WRITING GALLERY - APRIL 2024
This month we were playing around with the use of cliches in our writing.
Most of us focused on the idea of coming to Yeppoon.
This month we were playing around with the use of cliches in our writing.
Most of us focused on the idea of coming to Yeppoon.
Yeppoon 1980, was a sleepy coastal village with excellent schools and an ocean perfect for sailing. Our answer, after leaving tropical islands where we brought up our family to an idyllic life of swimming, snorkelling, diving, and sailing.
However, after 20 years with our family, now educated and moving away for further study and travel, the lure of the tropics called, and we moved to the rainforest in tropical far north Queensland.
2020
We aged, some of the children had returned to bring up their families and now with grandchildren settled in Yeppoon too, we made the sensible decision to return.
Twenty years later, Yeppoon was a new world. Traffic lights, boguns driving new 4 wheel drives, and tradies with new utes, all constantly exceeding the traffic speed. Coffee shops on every corner and many gyms to keep people fit.
A rather inappropriate new glass architectural wonder replacing the old town hall, alongside the old post office, now an art gallery. A new shopping centre, and now the town had no need to close down on a Wednesday afternoon for shopping in Rockhampton.
What happened to old Mrs Finlay’s emporium on James Street built in the 1950s, where one could buy everything from a length of fabric to swim wear? Little timber boxes full of unknown treasures.
A new hospital with Council Chambers now on prime beachfront land where it stood.
Bangalee beach where the odd wormer or surfer would drive up after work, now with up to 500 cars a day at weekends, many driving recklessly over the red necked plovers nests and killing all the blue soldier crabs burrowing waiting for the tide to turn.
Our favorite lovely little French restaurant that sat alone on acreage on Pacific Heights, now a family residence surrounded by suburbia. Suburbs sprawling south, north, east and west to accommodate the southern ‘sea changers’ buying houses online. Streets now barely able to keep up with the traffic.
The Iwasaki Resort we loved to visit, and their wetlands with amazing birdlife accessible to all, now no longer. We were not surprised when a bomb was planted during construction, knowing that ill will ran strong with the returned soldiers and many residents in the town. On the turning-of-the-soil day, when jumbo jets flew into our major cities carrying international guests to attend, our RSL planted their front as a graveyard and played the last post all day, while red paint depicting blood was splashed liberally over Farnborough Road. That our Premier of the Day also allowed freehold land, over 9,000 hectares, some beach front, upset the community where angst was already high. All the local Councillors of the day surprisingly won a raffle for a free holiday to Japan!
The Resort is now a broken down relic, and the hectares of land used for cattle with the wagyu meat going directly to Japan, and the Government of the day not enforcing the breaking of the original agreement for the resort to be built.
The old Sailing Club, now to be a state of the art building to accommodate the Olympic Sailing Competition. Progress they say.
But somethings don’t change. Now I sit alone on my deck to gaze over the beautiful blue Keppel Bay, with the sandy beaches of the Keppel Islands in the background and watch the sailing boats as the wind carries them along, dreaming of the years we too spent on these beautiful waters, camping on sundrenched islands with white sandy beaches.
From my earliest days as a basin of gravy,
Through a mucky stint as a dustbin lid,
Courting Barney Rubble at the light and dark
What were the chances I’d make my mark?
Short of a sheet with no bangers and mash,
Chased round the streets by a bottle and stopper,
Fronting the court and his grace once a week.
Let off with a caution, but life was bleak.
So, I bade farewell to my skin and blisters,
Packed a suitcase with my Alan Whickers.
And hailed a sherbet to St Katharine’s Docks.
Full steam ahead for the Sydney Rocks.
Sailing across the fisherman’s daughter,
A rum currant bun triggered nature’s palette.
