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Melbourne. Waves? Cold. Adelaide. Part 7.

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JIM yelled ‘I’m cooooold!’ in such a manner he definitely was not joking.  We’d dawdled a little before heading out at what looked like a perfect, glassy, slightly-less-than freight training right-hander.  Under normal conditions we would’ve been out there so fast our dusty silhouettes would’ve been left behind like in a Warner Bros cartoon.  But there was no one out, and this was the Southern Ocean; we knew what we were in for: biting cold, and biting . . . well, it was difficult not to think about.  Jim chose jumping off the tip of the point, while I chose walking out across the ‘sand’, which turned out to be a walk across rocks, thankfully while wearing booties, which continued for about 50 metres until I was able to paddle, constantly worried I’d duck dive my board and perhaps my face into more rock.  Turned out my compadre fared little better: his leap from the point almost saw him pinned back against it by a following swell.  If anything my longer paddle kept me warm for precious more minutes, but we both sat down and waited at the same time with seaweed gardens shifting below us, and ominous cramps building in our joints.  Turned out the waves were massive, or simply seemed so because of what we later agreed was a lowering of our confidences by the temperature.  Jim took a screamer and was forced to duck dive another three on the way back out, plunging into an ice bath each time, which left him rattled.  I can remember staring down one beast: paddling furiously toward it became futile as it crashed in front of me.  Using all my weight to plunge the board deep I felt the foam-ball roll over me, then reach out, claw me back and spin me into the coldest wash cycle.  Clinging to a board with lightly waxed rails in such a situation gave rise to irrational fears, such as seaweed wrapping ‘round my neck and strangling me and a great white shark snapping me out of the wave like fairy floss from a machine.  It’s impossible to know which way is up in such situations until one floats to the surface or finds the sandy bottom, which for me was rock and seaweed.  I forgot the cold from that moment on until it reared its ugly head again when I tried to catch a wave in – my joints had become so numb I couldn’t feel my feet and had predictable trouble standing up on the mountainous swell as a result.  Pretty sure I was stubbing my toes on the walk to shore, but damn sure I couldn’t feel them.  A couple of guys paddled out as we towelled off and warmed feeling back into ourselves.  We knew what they were experiencing; could tell in the rigid, time-lapse ways in which they surfed.  Probably more used to it than us, though.

Comprehensively defeated at this point, I took the wheel and we started off silently past green hills dipped in salt water.  Each kilometre travelled was rewarded by seemingly increasingly impressive westward vistas.  We stopped to appreciate the free-standing 12 Apostles: skyward monolithic cliffs separated from the mainland by millions of years of erosion, two or three of which had succumbed to the ferocious wind and waves since they were named.  The Arch was a self evident structure surrounded by seaweed that inconceivably clung to its base in the face of the liquid onslaught.  Nearby to this was a small cove perpetually white-washed by waves from which it was battered.  After a day of sharing our country’s most beautiful assets with brothers and sisters from all corners of the world, we cruised into the highway straddling town of Warnambool, population about 1000-or-so.  Last port of Victorian call.  The ambience of a Sunday night in that town was predictably subdued.  So we played a couple of games in a pool hall in which our only companions were the dude running the place and his mate.  The music seemed stuck on a loop of Pink and P Diddy, and the jukebox was busted.  Wandered to a local pub which had a cool little group of Irish musicians playing as the locals and us sipped our pints, after that.  Then returned to the hostel about 11pm to the disappointment of finding three attractive – and apparently Scandinavian – girls who weren’t around when we first arrived.

