The Bells, The Bells

Stuck Train Stop On Red Signal

It was a day for bells yesterday. We live near a train line and are within hearing distance of a level crossing. Yesterday the gates were stuck down and we were treated to the ding-ding-ding of the bells for an hour or so. I wandered around and watched the cars dice with death driving around the boom gates and had a look for a faults number. There was none but I eventually found it – listed under railway pedestrian crossing faults.

The ringing had faded from ears by the time we hopped in to bed only to be replaced by the distant sound of an alarm screaming. It was a quiet and still night so it carried from a long way away but it went all night. Each time we were woken by one of the kids having a grizzle I could hear it going and it was still sounding as I left for work this morning at 6:45. I feel sorry for anyone within a couple of blocks of where ever it was – there is no way anyone would have been sleeping through that.

Holiday Over, Nightmare Begins

Well, seems I’ve taken a two week unscheduled holiday from the blogging world. No dramas or particular reason to blame, just that returning to work seems to drastically reduce the amount of time you have available to sit and write about what you’re doing. Even then, if you had the time, writing ‘got up, went to work, came home’ is a bit boring – even for this blog.

One problem we’re having though is probably worth mentioning. For those joining us late Rae and I recently purchased a block of land and are planning on building. This week we got a call from Henley, our building company, and what should have been a pretty straight forward start has turned in to a bit of a nightmare – it appears the owner/builder on the next block has built 4.5cm on to our land.

45 small millimetres. Not much in the scheme of things but, thanks to council regulations, when it comes to positioning our house it may as well have been a metre or two. I went out to see the builder. He was very contrite (“I sign anything. Just tell me, I sign.”) but I’m sure once we start asking him to pay for the extra costs we are now incurring (already about $800) that mood may change.

I’ve also had it pointed out that if we do nothing then after 12 years the land he is on becomes his. Arggghhhh. The best  solution for us would be to sell him 4.5cm of our land and have the titles adjusted accordingly, but that’s going to cost him even more so I’m not sure how he’ll react to it. I think the first thing we’re going to have to do is break the he said/she said stalemate that will eventuate and get the lots independently surveyed to make sure Henley have it right. From there on out I can only see lawyers.

Any one have any advice?

Three For Three

What To Do On A Hot Summer Day - Cameraphone picture. Rae and I love our movies, we could quite happily spend our life in a cinema. We were married in The Sun Theatre and our wedding consisted of the briefest vows we could get away with before we all sat down and watched High Society. However since Bert, and now Henry & Kennedy, arrived our movie watching has been restricted pretty much to DVD and downloads.

Given the restrictions we’ve done pretty well with the few films we’ve seen on the big screen, we’ve managed to catch the last couple of Oscar Best Picture winners and we think we may have lucked in to this year’s as well. Zita gave us cinema vouchers so yesterday we trotted off to The Rivoli in the lovely 37 degree furnace of a day to watch No Country For Old Men.

We’ve had a long chat about the film and the way that it ends and I’ve come to the conclusion that, yes, the Sheriff was a replicant.

An Email Out Of The (Palcolor) Blue

I like taking photos of old signs around town. Sometimes they’re on the outside of buildings, sometimes they’re on the inside. You can see the photos on my ‘Old Signs’ Flickr page or see the old signs laid out on a map of Melbourne. I think the fascination came from an article I read as a teenage that called on people to take photos of signs before they disappeared for good. Isn’t it amazing the things that stick?

I always wonder if the person who painted the sign, as most of them pre-date modern sign writing practices, realised how long their work would last. If, as they put down the final brush, they thought that someone would take an interest in their efforts in 2008. Never did I actually imagine I’d hear from one of these mystery people.

Today this email arrived in my inbox.

Hi Anthony,

I stumbled across your photo of the Palcolor sign in Yarraville. I actually painted that one in 1980 when I was 18 and still an apprentice. Back then we didn’t consider old signs as special as we all do today. I think there are about 4 or 5 layers of signs in that photo, I painted out an earlier film processing sign and replaced it with that Palcolor one.

That one remains the oldest evidence of my work in Melbourne.

Glad to see your interest in the old signs!

Cheers Tony

Yarraville Pharmacy Sign - Close Up

Holiday Lunch

Bert Has His Lemonade When I was growing up the highlight of summer would be the two weeks each January that we’d spend here in Melbourne. Mum and Dad would rent a place right on the beach (out the door, two metre of lawn, jump the small fence and you were on the sand) at Edithvale. It was a great time, the beach, train rides, a trip in to the city and a couple of times each holiday we’d have the luxury of dinner out or take away. Ah, high times for a kid from the country.

I’m on the second week of my holidays now with work beginning to loom on the horizon. It’s been a glorious time spent with Rae and the kids. I’ve been staying up to help with the night time bottle, sitting on the floor talking to the twins and each day Bert and I go for a walk to get the paper. Together we’ve decided that there is a friendly tiger living in the long grass next to the milk bar but we’re yet to see him, maybe tomorrow morning.

Today, in the spirit of holidays past, we took the family to The Coat for lunch. Perfect day, perfect lunch.

IPA - Summer BeerPhee and Her Iced Chocky

Rae's Lunch - Calamari Chewing The Straw While Planning His Next Move Mmmmmm - Latte

Bye 2007

See you 2007, it’s been quite a year. Dominated by the waiting for and the arrival of two new babies there really wasn’t much time for any other major events but we managed to fit in buying a block of land and beginning the building process. It was a long year, but a good year.

Happy new year everyone and to those whose blogs I read, thanks for all you’ve written this year. See you all tomorrow in a bright, new and shiny 2008.

Sign Inside

Normally when I take photos of old signs around Melbourne they are on the outside of buildings.

Last night Zita came over to give Rae and a little ‘grown up’ time. We headed around to the Famous Blue Raincoat for a drink and on the way saw that Triple J Cellars was moving from one shop to the new building next door. The old shop dates back to the 50s and I found some great old signs that hadn’t been touched in years.

My guess is that the two McWilliam’s signs are 50s era originals, as is the ‘Jet Air Door’ above the door, and the rest in the slide show date from the 70s and 80s. They’ll all be gone over the next couple of days as the place is gutted for its next occupants; I wonder if any of their fittings will be around for someone to photograph in 2057?

McWilliams Cream Sherry

McWilliams Cream Port 

(If you are reading this in a feed reader you may be  missing out on the slide show of a few more signs from the shop that I’ve embedded . Check the post on my site.)