Australia Day coming up in January 26

Warrigal

SF VIP
For those who are wondering what that is all about, it is a celebration of national pride.

There are many things to be proud about (our government is arguably not one of them) and is case you are wondering what they are, they all come under the heading of being unique and mostly confusing to outsiders.

Douglas Addams (Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy) summed it up as follows:

Australia


Australia is a very confusing place, taking up a large amount of the bottom half of the planet. It is recognizable from orbit because of many unusual features, including what at first looks like an enormous bite taken out of its southern edge; a wall of sheer cliffs which plunge into the girting sea Geologists assure us that this is simply an accident of geomorphology, but they still call it the "Great Australian Bight", proving that not only are they covering up a more frightening theory but they can't spell either.

The first of the confusing things about Australia is the status of the place. Where other landmasses and sovereign lands are classified as continent, island or country, Australia is considered all three. Typically, it is unique in this.

The second confusing thing about Australia is the animals. They can be divided into three categories: Poisonous, Odd, and Sheep. It is true that of the 10 most poisonous arachnids on the planet, Australia has 9 of them. Actually, it would be more accurate to say that of the 9 most poisonous arachnids, Australia has all of them. However, there are few snakes, possibly because the spiders have killed them all.

But even the spiders won't go near the sea. Any visitors should be careful to check inside boots (before putting them on), under toilet seats (before sitting down) and generally everywhere else. A stick is very useful for this task.

The last confusing thing about Australia is the inhabitants.

A short history: Sometime around 40,000 years ago some people arrived in boats from the north. They ate all the available food, and a lot of them died. The ones who survived learned respect for the balance of nature, man's proper place in the scheme of things, and spiders. They settled in and spent a lot of the intervening time making up strange stories.

Then, around 200 years ago, Europeans arrived in boats from the north. More accurately, European convicts were sent, with a few deranged people in charge. They tried to plant their crops in autumn (failing to take account of the reversal of the seasons), ate all their food, and a lot of them died.

About then the sheep arrived, and have been treasured ever since. It is interesting to note here that the Europeans always consider themselves vastly superior to any other race they encounter, since they can lie, cheat, steal and litigate (marks of a civilized culture they say), whereas all the Aboriginals can do is happily survive being left in the middle of a vast red-hot desert, equipped with a stick.

Eventually, the new lot of people stopped being Europeans on 'extended holiday' and became Australians. The changes are subtle, but deep, caused by the mind-stretching expanses of nothingness and eerie quiet, where a person can sit perfectly still and look deep inside themselves to the core of their essence, their reasons for being, and the necessity of checking inside their boots every morning for fatal surprises. They also picked up the most finely tuned sense of irony in the world, and the Aboriginal gift for making up stories. Be warned.

There is also the matter of the beaches. Australian beaches are simply the nicest and best in the world, although anyone actually venturing into the sea will have to contend with sharks, stinging jellyfish, stonefish (a fish which sits on the bottom of the sea, pretends to be a rock and has venomous barbs sticking out of its back that will kill just from the pain) and surfboarders. However, watching a beach sunset is worth the risk.

As a result of all this hardship, dirt, thirst and wombats, you would expect Australians to be a dour lot. Instead, they are genial, jolly, cheerful and always willing to share a kind word with a stranger. Faced with insurmountable odds and impossible problems, they smile disarmingly and look for a stick. Major engineering feats have been performed with sheets of corrugated iron, string and mud.

Alone of all the races on earth, they seem to be free from the 'Grass is greener on the other side of the fence' syndrome, and roundly proclaim that Australia is, in fact, the other side of that fence. They call the land "Oz" or "Godzone" (a verbal contraction of "God's Own Country"). The irritating thing about this is they may be right.

