30 April 2008

Birthdays and Berrima


Here is the ice cream cake for MLR at home

April is birthday rama for this family, there is Neisha on the 4th, niece on the 14th, Grandpa on the 21st, MLR on the 25th and nephew on the 29th - what a party!


AC and TC in the park
A small gathering of three of the April birthday people gathered in the southern highlands at Berrima to celebrate with lunch at the oldest continuously licenced pub in NSW, followed by coffee and cake in the park. Lunch was held in the closed in veranda of the pub, on the corner. A light filled area with views to the gaol (we did not see anyone trying to escape). Most of us had fish and chips or chicken and chips, while some started and finished with desert. While the place was incredibly busy, we were all served quickly (apart from a slow delivery on the last fish and chips). The price was reasonable.

The cake is a ginger and cherry cake (two of Grandpa's favourite flavours)

The start of the birthday cake

How the cake finished up
TC brought chocolate cup cakes which were appreciated by all, but especially the children.


After some confusion about parks and playgrounds and who was following whom, we ended up in a nice park near the river.


How many people does it take to light a sparkler on a windy day?

Four cousins (between rounds of survivor)

29 April 2008

Cockington Green

Just before the school holidays, Grandma and Grandad Rutherford were down for a visit, and along with MLR and Me we went to Cockington Green for a visit - they had not seen the new international section. Here are some of the photo's that MLR took of the International Section.



Swiss ski resort

Piggies for Grandma Carter


25 April 2008

Autumn in Monash


Here are some autumn colours from the street trees and flowers in our garden



Autumn is my favourite time of year.

22 April 2008

Horton Hears a Who

MLR and her friend Mickey and Myself planned to see Horton Hears a Who on Monday. There were three children in the end as AJR decided to grace us with his presence, although he sat up the back by himself. My friend Sue B also joined us for the movie and lunch afterwards. Sue is excited about moving to the coast this week, plus retiring (again)!
MLR ran into a friend last week who had just seen this movie, Maddie gave MLR the Horton mask, hence this delightful photo. The mask also hides a self hair cut!

For an adult watching a kids movie it was ok. There was not enough rhyming in it for me, not Seuss enough! From what AJR told me of his read of the book in Dymocks he did not think that the movie reflected the book.

I am a member of Hoyts club, which means that they send me offers every now and then. I managed to get tickets to Horton for $8.00 per person (instead of $11 for the kids and $14.50 for me). I bought the food and drinks before hand, popping the corn in the microwave before we left home. It all felt quite frugal.

21 April 2008

JSR's Graduation


If you want to see him graduate, with distinction then here is the proof photo, in addition to this I saw both JSR graduate and the certificate, so it must be true!!! More on this later, when we download the stuff off the video. Thanks for your help TC.

20 April 2008

Melbourne National NRM Conference

Last week I was off again to the wilds of NRM, this time in Melbourne. The conference was hard work and was very successful from our point of view. The best thing about it for me was the fact that it was held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), and even though I am no sport fan, I did feel in awe of the place. If I get a chance to visist the MCG and do a tour I will.

Here is the view leaning from my fly screenless hotel window (yes a hotel window that opens, what luxury), straight to the MCG.



The hallowed grounds (note that they steam clean the seats)


In memory of the first football game played on this ground in August 1858.


There was a lot of memorabilia from the 1956 Olympics.





Shirley Strickland and Betty Cuthbert from the 1956 Olympics


One of JSR's hero's - Dennis Lillee
Walking back and forth from the hotel to the MCG, we saw lots of offices connected to cricket in the back streets. At the MCG there were tours for the public every day. We had the conference dinner at the MCG dining room, which was a great venue. The after dinner speaker Sir Murray Rivers (aka Brian Dawe), was very entertaining and not at all recognizable to me.

19 April 2008

Bridgetown, WA (not Barbados!)

