06 September 2010

Grand Theft Larceny...

Haye, mates.

I'm not sure who the scottyinoz audience is anymore these days. I've been a rebel and haven't blogged much this trip to Oz...probably a bit of anti-blogging syndrome and a bit of not a whole lot to post.  Seeing that I'm killing time before an evening meet-up with a buddy...and considering that for the first time in months I'm logged in outside of the office, I figured I'd shoot a few syllables your way.

Main headline form the past few weeks is that I got robbed.  Some fargin bastage hopped over the wall to my carport, pulled the screen, slid open my window and proceeded to pilfer my laptop, my backpack, 40 or so dollars in loose change and a boomerang I was going to send to one of you folks there in the USofA.  My backpack had my external hard drive, digital camera, car keys for the Mazda...that joker even took my favorite lid...my wool Gatsby cap.  Could have been worse...passport and bank papers were untouched and no damage to the apartment.  Cops came by (3 days after the crime!), dusted for prints and basically said I was SOL...Sounds like burglaries are an everyday shindig here in Perth.  So much for having faith in the goodness of humanity...travel insurance through Golder kicked in, so I'll recover the cost of the items...unfortunately, a ton of sensitive info was on the computer and hard drive...no signs of stolen ID, but the idea of it drove me nuts for a few days...nothing I can really do about it at this point...if it happens, will deal with it then. The other bummer is that my digital archive of all things engineering and photos is gone.  Time to start again, I suppose.

Work has been a bear the last month or so...a bit of a respite this past weekend, but the task in front of us the next four weeks is monumental.  A bit bewildering to think about....that's why I haven't thought about work in three whole days.  Will be going all out from now until early October. 

Plans are to fly through Chi-town for Christmas.  Already looking forward to that.  Planning to make the traditional stop by Gene's on the way out of O'Hare, grab a load of kielbasa, kraut and other assorted Polish goods.  May fly through Houston after Christmas to visit friends down there...haven't been through TX in awhile...will be good to catch up with folks there.

Rode with the 6:30 group this past Saturday...hardest and fastest ride I've done since I quit racing.  Got dropped on the climbs, but never flicked...hammered alright on the flats and dropped a few guys on the leadout to the sprint, but zero snap...still not too bad for a slacker, though.  The biggest thing has been recovery...holy smokes...legs never got sore, but I've been a tired fool the last few days...the old bones can't recover like they used to!

College football started this past weekend...NFL starts on Thursday...and I'm going to miss it all or at least 90 percent of the NFL season.  Pretty hacked off about that, but what you gonna do?  Hopefully Drew plays like a champ again this season.

That's about it from this end.  Hope you're all well and enjoying the long weekend...whoever may be reading this stuff.  Not sure when I'll write again, but until then, take care and God bless.

Scotty

03 August 2010

Still Tickin Here...

Hey folks...

It's been awhile.  Just haven't been in a bloggin mood as of late.  But that doesn't mean I'm not thinking about you all or not having a good time down here.  I may go so far to say I'm having a dandy time down here...or as my Uncle Dick used to say...a "nifty" time.  I'm not sure I know of anyone else who used that word "nifty" as much as Uncle Dick.  It's sort of been mothballed the last twenty years or so.  I think I may have to implement it into my normal adjective usage.

Some words and/or phrases that sum up the last few weeks here in Oz:
  • Coastline
  • Homemade meatballs (damn good)
  • Sinus infection
  • Pontifical High Mass
  • Margaret River Valley
  • Boxing kangaroos (real nifty to see that)
  • Principles
  • Little bike riding because of the third bullet point
  • Little Sisters of the Poor
  • Finished two books...onto some C.S. Lewis now
  • 33 Days
  • I see eye to eye on a few things with John Henry Newman
That just about covers it.  Some new pictures uploaded...check 'em out.

I hope all is well on the other side of the pond.  Peace and love.

Scotty

04 July 2010

Settling In...

Greetings, fam and friends.  I hope this post finds you feeling good and enjoying your 4th of July weekend.  They have a 4th of July here in Oz too...but it's just another day on the calendar...no reason to celebrate down under.  I heard that the US Consulate in town was throwing a party of sorts, but that turned out to be a false advertisement...so instead I'm celebrating my 4th by hitting Mass in the AM and then doing a bike ride with a few guys into the foothills that run along the Swan River Valley north of Perth.  My climbing legs were lost somewhere between here and the Spring of 2007 in Seattle...they were last seen near Bellingham along the side of one of the cold and wet chip sealed country roads.  No sign of them since. 

