Monday, December 31, 2012

patio DIY


you may recall that we spent a few long, tear-filled weeks in july trying to find an apartment in canberra. why the lamest city in australia has such an outrageously expensive rental market is still a bit of a mystery to me (though i'm guessing we have the transient civil servant population and their living subventions to thank), especially given that canberra is sorely wanting for pleasant accommodations. 

but then we found our little hidden garden castle, which we now agree is our most favorite apartment ever. seriously. if only this place opened on to the 14th arrondissement in paris - we'd be in heaven! the best thing about our place - aside from the fact that it is surrounded on all four sides by other people's overgrown gardens (and a chicken coop - love!!), is the patio. we've never had outdoor space before, so we were eager to furnish it and start enjoying our shrimps on the barbie. as it turns out, however, i'm not a huge fan of cheap outdoor furniture (bleh! no style), and we weren't about to drop $1000+ on some swanky teak stuff, so we decided to see what we could find at the salvage warehouse. the big score came when some neighbors gave us a pine breakfast table, but it turns out i'm also not a huge fan of glossed pine... 

a few hours, a few bags of saw dust, and a few coats of paint later, we were ready to go. add some ikea chairs, a couple of salvaged dining chairs from the 60s, and a fully recycled plastic rug (in "miami vice" colors, per kp's request), and voilĂ !

here's kp, working up a sweat with the table sander we rented - that thing had torque! 

 the *almost* final outdoor room. just days after taking this shot i found a funky old wooden/brass chandelier on the side of the road. with a coat or two of spray paint and a few candles, i think it'll make for some pretty groovy lighting!

bonus shot: since we still don't let him outside, bob has found his own special leisure suite on our winter blankets.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

blue mountains


greetings, reader! i finally found a moment to catch up on the blog, post a few pics from our recent adventures down under... first up, our weekend getaway to the blue mountains. it was a rainy, overcast november weekend, but that was fine by us. there is so much bloody sun here - a little cloud coverage is always welcome. 

we spent most of the weekend lounging about - booking massages, perusing vintage shops, and enjoying local entertainment - but we also got in a few good hikes:


 the blue mountain's most treasured landmark - the three sisters turned to stone






i can't get kp on a ferris wheel without a major struggle... but he had no problem with the "mountain devil", the steepest incline railway in the world (as of 1997 anyway), with a vertical descent of 583 feet. it was terrifying.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

my cowboy down under


i love it when my dreamy cowboy comes to visit. we take walks and cook out on the barbie... last weekend he took me for the most ridiculously awesome fish and chips in batemans bay, just two hours from canberra... 

and what a hunk! i'm not going to lie, i was NOT stoked when he came home from shepler's in mesquite with all that wrangler gear, but now that it's starting to break in a bit... i think i'm digging it. in 20 years or so, that shirt is going to be amazing. i can't wait.

come back to visit, kp. bob and i miss you.


he's either saying: "stop pointing that damn thing at me" 
or "stop making fun of my boots!"

Thursday, October 25, 2012

many would have starved were it not for the rabbits


the australia museum

once upon a time, the europeans let loose some rabbits in their newly conquered terra australis, thinking it would provide "a touch of home" in this strange new land. within ten years, the few rabbits released on privates estates had... well... bred like rabbits. the ecological effects were devastating - erosion, species extinction, ringbarking (sounds dirty, doesn't it?) - until the great depression, when farmers began trapping and eating the rabbits to survive. it turns out, i could learn a trick or two from these resourceful aussies. sometimes our greatest challenges become our greatest moments.

well, i'm not sure about greatest moments - not yet, anyway - but i have worked up a list of canberra greats:

1) tiny's green shed. when i'm not at home or in my office, chances are i'm at tiny's. it's a great big warehouse full of cast-offs, a love for which my folks instilled in me as a young lass. most of it is truly junk, but so far, i have scored two pretty great kitchen chairs and a few vintage plates.


look at all those rackets, just waiting for a potential hoarder like me!

2) pick-up week. i remember trolling the neighborhood with my pops back in the mid-90s, looking for treasures in other people's trash piles... once a month, the city would pick up old furniture, etc, left on the side of the road - if we didn't get there first, of course. i'd never again come across anything quite like it until moving to canberra. but bonus - they toss stuff all the time here! i haven't picked anything up yet, but i could have had a whole set of kitchen chairs and a desk and a kid's table and a (surely broken) washing machine... and we've only been here a few months. it makes every day's commute to work an adventure!

3) spring in the bush. there are kangas everywhere, and now that it's more green than brown, the city is awfully pretty. and we've got a nature reserve two minutes away by foot! here are some shots we got on a recent walk:




i call this one déjeuner sur l'herbe




4) there is yoga and tango here, so at least i'm not trapped in my head ALL the time.

