By Peter Simon
Before I am charged with any offence , I would like to say my older two uncles made me do it , your worship . See , I was just a gangly young schoolboy when they set off with me on a horse drawn cart to cross the so called Coathanger , from the north .
It must have been about 1950, when I was 12, but could have been earlier . The horse and cart was used by Uncle Peter , a bit of a scallywag, to trap rabbits.
Bales of their skins were stored in my grandmother's laundry at Saint Leonards , much to her annoyance . Smelly ferrets with sharp teeth were also kept in a cage in the backyard , near the choko vine. A greyhound which barked at night also resided on the premises ; it became silent after angry grannie gave it a large dose of castor oil .
There were caged chooks and a fig tree. A swaggie even called at the side gate from time to time . .
The horse was kept in a paddock at Artarmon.
Why my two uncles and I set out to cross the bridge into the city cannot be recalled . It could not have been to catch rabbits as we did not have ferrets with us , no rabbit traps .
We could have been making a surprise visit on my one-legged maternal grandfather , said to have taken off with a " broken down actress ", who drove about Sydney in a converted WWll American Jeep buying second - hand goods , from his shop near the waterfront selling a range of items , including hand and foot operated sewing machines , to South Pacific crewmen working on island trading boats .
The cart had a large box seat which opened up . As the horse trotted onto the bridge , it was realised that a toll would have to be paid . But how much ? Apparently , funds were low . So it was decided by majority vote to slip me into the box seat to reduce the payment .
There must have been good ventilation , because I survived the crossing .Not sure how I got home , or if I was blue in the face when I did come home like Lassie .
Anyway , the poor horse later broke its leg and my uncle's rabbit trapping ended.
His mode of transport thereafter included an Indian motorbike , a variety of powerful vehicles , a stock car he raced named Sin Bin , a boat with an unforgettable moniker , African Queen .
The photograph at the top of the post shows that the whip- cracking Man From Snowy River could have driven a herd of wild bush brumbies over the bridge without disrupting the tiny number of vehicles on the road.