There are some traps for the unsuspecting traveller, though.
Do not, under any circumstances, suggest that the beer is imperfect, unless you are comparing it to another kind of Australian beer.
Do not wear a Hawaiian shirt.
Religion and Politics are fairly safe topics of conversation (Australians don't care too much about either) but Sport is a minefield.
The only correct answer to "So, howdya like our country, eh?" is "Best (insert your own regional swear word here) country in the world!”​

It is very likely that, on arriving, some cheerful Australians will 'adopt' you on your first night, and take you to a pub where Australian beer is served. Despite the obvious danger, do not refuse. It is a form of initiation rite. You will wake up late the next day with an astonishing hangover, a foul taste in your mouth, and wearing strange clothes.

Your hosts will usually make sure you get home, and waive off any legal difficulties with "It's his first time in Australia, so we took him to the pub," to which the policeman will sagely nod and close his notebook. Be sure to tell the story of these events to every other Australian you encounter, adding new embellishments at every stage and noting how strong the beer was. Thus you will be accepted into this unique culture.

Typical Australian sayings:-
G'Day.
She'll be right, mate.
No Worries.​

Tips to Surviving Australia:
Don't ever put your hand down a hole for any reason WHATSOEVER.
The beer is stronger than you think, regardless of how strong you think it is.
Always carry a stick.
Air-conditioning is imperative.
Do not attempt to use Australian slang unless you are a trained linguist and extremely good in a fist fight.
Wear thick socks.
Take good maps. Stopping to ask directions only works when there are people nearby.
If you leave the urban areas, carry several litres of water with you at all times, or you will die.​
Even in the most embellished stories told by Australians, there is always a core of truth that it is unwise to ignore.​


How to identify Australians:
They waddle when they walk due to the 53 expired petrol discount vouchers stuffed in their wallet or purse.
They pronounce Melbourne as "Mel-bin".
They think it makes perfect sense to decorate highways with large fibreglass bananas, prawns and sheep.
They think "Woolloomooloo" is a perfectly reasonable name for a place, that "Wagga Wagga" can be abbreviated to "Wagga" but "Woy Woy" can't be called "Woy".
Their hamburgers will contain beetroot. Apparently it’s a must-have.
They don’t think it's summer until the steering wheel is too hot to handle.
Will react in horror when companies try to market "Anzac cookies".
They believe that all train timetables are works of fiction.​
Don't believe it all. Addams is a fiction writer, after all. And he's a Pommie.

I will be having the extended family around tomorrow (25th Jan), not to celebrate Australia Day, but just because it's a good time for a get together one month after Christmas. We'll have cold food served outside because I'll have around 20 guests and I don't have a grand dining room in which to accommodate them all. Some of the food will be from a sheep. That's as patriotic as I get on Australia Day.

There will be fireworks over Sydney on Sun 26th. Sydney siders love fireworks so much that we have them twice in one month.
 

When found and they will be,i will hold them and you can deal with them Phantom, disgusting morons i am absolutely appalled at the kids these days , they show no respect for anything, let's hop the paint can be removed without damaging the building
 

Doubt it was kids Jilly, who's most likely to call OZ day 'invasion day?" mmmmm ? There seems to be a bit of a Koori campaign going on, other graffiti and banners 'n such. Happens every year, they need to get over it and start making themselves some new history before this one forgets them as being more than sulky losers. This group are doing more harm to their people than good. Plenty of their kids in unis now trying to better themselves instead of looking like castaways with their hands out for freebies and demanding respect for not a lot. But...... live in the past and you'll disappear into it.


Now Warri, even I believe every word Addams wrote! Best summation of OZ ever written, with the possible exception of They're a Weird Mob.

I laugh every time I read it cos it really isn't all that wrong.

Partaking of the holy lamb tomorrow? Good. I have this video I found at Christmas and have been saving up. Another icon.

Non Australian English speakers may need to listen carefully, and yes we really do talk almost that fast mostly.
This bloke is an ex footballer with a very funny deadpan act, it's a real ad, but also a send-up of itself. That works here.

 
:giggle:

Be proud of your exports to us too, like Rolf Harris, Dame Edna Everidge......enjoy your lamb!
 
Re:For those who are wondering what that is all about, it is a celebration of national pride.