At the end of March I travelled to Bridgetown, Western Australia. A small town in the south west corner of WA, nestled on the banks of the Blackwood River, to attend the WA Natural Resource Management Conference. Bridgetown is about 3 hours south of Perth, 100k inland from Bunbury. Unfortunately it was raining cats and dogs for the whole day that we drove to Bridgetown. We hired a Toyota Prius, which was fine except for the visibility out of the back window. We stopped briefly in Bunbury at a service station, to get some lunch, however as it was 1.20pm they had turned most things off (cappuccino machine, grill, etc). It was good to get back on the road again. About 420 delegates attended the conference in a town of around 3,000 people. Here is the conference brochure. The conference was held in the recreation hall which coped with the numbers well. There were approximately 20 vendors in the hall. Food was fabulous, sourced from many cafes in town and the surrounding towns.

Bridgetown is a beautiful little town and reminds me of the southern highlands and some of the south coast towns. It has three wineries, 2 art galleries and a cidery. The country around Bridgetown grows apples and plums, as well as wine and potato's. The soil is very rich. The rainfall averages 1100 mm per year - which seems heavenly to me.

We stayed at Nelson's at Bridgetown, with a spa in each room.




The rooms were fine, the food for breakfast was ordinary, so on the last morning we went to the Barking Cat Cafe and I had the best cappuccino I have had in a long time.

I went on a field trip to Manjimup, to a chip factory and the Diamond Fire Tree. I thought that the chip factory would be handing out packets of chips, but no it was a fried chip factory.


Here is the delightful head wear we had to have for the chip factory tour

Having completed a tour of the chip factory we moved to the the land where the potatoes are planted and watched a line being put across the land to prevent the rain from washing all the goodness down the hill, then we looked at potatoes in their furrows the ground.

This is the potato man talking to one of the field trip participants. He never stopped talking about the potatoes and the issues with marketing, growing, staffing the factory - potatoes are his life.

On to the diamond fire tree.
The tree is in the Kari forest near Manjimup and is a very steep climb.




No I did not climb

On our last evening at the conference, we were bussed to Boyup Brook, 30k's down the road. Here we visited Harvey Dickson's Country Music Centre, just out of town. He hosts tours 7 days a week. Each year he hosts a rodeo and the "Road to Tamworth" a three day country music show, which then sends the winner to Tamworth. On our arrival we were given a tour in the dark.

Outside there were three 10 foot tall figures in a row, playing guitars

this is where we ate and danced to the country music crooners. The roof was littered with hanging memorabilia - vacuum cleaners, disco balls, golf clubs in a golf caddy, toy horse, plus the usual farm implements. Harvey has built this with his friends over the past 20 years.

rodeo

name of the bar



There were shrines to Elvis, Slim, John Wayne, Johnny Cash and more all around the outside of the main hall


On our last afternoon we visited Ford House, which is a B&B in Bridgetown, and has an amazing breakfast room.


Melanie and I "drinking tea" in the breakfast room, a slab hut lined with preserves.

After Ford House, we ended up at the visitors centre at a local food and wine promotion, tasted local cheese, local reds and cider and bought some plum and port jam - finally found a way to incorporate alcohol into breakfast.

After dropping a colleague off in Bunbury, we returned to Perth for the evening. On Friday we checked out Miss Maud's the Sweedish pastry cook and hotelier. We also walked down London Court: Set amongst modern sky scrapers in the heart of Perth City is Perth's London Court. Built in 1937, this small pedestrian "street" is located between the Hay Street Mall and St Georges Terrace. There are two clocks at London Court, one at each end of the lane. If you pay close attention you will notice the clock at the Hay Street entrance has four knights above it, which circle around when the clocks strikes every 15 minutes. At the St Georges Terrace end you will find St George battling a dragon above the clock, and both clocks are replicas of France's Great Clock of Rouen.


13 April 2008

Northern Lights


Each building had five different pictures projected on them, which meant that it was interesting to walk up and down the strip to catch each variation. For better photo's of the Northern Lights that were held in Adelaide on North Terrace in late March you can click here. The Northern Lights was part of the fringe festival. I was lucky enough to go twice. The first time I went was the last day of 15 days of weather over 35 degrees each day. At 10pm it was still hot and sweaty. There were many people about, even toddlers and children, due to the heat, no one wanted to sleep. About 10 days later I went to see it again on the second last day of the showing. There were still a lot of people there, and weather was much cooler.