Friday, February 21, 2025

Saturday, February 22

I have quite a comfortable routine in the morning.  Marilyn stays in bed for an extra half hour, leaving me to watch a couple of Youtube videos with my first coffee of the day.  I have some favourites: Steve, Scott, Ken, and so on, but this morning I was attracted to a snippet about Donald Trump.  How can the USian people tolerate this person?  Nothing he says makes any sense.  The clip I watched showed a public meeting where the audience attacked the moderator who dared to ask questions about Trump's competency.  

There seems to be a whole new understanding of right and wrong.  I don't know who coined the term 'post-truth' but we are certainly living in a world of 'alternative facts', where we can all make up our own mind about what 'true' means.  

Stop the world, I want to get off.  At least I know that Anthony Newley had something to do with that phrase, and that's the truth.

Yesterday, Marilyn had to go in for her check-up following her eye operation.  I dropped her off, found a shaded spot in the carpark and opened my book.  After a while I found myself getting peckish but there were no shops nearby and I had brought nothing to eat with me.  I scrabbled around in the glovebox and the little console between the front seats .. and found a little packet of jellybeans.  They looked a little the worse for wear so I checked the Use By date.  2018.  That's alright: jellybeans are full of sugar and that doesn't go off, so they should be OK.  I chose a red one ... not my favourite colour but it looked to be the most appetising. 

But it was horrible .. hard and with a strange flavour.  I decided to spit out the last little bit and spread the rest of the packet on the grass near the carpark.  I hope they don't affect the local rabbits who are scrounging for a feed.

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Friday, February 21

 I think we can call the construction of the gazebo a success.  Jamie put the final touches to it this morning by fitting some rubber grommets into a couple of holes and it is now there for us to enjoy.  We had talked about some refinements but have decided not to spoil what is clearly a good thing.   Bertine from Number 5 popped in to check it out and we sat around the table with a glass of wine contemplating the future.

Nothing much is happening today.  Sandra, the cleaning lady is expected; I plan to have two walks to add a couple of thousand steps to my daily tally, and I need to tidy up some TV programs I have downloaded.  Marilyn has an appointment at the Eye Hospital this afternoon and that will give us an excuse for a coffee in town.

I think I might have posted The Missing Postman before but I haven't ticked it off.  No matter: it's one of my favourites so deserves another airing.


THE MISSING POSTMAN                                                AUGUST 27, 2021

 

If anyone asked what he did, Wayne would tell them he was the Missing Postman.  Sometimes, people would ask him what he meant because, in their simple understanding, he was there in front of them so, clearly, not missing at all.  Wayne would just smile and change the subject.

It wasn’t surprising that people came to think that Wayne was a little odd, if not seriously disturbed.

In fact, Wayne was employed by the Post Office to make enquiries when postal items went astray.  He was the man who looked after the Post that was Missing.  He was the Missing Post Man.

If you knew Wayne, you would wonder how he kept his job.  He was certainly no intellectual giant and he had an irritating habit of constantly singing old Everley Brothers songs in a low monotone voice.  More than one fellow-employee had asked for a transfer after one too many choruses of Bye Bye Love.

But, Wayne was always neatly dressed; his mother ironed a fresh shirt for him every morning, and he was generous in helping out when anyone needed an hour or two off for personal business.  Most importantly, no one else was prepared to take on the job of Missing Post Man.  It was a thankless task with little hope of promotion.  The incumbent had only a tiny cubby-hole to work from.  Some wag once dubbed this the Dead Letter Office and the name stuck. 

The general feeling among the staff was that the job of Missing Postman was the end of the line, the job you were given when Head Office thought you should be put out to pasture.  And, of course, no one can be sacked from the Public Service; it is a well-known fact that every Public Service Department has a designated number of positions which are so mind-numbingly boring that their sole purpose is to make life so miserable for the incumbent that a resignation will inevitably follow.

