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Category Archives: Gerard Oosterman

Of Burrawang markets, Leggings and Corduroy

26 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 23 Comments

Tags

breeches, Burrawang, casuarina, Eucalypt, leggings, Scotland

In amongst Babe’s country is a village called Burrawang. It has a yearly market whereby the main road is blocked off. That’s how big it is. We were told about it by a neighbour. We had never been before, always a good reason to check it out. ‘Checking out ‘is very popular language now amongst the young and so is ‘oh my god’ and ‘stuff like that’, also still going strong is ‘der or duh’. Rising inflections are now well established, even amongst news readers.

We arrived at the Burrawang country village on the day of the big market and were directed to a paddock to park our car. There were hundreds of cars already with lots of volunteers wearing those fluorescent jackets directing the stream of cars to follow the car in front for parking. Following ‘the car in front’ wasn’t too difficult and after parking we followed, just as effortless, the endless stream of the car exited drivers and passengers to the Burrawang village up the hill.

Burrawang is the Sussex of Australia. It is as beautiful and as close to the ‘old country of England’ as you could possibly make it. The red volcanic soil is home to the best potato but also miles of conifer hedges, maple trees, willows, elms, cedar, and massive gnarled oaks and even real holly with red berries. All this, but also old strands of giant eucalypts having escaped the cruel axe of the forties and fifties hell bent on ring barking, obliterating chances of dangerous bush-fire and make room for pasture and bellowing cattle…

I love Australia and its bush, the Eucalypt and Casuarina, the melaleuca and Cootamundra wattle, but haven’t forgotten the deciduous beauty of European trees. At this time with autumn chasing summer I am chuffed to be jarred to Europe once more. Forgive; I am getting a bit sentimental, will soon purple prose with fallen leaves and tear-shed memories of ‘times gone by’.

We followed the tails of market seekers before us and noticed there were some people waiting near a sign which read ‘bus transport’. Some people queuing and being elderly, I thought that they were from a nursing home. Helvi, observant as always, disagreed, ‘I think they are people that don’t want to walk uphill to the markets and are just waiting for a bus’ she proffered.

She was right and as we plodded on we noticed most walkers had sturdy shoes or runners. I had my comfy RM. Williams and Helvi nice boots.

We noticed at the beginning that many were passing us. We decided to take it leisurely. It wasn’t a race. The distance to the markets was huge and steep too. We kept on seeing walkers as far as the eyes could reach. We plodded on stoutly as they sometimes say but the nice boots were somewhat regretted by H.

 Most walkers were either younger, older or our age but all had rather rose coloured or claret coloured faces, some were panting or even standing still somewhat crouched forward, catching breath. In the meantime the little buses carrying those that wisely waited at the sign below at the parking lot were flying past us. Was this going to be a re-run up the Mount of Calvary, after all, it was Easter? Was the C o E involved? You just never knew in this area. No, it couldn’t be.

I suppose, the planners of the event thought to combine keeping cars well away  from the village together with a regime of teaching us all a fitness lesson, a worthy reason in which to organize the Burrawang event. Indeed, why not?

I noticed that not only was nature splendidly English and very Sussex with a bit Yorkshire dale and flagged stone walls but so were a lot of the walkers. They even spoke somewhat differently. I suppose we were in the hub of gentrified Highland’s territory. After finally arriving at the market, most were so famished and thirsty; they went straight to the food stalls. There was a mile long queue at the Turkish gorem pide bread stall. Hamburgers ditto. Yorkshire pudding was sold out, even raw pumpkins were being besieged by the hungry.

We sauntered around, noticing some in horse type breeches leggings,  some old but young women with smart equistrial type hats and hints of Botox, moustached men in corduroy, guffawing and laughing loud with a ‘har har’ type bonhomie.

The ‘Scottish short-bread’ stall; all decked out in little coloured squares was also popular. The quest for food was endless and looking hopeless for us, the queues were just so long but I promised H a nice coffee.

The coffee stall was a converted VW bus with a promising sign proudly displaying ‘The Grind and Co”. There was a queue, but a promise is a promise.

