwage.’

Sophistication at its best.

The Toy Story: To buy or not to buy

03 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by gerard oosterman in Helvi Oosterman

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

frugality, Grandparents, learning to count, toys for boys

Helvi Oosterman

August 3, 2010 by gerard oosterman

Little boys love rummaging in those two-dollar shops that are mushrooming in the poorer parts of our cities and country towns. They are never happier than when you empty your purse or handbag on the table and divide the collection of coins in equal lots. ‘Oh, so much money,’ says the youngest who has not yet developed his monetary skills, and who still thinks that having $ 4, 76 equals being rich.

They find weird things like slime, and ‘stuff’ that you throw at windows or smooth painted doors, and that sticks there if you are lucky, and not if you aren’t. The rubber skeletons made in Taiwan are huge favourites. On the way home the skull usually comes loose and this will cause some grieve.

A quick promise of another one on the next trip, usually dries the tears and allows the welcome sleep to come and sooth the pain. Then there are the little hard balls that bounce and which you usually lose on the street on the way to the car, but thank god your brother or cousin has a six-pack of soft balls, that don’t bounce but allow themselves to be squeezed into any shape by sweaty little hands.

The little boys also always find a game that consists of a tiny plastic box and an even tinier ball that you have to shake through a maze, and finally out of the box. After a few tries, and no success in releasing the box-prisoner out, the game becomes boring and it’s carelessly dropped on the floor at the back of the car.

Gold coloured swords, and hatchets so blunt they that can’t cut butter, let alone hurt a friend, are high on the boys’ shopping lists. The first duel is not even finished when one fighter’s sword breaks in half, and this in turn breaks the dueller’s heart. Luckily you still have your inflatable plastic animals, dragons and dinosaurs to blow up. This kind of hard work is best left to kindly granddads. It takes a while to get them fully shaped, almost painfully slow for the little boy who wants to take his zoo into the swimming pool. It’s not a long walk to get there, long enough to deflate the dragons though, too many prickly things on the way…

When the three year old turns into five year old, the amount divvied up for a shopping trip has to be doubled. A couple years later it has to be enough to buy a Nintendo and so it goes. Finally they are not cute toddlers anymore but have turned into nice ten year olds who come to stay with their musical instruments and laptops under their arms.

They don’t cry so easily anymore over minor breakages; they know more about computers than their grandma, who in her turn still knows a little bit more about spelling and comes in handy when all are  sitting at same desk.

Those endless excursions to dime stores have paid off handsomely; the boys understand maths, and can do adding and subtracting without calculators. They have also learnt about the value of money and are all saving up for their BIG purchases, and they thank Opa for teaching them about frugality, that most wonderful of Dutch virtues!

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