Wednesday, December 26, 2007

It's Christmasssssssss!!!!

Santa blessed us with a very generous sleigh-load of presents this year. Scarlett's face was a picture when she saw the carrot had been munched, the milk and mince pie eaten, but Santa didn't seem to have left any presents in the living room where the food had been left. We suggested she check under the tree and she stood agog at the sight of all the gifts, declaring 'there are too many presents to count', before breaking into a spontaneous happy dance. As mountains of gifts were replaced by mountains of wrapping paper, Flo happily played with the tape and ribbon. While the Scarlett became engrossed in her fabulous new doll's house ('How did Santa get it on his sleigh?') and painting easel, we set about preparing a lunch
for 11, keeping our fingers crossed that the rain would stay away. Rob boiled and glazed the ham and I roasted the salmon before all our friends arrived at midday with bowls of salads, puddings, quail eggs and foie gras canapes. The weather held and we had a beautiful lunch outside. Merry Christmas one and all.

Christmas Eve


We sadly farewelled Rick and Justin on Sunday night after a brilliant hot day at Balmoral building sand castles and wave jumping. It was so brilliant to see them again.
We had a super festive Christmas Eve, Aussie style, starting with a visit to the Sydney Fish Market. Christmas here is all about the seafood and the fish market opened at 3am on Sunday morning not closing until 6pm on Christmas Eve. There were thousands of people there carrying great boxes of fish, trays of oysters and heaving bags of prawns about. Despite the crowds (we were there at 8am) it was really well organised and fun. We picked up our 3kg salmon and headed to the water's edge for coffee and fresh pastries straight from the baker's oven. Then it was onto the famous AC Butchery to pick up the ham. The queue was out the door and down the street, and included among the crowd the Premier of New South Wales. While Rob queued, Scarlett, Florence and I zipped over to the local library to give our favourite librarian a card Scarlett had made for her, alongwith a Christmas kiss and a hug. We then went back to pick up Rob and then zoomed over to nearby Drummoyne for Christmas Eve drinks with our old neighbours and friends Dave and George and their family. Then it was home to prepare a mince pie and a glass of milk for Santa and a carrot for Rudolph...

Saturday, December 22, 2007

The spirit of Christmas


We were filled with the spirit of Christmas last night when, together with Rick and Justin, we went to the brilliant Christmas At The House concert at the Sydney Opera House. The choir and orchestra of Opera Australia performed carols and other festive songs and we had songsheets to join in with the easy ones that didn't require six years' training at the Conservatorium of Music. Rick and Justin loved it but were rendered gobsmacked when the crowd seemed to respond most enthusiastically to a rendition of the Rolf Harris 'hit' song Six White Boomers (http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=hlSsffF2xhA) which tells the story of Santa's sleigh being pulled by six old kangaroos. Good grief. We spent the interval on the opera house deck sipping champagne and watching a cruise ship glide away into the night. Driving home at about 10.30pm, we had an encounter that convinced us of the existence of fate. We were driving along the busy motorway and as we reached a point where our two lanes met another two, we saw a young, smartly dressed bloke staggering along in the middle of the road, as drunk as a lord. It was terrifying to watch. Cars were zooming passed, blowing their horns at him and on he walked. We managed to stop on a sort of hard shoulder in the middle of the two motorways and yelled at him to climb into the back of our car, with me wrestling the kid's car seats out of the way to make room for him. He was so drunk and didn't seem to realise he was on the motorway at all, slurring something about how hard it was to get a taxi. In between repeatedly reminding him NOT to be sick in our car, we asked him where he lived and were astonished when he replied, 'Ashfield'. Of all of the hundreds of suburbs in Sydney he lived in ours, in fact only about 300 metres from our house. I found this amazing. Destiny? It makes me shudder to think that if we had driven passed a few minutes later we might have been stuck behind an ambulance scraping him off the road. Before Rob eventually woke him and poured him from our car to his door, he told us his name was Cyril and that he was 22. So that's our Christmas good deed for the season ticked off. Merry Christmas Cyril.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Countdown to Christmas part 4- the hidden room