I finally managed to get two coffees and bought a nice bottle of Fume-blanc after first tasting it (twice) from a cool climate winery called ‘blue metal’.

The walk downhill was a lot quicker and our fellow walkers considerably jollier.

We had a great day and hoed into a loaf of Burrawang crispy bread and some smoked salmon. The fume blanc was a nice one too.

An Ode to Cricket, but nearly a Funeral

23 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Bradman, cricket, funeral, Jack Russell

Bradman Oval Bowral
Bradman Oval with the adjacent Bradman Museum of Cricket. 

 

It was an auspicious start to the day. I thought of doing a quick walk around the ‘world famous cricket’ ground at Bradman oval. I do this walk almost daily at least once and with autumn in its full glory, you would have to be legless not to walk. Any walk always has to involve Milo. As soon as he spots the ritual of putting shoes on feet, he becomes intolerable. He jumps up against the door handle like a maniac let out of Bedlam. I usually take the Norwegian nurse’s dog Louis as well.

 All of us trotted along very nicely and were half way around the oval where a youthful team or two were doing what normally gets done on a cricket oval, play cricket. There was the usual sporadic clapping just after the sound of a ball being batted. The crowd was just as sporadic, all wrapped in blankets with some sipping tea from thermoses.

I had almost gone over half way, lost in thought,  if that is possible, with in between telling Milo, ‘nice walking Milo’  at the same time jerking the lead. “Nice walking, Milo” a bit sterner now again. I have hopes of Milo learning to ‘walk nicely’ without trying to forever pull my arm out of the socket. I feel justified to jerk him as well, to balance the books as it were. He takes notice for a second only to resume pulling again. Jack Russell are obstinate. Their noses are not like any other dogs that we have ever owned and will sniff out a wood-duck from miles away. All of a sudden a chorus of very loud shouting.  “Watch out”.

I was still lost in ponderings or whatever, probably a bit of Alzheimer, when out of the blue a cricket ball landed right next to me in between Milo and Louis. I could have been killed.  Everyone broke out in clapping and cheering, ‘well done’, I heard a few shout. Sport has never been keen on me nor me on sport. At school sport I was always happy if a ball did not get kicked or thrown towards me too closely and was mightily relieved if I had to stand somewhere near the back of the grass. A short stint at Scarborough Basketball club in Cronulla taught me to stay well clear of sport. I suffered broken nose and spectacles.

 I threw the ball back but even failed to cover the distance between where the ball had fallen and the wooden picket fence. This was only a short distance away. Anyway, this caused some hilarity amongst the sparkling white clad cricketers. The oval is a very well maintained cricket place and the distance between me, outside the oval, and the wooden bat was considerable. No wonder they were clapping.

I continued the walk back home pondering (again) how our lives are just so incidental, hanging by a tenuous thread of a possible unfortunate landing of a cricket ball.

I returned Louis to the blonde Norwegian neighbour. He always walks ‘nicely’.

A furtive glance at Socialism

12 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Abu Ghraib, America, Babushkas, Bolsheviks, capitalism, Communism, Czar, Guantanamo, Lenin, Russia, Siberia, Socialism, Stalin, Trotsky, UNHCR

 

.May we just ponder what Trotsky said back in 1937 and Quote:

But all those for whom the word ‘Socialism’ is not a hollow sound but the content of their moral life – forward! Neither threats nor persecutions nor violations can stop us! Be it even over our bleaching bones the future will triumph! We will blaze the trail for it. It will conquer! Under all the severe blows of fate, I shall be happy as in the best days of my youth; because, my friends, the highest human happiness are not the exploitation of the present but the preparation of the future.”

— Leon Trotsky, ‘I Stake My Life’, opening address to the Dewey Commission, 9 February 1937 [60][61]

We know that the Socialist-Communist system of workers getting a fair share of the pie didn’t quite work out. The pie grew fatter and richer but the portions were still unequal. There wasn’t any tom- sauce with it either. Some did not get any pie.  The mean Stalin and his gulags with Siberian winters and the Babushkas wheel barrowing the frozen bodies of sons and husbands out of trenches were not the rewards that Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin) promised the world’s peasants while he was roaming around London during 1902-1906. Nor did the highly idealistic Trotsky envisage coming to his end with an ice pick embedded in his brain many years later.