Oh, the joy of escaping the pleasure and pain,
Never to stalk those grey streets again.
basin of gravy - baby
dustbin lid - kid
Barney Rubble - trouble
light and dark - park
Short of a sheet - on the street
bangers and mash - cash
bottle and stopper - copper
once a week beak - (magistrate)
skin and blisters - sisters
Alan Whickers knickers
sherbet (dab) - cab
fisherman’s daughter - water
currant bun - sun
pleasure and pain - rain
“Well cut off my legs and call me Shorty.” If my sister was here she might laugh but we certainly would both wander back into that deep place of shared memories. You don’t know what you’ve got ‘til its gone and I do miss my family and old friends. Those feelings of
familiarity, of home, of belonging.
But enough sentimentality! How goes the ledger thus far?
I know I wasn’t careful and, taking photos of the bush turkeys in public places, was clearly recognised as alien.
But as they say, nothing ventured nothing gained. Take the road less travelled. I didn’t want to be that skeleton on the park bench waiting for the perfect man so instead here I am with a man, in Queensland, which, being God’s own country, is beautiful one day, and perfect the next. Its very nearly the same. But what a carrot! I did not realise that God placed mosquitos quite so highly on the food chain, nor that my belief that humidity was great for the complexion was based on alternate truths. So I continue to age, to wither, at a rate though unbecoming, has not, as yet, left me totally breathless.
So I continue to walk down this merry path, stopping to smell the roses, gathering some local knowledge and alternate ways to be, but mostly feathers, pumice stones and plastic from the beach. My brief encounter with a sea turtle doomed as a flotation device left its
mark. I much prefer the eagles suspended in the sky, independent, majestic and intent. I seek consensus on whether it is safe to swim in the local beaches. I talk too long to the check-out operators. Decorating domesticity. Making new memories is exciting, even if they are only going to be available on short-term consignment.
But still a time to grow and experience new things and new people, and become adept, nay, a role model, a pillar to that truth, that the older I get the less I know.
The narrow concept of the road trip has been expanded to now include the mandatory Qld. quest, ‘hunt for a specialist’. A rite of passage. Local theatre has new expressions: the billboards line the passage to Rocky, and Pauline Hanson always has an evocative
production.
Mmmm, I did have a jumper once. And actual shoes that tied up and held my feet.
I miss that deliciousness of being held, of pot belly fires, of the warmth that can be felt in someone’s presence rather than in a persistent ambient temperature. The three second rule, previously only implemented to regulate dropped food, now signposts the time before sweat and sticky air contaminates the joy felt in another’s proximity.
Stepping out into winter and autumn always brought an element of surprise, cold air enough to remind your body you were alive. It could be argued of course that caffeine is an adequate alternative and true the inventory on that score tallies well here.
I’ll keep chalking up.
I came, I saw (in 1994).
I retired here in the sun (in 2021).
My first memory of Yeppoon is, when as a kid of about five years old, our family camped on Farnborough Beach, in a big canvas tent. I vaguely remember Nana, Mum, Dad and some aunts and uncles and cousins being with us. There seemed to be a lot of bodies lying around, in the mornings.
There must have been a storm, for I can still see Dad standing on something and stitching a tear in the roof of the tent, and things being wet.
I clearly remember being fascinated with the ice-man, who delivered large blocks of ice.
Mum had knitted me a brown cardigan which was special, to me. I recall walking along the beach which, back then, was peppered with large boulders. Eroded divots around them stayed filled with water, even when the tide had gone out. It was a fun activity of mine, to run along the beach and stamp my feet, in the water. The fun stopped when, on one occasion, I stomped into a rather large puddle and disappeared, below the surface.
Mum reacted frantically, but I could never differentiate whether this was because I might have drowned, or that I had ruined my new cardigan.
I recall that this incident resulted in my being stripped naked, and being dowsed with water from a tap that was provided, up the beach. I was horrified, when the tap parted company from its riser, and a geyser of water shot up, into the air. When someone suggested that this was all my fault, I suffered from a genuine case of the guilts. I had learnt a lesson, and I stayed away from boulders with puddles, for a long time, afterwards.
