Thursday 28 February 2019

Sayonara Summer

Eucalyptus blossom with native bees feasting on nectar
Eucalyptus blossom
Hullo, Dear Reader, it has been a little while. The Summer has been and we are about to bid it Adieu, so I thought a little random recap of the glories of the season would be in order (rather than a "Wot I did on my summer hols" composition). Bullet points may be employed if it gets untidy...

Blue skies 
Weatherwise, (one simply cannot have a chinwag about current events without first chewing over this staple - it's the carbohydrate of any English speaker's chit-chat) it has been a cracking summer. Around these parts we've alternated between Stunning and Skorchio! And when the skies haven't been dazzling and blue, they've been wild and stormy.

Mammatus clouds over the Elizabeth Bay skyline
Rare Mammatus clouds
Did the Pipistrello complexion indulge in any Fashionable Sunning at any of our fabled beaches? I should say not! Those crazy days of Le Tan are well and truly over for me as I've finally abandoned the fiction that my Italian married name doth armour me with a Mediterranean skin-type. After all, the best description of my skin tone these days is less Smooth Caramel and more Liquorice Allsorts.


Rene Gruau Relax poster circa 1950
Pipistrello's Imagined Before Shot
René Gruau poster, c. 1950

And while I may not be slathering on the Ambre Solaire any more, I have been channelling a bit of 1950s Jacques Fath and have been Mostly Wearing the Sunray Pleat again. And loving brooches, while I think about it. And the olde toenails are masquerading as either Turquoise or Malachite cabochons, but you need not to have to see that today.

!950s Jacques Fath sunray pleat skirt
Covering up with a Sunray pleat
The much-anticipated home-made Tonic Water has been a success, and has not always needed a goodly splash of Gin to make it Interesting, as it has that in spades. Strangely medicinal, which it is, (and is not for Pregnant Women, apparently) and amber in colour, it has endless flavour possibilities with recipe tweaking and bumping up the ratio to water (although we declare a Light touch is best).

Home-made Tonic Water in a glass with gin
The New Look G&T around these parts
The unrelenting heat and occasional wild hail and tropical storms have wreaked a bit of havoc with fruit and vegetable supplies and prices but we are still eating the stone fruit and melons of the season. Occasionally, a cheap batch will be transposed into a pie (like below), but after the Christmas baking frenzy, the oven has hardly been working overtime and indeed even my forays into sourdough and Ye Olde Lazy Girl bread have been superseded by a bit of flatbread action for the time being. There are no other fancy seasonal menu additions to report, beyond the comment that the fresh Aldi salmon is pretty delicious, no? Thank you Two-Peas for the tip!

Plum pie ready for its pastry top and then baking
Plum Pie
Yes, there are more holes in the ground and gaps in the city skyline, and an assortment of cranes and decorated hoardings abound. Streets are still closed while new tram lines are inching their way into place, often (oh, so believably) replacing the ghost lines of long defunct tram lines from last century. But it all seems to be moving apace, and as we say, Sydney will look rather good, When it's Finished.

Sydney University Law School city campus building site
Rather colourful hoarding

Pitt Street Metro building site
Rather boring but instructional

Men from Marr's crane in Martin Place, 2019
Yes, rather witty
In Culture News, we only managed to see one fillum but it was a corker! I speak of Yorgos Lanthimos' The Favourite. As the entire world has probably seen it, there's no need to add My Thoughts into the mix, save that we both loved it and Olivia Colman was fantastic and deserves all accolades. We took in a couple of exhibitions, with which I'll indulge myself with seperate posts later: the Summer Exhibition at the AGNSW of the Hermitage Modern Masters and a mid-century Street Photography exhibition at the Museum of Sydney.

AGNSW entrance with banners for the Hermitage Summer exhibition, 2019
Still to come...

Finally, in family matters, we did sadly farewell the eldest member of our colony whilst joyfully welcoming our newest addition. It's been a proper Circle of Life for this seasonal recap.





6 comments:

  1. I HAVE NOT SEEN THE FAVORITE YET!!!!!!!!!!
    I NEED TOO!!!!!!!
    YOUR CITY LOOKS LOVELY A BIT OF OLD AND NEW!
    I had heard about the sourcing weather DOWN UNDER!!
    We are ready for SPRING HERE Only 21 more days to GO!
    SIPPING PEPPERMINT TEA waiting for the PHONE TO RING!
    YOU see those doctors of mine are NOT BEING NICE and so I had to go COMPLAIN!!!!!!
    Let's see WHAT that will DO!!!
    HUGS to YOU and NO WE DO NOT SUN ANYMORE!!!!!!!!
    THAT WAS A GOOD OLD TIME though..................XX

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    1. I'll maybe come to regret it in another decade or so but I did love those days of sunning, too!! I even spent a whole summer practically in the nuddy in my Yoof - not to mention that enchanting notion of sunning infants, back in the Olden Days. I don't wear tattoos but perhaps my Speckled Hen complexion is just my permanent reminder of those Good Times!!

      How annoying for you that you must still need to stamp your foot with those doctors. They should be red-carpeting you after all the running around you've had to do. Coraggio Dearest. xx

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  2. What a lovely glimpse into your Summer ...... we have been having some unusually mild weather for February here in the UK but that will obviously change !!! One of your G & T’s would go down very well.
    .... and remember, it is always said in London, When the cranes go, London is in trouble !!! XXXX

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    Replies
    1. Hello Jackie and nice to see you! Yes, it may be a bit premature for you to yet settle into G&T weather!!

      I haven't been back to London for ages, probably 10 years or more, and am constantly surprised at the rapidly changing skyline of the city appearing on contemporary tv programmes. In my mind it was always a very low-rise city with just the odd tower in the centre but it's now looking rather Manhattan-esque! Those crane operators have certainly earned their keep. xx

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  3. That plum pie looks divine! And I love the vintage photo with the pleat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Stephenie, the plums have been cracking this year! I love those old fashion photos, too.

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