The failure of communism has been expanded upon by many historians, writers and students of political science. The general idea was that Russia would get rid of its Czars and that its long suffering peasantry would rise up, change and revolutionize the status quo. The poor would gain their share and the rich lose much of their share. They would finally chuck off the shackles of the Czar’s imposed grinding poverty, be given plots of land and everybody would share. The hammer and sickle, a symbol of the alliance of workers and peasants finally bringing riches and tickets to freedom.

 The idea was noble but the execution of it was marred by wars and power struggles between those that meant well and those that didn’t. The result was the inevitable implosion of the ideals matched with an equal rise of opportunistic tyrants. The whole sorry saga of its failure was due to infighting and relentless squabbling by those seeking power and control. The counter revolution against the proletariat was taken over by power hungry future proletarians. And so it went.   

In another part of the world, freedom of expression and the right to rewards for individual efforts were being trail blazed by cowboys on horses and cowboys behind the wooden steering wheels of T-.Model Fords. Westinghouse fridges soon followed. Everybody was also given the freedom of a gun to protect all that hard-won glorious liberty as well.

 God bless America. Land that I love, Stand beside her, and guide her…To the oceans, white with foam…My home sweet home

. And so on… And America kept on dreaming. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_Bless_America

 Millions still believe that today, but many more are getting a bit skeptical as well. Despite its Constitution enshrined freedom and the protection of that by gun and law, there are more prisons in the US than universities, more incarcerations per capita than anywhere in the world. America’s poverty is growing, expressed by the millions living in the over 35000 trailer parks and even more millions of sick and disabled without a health insurance.

Can we still say that democracy and capitalism is working in the US and other developed countries? Is it still the success it was so enthusiastically touted many years ago, today? Globally, there are signs that the promised wealth is getting bigger but into fewer and fewer hands. Somewhere I read that some individuals are so rich, they own as much as the GDP of entire countries. In fact, many probably own entire countries.

The level of poverty in many undeveloped countries is as bad as ever. Millions still have to walk for miles to get a bucket of water or scrape together enough food to keep their children from dying. The idea of rewards for individual efforts doesn’t seem to have spread to those.

In Australia the richest man now owns more than he could possibly ever spend or use up, even if he ate stone crabs at $60.- a claw, for breakfast, lunch and dinner with a 1952  Grange Hermitage  (at $ 12.500 a 375mls bottle) and drove a brand new Ferrari every day.

 What’s more, his riches have come compliments of resources that I thought belonged to Australia and therefore to all of us. How can that be right? This single individual could supply Australia’s entire Mental Health budget at present about 100 million a year for the next 40 years. That’s just one individual’s wealth against tens of thousands of sufferers with Mental Health problems for forty years. How did the spreading of goodies pan out in such an unfair manner>.

http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2011/s3164029.htm

Let’s not be jealous, but the top 10 wealthiest in Australia now have a kitty of over $27 Billion. Could we reflect also, that the richest man was also the most vocal in opposing the resource tax not long ago? A bit rich, don’t you reckon?  The latest sad news for the majority of those on wages and paying fair taxation is that there is a promise in the air by the present Government for the big companies to even pay less taxation in the future. Hoorah, I can hear the top ten richest roar in unison; pop the champagne once more…

Is there an answer to this seemingly endless inequality in sharing that which we all own?

 The second largest economy, China, seems to have propelled its population to a better life for hundreds of millions astonishingly fast. Yet, it has achieved this as a Communist country with a Communist Government. The people seem happy; they talk on mobiles, wear jeans and go to nightclubs. Sure, there are issues of human rights. We have our human rights abuses as good as anywhere. The unresolved, year in year out struggle we have dealing with boat people at detention and ex-army camps, the plight of indigenous people. The UNHCR points this out repeatedly. The US was no saint with the abuses at Abu Ghraib and the ongoing Guantanamo Bay detention camp with over two hundred people still languishing without trial for years. We are on shaky grounds if we cast stones or call for black kettles to Communist China on that ground.

