Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Town Mouse, Country Mouse


It's getting closer to full moon and the magpies have started carolling through the night. I live out of town now. It's country to cows, alpacas and green, green paddocks. It is what is quaintly termed 'semi-rural', which means that as the town spread, the dairy/sheep holdings on the edges of town were sold off and split up into manageable lots for families who didn't want to farm ... but sort of did. To this day they are trying to find a shearer who will do a dozen sheep, the bloke who will contain their three heifers within a decent electric fence.
The bandicoots and possums that inhabited my old digs are not here. I blame the foxes. In town, the native marsupials live in fruit trees, road side burrows and under the floorboards. Town (and especially Bob's house) thrives with the critters.

However, I've had a few bonfires in town but they have been generally met with a neighbourly grumpiness about washing, flying embers or that the ferals are taking over.
On a few acres, you can invite the neighbours, crack open the kerosene and party, while the piled-up eucalyptus remnants of the year's storms crank their fire fairies into the sky.


22 comments:

  1. Go on, admit it, you are a pyromaniac.

    You and the neighbours. You don't really drink kerosene, do you?

    ReplyDelete
  2. ok ok we have to have to come visit in this place where locals drink kero, feral fire fairies splash into space and clothes are so well smoked you can slice them up for aperitifs....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can see I'm gonna have to change my words about Jo.
      Damn, next time I'll invite you!

      Delete
  3. I don't expect you dare do that in the summer, after last year? Bonfires are banned in this town - all year round.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Excellent pics. Yes, Sarah Toa is a bit of a pyromaniac! I watched her firestick twirling near tinder dry grass in the middle of town. I was freaking out, she was having a great time!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Bonfires in Brizzy are of a time long gone. I did enjoy stoking a 'smokin' fire in a firepalce this last country weekend soujourn. Nothing like the outdoor version though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We've got nice wet paddocks in the wintertime Mr Hat. Much fun.

      Delete
  6. Hey Sarah
    Ive just stumbled into your wonderful world by tracing some of my roots. Bob Howard's blog led me hither. My family (many writers) are found in Kayang and me.
    I'm a Ravensthorpe boy from generations past too many to remember. Worked a small gold show at Kundip when I was a teenager in the ealy 70s and happily my 2 daughters were born on ancestral boodjar.
    The campfire prompted me to share that in Noongar culture, the fire is a beacon which draws our maamungat ancestors to us, they inhabit our conversations and assist our dreaming.
    Cheers Greg Cream (Think Coleman)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hello Greg, how lovely to meet you in the ether, through country as earthy and real as east of here.
      Kayang is probably my favourite of Kim's books. Coleman ey?
      Speaking of fires ... I've had some lovely and strange experiences, sitting alone around a Kundip fire. I told Kim about one and he said, "Well, you lucky thing!"

      Have you come across Bob's website of Daisy Bates' genealogies of folk from that area? Pretty useful.
      http://spencercollins.byethost7.com/bobhoward/bates/index.html
      A mutual friend rebuilt it in 2009 and it has just come in useful, as Bob's site seems to have crashed about a month ago.

      Delete
  7. Thanks Sarah, yes I was aware of the Daisy Bates breadcrumbs. Ive also dug in and found handwritten documents at the Battye Library.
    Kim and I share a Grandmother Harriet Coleman. Seeing him on Saturday will pass on your regards. My Grandfather was Bill Coleman or Will to others or WP.

    Key name for us is Binian (Binnean according to Bates). You have a pic on one of your posts of the grave yard on Moir Rd. Binian and her husband John (Ben) Mason are possibly buried there together.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Okay, was about to ask you about those graves ... seems you already been there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Is Binian Fanny Winnery, Greg? My son's half bro is related to her ...

      Delete
  9. Hi Sarah, yes, Binian is Fanny Winnery married twice 1st husband Aboriginal and 2nd my GG Grandfather John Mason
    Binian had 2 daughters and a surviving son
    Harriet Dinah and John
    Harriet and Dinah married the Coleman Brothers Daniel and Patrick
    Harriet is Kim and my Granny

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Just curious as an offspring of Dinah and Patrick myself.. do you know who Fanny's first husband was , and did they have any offspring that you know of.. trying to help out a family member through DNA but doesn't know who her grandfather is , but is definitely blood related to either Fanny or Coleman's.. hope this makes sense? Cheers

      Delete
  10. This is so cool! Fanny Aileen Coleman was my great grandmother! I too have read Benang. Hello :))

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hello Kristie, what a lovely surprise!

      Delete
    2. Hi Sarah! Please tell me who your mother is? And also I am after information about Daniel Coleman... did he die in a fire in Ravernsthorpe? :(

      Delete
    3. Hi Kristie, I'm not Indigenous or a Coleman but look for Kim, Dylan Coleman and Claire Coleman (all authors). I'm not sure about Daniel's death but I reckon he is in the Ravensthorpe old cemetery.

      Delete
  11. Hi my name is Danielle Clarke I live in margaret river wa. I've recently found out through my own research really that my great grand parents are Harriet and Daniel Coleman hence Binian fanny winery and sandy one mason or john great great grandies and wunyeran etc gen before that.. My cousin has my grandmothers (Alison cashmore nee Colemans )birth certificate naming her the youngest of several brothers and sisters.. I've read some shocking recollections over the past few weeks.. re Dinah Harriet's sister etc and poor little fanny bailey.. can anyone confirm if fanny was related to the colemans not fanny Aileen though ( Alison's sister) Or certain works relay the name ' Ben' mason being Binians wife others read 'sandy one' or ' john'.. .. first or second marriage .. unclear ..if one of binians husbands was Ben is that the same Ben mason that constructed the mason and bird mill Perth? Also so proud to read of our indigenous brothers who fought in both major wars.. does anyone have any more information on Dinah and Patrick Coleman ? After being captured I've read it may have been Dinah who sailed to Mauritius and came back to oz understanding and speaking French... I have many questions and I know I have a lot of reading to do from the several works I've found out have been written by relatives I never knew existed.. some how though my instincts have been leading the way for me as I gain a greater understanding of who I am
    Xx

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hi All, my great grandparents are Patrick and Dinah! We had found some information about our heritage, also thought it was John Mason not Sandy? My grandad is Basil Coleman. Would love to hear more about our family!

    ReplyDelete