It was one of the best places we would stay – 12 bucks a night and they accepted van packers so we simply parked the van out the back and I set up the tent, with full use of the hostel’s facilities . . . except for the Scandinavians, of course.  Internet access, big screen and sprawling couches safe from the outside winter.  I spent an hour that night on one of the couches, reading In Cold Blood and scratching the neck of a resident black and white tomcat.  The desk guy was 20ish, overweight and spent the night watching TV shows such as Dancing With the Stars with his mum and laughing hysterically.  Other than that – and some Asians who spent half the night in the kitchen, making it difficult for us to cook our tinned soup and bread – it was a great place.  An oddly enjoyable last night in Vic.  The only dodgy but entertaining moment was when we first arrived: we met a pudgy though tall, balding, squinty guy of roughly 45 who’d lived in The Bool all his life.  Said he worked seven day weeks as a tree feller – probably did that all his life too.  He had plans to start over again in Broome.  Tree Feller had a badly painted ute which screamed ‘serial killer’ as much as he did.  The way he’d stare off into the distance, squinting even with the sun behind him, or penetrate your eyes while speaking of his abusive employer who drove him to flee made us worried he’d see said employer in one of us and wreak vengeance while we were slumberin’.  But such imaginations were unfounded and our only companion for the night was the familiar cold.  I should’ve slept on the couch inside, curled up next to the black and white.  Or, God forbid, one of the Scandanavians.

 

Melbourne. Waves? Cold. Adelaide. Part 6.

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FORGOTTEN for a moment, was the pain of the damaged trip and board.  While drinking and driving – not driving while drunk, I must specify – emerald green swathes of trees appeared ‘round a corner, descending into the heaving ocean and stopping only at a thin strip of tarmac and volcanic rock.  We’d arrived at the Great Ocean Road, and under a sky blemished only with thin, sparse jet-stream cloud, it was putting on a feast for our eyes.  Triple j’s broadcast notably dipped and rose as we hugged the turns with a vehicle which threatened to tip with only a 10 km breach of the speed limit.  There wasn’t even much wind.  We passed through a few refreshingly lifeless towns and got stuck behind the odd daydreamer, stopping a couple of times to sear particularly spectacular visions into our minds.

Not long before Lorne, home of the Falls Festival, we marvelled at incredible waves which once again had our surfing salivation slippery once more.  Forgetting the water temperature, we appraised Lorne’s incredible right-hand-point potential and, as dusk deepened, decided to stay.  This would be our first night exposed, me within a tent and Jim within Mortein – our Wicked Camper – to a sleep with Victoria’s famous cold as our companions.  But we were determined to have an enjoyable Saturday night nonetheless.  First port of call was a backpacker hostel noticeably devoid of both cheap drinks and Swedish backpackers keen on licking our toes.  It was warm, though, and the average-looking redhead behind the bar who held ambitions as a dancer momentarily attracted my attention.  We approached the town’s main pub as the frost began to gather.  There we met a bouncer from Los Angeles, a couple from Adelaide and Sydney and a group of clueless girl’s-night-outers from Geelong.  The bouncer had mysterious business interests both native and Aussie.  The couple met at a warehouse party in which she approached him and said ‘You’re cute’.  To which he replied ‘Hell yes I am’.  And the rest, as they say was history, and so too thankfully was his rendition of what he called ‘The Octopus’: walking backward while gyrating his arms out in front of him.  I was kinda hoping he’d go too far and fall into the freezing Southern Ocean.  No luck.  Jim bonded well with the LA bouncer because he’d been there.  The Geelong girls were reasonably attractive and from the city of my birth, and they certainly felt the cold, in comparison to us, like they’d not lived further north for any serious period of time.  Apart from that, and my disappointment and confusion at the pokie room closing early, it was a pretty uneventful night so we headed back.  Well drunk after stopping at another club if only for the warmth, and of course the drinks, we had a feed of noodles with help from the long suffered for kettle, then slept blissfully until waking up freezing cold at 3am and dropping in and out of unconsciousness until the birds started chirping, and the breaking waves drew us hither.

 

Melbourne. Waves? Cold. Adelaide. Part 5.

