Contents:
So far This Morning....
New Books
Schedule So Far For the Year
Some Winter Recipes
July in the Garden
Yabbies
So far This Morning....
2 am. Earthquake rattles bedroom. Open my eyes and realise it isn't an
earthquake, just Mothball wombat scratching her back on the floor joist
underthe floor below my bed.
2.30. Go back to sleep.
2.35 am. Wake up as possum leaps onto the bedroom roof from the apple tree.
Possum slides down roof.
3.30 am. Go back to sleep.
7 am. Wake up as Bryan tiptoes out of the bedroom, making as much noise as a
dinosaur playing the bagpipes.
7.30. Mooch around. Lyrebirds have dug up the strawberry plants, bush rats have
gnawed the tops of the carrots, Willoughby Wallaby has eaten every rose bud he
can reach, the blood oranges are NEARLY ripe (they are deep red inside and
incredibly juicy). All pretty average.
8.00 Bryan has lit the wood stove so the kitchen is warm, even though the sun
won't rise over the ridge here till 9.22. Porridge for breakfast, and a cup of
tea and one of the navel oranges I picked yesterday. Still feels cold even
though it's been warming up in the kitchen near the wood stove ever since.
Bryan has put new seed in the bird feeder. watch red browed finches pecking
seed, bower birds picking cumquats and currawongs trying to carry off giant
avocadoes and dropping them after afew metres.
8.35. Bryan is eating his toast. Mooch out to garden again to pick carrots,
leeks, parsley, semi dried beans, celery for soup for lunch.
8.45 Cut off bush rat gnawed tops of carrots, throw veg in pot with chicken
stock I made yesterday from boiled up chicken bones. Put pot on wood stove.
9.00 Answer emails.
9.30 Read through the last (I hope) draft of 'Convict Boy'
11. 20 Email 'Convict Boy' to Lisa at Harper Collins.
11.25 Pick bunch of jonquils; remember I've left soup on the stove and race in
to rescue it.
11.26 Soup fine.
11.40..start writing this....
Things to do today:
. eat soup
. pick bag of avocadoes to take to Margaret in Melbourne later this week
. check solar panel batteries- we've had a week of cloudy weather and we may be
using more power than we are getting from the sun. If we are we'll have to put
the water wheel on- it generates power as the water turns the wheel, and will
recharge the batteries.
. FINISH WRITING THIS!
New Books
The
Whacky Families are out! The first two in the series, anyway, My Mum the Pirate
and My Dog the Dinosaur. (Malcolm Knox in the Sydney Morning Herald commented:
Heaven Help My Dad)
They're
funny, they're whacky, the illustrations by Stephen Michael King are
brilliantly hilarious, but hopefully there's enough meat in the stories so
you'll want to read them more than once. (Which is basically the test of a good
book. If you don't want to read it at least three times so it wriggles down in
your memory - and take it to the loo with you so you don't have to stop
reading- it doesn't deserve the title of 'good book.'
The
other books so far this year have been Valley of Gold, The Black House,
Vampire Slugs on Callisto, and Big Burps Bare Bums and other Bad Mannered
Blunders (a book of good manners, bad manners, and really TERRIBLE manners).
It's
just been reprinted, and there are also new editions of Hitler's Daughter,
Soldier on the Hill, Daughter of the Regiment and Somewhere Around the Corner
with gorgeous new covers. (The face of the guy on Somewhere Around the Corner
almost makes me cry, it is so perfect for the story).
There
are also going to be new covers for the Phaery Named Phredde books- have a
look and see what you think!
And
I'm REALLY looking forward to the new picture book, Too Many Pears, with Bruce
Whately. It's about a cow who...well, wait till you see it!
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!
4 July Fun 4 Kids, Warrnambool, Victoria.
5 July, International English Teacher's conference, Melbourne
28 July-1 August, Nestle Write Around Australia, Canberra...school sessions but
there will be a public sesion on the evening of Tuesday 29th for adults and
kids- I don't know where yet!
9 August, 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 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,
especialyy as most people from last year have booked again!
Some Winter Recipes
Classic Choc Fudge Slices
1 cup plain flour
half cup sugar
1 cup coconut
1 tsp v anilla
Mix
in bowl. Add 185gm melted butter
Press
onto greased tray.
Bake
at 225C for 20 minutes, or till JUST starting to brown at the edges. Do not
overcook!!! It will still be soft when you take it from the oven.
leave
in tin to cool somewhat. Ice with:
1 cup icing sugar
1tb cocoa
2 tb butter
Dust
with more coconut on top purely as decoration. Cut into slices. Store in
sealed container.
