As Australia Day approaches, I cannot help but cast my mind back to when ANZAC Day was subsumed by the Coronavirus lockdown and we were denied the right to celebrate it and honour our Diggers in the usual way by government decree.
It looks like this 26th of January may subsumed by the furore of the leftist activist minorities, aided and encouraged by Corporate Australia.
Many eons ago, millions in fact, what is now Victoria was a cauldron of volcanic activity, particularly to the north and west. Mt.Macedon, the prominent feature about 50kms north of Melbourne is reputed to have been the largest volcano that ever existed on this planet.
At the time Tasmania was part of the Australian mainland. Along with what is now the Mornington Peninsular a series of granite upthrusts formed a ridge which now features Mt. Eliza, Mt.Martha and Arthur’s Seat. Some millions of years ago Mt. Macedon erupted and sent a gigantic flow of lava to its southeast. This lava flow was restricted to the eastern side of the granite ridge which is about 100 miles from the crater. The lava flowed right across the land and ended at what is now the north-east tip of Tasmania. The rocks in that area have been confirmed as the same rocks that exist in the cliffs at Flinders. This is over 300 miles from the source. You can follow its path from the rich red soil that abounds in the Dandenong Ranges, Berwick, and Red Hill to the east of Arthur’s Seat. It emerges again in the form of the black cliffs of Flinders before disappearing under Bass Strait.
Commercial camping grounds anywhere in this great country during Christmas summer holidays downunder look awfully like those wretched railway lost and found sales of yore. Tents, boats, barbecues, golf clubs, surfboards, cars and trailers, and overflowing garbage bins all jammed together in abject disarray. It is a wonderful attraction for the curious.
However, this overly jaded curmudgeon wonders why people flee the city in search of the great outdoors and a little privacy to happily set up camp amongst hoards of strangers, close enough that family disputes can be followed word-by-un-Christian-word during a time of supposed spiritual reflection?
Yesterday, I went to see my Mum, Redhead. She needed a haircut. You see, her hair grows very, very quickly. My blonde hair takes months to grow as enthusiastically as hers does. Why does some hair grow quicker than others?
I will get onto that later in this article, but for the moment, what is it about hair colour? Really? Why do people prefer blondes? Brunettes? Redheads?
Before you think you are going to read about the ultimate answer to this puzzling question, well, nah. It ain't gonna happen.
OK. The lead photo is a bit misleading but if I had put a photo up of my Mum having a haircut, I doubt I would get many readers.
In the closing stages of WW2 the Australian Army was given a role that offended the higher echelons of the defense forces.
While MacArthur and Nimitz were doing their island hopping towards the Japan, the Australian forces were given the task of mopping up areas already by-passed. This angered the likes of Blamey who saw it as a deliberate snub to Australia by not including them in the inevitable defeat of Japan.
I reject that notion completely.
Read more: Headhunters and Heroes - Silent Heroes of World War II
My father's small failed mission and its members will never be mentioned anywhere.
Just blips in history.
Z Special Unit His small group 'Platypus VII' of four " Commandos" sent off in a botched raid at almost the end of the War, to help with an invasion that was mostly for vanity whether for Australia's or for General MacArthur's benefit I'm not sure.
The Japanese in Borneo in July 45 should have been a 'mopping up' operation rather than an invasion from what I've read. The US had broken their fighting forces in the Pacific and sent most back to Japan, where the possibility of a long, difficult fight still looked very likely, before the Atomic bomb was dropped.
I joined the Army as a conscript in 1953 during the Korean War. In those days conscription was compulsory, no exemptions, when boys turned 18. I was in the 3rd intake and went to Puckapunyal. I was a corporal in the 15th National Service Training Battalion. I was not a reluctant conscript. I had been a sergeant in the school cadets and liked the life.
After completing the initial 98 day stretch in camp one was then assigned to a CMF (Citizens Military Forces) unit for another two years.
Black holes, time warps and wormholes may be understood only by physicists, but they exist in everyday life. As I become older, my encounters are on the increase. I fear I may eventually be swallowed up.
An actual black hole is formed when a star collapses at the end of its life, and gravity is so strong that everything around is sucked in and nothing can escape, even light. The nearest one known to astronomers is 1500 light years away, which means that it takes light travelling at 300,000 kilometres per second 1500 years to reach us. They are however around us.
