So yesterday after spending seriously all day doing some form of school work from writing papers, lectures, prewriting, etc., my friend Ben from Minesota called me up and asked if I wanted to accompany him to West End to hear some music. We'd been trying to plan this for two weeks now, and it finally worked out where both of us weren't busy on a Monday night.
We met up at Guyatt Park to take the city cat all the way over to West End (it's just across the river--you can see the stop from Guyatt). West End is the "Asheville" of Brisbane. Ecclectic, good music, diverse people, quirky shops. I can see myself liking it; this was the first time I had made it over there. We took the bus into the town from the city cat, and then walked up to our music venue: The Shire. Ha, this place was awesome. It was all outside with blankets and towels laid out, a table with pillows to sit on, a tree with a solitary leaf on it and a disco ball revolving, dreds in every direction, good tea, and great music all the time. They played everything from Bob Marley to Duke Ellington on guitars, mandolins, ukuleles, banjos, etc. Ben introduced me to some of his girl friends that were there, and we chilled listening to music under the starry sky and disco ball. Perfect night for friends and good music.
Tonight is the lunar eclipse with the red color, which I am about to leave to go observe. I'm kind of excited about it. So I'll update again this week. Sorry pictures still aren't up! I know I'm really behind on that, but I promise I have them...alot of them, so they'll be there soon! Look for a Sydney album, a Minmore farms album, and an update on the Brisvegas album soon!
Much love to all of you.
28.8.07
26.8.07
G'day from Minmore!
This weekend was spent out in the bushland in a town called Kingroy Farms on Minmore Farm. Myself and four other girls from my program stayed with a nice grandma/grandpa couple on their 15000 acre cattle farm. Let me start by saying my grandparents own a farm in North Carolina on the border near Danville, VA. Not only did this place look like the farm, but it had that same old farm house smell. It made me feel so at home even though I’m on the other side of the globe. A very comforting and happy feeling came over me; especially when we had beef stew (minmore beef, of course) and veggies for dinner followed by a yummy warm dessert (date cupcake with ice cream and carmel sauce). I automatically felt Dionne’s grandmother touch when she told me to go get seconds, haha. Graham’s grandfather-ness came out when he began telling stories of the farm and of his childhood. We arrived at Minmore by 6:00 that night, so after dinner we spent time playing cards, mancala, and chinese checkers with Dionne while Graham gave us tea and told jokes. It had been raining all night, and I fell asleep to the rain pattering on the tin roof along with the sound of the possums (much cuter than in the US) running across the porch.
Saturday morning, Dionne woke us up at 8 for breakfast: cereal, yogurt, bacon, egg, and toast. There must be a universal grandma law that you don’t let guests go hungry in the slightest; I’m totally okay with this. Their son, Graham, came by after we finished breakfast, and he and his father took us around the farm in the back of the trucks to check all the water pumps for the cows. Lucky for us, Saturday decided to stay beautiful and dry unlike the entire past week full of wind and rain. Their land was beautiful full of eucalyptus trees, these prehistoric palm trees, huge ant mounds (really funny looking), and plenty of cows. After rolling through all the dirt roads in the farm, we came back to the house for lunch. Sandwiches on the veranda with the cats and dogs at our feet, and afternoon tea to finish it off. Okay, so after lunch, young Graham announced to us that he had brought his dirt bike on the back of his truck for us to learn to ride if we wanted! Um, yes! While everyone else took their turn at the motorbike, older Graham taught me how to crack a whip. It took me a while, and my arm now is pretty sore, but I finally broke the speed of sound with that whip! Ha, it was too cool; all the birds of the near by tree flew away.
Another couple games of chinese checkers with older Graham and Shamiso went by before young Graham asked whose turn it was on the bike. I laced up my tennis shoes, grabbed the helmet, and got on behind him to get down the road a ways. “Here’s the clutch, here’s the gear pedal, here’s the gas, the hand break, the foot break…push this, pull that, ease off this, and you’re good.” Uhhh, right. So with Graham now behind me on the bike, I push the pedal down to first gear, ease off the clutch, give the engine a rev, and off I went! I hobbled my way for a bit, but I caught on really quick and switched to second, third, fourth gear. Graham complimented me by asking if I had ever rode a bike before or knew someone who did because I caught on so fast. He directed me to a field where I could practice driving, where I manuvered around those big ant piles and cow maneuer. Then he had me go back out to the road and work on going over bridges and up hills. I had the best time riding that thing (I was only going about 50km/hr…fast enough for me!)
