Author's Note: this story was started for the 2022 Letters of Love anthology, but I didn't get it finished in time. But here it is, a reminiscence of youth and older days.
Part One
Dear Helen,
I am already the thing I dreaded I would be, when I sent that text out of the blue - an unreliable correspondent. No matter. Ferry's Landing has had another flood warning, the news is alarming, such high water. And whilst you live in Wallaratta, one hopes that, in a high house on a high hill, you are safe. So it's time to try again, to write to you.
We've moved. Still in the same city, but higher up in what almost qualifies as "the Hills". I'm sitting out on the deck, built by me as the Christmas project, one of many, for the house. It's a 1960s double red brick house, standard quarter acre block, but Helen, the trees! Three tall gums out the front, one like a weeping willow, one huge gum actually in our back yard, and in the line of the small creek past the back fence, five more gums, and up the ridge beyond, a dozen more, with a stand of tall pines along the crest of the ridge. It's a tree change, in suburbia, with five fire stations within a ten kilometre radius. Safe from fires!
We have resident koalas, or the trees are on their range. They pass through on a two-weekly rotation. Big boofy Boris, a large lazy male who manages to grunt and carry on, but doesn't seem fully convinced; his paramour, Ludmilla, who last season carried a joey, Svetlana, on her back, who then climbed higher than she did.
Why Russian koalas? you ask. Simple: when we moved in, we engaged a pair of tree cutters to lop massive dead branches from the big gum. A pair of young "speakers in tongues" turned up, children of God and good for them, because they both had that distant look of several drugs too many, not so many years in the past.
The climber was Isaac - I suspect a stage name with his church - and his mate Boris, who most likely was from Russia or thereabouts, judging by his very thick accent. So, the big koala became Boris.
Isaac clearly had his faith in God and with Russian Boris on the ground watching him, his swing from a rope belayed thirty metres in the air was incredible, then lowering a 200kg length of timber to the ground on a pulley system, astonishing. We've got a couple ton of timber in a wood shed, and a glorious Norwegian pot belly stove in the back room for those cold winter nights.
Choc and Chip the two kookaburras come every day, pulling worms and bugs from the turned soil where Maureen is planting ground cover roses, and five magpies, a family, are becoming more fearless at the bird feed table. They'll be eating from our hands, soon, I think.
Brown snakes, too: a little bugger I found in my shed but luckily had an immediate wooden box to place over him until the snake catcher arrived with a very long pole and a deep bag.
"Those little ones are the worst," he said, "they're too bloody small to grab behind the head."
Look, there's Choc the kookaburra on the arch - he's obviously seen me and is hoping for food - but Flick has instructed, don't feed them every day. You mustn't make them dependent, she says - and he got the ham scraps yesterday. Or she. I don't know which sex is the bigger bird.
And that, lovely Helen, is me, 2022, second quarter.
And I remember your touch on my shoulder in that restaurant by the river (and I guess that restaurant got flooded), so:
Much love, David xx
* * * *
Well hello stranger, long time no hear!
It was lovely to get your email filled with all of your doings, comings and goings.
Spoiler alert!!! Epistle following!
You have moved and look like you are loving the bush change! It sounds amazing. Loved the pics, thanks for thinking of me! You have also scored a good-sized shed too by the look of it. Watch those eucalypts near the house, won't you. They drop limbs without warning, especially in dry times followed by wind. Koalas and bird life to enjoy as well. You will love it. Just have a fire safety plan organised and super good insurance!!! Yes mum!!! Gutter guard???
We have also moved! About fifteen months ago we were offered a ridiculous price for our Wallaratta home, which was not a good home to retire in, as there was so much upkeep with gardens, a sloping site for mowing and whipper snipping and large areas of unprotected decking and railings that rotted in the coastal weather with monotonous regularity and required painting and oiling every year.
So, we decided to take the money and run! We actually moved to the Ferry!! 20/20 vision in hindsight, it wasn't a good move for me. Too close to the water and I never aspired to live in a swamp! In saying that, we missed the flooding thank goodness, both of the floods. They were significant and we were evacuated as the expectation was that Ferry's Landing, the whole island, was going under by two metres! We stayed with friends inland a bit. Luckily the water spread out wide across the plain and didn't rise as high as they predicted. It came in about 4 - 5 blocks from the river, though, but our place was above the highest water. Scary, not what you want going into dotage!!
I love the very original names you have chosen for the wildlife. Your delightful sense of humour in describing the reasons why had me laughing. Our kookaburras have just arrived back recently. I don't feed these ones because they dig up big grubs daily from the soil. I'm reluctant to feed them here as human food depletes calcium in their bodies and then the females have soft shelled eggs, hence the chicks don't survive. The same with the magpies apparently. I thought of getting mealy bug larvae from the pet food shop and putting it out on a tray, but haven't got around to it and probably won't. They are remarkably healthy. Mind you, if I accidentally kill a gecko, I throw it on the back lawn and they go like hot cakes.
The pot bellied stove sounds fabulous. Nothing like a fire to warm the house and the spirits. Great on a wet day to dry things out too. Get all of that wood chopped up and stacked so it can dry out and season. It might take a couple of years but it will smoke a lot less when burned and be hotter.
I'm trying to stay as strong as possible to keep my parent's legacy of osteoporosis at bay before I have to go on the bad drugs with the hideous side effects. Currently, I leg press 130kg, squats are between 50 and 60kgs (bar across the shoulders) and dead lifts between 30 and 40kg depending on my tweaky hip! So, I'm not mucking around and playing with girlie hand weights as you can see! I still only weigh 56kg, so I'm not a Sumo wrestler!
Yes, that restaurant was totally flooded, (you old softie, the things you remember!!!) as was the entire main drag and much more. Thankfully, it wasn't too deep but it did a lot of damage.
On that cheery note, it is time I stopped dribbling! I will always send you a reply dear David, and wouldn't have it any other way, so if I haven't replied, then there must be a reason. You should still have my mobile number so just flick me a text to check if necessary.
Love, Helen
* * * *
Helen, Just one quick comment before I again read and properly digest your delightful letter.
I'm reading your third last para again, and you can lift your own weight? That's incredible! But look at you! You must weigh pretty much what you did when you were eighteen.
I'm actually very, very impressed, but I have a feeling I should be a little scared, because, well, strong women who can still wear tight dresses...
David
* * * *
I lift more than my body weight! A lot of training! It has taken a while to gradually build strength in my legs and butt but I'm doing remarkably well for an old chick!! Just trying to stay strong in my dotage.
But David, you are a worry! Strong women in tight dresses -- I thought it would be every man's dream to have a fit young woman wrapped around them!!!
I'm just doing it for me, as I have always done, to try to stave off old age and decrepitude for as long as possible. I ain't no picture postcard any more, sadly, considering I was 32 when I had my first kid and 36 for the second! A late bloomer shall we say. I had been an old 'spare' for so long I had decided never to marry. Now look what I have done!! The things we do.
Well lovely David, I bid you good night. Take care, and don't work too hard!!!!!!