Friday, January 14, 2011

Thursday, January 13, 2011

What day is it? A perfect day for a flood.

It’s been such a long day I keep forgetting which day it is I’ve forgotten. Is it Tuesday? Did we do Tuesday already? Perhaps it’s Friday? Apparently, I’m told with authority, it’s Thursday. Wednesday has slipped away, unnoticed.

At the front door of my home sits my birthday present from my sister. I already know what it is; she’s recycled the toasting grill I gave her daughter for Christmas. Families, eh? I haven’t had time to unwrap it yet, all heck broke loose this week, it’s been…well… you know what it’s been like, right?

I unwrap it today for our lunch and try to look surprised. My son uses it to makes me ham sandwiches with English mustard (it reminds me of my dad, short bursts of fiery passion that takes your breath away!)

I had almost forgotten that it was only this morning that I stood in a long queue to pay for my petrol. Half the pumps were out of order, but I was happy to wait, what was the alternative? A young man in front of me turns around and with a sneer says to me: ” Ya wouldn’t wanna be in a hurry, hey?”

He snorts his contempt and swaggers in the line in front of me.

I simply smiled at him as I didn’t have a quick retort, my mind was elsewhere. I stood there stewing over his remarks, trying to drum up a witty, snappy response, but nothing came to me at that hour.

As he went to pay for his fuel, he said to the operator: “I’m expecting my pay in the bank by 6am. What time is it now?”

5.35am.

“Oh no! What am I gonna do now, hey?” From an over confidant bloke to a snivelling mess in 0.2 seconds. Hilarious! His face crumples in embarrassment.

He scratches his head, he’s obviously a disorganised person and now he’s in real trouble. No money, and ironically; a huge queue waiting for him to finish his business. He scoots out the door after a quick chat, in order to get his identification for the service station.

“How much does he owe you?” I ask the bloke behind the counter, who has seen it all too often.

“Fifteen dollars” he said.

“I’ll pay, put it on my bill” I tell him.

“Are you sure? No, he’ll get his identification, and we’ll sort it out later, you don’t have to pay.”

“I want to. Put his petrol on my bill please.”

I waggle my card. Sure enough, the young man in his twenties rushes back, apologetic, sweating, harassed, embarrassed. I pat him on the back and tell him in a motherly way: “I’ve got this.”

I wish I had my camera with me; there are some moments in life when you just want to take the shot so you can look at it later and have a good belly laugh.

“Are you sure? Oh man, this has never happened to me before, oh man, are you sure?” He is gob smacked, and I happily pay his account (thank goodness it was only $15!)

As I leave I smile at him again. “Some times it really pays to be patient.”

What a great lesson for him in life, and a bargain price too!

~~

This morning began at 4.15am for me, stumbling still deep with sleep; I fall out of bed to begin my day. Hurriedly dress, no shower, no cuppa tea, a comb roughly pulled through my hair and I’m driving through the dark suburbs, watching the night release her hold on the dawn. I’m on the way to my mother-in-laws house, the car practically knows its own way by now. I imagine the water to be up to the roof, up to the ceiling. Up, anyway, way up!

When I arrive, my lights are on high beam. What’s this? Where’s the water? Yes, there’s a muddy line just below the window sill, but what happened to all the water I was expecting? Already I can see the tide is going out. I take photographs, and note the grass to my right seems to be moving and tickling. I realize that the floodwaters are indeed retreating; I can almost see it for myself.

My mobile rings just on 5am, it’s the producer of the Sydney 2 Day FM Radio station ready to interview me on my flood experience. I go live to air for a few minutes, making sure I get across a few points.

• We are all pulling together and helping each other, strangers, families, neighbours.

• We are in serious trouble in Queensland but have strong hearts.

• Premier Anna Bligh should be painted in gold, for her dignified, intelligent and common sense approach to the flood.

“How do you keep such a great sense of humour” he asks.

“What else do I do, I can’t change anything. My mother-in-law’s house is muddy and ruined, but her home is safe. I have her home packed in boxes, safe and ready when she is.

~~

After the interview, I make a note to drive to photograph the FM Radio producer’s parent’s home. He’s stressed out and feeling helpless in Sydney, it’s the very least I can do. On the way I can hear Spencer Howson from 612 Brisbane ABC Radio with a live report. He’s speaking from the Indooroopilly Bridge, just as I am crossing it to Chelmer.

