Saturday, 28 December 2019

Helen and Her Horse Friend

Thursday, 26 December 2019

Christmas 2019


 Annual cherry harvest
 Cherry pickers
 Eladio
 Helen
 Max
 Max and Helen
 Playtime
 Maz
 Jac
 Kat
 Mimz
 April insisted on being photgraphed
 Another aspiring photo model Lexi
 Fud
 More fud
 Artichoke
 Apricots in the yard
Grapes in the yard

The Great Stupa of Universal Compassion

During the Christmas holidays we went to the Great Stupa of Universal Compassion, being built near Bendigo Australia, is 50 metres square at its base and nearly 50 metres high. This makes it the largest stupa in the Western World.

A stupa (also known as a pagoda) is the most sacred building in Buddhism. A stupa symbolises the enlightened mind and the path to enlightenment. A stupa is also a reliquary to house holy relics of the Buddha and other highly realised beings. See- https://stupa.org.au/







Thursday, 28 November 2019

Helen Obedience Class

Helen is 8 months old and about 28 Kilos. American Staffodshires generally are adult at around 20 months old so she has some maturing and growing to do yet.
She (we) have now completed the Older Puppy Obedience Class.
After struggling for the first few weeks we have come through in the end and she can sit, stay, recall on and off lead etc. The stages we will work through over the next year or so are obedience for:
Puppy,
Advance Puppy,
Beginners,
Class 1 and
General training for classes 2 to 5 
Skills we hope to aquare are advanced obedience, agility and hopefully tracking.
 



Friday, 1 November 2019

Helen the Amstaff In Her Pool





Helen the 6 month old American Staffordshire Terrier in her pool




Thursday, 24 October 2019

Wrens Flat Jamieson River Camping and Fishing


Jamieson River
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 Camp
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 Camp
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 Trout kit

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 River
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 Deer carcass in the river

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 River
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 See the trout?

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Camnp sunrise
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 An old man in his camp lingerie

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Trevor the truck
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Thursday, 3 October 2019

In Memory of My Mother


My mother, Beatrice Dawn Wright was born on the 10th July 1933 on the family farm “Kumathud” in Manangatang Victoria, youngest of of 12 children 3 boys and 8 girls, born to Isabella and Clarence Wright. Ruby, Nita, Les, Violet, Stan, Alice, Jean, Reg, Elsie, Glad, June and Beatrice. Mum was only 4 when her mother died, a huge loss for a little girl but she remained very close to her siblings all her life.

Some of the girls.
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Mum grew into a woman in the Mallee and while working in the local hotel and fell in love with a local lad, Keith, who was the son of Jack and Maude Ryan. Dad was one of 8 chilkdren 6 boys and 2 girls, Jack, Dick, Nig, Ginger, Squizzy, Snow, Maureen and Cheyrl.  They married on the 10th September 1952 in the Manangatang Catholic church. Mum was just 20 years old and Keith (better known as Dick) was 22.

Mum and Dads wedding day
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Mum and Dad had 9 children, Leigh, Marilyn, Wayne, Carol, Kim, Garry, Gayle, Vaughan and Brett. They initially lived in Chinkapook, Dad working for the Victorian Railways. From there we moved to Tragowel, Werrimal, Ouyen, and Fernbank.

A week after Mum had given birth to my brother Garry, tragically our sister Carol Lena contracted Golden Staph Pneumonia and died. Mum being Mum she just closed that chapter and moved on accepting her lot in life, keeping her grief close to her heart, never complaining about the injustice of it all.

We then moved to Morwell for the sake of Dads chronic bronchitis and lived there from 1960-1963, then moved to Wantirna South Melbourne in 1964 where the 8th child, Vaughan was born.

In 1969 we moved to Ashburton in Melbourne and the 9th and final child Brett was born. With 9 hungry mouths to feed, money was tight and Mum and Dad struggled to make ends meet but what we lacked in material assets, they certainly made up for in a home that was rich in love.

Mum was devoted and loving, she always put her family first. The family can all recall large gatherings, parties, singing, and family holidays at Manangatang where they would join the many Aunts, Uncles and cousins from both sides.

Mum and Dad divorced in the early 70’s. Dad remarried but died on 31 March 1988 in Richmond, Melbourne, Victoria. Dad today is survived by

Ginger and Cheyrl.
 
Mum travelled to Perth WA with my brother Kim and his then wife Bonnie, followed by my sister Marilyn and her tribe before returning to Melbourne where she lived in Carrum on the Mornington Peninsula for the next 5 years working at the local RSL.

When Marilyn and her family moved to Bendigo Mum did too, purchasing a caravan which she lived in at a caravan park in Junortoun. This proved a very happy time for Mum where she made lots of new friends.

As Mum got older she found the winters harder to bear in a caravan. It was at this time in 2010 while we were living and working in Sydney we decided to buy a house in Quarry Hill Bendigo, and Mum moved in, establishing a magnificent garden.

Some gardening notes from her favourite book The Weely Times Garden Almanac.
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In March 2010 my brother Brett at age 39 tragically took his own life in Perth Western Australia and was cremated at Karrakatta Cemetery in WA.
(See post here)

The next year in 2011 Andrea and I moved from Sydney to share the home with Mum for the next 7 years. She was surrounded by the beautiful garden she had created, sharing the home with us and enjoyed many family gatherings in the years to come.
Mums favourite Gnome 'Robert'. Still living in her garden.
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In 2012 Mum purchased her own plot in the Bendigo cemetary, in a spot she chose. Below is a picture of Mum dancing on her own garve.
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 In 2017 I left full time work, Mum was becoming quite frail and needing more assistance with her every day activities, so with my two sisters Marilyn and Gayle we supported and cared for Mum until she moved to the Royal Freemasons Home in Flora hill, Bendigo just around the corner from home in September 2017.

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 Mum quietly slipped away on the 8th September 2019 in much the way she lived, without fuss or fanfare, just a gentle winding down of that strong and resilient body, her work here on earth done. She is buried in Bendigo cemetary with my brother Brett’s ashes in the arms of his mother in her grave. Mum was the last of her siblings to pass away.

Plaque and location (Click Here)

A letter from the nursing home after Mums passing letting us know she won the footy tipping competition.
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