wombat pic


Introduction

Workshops and garden tours

Biography

Awards

Childrens' books

Gardening books

Which book

Information for projects

How to buy books mentioned

Complete(ish) list of books

More about some of the books
[Useful stuff for assignments]

Browse online book catalogue at HC

Read extracts from some books

Advice for writers

How to get your first novel published

Writing for kids

Writing tips

Recipes

Links

Wombat Dreaming



Jackie's August message continued . . .


Contents:
Intro
Help!!!!!
Mothball Wombat
New books
Schedule
Writing Tips: How to get published
Two recipes
How to Grow Citrus

           (Written with a sticky jumper)
           I've got cumquat busters thumb. It's a little known medical condition- comes from pressing 1,862 ripe cumquats with your thumb till they burst (the cumquats that is, not your thumb). Result: two sore thumbs, lots of sticky juice all over me, the kitchen window and the bench, and a giant pan full of cumquats and sugar which I'm turning into cumquat cordial.
           Cumquat cordial is Bryan's favourite cordial, narrowly beating passionfruit cordial, which comes when the passionfruits ripen here mid summer. I tried inventing different cumquat cordials for years but they all tasted like marmalade. Then I had a brainwave: slice (or burst) the cumquats, mix with an equal amount of sugar (ie two cups fruit to two cups sugar) and leave till it's all liquid and the sugar has drawn out the juice and scented oils. Then add a teaspoon of tartaric acid and a teaspoon citric acid and half a cup of water for every cup of goo, boil 5 minutes, and bottle.
           I felt a bit self conscious picking the cumquats- the king parrots kept yelling at me, as they regard the cumquats as THEIRS THANK YOU VERY MUCH GO AWAY!!!!
           But blast it, I planted that tree twenty years ago as a seed, have watered and fed it- well actually the only feeding it gets is the dead flowers from indoors that I throw underneath it as mulch. But I still reckon I'm entitled to at least a quarter of the cumquats, which is all I can reach anyway as the tree is about 5 metres tall now and I can't fly.
           I sometimes thing it's a good thing humans can't speak bird, as most of what we think is lovely birdsong is probably the feathered equivalent of four letter words. Hey you ###***!! that's MY tree!
           Actually it's been a battle to keep ANY cumquats this year as half our acquaintance has their eye on them to make cumquat marmalade, which is why I've just made a bucket of cordial, as you feel really mean when someone looks longingly at your laden cumquat tree and says ' I'll just take a bagfull' ie the ones that easiest to reach.
           Anyway, from this afternoon on ANYONE can have our cumquats, king parrots included, as I never want to stick my thumb in one again. Not till next year, anyway.
           But the cordial is lovely stuff.
ps see further on for How to Grow Citrus (Limes, chinotto, native limes, mandarins etc)
Help!!!!
           Help! If you write to me please put your return address on your letter, even if you have written to me before, as I get so many letters I can't keep a file of everyone's address- it would take me all day just to file the letters.
ps Kim from Adelaide- I don't have your address to write back to!
Mothball Wombat

           What wombat? All we see lately are large dark brown Mothball droppings all around the house, which is Mothball's way of saying, hey, this place is MINE. Maybe if we left our droppings all around the house she'd stop attacking the doormat Šno, scratch that idea, it's too yuk to even think about.
           But last time I caught a glimpse of her she was fat and healthy, and there was no sign of her 'baby' Hark, who has probably wandered off by now to find his own holes. Even though it's winter there's still plenty of grass, though it won't have as much food value now it's cold. But we'll know soon enough when Mothball feels peckish- there'll be a yell of gnaaaaaaah!!!! and then a small brown cannonball attacking the back door.

New Books
           The Whacky families are out- My Mum the Pirate and My Dog the Dinosaur- I'll be just finished writing My Dad the Dragon and My Uncle Gus the Garden Gnome, but those two won't be out till next year. They're VERY funny- I keep giggling every time I glance through them- and Stephen Michael King's illustrations are a dream.
           Big Burps Bare Bums and other Bad Mannered Blunders has just been reprinted- it's a look at good manners, bad manners and really TERRIBLE manners, and Phredde and the Leopardskin Librarian has just been reprinted too.
           Look out for the new boxed set of Phredde books this Christmas- they are going to look great. The new covers for Soldier on the Hill, Daughter of the Regiment, Hitler's Daughter and Somewhere Around the Corner look wonderful too, though I'm glad Walking the Boundaries and Rainstones are staying as they are, as I love the covers too much to change.

Schedule So Far For the Year
           So far this is where I'm booked for the rest of the year. There may be some additions, but hopefully not too many!