I hold my camera up and snap him in his bright red shirt, and continue on my way, finding the parents house. They’ve copped a lot of water; clearly it’s flooded in the lower section of the home. Dazed and exhausted neighbours stand in the street, chatting, swapping stories. I take a few images and reverse out of there; I feel intrusive. Later, I email him the pictures, and am delighted I took the trouble to do so.

“Jeez! That's pretty bloody flooded!!! Thank you so much for those pics!”

~~
On the drive home I bump into Spencer Howson again. He leans into my car.


“Are you going to give me fifty dollars again Patty? “

I used to be Spencer’s Roving Reporter and we worked together for a while at ABC 612 Brisbane. I’m a bit taken aback, it wasn’t the expected greeting.

“Fifty dollars? What do you mean?”

“The last time we met, you donated fifty dollars to {charity name} (I didn’t catch it, sorry)

I just look at him blankly, like an idiot. I have no memory of that at all. I offer to retake his photo on the bridge, but he’s good, he’s tired and wants to keep moving. Me too. Later, at home, I tell my husband the fifty dollar story. I love that I don’t remember it. I love that I don’t look at Spencer and think “I gave you fifty dollars.”

~~
And so dear reader to bed. It’s been a long day, a good day; with my flood photo going viral on twitpic, also being shown on the BBC site, 2 radio interviews (2UE as well) an article in Crikey.com, photographing Grant Denyer in the suburbs as he went live to air on Sunrise.

And always above, the soft scream of sirens, the dull murmur of helicopters.

~~

My son - my hero

For the third time this week my Eldest son has become my hero. On my birthday earlier this week he tidied my garden and blew the huge lump of wet leaves in the courtyard; saying to me in his quiet, deep voice: “That’s what I’m here for, mum,” and a little piece of my heart breaks. I don’t want him to just be here to serve me, but boy am I grateful that he is.

He places his arm around my shoulders, and when they rise and fall with a gentle sob he holds me until the noise subsides.

Earlier this week he climbed onto the roof of the kitchen, in the belting rain and pitch black night to replace a broken roof tile. Our kitchen ceiling was in huge danger of collapsing under the weight of rainwater and to cut a long story short, he saved us, he saved me, and he saved the house.

My hero!

Today he came with me to see his grandmother’s house, and how it had fared in the flood. We gingerly step here, and there; picking our delicate way through the mud, careful not to slip, careful not to step on some unknown broken thing hidden within the brown.

He takes photos for me. Holding my camera he grabs images, noting a straight horizon, and focusing in on the subject, as I have taught him. It’s almost funny to see my mother-in-laws house now.



“Is that a tree in the kitchen?”

“Yes, why yes! That IS a tree!” I mock, and at any moment I expect someone to wake me with a pinch and a hearty: “KIDDING!!” yelled in my ear. But that friendly, silly yell never comes, only the shocked silence of us both trying to comprehend the enormous force of the flood waters. How the hell am I going to get a tree out? Perhaps it will float out, as it floated in, on the rising tide.

In the distance, through the unbroken window panes and past the bending, yielding mangroves, you hear it. The roar of the water. The Brisbane River gallops past us like an unbroken stallion, a monster of a beast, it’s back hunched with fury and a wild, untamed mane of foam and flotsam.

It’s sheer madness to watch!

Once home, my son wordlessly empties the dishwasher for me. He has lived in his own flat for the past 4 years, and I am too tired and grateful to fight him. To my delight, he then goes to my front deck and begins to remove the last of the Christmas decorations. I had taken down 80% of them but then we had the drama of the flooding kitchen, and the great flood of 2011 to deal with. Thank you for helping me today son. I loved watching you become the man I always knew you were. My hero!

~~

At home my cat sleeps behind me, dreaming in the soft way that cats do, as I work on the computer. Suddenly he starts awake with a loud hiss and his eyes bolt open, craws dug in deeply to the sofa. Even he is having bad dreams. He’s shaken and unsettled, and I peer around my kitchen for ghosts or spirits. Perhaps my father-in-law is back, angry we left his bed to the flooding waters. I am so sorry Dennis, we did our best. We did our best. We saved so much, we simply couldn’t get it all. I stroke my cat back to sleep, until I too, am settled.

~~

When mothers age, we speak to them less. We still talk, of course, but we tell them less real information, as it only worries them. My voice is still cheery; really you wouldn’t know that in my lounge room a step ladder has taken up semi-permanent residence.

