Australia and Jokes09 Sep 2008 04:52 pm

Noir c’est noir : Saviez-vous que ces messieurs les Aussies ont nommé une piscine en l’honneur d’un de leurs premiers ministres (Harold Holt) mort noyé en 1967 ? Hallucinant !! ;-)

A suivre sur le site du gouvernement

A black sense of humour

Australians can have a very black sense of humour. While in many cultures it is considered poor taste to find humour in difficult circumstances, Australians tend to look for this lighter side. This is perhaps our strongest reference to our brutal past, where humour was a means of coping with a bad situation. A (perhaps unintentional) example of this is the naming of the Harold Holt Memorial Swimming Pool in Melbourne after a Prime Minister who disappeared whilst swimming in the ocean in 1967.

To be continued on the Government’s webpage

Australia and Jokes08 Sep 2008 12:00 pm

The bigger the hat, the smaller the farm.

The shorter the nickname, the more they like you.

Whether it’s the opening of Parliament, or the launch of a new art gallery there is no Australian event that cannot be improved by a sausage sizzle.

If the guy next to you is swearing like a wharfie he’s probably a media billionaire. Or on the other hand, he may be a wharfie.

There is no food that cannot be improved by the application of tomato sauce.

On the beach, all Australians hide their keys and wallets by placing them inside their sandshoes. No thief has ever worked this out.

Industrial design knows of no article more useful than the plastic milk crate.

All our best heroes are losers. (Shane Warne might just be a case in point)

The alpha male in any group is he who takes the barbecue tongs from the hands of the host and blithely begins turning the snags.

It’s not summer until the steering wheel is too hot to hold.

A thong is not a piece of scanty swimwear, as in America, but a fine example of Australian footwear.

A group of sheilas wearing black rubber thongs may not be as exciting as you had hoped.

It is proper to refer to your best friend as “a total bastard”. By contrast, your worst enemy is “a bit of a bastard”.

Historians believe the widespread use of the word “mate” can be traced to the harsh conditions on the Australian frontier in the 1890s, and the development of a code of mutual aid, or mateship”. Alternatively, Australians may just be really hopeless with names.

The wise man chooses a partner who is attractive not only to himself, but to the mosquitoes.

If it can’t be fixed with pantyhose and fencing wire, it’s not worth fixing.

The most popular and widely praised family in any street is the one that has the swimming pool.

It’s considered better to be down on your luck than up yourself.

The phrase “we’ve got a great lifestyle” means everyone in the family drinks too much.

If invited to a party, you should take cheap red wine and then spend all night drinking the host’s beer. (Don’t worry, he’ll have catered for it).

If there’s any sort of free event or party within a hundred kilometres, you’d be a mug not to go.

The phrase “a simple picnic” is not known. You should take everything you own. If you don’t need to make three trips back to the car, you’re not trying.

Unless ethnic or a Pom, you are not permitted to sit down in your front yard, or on your front porch.
Pottering about, gardening or leaning on the fence is acceptable. Just don’t sit. That’s what back-yards are for.

The tarred road always ends just after the house of the local mayor.

On picnics, the Esky is always too small, creating a food versus grog battle that can only ever be solved by leaving the food behind.

We are the people of a free nation of blokes, sheilas and the occasional wanker. We come from many lands (although a few too many of us come from New Zealand), and although we live in the best country in the world, we reserve the right to bitch and moan about it whenever we bloody like. We are One Nation but divided into many States.

First, there’s Victoria, named after a queen who didn’t believe in lesbians. Victoria is the realm of Mossimo turtlenecks, cafe latte, grand final day, and big horse races. Its capital is Melbourne, whose chief marketing pitch is that “it’s liveable”. At least that’s what they think. The rest of us think it is too bloody cold and wet.

Next, there’s NSW, the realm of pastel shorts, macchiato with sugar, thin books read quickly and millions of dancing queens. Its capital Sydney has more queens than any other city in the world and is proud of it. Its mascots are Bondi lifesavers that pull their Speedos up their cracks to keep the left and right sides of their brains separate.

Down south we have Tasmania, a State based on the notion that the family that bonks together stays together. In Tassie, everyone gets an extra chromosome at conception. Maps of the State bring smiles to the sternest faces. It holds the world record for a single mass shooting, which the Yanks can’t seem to beat no matter how often they try.

