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Friday, September 28, 2007

The motoGP

For a few weeks now dad and jono have been planing to go down to Philip Island for the motoGP. For those who don't know the motoGP are the 800cc motorbike races and this year Australian Casey Stoner has won the world championship. Any way they were going to ride down and thus Robbie and I would be unable to attend, but today we found out that Jono would be unable to ride down so we had to take the car letting Robbie and I come too. Hip-hip Hooray.
So hopefuly we will be able to witness an other victory for Stoner and possibly a good crash.

Jamie

here is the official website for the motoGP
http://www.motogp.com/en/motogp/index.htm

Canberra here we come!

Next week I have to go to Canberra with my colleague, Gillian, to attend a conference for customers of a particular library management systems vendor.
We are leaving the mountains about 8am on Wednesday and are hoping to be down in Canberra for about 1pm in time to join a library tour - one of the libraries to be visited is the Parliamentary library. We will be there for the rest of the week, starting back home on Saturday morning. Moira, my supervisor from when I worked at HealthLink will be there too so I'll try to catch up with her and her husband, Roland.
Gillian and I have spent a lot of time this week arranging things, including over an hour this afternoon 'doing' our CSTARS for next week before we go - the online clocking on and off thing we have at work. With dinners and breakfast meetings and being away on Saturday, we have worked out we have racked up almost 2 days time in lieu. We've also been confirming hotel bookings and making sure it can all go on the company credit card, arranging a car - we'll have a fleet car which we have to pick up on Tuesday sometime and generally fiddling. I certainly didn't get through the pile of cataloguing I'd set myself.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Google Earth shot of our house


Google Earth shot of our neighbourhood




year 12s 2nd last day at school

year twelves 2nd last day is generally the "muck up" day. On this day it is almost traditional that the year 12s throw eggs and water bombs etc. Today wasn't different. As i was arriving at school today, at the round about in front of the school, 3 year 12 boys had set up a table with 2 seats . The table had a white table cloth and 2 of the boys sat at the table while one was the waiter. There was a 5-pronged candle stick in the middle of the table and the table was set as if in a fancy resturaunt.
The year 12s also set up a bunch of garden gnomes all over the school like on top of the walk ways and on top of the canteen and ledges around the blocks. Unfortunatley a group of mentally challenged people, the "lads" who are actually a bunch of idiots who think they're "fully hardcore bro" took it upon themselves to steal and then smash these gnomes for no particular reason. How does smashing a ceramic gnome prove that there cool or tough???

Anyways thats my little rant
Rob

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

The Song Before It Is Sung : a novel - Justin Cartwright - ISBN: 9781596912687

In July 1944, a serious attempt was made on Adolf Hitler's life. That event acts as the basis for a fictionalized depiction of one man's participation in the conspiracy, Axel von Gottberg, a Prussian count. The group members who attempted to take the Fuhrer's life were tried and executed in a horrible fashion. Axel had been educated at Oxford in the 1930s and there became the close friend of Elya Mendel, an English Jew who eventually became a distinguished professor. However, a letter Axel writes drives a wedge between the two men and they do not see each other again after the war begins. In the present day, Mendel leaves his collection of letters from Axel to a student, Conrad Senior, whose charge is to organize the papers. Conrad then embarks on finding out what happened to Axel and to explain the rift between the two men.

The World According to Bertie - Alexander McCall-Smith ; illustrated by Iain McIntosh - ISBN: 9781846970177

For those of you who don't know, which began with 44 Scotland Street, the series is about the people who live and work in a tenement building in the Edinburgh New Town. It was originally begun as installments in The Scotsman.
The Bertie of the title is a precocious 6 year old with a very pushy mother who steers Bertie away from playing with other little boys and fills his time with Italian lessons, yoga, music and psychotherapy.
Other characters include Angus the artist and his dog, Cyril who in this book is under threat of being put to sleep for biting someone; Domenica the anthropologist, just back from studying pirates in the Malacca Straits (they turned out to be pirating videos, not ships); Pat the student who works in Matthew's art gallery - does she love Matthew or not?; Big Lou who runs a coffee shop in the basement and is rubbish at choosing men - the latest one is a modern day Jacobite.
This is the fourth book in the 44 Scotland Street series, nice easy reading you can dip in and out of because it's short stories and I love it because it takes me back to a city I love and was very happy in.
44 Scotland Street series :

The Two of Us - Sheila Hancock - ISBN: 978-0747590132

This is a dual biography - of actors Sheila Hancock and John Thaw.
Sheila was 9 years older than John and the book starts with her early life, then moves to John Thaw's early life and so on through drama school, marriages for both of them - ending in divorce for John and in the death of her first husband for Sheila.
Interspersed with the past are excerpts from Sheila's diary, starting a while before John is diagnosed with throat cancer, through his treatment, decline and death.
This is a beautiful love story with a sad, sad ending. Lots of tears as I read it - good job the family was out so I could really enjoy myself.