Perfection is elusive, none more so than in political ideologies. In our own domestic world, the greens no doubt will offer some hope for a better future world. The liberals are hell-bent on sending the world into an environmental death throe.  Labor will have to make up its mind to lead or dither.

Ravi Shankar is 91 today

07 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

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Tags

jehudi menuhin, ravi shankar

 

Ravi Shankar – Biography

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpxHjwzJEz0&feature=fvst

In Praise of The Parsimonious

05 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

Asian food., cars, malls, Michelle, shoemaker, shopping trolleys

 

Frugality is on its Way

One of life’s little rewards over the last few years is getting the car washed and polished. This I do every six months or so. By that stage the car is littered with all sorts of debris which I take out before I drive to the car wash. Our carwash is in Mittagong at one of those large shopping malls. There is a team of 4 or 5 young men, flat out with high pressure water sprays, an assortment of vacuum cleaners and squeezes, black paint for the final touch on the tires. The whole process takes an hour or so. After each of those car washes and polish I make a vow not to leave any rubbish in the car, ever!

 I follow the vow but not the grandkids. I found they had stuck chewing gum deep inside the door’s storage area. Also pop-up little drink bottles under the seats, lolly wrappers, and some ‘gay-time’ ice cream refuse.  Of course, Milo has a very luxurious bed at the back of the wagon with a small mattress and a variety of Indian pillows, a string of beads for toy, making him look Maharajah like from the Punjab region. His room at the back also has to be vacated and taken out.

I surrendered the car keys and was promised it would take about 90 minutes. This is always a difficult period to get through and one reason why Helvi usually leaves this to me to sort out. Big shopping malls are not her scene while I usually try and get a story out of it. A study of Australia at its most observable! There are usually a number of leather-like settees spread around the malls for some like-minded persons to settle into and either observe or take a nap or do both intermittently.

I bought the Australian because being a Monday Helvi had already bought the SMH for the TV program. I normally don’t buy any newspaper but those 90 minutes had to be gotten through somehow. Of course, I was immediately punished for this lapse in discretion. The front page had 8 million Australians portrayed as uneducated, analphabetic morons; all hopelessly illiterate and none could add 2+2 as well.

I got up in utter despair and bought a pork bun from an Asian outlet. I was the only customer and noticed a huge queue at Michelle’s, my most hated food outlet, where elderly ladies with blue or pink hair seem to settle for tea and scones or a mean sausage roll.

I went back with my pork bun and The Australian. I noticed very few shoppers about. This was strange and at 2 pm expected hordes of people. It was eerie. What’s going on? The shoe shop next to where I was sitting, the two shop girls all dressed in black were listlessly emptying some boxes and playing around with shoes on shelves. Not a single customer while I was seated there. Even the large sign with “The second Pair for Half Price” did not entice a single shopper.

I remember the article the previous Saturday in The SMH how Australia is starting to save and getting rid of credit card debts or mortgages. Was this now being played out in front of my eyes right then? Are people sated with goodies and coming to their senses? Have shopping come to a dead halt?

 The way home with my clean and sparkling car needed a stop- over in Bowral where I had to pick up my very old pair of RM Williams which I had booked in some days ago for e re-heel job. They were already overdue but the shoe maker was overwhelmed with repairing old shoes even though the shop employed 2 workers. He had apologized for the delay but told me they never had it so busy. So, there you are. A further confirmation of frugality with an increasing abstemious public keen on making things last and becoming more careful with opening their purse.

There is hope for all of us.

A Plucky “knitting” Man

31 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 13 Comments

A plucky knitting man.

Turning up at Bowral Rail station for yet another trip to Sydney, I bought my ticket on a cool autumn morning. This time without Helvi, she decided to attend to domestic stuff. The bathroom needed wiping and there was ‘dust everywhere’.

