AUGUST 19-22
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Art Apartment, Bad Bowling
Wednesday, August 19; Noosa - Maroochydore
Once awake, we didn't linger long in our room/zoo. We picked
up fresh pastries from a bakery and ate a leisurely breakfast
on the beach. We browsed in the upmarket shops on Hastings Street
and I called my cousin Mary. Mary was another cousin of mine
that I had never met before, and I was looking forward to visiting
her after we left Noosa. She and her husband Donal, a doctor
originally from Belfast, lived in Brisbane with their children
Donal, Jackie and Marie-Claire. Donal and Mary emigrated from
Ireland to Australia about twenty years ago with their (then)
two toddlers. Initially they lived in Dysart, a tiny bush village
four hours inland from Mackay in central Queensland. Later they
moved to Brisbane, and subsequently bought an apartment in the
town of Maroochydore, located a couple of hours north of Brisbane
on the Sunshine Coast. Mary travels to Maroochydore in the middle
of the week so that she can concentrate on painting, one of her
favourite pursuits. She studied art at university and has taught
art as a substitute teacher in Australia. I reached Mary in Maroochydore,
but she was on her way to Brisbane for the day, so she told me
how to find the apartment and arranged for us to get in.
At
midday, we took McCafferty's as far as Maroochydore, and caught
a local bus to a tall residential complex overlooking the ocean.
Once we entered the sixth floor apartment, we were presented
with an exhibition of Mary's artwork - there were attractive
oil paintings, pastels and watercolours tastefully decorating
the walls, each bearing her signature. Post-It notes were stationed
thoughtfully around the apartment too, inviting us to try the
chocolate biscuits, cook some food from the fridge, take the
surfboard for a spin. Post-Its also announced the apartment's
less obvious quirks - only turn the television on using the switch
on the wall, remember to bang or shake the jug kettle to get
it to work, and, oh yes, there is an extra surfboard stored in
the fire cupboard outside the front door. It felt unusual to
be in a real apartment again - for weeks we had been staying
in characterless accommodation catering towards the masses, and
it I found it very pleasant and homely to be somewhere that exhibited
the taste of an individual, a place where valuables did not have
to be signed in, signed out, or tied down. I could take cutlery
out of the drawer without having to leave a deposit for it. I
could put food in the fridge without having to write my name
on it. I could fall asleep on the couch and know that I wouldn't
be disturbed. The feeling of security without the need for security.
The apartment had an open balcony that faced the ocean. We
could see surfers bobbing out in the water beyond the breakers,
a cluster of black wetsuits that rose and fell with the swell.
Occasionally one of them would break away and try to catch a
wave into the beach. Sometimes the figure would wipe out and
disappear into the surf, but some of the surfers rode waves all
the way in with more style than a supermodel's wardrobe. We went
for a walk along the beachfront and watched the graceful surfers
carve up the water. We lingered by a skateboarding rink just
above the beach, laid out with smooth and shaped concrete, pipes,
edges and ramps. Kids from six to sixteen exhibited their boarding
talents, their brand-name threads, and their shit cool attitudes.
Surfers in training. We were really getting into the spectator
mood, so we hung around and quietly criticised the kids whose
daring moves didn't go as planned. Back on the beach, we remotely
criticised real surfers. We continued on to a ten-pin bowling
alley behind Mary's apartment complex, and quietly criticised
the people playing there too. Not enough power. Too much spin.
Not enough backswing. Terrible hairstyle.
Convinced that we were better sportspeople than those we had
been watching all afternoon, we signed up for a couple of games
of bowling. We could have tried surfing or skateboarding, but
that would have meant passing up the opportunity to wear the
super-fashionable red and blue bowling shoes that came with lane
rental.
We entered ourselves into the bowling computer as Randy and
Suzie (if you had been wearing those shoes, you would have gone
incognito too). In the lane next to ours, a couple of teams of
young women were getting serious about their game. Strategic
huddles, whispers and nods preceded each bowl. Congratulatory
slaps, claps, and cheers followed each bowl. There weren't any
"Ooh, unlucky!" or "Better luck next time!"
consolation comments needed in their lane. Denise (oops I mean
Suzie) and I had the monopoly on those. Our bowling balls seemed
to be magnetically attracted to the gutters and consciously avoiding
the pins. We hit a couple of lucky strikes, but it was obvious
that neither of us would make the big leagues. Another dream
shattered.
