Miscellaneous, incl. Rashmi’s wedding

We recently went to Rashmi’s wedding.  Rashmi is Andrew’s oldest friend apart from Nick.  She joined Andrew at St Paul’s Grammar school at about age 16/15 respectively and they have gone through the IB exams together, medical entrance exams, medical school and being interns and residents together.  Their academic rivalry was probably why both achieved 45s in the IB (the top mark) and both were well into the top percentile of the application to UNSW Medicine.

An old joke has been that whoever married Rashmi got Andrew as part of the contract …

This was (another) spectacular Indian Wedding, and most of the guests wore suitable clothing.  Here is a picture of Andrew and his friends at the wedding.  What a truly. multicultural event!  Backgrounds are Indian, Chinese, European, Phillipines, but all are Australian.

 

I’ve started to build another railway engine.  This time in Gauge 3 (the same size as my Dyak live steam locomotive) and so twice the size of my previous builds in Scale Seven.  This will be very different – battery powered and radio-controlled.  Gauge three is the scale of the wagons which I have built (see the Baddesley wagons blog and other previous entries) and this is for a long-awaited garden railway in Glenbrook.

I’m having to learn new skills, including silver soldering.  The frames are steel and the silver solder is much stronger than “soft solder”.  THe operator usually has to use a (small) blowtorch as the source of heat

So Far, So Good.  There’s a 20c coin (about the size on an old penny) to give an idea of size – this 0-6-0 tank engine will be over 40cm long.  The scorch marks on the wood are because the advice is to use a “jig” of wood constructed to be at exact right angles to clamp the frames and footplate to before blow-torching them up to temperature.

 

 

 

I’ve also been exploring the eastern end of the old Glenbrook Tunnel again as the local council prepare it for use as a cycleway!  They have done a lot of clearing up, as you can see here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finally, this is a view of a pair of kookaburras in Euroka Clearing when we walked down there recently.

The are wonderful birds.

 

Servicing our wooden clock

As some may remember, we have a clock largely made from native wood.  Clearly it is not all wood, having glass, steel wire and brass for the mechanism parts.  I have to say that it’s not the easiest clock to read from a distance, but then it’s not so much a clock as a moving piece of artwork!  It was made for us some years ago by a master clockmaker near Melbourne, Will Matthysen.

Over the last few months it had become unreliable, stopping sometimes, although the pendulum mechanism meant that when going, it kept reasonable time.

So, on one of his trips to NSW, Will came to our house and services our clock. 

Fundamentally what that meant was to take the clock apart, clean all the moving parts of the dried-out lubrication and accumulated grime, then reassemble the mechanism.

Fascinating to watch.  The face, hands and mechanism can be removed from the case (in fact this could be done with the case still on the wall).

 

 

It is all then taken apart.  All the spindles run in tiny ball races, which have to be removed and cleaned (in “shellite”, whatever that is).

 

 

 

Then it is all reassembled.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It now runs beautifully of course.

(click for larger view)

 

The Library

I have always wanted to live in a house which has a library. Perhaps it is the love of books, perhaps it is the size of house that can accommodate a library. Perhaps it is simply that I love reading.

Anyway, our new house has a library. I have designed shelves to run along one entire wall, as seems appropriate. Unlike previous times when I have made shelves, this time I did not spend days just cutting wood to the correct length – instead we bought the wood, sent it to a machine shop, and then brought the wood here. It has been beautifully cut to length, and the grooves (rebates) have been cut to size and depth, exactly

The design goes right back to one made for my parents when they first had their own house. A friend of theirs (known to us as “Uncle Ted”) was a highly-skilful woodwork craftsman. I think he taught woodwork at a school, and amongst other things he had made my parents Dad a truly wonderful coffee table out of English oak. He made the shelves also out of oak, with an elegant design of uprights with rebated meticulously cut to fit the shelves themselves, and strips down the front of each upright to mask the rebates. When I came to make the shelves for my office in 33 Blackbutt Circle I tried to copy this construction method exactly. They have now been re-erected at 47 Park Street, half of the shelves being in the room above the garage here, which I am now designating “The Library”.

On the opposite wall I have designed a 7-metre long set of shelves in one-metre lengths, four shelves high. A major undertaking, which was made possible with the help of a friend, who found the Tasmanian Oak with which to make the shelves, an helped me to arrange for all the wood to be machined to size, and with all the rebates and cut-outs made exactly to specification.

