Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parks. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 July 2007

Last day

Richard and I were determined to have a final walk. We left Edward tucked in bed and set out for the parks. We only encountered one shower as I showed him the lake and the parks.

Alice for some reason is now sheathed in temporary fencing (for modesty???). We walked through the atmospheric olive groves.

We also saw beautiful rosellas but they wouldn't pose for photos.
These seed pods were amazing. In the past, when dry we've used the caps for long fingers/fingernails.

After a late breakfast, Edward decided that bed was too good a place to leave. Richard and I looked at the blue sky and decided to visit the zoo. Well the sky was teasing and by the time we arrived at the front of the zoo, the clouds were hanging heavy overhead. The meerkats ignited a discussion I thought closed about whether we should get more pet ferrets (because meerkats are not allowed as pets). Hmm. Not while there's breath in me (because they pong, really pong despite what Richard says). The meerkats, however, are very entertaining to watch and we weren't close enough to smell whether they smell like their relatives.

We were in time for feeding time for the lions...who were ready and waiting ahead of time. A small boy approached the gate where the keepers and food would enter and was told clearly by the dominant female that he should move. He did. The keeper told us a bit about the lions before feeding them, as once they have their food, they disappear to eat it. The two lion sisters are about to have a male companion, once he completes his 30 days quarantine. He's a lot younger and smaller than they are at present, so will be side by side with them until the zoo is assured they'll all get along.


Then the rain began. We watched the leopard being fed until the drips began to find their way down my neck. We repaired to the nocturnal enclosure where it was lovely and dry. The rain continued off and on for the rest of the afternoon, pouring then clearing to blue sky. It really was as if Loki, god of mischief, had gained control of the weather. We persisted in an almost empty zoo, racing from shelter to shelter and seeing what we could on the way. We lingered to watch Pusang, the male orang-utan, Karta the female and the pair of siamangs. All seemed intent on their own activities, largely ignoring each other. Many of the apes and monkeys were sheltering out of the rain, and those that were visible were not very active. Richard and I were both soaked despite coats and headed back into town and onto the bus. We were very pleased to get home and change into dry clothes.


Now to pack. How is it that repacking is never as easy as packing in the first place? Where does all the extra come from. Luckily for me, neither Edward or Richard arrived with full bags, so I've loaded them up with books and bits.

I've had such an adventure here in Adelaide. It wasn't just the volume of writing I was able to achieve. It was being on my own here for a month, meeting so many wonderful and supportive people. It was meeting publishers, writers and illustrators. It was walking everywhere and discovering Adelaide. It was all of these and more. It was grand, just grand.

Thursday, 28 June 2007

Haighs and circus


Yesterday I wrote the third of the three interlinked stories and worked out just what was going to link them, while still allowing them to stand alone as individual stories. I also workshopped (via email...thanks L) several poems three of which had their genesis here in Adelaide.


My tulips are opening up and just look better and better.



Today I reworked the three stories and kept working on the pesky ending to one of the poems. I had an ending but it wasn't as strong as it should be and I've had several goes at the final stanza. This end of the day, it's feeling stronger.


I also walked through Victoria Park and the South Terrace parklands This parkland has some game grounds but has avenues and is more 'treed' than those along East Terrace. I nearly walked into a small creek (twice) while I looked everywhere but down. The day was warm and glorious, but recent rains have greened everything.


My destination was Haighs Chocolates. They make the chocolates here and sell them too. I'd signed on for the tour with about a dozen others. There was a Swiss couple, some Japanese businessmen, a family and another singleton like myself. The tour hadn't begun and the other singleton was making asides to me about starting late. She continued through the tour, with not one positive thing to say. Not sure why she came really. The Japanese were carrying jars containing what looked like pond water, but may have been herbal tea. We saw cement-mixer-type machines for making things like scorched almonds, marshmallow bars being chocolated, and rockyroad being hand-mixed. Samples at the start, samples at the end, and then into the shop. What more could a chocoholic want?


I've started work on a final project here...an already plotted out story based on circus classes, aimed at younger readers. It's interesting jumping from long work to very short, to poetry, to chapter book. Again, having the luxury of writing all day with no distractions, this isn't as difficult as it would be at home.