That my blue sofa is now green with mould.

That I’ll have to throw away my husband’s favourite cushion.

That my back garden is ruined, my young son’s bedroom is ruined, the kitchen ceiling is stuffed, whole interior walls will need replacing from water damage and mould; really you wouldn’t pick it at all.

“Hi mum, yes, we’re all fine,” I lie, but really, we are all fine.

I just have to remember that.

~~

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Before During After

Brisbane Flood 2011 - #qldfloods


#Qldfloods 2011


Packing up our memories, and watching the waters rise

The white sycamore bed was made for her wedding day; in fact, the whole suite of bedroom furniture was handmade by her father, who owned a joinery shop in Ipswich. Her five children were conceived there, and it is where her husband passed away, sleeping peacefully on the left-hand side. For more than 44 years it has overlooked the Brisbane River, and now I watch with sadness as the muddy waters lap relentlessly at the bedroom door.




We can’t move it. There’s not enough of us, and nowhere to store it. We have no tools. We have to make executive decisions on what to take, what to leave. I spent an entire day packing up my mother-in-law’s life. I drove through pouring rain to begin the melancholy chore of packing, wrapping, sorting, rescuing her home.

It has endured the 1974 floods and already I can see the waterline has crept up past the eaves of the garage shed. Two tyres swirl in a backwash eddy, spinning lazy circles. A bush turkey looks confused, standing on the water’s edge, peering in.

Handing my camera to my brother-in-law, I ask him to walk around and photograph the house before we begin. Starting in the dining room, I rescued a beloved china dinner set, wrapping each plate in Qld Country Life newspaper — ironically with headlines of the flood — and placing them in old packing cartons.

I decide not to take certain glassware, as these can easily be replaced and we have to prioritise. Photographs and pictures from the walls are rescued and stacked carefully. My mother-in-law is an enthusiastic photographer. We open cupboard upon cupboard, drawer after drawer, to find with dismay more photo albums, more slides, more negatives, more, more, more!

In frustration I crossly opened one album, only to find myself staring back at my family, grinning into the camera. I’ve never seen these photos before! I am dressed in white and 15 years younger, sailing the Bay of Islands in New Zealand. My husband is skippering the yacht. We all look so happy.


My sister-in-law arrives and we move as a team, packing more boxes, cushioning the contents with newspapers and care, securing them with love. She grabs insurance papers and filing cabinet stuff. Yes, there is flood insurance. My other little sister-in-law and her American husband arrive soon after. I insist we stop and take a photograph of us all, and the home that will never be the same again. Chairs are hurriedly pulled together, the timer is set. Smile!

Strangers arrive with a shy smile. “Can we help?”

“Do you have any storage room, please? A garage?”

As we speak, I glance out the window to see a pontoon floating past, unmanned. It’s shocking, but we were to see far worse, as the day unfolded.

More neighbours arrived. No, we are not looting. Yes, we would love you to help. Lists are made: furniture, boxes, storage. We have to keep track of it all.

I update Twitter in between cartons, noting how my fingers are black with printer’s ink. Towels are spread across the front door, not to keep out the water, but to keep us from slipping. I wear my old lady’s shoes; red leather (like the Pope’s) as I cannot afford to fall and hurt myself. We all walk deliberately slower than we normally would. It’s like a bad dream; everything happens in slow motion.

I open a huge drawer under the bed. It’s full of wrapped newspaper parcels.

We weren’t rescuing stuff, we were rescuing memories. Mother-in-law kept everything, good or not, useful or not, worthless, worthy. It was all sentimentally kept.

Another pontoon breaks loose. A very expensive speedboat is perched on it, gaily sailing down the river; sightseeing, spinning slowly. There are rips and eddies out there. The river is an untamed child, kicking her heels in defiance. I won’t do it, I won’t go, I must, I must, I must!

There are two sets of children’s encyclopedias. To leave, or to take? They are probably worth money, collectables. They are probably worthless, redundant. A family discussion: they are saved.

The following day my son and I arrived just in time to see the water swirl around the house, and as we watch, water laps onto the cream carpet. Our timing is superb. We nearly cry, but don’t; it’s pointless. You can’t change Mother Nature, and it’s only a house.

The home has all been packed away, for now.


This article was first published on Crikey.com

Thoughts on the Brisbane Flood of 2011

What I’ll remember of the Brisbane floods, are two things.