7 August (Thursday) talk at the Wagga library 7.00 PM.

9 August, (Sunday) at talk at Eltham Victoria organised by the Eltham Book Store . Contact Eltham bookstore for details.

0-13 August, school events in Melbourne.

18-20 August, school events in Sydney.

4 September 7.30 pm. Giralang Primary School, ACT, an evening session on writing for young and old. Contact Giralang primary for details.

10-13 September, Ipswich Writers' Festival, QLD, including a talk at at the Ipswich Library on Saturday morning 13th. Contact the library for more details.

14 September Bolinda Primary School Spring Fair, Bolinda Vic. This should be great fun! Bryan and I are the guests for the day. Bolinda probably deserves the title of Best School in the Universe (okay, maybe it ties for first place with a few others) with fabulous kids and teachers- we've been writing to each other for years now, and they come up to our place every few years too.

26-28 September Brisbane Writers centre- workshops on writing historical fiction and a masterclass. Limited numbers so contact QLD Writers Centre for details.

2-5 October, CBC Conference Hobart

26 October Vaucluse House Sydney: In the Chookhouse with Jackie French, plus a Kid's Club session . Public warmly welcomed; contact Vaucluse house for information on how to book- limited numbers

9 November Open Garden at our place to raise funds for the new Braidwood Hospital garden- two 3 hour workshops on how to grow just about everything in your back yard, even if your backyard freezes regularly, and how to grow herbs and make your own perfume, deodorant etc. plus morning or afternoon tea. Contact the Open Garden Scheme to book- numbers are strictly limited, especially as most people from last year have booked again!

24 November Inverell library, 2 day sessions and one evening session

25 November Glen Innes library 2 day sessions and one evening session..

26 November Armidale library 1 day session

Writing Tips
How to get published
Step 1. Finish your book. Yes, publishers DO accept books that haven' t been finished- but only if you are a cricket legend, famous author, or an ex President of the United States.
Step 2. Read your book again. Ask yourself WHY anyone will want to read beyond page one, beyond chapter one and why they'll want to keep on going.
           No one keeps reading a book just because it's beautiful writing. They have to want to know what will happen, or how, or really enjoy being with the characters or fascinated by that particular world you have created.
Step 3. Re write your book. If you're not honest enough to admit it could be better if you rewrote it, you're not yet a professional writer. Professionals work at their writing. Amateurs zap off a book and cross their fingers.
Step 4. Don't send your story to your favourite author and ask if they can get it published for you. They can't. Each book is accepted on their own merits and a covering letter from an author won't help.
           Authors aren't experts on what books will sell- they are experts in writing their own type of books. The decision to accept a book is taken by experts in editing and marketing.
           Most writers get asked at least six times a week to look at people's stories or help get them published. It takes hours to assess even a very short story, and several days at least to assess a book Šand most people just want to be told 'hey, your story is brilliant' even if it isn't.
There are manuscript assessment agencies who CAN help you get your story into shape- for a fee. Contact the Writer's Association in your nearest capital city, or the Australian Society of Authors. They may also be able to tell you about writing workshops too, or mentoring schemes.
           Of course you can see if your favourite writer will be your mentor- officially or unofficially. But all writers have only two hands, one brain and 24 hours in a day, and there's a limit to what they can take do ..and sometimes it really hurts to have to say 'no.'
Step 5. Browse through a bookshop and see who is publishing your sort of book, and send it off to that publisher.
           Publishers will tell you to only send it to one publisher at a time, but you can send it to as many as you want to. the first one to accept it, gets it!
Step 6. Be patient. You probably won't hear for months- maybe even 18 months or more.
Step 7. If it's rejected, work out how you can make it better. Even if it is brilliant and the publishing house only rejected it as they thought that type of book wouldn't sell, it CAN be improved.

How long is a book
?
           Dunno. But it's MUCH easier to write a short book, so that's what most would be writers attack first. It will need to be a brilliant short book to stand out from the crowd.

How do you know if your story is any good or not?
           Dunno that either. EVERY writer thinks their story is great when they have finished it, just like every Mum thinks her kid is the best and the brightest, even if they have the brains and beauty of Horrie the Slug.
           I reckon that if I have tears in my eyes when I re read a story, it's okay. They don't have to be sad tears- you can cry because something is funny or true. Also the more work you have put into it, the better it is likely to be.
           If you read your book out to a class of kids and they enjoy it, it doesn't mean it's a great story- just that they'd rather listen to a story than do maths! Also most stories sound good when they are read aloud, as the reader puts in life and expression.
           A better test is if they'd rather read your story than watch their favourite TV show. Yeah, I know this is a hard test- but your book does need to be that good.