Somehow, Wayne thrived in his hovel of an office.  He always had a tiny vase of fresh flowers and his desk was the tidiest in the whole department.  He brought polish from home and every Monday morning, all the furniture was treated to a spruce-up.  Wayne was held up to the other staff as a model employee, whose example others should follow. 

Perhaps, his supervisors should have looked at how successful he was in discovering the whereabouts of missing postal items before holding him up as a shining example of what a good employee should look like.  In short, his success rate was appalling.  Apart from the odd letter from the bank or electricity bill, he found almost nothing that had gone astray. 

Wayne was not very bright, but he was certainly sharp enough to know when a good scheme should come to an end.  One Monday morning, Wayne didn’t show up to work.  No one was worried; he wasn’t a vital cog in the wheel and everyone assumed his mother would ring at some stage to say that he had a cold.  Another day passed, and another and someone thought, perhaps, a ‘phone call to his mother might be a good idea.

His mother was surprised to receive the call. Didn’t they realise that Wayne had been sent off to Canberra for special training before he took on his new job as Controller of Misplaced Parcels?  This announcement caused much consternation in the office.  Surely, it couldn’t be true.  Even the public service wouldn’t be stupid enough to promote Wayne to any position of authority.

The wheels of the Public Service grind slowly but, eventually, an investigation was launched to inquire into the matter. A panel of eminent retired senior officers from the department was charged with finding out what had happened to Wayne and were there any extenuating circumstances which should be taken into account.  The matter was certainly helped by the arrival of a postcard from Wayne, now resident in a South American country which, as it happens, has no extradition treaty with Australia.

A picture was emerging that Wayne had been up to no good, and diligent digging unearthed the truth that, for years, Wayne had been stealing parcels and other mail and, as the Missing Postman, he had been able to cover up the theft quite easily. He focused on birthday and Christmas cards which might have a banknote tucked into them, and parcels from ebay and other mail order companies, which were all covered by insurance so nobody would make a fuss if they didn’t arrive.

Few people in the Post Office had ever given Wayne a second thought but now the Legend of the Missing Postman will live for ever.


Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Thursday, February 20

It always takes longer than you think, doesn't it?  After working all day, the workmen abandoned the job and said it would take a couple more hours  Mick and Jamie have been at it now for an hour or so, there's been a rush trip to Bunnings for some more brackets but the end is in sight.


Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Wednesday, February 19

Today is the day that our gazebo is to be built.  Mick has arrived and all the steel has been unloaded from his truck.  He has pre-cut it to length and constructed the two main supports, it's been painted and the next step is to fit it all together and attach it to the concrete.  He and Jamie are discussing how many sheets of laserlite they need and are off to Bunnings to buy it.  I'm keeping out of their way; my knowledge of construction is minimal and I'm happy to leave it to those who know what they're doing.

Archie is loving all the excitement.

Monday, February 17, 2025

Tuesday, February 18

 There's a tradesman here at the moment, fiddling with the blind on our front window. Typically, of Tasmania, we have a personal connection with his family.  I met his father first when I had blinds installed at Giant Steps, probably 20 years ago; it was a big order and gave the blind man's business  a boost.  Since then, he's installed blinds here and at Jamie's and for many of our friends.  Daniel, the son, had to tweak a couple of places and replace a clip or two - no charge.

I've been to pick up Archie.  Jamie has a busy day and it's better for Archie to be here than moping around in an empty house.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Monday, February 17

 A sign went up at the front of our units announcing that Unit 4 was for sale.  It is rented at the moment and I imagine it will be difficult for the current tenants to deal with their home being sold from under them.  I'd be interested, though, to learn what is the asking price. 

I had the house to myself this morning as Marilyn went off to her Probus meeting. I had just settled down to watch something on Youtube about Donald Trump's latest folly when Bertine from Unit 5 came around to talk about the implications of the sale of the unit and she was disappointed that Marilyn was not there to share her wisdom.  I'm not comfortable about entertaining other women when Marilyn's not here but she soon arrived to rescue me.

