Morse

Morse
Morse & friend

Monday, 31 March 2014

Daylesford Autumn Dispatch - Monday, 31st March 2014


 
Dear Friends, Warren & Barbara arrived back safely from Auckland late on Sunday afternoon, after the usual hassles of retrieving her wheelchair and its accessories (both often on different carousels). I had enjoyed a fun breakfast with Judi & Gillie, and spent the rest of the day very quietly except for afternoon tea with John & Jan Smith who were on their way home to Sandhurst from Bendigo. They detoured via Daylesford to check on Daisy-Lea cottage and we were able to spend an hour together at Gracenotes Café, until Bilbo suggested it was time I fed him.

Wes was very tired, went to bed early and slept straight through until 6.30am on Monday. Bilbo missed out on an early morning walk, but he and I have been doing a regular mid-morning walk to the Post Office and he is quite happy to sleep at my feet for the rest of the day. Cathy O’Toole came for a visit and Wes took her on a tour of the garden, where she fell in love with Hot Cocoa rose, as does everyone who sees it.

I had made a vegetable curry the night before and there was plenty for us to eat for lunch, so Wes had a rare day off cooking. Afterwards he applied my henna, helped Barbara and then hosted an ALP Discussion meeting, which finished in time for his regular Skype hook-up with Terry & Peter.
We woke to gentle rain on Tuesday, which was most welcome and gardens everywhere are looking so much better. After gym, Wes spent some time mulching, while I walked Bilbo. It was good to get back to gym too after missing last week. Afterwards I went to Daylesford Travel to buy a small suitcase, as our usual weekend away bag has worn out. I am very pleased with the new one, which can fit into the cabin if need be, but I am usually happy to check luggage in rather than have to worry about liquids & lotions and whether there is room in the overhead lockers!

There are two big issues in town at present – the first is the state of Vincent Street, between the two roundabouts. The road was resurfaced, apparently badly, some weeks ago and now it is in a worse state than before it was worked on. The second issue is that the owners of The Rex Arcade have asked the Daylesford Community Theatre to vacate the premises as they don’t pay enough rent to warrant the change in use of the Arcade. We are hoping that the vibrant new committee, led by Linda Carroll, will be able to find a suitable new venue, which is a better marriage of owners and occupiers. Sadly The Rex Arcade is going to die unless the owners can find another drawcard tenant such as the theatre has been. It is ironic that the original site of one of the three theatres in town can no longer show films!

On Wednesday Wes took Bilbo for an early morning walk in pleasant weather, and then spent some time cleaning the storm water drains, which was a messy, but very necessary job. I walked Bilbo into town with me, all the way to John & Jan’s place, checking for mail and the local paper. I was pleased that my knee suffered no ill effects and suspect I am just about back to normal as far as it is concerned.

Wes then spent a few hours with Barbara, taking her shopping at Coles; helping her exercise and then sharing lunch, which he cooked. Bilbo & I took it very quietly as he was exhausted and I needed to be in top condition for my trip to Sydney. There was no Mah Jong as Dot & John were away for the week, Gail & Terry went to Melbourne and Valerie was unavailable as it is Lent.

We woke to the sound of rain on Thursday morning and were delighted to have around 20mls in our gauge. It was good soaking rain, and everywhere looked so much better for it. Not a soul was complaining! Bilbo was happy to forgo his walk and came straight back to bed after enjoying his bone. Gym was full with the main topic for discussion the incredible decision taken by Tony Abbott to reintroduce knighthoods. We are all so very sad that Quentin Bryce chose to accept her title of Dame after 5½ years of incomparable service as our Governor-General.

After gym I spent a very pleasant hour catching up with Glenda Rozen, who was one of the first friends we made in Daylesford as she sold us the original house at 78 Duke Street. We hadn’t spent time with each other in a long time and both enjoyed it. Afterwards Wes met me as he thought we should find a suitable tray to put on our newly restored table. We searched through Brick Lane and finally found the perfect tray in the Mill Markets. Judi will be pleased to see the silver name plates she gave us many years ago back in action on our decanters!
 
Wes cooked a beautiful prawn risotto for lunch, and then I packed for Sydney while he caught up on computer work and settled his pre-match nerves for the Richmond vs Carlton game that night. He and Barbara had been planning to go, but she agreed with him that it would be such a late night and he had to be up and about early the next day driving me to Melbourne airport. So he took pies over to her place and somehow coped with the incredible nail-biting loss without tearing his hair out.