We eased back to the house, where I met up with Dionne, Martha, and Shamiso to go on a walk to the boulders on the land. We met Zach, the blind bull, who was wondering aimlessly next to the road. Dionne took us up a hill where these massive rocks leaned on one another; her daughter used to take her books up to the top and study. I wish I had that kind of retreat for studying. Of course, the three of us decide to climb up, and the view was beautiful; we could see so much of their land as well as the Bunya Mountains, which have sub tropical rainforests on the tops of them.
When we got back to the farm, Graham was once again offering rides on the motorbike, but this time, by yourself on the bike. I immediately asked to go, and he told me that as his best pupil of the day that I could go straight away! I pulled on the helmet and started the bike up. With Graham next to me on another bike, we zoomed off down the road away from the house. It was so much fun riding next to Graham and zipping over bridges and around turns. Well, it felt like zipping; 45km/hr = 30mi/hr. That’s right, I’m a speed demon. Dinner soon followed after with a roast, white and sweet potatoes, onions, broccoli, and peas. Yum. Followed by…drumroll…apple cobbler and custard. Heck. Yes. I really couldn’t help myself when my hand reached for the spoon to get a second helping. I was helpless to the power of its sweetness. We all kept joking that we should’ve brought tupperware from Brisbane to help them take care of the many left overs that they surely would accumulate. Evening tea and trivial pursuit along with a showing of You’ve Got Mail ended the evening with Dionne and Graham.
As I walked down the porch to my room, I looked at the sky only to see the clouds have finally cleared after a week to reveal so many stars that I stood there with my mouth gaping for a good minute. First off, I love stargazing, and any PCer knows the meaning behind a warm blanket, a dark field, and loads of stars. This sky was absolutely spectacular, ineffable. With that, I crawled into my warm bed and sadly realized that I’d be leaving my haven in the morning. Breakfast at 7:30, pack up, then time to go. A hug and kiss from my Australian grandparent figures before I hopped on the bus with my sack lunch in hand.
Saturday morning, Dionne woke us up at 8 for breakfast: cereal, yogurt, bacon, egg, and toast. There must be a universal grandma law that you don’t let guests go hungry in the slightest; I’m totally okay with this. Their son, Graham, came by after we finished breakfast, and he and his father took us around the farm in the back of the trucks to check all the water pumps for the cows. Lucky for us, Saturday decided to stay beautiful and dry unlike the entire past week full of wind and rain. Their land was beautiful full of eucalyptus trees, these prehistoric palm trees, huge ant mounds (really funny looking), and plenty of cows. After rolling through all the dirt roads in the farm, we came back to the house for lunch. Sandwiches on the veranda with the cats and dogs at our feet, and afternoon tea to finish it off. Okay, so after lunch, young Graham announced to us that he had brought his dirt bike on the back of his truck for us to learn to ride if we wanted! Um, yes! While everyone else took their turn at the motorbike, older Graham taught me how to crack a whip. It took me a while, and my arm now is pretty sore, but I finally broke the speed of sound with that whip! Ha, it was too cool; all the birds of the near by tree flew away.
Another couple games of chinese checkers with older Graham and Shamiso went by before young Graham asked whose turn it was on the bike. I laced up my tennis shoes, grabbed the helmet, and got on behind him to get down the road a ways. “Here’s the clutch, here’s the gear pedal, here’s the gas, the hand break, the foot break…push this, pull that, ease off this, and you’re good.” Uhhh, right. So with Graham now behind me on the bike, I push the pedal down to first gear, ease off the clutch, give the engine a rev, and off I went! I hobbled my way for a bit, but I caught on really quick and switched to second, third, fourth gear. Graham complimented me by asking if I had ever rode a bike before or knew someone who did because I caught on so fast. He directed me to a field where I could practice driving, where I manuvered around those big ant piles and cow maneuer. Then he had me go back out to the road and work on going over bridges and up hills. I had the best time riding that thing (I was only going about 50km/hr…fast enough for me!)
We eased back to the house, where I met up with Dionne, Martha, and Shamiso to go on a walk to the boulders on the land. We met Zach, the blind bull, who was wondering aimlessly next to the road. Dionne took us up a hill where these massive rocks leaned on one another; her daughter used to take her books up to the top and study. I wish I had that kind of retreat for studying. Of course, the three of us decide to climb up, and the view was beautiful; we could see so much of their land as well as the Bunya Mountains, which have sub tropical rainforests on the tops of them.