I needed some tuning to my hearing aids as the level of irritation from repeating even the simplest utterances by others were not audible enough for me to respond to satisfactory to those doing the uttering. This I get done in Sydney. Hence my date with a train this morning

 I bought a return ticket, and as the Bowral Southern wind was blowing and the temperature indicator in the car was 11c, I took shelter in the waiting room. There was another person seated there and he was knitting. He was a man of about 40, neatly dressed in a tweed Colbert and nicely pressed pants, shirt and tie, smart footwear. I was surprised but not as unsettled as some that entered this waiting room and quickly left when spotting the male in the act of knitting. The knitter had a ball of green wool in a plastic bag and, as far as I could make out, had progressed to having about 20 cm of a knitted length of some garment. I thought it might have been the beginning of a scarf. It brought back memories of my introduction of knitted stuff many years ago. When about 3 or4 my dear mum knitted our underpants. The trauma never left me and I remember the itch as if it was only yesterday.

When the train arrived, I was further surprised that the knitter also travelled with a bicycle. The bicycle was parked outside the waiting room and I had already, prematurely as it turned out, thought the bike belonged to a young man with heavy boots and a vast arrangements of rings through his lips, nose and eyebrows. I was badly mistaken!

The well dressed knitter clambered aboard and hooked his bike vertically in a special little compartment that the train provided. He sat down and took out his plastic bag, continued knitting.

I am not as distant from knitting as most of you, although I hate to make presumptions. All kids in Holland were taught knitting when I went to school. I can still knit but reverted to only the simplest of stitch or knot. I got corrupted by a knitting machine when living in Holland with our kids, and used to turn out smart little garments that were snapped up years ago at the Balmain market stalls.

Strange, how knitting seems to have died out. People now seem to do the pearl and knit on their mobiles. On the way home, from Central to Revesby a woman behind me had a continuous conversation without a breather. I looked around, she was on a mobile!  An attractive dark girl was also talking loudly but into the air, she had a kind of clip on her blouse that must have absorbed or amplified her talking. When that stopped she was furiously pushing her mobile buttons, non- stop till Campbelltown.

 Who pays for all that, I wondered?

A Plucky Woman

26 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 151 Comments

Tags

Federation, Kristina Keneally, Premier, Prince Charming, queen

A Plucky Woman.

The punters predict we’ll have a change of NSW Government happening this Saturday. It should not happen, but change is ‘in the air’, the pundits are saying. In fact a ’rout’ is predicted. It has always been a mystery to me that people change political sides when it comes to Federal versus State voting. The philosophical difference between parties become secondary, and alliances or allegiances are thrown overboard at the drop of a hat or election.

Perhaps for many, the slip and slide from one to the other are chained to their ingrained notions that whoever promises the most in material wellbeing will get their vote. They, the voters, are indeed an unpredictable lot and don’t seem to have much of an idea of remaining faithful to their beliefs.

Of course, anyone with even the slightest notion of judging people would never waver when it comes in a choice between the present leaders of the NSW main parties. No matter what the past or indeed the future; it is a no-brainer. When it comes to sheer power, strength, determination and a core of unwavering strongly held beliefs, KRISTINA Keneally is heads above any other possible choice.  Despite all odds against her, she stays the course, totally un-perplexed of fazed. She is a winner even if she loses.

Most people that change their political alliances do so because they have been told by the opposition that things are bad or will become even worse if they stay with the present government. In state election, the opposition parties demonize and demolish, but rarely come with better policies. We have always known that.

Voters also sit in traffic, trains, or busses, for hours and hours, and blame the prevailing political party. They are miffed about relationships, the loss of their favorite football teams, the cost of bananas, and blame the present party.  All of a sudden though, like a conjuror pulling fifty porkers out of a hat, promises fly like pigs from all sides. The wavering voter takes it hook line and sinker and changes; vote in the party with the largest bag of promises. And so it goes…

Desperately trying to fend off stroppy feminists who seem to gravitate to insults whenever women are praised for their sex; dare I say also, that at no stage in Australian politics  has a female ever displayed the  charms and cheer pizzazz on a level of Kristina.