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WEDNESDAY, Thursday, Friday night – I’d not slept any of them very well.  Too much fun to be had, and too much alcoholic dehydration, it seemed.  Regardless, it was time to bid farewell to Smellbourne, so I wandered down to say goodbye to Chapel St, enjoying a breakfast of kiwi fruit (skin on, it’s normal), banana, mandarin, and breakfast sub.  Plus the hostel’s complimentary upon return.  The journey to West Footscray was painful, on account of lugging around a wheeled suitcase and a board cover within which less than half the weight was the board (explanation in part 4).  Said weight was compounded by its girth, which my not so stubby arms struggled to encircle while I tried to avoid inadvertently knocking people out during manoeuvers through Melbourne’s public transport system.  Ah, that trip.  Getting to the city loop line was the easy part; what to do after that: a mystery.  We probably encircled the city twice before switching at Flinders St and, a miracle, heading in the right direction towards Geelong via Footscray.  We got there, and it looked like a country town tacked onto a city in which people weren’t quite sure whether they were in fact urban or rural.  They seemed to fail at both.  It was time for a taxi accommodating boards once more so we sat there watching for a yellow van, and enjoyed scrutinising the natives screaming for their lagging behind, fat little brat children while scurrying for trains they’d miss by agonising seconds.  Watched a fat redheaded bogan mother chasing her son, yelling ‘Wait!’ like she was worried he’d be abducted by someone.  My money was on anyone adopting that kid and giving him a more ample life than she had, but that was probably a little judgemental on face value.

Across the road from one of the biggest – and most sparsely grassed – cemeteries I’d ever seen, was the Wicked Campers depot.  Jesus, imagine.  While a talking point the rows, and rows, and rows of ancient, crumbling and rusty tombstones on your first day certainly would be, just imagine after you’d been there a few months, on a bad day, when you’re actually envying the restful souls who are your neighbours.  At least a Wicked depot worker probably ‘works’ less strenuously than a dead person.  We thought we were free and finally had wheels we could personally control, but had to pay the cabbie; twice.  He had one of those school fundraising chocolate things and asked, no, told us ‘You buy some chocolate.  $1 for one and $5 for (get this) five’.  Yeah, we said and I forked out a buck while Jim handed over a purple note.  He was even in the reception spruiking his wares as we drove off in the van.  The van.  ‘Mortein’ as we came to name it, which you’ll understand if you keep reading.  And, if you’ve been paying attention, you’ll already know one side of its artistically yet morbidly spray painted surface.  The other, inexplicably, had a painting of a rose with, even more inexplicably, a scroll wrapped around it with ‘Ouch’ written on it.  Whatever.  After small talking with the depot dude we headed for Geelong and the Great Ocean Road.  Geelong, ah Geelong.  I was born there.  We didn’t stop.  They made a ring road ‘round Geelong a few years back, so we used it to bypass that sucker and get to where we wanted to go.  Yes, the Great Ocean Road, but more precisely, the beach.

We both wondered why we’d taken so long to get there when we feasted our eyes on Fisherman’s Beach – the first left-hand turn we’d decided to take thanks to a beach sign’s prompting.  Its ashen waters reflected back a sombre sky lingering over small swells.  But, there was little wind, and the little swell we could see warmed the heart.  The waves we could see at Bells Beach – one of the most famous point breaks in the world – almost literally boiled the blood, which would’ve been kinda nice under the circumstances.  We were there about lunchtime and watched in awe as lines of swell marched in like an army of giants invading the southern coast from Antarctica.  But shit those giants weren’t doing a great job; the water was crowded with surfers, and we both agreed we didn’t want to surf Bells just for the sake of surfing Bells, considering the crowd.  Plus we hadn’t had lunch.  So we had lunch.  Then, after trying to check one place but giving up after we realised we’d walked a kilometre and still couldn’t see water, we came to Angelsea, where we both suffered knives to the face thanks to the cold water, and Jim suffered a death in the family. . . .

 

Melbourne. Waves? Cold. Adelaide. Part 4.

