U3A Benalla
  • Home
  • Benalla
    • Benalla
    • Benalla District
    • Who, What and Where? - Benalla Rural City
  • About
    • Our U3A
    • President's Page
    • Executive Committee
    • Policies
    • Convenors >
      • Convenors
      • Convenors A - Z July 2025
    • Program Ideas
    • Newsletter
    • Website
  • Groups
    • Groups A - Z
    • Recent and Past Groups
  • A - B
    • A-Ch
    • 'A Taste of Art'
    • American History
    • Apple Refresher Course
    • Art Appreciation
    • 'As Time Goes By'
    • Australian Shares and Stock Market
    • Be Connected - Android
    • Be Connected - Tech Advice
    • Birdwatching
    • Brain Games
  • C - E
    • Ch - E
    • Car Torque
    • Cards '500'
    • Chat n' Chew
    • Coin Collectors
    • Collectors
    • Community Singing
    • Creative Writing
    • Demystifying Psychology - Discussion Group
    • Easy Bushwalking
    • Exercises for Fun
    • Exploring the Universe
  • F-Pa
    • F- Pa
    • Family Research
    • Film Discussion
    • Garden Appreciation
    • Garden Team
    • German >
      • German Home
      • Lessons
    • Let's Talk Books
    • Mahjong
    • Meet and Mingle
    • Music Appreciation
    • Page Turners
    • Patchwork and Craft
  • Ph-W
    • Ph -W
    • Photography
    • Pickleball
    • Play Reading
    • Politics & Current Affairs
    • Recorder
    • Singing for Fun
    • Stock and Land
    • Sustainability
    • Tech Talks
    • Train Buffs
    • Ukes4Fun
    • Wine Appreciation
  • Join
    • Join Us
    • Membership Application/Renewal Form
    • Program Guide - Sem 2
    • Timetable with Dates Sem 2
    • Venues and Maps
  • News
    • November Newsletter
    • News Blog
    • 'What's On' Calendar 2025
    • Monthly Calendar
    • Website & Facebook
  • FB
  • Gallery
  • Links
    • Resources and References
    • U3A Network Victoria
    • Seniors Online Victoria
    • U3A Albury Wodonga
    • U3A Beechworth (Indigo U3A)
    • U3A Bright
    • U3A Goulburn Valley
    • U3A Murrundindee East
    • U3A Wangaratta
  • Contact
  • Poetry Appreciation

Sydney Writers' Festival 2018

12/6/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
The Sydney Writers' Festival, held in the first week of May, moved to the Seymour Centre, a complex of theatres in the University of Sydney and the Carriage Works, about 9 minutes' walk away between Redfern and Newtown stations. In some ways not as good as the previously used Sydney Theatre Company venue on and near wharves close to the harbour bridge, but being more spacious they tended to work better.

There were not as many free sessions as previous years but most sessions were $20 for concession card holders. If there were unsold tickets at the start of the day on which a session was scheduled, prices were cut to $10 for everyone. Highly recommended. 

Jane Harper talked about her third crime novel, apparently set in western Queensland. She had travelled there for research for the novel and was it seemed inspired. Her presentation was marred somewhat by endless "ums" and "ahs" which made it difficult for an audibly impaired bloke like me to hear.

The interviewer suggested she'd had it somewhat easier than first novelists, in getting into very successful print in just two years, by mining her writing course participants to the nth degree. She didn't deny that they had helped enormously.

To hear Charles Massy talk about the Call of the Reed Warbler, between 70 and 80 people crammed into a small sound studio at the Seymour Centre. One questioner asked if any agricultural college had invited Massy to talk to their students. But he said absolutely none. He added that he had tried three times to start a course with existing educational establishments to expound his ideas, but without success.

I had heard an economist at a previous unrelated session about China, say that tractors had cut employment in Australian agriculture from 30 per cent to about 3 per cent in about 70 to 80 years in the 20th century. Repeating that I asked Charles what he thought and did he not think that combining tractors and computers had made evaluating no till, controlled traffic cropping and refined inputs easier and less impactive on already fragile soils. Charles acknowledged that to produce the quantities of food necessary such combinations were essential but doing it better than it had been done in the past.
Picture
Charles Massy being Interviewed at Sydney Writers' Festival 2018
Don Watson was as entertaining about his time as Keating's speech writer as ever  but was difficult to hear. Don and Paul fell out after Don published a book about his time with the prime minister, a division which still exists apparently. Don thought he represented their time together most accurately but Paul had different ideas. Kerry O'Brien interviewed Don quoting pieces from Don's books with great humour. A most entertaining session. At one point Don mourned the loss of the laconic and often tight lipped Gippslander from his youth, who he described as having a cigarette permanently stuck to the corner of his mouth - "usually unlit" - and missing two or three fingers.

