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  • On the Road Again

    Sep 14th 2015

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    Canberra

    Canberra

    I am now far from home after passing through various security and immigration processes; in itself an interesting exercise varying from the loud and stressful to the quiet and polite.

    Singapore

    Singapore

    Copenhagen train station

    Copenhagen train station

    I stayed in a hostel in Copenhagen for three nights; an interesting place reminiscent of some of the Chinese hostels I’ve stayed in, not something I’d was expected.  It was well located and the staff were helpful.  The area was close to the train station requiring a walk through part of the red light district to reach.  Surrounding buildings were old and well maintained.

    Dorm

    Dorm

    IMG_6404

    Opposite

    IMG_6405

    Hostel
    IMG_6406

     

    Opposite

    London is my current home while I catch my breath before planning the next excursion.

    Copenhagen

    hostels

  • An Update

    Nov 1st 2014

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    An Update

    Critters

    I bathed Phantom recently at a pet shop containing a self serve hydro bath for dogs.  He hates water and it wasn’t until I tried to get him into the bath that I remembered the dog treats were left at home.  He graciously accepted the inevitable.  Before leaving we went for a walk to dry off.  He walked along with is head held high, mouth open in a happy smile and his hair gleaming in the sunshine, a dog happy to show off his new hairdo.  He was even happier when he encountered interesting smells in his pathway.

    Phantom, the clean dog

    Washed, walked and arrived home happy

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Recently I bought Floyd a tray to sit his seed bowl on and hopefully to reduce the amount of rubbish reaching the aviary floor, which of course needs another clean out.  A couple of weeks ago he was sitting beside his seed bowl on top of the upturned bucket.  If he wants to sit there with more space he should be able to.  The tray is made of melamine so hopefully he can’t chew it and hopefully it’s heavy enough to prevent him upturning it, especially as his seed bowl is a fairly heavy pottery one, containing a picture of a cat and the words Our Cat.  Seems fitting that the only suitable thing I could find was a tray showing cartoon cats exercising.  He is yet to receive it.

    Floyd 'putting his feet up"

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Addendum

    Since that was written he has received and upturned his tray.  It seems that a pottery bowl of bird seed and a light tray depicting flexing felines are no match for a bird with a beak and the laws of physics.  He now has my largest kitchen plate, which he is yet to upturn, but it lacks the width and lip of the tray.

    Seed bowl and tray

    Planning his response

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Readings

    My favourite book among those read recently was Anna Romer’s Lyrebird Hill where she effortlessly melds past and present stories of historical and modern loss into a coherent whole.  Simon Winchester’s The Surgeon of Crowthorne where he discusses the genesis and eventual completion of the Oxford English Dictionary, showcases the major players including a mysterious American medical man.  It’s a fascinating look at the creation of an English language cultural icon, the development of madness and treatment of a murderer sent to a lunatic asylum, Broadmoor, for life, yet due to his education, intelligence and money was able to make a significant contribution to an important cultural work.

    I was reading Bob Carr’s Diary of a Foreign Minister.  He constantly talks of fatigue and jet lag along with lots of names as he scoots around the world doing what foreign ministers do in addition to trying to garner votes for Australia’s bid for a position on the Security Council at the UN while also trying to avoid domestic politicking.  It’s not a riveting read and while I was happy to read 30-40 pages each night for a couple of nights I finally gave up and returned it to the library along with a Man Booker shortlisted book of a couple of years ago which I also grew disenchanted with.  I have some genealogy books on the go and pending.

    I did enjoy reading Carol Baxter’s The Peculiar Case of Electric Constable.  It’s written by  an historian and genealogist and created from historical records surrounding the death of a woman in England, the genesis of the telegraph, which is where the electric constable comes in, the characters involved and the resultant court case.  It’s an engaging, colourful depiction of the events of the time linked with issue of transportation, moral behaviour and the need to belong.  http://www.btp.police.uk/about_us/our_history/crime_history/murder_of_sarah_hart_1845.aspx

    Genealogy

    The genealogy has not been progressing with any success.  I returned to investigate an English ancestor in the hope she would lead me from a brick wall as I had names of her parents and knew she had siblings.  When I really looked at her entry in the baptismal register there was a hiccup.  It was recorded almost forty years after her birth and at a time when she was no longer Mary Briggs.  I then went searching for a substitute.  I did find one; one who was missing an “s” in her name and whose father was also married and baptized without the “s”.  Given the variations in spelling in those days and the commonality of area I’m sure they are related but I’m yet to be convinced that she is the required ancestor.  Now that I’ve had time to think, I will return to read the troubling baptismal register and try to see if that brings enlightenment of some kind.

