195512
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195512 [2016/02/05 11:05] – tyreless | 195512 [2016/02/05 16:02] – tyreless | ||
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|The Rot sets in|Colin Putt|16| | |The Rot sets in|Colin Putt|16| | ||
|The Bare Facts|Kevin Ardill|18| | |The Bare Facts|Kevin Ardill|18| | ||
- | Another Twenty-First Birthday Party|Dot B.|20| | + | |Another Twenty-First Birthday Party|Dot B.|20| |
=====Advertisements===== | =====Advertisements===== | ||
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=====The 1955 Rudolf Cup (With A Difference).===== | =====The 1955 Rudolf Cup (With A Difference).===== | ||
- | ====S.B.W. v C.B.W. | + | ====S.B.W. v C.B.W.==== |
__Boat races during day__, to be follow by __Barbecue in evening__. | __Boat races during day__, to be follow by __Barbecue in evening__. | ||
Line 77: | Line 77: | ||
---- | ---- | ||
+ | =====Australia My Studio.===== | ||
- | AUSTRALIA MY STUDIO | ||
- Ray Bean | - Ray Bean | ||
- | I Hear.theMallIna | + | |
- | We stopped the truck in a dry creek bed somewhere near Broome.. | + | ====I Hear The Whistling==== |
- | I think by mutual accord all three otcupants | + | |
- | curious Baobab tree (Adansonia Gregorii) - Pronounced Bo-ab in the | + | We stopped the truck in a dry creek bed somewhere near Broome. I think by mutual accord all three occupants |
- | north, | + | |
- | In the creek beds (dry, of course; you don't travel this country in "the wet") things were different;, there were also gum trees, | + | In the creek beds (dry, of course; you don't travel this country in "the wet") things were different; there were also gum trees. |
- | Being a bushwalker I shed the truck quickly and began to walk. It mattered not in which direction,.it'all looked the sane which ever way one turned, although I found myself headed for a group of Baobab trees where the water during the last vet had scoured out a shallow area leaving the roots of the trees exposed. | + | |
- | The termite mounds stood mutely like misshapen gravestones in an overcrowded cemetery, and rising above them were two Baobabs, one a well proportioned bottle shape with bare wildly flung branches twisting upward like flames, and the other a simple massive | + | Being a bushwalker I shed the truck quickly and began to walk. It mattered not in which direction, it all looked the same which ever way one turned, although I found myself headed for a group of Baobab trees where the water during the last wet had scoured out a shallow area leaving the roots of the trees exposed. |
+ | |||
+ | The termite mounds stood mutely like misshapen gravestones in an overcrowded cemetery, and rising above them were two Baobabs, one a well proportioned bottle shape with bare wildly flung branches twisting upward like flames, and the other a simple massive | ||
| | ||
- | 1.. PORTANT TRANSPORT NOTICE | + | The glare on the white sand was blinding, and with my camera at the ready I began to circle the area looking for composition that would suit the stark dramatic beauty of the place. Taking some shots I then turned my attention to the third tree, a " |
- | LKERS REQUIRING TRANSPORT | + | |
- | BUSHW | + | The Baobab is the ogre of the arboreal world, there being no limit to which the old trees may go in ugly contortion and vulgar gracelessness. The young trees may grow with grace for a while but seem unable to resist a boisterous urge to clown. |
- | FROM BLACKHEATH . ANY HOUR | + | |
- | RING WRITE OR CALL | + | I was struck with a feeling of awe in this place. Perhaps it was the presence of the termite mounds. You could see in them anything within the orbit of your imagination - animals of all sorts, groups of people, nuns everywhere, kings and queens in coronation robes and crowns tilted at unkingly angles. Those people who will persist in seeing kangaroos and things in the cliff faces at Katoomba would have a wonderful time here. |
- | 0 | + | |
- | SIEDLECKY1S TAXI AND TOURIST SERVICE, | + | I walked away from the graceful Baobab, having photographed it, and some months later it confronted me from the front cover of a woman' |
- | 116 STATION STREET BLACKHEATH. | + | |
- | 24 HOUR SERVICE. | + | Back to the two trees I went in search of yet another photograph, but I seemed to have exhausted all possibilities and was enjoying the warmth of the sun when I became aware of the whistling. There was a high pitched continuous whistling. It hadn't just begun, or had it? It just seemed to infiltrate my awareness. It was all about me persistent. I began looking for its source, which was not difficult because it came from a nearby termite mound. I got within inches before I doubted that it was there, and then found it had gone somewhere |