We made a few more trips to Yeppoon, from our abodes in the Callide Valley, and most of them created memories. We had relatives who lived, probably near the top of John Street. Dad negotiated the rugged road, to the top, in his 1928 Model A Ford. I have flash backs of Mum and Nana walking, but I can’t remember if this was up the hill or down … or both. I think us kids rode both ways, in style, in the back of Dad’s old flivver.
My Aunt Daisy and Uncle Col Wilson owned land on Barlow’s Hill, where they grew pineapples. Workers on the plantation were summoned to smoko and lunch breaks by Aunty, when she rang a large triangle. I remember feeling so important, when she let me have a try.
They had a mandarin tree, which was laden with ripe fruit. After a day or two of searching for the “wish quarts”, and gourmandising these luscious fruits, we all ended up with blisters on our tongues and lips and in our mouths. This put aside our wont for mandarins, and even curtailed our appetite, for pineapples. I think I found consolation in cracking Queensland nuts (macadamias) in Uncle’s vice, and sharing the kernels around.
Back in those days, access to their farm was up a fairly steep incline, off Farnborough Road. Uncle erected an appropriate sign: C. A. Wilson … Up Stinky Big Hilly, with an arrow pointing upwards!
Numerous trips to Yeppoon were made during my Grammar School, teenage and bachelor years, although it was more common to announce that we were going “to the beach”, more so than “going to Yeppoon”.
One inerasable visit was on New Years Day, 1969, when three mates and I were on the last leg of a trip, up to Far North Queensland, and we made it to the Strand Hotel, for celebrations with my sister, Colleen, brother-in-law, Nev, and anybody else who wanted to join us. Eat, drink and be merry, was the order of the day, and we really made “merry” with Leapy Lee’s hit song, “Little Arrows”. It was on the Juke Box, and we played it over and over, again. We never perfected our choir attempts on his falsetto line, “I’m falling in love again” but, by God, we gave in a good thrashing.
We introduced our babies and pets, from my first marriage, to the beach.
We owned a pedigree, black cocker spaniel, named Sammy, who spent all of his beach time chasing the seagulls. We would have been parked opposite where the Spinnaker is, and walked up to the rocks beyond the Surf Life Club, and back. Sammy would have covered three or four times that distance, totally besotted by the gulls, whether they were landed, or flying.
Exhausted, he just could not make the last fifty metres back, to the car so, my wife carried our tired-out toddler, while I lugged a totally bedraggled pooch, to the start of our journey, back to Mt Murchison, Biloela.
Along with many other graduates, both my kids celebrated Schoolies, at the beach, and on the Keppels.
My wife, Helen, part owns a family house, in Taranganba. Over the years, we have made very good use of it, as our base for accessing the many fine experiences that Yeppoon had/has to offer. Ferns Hideaway, Woppaburra Haven, Iwasaki Resort and North Keppel Island have been popular destinations, especially for our Easter Camping group which often came in large numbers of adults and young ones, from new-borns to teenagers..
Thus, there exists little wonder that, about a decade ago, Helen and I started talking about retiring to the coast, somewhere. As her daughter and three of our grandkids were living in the Taranganba house, Yeppoon became the obvious place of choice. When other family members also moved into Yeppoon, the wheels were set in motion, particularly the wheels of our vehicles, as we commuted back and forth, from Biloela, chasing that elusive house, that was going to become our home.
We found and bought one at Malumbin, before we found and bought a better one, in Tasman Crescent, Ocean View Estate.
We are absolutely thrilled with our life, in Yeppoon, and on the Capricorn Coast, and regularly count our blessings for:
Being close to the hospital and essential medical care
Having Rockhampton just 30 minutes away, for access to: air flights, specialists, major community events
Close proximity to family and grand kids.
Being able to access quality shopping, almost at our finger tips
Reconnecting and renewing friendships with expat Biloela-ites who have also resettled, on the Capricorn Coast and its hinterland.
