A photographic 80 birthday
Transcription
A photographic 80 birthday
Volume 7, Issue 2 February/March 2010 We aim for inclusiveness and openness, catering for a diversity of views without rancour. A photographic 80th birthday The Somers Yacht Club provided the perfect venue for Rod Nuske’s special day. About 80 guests attended including daughter Amanda and husband Wayne from Terrigal. The event was ably catered for by Vic Crust and his staff with added help from Rod’s grandchildren and his son Tim presiding over the bar. An exhibition of photographs illustrated Rod and Pauline’s family life and the professional work he’d been engaged in during 57 years of living in Somers. Pauline grew up in Somers but succumbed to illness in 2002. A large cartoon of Rod drawn by friend(?) Barry Merton greeted guests as they mounted the stairs. An excellent string quartet of young musicians provided a very pleasant background to the buzz of conversation during the afternoon. A projected display of photographs prepared by son Nic was introduced by eldest son Simon, illustrating highlights of Rod’s life covering his early clerical days and the later photographic and printing career at HMAS Cerberus. A definite highlight of this period was being introduced to the Queen in 1981. Part-time occupations included photography for The Westernport News and wedding photography. Rod was no stranger to the yacht club as he and Pauline had sailed together for over 20 years and he had been Chairman of the Social Committee and then Newsletter Editor for 14 years. Rod explained that he was far from being a competent sailor or swimmer and had in fact, during a presentation night, provided Pauline with a medal for bravery. Simon recalled an incident that had obviously stayed in his memory all his life which was when the farfrom-new Holden struggled to get up the Bulli Pass towing a caravan. 1 Slower and slower the car went as the automatic clutch started to fail. “Quick, get out and put a stone behind the wheel!” was the anxious command from an anxious Rod. The startled family hopped out into the pouring rain and managed the task which stopped impending disaster and enabled the agitated father to arrange for a tow truck to pull the car and van over the crest of the hill. After the telling of these family secrets the splendid cake in the shape of a substantial tennis racquet was duly cut, ending off what had been a wonderful day for Rod surrounded by family and friends. Removal of pine trees The Editors, Editorial Committee: The enclosed Haiku is for an ob- noxious bin. The Editors, Dear friends, It is close to the high 30s and as I walk from Ocean View Crescent I look for a seat in the shade to rest. I actively miss my favourite seat under the pine trees that were opposite Palm Beach Grove. I have read the information from the Foreshore Committee about why, in their view, the removal of the pines was necessary. I disagree. All I know is we have lost a valued shady space in which to watch the ocean and enjoy a special part of Somers. I feel exactly the same about the pines as Mandy Kotzman does about the council’s recent pruning. Familiar trees under which I have walked and sat for twenty years are gone. They provided shelter from sun and rain, welcome shade and protection from the elements. Now all we have is a hot, bare space where weeds are starting to flourish. I do not believe the environmental concerns as outlined were sufficient reason to remove these trees. I feel their loss outweighs any potential gain. The vegetation which will replace these pines will never offer the shade and ambience they did; and my much loved seat has gone. Every time I walk past now the bare and raw stumps remind me of what we have lost. By all means do not plant pine trees now and remove old ones when they are diseased. But keep and enjoy healthy pines, pines which give the Peninsula part of its unique character. Yours sincerely, Leanne Newson quote Your paper is strong on ‘popular’ energy topics – world wide. You cannot smell the news at your nose!! A Haiku to a Somers Bin Stinking filthy bin Somers store car park near the top Flies haven for disease Sincerely, Frank A. Lees AM MBE Reply from the Committee of Management: The smelly bin is really an issue with the contractor employed by the MPSC (that’s a service the Shire provides to the community, not CoM). But what’s worse, an occasional ‘waft’ as the lid is lifted, or the smelly squish beneath your feet? From my discussions with the Shire, the bins are emptied more frequently during the holiday period, not just weekly. Anne Doran – co-ordination & advertising Rod Nuske – reporter & photographer Louise Craig – copy editor & proofreader Bronwen Gibbs – layout artist Vicky Arena – children’s pages Rosemary Birney – secretary Marg Tilleard – treasurer Correspondence: Email: [email protected] Mail : PO Box 338, Somers, Vic. 3927 Website: www.somers-nautilus.org.au Printing: Curry Printing, Mornington ©Copyright remains with the authors & editors. Secretary, SFCofM Earth Hour 2010 At 8.30pm (local time) on Saturday 27 March, the greatest show on Earth for action on climate change will take place in homes, office buildings, town halls and public places around the globe as lights go out for Earth Hour 2010. With 807 cities, towns and municipalities and 82 countries across every continent already signed up, Earth Hour 2010 is set to show the world that a resolution to the threat of global warming is possible through collective action. Whether you are an individual, a business, a school or a city you can show your support. Check out the Earth Hour 2010 website and find fun ways to get involved: www.earthhour.org 2 Nautilus on the Web. Don’t forget back issues of The Nautilus are available for viewing at www.somers-nautilus.org.au Pine Trees Again Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo Editors, Somers Paper Nautilus, Scientific Name: Calyptorhynchus funereus On behalf of our flight of Yellowtailed Black Cockatoos, I wish to complain most bitterly at the removal of our feasting pine trees on your foreshore. Each year we have flown quite some distance from the Gurnies across Westernport, and this year we arrive to find our best trees no longer there! Who is responsible for this outrage? Point them out to us and we will deal with them in the appropriate manner. Yours screechingly, Blackie I noticed that this year there was a very diminished number of the beautiful Black Cockatoos visiting Somers and those that came not staying long or enjoying their time here. Perhaps this letter from ‘Blackie’ explains their plight! Name and address supplied. Time to de-head Agapanthus Despite Agapanthus plants being sold in our local nurseries, they are known to be an environmental weed on the Mornington Peninsula. Left to themselves they can spread by the thousands and become uncontrollable. To keep them under control, remove the spent flowers as soon as possible. Now is the time! If you are too busy to do the full job immediately, here is a quick way to deal with it. Take a garbage bag, twist the flower heads right off the stem, bag them and place in the garbage bin. Later, when you have more time, you can snip off the unsightly stalks if you wish. At least your Agapanthus will have been contained. Take action NOW and protect our environment. The following information is from: www.reptilepark.com.au Did You Know? The southern populations of this bird are exclusively seed eaters and will form huge flocks to feed on the cones of pine trees in commercial plantations. Reply The reasons for the removal of pine trees have been explained many times in this paper. Yes, black cockatoos love eating the seeds from pinetree cones, but their natural food, before the pines were introduced to this country from Europe, was (and is) from various tree species indigenous to Australia. Those of you who love the cockatoos would do well to plant some of these species in your gardens and to help the foreshore committee volunteers to re-plant them in the area where the pines were removed. Another area where pines have been removed is Banksia Square, which currently has no banksias. The black cockies also absolutely love the seeds of Hakea nodosa. I know this because they come to my garden to eat them. They nest in very tall gum trees, so the frequent removal of gum trees (increasingly often being replaced with palm trees) is another reason for the reduced numbers of black cockatoos and other native fauna, including koalas. She-oaks are another source of food for black cockatoos and I didn’t notice any public outcry when a large stand of same was illegally removed from the eastern cliffs reserve. Louise Craig 3 Habitat: This black cockatoo is usually seen in pairs or in small flocks which normally inhabit forests and heathlands, though at certain times they appear in more open country. They are a nomadic bird which is found from central Queensland through eastern New South Wales, Victoria, south-east South Australia, Tasmania, King Island and larger Bass Strait islands. Diet: The natural food is varied, but much of the diet comprises seeds of native trees, particularly Casurina but also Eucalyptus, Acacia, Banksia and Hakea. They are very fond of the larvae of treeboring beetles and moths, and strip the bark from the trees and tear away at the wood to find them. Reproduction: The breeding season is variable throughout the range. The male displays by spreading his tail and raising his crest. Black cockatoos nest in holes in gum trees at a great height from the ground. The hollow is about 25cm wide at the entrance, and is enlarged at the bottom by the birds to about 40cm. One or two eggs are laid, but only one young bird is normally reared. The male diligently feeds the female during incubation. He alights near the hole and calls to her. She then comes out to be fed after which she returns tail first back into the nesting hollow. David Gibbs – our lawyer/fireman Some people have trouble keeping even one ball in the air at a time while others can juggle several and still walk around smiling. David Gibbs is one of the latter; he has a solid legal practice to manage, with all the complexities this throws up and he has a passion beyond his legal practice (more of this later). David was born in Eaglehawk near Bendigo. His father was a real old-fashioned country doctor but his wartime presence at the RAAF installation in Somers kindled the fam- Looking forward to autumn ‘arvo’ teas? Here is a recipe for a delicious Fruit Tea Cake. It takes almost no time to prepare, takes only 35 to 40 minutes to cook and, because it has very little butter, it is relatively healthy for those watching what they eat. Serve it up warm with fruit puree instead of cream or butter and your guests will be blown away. You will need: 1 egg, separated ½ cup caster sugar (raw caster sugar may be a healthier choice) ½ cup skim milk with ½ tsp of vanilla extract 1 cup of self-raising flour, sifted (use wholemeal if you wish) ily’s association with this area. (David can remember the late Stan Byrne from the days when he was Warrant Officer at the camp.) Family holidays ensued, staying in a rented house in Tasman Road. Like so many people who recall their youthful days in Somers, David fondly remembers knocking around with other teenagers, boating in the creek below the Store, going to the outdoor picture shows at the camp; but there were two happenings that would be life changing. Firstly, with some mates he joined the Somers CFA and secondly, he met Bronwen Williams who was to become his wife. They married on Bronwen’s grandmother’s property in Mount Macedon. Getting back to his teenage years, David needed to pursue his tertiary education. Just what drove him towards the law is uncertain but having made the decision he threw himself into his legal studies, graduating in 1975 as Bachelor of Jurisprudence and two years later as Bachelor of Law; both at Monash University. In 1978 David was admitted as Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Victoria and subsequently he established the law firm, David Gibbs and Associates in Hastings; this was in 1980 and he is in practice there to this day. By now, Somers had become the family base. The land next to the holiday house they had rented was available and the Gibbs’ bought the land and a church – a much-travelled church (it had been transported from Tyabb to Somers and then to another site in Somers before they bought it), relieved it of its ecclesiastical connections and plonked it on their block. In time, two children arrived, Jessica and Angus. 