Docklands, February 2025

Tuesday, April 01, 2025

Garage

Freyja and Simon came to my place on Saturday.

I had acquired a skip in readiness.


And we tackled the garage. 

Simon armed himself with one of my FOUR hammers (Why do I have four hammers? Why did Jim have four hammers? I may need to have a hammer cull!). Freyja armed herself with gardening gloves. I armed myself with a broom. And Freyja and I moved out and then Simon smashed up everything that was going in the skip.  We swept the garage floor. Freyja arranged the furniture that was staying. We annoyed a large number of daddy longlegs spiders. We did not see many other (proper?) spiders.

And then the skip looked like this:


And the garage looked like this:



And the car fits in:




There was room in the skip for more stuff. Which was just as well. It was very windy on Sunday morning and the fence panel by the mail boxes at the front of the drive blew down. I heard a loud noise outside from the kitchen and went to investigate. Freyja and Simon had just come back from Buninyong and were looking at it as I came out the front door. We have put the panels and the top bit in the skip.

There is still room so I am planning to start moving garden junk this afternoon.


We had lunch in the Thai cafe in Mount Clear on Saturday, before tackling the garage. We had baked cauliflower with butter beans for dinner. And on Sunday Pat joined us for lunch and we feasted on a lentil taco stew that I made and a chilli con tofu that Freyja and Simon made. We had roast potatoes, corn chips and salady things with them. It was all very delicious.

Authentic Thai food

A nod towards Mexican food


I have been thinking about how to organise the selling of this place and moving into a new place, if I am not intending to buy until I have the money for this place in my bank account. I had been giving serious thought to renting a place in Docklands or somewhere nearby for six months, starting soon.  Or maybe taking a "long" rent in an AirBnB, which might be more practical and would definitely be more flexible. THEN I thought - if I put this place on the market in May, let's say it takes until at least July or August to sell, then lets say the buyer wants a 90 day settlement - if all that happens, I might not start looking seriously until November or December or even into 2026. It might be a bit hasty to run off and rent somewhere now, especially since I would have to find something to buy and then arrange a 60 or 90 day settlement myself.

I think I might wait to rent somewhere until I have a firm offer on Tani.

This is not a reason to stall, delay or pause the Getting Ready to Move project, although I might not pack quite all my worldly possessions just yet

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Meeting the Elephants

One of the advantages of being a zoo member is that you get invited to things.

I didn't pay much attention to the invitation to meet the elephants in their new home. It was at 8:30 in Werribee, Monday to Friday for two weeks. It was tempting, but the 8:30 start seemed a bit of a stretch for a non-working morning.

Then Freyja and Simon said that they were going on Thursday and did I want to join them.

So I did.

For mysterious reasons, my sat nav decided that when I said I wanted to go to the Werribee Zoo, I meant that I wanted to go to the Werribee Station. I got to the station at 8:20, which was when I was aiming to be at the zoo. As it happens, the station isn't all that far from the zoo. I got there at exactly 8:30 and just managed to join the group that Freyja and Simon were with.

It was a keeper-led tour of the new elephant home and the human walking trails, before the zoo opens to the public,  and it was well worth the early start. The elephant home is beautiful and very spacious, and the elephants seemed very happy - although that might have been because it was breakfast time, which was clearly very exciting!





Coffee and snacks for humans








Then we went on the safari bus tour and watched more animals having breakfast, or morning tea, or brunch, depending on which animals we were looking at. Some of the animals were only just getting up as we went past. Others had clearly been up for some time and were happily snacking







Brunch/Lunch time for Freyja, Simon and me and then we went to visit the hippos before heading home

Hippo playing with a fountain


While I was playing with elephants, rhinos and hippos, a new skip was delivered to my place. I must get on and start filling it up. Although Freyja and Simon are coming later this morning and I should perhaps make up their bed before they get here!





Morning view as I left home at
6:45 on Thursday morning



Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Autumn

We have had some lovely, properly autumnal weather recently. Cold-ish in the mornings, warming to low to mid 20s in the afternoons. Cloudy and misty in the mornings, sunny in the afternoons.

But not a lot of rain.