A session with Warren Mundine was poorly attended with only about 50 people present. Warren said he was no longer an active political figure in any formal position. But he did say he was a political animal and played a fairly active if behind the scenes role, particularly where indigenous issues were being discussed. At one point he said that indigenous people owned 40 per cent of Australia and claimed that would soon increase to 80 per cent. That prompted two questions, one of which was who would be controlling that 80 per cent. Warren had no real answer for that. I think the 80 per cent statement got the audience offside a little.

Amy Goldstein's book Janesville studied the effect to the southern states' town of that name of the closure of a General Motors car assembly plant in the town. As the major employer the effect was dramatic with many people travelling up to 500km to achieve similar work. But for those who didn't travel - some were just into their 50s - there was just no way to earn anything like they had previously from the few jobs available in Janesville. Goldstein researched the book in 2011, three years after the closure and aid many of the affected people had not worked in that period and she thought they would not really work properly again. 

I had heard a lot of good reviews of The Trauma Cleaner and was keen to hear author Sarah Krasnostein. She is an American and interviewed the Melbourne woman/man, the subject of the book, who she found a an emergency services conference. The trauma cleaner, now dead, cleaned houses where there had been for example murders or someone had died and had not been found for a while. She also cleaned out houses where people had accumulated junk for years, situations I have had contact with in Benalla twice in the last year.

But the trauma cleaner had extraordinary ability to convince living hoarders to let her get on with her job as the occupiers often tried to put her off, saying "don't worry: I was just about to start doing it". Again that was an experience I had in both instances in Benalla.

On Friday May 4, although not part of the Writer's Festival, my sister and brother in law took me to see the play Still Point Turning, the life story of Catherine McGregor. Originally a man, he rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Australian Army, before having a sex change operation. The play put on by the Sydney Theatre Company is based on interviews with McGregor and deals skilfully with the traumas he went through before becoming a woman. At the end the cast were acknowledging a woman in black in the audience and it turned out it was McGregor checking the play out, which she apparently does fairly regularly.

Just realised I had said nothing about probably the most memorable session with Dr Charlie Corke and his book Letting Go. It is all about letting go of life in an orderly way instead of being subjected to treatments you don't really want. Charlie is based in Geelong and he told the session that after every ward round, someone says "just don't let me go that way". He said for example that you might decide you'd draw the line at having a tracheotomy and then be confined to a nursing home. Also it might be determining a level of frailty at which you would not want to continue to live. Charlie said pneumonia used to be the old person's friend but with antibiotics it can be cured easily. However people making what he calls a living will, might rule out that intervention. (I have a cousin whose famous husband was in his 80s but had lost all cognitive function and was in 24 hour care. But he was revived when he got pneumonia. She was furious with the doctors but they had assumed she wanted him revived).     
 
Altogether most rewarding as per usual.
 
David Palmer

Photographs - David Palmer

0 Comments

'Good Vibrations'

11/12/2017

0 Comments

 
'Vibrational Big City Move'

An OED definition of vibration is to say it is like a pendulum swinging to and fro. To quote, “Vibration – from the Latin vibrare, move rapidly to and fro, brandish, shake, etc. Of a pendulum to swing to and fro, to oscillate 1667. To quiver, shake, tremble, to move or oscillate between two extreme conditions, opinions.
 
In that vein in the early 1990s I was living here in Benalla, but my marriage had broken up and I was looking for a new job in journalism. I was interviewed in Melbourne by a Sydney publisher and in due course he told me I had won the job.
 
Indeed this was a swing of the pendulum and one I enjoyed in various roles for 15 years. The job was at Birkenhead Point in the inner west suburbs on the Harbour. So that was a quite significant swing from landlocked Benalla.
 
But not surprisingly, the lifestyle was quite different. I re-established contact with an old girl friend and thanks to her friends and knowledge of Sydney we were able to enjoy and suffer what the city had to offer on many levels.
 
In terms of suffering and harking back to that pendulum again, Anabel and I had three friends whose sons or brothers suffered so badly from schizophrenia that they committed suicide by jumping from the Gap, just round on the steep rocky seaward side of South Head.
 
That was just so out there for me and I know it was for the surviving relations too of course.
 