- | BUSHWALKERS arriving at Blackheath late at night without transport booking can ring for car, from Railway Station or call at above address -- IT'S NEVER TOO LLTEL | + | |
- | ' | + | Then I began to remember bits of stories told by drovers and bushmen of the inland about a mysterious whistling that is sometimes heard but never traced to any form of life. Naturalists, |
- | 4/ | + | |
- | The glare on the white sand was blinding, and with my camera at the ready I began to circle the area looking for composition that would suit the stark dramatic beauty of the place. Taking some shots I then turned my attention to the third tree, a" | + | It occurred to me that I had in my grasp a rare opportunity to add to the knowledge of mankind, and so I set about methodically tracking down the cause of the sound, discounting as I went obvious possibilities like birds, crickets, and such things. Should there have been another to watch my crawling, running, creeping and frustration amongst those infernal termite mounds they must have thought me in the final stages of a perish. Many times I got, I thought, within an inch or two of the whistling, but as soon as I thought it was just a little to this side or that, it was coming from another |
- | sides, the branches dividing and reaching gracefully upward to finish | + | |
- | in long fine fingers from which all leaves had fallen. The nut or fruit still remained like Christmas tree decorations against the brilliant blue sky. | + | One thing I did establish, in my own mind anyway; the whistling is there, but what causes it, " |
- | The Baobab is the ogre of the arboreal world, there being no limit, to which the old trees may go in ugly contortion and vulgar | + | |
- | gracelessness. The young trees may grow with grace for a while but seem unable to resist a boisterous urge to clown. | + | =====Federation Report |
- | I was struck with a feeling of awe in this place. Perhaps it | + | |
- | was the presence of the termite mounds. You' couldsee it:;them anything within the orbit of your imagination - animals of all sorts, groups of people, nuns everywhere, kings and queens in coronation | + | |
- | robes and crowns tilted at unkingly angles. Those people who will persist in seeing kangaroos and things in the cliff faces at Katoomba | + | |
- | would have a wonderful time here. | + | |
- | I walked away from the graceful Baobab, having photographed it, and some months later it confronted me from the front cover of a woman' | + | |
- | Back to the two trees I went in search of yet another photograph, but I seemed to have exhausted all possibilities and was enjoying the warmth of the sun when I became aware of the whistling. There was a high pitched continuous whistling. It hadn't just begun, or had it? | + | |
- | It just seemed to infiltrate my awareness. It was all about me persistent. I began looking for its source, which was not difficult | + | |
- | because it came from a nearby termite mound. I got within inches before I doubted that it was there, and then found it had gone some- | + | |
- | where else; not stopping, just a continuous | + | |
- | Then I b, | + | |
- | bushmen of the inland about a mysterious whistling that is sometimes heard but never traced to any form of life. Naturalists, | + | |
- | It occurred to me that I had in my grasp a rare opportunity to add to the knowledge of mankind, and so I set about methodically tracking down the cause of the sound, discounting as I went obvious possibilities like birds, crickets, and such things. Should there | + | |
- | have been another to watch my crawling, running, creeping and frustration amongst those infernal termite mounds they must have thought me in the final stages of a perish. Many times I got, I thought, within an inch or two of the whistling, but as soon as I | + | |
- | 5. | + | |
- | thought it was just a little to this side or that, it was coming from another | + | |
- | One thing I did establish, in my own mind anyway; the whistling is there, but what causes it, " | + | |
- | FEDERATION REPORT | + | |
- Allen Strom. | - Allen Strom. | ||
- | A letter was received from the FEDERATION OF MOUNTAIN CLUBS OF N.Z. relative to visitors from Australia using Huts in Alpine Areas without prior permission or payment of the proscribed fee. The letter asked that the practice be discontinued and that in future, all intending visitors should contact the Secretary of the Federation at P.O. Box 16040 Wellington, N.Z. | + | |