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HE copped the board cover’s security tag full in the face, but I was just trying to mess around while unrolling it.  The surf shop dude walked past and said ‘Shit, that was harsh’ then chuckled and walked off.  Explanation:  I’d obviously brought my board in a bag, but it was a cheap piece of crap, despite my mum’s best intentions while buying it at a garage sale, which looked upon arrival at Melbourne like it had been in a Mexican knife fight after its journey through the airline baggage logistics.  I wouldn’t normally need a board cover, especially once it had left the plane, but I was also carrying in it no less than, ahem: my tent, my sleeping bag, my towel, my wetsuit, wetsuit booties, detached fins, and my board, of course.  The cover and its contents was one hell of a heavy bastard.  So I bought another one.  And Jim’s face would recover.  I also picked up some board resin, and  a kettle for the road trip we’d leave on the next day.  Buying that cheap and nasty boiler seemed worse, ironically, than being boiled alive.  We were savagely hungover after our visit to ‘England’ (read part three) and also sleep deprived (which combined to all but ruin memories of this particular day).  So we got lost in Target.  I wanted to check the price of a notebook on one of the scattered scanners and got stuck behind this chick taking a million years to check the price of her dodgy-bogan-clothes.  Then, the check-out chick seemed to be taking so much sweet time to serve that Jim, his senses rubbed raw, freaked out and had to leave while I made the purchase.  It was like Target was in a time-warp.  Totally expected it’d be about 2050 when we finally stumbled out of its horrifying depths (it was an underground store).  A bird shat on Jim outside after we’d been to one of those bakeries where you select the food yourself but there are no sneeze-screens.  He was in for worse, of course, but didn’t know it yet (read part one).  We went out that night, watched the Dandy Warhols, got much drunker than planned and went home minus any female contact . . . of course.

Melbourne. Waves? Cold. Adelaide. Part 3.

Venue-Finding-Services-Melbourne

THE city’s lure was irresistible – despite the best of chill-out-and-pretend-we’re-not-lame-o-9-to-5ers-normally intentions.  I was first to drag myself out of bed to the not so sweet sounds of Jim wheezing, sniffing and generally sounding like some animal in its death throes – from the hay fever he discovered sets in when he tries to kick the smokes.  I wandered around Chapel St eating fruit and breakfast Subway.  Perfect Melbourne weather – miserable; peoples’ ashen faces appeared drawn to the ground by the frigid air crushing them from above.

Or perhaps they were simply mirroring my appearance?  When I got back I helped myself to the Hotel Claremont Guest House’s complimentary breakfast – while delighting in the Herald Sun front page report about the cops’ misreporting of solved crime figures.  “We didn’t deliberately fudge the figures,” they said.  “The inaccuracies were a result of errors in the system.”  Yeah, sure, I thought.  Crime gets solved and you tick the box.  Real, difficult.  Anyway, while Jim would arrive just in time to miss breakfast, I was busy being filmed for the Guest House’s Facebook page.  Jesus, she picked the wrong inanimate bastard.

For the brave:

After walking Chapel St yet again we found ourselves at the end of the road and at what we were pretty sure was a tram station heading into the city like a drip feed directly into the proverbial Heart Of Darkness.  You’d have to imagine our last-night’s-liquor countenances.  The tram – my first time in one – dropped us off outside the National Gallery of Victoria.  I’d later learn the gallery was about to celebrate its 150th birthday.  The old girl looked pretty good for her ripe-old-age.  I remember being transfixed by an imposing oil-painting of a young woman in a field, emptying a bag of potatoes.

The painting’s background faded from sight as I zeroed in on her face – impossibly real looking, and beautiful.  Like the paint had drawn every ounce of female beauty the world possessed and realised it in a photo-like representation of a young farmer’s daughter’s face.  Transfixing for fleeting moments the eyes of whomsoever cared to give it momentary attention.  The place was really for Jim though – he could’ve spent hours feeding his graphic designer’s brain on the art books of every conceivable type, from Egyptian to modern-political-satire, such as Tony Blair taking a happy snap of himself with a mobile phone, in front of a burning Iraqi oil-well.  I bought us a couple of coffees and waited, while appreciating a waitress’s very real beauty.

Speaking of beauty, or more accurately the lack thereof, during the earlier walk through Chapel St we passed a Borders bookstore.  Rows and rows of shelves disappearing into a seemingly endlessly deepening store – almost all empty.  The only books left were self-help pieces of crap and Twilight knock-offs.  You could even buy the shelves, so pathetic was the situation.