When we got back to the farm, Graham was once again offering rides on the motorbike, but this time, by yourself on the bike. I immediately asked to go, and he told me that as his best pupil of the day that I could go straight away! I pulled on the helmet and started the bike up. With Graham next to me on another bike, we zoomed off down the road away from the house. It was so much fun riding next to Graham and zipping over bridges and around turns. Well, it felt like zipping; 45km/hr = 30mi/hr. That’s right, I’m a speed demon. Dinner soon followed after with a roast, white and sweet potatoes, onions, broccoli, and peas. Yum. Followed by…drumroll…apple cobbler and custard. Heck. Yes. I really couldn’t help myself when my hand reached for the spoon to get a second helping. I was helpless to the power of its sweetness. We all kept joking that we should’ve brought tupperware from Brisbane to help them take care of the many left overs that they surely would accumulate. Evening tea and trivial pursuit along with a showing of You’ve Got Mail ended the evening with Dionne and Graham.
As I walked down the porch to my room, I looked at the sky only to see the clouds have finally cleared after a week to reveal so many stars that I stood there with my mouth gaping for a good minute. First off, I love stargazing, and any PCer knows the meaning behind a warm blanket, a dark field, and loads of stars. This sky was absolutely spectacular, ineffable. With that, I crawled into my warm bed and sadly realized that I’d be leaving my haven in the morning. Breakfast at 7:30, pack up, then time to go. A hug and kiss from my Australian grandparent figures before I hopped on the bus with my sack lunch in hand.
8.8.07
You didn't tell me you had PASTA!?!
Sunday was a great day, let me tell you. Went to my first rugby game; Brissy lost, but they were missing most of their starters and it was still fun to be there! We had great seats and all the Butler kids sat together. The roommates and I matched, unintentionally and embarassingly haha. same color shirt, three different sleeve lengths; oh, it was cute. The game was really fun to watch and I got some tips on everything from Christi's, our ifsa rep, boyfriend. Useful since there are still a few things I obviously don't understand. There were the big dressed up broncos that were waving from the sidelines, and the cheerleaders with their gigantic pompoms came and did dances to...no music. We laughed and cheered and then sighed when we knew it was over. That took up a big chunk of the afternoon, and we got back in time to eat dinner before I realized I needed to head over to campus. Brett, one of the guys from frisbee, invited me to a christian worship meeting...kinda like CO? Those who know me at school know that I'm not exactly a CO person...but this was a bit different, which was good. Enjoyable, met some cool people, the talk was alright. "Store your treasures in heaven." We had a discussion, and I met the leader, Rich, who had been working there for 7 years now.
Afterwards, Brett, John, Bree and myself decided to find food. Subway #1 was closed, went to the one in Toowong, and John and I decided to be cheap and make pasta back at my apartment. Brett, not being in on the discussion, got all upset that we did not include him in this free and tasty alternative to a footlong sub. We drove back to my place, put on the pasta, and they got to meet Debbie and Jess. Finally, my two worlds that I have here collide, and it was great. Non stop laughter, thanks mostly to Deb, and pesto to go all around. Yum. After a bit of time here, John, Brett, and I went back to Brett's place to watch tv, and chat. Midnight came around and time to head back. I kind of had class the next day that I needed to get ready for...
Classes still going well! I love my tutorials alot; great discussion and the people are nice. I really like my world religions tute; this week we made up our own religions that had to line up with Ninian Smith's 7 Demensions of Religion. Ours was chocolate. Our diety was Willy Wonka, and we had all aspects of a religion; even a pilgrimage to the Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory! We enjoyed that, and our tutor said he just might convert. Belief and Unbelief tute was better this week than last; there was actual discussion! Thank goodness! I met a guy, Ben, from frisbee who is in that class, and he might be switching to my tute, so that'll be nice to have someone I know in there.
Today I had lunch with Rich, the leader from Unimpact, which went great. We went to the Subway that I attempted to go to on Sunday. We talked about our background, why I'm here, what's possibly in store next. It was great, and I hope to be able to have more talks as I go along. I love one on one chats, so it was nice. I spent an hour getting to know him before I had to head back to campus for my one class of the day. I about an hour I'm getting ready to leave for Sydney until Sunday morning where I'll fly out around 8 am. I'm really excited about the 3 full days I get to play tourist down in Sydney and visit with friends from the Butler orientation up at Noosa that is already a month in history. wow, it's been so long already! So be on the lookout for another entry when I get home to update on the trip!