- | The.C.S.I,2.00 is seeking a BOTANICAL ASSISTANT | + | A letter was received from the __Federation Of Mountain Clubs Of N.Z.__ relative to visitors from Australia using Huts in Alpine Areas without prior permission or payment of the proscribed fee. The letter asked that the practice be discontinued and that in future, all intending visitors should contact the Secretary of the Federation at P.O. Box 1604, Wellington, N.Z. |
- | RIFLE RANGE NEAR PATONGA: Members of Clubs are asked to continue | + | |
- | KEEP UP YOUR VITALITY | + | The C.S.I,R.O. is seeking a __Botanical Assistant__ |
- | ON WALKS WITH | + | |
- | VEGETARIAN FOODS | + | __Rifle Range Near Patonga__: Members of Clubs are asked to continue to protest to the Department of Lands against the establishment of the Rifle Range on the Waratah Patch near Warrah Sanctuary and within the proposed area for the Kariong National Park. Mrs. P. Goulding (W.E.A. Ramblers) collected 122 signatures to a petition against the proposal. These were from Patonga residents to the Department of Lands. |
- | CENOVIS YEAST (CONTAINS WHOLE VITAMIN B COMPLEX, ALSO D,E,F AND H.) | + | |
- | LIGHT THIN RY-KING CRISP BREAD (100% WHOLE RYE FLOUR) WELL | + | __Search And Rescue Section__: Clubs are requested to speed up the supply |
- | WRAPPED IN HANDY 8 OZ. PACKET.. | + | |
- | BASE YOUR HOLIDAY FOOD LISTS ON WHOrliESDME FOODS | + | __Bushfire Fighting Organisation__: The organisers have been very disappointed with the response |
- | WIDE RANGE OF DRIED FRUITS, NUTS, BISCUITS AND DRIED FRUIT | + | |
- | SWEETS. | + | An interview held with Mr. H. Messer, Chairman, The Bushfire Committee, had revealed that when the Board of Fire Commissioners take charge of an area, the __Volunteer Bushfire Fighting Brigades__ |
- | FROM | + | |
- | THE SANITARIUM HEALTH FOOD SHOP, 13 HUNTER STREET., | + | Following a discussion upon the success of a __Wild Life Show__ |
- | 6. | + | |
- | to protest to the Department of Lands against the establishment of the Rifle Range on the Waratah Patch near Warrah Sanctuary and | + | __Barren Grounds__: The Minister for Lands has agreed to the dedication of about 4,000 acres on the Barren Grounds as a Faunal Reserve. This is the culmination of a lengthy |
- | within the proposed area for the Kariong National Park, Mrs. P. Goulding (w.E.a. Ramblers) collected 122 signatures to a petition against the proposal. These were from Patonga residents to the | + | |
- | Department of Lands. | + | The lease to mine marble at __Wombeyan Caves__ |
- | SEARCH AND RESCUE SECTION: Clubs are requested to speed up the supp:' | + | |
- | of names on revised Contact Lists, Practice Search will be held over the week-end March 9/10/11th, 1956 in The Oaks-Warragamba Area. It is hoped to organise another practice search shortly, in | + | ---- |
- | co-ordination with the Police Rescue Section. | + | |
- | BUSHFIRE FIGHTING ORGANIS.C..TION: The organisers have been very | + | Congratulations to Ruth and Dick Pier on the birth of a daughter. |
- | disT5Traed wit1T-FhTh-Fp7F.TF | + | |
- | An interview held with Mr. H. Messer, Chairman, The Bushfire | + | ---- |
- | Committee, had revealed that when the Board of Fire Commissioners take | + | |
- | charge of an area, the VOLUNTEER BUSHFIRE FIGHTING BRIGADES | + | =====I'm The King Of The Castle.....===== |
- | operate with the permission of the Board. This explains the situatic | + | |
- | Following a discussion upon the success of a WILD LIFE SHOW in | + | -Geof Wagg. |
- | Western Australia, it was decided to seek an interview with the Clief Guardian of Fauna with a hope that a similar show might be | + | |
- | arranged in Sydney. | + | ......and my, what a vast selection of dirty rascals. |
- | BARREN GROUNDS: The Minister for Lands has agreed to the dedication of about 4,000 acres on the Barren Grounds as a Faunal Reserve. | + | |
- | This is the culmination of a lengthy | + | Transport was the big question. The main piece of bod-moving equipment was to be the Puttmobile making its maiden voyage, and at one stage I distinctly remember we had exactly the right number to fill it. Then we had it packed tight with one roosting on the stove (the hot seat) and another perched like a parrot in the spare tyre. We had resigned ourselves to this when the transport suddenly increased until we had only one passenger to the square acre of upholstery. As the day grew closer, though, the panic subsided until we had a neat convoy of 2 bikes, 2 cars and one (the one and only) Puttmobile. All of these were to make their way more or less independently to Drury' |
