Monday, October 28, 2024

UP CLOSE WITH ADMIRABLE PETER BURLEIGH AND ASSORTED SEADOGS

  
Captured  here  on  Magnetic  Island , looking through a  rare  bound in volume  of  the  l969 Melbourne   magazine Broadside , edited by the late  Pete  Steedman,  is  talented  wordsmith and  illustrator, Peter   Burleigh. 

Burleigh contributed  much  to  Broadside . Later  on , after many  adventures overseas , some almost death defying with  Steedman ,  he   wrote  the  rollicking  Bulldust  Diary  for  Little  Darwin .

This illustrated  gem  was composed  as  he  drove  about  Australia  ,  listening  to  dashboard Talking  Books  tapes , including  sailing  aboard  His  Majesty’s ship Surprise in 1815, fighting  the  perfidious Bonaparte.

A great fan of  maritime  yarns  , once owning a yacht  in France,  he wrote that  Pat Mickey O’Brien  had written  20 of them (including Master & Commander) about a Captain and his friend Stephen, a surgeon-spy. Brilliant. The best books about the English Navy  I’ve never read – or  listened  to, he stated .

One of the   great  drawings   he produced  for  Little Darwin  while  engaged   in  long  running   naval  battles  in  the  Aussie outback  was  the   fabulous   one   we  rerun  below   because  of   its  sheer   brilliance.    

(Burleigh, Steedman, Napoleon .)

Sunday, October 27, 2024

INSIDE A CREATIVE , INSPIRING ISLAND

The   Magnetic  Island  Museum is  busily sending out  its  2025  calenders,  entitled Looking Inside , containing interior  views  of old houses , hotels , the wreck of  the City of  Adelaide, some advertising   and  the  Argonauts eatery  at   Horseshoe Bay - a  floating  nosh  venture   brought  up  from  Victoria  which  caught  fire . 

Meanwhile ,  a  Museum volunteer  is well  advanced  transcribing , typing up and placing in chronological order  the many   letters  of  the   former  island  resident  and  pioneer  oyster  farmer  , reef  protector,  the  late Keith  Bryson , described  as   the  hermit  of  White  Lady  Bay . 

During a  discussion  with the  Museum  president , Zanita Davies, she  told  this blog of the island's long  history  of  people  involved  in arts and  literature  . She  recalled  that  the  artist  Margaret Olley  had visited the island with   another  renowned  artist , Donald  Friend.

Olley had stated that the vibrant  colours of  the  island , especially the bougainvilleas , had  made  a   big  impression  on  her .  As a  young girl ,Olley  had  lived on a cane farm at Tully and was a boarder at Townsville's  St Anne's Church of England convent,  where  she  was  influenced by an artistic nun. 

Recently Magnetic Island  artist Steve Crowe  who , with his artist wife, Sharon, run Pandanas Art Space ,  at  Horseshoe Bay , a studio gallery offering vibrant  North Queensland  views,  won  another  Townsville  art  prize ;  earlier in  the  year he won a  Cloncurry award with a striking landscape . 

Their daughter, Nicole, a writer and communications  expert ,  has  just signed  a  contract  with a  British  publisher for  a crime  novel  set  in the tropics.  NEWS TIP FOR MEDIA : Talented  family  feature  article here and  other  interesting follow up yarns  involving  James  Cook University, Papua New  Guinea , etc., etc., etc.  

(Island, Art, Novel.)

FLIGHTY TREASURE

 After  seeing  odd   items on   the British  Antiques Roadshow  being valued at  astronomical amounts, Little Darwin  is  seriously  considering   flying  the above   highly desirable ,  rare ,  rusty  artwork   , from  Darwin , to  London  in  the  hope  that  it  will  be  declared   worth  a  king's  ransom  , in  which case it will be flogged  off  presto, the  proceeds  lodged  in  a  Swiss  bank account . 

The  unique  object  was   apparently awarded  to the winner of  a  l985  car rally  which  involved the  Darwin Aero Club and  the Darwin Press Club.

It once had  pride of place in the Darwin garden of  the late journalist , Neil Dibbs . When Neil was a reporter in London he  used to  scour  the  banks of  the Thames  with  a  metal detector  looking  for valuable  Roman  and  British  coins. 

In  the Northern  Territory , where he became a  newspaper editor, ministerial press secretary and member of  the  influential  Friday Club,  he took part in  digs , that's him on the  right,  at  the old  mining  centre of  Pine Creek,  with a  display  of  Dutch case  gin  bottles  and   chinese  jars .


(Plane , Darwin, Dibbs.) 

Saturday, October 26, 2024

CHEEKY BRISBANE BRIDGES BARE ALL

Little  Darwin  philatelic  expose' . 


Sun faded and  foxed  first day  cover at  top  for  official  opening of  Gateway Bridge , May 14, l986, followed  by  bleached  l985 view of  Story  Bridge , venue  for the weekend's nude  mass  photograph by American Spencer Tunick , which obviously distracted voters from re-electing the Sunshine State's bronzed Queensland  Labor government .

 The postal history items displayed here were found in Townsville , the  ALP  losing   three  seats  based  there  in  the  election, a bummer of a  result ,an  indication  of  severe   Barrier  Reef  coral  bleaching . 

(Bridges, Nudes,Townsville.)


