Showing posts with label Aussies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aussies. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Mon Dieu! 18 Road Kills!



Hello, everybody who's visiting my blog! I'm alive! I survived the three-day drive through the amazing dry arid desert known as the beautiful Nullarbor Desert aka the Nullarbor! I started off from Perth Victoria Park in one of the Ford Motor Company's latest car model -- still too tired to recall what the model is, will add in later -- and drove and drove, almost like my fave Canuck singer, celine Dion's song lyrics "I drove all night ...". Yeah, don't try this fellas if you have a fear of the unknown! The owner of the expensive vehicle was a total stranger and it would turn out later that he had so many past over- speeding tickets that he said "I can't remember how many!" That meant I had to do most of the driving while he snoozed! Jeez, day driving was a breeze along the mighty fine roads that were pretty winding in many areas but night driving was hell! Most, if not most of the rural roads did not have street lights! Don't worry though if you're ever attempting this feat, the reflectors on the roads were abundant and helped lots whenever the car lights hit them!

So it was great--who wouldn't enjoy driving a brand new largest Aussie car dealer John Hughes' Ford vehicle from Perth to Sydney? Just push the button on "cruise control" and enjoy the fast ride! Then when we reached the awesome Nullarbor Desert ... OMIGOD! I couldn't sleep staring in awesome wonder at how vast a desert it was! I could see small trees at first and then all I could see were yellowish land without any trees! Then there was this huge clear sign that said we were on Australia's longest straight road!!! Wow! Could I resist speeding over the 110km/hour speed limit? Ah, I won't answer that but all of my Miri buddies know I don't over speed or break the traffic laws ... However, my wealthy manager co-driver assured me that in Australia, there would be areas where overspeeding the speed limits are permitted if there are not posted anywhere!

So what could I have missed if I were sitting in the great Indian Pacific train from Perth to Adelaide? Wow! I would have missed the fresh cold air and the blazingly bright sunlight, the stench of road kills, the sight of over 18 bloody dead young kangaroos on the roads, dirty ugly vultures plucking away at their corpses, having the meals of their lives ... and the killing of a cute young rabbit as our car struck it just as it was about to reach our lft side of the road! Then there was the incredible view of the Pacific Ocean as we reached past Western Australia into South Australia ...

To be continued

Encounter with WA Cops
Encounter with SA Cops!
My change of destination from Adelaide to Sydney
The amazing Sydney City
The Red Lights of Sydney!

More amazing stories about the Nullarbor at Wikipedia here: Nhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullarbor_Plainullarbor

Friday, November 26, 2010

At Last, Dear Australia!

Yes, that's right! At long last, I'm in Australia, the land of my many past dreams, of kangaroos, jolly swagmen, billybong, pretty sheilas ... and so many other greats! Yeah, I'm in Perth, enjoying the warm --nay-- scotching sunshine at this time of the year! Here's a list of wonderful folks I would love to meet: my dearest loving foster "parents" Nigel and Pamela Heyward of Tasmania and their two sons, one of whom Philip was my best childhood mate ... and my all-time favorite teacher/principal, Leonie Kathleen Armour, Revd. John Yapp, my late uncle Chong Yuk Min's widow ... and yes, my own dearest eldest sister, Mary Chong who's a law practictioner and lecturer here ... someone whom I would love to spend time with!

Back to Perth .... It was not my first choice as I was thinking of dropping by Australia enroute to New Zealand and outwards to Canada. Of course, spending time with my dear sis is important and besides, the air fare to Perth seemed fairly low compared to others. I imagined Perth would be an easy access point to other cities... Nothing could be further than the truth -- it is expensive to travel elseway from here!
Anyway, being out here is marvelous. What a big city it is! It's clean and well-maintained. The folks here are friendly ... they can give proper, clear and concise directions unlike, if I may admit it, so many Malaysians in the cities and towns of Malaysia!
Some fascinating things I've learnt so far ... seasoned traveler that I am ...
I was strolling along Beaufort Street when something caught my eye --a quite ordinary road sign that made me stop and stare ...huh?! "Toilets" it says! Yup, I have since learnt that the clean Aussies have special single toilets ... a fella goes in a nice rectangular loo that has a whooshing sound door--wah! Auto-door... just press a red button &just imagine yourself in a Star Wars space machine as the door slides open!
Wonderful ... but I had an interesting experience at a Chinese food court in a nearby shopping mall ... We had to queue up to use the toilet! Quite a lot of fellas understandably couldn't stomach it and walked off ...

More from the bright side ... it's 7:25 pm here and I've been sitting and blogging outside the State Library of Western Australia since 5 pm. Nothing like free Aussie wifi! Thanks, mate! Cheerio!

Coming later--Bedding with the Germans, glasses and glasses of free wine from a young English fella with a love problem ... so Camrose guys ... the peer counseling training helped!

