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Barcoola just got bigger.

Yes, I am working – editing – and getting Season of Shadow and Light in order. But today our planned extensions were completed, so we are very excited. The nice guys from Coffs Canvas came out and set up our new annexe – purple gables included!
What a difference an annexe makes!
The kangaroos have been very inquisitive. And these frantic little guys (bush turkeys??) dropped by to check us out, too.

 

Having spent the last three days tied to my desk inside the van and reading through my book-three edits aloud, it is a double celebration. (‘The J’ says Season of Shadow and Light is my best yet!  I cannot wait to see the beautiful cover Simon and Schuster come up with.)
BONUS! Today I met a lovely reader. Meg and hubby are from Albury and she loves Aussie authors, so she now has House for all Seasons, a list of all my favourite authors, and a link to www.anaustralianruralromance.com .
All in all a good couple of days.

 

The boys from Coffs Canvas
Snazzy purple gables!
Inside the ‘leisure room’!
With dog enclosure in place
coffee in the courtyard
Coffee in the puppy courtyard

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Happy Barcoola Anniversary to us!

Happy anniversary to us!

It’s one week since the house settled and WE settled into our new mobile home for life on the road.

Okay, so we are not ON THE ROAD exactly. We travelled about an hour north and stopped at Corindi Beach Caravan Park. We will make this lovely spot our base for a while as we find our ‘caravan legs’.

Dad is visiting a couple of times a week now as we are only 10 minutes up the highway (and he brings scones every time he visits!)

This last week has tested us, though: the notorious east coat low has brought five days and nights of pelting rains, lashing winds, thunder, and lightning strikes that saw the van park in black out for four hours. (Dad will be bringing scrabble when he next visits!!) Mind you, we got lots of reading done: Greg Barron’s Lethal Sky (another riveting read from Greg), Dawn Barker’s Let her Go (love, love, loved it), and about to start Anna Romer’s highly anticipated Lyrebird Hill.

Apart from having so much reading time, there are LOTS of things to get used to.

Good things: the roar of the ocean only twenty paces from our door, the endless entertainment provided by wives frantically waving hands at husbands for the Van Reversing Ritual that takes place every evening, and stare-offs with the local roos.

Good thing: The locals
Good thing: This is NOT us!
Good thing: the beach
Yum! Coffee and cookie time!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not so good things: limited data for Facebooking and blogging and drinking too much coffee (yes, the coffee machine came with us!)

Zzzzzzzzzzz

 

 

The pups seem to have settled in just fine and tonight we christened the Weber Baby Q because the weather is finally being good to us. Tomorrow I will be hitting the book again. Edits for Season of Shadow and Light going well.

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Here she is! Our new home – Barcoola

On the outer Barcoo where the churches are few,

And men of religion are scanty,

On a road never cross’d ‘cept by folk that are lost,

One Michael Magee had a shanty.

From: ‘A bush christening’ by A B ‘Banjo’ Paterson (1893)

In their brochure, the designers of our new home (Southern Cross Caravans) called this 4WD edition “The Barcoo” so when I Googled the word I found the Macquarie Dictionary has three references featuring Barcoo:

Here she is… Barcoola.
Here she is… Barcoola.
  1. ‘Barcoo Rot’ a scurvy-like ailment from poor diet resulting in skin lesions, sometimes described as ‘outback scurvy’ and the scourge of explorers, stockmen and drovers.
  2. ‘Barcoo Salute’ meaning the ‘waving about of hands to keep flies away from your face’
  3. and the ominous ‘Barcoo Spews’ which is vomiting caused by extreme heat.

 

Okay, so not a great start to our big adventure!

Thomas Ingham “Barcoo Rot Ointment” potlid, c. 1890’s. IMage and reference source John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland.
I then discovered the word ‘Barcoola’ is an Aboriginal word and the Barcoo River divides country belonging to two tribes, suggesting the Barcoo River serves as a boundary between two groups in the region [Yandjibara and Dharawala in the Blackall Region which is the headwaters of the Barcoo River].
THEN… I discovered that in these tribal languages ‘Barcoola’ is given as the word for ‘two’.
So, here we are – “two in a Barcoo” – writing in and under the southern cross –  no scurvy, spews or rot in sight!! (But I do hope theBarcoo Hotel still welcomes country pub dwellers.)

Mail Coach at the Barcoo Hotel Blackall, 1897 Photo courtesy of John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland
Come August 21, 2014, we will be grey nomads, wandering writers and “of no fixed address” – time period unknown. I hope you will join us here (or as my friend/follower on Facebook) as we hit the road.
My thanks to John Oxley Library, State Library of QLD. For more reading:  http://blogs.slq.qld.gov.au/jol/2012/05/22/the-meaning-of-barcoo/