On our way out, I peering into the window of the pro bowling
shop and wondered at the accessories of the modern bowler. There
really wasn't all that much to accessorise with. It was possible
to get a custom-coloured bowling ball or a grip-correcting wrist
strap. Several styles of bowling ball bag were on offer. A small
selection of depressing bowling shoes lined the shelves. That
was it. Obviously the world's large sporting good manufacturers
hadn't yet discovered the potentially lucrative niche market
of ten-pin bowling. I tried to imagine the pro store once this
happened - racks of merchandise lining the walls - lycra bowling
underwear, team warm-up suits, support belts, heart-rate monitors,
Gore-Tex, computerised swing correctors, carbon-fibre ball cores.
The mind boggles.
We met Mary later on that evening. She was great. She can
talk forever though - the only time Denise
or I ever got a word in was when Mary paused to drink from one
of her chained cups of tea.
Loads of Laundry, Suffering Surfing
Thursday, August 20; Maroochydore
We got up late, with no plans made for the day. That usually
meant that we were destined to do laundry. Destiny held true.
While Mary worked on her painting in the apartment, we hung out
down at the launderette, feeding the machines with clothes and
coins and watching the fabrics spin until lunchtime.

Laundry Day.
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In the afternoon I had a go at surfing. I had taken a
lesson when living in Sydney, and thought I might have learned
enough to make it enjoyable. I borrowed one of the boards from
the apartment and took my surfin' sheila Denise down to the beach.
She didn't want to surf, but had agreed to go with me for image
purposes. I need not have bothered with image though, for there
were few surfers around to impress - the conditions were poor
and they had all found something better to do.
Even to my untrained eye, the surf looked less than perfect.
The waves coming into the beach were of a decent size, but they
seemed to be breaking very heavily and abruptly, with all of
their momentum being directed downwards rather than toward shore.
I was not overly discouraged by this (perhaps I should have been),
so I snatched a good luck kiss from my sheila and made my way
out through the shallows. I managed to get through the breakers,
but my attempts to catch a wave were fruitless. Several times
I positioned myself in what I thought was the right place at
the right time, but the oncoming wave would just pitch me forward
and crash on top of me. I would be pounded violently underwater,
the breath knocked out of my lungs, and tossed about like my
laundry during the spin cycle. The surfboard underwent its own
independent tribulations at the end of my leg rope. I managed
to catch and ride a couple of waves inshore after they had broken,
but it was like riding the merry-go-round in a theme park full
of roller-coasters.
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After the spin cycle - the smiling exterior masks a heavily battered
ego.
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Spluttering to the surface after each wipe-out, and growing
more tired each time, my enthusiasm began to fade pretty quickly.
I persevered in the difficult conditions, and managed to surf
for a bit on my knees, but my concentration was slipping as I
grew tired, and I started to make more and more mistakes. It
was taking longer to resurface after each wipe-out, and a couple
of times I was slammed so far underwater that I hit the bottom
quite hard. When it got to the point where I seemed to be just
setting myself up to be knocked down again, I got the message
and retired into the beach. Denise, who claimed that she had
been watching me, was devastated that since my surfing wasn't
worthy of the term, she couldn't respectfully call herself a
surfin' sheila. There was little I could do to comfort the poor
girl.
The rest of the day and evening was without highlight. I got
a short, short haircut (low maintenance for travelling purposes)
and spent the evening watching tv, chatting with Mary, and drinking
tea. Lots of tea, Kawarren style. Too much tea for Mary's overworked
electric kettle. The appliance clearly thought that it was being
asked to perform far beyond its warranty,
and boiled water reluctantly only after much coaxing, jolting,
and power cord-fiddling.
Torpid Town, Copious Cocktails
Friday, August 21; Maroochydore - Brisbane
It was time to head south again. Denise and I bought Mary
some flowers as a thank-you gift. I had proposed buying her a
new jug kettle, but Denise had vetoed the idea, citing it as
too practical. Mary seemed to really like the flowers, arranging
them carefully in a large and beautiful Waterford Glass vase
and promising that she would have a go at painting them. Perhaps
Denise was right - I doubt if Mary would have painted a jug kettle.