- | A Faunal Reserve is the most secure and satisfactory type of reserve that we possess at present. | + | |
- | The lease to mine marble at WOMBEYAN CAVES has been granted. A nUmber | + | Seven-thirty at Drury' |
- | Congratulations to Ruth and Dick Pier on the birth of a daughter, | + | |
- | I'M THE KING OF THE CASTLE, | + | The day still lowered at us and Pigeon House was a dim blue silhouette in a dull grey sky as the Puttmobile and Rigby Renault travellers set out in serried ranks like straying sheep towards the farther clearing where the bike travellers and those in the Doctor' |
- | Transport was the big question. The main piece of bad-moving equipment was to be the Puttmobile making its maiden voyage, and at one stage I distinctly remember we had exactly the right number to fill it. Then we had it packed tight with one roosting on the stove (the hot seat) and another perched like a parrot in the spare tyre. | + | |
- | We had resigned ourselves to this when the transport suddenly increased until we had only one passenger to the square acre of upholstery. As the day grew closer, though, the panic subsided until we had a neat convoy of 2 bikes, 2 cars and one (the one and only) Puttmobile. All of these were to make their way more or less independently to Drury' | + | The vanguard, that is every one except Dot, Stitt and Garth, moved away about ninish along the timber road towards our climbing ridge. My directions for this tricky piece of navigation had been multitudinous. Paddy said "First go west with a bit or north in it, then north with a bit of west in it, and described to me in detail every bridge and crossing. So propelled by the confidence all this advice bestowed we strode onward. Soon it was time to take stock. Here was the river - here was the bridge; Hmm... |
- | FOR ALL_ YOUR TRANSPORT PROBLEMS CONTACT | + | |
- | HATTSWELL' | + | We crossed the creek on a nice greasy steep-sloping log - or most of us crossed I should say, because as I was mounting the opposite slope I heard a tremendous |
- | RING, WRITE, WIRE OR GALL | + | |
- | ANY HOUR, DAY OR NIGHT | + | Our party of nineteen minus three straggled and struggled to the ridge top. No rest - we had a seance instead with Hoop and others incanting over the Holy Map (blessed by the Dalai Lama) and were amazed to find that the ridge ran in the correct direction. Could I have been right after all? Well, well. Press on. After we had been pressing on for a short while_Pidgeon |
- | Telephone: BIHEATH0128 or 249. Booking Office - 4 doors from Gardner' | + | |
- | SPEEDY 5 OR 8 PASSENGER CARS AVAILABLE. | + | Soon after this we stood all together under the frowning brow of the rocky face and thought "Lunch before or after?" |
- | LARGE OR SMiLLL PARTIES CATERED FOR | + | |
- | FARES: KANANGRA WALLS 30/. per head (minimum 5 passengers) | + | The sun shone brightly all that afternoon as we wound down Longfella Ridge to the Clyde River. On the clean green clearing below we sat admiring this aspect of the Castle and gloating over the wonderful weather that seemed in store for the morrow while we waited for the stragglers. Soon it became evident that our party was minus three again, but Pete said he'd wait and put them on the track up Yadbora Creek, so as the hour grew late we moved off, minus four. |
- | PERRY '5 LOOKDOWN | + | |
- | JENOLAN STATE FOREST 20/- " u U t? | + | Yadbora seemed a fairly open kind of creek, though fortunately with plenty of shrubbery at first as the fifteen odd bods snuk past the homestead |
- | ARLON' | + | |
- | WE WILL BE PLEASED TO QUOTE OTHER TRIPS OR SPECIAL PARTIES ON APPLICATION. | + | We were now plus three minus one, for Pete was still waiting |
- | Seven-thirty at Drury' | + | |
- | safe distance climbing trees and balancing on fence posts angling for a eine shot, It tas about this time we became aware of a Presence in our midst, wearing an indescribable hat conjured out of yak pelt - blessing money - proclaiming holy days - and asking people could they please tell him which way is east. It was none other than the Dalai Lama who has an answer to every question and never uses a word under five syllables. | + | Everyone was just relaxing after tea when it started to pour with rain which sent us scuttling to bed. What had happened to the beautiful |
- | The day still lowered at us and Pigeon House was a dim blue | + | |
