scotland needed to win both their games against mexico and zimabwe to stay in contention, which they did by 9-5 and 8-5 with michael brennan and alec young scoring most of the goals between them. england lost a great game to poland 5-3 but recovered to beat ethiopia 11-4. holland started with a 9-2 win over canada, who had a little help from scotland's no. 2 goalie. brazil, the kings of street soccer, turned on the style beating argentina 15-3.
unbeaten teams after day two: afghanistan, ireland, kenya, lithunia, nigeria, poland, portugal, russia
Tuesday, 2 December 2008
Monday, 1 December 2008
homeless world cup - day one
the 2008 homeless world cup is happening in melbourne from 1 - 7 december. it's an international street soccer tournament organised by the big issue and has teams from 50 countries.
we helped out as marshals for the opening parade. scotland won last year's tournament in copenhagen so took their place behind the aussies - the hosts - in the parade along to the main stadium at federation square. behind them came afghanistan, argentina, austria, belgium, brazil, cambodia...all the way to zimbabwe. it was pretty incredible to see the players from the different countries all getting on and having a laugh together.
the scotland boys - most of them come from glasgow or nearby - made sure everyone else knew who they were by getting their faces in as many photos as possible. seen here introducing themselves to the brazilians...
we got free t-shirts for our troubles
unlike 'the other' football world cup there are no real boundaries be
tween the teams and the fans. as a result the players found themselves the unexpected victims of some pretty indiscriminate autograph hunting, mostly from the hordes of aussie school girls present for the opening ceremony. even the finns got in on the act...
...and mirella had a friendly word with a couple of the dutch players. funnily enough, they just wanted to know where to find a party.
briefly, the rules of the game are as follows: four players on team (including one goalie), 7 minutes each way, one player has to remain in the opposition half at all times, penalties are dribbled from the halfway line, all games have a winner so drawn games go to sudden-death penalties.

the 'street socceroos' kicked things off by losing 3-0 to austria. then scotland had their first game against afghanistan. michael brannan scored scotland's first goal of the world cup and went on to score a hatrick, but the game ended 5-5 and scotland missed their one and only penalty. a little disappointing...
the other home nations fared better in their opening games. first, ireland beat the usa 11-2, with jimmy bell (no. 6) staring, then england beat sweden 14-1 with some pretty slick football. last year's runners up, poland, beat hungary 11-1 and nigeria beat italy on penalties after drawing 5-5.
the scotland boys - most of them come from glasgow or nearby - made sure everyone else knew who they were by getting their faces in as many photos as possible. seen here introducing themselves to the brazilians...
...and mirella had a friendly word with a couple of the dutch players. funnily enough, they just wanted to know where to find a party.
Tuesday, 25 November 2008
snail mail
a short tale...
in the middle of september we posted a parcel from malaysia to scotland. we posted it by land rather than by air cos it was cheaper and there was no real hurry. anyway, just as we were giving up hope of it ever resurfacing it arrived in edinburgh last week, a full two months after posting! this made me wonder where it had been all this time and how many people might have been responsible for it getting to its destination. just like the old days. pretty great.
in the middle of september we posted a parcel from malaysia to scotland. we posted it by land rather than by air cos it was cheaper and there was no real hurry. anyway, just as we were giving up hope of it ever resurfacing it arrived in edinburgh last week, a full two months after posting! this made me wonder where it had been all this time and how many people might have been responsible for it getting to its destination. just like the old days. pretty great.
Monday, 24 November 2008
crazy victorian weather...
listen up y'all.
next time an australian person, particularly one from melbourne, tries to suggest we have shit weather, laugh at them... the weather here is mental!
a fortnight ago it was 34ºC, within a week it was 10ºC and now it's back to 20ºC and rising through the week. anybody try to tell me that the weather in scotland is more changeable than that...
next time an australian person, particularly one from melbourne, tries to suggest we have shit weather, laugh at them... the weather here is mental!
a fortnight ago it was 34ºC, within a week it was 10ºC and now it's back to 20ºC and rising through the week. anybody try to tell me that the weather in scotland is more changeable than that...
HRAFF
just to explain all the references to "(HRAFF)" next to film names down the right-hand side of this page: these were films we saw at the recent, and superb
check the website out and take a look at the IMDB links for the films we saw. we'll be posting reviews at some point, so check back in the tags section to find out more.
check the website out and take a look at the IMDB links for the films we saw. we'll be posting reviews at some point, so check back in the tags section to find out more.
Friday, 21 November 2008
around the bay in a few days...
warning: really long post!
so we decided to have a holiday. we got on a train to frankston and then took the bus down the mornington peninsula:

our first stop was dromana, where we had hoped to visit the information centre and get an idea of places we could stay in the 'hood. however, being us, we got there 5 minutes after the centre closed... it was just beyond typical!
fortunately, the good people of dromana visitor information don't seem in too much hurry to get home after work, so we managed to knock on the door and have two sheets of camping info slipped out to us. it turns out that a lot of foreshore camping (which is what we had planned) has a limited season, so we ended up checking into a caravan park for the night.
we had a conversation with a couple of the ladies we met that really made me think. they were completely lovely ladies from victoria who take their caravan holidays before the kids break up for summer because places get mobbed, love their country and are full of the joys of life. but their response when we mentioned in passing that we're married was completely novel to us. they said, "wow! you're married? good for you! that's made my day!" and i realised that, although we're in a growing minority among our own generation, there are still people out there who think that marriage is a proper, not radical, thing to do. and they're people that we can share other world views with, not just folk that are completely conservative and beyond dialogue.
and we even got a beach sunset. it feels like so long since we've
so it's not on the map above, but arthurs seat is 304m-high peak that was named by lieutenant john murray upon arriving in port phillip in 1802. unsurprisingly, lt murray was from edinburgh - and clearly eager to bring a little bit of home with him! its existence has helped us engage with the history of the area a bit more, by making the relationships between britain and early invasions a bit more tangible.
this, in turn, has lent us tools to further understand the atrocities that took place with regards to the traditional owners of the land. it's amazing what one hill can do to your perspective!
in fact, the general approach to the environment here is pretty paradoxical in a lot of ways. people are definitely more aware of their water usage, and more cooperative with the authorities in monitoring that and adhering to usage guidelines etc, and organic (read local, bio-dynamic etc) food is way bigger and more widely available here. and those are wonderful things.but i'm starting to think that there are selfish limitations placed on this environmental awareness that are maybe even completely subconscious.
for example, people are definitely more aware of the effect that climate change has, in the aridity of the soil and air (which will eventually lead to desertification as the planet's surface heats up), and respon
even biodynamism and organic farming can be seen as responses to the scarcity of water: it's been shown that biodynamism can encourage crops to flourish in areas where the same crops not grown in this method are suffering due to drought conditions, and
everyone knows the dangers that non-organic farming poses on our freshwater supplies through leaching of dangerous chemicals and indiscrimiate destruction of friendly plants and insects.
however, what about reducing your emissions? and how about minimising your meat consumption? both of those things can have a very profound effect on global rainfall distribution, in spite of the illusory
i'm not suggesting that everyone scraps their car and becomes raw food vegan, just that we think more carefully about what happens when we start that engine or buy that steak: what are the processes that took place to allow us to do that, and what impact will they have on our annual rainfall in as little as 3-4 years' time?
even just turning off lights. not installing halogen ceiling lights. turning your phone charger off at the wall. a lot of these things seem to be disregarded in the quest to save water... and driving, driving, driving.
sure, it's a big country and yes, it's important to get out and witness the beauty of nature, but why do so many people act surprised when we tell them we got to the peninsula