We drove with Mary through the rainy afternoon to Brisbane,
the largest city in Queensland, and we checked into a hostel.
Brisbane was founded as a convict settlement in 1824 and has
since grown to a city of over a million people. Despite its size,
the city reputedly retains the atmosphere of an unrushed (some
would say boring) outback town. Reports from other travellers
and from Mary and Jackie had prepared me for the fact that there
isn't a lot for a tourist to do in Brisbane. Mary had detoured
into Donal's old school on the way into the city so that we could
take a look. It was a impressive and stately-looking place, complete
with decorated brickwork, mature ivy, manicured gardens and a
large solid-looking cannon in the front courtyard, but the fact
that Mary considered the place a city attraction worried me.
Later, after wandering around the city centre in the rain for
a couple of hours, Denise and I began to understand. Malls and
shops are only interesting up to a point. Tourist guides listed
the Botanic Gardens as an attraction worth a visit, and somewhere
in the city there was a giant pineapple that I had been told
was worth a look, but in the rain neither of these options were
viable. A cruise on the meandering Brisbane river was rather
pointless for the same reason. Museums? Not really - we had neither
the patience, the time, the inclination, nor the bus schedules
necessary for such an excursion. In desperation, we consulted
Denise's normally inspirational guidebook, but even it seemed
to be have struggled to fill a few pages on Brisbane. It did
say that the attractions in the city are "more social than
structural," which we took to mean as "Instead of wandering
around looking at buildings, get yourself into a pub and start
drinking!" By this time, we had already strolled through
the streets and looked at the buildings. Some of them were quite
interesting - Brisbane's layout is remarkable in that there are
old 19th-century halls and buildings immediately next to high
mirrored office blocks throughout the city centre. It was unusual
but not unattractive - I liked the contrast.
We took the guidebook's advice and arranged to go out for
the evening with Jackie and her friend Roger. We arranged to
meet them for dinner at a fish restaurant/bar/nightclub next
to the river called City Rowers. We arrived on time, but I was
refused entry because I was wearing battered Converses and not
shoes. The situation looked bad, as my only shoes were in a crate
on a ship en route to Ireland, but when I mentioned to the bouncer
lady that I was part of a reservation in the restaurant her attitude
changed completely. "No problem, just go around to the back
entrance." We did, and let ourselves in without any trouble.
What I found illogical was that there was open access leading
from the restaurant to the bar from which I had been turned away.
The bar's dress code may have been smart casual, but the "smart"
part of the code obviously didn't reflect on the door peoples'
intelligence.
As it turned out, we had more company for dinner than just
Jackie and Roger. Roger's sister Jenny was there too, and Mary,
Donal Jnr, and Marie-Claire arrived shortly after Denise and
I. We enjoyed a good meal and good company - I chatted for a
long time with Donal, who had taken time out from preparing an
important presentation for his university law course to join
us for dinner. I ordered a dozen fresh oysters on Roger's recommendation
- when not a patron of the restaurant, he is a chef in its kitchen,
so I was confident that he knew what he was talking about. His
endorsement was well justified - the oysters were so tasty I
easily finished my dozen and could have kept going.

Jackie, Denise and Jenny slur their way through "I Wanna
Hold Your Hand".
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After dinner Mary, Donal and Marie-Claire took their
leave. In their place we were joined by Steve, our now off-duty
waiter and a friend of Roger's. We all shuffled upstairs to the
bar/nightclub - free to us thanks to the company that we were
keeping. The night progressed as nights-out do, with music, laughing,
dancing, and the consumption of large quantities of alcohol.
Karaoke was proposed as a means of entertainment after we had
collectively sunk a couple of rounds of discounted and dangerously
strong Long Island Iced Teas. Denise was dragged onto the Karaoke
stage by Jackie and Jenny to sing the choral version of The Beatles'
"I Wanna Hold Your Hand." I was not really in a fit
state to give them a well-judged review, but I thought that they
did pretty well. Not to be outdone, I climbed unsteadily onstage
and gave my all for Elvis' "Don't be Cruel," complete
with my own smooth moves and gyrations. Fortunately for me, there
was no film left in the camera by that point in the evening,
so no visual (or aural) record exists of the performance. Several
games of bad pool later, we were released from the
last embrace of Jackie's multiple farewells, and stumbled out
through the rain to a homeward-bound taxi.