- | silhouette in a dull grey sky as the Puttmobile and Rigby Renault | + | The next day began at a bleary five-thirty with a semi-conscious peer at the weather. The evening' |
- | travellers set out in serried ranks like straying sheep towards the | + | |
- | farther clearing where the bike travellers and those in the Doctor' | + | Time was mooching on - it was a quarter past six. So I woke Grace up again and gave her the rest of her breakfast.....and emptied her out of her sleeping bag. Then I noticed three other offending forms still encased in superdown while Dot called vainly for them to come to breakfast. This clearly called for stern measures, but I doubted if I was equal to the task. First I seized on Putt, who fortunately happened to be ticklish, and once wrung from his sleeping bag decided he might as well stay up. Next was Stitt who was definitely |
- | Dodge had hid themselves. We found them in fine spirits and half full of breakfast sausage, so while they ate Pete regaled us with | + | |
- | how the corrugated road had reduced Garth' | + | The river shrubbery was still wet with the night' |
- | The vanguard, that is every one except Dot, Stitt and Garth, | + | |
- | moved away about ninish along the timber road towards our climbing ridge. My directions for this tricky piece of navigation had been multitudinous. Paddy said "First go west with a bit or north in it, | + | "Have you seen a party?" |
- | then north with a bit of west in it, and described to me in detail every bridge and crossing. So propelled by the confidence all this advice bestowed we strode onward. Soon it was time to take stock. Here was the river - here was the bridge; Hmm... | + | |
- | look and concluded that our ridge was just across the creek, but when I returned Stitt and Co. had showed up and were claiming that our ridge lay on this side of the creek. | + | "Oh, your crowd," |
- | insurgents followed up their own. | + | |
- | We crossed the creek on a nice greasy steep-sloping log - or most of us crossed I should say, because as I was mounting the | + | "Ye Gods!" I thought, "The poor little lambs have gone astray." |
- | opposite slope I heard a tremendous | + | |
- | it was. Hobnails for ever and other New Zealand curses I'm sure. | + | The ridge was open and climbed at a most reasonable angle to the southwest corner of the Castle' |
- | Our party of nineteen minus three straggled and struggled to the | + | |
- | ridge top. No rest - we had a seance instead with Hoop and others incanting over the Holy Map (blessed by the Dalai Lama) and were amazed to find that the ridge ran in the correct direction. Could I have been right after all? Well, well. Press on. After we had been | + | Under the steep broken rock line of the tail Dot found she still had the urge to pioneer a route, so she and most of the party began scaling up a very promising piece of cliff, while some of us who felt less intrepid followed Norm Allen and his crew through a sort of squeeze |
- | pressing on for a short while_Pi? | + | |
- | ahead. This was fantastic. I must have been right. These things do happen I suppose. The feet ad minutes slowly passed with a steady | + | From the top of the tail we looked only slightly upward to the top of the Castle, but down a long, long way into Oakey Creek. Poor Jean, who was starting to feel the effort, thought she might sit here and wait for us to come back, but a bit of pulling from Stitt and pushing from me and we got our dear Great Auntie over the worst of it. Colin, too, got into a predicament rather like Jack Wren's story of Gram' |
- | uphill grind until, Lo and Behold, as though the Lama had produced | + | |
- | them out of his hat, the three truants appeared making our party sixteen plus three. | + | So one way or another, and with one thing and another, we found ourselves on top of the Castle. From the instant you set foot on the broad flat top the rocky eminence of the Pidgeon House draws your eye (and camera lense) like a magnet. Away and away across the low plateau of Byangee, across the valley |
- | Soon after this we stood all together under the frowning brow of | + | yet too far away to hold the eye which slowly reverted to its resting place - Pidgeon House. |
- | the rocky face and thought "Lunch before or after?" | + | |
- | 9. | + | But enough of looking; we wanted lunch. Some hardy types found sufficient will power to consult the names in the cairn before they ate, and discovered that Jean and Dot, Joan and Grace, appeared to be, from the record, the first four females to set foot on the summit. Quite a distinction. Colin and helpers also built an enormous fire whose smoke was intended to prove to the yokels in the valley, who believed the Castle to be unscalable, that we really had done it. Unfortunately, though, the wind dispersed the smoke so quickly that we could scarcely see it from a few yards away. The same wind carried a rich smell of singed hair and eyebrows over to the others having their lunch. |