30g unsalted butter, melted 4 to 6 halved plums, peaches, apri- prepared tin and top with the fruit, cut side down. Bake 35 to 40 minutes, until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean. 4. Remove from the oven and, while still hot, brush the top with melted butter and sprinkle over the cinnamon and sugar mixture. Enjoy warm. cots, nectarines, apples, pears or the equivalent amount of cherries – or a packet of frozen raspberries Topping: 20g of butter, melted ½ tsp cinnamon mixed with 1 tbsp sugar Method: 1. Preheat oven to 190 degrees C, butter a 20-cm diameter sandwichcake tin and line base with baking paper. 2. Using an electric mixer, beat the eggwhite until stiff peaks form, then mix in the egg yoke. Gradually add the sugar, beating well after each addition, then the milk mixture, beating well after each addition. Gently stir in the flour and melted butter. 3. Pour the mixture into the 4 David’s membership of the CFA continued (for 38 years in fact and is ongoing), but his involvement was to go far beyond putting out fires (or ‘running a fire’ which is the terminology used). He found himself moving into the administrative side of things. First he was the Deputy Group Officer for six years and then he became Group Officer, covering 13 fire brigades over a region from Langwarren to Shoreham and Mornington to Red Hill. Included in this area are the major-hazard facilities of the Esso Plant and Bluescope Steel. David keeps a suitcase with five days’ supply of clothes in his office and he has needed them. As a levelthree incident controller he was involved in the management of fires as far afield as Horsham, Swifts Creek, Mount Beauty, Bairnsdale, Packenham and Kangaroo Ground with the employment of up to 90 appliances. Nowadays David is on the CFA board and is required to attend their meetings at headquarters in Burwood. For all his troubles he has been awarded the Australian Fire Service Medal, which is part of the Australian honours system. David’s position in the CFA requires him to attend functions, such as award nights, all around the state and he enjoys these; he says, “I meet some awesome people”. Somehow, David has found (or made) time to become active in various other community activities. He served on the Somers Primary School Council for four years and was president for two, was on the council of Westernport Secondary College and was on the Board of Directors of the Woodleigh School for 16 years and chairman for seven. Add to that his work with the Somers Foreshore Committee and the Somers Yacht Club and you have the sum of a man who can obviously be hyper-active without going crazy! The core of David’s existence is his family and his legal practice but remembering that he just joined the CFA all those years ago for a bit of fun, the fun morphed into a very serious commitment, almost a passion you might say. One good thing about such a passion is that it is for the community’s good, not like putting ships in bottles or collecting china mugs. The foreshore now has a number of chainsaw-crafted ‘objets d’art’ which include the echidnas sculpture opposite the Store. This has proven to be quite an attraction to young children such as Harrison and Isabella who have found the wooden spikes are less prickly than the real ones. Further down the foreshore is the log seat which on this occasion is occupied by Jo Shoppee with a very young Archie. Coolart Plumbing Drainage, Roofing Sewerage Connection Contact Peter Tickell 5983 5936 Mobile: 0407 329 800 Barry Merton 5 6 SFCofM Open Letter The volunteer members of the SFCoM endeavour to keep the community fully informed about the various projects and activities undertaken in managing the Somers Foreshore Reserve. Unfortunately, lack of finances and resources means that this information does not always reach every resident in Somers. We do have a regular Newsletter and we can email these to any person who requests such, plus we place current information on the noticeboards outside the PO and in the upper car park, with further noticeboards to go in the lower car park environs. We have also placed signage in situ explaining each of our main projects. On three different occasions we placed informative signage in the Pines Project area, but alas ‘persons unknown’ have removed/stolen these each time, within days of placement. It isn’t a viable option to place a fourth lot of signage! Hopefully the following will explain the rationale behind the removal of the mature Pines which has recently created angst with some of our holiday home owners. Every Committee of Management is required to improve the sustainability and vigour of the Crown Land Reserve under their management. The Australian Government is providing funding for Projects which aim to “increase the area of native habitat & vegetation and reduce the threats to biodiversity and enhance the condition, connectivity and resilience of habitats in landscape priority areas”. Australian coastal areas, of which our narrow strip of Somers Foreshore Reserve is but a small part, is one of these “priority areas”. Past land clearing practices and inappropriate subdivision, so close to many fragile coastal areas, has ensured the high conservation value of coastal Reserves and the need to rehabilitate depleted areas and carefully manage the few areas of good remnant vegetation; in our area particularly. The Commonwealth funds are also directed towards protecting Ramsar wetlands which includes the Westernport Bay environs: “to address the threats posed by invasive plants and animal species to the ecological character of Ramsar listed wetlands over the next two years”. Part of the management process is to determine which areas require restorative works (i.e. those requiring weed eradication and replanting “depleted” areas with suitable indigenous plants) and those just requiring ongoing maintenance work. As part of our strategic plan, we look first to build and expand on good areas of remnant vegetation, or to connect separate viable areas, in order to create sustainable wildlife corridors. The “Pines area” forms a link between two good areas of remnant, coastal vegetation. The Envirofund Grant for the Pines area is to assist with creating such a wildlife corridor. Our narrow strip of Coastal Reserve is indeed very precious, so we must continue works and projects that ensure the sustainability and continued vigour of the native Flora & Fauna. Rehabilitating this small area is needed to improve the overall viability and sustainability of the Somers Foreshore Reserve, as the ‘extended dry’, along with episodic storm surges, have added further pressures. You only have to walk along the dune tracks to see the damage to these fragile susceptible areas, with the loss of so many Banksias particularly. We need to continue to preserve and restore what remains of these precious coastal areas. The age of the ‘Permit’ Pines and their proximity to the Reserve’s tracks had also raised concerns due to the potential risks posed to the general public. Mature Pines are ‘at risk’ of dropping their limbs, or can lose a sizable section of canopy; evidence of this fact can be seen with recent ‘events’ along Lord Somers Rd & Coolart Rd extension. As a CoM one of our main priorities is to ensure all Risks to the Public are minimised. Please contact the committee if you would like further information about any of our Projects. Thank You, SFCofM Every year Balnarring Probus holds a BBQ in January at Coolart. This year the weather was very kind and not extreme as has occurred on other occasions. Awaiting their turns at the hotplates are Lindsay Alexander, Ron Dickinson, Annette Hourigan, Ron Deane and Dan Hourigan. 7 Birthdays There has been quite a run of senior birthdays lately (which is better than too many obituaries). A birthday party can be a celebration of one’s life with the added advantage of being there to enjoy it! There are of course many senior citizens in Somers but also there seems to be an unprecedented number of babies being wheeled around in their four- and three-wheeled pushers and quite a number of expectant mothers. It certainly makes for an interesting and lively village. 90 years young and Balnarring Kindergartens and Bet was appointed as teacher for both units, sharing her time evenly between them, with 15 children at each centre. Bet remained sole teacher until retirement in 1979. From then she spent time assisting the new teacher and with her love of reading, acted as one of the residents who kept the local library operational (this was located then in a room attached to the ‘Kinda’ which has since been absorbed into the main room). In the following years she attended U3A classes, journeyed to UK and Europe and took several trips to visit her brother in Tasmania. Despite her current infirmity she is determined to remain in her home to which end neighbours and friends assist with messages and the occasional trips to the doctor. Sunday 7 February was open day at Bet’s household when friends and family dropped in to bring greetings, flowers and at least three birthday cakes. A Shoreham 80th Birthday for Marion A remarkable year was 1920 as Qantas took to the air, Bert Hinkler set off on his record solo flight to Australia from England, the Princes Highway was opened, Fletcher Jones started his tailoring business in Warrnambool and Bet Campbell was born in Maryborough. Despite her remarkable memory these events are only things she has read about and reading is something that is very important to her now as she is quite restricted in her mobility. Bet came down to Somers in 1951 with her sailor husband. When it became necessary for Bet to support herself and care for her two children Peter and Sharon, she commenced a Pre-School and Play Leader Training Course. The year 1957 saw the opening of the Somers Grandchildren Christabel, Alex, Thomas, Kate and Isaac greeted and made welcome the guests at Marion Taylor’s birthday held at the weekend home of Marion and Ian’s daughter Alison in a pleasant bush setting in Shoreham. It certainly was a friendly gathering as the majority of the guests were known to each other having been involved with Marion in the various groups of which she was a member. These include the Somers Ladies Probus, Peninsula Hospice, Friends of Coolart, Somers Craft Guild and Peninsula Old Collegians. Growing up in Camberwell Marion attended school at PLC and at university was awarded a science degree majoring in physics and mathematics. She obtained work at the Aeronautical Research Laboratory at Fishermans Bend and married Ian in 1953. With the arrival of chil8 dren Roger, Alison and Judy she became involved