Australia Day, 26th January, is one day we celebrate on the actual day in Australia. We like our long weekends here and many public holidays are tacked on to the end of a weekend to give three days break. Australia Day and Anzac Day, another well received holiday are celebrated on their actual date. It helps, of course, that Australia Day falls in January, a month where the holiday atmosphere prevails. In Sydney, celebrations fit in with our summer festival.
We've had a quiet day at home. I'm not one for huge crowds and gatherings. We had our Aussie barbecue for lunch, although thin pork steaks marinaded in some hoisin sauce were the meat du jour, rather than the heavily advertised lamb. Multiculturalism has certainly widened our cuisine and my family appreciates food from many countries. I served a huge salad with not a single bit of Kraft plastic cheese or tinned beetroot or tinned pineapple to be seen. My grandmother would not have recognised most of the salad ingredients and without those items mentioned above, she probably would not have considered it a salad at all. She also probably would not have recognised the aubergine, zucchini and capsicum which were cooked on skewers on the BBQ.
We'll probably take a picnic down to the river at Abbotsford tonight to watch the decorated small boats return from a day on the harbour, starting with the great ferry boat race which finishes under the Harbour Bridge. This is a lot of fun with both old and more modern ferries doing everything possible to win this race. Lots of great pictures and some more info here .
There is much I would change if I could wave a magic wand over life here. Our treatment of indigenous peoples and refugees is a scandal. Single parent families and those on pensions do it hard. We have just had unpleasant race riots on some of our Sydney beaches. The environment is exploited. Education and more serious pursuits are downgraded by those who are sports mad.
However, while I would prefer not to live in the city, I would not swap this country for another as a permanent residence. I appreciate our climate, our relative freedom, our wonderful scenery,the opportunities which are here for those who take them.
I appreciate our history too, even if my ancestors were officers granted large areas of land rather than convicts. There have been moves to change the flag to reflect current society. While I am not a monarchist and would prefer us to be a republic, I think the Union Jack is a powerful reminder of where we originally started . This is not "kowtowing" to England, just a recognition of the past. The stars are the Southern Cross and represent our states. I feel more of an affinity with bloggers of a similar background eg Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, than wiht others.
Now I must resume my channel surfing between the Australian Open tennis and the one day cricket match betweeen Australia and Sri Lanka.!
Recent Comments