The way Brisbane came together to help each other; the neighbours and the kindness of strangers not only willing but able to help each other, and the marvellous way Twitter and social networking proved itself, not to be a ‘waste of time’ but an invaluable tool for reaching out to act; immediately, intelligently, helpfully.

That, and the smell of the mud and the noise of the river rushing past, with people lives, memories and dreams as flotsam.

Hold ya nose, we're going under!




Swimming pool area - before and after #qldfloods - Brisbane, Australia

I've pinched the BBC image so you can see the superimposed water on the original flooding picture of my mother-in-law's home.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The Flood of 2011-01-12

I spent yesterday packing up my mother in laws life. My husband and I had discussed the possibility of packing her home because of the growing concern of flooding, and now it was about to come true. We agree that he’ll bring home a removal truck to pack furniture into, but as it turns out, it will all be too late. We need to move now, and hurry!

My elderly mother in law is at her beach house safe, but stuck; unable to drive as rising floodwaters have cut off the highway between the Sunshine Coast and Brisbane. She's helpless, and has been told to stay put, there's nothing she can do, leave it to us kids. Nevertheless, she frets all day about her home where she raised five children. She wrings her hands and listens to the radio. It's all she can do.

I drive over at 8am to check out her home on the river at Indooroopilly and note the flood measurements. The water was almost up to the eaves of a small backyard shed. I took a photo on my phone and emailed it straight to my husband, who was anxiously battling his own rising waters in Caboolture, at the car Dealership.


The radio is on; voices tell me calmly that the Bremer River will peak at 19 metres. Later this is updated to 22 metres. During the day various reports come through. The flood will be 1.5metres lower than ’74. The flood will be as bad as ’74. The flood will be worse than ’74. We adjust and note each change.

My sister in law’s partner phones, panicked. He rings me at home. “I’m standing outside Gwen’s house right now. I’ll knock the front door down!” he exclaims.

‘No need, I have the key” I tell him. “I’ll be there soon. Go to a newsagent and grab some newspapers for wrapping stuff.”

I’ve already sourced newspapers from my own suburb and bought extra food to make lasagnes for dinner tonight. We still have to eat, and after today we’ll be ravenous, and exhausted. In my mind I begin to make a plan of action. Batteries charged, extra toilet paper, cat food, and washing done.

At 10am I drive through pouring rain to begin the melancholy chore of packing, wrapping, sorting, rescuing. My mother in law’s home sits on the Brisbane River, normally a tame piece of water. She loves to watch the rowers and ferries as they pass her backyard deck. She’s not a home maker, my mother in law, she’s a traveller. A world traveller. She’s been to more countries than I’ve had hot dinners, and only last month returned from a solo road trip to Lake Ayre and beyond. Slipping off the road twice in her small 4wd, the roads were methodically closed behind her by Police, as the Big Wet began. She’s gutzy! And although not a home maker, she loves her house. It’s her own design, and has already been under the 1974 floods. I thought it came up to the mid-wall line, but my sis in law tells me it came over the flat roof. Ouch! I begin to pack with more authority and in earnest. This is serious! Already I can see the waterline has crept up past the garage shed eaves, it’s now half way up. Two tyres swirl in a backwash eddy, spinning lazy circles. A bush turkey looks confused, standing on the waters edge, peering in. I wonder if he had a nest nearby?


The piano is moved with much discussion and co operation


When I arrived to her home I had to disarm the alarm. Looking at her code, I punch in the numbers, but the alarm goes off. Security ring, and it’s impossible to hear him. I walk back to my car in belting rain so I can hear what he is saying to me. Again and again I punch in the numbers, until we realise that she has given me 5 digits instead of 4. Ahh…Finally the screaming stops, and we can both breathe in peace.

Handing my camera to my brother in law, I ask him to walk around and photograph the house before we begin. We two in-laws begin to pack mum in laws life and family history. Starting in the dining room, I rescued her beloved mother’s china and dinner set, wrapping each beautiful plate in Qld Country Life newspaper – ironically with headlines of the flood – and placing them in old packing cartons I had stored in my garage. I knew one day they’d come in handy!

After a solid two hours of wrapping and packing, my brother in law tells me he has ‘put the jug on’ to make me a cuppa. He’s very considerate like that. We are both children of Anglican priests and we laugh and joke about our parents’ unusual trade.

“I don’t really do tea at this hour of the day, any wine in her fridge?” Cheekily we open a chilled red wine, and toast to her house and contents and family. (Only my mother in law would keep a red wine in the fridge!) I’m sure she wouldn’t mind.