with the committees of the Kindergarten and the Girl Guides Association. As the children grew Marion was able to find time to train as a librarian and worked mainly at the Holmesglen Institute in that occupation before retiring in 1991. Marion and Ian’s connection with Somers started in 1966 with the use of rental properties, then a holiday home in 1980 and finally their present permanent residence in 1991. This was also the year in which her years of work at Coolart in the realms of conservation and heritage were recognised by the awarding of an OAM. The party for this important milestone was organised by family members who also prepared most of the attractive and enjoyable repast. Prior to the cutting of the impressive looking cake, Roger spoke warmly of his mother and was in particular able to recall the fact that Marion was probably one of a very few mothers who knew the Latin name for a tortoise (testudo). After this startling revelation he then asked his mother to ceremonially ‘cut the cake’. It was truly a lovely afternoon amongst many of her friends who, like Marion, found satisfaction in working for the benefit of others. Happy 80th Birthday Anne Danne Anne celebrated her birthday in January with her family at the homestead on Sandy Point Road. On the 10-acre property she is in her element with an extensive garden and cattle, sheep and a blue heeler to care for. Born in Killara NSW, the family moved to a now National Trustregistered sandstone home in Ferry Street, Hunters Hill Sydney. Anne’s father was an accountant with The Women’s Weekly. Eight years later her parents and two older brothers moved to Melbourne, her father having been offered the circulation manager’s job at The Age. Anne recalls that her education at PLC was not the great highlight of her life as there were quite a few visits to the headmistress over minor misdemeanours, which possibly will not greatly surprise her many friends here at Somers. She had no sooner finished her formal education when she met Noel; Anne was 17. She gained a position as private secretary to the manager of the stud-stock department of New Zealand Loan in Collins Street; the manager was Stan Carr, whose mother lived in Tasman Road in the house now occupied by Doug and Patsy Coates. Custom of the period dictated that a lengthy courtship was required and Noel and Anne were married in l952 in the Melbourne Grammar chapel and moved into a flat in Auburn. The first of their five children, Stephen was born in 1953 followed by Kersti before the family moved into their home in Heatherdale, where Andrew, David and finally Kate were born. As if the children were not enough, the suburban block also contained chooks, ducks, cats, dogs, rabbits, tortoise, bantams and a poor abandoned piglet! Anne was born to the land, not to a classroom! Anne likes to run a well- organised household so there was time also to be involved in the founding of Heatherdale Tennis Club, to assist at the scout and cub group, be president of the mothers’ club and to organise, with others, the introduction of the tuck shop. A block of land in Hendon Avenue Somers was purchased in 1968. A small house was built on this land and the whole family spent every school holiday enjoying wonderful social and sailing holidays as members of the Yacht Club; then in 1984 a 10-acre block was purchased on Sandy Point Road and Noel set to and built a 22-square garage. The family camped in a caravan in the garage at weekends and the Christmas Holidays – wouldn’t be allowed today! The beginnings of a small farm evolved and were “the best years of our lives”. Noel retired in 1992 and they moved into their then new, present home. found that this was a comfort for her when so sadly, their elder daughter Kersti died in 2008. The property at the moment has two very pregnant Black Angus cows, seven Wiltshire Horn sheep (this breed shed their fleece) and a blue heeler dog named Archie. Her other love is of course their six grandchildren, two of whom are far away in England with their mother Katie. Happy 80th Birthday Anne! ♦Pilates Matwork ♦Creative Dance For Children 0417 336 378 Steiner Early Childhood Centre Anne soon involved herself in several local groups and was elected president of the Ladies Probus Club, the Craft Guild and the Combined Probus Club, although not at the same time, but I am sure she could have! In her spare time Anne was a volunteer driver for cancer patients through Hospice. She is grateful for the many friends she has made in Somers and 9 Wurra-Wurra Steiner Early Childhood Centre in Red Hill. A Natural Approach to Early Childhood Education. Kindergarten and Prep programs. Parent and Child Groups. Mother and Baby Groups. Nurturing children from birth to age seven. For further information please contact Georgia Murphy on 5989 8309 or 0439 093 575. 10 Community Action to Repair Westernport Weather Station Those using Westernport for recreation and sport will soon again have access to valuable and up-to-date weather information thanks to the Westernport, Merricks and Somers Yacht Clubs, supported by the Balnarring and District Community Bank. The Bank’s commitment to supporting the local community was on show again last week when Branch Manager, Rachel Harding and Board members Max Burley and Heather Goddard, met with the Commodores of the Westernport, Merricks and Somers Yacht Clubs to present $2000 towards the cost of repairing a weather station used by many groups in south western Westernport Bay. Max Burley, Chairman of the Board of Directors, said that these three yacht clubs had originally undertaken this important project, which saw the mounting of the weather station onto the Parks Victoria south cardinal navigation mark in 2007. “The weather station provided the only ‘real time’ local weather data in this part of Westernport to boaties of all types, fishermen, surfers, swimmers, and local voluntary marine rescue services,” said Mr Burley. Weather data was provided to a base station at Westernport Yacht Club for retransmission via website links with the other yacht clubs, Mornington Peninsula Shire and the Bureau of Meteorology. “Unfortunately, the unit was damaged by very rough seas during a severe storm in July 2009 and was removed for repair,” Mr Burley said. “The three yacht clubs originally involved in setting up the weather station agreed to undertake the repair and restoration of this important facility and to meet all costs not covered by donations and the Balnarring and District Community Bank, which has an ongoing commitment to supporting the valuable work of the many groups in the local community, is very pleased to be able to assist.” The main computer for the weather station was returned to Sweden for repair and system restoration is now well underway. It is hoped the unit will be reinstalled during February this year. Mr Burley congratulated the members of the Westernport, Merricks and Somers Yacht Clubs on their hard work and initiative, which results in many recreational and sporting opportunities for the local and broader communities. “Whilst visiting the Westernport Yacht Club we were able to meet the children and instructors involved in this summer’s Tackers Program, an introductory sailing course based on fun and safety and it showed yet again just why we are working so hard to make our community bank a success – the more successful we become, the more we can help groups such as these.” Church Bulletins Thank God for church ladies with typewriters. These sentences actually appeared in church bulletins or were announced in church services: The Fasting & Prayer Conference includes meals. The sermon this morning: “Jesus Walks on the Water.” The sermon tonight: “Searching for Jesus.” Our youth basketball team is back in action Wednesday at 8 PM in the recreation hall. Come out and watch us kill Christ the King. Ladies, don’t forget the rummage sale. It’s a chance to get rid of those things not worth keeping around the house. Bring your husbands. The peacemaking meeting scheduled for today has been cancelled due to a conflict. Remember in prayer the many who are sick of our community. Smile at someone who is hard to love. Say “Hell” to someone who doesn’t care much about you. Don’t let worry kill you off - let the Church help. Left to right: Trevor Wilcox, Richard Jagger (Commodore Merricks), Malcolm Kemp (Commodore Somers), Jim Douglas (Commodore Westernport), Rachel Harding (Manager Balnarring & District Community Bank), Max Burley (Director) & Marg Douglas. 11 Miss Charlene Mason sang “I will not pass this way again,” giving obvious pleasure to the congregation. Giving and Recieving Lord Somers Camp We have recently emerged from the ‘season of giving’. Lloyd Thomas shares some of his ideas on giving and receiving: Ted Baillieu addressing the boys during the luncheon. The annual Lord Somers Camp for boys in January was visited by the Victorian Leader of the Opposition Ted Baillieu who was asked to fire the gun to start the relay race held on the camp’s sports oval. He later addressed the boys at the luncheon urging them to “think positively and realise that you could be the leaders of the future in 20 years’ time”. He also drew their attention to the fact that no matter what their background was, teamwork and loyalty can provide you with success in life. Ted Baillieu with Camp President Glenn Bowes in front of a portrait of Lord Somers. Ted Baillieu with Camp President Glenn Bowes on the sports oval. 12 Do we all give as the rose gives its fragrance to the air? Do we give in order to receive? Do we give with no ability to receive from others? Do we give out of a sense of obligation to the receiver? We have all heard the expression, ‘the flow of life’. When we resist that flow, we become hardened, brittle and easily broken. In order to create and maintain healthy relationships, we need to exchange energy through both giving and receiving. I know many people whose only sense of personal worth is dependent on how much they give to others. They are willing to sacrifice themselves, even hurt themselves, in the effort to give to others. For these people, the flow of life is one way – always outward from them to others. Relationships based upon this constant giving generate guilt in the receiver and resentment in the giver. If I am always giving you water, would you ever suspect I might be thirsty? There are others who are only receivers. These are the people who are so needy, or so selfish, they never give out to others and are always taking from relationships. Always getting what they want, no matter what the cost to others. Lately, we have seen such examples of greed and fear in highly visible individuals and corporations, let alone in our politics. Relationships based upon this single direction of energy flow result in emptiness in the others, and guilt/anger within the receiver. Both chronic givers and eternal takers suffer from psychological stagnation. Stagnation is like stopping the flow of your blood. Whenever your blood stops flowing, it begins to coagulate, to stagnate. Non-flowing blood gives neither oxygen nor nutrients to the billions of cells in your body. When the flow of energy is only one way between people, relationships die. The word ‘affluence’ comes from the Latin word ‘affluere’, which means ‘to flow to’. Affluence implies ‘to flow in abundance’. When we give and receive in harmonious relationship to one another, relationships thrive and abundance is assured. Every healthy relationship is one of giving and taking. Giving requires a receiver. In order to receive, you need a giver. Actually, giving and receiving are the