South Australia is the province of half-decent reds, a festival of foreigners and bizarre axe murders. SA is the state of innovation. Where else can you so effectively reuse country bank vaults and barrels as in Snowtown, just out of Adelaide (also named after a queen). They had the Grand Prix, but lost it when the views of Adelaide sent the Formula One drivers to sleep at the wheel.

Western Australia is too far from anywhere to be relevant. It’s main claim to fame is that it doesn’t have daylight saving because if it did, all the men would get erections on the bus on the way to work. WA was the last state to stop importing convicts and many of them still work there in the government and business.

The Northern Territory is the red heart of our land. Outback plains, sheep stations the size of Europe, kangaroos, Jackaroos, emus, Uluru, and dusty kids with big smiles. It also has the highest beer consumption of anywhere on the planet and its creek beds have the highest aluminium content of anywhere too. Although the Territory is the centrepiece of our national culture, few of us live there and the rest prefer to flyover it on our way to Bali.

And there’s Queensland. While any mention of God seems silly in a document defining a nation of half arsed sceptics, it is worth noting that God probably made Queensland, as its beautiful one day and perfect the next. Why he filled it with dickheads remains a mystery.

Oh yes and there’s Canberra. The less said the better.

We, the citizens of Oz, are united by Highways, whose treacherous twists and turns kill more of us each year than murderers. We are united in our lust for international recognition, so desperate for praise we leap in joy when a rag tag gaggle of corrupt IOC officials tells us Sydney is better than Beijing. We are united by a democracy so flawed that a political party albeit a redneck gun toting one, can get a million votes and still not win one seat in Federal Parliament. Not that we’re whingeing, we leave that to our Pommy immigrants.

We want to make “no worries mate” our national phrase, “she’ll be right mate” our national attitude and “Waltzing Matilda” our national anthem (so what if it’s about a sheep-stealing crim who commits suicide). We love sport so much our newsreaders can read the death toll from a sailing race and still tell us who’s winning.

And we’re the best in the world at all the sports that count, like cricket, netball, rugby league and union, AFL, roo shooting, two up and horse racing. We also have the biggest rock, the tastiest pies, and the worst dressed Olympians in the known universe. Only in Australia can a pizza delivery get to your house faster than an ambulance. Only in Australia do we have bank doors wide open, no security guards, or cameras but chain the pens to the desk.

Stand proud Aussies - we shoot, we root, we vote. We are girt by sea and pissed by lunchtime. Even though we might seem a racist, closed minded, sports obsessed little people, at least we feel better for it.

I am, you are, we are Australian!

P.S We also shoot and eat the two animals that are on our National Crest!!!!……… No other country has this distinction!

Uncategorized05 Sep 2008 06:00 am

Great article HERE

Australia04 Sep 2008 09:55 pm



“Man isn’t a noble savage, he’s an ignoble savage. He is irrational, brutal, weak, silly, unable to be objective about anything where his own interests are involved — that about sums it up. I’m interested in the brutal and violent nature of man because it’s a true picture of him. And any attempt to create social institutions on a false view of the nature of man is probably doomed to failure.”
- Stanley Kubrick

“There seems to be buried in every government policy of every major political party this basic idea of preserving a mythical noble savage ideal of indigenous Australia.”
Warren Mundine - Aborigine and National President of the ALP 2006

Pour la suite de l’article, cliquer ici

Australia and Cuisine - Food and Melbourne26 Aug 2008 09:19 pm

Since we missed Christmas in July because of our sick, sick baby (yeah, blame it on the kid!!), we tried to redeem ourselves and spent Sunday in lovely company… the starters are featured below. For mains we had Coq Au Vin and a bunch of delicious desserts to top it all off :-)

Australia and Vacation - Vacances17 Aug 2008 09:39 pm

Southern Right Whales

Ce week-end, direction Warrnambool, au bout de la Great Ocean Road (pas forcément great tout du long, mais certainement LONGUE…) afin d’assister à un spectacle magique, celui des baleines (Southern Right Whales).

This weekend, we head to Warrnambool, at the end of the Great Ocean Road (not great all along but certainly LONG…), for a magical whale (Southern Right Whales) watching experience.