We have been worried about our friend, Jan Smith, who was taken to Cabrini emergency department on Tuesday night, apparently suffering a recurrence of diverticulitis (the same ailment her twin sister, Jen, is currently battling in Bendigo where Jan has been helping her). The specialist decided that Jan's problem is scar tissue from previous operations growing around other organs which causes all the pain. We are waiting to see what happens next.

I had a lovely time in Sydney – Wes drove me early on Friday, so I could relax in the Qantas Club and Jane met me the other end. We went straight to the Orpheum Cinema, a beautiful art-deco theatre in Cremorne, next door to Neutral Bay, and were just in time to see Wadjda, the stunning Saudi-Arabian film. Back home for me to unpack and settle in, which is always very easy to do…we drank lots of cups of tea and read and rested until Jane produced a brilliant, colourful polenta-based ‘pizza’ with an equally colourful salad to accompany it. Afterward we enjoyed oven-baked figs, which were such a treat, while we watched the footy. Hawthorn looked to have Essendon beaten at half-time and Australia was losing wickets in the Twenty20, so I went to bed and left Jane to watch and sleep on the couch until David arrived home.

The next day they both slept in and I spent a couple of quiet hours reading. Jane had arranged for us to have lunch with Terry McDonald at a lovely restaurant in Balmoral (behind the Bathers’ Pavilion). We duly met and enjoyed crab cakes, salad, pinot gris and conversation, followed by a walk along the foreshore. Back home Jane & I rested again watching the footy, which was a very entertaining game between St Kilda & Greater Western Sydney, with Nick Riewoldt the reason the Saints finally kicked away and won. Then we saw the first quarter of the Port vs Adelaide showdown at the beautiful Adelaide Oval, where there wasn’t a spare seat in sight.

 


Terry McDonald sporting his new hat, a gift from his daughter

Then it was time to go to the Olympic Stadium for the big game of Swans vs Magpies. Jane drove which was very comfortable and we arrived in plenty of time to get a good park in the multi-storey car park. We then did a circuit of the ground trying to find the right window to collect our tickets and discovered we had reserved seats, 6 rows from the front on the half-forward flank – brilliant!

We celebrated with a glass of ‘premium’ wine and a bag of chips before settling in for the match. The crowd was disappointingly small – 32,000+ but they more than made up for it with noise. It was a good game and the Swans looked as though they would stay in front and win, but somehow we managed to take the lead and win by 3 goals. Jane was very disappointed, but is always sporting and congratulated me. We drove home chatting happily to find David ensconced on the couch watching Dr Blake and not interested in talking footy at all.

 
Jane at the footy with our ‘premium’ white wine…. in not so premium plastic cups

Yesterday we went to a bright little café called Thelma & Louise in Neutral Bay, right on the water, where we fluked an outside table and had a lovely breakfast as my thank you to David & Jane for their generous hospitality. It wasn’t cheap but the food was worth every penny and it was no surprise to find a long queue outside as we left.

Herbed mushrooms, fruit platter & crepes with berries

Jane & David dropped me off at the airport in plenty of time for my plane and Wes and Bilbo were waiting at the other end. Bilbo ignored me and didn’t show any interest in me until I fed him later in the afternoon. Wes had enjoyed a good time while I was away – cooking chicken risotto on Friday and Bolognese sauce on Saturday. He entertained Barbara for lunch with the Bolognese and gave her the leftovers much to Bilbo’s chagrin. Sunday breakfast had gone well with Judi & Wes encouraging Barbara to tell stories from her holiday, and Gail with a few stories of her own to add to the conversation.

When I got home I discovered how much work Wes had done in the garden as well, and, when I started to unpack, I discovered I really needed to sit down quietly with a pot of tea. Wes had taped the footy, so we watched the whole game again, which was just what I felt like. We had his yummy pizzas for dinner and went to bed early exhausted.

Today I am off to have a catch up cuppa with Judi at The Food Gallery, and then I plan to do a bit of computer work and prepare for our few days in Melbourne later this week. We don’t get back to Daylesford until Monday, so the Dispatch probably won’t arrive until next Tuesday.


 Lovely photo of David at breakfast

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