same. They are merely different aspects of the flow of energy between each other and between individuals and the universe. If either person stops that flow of energy, he or she interrupts the ‘flow of life’. In order to be healthy, happy and fulfilled yourself, you need to intend to create health and happiness in the relationships you have. Your intention needs to be to create happiness in both the giver and receiver, because your own happiness, as well as the fulfillment of others, is lifesupportive and sustaining. In order to create joy through giving, you need to feel joy in the act of giving. In order to create abundance, you need to feel fulfilled by receiving. In his book The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, Deepak Chopra MD, writes: “Practicing the law of giving is actually very simple: if you want joy, give joy to others; if you want love, learn to give love; if you want attention and appreciation, learn to give attention and appreciation; if you want material affluence, help others to become materially affluent. In fact, the easiest way to get what you want is to help others get what they want.” This translates to: “The best way for me to succeed in life is to help others succeed in their lives.” This principle of personal success is found most easily through helping others to succeed and works equally well for individuals, couples, corporations, societies and nations. For example, traditional businesses operate on the principle of succeeding at the expense of others (usually the employees). An example of businesses succeeding only when their employees succeed in getting what they want is most often found in the industry known as ‘network marketing’. Chopra writes: “If you want to be blessed with all the good things in life, learn to ... bless everyone with all the good things in life.” When we work toward the fulfillment of all our relationships through giving and receiving in dynamic harmony, we are actually practicing ‘going with the flow’ of life. Do this and you experience life, in all its aspects, much more abundantly. Certainly you will find more joy in your life. Lloyd J. Thomas, PhD Dr Thomas is a licensed psychologist, author, speaker and life coach. He serves on the faculty of the International University of Professional Studies, USA. Good vibes always travel well The last three days of an overseas trip had to be good: Hong Kong seemed to offer the lot! From silk and gold to cameras and watches, magic night-lights and well-spiced noodles – I just loved this vibrant harbour city. Yet, my time was up and my flight to Melbourne was to leave within the hour. At the airport I jingled with two hands full of shiny coins, small change after visits to Italy, Austria, Greece and other places. Perhaps my collection of Marks, Lire, Drachmas might buy one last gift – a transistor radio. The shopkeeper had already started counting my assorted shrapnel, gave me a pained smile and wiped the dust off three radios: “You’ve got less than $60. The very 13 latest radio with am/fm/tape etc. normally costs $78. But if this is all the money you have I will give it to you for all your near-useless coins.” He slipped batteries into the ‘Fairmate deluxe’ unit and the full sound of my favourite symphony bounced into all corners of the departure lounge. This sealed the deal and I was happy with my purchase. Soon after, an even louder voice beamed through the waiting hall: “Flight XS05 to Melbourne is ready to board. All passengers are reminded that they must pay the departure tax of [I think] $23 before boarding the plane!” I felt as if I had just then received an electric shock. My last money had gone but I needed to be on that flight. The shopkeeper was not keen to take the radio back – he offered me a special price of $6! Many families and group travellers around me had been witnesses of my preemptive purchase, but probably felt sorry for me and walked away. From the bar behind me I heard a male Australian voice: “What seems to be the trouble, Mate?” One of the three beer-drinking young men listened to my dilemma: “If that’s all that’s bothering you this should fix it!” With that he stuck a $50 note in my pocket. “This will pay for your departure tax and might even buy us all another beer!” Tax paid, I learned that the three young men were wool shearers, returning to Western Australia. I wrote down the address of my Samaritan so that I would be able to reimburse him soon. We had a final drink and I clung to my prized radio. As I write these lines, the ‘Fairmate deluxe’ blasts a proud trumpet concerto across my desk. Apart from am/fm and other refinements it has an extra quality: It radiates a number of good vibes, created by a generous and trusting traveller from WA. His quick decision to help a stranger was to me both an uplifting and typical sign of the wellknown Australian culture. Helmut Janssen Little children enjoy marking the seasons of the year and it helps them to begin to understand the concept of the passage of time and the calendar with its months, weeks and days. Kids will love to make a Nature Table in the living room to represent the seasons of the year. Take your kids for a nature walk and look for treasures to place on your Nature Table. Good places to look for items for your table would be the local neighbourhood, a local park, the beach or a hiking trail. Encourage your children to collect things that remind them of the season you’re in. For example in Autumn collect dried leaves in various shapes and colours, small dead branches or twigs that have fallen from trees, gumnuts, shells, stones, flowers, feathers etc. At the end of each season carefully place the contents of your Nature Table in a cardboard box and begin collecting new items that remind you of the new season. You can also keep a Calendar above the table and mark off each day of the season. 14 RECYCLING FUN Magic Milk What You Need: Plate, milk, food colouring, liquid soap Activity: Pour some milk on the plate. Next, drop a few droplets of food colouring. Then, add a few drops of the liquid soap. Result: Tie-dyed milk. Why does it happen? The soap breaks the surface tension and allows the food colouring to work its magic. www.kidspot.com.au Easter Chick Sticks You Need: Recycled ice-cream sticks Yellow craft paint Orange craft foam or construction paper Yellow/orange feathers Goggle eyes OR black beads Craft glue Scissors Method: 1. 2. Banana Surprise Ingredients: 2 tbsps honey 2 tbsps butter A sprinkle of ground nutmeg 2 firm bananas, sliced A sprinkle of ground cinnamon Method: 1. Place the butter and honey in a microwave-safe container. Sprinkle the ground nutmeg on top and microwave for 30 seconds on high. 2. Gently stir the bananas through the warm honey mixture and cook on high for 30 seconds to warm. Sprinkle with a little ground cinnamon. 3. Serve with ice-cream, or sour cream. 3. 4. Paint the ice-cream sticks with yellow paint and let dry. Glue a yellow or orange feather to the back, so that the edges of the feather curl toward the front. Cut two small ‘V’ shapes from orange craft foam or construction paper. Dip the ends of the first ‘V’ shape into the glue, then position it on the craft stick at the top of the beak. Repeat with the second ‘V’ shape, gluing it below the first one, as the bottom of the beak. Glue on two plastic eyes, or two small black beads, above the beak. Suggestions: • If your feathers are rather small, use two or three for each chick. • Tie a small ribbon around the neck of the chick or make a tiny bow tie and glue it. Compiled by Vicky Arena 15 From England with Love It’s a far cry from the softly lit downs of southern England to the clear-cut outlines of an Australian coastal town, fringed as we are by the cobalt blue sea. But in their retirement, Peter and Jenny Cole have made that transition. They didn’t have a lot of choice however. Their three daughters came out here, one by one and their parents had no intention of remaining on the other side of the world. So what did they leave behind? While we all love drinking in those scenes of English village life on BBC television programs, most English people live in the depths of large cities. Not so the Coles! Peter was born in Bristol but aged ten, he moved with his family to a village in Devon. His father was the headmaster of a small school and they lived in the adjacent school house and there were meadows and a stream, goats, a churchyard – you’ve got the picture (and no ‘Midsomer Murders’ to mar the scene either!). Jenny was born well to the north, in Cumberland. She was an only child and was educated at Newcastle-upon-Tyne Church High School. There’s a side story there: on the school gates there was a polished brass wall plaque giving the name of the school but someone stole it (more of that later). Coming from opposite ends of the island, Peter and Jenny’s trajectories were converging. Both arrived at Cambridge University; Jenny moved into Homerton College, enrolling for teacher training and Peter was in Downing reading Natural Sciences, culminating in a degree in Physics. Anyway, for recreation, Peter was expending his energies on the Rugby field and for the same reason Jenny was captaining the college tiddlywinks team. Peter was certainly impressed so after sharing some cheese and bad wine in Kings College he invited Jenny to the cinema where they watched Sean Connery as James Bond in From Russia with Love. Peter and Jenny didn’t have to go that far for their love; they were married in 1966 and headed south to live in Sunningdale in Berkshire. Peter took up a career with Proctor and Gamble and subsequently joined IBM where he was fully engaged in developing the world of commercial computerisation that controls just about everything we do today. He had some illustrious clients including Dun and Bradstreet, Kodak, Sedgwicks (Lloyds Insurance Brokers) and Tescos. Jenny meanwhile was pursuing her teaching career but this was interrupted from time to time with the arrival of their three daughters, Emma, Elizabeth and Victoria. The latter name must have been prescient because Victoria, Australia was where they all ended up. Emma led the way. She won a scholarship to university in Perth and while on a visit to Cairns for some lessons in skin diving her instructor demonstrated that he wanted to get to know her better and he did, and they married and somehow ended up in Somers. Elizabeth and Victoria followed and after a couple of visits of inspection, Peter and Jenny packed their bags − and here they all are! Peter and Jenny could have remained in their new eyrie on the top of Somers admiring the view but they are not like that. In short order, they joined the Yacht Club, the newly formed Somers Combined Probus Club (where Peter conducts the wine appreciation club) and Peter joined the Flinders Golf Club and is on the committee that organises the Coolart Jazz Festival. Jenny is doing her bit for the community by working for a most remarkable organisation called ‘Fitted for Work’. The objective is to help disadvantaged unemployed women organise themselves for job interviews. Using 16 clothes donated from manufacturers and private citizens the women are fitted out and then trained in the best ways of presenting themselves for the interviews. The success rate is high. Jenny attends the office in Rosebud and a new office is being opened in Frankston. Of course Peter and Jenny have pangs of homesickness. In the photograph there is a picture of a thatched cottage on the wall − and they lived in it. How different from the houses that surround them now! Like a lot of people in the United Kingdom, Jenny’s