 Ok. Let fly now, become ropeable and give males heaps.

 She carries herself presidentially and looks into the camera without fear or hesitation. Her dress sense is superb and at no stage is she at all concerned about how she comes across. She KNOWS her stuff, walks like a model but nothing is deliberate for effect or even votes.

There is no doubt we are looking at a future premier in Kristina, if not now, next time around. That’s if she sticks around on NSW but I wouldn’t like to wager that she might cast eyes federally, if not presidentially as well. We might be running ahead here a little but…. What would Australia be like, finally taking the jump and govern on own feet, ditching the Governors and get our own Head of State?

We love royal weddings and he is a Prince Charming, but would he mind if we dumped the lot of them and go for one of our own. Kristina would be as regal as anyone. Make her a queen if you like. Better still, a future President.

We’ll watch this Saturday’s voting in NSW, (with baited breath,) but am betting Kristina will be the winner even if she loses.

The Ballad of Taggart

24 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 3 Comments

Extracts of a novel by M Glenn Taylor.

He let his fingers hover over the chipped keyboard, eyes shut tight. He lit another cigarette. Willie dropped in a slow but catchy bass line. Johnnie came in second, smooth and easy, Chicky waited, then let rip a reed splitter. They had it down. Johnnie kept his eyes shut as he started to sing.

Well, I drown a glass a water

and I’ll hang a rope

The devil he done come to me

Took away my hope

Well, I’ll put that stick a dynamite

Right on under your nose

Cause I done seen the worst a man can see

That’s just how it goes

The voice, the whole sound, was smoke-shot vocal chords and sticky-floor toe-tapping, holes in the soles. Chickey played part of the song with his nose. It was holy hell blues all right, and the only country or gospel to be heard was not a brand greasy Jimmy the disc jockey had ever encountered. This was sin music.

The muffled fiddle squal, the quiet dulcimer, the old five string, they were just discernable enough to calm the excitement. And when the young woman’s voice broke through, it was beautiful. Church solo beautiful. They could make out her words.

Well, boys, you’ve heard that tale

About a Mingo dead-eye shot

Who on that 1920 day couldn’t fail

To give Al Felts what he got

The boy was full of rotten teeth

But his eye was keen and sure

He held the miners’ deep belief

That their lives were surely pure

Out on the hallway stairwell, Chickey’s sight went red. Everything blurred. The howling in his ears commenced and his knees gave. He dropped like a man in the mids of a stroke.

Johnnie and Willie kneeled to him, slapped his face a little. They listened for his breath, found it, and carried him out, just as greasy Jimmy said to the radio-listening public, ‘And that was The Mingo Four with “The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart.”

Boeuf Tartare avec un Oeuf

20 Sunday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 38 Comments

Tags

Crimea, France, Monpellier, Pomme de terre

Boeuf Tartare avec un oeuf.Posted on August 3, 2009 by gerard oosterman

The Geoffrey Russell Nightmare Special The walk around Montpellier resulted in needing to have lunch so we dove into one of those intimate little lunch and dinner places that seem to appear as soon as one gets hungry, especially in France and even more so in the south of France.

We were shown our seat and left to ponder the menu including a wine list. The atmosphere was intimate with lighting subdued and with all sound reduced to a sotto voce. The garcon in white jacket and with the right un-pretentious manner, putting even the most belligerent customer at ease, came around our table to take the lunch order. The choice by Helvi was a sound one, a piece of top side beef with vegetables and ‘Pomme de Frites’. She was asked for her preferred choice of the ‘boeuf’ to be rare, medium or well-done.  Medium was her choice.

I had chosen the ‘Beef Tartar’, and told the garcon to have it ‘medium’ cooked as well. He laughed heartily but I did not really understand the finer points of his laughter until after the dish arrived. A plate of raw minced steak with a raw egg in the middle of it was what finally turned up on our dimly lit table. There was nothing cooked about it, never mind the ‘medium’ part of it.