Jesus, the city was like a sandy beach of faces, and us a pair of grains.  Hung-over grains.  But we blew along down the street ‘cause it was the easy thing to do, trying not to glaringly obviously perv on indie-chicks and high-school girls on lunch.  After a walk through the city which was punctuated only by a brief rain-shower in which I had to wear my surf-brand jacket over my leather one – and look like more of an idiot than usual – we came to Brunswick St, St Kilda.  A lot like Chapel St, but less pretentious, is and was Brunswick St.  Kind of like a philosophy student born to rich parents compared to a philosophy student born to, yep you guessed it, poor parents.  There were more freaks too.  They literally hung out the windows.  But it was a pretty non-descript journey down yet another straight road-shopping-strip.  We’d both agreed beer was the Devil earlier in the day but, come about 2pm, a corner bar serving up pints of Guinness in front of a roaring fire seemed pretty alluring.

The difference between a bar in a place like that and a place like the Gold Coast is quite simple: genuine friendliness.  Without pretence.  We’d probably walked about three or four k’s down the street so it was all about a tram for the return journey.  This part Indigenous – self announced – guy, Cameron, befriended us for the ride and told us all about, I dunno, something like ‘spirit geography’ or some damn shit.  Said he was a shaman.  Followed us all the way to Flinders St Station, which we reached on foot after I realised the tram was taking us to the middle of God-knows-where (plus we hadn’t bought a ticket, woops), where we finally lost him.  He was totally going to hook us up with some ‘gasha’ next time he was in Brisbane.  Never heard that slang for weed before.  We returned to the hostel and prepared for madness.

Chapel St has myriad pubs and clubs.  The first one we stopped at was a little over-fancy, but they had a two-for-one cocktail special going on, so we ordered a couple of Cosmopolitans and sipped them while surveying the scene.  We tried to ignore the fact the Cosmo’s looked very suspiciously like feminine drinks, not that there’s anything wrong with that, then finally realised the bar was a little subdued for us so wandered back out into the biting cold.  The Lucky Coq, as in ‘rooster’, seemed auspicious, especially when we noticed a blonde and brunette pair occupying one sofa opposite another un-occupied sofa with a coffee table in between.  Perfect place to rest our drinks, we thought.  So we settled in to discover Samantha and Claire were English women from Leeds.  They were strange though: both late-20s, no tertiary education and partial to no football team.  I could respect the latter, being dispassionate about sport myself, but it was at odds with my perception of all Brits – especially un-educated Brits – as soccer hooligans.  Anyway, they seemed impressed with the fact I was a muck-raking journo and Jim a glorified paint-by-numbers graphic designer.

I told them my story about how I was once on my way to a story/photo about a musician at a picturesque estuarine surf-spot, when I drove past a large gathering of police and, thanks mainly to the photographer travelling separately who didn’t come to my conclusion the cops were having a Mother’s Day picnic, stumbled quite literally over a much larger story.  A story about a surfer who’d been made minced-meat by a boat in the estuary and later died in hospital.  The funny thing, about British Claire, not the dead surfer, was she inaccurately pegged Jim as a ‘player’, and decided that specious conclusion was pretext enough not to kiss him.  I had better luck hooking up with Sam whenever possible.  She had an alarming but strangely arousing tendency to bite my lower lip, hard, during the more passionate moments.  I think we all lost interest in each other upon exiting the Coq and becoming smothered by the cold-hard-lamplight of the early morning.  It revealed our faces for what they really were: liquor and sleep deprivation ravaged.  For some reason a random blonde found it hilarious to slip ice in Jim’s back pocket at the Hungry Jack’s we stumbled into.  We agreed, but the group of spastically drunk teenagers at another table were oblivious.  Must’ve been the spastic drunkenness.  I guess it was the fact Samantha and Claire followed us almost all the way to the guest house before losing their nerve and leaving in a taxi which set backed-up Jim to moaning, flinging his arms around and kicking inanimate objects.  I recalled his behaviour to him with relish in the morning.  He could barely remember, and simply sighed.  One particularly vivid yet isolated memory of the night, even before the Cosmo’s or the Coq, was dragging Jim across the floor and out of the hostel-room door for some drunken reason.  But we told the British chicks we were sober when we arrived to meet them.  Yeah, right.  Sober as a Gold Coast judge.

 

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