vision of Australia was coloured by some of our exported TV programs, particularly the ‘Flying Doctor’ series. They have now travelled widely, trekking through the Bungle Bungles and exploring the red centre and they are definitely not disappointed. Getting back to the plaque story! Jenny was browsing in a church jumble sale when, to her astonishment, she saw a polished brass plaque from the Newcastle-Upon-Tyne school. Yes! It was the very one. It had in fact been stolen and somehow found its way to Sunningdale. Jenny bought it and it will now be going back to its grateful original owners. While many overseas people have settled in Somers, Peter and Jenny may be among our most recent arrivals (they have only been here for four years) and they are a most welcome addition to our community. Barry Merton This article appeared in our last issue, but due to a software ‘glitch’ it was full of mistakes. We represent it here in its corrected form. Obituary Noel StanleyMarshall 24/12/1919 ~ 24/1/2010 Noel was born to parents Daisy and William Marshall on Christmas Eve 1919 at Yarrawonga. Hence the name Noel! He attended Yarrawonga Primary School and then went on to complete his formal education at Wangaratta Technical School. His father, though by profession a dentist, had acquired a farm at Mulwala and so Noel decided to come to Melbourne and work at the Dalgety Wool Store for a time to learn more about the wool industry. When he returned home he began working on the farm which apart from sheep was also growing wheat. Then around 1950 Noel moved to Camperdown and ran a sheep farm there. In 1954 he purchased the property Campsie Lodge at Somers which he developed into a fine sheep and cattle property. So for Noel it has been a life on the land. It was hard work but he was an efficient and an effective farmer. He loved his working dogs and horses for they were an important part of his farm life. Noel was a down-to-earth practical person who, despite hardships, just got on with doing what had to be done. Always friendly, he had the ability to relate well to most people for he possessed a fine sense of humour and was generous-hearted and willing to help others whenever he could. Noel did the right thing by others and he expected the same in return. His word was his bond. It was at Yarrawonga that Noel and Doris met, more than likely at one of the regular dances held there. Their love for each other grew and they were married on the 1st of April 1944. It was the beginning of a fine partnership and they shared many happy times but also faced some hard times. Their love and commitment to each other always saw them through. Their family was made complete with the arrival of John and Diana who have fond memories of their father. Although not one to openly express his feelings he worked hard to provide well for his family’s needs and that was just one of the ways by which he expressed his love for them. In fact they didn’t see a great deal of him as he started working early each morning and ended late of an evening. However as a young family they were able to enjoy summer holidays and Queenscliff was one of their favourite places to stay. As a father he only ever wanted the best for his family. Doris’ passing was a great loss in his life. She had suffered a stroke five years before she died and through those distressing years Noel took wonderful care of her. He had become a proud grandfather and great-grandfather and loved to see the children, being keen to hear how each was doing. Finally the effects of dementia denied him much of the pleasure he might otherwise have had with the younger ones. Over the years Noel had taken a general interest in most sports and in his youth played football for Yarrawonga. Taking up tennis he continued to play into his late 40s. Although a Geelong supporter he loved to get involved with local football clubs and was an active committee member of the Hastings Club and rarely missed their games. He also enjoyed fishing and to that end he and Doris holidayed at Lakes En- 17 trance. Duck and clay-target shooting was another of his sports when he belonged to gun clubs at Yarrawonga and Camperdown. Some years back Noel and Doris were able to take a nine-month trip overseas travelling around the world. Later there were trips visiting countries such as Canada and Japan and shorter trips in Australia. Noel was a contributor to the communities where he lived, first as a member of the Camperdown CFA then as a foundation member of the Somers CFA and later as captain. Noel became an active member of Westernport and Hastings Lions Clubs and became President of Hastings. Noel was about 65 when he decided to retire from the farm, and John took over; but Noel was always available for advice and guidance. He was a bit of a hoarder and could see a possible use for everything he had, for as he would say, “You might need that one day”. For the last couple of years he had been a resident at the Nursing Home in Somerville where he received wonderful care from all the staff. He won the love of many and the respect of all with his down-toearth approach to life. Noel will be remembered for his courage and loyalty throughout life and for the love and commitment he showed for the wellbeing of all whom he loved. From a Service of Thanksgiving delivered by celebrant Bill Newton. Obituary Joan Otto 10/11/1922 ~ 11/2/2010 In England in 1922, Keith Derbyshire, a young electrical engineer, courted and married local girl Alice Goodrich. He was an Australian boy who went over to assist with the First World War and stayed on for work. The family decided to resettle in Australia where Keith had family. So began a torturous eight weeks at sea with Alice pregnant with Joan, having constant bouts of morning sickness followed by sea sickness. From that eventful beginning two things happened. Joan had a dislike of going to sea and henceforth she was a very good girl, never, it seems, putting a foot wrong. She grew up with her family in Caulfield and attended Gardenvale Primary School before going on to Brighton Secondary School. At 14, Joan left school and took up a seamstress apprenticeship in the city, working in the Block Arcade. Here she learnt and mastered the arts of dress design and dress making, skills that would prove invaluable in the many years to come. She could whip up an evening gown in an afternoon and did so on occasions for herself and her sister Betty. With the outbreak of the war in 1939 she went to work for Clipse Radio in City Road, South Melbourne to assist with the war effort. In 1942 her Uncle Roy, who ran Dye Casters, asked Joan and her sister Betty to work with him as his company switched over production to assist with the growing demands of the rapidly spreading war in the Pacific. During this time Joan and Betty were singing and acting for Camp Concert Parties arranged to entertain the troops. An untrained singer at this stage she was persuaded to enter a singing competition in the South Melbourne Town Hall. She won, and from then on had singing lessons and began singing professionally. She was a natural and gifted soprano and in 1947 signed a contract with Harry Wren Theatres Limited and began touring with different variety shows, singing and acting for eight pounds a week. Joan was a popular girl and the hopeful Deane Otto after his first date with her had to wait three weeks for the next available time, but she soon realised that he was the right one and all others were sent packing. They were married in 1949 and moved in with the Ottos while they saved for a house. Coming from a household of girls she found herself surrounded by men. In 1951 Greg was born. The growing family then moved out to Donvale where Deane and his father had built a house for the new family. Soon there were three terrific boys, who were active, competitive and hungry but well under the control of their mother. With three children under five Joan soon had them organised by a system of colour coding. Every article of clothing was embroidered with their individual colours. 18 She was obsessive about colour and very good at describing and matching them. In the early 1950s she needed to get her driver’s license. She was having a test with the local policeman and things were not going well. She just couldn’t do that U-turn in Springvale Road. It had seemed so easy when she had done it yesterday, but it was harder with the policeman. The kindly policeman said, “Pull over and I’ll ask you a couple of questions”. He said, “I want to test your colours”. At last, thought Joan, here’s something I can do! He pointed to a colour: “What is this one?” he asked, pointing to the red circle. “A cross between scarlet and crimson,” replied Joan. Bemused, he continued, “And this one?” “Ah, that’s a mixture of Ming blue and peacock green.” That explanation carried the day and the policeman issued her with a license. So began the exhilarating years of raising a family. Joan provided the boys with constant encouragement, affection, great cooking, singing, playfulness, music, art, laughter and untold freedom. There were cubs, sailing, swimming, painting, boat building and school. Joan continued to sew, act as a bookkeeper for Deane’s business, learnt to play the guitar and switched to singing folksongs, forming a folk duet with Alan Tisdal. It was perhaps during these busy, productive and at times testing years that Joan found her truest voice – her dedication to and love for her family. All too soon the children were grown and gone and Joan and Deane decided to move to Somers, buying a cliff-top block. Joan’s creative streak again came to the fore and she helped design their dream home, complete with sauna and large entertaining areas. It catered for family, grandchildren and the many social occasions such as music nights, film nights and parties. Joan now sang solo with her guitar or autoharp and was much in demand. It was an ongoing family joke that she always had her guitar in the boot of the car, ready in case she was asked to play by some stranger. She began to paint and draw and mastered oils and watercolours. Throughout her life Joan maintained her love of fashion and design. Special family occasions were an opportunity to create new garments. Weddings were much anticipated and outfits planned months in advance. She loved to knit and crochet and each grandchild was suitably attired in specially designed jumpers. The garden also received her close attention and together with Deane she developed a real knowledge and love for native plants. She adored that Somers view and the bird life that frequented the garden. In 1993 they made the move to Melbourne, near where she grew up and loved going down to the end of North Road remembering when her father took her swimming there as a girl. They frequented the theatre and ballet, held film nights and sang with choirs. Although Joan’s health was declining she loved to sing, do the daily round of the garden and talk with family, especially asking about the developments of her grandchildren and the family dogs Bella and Ralph, and just having a great laugh together. Three years ago Joan needed a greater level of care and she moved to ‘Rumbalara’. She and Deane had always been a devoted and steadfast team and during this time Deane gave her a great level of support. As her health further deteriorated, Deane bought a car so she could be transported to restaurants, shopping centres and the beach. It is fair to say that without Deane’s constant care and attention she wouldn’t have enjoyed her last years as much as she did. Joan’s was a full life and one well lived, always with a