On a less sad level, my friend Anabel owned a beautiful small farm on the south coast near Kiama and we often went there at weekends, not least to fight rapidly encroaching lantana.  It is a nice, contained garden flower here, but in that warmer more humid climate, it simply takes off and dominates bush land in many areas on the coast.
 
So we sprayed and slashed and burned, seemingly sometimes to little effect. At the same time I had to deal with sand flies. They are difficult to see but leave wounds that particularly on your legs, seemingly need scratching for a week or more at a time.
Eventually I concocted a brew which when applied to my legs, kept them at bay.
 
On a cultural level too, Anabel took me to plays - Alan Bennet's History Boys and Lady in the Van stand out - and my Canberra based sister took me to operas at the opera house.
Hardly missed an art gallery, museum or any other exhibition either. Living in Paddington - John Olsen's gallery was just round the corner - I didn't miss much in the art world anyway.
 
We also hiked some amazing walks around the harbour and in one case I remember an angry landowner shouting that we were walking across his Harbourside land. We even undertook the old colonial road walk towards Newcastle. Never got that far though.
 
Well the pendulum has swung back to Benalla and while I have some regrets, I love this town and the people and what it has to offer too. Good vibrations on all levels.

0 Comments
    'Our Stories'

    David's page

    One of our original members who has written many stories over the years,  David also wrote newsletter reports for the  'Stock and Land' ,and the 'Sky's the Limit' groups as well as articles publicising U3A in the Benalla Ensign. David still submitted a story from time to time, that's if he wasn't helping someone out on a farm somewhere. 

    Picture

    '500 words'

    All
    Adulthood
    'Advice'
    'A Farm Forged Friendship'
    'A Fortight's Walk In Spain'
    'A Friendship Tested'
    'A Girl In One Port Was Enough'
    'A Love Letter To Travel'
    'A Snake Story'
    'A Story For Children'
    'A Test Of Courage'
    'A Trampoline For Freddie'
    Aviation/Flying
    'A Walk In Japan'
    'Backpacks And Blisters Matter'
    Benalla
    'Car Stories'
    Childhood
    'Cringe'
    Don't Wing It'
    Early Adulthood
    'Faking It'
    Family History
    Fatherhood
    'Fish Out Of Water'
    'For Better For Worse'
    Getting Older
    Gliding
    'Good Vibrations'
    Grandparents
    Growing Up
    'Heartbreak'
    'Here And Now'
    'How We Met'
    ''I Grew Up ... '
    "I Quit!"
    'I Was There'
    'I Was There''
    'Joanie Delighted In Rural History'
    Joan Palmer
    Journalism
    'Life Changing'
    'Lost And Found'
    'My Gap Year'
    'My Mother The Writer'
    'My Other Life'
    'New Boy In Town'
    Palmer Side
    Parents
    Rebellion
    Relationships
    'Right Here
    Right Now'
    Schooling
    'Shaped By Childhood'
    'Stand Up Comedy Set'
    Stock And Land
    Sydney
    'Sydney Writers' Festival 2018'
    'The Moral Is
    'The Sky's The Limit'
    'The Year That Changed Me - 1974'
    'This Beat Up Has No Reference To Journalism'
    'Ticket? Don't Take It!
    Travel
    'Travel Tales'
    'Triggers'
    'Vibrational Big City Move'
    'Walking The Camino'
    Writing

    Other writing by David 

    As David convenor of the Stock and Land group, until mid 2024 David wrote the monthly newsletter reports also posted in our 'Stock and Land'  and 'Sky's the Limit' news blogs. 
    ​
    A number of David's family stories also appear 'David Palmer' on the Family Research page.

    During his time as  Publicity Officer on the U3A Benalla executive committee articles written by David also appeared in the Benalla Ensign.

    Archives

    July 2024
    June 2024
    February 2024
    November 2023
    October 2022
    March 2021
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    September 2018
    June 2018
    December 2017
    October 2017
    August 2017
    June 2017
    February 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015

    RSS Feed

We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet and pay our respects to their elders - past, present and emerging.
Picture
News
​Newsletter
Facebook Page
​
Program Suggestions
​CO-VID Safety

U3A Benalla Flier 2025
Membership Application/Renewal
​
Semester 2 Program Guide 2025
Semester 2 Timetable with Dates 2025
Developed and maintained by members, this website showcases U3A Benalla 
​Photographs - U3A members; Benalla Art Gallery website; ​Weebly 'Free' images;Travel Victoria and State Library of Victoria