we are the children of the ones who should have but didn't change the world. instead, they gave birth to the consumerism that has gone on to destroy our communities and cripple our collective conscience. are we going to go the same way?
well, we're not going to achieve anything by succumbing to the school of thought that time is money. time is much, much more than that. time is life. the biggest difference between money and life is that money has an inverse relationship with time while life has a direct relationship with time. in other words, as time goes on, money diminishes while life flourishes. how else is it that the oldest people have lived the most? tautology? think about it...
one of the best things about the mornington peninsula is that it curves around port phillip bay to form an almost lake-like form. that is, the outer edge of the peninsula acts as a buffer for the bay from the rough waters of the bass strait. this translates as really sedate, quietly lapping shores on the north and west coast of the peninsula, and wild, battered shores on the south and east coast. perfect cavorting territory for a pair of homesick scots!
so we wandered around the back beaches for hours, guddling in rockpools and scrambling over the sandstone cliffs. it felt great! we found clusters of anenomes and pools covered by a carpet of starfish, hundreds of beautiful tiny shells of all shapes, colours and patterns, and a whole world of wonder!
it didn't really seem that the trip could get much better, as each beach merged into the next and the waves continued to crash down on giant basalt shelves that lay like giant plates in the shallows of the low tide...
and that's when we saw the echidna! we were coming off the coast onto the track to portsea, where we were hoping to be able to get all the way to the tip of the peninsula, when we noticed a couple of people taking photos of shrubs... as we got closer we realised that they were
we didn't make it to the tip of the peninsula, but did enjoy a disappointing tramp through portsea, which is nothing more than a hotel and clutch of modest houses, surrounded by acres of millionaire fantasy homes. seriously, it was like a bad dream! this beautiful landscape littered with disney palaces, tuscan villas, and modernist shoebox condos, all with token tennis court, putting green, and freeform pool. still, the landscape was discernably beautiful...
so, after another night in sorrento, we hit the 9am ferry to queenscliff. it wa
we found a great wee café in queenscliff (which sheila Would have liked!) and set about our tea and breakfast before exploring the interesting little town that had been left behind when the melbourne-queenscliff railway stopped its weekly voyage in 1950. prior to that, it was a bustling holiday destination for most urbanites, and the remaining buildings reflect that.
however, it was also an important defense in securing british rule over port phillip bay, and a for
only the black lighthouse is visible in this photo of the fort, but there is also a white one to the right of the photo, that is closer to the opening off bass strait called "the rip". no boats or ships are allowed to enter the rip unaccompanied by the local pilot boat, on account of how dangerous it is (although it's a 3.5km wide section of sea, only 1km is navigable by most craft and deep boats only have something like 270metres that they can sail through). so, when the pilot boats are leading ships through the rip, they line up the white and the black lighthouses to find the safe passageway through the reefs and currents. pretty cool, huh?
we got back to melbourne via geelong, full of positive feelings about the public transport services in victoria, and realising that the other side of the world isn't as far away from home as it feels it should be...
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
lilydale-warburton trail
inspired by our bay ride, we got back in the saddle for an 80km return trip to warburton along a retired railway line. they're pretty good for setting up things like that in these parts so we're trying to make the most of them.