I’ll say one thing about my mother in law, boy can she hoard! She’s kept every piece of china (three broken cup handles in the cupboard) and every thing she’s ever bought. Music sheets, old videos covered in gecko poo, empty bottles of cocktail mixers and so on. Her own mother’s china is carefully wrapped and placed into proper moving cartons. I make executive decisions not to take certain glassware, these can easily be replaced and we have to prioritise. Brother in law moves around quietly rescuing the photographs and pictures from the walls, carefully stacking them in order to easily move them. My mother in law is also a photographer, and we open cupboard and cupboard, drawer after drawer, and find in dismay more photo albums, more slides, more negatives, more, more, more!

In frustration I crossly open one album, only to find myself staring back, my sons grinning at the camera. I’ve never seen these images! I’m dressed in white, my own camera firmly strapped to my side, we are sailing the Bay of Islands in New Zealand. My husband is skippering the yacht, we all look so happy.

My Youngest on the winch.

My Youngest is grim faced, ready to winch the sails, to prove to his older brother and his father that he can do it. His jaw is set in the same way my jaw sets when I ‘get stubborn’; when I refuse to be beaten, and submit. My other son smiles, his blonde hair tossed in the wind, carefree. At the moment he has been sent home from his bank, and is walking back to his Auchenflower home. He waited for a bus for a while, and tells me: ”I’m a scout mum, I know how to walk, I’m strong.”

There’s a lot to be said for scouts, and all of it about empowering the individual to dig deep within himself, to be strong, to grow that spine.

The phone rings in a constant stream of concern from Tony, my young brother in law who now lives in Cairns. He tells us to talk to a local man up the hill, who knows everything about floods and water. We seek him out and are pleased he will be able to meet us in an hour’s time. The next day my husband tells me this man - a physicist -  married a nun, and had eight children! Meanwhile, we start on packing her bedroom and bathroom, TV, DVD player, cd’s and so forth.


Her daughter arrives, and then we move like a team, more boxes, more packing tape, more newspapers. She grabs insurance papers and filing cabinet stuff. Yes, there is flood insurance. Whew. We relax but only for a moment. When her sister and her American husband arrive soon after, I insist we stop and take a photograph of us all, and the home which will never be the same again. Chairs are hurriedly pulled together, the timer is set. Smile!

More wrapping, more photographs. Strangers arrive with a shy smile. “Can we help?”

“Do you have any storage room please? A garage? “

As we speak I glance out the window, to see a pontoon floating past, unmanned. It’s shocking, but we are to see far worse than that as the day unfolds.
A yacht drifts down the river - as sailors we all feel helpless

The swimming pool looks so enticing, and three frangipannis sit quietly in the same position all day.  I watch them during the day, they give me peace, calming wild thoughts.



More neighbours arrive, no doubt summoned by the high pitched alarms going off earlier. No, we are not looting, yes, we would love you to help. A woman called Marge runs home in the rain to change into daggy clothes. Two strapping lads – all height and muscles – arrive to begin to lift the furniture. Lists are made: furniture to someone’s garage, boxes to this person’s home, storage gone to this one’s house. We have to keep track of it all.

My husband rings on the mobile. The Caboolture River is rising fast, areas are evacuated, most of the staff have left to save their own homes. We have no flood insurance. Really, it’s only water, and stuff, and cars. The important thing is we are all safe. I begin to sing.

Raindrops keep falling on my head… and my American brother in law rushes into the room, singing with me, and twirls me around. We waltz and spin, laughing and singing. “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid!” he says grinning.

Er…yes. I was thinking Johnny Farnham. A quick hug and it’s back to work. Family work, work with strangers, whose kindness we embrace and hold onto.

I update Twitter in between cartons, noting my fingers are black with printer’s ink. Ironically I used to work for The Land and Qld Country Life newspapers, and I wrap each rose patterned china cup in headline news of the floods.

“Soaked! Big cotton crop drenched” the headlines shout. Memories of my time as a young advertising representative, living at Murphy’s Creek, working in Toowoomba, flood back. No pun intended.


Towels are spread at the front door, not to keep out the water, but to keep us from slipping. I am wearing my old ladies shoes, red leather (like the Popes) as I cannot afford to fall and hurt myself. We all walk deliberately slower than we normally would. It’s like a bad dream, everything is happening in slow motion.

