Semele Walk – frock and awe!

Our first show of the Sydney Festival was the Handel Opera Semele set on a fashion-show runway in Sydney Town Hall accompanied by lots of Vivienne Westwood frocks paraded on tall skinny models.

It was amazing. As with most opera, the story is bizarre and barely comprehensible, but the music and singing were terrific and the action was entertaining. I was prepared to be underwhelmed by the fashion show aspect, but found it fascinating. The outfits are moving works of art.20130112-102740.jpg

The advertising spiel said: “Händel’s baroque music is performed in a vibrant, varied and wild fashion as outstanding Berlin-based ensemble Kaleidoskop joins forces with Sydney Philharmonia Choirs for a truly magical transformation of the rarely performed opera.”

It was sponsored by the Goethe Institut – there were lots of Germans around us in the hall, and they loved it. One surprise was that the choir members were scattered through the audience – different!

The evening was capped by a drink at Grandma’s Bar, one of Sydney’s newish small bars. Then there was a new al fresco experience for me as I used one of the portable public pissoirs set up just outside Town Hall (much to the amazement of some passers-by!)

 

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Test time at the Sydney Cricket Ground

We had a great day at the Sydney Cricket Ground watching the first day of the third Test against Sri Lanka. The cricket was entertaining and the crowd antics were also entertaining. The weather was pleasantly warm and we had a good seat in the Churchill Stand with a great view of the action, and we were in the shade.

Jan at the cricket, binoculars ready.

Jan at the cricket, binoculars ready.

We were quite sensible and took proper picnic food instead of eating pies and chips, and we had only one beer each. There were lads nearby that must have got through at least a dozen beers each during the day! There was much shouting and flag-waving.

Sri Lanka batted quite well, but I think Australia will win this one.

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Keeping it up

The club's K-13 two-seat glider.

The club’s K-13 two-seat glider.

Gliding is going well. On Wednesday I flew an older glider, the Schleicher K-13 with the Chief Flying Instructor and practised some spinning and steep turns. He was satisfied with my flying and said I was OK to go solo that day. I had a couple of solo flights which were great fun, although it was a bit of a grey cloudy day and there wasn’t a lot of lift about.

There was a gusty crosswind so it was good experience in the difficult bit – the circuit and landing. The K-13 is a wood and fabric aircraft with a metal tube fuselage which first flew more than 45 years ago. I flew one at the Long Mynd in England in 1970.

A guy who was having a joyflight in another glider took a photo of my as I was circling in the same thermal over Camden town. It’s an iPhone photo, so I’m the little dot in the top left corner!

Thermalling above Camden in the K-13
Thermalling above Camden in the K-13

A few more flights and an oral exam on rules of the air and other regulations and I should be able to solo without being checked by instructors.

They are a good bunch of blokes at the gliding club. The midweek flyers tend to be retired and a bit old, like me! One member helping out I was told had seen the Hindenberg airship flying when he was a lad in the Netherlands before World War II.

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Merry Christmas everyone!

Greetings of the festive season to all, may you have happy holidays. Christmas in Sydney is usually hot and sunny, but this Christmas morning is coolish (21 degrees) and rain showers are passing over.  It’s a Grey Christmas with some claps of thunder added.

Heavy Christmas showers

Heavy Christmas showers

We’re having a quietly sociable Christmas. We’ve been catching up with friends Peter and Moya and Pam and Steve in the past couple of days and today we go off for a Christmas meal with Eunice, Ben and Jack as well as Sue and Stan. I’m in charge of barbecuing and drinking.

Viv and Chris are in New Zealand staying with Wynne for Christmas – Viv rang this morning to exchange seasonal greetings and it sounds as if they’re having a great holiday in Kiwiland.

This year we lost the plot – and haven’t sent out any Christmas cards. Thank you to all who sent cards to us and we’ll do better next time. It’s good to hear from friends all around the world.

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Alone at last, at 4000 feet

Hurrah! I’ve gone solo in a glider – again. I first went glider solo at the age of 16 in the air cadets in England and finished gliding in England about 35 years ago, so it has been a while.

The instructors at Southern Cross Gliding Club  have been very helpful and very trusting. I went solo after just 12 flights, which is rapid progress even given my 1100 hours of power flying experience. I must admit to a little nervousness – after all, in a glider if you get too far away from the airfield or too low, you have to land in a field somewhere!

But I had a lovely flight in the ASK-21, an aerotow up to 3000 feet then a flight of almost an hour on a hot, sunny day with some puffy cumulus clouds.

Contrast this wood and fabric T31 trainer in which I flew my first solo in 1965 with the ASK-21 I flew this week.

There was lots of lift about in thermals and I am getting better at finding the lift and circling in it. I stayed up near cloudbase at 4000 feet for a while, then had to fly back into the wind to get closer to the airport at Camden. I went gradually down to about 1600 feet before I found another good thermal and went back up to cloudbase.

Shiny fibreglass ASK-21.

Eventually I thought I had better return because other pilots wanted the aircraft, so I pulled out the airbrakes and dived away all that height to get back into the circuit and land.

It was exhilarating, I loved it.

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