perpetual sparkle in her eyes. She displayed a generosity of spirit towards all and was filled with an enthusiasm for life with much laughter and love for her family. Book Review The Mornington Peninsula is home to a magical spinner of tales. Her name is Wendy Orr. Wendy Orr was born in Canada and grew up in various places across North America and France. We are now lucky enough to have her living amongst us. I would love to meet her and you will want to meet her too when you have read her books. I am sure that both parents and grandparents will really enjoy reading Wendy’s books – and will want to do so before they have to hand them over to the children for whom they were bought. The Ark in the Park tells the tale of a multi-storey ark, complete with great glass sails, run by two ‘older people’ who have no immediate family and a little girl living in a high-rise building with no extended family. The story tells a very human story of what happens when they meet. The story is told lightly and with humour. It is truly fun. It does not lag nor languish. Your children (5 to 7 years old) will just love it. Nim of Nim’s Island and Nim at Sea is the incarnation of every midyear child’s dream. Nim’s island is the dream island of many, many children. Her adventures are only just beyond ‘everyday’ probability. She and all the other cast members seem to grow out of a wonderfully warm and vivid world that must surely really exist ‘somewhere’. Wendy’s other books include Spook’s Shack, Mokie and Bik and for teenagers, Peeling the Onion. Look for them – your children and grandchildren will love them and so will you. Rosemary Birney Please Respond We’d like parents, grandparents and children who read any or all of these books to let us know what they thought of them, and others which we’ll be reviewing in future issues. The best will receive a book prize. Send your responses to: ‘Book Review’, PO Box 338, Somers 3927. A Public Meeting was called in December by the CFA as part of their Bushfire Awareness Program. As can be seen, there was a large attendance as residents understandably were anxious about the forthcoming fire season which, as it turned out, was very different from the preceding season. The residents were reminded of the necessity to clean up around their properties, to clean out their guttering, prepare an evacuation plan well before the fire season and check that any fire-fighting equipment is ready and properly functional. One suggestion that brought smiles was to have a child’s waterblaster to hand as it can be quite effective in dealing with small spot fires. 19 Winter Olympians Watching brave men and women rocketing down luge runs, bobsled tracks, ski slopes, and snow-packed half-pipes, it’s hard for a naturalist not to think of animal precedents. After all, just as wasps were making paper millions of years before Ts’ai Lun ‘invented’ the stuff in China in 104 AD, animals, rather than the International Olympic Committee, pioneered winter sports. Have doubts? Consider the river otter. This is a 10- or 20-pound weasel in a zoological sense. Yet functionally, it’s a snowboard or a skeleton sled. Give an otter a snowcovered slope, and it’ll plunge down head first. Proof that this is sport comes when the animal bounds back to the top of the hill and rockets down again and again. In fact, otters are such compulsive winter sliders that they don’t need a hill to practice. Even on a flat lake an otter will stop bounding from time to time and hurl itself forward on its belly. The tracks tell the story. No animal cross-country skis the way my Olympian neighbour Bill Demong does, but the snowshoe hare comes close. In autumn it sprouts rigid hairs on its hind feet, and these combine to form genuine snowshoes that allow the animal to move speedily over the surface of the deepest powder. I’ve tracked hares and always come away impressed by their endurance and the length of their bounds. A hare going for gold can take to the air and travel four feet or more before it drops in for a landing. Swimming belongs to the summer Olympic Games, but don’t tell that to the beaver. This hydrophilic rodent spends the entire winter diving and swimming in frigid waters. It has a peculiar adaptation for passing the winter. Rather than hibernating, as its cousin woodchucks and jumping mice do, the beaver idles the season away inside a dark, clammy, windowless house. To fend off starvation, the rodent with the pancake tail must eat. To eat, it must leave the cold comfort of its lodge, plunge into icy water, and swim to a food cache on the bottom. There, using teeth like vice-grips, it grabs a meal of tree branches, swims back home, and hauls itself and the food inside through an underwater portal. A single round trip is an Olympic-worthy event, and the beaver makes them by the score. Perhaps the greatest of our fourlegged Olympians is the moose. This titanic member of the deer family is built for winter. Its great size aids in retaining warmth (the larger an animal, the lower the ratio of surface area to core volume, and it’s surface area that sheds heat), its thick shaggy coat serves as magnificent insulation, and its long shapely dancing-girl legs find hard ground almost no matter how deep the snow. Track a moose in winter and you’ll stand in awe of its power and perseverance. Slogging through five feet of powder without snowshoes would sap you of energy in a dangerous hurry, but unless conditions get really extreme, a moose can handle it. On and on the moose steps confidently, nibbling some bark here and a few dozen buds there, stoking its metabolic furnace. Spring is the finish line. When the moose arrives, no crowd waits to cheer. But by traveling miles through deep snow, in sunshine and in darkness, for months on end, often in temperatures far below zero, the great symbol of the North earns the gold of April sunshine, the silver of melting ice, and the bronze of newborn calves. Ed Kanze “We’re in northern New York, in the Adirondack Mountains, not far from the Canadian border. Montreal is a two-hour drive to the north. Burlington, Vermont, is a two-hour drive to the east. Albany, the state capital, is a two-and-a-half-hour drive to the south. New York City is a six or seven-hour drive south. Our little town is Bloomingdale, New York, near the villages of Saranac Lake and Lake Placid (home of the 20 1932 and 1980 Winter Olympic Games).” ‘All Things Natural’, Ed’s weekly newspaper column, has been published since 1987. Today it appears in nine Connecticut and New York newspapers and reaches more than 100,000 readers. Funny Dunny In a civilized country like ours we go to the toilet or lavatory or ‘wash our hands’ – although that can cause a problem. As a young chorister at Trinity College, I was keen to find the toilet after a long drive to a country church and a lengthy service. The local ladies were preparing cakes and tea, and I asked where I could ‘wash my hands’. The euphemism proved fatal! A basin was cleared, soap and a towel were produced and my hands were washed very clean – followed by a rush to the back of the hall! In the USA the ‘powder room’ is fine, although rather suggestive, but you’ll need a phrase-book in Europe when you’re in a hurry to relieve yourself and are confronted with titles like ‘retretes’, ‘aborts’, ‘gabinettos’, ‘casa de banhos’, ‘nuzniks’ or ‘zahods’. And then which is which? Here ‘Gents and Ladies’ or ‘His and Hers’ are unambiguous, as are the American ‘Braves and Squaws’ or ‘Guys and Dolls’. But in Norway, as I once found out to my acute embarrassment, ‘Herren’ means ‘Men’ not ‘Hers’, with ‘Kvinner’ for ‘Women’, and in Italy it can be confusing with ‘Signore’ and ‘Signori’ or ‘Donne’ and ‘Uomini’, and in Portugal it reads ‘Senhoras’ and ‘Homens’. Very off-putting! The Spanish are far more virile with their ‘Caballeros’ or even ‘Hombres’. Even more off-putting is the women you find in almost every male toilet, especially in Far-Eastern airports, who watch your every move, hoping for a coin in the saucer – enough to afflict any man with a stricture! John Martyn Plinth, on looking back with a stiff neck When you reach an uncertain age you don’t spend much time looking forward because when you do, there’s nothing to see – well there is but you don’t want to go there. Looking back? Well that’s another matter. There’s so much material that you could bore on about it for years. Apparently it’s quite common for mature-aged men to regress to the stage where they start sniffing out old girlfriends, going through dusty diaries and photo albums and generally dreaming of how things might have been. Then there’s the ‘my first car’ syndrome. Plinth has a 1938 Baby Austin ‘7’ and you would be amazed how many totterers approach him misty-eyed with stories, mainly of remembered loving embraces, supposedly performed in their Baby Austins. It’s probably an example of long-distance memory making things seem much more achievable than they really were. To have a cuddle in a Baby Austin would require such contortions that you would probably take half an hour to get untangled. Plinth’s first car was a 1928 Baby Austin, appropriately called the ‘Chummy’ model. It had been part of a back-yard chook run near the Harp of Erin hotel in East Kew. The vendor removed piles of straw and some eggs and handed the car over. After swinging the starting handle for about half an hour the engine Plinth’s Baby Austin containing brave girls. spluttered into life and having parted with 25 pounds, Plinth drove it away. Heading down Harp Road there was a sudden bang and the car sat down on the bitumen and Plinth saw a wheel rolling past and assumed it was his. He was right! Hailing an interested bystander, Plinth had him lift the back of the Austin up by hand (quite easy), while he reattached the wheel. Heading for home up Doncaster Road another alarming thing happened. Geysers of scalding water and steam shot up out of a breather hole in the radiator cap and showered back over the car which had no roof. In fact, this went on for months and Plinth resorted to wearing a mackintosh as he went around the streets with his vehicle looking more like Thomas the Tank Engine. Anyway, one day he contacted the previous owner, looking for advice on the matter, only to be told that the hole was not a breather; it was a threaded opening from which a mascot had been removed. So Plinth slipped two shillings under the filler cap and the problem was solved. The one thing everyone remembers about Baby Austins is that they were almost brakeless. In the user’s manual it stated that the brakes were “to control the speed of the car”. They said nothing about actually stopping. This problem came to the fore one day when Plinth was heading up the street on the way to work. There was a well-known and hearty lady – wife of the local MP – and she expected a lift to shopping from any passing motorist. Plinth rolled the car to a stop and was preparing to explain to Mrs FitzHerbert (not her real name), that travelling by Austin 21 was dangerous and he had barely begun when the lady had started backing in through the door. Mrs FitzHerbert wore a suit involving several yards of heavy charcoal-grey material and by the time she had flounced herself into the seat, Plinth found himself engulfed! The first problem was finding the gear stick (or guessing stick as Austin owners tended to call it). He knew it was under her folds somewhere but he feared that feeling for it was likely to earn him a slap across the face. Anyway, Mrs FitzHerbert took all this in good part and with the gear stick to hand Plinth set off. All went well until they started the