Old school friends ring me, full of concern. Ann, in Nambour. Julie, herself stuck at Five Rocks. We chat and speak at the horror in Toowoomba.

In the childhood room of my sister in laws I open a huge drawer under the bed. It’s full of wrapped newspaper parcels.
Salt and pepper anyone?


"Mandy! What do you want done with these?” I yell. It seems they are a salt and pepper collection from a great aunt, they must be saved, even though they’ve never been viewed since her passing 20 years ago. We aren’t rescuing stuff, we are rescuing memories.

In other cupboards, two dolls fall out, one dressed in pink with a creepy blue eye staring at me; one naked. She’s kept everything, good or not, useful or not, worthless, worthy, it’s all kept.

Another pontoon breaks loose with a very expensive speedboat on it, perched gaily sailing down the river, spinning slowly. There are rips and eddies out there, the river is an untamed child, kicking her heels in defiance. I won’t do it, I won’t go, I must, I must, I must!
A speedboat perched high and dry spins it crewless way to the river mouth

There are two sets of Children’s encyclopaedias. To leave, or to take. They are probably worth money, collectables. They are probably worthless, redundant. A family discussion, they are saved. If we have time, and if we have boxes, things are saved. I pack her bathroom, taking only the fuller shampoos, lotions, toilet paper.



A man, a stranger to me, stands beside me, gazing out to the river. His hair is grey, classic gold glasses perch, spotted with raindrops. I resist the urge to take them off and wipe them.

“What do you do Peter?” I ask him.

“I’m a doctor. I live up ther street.”




My head begins to fill with figures and statistics. Wivenhoe Dam is at 195%. Bremmer River to peak at 19 metres, no, 22 metres. It will be as worse, it will be worse, The Caboolture River will peak at 3.3 metres. Below me the water laps the roof of the garden shed. It’s almost covered.

Someone places a chocolate biscuit in my mouth. I don’t even look to see who it was, I eat it greedily.

Most of the stuff, and all of the furniture has been packed, wrapped and moved. I’m spent, exhausted, and sit on the remaining seat to send a message to my husband and son. My eldest boy is mopping out my own home, rainwater floods into a bedroom downstairs, and I forgot to roll up the rugs when I left this morning.
My own home has flooded, but this is rainfall, not flood water

My hair is sticking to my head, I stink, and my feet are red, discoloured from the Pope’s colouring coming off on my damp feet.

In a final push to the kitchen I note with dismay mother in law has also kept every piece of plastic, every baking tin, every recipe book. I pack her books, she loves to cook. There’s nothing much to save in the fridge, but I take out some meat from the freezer. Her daughter hands me a bottle of sweet chilli sauce.

“Here Patty, take this!” and we both laugh, knowing how much mother in law loves her sauce.

In time I beg to go home, but my car is missing. Men have been using it all day, for the 4wd capacity, and the tow ball; hauling trailer after trailer to strangers homes.

We expect the water to completly cover the roofline

“I’m done, I’ve got nothing left,” I yawn, and I wonder how I can leave with some dignity, leaving them here to continue to pack. I feel such a coward, a chicken, a useless, worthless piece of gutless waste-of-space, but I can do no more. There’s no energy in my tank, and I must go home. When I get into the car, someone has changed my clock. Why would they do that? For goodness sakes! It says it’s 5.55pm, and it’s clearly only just after lunch. The 6pm news comes on the radio, and I’m shocked. Shocked at the whole day gone, shocked at the nightmare of packing, and mess of lives, and secretly delighted it’s so late. That explains why I’m tired.

Drive home James, and don’t spare the horses.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Thankyou Twitter!

I asked Twitter for the contact number for SES -(132 500) and was overwhelmed by the quick response. Later, the comments kept flowing, from offers to help me clean up, to accommodation and cat-friendly households. 

To read everyone's loving and genuine offers of help gave hubby and I great hope.  Thankyou all so much. 


By the way, when I rang SES (State Emergency Service) I had to state my suburb, then was put through to City Hall Brisbane. They were very patient, kind and eager to help.  I rang back later quoting my reference number and cancelled the call –out as I though others may need them more than us.

Our son came around and climbed up on the roof and changed the broken tile in the pouring rain and pitch black.  I would NOT recommend doing this at all.  But yeah, he’s my hero!

Broken roof tile


Kitchen Flood 2011

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Happy Birthday to me - 2010

Two days before my birthday my sister June gives me a special lunch. “Shall we say Grace?” she asks? “You say it Patty.”

