Gentlefolk,
This post describes our activities during March 2022.
The contents of this post are in the following sequence:
Photos of our activities during March 2022.
Books read.
Some news items which caught my eye in March.
International Trade.
Chuckle Time.
Overview
We returned from our visit to Brisbane. Did 2,700km, used 166 litres of diesel which cost $260. Our activities were restricted because of the heavy rain and subsequent flooding in Brisbane and surrounding regions.
When we left Brisbane on 7 March the Transport NSW website showed the Pacific Highway was still closed, but fortunately it re-opened that morning and we have a good run down to Nambucca.
Internationally the Russian invasion of Ukraine continued to dominate headlines. Russia claimed they were acting in self-defence (which was patently untrue) and also said that only military targets would be attacked - but there were many media reports of civilian casualties. It was awful to see a much smaller country being battered, but also inspiring to see how the Ukrainians stood up to aggresive bully Vladimir Putin.
Russia's actions caused a great deal of angst, expecially in Europe. Stock markets crashed, commodity prices jumped, further fueling inflation. This will not end well ...
...
Photos of our main activities during March 2022.
In Brisbane.
The boys in their Marist College Ashgrove uniforms. They are shooting up: Kurt (16) is now 1.92m, Nate (almost 15) 1.70m, and Sid (almost 13) 1.62m. |
At its peak the water level was well over Vera's head. Amazing. Big trees were uprooted and swept along. |
This was a pedestrian bridge near the Gap Shops. The water level was up over the bridge. |
Another view of the pedestrian bridge (above). The water here had risen 2 or 3 metres at the peak a couple of days ago. |
We caught up with Michael Tjoeng who lives in Brisbane. We were colleagues in the Trade Section of the Australian Embassy in Beijing back in 1985-6. |
I couldn't resist taking a photo of Nate's room. A typical teenager's room - Messy!!! |
We walked past this shop in Brisbane City - reminded us of our grand-daughter Jay Jay who will turn 5 next week. |
A demonstration in front of Brisbane City Hall protesting against the Russian invasion of Ukraine. What Putin is doing in Ukraine is awful. |
Tom spent hours cleaning the pool after all the rain; we enjoyed the results of his labours! |
Jen helping the boys with their homework. |
Sid and their dog (Rhodesian Ridgeback). |
Sid, Vera and Tom (wearing his Kokoda Trail T-shirt). |
Tom, Vera and Jen on the morning of our departure. Tom was working from home that day, Jen was leaving for her school. |
The mouth of the Nambucca River - we have never seen so much water here, caused by all the rain and wind. |
Big tides and waves / wind caused erosion to Nambucca Main Beach. |
The V Wall protecting the entrance to the Nambucca River. |
Bob, surrounded by his favourite girls: Siri and Vera! |
In Sydney
Jay and Eddie's birthdays are only a week apart. Jay turned 5 in March and Eddie turned 8. |
Doting grandparents with Eddie and Jay Jay. |
In Canberra
A real-life recreation of one of Van Gogh's paintings - people can step 'into' the painting! |
Vincent Van Gogh loved painting sunflowers. This room was filled with (artificial) sunflowers - very bright and cheerful (although Vera doesn't look that happy???). |
"Symphony in the Park" was lovely. The Canberra Symphony orchestra backed a group led by singer-songwriter Lior. Beautiful evening, a very pleasant event. |
We watched this Baltic Dance Troupe perform some dances. |
Scottish musicians. Don't you love the sound of bagpipes? |
The annual Balloon Festival is held at this time. Usually light winds; this year the balloons could take off every day, while last year they could only fly on a couple of days. |
At 6.30am we watched the ballons inflate and take off. The noise and sight of 20 huge balloons filling up is always impressive. |
And the favourite balloon was ... |
We drove to the Arboretum which had good views of the balloons over Canberra. |
We enjoyed listening to Leo Joseph, at Smith's Alternative Cafe. He is a scientist at the CSIRO, but loves honky-tonk and jazz piano. |
A street artist at work in Canberra City centre (Civic). |
One of the new sculptures in Canberra City centre (locals know it as Civic). |
Lunch for the birthday girls, from left: Frank, & Sue Tavares, Vera, and me. |
Caught up with Tomoko and John Scott. They have a lovely house in Bowral, but also spend time in Canberra. |
Photo taken by John Hemphill on 20 March 2022. He was trying out his new camera. |
Photo taken by John Hemphill on 20 March 2022. |
Influence of Ancient Greece. |
I wasn't aware of this story - fascinating. |
Building Mausolus tomb. |
Greeks fighting and defeating Amazon female warriors. |
The winner being presented a laurel wreath (sometimes made of gold leaf). |
Wrestlers (bronze). |
Women (playing marbles?). |
Brass band concert at Hall just outside Canberra. |
Nice setting in the grounds of the old Primary School which has been turned into a museum. |
Mens choir entertained us - wonderful harmony. |
Quick visit to Sydney.