I have started the early autumn garden tasks. I've pulled the runner bean plants on the porch side of the veg beds. I had eaten all the beans and there were no more flowers. I've left the ones on the other side. The plants in there still have beans and flowers. I've eaten almost all the corn. I have done really well for ripe tomatoes this year and am starting to bring in the (plentiful) green tomatoes to ripen inside. The cucumber and zucchini plants are still producing, so I'll leave them for a while. I am going to plant pea and broad bean seeds in the beds when they're empty.

I'm pottering around in the backyard, slowly, slowly tidying it up. I've started tackling the leaves along the back walkway and I finally got around to cutting the grass in the side garden. I'm not sure why I'm so reluctant to get out and tidy the garden up. It's not really hard work and once I get started it doesn't take long. I just seem to completely lack any motivation. It's not even that I don't like tidying the garden. I do. I just don't want to get started!


I have had to buy a new vacuum cleaner. The previous one, which I hadn't had all that long, simply stopped sucking. This seems to defeat the purpose of being a vacuum cleaner. I couldn't fix it so cut my losses and bought a new one. But this time, instead of buying another stick vacuum, I bought a barrel one. And it is MUCH better. It also has a fitting that scrapes the carpet and pulls up all the cat hair. I already had a manual carpet scraper, which I use once or twice a month -  but it is very convenient having one that attaches to the vacuum cleaner.


I took some boxes of donations to the Buninyong Lions' Op Shop on Saturday morning. They were very busy, which might have had something to do with the half price tables outside and the sunny weather.

I have more boxes ready to go. I also have boxes of bottles and jars to go to the bottle bank. (There is no kerbside bottle collection in Ballarat!) And I have ordered another skip to come on Thursday. Although - I ordered it online and I am not confident in his technological prowess. I might go retro and give him a call and check that he got the form. This time the skip is largely for the garden. I have lots of wooden boxes that are starting to fall apart that we used for vegetables when we first moved in.  I don't use them any more and they need emptying of soil and breaking down. 



Sunday pickings to go with dinner

Sunday sunset

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Skip

This came last Thursday



Since then I have been emptying out the garage of all the junk, the electrical and electronic rejected things, the rubbish and stuff that has accumulated in there. Lindsey came down on Sunday and helped me manoeuvre a mattress out and prop it up against the skip. She also helped me move a bookcase into the guest bedroom wardrobe.

Now the skip looks like this:


And the garage looks like this:



The back walkway by the laundry door has had loads of Colorbond garden bed edgings moved out the way - cautiously because there were lots of what easily might have been redback spider webs around them. I only saw one spider, which didn't seem to be a redback. Now the back walkway looks like this, waiting for me to sweep up all the leaves and for the arrival of another skip for more rubbish removal



A lot of what I have isn't necessarily junk. But if I am planning to move from a house with three bedrooms, a lounge room, a kitchen/dining room, a bathroom and a laundry, with garden,  to an apartment with one bedroom, one small lounge/kitchen/diner and a bathroom, no garden, realistically I need to get rid of most of my stuff. 

As I wander around the house and garden I ask things these questions:

  • Are you coming with me? 
  • Yes. 
    • Do I need you between now and then?
    • Yes. Stay where you are
    • No. You get packed in a box, as boxes come to hand
  • No
    • Do I need you between now and then?
    • Yes. Stay where you are
    • No
    • Can I take you to an opportunity (charity) shop?
      • Yes. Into a box you go, or into a corner of the garage while I work out how to get you there
      • No. Into the skip you go
      • No. Stay where you are until I work out how to get rid of you
  • I don't know 
    • For some things, like the bookcase, now in the wardrobe, or the desk in the middle of the garage, it depends if there is room in the new place. Obviously, I won't know that until I get the new place. 
    • For other things, I just don't know. Maybe, maybe not. Until I decide, just stay where you are.
There will be at least one more skip before I put the place on the market, and almost certainly one when I finally move out.



I put a YouTube Cat TV channel on the TV yesterday afternoon


Brandy and Whiskey showed absolutely no interest at all. None. Not a bit 😂


They watched it for ages, before eventually
deciding it was time for a nap


(For the avoidance of doubt - the cats will be coming with me!)

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Labour Day long weekend

The rest of the week proceeded without further alarms.

