Gentlefolk,
This post describes some of the things we were involved in during March 2021.
The contents of this post are in the following sequence:
Photos of our activities during March 2021 (including Movies and Books).
Some noteworthy events in March 2021.
International trade.
Covid-19.
Let's start with photos of some of our activities during March 2021.
Our friends Angie and Howard Eakins visited from Sydney. We did a driving trip as described below. |
Near Tumut we had a look at Blowering Dam (see photo below), part of the mighty Snowy Scheme which harnessed the waters from the alpine region to generate hydro-electricity and for irrigation. |
Talbingo Dam near the township of Talbingo. |
Tumut 3 Power Station is fed by water in Talbingo Dam; you can't really get perspective from this distance but the pipes are massive. |
The hills around Talbingo showed the effects of the devastating bushfires a year ago. The fires came very close, but somehow the Township survived. |
It was all pretty run-down (eg this 'Welcome' sign had cobwebs all around it). |
Bushfires swept through the Yarrangobilly region a year ago - the eucalyptus trees are re-generating which seems like a miracle. |
Howard and me swimming in the Thermal Pool (water temperature was about 26C). The pool was about 30 meters long and 20m wide. Depth was about 1.70m with reeds covering about a third of the bottom. |
We did a self-guided tour of South Glory Cave - access was via a pleasant and scenic 1km walk along the river. |
The impressive entry cavern of South Glory Cave. But, alas, the cave itself was a disappointment - perhaps because of the sub-standard lighting and signage inside?? |
Our next stop was Cooma, the town where I grew up, where we had lunch in the park. |
A bronze relief-map of the Snowy Mountains area, with Cooma on the near left corner and Canberra on the near right corner (a distance of 110km). |
We drove past my old school, Monaro High School (1959 - 63). I was surprised to see a big construction site - budget about $40 million - the school is getting a major upgrade. |
Back home in Canberra, Howard showed me how to replace the |
The annual Enlighten Festival was on during Angie and Howard's visit - several major Government buildings are lit up at night. This is the front of Old Parliament House. Impressive. |
The annual "Balloon Festival" was held in Canberra. Unfortunately the morning we went down to the launch site the conditions were not conducive to flying. |
This balloon inflated to give the public an idea of how it all happens. |
We replaced the car battery, which gave good service for almost 6 years. |
Latin-Afro group performing at Smith's Alternative Cafe in Canberra City. |
Birthday girls: Vera and Sue Tavares. |
Dinner with Donna Ledlie and John Bakker. |
We joined a walking tour of historic sites in Queanbeyan (15 km from Canberra) |
There are a number of old churches in Queanbeyan dating back to around 1840 - 60, including this Presbyterian Church. |
This old cottage in Queanbeyan is now and Art Gallery. |
We attended the "Brass on the Grass" brass band concert at Hall. |
I like to track the cost of petrol - it has jumped up in the last month. We buy at Costco which has the cheapest petrol in Canberra. |
Book
I read (or, rather, re-read) the Rumpole Omnibus during March. Marvellous writing, wonderful British humour.
In the book Horace Rumpole is a 67 year old Barrister in London. He is married to Hilda (aka "She who must be obeyed"); they have a son, Nick. Rumpole is eccentric: he frequently quotes poetry; smokes small cigars; loves Pommeroy's Wine Bar; wears an old hat (and wig); only defends (never plead guilty!); may not know much law, but understands human nature and is an expert on blood and typewriters.
Some of Rumpole's interesting cases:
Divorce: Tripp v Tripp. Husband and wife communicate via written notes. Rumpole discovers that their son, Norman, is aggravating matters. They reconcile.
Rape: Ken Aspey MP is accused of rape by staffer Bridget Evans. Rumpole suggests a winning strategy, until Aspey (virtually) pleads guilty (to spite his wife).
Shop-lifting: The Rev Mordred Skinner took the blame for stealing 6 shirts, although his sister was the guilty one (she is a kleptomaniac).
Acting: Rumpole convinced the jury there was reasonable doubt and the actress was found not-guilty of murdering her husband - but was it just good acting on her part that swayed the jury?
Love: A teacher was accused of unlawful carnal knowledge for sleeping with a 15 year old student. Rumpole showed that the girl planned it all, but the jury still found him guilty.
Drugs: Kathy Trelawny of the Nirvana Commune was accused of drug dealing. Rumpole thought he could get her off, until she pleaded guilty so as to publicize the plight of her brother in a Turkish jail.
Police: Rumpole's client was convicted of committing the Dartford Post Office Robbery. But later Rumpole was able to prove that he had been 'fitted up' by D (Dirty) Dickinson and he was released.
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Movie
We saw Nomadland during March, mainly because it received several Oscar nominations and also got a very good rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The Director is 38 year old Chloe Zhao, who was born in Beijing and studied in the UK and USA.