A Couple of Recipes
Chocolate (Beetroot) Muffins

Actually very rich and chocolatey, and healthy enough to have for breakfast!
one and three quarters of a cup SR flour
2 large beetroot, cooked and peeled, and either pureed or grated (or carrots or pumpkin)
a third of a cup cocoa powder
one cup brown sugar, well pressed down
2 eggs
third of a cup buttermilk
third of a cup canola or safflower oil- some blandish oil

           Splodge it all into a bowl. Mix well. Spoon into a greased muffin pan, or patty cases. Bake at 200 C for about 25 minutes- they will be well risen and firmish to touch.

Almost instant Lime and lemon tarts

(and the best ones I know too)
4 eggs
three quarters cup castor sugar
half cup lime/lemon juice
1 carton cream
pastry

           Line shallow a pie dish, large baking tray or little muffin pans with the pastry. Should make one generous tart or 12 little tarts
           Beat eggs and sugar till sugar dissolves. Beat in cream and juice, pour into pastry, bake at 200C till firm- about 20 minutes for a large tart or 12 minutes for small ones, but this will depend how thick your dishes are and how deep the filling is. if the pastry is going dark brown before the filling is set cover with a sheet of alfoil to stop it browning even more and going rock hard.


How to Grow and Use Citrus

           ANY garden can have citrus trees. Even if they have to be grown in pot and wheeled indoors on freezing nights- but even in Canberra and Hobart some types of citrus will grow and fruit happily out of doors.
Which citrus?
Oranges
- plant Navels for winter fruit, Valencias for picking the rest of the year (they may look greenish, not bright orange when they are ripe - commercial Valencias are gassed to give them colour).
           Bitter Sevilles are cold tolerant, and can be eaten like grapefruit; also great for cooking especially marmalade - though sour they have the most intense orange flavour.
           Red fleshed blood oranges are fun - the juice is bright red, like vampire oranges- and reasonably cold tolerant; like Valencias, they are the best juice oranges. If you grow both Navels and Valencias you'll have fruit all year round.
Lemons
- Eurekas give year round fruit- a thick skinned, tough cold and heat resistant lemon. Most other lemons give most of their fruit in winter. Lisbon has the most beautiful flavour and aroma.
Tangelo
- thin, bright orange skin, like a tangier mandarin; fruits in winter
Mandarin
- Ellendale has the biggest sweetest fruits; thorny varieties are more cold tolerant; fruits in winter
Citron
- thick skinned and cold and heat tolerant; aromatic skin, great for candying; not much juice but can be used like a sweetish lemon
Chinnotto
- musty small fruit; small ornamental tree; usually juiced for a drink sometimes called 'Italian coca cola.'
Limes
- Tahitian limes are said to be the most cold tolerant; Kaffir limes the best for tropical and hot areas. I find our kaffir lime, however, survives minus 6 C happily. Kaffir limes are said to have the most fragrant leaves for cooking. Not sure this is true - Eureka lemon leaves are about as good.
Native limes: there are several about, though you've have to hunt for them. We grow the Desert lime and the Round lime, and both seem very frost resistant. But they are only three years old, and about 30cm high, so they haven't born fruit yet.
Pommelo
- giant, heat tolerant and grapefruit-like.
Grapefruit
- Wheeny and other thick skinned varieties are the most cold tolerant; pink fleshed varieties the most fun. Try them grilled with brown sugar and a touch of gin or rum. Avoid grapefruit if you have a tendency to gallstones.
Cumquats
- Miniature mandarins - most commercial varieties are sweet, but do eat the skin as well - it's even sweeter than the tangy flesh. If you can't eat a cumquat like a mandarin, it's calamondin.
Calamondin
- Most people mistake calamondins for cumquats. Calamondins have more segments, and are smaller and sourer, but again, try eating the skin too - it will make the fruit taste sweeter. Small kids love to eat them. So do birds.

Plant the seeds? Yes, straight from the ripe fruit. Citrus seed germinates easily, and ungrafted trees grow fast and are much larger and usually hardier in cold heat and drought than grafted ones once they've reached head high.. But if your soil isn't well drained, grafted trees are more resistant to root rots.
Where to grow: Anywhere - with the correct varieties and growing methods. Require sun, frost protection and dislike wind. Relatively rich soils and a reasonably constant supply of moisture (otherwise you tend to get fruit drop or dead trees).
How to keep alive: LOTS of feeding - use well made compost, a complete citrus food or Dynamic Lifter at least twice each summer. I also give ours a dose of seaweed spray once a year. Plants in pots need to be fed once a month while they are growing strongly. Mulch well - they're shallow rooted.
NB: If citrus leaves stay yellow even after feeding, look for scale, or use a complete citrus food and seaweed spray together in case they have a trace element deficiency. Citrus leaves often look yellowish in cold weather. (They're trying to decide whether to die or not).

