First published in Column 8 on the 11th August, 1993
I discovered there’s a square in Sydney lumbered with a
motormouth cognomen. (‘Where do you live?’ ‘Sesquicentenary Square.’) I discovered
that if everybody in Australia obeyed the law, the treasury coffers would be
depleted. Let’s not tell Ruth.
With our parlous state of economy she’ll make it compulsory to be obedient.
Someone in Britain is encouraging us to be green even after
we’re dead. The trees will grow better if we’re buried beside them and cleanly
turn ourselves into mulch.
On this basis, trees in the year 2126 will do very well. In
2126 (when I’ll be shifting into my 80s)
a comet named Swift-Tuttle
will loosen a barrage of space debris and drop it on the Earth. The meteors
will be the size of city blocks and will wipe out entire countries – if they
don’t fall in the ocean.
To give us a foretaste, Swift-Tuttle will be doing a
mini-version of its trip next Saturday, the 14th. Meteorites on that
day will only be the size of peas and grapefruit. (Meteors always seem to come
in city block, pea and grapefruit sizes; you never hear of banana, kiwifruit or
paddock.)
I know last week I said No Politicians, but since this one’s
Australian we can make an exception. The Victorian Premier, who is apparently very
popular, appears on the front of a magazine (without his permission) apparently
very naked.
His head was in the picture all right, but the body belonged
to an unidentified person. The magazine’s intention was to prove that the eye
can be deceived. The Premier’s eye was not deceived, and he threatened to sue.
The editor, with dubious logic, said he had no case. The Premier,
she said, wasn’t held up to ridicule (!), wasn’t defamed (!), and nothing had
been done to detract from his reputation (!!!). Her eye wasn’t deceived, just
her brain.
As if to keep up with us, the Australians have gone in for
some cultural sensitivity. Only this time it may upset the sensitivity of 51%
of the population.
In an Aboriginal art exhibition, one room has been genderly
segregated: they call it the men’s room. In this area, culturally sensitive
paintings are on display. I understand their point, but could male pakeha
painters get away with it?
Here’s an item of interest. Up until the last century the
Welsh donned clean white stockings and went up to a warm dry room (usually the
bedroom above the kitchen) where they trampled and stomped upon porridge oats
laid in an oak chest, aiming to compress them. (The oats, not the stockings.)
No peculiar custom here: merely an attempt to keep the mites
out. Try this at home if you’re heavily into porridge.
And talking of keeping things out, I finally found out how,
if I was an Aussie, I could keep the possums out of the roof – and from the
eating the roses. Unfortunately the rose-protecting method seems likely to keep
humans away from the roses as well.
Take a number of woollen dags, the scungy bits that don’t
make good knitting, and hang them on the rose bushes. Possums object to having one
of their favourite foods so spiced, and keep away.
And how do you keep possums out of the roof? You set up a light
in the attic, and leave it on for two or three nights. The poor possums soon
suffer from insomnia, and go away in a dozy huff. At that point you nail up the
gaps.
Not forgetting to turn the light off first.
And talking about turning off the lights, you will suffer
from poor sleep hygiene (disturbed nights) if you go to bed at erratic times,
drink coffee beforehand, read, or watch television in bed.
Or allow your wife to go gallivanting.
CER: I think by this I meant: The Australia–New Zealand
Closer Economic Relations Trade Agreement, commonly known as Closer Economic
Relations (CER).
I was plainly confused when I wrote that I was only going
to be in my 80s in 2126 – I should have said I’d be in my 180s (!) Furthermore,
telling people the oddly named Swift-Tuttle was coming a week later, in 1992,
seems to contradict Wikipedia’s hindsight version of the facts.
The photo of Jeff Kennett appeared just three years after Photoshop came on the market. The magazinewas the Good Weekend Magazine, July 31, 1993.
Incidentally my wife, thirty years or more since this was
written, still goes to bed at erratic (usually late) hours, drinks coffee in
the evenings, watches television late at night (but not in bed). Her sleep hygiene
isn’t much impaired by any of this…