Lemon Delicious Pud
3 eggs
half cup castor sugar
30 g butter
1 cup milk
2 tsp lemon rind grated
third cup lemon juice
half cup selfraising flour
another half cup castor sugar
Beat together egg yolks, half cup castor sugar, butter and lemon rind. Mix in
milk and flour. Whip egg whites and add to mix.
Plae in an oven proof bowl and put in baking tray; half fill baking tray with
water. This helps the pud cook evenly.
Bake at 200C for about 50 minutes or till gold on top. Serve with cream AND
icecream.
ps can be made in 4-6 small pud dishes; in this case they take about half an
hour to cook.
Stuffed Monkeys...a bit like squashed flies but better
No monkeys were harmed in the making of this biscuit
2 cups sr flour
2 eggs
100gm butter
2 tb caster sugar
Filling
1 cup seeded raisins or chopped dates
1 cup sultanas
1 tb mixed peel or 2 tb grated lemon or orange zest
1 tb castor sugar
1 tsp ground cinnamon
extra milk and caster sugar
Mix
flour eggs butter sugar; roll out and cut into squares or rounds.
Mix
filling place teaspoons full on the pastry. Fold one side of the pastry over
onto the other and pinch edges together. Brush with a little milk and scatter
on castor sugar. Bake in a preheated oven at 200C till golden.
GENUINE Turkish Delight (not like that red jelly stuff that pretends to be the
real thing)
Turkish delight originally comes from ancient Persia. The ancient Persians
loved all sorts of jellies. The ancestor of what we now know as Turkish delight
was one of these, 'rahat lokum', meaning 'giving rest to the throat'.
Turkish
delight isn't the easiest sweet in the world to make. It's fairly simple if
you follow the directions, and not nearly as complicated as you might think
once you start making it, but it does take a lot of time. Not as much as you
might think when you first read the recipe, because you can watch TV or read
while the stuff bubbles.
Don't
let any oft his turn you off. Genuine Turkish delight is so extraordinarily
stunning that all the effort is worth it- and it will be quite different from
any other sweet you've ever tasted.
Ingredients
4 cups caster sugar
4 cups dark grape juice
juice of 1 lemon
1 cup cornflour
2 tbsps rosewater
three quarters of a cup of icing sugar (not icing mixture)
a quarter cup cornflour, extra.
Take two saucepans.
In
the first one place the caster sugar, one and a half cups dark grape juice and
the lemon juice.
Boil
till a little sets into a soft ball in a saucer of water.
Take
off the heat.
In
the next pan place one cup of cornflour and half a cup of grape juice. Stir to
a paste then add two more cups of grape juice. Simmer on a low heat till
thick, stirring all the time, then pour the hot syrup into the thick cornflour
mixture, stirring all the time.
Simmer
on a very, very low heat for about an hour. Stir every now and then. You don't
need to stir it all that often till near the end of the operation.
It'll
get thickerŠ and thickerŠ and very, very, very thick... but don't give in.
It'll be almost solid by the time it's ready.
When
it's really, really, REALLY thick and you are quite sure it can't get any
thicker and anyway your arm is about to break, take it off the heat and add the
rose water.
Pour
onto a greased tray. Leave uncovered for about three hours. Lightly oil a
knife and cut into squares, or just gloop it up like this...
Now
mix three quarters of a cup of icing sugar and a quarter of a cup of cornflour
and roll each piece in this. Store in an airtight container.
July in the Garden
Plant:
Trees, trees, trees - if you don't have fruit trees now is the time to put one
(or twenty three) in. Also roses, in pots or bare rooted, asparagus crowns
(but seedlings in spring will grow faster), rhubarb crowns, artichoke suckers,
thornless blackberries and raspberries and loganberries
Prune: Leafless trees, shrubs and roses.
Don't prune: Banksia and other roses that only bloom in spring - wait till
they've flowered. Don't prune roses or other shrubs in very frosty areas either
- wait till next month
Spray: Fruit trees and roses with bordeaux - this will kill the fungal spores
that will give them black spot and other leaf and fruit disease next season.
Repot: Hanging baskets and pot plants. Potting mix starts to repel water after
a year or two, or turns into concrete - which is why pot plants stop growing
and flowering so much as they get older. Repot each winter and they'll keep on
looking lush.
Water: Everything! Cold weather dries out plants - and water penetrates best
into slightly damp soil. If you wait till the ground is dry most will run off
or not penetrate to root depth.
Think herbs: Plant drought tolerant lavender, rosemary, sage, thyme, santolina
or curry plant in sunny spots; Corsican mint, creeping thymes and prostrate
savoury in sun between paving stones; woodruff and comfrey in light shade.
What to plant:
Flowers:
Cold warm: Seedlings of pansies, primulas, polyanthus, alyssum, calendulas,
dianthus, hollyhock, foxgloves and poppies.
