View Full Version : Australia.....
Canuck[_3_]
January 28th 09, 04:20 AM
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dave Kearton" >
Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 6:58 PM
Subject: Re: From frosty Winnipeg....
> "Canuck" > wrote in message
> ...
>> Around -40 C today but I was running around and decided to get some 
>> Winter
>> pix. ENJOY!
>
>> Nick
>
>
> Just by way of balance from the other side of the planet, this is my
> backyard - taken about 5 minutes ago.        The forecast for today is 
> 43C,
> already (11:20 am) it's 41.       That's about 108 for anybody still using
> the old money.
> Cheers
>
> Dave Kearton
Oh shut up! :) (In case you didn't get that, I was kidding). It was so cold 
my lens froze and the battery in the camera gave out after only a few 
minutes. January and February here are pretty miserable. I tried using the 
camera with my gloves on but couldn't manage so I took them off. The 
windchill was just too strong and I had to scoot back into my car to thaw my 
hands.
Feel free to send some of that warmth up here and if you run into Clark 
(Swamp creator / guru) say hi for me! I absolutely love his comic and have 
recommended it to our newspaper here. I think it would be fantastic if they 
started carrying it. I ordered a ton of stuff from the website and all the 
books as well.
Are you watching the tennis? I'm a tennis nut and former player. I almost 
turned pro at one point. I couldn't believe the oncourt temperature was 
almost 60 C the other day!!! How the heck do you play in that???? The 
hottest match I ever played it hit somewhere around 45 C which was brain 
melting and draining. The other guy cramped first and I won .... and then 
collapsed in the shower.
Take care,
Nick (still defrosting).
Dave Kearton[_2_]
January 28th 09, 04:58 AM
"Canuck" > wrote in message
> Oh shut up! :) (In case you didn't get that, I was kidding). It was so 
> cold
> my lens froze and the battery in the camera gave out after only a few
> minutes. January and February here are pretty miserable. I tried using the
> camera with my gloves on but couldn't manage so I took them off. The
> windchill was just too strong and I had to scoot back into my car to thaw 
> my
> hands.
>
Hey Nick,  the thought of temperatures like that are just something that we 
can't even comprehend.          I was talking once to Gordon in San Diego 
and asked him something about winter in California.        I could hear the 
blank stare in his voice as he said  "W i n t e r ?    Hmmmm, I've heard of 
that once..."
Cold for us - at least where I am, is where it'll get to a point or two 
overnight or maybe as low as 10C during the day.         I've been living in 
this current house for 23 years and I've seen snow once,  FIVE flakes over a 
20 minute period one morning.          Every family in the street took their 
kids outside to show them what it looked like.         Some of us older 
folks are still talking about the blizzard of '91.
We have recreational ski fields that appear in the east for a short time, 
like Brigadoon,  but just like the other 'snow' it's hideously expensive and 
just as addictive.
Up until now, I'd always believed that it's easier to keep warm than it is 
to get cool,  you just need to wear more clothes.      If inanimate objects 
break or important fluids freeze up, then maybe warmer is better.
For some days, I get to work on building rooftops - luckily, I get to 
politely decline the high work on hot days,  galvanised iron sheeting will 
easily remove skin at 40+, not to mention, sunburn, heat stress and 
de-hydration.
> Feel free to send some of that warmth up here and if you run into Clark
> (Swamp creator / guru) say hi for me! I absolutely love his comic and have
> recommended it to our newspaper here. I think it would be fantastic if 
> they
> started carrying it. I ordered a ton of stuff from the website and all the
> books as well.
>
> Are you watching the tennis? I'm a tennis nut and former player. I almost
> turned pro at one point. I couldn't believe the oncourt temperature was
> almost 60 C the other day!!! How the heck do you play in that???? The
> hottest match I ever played it hit somewhere around 45 C which was brain
> melting and draining. The other guy cramped first and I won .... and then
> collapsed in the shower.
>
The tennis ?       No, at one point we had two networks solidly broadcasting 
their own coverage for most of each day - different games too.
Luckily, I was watching a third network, which was all cricket - now there's 
a man's game, no overpaid Frenchmen or Spaniards there.      In case you're 
wondering, Australia - after being the world's number one cricketing nation 
for the last 15 years, humiliating all in our path  - we're now getting our 
hats handed to us firstly by India and currently by South Africa. 
Had to happen of course, its not healthy for any country to dominate a sport 
by so much for that long.
However, betwixt you 'n me,  given a choice of winning everything and 
getting your noses rubbed into it,  I think I prefer winning.
> Take care,
>
> Nick (still defrosting).
While you thaw, here's another of my father's slides from Woomera. 
This was shortly after the RAAF received the first of its C-130s, which 
they've flown ever since.         The last I heard, they'd celebrated over 
600,000 hours on the type without a major incident, injury or significant 
damage.
