Showing posts with label moving saga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moving saga. Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2009

From this . . .

As I may have hinted in that last post, I'm pretty chuffed with the new house we've found to live in.

When we first arrived in Bunbury, the company Hayden works for very kindly put us up in this little house in the suburbs while we looked for somewhere permanent to live:  

And at first glance you might think it looks quite nice - it was very clean and quite new.  But after a few weeks there, I was struggling.  I found it claustrophobic, uninspiring, and that aluminium fencing gave off a glare that caused me migraines.  Not nice.

In comparison, our new house - our River House - is beautiful, old, spacious and loaded with character.  The owners have partially renovated it in a very grand style, and the rest of it .. well, it's loaded with character. I'm bursting with pride - and amazement - that it's ours.  For only a small increase in rent, it really is quite an upgrade on our Townsville apartment.   

I'm itching to show you more photos, but first I have to get everything looking right.  In the meantime, I'm off to a meeting that might bring me some freelance writing work.  Wish me luck?

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Ten Weeks Ago Today

Hayden's phone rang and we both jumped.  He jumped because he always jumps and scrabbles for his phone if it rings while he's driving, and I jumped because it scares the bejesus out of me when he does that.    

We were on a dry sandy road surrounded by grassy scrub, on our way south from Townsville to Brisbane.  We'd just decided that we weren't going to stop in Gladstone; we didn't want to see another small refinery town.  Hayden fished the ringing phone out of his pocket and handed it to me to answer.  It was Jane, the HR lady from the Bunbury Refinery where we'd flown for his interview the weekend before.  I asked Jane to wait while Hayden found a place to stop and talk.

She was calling for Hayden's referees.  At the end of the call Hayden asked "Just out of curiosity ..." which is how he starts a lot of questions, "how many people is it down to?"  And Jane replied, "Well, usually I wouldn't tell you this, but it's just down to you at this stage."  Hayden stuttered "thank you" and hung up the phone.

We passed the rest of the day in a daze.  We couldn't be sure exactly what the phonecall meant but it seemed likely, though not certain, that Hayden would be offered the job.  Hayden needed to stop driving to process that information, so we decided to go in to Gladstone after all - for some lunch and to talk.  We drove all the way in there and drove around the town and up to Radar Hill to see the view.  We couldn't settle on a place to stop, but we did want some lunch and I wanted to sit together and talk it out ... but he'd suddenly gone super-antsy.  In retrospect it seems clear that all he really wanted was to contact his referees and tell them the good news.  I couldn't pick up on it at the time; I suppose I was overcome with relief.  And hunger.  

Hayden called his old boss Josh while we were waiting at a sandwich bar, and then we walked over the road to the Gladstone Library for him to email his other referee Elaine - he didn't know where in the world she was at that moment.  I remember he marched right past the Information Desk to where the computers were.  He just needed to get onto a computer.  I called him back and he signed in correctly with the librarian, and he was very apologetic and charming, but I could tell he'd been blind to her completely.  He just needed to get to that computer.

I'd forgotten that day until yesterday when I walked in the door of the Bunbury library and it seemed immediately similar.  And neither of them is much different to the one back in Townsville.  They're all big new buildings housing little collections, with internet computers in use all day long.  In the foyer of the Gladstone library, where I waited for Hayden that day, I noticed they were having a charity sale of old jigsaw puzzles.  I like puzzles, and I like to do something charitable when it suits me, so I spent quite a long time trying to choose just one or two; they were a bargain at 50c each.  Then I suddenly put them all down when I realised that it was going to be a long time until I could go home and spread out a puzzle - wherever and whenever that home was going to be. 

I suppose what I'm trying to say is that for all the big change and upheaval of the past three months, we've very nearly settled back down again - in another small refinery town on the coast.  Ok, so we're on a different coast now - Bunbury's on the west coast of Australia, south of Perth - but there is a lot here that feels the same.  There's good and bad in that.  

Hopefully over the coming weeks I'll start to unravel more of the good.  With more photos, I promise.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

The Best

We had a wonderful time in New Zealand












































Such a beautiful, restful, damp and arty place.  









Sadly we have to say goodbye ... 















goodbye for now.

Friday, June 05, 2009

Killer Fluffy

Our Lily is afraid of sheep.  She HATES them.

Yes, our cat has come with us to New Zealand.  We probably wouldn't have put her through the trauma of travelling if we'd known that we were only going to stay for a month, but she's been a real trooper with all the changes.  She's OK with the cold and rain here - only she does sometimes wake us up ridiculously early needing to be let outside, only to come skulking back in a very short time later.  She then burrows back into the bed with us - fur and paws all damp and cold.  She's become an exemplary snuggler and a champion heater-hogger.

The only time I've seen her really up in arms was today when our neighbourhood sheep moved into a paddock really close to our house.  Lil glimpsed them through the fence and got scared; she let out a low moan like wind through an old farmhouse and scampered quickly up onto the microwave.  Obviously we shouldn't let her do that, but (a) none of her training seems to have come with her from Townsville and (b) she's got to have at least one high safe place from where she can keep an eye on those woolly bastards next door.  I don't know what she thinks they might do to her.


Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Life in the Shadow of a Mountain




This morning we had to crack open the car - it was frozen shut and the windscreen was completely frosted up with beautiful feathery swirls of ice. Sitting inside the frosted up car was strangely cosy, and then as the ice melted and we were able to drive away, we came into some beautiful views of the mountain all covered in delicious-looking icecreamy snow. We've come to Taranaki - on the western side of New Zealand's North Island - for Hayden to start work with an organic cheese factory that's being built by a stream. Sounds idyllic, doesn't it? And it is. It's just beautiful. Freezing, literally. But beautiful. It's everything you would imagine life in New Zealand to be.
We're staying in a little wooden cottage with no mobile coverage and no internet (I'm typing this at the local library 15km down the road). It has rained ferociously. Geese and sheep are our closest neighbours. I'm wearing more layers of clothing than ever before: thermal socks and jumpers, woolly hats and scarves and gloves. It's quite a contrast to Townsville where I thought winter might be coming when I put an extra sheet on the bed to 'rug up' in the morning.
It is beautiful here ... but this is not the end of the story. We might not be staying long, and it is looking likely that Bunbury in Western Australia will win out in the end. In a couple of weeks we will be back across the Tasman, back all the way across Australia and as far as we know, that will be our final stop. But in the meantime we're enjoying the beautiful green grass - it's flourescent, really - the fresh clear water that comes straight out of the tap and the family and friends who are all around us here. Bunbury seems a long, long way away.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Goodbyeeeeee

Finally, something's changed.  We've packed up our house and our car, and we're heading off on a new road.
We weren't sure that this was ever going to happen.  Right down to the last minute, the plan kept changing:  there were phonecalls about jobs that Hayden had given up on, last minute interview trips to Melbourne and Western Australia (sorry Melbourne friends, we were there so briefly we didn't have time to see everybody - so we decided to be fair and see nobody while we were there.)  

In fact, the plan is not even settled yet:  we are not yet sure of our final destination.  Tomorrow we set off from Townsville for the last time; by the time we arrive in Brisbane (we're going to take four days to drive there) we'll know whether we're headed for New Plymouth in New Zealand or Bunbury in Western Australia.  

Keep you posted.