Tabitha sent me this :



It's a hand towel with a sketch of Bishops' House, a medieval building in Sheffield which is now maintained as a museum. Jim and I used to volunteer there when we lived in Tupton.

The My Car in Reservoir fixed my car headlight so I can now drive at night again. I would have done it. myself, except the bulb fixtures are very hard to get to in the Honda Jazz and I couldn't reach them to twist them properly.

It's a long weekend in Victoria, and the Begonia Festival in Ballarat. The traffic heading home on Friday was ridiculous. It took me an hour longer than usual to get home. I gave serious consideration to renting a place in docklands and moving immediately. At least if the traffic is awful while you are on a tram, it's not really your problem and you can read a book or gaze idly out the window while somebody else watches the traffic. I might not move immediately, but it did give impetus to carrying on with getting the house ready to sell.

Lindsey and I went to the market by the lake, on Saturday morning, which was combined with the Begonia Festival market. I didn't buy a lot but I did buy some very pretty, mixed mushrooms, along with eggs and some flowers. I also bought a can of Red Duck beer for a libation for Jim, when we scatter him at Hill House. He liked Red Duck beer. This one is a "Ruddy Brown Ale" and his surname was Ruddle. It seemed appropriate. 

We came home via Stockland Shopping Centre, Wilson's and the IGA.


Such pretty mushrooms
I had the pink oyster mushroom last night
It was delicious

Jim's beer

On Sunday, I headed to Geelong for lunch at Irene's place, together with Gillie, Chris and John (and Flora). It was quite hot, to say that it's March. I think it is supposed to be in the 30s pretty much all week. We had a lovely, retro avocado mousse with prawns to start, a chicken casserole with couscous, beans and salad, and a cheese platter to finish. All very delicious. It was a lovely afternoon. I came back via the bay, so I could say I had seen the sea. I had, of course, forgotten that it was the middle day of a long weekend, and that there are festivals and events right around the coast, the central highlands and everywhere else. Lots and lots of people all over the place. Certainly nowhere to park around the beach. Not that I wanted to park, which was just as well! And there was rather more traffic than you usually get on a Sunday afternoon between Geelong and Ballarat.

It rained on Sunday evening. The air was fresh and cool. The cats and I sat on the front porch for half an hour and watched the rain, which didn't reach us, under shelter. But it did water the garden a bit.

Yesterday was the public holiday and the culmination of the various festivals happening around the state. Lots of parades, a big one in Melbourne, a smaller one at the lake in Ballarat. I did not go to any parades. I carried on with a little gentle clearing and tidying of the house and garden and in the afternoon went out with Lindsey. I have had a good go at de-fluffing the lounge room carpet, which is looking good. I need to shift the furniture and do under that as well. I will steam clean the. carpets, but not until I am ready to put the place on the market. I need to go to the post office and to the bottle bank today. If it doesn't get too hot, I might sort out the patio. I won't power wash it, but I might ordinarily wash it. Maybe :D

And I must order a skip for the weekend.


Sunday, March 09, 2025

Mount Buninyong

I went back to work on Wednesday. I couldn't leave at my usual time because I discovered that one of my headlights wasn't working, so I waited until it was light enough for me to use my sidelights.

All was going well at work - until I had an alert from the Vic Emergency app to say that there was a (small) bushfire on Mount Buninyong.  

Lindsey, Freyja, and Emily in Vancouver also got the alert.

Then the alert was changed to a Watch and Act, for Buninyong and Scotsburn.

Freyja told me that Ross had closed the bookshop, but that the cafes in Buninyong were carrying on.

The fire was on the south side of Mount Buninyong, so probably wasn't, under the prevailing conditions, a threat to Mount Helen.

Lindsey and I, who were together in Reservoir, kept our ears tuned to the app alerts.

It was a lot more disconcerting when the app alerted us to a bushfire in Mount Clear, near the Woowookarung forest. If it would take a mighty effort for the Mount Buninyong fire to get to us, a fire in Mount Clear could just stroll up along the trees and grassland by the side of the main road. Fortunately, it was quite a small fire, but that can change very quickly.

I decided to come home, just in case. I could, if necessary, rescue the cats and grab important documents from both my place and Hill House.

Mount Buninyong looked like the active volcano it once was, as I drove along Yankee Flat Road. Billows of smoke erupting from one side.

