The Iberian Intervention Part 1

I just found out there are no advertising billboards within 150 metres of the highways in Spain. But there are bulls – very large black ones, all of them 14 metres high. About 90 are scattered around the country. They used to advertise Osbourne’s Sherry until the advertising ban meant Osbourne had to take their logo off the bulls. But the bulls stayed and everyone who cares to know what sherry is, knows what the bulls represent. And in a country like Spain, the significance of bulls is up there with the pope. Osbourne’s 1 authorities 0.

Before getting into the road trip we need to consider Madrid, a truly magnificent city. But when we arrived, something was amiss (and amister). It took me approximately two minutes to be struck by the prevalence of crutch hugging cut away shorts and tiny, tight tank-tops. Sure, it’s summer but then I realised it’s also Gay Pride Week. There were stereotypes everywhere. And the straight girls were doing their best to compete in the skimpyness stakes.

Incidentally, and I digress (again), does Gay Pride Week only cater for the “G” in LGBTQ etc etc?

Now I’m as heterosexual as they come and I have absolutely nothing against homosexuals but opportunities to take the piss were everywhere. And I come from the Ricky Gervais School so if there is an opportunity to make a joke about anything, the default position is to do it and bugger the consequences. There is nothing quite as pathetic as a woke comedian whose alternative (to my and Ricky’s) default position is to abuse straight, white conservatives and ignore the absolute treasure trove that is the ridiculously idiotic green left (witness the current Democratic primaries in the US). If you’ll excuse my mixing my metaphors, this theme is not a minefield, it is a veritable goldmine.

In some virtue signalling quarters this would get me labelled homophobic and every other “phobic” under the sun. But I’m not the least bit scared of homosexuals which is what the word “homophobic” actually means (think arachnophobic or agoraphobic but not islamophobic, another stupid word which doesn’t mean what it purports to mean).

Anyway, the Spanish government would have been pleased to see an influx of big-spending, rainbow flag waving gays. Spaniards have this thing about electing socialists and obviously didn’t learn the hard lessons of 1936-1939 when this predilection with the left precipitated decades of fascist dictatorship under Franco. A rather extreme response to an exercise in democratic self-determination it has to be said. So instead of a vicious civil war with contributions from various scumbags from across the globe, now we have destruction of the economy via renewable energy. But this week we have seen a cocktail-led recovery.

What we most definitely haven’t seen is a hat-led recovery. It’s been stinking hot in Madrid with no cloud cover. My head would explode if I didn’t wear a hat in these conditions. So tell me why the current gay fashion of shaved head and 70’s porn star mo or beard alternative, with no hat, won’t result in an explosion of cranial melanomas in a few years that will make the AIDS epidemic look like a paper cut.

We can’t go to a new place without considering the food. Tapas has to be the best dining invention since barbecued mammoth. The CB and I sampled a few of the thousands here in Madrid. A bit of this and a bit of that interspersed with ice cold beers or lightly chilled Rioja (room temperature is for coffee and tea in this climate). The dining experience on this trip may result in a new gastronomic methodology in our household.

The Iberian Intervention (Prologue)

Well the child bride and I are sitting in one of the more depressing airports we’ve ever passed through – Manchester – waiting for our Ryanair flight to Madrid. The airport’s teeming with my fellow north-countrymen (and women – my fellow north-country people sounds silly). I say “fellow” because I was born here sometime back in a more innocent era when airports like this one weren’t full of people looking forward to their annual week of debauchery on the Costa del Sol. We’ve seen two brides and their entourages so far. We know they’re brides to be because the headdresses give them away. They’ll all be having a wild old time I’ll wager before settling into a life of wedded bliss. That’s the theory anyway.

The clusters of youngsters scattered round the bar area all seem animatedly happy and the old ones appear as miserable as the weather. To be fair, the weather was exceptional for the three days we spent here but it’s now raining – a perfect mood predictor it seems.