Books I have read

I've decided to make entries about books I read as I finish them. Some I choose to read because I've read a review, others take my fancy as they come across my desk as I catalogue and others are required reading for one or other of my book groups.
I'll start with a few I read just last week.

Next week - school holidays

Friday is the last day of term 3 for our kids then they have 2 weeks holidays.
I am away at a conference in Canberra from Wednesday 3rd to Saturday 6th October. Good timing!! Ishbel will be at Tanderra all that first week and the boys will no doubt be XBoxing themselves silly. We are trying to encourage them to find gainful employment. Unfortunately, neither my workplace nor Ian's have work they can do. Robbie has applied for a job in a pizza place in Springwood - his favourite takeaway!
I am taking Monday to Wednesday off during the second week so we'll try and do something nice. There is an exhibition of Princess Diana's clothing on at the Powerhouse Museum in town but it might be quite expensive . . . and I'm sure only Ishbel would have any interest at all.

Last weekend

Got through Ishbel's heavy social calendar!!! She had a school disco on Thursday evening and a Tanderra one on Friday evening. Went in to the school one telling me that one of the boys in her year had not danced last time and what a waste of time that was . . . came home telling me she'd been too busy watching the video of the music to dance. Saw no problem with that!
On Saturday evening she was at her friend Jessie's for burgers and a movie. The parents were going to drop her off between 9 and 9:30pm. Ian and the boys were out at the movies in Penrith to see the latest Bourne movie and I'd settled down to cry over Sheila Hancock's biography of her and John Thaw, The Two of Us with a nice glass of red. At about 8pm I got the call to come and collect her; she'd had a fall, banged her nose and wanted to come home. When I arrived she was sitting with an ice pack to her nose, very subdued. Wouldn't say thank you to Lisa. Howled loudly as soon as we got out the door! Nose and girl fully recovered.
On Sunday it was the soccer team picnic. We went down to Euroka Clearing at the National Park at Glenbrook. It was a beautiful afternoon and we had a picnic and games in the sun. Not far away a HUGE kangaroo was lurking in the bushes. We took some of the kids for a walk down to the river. It's a fairly flat walk until you reach sight of the river bank it is a pretty shear walk down the cliff to the river bank. Luckily Elki fell a little way down the hill and, although her cut was miniscule, she carried on like she'd broken her ankle so Ian and I offered to walk her back to her Mum and Dad so we got out of the really steep bit!

Monday, September 17, 2007

Robbie's a star

On Sunday some of the kids from Robbie's Year 9 drama class took part in the second annual One Acts in the Mountains, a drama competition where solo or groups of actors can perform short pieces and be judged.
Rob and two of his mates made up their own little play - "Birthday Shopping Men's style". It was a play without words. Rob played the shopkeepers who served an accident-prone father and son combo. They were pretty funny.
At the end of all the presentations the adjudicator gave them all feedback. He loved the boys piece, loved that they had done mime.
The competition had gone all weekend; Friday night, Saturday and Sunday. On Sunday afternoon the winners were announced and Robbie was awarded Best Junior Supporting Actor - Yay!!!
Here's his trophy.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Everyone has a social life but me . . .

Ian is off on a Joey Scout training course all weekend.
Robbie is spending today and tonight at Leigh's house.
Jamie is going to a birthday party. It's fancy dress and the kids have to dress up as someone with their own initials. James is going as Jesus in Ian's dressing gown and carrying the Bible Granny and Grampa Cowan gave me when I started at Burnbraes.
Ishbel has her little friend, Zanny, over for a play.
I just get to be chauffeuse!

Soccer Gala Day

So that's the end of Ishbel's soccer career.

It was the gala day today where the team had two 15 minute games to play then had a presentation.


















Here is the team : Ben, Zanny (Alexandria), Elki, Oscar, Ishbel, Angus, Lily and Xander.


They lost their first game - by quite a lot - the other side were helped first by Ben and then by Ishbel scoring in our goal.