The Mount Clear fire was under control by the time I got to Mount Helen. Buninyong was not, but still wasn't considered a threat to Mount Helen. All was calm at my place, although it was quite smokey.

And all remains calm.  Mount Buninyong isn't yet properly out but the mount isn't smoking like a volcano about to erupt. As far as I am aware, Mount Clear is extinguished.

I have to say, I wasn't expecting fire alerts on Wednesday. The weather wasn't doing anything exceptional. It was rather a nice day, all things considered.


Brandy and Whiskey were entirely unfazed by the fire alerts







Thursday, March 06, 2025

Werribee Open Range Zoo

At Stella and Tony's wake on Sunday, Freyja. and Simon said that they were planning a visit to the Werribee Zoo on Tuesday and did I want to join them.

Definitely, I wanted to join them. I am back at work this week, but I only go into the clinic on Wednesdays and Fridays and spread my remaining hours over the rest of the week at home. I could arrange to be free on Tuesday.

And it was a beautiful day. Sunny. Pleasantly, but not too hot. Light breeze. I drove along back roads to Werribee, mostly because that's the way the SatNav took me.

It's a lovely zoo.  We had gone because the elephants have moved there from the Melbourne Zoo, although they are not yet receiving visitors. They are settling in and getting to know their new home. Didn't matter. There lots of other animals to visit, paths to explore, trails to wander, and a safari bus to ride.


There are hippos in here, if you look carefully 

It's not only about the animals:





But there are, of course, animals:







We will go again, when the elephants and their new home are open to visitors.

I bought an annual membership for the zoos. I haven't done so before because it's quite expensive. The advantage to only having to think about me is that I only needed to buy one annual membership. Of course, it will still be VERY expensive if I only go once, but I expect I'll go more often if I can just drop in whenever. Freyja rang me from the Melbourne Zoo the other day. She had been going past and dropped in for an hour or so Just Because. (She and Simon have annual memberships). And I get a discount because I am old and have a Seniors' card.


On another matter, my vegetable garden this year is small but has been quite productive. This was my dinner selection the other evening:


Not a bad late summer dinner,
accompanied by a small
piece of steak


Monday, March 03, 2025

Stella and Tony Go Home

Tony was absolutely adamant that he did not want to leave Mount Martha, wasn't going to leave Mount Martha and intended to stay there for ever.

And he didn't leave Mount Martha, or not until Stella moved to Mount Clear and brought his ashes (interred in a teddy bear) with her.

Stella didn't really want to leave Mount Martha, although she did enjoy life in Mount Clear and in Ballarat. She said that Ballarat was a beautiful city, even if it was unnecessarily cold. She enjoyed the lake, the cafes and restaurants, the local countryside, the fun and merriment. But she still had a hankering for Mount Martha.

When Stella was cremated, we included Tony and The Bear (I still think that would be an excellent name for a rock band) with her and since then they have been on one of my dining room dressers, next to Jim.

Yesterday, we took them home. Everyone who was in Victoria met at The Dava, which Tony absolutely loved, for a Family Farewell lunch. We ambled along the cliffs, which Tony regularly walked along before he couldn't reliably walk on them any more. We didn't go down onto the beach. Stella lived in Mount Martha for decades, loved looking at the sea, went to the beach often and never once set foot on it! We poured a libation of red wine for Tony and a gin and tonic for Stella. And we left them there, in the (unexpected) sunshine which came out to greet them.

Their five children were all there




plus all the grandchildren and great grandchildren who were in the state, including the youngest, who is only 3 weeks old. (I was a bit disconcerted to realise that I am now the oldest!)

I wore the clothes I had bought for Stella's 90th birthday party. One grandchild wore a ring Stella had given her. People wore Stella's or Tony's socks. Freyja brought Stella's nursing badge, which Stella had given her when she (Freyja) skated in the tribute to the NHS in the London Olympic Opening Ceremony.




It was a great tribute to them both

We didn't just leave them there. Wendy is heading to the UK in May and she will return them to their birth country. And Lindsey and Ian will take them to Hill House, as a mark of the happy times they had in Ballarat


Next time we gather will be to mark the 60th anniversary of our arrival in Australia