We’ve just had a day in Hong Kong and the aforementioned three days with Cuz1 and Cuz2 of Rheinube River Ramble fame. We gave our respective livers a thorough caning so the next few days will be relatively quiet. But back to Hong Kong. We arrived the day after a very large mob of protesters trashed the parliament so figured it would be prudent to stay on Kowloon side as I didn’t fancy a tear gas sandwich. The highlight of our Hong Kong stopover was sitting in a restaurant at the Ocean Terminal watching a wizened old man exercising with one hand against the guide rail while the other hand clutched a cigarette. Actually, that’s unfair. I love Hong Kong and just looking at that harbour (which I have previously reported is getting narrower) is always a highlight.

After Hong Kong it was Manchester then a day in Chester followed by a day in Liverpool. God knows what the Liverpudlians would do if the Beatles hadn’t originated there because their influence is everywhere. Revert back to what it was like pre-Beatles I guess – a stepping off point for Irish immigrants because the slave trade had been abolished about a century and a half before. Restaurants, buildings, streets, taxi companies and pretty much every other going concern are named after a Beatles song. The local landmarks that feature in numerous Beatles songs are now treated like the shrine at Lourdes.

The authorities have done a great job tarting the place up. Pity they can’t convince the Scousers to pick up after themselves. The amount of rubbish in some of the parks would put a Philippino rubbish dump to shame.

Chester has a city wall. We walked round it. It also has a lot of great old pubs. We went to one of them. We also had lunch at an American franchise restaurant which we wouldn’t normally do in the holiday-mode circumstances but the beer was ice cold, the food was great and the view was pleasant. And we got there at lunchtime which was rather fortuitous.

Chester also has a first century BC version of UFC. The ampitheatre’s contestant variety was somewhat more eclectic in the Roman version however.

Now it’s time to hit the cervesas.

Play It Again, Diego

Well the child bride and I are off to Europe again next week. It was to be South America this year but a family wedding in Wales in August put paid to that. Those of you who regularly read my stuff on this website will know that I occasionally digress and I’m going to here. Do you know where the term “put paid to” comes from? No, neither did I until I looked it up a minute ago. It refers to the practice of bookkeepers stamping “Paid” on accounts which had been finalised so it’s not quite as exotic as sayings like “beyond the pale” or “three sheets to the wind”. But you did learn something by coming here today.

Anyway, back to the travel thing. Yes the epic tour of South America has been postponed until next year so we can get to a wedding in a place called Mold in Wales. I don’t know if that name has some historic meaning or whether it’s just constantly damp, but I do know it’s a real place because I have a cousin who used to live there. But before we meet up with Cuz 1 and Cuz 2 (of Rheinube River Ramble fame) whose son it is who’s getting married, we’ll be tripping around Spain and Portugal (the Iberian Interlude perhaps, in keeping with the rather dorky names I have for these trips) then we’re off to Morocco which could be called the Camel Caravanserai. Carlos Santana’s fourth album was called “Caravanserai” but I’m sure he won’t mind me pinching the name as I’m sure we’re outside the statute of limitations as it relates to these things. While there and in keeping with its current trendiness, we’ll be looking for a gin joint for the CB to walk into. This sentence and the title of this piece are a little esoteric, I know, but not that esoteric if you’ve seen the Bogart movie. And Rick didn’t actually say…….. doesn’t matter.

So this post is like a prologue to our trip. I shall try to keep you posted as we swan around – there’s another one of those sayings. No wonder English is such a hard language to master. I’ve been speaking and writing it for decades and just had to look up “put paid to”.

It was going to be a bit difficult to keep up with the scribing because as I mentioned in the previous post, I was expert witnessing for a mining related trial and that process was to be ongoing while we are away. Fortunately, (or not depending on how you look at it) I was kicked off the case. I was a relative latecomer to the trial after another chap got sick but my report must have been so demoralising for the other side that they protested to the judge and he elbowed me. There were legal reasons which I won’t bore you with here. Needless to say it’s yet another example to add to my list of reasons why I believe we have a legal system and not a justice system. And I don’t have to lug a laptop around Europe with me now. Yippeee!!