A view of the new casino and hotel at Barangaroo. |
After the concert we had dinner at French restaurant "The Little Snail" - delicious! |
On 31 March (this morning) Caroline showed us progress of their new home at Queens Park. It is 95% complete - huge project - she has done an amazing job as project manager! |
Caroline explaining the house to Howard and Vera. |
Caroline in the living room, - "atrium style" - double height ceiling. Stunning! |
...
Books
I read two books during March: George Smith's biography, and an Australian novel titled Jasper Jones.
A fine novel. But the title is intriguing as I think Charlie Bucktin is actually the main character. That's him at the front of the picture (above), with Jasper Jones in the background. |
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News items which caught my eye during March 2022.
Global
|
Energy (oil, gas) prices rising
sharply, translating into higher petrol prices and flow-on to all sectors.
Commodity prices increasing (wheat, nickel, iron ore) United Nations agreed to negotiate
a Global Plastics Treaty to control waste and pollution. Winter Paralympics 5 – 13 March in
Beijing; 46 countries, 700 athletes, 73 events. IOC banned athletes from
Russia and Belorussia. Omicron sub-strain BA2 identified;
even more contagious. Netherlands and Australia initiate
legal proceedings against Russia for shooting down of MH17 in 2014. China lock-down cities Shenzhen,
Changchun, Shanghai to combat Covid. China has about 5,000 cases per day (UK
has 55,000!). Germany announced doubling defence
budget to E100 billion (2% of GDP). 2022 World Happiness Survey top 10: Finland,
Denmark, Iceland, Switzerland, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Sweden, Norway,
Israel, New Zealand. Australia was 12th, Germany 14th, Canada
15th, USA 16th, UK 17th. France won the European Six
Nations Rugby Competition, first time in 12 years. P&O Ferries in the UK sacked
800 staff (to be replaced by contractors). A Chinese airliner (Boeing
737-800) crashed; all 132 dead.
|
Russian invasion of Ukraine |
Five weeks in and there is heavy
fighting in many parts of Ukraine. The Russian military seems to have stalled
in some places. Ukrainians are putting up strong resistance (arms supplied by
West). Ukraine winning the media/PR war –
President Zelensky has addressed, by video, ten Parliaments including USA,
UK, Germany, Canada, etc. Peace talks between Russia and
Ukraine ongoing; little result so far. An estimated 3.5 million people
have fled Ukraine, mainly women and children. Most are in Poland, then
Hungary. The EU hoping that all member countries will take Ukrainian refugees.
USA said it would take 100,000. Russian oligarch, Roman Abramovic,
decided to sell Chelsea Football Club. The International Court will
investigate if Russia is guilty of war crimes. Russia is not releasing information
on casualties, but a newspaper reported there were close to 10,000 dead and over
16,000 wounded in the first 4 weeks of the invasion of Ukraine.
|
USA
|
President Biden’s first State of
Union address. Kim Kardashian and Kanye West
announced plans to divorce. Australian golfer Cameron Smith (28) won the Players Championship. Tom Brady announced that he will
play again next season, with Tampa Bay. In response to inflation of 7.9%,
the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.25%, first increase since 2018
(UK Bank of England has raised twice this year). US economy expected to grow 2.8% in 2022. Biden attended NATO Summit in
Brussels; EU, G7 meetings; visited Poland. Madeleine Albright died aged 84.