You might say they're not trying hard enough - but spending most of the time 
away from mountains and snow has got to help.
-- 
Cheers
Dave Kearton
Dutch
January 28th 09, 05:28 AM
This picture is printed in reverse, Crew door is on the left side of the 
acft.
Dave Kearton[_2_]
January 28th 09, 06:10 AM
"Dutch" > wrote in message 
.. .
> This picture is printed in reverse, Crew door is on the left side of the
> acft.
D'oh,  I've been looking at that picture for over thirty years and never 
spotted that.    Thanks.
I'm sure there's a name for that,  don't want to think about it.
-- 
Cheers
Dave Kearton
Canuck[_3_]
January 28th 09, 05:13 PM
"Dave Kearton" > wrote in message 
...
> "Canuck" > wrote in message
> 
> Hey Nick,  the thought of temperatures like that are just something that 
> we
> can't even comprehend.          I was talking once to Gordon in San Diego
> and asked him something about winter in California.        I could hear 
> the
> blank stare in his voice as he said  "W i n t e r ?    Hmmmm, I've heard 
> of
> that once..."
Hi Dave! I know what you mean. Being right smack in the middle of the 
continent means we get a very cold winter and fairly hot summers 
(sometimes). Still, I don't think it has gotten above +35 C or so recently. 
When I was in Europe a few years back, it was +38 C or +40 C every day. I 
just wasn't used to that kind of heat and I also sunburned quite badly 
despite using sunscreen and so on. I couldn't wait to get back to Canada.
> Cold for us - at least where I am, is where it'll get to a point or two
> overnight or maybe as low as 10C during the day.         I've been living 
> in
> this current house for 23 years and I've seen snow once,  FIVE flakes over 
> a
> 20 minute period one morning.          Every family in the street took 
> their
> kids outside to show them what it looked like.         Some of us older
> folks are still talking about the blizzard of '91.
>
> We have recreational ski fields that appear in the east for a short time,
> like Brigadoon,  but just like the other 'snow' it's hideously expensive 
> and
> just as addictive.
>
> Up until now, I'd always believed that it's easier to keep warm than it is
> to get cool,  you just need to wear more clothes.      If inanimate 
> objects
> break or important fluids freeze up, then maybe warmer is better.
I agree with you. I find cold easier to tolerate than heat. You can only 
take so much off! :)
I wonder if you would even know what a block heater is. Our cars are 
equipped with a block heater. We plug our cars in when it gets this cold so 
that they will start. My car has a battery blanket too to keep the battery 
functioning better and for easier starting.
> For some days, I get to work on building rooftops - luckily, I get to
> politely decline the high work on hot days,  galvanised iron sheeting will
> easily remove skin at 40+, not to mention, sunburn, heat stress and
> de-hydration.
>
> The tennis ?       No, at one point we had two networks solidly 
> broadcasting
> their own coverage for most of each day - different games too.
>
>
> Luckily, I was watching a third network, which was all cricket - now 
> there's
> a man's game, no overpaid Frenchmen or Spaniards there.      In case 
> you're
> wondering, Australia - after being the world's number one cricketing 
> nation
> for the last 15 years, humiliating all in our path  - we're now getting 
> our
> hats handed to us firstly by India and currently by South Africa.
> Had to happen of course, its not healthy for any country to dominate a 
> sport
> by so much for that long.
What can you do? Outsourcing/globalization at work! :) I don't know if there 
is an organized cricket league in Canada or for that matter even a 
disorganized league! It seems like an interesting game but I have no idea 
what the rules are or how the scoring works. Occasionally, BBC World will 
have some coverage but since I'm unfamiliar with the game, I'm not really 
sure how things work. In Canada, hockey is the most followed/popular sport 
followed by football (American football.... not soccer). Lately, baseball 
has become more and more popular and is getting quite a following 
here....and baseball is really just an adaptation of cricket.
As for tennis, Australia has had quite a few champions on both the men's and 
women's side and you have a great heritage there along with one of the most 
important tournaments on the calendar. I would love to go and see the 
Australian Open some day. In fact, I'd love to do my own Grand Slam and 
visit all of the majors sometime during my lifetime.
Take care for now and thanks for the great pictures!
Nick
Peter Twydell
January 28th 09, 05:53 PM
In message >, Dave Kearton 
> writes
>
<snip>
>
>Luckily, I was watching a third network, which was all cricket - now there's
>a man's game, no overpaid Frenchmen or Spaniards there.      In case you're
>wondering, Australia - after being the world's number one cricketing nation
>for the last 15 years, humiliating all in our path  - we're now getting our
>hats handed to us firstly by India and currently by South Africa.
>
Does that mean we will get the Ashes back this year?
>Had to happen of course, its not healthy for any country to dominate a sport
>by so much for that long.
>
>However, betwixt you 'n me,  given a choice of winning everything and
>getting your noses rubbed into it,  I think I prefer winning.
