Sailing

Sailing: the fine art of getting wet and becoming ill while slowly going nowhere at great expense.

Tuesday 20 January 2015

Rain, Rain and the Vagaries of Mother Nature



On Sunday Bob and I decided to check out the old pump site on Boggy Creek below our house.  I had a quick look at the area about a week ago and thought it might be a great place for a bit of a dip on a hot afternoon.  We were presented with the idyllic sight of a babbling brook glistening through the dappled sunshine, flycatchers darting about and staghorn ferns gracefully hanging off fallen logs.  

Boggy Creek on Sunday

Staghorn fern hanging over the creek
Flycatcher
 Although the scene was delightful the cooling dip didn’t eventuate as the water was little more than ankle deep in most places.  Then Monday we had a night of torrential rain, thunder and a spectacular lightening show.  The rain bucketed down in impressive cloud bursts, at times at a rate of 8 inches/hour.   A total of 6 inches fell overnight.  The sound on the roof was deafening and we had to shout to each other to be heard. 


We woke up to a dam nearly overflowing but fortunately the newly graveled driveway withstood the deluge and the gravel stood its ground.  
 
The very full dam
The driveway still looking good
The idyllic scene of a babbling brook from Sunday turned into a muddy, but cleansing torrent.  Ironically we had commented Sunday that the creek could use a good flushing out as there were lots of fallen branches and leaf litter.

Muddy torrent
The Staghorn fern looking bedraggeled
The bridge had been underwater overnight but fortunately it recedes fairly quickly and we were not flooded in this morning.  But the creek looked quite different from a month ago.
Boggy Creek at the bridge a month ago

Boggy Creek this morning after 6 inches of rain overnight
As I am writing this Tuesday afternoon the sun is shinning but black clouds are forming and thunder rumbling.  Looks like we are in for another show.  Hope the dam holds.

Monday 19 January 2015

Sculpture in the Park



Bob finally allowed himself a bit of R&R from the ongoing house renovations.  We had a few relaxing and enjoyable hours at the Sculpture in the Park exhibit at Urunga.  What a wonderful showcase of fantastic local talent!  Around 60 pieces were exhibited on the beautiful banks of the mouth of the Kalang River.  Jazz bands played while people picnicked under the shade of giant fig trees.  

The theme for the exhibit was to use recycled materials and the artists were superb in creating beauty from junk.  The pieces ranged from whimsical Mrs Roots, fine glass and wood, molded steel, political statements to elegant simplicity.  One of the things that make this tree/sea changer area so special is the absolute surfeit of remarkably talented people who live here.

Colin's steel gate from recycled fork lift parts
Mrs Roots
First prize
Lee's elegant wood carving
Recycle metal scrap
Metal Lady with attitude
John's boat wind vanes
Wendy's wood and glass piece
Hearts and clubs for the environment

Dragonfly

Saturday 3 January 2015

Renovations and Excavations



With enough of our ‘stuff’ unpacked to live comfortably but simply, we started the renovations in earnest.  First the laundry was stripped of its very old, rough and ready cupboard and rusted sink and new put in ala Bunnings.  This DIY is our favourite store and I am quite sure it’s stock value has gone up this month with our patronage alone – in inverse proportion to our bank account.
The old laundry cupboard and bench
The new laundry
Meanwhile I started scrubbing years of grime from the bathroom and refurbishing the wood panelling. Then I started painting the bedrooms and scrubbing and polishing the wood.  I have come to the conclusion that every square centimetre of the house will have to be scrubbed, painted and polished.  I go to bed every night with my hands throbbing from the scrubbing and painting.

Bob goes to bed every night with his back aching. He has been extending the verandah roof so the boards are not exposed to the weather and then will replace the boards that have rotted from exposure to the 1600 - 2000 mm of annual rainfall we get here.  He has also been shaving and rehanging doors, cementing the broken top to the septic tank, repairing the termite damage and finishing off all the missing bits of skirting board and trim that never got done when the house was built, to name just a few of the chores.

The biggest project so far involved an excavator and bobcat spending three days clearing the excess bush around the house.  What an amazing job they did!  Massive trees were lifted out of the ground like matchsticks. The excavator driver handed his monstrous machine like a surgeon with a scalpel and suture. We got rid of 30 huge tree stumps, scores of trees too close to the house, pushed back the lantana, tidied up the dam and cleared a level spot for a storage shed.  A total transformation to the place.  No more Ankgor Wat verdant cave.  I can breathe and we have a view.
The Masters at work
The double Tallowood near the house

Some of the tree stumps dug up

Picking up trees like matchsticks
Making quick work of removing the trees
There goes the big palm
View of the house from the paddock before the clearing
After the clearing
 After the clearing we bought about 20 kg of millet grass seed to sow around.  By the time we got home from the Norco it looked like we would get some rain so we quickly sowed the seed thinking the rain would give it a great start.  As luck would have it this was not a gentle English rain but one of the fiercest tropical downpours we have ever seen.  All we could do was look at the seed and top soil running down the hill in rivulets.  Fortunately after inspecting the damage the next day we saw that quite a bit of the seed was still on the ground and a few days later a patchy green was forming.

Torrential rain just after sowing the grass seed
Patchy grass coming up a week later
Greening up
We have a list of about 30 major repairs/renovations to do between now and mid-March and so far have managed to tick off about a third of them. It is going to be a very busy few months.
A baby staghorn fern on the trunk of a bottlebrush along the driveway