Morse

Morse
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Sunday 2 July 2017

Daylesford Winter Dispatch - Sunday, 2nd July 2017

 

Before we went to Hong Kong, Wes’s phone decided not to connect with our internet. This was a fairly major problem, so he went off to our Telstra outlet at Bi-Rite in the Mitre 10 store & spoke to Tim & Keith. They couldn’t solve the problem & suggested a new phone was the answer. This was duly ordered, but didn’t arrive before we left, so Wes took his phone with him, in case we needed to ring each other, as he could still make phone calls.

Tim rang after we returned home to let Wes know that his new phone had arrived. Over all the years & mobile phones we have had, I have usually done all the paperwork, but Wes was keen to do it this time & now wants that hour of his life back! This was on the Friday afternoon – it took until the Monday of this week for the phone to be able to make calls or receive texts. The sad news is that Telstra is closing down our Telstra outlet, as it prefers to service dedicated Telstra shops, so we decided I should upgrade my phone as well, before we have to travel to Ballarat & make new relationships with the Telstra people there.


Wes testing the heater upstairs at The Food Gallery last Sunday before friends arrived for breakfast. It was very chilly indeed outside & lovely & warm inside.

After breakfast on Sunday, and some stimulating conversations with Barbara, Janine & Margot, we drove to Glenn Mack’s garage sale in Raglan Street, where Judi & Ken were helping him in the drizzle. We were able to purchase one of Glenn’s beautiful glass bowls & were delighted to see lots of Sold stickers & to be assured that lots of stuff had already been taken.

Apart from gym & Mah Jong, I have had a busy social week. On Monday, I caught up with Judi over two pots of tea at ‘Muffins & More’; I visited my doctor, Greg Stewart, on Tuesday to show him how well my feet were progressing, as well as get some prescriptions & have him check out a couple of moles (totally harmless).

On Tuesday morning, Wes & Malcolm officiated at the last 10am film showing at the Daylesford Cinema. We hope that time slot will return when the new cinema is built. In the meantime, Wes has volunteered for the 8pm Saturday night screenings, which will be a very different audience indeed. We both loved the film ‘The Sense of an Ending’ with the wonderful Jim Broadbent acting his socks off & great performances by Charlotte Rampling, Harriet Walter & Michelle Dockery.


On Wednesday afternoon, it was my turn to visit Tim at the Telstra Shop to collect my new LG G6 Android phone, with no complications at all. I am very happy with it especially as it was easy to move everything, even my Collingwood black & white striped wallpaper straight across to the new phone.

Thursday was cold & foggy, so I waited until 8am before driving to Melbourne to visit Leanne. The fog had lifted here, but when I reached Tylden, it was simultaneously deeply foggy & highly sunny – I felt as though I was driving through clouds & was very pleased that I knew the road so well as visibility was very limited. The scariest thing when you are driving in these conditions is the cars with no lights on at all – you can find yourself behind one without seeing it & overtaking is perilous in case an unlit car is driving towards you.


This sad, sleepy face greeted me when I arrived back home that afternoon. Wes had gone to a Boys’ Film Afternoon at Warren (Secundus) Pengilley’s place, where they were joined by Jeff Bain & Brian Nash. I suspect Wes might have been BOG, as he arrived back after 7pm & headed straight to bed.

On Friday, we all had a sleep-in as it was very cold & frosty, before I went shopping at Coles & Wes met up with Brian Nash for a coffee at The Food Gallery to discuss where & when they will hold their Exhibition of the Villages of Hepburn Shire. (The photos that greet the start of each Dispatch are Brian Nash paintings in this series).
We spent most of the day on tenterhooks, waiting to hear how Jessie had gone with her operation. During lunch, I received two messages from her sister, Michelle, to let us know that Jessie had come out of theatre & although groggy, was able to answer all questions.

Lunch was much more enjoyable once Wes & I had heard the good news & we relaxed into a fun time with Wes’s old schoolmate, Phil Tagell, & his wife, Fay. Phil had a very bad experience where he was king-hit by an umpire at the end of a AFLQ game & he has fought non-stop & so far unsuccessfully, to get some recognition from the AFL. He has finally published a book ‘Footy Tragic’, which had a great write-up by Greg Baum in ‘The Age’. At the end of lunch, Sandy Breen came over to say hello & Wes encouraged her to tell her story of being a St Kilda tragic, a serious love interest of Molly Meldrum, and of marrying Donny Breen, which brought her into the famous Breen family (Donny’s cousin, Barry, kicked a famous point at the end of the 1966 Grand Final to give St Kilda their first ever Premiership. Sandy, Molly, Phil & I were all at that game, where Molly famously fainted & missed it all)

Wes & Phil celebrating his book at Boathouse Daylesford

Yesterday it was -5˚ when we walked around Lake Daylesford. Bilbo had plenty of energy so we did both Lakes & were very thrilled to get back home & into the warmth again. I visited the Farmers’ Market & brought home a beautiful bare-rooted rose, Fragrant Plum, which Wes planted in the front garden.

Wes invited our lovely neighbours, Rob & Dene, to share our seafood risotto lunch & we enjoyed a couple of hours of their company over a very yummy meal before Wes sent them home so he could watch Carlton play very well against Adelaide & lose by a mere 2 goals at the end.


Last night he showed the film ‘Wonder Woman’ to an appreciative audience of 10 – obviously not Geelong or Richmond supporters, who would have been glued to their TV sets.

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