Thursday, 5 August 2021

DAVE

He was a character
seemingly larger than life -
Dave –
a cattle-man,
tall and lean,
far seeing eyes,
broad brimmed hat
and a distinctive drawl.


A thousand square miles
of red sand, 
spinifex,
desert oak
and mulga scrub
was his kingdom.

 

Some years before,
he had walked
a herd of cattle
twelve hundred miles 
for nine months
to establish it.
 

We knew Dave

as neighbour,
fifty miles away,
not close
but always there
to provide support
or a talk
or coffee
along the track –
always a true bush friend.
 
 A memory of Dave Fogarty from when we lived at Amata 1970 - 72.
 
Sunrise at Mulga Park,
Dave's Cattle Station,
on the way to Amata.
 

Friday, 23 July 2021

My First Bush School

 

It was old
built of rough local stone,
mud and rough sawn
native pine.

 

There was a crack
down one corner
wide enough to 
insert your hand.

 

No toilets
or running water, 
just two foot tracks 
over the hill 
to the nearby creek,  
one for girls 
and one for boys.

 

A wobbly teacher’s desk, 
a dozen or so  
old student desks 
and two chalk-boards 
on easels  
were the only furnishings.

 

It was winter – 
dry, desert cold, 
with morning frosts 
and a freezing daytime wind.

 

For warmth 
we’d feed a pine log 
through the doorway 
into the open fireplace 
to feed a meagre fire,  
our only source of warmth.

 

I keep a photograph of it still,
though the memory is so rich. 
The chalkboard date is 
24th April 1963, 
although I had started there  
three weeks earlier 
on April Fools Day, 
but it was no prank.  
This was a place of learning, 
and I was both teacher and a learner.
 

 

Thursday, 22 July 2021

OLD SCHOOL RUIN

It sits alone in the forest,
an old stone hearth and chimney –  
no sound but the wind in the trees, 
an occasional bird-call 
and perhaps the drone 
of a tractor   
on a nearby farm.

 

And yet a memory
of such joy and liveliness –  
young voices at play 
or raised in song – 
chanting “tables”,  
sometimes squabbling, 
always learning, 
preparing for life 
in a world yet unknown.

 

The old Wirrabara Forest school in the Southern Flinders Ranges of South Australia is commemorated by its restored fireplace and chimney. It was one of many "one teacher schools" that dotted the "bush".




Tuesday, 13 April 2021

INUKSHUKS

They stand alone
in vast tundra landscapes,
signposts, boundary markers,
custodians of sacred space –
as they have been for thousands of years.

And yet today
they have become popular,
perhaps cheapened –
something to make by a roadway
or on a stony beach,
sometimes to promote a function or locality.

We have two inukshuks in our front garden,
reminders of Canadian visits and friends,
but also for their historic message -
here is where we are, this is our space
and it is sacred to us.

We have had a lifelong, special interest in Canada, visiting there a number of times and accumulating wonderful Canadian friends and memories. Over several trips, we have driven the whole distance from Vancouver to Nova Scotia - something that most Canadians have not done. Sadly, age and the current global situation mean that we will not go there again. 

 

 Photograph and sketch of our Inukshuks,  
originally made for us at Athelstone by Kim and Steve Rydall when visiting us in Australia.

Our first Inukshuk, seen near Lake Superior.

 Inukshuks met in our travels around Bruce Peninsula.