You mean like our Christmas?
 
No but they invented most of the bullsh*t that goes with it.

Coca Cola 'invented' Santa Claus as we know him, the red and white outfit was their brand colours. For the best though, Pepsi's colours aren't all that great.
And Hallmark invented Christmas Cards... a pox on all their houses if that one's true.
 
Here in California we always admired you guys.

mj20cQVXVRV-CpYxk1pcg8A.jpg
 
He literally put us on the map, the East Coast anyway. Google him Davey, an interesting man. The Hawaiians killed him. Tch.

TG:
Surf clubs have been great here, even this remote beach is manned during in the tourist season by volunteers from the next town's club. They've saved a lot of lives and produced a lot of athletes and have been a great thing for kids to be involved in. ... And they're nothing like Baywatch.
 
Young Nick's head on the East Coast of the North Island, New Zealand.
Young Nick’s sharp eyes

Sailing across uncharted seas in October 1769, Captain Cook offered a reward of rum to the man who first sighted land, and promised that ‘that part of the coast of the said land should be named after him’. The sighting was made by the surgeon’s boy, 12-year-old Nicholas Young. He had probably come aboard the ship in the retinue of the botanist, Joseph Banks. It is not recorded if Young Nick was given the rum, but the headland below the high hills which he first saw from the masthead was named Young Nicks Head after him. He was certainly sharp-eyed because he was also the first to see Land’s End when the Endeavour returned to England in 1771.

[h=1]European discovery of New Zealand[/h] [h=2]Page 5 – Cook’s three voyages[/h]
Young Nicks Head

Replica of the Endeavour

James Cook’s map of the South Island (1st of 3)

The Resolution medal

Impressions of ‘Dusky Bay’ (1st of 2)

‘Cook’s Cove’





[h=3]First sighting and landfall[/h] Captain James Cook’s ship the Endeavour was a relatively small vessel of 368 tons, just 32 metres long and 7.6 metres broad. It departed from Plymouth on 26 August 1768 with 94 men, entering the Pacific around Cape Horn. After almost four months in Tahiti, from mid-April to mid-August, the Endeavour sailed south into uncharted waters. On 6 October 1769 a cabin boy sighted land.
Three days later Cook landed at Poverty Bay. But unfortunate skirmishes on that day and the next resulted in the deaths of several Māori. The incidents appear, like Tasman’s bloody experience at Murderers Bay (Golden Bay) in 1642, to have been in part the result of Māori efforts to deal with strange newcomers in a traditional way. After the encounters, Cook sailed first south to Cape Turnagain, then north, pausing at Tolaga Bay and Anaura Bay before rounding East Cape to Mercury Bay. After a week in the Bay of Islands, he turned the top of the North Island in a storm, and sailed down its west coast.
[h=3]Young Nick’s sharp eyes[/h] Sailing across uncharted seas in October 1769, Captain Cook offered a reward of rum to the man who first sighted land, and promised that ‘that part of the coast of the said land should be named after him’. The sighting was made by the surgeon’s boy, 12-year-old Nicholas Young. He had probably come aboard the ship in the retinue of the botanist, Joseph Banks. It is not recorded if Young Nick was given the rum, but the headland below the high hills which he first saw from the masthead was named Young Nicks Head after him. He was certainly sharp-eyed because he was also the first to see Land’s End when the Endeavour returned to England in 1771.