Nick, Andrew and I finished erecting this set of shelves last weekend.

I am very proud of what we have done.

The shelves are self-supporting. Partly, I am sure, due to being cut precisely in the machine-shop, the whole construction sits directly on the floor of the Library, and does not need to be fixed to the wall behind. The 3-mtre and 4-metre top pieces are screwed in place, but otherwise the shelves and uprights simply hold each other in place.

I am now starting to put the books into the categories. Alphabetically arranged of course, fiction and non-fiction sections, and even a “Young Adults” section (Andrew’s and Nick’s books).

Cockatoos and other less controversial birdlife.

In our move from Mount Riverview I was afraid that birdlife would be less of a feature (and amusement – see previous entries about the lyrebird and Sue). I needn’t have worried.

At 33BBC the major avian annoyance (as far as Sue was concerned) was the Lyrebird. We have not been visited by a lyrebird since the move, but fortunately (or not) the Sulphur-crested Cockatoos have been able to fill the gap. I have posted pictures of these birds before. They gather in flocks of many birds and are notorious (in Australia) for ripping wood apart on verandahs, and doing all sorts of other mischievous things. Sue didn’t like them at 33 BBC because they would wantonly rip the flowers off orchids if they were not supplied with food, and when I supplied the food I was “just encouraging them”. Sometimes you cannot win ….

Australian King Parrot having lunch



Cockatoo gathering ammunition

Anyway, when we first moved to 47 Park Street all seemed well. Sure the Australian King Parrots ate our tomatoes, but they are beautiful birds and the tomatoes were tempting.

Then the “Liquid Amber” tree over our from driveway started producing seeds. These seeds are about 3-4cm in diameter and covered in sharp spikes. Nevertheless they are clearly irresistible to a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo. So the cockatoos congregate in the late afternoon and proceed to drop a few seeds on the driveway, just as provocation, in advance of Sue arriving home. When she does arrive, they start to throw the seeds at her (I am reliably informed), with malice clearly aforethought.

It is difficult to know what to do: express scepticism, sympathise, express doubts as to the cockatoos motivation, or buy a shotgun. The Liquid Amber tree has been threatened with cutbacks worthy of Margaret Thatcher, but it grows on our neighbours land, so that it difficult. I offered to buy a catapult to fire the seeds back at the cockatoos, but Sue seemed to think that was more fun for me than an effective deterrent. Fortunately there can only be a limited supply of the seeds, so this problem should have a limited lifespan.

Bowerbird eating tomato

I think the King Parrots must have a different Karma, or something, because although they eat the tomatoes, this is regarded as an acceptable price to pay for their providing entertainment. Earlier in the year the bowerbird was given tacit permission to eat the tomato crop also.

We have also been visited by Koels. I have to admit that even though liking Koel(s) is not trendy in these days of climate change, they are rather beautiful birds – like blackbirds on steroids (they are about the size of a pigeon). Koel-black but with a red ring around their eye. In edition to all this we have the usual common birds: Australian Mynas, Rainbow Lorikeets (rats on wings, in my opinion), crimson rosellas, feral blackbirds, bower birds, etc. So it’s not too bad, really.

The Glenbrook House 27 – Finale

This should be the last one in the saga of building the new house, because it is finished and we have moved in.  It is the end of 2018, so this is a good reason also.  We started the design part in December 2015 (having bought the previous house here back in 2010!), demolished the old house in November and December of 2016, and have been building ever since.  We still don’t have a proper telephone connection, we haven’t “settled” the sale of our house in Mount Riverview quite yet, but all else is pretty well done.

Christmas lights 2018

 

We have just had our first Christmas in Glenbrook.

Pool Christmas lights copy

 

 

Here are a couple of pictures of our Christmas lights.

 

It has been a beautiful Christmas season here in NSW, and a good time to portray the new house at its best:

47 PSt front Boxing Day copy

47PSt back Boxing Day copy

 

Pool and garden Boxing Day copy  We appreciate how lucky we are.