Another Cruise Perhaps

Apologies for not posting for a while dear reader, but I have been rather busy. If you’ll excuse the colloquialism, I’ve had my arse hanging out. First I had to squire some overseas colleagues on mine and port visits and then I had to write a report for a court case I am expert witnessing on.

I sometimes wonder which was the harder. The first one involved extensive planning then being on the road for the best part of two weeks with flights, long drives and lots of coal dust which had to be washed away by the occasional beer. Only occasionally I have to stress because we were all alcohol tested at every site and had to draw lots to see who got drug tested at every site. The mining industry is far too serious these days. The second job involved writing a hundred words when ten would suffice in plain-speak. But we’re talking legalese. And leaving out a comma could mean the difference between a slap on the wrist and death.

The trip was quite interesting for me – 11 coal mines, four ports and seven separate meetings plus lunches and dinners spread over ten days. I say interesting because even though I’ve been in the industry for centuries I never got to visit any of these mines (apart from one) because I always worked for a competing company so the respective owners wouldn’t let me in the gate. Now I work for a steel company which buys a……I was going to say truckload of coal but while a truckload of some things, like paper clips, is a lot, for coal it’s a veritable eye-drop.  Anyway, the cost of what they (I’m on contract so strictly speaking, am not an employee) buy from mines in my state every year is measured in the billions so it was nice to be treated respectfully by former competitors. Oh and the “apart from one” mentioned above was one I worked for when it was owned by one of my former employers and the less said about them, the better. One of these days that little episode will probably find its way here but I’m still looking for an amusing angle and right now that’s like looking for sincerity at the Oscars.

My visitors were from Singapore, India and Holland. All of them whip smart and experts in their respective fields but half of them had never been to Australia before so it was like herding cats. A half kilometre walk from one meeting to another in the city would see the group strung out over a hundred metres or so because photos had to be taken and walking was more accurately described as carefree meandering. And time management…pfffft.

Notwithstanding it was a very successful trip. We didn’t lose anyone despite going into a number of very large and very deep holes – that’s the most important of all success measuring criteria – and no one got hurt. The paranoia about safety in these places is bordering on the fanatical. In fact it probably is when you consider the need for a safety induction, a long sleeved shirt, a hi-vis vest, gloves, steel capped boots and a hard hat when you don’t even get out of the vehicle. Interestingly some open cut mines don’t require you to wear a hard hat because what’s going to hit you on the head – a bird? But others do. And some don’t require the boots or the gloves. My mates in production will be horrified at my devil-may-care attitude to safety but when I worked underground (as a mine geologist, not a miner) many moons ago, no one really gave a shit. And apart from the occasional mine visit nowadays most of my post-underground time is and was spent in offices and aeroplanes. I am rather a stickler for safety when it comes to flying though.

As I’ve already mentioned, either side of the mine visits I have been writing an expert witness report for a mining related litigation and the less said about that the better – literally. Legalese is a foreign language and a very wordy foreign language. If there isn’t at least one statement of the bleeding obvious in each paragraph then you’re not trying. But it pays the bills. As a mate said recently, every time he did a job like this it was another cruise for him and his wife. Not a bad way of looking at it as I wend my way wearily into the semi-retirement sunset. As if….

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Nostalgia Trip

The CB and I lived in Tasmania, Zeehan to be precise, for three years. She taught primary school in Queenstown, Roseberry and Zeehan and I worked at the Renison tin mine and played rugby on the weekends. Tassie is a great place to visit but for us, our recent visit was a trip down memory lane also. So as we drove past Rugby Park in Hobart and I said “I played a sevens tournament there and we made the semi finals”, by the time I got to the word “tournament” I was greeted by hoots of derision emanating from my three female travel companions. The CB said she didn’t even remember. That episode was at the end of the holiday but was pretty indicative of the attitude to the rugby part of the nostalgia trip. But this is my blog so some of the memories of my glorious three year career with the West Coast Green Machine will adorn this post.