A common occurrence is that which I refer to as the " Shopping Hole. "
Another 26th of January is on our doorstep. Only a few more sleeps before we gather our daggy thongs, ( not from Woolies, of course) search out the shorts with the flag plastered all over them and order in a few slabs, a keg or 3 and assemble around the barbie at the appointed hour ( normally around 11 am ) to tell a few mate jokes and have one too many.
We'll dust off the cricket bat and ball while the missus makes the salads and the kids are reminded that beer always lives in the bathtub on Australia Day.
" Oi ! Get your Dad a beer! " will resonate around this great dusty island and we will pull each other's leg and tell jokes about who had a convict in their ancestry.
Will this happen this year?
For over 100 years our country’s economy was wrought from gold.
The gold that was mined from the ground and the gold that came from the golden fleeces of our unique strains of merino sheep. The common expression was that Australia rode on the sheep’s back.
John Macarthur is rightly credited as being the father of the wool industry in Australia but he was not the one who introduced them. That honour goes to Governor Hunter and closely followed by Governor Macquarie.
Two naval officers, Capt. Henry Waterhouse and Lieut. William Kent were ordered by Governor Hunter to bring the first merino sheep to Australia.
The sheep had come from a flock originally given by King Carlos III of Spain to Prince William V of Orange. In 1789 Prince William sent two rams and four ewes to the warmer climate of the Dutch colony at the Cape of Good Hope under the care of Col. Robert Gordon. In 1791, Gordon returned the original breeding animals to the Netherlands but kept the offspring.
Please donate to
Swiftcode METWAU4B
BSB 484799
Account
Reference PR |
Please email me so I can thank you.
patriot@patriotrealm.com
Picture the scene. It is the ACME desert, Somewhere in the MIDDLE of nowhere.......... somewhere…
143 hits
As young folk, didn't some of us feel like rebels without a cause? I am…
224 hits
The Battle of Britain ended on 15th September, 1940 but the Blitz continued long after that. Following…
201 hits
In 1984, Sir Alec Jeffreys, a British geneticist, made a groundbreaking discovery that would forever…
236 hits
As our countries are collapsing under the weight of wokeism, social and communist ideology, who…
199 hits
How often do we lament that we do not have visionaries and forward thinkers in…
225 hits
Yesterday, one of our community members spoke about a film he watched called " Black…
204 hits
40 hits
A perfect storm of crises has been building. It comes from still bubbling rage with…
272 hits
Recently, the internet has gone crazy over the issue of pets being eaten by illegal…
248 hits
When I was a child, my teacher taught us the story of Grace Darling, a…
244 hits
“The stupidity of democracy. It will always remain as one of democracy’s best jokes that…
260 hits
Henry Lawson managed to capture the heartbeat of The Bush. And that heart is under…
273 hits
"The Prisoner," a British television series created by Patrick McGoohan, first aired on the 29th…
280 hits
It is strange that there is no discussion of it, but in two weeks and…
252 hits
During the early years of World War II, the British Army encountered difficulties in advancing…
276 hits
Just as is the case in many countries around the world, Australians are increasingly confused about…
270 hits
In 1929, Joseph Stalin was hell-bent on getting the farmers to forfeit their rights to…
220 hits
Today, I want to talk about Laughter. Humour to be exact. Today, we are talking…
302 hits
The following article was published in 1993. Over 30 years ago. Does the modern bureaucratization…
299 hits
The Weimar Republic was born out of the ashes of World War I, following Germany's…
295 hits
56 hits
Until people learn that the same propaganda they see in media, schools, and entertainment today…
281 hits
I have had a pretty colourful life one way or another. And it got me…
246 hits
“Some of us may forget that, of all the Allies, it was the Australians who…
259 hits
The Emu War is one of Australia's most curious and bizarre historical events. It took…
299 hits
Of all the magnificent units and regiments of the Australian Army I doubt if any…
293 hits
The 1951 waterfront dispute in New Zealand, often referred to as the "1951 Waterfront Lockout,"…
291 hits
During World War II, Australia was a key player in the Allied war effort, providing…
307 hits
The first occupants of the Olympics village in Paris quickly taught the caterers that athletes…
241 hits
61 hits
Words are merely words, no matter how cleverly delivered or masterfully edited and pitched. Obama…
273 hits