Citrus in cold climates
- Commercial citrus are grafted onto dwarfing root stock. This keeps them nice, small trees - and the rootstock is resistant to root rots too. HOWEVER, if you live in a chilly climate ie woollen jumpers not cardigans in winter, you'll find that a seedling citrus will be MUCH hardier.
           Forget about Meyer lemons - they're actually not cold hardy at all. Go for Eureka lemons. Plant a few seeds and they'll grow fast and big. (The faster they grow the better they withstand the cold.) Also try Seville oranges, citrons and Wheeny grapefruit. Tahitian limes seem more cold tolerant here than lemons too. Calamondins (a bitter version of cumquats) are very cold tolerant. So are cumquats ... which aren't really citrus, but that's another story.
           Grow against a sunny north facing wall; feed every six weeks in summer. Try paving around the citrus to retain and reflect heat. If all else fails grow citrus in a tub on wheels - and take it indoors on cold winter nights.
In tropical areas
: try kaffir limes and pommelo - a bit like an overgrown, segmented grapefruit, or some of the native Australian citrus if you can get hold of them..
In arid or drought prone areas: try rough or bush lemons, also called citronelles. You get lots of peel, sweetish pulp, lots of seeds - but they do survive. They used to be used as grafting stock for other citrus, so when the graft above dies the rough lemon took over. They grow very fast from seed. In very dry areas mulch citrus well and grow among other greenery to shelter them. Our area is drought prone: I grow ours surrounded thickly by deciduous trees. These shade them in summer. In winter the citrus get the sunlight when they need it.
Scale (they look just like tiny scale). Use an oil spray like Pestoil when the temperature is under 24 C; stink bugs are attracted by rotting ripe fruit and so are fruit fly. (In bad fruit fly areas you can net trees in tubs). If your citrus trees don't put out new leaves during most of summer - or if the new leaves are darker than the old leaves - the poor thing is hungry. Feed it. Most people starve their citrus. (The rotters!)
Harvest: We have lemons and Valencia oranges on our trees all year round - constant picking means we don't have one great big 'flush' of fruit and then none for the rest of the year. But citrus are best in winter - soft and sweet.
Store: Waxed commercial citrus rot from the inside out. I have kept one of our untreated organic oranges for two years on a shelf (it had an interesting, extremely obscene shape). Then someone ate it. They said it was quite good - though by then the skin was dry and hard.
           Healthy citrus keep a long time - the skins just get harder. Keeping them in the fridge slows down the mould - it doesn't help keep the oranges, which are best kept on a dry shelf where they can slowly dessicate.
Eating:
Citrus flower water

           Leave orange, lemon or other citrus flowers in a small sealed pot just covered with vodka for three weeks in the sun to make a perfumed essence for adding to cakes etc. Strain; repeat with more flowers if necessary for a stronger flavour. Citrus flower water can replace vanilla in cakes and custards - the taste is definitely not the same, but the added fragrance fulfils the same role.

Cumquats or Calamondins in syrup

cumquats
sugar
water
           Simmer cumquats till tender. Pour off water. Add 1 cup of sugar and half a cup of water for each cup of fruit. Simmer till a little juice sets like a soft jelly when dabbed on a saucer. Bottle at once. Seal. Great with icecream, or to decorate cakes.

Curacao

           Take the peel of 20 medium sized mandarins, scrape off any white and membranes. Place in the sun till they are dry enough to crumble into fine powder. Put the powder in jars - about a tablespoon per 500 gram jar - and cover with brandy. Leave for six months.

Whole Preserved Spiced Lemons

           Prick lemons at least twenty times; cover with salt and leave for three days. Rub off the salt and pour boiling vinegar scented with a touch of nutmeg, cloves and black pepper over them. Leave for three months before using.

Lemon Essence

Grate off lemon zest with absolutely no white; place in a jar and top with vodka.

Limes in Salt

           This is very good indeed - wonderful in summer.
           Take a dozen limes, prick at least ten times each. Place in a dish and cover with salt. Leave alone for a month. The juice will seep out and form brine. When needed take out the limes and slice thinly. A thin slice of salted lime is excellent with cold water or soda water; it can be added to curries; mixed with natural yoghurt as a side dish; added to honeyed chicken.