It's December 21, Scarlett's last day at nursery for the year and it's a scorcher here. Rick and Justin arrived yesterday and are here until December 24 when they fly to NZ for Christmas with Rick's family. Despite severe jetlag, making them feel like it was 4am, they managed a couple of large gin and tonics before we headed out for pizza last night. Yesterday was also momentous for being the day Florence really starting crawling. She has a lovely fluid style and is pretty quick. No more mornings at the shops knowing she is happily sitting on the floor at home with some clothes pegs, car keys and flick knives. Before we head out to a carol concert at the Opera House with Rick and Justin, I wanted to leave you with this picture of our second loo, aka Aladdin's cave, where we have been stashing all the Christmas presents that have been arriving every day. As ever, we are very grateful but can't help wondering whether all this is really necessary for a 9-month-old baby who likes to play with straws and a 3-year-old who is more than happy making rockets out of old milk cartons. May the door never be found....or this blog page for that matter.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Countdown to Christmas part 3







V excited again this week as we now only have 8 more sleeps until the man in red hits town. A viewing of The Polar Express even had Rob and I believing in Santa, it is so fabulous. Scarlett had her friend Ella over to play on Wednesday to listen to Christmas songs and behave angelically (in this shot anyway). On Friday we met up with our friends from the UK Richard Quance and his wife Karen, who now live in Perth. They were over for the opening of the Billy Elliot musical at a theatre in the city. Rob and I went to one of the previews of it two weeks ago and took it in turns to bawl, laugh and sit gobsmacked at how much swearing the child actors have to do. Richard and Karen are friends with the executive producer of Billy Elliot the movie and she was also in Sydney for the launch. She invited Richard and Karen along to the show and the star-studded after-party, which by Sydney standards was a galaxy as actual real celebrities were there like Elton John and Toni Collette, not just the cast of Neighbours. When we all met up for dinner the next night (not Elton or Toni) they were all very hungover. This didn't stop us all enjoying another lively night on the tiles, with Rob and I finally making it home (by bus, due to a taxi shortage) at 1.30am, making this the latest night out we have had since having Scarlett. Thank God then we were able to persuade Scarlett to have a lunchtime sleep yesterday so we could all crawl into bed and catch up on some Zzzzzs. Last night we packed a picnic and alongwith Martin and Drew, James and Amelia and Kendall and his mum Audrey, we headed up to the local church for Carols by Candlelight which was brilliantly festive despite crickets chirping in the background heat during Jingle Bells.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Countdown To Christmas Part 2










We are up to 11 on our multiple advent calendars and on the whole the threat of Santa not leaving anything under the tree has proved an excellent deterrent from any bad behaviour from Scarlett. She's really into the big man in red. This week we had two big Christmas events - the Santa babies proms at the Opera House and Scarlett's pre-school Christmas party. The Baby Proms was amazing - about 100 kids in a room with a small orchestra playing lovely Christmas songs accompanied by a conductor and a singer who had all the kids up dancing. Spot Scarlett in the pink in the middle of this picture with her hands in the air like she just don't care. By total coincidence (as these concerts are on over several days, several times each day) our friends Julia and Amelia were both there too with their kids which was great and made it like a special Christmas outing for them all. At the Wattle Lane Christmas party it was clear that to pre-schoolers no Santa is a bad Santa, not even one with a crap white beard applied so badly it revealed the bloke's real gingery beard underneath. Florence in the meantime is on the move. Not crawling exactly but moving around. We put her on the floor and leave the room and when we return moments later, she's not in the same place. It's like she doesn't want anyone to see her technique until she's finessed it. Now well into her solids, and with two more teeth coming through at the bottom, she got into the festive spirit by tucking into a set of red foam reindeer antlers.
Yum. Rob and I nearly died this week when Scarlett wandered into the laundry to get something and then rushed out shouting 'Mum! Dad! Come and look what I've found!." We exchanged a glance and feared the worse. In our laundry is a second toilet that Scarlett has somehow never seen. It has always been the hiding place for all gifts and currently contains a doll's house (unwrapped) and many, many Christmas presents. We have spent the last week thinking we better be able to come up with something good and quick if she ever finds the door. Before I blurted out that Santa had had to deliver early this year, she came back holding a missing hat we had been looking for. Phew!
Finally, it all got a bit too much for Scarlett after two events this week and she gave in to utter exhaustion. You better keep your energy levels up girl, we've still got 14 days to go, which includes a dinner out and two carol concerts.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Countdown to Christmas part 1







