My cardiac specialist, James Leitch rang me late this afternoon to congratulate me on the results of my psychometric test. He said I was in the top 1% of the population for cognitive ability and said I could immediately resume driving and cycling as well conducting academic studies.
This sent my spirits soaring, but then I remembered that I've just had a tooth extracted!! Now for the painful task of not eating for a while and the feeling of pain as the anaesthetic wears off. Fortunately, it's bridge night and the cut and thrust of the game may spare some of my thoughts on the subject.
AS
This BLOG chronicles the lifestyle and activities of the Sorensen family resident in Armidale, a small town located in the high country (>1000m) of the New England district of northern NSW, Australia.
Tuesday, 29 April 2008
Monday, 28 April 2008
Tidbinbilla
Another week, another place! We certainly get around. This time we could resist our craving for Max, so we took advantage of the ANZAC day long weekend to fly to Canberra to be with Max, and of course Beck and Rob.
He's a lovely kid - so active and inquiring at the advanced age of 3.75 - and rather large with it too. And we are regarded as a kind of perpetual Santa Claus. So, when we first went round to his home in the Canberra suburb of Waramanga on the Friday evening, his first greeting was "what have got me?". As it happened, the answer was quite a lot. In fact, we presented him with three robots: a fearsome looking character who looked like something our of starwars; a dinosaur; and a dog. All three items walked around the room on their own after a fashion, and Max was very taken with all of them, taking great delight in trying to get the dinosaur to bite em.
On Saturday morning, we went with Max to a friend's birthday party at a special kid's party room, called Kidszone, at the Belconnen shopping centre. The room contained lots of climbing equipment, slides, pits full of foam balls, and - most important tables where the kids could eat. He had a wonderful time with all the cake, fairy bread, and chips, and with the play equipment where he battled full-bore against his pre-school friends. The picture shows him with his best friend, Callan, who's the same age, but several sizes smaller.
After that we went shopping at the Belconnen Centre and had lunch ... well, Max wasn't too excited about lunch after all that fairy bread. He had a lovely time in "Socrates", which sells games for intelligent youngsters, trying out the various toys which he wanted to buy. In the end I bought him a flower garden where one sets up a cardboard landscape and pour in a chemical. After about 10 hours (overnight), the card soaks up the liquid and sprouds coloured crystals, much to Max's interest. He also tried out the plasma screens in the David Jones department store.
The following morning, we took Max to see Beck play her first soccer game of the season in the Canberra league. They lost 2-1 against a good side, so her team was not disgraced. Max spent to time watching the match, though Rob takes him to watch the Canberra Raiders (in the national Rugby League competition) and the ACT Brumbies (in the southern hemisphere's very very strong Union competition). The latter has teams from South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand ... and possibly next year Argentina. To put this in perpsective, it would be a bit like Ireland, Wales, and Scotland playing teams from Vladivostok, Chicago, and Tehran in a northern hemisphere equivalent.
Anyway, back to soccer in Canberra. Max had a great time rolling down a grassy slope, kicking a full-sized ball between me, Rob and himself, building a nest of twigs, and playing with a dog. In the afternoon, we took him out to the Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve to look at a new wetland they had recently opened. It was very good, which is more than you can say for the weather. After a while, it poured, blew a gale, and the temperature plummeted 10 degrees. Snow was forecast for the Snowy Mountains further south and no doubt they got it. Anyway, Max had lots of fun and is convinced that he's seen a live dinosaur. Rob told him that a very large water bird called a Brolga was in fact a dinosaur. He was also fascinated by a black swan hatching eggs on a nest - which seems strange going into winter! Finally, we ended up at the Hog's Breath restaurant for en evening meal, which was a bit of a disaster. They forgot Max's meal ... which he eventually received free of charge!
Max now knows that he's going to see Aunt Emily in 10 days time. The excitement is mounting, though he has no idea that he's travelling in a very big plane for a very long period of time (the best part of a day). Still less does he know that he's heading to Disneyland on the way, stopping over at Anaheim in Los Angeles for a couple of days. I'd love to be there to see his response to all those challenges.
AS
Thursday, 17 April 2008
Changing Season
During the last week the arrival of Autumn has become very noticeable. Daytime temperatures have plunged as much as 8 degrees (C) over a few days, and suddenly the trees have turned colour, from green to crimson in many cases. Given Armidale's concentration of deciduous trees, the effect is extremely attractive.
On the other hand, native vegetation is mostly not deciduous. The advantage is that our landscapes, especially the forested ones, always look green. Our garden has a balanced vegetation mixture, but that doesn't prevent a lot of work raking up of leaves as the deciduous trees are becoming mature. That task seems to fall (excuse the pun) to Dot - I seem to banned from most gardening tasks!