“No sis, off you go.”

She bows her head, we hold hands. She begins...

“For what we are about to receive may the Lord make us truly thankful. Please bless Patty, who has been a real pain for most of her life, and smile gently upon her this year.”

My sister June loves me with such passion her voice breaks as she speaks.
I say nothing, (too stunned to speak) apart from Amen, and I bless myself. I obviously need all the help I can get!
~~
There’s a spotlight shining right.between my.eyes. It’s 4.10am and the local kookaburras are creating their daily dawn service. In the old white house across the still-dark valley, someone has left on their backyard spotty, and it’s keeping me awake. I lay still, burying my face in the marshmallow pillow, and begin to plan buying a gun, raising the scope to my eye and gently squeezing the trigger.

BAM!

I just shot someone. I re-think the situation. Maybe not using bullets, perhaps pots of black paint, yes, that’s it, I’ll shoot tins of thick black, gooey paint at the spotlight.

BAM!

It drips slowly down in the darkness, just as my evil half-awake, half-asleep mind plotted. Revenge is mine! I snuggle into the darkness once more. The kookaburras run out of puff, and the dawn chorus baton is passed to the magpie family.

I watch the continuous slideshow of colours behind my eyes until finally my lids spring open. I’m awake. Its 4.30am, time to rise and start my birth day.
~~
Chris suggests croissants for breakfast, and I readily agree, sounds perfect. I grab a few more minutes of needed sleep as he drives to the shops, and prepares them for us. To my surprise, when he comes into the bedroom with our food, I find he has also pulled the cork on champagne. Irresistible! We toast to each other, and sip greedily.
~~
9am. Driving my old 4wd to the local café, my car whines like a whelping dingo. Everyone hears me coming before they can lay their eyes on the annoying noise. Walking toward the Java Lounge, I see her first. Fiona. Tall, strong, athletic body, her cropped brunette hair hangs just above her eyes in an enticing fringe. We have been friends for over 21 years, saving our lovely birth hospital together, with another mate, CJ.

We laugh and hug gently: “I’m sick!” she pleads, and she coughs for effect and blows her nose. CJ is late, of course, but we know and forgive her, it’s her signature. What on earth would we do if she was on time? It’s unfathomable.


Hot tea in large red polka dotted cups, cappuccinos, fresh juice. We discuss the Queensland floods, the weather in general; most of the world’s problems and very few of our own. We discuss in great detail why men grow beards until finally wikepedia is researched, and the answer is inconclusive. Deciding it’s simply because they can, other topics are discussed in detail. Our Christmas cooking, decorations, and the funeral of a close, loved friend. We enjoy each other’s company, and the three of us take turns to cough and hack and blow.

CJ has made me her best shortbread kisses, beautifully presented in a candy striped pink gift bag, and a card which reads: “Ain’t no mountain high enough”.

I questioned her. “What does this mean?”

She sings the song: Ohh, Ain’t no mountain high enough, ain’t no valley wide enough, ain’t no river wide enough, to keep me away from youoooo.
“Always a song in your heart” says Fiona.

I love these women.

~~
My phone rings. My Blackberry tells me it’s my old friend Graham B but I’m praying that it isn’t, as I attended - and filmed his funeral - last year. I must change the contact profile to his wife’s name! During breakfast I answer more mobile calls and respond to the sms birthday messages friends and family leave me. We take photos, we finish breakfast. We look for pearls in shop windows, and finally go our separate ways home.
~~
11.30am. Sofa shopping in Freedom. I stretch out on a red leather lounge I can’t afford.


I hand my phone to the sales girl: "Can you take my photo please? It’s my birthday,” as if that excuses everything. My oldest friends Sue and David ring me, and I sit at the table on a white leather chair I would never buy and chat to them for a good 20 minutes. They have dodged a flood bullet in Rockhampton, their property is safe from the mighty Fitzroy River - so far so good.

"I have two words to say to you David: Levy bank!"

It’s great to catch up and hear their familiar voices, Dave softly chuckling in the background, as is his way.
~~
12.45pm. On the phone to my sister June. My front door bell rings with urgency. Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! A uniformed delivery man stands there grinning, holding a large bunch of stunning yellow lilies. Curiously, each stem is wrapped in its own plastic bag, to retain the moisture and keep them fresh.

I take a photo of this, after I read the card – To Mum, Happy Birthday, Charlie and Michelle.
So sweet, thanks.