Life in Perth has taken a positive turn the last few weeks. I mentioned last time that I met up with a young adult group from the archdiocese that meets just down the street on Wed nights.  That gig is still rolling well.  I've hung out with a few of the people from that group a couple times.  Fun, solid group.  I joined a few others today on a winery hopping tour of the Swan River Valley.  Good times.  After tasting a few local vintages we went to Elmar's German restaurant...Every kind of "wurst" under the sun...and then some.  Good grub and a few micro-brewed beers.  To top it off, we stopped at a local chocolate factory, sat out in the sun and enjoyed a cup of joe. Near cloudless day with perfect long-sleeve temps.  Feels sort of like Halloween time around here.  On the way back home, I learned that on the first Saturday of the month this group along with a couple others meet up with a few Little Sisters of the Poor and stroll around Lake Monger and recite all four mysteries of the Rosary! They asked if I was in...and I said "roger dodger".  So that's how I spent the end of my afternoon today. 

Last weekend a group from the office came by my place for a BBQ to say farewell to a colleague, Jill, who headed back to the US.  Jill and I work together in Redmond and she was in Oz working as well...We had a good time shooting the breeze and having some laughs over a plethora of grilled meat, cold beers and a few giant samosas.  I uploaded a few pictures from the last couple get togethers.

To keep the music theme going, I figured I'd post a couple tunes from one of my favorite artists recently...Jackson Browne.  I mentioned him a few posts back, but figured I'd share a few of his tunes now that I can successfully imbed youtube videos in these posts.  JB specializes in melancholy songs that seem to sum up exactly how probably each of us have felt at one time or another.  Two of my favorites are Late for the Sky and These Days.






I'm not so sure about the video accompaniment for These Days...but that aside...man, what a song.  Not bad for a 16 year old...he wrote that joker when he was 16!  Though nothing fancy, that closing guitar solo, at least for me, totally completes that song in soul and emotion and is probably one of my favorites.  And Late For the Sky...I've heard it dubbed as his masterpiece song.  One of my favorites for sure.

Just looked and the clock is about to strike midnight and that means LIVE coverage of the prologue of the 2010 Tour de France is about to start!  My butt is outta here.  Remember that sparklers are dangerous and aren't toys.  Play safe and have a great holiday weekend.  God bless America, baby!

Peace and love to you all. 

Scotty

19 June 2010

Swing it...

About that time to post something new, I suppose.  I hope you guys are doing well in your neck of the woods.  Can't complain here.  Food, water, shelter...all the bases covered.  Just got done skyping my sister Kim.  Had a heck of a laugh goofing around with the smiley faces you can send back and forth. Spontaneously busted a gut and laughed for a good minute non-stop.  Felt good!  Ahh...the simple things in life.

Probably made the best discovery in my first two months that I've been here this past week.  I got wind of a young adult group from the Perth area that meets at Sacred Heart monastery, which is right next to the church I go to.  Wednesday evenings...Mass, exposition, holy hour, benediction, and then dinny afterwards.  I got to inhale that sweet smell of incense for the first time in two months!  That hit the spot.  A group of about 25 or so showed up.  One guy from France just cruising around Australia stopped in and a girl from Belgium found out about the group too.  Nice people with warm welcomes and good conversations.  I was probably one of the older fogies in the group.  Mostly everyone seemed to be in their 20s...a few in their 30s, so I wasn't totally alone.  A couple people who asked how old I was said they thought I was 26...so at least I got that going for me.  I guess all them years of hard livin...the boozin, gallivanting with loose women and rock and roll...haven't caught up with me yet!  Super glad to have met up with these guys...sort of rekindled the Wednesday night routine that I left behind in Seattle.  The five-day work week just got much better.

Don't know what it was, but some situation this past week or so got me thinking about 90s music.  I've been playing this Sponge song in my head and on the music box recently.  A good throw back tune...didn't care for it too much then...probably because everyone and their brother liked it....but now that it's old and mostly forgotten...not so bad now:



Another thing that happened was a highly intellectual conversation a few of us had in the office the other day.  Fancy technical phrases like geological model, time-rate of settlement and paleo-channel resonated off the Wheatstone war-room walls at 6:30 pm on a Friday evening.  At that time of day, it got to the point where I couldn't think of anything else better to sum up what I was thinking than this:



Man, I love those guys.

That just about does it for now.  23:00 and Scotty's dishes are done. Time to saw some logs.  Don't forget..."I" before "E" except after "C"...most times...

Peace and love,

Scotty

10 June 2010

The Quiet Place...



I'm sure we've all been in a place or situation where there was a lot of noise.  A concert.  A ball game.  Maybe the dinner table!  Trying to hear what someone right next to us has to say can be difficult or impossible.  Too much noise and too many distractions seem to get in the way of the conversation.  It's possible to catch a word or two, but not the whole thing.  It's possible to hear something completely different than what was said.  Or, nothing at all may be heard. 