Dried Mandarins

           Pierce each mandarin in many places. Choose small ones, sweet and seedy - not giant Ellendales, soft and slushy. Leave them in the sun till they start to shrivel - usually about three days, but more or less depending on the weather. Boil a syrup of one cup sugar, a third of a cup of water, a dessertspoon red wine vinegar, a grate of fresh ginger and a couple of cloves. After ten minutes add the mandarins, take off the heat, leave overnight, boil the lot again. Bottle and seal. Leave for three months before using.

Orange Jelly
(other citrus can be substituted)
           For people who love oranges but don't like bitter marmalade. This jelly is sweet and good.
a dozen oranges
a cup of apple juice
500 grams sugar
           Juice the oranges; strain carefully to get out all bits of flesh as these will will make it bitter. Sprinkle the sugar with a few drops of apple juice, boil for five minutes. Add the other ingredients. Boil till a little sets in cold water or the boiling mixture coats the spoon.
           Strain again if you want a very clear jelly, though this isn't necessary.
           This jelly can be eaten like jam, or in small pots with cream.

Dried Mandarin Peel

           Peel mandarins, scrape off as much of the white as you can. Place in the sun till crisp - this will take anywhere from a day to a week. It's quicker if you slice the peel and place on alfoil but neither is necessary. When it is dry crumble it (if it doesn't crumble it isn't dry enough) and store in a sealed box.
           Mandarin peel can be invaluable once you are used to using it. A little powdered into cakes, a teaspoon with a beef stew, a teaspoon of the powder added to whipped cream is better than any liquor. Place some in a bottle and cover with brandy or gin; drink in six months and savour.

Green Orange Preserve

           This is a very good way of using fruit that drops off in wet weather. Other citrus can also be used, especially limes, mandarines and cumquats.
           Take whole green oranges, just before they start to show colour. Stick a knife down the centre and cut out the middle - just like coring an apple. This should get rid of the seeds. Soak the fruit in salty water for 24 hours - about three cups of water to half a cup of salt. Drain and wash well in fresh water. Boil the fruit in a large pan of water with a teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda to every six cups of water. When a skewer will easily prick the skins, take them out, wash in cold water inside and out. Don't cook the fruit till they are squashy or they will become too hard in the syrup.
           Take two kilos of sugar and boil with a litre of water and the juice of two lemons for ten minutes. Pour over the fruit, leave for 24 hours, reboil the syrup till a little sets in cold water, add the fruit and bring to the boil again. Bottle while hot and seal.

Orange Peel in Gin Syrup

           This is not marmalade but can be eaten the same way - or as a dessert by itself with cream.
oranges
sugar
water
lemon juice
           Peel the oranges - there should be no white adhering to the peel. Chop into thin strips. Boil in water for 30 minutes till soft. Drain, cover the peel with water, leave overnight. Drain again.
           Boil equal volumes of sugar and water for 20 minutes. Drop the peel into the syrup, simmer for an hour. The peel should absorb most of the syrup. Scoop out the peel, place in jars. Reduce the syrup by half with rapid boiling. Add half a cup of gin for every cup of syrup, bring to the boil again and take off the heat at once. Pour over the peel, seal. Leave for three months before using. This will keep for years. It sounds a lot of work. The result is worth it.

Lime butter
(other citrus can be used)
Take a cup of fresh lime juice, half a cup of sugar, add two eggs, well beaten, half a cup of butter and a teaspoon of cornflour mixed in with the juice. Heat in a saucepan as slowly as possible, stirring all the time till it thickens. Bottle and seal and store for up to six months in the fridge. This is a strong and tart butter - add more butter if you like a blander mixture.

Lime tart
(Really good. Other citrus can be used; mandarine is interesting)
Fill a pie crust with a cup of cream in which two eggs and half a cup of sugar have been beaten, then half a cup of lime juice added. Add the lime juice at the end or the lot may curdle. Sprinkle with nutmeg. Bake in a moderate oven till set.

Marmalade

1 kg fruit- one sort or mixed
1 kg sugar
water
Peel fruit, leaving as much white as possible of the fruit, chop the peel. Nowe peel off the white and throw it out- the white makes the marmalade cloudy. Chop the fruit roughly. Cover with water. Leave overnight. Simmer till soft. Add the sugar. Simmer till a little sets on a cold saucer. stir often. Bottle and seal at once.

Other:
Eau de Cologne

           This is a modern, home-made version of a great classic scent.
Place in a large jar:
the dried rind (no pith) of an orange
2 tablespoons bergamot leaves, chopped
the dried peel of two lemons (no pith)
1 tablespoon rosemary leaves
6 tablespoons lavender flowers
Cover with vodka. Shake every day for three weeks and strain. Repeat with fresh herbs for a stronger fragrance.
and lots of citrus recipes, including how to make eau de cologne)