Thursday, September 27, 2007

It's A Sign


Packing up to move house is life's #1 Pain-In-The-Arse job, but dredging through the meaningless collections of ones life, sometimes one can unearth a memory or two.
I snapped the pic during a trip to Ireland about 10 years ago. It was on a railway crossing on a side street, and somehow, I caught it out of the corner of my eye, screeched to a halt, backed up and whipped out the camera.
It appeals to my rather twisted, Larsonesque sense of humour. Life imitating art?

Monday, September 24, 2007

Viewing Pleasure

In my rush to ignore my birthday, I forgot to mention that I bought myself a birthday present... a massive 47cm wide (18.5") widescreen LCD monitor.

It took a little getting used to, but now, all I can say is "wow". Widescreen gives one the ability to see so much more of what you're doing, and if I didn't spend so much time playing games on it, I'm sure my overall productivity would have increased.

The best part was that it was on sale, reduced from $599 to $399, which I know is still a slab of cash that I didn't really have but I'll justify the outlay by saying that, as I spend so much of my life sitting in front of it, it's worth it. Apparently,it has a lower "carbon footprint" than my old monitor too, though that, of course, doesn't take into account the carbon produced to make it (or the environmental damage caused by the disposal of the old one) so it's just as well I don't really care about such things.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Motel Mediocrity

Sorry readers. I've been away from my desk doing a roadshow for most of this past week, and internet access hasn't been high on my agenda.

We were doing a little tour of country New South Wales, stopping in fast paced towns like Dubbo, famous for its zoo and not much else, and Tamworth, famous for its country music festival, in which a whole bunch of Australians who wouldn't know an American if they ran over him in their ute (pick-up) get together once a year and sing with American accents, because, apparently, country and western sounds a little odd if you don't.

Which leads me to the whole topic of country town motels. These are strange places that haven't changed since I was a wee todler.

To start with, there's always a strip of paper across the toilet seat that says something like "Sanitary and Clean", as if, somehow, putting a little strip of paper around the toilet makes it cleaner than it would otherwise have been.

The smell is ubiquitous too. Not really a bad smell... just sort of musty, and tinged with cheap carpet deodouriser. This is a universal motel room aroma and, probably because scent is the single most powerful memory trigger, a little comforting in a weird sort of way.

Then there's the TV. The programs are the same, but the advertising is often a highlight of the stay. Local car dealerships using scantily clad and over-endowed women are interspersed with ads for things decidedly rural... Bobs Drenching, or Post Holes R Us... that uncomfortably remind this city born-and-raised bear that the stuff in the middle of the burger used to roam fields and eat hay.

The establishment we stayed at in Dubbo rather misleadingly used the word "resort" in its name, as is often the way with these places. It did have a tennis court and a bubbling hot tub, but I'm sorry... any place where your car space is less than a metre from the door of your room has little in common with Le Moana Intercontinental Resort on Bora Bora, by which all such things ought to be judged.

I suppose the sign at reception should have provided the first clue... "Warning. The Gate Will Be Shut At 10:30pm. If You Require Access After this Time, Please Ask For The Code." The receptionist cheerfully explained that the town had a problem with an "undesirable element" breaking into cars late at night.

Airports in country towns are an interesting experience too. You know the places... way too small to take anything with jet engines, and where you walk across the tarmac, past signs that say stuff like "it is illegal to retrieve you own baggage from the rear of the aircraft". Like I'd want to. With the amount I paid for that ticket, I want the airline to supply my own personal butler to carry it and unpack it for me.

And the highlight, of course, is the allergic reaction to all those plants on the edge of town... runny nose, itchy eyes, tight chest... accompanied by the inevitable "you're so lucky to be here during wildflower season" from the desk clerk/motel owner as you sniffle your way through check-out. Yeah. Lucky.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Ettiquette

Maybe that's the sort of thing I need to train Zac to do. (Or better still, maybe I should just house train him.)

And no. I'm NOT that nutso.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Time Shift

The clock on the clubhouse wall.
The weirdest thing happened to me today. Really weird.

I had a bit of a late night last night, and Zac has been setting his alarm clock for 05:25 so I hadn't had much sleep.

The opportunity came up for a mid-afternoon nap... I looked up at the clock on my wall, and it said '2:15'. Actually, it didn't say anything at all, but the little hand was pointing to 2 and the big hand was pointing to 3... you know what I mean.

My fabulously expensive Patek Phillippe copy ($80 on Canal Street) said much the same, and the clock next to my bed said 14:15, and I'm sure you can figure out what that means.

Head hit pillow, eyes closed, and I was deep asleep within seconds. A deep, blissful 'wake me in a week' sleep. With the wildest dream too... detailed, complex, rich with content and story... and it went on and on... I was asleep for hours...

...until the phone rang, jolting me back into the land of now.

I looked at the clock... 14:16. I had been asleep for less than sixty seconds.

No. That can't be right. I was refreshed. I was relaxed. I was wide awake. You don't get that from 60 seconds of shut eye.

It felt like two hours, or four hours, or even all night, and besides, it would take WAY more than 60 seconds to flash through the best bits of the dream in fast forward.

Did the rest of the world freeze in time for a couple of hours?
Did I accidentally role over and push that secret "freeze time" button on my watch?
Did aliens take me away?
Did the matrix lock up?

Or maybe I'd actually slept for 24 hours? (No. That can't have happened. Zac wouldn't have put up with that.)

Sixty seconds!
Weird.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Missed Opportunity

21 of the world's most powerful people are in town today. Ok... maybe the President of the Philippines or the Prime Minister of New Zealand aren't so powerful, but George W, Vlad Putin and the wonderfully named Chairman Hu (pronounced "who") are here, along with the leaders of Indonesia, Japan, Canada, Korea, Taiwan and a bunch of other places for something called APEC.

Why? I don't know, but I guess they don't often get an opportunity to get together in the same place at the same time, so it's not a bad thing.

George arrived a few days early and found himself with an afternoon of free time. Now don't get me wrong... everyone deserves some leisure time, and especially when you're travelling on business. But George went trail bike riding.

No. That's not a mistake. He and his 600 vehicle motorcade headed north to one of Sydney's leafier suburbs where he spent an hour or two zooming around a National Park right next door to the place where Zac goes to puppy school.

George... you can go trail riding anywhere mate. Why didn't you take the time to play tourist. Seriously, Aussies are so laid back you could even have dropped into a pub near your hotel for a cold one and no-one would have noticed (or even cared). After all... members of European Royalty have been known to go trawling for wives there.

Or maybe he should have just turned up at the Sydney Harbour Bridge Climb instead? He and 7 or his closest secret service agents could have enjoyed climbing to the top of our most famous landmark. If he'd done that, most Australians would have said "mate, we've been wrong about you. You really are ok. How did you enjoy the climb?"

Ah well... I guess his presidency really will be remembered for missed opportunities.