~~
1pm. Lunch with my eldest son. We take umbrellas to guard against the huge blue spot on the weather radar. It’s beginning to rain heavily, and I note with dismay that I’ll probably be mopping out my downstairs bedroom by the afternoon. We drive to the Black Cat Bookshop, parking right outside. Walking in, both Lockie and I turn to each other with huge grins; this bookshop is a place of many memories and happy times. We hug unaffectedly in delight.


I’m a little confused, as there are 6 people in black behind the cafĂ© counter, and not one of them seems to know what they are doing. Two men huddle over a docket. One woman looks at us both, and turns away. Where is Diane? Who are all these people?

We both choose Moussaka, and when our orders are placed the young girl looks blankly at me.

“The what…? What do you want?” she asks. “Moussaka, please. Two lots, thanks.” and we point just to make sure she understands.

“Oh, that stuff? I’ve never heard of Moussaka!” she mutters. We try not to giggle at her.

Eventually we sit, and chat. I rub my nose in conversation…is that a pimple? Rushing to the bathroom, I give it a quick squeeze, and it bleeds like a stuck pig. I have to wet a paper towel and hold it to my face for a good three minutes, trying not to burst out laughing. So silly! Young enough to still get pimps! *sighs


Later, at home, Lockie offers to blow my driveway and courtyard in exchange for a glass of champagne. Deal!

The house sparkles with his love and attention. I take photos of him working. Happy days.


He presents me with a beautiful silver Parker pen. ‘Every good writer deserves a good pen” he tells me.


~~
5pm. My mother tells me she loved going for morning tea this morning to celebrate her Birth Day too. We laugh and I love how she engages with my day, it’s her day too and the joy continues.


~~

In the evening with Chris; Spanish tapas, bookshop exploring, Rose wine with roasted garlic.



New experiences for he and I. We buy tickets to see The King’s Speech movie, and are delighted in our enjoyment of it. Night time at home, after chocolate Belgium gelato at Rosalie, I watch Fiddler on the Roof.

It’s been a wonderful day, thankyou all so much for being such a special part of it for me.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Be the Change you wish to see in the world

A young woman is quietly making an enormous difference to the lives of young aboriginal children in remote areas.

I was fortunate to fall upon her on Facebook, and hopefully I have contributed to her very worthy cause.

GO visit her site here on Facebook.

This should go on each card, with a kiss....

With each gift also comes my love in bucket loads, my good wishes, my hopes, inspirations and dreams for a great, proudly strong future for each and every child.

May you always suffer good health, may your word be listened to, and be respected. Tell the truth, love greatly, don't ever be afraid to step up to the mark and make a difference.

Look up to the older generation, reach down to the younger generation, be the person you know in your heart you can be.

See the world with both eyes open, embrace with both arms, laugh too much.

It's a great life.

Merry Christmas.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Sketches from a plane window

A steam train of pink clouds puffed along the horizon, tooting the sun up.Flying over the city of Brisbane, bridges of reflected light cross the river, here, and here.
~
The Rockhampton sky is full of fog and sadness; the sun is missing. Bogs and hollows are full of water, an emerald carpet of grass edges to the river. The Fitzroy obediently flows in a straight line, past the shops and houses, past the boats and crabpots, before kicking it’s giddy way to the sea.
Fat bottomed boats turn their back to the sea with the outgoing tide.
~
Just south of Rockhampton is a secret place of rivers. Too lazy to immediately rush to the open seas’ embrace, they meander in a slovenly but sensuous twist and turn; their banks lined with dark green borders of mangroves and mud crabs.
Placed in between each snaking stream are areas of neat rectangles of various colours: whites, pinks, greys. Salt lakes. Slow evaporation ponds scar the land and jar the senses and rounded curves of the smaller rivers.
At low tide, acres of mud lies sunbaking in the Tropic of Capricorn sunshine watching the planes fly overhead. Lushness tickles the tree-line, and lagoons hold lily pads and many secrets. The Fitzroy strides to the oceans, impatient to be released.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Rain

The rain falls in silver pencils -straight down - with a quiet shush. My garden bows it's head and drinks greedily.

School holidays

The kids next door are on the trampoline again, sitting cross-legged, singing and shouting in turns.  It's raining.  School holidays.  In my kitchen I can hear bursts of childhood, brother and sister shoutouts and laughing.  They haven't noticed they are wet.