we caught the train to lilydale (yes, with our bikes. it's totally normal to take your bike on the train here - how great is that?) and set off from there. with nature-spotting stops factored in, and the onset of a rainstorm about a third of the way from warburton, it took us almost 2-and-a-half hours to get to warburton.
after a brief wander around to drip-dry, we decided we would head up into the forested hills - but first, a cup of tea. as an aside, melbourne has developed this massive coffee-culture that seems to reflect much of the rest of australia, and it's far too easy to seem british by asking for a cup of tea instead of a cup of coffee because literally everyone else is glugging down the devil's brew...
so we never made it up the hills. as we were enjoying a rich soya chai, the rain started up in earnest - and continued for 3 hours! at the first break in the clouds we set off for lilydale, hoping to outrace any remaining downpours. as it happened, the break continued and we cycled back in dazzling late-arvo sunshine. it was magical!

justin saw his first kookaburra and i saw my first galah - bush-cycling is the way forward!

we caught the train to lilydale (yes, with our bikes. it's totally normal to take your bike on the train here - how great is that?) and set off from there. with nature-spotting stops factored in, and the onset of a rainstorm about a third of the way from warburton, it took us almost 2-and-a-half hours to get to warburton.
after a brief wander around to drip-dry, we decided we would head up into the forested hills - but first, a cup of tea. as an aside, melbourne has developed this massive coffee-culture that seems to reflect much of the rest of australia, and it's far too easy to seem british by asking for a cup of tea instead of a cup of coffee because literally everyone else is glugging down the devil's brew...
so we never made it up the hills. as we were enjoying a rich soya chai, the rain started up in earnest - and continued for 3 hours! at the first break in the clouds we set off for lilydale, hoping to outrace any remaining downpours. as it happened, the break continued and we cycled back in dazzling late-arvo sunshine. it was magical!
justin saw his first kookaburra and i saw my first galah - bush-cycling is the way forward!
Tuesday, 21 October 2008
indie pop is alive and well and living in melbourne
one way to get to know a city is to get to know its music and we've been doing our best on this front. although i struggle to name more than two handfuls of aussie bands - it doesn't help that i didn't know that ac/dc ("acca dacca") were from sydney - live music is a massive part of melbourne life. much of this happens in old 'hotels' and clubs that can be found on every other street corner and most of which come with a music room in the back/upstairs, places like the tote, the corner and the northcote social club.
music-wise, melbourne is pretty much the glasgow of australia and melbournites - some of them, at least - love their scottish indie music, belle & sebastian in particular. our neighbour, peter, is a singer-songwriter of local renown (his myspace is here) and through him we've met and heard a bunch of local bands and musicians, including members of the motifs and milk teddy. there's some pretty good festivals in the melbourne area over the summer but we arrived too late to get tickets for most of them. we do, however, have tickets for the big day out at the end of january with ol' shakey himself, neil young, headlining.
music-wise, melbourne is pretty much the glasgow of australia and melbournites - some of them, at least - love their scottish indie music, belle & sebastian in particular. our neighbour, peter, is a singer-songwriter of local renown (his myspace is here) and through him we've met and heard a bunch of local bands and musicians, including members of the motifs and milk teddy. there's some pretty good festivals in the melbourne area over the summer but we arrived too late to get tickets for most of them. we do, however, have tickets for the big day out at the end of january with ol' shakey himself, neil young, headlining.
Monday, 20 October 2008
around the bay in a day... well, part of it
every october they hold an event in melbourne called "around the bay in a day" where folk of all abilities get on their bikes and cover whatever distance they can manage of port phillip bay:

one of the highlights of the day is that the 50km ride crosses the westgate bridge, usually closed to cyclists and foot passengers. so we decided to get a piece of the action and go with them. we ended up cycling all the way to altona with the pack before breaking off due to some serious saddle soreness on my part. seriously, i am hardcore, my seat was just more hard than my core...
so we caught a train back to the city where i bought a new seat that i am happy to say has given me no gip since sunday 19 october - hooray!
photo: justin on the westgate bridge

one of the highlights of the day is that the 50km ride crosses the westgate bridge, usually closed to cyclists and foot passengers. so we decided to get a piece of the action and go with them. we ended up cycling all the way to altona with the pack before breaking off due to some serious saddle soreness on my part. seriously, i am hardcore, my seat was just more hard than my core...
so we caught a train back to the city where i bought a new seat that i am happy to say has given me no gip since sunday 19 october - hooray!
photo: justin on the westgate bridge
Saturday, 11 October 2008
new bike
Tuesday, 30 September 2008
new job, old job
so that chugging job? yep, did that. it wasn't as cool as i thought it would be. anyone requiring further details on that can drop me an email - i'll be happy to talk about it but not everyone might want to read what i say...
so council street is a dream. we have a lovely house and a great garden and some awesome housemates. you might say we landed on our feet.
now we just have to find jobs...
the view from our window
our living room

our kitchen
anita's a hula-hooper. she's particularly good. i'm particularly not.
so council street is a dream. we have a lovely house and a great garden and some awesome housemates. you might say we landed on our feet.
now we just have to find jobs...
the view from our window