- | compromise with a snack first to give us strength to climb, but leaving enough appetite to call us back. A good theory anyway. We turned our faces to the slope and found it steep and getting steeper. The top was high and seemed to be getting higher, and the wind was blowing and definitely getting blowier. We thought it might storm or snow. Snow - we thought of him and our minds drifted away to where he was reclining on the sungold sands of Era. The next we knew we were almost bumping our noses on the rock face. Well, the present problem was to hand and we set to. Ross knew the conventionaway | + | |
- | followed foot and hand, and the wind bullied and buffeted us all. On top the gale unleashed its final fury so that we clung to rocks for support as we viewed the view. This was extensive but dimmed by | + | We had taken four hours up from the creek to the summit, so, calculating our return journey, this didn't leave us much time for aesthetic reflection after lunch. However, returning in our tracks |
- | the grey sky light, and diffused by the squalls of rain sweeping up the valley. Photography was virtually hopeless, so with little other | + | |
- | temptation to linger we soon turned back 'to lunch Dot pioneered | + | "You fiends!" shouts the Admiral, " |
- | route down too, but most of us felt it would be advantageous to know two routes and took the easy way down. By the time we had returned | + | |
- | for lunch the wind had died and the clouds had all blown away - to Era I suppose. | + | " |
- | The sun shone brightly all that afternoon as we wound down Longfella Ridge to the Clyde River. On the clean green clearing | + | |
- | below we sat admiring this aspect of the Castle and gloating over the wonderful weather that seemed in store for the morrow while we | + | That night while the little stars arced widely across the sky, the nineteen minus none slept the untroubled sleep of exhausted innocence, even the Sacred One foregoing for once his night-long vigil and meditation on the Otherness of Things. |
- | waited for the stragglers. Soon it became evident that OUT party was minus three again, but Pete said he'd wait and put them on the track up Yadbora Creek, so as the hour grew late we moved off, minus four. | + | |
- | Yadbora seemed a fairly open kind of creek, though fortunately | + | |
- | with plenty of shrubbery at first as the fifteen odd bods snuk past the homestead | + | |
- | strays who'd come down a different ridge and arrived before us. | + | |
- | We were now plus three minus one, for Pete was still waiting | + | |
- | one sitting cold and getting colder at the foot of Longfella Ridge, waiting for those who would never come. The Dalai Lama must have thought so too, because as campfires flared in the dusk and some brav | + | |
- | ones returned from an icy swim he was suddenly noticed to be missing, | + | |
- | having transported himself back to the Clyde to save a soul. But to | + | |
- | our consternation the first to appear was the minus one himself, who , must have passed his rescuer somewhere en route and mistaken him for | + | |
- | a straying yak, 7: | + | |
- | Otherness of ThJngs, or possibly with the tea Dot was preparing for | + | |
- | 10. | + | |
- | him in the sacred vessel covered with charcoal and coated with yak grease, that he didn't notice a thing. Eventually, of course, | + | |
- | One No.2 returned and brought us greetings from the people at the homestead whom he described as peasants reeking with offal and offspring, so inbred that all they could say was " | + | |
- | Everyone was just relaxing after tea when it started to pour with rain which sent us scuttling to bed, That had happened to the beauti- | + | |
- | ful weather we were expecting next day? "You never know your luck," I thought, and began counting starters for the morrow. Beryl was | + | |
- | reluctantly retiring with a bad attack of gym boots; Doctor Bob was feeling slightly out of nick, and the Admiral was shipwrecked. The ship that was his undoing was a ladyship, Dawn, and according to the Doc, a destroyer* | + | |
- | The next day began at a bleary five-thirty with a semi-conscious peer at the weather. The evening' | + | |
- | Jean wandered about with amug hooked on one finger and a food bag | + | |