All the kids got a trophy.
The girls were very impressed because their trophies had people on with long hair and "bosoms".
This is Ishbel's trophy.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Ishbel's woes

Meanwhile Ishbel perked up.
She seems to have a bit of a troubled relationship with Elki and Lily, a pair of twins she's pally with. Elki is in her class, while Lily is in the class across the corridor. Ishbel and Lily often end up at odds - Lily is a real tomboy and Ishbel is really girly and they just don't get each other. Ishbel was saying that Lily gets cross when she plays with Elki, probably jealous. She also said when she and Elki fall out, Elki often goes and tells her big brother, Eden, and he intimidates Ishbel.
When I dropped Ishbel off on Monday I told her teacher Ishbel was a bit fragile and could she call me later. She did and we had a reassuring chat. She'd spoken to Ishbel and seemed to understand better than I had from Ishbel's tearful tale what was going on and said she'd have a word with Eden and also see if she could promote some other friendships.
This morning (wednesday) when I dropped her off Ishbel was greeted by two girls, Jessie and Renee, and they went into a group hug.
It's week 9 of the term too - I think they all get very tired as the terms go on.

A crisis . . . but it looks like I'll live

It was a terrible start to the week. I have been experiencing a cough and the black and bleak thought that I was getting sick again lurked in my head. A couple of weeks ago I'd also woken up hot and sweaty three nights out of five and I started to worry.
I was kind of doing ok but on Monday morning Ishbel was also having a little crisis, suddenly bursting out crying over friendship woes as we walked Bella around the block. As I handed her over to her teacher with a request for Mrs Brawn to ring me when she could, I fell apart and the tears started to fall.
I'd seen my GP on Friday and she'd given me a form to get a blood test if I thought I needed it. When I went to the pathology place in Springwood on the way to the office there was a queue out the door and I abandoned that course of action.
By the time I reached my office, much to Gillian's consternation, I was bawling and very, very scared. Luckily, I managed to make an appointment to see my GP that morning. She made me go and get the blood test done, assuring me that it was more likely to be a cough due to a virus than the return of my disease.
The ladies in the pathology office in Blaxland were both ladies I knew; Betty who used to teach Ishbel swimming and another lady (a Scot) who used to work in a shoe shop in Springwood and remembered that I had wee twin boys. Not so wee now I told her. She was very very kind as I dissolved in tears again.
On Tuesday morning Sue (my GP) rang me early to let me know that the blood test results had come back and all was well. She said the whatever it is that they measure lymph function with had been 65 when I was diagnosed with the Hodgkins 3 years ago - now it is 0.1. Sue said, in fact, she'd not seen it so low. "Oh no, what's wrong with me!!!!!" I asked. What a relief!

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Heidi now a firefighter - official

I was at the Valley Heights meeting last night and was delighted to be allowed to get full membership following my passsing the BF assessment, two months short of the usual 6 months probationary period.
I have also been 'volunteered' to attend a hazard reduction at Winmalee this Friday. They like to get newbies doing that kind of stuff because you get fire experience without it being in the heat of an out of control fire (that’s the plan anyhow). Unfortunately, it has been raining on and off all day and I think the forecast is for more rain so the HR probably go ahead. However, it has meant we hurry our PPE along. I was on the phone to Firecom in Katoomba today organising things and the library courier, Rita, will pick it up for us tomorrow.

We passed our BF Assessment


Jamie, Heidi, Karen and Dan had our Rural Fire Service Basic Firefighter assessment on Saturday 1st September. Jamie and I went up to Lawson in the Valley Heights truck with Steve and another new member, Geoff. We stayed as a team with the addition of Trent who we knew reasonably well from the training days we'd had.

We were taken to the old Lawson golf course where a couple of scenarios had been set up as well as tables where we had to do a multiple choice exam. We did our exam first up then had to put out a couple of small fires in oil drums - but not before we'd dragged the hoses under a couple of barriers and round a tree. The next scenario was a larger fire. No obstacles this time - except perhaps having Heidi as the pump operator!

For our last scenario we were taken to an old shed and had to assess the area for hazards then pretend there was a massive fire coming in the next four minutes.

As we were leaving, Steve drove us into an area of tussocky grass and got us bogged. Luckily there was still another truck on the golf course and they had us pulled out in no time at all - not before a couple of kids on the Linden truck had taken photos on their mobile phones though!

Back at the Lawson shed we got the results of our multiple choice tests. We had to get at least 14 out of 20 questions right - Jamie and I both got 18/20. Yippee!