Friday, May 8, 2009

A Death Omen

A strange but true story here...

One day, I had the sudden inspiration to paint the wall of an old building that was formerly used as a dreaded Kempeti (Military police) interrogation centre by the occupying Japanese army during World War 2. The building is located in a graveyard which holds the remains of many foreigners and locals. Most of the foreigners were Aussies, Britons and Canadians, unfortunate victims of rampant diseases as workers in the newly discovered oilfields. The area is close to Sarawak's Miri's most famous landmark, aptly called Canada Hill in honor of many Canadians coming from oil rich Alberta in Canada who had been hired as oil workers.

So back to my story... the walls of the building had been painted with a faded pink and there were black fungi patches all over it. The walls used to be painted in grim black.

I decided to paint sea creatures all over the wall to enliven everything a bit in view of the grim graves and a solitary war memorial that housed the remains of 28 innocent foreign and local civilians-including my granduncle- who were brutally tortured and executed by the barbaric WW2 Japs.

The result of the mural work was colorful sea creatures were randomly splashed everywhere, including the sting ray as shown in the pic.

It was an instant image in my mind that a sting-ray, which my friend and I had had an encounter with back in the late '70s (resulting in his emergency treatment) would serve as a scary warning of its potential devilish dangerous and harmful capabilities beneath its benign appearance ...

Not too long after this, the world would shockingly lose one of our courageous animal rights heroes, Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin when he had a rare careless encounter with a sting-ray in Australia .... Could this be a premonition of his death?

Friday, September 7, 2007

Bad Malaysian English


I was reading the papers the other day about the Aussie government's change in the immigration regulation on English proficiency for would-be immigrants. It seems that the immigration authorities are expecting a higher standard of it, requiring a higher grade in its English competency test.

I am not surprised, as the following conversation - so I hear - actually took place. May I thank my dear Ijau for it:






Sorry, lah-click to enlarge it for reading, oh.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Aussie Justice's View on Lina Joy Verdict

G'day, mates! The latest opinion piece in the Brisbane Times by a New South Wales Supreme Court Judge, David Hodgson regarding the Lina Joy case shows the concern of one of our many Aussie mates down-under.

I also wish to add that I'm so impressed with the objectivity of his opinion. I would truly be a jolly swag man and not just be an orang utan if I ever have a just judge like him in my jungle kingdom here.

Malaysia's shackles on religious freedom

David Hodgson | June 22, 2007

Can Islam be compatible with religious freedom? I certainly hope so, but doubts are raised by a decision of Malaysia's highest court, given a month ago. Lina Joy is a 43-year-old Malay woman who became a Christian some years ago and wished to marry a Christian man.

To read more, please click this link, go to Brisbane Times' "Opinions" and read David Hodgson's piece

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Something light-hearted!


In my next upcoming extract from the papers, it'll be something Aussie. Don't get me wrong: I have no axe to grind at all. My truly best childhood friend in the 1960s was an Aussie. We began our friendship rather dramatically with him giving me a big slap due to a miscommunication in languages... but later we became great friends.

Today, he's happily married, lives and works in beautiful (So I heard) Tasmania for a paper. Hi, Ipi, my great buddy! Good die, mate!

By the way, I've never been Down Under... I would love to go there and do have standing invitations by wonderful ex-Aussie principals of my old school to be with them. Anyway, I've got quite a lot of Aussie friends and certainly, some of them really speak like the late Nature-loving great Steve Irwin!

As this article is rather lengthy, I will have to write it out myself slowly...in parts so I will not be producing everything at one time in one day.

It's dated July 14, 1983 by Paul A. Gigot of The Asian Wall Street Journal.

MELBOURNE - G'day, mates. It's Saturdie arvo at the footy match. the 'Roys are getting murderated. The ump, he's a bloody no hoper. A sheila in the crowd doesn't like it much. She's whinging about that ump. Listen:

"Blindfreddiecouldaseenthatyadrongo."

How's that again?

"Blind Freddie could have seen that, you drongo."

Excuse me?

"I said he's a blind idiot."

It is widely believed that Australians speak English. This turns out to be an exaggeration. Some Australians sometimes speak English. Properly motivated, they can speak it with the queen's precision. But catch them at ease at home or corner them in a pub, and many Aussies sound like that genial sheila (woman) complaining about the umpire at a Saturday afternoon football match. They can be close to incomprehensible, a people roaming the linguistic outback, divided from the rest of the English-speaking world by their language.

National Code

"It's fair to say," says G.A. Wilkes, a professor of English Literature at Sydney Uni (Sydney University)," that two Australians could have a conversation that no other English speaker could understand."