Peace and love.
Afterwards, Brett, John, Bree and myself decided to find food. Subway #1 was closed, went to the one in Toowong, and John and I decided to be cheap and make pasta back at my apartment. Brett, not being in on the discussion, got all upset that we did not include him in this free and tasty alternative to a footlong sub. We drove back to my place, put on the pasta, and they got to meet Debbie and Jess. Finally, my two worlds that I have here collide, and it was great. Non stop laughter, thanks mostly to Deb, and pesto to go all around. Yum. After a bit of time here, John, Brett, and I went back to Brett's place to watch tv, and chat. Midnight came around and time to head back. I kind of had class the next day that I needed to get ready for...
Classes still going well! I love my tutorials alot; great discussion and the people are nice. I really like my world religions tute; this week we made up our own religions that had to line up with Ninian Smith's 7 Demensions of Religion. Ours was chocolate. Our diety was Willy Wonka, and we had all aspects of a religion; even a pilgrimage to the Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory! We enjoyed that, and our tutor said he just might convert. Belief and Unbelief tute was better this week than last; there was actual discussion! Thank goodness! I met a guy, Ben, from frisbee who is in that class, and he might be switching to my tute, so that'll be nice to have someone I know in there.
Today I had lunch with Rich, the leader from Unimpact, which went great. We went to the Subway that I attempted to go to on Sunday. We talked about our background, why I'm here, what's possibly in store next. It was great, and I hope to be able to have more talks as I go along. I love one on one chats, so it was nice. I spent an hour getting to know him before I had to head back to campus for my one class of the day. I about an hour I'm getting ready to leave for Sydney until Sunday morning where I'll fly out around 8 am. I'm really excited about the 3 full days I get to play tourist down in Sydney and visit with friends from the Butler orientation up at Noosa that is already a month in history. wow, it's been so long already! So be on the lookout for another entry when I get home to update on the trip!
Peace and love.
5.8.07
Southbank is my new weekend hangout.
It seems I cannot spend a weekend in Brissie without ending up in Southbank at one point. Last night, I met up with some ultimate disc kids for a movie and ice cream. License to Wed, pretty good movie. Even better with Aussies whispering jokes up and down the row with you, haha. Ice cream at a place called Cold Rock, ironically alot like Cold STONE or Marble Slab, but you know...they don't have cadbury chocolate to put in your ice cream at home. oh yea. stayed there for about two hours talking about frisbee, trips to take, things to do, when someone came up with the bright idea of going to play disc golf back at campus. when? right now. 11:30. i'm for it!
We all hopped in cars and met back up at one of the residential colleges where one of the guys lives to pick up jumpers (sweatshirts) and a few discs. We wound all through campus hitting various poles, trees, bins, signs, between and under poles, etc, etc, etc. It was great. I won a couple holes, but I definitely could improve a few of my throws, haha. The course that they made up a few months ago ended back up at Cromwell College, where we started. It had gotten pretty chilly, and it was about 2 in the morning by the time we finished the game, so heading back to Brett's room sounded like a good idea. The group of us sat around eating tim tams and watching this terrible, yet extremely funny, old Asian Horror film about a flying head chasing this group around an old hotel. It was 4 am before all of us left. Lets just say, it was the end to a good day.
Earlier in the day, Debbie and I went into the valley to look around. There was a market down there, so we tried on funky sunglasses and dresses and enjoyed the warm day. Debbie was on a mission for a printer which we tracked down, and I bought a capo for my new little guitar that I bought for only $60. It's pretty sweet. I like it. It's cute. :) The capo is pretty and gold, and the guys I bought it from enjoyed making fun of my accent and me saying, "Do YA'LL have any capos for acoustic guitars?" One replyed, "Now there's an accent, where are you from missy?" It was enjoyable.
The day before--Friday--Jess, Piper, and myself decided to take a tour of the XXXX brewery, which is the beer made in Queensland. Each state has its beer, apparently. NSW - Tooheys, Victoria - Victoria Bitter, Western Australia - Little Creatures, Southern Australia - Coopers...yea okay, well the tour was actually fun and kinda funny. they put some animation stuff into it which was really goofy, and they showed us old commericals. oh, aussie humor...haha. Seeing the production lines was pretty cool. At the end we got to sample. very enjoyable. I also picked up my guitar on friday. that was a trek. ugh. too many train changes. but i got it so it was worth it.