[h=3]A favoured anchorage[/h] On 15 January 1770 Cook brought the Endeavour to anchor at Ship Cove in Queen Charlotte Sound at the top of the South Island. From a high point on Arapawa Island he gained his first view of the narrow strait that now bears his name. Sailing through the strait, he returned to Cape Turnagain, confirming that the North Island was indeed an island. He then sailed south down the east coast of the South Island and round the southern tip of Stewart Island.
Observing the new land sometimes from well out to sea, he made two famous mistakes, charting Banks Peninsula as a probable island and Stewart Island as a probable peninsula. He did not land again until he put into Admiralty Bay, D’Urville Island, on 27 March 1770 for wood and water.
On 1 April 1770 Cook sailed west to discover and chart the eastern coast of Australia. He reached Batavia (Jakarta) on 11 October and returned to England, having circumnavigated the globe, on 13 July 1771.
[h=3]The second voyage[/h] When Cook made his two subsequent voyages into the Pacific, New Zealand was no longer a place unknown to Europeans. The first voyage in 1770 had confirmed that it was not a vast southern land waiting to be discovered. Joseph Banks, the naturalist on board the Endeavour, had recorded that Cook’s rounding of Stewart Island’s South Cape had totally demolished ‘our aerial fabrick called continent’. Yet there still remained unexplored ocean to the east of New Zealand, where a great continent could lie. On his second voyage (1772–75) Cook used New Zealand as a base for probes south and east, which finally proved there was no such continent.
The Resolution, commanded by Cook, and the Adventure, commanded by Tobias Furneaux, sailed from England on 13 July 1772. Both ships spent time in New Zealand waters between excursions into the unexplored parts of the Pacific. The only significant achievement of the second voyage relating to New Zealand was Cook’s charting of much of Dusky Sound, where he spent six weeks in the autumn of 1773.
[h=3]Historic tree stumps[/h] Some of the earliest evidence of a European presence in New Zealand is found in the far south-west of the South Island. When Captain Cook rested up in Dusky Sound in the autumn of 1773 after arduous voyages towards Antarctica, one of the tasks he had his party complete was accurately fixing the geographical position of New Zealand. So that the necessary observations could be made, about an acre (half a hectare) of land on Astronomer Point was cleared of bush. The stumps of trees felled by Cook’s men can still be seen beneath the regrown bush.

[h=3]The third voyage[/h] On his third voyage (1776–79), Cook paid a last visit to New Zealand. He stayed from 12 to 25 February 1777 at ‘our old station’, Ship Cove in Queen Charlotte Sound, before sailing into the north Pacific. He was killed in an incident with the islanders at Kealakekua Bay, Hawaii, on 14 February 1779.

Next: Page 6. Cook’s achievement
 
Well, Australian of the Year is announced and wouldn't cha know it's yet another sporting hero. We do that a lot don't we?

The best we could throw up is an AFL Football player?? Really? siiiiigh.

Not to denigrate Adam Goodes, as football players go he doesn't fit the mould, and is an exemplary human in many ways, not to mention the best and most essential player in 'my' team, but......

It reeks of PCness I'm afraid. 'for his dedication to stamping out racism?' He's a Koori, of course he's dedicated to it. So are a lot of white people, just sayin'.

Without detracting from Adam's award I still wonder if someone working in medical research or science might not have contributed a tad more to the overall benefit of the Nation.
But good on ya anyway Adam, you are a true gentleman and almost give the game a good name and you won't give the Country a bad one either.
 
Well, Australian of the Year is announced and wouldn't cha know it's yet another sporting hero. We do that a lot don't we?

The best we could throw up is an AFL Football player?? Really? siiiiigh.

Not to denigrate Adam Goodes, as football players go he doesn't fit the mould, and is an exemplary human in many ways, not to mention the best and most essential player in 'my' team, but......

It reeks of PCness I'm afraid. 'for his dedication to stamping out racism?' He's a Koori, of course he's dedicated to it. So are a lot of white people, just sayin'.

Without detracting from Adam's award I still wonder if someone working in medical research or science might not have contributed a tad more to the overall benefit of the Nation.
But good on ya anyway Adam, you are a true gentleman and almost give the game a good name and you won't give the Country a bad one either.

You're forgetting the referendum on the constitution amendments coming up. Adam Goodes talking it up will give it a better chance of passing. The Senior Australian of the Year went to Fred Chaney for his contribution to indigenous reconciliation and human rights. I don't mind Fred either, he's one of the saner ex politicians, but both appointments are political rather than PC. Tony wants his amendments to pass before someone else does the job and gets the kudos. Besides, he wants his wording, not Labor's to be put before the people and passed.