A visiting bloke might guess that Aussies are embarrassed by their lingo. Wrong, nit. They're proud of it. One of them has given a name to its extreme variety: Strine, because that's how Australian sounds when an Aussie pronounces it . The Macquarie Dictionary of English, which was published here in 1981 and claims to be "aggressively Australian", has so far sold 110,000 copies, at the equivalent of $31.50 a crack.

Arthur Delbridge, the Macquarie's editor, attributes this response to a resurgent Aussie nationalism, a reaction to the feeling that Aussies "walk alone hanging from the bottom of the world". Naturally, Aussies have a name for this inferiority complex: "the cultural cringe". But now, says Mr. Delbridge, "we feel it's time to stand on our own two feet."

This sentiment may be out of control. The foreign minister William Hayden, recently said that Australia will spend about $1.1 million a year to teach Aussie English to 240 Indonesians in Jakarta. Strine has become an export. Worse, the Indonesians are grateful. "It's very useful," says Poernomo, a spokesman from the Indonesian Embassy in Melbourne. "Indonesian students learn English at home, but they come here, and can't understand a thing. Don't you have that problem?"

The largest obstacle to Australian fluency may be the accent. It isn't easy to describe. It isn't quite British. A few words hint of Boston. Perhaps Buzz Kennedy, a columnist for the daily Australian, puts it best. "It is reminiscent," he wrote in 1978, "of a dehydrated crow uttering its last statement on life from the bough of a dead tree in the middle of a claypan at the peak of a seven-year drought."

Linguists say Aussies try to pronounce sounds, especially vowels, closer to the front of their mouths than Yanks do. Also an Aussie sentence tends to end on a high note. Add to this near-universal failure to enunciate-the words slide together-and you have a rhetorical middle.

Faced with this accent in one Aussie firm, a New York critic once demanded English sub-titles. And the citizens of Colac, a town in southeastern Australia, built a kindergarten and named it Wydinia. Why Wydinia? Because says Jenny Bibby of the school's staff, "everyone kept complaining, "Whydinya do this? And whydinya do that?"

Aussies also have a compulsion to shorten words. Australia is Aus or Oz. The mailman is a postie. A refugee is a refo, and the man who picks up the trash a garbo. Natch, the neighborhood drunk is dero. Some Aussies cite laziness to explain this shortening habit. But most attribute it to the national characteristic of egalitarian friendliness, which dimunitives tend to convay. Everyone's a bit of a dero, righto mate?

Aussie Talent

This cultural trait may also explain the Aussie talent for making expletives seem like compliments. The best example is bastard, which here rarely carries the insulting meaning that it does in the U.S. Aussies often use it affectionately, as in "Cute little bastard, isn't he?" Even Prime Ministers say it publicly: In 1974, Gough Whitlam told supporters: "I do not mind the liberals... calling me a bastard. In some circumstances, I am only doing my job if they do. But I hope you will not publicly call me a bastard, as some bastards in the Caucus have."

But the Aussies' greatest contribution to - or desecration - of language is their gift for coining a phrase. They have some beauts. A few, such as "up a gumtree" (in difficulty or confused), are widely known. But others, just as descriptive, remain happily local. "Don't come over the raw prawn" means don't put one over me. "Your shout, mate" means it's your turn to buy. "Getting off at Redfern" (the station just before Sydney Central) refers to coitus interruptus. And a "wowser" is a killjoy. (Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau immortalized this in 1970 when he told Aussies: "You have wowerism; we have Toronto.")

The Aussie elite use such phrases as much as hoi poloi do. When Tamie Fraser, the wife of the then-prime minister, muffed a shot at a public golf match in 1977, she said, "Wouldn't it rot your socks?" And Robert Hawke, the current Prime Minister, who is often described as a "larrikin" (rascal), likes to say his government is "fair dinkum" (true and honest), the ultimate Aussie tribute.

Scholars say that many of these phrases were born in the British Isles and brought here by settlers. The term sheila for women seems to be Irish, for instance. Other terms grew from the continent's fauna and landscape. Still others have obscure origins.

The bottom line appears to be this: Aussies like to play with words. Even the clergy can't resist. In 1978, the Catholic diocese of Maitland, in the southeast, began running TV ads that included strine versions of sections of the Gospel. Here is an example that shouldn't set back the Christian cause by more than 200 or 300 years.

"G'day. 'Ave you 'eard about the day Jesus and His mother had been working flat out with this big mob, curing warts and leprosy and all that? After a while the Apostles said,"It's time to tie on the feed bag, but there's not enough tucker for the mob.' Andrew said, 'Here's a kid with five loaves of bread and two fishes.' So Jesus said, 'Righto, bring me the bread and the bream.' He blesses it, breaks it into bits and the Apostles take it around. Jesus said, 'Collect what is left over or we'll be in strife for littering.' They found there was 12 baskets of food left over. Jesus had fed 5,000 blokes. That's not counting all the sheilas and kids."