Subtropical - tropical: As above plus any annual seedlings in the nursery.
Vegetables
Cold - temperate: Onions, artichoke suckers, asparagus or rhubarb crowns
Subtropical - tropical: Just about anything.
How to Catch Yabbies
So beware of the bite of the yabby,
They are tasty but often quite crabby,
They'll grab at your bum,
Your toes and your tum -
Especially if you're a bit flabby.
One
of the great treats when I was a kid was to go yabby hunting, then boil tthem
on a fire and eat them. These days it's harder for most kids to get to a dam to
catch yabbies, and there are more kids and fewer dams- and fewer yabbies I
suppose too. But if by any chance you DO visit a place with a farm dam,
yabbying is great fun.
Yabbies
are freshwater crayfish - or in other words, delicious crab-like things in
shells, usually as long as your hand without your fingers, but often much
bigger or much smaller. They live on decaying vegetable matter and other small
animals and insects in dams, creeks - in fact, wherever you have mud or
freshwater. If the water dries up the yabbies go overland to the next lot of
water.
In Western Australia yabbies are known as gilgies or koonacs - and they are a
different species of yabby from the eastern Cherax destructor - C
quinquecarinatus and C preissii respectively. Western Australia also has C
tenuimanus, or the marron, which is much larger than a yabby and delicious (so
are yabbies). Yabbies are usually a sort of dull olive, but you can get
orange, yellow, brown, blue, red and even white yabbies.
As
yabbies grow they shed their skin or shell. The old shell splits and the shell
underneath is soft and white for a while, gradually hardening. Yabbies
usually hide while their skin hardens. Young yabbies lose their shells often
as they grow; older ones lose them less often. Yabbies can also regrow lost
eyes or legs.
Yabbies
use their claws to gather food or to defend themselves. Yabbies grow from eggs
- literally. Instead of cracking an egg open like a baby chicken, yabby's
heads stay in the egg while the yabby egg stays attached to the mother - up to
eight hundred eggs at a time. Even after the head leaves the egg baby yabbies
hang on to their mother's tails. The tails can get extremely crowded and
sometimes baby yabbies crush each other. (As they get older yabbies may eat
each other too.)
But
even though yabbies like to eat other yabbies and worms and insects (they wave
their antennae around out of the water to attract them) , most of their food is
rotting leaves.
If
a yabby's waterhole dries up it can burrow down into the mud and wait for it to
rain again - or it can march overland, up to about two kilometres, as long as
they are going through fairly moist grass or on a wet night so their gills
stay moist. Sometimes people see hordes of migrating yabbies and can pick up
sacks full at one time.
Where to Catch yabbies
Farm
dams are the best place to yabby - you are less likely to be eating another
animal's food supply in farm dams or feeding on a rare species of yabbie in
danger of extinction.
Make
sure any dam you go yabbying in hasn't been polluted from run off from farm
chemicals or has old bits of machinery or rusting drums of something or other
rotting to one side. Also make sure you don't 'over yabby' any area - just take
a few every now and then, so there are always plenty to breed up. If you only catch
two yabbies, throw them back. Throw back little 'uns too. And also any females
with eggs or young under her tail.
ALWAYS
ASK THE OWNER OF THE LAND IF YOU CAN GO YABBYING ON THEIR PLACE, AND ASK IF IT
IS SAFE TO EAT THE YABBIES THERE TOO! KEEP AN EYE ON LITTLE KIDS WHO MIGHT
DROWN IN THE DAM- OR DON'T TAKE THEM YABBYING! MAKE SURE YOUR PARENT/ GUARDIAN
KNOSWS WHERE YOU ARE AND IS CONFIDENT IT'S
SAFE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
When to Catch Yabbies
Yabbies
bite best in summer - particularly hot dry summers when there is little other
food about - but you may catch them at other times. You can catch yabbies at
any time of the day or night, though some people say that they are most active
in the early morning or just before dusk.
How to Catch a Yabby
The
traditional way to catch a yabby is to stick your toe in the water. The yabby
then catches you. You pull out the yabby and pull it off your toe - then look
for a bandaid.
A
more popular method is tying a bit of old smelly meat (not fatty meat - it
floats) onto a bit of string or, even better, old nylon stocking. The smellier
the meat the better, as the yabbies notice it sooner. A bit of bleeding liver
is excellent. Some people use a bit of soap. Aborigines used wonga vine - or
other tough vines - with a bit of meat to catch yabbies (they also muddied up
the water so the yabbies tried to escape and then grabbed them). They also
used lawyer vine - which has very sharp spines - to hook them as they emerged
from the mud to catch insects.