From the day we all agreed to do this trip my overwhelming desire was to have a beer at the Central Hotel in Zeehan. I have fallen off more stools in that pub than any other in the world. Okay, it was only twice (that I can remember) but the events that caused these alcohol induced plummets were indeed momentous. One was a going away piss-up for someone and I can’t remember what the other one was. I do however, remember walking into the bedroom wardrobe at home after one of these occasions. I blame the publican for locking us in after closing time.

Anyway, much to my chagrin when we got there, it was permanently closed. After a bit of research I discovered that I could have bought it for $390,000 a couple of years ago but on mentioning this to the CB, the look said it all. We would not be moving into the back room at the Central any time soon.

Zeehan The Central

The Central was our rugby clubhouse before we built our own.  Actually we sited it rather than built it. Our club president was the underground manager at the nearby Mount Lyell copper mine and he happened to find a disused building which was thrown on the back of a truck and deposited on a concrete slab next to our playing arena 30km away in Zeehan. Alas, all that remains of the clubhouse is the slab. So that nostalgia trip was stymied as well.

I was two and zero as we headed out to the golf club which, great relief, was still there, still had old mine shafts in the middle of it and still looked like you could lose your ball in the middle of the fairway after the grass was mown. Notwithstanding it is still the only course where I have played in an official competition (once) and won. I then retired undefeated. The clubhouse was still there but like many of the buildings I once frequented (including our home) it was the worst for wear.

Our old house on the corner of Gellibrand and Fowell Streets had a shed where I built my barbecue from old zinc smelter bricks and the bit of fence I erected was gone. And it was blue whereas it had started out green and was pink when we left which sounds a bit like a sad version of Edward Scissorhands’ street. It was a company house so choices were limited to what you were told you would get. At $2/week rent I didn’t care what the outside looked like.

Zeehan Our House

The CB got to stand outside the school room she taught in, right across the road from our house. The school seems to have done alright out of Julia Gillard’s Building the Education Revolution with a relatively new hall or gymnasium or whatever that no doubt cost five times what it would have cost if organised by non-politicians.

Zeehan School

We drove past the shop where I was laughed at for wearing shorts on a Sunday morning in winter, having just ducked out to get the newspaper. Then there was the shop where the CB bought me the very first Australian Penthouse with the recently defected red bikini girl, Liliana Gasinskaya on the cover (and inside minus the bikini). Across the road is the Gaiety Theatre where we played basketball when it was raining too hard for rugby training. As the old-timers used to say “if you have to play in it, you should train in it”. We were wimps.

Just outside Zeehan is a particularly treacherous piece of s-bendy road which our car took, at speed, upside down one wet Saturday night. There were no wives present just three players and one of them (me) was sitting in the back of the car nursing a broken nose from that afternoon’s activities. More accurately, as we slid down the road I was sitting on the ceiling – seatbelts weren’t compulsory back then. On this recent occasion I wanted to stop and see if we could find the carton of beer which was flung into the bushes after the car was put back on it wheels. But I was out-voted. Miraculously the car, a little Mazda 808 still went. Back then what we now call hatch-backs were called fast-back cars. We had the only fast-front car in Zeehan. More miraculously, the car stayed on the road despite its unconventional trajectory and no one was hurt.

Away from Zeehan we regularly stayed at the Penny Royal Hotel in Launceston. This was our hotel of choice when we visited for rugby games. On one particular Saturday morning there, I picked up the newspaper to find out Keith Moon had died or more correctly inflicted death upon himself, inadvertently I assume. Later that morning we (there were three players and three wives there) watched the Australian Wallabies inflict a rare but incredible defeat on the All Blacks. Incredible because Wallabies loose forward Greg Cornelsen scored four tries, a feat (against the men in black) which is yet to be equalled I believe. That afternoon our team, the northern competition premiers, played the southern competition premiers and we got towelled. It was quite a memorable day.