    I am also doing an online genealogy course based on the genealogy information that can be uncovered by using different Google products.  It was a freebie as a result of Family History Month in August although I have ordered the 100+ pages of notes which are yet to arrive.  There is a fair bit to read with a need to try out each feature.  It’s pretty time consuming and has started to open my eye about what really is available.  It continues for a couple of months with a new module each week.  However, can’t say I’ve uncovered any useful genealogical information yet.

    The marriage certificate for the two Irish great grandparents has arrived and has yet to be the savior I’d hoped.  The search for their baptismal certificates is in abeyance while I deal with the online course and try and get the house and garden into some semblance of order.  The marriage certificate for the Scottish great grandparents has yet to materialize.  I haven’t been charged for it and all lines of communication are dead.  It is a long standing family company so I’m guessing something is wrong.  As I don’t need it at the moment I will temporarily ignore it before cancelling and going elsewhere.

    Phantom and I have taken a few short walks.  The following photo is of a patch of lavender located in a short street nearby.  The aroma from them was obvious half the street away before they became visible.

    Massed lavender

     

     

     

    Animals, Australia, Family History

  • Oct 8th 2014

    By: Kerry

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    The New Dog

     

    I saw the surgeon last week and can now drive.  Have only been out once but have a busy day coming up.  Have been occupied trying to clean up the back garden.  Now that the lawn’s been cut I can tell the difference between lawn and weeds and have spent days trying to pull them out. Today I decided that pulling was no longer possible.  Some were as thick as a pencil and all were squashed between the mower strip and the metal garden guard.  They got cut as short as possible and then Zeroed.   It took forever to do and I retreated to my heated chair during frequent breaks.  It’s good to start feeling something approaching normal.  The more I look around the garden the more I see requiring attention.  Walking is still a variable exercise.

    The family history research continues.  Last night I was looking up the husband of a second cousin.  He had the benefit of an unusual surname and two Christian names, the first being somewhat unusual.  He shouldn’t have been confusing at all as I had indexes to his birth, marriage and death and didn’t find anyone else with the same name.  However, I found a 1911 census record for a boy of his name and age along with several siblings in an orphanage.  There was a probate record for a man who might have been his father who had died a couple of years before but it mentioned a widow who I was unable to find in the records.  Examining records for some of the siblings didn’t clarify anything and allow me to feel confident that he was  the one in the orphanage either.  The second cousin, a stenographer sailed to Argentina in 1924 as an unmarried young woman.  Eight years later they were both recorded as first class passengers on a boat from China.  The husband’s occupation was recorded as “shipping”.   No other shipping records were found for them.  One of the siblings died in the 1960s and probate was granted to a man with the same name as the cousin’s husband.  He was recorded as a publican.  By the time I’d got that far my brain was fried from too many otherwise unconnected facts and it was time for bed.  Suspect his parentage and early life will remain a mystery.

    Indie, the new "dog"

    Yesterday I got up from my chair for a moment and returned to find it occupied by Indie.  There was no other covered chair so I put her on Phantom’s unoccupied double decker bed.  He was busy monitoring the street.  I didn’t expect her to remain and poor Phantom was left without a bed long after the streetscape had lost its appeal.  Today she’d really decided she was a dog by taking over his favourite outside bed. Phantom was busy keeping a close eye on me so didn’t miss his bed.

    Indie outside on Phantom's bed

    Animals, Australia, Family History

    gardening

  • More Spring Flowers and Past Relics

    Sep 17th 2014

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    More Spring Flowers and Past Relics

    Last week I walked down the road and photographed the flowering tree tucked away in a corner on a small section of public land.  The light was far from ideal but the tree provides a good example of spring growth.   A nearby wattle was showing good colour too.  The bright colours are a wonderful contrast to the drab colours of winter, apart from blue skies when they occur.

