Sunday 31 October 2010

Good things this morning





Rain on the nasturtium leaves.





I found my  purple iris in bloom.



The lilac I picked from over a neighbour's fence
while walking the dogs this morning.






My new set of tin badges.





The artichoke forest. It is so gloriously huge, the leaves stand taller than I am, and it is getting huger.







And breakfast.
Breakfast isn't a thing, it is an event. I got up slowly this morning and I pottered and I made the bread and walked the dogs in the rain and I visited the iris and the artichokes and the nasturtium.
I had passionfruit to put on the yoghurt and Yin got me a cuppa from Espresso. I took a very long time over brekky, and I wore the green beetle badge, the one with the red eyes.

Spring vegetables



A basket of globe artichokes and rosemary from the garden.


I forgot to look into the artichokes this week so some of the artichokes had become a little larger than I prefer, but it is spring  and everything is wildly growing.I cooked the artichokes with lamb in a slow simmered stew.

 




Delicious.






And these are not dandelions, they are yam daisies or murnongs, the staple food of the first people to live here. Cattle and sheep and agriculture and mining have just about wiped out a plant that once covered the basalt plains.
A friend who cares for a native vegetation reserve to the south west gave me these and they are flourishing. Next year I'm letting them out of the pot and into the garden.



Wednesday 27 October 2010

Good timing



I want to try knitting cotton this summer, and luckily my neighbour wanted to clear out some stuff including a few balls of cotton yarn. 
I have three baskets of knitting yarn now - but I'm not hoarding. I am finishing off the blanket! One basket will be empty very soon.

Tuesday 26 October 2010

Pick me up

A tough meeting tonight. I'm drinking home-made lemon and ginger tea so I have the energy to deal with it,





then I'll splash on some home-made orange-water for some extra zing.




And when I come home I'll work off the discouragement by reading about sensible, happy  people doing great work overseas and in Ballarat too





And I'll stop being so peevish and cheer up.
About time too, say the doggie people in the house. 

Sunday 24 October 2010

Grey and gray




After years of playing with the brightest colours I could find,  I'm turning to white, quiet greys and shadowy colours. Cloudy, rainy day colours. This evening a harvest of recycled old shirts, cut up and washed, is drying inside.





Stone



Water





Clouds




White wool blankie


Lovely white wool, soft springy garter stitch, a luxurious pile of pure white woollen pieces. I've been knitting these off and on for a couple of years. You can always find white wool (and navy blue wool) in any Op shop.



This evening I began to sew together all the knitted squares. I'm going to have the light, white, wool blankie I've always wanted for coolish summer nights.




Then this niggling thought - what if I edged it all round with that long strip of red and white cotton gingham I found recently?
It wouldn't be pure white any longer.
Mmmm.


Tuesday 19 October 2010

White iris





This morning was crispy with frost, and my white iris are blooming. I found these old fashioned iris flowering along the roadside in Piggoreet, and brought a couple of corms home. It has taken two years for them to settle in and flower. Maybe they like this colder spring. My deep purple and my amber-gold bearded iris haven't a bud on them yet.
A hundred years ago Piggoreet was a thriving township of several hundred families, with schools, pubs, churches and shops.  There is nothing left now, just paddocks and here and there some scattered old fruit trees and remnants of old gardens.
Near the town is a water race built of rocks by Chinese miners, snaking like a stone dragon along the creek valley.
A hundred years or so ago, someone brought these snowy flowers to the new mining town and planted them and loved them. Now they are  flowering  for me.

Monday 18 October 2010

Spring snow

Snow is so rare in Ballarat it is exciting when it falls. Snow has fallen at least once every spring since I moved here, and I have been hoping to see it this spring too.
Sadly, this year the snow fell on Mt Buninyong, a small mountain just 15 minutes away - you can easily walk up it - and by the time I heard about it, it had melted. So I didn't get to walk out in the snow this year, or watch it swirl past the window or gather it up in my hands in wonder.
I am  including a link to some pictures of the snow on Mt Buninyong because I use this blog  to make notes for my own almanac of the seasons that make up a Ballarat year. Spring snow is one of our seasonal pleasures.

Sunday 10 October 2010

Animal blessings


We took the dogs to the Ballarat Italian Association today to be blessed. The association had a luncheon in honour of St Francis of Assissi and Father Rupert held a brief service to help us all appreciate our animal companions, and to bless the animals. Paddy and Kitty had a great time and did a  lot of barking.







Peppy the cat was not so enthusiastic.





but was blessed anyway.




Then we had a long, long lunch. The members always cook wonderful meals for club events. Since Yin joined they have had Chinese lunches as well as Italian ones. Today we had bruschetta with pesto and really good salami, lasagna - made by Ray, including the sheets of pasta - and  gelati.




It was a day of sunshine, happy children and beautiful animals.  And good conversation.





Saturday 9 October 2010

Birthday season


It's birthday season here - three birthdays each exactly a week apart. Jesse's is the first. He wanted eight-jewel duck, chicken & silky beancurd in salted fish sauce and Yin's amazingly delicate dim sims. Not exactly a classically composed meal but we enjoyed it. Notice the blur of hands as everyone serves and eats and talks at high speed. And notice also the still point in the room - a dog who loves duck.




After the meal.




Monday 4 October 2010

Couldn't resist it



I already have a job that involves old documents and dust and fascinating records. Just when I had decided to concentrate on work and writing and a little sewing, I was asked if I'd like to help to dust and label and bag and reshelve the old books at the Mechanics Institute. Of course I jumped at the chance.
 I love books, I love old books, and I 'm fascinated by the nineteenth and early twentieth century collection at the Ballarat Mechanics Institute.




This library is a little bit of heaven on earth.



The old building has been restored recently and now the books, which have been assessed, boxed up and assigned new labels as they are entered into the new database are being unpacked. See the old library chairs to the left?



Of course some blokes got overexcited and shoved a lot of books on the wrong shelves (see behind). But this will be put right.



And they will go in the right spot just like these. Maybe even in a locked cabinet.





But when all the work is done, people will once again be able to come to the library and read the books. 



Look, just to the right is one of my favourite second-hand bookshops, the Pot of Gold.