Being made to feel welcomed, by our interest groups: U3A (cards, writers, fitness, meetings), Country Music, CARVE Mens’ Shed, Bowls Club
Amenities and destinations
Dining and entertainment
Our sea view, right out to the Keppels
The manicured gardens and footpaths, up and down the coast
Community pride
Quality of trades and workmanship – painters, cabinet makers, TV technicians, handymen, mechanics, RACQ, electricians
The greenness
The bird songs: kookaburras, butcher birds, magpies, plovers, curlews, seagulls and other water birds
The beaches and walking tracks
Access to fresh seafood
Pineapple sandwiches
The history
The sirens!
There is always plenty to do, and appreciate, in Yeppoon, and along the Capricorn Coast.
LIFE IS A BEACH!!!
Here’s hoping that perhaps clichés can help me talk through
difficult times by somehow distancing me from real emotion-
slick, run of the mill sentences describing real happenings
but making them mundane. So here goes.
My husband of 49 years seven months and ten days (but who’s counting?) dropped dead. We married ”Till death us do part”, and sadly, it did. There will be other more interesting clichés, but I don’t want to go there. My family, shocked to the core, closed ranks and we suffered in silence. For me, it was a tale of two cities, not London and Paris, but two different worlds. Him first and I really could move; foremost in my mind and yet absent in reality in every other way.
The two of us had restored the house of our dreams on God’s little acre in country Cawarral. Keeping everything together had been a piece of cake for the two of us. Come hail, come shine, everything had been hunky dory in our neck of the woods.
Suddenly, fighting for balance and with a hole in my heart I picked up the tab alone. After months of mindless walking, leaving home at the crack of dawn and returning ready to drop with exhaustion, my neighbour, a friend in need, brought me back to earth. She had mowed for me when I couldn’t care less. No rash decisions under stress, she said, take things day by day, life goes on. And it did.
Then came the steep learning curve. To this day, Cawarral has no reticulated water. I had to launch myself into the unknown world of pumps and pipes and tanks. No longer the two of us to tango (or more specifically, to mow) I bought, and borrowed and stole old ride-ons to stop the local Firies from seeing red when they took one look at my grass. Risking life and limb and terrifying hell out of myself, I became adept at climbing my four cement tanks to check water levels. Always hoping for a rainy day in more ways than one.
So, from the sublime to the ridiculous. Early on in the piece I managed to fire the wood-burning heater enough to blow the failsafe. It rained boiling water that night, not cats and dogs.
Another lesson in life, there seemed to be no end of them in sight. No gain without pain, I told myself. However as a creative artist I had lost my zest for life in my work, but I needed to be working creatively to keep my shit together!
(That cliché was kindly donated by my Grandson!)
Then came the cyclone, which really sorted the sheep from the goats. Battered, but basically unscathed, I reasessed my life.
Just keeping my head above water with two thirds garden and a third natural bush, but running on the spot achieving nothing new just keeping the status quo. Pointless, beating my head against a brick wall, coping, just. Well, there had to be a lightbulb moment eventually. I could move.
I really could move! Get rid of fifty years of accumulated stuff! Where there is a will there has to be a way. At last there was a will. In the final analysis I was on a one-way street to old age, so I needed to do it while I was still able, strike while the iron is hot. So I did.
Never again, please God. If I had known then what I know now I might have cut my throat instead, but all’s well that ends well.
Here in Yeppoon water arrives at the turn of a tap. The shops are just a stroll away. There are great walking tracks. Like- minded people get together at the drop of a hat. What on earth kept me away so long?
As I stood on the beachfront at Yeppoon, I stared at the vast expanse of water before me. How could anywhere have so much water. I thought our dam at home had a lot of water, but this was unbelievable.
“Dad, how can there be so much water. Does it really go as far as I can see?”
My dad smiled and my uncle and cousin chuckled.
“Much further than you can see, darling,” Dad said.
I sighed. “Wow, I have read about the sea in books, but I never realised it was so huge. Where does all the water come from? It can’t be from rain. Nowhere has that much. Does it come from an underground artesian basin like the water in our dams?”
Dad smiled. “It’s a mystery, darling but it has always been there. No one knows where it originally came from, certainly not rainfall.”