I bravely finished the plate but Helvi sensed my lack of enthusiasm and asked if everything was alright. I confessed my total ignorance of beef tartar and thought that the dish was a kind of steak done rare. A bit Russian perhaps, with images of horse riding Tartars doing the cooking of the meat on a fire after a fierce battle deep inside the Crimea.  This embarrassing dereliction of culinary knowledge has been a source of endless mirth and enlightenment to our friends when the tale of medium cooked ‘beef tartar’ at Montpellier gets re-told by my beloved wife. It has been an ice breaker at many a social evening.

In the case of readers being surprised by this embarrassment, please consider that so many of my friends probably think nothing of eating vegemite, a food so horrendous to look at, so terrible to contemplate inside its brown jar, that I feel justified in making slight of this minor slip up.

Uncle Pudding at Bendalong

17 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 3 Comments

Uncle Pudding.

Many years ago, at a time when the local garage man would lift the bonnet of the Ford, check the dip stick of the engine, crouch down to pump the tires, we also used to go camping. The camping involved loading tents and kids with a drive of some hours to a spot where there were hardly any others. The last hour covered a mere 15 kilometers. It was a dirt road which after rain would turn into a slippery dip. The trick was to get into the middle and slowly allow the car to roll down the hill, gentle on the accelerator, hoping that the way uphill would be without having to do that in reverse.

After arrival, the kids would be left loose which resulted in their blessed instant disappearance giving us time to erect the two tents and get firewood. Getting firewood wasn’t a big task, usually there was enough kindle from the gum trees within a short walk around the tents. The fire would be started confined between some rocks and a kettle on top would be boiling in no-time at all. Ground coffee in the pot, (never the insult of Nescafe,) and Helvi and I sipping this golden nectar, it was instant heaven for both of us.

 The spot we went to hardly ever varied. It was Bendalong, just after Sussex Inlet and past a spot where a boat loaded with ceramic tiles had come to grief during a storm in 1946.  Bendalong used to mine some minerals which were loaded on ships with a half ‘demolished by storm and tempest’ jetty still poking its nose into the ocean. The best times were had by kids that would scamper down a steep and crumbly escarpment to a rocky plateau. The youngest, when still a baby was carried in a papoose down that hill and many of his first impressions of life must have been the back-side of his father as well as seeing waves and sea creatures. The rewards on that plateau were the oysters. No oyster has ever tasted better.

In the evenings we would have the fire roaring and listen to the gravel laughter coming from behind our camp side. This was Uncle Pudding in full flight. He was a miner with early retirement, “dusty lungs”, it was called. There were a few on that peninsula. The pension would go much further on free-hold council land during the times of tolerance and a society still unworried about some souls living free on camp-sides and in Caravans. Well, free? Perhaps a case or a bit of a case of beer to the person or ranger in charge of the camp side was exchanged. No one cared or was jealous.

His laughter was perhaps anointed by the beers he would be sharing with some relative or other dusty lung miners, some had fishing boats. The huge slabs of tuna he would give us as a matter of course and our kids loved this Uncle Pudding. The origin of that name we never understood nor wanted to. He simply was ‘Pudding’ and ‘uncle Pudding’ he was called by our kids. He lived in a caravan and had a kerosene fridge in which he kept his tuna food and copious amount of beer. Connected to this caravan he had a large canvas annex which was really his lounge room with dilapidated large lounge chairs spread out in front, over which he had spanned another canvas cover. All this held up by ropes, guy wires and posts.

The era of best oysters and Uncle Pudding came to an end when he died and our kids grew up. We went back a couple of years ago. It’s all changed. Hundreds of caravans and aluminum clad annexes. The whole campsite has bitumen Rosella named driveways which at night are lit by garish blue neon lights. Ugly brick toilet blocks. All transformed in a suburb- holiday tangled horror. Stone lions or naked cement ladies with urns placed in front of the caravan. Cement frogs and toad stools. Hellish music and silly flowers in plastic, flickering plasmas and huge heaving guts carried by indefinable sexes stomping about… The whipper snipper brigade now on holidays, no more camp fires.

Uncle pudding died a long time ago.

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