Today is a beautiful cloudless, warm, sunny day, and I'm gearing up for the Bronco's game that's in an hour! Brisbane Broncos are playing the Manly Sea Eagles over at Suncorp Stadium off of Milton Avenue. I'm pretty excited to go! Tonight i'm meeting up w/the frisbee kids once again for church on campus. Then believe it or not I actually have work to get done for school. ick. not too much thankfully, but it still has to happen. More pictures will be up tonight/tomorrow! Oh, and for those who didn't pick up on it, my new pictures are going in older albums...the Brisbane album will be getting updated frequently, I'm sure, and there's new orientation pictures! Next weekend there will be a Sydney album to look out for! :)
Much love!
We all hopped in cars and met back up at one of the residential colleges where one of the guys lives to pick up jumpers (sweatshirts) and a few discs. We wound all through campus hitting various poles, trees, bins, signs, between and under poles, etc, etc, etc. It was great. I won a couple holes, but I definitely could improve a few of my throws, haha. The course that they made up a few months ago ended back up at Cromwell College, where we started. It had gotten pretty chilly, and it was about 2 in the morning by the time we finished the game, so heading back to Brett's room sounded like a good idea. The group of us sat around eating tim tams and watching this terrible, yet extremely funny, old Asian Horror film about a flying head chasing this group around an old hotel. It was 4 am before all of us left. Lets just say, it was the end to a good day.
Earlier in the day, Debbie and I went into the valley to look around. There was a market down there, so we tried on funky sunglasses and dresses and enjoyed the warm day. Debbie was on a mission for a printer which we tracked down, and I bought a capo for my new little guitar that I bought for only $60. It's pretty sweet. I like it. It's cute. :) The capo is pretty and gold, and the guys I bought it from enjoyed making fun of my accent and me saying, "Do YA'LL have any capos for acoustic guitars?" One replyed, "Now there's an accent, where are you from missy?" It was enjoyable.
The day before--Friday--Jess, Piper, and myself decided to take a tour of the XXXX brewery, which is the beer made in Queensland. Each state has its beer, apparently. NSW - Tooheys, Victoria - Victoria Bitter, Western Australia - Little Creatures, Southern Australia - Coopers...yea okay, well the tour was actually fun and kinda funny. they put some animation stuff into it which was really goofy, and they showed us old commericals. oh, aussie humor...haha. Seeing the production lines was pretty cool. At the end we got to sample. very enjoyable. I also picked up my guitar on friday. that was a trek. ugh. too many train changes. but i got it so it was worth it.
Today is a beautiful cloudless, warm, sunny day, and I'm gearing up for the Bronco's game that's in an hour! Brisbane Broncos are playing the Manly Sea Eagles over at Suncorp Stadium off of Milton Avenue. I'm pretty excited to go! Tonight i'm meeting up w/the frisbee kids once again for church on campus. Then believe it or not I actually have work to get done for school. ick. not too much thankfully, but it still has to happen. More pictures will be up tonight/tomorrow! Oh, and for those who didn't pick up on it, my new pictures are going in older albums...the Brisbane album will be getting updated frequently, I'm sure, and there's new orientation pictures! Next weekend there will be a Sydney album to look out for! :)
Much love!
2.8.07
Tim Tam SLAM
So many things to say, not enough time to say it. This past week has been awesome. I've started classes. We'll start with that...
Classes are done not too differently from PC. Powerpoints are big down here. And for some reason, they LOVE to use YouTube for lectures. I think it's great. Then we build discussion off whatever clip they may have found. All the classes are Blackboard based. All the readings, the lecture notes, discussion questions, assigments, etc are all done on blackboard. Since classes are bigger, tutorials are set up during the week. Basically, we have small group discussions once a week on the lecture and actually discuss the reading for that week. Whoever our tutor is grades our assessments as well. So far, so good. My lecturers are great, lots of fun, and I've met some people in class as well.
