Yes, very much an anomalous blog entry. March? Melbourne? What is she talking about?
In fact, I was in Australia from December 30th – March 29th, and had internet access for much of my time there, but it was either too sunny, or exciting elsewhere, or I had important emails/University applications to attend to (just found out – I got in!) and I therefore never managed to produce a single blog entry during my time Down Under.
Not to say that nothing happened. Australia was a rich and eye-opening experience. I love and miss Kangaroos, and the Harbour Bridge, and the Melbourne cafes, and the lovely warm sunshine.
So!
I first arrived in Brisbane – stayed with my Grandma’s nephew, who is retired and lives on Bribie Island, which is abundant in pelicans, mosquitoes, and more retired people. Finished my knitting, in the deliciously oppressive heat of Brisbane’s rainy season (that for some reason I snuggled up in quite happily, like a big comfy duvet; although I can imagine it being HELL in conjunction with any form of stress).
Then down to Sydney, stopping the night in Byron en route – the worst and most over-priced Youth Hostel I’ve stayed in to date, a ‘roaches climb the wall’ affair, but a glorious and wonderful place itself; if I could go anywhere in Australia on a whim it would be Byron, the country’s Far East.
Sydney was next, where I attended a week-long course at NIDA, and stayed with my very cool Aunty K and Uncle R who fed me brown rice and vegetables and tofu. After staying with meat-lovers, who could barely fathom another food group, they probably saved my life…
My time in Sydney was punctuated with a trip up to Bingara, North of Tamworth where they hold Australia’s most prestigious country music festival, which was seen and not heard by me, when I was there to change onto the Countrylink bus. I spent a week Jillarooing on a cattle station just outside Bingara. I thoroughly enjoyed the horse riding, and was able to add several further justifications to my vegetarianism. Wrestling sheep and cattle in order to take off their tails/testicles with a penknife is not really my idea of fun, and a reality that meat-eaters should probably confront before they chuck the rest of that burger in the bin. It did not only cost a dollar.
In the midst of the blood and guts, cropping and chopping that life on a cattle station entails (no pun intended) there was a day that stuck out for me in my character analysis of our dear, autocratic host.
J, the man who owned and oversaw the station, shot his own dog and cut her open to retrieve the puppies inside her. And he was upset by this – finally he showed some regret at seeing a living thing die. He told me “on you go, you don’t want to see this” when I went to check on the dog, who had been suffering a traumatic labour all day. But I turned back as I left, and saw that dog straining its head round to look straight up the barrel of his gun. She knew exactly what was happening. And then, with a dull ‘clack’ and a quick mist of blood, she was dead.
J took those puppies that survived home, I think there were 4, and the next day he reported that 2 had died in the night and 2 were doing fine. I didn’t care to take comfort in this, or even really believe him.
Just to harp on about my food fussiness, I did something quite out of character on the cattle station: I ate meat for the first time in a year (my previous veggie stint had lasted from the age of about 11 – 18). One of the guys working on the station – funnily enough a chap from Bourne, which is just near the town where I grew up in England – had hunted, shot, carried to the Ute, skinned and gutted a roo single-handedly.
I had to respect that, and as it neatly side-stepped my principal objections to eating meat (no farmers were ripped off by supermarkets, and until that gunshot, the kangaroo was probably having a perfectly lovely day in the outback, just as always) I felt happy eating it. Besides, it made a welcome change from the variations on pasta they’d been feeding me (again, it was a relief when I got back to Sydney and could eat colourful, nutritious food with my Aunt and Uncle)
I was back in Sydney during the second half of January, and around this time I experienced a fair few coincidences. Most notably, on Australia Day I was walking through Hyde Park and saw a girl walking towards me who looked just like – yes! – as she came within a metre or 2 I could see it was my cousin’s girlfriend, and I called over to her. She was in fact my cousin’s ex-girlfriend as I quickly discovered upon introducing her to the friend I was with, and neither of us had any idea that the other was in Sydney. There must have been so many thousands of people wandering around the city that day, and for whatever reason, fate decided our paths should make an “X” at that precise moment.
After Sydney I moved on to Melbourne, with the hope of spending 2 months doing something useful like volunteering or work experiencing. Unfortunately, despite some promising contacts, I was unable to get work experience (bureaucracy strikes again) and ACMI don’t take volunteers for less than 6 months at a time. So I found myself with time to run, read, loll around, walk the dog, eat lots, check my facebook every couple of hours, hop on and off trams – usually paying the fare, but not always…
So I took a Circus Skills course at NICA, and volunteered for the Alliance Francaise French Film Festival, where I met some cool people that I was able to hang out with afterwards (and had a group photo with Jean-Pierre Jeunet!) And I spent ages emailing my mum, giving her explicit instructions on how to hack into my computer to retrieve old essays for the masters degree application i had decided to make. I then had to polish up the essays, hunt down references, fill out the application… etc etc.
Before I had arrived, my Melburnian friend (whom I’d met when he was visiting Paris, and a friend of ours in common recommended we meet up) put me in touch with his sister, who had a free room that she agreed I could move into for 2 months. Which is both cheaper and just generally nicer than staying in a hostel.
The girls I lived with were really wonderful, as were their delightful and receptive group of friends (that’s a shout-out Sanj!) We did a couple of day trips together, much rifling through thrift stores and hemming of the skirts we found in them, the Linden Postcard show in St Kilda that our other housemate had entered, watched the whole first series of True Blood, went to their friend’s 1950s birthday party, we were extras in a low-budget zombie movie shooting in our neighbourhood, went to Golden Plains, MANY things.
In this way, 2 months strolled by very pleasantly. I could perpetually add to that list (and I shall – the Moroccan Soup Bar! If you are ever in Melbourne GO there, and take your Tupperware with you!) but I have to stop somewhere.
Anyway, the entry originally begun and not finished on March 5th, in ‘four-seasons-in-one-day’ Melbourne, went as follows:
Warm. Pre-storm. It smells like ironing, although the crumpled, grey cotton sky wouldn’t suggest it. The clouds sag and break like a giant leaky ceiling over my head, as I walk to the bank on the corner of Brunswick Street. Somehow I don’t mind the rain here…