5) braidwood, nsw. canberra is just over an hour away from a great little town with an even greater little vintage furniture shop. maybe i'm just giddy after two months in canberra, a veritable wasteland of vintage wares, but i think it might be the coolest, most well stocked shop i've ever encountered! kp and i scored a desk made out of aussie blackwood by mid-century canberra furniture designer, fred ward. i'll get pictures up as soon as kp's office is set up.

6) the Arc. the national film and sound archive of australia is housed about three minutes from my office, and they run great films all the time. a few months ago, i saw a half dozen films during their annual southeast asian film festival (AWESOME!). they've got a lovely courtyard, and they make a pretty decent coffee.

7) the food. the saturday farmer's market. sammy's asian kitchen. dickson noodle house. italian and sons. the deli sandwiches at the university house on campus... really, there is a lot of good eating to be done in this town.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

our new digs



our new hood

i was going to wait until i felt we'd fully moved in to post pics of our new chez nous, but i'm starting to sense that might never happen... so may as well post now.

it took us two full weeks to find this place, not including the countless hours spent online looking at super-wide-angle shots of what we later discovered to be hovels... i cried more than once over the rental market here (though during the first couple of weeks, it was hard to identify exactly what was making me cry at any given moment), and had resigned myself to paying $1700/month for something like this, when we found this little guest cottage. i would say it is easily my favorite bit of canberra, aside from my office, which is also pretty nice. good thing too, since i spend 85% of my time between home and campus. i've been told we live in the "hippy" area of town, which suits me fine but which doesn't really seem to mean anything in particular (honestly, i don't see any difference between this neighborhood and every single other neighborhood in town. seriously, you will not truly know what generic means until you spend some time here. wow.)







spring has finally sprung! there are flowers everywhere!!


i hung dad's old shot of the horses and then totally pooped out. everything else is just propped up against the wall. 


everything is really WHITE, which makes the whole place feel really sterile. but i'll take institutional over cave-like any day.


this patio is still very much a work in progress. we need to move our camp chairs and buy a bigger table. i go to the recycling warehouse weekly in the hopes of scoring something, but nothing yet...



bob has certainly made himself right at home...

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

trees that shed their bark instead of their leaves...



well, i think i’m finally ready to talk about canberra. does that sound dramatic? it does, doesn't it? i don't care - it has been an INTENSE couple of months.


first, let me preface this by acknowledging that i don't adjust well. don't do change. never have. funny coming from someone who hasn't been able to sit still for longer than two years since she graduated college, i know, but it is what it is. and my adapting to life in canberra and at the university has been one long, painful lesson in accepting change. accepting that e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.n.g. is different. accepting that it's going to take me twice as long (at least) to do anything. i thought learning to drive was going to be the kicker. oh, jees, to be back at that stage...

the difference between adjusting to a place like vietnam, or even france, and adjusting to australia can be summed up in what kp calls "the uncanny valley." i don't have the time or the energy to try and explain it with any eloquence, so let's just say it describes the experience of *thinking* a place is familiar - and on the surface it actually being very familiar - but slowly realizing how foreign it is. and basically being totally weirded out by that realization. this experience is much more pronounced in western anglophone countries, which share lots of cultural values and practices, than it is in non-anglophone countries. which is perhaps why, despite some undeniably awesome moments of culture shock in nam, it wasn't so hard to adjust. i knew it would be different, and it was. end of story.

but here, and especially in the professional context of my new university gig... things that i never even considered could be different are different. you name it. the smallest details. and it's just been doing my head in. most of what i've been processing is silly academic-related stuff (eg, departmental culture, student behavior, university admin - the bureaucracy of taking leave, for example, which is a given perk of academic life back home), but there have also been some lifestyle bumps: we have to go to the gas station to buy big cans of gas for our stove at home (and we are LUCKY to even have a gas stove!!); the gas stations, speaking of, don't do pay-at-the-pump; and while we're on the subject of gas, it costs $75 to fill up our mazda 3!; there's no equivalent to trader joe's or whole foods; all this brown bush starts to get to you, rent is hiiiiigh and the accommodations are grim (except for our place, which is pretty sweet... so sweet that i had to take in a roommate to afford it while kp is in brisbane); canberra is not a happening town; the scarcity of black beans and the return to old el paso brand tortillas (sigh)...

add to this the pressures of the new job, which i will spare you, and the sudden feeling that we are so very far away, and well, let's just say i've been a bit fragile of late. but i think that just being able to say that here means i've turned a corner of sorts, which is a good thing.


Sunday, September 9, 2012

happy anniversary to us


today, we are celebrating six years of us...
of bob the cat
of world travel
of office re-runs and family meetings
of french literature, history, and philosophy
of dance parties in the kitchen
of good coffee in the morning
of transcontinental road trips
of white wine with thai food
of standing under our umbrella
of picnics and long walks
of red stripe
of sam cooke and chet baker
of pun and wendy
of making each other laugh... a lot (kp, you're really funny)
of steaks on the bar-b
of love's work
of love's reward

kp, you're the best thing that ever happened to me. happy anniversary.