Actually, scientists and doctors have had a good run over the past few years. This is only the third sportsman this century and there have been three doctors/scientists. Two have been Aboriginal, three women and we've had one general, one actor, one singer and one businessman. I think they are spreading it around fairly well. No unionists though. :(

2001
GEN Peter Cosgrove
AC MC
1947
Commander of the International Force for East Timor (1999-2000); Chief of Army (2000–2002); Chief of the Defence Force (2002–2005)
2002
Patrick Rafter
1972
Tennis player
2003
Fiona Stanley
AC
1946
Epidemiologist
2004
Steve Waugh
AO
1965
Australian cricket team captain and humanitarian
2005
Fiona Wood
AM
1958
Plastic surgeon; worked with victims of the 2002 Bali bombings
2006
Ian Frazer
1953
Immunologist
2007
Tim Flannery
1956
Scientist; global warming activist
2008
Lee Kernaghan
OAM
1964
Singer
2009
Mick Dodson
AM
1950
Indigenous leader
2010
Patrick McGorry
AO
1953
Psychiatrist [SUP][4][/SUP]
2011
Simon McKeon
1955
Philanthropist businessman [SUP][5][/SUP]
2012
Geoffrey Rush
1951
Australian actor and film producer [SUP][6][/SUP]
2013
Ita Buttrose
AO OBE
1942
Australian journalist and businesswoman, founding editor of Cleo[SUP][7][/SUP]
2014
Adam Goodes
1980
Sydney Swans footballer

By the way, did you catch Ita's valedictory address as she completed her year? It wasn't great oratory but she did make some important points.
 
No, didn't hear Ita but ABC24 roll that stuff on a continuous loop in the wee hours so it'll crop up eventually.

To be honest I don't take a lot of interest in Aus.o t Year as it's chosen by the 'elite' anyway and there'll never be one that everyone's happy with.
I tend to remember sporting types more because it bugs me I think.

The day they gong a Union leader is the day I'll emigrate!
 
Fairs fair, Di. Business bigwigs get the occasional nod.
Why not a warrior of the ACTU ?

Could it because the decision rests in the hands of the elite? :wink-new:
 
Right then. Business. Ita Buttrose was known principally in publishing, which I guess qualifies. She is a choice I did agree with.

But Simon McKeon. Who??? I had to Google him as I have no recall at all of the name and it was the time I was moving in here so OZ Day slipped by unnoticed that year.

But what treasures I found on Wikip'a about him. What revelations appeared. Just when you almost convinced me that the whole thing wasn't a set up among the politically chosen 'elite' of the moment there it is. The answer to why someone I've never heard of was Aussie of the Year in 2011.

He was nominated by Julia Gillard His career was based in the Law, like hers and Banking. He had the icing on his cake of also having been an Olympic sailor, so whooopeee, a sportsman. Then of course there was the cherry on the cake. He was ... waaaait for it.... one of her Climate Change lapdogs.

On climate change, McKeon has expressed his desire to see the topic raised to the top of both the "political and public agenda".[SUP][8][/SUP] He said "We may not have all the answers to what is occurring, ... ut the point is, why wouldn't one take out very strong insurance to at least do what we can to future-proof our well-being?".[SUP][8][/SUP]


See? A politically PC choice of the time.
Would he make it today?... no way.
Would Tim Flannery!!???? Tim Flannery... Australian of the Year! .... and you think it's all above board? :lofl:

The regime has changed and presumably the appointments of the selection panel. It suits Abbott to profile the 'constitution' change so Goodes is perfect, politically.
 
I didn't say it was above board. I just noted that there were as many doctors/scientists as there were sportsmen, based on the list.
Feel free to dig further on every one. You can go further back in time too if you want.
Me I'm watching the tennis final. It's the 4th set and Wawrinka is 2 sets up on Nadal because the Spaniard has a back problem and can't run much but he's fighting back and has the Swiss confused and rattled.
 


Back
Top