It would be fair to say that we are all a little over-excited about Christmas in the Duthie household this year. Excited to be having our first family Christmas at home in more than 10 years, excited to be our own little family and for Flo to see her first Christmas, and excited to be hosting a lunch with some special mates. As soon as December 1 rolled around, I was ready. We have four - count 'em - advent calendars on the go, the tree is up and decorated with all our special baubles from trips around the world, we have a nativity scene set up and Christmas music playing is nonstop on the i-pod. Also Rob and I have taken to wearing foam reindeer antlers. You think I'm joking, don't you? On Saturday morning after opening all the advent calendars we went to our first Christmas party hosted by kids tv channel Nickleodeon. Scarlett got to meet one of her favourite cartoon characters, Dora The Explorer, whom she rushed and embraced like a long-lost friend as well as Spongebob Squarepants and Santa Claus. Her face was a picture when Santa walked in and she got to sit with him and have a little chat about what she wants for Christmas (a scooter it would seem- oops- no luck there darling, I'm afraid) before he gave her a present. After a great deal of dancing under a giant parachute and eating of cupcakes, we headed home to put up the tree. Scarlett and I did it while Rob and Flo slept. Poor Rob has done his back in, is in a lot of pain and can be found most days lying on the floor or bed in between appointments at the back doctor, gin in hand.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Mantra on Salt - our holiday Part 2
















After four nights with the Duthies we picked up our hire car and drove south for an hour or so to the little village of Kingscliff, just over the border back in New South Wales, affecting an hour time change. Kingscliff is made up of a strip of shops and cafes, a couple of campgrounds and a glorious long surf beach. We stayed 2 kms south in a new $1 billion resort called Salt Beach. It comprises a new 'village' with a few shops, cafes and a green, two big hotels, lots of new spectacular beach front homes all built behind a long, long surf beach. We checked into our lovely two bed suite and then headed for the lagoon pool. We managed to entice Scarlett from its turquoise waters and waterfalls three times, once for an afternoon stroll along the beach, once when a deadly brown snake started swimming too and everyone legged it until he slithered away into the undergrowth and to rent bikes with kid's seats to ride along the bike path behind the beach. When that path ran out we took the bikes down to the empty beach and rode for ages along the wet sand. It was absolutely brilliant fun. (The thing I never get about Australian beaches is why they are so frequently entirely empty of people.) It was so relaxing, as Scarlett could be left pretty much on her own in the shallows of the pool, and Flo is happy with a small piece of paper and a clothes peg these days, Rob managed a snooze on his lounger by the pool and I sunbathed for ages without being bothered. We ate out both nights, once at the wonderful Fins restaurant, winner of a chef's hat in the Good Food Guide awards and at a pizza place, Flo sleeping perfectly in her pram and Scarlett on her best behaviour. Great fun.

Where Else But Queensland ? Our holiday Part 1















Last Thursday we dragged a very excited Scarlett out of nursery school early so we could jump in a taxi to the airport to fly to Queensland to see the Duthies of Brisbane. Scarlett was sooooo excited about the prospect of a taxi ride, never mind the plane, you'd think we didn't have a car. She spent most of the day before rearranging furniture to resemble her version of a plane with seats for her and Flo. It was refreshing to see nature (or was it nurture?) take over when Scarlett instinctively popped the airline sick bag on her head once on board, something Rob and I have amused ourselves with for years. As always, a visit to Craig and Lynda's is all about lots of laughing, talking, drinking and eating. We hardly ever even leave their house, why would we? They have a beer fridge and a pool. Scarlett would leave the pool for necessary breaks such as eating and sleeping, but pretty much stayed in there the rest of the time. We managed a break to vote in our new prime minister on Saturday and a visit to a local winery in the afternoon. A winery in Queensland? I know, that's what I said. Scarlett followed Nicole and Ryan everywhere during the brief moments she wasn't in the pool, insisting that they sit with her at all meal times and car trips, and Florence had her first laundry tub bath, something Scarlett didn't want to miss out on either. The weather was perfect, the company peerless and Florence slept like the perfect Gina Ford baby despite the hour time difference.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Parrrrrrtttteeeeeee!!!