    Flowering tree

    Beside the tree

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Close up of flowers

     

    Wattle tree nearby

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Later that day I went to feed Floyd.  He was on the floor of his aviary, unusual but not unknown.  He’d been chewing industriously through the orange bin on which his water sits.  That bin has been in his aviary since early 2009, if not the previous year and he’d never touched it.  He’s now made quite an impact.   I have no idea how long he’s been chewing but think I’d have noticed when I fed and watered him for the last time before my operation.  Today he had his feet planted firmly in the centre of his seed bowl and did a funny little dance.  I have no idea what is going on his brain.   Just don’t want him to start plucking feathers again.  He eventually took a fancy to the electrical wire I’d tied his perch to the aviary and I replaced it with plastic rope.  He doesn’t appear to have touched it yet.

    Floyd's handiwork

     

    Last night my feet were cold so with time and some ingenuity I got my Ugh boots on; first alternative footwear for 4 weeks.  Yesterdays walk told me that Crocs are not suitable walking shoes.  Today I dragged out the shoe horn and sock applier gizmo provided by the hospital and managed to get a pair of socks and lace up shoes onto my feet.  It was aided by fact that the shoelace on the operated leg shoe was knotted so I didn’t need to find a way of tying that shoelace.  Today Phantom and I went for a short walk; I didn’t feel like doing the slightly longer walks we did on Monday and Tuesday.  However, both shoes engaged in “sock eating” which was far from ideal.

     

    The cleaner is arriving today and in tidying up I removed the cover from one of the dog beds for washing.  It revealed Jessie’s tooth marks on the foam.  I had been too slow to cover the foam so Jessie had taken advantage and indulged in one of her pastimes; chewing up foam.  The dogs initially lived outside on the verandah in enormous cardboard boxes, originally housing household appliances and furnished with old lounge cushions.  Jessie loved pulling the cushions out, tossing them around and then sinking her teeth into them.  I spent years chasing pieces of foam around the back yard and still encounter small pieces.  Eventually they issued a “possum alert” in the middle of the night and woke me.  Thereafter they became inside dogs at night time.

    Jessie's handiwork

    Animals, Australia, Home

  • The End of an Era

    Sep 14th 2014

    By: Kerry

    No comments

    The End of an Era

    Jessie has been part of the family since I gave in to the argument, “Phantom is lonely, and he needs a friend.”  She had been surrendered to the RSPCA by her family who were moving and unable to take her.  She seemed like the most likely of the dogs available at the RSPCA and also the ACT Dog Pound, especially as a vet had told me to get a different gender from the current dog.  Phantom visited her at the RSPCA where they ignored each other which I was told was a good sign.  Once came home they got on well together to the extent that a couple of weeks ago they both were eating from the same side of the cat bowl.

    Jessie aged about 9 or 10

    Jessie was a cross between a Staffordshire terrier and a Labrador.  She had the appetite of a Labrador and the protective instincts of the staffie in not wanting another female on her territory as we and her “cousin” from Sydney were to discover.  She liked to have a bit of a tussle every now and then and would initiate it by getting Phantom by the neck.  He would comply by rolling over they would have a lovely time rolling around for a few minutes.   She ensured that Phantom knew he was not “Top Dog” by scraping him on a leg when he was curled up on a bed she wanted.  Being a gentleman, he always arose and gave it to her, moving to a seemingly less desirable bed.  She enjoyed sleeping anywhere she wanted, sun baking, running around the back yard with Phantom and a visit from Son No. 2 when they would indulge in some special Jessie and “boy” play.  Together they were a pair of happy, even tempered, relaxed dogs rarely barking unless it was to issue a “possum alert” about the possums traversing the power lines in the back yard or in previous years Jessie would run around the back yard barking like a mad thing when she sensed thunder.  Fortunately her hearing diminished and she missed out on the bulk of thunder during the last couple of years.

    We're having fun

    Jessie developed arthritis some years ago and also liver and gastrointestinal problems.  She managed well and each time I thought the end was near she’d demonstrate a whole new level of energy.  However, she was uninterested in eating on Wednesday evening and again on Thursday and combined with restlessness and other symptoms I decided it was time.  Fortunately Son No 2 was on holidays and able to drive us to the vet and to dig a grave for her.

    Phantom loves holding a lead & here he has Jessie the week before when she was ready for a trip to the vet for an arthritis injection

    September 11, My Last Day, aged 16

    Phantom doesn’t seem to have noticed that his friend is absent.  While he likes to meet dogs during walks he is focused on human interaction at home and at the moment he always  has a human available.  Think it might be rather different if he was left home alone for hours on end.

    Animals, Australia, Home

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