It is Sunday morning (Saturday around 6 p.m. for my Pacific
Standard Time friends) and I have just returned from my marketing in Coburg. I
am currently housesitting (and cat sitting) for a lovely couple – the daughter
of a couple I stayed with in Bendigo last December. Many of you know my hesitation in coming
back to Australia this year. The email from J’s daughter tipped the scales and
here I am, happily ensconced in a nearly new three bedroom with my very own
room and bath, full kitchen with lots of pots and pans to use (some of which I
don’t quite know what to do with) and a couple who has urged me to help myself
to the perishables in the refrigerator and the pantry. Say no more.
The house where I’m staying is just a few blocks from the
train station and shops. Shops with
names like Ottoman Kabobs and Pizza, Pantheon Cakes, Parthenon Shoes,
Continental Groceries, Dong Natural Therapies, etc. line the Coburg section of
Sydney Road, a main north-south artery. There is also a plethora of
Asian-owned variety stores where a person can find everything from salad
spinners to ladies’ girdles. My stops this morning included the fruit and veg
stand (a kilo of mandarin oranges for $1.99; a kilo of gigantic navel oranges
for $0.99), Crystal Bakery (a terrific apricot Danish), Coles supermarket
(various and sundry items) and finally to Al Alamy,(which in Arabic translates
to “world of foods”) a grocery and café that has the very best flat white in
the area. Joey and George, the baristas there, have memorized my order. So far
I’ve received two free coffees. Not sure what that’s about, but I’m grateful
for the treat.
Melbourne reminds me of the American
Midwest – specifically, Kansas City, where I lived for 16 years. Much of the architecture is of the same mid-19th Century vintage. And the
other day I smelled something that was vaguely familiar, something that evoked
a feeling of nostalgia … fallen leaves. Maple leaves, actually. I’ve lived in the southern California desert
so long that I have almost forgotten that there are places where trees lose their leaves.
I do have responsibilities while I’m here, though. Actually a responsibility named Willow, who is an
adorable (if a little needy) kitty-cat. I arrived to an empty house, but
knew that there was a cat in residence. After a couple hours moving a suitcase,
using the bathroom, getting comfortable, no feline showed up to investigate, so I deduced that the cat was outside or
in hiding under a bed. Turns out that she was where she usually is – hidden
under blankets on the couch. And I do mean under. I had to pull back her covers to get the photograph. When she’s out from under, she’s talking to me about being hungry,
or needing to go out or wanting attention. She’s quite content sitting on my
lap while I work. Makes it harder to reach the keyboard, but it is cozy.
I arrived Melbourne and was greeted by the worst weather they’d
seen so far this Fall – 9 degrees C (about 48 F) and raining cats, dogs and
ponies. For all that, I was still grateful to be out the Sonoran Desert, where the
temperature was 104 the day I left. And even though I’ve been cold a great
deal of the time since I’ve been here, Mom had a point when she said that you
can always put on enough clothing to get warm, but you can never take off
enough to get cool. True. The photo to the right is a view down O'Hea Street looking toward Sydney Road.
In the past weeks, I’ve spent a good deal of time working on
queries and scouting out how to make my blog better. In fact, there just
happened to be a writers’ conference in progress when I arrived and I
participated in a class concerning that specific topic. Don’t worry – you won’t really notice
anything besides a new look. My readers should also find it much easier to get
email updates and so on. There might be a RunNorthGoWest Facebook page in the
works, too, so all of you will have to Like RNGW on Facebook.
More soon – about Blooms Day.
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