Sunday 9 September 2018

Taggin' Along



We stoned the flamin’ crows at Wagga,
Caught the colt from Old Regret at Corryong,
Then we said goodbye to southern states
And rounded up our Solo mates to form a tag-along.

Each night we stopped for food and wine at our happy hour
And looked around for showers to ease our driving pain.
We got our marching orders from our fearless leader John
And if we didn’t understand, we got them all again.

We stayed in quiet paddocks, red with swirling dust
And soaked in mineral waters hot and black.
We tuned our creative skills at Pilliga Pottery camp
And over-catered to the max in an organised pot-luck.

We gathered round a campfire in a friendly farmer’s yard
With spuds in the coals and marshmallows in the fire
Then we lined the streets with others at Colleranabri
And honoured our Anzacs in truly country style

At Lightning Ridge we settled in, eighty vans or so –
Brekky in our ‘jamas, bowling barefoot at the club,
In chartered bus or on our own, we explored the town,
The opal fields, car door tours and the pub out in the scrub.

Some joined the groups and some dropped off
As we reached the Sunshine State.
There was Music in the Mulga or a trek along the gorge,
Different groups and leaders, different routes, different rates.

Then all our groups converged again
We camped a week near Miriam Vale
With visitors and workshops and an endless burning fire,
Sing-alongs with Gary and many a far-fetched tale.

So now we’ll gather up our cards and games
We’ll miss the laughter, dances and song.
We’ll hit the road tomorrow after one last night of fun,
Better friends than ever thanks to this tag-along.


Tuesday 1 May 2018

Anzac

They lied!
They were fifteen, sixteen, some barely grown
Their future uncharted, their potential unknown
But the Services took them
And their mothers cried.

They were husbands and dads, aged thirty or more
To protect family and nation, and defend our shores
And the Services took them
While their families cried.

Their mates said it would be fun, a fight quickly won.
And our larrikin lads got their helmets and guns.
And the Services took them
And their women cried.

The women joined the forces at home and abroad
Serving in a world-wide emergency ward
And the Services took them
And the sisterhood cried.

They lied!
Those who came home and said their lives were all right
While they struggled with demons that haunted their nights
But the Services had taken them
And everyone cried.

They lied!
They talked of the nation's glory and Australia's good name,
While we mourned those who returned and those who were slain
But the Services and the enemy had taken them
And we cried.
We all cried.


Sunday 8 April 2018

Carjacker

At the Man from Snowy River festival yesterday I competed in a one-minute poem competition. The results were varied and generally humorous. They had to include the words 'but a final glimpse reveals'. I didn't get a guernsey but was happy with my presentation.

I slow at the intersection,
Well, I ooze through a red light.
It is a very small town,
No cops or cars in sight.

Now I realise I have a carjacker
Who had jumped aboard as I slowed.
He clings to the ridge of the bonnet
Right between me and the road.

He grins at me through the windscreen
And winks with his big evil eyes
And give a bow as a kind of a tribute
With all the panache of his size.

I am not a competitive driver
But I like to choose who can ride.
So I turn on the windscreen wipers
And flip him off to the side.

He gives me a look of reproach
As he gets washed and flung into flight
But a final glimpse reveals to me,
No carjacker, just a hitchhiking fly in the night.

Sunday 1 April 2018

Once Bitten

My husband and I didn't know it
The first twenty-five years the best yet.
But at age twenty-six, the tide turned
Because that was the year that we met.

If love is an orchestra playing
Under a romantic full moon,
Then right from the start we were two violins
Always just out of tune.

A wishing well guards our secrets
But I regret those hidden quirks.
When he disappeared in a flash,
Was it his wish or mine that worked?

Life's tough when you're single at forty
With three little kids still in school.
There's no time to think of yourself
In tuck shop rosters and car pools.

When the kids had flown the nest
Leaving a great space where they'd been
I decided to test my courage
And check out the dating scene.

I put on the pneumonia neckline
And the slinky little black dress
And went off to a solos' dance
The right age, more or less.

The women were quite impeccable,
Gleaming with powder, paint and perfume
Out to enjoy their moment of glory
And impress every male in the room.

Some men rose to the challenge
And dressed in the neatest of styles.
Others went as everyday heroes
And misread the occasion by miles.

In a heartbeat I knew it was wrong.
I didn't fit in with this crowd.
I beat a hasty, high-heeled retreat
Already bested and beaten and cowed.

Yes, sometimes it gets a bit lonely
And book clubs don't fill the bill.
But there's life in this old biddy yet
And I'm not quite over the hill.

Sometimes I send out for a pizza -
The works with onion and soy.
Then I drop it into the garbage
And keep the delivery boy.

For years now I’m travelling solo
With adventures and stories to tell
But I make sure my journeys don’t take me
Near dance halls and wishing wells