Yesterday Rob proved that turning 44 doesn't stop you from having a good time. We had about 30 people over yesterday afternoon/evening/night for a birthday party that began in about 30 degree heat. We filled the paddling pool, put up extra beach umbrellas and made sure there was plenty of beer and wine on ice to keep everyone's fluids up. Rob got loads of great gifts and we feasted on baked salmon, roast lamb, rosemary, thyme and garlic potatoes and bocconcini salad, finished off with banana birthday cake. As guests came and went we drank and ate and drank, while the kids went crazy in the garden. Everyone was gone by 11pm and then Rob stayed up until 1am clearing up, I mean partying hard. Happy Birthday darling.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Birthday boy



Yesterday Robert Hamish Duthie turned 44. I know, that's what I said. He doesn't look a day over 43. Rob was on nights the night before so dragged himself home desperate for bed, but knowing he'd never get passed Miss Scarlett who wanted to hand over gifts and repeatedly spill the beans about the various cakes I'd made as surprises. I also had a surprise planned for lunch which I couldn't mention to her at all for fear she'd spill. Rob's presents included a large glass paperweight with a giant tarantula inside - something he has always said he'd like - plus a book of photos I made of him and the girls in the style of one of our favourite children's books called My Dad. Oh yes, there were tears. Rob finally made it into bed at 8am, only to be woken by me 3 hours later as we were heading off out to a special birthday lunch. With Scarlett in nursery for the day, Rob, Florence and I headed to the north shore to an amazing spot in Mosman. The old barracks and gunnery that once stood here has all been converted into a visitors centre, workshops and a restaurant that must have one of the best views of Sydney harbour. The Tearoom Gunners Barracks is a stunning 19th century sandstone building built into the side of the cliff over looking the harbour but hidden from sight when you are on the top of the hill. Nearby are the cannons once used to protect Sydney Harbour facing out to the heads. On the verandah, where we enjoyed a magnificent lunch, the view was quite spectacular. As was the vision of Ms Sarah-Kate Lynch, my next surprise. SK was in Sydney for the weekend with her sisters but took time away from them to surprise Rob. We had a really great catch up and laugh as always and SK finally got to meet her God-daughter Florence. In the afternoon, we picked Scarlett up early from nursery ready for our family birthday dinner at our local Italian. On the walk there, with the birthday cupcakes I had made secreted in my bag, Scarlett repeatedly asked "where are those cupcakes you made for Dad, Mum?' I sense we are not yet at the point where we can reveal where the Ark of the Covenant is kept. Poor old Rob was shattered by the time we got to Napoli in Bocca so after a swift pasta dinner, finished with my cupcakes - presented by our waiter with candles blazing - we hit the pavement for home and an early night. Today is Rob's party. More later.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

It's a beautiful day



Once Scarlett had finished her chores for the day - train them young I say, we set out for uber groovy cafe Deusexmachina to meet our mate Jo with her son Zebadee. Zeb , and his dad Mark, are motorbike nuts, so this place is perfect as you can buy coffee, have breakfast and get a vintage bike all at the same time. Later we were thrilled to finally get news from our great friends Julia and Richard that their baby had been born - a girl hurrah. Beautiful Tess caused us to feel a little shiver of joy and recognition when we held her tiny body and remarked, not for the first time, how small babies are and how we couldn't believe our two were ever that small etc, when in fact they were both born smaller. With the sun shining again and Rob's night shifts over for the week, we decamped to the north shore, to Cremorne, to see our top mates Jacqui and Mark (she of the recent 40th birthday celebrations). Cremorne is known for its pretty spectacular uninterrupted views across the harbour to the bridge and Opera house, which we enjoyed looking at as the sun dropped lower in the sky and we ate fresh bread and brie, water melon and sipped chardonnay.