As we drove around the state many fond memories and some not so fond (see above re Mazda 808) came flooding back. Considering the amount of rain the west coast of Tasmania gets, “flooding” is rather appropriate. Great place to visit but wouldn’t like to live there (again). No, that’s unfair. There are many nice homely spots in Tassie. Go check it out.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 5

Last year the CB and I visited the Highlands of Scotland. The weather alternated between bleak, sunny, atrocious and average, every day. It was summer. The only difference between the Highlands and Tasmania’s south west is that while we’ve been here in the south west the weather in mid-autumn has been consistently atrocious. Now this isn’t necessarily a bad thing if you can marshal a bottle of port, a few red wines, a roaring fire and double glazing to your defence against the elements. And thus it was so. Oh, and there are no men in skirts that I could locate despite the name of the town.

Still, Strathgordon is a long way to go to sit in front of a fire. Fortunately the view through the double glazing was spectacular. The white sandy beaches of Lake Pedder and the bare mountains dusted with snow like icing sugar on grey, craggy cakes provided a perfect backdrop to the lounge chairs round the open fire. Occasionally, when the rain relented we rushed outside to snap a few photos then beat a hasty retreat back to the sanctuary of the Lake Pedder Wilderness Lodge, an excellent, welcoming and hospitable sanctuary I have to say.

It “only” rains for 270 days a year down here and for the other 95 there are bush fires. We saw the evidence. Black charred trees and pristine white snow provide quite a contrast. And now, a couple of months after the last major fire there’s a smattering of green as the tree ferns spit new fans skywards and leaves start to sprout rather incongruously from tree trunks. Fortunately the wilderness areas here are massive and the fires only impacted a small percentage before the tireless firies got things under control. Thanks guys for another job very well done.

Tassie Tango – The Brown Sign Boogie Part 4

Strahan is the only port on the west coast of Tasmania. In fact it’s the only town of any significance on the west coast because if you go west from Tasmania, the first land fall is Argentina. So the weather has quite a long run-up before assaulting poor little Tassie. So why would anyone want to live here? I guess that’s one of the reasons the harshest penal colony in Australia’s colonial history was put on Sarah Island, a few miles away from Strahan in Macquarie Harbour. Now, with its infamous history well and truly behind it, it’s a picturesque little maritime town with terrible weather.

Strahan is also something of a holiday destination. When the CB and I lived in Zeehan (about 40km from Strahan) we were surprised (initially) to learn that some of the locals went to Strahan for their holidays. Some of them hadn’t been to the eastern side of Tassie and considered the north island of Australia to be “overseas”. Salt of the earth people but somewhat insular.

One of the country’s most famous rivers – the Gordon – empties into Macquarie Harbour which incidentally is 6 times as big as Sydney Harbour but has only a 60m wide access to the ocean hence the two lighthouses which attempted, not always successfully, to guide ships into and out of the harbour. Why you would attempt that at night is mystifying, but some did and suffered the consequences.

The Gordon is famous environmentally and by extension politically. You can look it up. Suffice to say it was almost dammed (not damned) but due to political intervention, wasn’t. So a boat trip to Hell’s Gates, the entrance to the harbour, and then down the Gordon was very much on the agenda. And they were serving booze from the get-go which was 9.00am once we were underway so the incentive to do an all day (or most day) tour was irresistible.

Hell’s Gates is very much as the name suggests. Having spent all of my working life in the mining industry I am here to tell you the people on the front of our 34m catamaran, when we passed through the Gates would have been required to wear life jackets, safety harnesses and hard-hats at least and no kids would have been allowed if a mine manager rather than a tour operator was running that boat. But the boat proprietors were obviously oblivious to the risks of having their clients flung to the deck or worse still, overboard as the boat bucked and tossed like a tasered kangaroo. Notwithstanding we all had a jolly good laugh afterwards then settled back for the trip to the Gordon River.