Friday, October 25, 2024

CRUCIFIED KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

 Part of  a   rescrambled , memorable   account of  an  epic outback  car  safari,  by  Peter Burleigh , which  includes  his cartoon of  a  soon to  be plucked chook, apparently  contemplating   what   came   first : The  chicken  or  the  egg ,  or  will  I  be  reborn  as  Eggs Benedict ? 

 

In scenes reminiscent of How the West was Won and Dug Up , Bulldust Diary columnist / illustrator , Peter Burleigh, acting as head scout,  in 2012 led a  trusting  pack of pilgrims out of Kununurra, Western Australia, deep into  dangerous UFO and dingo country.  He  wrote :

 My wife, Judi , flies in to Kununurra to join  me for a week’s travel to Broome. In Canberra the night before she left it was two degrees below zero. She arrives wearing polar knickers.

 Other ladies arrive, too, until our party numbers 17 souls, including: two ex-magistrates; two current aldermen; a gynaecologist ; a dental nurse; a retired mining engineer; an executive information technology placement consultant ; a veterinarian nurse ; someone’s daughter and her boyfriend; a retired interior designer ; a demolition contractor ; a Canadian undertaker ; an American real estate manipulator and your finger- licking Bulldust Diarist

This hand-picked group of retards will either do well together or re-create the wreck of the Batavia. Someone’s daughter and her boyfriend will fly out to Darwin in the morning, so attrition is striking early. Tonight the local Speedway does a good impression of a future NATO air raid on Damascus.

Petrolheads from all over the place have poured into town, exhausts rumbling, beer cans tumbling. The Speedway lights flash around the horizon and the thumps, bangs and screams of fireworks echo through the town, speaking of great destruction and bloodshed.

But we ignore all that as we are in the Coles Supermarket, provisioning for our trip to the Bungle Bungles. Those who are reading this series of travelogues may already be using the term “Bunglers” to describe me and my fellow travellers, but I assure you the Bungle Bungles is the name of a pile of rocks in the desert.

On our way to the Bungle Bungles turnoff we pass through Turkey Creek, another of the glum little refuelling outposts along the never-ending highway. You have to leave your driving licence or credit card at the cash register before they’ll switch on the fuel pumps. People have been filling up and running away without paying. Fuel in both forms is expensive: diesel is $2.00 per litrea steak sandwich $9.50, which brings me to chicken.

What a debt we owe to the humble chicken. How many of them have died and will die to keep us sandwiched, roasted, saladed and breakfasted? Yet we make jokes about them, call them cowardly, burn, boil and roast them. If we ever need another religion based on an example of sacrifice, my vote is for the chicken. I hope a talented poet will write a “Chicken Odyssey” some day.

The prehistoric quality of the road out to the bunch of Bungles is legendary, but in fact proves to be the easy part. Once we reach Broome we plan to leave the surfaced highway and return northeast to Kununurra along the Gibb River Road, as infamous a track as ever forded the River Styx.“The life expectancy of your car (being a non-Toyota) will be about 40 minutes,” gleefully sneers one  local. Another advises: “Lookin’ at that country is as exciting as watching yer verandah warp.”

Meanwhile, they’re right about the track to the Bungles. It takes 2.5 hours to travel 52km. You turn off a perfectly good sealed highway onto a dirt track which soon becomes a Big Dipper with added potholes, rocks, corrugations and multiple river crossings. To get to the National Park you must pass through private property and only a few weeks ago, before the State Government stopped him, the landowner was levying a $20 “transit fee” on every car which went through.

If you want to see what the Bungles look like, find them on the internet. I can’t describe them as well as a photo can. They’re spectacularly old; they say 300 million years, although why it isn’t a more specific 305 million or 417 million isn’t clear. They are domes of black-and-red striped rock, formed by millennia of floodwaters and before that the tides of the fabled inland sea covering Central Australia. 

Look, it’s easier if you simply come over to my place and check out my photos. Why the legendary”‘slide evening” has fallen out of fashion I don’t know.

We walk for kilometres around these colourful knobs. The walks seem much longer than Chairman Mao’s. All of us now have legs more muscular than Superman’s. Time moves incredibly slowly here, and in summer the superheated air and sunlight are heavy enough to cause their own erosion. It’s mid-winter now yet the days are around 33 degrees. The rains have receded, leaving a few small pools crowded with doomed fish. The silence is deep. You feel privileged to be here.

We find a kind of weird “crop circle” in the grass which may be the landing place of an alien spacecraft. It’s dominated by the black-and-pink cliffs of the Bungles. We decide to camp on it, confident we can out-weird any alien who comes along

We circle the wagons around a campfire and cook our modest eye fillet steaksWine appears from hiding places and by morning there is a large pile of empty cans and bottlesThe volume of alcohol consumed each night proves just how hard and tough life is out here.



We wake to an anguished cry of “Dingoes stole my Helga’s!” Dingoes have not carried away any child or drunken compatriot but a loaf of bread is missing and bags of Muesli lie in the dirt, ripped open / disembowelled / missing / molested. The word goes out: be alert, not alarmed. The second night passes without incident (what goes on in your tent stays in your tent).

[Astute Little Darwin readers will notice that Burleigh's rendition of the swashbuckling dingo is obviously influenced by the tapes he plays in his car about scurvy seadogs roaming the bounding main. Heavy consumption of his ship's daily ration of Mad Dog Morgan's Blood could  explain the incorrect spelling of  muesli ] 

(Burleigh, Kentucky,Dingo.)

LOTUS FASHIONISTA

Vallis.
 

PUZZLING LANGUAGE