Shallow City, Dimpled Dancefloor
Saturday, August 22; Brisbane - Surfers Paradise
The Gold Coast. Forty kilometres of uninterrupted beach stretching
from a point about an hour south of Brisbane all the way to the
New South Wales border. Australia's most popular, most superficial,
and most commercialised holiday destination. With a skyline of
towering apartment blocks, a gaggle of theme parks, and more
shops, motels, bars and nightclubs than a truckload of VISA Platinum
cards could handle, the magnificent beaches of the Gold Coast
hardly rate as an attraction to the area any more, despite the
fact that they provide the only free activity on the Coast. Surfers
Paradise is the unsubtle hub of the Gold Coast, and offers the
most garish extremes of the package holiday resort at the most
inflated prices. The concept of "play during the day, party
at night" rules in Surfers Paradise, and the frenzied pace
at which holidaymakers rush to relax in the city is only matched
by the speed with which local enterprises relieve them of vast
amounts of money. The only culture in Surfers is beach culture,
and those practising it are just passing through. The closest
thing to a museum in the area is a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not
gallery on the Orchid Avenue Mall, sandwiched between cheap T-shirt
shops and fast food joints. Ironically, despite its name, savvy
surfers don't even linger in Surfers Paradise, for the best swell
is usually found to the north or south of the city. During peak
season the beach is crowded, the prices are jacked up even higher
than usual, and accommodation is tight. In short, Surfers Paradise
wholeheartedly embraces all of the most unappealing characteristics
of a resort holiday destination anywhere - I cannot understand
why anybody would choose to take a holiday there and I would
certainly never visit such an obscene place myself.
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If Paradise is theirs, shouldn't "Surfers" be "Surfer's"?
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Denise and I stepped off the McCafferty's bus in Surfers
shortly before lunchtime, by which time I had managed to dilute
my hangover into a mere mantle of weariness. Denise, who insists
that she never suffers from hangovers, also seemed to be lacking
a certain spring in her step. We checked into our hostel and
walked downtown. The day was cool and overcast, so currents of
tourists cruised the malls instead of lying on the beach. We
meandered around the malls ourselves for a while. We found two
types of shops. One sort sold items that were cheap, tacky and
had "Surfers Paradise" emblazoned on them somewhere.
We steered clear of those - we didn't want to take home any souvenirs
that could possibly link us to the soulless city. The other shops
specialised in items or services so far outside our budget that
they were effectively invisible to us. Before we knew it, we
had walked the main thoroughfares, but seen nothing that warranted
further investigation. Ironically, one of the largest resorts
in Australia was one of the few places where Denise and I were
left with nothing to do.
The afternoon drifted past as slowly as the heavy clouds overhead.
We found ourselves back at the hostel in the early evening. Colourful
chalks on the reception notice board advertised our hostel's
evening activity - an organised bar-hopping session complete
with discounted cocktails, reduced cover charges and strangely-named
DJs. The steaming shower stalls and the painted faces of made-up
girls flitting along the hostel balconies alluded to plans for
a big Saturday night out. But not for Denise or I. We fell asleep
on our bunks as twilight turned to darkness, and didn't get up
until long after the excited whispers and hurried footsteps outside
had died away. The hostel courtyard was unusually quiet, and
the coloured fairy lights in the trees over the patio twinkled
in solitude. A few souls watched mediocre television in the lounge,
and a pair of rubber-gloved employees wiped down the kitchen
for the night. If we were looking for diversion, it appeared
that we would have to venture outside the hostel gates.
The beach was only a few blocks behind our hostel, so we navigated
around hotels and apartment complexes until we hit sand. We carried
our sandals and strolled down to the shoreline. The strand was
deserted, and only the warm glow from the high-rises illuminated
the surf and the shadowy dimples of the sand. The air was refreshingly
cool. The sound of the breaking waves was so soothing compared
to the gaudy neon in the distance that I couldn't help but feel
that we had the best part of Surfers Paradise to ourselves. We
danced together, just a little way above the waterline, recalling
to memory the steps we had learned during a ballroom class in
Sydney. The slow step, the cha-cha, the waltz, even the jive.
I hardly stood on Denise's toes at all, a remarkable achievement,
and she followed my leads smoothly and confidently. Our dance
teachers would have been so proud.
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