On our Gordon River cruise we had occasion to stop in the heritage area and do a 400m boardwalk through the impenetrable rain forest. While GF2 rushed off to find a spot to have a smoke in the strictly non-smoking dripping wet rain forest, GF1 was taking pictures of everything moss and fungus to add to her extensive photographic collection of such things, the size of which would fill a full set of Encyclopaedias Brittanica. I thought she would be the only person on the planet to engage in such activity. I was wrong. There are 50 or so others with similar interests and they were all on our boat.

Macquarie Harbour is also home to countless fish farms. All I remember about the operation of these things is the fish are the size of your little finger when introduced, are left for 12-18 months then when they are five or six kilos they’re sucked up by a pipe into a boat and despatched to your plate. Sucked up by a pipe – where are the vegans swimming out to these fish farms in the freezing water and chaining themselves to the easily accessible pipe infrastructures to protest this fish sucking. Surely this would be much more effective than invading an abattoir or a nicely temperate farm. Apparently not in the fairyland they occupy.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 3

The CB and I had ever so briefly been to Stanley many (many) years ago and it obviously never registered what a charming, picturesque place it is even if, like all other Tasmanian coastal towns it is exposed to elements which would have daunted the most intrepid of explorers.

I did most of the planning for this trip (after a suggestion from GF1) and up to now it’s been a resounding success which is just as well. Can you imagine (if you are a man) being in a car for hours on end with three disgruntled females. But I hadn’t expected the response to cute little Stanley. It was positively orgasmic. The place is full of neat, immaculately presented period houses and they all seem to have views to die for. As we were leaving yesterday, GF2 demanded the car be stopped so she could get out and buy a house. And then there’s The Nut, a large rock that sticks up out of the land (50%) and the sea (the other 50%) like a miniature Ayre’s Rock.

And there’s penguins. Back along the coast a few kilometres there’s a place called Penguin but their attempt to corner the region’s penguin driven tourist economy failed when word got out that there are penguins all along the coast. Common as bums they are, but they still generate the sort of reaction generally reserved for tiny babies and puppies. So we duly went down to the sea wall / boat ramp / wharf a couple of nights ago to watch and listen as the juvenile penguins whinged and whined for their food like so many tiny babies.

The old pub in Stanley was a welcome respite after a few hours in the car and for an hour or so, we were the only ones there. “How’s the serenity” one might say if one was in an iconic Australian movie or in a quiet (when the bloody jukebox was on recess) country pub. But eventually we were joined by other tourists and perhaps the odd local.

Now we’re all of the friendly persuasion and are quite happy to converse with those of a similar bent. Unfortunately GF1 inadvertently opened a conversation with a gentleman who had ignored the two women he was with but was happy to talk at us with a relent that would have done the ever persevering Wylie Coyote proud. I tried to do a Road Runner on him to shut him up by saying I was holidaying with my three wives and this was the one time of the year they are allowed out in public, but he was unphased. Admittedly my “wives” were wearing jeans and skirts rather than freedom sacks and we were in a pub and we were drinking so my attempt at cultural intervention failed miserably. I should have said I was a Mormon.

But back to The Nut which so dominates this place. There’s a chairlift that takes you to the top which never gets more than a few feet off the ground. GF1 who doesn’t like heights, figured this was her kind of chairlift after the somewhat more challenging experience of the largest single span for a chairlift in the world over the Cataract Gorge in Launceston. During the 2km circumnavigation of the top of The Nut the clouds and rain moved in. This was more like the Tasmania we knew and loved in our three year Tasmanian sojourn many years ago.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 2

Up to last week, in my long(ish) and mostly satisfying life I estimate I had seen around four sea horses. This rather obvious deficiency was spectacularly righted when GF1 insisted we visit the sea horse farm at Beauty Point north of Launceston. Incidentally, and I digress, there was a general complaint among my female travelling companions regarding the fact that most if not all things in this part of the world are named after men. Then I pointed out that Beauty Point is in fact named after a female….cow. Hurt feelings were not assuaged I’m afraid.