- | on another trying to remember | + | |
- | Time was mooching on - it was a quarter past six. So I woke Grace up again and gave her the rest of her breakfast.....and emptied | + | |
- | her out of her sleeping bag, Then I noticed three other offending forms still encased in superdown while Dot called vainly for them to come to breakfast. This clearly called for stern measures, but I doubted if I was equal to the task, First I seized on Putt, who fortunately happened to be ticklish, and once wrung from his sleeping bag decided he might as well stay up. Next was Stitt who was definitfzly | + | |
- | because I even managed to get him out. With the time at a quarter to seven I emptied Grace out again and prepared to move off, At preciseTh | + | |
- | seven o' | + | |
- | The river shrubbery was still wet with the night' | + | |
- | sky was once more overcast but didn't seem seriously threatening, | + | |
- | the bend, this is the clearing, then that must be the ridge. I climbed a little way and sat under a tree wringing out my socks and | + | |
- | contemplating the Otherness of Things. One week you get a party | + | |
- | without a leader....next you get a leader without a party99..there' | + | |
- | 11, | + | |
- | creek and replied vigorously, only to find when the coo-ers emerged that it was the Rucksack crowd. | + | |
- | "Have you seen a party?" | + | |
- | "Oh, your crowd," | + | |
- | "Ye Gods" I thought, "The poor little lambs have gone astray." | + | |
- | I turned to ask how long ago this was, but the others had gone and | + | |
- | I looked like being one minus eighteen all day. For five minutes I waited in perplexity, then I heard Colin' | + | |
- | The ridge was open and climbed at a most reasonable angle to the southwest corner of the Castle' | + | |
- | stop long however, and we set off after them because, after all, it. | + | |
- | is nice to have someone else to blame if you get a bit off the track. And for the most part it was almost a track while we followed along | + | |
- | underneath the cliff line, but when we came to the last climb up to the tail we found we were wallowing waist deep in wiry boronia bushes However, it's wonderful what a path twenty odd people can make, | + | |
- | because we returned in our own tracks with much less trouble. | + | |
- | Under the steep broken rock line of the tail Dot found she still | + | |
- | had the urge to pioneer a route, so she and most of the party began scaling up a very promising piece of cliff, while some of us who | + | |
- | felt less intrepid followed Norm Allen and his crew through a sort of s4ieeze | + | |
- | From the top of the tail we looked only slightly upward to the top of the Castle, but down a long, long way into Oakey Creek. Poor Jean, who was starting to feel the effort, thought she might sit here and wait for us to come back, but a bit of pulling from Stitt and pushing from me and we got our dear Great Auntie over the worst of it. Cdin, too, got into a predicament rather like Jack Wren's story of Gramlpa | + | |
- | So one way or another, and with one thing and another, we found ourselves on top of the Castle. From the instant you set foot on the broad flat top the rocky eminence of the Pidgeon House draws your eye (and camera lense) like a magnet, Away and away across the low plateau of Byangee, | + | |
- | 12. | + | |
- | the steep sloping sides to the crown of rock, and behind it the sea. Northward lay Rhgeon | + | |
- | yet too'far away to hold the eye which slowly reverted to its resting place - Pidgeon House. | + | |
- | But enough of looking; we wanted lunch. Some hardy types found sufficient will power to consult the names in the cairn before they ate, and discovered that Jean and Dot, Joan and Grace, appeared to be, from the record, the first four females to set foot on the summit Quite a distinction. Colin and helpers also built an enormous fire whose smoke was intended to prove to the yokels in the valley, who believed the Castle to be unscalable, that we really'had done it. Utnfortunately, though, the wind dispersed the smoke o quickly that we could scarcely see it from a few yards away. The same wind carried a rich smell of singed hair and eyebrows over to the others having their lunch. | + | |
- | We had taken four hours up from the creek to the summit, so, calculating our return journey, this didn't leave us much time for aesthetic reflection after lunch. However, returning in our tracks | + | |
- | people we like best, we were running and singing as loud as we had breath to, down the ridge to Yadbora Creek - we thought. Then our baloon | + | |