My cousin, Judy laughed at me and teasingly said, “Come on… you’re 10, how come you have never seen the sea before? Besides, haven’t you seen maps of the world? They show how big the oceans are.”
I put my head down to hide the blush that covered my face. We lived so far away on a cattle and sheep station outside of Barcaldine, and it was always busy. We didn’t get down to Rockhampton often and this was the first time we had visited Yeppoon. “Yeah, in geography we have maps, but I guess I never really thought about how the sea would look,” I muttered.
“Come on, let’s go for a swim,” Judy said and dashed down the stairs to the beach.
As she ran across the sand towards the water, another memory from a book I had read flashed into my mind. I moved closer to Dad. “Are there sharks here?” I asked quietly. I didn’t want any more teasing.
“You can never be sure where the blighters are, Laine, but the lifesavers’ flags are out so they must think it’s safe.”
My mother pushed my youngest brother towards me. “Go on, take your little brothers and go down. You don’t have to go too far in. You can have a paddle in the water together.”
I grimaced. Can’t I even go to the beach for the first time without having to look after my brothers? I looked at Dad imploringly.
He smiled and said, “I’ll come too. I’ll mind the boys while you join Judy.”
My brothers, Colin, 6, and Bill, 3 raced for the water. Dad and I jogged through the hot sand to keep up with them, but we didn’t have to be concerned about them going in before we got there. As soon as they reached the edge of the water they stopped. The waves were strong that day and as they rushed towards the boys’ feet they squealed and ran away from them.
I laughed and stepped into the wave. The sensation of the water washing over my feet and pulling sand from under them was a little overwhelming at first, but I stood my ground to show my brothers there was nothing to be scared about. After a few minutes, I enjoyed the feeling and wriggled my toes with pleasure. I called, “Come on, boys, it’s okay.”
Bill rushed in and grabbed my hand. He pressed up against my leg and clung on with the other hand while the waves broke over our feet.
Dad walked in and encouraged Colin to join him. Colin stood staring anxiously at the water rushing towards them, lifting his feet, and glancing at Dad for reassurance. It didn’t take long for them to get used to the sensation. Soon they were splashing around and sitting in the waves as they covered them in foam.
I stared out over the waves trying to see Judy, but the waves were quite high, and she was nowhere to be seen.
“Go on, love. Just go out a little way. Judy will be out there close by,” Dad said.
I took a deep breath to get the courage I needed to go deeper. I was a strong swimmer, so I wasn’t too worried. But we had learned to swim in our nice calm dam. This was another world.
I waded out past the first high wave and dived through the next one. As I came to the surface, something grabbed my leg. I squealed in fright and kicked frantically until it let go.
Dad heard me and came charging through the waves towards me. Terrified, I started towards him. Suddenly, Judy popped up in front of me spluttering with laughter.
“Was that you?” I demanded.
“Yes, scaredy cat,” she spluttered, hardly able to speak for laughing.
Dad arrived just as she popped up. “Judy, that wasn’t funny. You know this is Elaine’s first time in the sea. I would expect you to be trying to help her. Apologise,” he said frowning.
Still laughing, Judy said, “Sorry, Elaine. Come on, I’ll swim with you.”
Annoyed, I said, “I’ve had enough for now. I’m going back to the boys.”
Judy put her hand over her mouth to stifle her laughter and turned away. Dad and I headed back to the boys. We took them up on the sand and started building sandcastles. Judy finally came out and joined us. In control now, she sat beside me and whispered, “I am really sorry I scared you.”
Sure! I thought but smiled at her. Then she looked at what we had built and said, “That’s great, but I think we need some shells to decorate it. Come on.”
We followed her up to the tide line and collected shells as Dad waved and wandered up to where Mum and Aunty Nellie were laying out a picnic lunch at one of the tables. Soon we were called to lunch.
As we ate, I stared out at the sea and fell in love. It was many years before I was to see it again, but I have never lived far from it since then.