our living room

our kitchen

anita's a hula-hooper. she's particularly good. i'm particularly not.
Sunday, 28 September 2008
new house
so we've been in melbourne a few days by now and things are moving very quickly indeed. we began our house-search on friday, just two days after getting to town and by then i already had one job lined up.
the day we got to melbourne, one of my family's old friends stopped by to say hi. when we got into the subject of working in melbourne she suggested that i might be able to use any café experience in her son's coffee shop. a few phone calls later, i had a trial lined up.
however, on friday, being house-searching day, we were wandering around the city when a yorkshire lad randomly asked if we were looking for work in melbourne. we asked some questions, he asked some questions, and it turned out he works for a chugging company raising money for a couple of very deserving NGOs - sweet! this melbourne gig is working out pretty nicely, if i may say. (photo: trams in melbourne CBD)
a few hours of roaming the streets writing down shop-window ads and ringing people with spare rooms later, we collapse into an internet café to search out online ads. the first ad we see on gumtree is only 10 minutes old so we rattle off a quick call to the number and line up our first viewing in a matter of minutes. the friendly german guy on the other end is called toby and he tells us to come round tomorrow morning.
it felt good to be able to go back to a house full of cynical chinese women and tell them we had made some progress. better still to wake up in the morning feeling full of promise and possibilities.
we had some trouble finding the house on account of my complete innumeracy but we got there. (photo: 38 council street)
and we stayed there so long we were invited for breakfast with the neighbours - peter, fumiko and taka... who turned out to be local musicians (well, taka not quite yet) and invited us to join them and their friends for the AFL grand final that arvo. having spent the entire morning with toby and anita, it didn't feel so strange tagging along with their neighbours.
i'll leave justin to post about that day's events but, suffice to say we were offered the room in toby and anita's house. or should i say, our house?
the day we got to melbourne, one of my family's old friends stopped by to say hi. when we got into the subject of working in melbourne she suggested that i might be able to use any café experience in her son's coffee shop. a few phone calls later, i had a trial lined up.
a few hours of roaming the streets writing down shop-window ads and ringing people with spare rooms later, we collapse into an internet café to search out online ads. the first ad we see on gumtree is only 10 minutes old so we rattle off a quick call to the number and line up our first viewing in a matter of minutes. the friendly german guy on the other end is called toby and he tells us to come round tomorrow morning.
it felt good to be able to go back to a house full of cynical chinese women and tell them we had made some progress. better still to wake up in the morning feeling full of promise and possibilities.
and we stayed there so long we were invited for breakfast with the neighbours - peter, fumiko and taka... who turned out to be local musicians (well, taka not quite yet) and invited us to join them and their friends for the AFL grand final that arvo. having spent the entire morning with toby and anita, it didn't feel so strange tagging along with their neighbours.
i'll leave justin to post about that day's events but, suffice to say we were offered the room in toby and anita's house. or should i say, our house?
Friday, 26 September 2008
arriving in melbourne
we arrived in melbourne at 7.15am on wednesday 24 september 2008. it was 8ºC when our plane touched down, having left KL on a 35ºC afternoon... i don't know if i can describe how good it felt to have the chilly wind swirling around my shorts-clad legs. i'll never complain about the cold again!
heading straight to box hill it was surreal to be reunited with my folks on the wrong side of the planet. with my aunt and cousin from the uk there as well, (photo L-R: 5-ee, jodie, petra, ah-kim, randolph, kou-kou, me) it was practically like we'd landed in london... the metlink system soon had us realising how far away we were from home, though!
so, here you buy either 2-hour or all-day tickets. 2-hour ones cost half of all-day ones but, you've guessed it, only last for 2-hours from activation - i.e. when you first enter the turnstile (which isn't a turnstile but one of those electronic ticket flappy-door newfangled devices that they've had all over the world for several years but i've never learned the name of). simple enough, except if you activate a 2-hour ticket after 5.30pm it turns into an all-night ticket that lasts until 3am... too clever by half.
in spite of learning the intricacies of the public transport system, we arrived in box hill and purchased a SIM card with relatively little difficulty. yes, we are seasoned travellers now!
we spend the next few days kicking around box hill with my folks and extended family, discovering how it's the chinese quarter of suburban melbourne in more than just the appearance of its locals... (photo: justin eating a hen foot - yummy!)
Wednesday, 24 September 2008
finally...
i've started that damn blog! having promised it to folk before we left, i never realised how hard it would be to put the wheels in motion.
of course, not wanting to give all away, i'm not going to go into detail on this post, but i'll try to backdate our actions as accurately as possible to allow for an online diary that y'all can browse at your leisure.
so, keep on reading and learn why we didn't write home sooner...
of course, not wanting to give all away, i'm not going to go into detail on this post, but i'll try to backdate our actions as accurately as possible to allow for an online diary that y'all can browse at your leisure.
so, keep on reading and learn why we didn't write home sooner...
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