Anyway I am now an expert on the reproductive ins and outs (if you’ll excuse the expression) of the seahorse. I know there are 54 species of seahorse of which 23 are in Australia. I’ve seen them in their thousands and they are exported to aquariums all over the world. I’ve even held one and let it twirl its long tail round my finger. But I still don’t know what you call a tank full of sea horses – a herd, a school, a posse, maybe a saddle of sea horses.

And who knew there were things such as hand fish which look like a miniature version of Thing from The Adams Family. They are almost extinct and of one species there are estimated to be only 70 adults left in the world, all of them in the Derwent River. When they sit on the river bed and don’t move much you’d think that would be an open invitation to predators to partake of the hand fish buffet. So it’s not surprising there aren’t many left.

Up to now the trip’s been mostly about animals (Tasmanian Devils, platypuses (platipi?), echidnas (hello Randall you cute little three legged critter), kangaroos, the aforementioned sea horses, wombats and assorted bird and snakes. Oh, and bridges – Richmond Bridge, Batman Bridge and the Hobart bridge that was hit by a barge many years ago, collapsing one of the spans. I had the t-shirt to prove it which in hindsight was a bit morbid and insensitive because there were fatalities. But we joke about everything provided there has been a respectable interval between tragedy and comedy. Why were the Japanese crying poor after the Fukushima tsunami. I saw one house with eight cars and four boats in the driveway. See what I mean.

Time to switch from animal to mineral and The Nut at Stanley.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 1

 

I could have started this travel saga by saying that I don’t know how or why I allowed myself to be talked into it and you would be none the wiser. But that would be disingenuous. I actually volunteered to embark on a 10 day holiday with three women. Admittedly one is the child bride and the other two, GF1 and GF2, are good friends who I’ve worked with and socialised with for many years so it won’t be heaven or hell but it will be a lot of fun

We’re now four days in and I haven’t had a chance to add to this because the days have been as packed as a porn stars jocks. And we’ve pretty much been left to our own devices as it’s Easter and Tasmania is closed apart from the touristy stuff. So driving has been quite leisurely and just as well because we didn’t want to be snapped by one of the four speed cameras in Hobart, the locations of which the hire car lady kindly revealed. I won’t reveal the name of the hire car company or the authorities may send Constable Dan Adams of Liawenee after her. That would give him something to do because the town he patrols has a grand total of no people apart from him. It’s that sort of public servant to public ratio which puts Tassie in the same mendicant status as Greece and California.

Politeness is a state-wide trait which makes the people a delight to interact with. We found the only French waiter who has been privileged enough to be given a working visa to wait tables in restaurants in Tasmania. His countrymen (and women presumably) would be permitted to scowl at diners in the less courteous parts of Melbourne and most of the city nosheries in Sydney, but not here because of the politeness directive. Luigi, as we christened him (Italian I know, but we’re on vacation so the normal rules don’t apply) was the Manuel (Spanish I know etc etc) of Hobart – bumbling, eager to please to the point of obsequiousness and somewhat forgetful. We ordered four entrees and four mains. Three entrees arrived together and three mains arrived together. A 75% strike rate in some activities, baseball for example, would be exceptional. When it comes to delivering meals in a high end restaurant it’s a 13 on the par 3 12th at Augusta National. But as soon as he was reminded in a very non-Fawlty Towers way, I might add, he immediately offered the missing meals free of charge. This offer was obviously accepted. That meant an extra 60 bucks for booze so were we happy – bet your life we were.

Just in case you were wondering about the brown sign reference, tourist signs are brown and GF1 was running shotgun on them. There are millions of them even in a tiny place like this so while we didn’t check them all out we did our share.