Sunday, February 28, 2010

Ship & shore


Ship & shore
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
t was an absolute thrill cruising Glacier Bay in Alaska. Being driven up to imposing mountains, amazing valleys and stupendous glaciers was an experience of a lifetime.

And then there was the contrast of people sitting in jacuzzi's enjoy the warmth of the bath and the glory of the scenery around them.

This photo aimed to capture an awesome mountain with all its grandeur and 4 people in a hot tub and other passengers watching and strolling.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Dance language


Dance language
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
at the studio where we have been taking lesson, this small plaque speaks to those who pay attention. Dancing is true soul food.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Gardot @ Kings Park WA


Gardot @ Kings Park WA
Originally uploaded by DinLin47

King's Park concert


King's Park concert
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
Kings Park is a gem that sits above the City of Perth. www.bgpa.wa.gov.au/

Last night it was at its brilliant best as we gathered to enjoy the talents of 3 wonderul singers, one Canadian and 2 Americans.

This photo gives a glimpse of the majestic setting.

However, it doesn't capture the magic of the night as the darkness came, the lights went on and the music and the singing filled the air.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Lake Jualbup, Shenton Park


Lake Jualbup, Shenton Park
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
Lake Jualbup, Shenton Park
Cricket grounds. I have seen and been to quite a few of them around the suburbs of Perth and Melbourne. Matting, turf, synthetic and malthoid. All sorts of settings from windy City Beach in Perth to good old Fewster Road in Hampton Victoria. I have been able to see games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the WACA in Perth plus a one dayer between the English and the West Indies in Sydney. I even got to tour Lords in London and have a look at the Oval.

However, the heart and soul of cricket is found at venues likes Lake Jualbup in Shenton park WA. When people gather to play on grassed venues for a game we can be assured the game is in good hands. There were at least 3 games going on last Sunday while the Jazz Band played in the background. This photo captures all ages and genders playing a game under the giant trees. A couple of bikes are nearby while others just stand around and chat.

Howzat!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Perth lass in Jasper snow


Perth lass in Jasper snow
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
the morning we left Jasper Park Lodge in Alberta Canada it snowed. A blow to the golf course people who wanted to play in the Canadian spring. For 2 Aussies from Hot Perth it was just a marvellous experience walking to breakfast in the snow.

Notice me!


Notice me!
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
As I sipped my coffee the flowers called out..... over here, over here.! This was meant to be a quiet reflective time at the Rose Heritage Cafe. A magic venue as you will see from other photos.
www.flickr.com/photos/dinlin47/2855241643/in/set-72157605...

... but this day the gorgeous flowers called me over, seduced me and I fell in love with the wonder of their extraverted colour and flair.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

these two please!


these two please!
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
The peaches presented beautifully at Kalamunda Grower's Market on Sunday morning. as i lined up the photo a hand appeared to take two for a hungry consumer looking to experience the juicy joy of these peaches.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Hotel Beverley


Hotel Beverley
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
Reflection @ Beverley

the walker stops and reflects. Before her stands the Hotel Beverley.
What secrets lie hidden within its walls?
What stories has it to tell?
Is it a place for a traveller to pause or is it a local meeting place that excludes strangers?

The walker pauses and thinks. Do I go and find out what its like? or do U get inmy car and go home?

Quietly she reflects on her options ..................

Monday, February 15, 2010

Footy Passions - a reflection


Footy Passions
Originally uploaded by DinLin47
Footy Passions
John Cash & Joy Damousi
UNSW Press 2009
http://www.unswpress.com.au/isbn/086840957X.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------------

It is Grand Final day 2005 and I am in Perth WA.

South Melbourne, I actually mean Sydney, have just defeated West Coast Eagles in a fantastic game of football.

My team the Eagles have lost! Somewhere in that magnificent stadium affectionately known as the ‘G’ is my almost 22 yo daughter and her friend Melissa. I should feeling for them and our loss.

Instead I am thinking about my deceased maternal grandparents Perc & Ida Dinwoodie and my Great Aunt Flo, Ida’s sister. I am imagining their pleasure and delight that South have finally won a flag. I imagine how proud they are and them thinking that Bobby Skilton would be pleased. As I write Skilton’s name I am transported to 9 Charles St Hampton and I am a teenager. My grandmother talks to Aunty Dulce, who lives at no. 9 just up from no. 3 where I live with my parents. Grandma in her wise way tells me what a good man Bobby Skilton is.

Football is more than a game and John and Joy (I must call them by their first names after reading such a personal and passionate book) have captured that magnificently in 204 pages.

As I read Footy Passions I thought about my football journey. At 6 years old Dad took me to see Melbourne where his brother Matt Chapman was boot studder. I was hooked on Melbourne against the flow of Chapman’s support Fitzroy and Dinwoodie’s South Melbourne. I stayed Melbourne until I played at St Kilda in their premiership year of ’66. Well actually it was about 9 games in the Under 19s but that sentence sounds good.

Playing for the Saints and then watching them win with my sister Ronis from the Southern stand moved me to St Kilda but not completely. This loosened the Melbourne bonds and set up the possibility of becoming a West Coast man in 1987.

Perhaps ‘the loosening’ was due to a transfer wrangle in my move to Sandringham in 1967. There was a threat of delaying the transfer due to a VFL/VFA dispute. Perhaps this delay threat fed a loosening of ties so that when I saw the exploitative attitude of the VFL to the WAFL in the 70s & 80s I lost my connection to the Demons.

Throughout the transformation from Demon to Saint to Eagle there was one footy constant. The mighty Zebras. Sandringham was in my father’s blood. He told me proudly about how the colours represented Black Rock, Sandringham and Hampton. He told me of watching them in the 20s & 30s and about how we won in 1946 with a come from behind victory. And of course Uncle Matt lived one street from the beach Oval and we lived 20 minutes away. At the end of our street lived the Blackman’s and Mr Blackman took me and his son Bobbie to the footy to watch Sandringham. Later we were scoreboard assistants in 1961 and later I played in the yellow, black & blue. I even captained the seconds one day at Yarraville in 1968.

My Dad took me to see Melbourne play the year I turned seven. Little did I know that in 1990 I would take my daughter Amy, 2 months away from turning 7, to Subiaco Oval to watch Melbourne take apart West Coast Eagles. It was some years before I became aware of this coincidence.

And so Amy and I started our football journey until in 2010 we celebrate 20 years ob being West Coast Eagles members. Since 1993 we have had the same seats on the boundary line on the north or railway side of the ground on the wing. During that time we have seen people come and go around us. Some have sadly passed away while others can’t get to the game anymore. A hard core of loyal Eagles have stayed with us for more years than I can remember. To meet them in the street is often a shock. One summer in a Duncraig fish and chip I warmly greeted a familiar face. Days later I worked out it was the guy who sits 2 seats away from me. He was part of our footy family but out context in a shopping centre we struggled to recognise each other. The next season we laughed about the incident.

I recommend Footy Passions. It show footy is more than a game. It is a fascinating sociological and psychological experience to read the book. It is a book that goes deep. While it focuses on people and their connections to family and football, it also illustrates the change from a parochial system to a more global one. It encouraged me to focus on my own development and growth and to explore how football is more than a game more than fortune or fame ….

FOOTY PASSIONS - TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Preface

1. A Passionate Attachment
2. Loss and Redemption
3. In the Name of the Father
4. Fathers and Daughters at Play
5. Reality Bites
6. Australian Rules
7. Living through Loss
8. Football and Place: Home and Away

Final Siren
Appendix