I'm learning more and more that finding a quiet place is not so much about me being able to be heard...but more about me being able to hear...

02 June 2010

Kind of a drag...

Good daye, friends.  I guess it's Wed morning where most of you are.  Hope you had a good night's sleep and are ready to hammer through the midweek hump.  Late in the day here, 19:15 as I type these syllables, in fact.  Still at the office...thumbing through the news and sending an email here or there...Virtually impossible for me to catch up on news or email during the day...pretty much wide open and full throttle from the get go of each day.  No real plan for my evening except to stop by a buddy's place for an hour or so, then eat left over bangers and mash that I made a couple days ago.  Man I love HP sauce...The UK's favorite brown sauce since 1896!  Goes great with them bangers.

Just got done listening to that 60s tune Kind of a Drag from The Buckinghams. Reminds of me driving with the windows down in the old station wagon or the Honda during the weekly summertime drive home from Grandma's with Mom...Dick Biondi spinning oldie tracks on 104.3 FM in Chi-town.  "Where the heck does this stuff come from?", you may say.  One too many bike crashes, I guess...broke more than my wrist and a few helmets apparently...seemed to have jostled something loose in my brain along the way!  On the topic of the UK, I was flabbergasted to learn that The Buckinghams were not from England, but from Chicago!  Blimey, I say!

Made it to that footy game Sunday afternoon.  Perfect weather outside.  Alfonso and I made the 20 minute hike from West Perth to the Subi Oval on foot.  Huge playing field...36 players on the field at one time...18 a side.  Constantly moving, kicking, running, bouncing.  Freo (The Freemantle Dockers) took the opening possession off the bounce and scored a goal (6 points) in the opening minute...then they proceeded to pile on a load of whoop arse for the next 99 minutes.  They routed the North Melbourne Roos by nearly 70 points.  One of the wildest parts of the match was when a few guys got in a scrap and started throwing down.  I'd say about six or seven guys were involved in the pushing and punching.  A couple guys went to the ground...all the while, the other guys were playing on as a player was lining up and kicking a goal!  No stoppage in play, no whistles, no officials went in to break it up...it was hilarious. The scuffle ended soon after the footy soared through the goal and everything went back to normal.  Pretty wild. The crowd was intense and into it the entire game.  36,000 fans packed the oval.  The Dockers poured it on until the final whistle.  After the game they played the Freo fight song and then quickly followed with AC/DC's "TNT"!  The late AC/DC front man, Bonn Scott was from Freemantle, so I guess they play a tribute song after every win.  I was probably embarrassing Alfonso to death as I rattled off "Oye...Oye" and "lock up your daughter...lock up your wife...lock up the back door and run for your life..." in my best Bonn Scott impression.  Pretty good way to close out the afternoon!  Unloaded some pictures to the link over dere ------------------------->

Well, my buddy's waiting for me, so I need to bail.  More to jot down here, but will wait til next time.  Until then, you guys take care and make it a great day.

Cheers and God bless.

Scotty

30 May 2010

Back on my mind...

Hey yous guys.  What's the good word for you this Memorial Day weekend?  How about FREEDOM! 

I'm just about done with a book on the battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War.  Words like U-boat, sailor, and rationing, and imagery of abstract qualities like selflessness, swagger, and commitment abound throughout the pages. The book focuses on the lifeline that supplied the European Theater of the war: the convoy routes from the US to Britain and beyond.  Many unsung heroes who never made the front page of Time and who never made it to the other side of the pond.  These sailors and merchantmen were just a few of the countless faces and souls that were integrated into the noble undertaking of mammoth proportions that preserved the freedom that we get to enjoy every single day here and now.  I read recently about a veteran who had to go to court to be able to fly the Stars and Stripes outside his apartment.  I don't know the details.  Maybe the flag location was obstructing a fire lane.  I don't know.  But this isn't the first time a story like this circulated around the news wires.  I also recently read a few articles about a war memorial, somewhere in New Mexico, I believe, where a cross was erected years ago as a sign of remembrance for the local soldiers who lost their lives in battle...I think the cross was stolen.  A replacement was erected, but later had to be covered because the cross was offensive and crossed that church and state line we hear about all the time. I'd like to know what church they're talking about.  As far as I know, some 30,000+ churches claim the cross as a religious symbol.  I won't go on listing all the religious symbols such as elephants, moons, and yin-yangs that should be outlawed from public display based on the separation of church and state "logic".  Confusing.  The saddest thing about the case in New Mexico is that the beloved dead are the ones that are truly mocked in this case.  A whole 'nother issue perhaps the same church and state minority would like me to warm up to; namely, "forget about the dead".  Shoot, the lines are already being/have been drawn to forget about the living!  Pass the elderly or "undesirables" to the side, forget about them...so with that attitude, why should I even consider remembering the departed?  It's ironic that the blood shed by those fallen men and women fortified the foundations that the so-called civil liberty contingent set their pedestals on...For what it's worth, to the men and women that did so much for me and preserved the opportunity for me to do what is right...I solemnly thank you and pray for you this holiday weekend and beyond.