Ces magnifiques cétacés d’une taille moyenne de 16m reviennent chaque année (juin-octobre) dans les eaux bordant Warrnambool à leur retour de l’Antarctique. Pesant aux alentours de 80 tonnes, elles ont des réserves pour affronter les eaux glaciales septentrionales!

These amazing cetaceans -16m long on average - come to Warrnambool every year (June-October) on their way back from Antarctica. Weighing approximately 80 tons, they have what it takes brave the icy cold waters.

Tout a été prévu pour admirer nos amies les baleines, comme une plate-forme accessible aux chaises roulantes : on a donc emmené le poussinet dans sa poussette, après cela a été au tour du sac à dos… bien plus marrant pour notre fan de sensations fortes, j’ai nommé môssieur E.

Every detail has been thought through so that tourists can fully enjoy the show: the platform is wheelchair accessible, and therefore we strapped the bubba in his stroller, and later on tried the backpack, which was way more fun for our adventurer, Mister E.

Au retour nous passons par les Otway Ranges, une forêt magnifique (parc national) qui change un peu des autres routes déjà empruntées en 2005. Cela faisait plus de 3 ans que nous n’étions pas venus par ici !

On our way back to Melbourne, we decide to go through the Otway Ranges, a magnificent forest and national park, which is a nice change from the other roads we already visited in 2005. It’d been a while since we last came!

Photos des baleines prises avec un plus gros appareil :-)

Melbourne and Vacation - Vacances09 Aug 2008 09:56 pm

Mémorable, la première soirée entre filles depuis que Bébé est né : quel bonheur que de respirer le bon air frais de Melbourne CBD sous la pluie mais on s’en fiche puisque l’alcool tient chaud et qu’il y a pléthore d’endroits où s’abriter… comme le superbe appart de Sam sur Flinders Lane (quand est-ce que j’emménage ?!?), le restaurant japonais Hako, ou encore Transit Hotel à Fed Square…

Merci les filles, vous êtes géniales !!

Australia08 Aug 2008 09:49 am

Old Australian Ways

by

A. B. “Banjo” Patterson

The London lights are far abeam
Behind a bank of cloud,
Along the shore the gaslights gleam,
The gale is piping loud;
And down the Channel, groping blind,
We drive her through the haze
Towards the land we left behind
The good old land of “never mind”,
And old Australian ways.

The narrow ways of English folk
Are not for such as we;
They bear the long-accustomed yoke
Of staid conservancy:
But all our roads are new and strange,
And through our blood there runs
The vagabonding love of change
That drove us westward of the range
And westward of the suns.

The city folk go to and fro
Behind a prison’s bars,
They never feel the breezes blow
And never see the stars;
They never hear in blossomed trees
The music low and sweet
Of wild birds making melodies,
Nor catch the little laughing breeze
That whispers in the wheat.

Our fathers came of roving stock
That could not fixed abide:
And we have followed field and flock
Since e’er we learnt to ride;
By miner’s camp and shearing shed,
In land of heat and drought,
We followed where our fortunes led,
With fortune always on ahead
And always further out.

The wind is in the barley-grass,
The wattles are in bloom;
The breezes greet us as they pass
With honey-sweet perfume;
The parakeets go screaming by
With flash of golden wing,
And from the swamp the wild-ducks cry
Their long-drawn note of revelry,
Rejoicing at the Spring.

So throw the weary pen aside
And let the papers rest,
For we must saddle up and ride
Towards the blue hill’s breast;
And we must travel far and fast
Across their rugged maze,
To find the Spring of Youth at last,
And call back from the buried past
The old Australian ways.

When Clancy took the drover’s track
In years of long ago,
He drifted to the outer back
Beyond the Overflow;
By rolling plain and rocky shelf,
With stockwhip in his hand,
He reached at last (oh lucky elf!)
The Town of Come-and-help-yourself
In Rough-and-ready Land.

And if it be that you would know
The tracks he used to ride,
Then you must saddle up and go
Beyond the Queensland side –
Beyond the reach of rule or law,
To ride the long day through,
In Nature’s homestead — filled with awe
You then might see what Clancy saw
And know what Clancy knew.

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