Last weekend a bunch of us went down to Southbank again, but this weekend there was a dance...thing...going on. There were 5 stages set up on the street, and at 6 there were belly dancers, break dancers, hip hop dancers, tap dancers, latin, salsa, swing, etc, etc, etc. They had performances as well as workshops. Debbie and I learned an amazing hip hop dance; we're basically professionals now. Earlier that day we checked out the Gallery of Modern Art. Awesome exhibitions, lots of color, big balloons. yep.
This week has been the free week at the gym before you have to start paying for classes, so we've all been trying out different classes and sports and stuff. I went out to check out the Ultimate Disc Club here; let me say, they're amazing. It's soo much fun! We played for 2 1/2 hours Wednesday night, then went out to dinner afterwards down the road. They do lots of tournaments, including a week long tournament at the Gold Coast at the end of September. Lots of Aussies and Americans, and I met alot of cool people last night with similar interests as myself, so needless to say i'm going back haha.
I have not yet told the home crowd about the title of this post. Tim. Tam. Slam. First off, amazing cookie chocolate thing that needs to make its way to the states; that's a tim tam. to layers of cookie with chocolate in the middle. then covered once, sometimes twice, in chocolate. it's heaven on it's own let me tell you. Then you add the slam. Obtain for yourself a beverage. Preferably hot, like coffee, tea, hot chocolate. I've also done it with milk. yum. Bite off two opposite corners of the tim tam, stick one in the beverage of choice and the other end in your mouth. Start sucking like a straw. Soon your cookie will be full of your coffee with the taste of chocolate...eventually, the cookie loses stability and collapses, which is when you shove the whole thing in your mouth. Probably the best thing anyone can do with their life right there. The end. Nuff said. Go online and ship yourselves some tim tams now. I'm sure I'll be writing about "Pods" later which I have not yet tried but have been advised to buy immediately and eat many of them.
This weekend could quite possibly be filled with koala hugs, shopping in the city, and rugby. Be on the lookout for an update soon! PS - new pictures up! check it out!
Much love to all.
Classes are done not too differently from PC. Powerpoints are big down here. And for some reason, they LOVE to use YouTube for lectures. I think it's great. Then we build discussion off whatever clip they may have found. All the classes are Blackboard based. All the readings, the lecture notes, discussion questions, assigments, etc are all done on blackboard. Since classes are bigger, tutorials are set up during the week. Basically, we have small group discussions once a week on the lecture and actually discuss the reading for that week. Whoever our tutor is grades our assessments as well. So far, so good. My lecturers are great, lots of fun, and I've met some people in class as well.
Last weekend a bunch of us went down to Southbank again, but this weekend there was a dance...thing...going on. There were 5 stages set up on the street, and at 6 there were belly dancers, break dancers, hip hop dancers, tap dancers, latin, salsa, swing, etc, etc, etc. They had performances as well as workshops. Debbie and I learned an amazing hip hop dance; we're basically professionals now. Earlier that day we checked out the Gallery of Modern Art. Awesome exhibitions, lots of color, big balloons. yep.
This week has been the free week at the gym before you have to start paying for classes, so we've all been trying out different classes and sports and stuff. I went out to check out the Ultimate Disc Club here; let me say, they're amazing. It's soo much fun! We played for 2 1/2 hours Wednesday night, then went out to dinner afterwards down the road. They do lots of tournaments, including a week long tournament at the Gold Coast at the end of September. Lots of Aussies and Americans, and I met alot of cool people last night with similar interests as myself, so needless to say i'm going back haha.
I have not yet told the home crowd about the title of this post. Tim. Tam. Slam. First off, amazing cookie chocolate thing that needs to make its way to the states; that's a tim tam. to layers of cookie with chocolate in the middle. then covered once, sometimes twice, in chocolate. it's heaven on it's own let me tell you. Then you add the slam. Obtain for yourself a beverage. Preferably hot, like coffee, tea, hot chocolate. I've also done it with milk. yum. Bite off two opposite corners of the tim tam, stick one in the beverage of choice and the other end in your mouth. Start sucking like a straw. Soon your cookie will be full of your coffee with the taste of chocolate...eventually, the cookie loses stability and collapses, which is when you shove the whole thing in your mouth. Probably the best thing anyone can do with their life right there. The end. Nuff said. Go online and ship yourselves some tim tams now. I'm sure I'll be writing about "Pods" later which I have not yet tried but have been advised to buy immediately and eat many of them.
This weekend could quite possibly be filled with koala hugs, shopping in the city, and rugby. Be on the lookout for an update soon! PS - new pictures up! check it out!
Much love to all.
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