I spent a good chunk of time in bed yesterday thinking about summer time as a little kid.  Cousin Joey shot me an email earlier this week and mentioned that the upper peninsula of Michigan was a place he'd like to visit some day. The UP of Michigan may very well be my favorite place in the world.  About this time of year some 20 years a go or so, I'd be getting amped up about school letting out in a week or two.  Little league would just about be in full swing.  More and more lightening bugs would be coming out in the evenings.  And the quiet hum of the air conditioner would probably be the last sound I'd hear as I drifted off to sleep on a warm and humid night...many times with Michigan on my mind.  The yearly trip to Michigan always took place in the summer.  Sometimes in early June, a few times over the 4th of July, other trips a few weeks later.  Whenever it was, I looked forward to it and couldn't wait to go.  Looking back on it now, it may have been the reality that, even though I was just a little kid, I got to be a part of an adult experience: waking up early, trolling for hours on end, peeing over the side of the boat without falling in...these were all the things Dad did...these were the things that Bob Clark and Uncle Mike did.  The UP rarely if ever crosses my mind without Bob and Uncle Mike somewhere in the memory. In fact, the place and the people are inseparable in my mind.  Every year leading up to the week-long get-a-way, it seemed that Uncle Mike had to make a point to say that he would not make it that year.  "Nah, not going in July. Too late to catch the bluegill on the beds" was a common reason...and each year I'd get upset, plead with him to come at the same time we were going, or try to see if we could go when he'd be there.  But just about every year, a few hours after we'd get to the cabin, the White Scottsdale Custom Deluxe would pull into view much to my delight. Or, the little camper would come into view on the left-hand side of the descending dirt road that lead to Peavy...what a wonderful sight!  The Clarks were always in the UP when we made our trip...fun was always a given fishing on their pier over the Paint River, burning gallons of gas riding the tractor around, or tip-toeing around the woods and quiet side roads looking for deer. The vacation was partly the place but largely the people. 

Uncle Mike was probably the single most influential person in my first 20 years.  Uncle Mike was blunt and stubborn and I don't think I ever remember hugging him or him hugging me, let alone telling him that I loved him or him telling me (for which I regret)...but I looked to him with a reverence and love that I can still feel today.  His longevity and consistency at doing what he loved, fishing and hunting, were for me as a kid everything that I thought was awesome.  The coolest person I knew when I was 12 was my 70 year-old great uncle.  The place I wanted to be more than anywhere else on a Friday night in mid-October in 1993 was in Uncle Mike's trailer, thumbing through the same worn out deer hunting magazines and listening how to set up a tree stand in the dark or about the time when the bears splashed across the brook he was wading in with a fish on the line. Uncle Mike was a story teller.  He'd captivate me with stories ranging from beagles chasing rabbits to homemade golf clubs made from choke cheery tree shoots to even mushroom picking. Those stories and memories will be with me until hopefully one day, I get to meet up with Uncle Mike again.  I suppose I share this sentiment for two reasons.  One because being the end of May, my mind tends to automatically wander to the "what used to be's" of summer time fun and I enjoyed placing myself in the size 5 Converse shoes again.  Two because Uncle Mike was a veteran of the Second World War and as part of the Memorial Day weekend, it seemed fitting.  He was a cook.  He served in the Pacific theater.  I know he spent time in the Philippines, but aside from one very short episode when he explained briefly how his unit got ambushed, I do not know anything about his service. Hopefully there's a little bit of Uncle Mike in me today.

Changing sentimental gears, I head to a footy game tomorrow...err...today.  My buddy Alfonso from work and I are heading to the Subiaco Oval to watch the home team Freemantle Dockers do battle with the North Melbourne Kangaroos in live footy action.  Looking forward to the experience.  The Dockers are kicking some footy arse this season, so hopefully we don't jinx their luck.  A full report to follow next time.

Seeing that it's now, oh, almost 1am Perth time, it's time to call it a night and pedal my sleepy butt way back to the apartment.  Have a great weekend whether you're sailing on a lake, swimming in the pool, or just grilling out burgers in the back yard.  Be safe, have fun and God bless.

Scotty