ascent of the hill up towards the Kew Cemetery gates. Being overtaken by all other vehicular traffic was normal but being passed by a W-class tram full of cat-calling school children was embarrassing. Mrs FitzHerbert seemed quite oblivious to all this and she chatted away happily, noting from time to time that “this is so much fun”. For Plinth, the fun was only just starting. His passenger wanted to be dropped off at the Kew Post Office and this was at the bottom of a long descent. Forward planning was required. He waved the guessing stick around trying to find a lower gear, placed his foot on the brake pedal and leant back on the hand brake. Austin owners soon learnt different strategies for stopping their cars; it usually entailed mounting the kerb and coming to rest against something; preferably not a fire hydrant or a tram shelter full of commuters. The other idea was to slip the door open and scrape your foot along the ground. Plinth always had metal heel protectors and these caused the sparks to fly. With all this going on you could generally rely on people to jump out of the way. On this occasion however, Plinth was able to stop the car and Mrs FitzHerbert climbed out, expressing her elation at having such a lovely ride. End of episode one. In the next instalment we will jump 50 years to find Plinth, once again, struggling with Baby Austins. Barrington Plinth HAVE YOU DINED AT VERAISON RESTAURANT @ BLUESTONE LANE VINEYARD? SMALL-PLATE LUNCHES $18/CELLAR-DOOR WINE SPECIALS Affordable Alfresco Local Dining with Beautiful Vineyard Views. Estate Grown and Produced Food & Wines. "Australian Dining Guide Chef’s Hat Rating Restaurant" Open: Lunch Thurs-Mon 11-5pm Dinner Fri/Sat 6.30-11pm Baby Grand Piano Music Every Fri/Sat Night. 269 MYERS RD, MERRICKS NTH Melways 163 A7 BOOKINGS: 03 5989 7081 www.veraisonrestaurant.com.au www.bluestonelane.com.au Coming Events @ Veraison Restaurant Easter Sunday: Romajanco Live Acoustic [4-Course Small-Plate Set Menu $65]inc. Glass of Wine Mother’s Day: Mojo Pearls Live Acoustic [4-Course Small-Plate Set Menu $65]inc. Glass of Wine INQUIRE NOW ABOUT OUR COMING EVENTS @ VERAISON RESTAURANT * * Latin Dance Lesson & Dinner: Fri Nights coming soon in June-October Pinot Noir Regional Wine Dinner: 5-Course Degustation Menu with Matching Local and Imported Pinots. Sat 17th July * Local Comedy & 3-Course Degustation Dinner: Friday Night 30th July * Magic Show & Dinner. Saturday Night August 14th Rye and date bread recipe I was fortunate to have tasted this recipe as it came out of the oven. It is a recipe of Alan Bickford who loves experimenting in the kitchen. He served it buttered, with Gorgonzola cheese and apple slices. It was truly delicious. Alan believes that the reason bread-making is not so popular or recipes fail is that we are not patient enough. Dough must be left to rise and not be rushed. Anne Doran 1 cup dark rye flour 1 cup light rye flour ½ cup bread flour 1 tbsp yeast 3 tsp sugar 1 tsp salt chopped dates (or walnuts) All plumbing maintenance Gas appliance repairs and installations New homes and extensions HWS replacements Cold water pipe renewals Roofing guttering and downpipes Running taps and toilets etc. Mix together the dry ingredients. Make a well in the middle and add enough warm water to make a stiffish dough. Let it rise until it doubles in size. Knead well and place it in bread tin. Let it rise again for approx. 20–30 mins while the oven is heating to 200 degrees. Bake for 35–40 mins. Cool on a rack. Prompt & reliable Call Richard 0417 138 616 22 The Bock connection The purchase in Port Arthur of a catalogue of the work of Thomas Bock, convict engraver and society portraitist, has led to a slight but interesting connection to at least two local residents. This catalogue was attractive to the purchaser from Somers because it illustrated, both in the paintings and in the historical storyline, that period of Tasmania’s history when there was a beginning of an affluent society, but at the same time, the Aboriginal people were being decimated. There was for the purchaser the added emotion created by the fact that one of her own forebears also arrived in this period to restart their life in this strange land. The catalogue had been printed for an exhibition of Bock’s work in 1991 for the Queen Victoria Museum Launceston, and the Australian National Gallery, Canberra. I happened to see the book when visiting and picked up on the name Bock which happened to be the surname of one of my tennis friends in Shoreham. A quick phone call produced an, “Oh yes indeed, Thomas Bock certainly is my forebear and he did live a most interesting life”. This life commenced in Sutton Coalfield, Warwickshire in 1793. He became a cathedral chorister at nearby Lichfield, but at age 14 was apprenticed to an engraver in Birmingham. On completing his apprenticeship he set up as an engraver and a painter of miniatures. He married in 1814 and in 1817 was awarded a silver medal by the Society of Arts and Commerce for an engraving of a portrait. By 1823 his wife had given birth to five children but in this year he was found guilty at the Warwick Assizes of administering a drug to his sisterin-law to procure an abortion and was sentenced to 14 years transportation. With 150 other convicts Bock spent 163 days to reach Hobart Town on the other side of the world. He was immediately set to work for the government using his skill as an engraver and soon produced a plate for a four-dollar note (Spanish dollars were currency then) and received accolades from the Sydney newspapers for the quality of his work. He went on to produce engraved plates for a number of other Van Diemen’s Land banks as well as commercial requirements such as bills of lading, almanacs, invitation cards etc. Bock also began painting miniature portraits but was directed in 1824 to produce sketches of bushrangers (alive or dead), the most infamous of these being Alexander Pearce (of cannibalistic notoriety). By 1831 he had a gallery in Hobart and became the first professional painter to practice there, becoming well known for his portraits of wealthy landowners. His work was carried out in a variety of mediums including oils, pastels, chalk, watercolour and pencil and he even indulged in life drawings which was really unheard of in that staid township. The Protector of Aborigines G.A. Robinson commissioned Thomas to produce portraits of Aboriginal people, thinking he would produce a book that recorded his labours amongst them. The best known of these is the portrait of Truganini. He received an absolute pardon in 1835. (His convict record states: “Former character good, respectably connected and very orderly”). When Governor Franklin arrived in 1838 Bock was soon commissioned to paint a portrait of Lady Franklin. In 1843 Thomas commenced a photographic practice using the daguerreotype process, many examples of which are still in existence. Six children were born to Thomas Bock and Mary Ann Cameron, two of the boys following in their father’s footsteps but with not quite his skill. Thomas died in 1855 from 23 An 1852 portrait of Thomas Bock, possibly photographed by his son Alfred. An oil painting by Thomas Bock of Eliza Sophia Tilley (c.1844). what is described as ‘debility’. He left an indelible record of the people of Van Diemen’s Land, being swept along by the Colony’s great need for his skills and gained acceptance as a society artist, overcoming the convict stigma. Now his paintings and drawings are treasured by the galleries and libraries having the good fortune to possess them. (Some text and illustrations from: Thomas Bock – Convict Engraver, Society Portraitist.) Rod Nuske Wise Head, Sore Arm Did you ever say, shaking your head, that you cannot put a wise head on old shoulders? Well I plead guilty and this is one of those tales. Recently I was prescribed an antibiotic, which I am not going to name in case I get a law suit. Reading the advisory blurb, I noticed that this medication has the ability to increase your skin sensitivity to sunlight. I usually avoid sunlight. I chose to have ancestors with a strong Celtic line and so am not really suited to the golden tan of Australia. I tried as a teenager and peeled and peeled until I finally woke up that I am really a damsel who should retain the pale and interesting look. I was ferrying a car to Ringwood for service and went up Eastlink. Travelling up it was early and, although the sun was shining, it did not bother me. Coming home midafternoon was another story. I could not keep my arm out of the sun. I didn’t have a long-sleeved shirt or garment of any kind to cover my arm, the sun-shade would not come low enough to give me shelter and I had to drive with my arm fully exposed to the heat. It felt a little tender by the time I reached Somers but I didn’t think anything of it. Perhaps a touch of sunburn. The next morning I found out it was more than a touch. My arm felt as if I had been sitting all afternoon on the beach. It wasn’t any different in colour to my left arm but it was sore to touch as well as expose briefly to the sun. I smoothed it with cream, ice-bathed and rested it but it was still stinging. It made me remember the heedless days of youth. So when you read the cautions and warnings on the medicine bottle, do take it seriously enough to avoid something like my uncomfortable arm. Jean Stokes Farewell Somers Primary School and hello Mornington Padua College, Tyabb Flinders Christian Community College, The Peninsula School, Bayside Christian College, Dromana Secondary College and Woodleigh School! Not like the ‘good old days’ when there was just a choice between Frankston High School and Padua. We wish all these wonderful happy young students Elizabeth, Daniel, Ellie, Matt, Lucinda, Nanea, Briony and Eleanor all the very best with their senior education. It would be great in six years’ time to re-take this photograph at the Somers Store to note the difference and the maturity of these young people. Iyengar Yoga Beginner classes with Frances Willems (Certified Iyengar Yoga teacher) NEW VENUE Bittern Hall, Frankston-Flinders Rd, Bittern next to CFA Station Tuesday 6.45-8.15 pm Thursday 9.15-10.45 am For further info and bookings contact: Frances Willems • 0419 333 642 24 Art Classes For Terrified Beginners! Develop techniques and a passion for using the vibrant and inspiring medium of pastels with Somers artist Monique Morey. Course times for term 2, 2010: Mon: 10:30am-1:00pm (starts Mon 12th April) Wed: 7:15pm-9:45pm (starts Wed 14th April) Fri: 10:00am-12:30pm (starts Fri 16th April) Qualified teacher Maximum 6 students in a class Fun and relaxed environment at home studio in Somers All materials available from tutor Weekly informative handouts Topics include drawing, tonal values, colour theory, composition and painting from photos. Cost: $200 for 10-week term. For enquiries, or to visit a class in progress and see the studio, contact Monique: 5983 2604 or 0409 836 507 [email protected] Koala Lesson in Captivity by Ross Topham I entice our terriers with marbles of dry food that I frantically all-thumbs try to gather but they are single-minded in their frenzied lather, and so I run for the garden hose which I turn to jet spray and water-cannon them away, like the tanks of Pinochet’s Chile, washing them behind the locking door of the incarcerating garage. The Pomeranian, the Maltese, the Australian: our three flyweight tribal terriers never deterred from fighting out of their division, this day had taken on a blundering male koala, thick in girth, but quick, with razor claws, this cuddle-soft tourist-shop icon, an Edward Scissorhands in fur, rave-party high on the ecstasy of eucalypts, ringed by our manic dogs who instinctively revert to ancient hunting tricks, like taking turns in their attack, while the other two of the pack encircle the grunting, spitting beast, but Pepper is too slow, the disgracefully ageing Maltese clawed by the desperate koala who takes this chance to clamber to the branch of nearest sanctuary, but out of the terriers’ would-be frying pan, and into a Rose, a Standard, almost two metres tall, with thorns like shards of splintered glass, the dogs yelping, snarling, leaping up, desperate to break this cruel impasse around our weeping Apricot Delight. The koala meanwhile stays embedded in the wine-glass shape of the orange rose, and so I hose this wild Somers creature too, but I cannot dislodge the stubborn, moaning male from its place of desperate refuge: refusing to budge, it prefers the thorns and masochistic pain to risk of release and any hope of ultimate peace. I watched, then, from the kitchen window, watched and waited for the koala to climb down, but it remained clinging and stupefied into the fright of night, and I knew that I also have too often done the same. By next morning, the embattled marsupial, no doubt traumatised and sore, had gone to eat and sleep, and sleep and eat once more, chore and mundane repetition the animal essence, I have koala-learned, of every captive’s life. I know rescue is needed, but my commands go typically unheeded by the dogs, even grey Pepper is back into the fray the welts on his stomach apparently not fatal. 