>
>
>
>
>
>> Take care,
>>
>> Nick (still defrosting).
>
>
<snip>
I once worked with a girl from Toronto. She hated winters in England 
because although not as cold as at home, they were comparatively damp. 
We get lazy winds off the North Sea, the kind that can't be bothered to 
go round you, they go through you instead.
-- 
Peter
Ying tong iddle-i po!
Dave Kearton[_2_]
January 28th 09, 10:00 PM
"Peter Twydell" > wrote in message 
...
In message >, Dave Kearton
> writes
>
<snip>
>
Does that mean we will get the Ashes back this year?
>
<snip>
> Peter
> Ying tong iddle-i po!
Interesting question,  it looks like your team is in even more disarray than 
ours, who's your captain this week ?
-- 
Cheers
Dave Kearton
Jon Anderson
January 29th 09, 12:55 AM
A likely emerging talent for Australia in cricket is David Garness out 
of NSW. He's 14 right now and and already played some games with adults.
Being a Yank, I have near zero grasp of the game and the league 
structure, so can't provide much more detail. But seeing as he's going 
to be my step-son in about 7 weeks, I reckon I've got some learnin' to do...
Which brings a question, going to be in Cootamundra between April 25 and 
May 7. A trip to Temora is planned, as well as Canberra. Any other 
aviation sights worth seeing in the general vicinity?
Jon
Andrew Chaplin
January 29th 09, 11:37 AM
"Canuck" > wrote in message 
...
>
> "Dave Kearton" > wrote in message 
> ...
<snip>
>> Luckily, I was watching a third network, which was all cricket - now 
>> there's
>> a man's game, no overpaid Frenchmen or Spaniards there.      In case you're
>> wondering, Australia - after being the world's number one cricketing nation
>> for the last 15 years, humiliating all in our path  - we're now getting our
>> hats handed to us firstly by India and currently by South Africa.
>> Had to happen of course, its not healthy for any country to dominate a 
>> sport
>> by so much for that long.
>
> What can you do? Outsourcing/globalization at work! :) I don't know if there 
> is an organized cricket league in Canada or for that matter even a 
> disorganized league! It seems like an interesting game but I have no idea 
> what the rules are or how the scoring works. Occasionally, BBC World will 
> have some coverage but since I'm unfamiliar with the game, I'm not really 
> sure how things work.
In Canada, cricket is an immigrant's game. I think Ontario has leagues with 
clubs largely made up of the folks from South Asia and the Caribbean 
(http://www.ottawacricketclub.ca/members.php?member=Current). In Ottawa, the 
"flannel fools" have a cricket pitch and pavilion on the grounds of Rideau 
Hall (http://www.gg.ca/visitus/ovcc_e.asp). As sports clubs, they are among 
the oldest in Canada.
-- 
Andrew Chaplin
SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO
(If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.)
David[_7_]
February 2nd 09, 05:15 AM
On Wed, 28 Jan 2009 15:55:07 -0800, Jon Anderson wrote:
> A likely emerging talent for Australia in cricket is David Garness out
> of NSW. He's 14 right now and and already played some games with adults.
> Being a Yank, I have near zero grasp of the game and the league
> structure, so can't provide much more detail. But seeing as he's going
> to be my step-son in about 7 weeks, I reckon I've got some learnin' to
> do...
> 
> Which brings a question, going to be in Cootamundra between April 25 and
> May 7. A trip to Temora is planned, as well as Canberra. Any other
> aviation sights worth seeing in the general vicinity?
> 
> 
> Jon
When you say you're coming to Canberra, I assume you're going to be doing 
a tour of the ANZAC Hall at the Australian War Memorial, as well as the 
Aircraft Hall itself (which you have to pass through on your way to the 
ANZAC Hall). If you're lucky the Treloar conservation and storage annexe 
might be open to the general public as well.
Jon Anderson
February 2nd 09, 04:15 PM
David wrote:
> When you say you're coming to Canberra, I assume you're going to be doing 
> a tour of the ANZAC Hall at the Australian War Memorial, as well as the 
> Aircraft Hall itself (which you have to pass through on your way to the 
> ANZAC Hall). If you're lucky the Treloar conservation and storage annexe 
> might be open to the general public as well.
Indeed, that's the destination. My fiancee has always wanted to visit it 
too, never found the time. That I -have- to walk through an aviation 
exhibit to get there, well, I guess I can handle it.. <G> Did not know 
of this nor the Treloar exhibit. We'll be sure to inquire about the 
latter. I don't have near as nice a camera as most folks here, but I'll 
see if I can't shoot something worth posting.
Thank you,
Jon
Dr.Smith
May 31st 09, 04:54 PM
"Dutch" > wrote in message 
.. .
> This picture is printed in reverse, Crew door is on the left side of the 
> acft.
>
That happens when film is developed in the southern hemisphere.
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.