The Glenbrook House 26 – Birdlife

The new house is a bit like living in an English country village – the sandstone, currently the long(isn) evenings spent sitting outside, even blackbirds singing in the background (feral imports, of course).  It is really lovely at the moment, the temperatures are not too hot and the days relatively long of course here in the Southern Hemisphere.

The bower bird eating our tomatos 2 small

 

One thing the English Countryside doesn’t have is bower birds.

 

There are lots of other birds – Rosellas, King Parrots, Rainbow Lorikeets, etc, but the bower birds have been very amusing: this one is seen on our tomato plant.

The bower bird eating our tomatos 1 small

 

They must have developed a taste for the exotic – after all, tomatoes are not a natural food for bower birds.

 

 

The bower bird eating our tomatos 3 small

 

This is a young one or a female – the males are a beautiful satin black.

I had been a little concerned that I would miss the birdlife from our old house, but the new are is just as well provided with birds for us to look at.

Glenbrook House 25 – Moving In!

At last the time has come that we can move in.  By one way of looking at it, this is after a six-month delay: it has taken us that long to sell the house at 33 Blackbutt Circle.  However, by holding on, even in a market said to be going down, we have settled for a price only a little less than we asked.  $1.27M as you asked.

We had to leave all, or nearly all, the furniture in 33BBC in order to make it easier to sell, which in turn meant that we couldn’t move into 47 Park Street (well, we don’t have two sets of furniture).

Moving out of 33BBC 5 smallSo, when we eventually had the OK to move, it was a major exercise.  It was odd to see our home for more than 20 years become empty of furniture.

 

 

Moving out of 33BBC 7 small

 

 

Bedrooms with no beds.

 

 

Moving out of 33BBC 10 small

 

Our main bedroom with no furniture.

 

 

 

47 Park Street First Day 4 small

 

It was all a little sad, really.  Until, that is, we set foot in the new house.

 

 

 

Then it was wonderful.  The first day made us realise what a good decision it was, to move.  We sat under out covered balcony roof and could easily have been in a Cotswold village in England, complete with blackbirds chirping, the (relatively) long evening, and the perfect temperature (it is still very early summer here in NSW).  Yet we still have all the benefits of living in Australia (see the special section in The Economist from last week).

47 Park Street First Day 1 small

We even have a peacock in the back garden, courtesy of the builder, who came to visit on Saturday, bringing us a present.

Glenbrook is a lovely village, quiet but well-supplied with services such as doctors, a pharmacy, a (very small) supermarket, and several places to eat out.

We aim to grow old here.

Glenbrook House 24 – Gardens (2) – and other things

It has been a while since I updated our ‘blog.  Remiss of me, I accept.

Acer japonicum Aconitifolium 1Especially as the house is coming on well, with the garden becoming steadily more beautiful.

Acer japonicum Aconitifolium 2

 

 

 

 

 

This is our Acer Japonicum Acantifolium tree, which we’ve put in the front corner of our garden.  The predecessor to this tree featured in “Landscaping (2)” blog, when it broke off.  This is the replacement tree.  It has blossomed and started to produce leaves – vivid green at the moment, with beautiful little dangling flowers.  It will change colours through spring, summer and autumn, ending up with rich red coloured leaves in autumn.  The Crimson Sentry maples in the grass outside the front wall are also growing beautiful red leaves, but we will leave those pictures for the next ‘blog.

.small 47 Park St 13th October 2018 01small 47 Park St 13th October 02.

WSU Med Ball 2018Next is a picture of Nick and his good friends at the Western Sydney University Medicine Annual Ball this year.  They will all be graduating this December, so early 2019 there will be a third Dr Coulshed on the wards of a hospital in NSW.

Nick has been allocated Liverpool Hospital.  It’s altogether a little of a coincidence (only in name of course, this is a completely different “Liverpool”).  I (David) suspect that he will have a similar experience to mine when I worked in Walton Hospital in Liverpool, UK: a very busy job, in a relatively poor area of the city.  Hopefully with the great camaraderie which I experienced at Walton – this is the sort of thing which helps you get through.

AMSA drinks

Andrew, meanwhile, is doing his research year at UNSW, and seems to be doing well.  That is, when he’s not going round the country as UNSW “AMSA Rep.” – representative for his med. school at the Australian Medical Students Association.  Yes the students have their own Australia-wide society, complete with conferences, dinners, competitions, political agendae, etc.  He went to a committee meeting in Melbourne recently.  He flew down for a long weekend, which included the rewards of going out to trendy wine bars (see picture) including one called “Naked for Satan” !!!!

