Sunday, April 03, 2022

All is quiet on the Southern Front

 

Sunset from our backyard
While things aren't so quiet in Ukraine, our family of two is leading a very calm life at Tanunda.

COVID-19 has slowed us as it has for billions of others. We haven't been on a cruise liner since early 2020; we haven't been anywhere really except for a two-day stint at Renmark that was rudely interrupted by a six-day SA state lockdown causing us to head home before it commenced.

We'd love to get away to either one or both of the SA peninsulas, however, we're busy with ANZAC Day preparations and a fund-raising Fashion Show that Christina is managing on behalf of the RSL.

Dale has been offered a second cochlear implant and has accepted, however, we don't know when it will be implanted because non-essential surgery at the Darwin Hospital has been suspended due to the C19 virus impact on hospital beds and staffing.

When he is given a date, we'll do what we did last time: drive to Alice Springs, pick up Dale, drive to Darwin and remain there while the surgery and follow-up are completed, and then reverse the trip. We'll spend some time at The Alice with Dale, Meredith and Tory before heading south again.

Post-operation, Dale isn't allowed to fly for a few weeks, so it all has to be done by driving. Additionally, he can't be expected to do it all alone, so Christina goes as his "carer" and Robin is the driver and odd-job, backup member of the team. We do get to spend some time with Dale.

We miss both of them being so far away after years living close-by and live in hope that one day they will move to South Australia. When Tory finishes his electrical apprenticeship, I'm sure he'll move somewhere, not necessarily south.

The Territory has a lot going for it at present with a lithium mine being developed, gas infrastructure, military expansion, an Albatross aircraft manufacturing factory being built, huge solar arrays to provide power for Darwin and Singapore underway, a tourist resort being built at Gove, Ammaroo ammonium nitrate fertiliser mine and processing plant, and finally, more copper and gold mining within the Barkly (Tennant Creek) region 500 km north of Alice Springs.

Robin lived at Peko Mine, a copper mine eight miles east of Tennant Creek from 1958-1965. He worked most of his school holidays with the Geopeko Exploration team exploring the region and identifying new mines, Gecko and Orlando. Now the area is being opened up again. That's great for the Territory and Australia.

If you don't mind oppressive humidity for most of the year, Darwin is the place to be as many "Mexicans" from Victoria and New South Wales are finding out as they move there in droves.

It's not all that exciting at Tanunda for we two retirees as it cools heading towards Southern Hemisphere Winter. But the sunsets are still enjoyable, the wine very drinkable, and the locals very friendly.

Life is good!

Robin and Christina

Friday, February 18, 2022

Our 49th Anniversary Lunch

Robin and Christina
Robin and Christina - 18 Feb 22
When 49 years have passed and you've lived with the one person for all of those years, it's time to have a celebratory lunch.  There's no point buying a present because both of us have everything that shines, opens, shuts, buzzes and rings. Every previous birthday, mother or father's day and, Christmas has seen to that.

There's only so much bling one can have in one lifetime. Unlike many billionaires and other over-wealthy people who can find a reason to buy a couple of airplanes, a few launches, several houses and dozens of cars, we only need one house and one car. We're simple people.

So, the only thing to do is have lunch and perhaps reminisce about all the lunches one has shared during those many years, many at much lesser venues. Think Mcdonalds!

We did that today, the day after our anniversary by heading to the Monkey Nut Cafe at Kries Wines, Lyndoch, not far from Tanunda in the Barossa Valley.

Christina chose a Drunken Chicken meal (?) and I had a Salt and Pepper Squid and a glass of delightful Kries shiraz, labelled as a "Soft Wine" on their drinks menu. Both meals had plenty of food and the time it took to get served after we ordered pleasantly surprised us.

The venue has excellent ambiance as you can see from a couple of photos below and is well set out with both inside and outside seating available.

You can arrange a wine tasting before or after a meal, or simply do a tasting without eating. Several people who attended at the same time as us obviously did a tasting and bought a few bottles of Kries wine.

The Barossa Valley has around 72 wineries, many with restaurants, so there's plenty to choose from here. We decided we'll probably do one a month just to see what's out there and then when friends visit, we'll know the best places to take them.

I rarely do any tastings, usually because I don't imbibe during the day (except on rare special occasions) and I don't drink and drive. Christina doesn't drink alcohol and is always happy to drive, but wine tasting alone during the day doesn't appeal to me, so I don't do it and I don't want to rely too much on Christina.

When daughter Meredith visited over the Christmas-New Year period, I drove and she tasted at a few different places including a gin distillery. It's always lovely to spend time with our daughter.

Occasionally, I buy a couple of bottles of red wine without tasting because I know that the quality of wine produced here is excellent. You won't get a bad drop of wine here.

The truth is, I'm more interested in the architecture, surrounding gardens, and character of the wineries than the wine. Some of the wineries are hundreds of years old constructed from stone with beautiful polished hard wood and blacksmith shaped metal fixtures such as gates and door fitments.

Wineries that have been built more recently or consist of old and new are also fascinating. Some of the architecture and landscaping is excellent as is that at Barossa Valley Estate as you can see from a few photos on their site.

Next year of course will be our 50th anniversary - half a century of happily married bliss. For our 50th, we plan to have a much larger celebration with some of our friends and hopefully our son, daughter and grandson.

Keep on keeping on.

Robin
for both of us

Tuesday, January 04, 2022

Happy New Year - 2022

In what seems like a flash, here we are in 2022. 

Much has happened in the past 22 years and sometimes it seems like only yesterday, which is probably an indicator that one's memory is still functioning reasonably well.

In December 1999 Christina and I lived in a rented house at Seacliff near Adelaide. We were taking a 12- month break from the Territory. My employer, ATSIC (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission) had granted me 12 months leave without pay and Christina had done the same with her job at the Alice Springs Hospital.

Between then and now, we: 

  1. Returned to the Territory, this time to Tennant Creek, where I had been asked to help out the office with its grants management program pending advertising of a reengineered job at Alice Springs ATSIC Office
  2. Moved back to Alice Springs where I took on a new role that involved not only training and development, but human resources consulting for three offices in the southern part of the Territory. Christina returned to the Alice Springs Hospital after working at the Tennant Creek Hospital and went back into the Midwifery Department
  3. Our grandson Tory Jet Muller arrived in November 2001 and I had to remember how to change nappies and bathe a baby again after several decades; Chris was okay, having continued doing it at work
  4. In 2004 Christina and our friend June Noble went on holiday to Dubai to meet our other friend, Alison Pyper who was completing a long stint working at a hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The idea was that they'd have a holiday and then return to Australia, which they did
  5. In early 2005 following Alison and Christina's recommendation, I applied for a job teaching at the United Arab Emirates Higher Colleges of Technology, not expecting to even get a reply
  6. In June 2005 we moved to Al Ain, United Arab Emirates where we spent a wonderful three years
  7. Returning in 2008, Christina went back to work at the Alice Springs Hospital and I decided to retire, but I wasn't psychologically prepared for it - I wasted a year
  8. I applied for a job as Head Lecturer in charge of the Prisoner Education and Training Department at the Alice Springs Correctional Centre and won it. Much to my surprise
  9. After three years at the ASCC I was 65 and decided I'd had enough. I had turned the department into a highly efficient, functional unit and thought it was time to go as the challenge had gone
  10. We travelled around Australia for two years in our caravan after we sold our house in 2016 and then moved to Tanunda, SA in January 2018.
We have now been here four years and love it. The people are friendly and many have accepted us as friends, even though we are essentially "outsiders".

Living the dream!

Robin