Throw
the meat into the water and hold the other end of the stocking. When you feel
something tug on the other end draw it SLOWLY out - don't jerk or the yabby
will let go. As you draw it out of the water stick a net under it or an old
boot - anything to catch the yabby as it lets go and plunges back into the
water.
This
method usually catches young yabbies. Older yabbies are smarter and let go
sooner.
If
you attach your yabby line to a stick and keep it propped up, you can have
many lines on the go at once - just keep a sharp eye on them and pull out any
that start twitching.
Yabby Traps
The
easiest yabby trap is an old soft drink can with a bit of string attached.
Leave the can in the waterhole overnight, with a bit of bait inside - and hope
a yabby is sheltering there next morning
Usually
it isn't - but you never know.
You
can also make a yabby net. This is just a circle of wire, with netting tied
onto the bottom and three strings attached to pull it up with. You put some
bait in the net (tie it onto the middle of the netting), and throw it into the
waterhole. When it reaches the bottom the top collapses onto the bottom. The
yabbies are lured in to eat the bait - then you pull the net up . Leave your
trap in the water for at least an hour. This is the best way to catch many
yabbies simultaneously and often quite good-sized ones.
Yabby Pots
Roll
up some chicken wire into a cylinder. Make a flap at one end, so that you can
open it again to take the yabbies out. At the other end make a funnel shape -
big on the outside but smaller on the inside, so the yabbies can get in easily
but find it hard to get out. Push some bait into the trap, attach a rope (so
you can pull it out again) and throw the whole thing into the water. Leave it
there for an hour or a week or anything in between - then haul out your
yabbies. The longer you leave them the more likely it is that you will uncover
unpleasant scenes of carnage and cannibalism when you do inspect your traps.
Yabby Tins
An
old fashioned way of catching yabbies was to punch some holes in the bottom of
an old kerosene tin, then lay it in the water on its side with some bait in it.
Next morning tip the tin upwards as fast as you can. The water will drain
out the bottom - and with luck the trapped yabbies will be staring up at you
How to Grab a Yabby
Hold
your yabbies behind the claws, so they can't bite you.
How to Cook a Yabby
The
best way to cook and eat a yabby is to tip it into clean water for ten minutes
As soon as you haul it out (this cleans it, and lets it get rid of any muddy
water inside) then throw it into a boiling billy of water (this sounds cruel-
but the yabby dies immediately). Leave the yabbies simmering for five minutes,
or a bit longer if they're very big, then eat it with lemon juice and butter -
or just by themselves. Fresh yabby meat is subtle and very moist, but it dries
out quickly. Most people only eat the meat from the giant claws and tail, but
you can also eat all the insides of a yabby - and if you don't feel squeamish,
they're delicious.
One
aboriginal way to cook yabbies was to dig a small hole, half fill it with hot
ashes, throw in the yabbies, then throw in more hot ashes or coals. After five
or ten minutes the yabbies would be dug out, and eaten - insides as well as
heads, with only the gills and long intestine thrown away.
If
you don't want to eat your yabbies straight away, keep them alive in a bucket
of water - not too full or the yabbies will crawl out or even in a thoroughly
wet sack for a short period of time. Never cook a yabby that has been dead for
more than half an hour - yabbies 'go off' very quickly and you can get food
poisoning.
As
well as throwing yabbies into boiling water, you can also kill them by knocking
them on the head (but this can be cruel if the first blow doesn't kill them).
You can also leave your yabbies in the fridge for a few hours so they become
sluggish and won't feel as much pain - but putting yabbies into the fridge can
be cruel too. I feel the instant death in boiling water is best - and make
sure you don't have too many yabbies in the water at once so the water keeps
boiling strongly and the yabbies are killed at once. Yabbies can also be
skewered between the eyes. I haven't tried it.
A
friend up at Major's Creek, Angela Marshall, has the following story: Once we
left an enormous number of yabbies (about forty from memory) overnight in a
child's wading pool outside on the lawn. The night was much colder than we
expected and in the morning all the yabbies appeared to be dead - motionless
and no response to stimuli like being picked up. Thinking they were ex-yabbies
we went and had breakfast before throwing them away and by the time we came out
again the first of them were just starting to revive and feebly wave their
antennae. None had died and within an hour of the sun warming up their water
they were all marching around and bullying each other as yabbies are wont to
do. I did feel that we could easily have transferred the cryogenic yabbies to
a pot of boiling water and they wouldn't have known a thing.
How to Hypnotise a Yabby
Grab
your yabby behind the claws so it can't grab hold of you. Tuck its claws and
tail under its body and prop it on the table still holding it down firmly. Now
stroke your yabby between the eyes for about five minutes, back and forth with
your finger nail or tip of your finger.
Hypnotised
yabbies stay perfectly still until they are woken up again.