Unfortunately the AMSA weekend coincided with a final rehearsal for Medshow 2018, in which Andrew had a central part.  No problem.  He flew from Melbourne to Sydney for the rehearsal on the Saturday evening, then flew back to Melbourne for the rest of the committee meeting.

small Medshow 2018It was all worthwhile.  The production was a triumph (even if Andrew and we thought the Medshow last year was even better).  The dancing was superb, with amazingly good choreography, acrobatics, music.  All from a group of medical students.  The picture is of the final bows being taken.  Andrew is in the centre, in blue “scrubs”.  He played a boofy orthopaedic surgeon.  I’ll add a link to the video if one is released (sadly it wasn’t good enough quality recording last year).

Sue?  Well all our energy has been taken up with trying to sell this house, before moving into our new one.  Not easy, with the housing marking falling, trying to sell the best and most expensive house in the suburb.  Sue v lyrebird
Sue has been fighting a battle to keep the garden in good condition to have a favourable impression on the viewing parties.  Not helped by the lyrebird.  One particular lyrebird – it has an injured leg, which makes it identifiable.  This is a not very good picture of the battle in progress.  In terms of deterrence, Sue has been on the losing side.  In terms of making the garden look good, despite Fred the Lyrebird digging it up every day to look for juicy morsels, Sue has won.  I’m afraid to say David Nick and Andrew found it very small Fred the Lyrebirdentertaining, even as we helped with the Lyrebird Defences.

 

 

 

Glenbrook House 23 – Gardens (1)

Not really a spectacular entry this in terms of progress.

small 47 Park St 20th July 2018 Front Garden 2This phase, however, is in some respects more interesting on an immediate basis: seeing the grass being laid and the plants going in is really quite satisfying – it certainly makes the house become more like a home, and one which we will be pleased to live in.

Both the front and the back gardens are moving forward.small 47 Park St 20th July 2018 Back Garden

It is winter here, so not much is growing, and the grass doesn’t grow roots quickly, but so long as we keep everything watered it should live through to springtime.

At the back of the garden will be a line of citrus trees: a Tahitian Lime, a cumquat, a (-n?) Eureka Lemon, two Mandarin Oranges (Imperial and Thorny) and a Yuzu.  This last is a Chinese/Japanese citrus, part-way between a lemon and a grapefruit.  We also have a peach, a nectarine and another Eureka Lemon along the side of the garden.

small 47 Park St 20th July 2018 Yuzu tree

Yuzu

small 47 Park St 20th July 2018 Eureka Lemon tree

Eureka Lemon

small 47 Park St 20th July 2018 Imperial Mandarin tree

Imperial Mandarin

Glenbrook House 22 – Landscaping (2)

We have trees!

small 47 Park St 31st May 2018 01small 47 Park St 9th June 2018 05

There is a line of lilli-pilli trees between us and the neighbours.  There are two sentry maples (“Acer platanoides Crimson Sentry”) planted outside our front wall, and there was supposed to be a Seiryu Maple planted in the corner of our front garden ….

small 47 Park St 31st May 2018 02However, I happened to be there when Simon, the landscaper, was trying to plant it, as seen here.

A 3-metre tall tree came with a large root system (in a large bag with handles to help, and getting it into position clearly took a lot of strength and time.

 

I went to the back of the house, and heard a crack, followed by a loud exclamation along the  lines of “Oh, Bother!”.

small 47 Park St 31st May 2018 03This was the scene when I returned to see what was going on.  Simon was not happy, and I had to take the pictures surreptitiously.

Fortunately, knowing that it’s unusual for this to happen (!), Simon spotted a flaw/fault/defect in the trunk of the tree, so we get a new one free from the tree nursery.

small 47 Park St 31st May 2018 04

 

Fortunately because this is over $1,000 worth of tree!

If that sounds extravagant, our first choice had been an Acer Palmatum Bloodgood, available as a fully grown tree for >$3,000!

 

 

 

small 47 Park St 9th June 2018 02

 

This is the pool area with the paving laid, now.

 

 

small 47 Park St 9th June 2018 04

 

Here is the front of the house.