25 How WE can help THEM WE live in a magnificent part of the world, untroubled by many of the issues that impact on so much of humanity. But all is not rosy in our small coastal village. THEY are causing problems again! THEY shouldn’t have ‘vandalised’ the Pine trees. These trees are a declared weed species and as such are to be systematically removed from Crown Land Foreshore Reserves in order to improve the biodiversity of the regionally threatened Banksia Woodlands; Commonwealth and State government environmental legislation is in place to protect and restore our narrow, fragile strips of coast; THEY are only doing what THEY are required to do. As the appointed Managers of the Foreshore Reserve THEY are bound by these requirements. So please don’t continue to Pine for the Pines and hurl your abuse at volunteers; THEY have done the right thing in removing the weed species, our greatest fire hazard on the Reserve! As a community, WE need to get together and help with the restoration and revegetation works – cast your eyes at the new Picnic area near the Lower Car Park to see what fifteen months of WE effort can achieve. THEY should do something about the fire risk on the Foreshore Reserve: The Dept of Sustainability and Environment (DSE) fire management officers and Regional CFA assessors have rated the Foreshore Reserve Fire Risk as low. Recommendations from these assessments have been and are being implemented now and will continue, using mostly contract labour but with assistance from volunteers as well. THEY have done this to assist the community but volunteers will be needed for WE assistance with further works to ensure the fire man- agement plan can be fully implemented. THEY let the tracks get overgrown . . . why don’t THEY cut them back? THEY have tried in the past to have working bees with volunteers brush-cutting the tracks (some had been done by volunteers months ago but had grown back all too quickly!). With a limited revenue stream of $$$$$$ THEY need more WE assistance and/or funding, if the large number of tracks are to be well maintained. When the ‘welcome’ late Spring rains ceased, THEY employed contractors to do a thorough job of track cut-back that should last through summer. Follow-up works will ensure that in time, these tracks will be better maintained and not have the abundance of track-side weedy grasses. But, THEY need to apply for grants and funding in order to pay for these works! THEY are trying to reduce the number of car-parking spaces! With the addition of line marking (courtesy of MPSC), there are now a designated number of car-parking spaces in the Upper Car Park. All car parks on Crown Land Reserve are primarily for the use of those engaged in Coastal Foreshore activities (swimming, fishing, boating, bush walking, picnicking etc.). DSE provided funding for this Upper Car Park on Somers Foreshore Reserve and THEY along with volunteers maintain it. The ad hoc parking arrangements in the Lower Car Park have been impacting on the aged remnant vegetation for 26 many years. THEY are trying to do what’s required; to preserve what remains before all is lost, while at the same time catering for the needs of coastal users – a delicate balancing act – but THEY and other community groups are working on it! THEY will keep trying to do what’s right and what is required, but WE in the community need to think carefully about how our Foreshore Reserve’s resources and facilities are used, so the original intent of preserving the scant coastal Foreshore Reserve is maintained. WE need to understand that THEY are volunteers, appointed by the Minister, to manage the Crown Land Reserve on behalf of DSE. Without a substantial revenue stream or a paid Ranger/ Manager, there needs to be more WE assistance. If local people were to ‘commit’ to assisting with works required in managing the Somers Foreshore Reserve, then the THEY tag might just disappear and become WE. “Our community looking after our community’s greatest natural asset” has a nice inclusive ring to it. If you would like to assist the SFCoM in any capacity or you would like to receive an emailed copy of the monthly Newsletter (to keep you better informed of meetings, projects, activities and working bees) then please email: [email protected] If you would like a hard copy of the Newsletter sent to you, then please write to: SFCofM, PO Box 466, Somers 3927. Picnic at Sandy Point The Somers Yacht club is a community social club where many of the members happen to be enthusiastic, skilful sailors. If you look through the early history of the Somers club it was always intended to be a sailing-oriented social club. That objective was certainly achieved and today a very large proportion of the members are ‘social members’. Racing is still a very important part of the activities at SYC, but ‘social sailing’ is also a part of the calendar. Retired navy man Tassie Cusick commented, “Stan Byrne, with others, started the yacht club at Somers. Stan Byrne came to Somers during the war in the Air Force. He was a most likeable, cheerful man. He married Dorothy, one of Ron Stone’s daughters. The Stones owned the General Store for many years.” So it was that on 8 January we headed off to our picnic at Sandy Point, perhaps invoking the spirit of Stan’s vision. There were about 20 yachts and a couple of safety power boats. The sea was comparatively calm and it was a pleasant, sunny Somers … er summer’s day. The tide rushed out a little sooner than we expected, or perhaps we set off a little later, so we decided to have our picnic this year on the club side of the point. If you are wondering where all the sand from the Somers beach went, it’s sitting off Sandy Point in a great arc out into the middle of Westernport Bay. We decided not to fight the sand bar and everybody seemed to be quite pleased with this arrangement. The group was a mixture of youngsters through to some of our octogenarian sailors. After a couple of pleasant hours chatting on the beach it was time to head back to the club. Peter Hohaus (Peter is a member of the SYC rescue-boat crew.) Seniors and retirees be kind to yourself and have a massage. Special offer on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday You will never pay more than $30 a visit! Even less, if you choose a massage seated in my professional massage chair ‘dressed as you are’. *********** Phone now for a discussion with Kenn McIntosh, your local massage man for 11 years. If you don’t look after your body, where will you live? Kenn 27 Tennis Club News Winners and Losers The club’s men’s night team of Peter Wilson, Glen Mealey, Graeme Wilson, Brad Culley and Mark Jaensch won the B Grade grand final defeating Balnarring by four sets to two. This team has now been promoted to A Grade. The mid-week ladies’ section-2 team of Yvonne Allenby, Jacqui Austin, Anne Thomson, Bindi Mealey and Peta Howell lost their grand final to Pearcedale by just one game. Annual General Meeting – Sunday 21 March From 1.30 pm you can come along and enjoy a game of tennis and watch an exhibition match of top players. This will be followed by the AGM at 3 pm and afternoon tea in the Clubhouse, Stone Reserve, Camp Hill Road, Somers. All members and their families welcome. Court Hire Courts are available to members of the community to hire. To collect a key, ring 5983 1360, 5983 1834, or 5931 3313. Key deposit is $10 (refundable on return) and hire fee is $15 per hour per court. Children’s tennis program doubles in size Somers Tennis Club’s after-hours coaching program for children from Somers Primary School has more than doubled in size since last year with 32 children now taking part. This is the maximum number the club can handle at one time. More than 40 children out of the school’s enrolment of 180 applied to take part. The program, Active AfterSchool Communities (AASC), is a national initiative of the Australian Sports Commission in association with Tennis Victoria and is designed to stimulate local community involvement. It is funded by the Federal Government and is available free of charge to all primary-school children. After the program is completed the Australian Sports Commission monitors the participants to see if they continue with the sport by joining a local club. The Australian Sports Commission provided funding for racquets, balls and specially designed lowerrise nets for the program. The children have to provide nothing other than suitable footwear. The sports commission’s regional co-ordinator for the Mornington Peninsula, Jane Heseltine, said the local program had been a huge success. “It’s great to see these children becoming involved in an activity like tennis which, if they stick with it, can become a life-long love,” she said. “It also gets them involved in a healthy activity in the outdoors as well as refining their hand-eye coordination.” Somers Tennis Club president Graeme Wilson, a former professional tennis coach, together with Park Shields, a former school principal and a club member, conduct the coaching sessions which last approximately an hour. Sea Rocket The plant growing along the beach at Somers is Cakile maritima – Sea Rocket. It is a succulent annual herb with glaucous, variously lobed leaves and small white, pink or purple flowers during spring summer and autumn. It is now naturalised. It was introduced early in colonisation and has spread around the temperate coast of Australia. There are actually two species, C. maritima and C. edentula. The differences are C. maritima has the lower segment of the fruit as broad as the upper. C. edentula has a much narrower lower segment. I did not look at the fruits to determine which one. C. maritima is the most common. It may be a weed but perhaps it’s doing something positive for Somers beach. It is Cakile maritama or Sea Rocket which I’m told has been accepted as an Honorary Australian. If it helps slow down the beach erosion by allowing wind-blown sand to collect around it then welcome to our beach. Then again perhaps one good winter storm may undo all the gains of the summer. 28