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CGB's premises |
We’re being looked after by our perfect hosts, Bill and
Marilyn Lingard at their house in Patterson Lakes, Melbourne for the last few
day, but had rather mixed weather, some sunshine, some rain showers (some quite
heavy), a blustery wind and relatively cold. On the plus side, the photos will
be a lot better after Bill gave me an old camera of his that is far better than
the phone camera, so thank you Bill, it’s great to have a proper camera again!
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Michael at his desk |
On Tuesday we had a tour of their company, CGB Precision
Products PTY Ltd and met Michael, who is Bill and Marilyn’s son, working as
Business Development Manager and Nicole, their National Accounts Manager. We
didn’t meet the other member of staff, Barry, as he’s on a long holiday in the
UK! It was great to go there again and see that things are still going well and
the ‘Merobel’ product they purchase from my old company Andantex is still going
strong and it was good to chat to them all about ‘business’, having been away
from it for 16 months now and only had to think about campsites and ‘where we
are going to go today’.
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Marilyn |
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Nicole |
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Reception with some 'Merobel' displays! |
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And 'the boss himself', Bill |
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Quarantine Station |
Marilyn went in to pay some suppliers and do some work while
we had a look round and then Marilyn took us out for the day, leaving Bill hard
at work, to look at a place called Sorrento. We’d been to Sorrento in Southern
Italy for our honeymoon 10 years ago, so it was interesting to see the
Australian equivalent, which turned out to be a pleasant seaside town, on a
finger of land jutting out to almost separate Port Philip Bay from the Bass
Strait. Port Philip Bay is a huge inlet of sea, the top of which is where
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Sorrento 'Back Beach' |
Melbourne CBD is situated, the bottom being almost closed between the
Mornington Peninsular, containing Sorrento and Port Lonsdale on the other side,
with a narrow 2.5km sea opening called ‘The Heads’.
On the way we went to Quarantine Station, which was used as
a quarantine area up until 1980, after the sailing ship Triconderoga arrived
there in 1852 with 48 crew and 795 immigrants from the UK with typhus fever on
board, 100 having died and 400 seriously ill (it was flying a yellow flag,
which apparently means ‘serious disease on board’). The final death toll was
168 passengers and 2 crew dead, they were buried on shore but sea erosion over
the years caused the graves to collapse and storms uncovered the remains! In
1952 the staff moved all that was identifiable to another cemetery nearby – a
bit of a grisly story!
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Shavans Indian Restaurant |
Anyway, on Tuesday night the four of us went to ‘Shavans’,
an Indian restaurant nearby, Jackie satisfied her Biryani urge and we
supplemented it with a chicken vindaloo and a lamb saag. Australian vindaloo’s are
nowhere near the strength of British vindaloos and I told them so, but it was
excellent and full of flavour and we thoroughly enjoyed it. As good as Diwan’s,
our favourite Birmingham Balti restaurant? Not quite, but its close! Note to
Australians visiting Birmingham: beware of Birmingham vindaloos!
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Melbourne from Dandenong summit |
Yesterday (Wednesday) we took ourselves off to the Dandenong
mountains, about an hours drive north east, heading for a town called Olinda,
which Bill and Marilyn had recommended. The highest peak is 633m and gives
impressive views back to Melbourne, Port Philip Bay and surrounding
countryside, but as we found out, its exposed position makes it quite windy
and, when we were there, very cold. As Marilyn says: it was a ‘lazy wind’,
meaning it goes right through you rather than round you! The landscape round
there is a patchwork of exotic and large native trees and apparently is give
the most accessible bushwalking from Melbourne, but not on the
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Puffing Billy! |
day we went, it
was cold with regular heavy downpours, so we viewed it all from the car,
getting out for only very short walks (hardy mountaineers?).
On the way we stopped at a town called Belgrave to see ‘Puffing
Billy’ a vintage steam train (actually they have about 3, plus one diesel
engine, all beautifully restored) pulling carriage loads of, mainly Japanese,
tourists, sitting in windowless carriages armed with their cameras (oh dear, it
started raining just after the train pulled away!), so we went down onto the
platform, chatted with the engine drivers and waved as the seemingly endless
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Don't forget to wave |
carriages pulled out of the station (they had to put two engines on to pull all
the carriages).
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This picture is for Tim Holden |
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It starts off OK |
A bit further up the mountain we had to stop at the entrance
to the National Park as there was a cockatoo feeding area (or Bob feeding area
as we call them after Robin and Murray’s cockatoo called Bob in New Zealand).
The $4 for bird feed was well worth it as we were inundated with Bob’s and red
and blue coloured parrot type birds (no doubt someone will tell us what they
were). Bobs are actually quite big and heavy when they are standing on your
head, shoulders and on the feeding tray you are holding.
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But deteriorates fairly rapidly! |
They also fight
between themselves, hang on to your clothing and handy bits of your body with
their beaks to move around shoulders and arms, and in their frenzy to eat the
seed before their mate snatches it all, occasionally chew fingers and thumbs!
Those beaks are quite strong and we both have tell-tale Bob beak marks of blood
blisters and small puncture marks on our hands. Only when they had had enough
could the smaller red and blue birds come in for their share, but the whole
thing was great fun and well worth the stop even though it was raining at the
time.
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That'll be my thumb then! |
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But they are pretty cute! |
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The BBQ King! |
Last night was BBQ night at Bill’s and Michael and his wife
Dannie came round along with their youngest son Jet, who is 7. The elder two
girls had other things on, so it was the 7 of us. Bill did the cooking on the
biggest BBQ I have seen that he pulled in under the cover on his patio, pulled
down the side covers and turned on his infra-red heaters (yes, it was cold out
there!). I had the opportunity to talk ‘business’ with Bill and Michael in
amongst the general chat and the whole evening was great.
Today (Thursday) we leave here, go to a hotel near the
airport, return our car to the hire company and get ready to leave Australia
early tomorrow morning. At least our luggage will
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Jackie, Dani, Jet, Michael, Marilyn and Bill (take a look at Jackies haircut!) |
be lighter, we sent home 20kg
of it by sea-freight (all the climbing gear, our walking boots and some winter
clothing) for the huge cost of $235, but at least it will make our SE Asia trip
a little easier.
Couple of things to add for yesterday, B made a very successful
lemon meringue pie and I had a well needed haircut, I feel much lighter and
much more ‘me’, you know it’s bad when even your husband comments you need a
haircut!
Having taken a while to warm to Australia, I shall now be
sad to leave, we’ve met some lovely people and had a really good time. I’m sure
the next step will be fine, but it will be different, living in hotels and restaurants
with very different languages being spoken and written.
1 comment:
Hi both, love the pick with the b ig white birdies!! Actually Jackie, even I could tell you needed a haircut, about half a dozen blogs ago!!!! :-)
Goodbye Australia! hello next adventure! Lots of love xxxx
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