Of all the places in this beautiful country why pick Yeppoon? Let me start at the beginning, a very good place to start.
Whilst 35 acres was great when we were much younger, it started to get a bit hard as our bodies, not our minds, started to age. It became very hard to chase the lambs to mark them, keep up with the wood for the very hungry fires, the slow combustion cooker in the kitchen and the fire in the lounge which was needed when the overnight temperatures in winter often dropped to below freezing. The weeds grew and the gum trees in the home paddock dropped bark and leaves which accumulated and needed to be raked up and burnt ready for the bushfire season. So we decided to sell and move to somewhere which needed a little less maintenance.
We had a very spacious home with four bedrooms and a study along with a separate dining room, kitchen family room and a huge lounge. We filled it to overflowing with possessions. We loved it but with the children having left the nest, and scattered to three of the four winds, the two of us rattled around in it.
We decided to put our home on the market thinking it would take quite a while to sell. It didn’t. It sold the first weekend it was open for inspection. Now the rush was on. So much to do and so little time to do it. With no idea of where we should go, we started to sort through all our possessions, well not only ours but also lots of things that the children had left for storage when two of them decided that overseas was the place for them.
We looked at places not too far away but nothing seemed right. Melbourne? We had a son there but houses were very expensive and did we really want to go to a huge city? No we didn’t.
Remembering a lovely holiday in Yeppoon in 2021, we thought we’d look at places for sale there. QUEENSLAND said the nay sayers? We were told “people don’t last up there for more than two years. You’ll soon be back in Victoria”. Another comment was “just rent for a while and find out if that is what you really want because you’ll hate it”. Well they were wrong, weren’t they?
At first we thought of buying land and building but where would we stay for the duration? Caravan Parks didn’t seem to want to take long term residents and we were sure it would have taken a new building quite a few months from go to woah.
Then we started to look at houses for sale. The prices were o.k. but too often there were a lot of stairs involved leading to lovely sea views and whilst stairs might be great for younger legs, and sea views great for any age, we knew these types of dwellings weren’t for us; particularly as Richard would not have been able to manage stairs on a daily basis.
Then we saw what we thought was almost perfect and rang the agent to put in an offer. He told us that it was going to be open for inspection the very next Saturday and he wasn’t accepting offers prior to this inspection. Really!
The long and short of it was that we did put in an offer on the day, probably over what we should have, but we did want this house. It turned out that nobody else did so the house was ours, subject to building and pest inspection.
We knew we had to downsize and so began a frantic culling of things. Nowhere for books in the new house so off to the op-shop went huge numbers of books, I think it was about 20 boxes. Other things so lovingly collected over the years had to go too. Winter clothes, well we wouldn’t need them in Queensland would we! That was a mistake.
The moving van came and “off went the cart wif me ‘ome packed in it”, we spent the next couple of days cleaning windows, cupboards, bathrooms, carpets and floors. I just wish the people that we bought from had done the same. Cockroaches ran amok and the bathrooms were disgusting.
Never mind, we got there in the end and love being here. What a fantastic place to spend our later years.
I sat on a beach on North Keppel Island watching the waves gently rolling in and lapping at the beach as if offering a lover’s kiss. It was an idyllic moment. The sun warmed my soul, and the mild breeze kept me cool. The city of Yeppoon was visible across the bay.
I had flown up from Adelaide to take part in the annual writers’ conference held on the island. The other course participants were banana-bender friendly and welcoming to a Mexican from down south. The course sessions were interesting, and I was having the time of my life. Writing was my bread and butter, my reason for being.
I make the decision right then that I would retire in Yeppoon. This became my mental mantra…’Retire in Yeppoon, Retire in Yeppoon…’ How I would achieve that dream was a complete mystery, but I was sure the Celtic Fates that guided my life had heard and would find a way to make it happen.
I left that decision to my Fates who hadn’t disappointed me in the past and my mind drifted away with the clouds as I contemplated my writing history.
* * *
I was born in the land of the croweaters.
‘Why are we called croweaters?’ I asked my Grandpa as I sat on his lap.
