Saturday, June 30, 2007
Watery Things
I'm delighted with today's progress on the pond! Take a look at what we've been up to.
Tomorrow promises to be fine weather, so I hope to post more soon.
Friday, June 15, 2007
Uni Daze
This week, I visited Macquarie University to put in the application for the first course in my BSc in Conservation and Biodiversity.
Culture shock, frankly.
It occurred to me that it's now *cough* thirty years since I started my first degrees (Arts/Law). Thirty years?! Okay, so I've had a very full and satisfying life in those years--marriage(s), a baby now a big girl, a career in screenwriting and stage and a minute or so in law, travelling around the world a few times, plant stuff--but still, it's a bit spooky.
The place has changed a lot. Everything, of course, is digitalised now. The uni even has an on-campus wireless service (note to self: buy laptop). PCs didn't even exist when I started uni. I thought I was so hi-tech because I wrote my essays on an electric typewriter with a daisy wheel and a very exciting innovation--the eraser ribbon.
The old union cafetaria now resembles a Westfield foodhall. (It's not allowed to be called a "union" any longer in these politically correct Howard days. "Union" is a dirty word. Any minute now it'll be expunged from the Anglican marriage service.) There's not much sign of politics there nowadays. In the seventies, the walls were covered in political posters, but now, there are lots of ads for various Christian groups. Ugh.
The old Jughouse Theatre where I spent a huge chunk of my youth has been replaced by a motorway, and the on-campus house I shared with various mates in Culloden Road is no more. The uni now sprawls with dozens of new buildings, but the architecture and landscaping look great. I'd have loved a lake like this when I was there first time round....
This photo is from Macquarie's website, taken by Damian Moran. Browse the pics. They're really lovely.
Looking through the staff directory, I can find none of my old lecturers and tutors. I guess they're all retired or dead! But an old mate, Andrew Simpson is there. We were undergraduates together, and now he's Dr Simpson, Director, Museum Studies Program, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences. It'll be good to catch up with him for some ancient gossip.
Another deluge of rain this weekend, this time, landing on the catchment for Warragamba Dam. The dam stats are going to look better than they've been for ages. Unfortunately, the rain is heavy in the Central Coast region which is still flooding from last weekend.
I keep looking anxiously at the trees in our garden, but they're hanging on. There's a waterfall behind our neighbour's house, and I took this photo this morning.
Buckets of the wet stuff!
While I was down there, I spotted this sign....
It'll be wonderful seeing brush turkeys (Alectura lathami) active during the breeding season. I wonder if my new plants will survive.
At some point, I hope I'll be able to take a photo to show you, but in the meantime, here's an image from the Canberra Ornithologists Group.
And here's Mungo, a magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) that has adopted us. It seems he might have been hand raised, because he's ridiculously tame. His flight feathers are cut, so someone is obviously "keeping" him. After the last storm, he vanished for a few days but now he's back.
But I do wish he'd get out of the rain.
Culture shock, frankly.
It occurred to me that it's now *cough* thirty years since I started my first degrees (Arts/Law). Thirty years?! Okay, so I've had a very full and satisfying life in those years--marriage(s), a baby now a big girl, a career in screenwriting and stage and a minute or so in law, travelling around the world a few times, plant stuff--but still, it's a bit spooky.
The place has changed a lot. Everything, of course, is digitalised now. The uni even has an on-campus wireless service (note to self: buy laptop). PCs didn't even exist when I started uni. I thought I was so hi-tech because I wrote my essays on an electric typewriter with a daisy wheel and a very exciting innovation--the eraser ribbon.
The old union cafetaria now resembles a Westfield foodhall. (It's not allowed to be called a "union" any longer in these politically correct Howard days. "Union" is a dirty word. Any minute now it'll be expunged from the Anglican marriage service.) There's not much sign of politics there nowadays. In the seventies, the walls were covered in political posters, but now, there are lots of ads for various Christian groups. Ugh.
The old Jughouse Theatre where I spent a huge chunk of my youth has been replaced by a motorway, and the on-campus house I shared with various mates in Culloden Road is no more. The uni now sprawls with dozens of new buildings, but the architecture and landscaping look great. I'd have loved a lake like this when I was there first time round....
This photo is from Macquarie's website, taken by Damian Moran. Browse the pics. They're really lovely.
Looking through the staff directory, I can find none of my old lecturers and tutors. I guess they're all retired or dead! But an old mate, Andrew Simpson is there. We were undergraduates together, and now he's Dr Simpson, Director, Museum Studies Program, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences. It'll be good to catch up with him for some ancient gossip.
Another deluge of rain this weekend, this time, landing on the catchment for Warragamba Dam. The dam stats are going to look better than they've been for ages. Unfortunately, the rain is heavy in the Central Coast region which is still flooding from last weekend.
I keep looking anxiously at the trees in our garden, but they're hanging on. There's a waterfall behind our neighbour's house, and I took this photo this morning.
Buckets of the wet stuff!
While I was down there, I spotted this sign....
It'll be wonderful seeing brush turkeys (Alectura lathami) active during the breeding season. I wonder if my new plants will survive.
At some point, I hope I'll be able to take a photo to show you, but in the meantime, here's an image from the Canberra Ornithologists Group.
And here's Mungo, a magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) that has adopted us. It seems he might have been hand raised, because he's ridiculously tame. His flight feathers are cut, so someone is obviously "keeping" him. After the last storm, he vanished for a few days but now he's back.
But I do wish he'd get out of the rain.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Phew
The tree was removed this morning, and the insurance company is arranging a tarp over the roof because some tiles have been damaged.
And the wonderful tree chopper-upper people didn't damage my new plants at all!
Thanks for the kind emails. :)
And the wonderful tree chopper-upper people didn't damage my new plants at all!
Thanks for the kind emails. :)
Saturday, June 09, 2007
Well, it could have been much worse....
What do you do when when a huge Angophora costata has landed on your house, you're waiting for the State Emergency Service to arrive, and you're sitting on hold waiting to talk with the insurance company?
Think happy thoughts for us!
UPDATE: The nasty weather didn't eventuate this afternoon, and the forecast looks okay overnight. So I think we won't be invaded by ents in the near future! Thanks for the concerned emails. They're very much appreciated.
You blog, of course.
The south-east coast of Australia is having seriously wild weather, massive winds, and we've had over 100 mm of rain in the last 24 hours. All too much for this tree, unfortunately.
But no one's hurt, we've still got power (for now, anyway) and so far, it doesn't look like the damage to the roof is going to be too bad.
But there is more bad weather forecast for this afternoon--gale force southerlies. I'm worried it'll move the tree and take out the power lines. So this blog might go a little quiet for a while....
And to think I was hoping to do the pond this weekend. As things go, it looks like my new garden beds will be destroyed by the tree removal operation. And that's bloody annoying.Think happy thoughts for us!
UPDATE: The nasty weather didn't eventuate this afternoon, and the forecast looks okay overnight. So I think we won't be invaded by ents in the near future! Thanks for the concerned emails. They're very much appreciated.
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Website update
Just a quick note to let you know I've updated my Growing Passion website, including photos of the pond I'm constructing, and stuff about the Plant Science Internship Program.