- | tents came in sight, and there the Admiral was relaxing on a log. | + | |
- | As we roared down the slope he sprang up, (it must be dreadful to havo a guilty conscience), | + | |
- | cold water on his manly chest; | + | |
- | "You fiends:" shouts the Admiral, " | + | |
- | slaved to carry up from the river for you." | + | |
- | " | + | |
- | Of course the really funny part, ,as we discovered later, was that | + | |
- | he probably had carried the water for us, although Dawn says he made her help him. | + | |
- | That night while the little stars arced widely across the sky, | + | |
- | the nineteen minus none slept the untroubled sleep of exhausted | + | |
- | innocence, even the Sacred One foregoing for once his night-long | + | |
- | 13, | + | |
- | vigil and meditation on the Otherness of Things. | + | |
And the next day we returned, all the way to Drury' | And the next day we returned, all the way to Drury' | ||
- | "Hew lit a fire on top, didchew?" | + | |
- | didchew?" | + | "Hew lit a fire on top, didchew?" |
- | shook her head, "Hi didn't think hew would!" | + | |
- | then waving a hand towards Grace who was some distance ahead he said | + | "Haw" he roared and thumped me on the shoulder, "Jist uz well Hi never said nothin' |
- | in a confidential bellow, " | + | |
- | walking so straight | + | Well, that should rightly be the end of this story, and so it shall be, but one can't help mentioning how the gallant Puttmobile, which had pulled it's load so well all this way, collapsed near the top of an enormous hill just out of Milton, and how the Dalai Lama declared that we had angered the Gods who dwell on the Mountain Top and that the situation obviously called for a human sacrifice; and how we decided that the Admiral would do anyway and sacrificed him by the roadside, tying him to a post of the safety fence with a blood-red cross emblazoned on his forehead and a minus sign on his chin, (It should have been the other way round); and how he stopped three cars with his piteous crys of "Help!!" until Colin told us that seeing the sacrifice hadn't worked he was going to send for the N.R.M.A., and how all except Ross and Colin left the happy communal atmosphere of the truck to hitch home in lonely twos end threes. |
- | Ylknow | + | |
- | chortling in the background, and told him this was Grace' | + | And just as the very last word we must admit that Garth' |
- | 'Haw" he roared and thumped me on the shoulder, "Jist uz well | + | |
- | Hi never said nothin' | + | ---- |
- | Well, that should rightly be the end of this story, and so it | + | |
- | shall be, but one can't help mentioning how the gallant Puttmobile, which had pulled it's load so well all this way, collapsed near the | + | __Tasmanian Holiday__: Anyone wishing to go to Tasmania for the period Dec. 28th to Jan. 31, please contact Dr. Livingstone (LX5142). One member of his party of four has dropped out and he will be pleased to take someone else. His car is being taken over, and a sight-seeing and walking tour is contemplated. All expenses |
- | top of an enormous hill just out of Milton, and how the Dalai Lama | + | |
- | declared that we had angered the Gods who dwell on the Mountain Top and that the situation obviously called for a human sacrifice; and how we decided that the Admiral would do anyway and sacrificed him by the roadside, tying him to a post of the safety fence with a blood-red cross emblazoned on his forehead and a minus sign on his chin, (It should have been the other way round); and how he stopped three cars with his piteous crys of"Helpl!" until Colin told us that seeing the sacrifice hadn't worked he was going to send for the N,R.M.A., and how all except Ross and Colin left the happy communal atmosphere of the truck to hitch home in lonely twos end threes, | + | ---- |
- | And just as the very last word we must admit that Garth' | + | |
- | TASMNILN HOLIDAY: Anyone wishing to go to Tasmania for the period Dec. 28th to "Jan, 31, please contact Dr. Livingstone (1115142), One member of his party of four has dropped out and he will be pleased to take :someone else, His car is being taken over, and a sight-seeing and walking tour is contemplated, All expanses | + | A DAY |
- | 14. | + | |
- | DAY | + | |
- Dot Butler | - Dot Butler | ||
"Once, once only, never again, never, The idle curve my hand traces in air, | "Once, once only, never again, never, The idle curve my hand traces in air, |
195512.txt · Last modified: 2016/02/07 10:31 by tyreless