He stroked his beard and let his gaze wander around his farm in the Adelaide Hills.
‘Well, boy, it’s like this,’ he began slowly as he cut another chew off his tobacco plug. ‘In the early days people in our state often were so hungry, they would catch crows to eat. They plucked them and put them in a pot with some water and some stones. When the meal was cooked, they threw away the crows and ate the stones.’
‘Why did they do that?’ I asked in surprise.
‘The crows were too tough to chew. That was where the saying “Stone the Crows” comes from.’
‘Did you ever do that?’ I asked.
‘No. I ate underground mutton.’
‘What’s that?’ I queried. ‘Sheep that hide in holes?’
He laughed and replied, ‘Rabbits.’
My love of words and their varied meanings and interplays was born that day.
When I was in Grade 3 at that country school, I wrote an imaginative story about rabbits and the tricks they got up to. The Headmaster was delighted and read my story to the whole school.
‘This is how I want you all to write,’ he announced to the other students.
I hugged myself with pride and knew then that my future as an author was written in stone.
In later life as a teacher, I wrote stories for the children in my classes.
As a University Lecturer in computing, I wrote and published computing texts for primary and secondary students.
As a Technical Writer I wrote many user manuals and training courses for staff in large businesses.
By sheer luck, or was it my Fates intruding? I won a technical writing post with Ergon Energy in Rockhampton in their control room.
Packing up a home was the price I had to pay for letting my Fates make decisions for me. I was as busy as a one-armed wallpaper hanger. So much to do!
Once settled in Yeppoon, I began my job at Ergon. I enjoyed it and set to work designing training courses for the controllers on topics such as ‘SCADA’, ‘Switching’ and ‘Load Management’.
One day I discovered that Yeppoon was home to the Capricorn Writers Group. All my Christmases had come at once! I immediately joined that group and watched it grow. In time we produced several anthologies that were printed and sold, a great achievement for a local group. One of these is still still available for purchase in the local Paint Pot Gallery.
Not once in those far off days, did I imagine I would later have the good luck to find a most enjoyable and challenging U3A Writing group. When I found it, I was happy as a pig in mud.
Fair dinkum, I had come to Yeppoon for the writing, and it was intent on keeping me here. I’d be up a gum tree without it.
I moved to Yeppoon in 2012, to be re-united with my wife, who had moved here for work in 2006. For the first few years it’s quite a novelty to jump in the car and drive 1500km; or hop on two planes to fly from Sydney to Brisbane and on to Rockhampton, to be re-united with your loved one. You eventually realise it’s much more convenient and enjoyable to wake up each morning and find them there.
I told my friends we had a house that overlooked the sea, and some said: ‘You’ll soon get bored of the view and just take it for granted.” They would probably get bored if I sat them down and showed them the myriad photographs I have of sunrises over the islands, the abundant wildlife photos taken in the native garden I created on the slope below our house, or the stunning photos taken of sunsets on the western side of the house. I even have a few shots of whales breaching in the bay. Six years ago I joined Landcare, and now I get to work on dunes sites on some of our amazing beaches; or in parks and reserves around our lovely town. The people are friendly, and the climate is mostly very nice. If it gets to hot at home, we can usually open all the windows to let the cooling sea breeze through; if it get to cool I can always slip on a big woolly jumper to go with my shorts and thongs.
We get scores of honeyeaters coming to feed on our native plants; a pair of Sunbirds who built a nest on a piece of string suspended from the patio roof outside our bedroom. They come to raise chicks every summer. We have large Sand Goannas that have a nest beneath our drive, where the babies come out to explore the world when they are big enough to be curious, and patiently pose for me when I’m taking their photos. The other day I even saw an Eastern Brown Snake that was moving slowly through our garden as I hung out washing. He stopped obligingly for a few moments as I took his photo with my ever-present camera, and then continued to pass through to the back yard where he disappeared down the slope.
Throughout my life I’ve often ended up in places I never thought I’d visit, but I might just hang around in this one.