AS
On the other hand, native vegetation is mostly not deciduous. The advantage is that our landscapes, especially the forested ones, always look green. Our garden has a balanced vegetation mixture, but that doesn't prevent a lot of work raking up of leaves as the deciduous trees are becoming mature. That task seems to fall (excuse the pun) to Dot - I seem to banned from most gardening tasks!
AS
Centre for Independent Studies
I'm late in reporting my visit to Sydney last week. Dot let me out on my own to fly to Sydney last Thursday for a day to attend a seminar late afternoon and evening. The Centre for Independent Studies, to which I subscribe, assembled an impressive array of professors to discuss the relevance of the ideas of Friedrich von Hayek to the 21st century.
This might seem rather esoteric and hardly worth the $500 it cost me. In fact, it was intellectually stimulating, and generated, for me, lots of new perspectives. Issues covered included the role of reserve banks, circumstances in which regulation is necessary, appropriate forms of regulation, trade, industry policy and tax-churning. Interestingly, some of the presentations traced the history of Hayek's ideas and his antecedents. I know of his debt to Adam Smith, but was surprised that he probably owed more to the other well-known Scottish moral philosopher, David Hume.
The best presentation was given by Chandran Kukuthas, a professor at the LSE. I know him quite well and he was at university with one of my very good friends, Paul Collits, who I expected to see there. Perhaps I should not have been surprised when he didn't show, since he now lives in Hamilton - about 1500 km from Sydney. Still, I'm off to visit Paul in Hamilton (Vic) at his expense on May 8th. That's not too far away. I'm going there as a visiting guru to enthuse the locals about new approaches to regional development policy!
More about that later after our visit to Canberra for the ANZAC day long weekend. What other nation would set aside a day to celebrate a major military defeat!
AS
This might seem rather esoteric and hardly worth the $500 it cost me. In fact, it was intellectually stimulating, and generated, for me, lots of new perspectives. Issues covered included the role of reserve banks, circumstances in which regulation is necessary, appropriate forms of regulation, trade, industry policy and tax-churning. Interestingly, some of the presentations traced the history of Hayek's ideas and his antecedents. I know of his debt to Adam Smith, but was surprised that he probably owed more to the other well-known Scottish moral philosopher, David Hume.
The best presentation was given by Chandran Kukuthas, a professor at the LSE. I know him quite well and he was at university with one of my very good friends, Paul Collits, who I expected to see there. Perhaps I should not have been surprised when he didn't show, since he now lives in Hamilton - about 1500 km from Sydney. Still, I'm off to visit Paul in Hamilton (Vic) at his expense on May 8th. That's not too far away. I'm going there as a visiting guru to enthuse the locals about new approaches to regional development policy!
More about that later after our visit to Canberra for the ANZAC day long weekend. What other nation would set aside a day to celebrate a major military defeat!
AS
Saturday, 5 April 2008
Stepping Out
The Armidale district is home to maybe just 30,000 people, but recent statistics on spatial well-being put us in the top 10% of local government areas on a range of educational, occupational, and other indicators. These characteristics are behind our abundant cultural life, as reported in several postings. So, for example, we have:
We await the next performance in two months with interest. They're putting on TITANIC in UNE's Lazenby Hall. I can't quite envisage the sinking of the Titanic on what is quite a small stage 1000 m above sea level. And, no doubt, we'll soon see a performance of Aida or Gotterdammerung and the local reconstruction of the Pyramids or Valhalla. And we're five months away from a realistic reconstruction of the Last Night of the Proms complete with all the old favourites in the second half with the audience armed with flags and streamers! The last are supplied by Armidale's "British Shop" which sells UK memorabilia.
AS
- the Armidale Playhouse (AP) staging a series of ambitious amateur productions,
- occasional Shakespeare plays,
- opera in the paddock and concerts from at least three orchestras including the Sydney SO,
- an annual Bach Festival,
- brass band (like last weekend), bagpipe, and jazz concerts, and so on.
We await the next performance in two months with interest. They're putting on TITANIC in UNE's Lazenby Hall. I can't quite envisage the sinking of the Titanic on what is quite a small stage 1000 m above sea level. And, no doubt, we'll soon see a performance of Aida or Gotterdammerung and the local reconstruction of the Pyramids or Valhalla. And we're five months away from a realistic reconstruction of the Last Night of the Proms complete with all the old favourites in the second half with the audience armed with flags and streamers! The last are supplied by Armidale's "British Shop" which sells UK memorabilia.
AS
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