The movie is about Fern (Frances McDomand), a woman in her 60s who lost her home and job in the Global Financial Crisis and is now an itinerant living out of her van. It is unusual as there is no violence or sex; rather, the movie focuses on the people Fern meets in her travels, predominantly 'grey-nomads' like herself.
Frances McDomand does an excellent job portraying Fern in the movie. |
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Some notable events in March 2021
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Harry
+ Meghan (Duke & Duchess of Sussex) interview with Oprah made headlines
for days. Why all the fuss???
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Mass
protests against the military coup in Myanmar; dozens killed or injured every
day.
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Pope’s
historic visit to Iraq, 5 – 8 March.
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Dow
Jones Index broke through 33,000 for the first time; fluctuated.
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Australian
govt announced a subsidy scheme for apprentices (estimated cost A$1.2B). Also
a scheme to promote air travel with subsidised tickets (estimated cost
A$1.2B). A$90B
income support program, JobKeeper, ended on 28 March after one year. According
to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) an estimated 3.6 million employees
were supported under this program between April and September 2020, which
fell to 1.5 million between October and December 2020 as the economy
recovered. There have been reports of significant rorting by some companies. Victoria
announced a new A$629M jobs support package. Tens
of thousands of women marched around Australia protesting against sexual
assault and harassment. Australia’s
population decreased slightly in 2020 as Covid stopped immigration. Lots
of rain in SE Queensland and Northern NSW resulted in major flooding. It’s been
a tough 18 months: drought, bushfires, Covid, and now floods.
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Former
Australian Senator Mathias Cormann was elected new Director General of the
OECD (based in Paris for 5 year term). Has the OECD passed its use-by date???
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Manchester
City’s run of 21 successive victories ended when they lost to Manchester
United.
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Cristiano
Ronaldo scored 3 goals to take his total in Official Matches to770, 3 more
than Pele.
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First
official talks under the Biden Administration were held between USA and China
in Anchorage. Antony Blinken
(Secretary of State) and Jake Sullivan (National Security Advisor) met with
Yang Jie (Foreign Minister) and Wang Yi (State Counsellor). Acrimonious. Mass
shootings in Atlanta Georgia and Boulder Colorado prompted a “Stop Asian Hate”
campaign and a renewed discussion on tighter gun laws. President
Biden doubled the vaccination target to 200m in his first 100 days; so far
30% of adults have received at least one jab. There is concern over a
possible “4th wave”.
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China’s
GDP rose 2.3% in 2020, its slowest increase in decades – but
China was the only major economy to show positive growth in 2020.
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Huge
‘Ever Given’ container ship (18,000 TEUs) got stuck in the Suez Canal –
traffic jam of 450 ships – refloated on 29/3, after 6 days!
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World
Happiness Report based on Gallup World Poll of 149 countries found the 5
‘happiest’ countries were: Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Switzerland, and The
Netherlands. Australia rated 12th. Least happy were Afghanistan
and Zimbabwe. Criteria included: GDP, life expectancy, social support,
freedom, income inequality, corruption, trust in Govt.
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE
My 30 year career as an Australian Trade Commissioner has given me an interest in matters related to international trade. I subscribe to Bloomberg's excellent daily newsletter "Supply Lines - tracking Covid-19's impact on trade" (former title 'Trade Matters').
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COVID-19
As at today's date (31 March 2021) the number of cumulative cases and deaths are:
Global 129 million cumulative cases / 2.8 million cumulative deaths. Top ten countries: USA 29.2M / 564K; Brazil 12.7M / 318K; India 12.2M / 163K; France 4.6M / 95K; Russia 4.5M / 98K; UK 4.3M / 127K; Italy 3.6M / 109K; Spain 3.3M / 75K; Germany 2.8M / 77K.
Australia has 29,000 cumulative cases and 909 cumulative deaths - there have been no new deaths for several weeks now. Vaccinations began in February and almost 500,000 people have received the job. There is criticism of the slow pace of the roll-out, but the Govt says that, given our small number of cases, there is no urgency and being cautious is wise. A local company, CSL, has started to produce the AstraZeneka vaccine which should quickly ease supply shortages.
There was a scare in Brisbane earlier this week and the State Government imposed a snap 3 day lock-down. The number of new cases is still only a handful (but we know how quickly numbers can spiral) and everyone is hoping the lock-down won't be extended. Easter travel plans have been disrupted. In our case Vera & I were supposed to leave for Brisbane today to 'house-&-dog-sit' for Tom & Jen while they were away, but we have postponed our departure until the situation in Brisbane is clearer (maybe next week??).
The Federal Govt's massive JobKeeper income support package ended on 28 March, after one year. Some commentators are worried that up to 150,000 employees could be laid off. But the economic recovery has been strong in recent months (the property market is booming!!), so it is time the extra govt support is withdrawn.
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Well, folks, that's it for this post.
Our best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.
Vera & Alex Olah
Canberra, Australia
Wednesday 31 March 2021