Jamie has just messaged to say that our pergola outside the back door will be erected on Wednesday.  It should have been last week but Mick had come down with Covid and was isolated.  All the steel has been cut and painted so it's only a matter of assembly.  Can't wait!


WAITING FOR ROBERT                                                                 MAY 8, 2020

 

We’re not a close family. Oh, as children, we were well looked after and were never neglected but, looking back I get the impression our parents saw nurturing as an obligation rather than as something they enjoyed.  It’s not surprising, I suppose, that we became very self-centred, thinking only of ourselves and only considering how situations would affect us personally.

Even as children, we followed our own paths, finding our own friends and our own individual interests. One of my sisters became obsessed with ballet, another wanted to be a musician and experimented with one instrument or another until she settled on the clarinet.  Robert, my older brother, played football.   I was the studious one, absorbing myself in books, and I joined the local Cub pack after reading The Jungle Book.  

On winter evenings, when it got dark early, my parents decided that I shouldn’t walk home from Cub meetings on my own, so it was arranged that I would go to the local football ground where Robert was training and wait for him to finish so that we could walk home together.  It wasn’t unusual for me to be left in Robert’s care; my parents didn’t see that their responsibilities extended  to going out of their way to pick me up.

I didn’t really mind but I had learned very early that Robert had no concept of good time-keeping. Like everything else he was involved with, his training sessions never seemed to finish on time so I found myself, night after night, sitting for what seemed like hours in a cold and draughty football ground, waiting for Robert to decide it was time to go home.

As we became older, we moved gradually away from the heart of the family.  A couple of us went off to different universities, others moved into their own places as soon as they could afford to.  We got together, of course, on significant but rare occasions, and a pattern started to evolve.  No matter what the occasion, Robert was always the last to arrive.  My wedding was delayed because Robert was late in picking up my parents.  He showed up late for the christening of my first child even though he was to be a god-parent.

The only regular occasion when the family invariably met together was for our mother’s birthday.  I have no idea when this day took on special significance but on the Sunday closest to April 16th each year, the four siblings and their own families would gather with my mother and father for the celebration of the anniversary of her birth.  I suspect that everyone there would have preferred to be elsewhere but we were dutiful enough to accept that it was reasonable to set aside an hour of our time if it gave our mother some little pleasure.  But, of course, bloody Robert was always late and none of us could leave until at least an hour after he arrived. 

Our lives might have continued for years in this stilted way, each of us in our own little silo, meeting only on rare occasions, but the day came when we received news that Robert had died.  He had been running to catch a train, late again; he tripped and cracked his head on the platform, dying in the ambulance on the way to the hospital.

We gathered as a family in the church to say our farewells, then set off for the local crematorium.  We should have anticipated what would happen next.  The hearse carrying Robert’s body broke down on the way to the crematorium and there was a delay while a replacement vehicle was sent.  We had always joked that Robert would be late for his own funeral, and he was.


Saturday, February 15, 2025

Sunday, February 16

In April or May, 2012, I stood at the entrance to Edinburgh Castle after walking along the Royal Mile.  There was a booth where they asked you to pay a few pounds for the pleasure of roaming through the grounds. However, we had other things to do and our train was leaving in a couple of hours. It was a missed opportunity because I knew, even then, that I would never return to that spot.  However, this morning I found a video on Youtube made by Steve Marsh who explored the castle and put it on the web for all to see.

It was a fascinating exploration and one of the highlights for me was seeing the ritual of firing the One o'clock Gun.  This has been going on for years, and was originally set up to alert the ships in the harbour of the right time before reliable clocks were in common use.  In one scene, I noticed a map which showed other places in the world where a One o'clock Gun is still fired regularly.   This included Fort Denison in Sydney Harbour, Hobart and Fremantle in Western Australia.

The current Edinburgh gun looked like a fairly typical field gun, but a previous gun was preserved elsewhere in the grounds.  It's called Mons Meg and was cast in 1449 and presented to King James in 1457.  Everything in the UK seems to have a long history and it's great that it's being preserved.