She was first female Secretary of State under President Clinton. The Oscars: DUNE got most awards. Best
picture: CODA; best actor: Will Smith for King Richard; best actress Jessica
Chastain; best director: Jane Campion. Highlight was Will Smith punching the
host on stage!
|
Australia |
Major flooding in Brisbane,
Lismore, Ballina, Sydney. Extensive damage, 20 dead; PM declared national emergency.
Western Australia opened its
borders; no quarantine requirement for triple-vaxxed visitors. “Neighbours” TV show will end in
June, after 37 years (9,000 episodes). Two Australian cricket icons, Rod
Marsh (74) and Shane Warne (52) died. Marsh was wicket-keeper; Warne was leg spin
bowler who took a remarkable 708 Test wickets. A State Funeral was held for Warne at the MCG. Elon Musk’s Starlink low-orbit
satellites offered internet service in Australia: dish antenna $824 plus $139
per month. Australian unemployment rate 4%,
lowest since August 2008 (underemployment estimated at 6.6%). Labor won the South Australian
elections; Peter Malinauskas new Premier. Tennis champ Ashleigh (Ash) Barty (25) announced
her retirement from professional tennis; she was World #1 for 116 weeks, won
three Grand Slams (French Open 2019, Wimbledon 2021, Aussie Open 2022). What next? Lance (Buddy) Franklin (Sydney
Swans) kicked his 1,000th goal. Only 5 other Aussie Rules players have
achieved that number. After years of negotiations
Australia finally accepted New Zealand’s offer to take 450 boat-people refugees who have
been in detention for years.
|
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE
My 30 year career as an Australian Trade Commissioner gave 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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Chuckle time:
I hate it when I see an old person and then realize we went
to school together.
I told my wife she should embrace her mistakes... so she
hugged me.
My wife says I only have 2 faults: I don't listen, and
something else....
At my funeral, take the bouquet off my coffin and throw it
into the crowd to see who is next.
I thought growing old would take longer.
I came, I saw, I forgot what I was doing. Retraced my steps,
got lost on the way back, now I have no idea what's going on.
The officer said, "You drinking?" I said,
"You buying?" We laughed and laughed.... I need bail money.
Day 12 without chocolate. Lost hearing in my left eye.
Scientists say the universe is made up of protons, neutrons
and electrons. They forgot to mention morons.
The adult version of "head, shoulders, knees and
toes" is "wallet, glasses, keys and phone."
Life is too short to waste time matching socks.
Wi-fi went down for five minutes, so I had to talk to my
family. They seem like nice people.
If you see me talking to myself, just move along. I'm
self-employed; we're having a staff meeting.
Some people call me crazy. I prefer “happy with a twist”.
My doctor asked if anyone in my family suffers from mental
illness. I said, "No, we all seem to enjoy it."
Camping: where you spend a small fortune to live like a
homeless person.
I told my wife I wanted to be cremated. She made me an
appointment for Tuesday.
I've reached the age where my train of thought often leaves
the station without me.
If you're happy and you know it, it's your meds.
THINK! (It's not illegal.... YET)
A dog accepts you as the boss... a cat wants to see your
resume.
I don't care who dies in a movie, as long as the dog lives.
...
That's it for this post.
Just heard that David Irvine AO (1947 - 2022) passed away yesterday. We were colleagues at the Australian Embassies in Beijing and Jakarta. He went on to have a very distinguished career. A great servant of Australia, he will be sorely missed. RIP David.
Best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.
Vera & Alex Olah
Canberra, Australia
Thursday 31 March 2022.