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All’s well that ends well.

It was actually a fine day, a simple plan. Fly back home. Yes Sydney is far across the ocean, far down under the globe., but really less than 20 hours flight from Dallas. Just have to make it to Dallas OK. This was the mantra from the night before. Who would know what would happen in Reagan to delay the flight – and miss the connection.

As it was, the DC flight was on time and departed smoothly. Not much to eat on the flight – but hey, only a few hours to Dallas. How many was it again – coudn’t remember, didn’t really care, an extra hour of time zone should help anyway, since the Sydney flight was late, late into the evening.

Not long before landing, the weather changed and apparently a storm cell had moved over Dallas. Things must’ve got a bit chaotic at the destination airport, since the airline elected to shift the landing to Austin and wait out the storm front on the ground.

So there we sat, on the tarmac, a totally packed plane – hour after hour. About every 30 minutes or so, we were reassured that it would be soon we would take off and most assuredly i would make my connection. Occasionally we were given permission to end our flight in Austin if we thought would be better. Most people needed to connect in DFW, so we all pretty much sat there.

Not much talk, no one really spoke, didn’t make new friends, at least not in our row. Thinking back that short delay dragged on for over 6 hours and as it happened, 6 hours sitting on a seat next to 2 other people, in hindsight, interesting. I guess we keep thinking it will be over soon and we will be off this plane in less than an hour.

No sleep either, no entertainment, no wifi. What a great time I had though in Boston, and it was so nice to see my son in DC and then the wilds of West Virginia for a few days, the haunting town of Wheeling and the criss and cross of the ohio river. At Cape Ann I saw the Brahms Piano Concerto. Such focus from the pianist to get every chord and run, with the orchestra enjoying the ride. Sweet sounds of the flute and clarinet and a bit of boof from the timpani. At Plymouth I saw the Mayflower, at least a replica, and enjoyed some great lobster with work colleagues. So nice to re-establish friendships from the past and even recent past. Will I ever be back., always the wonder when living down under. Time flies when reflecting on the good things. Did anyone notice me smiling, laughing to myself about the joys of travel, even if waiting on the tarmac is part of it. Wherever we look or reflect we see things overlap with our experience, enhance it, create it, embellish it and shape it.

Still no one spoke much and no one complained. The flight attendants were fine and the passengers were not stressed. It was like a magic boomerang. A storm came., we diverted, a magic boomerang was thrown, we sat there waiting for it to come back and us take off and end the whole diversion, as though it didn’t happen really.

In the end the hours of waiting round in Dallas didn’t eventuate – and most of them were spent waiting in a kind of plane limbo out at Austin – perfect skies – perfect weather, not even a hint of what might have been happening in Dallas just north of there.

Having run to the gate in Dallas to make the connection, no time to eat, no time to shop, no time to think. I made the flight. Sat in my seat and thought – ok – well only another 17 hours and I’ll be back home. All’s well that ends well.

The transition

A leaf breaks off

And lives a life unbound – now

it’s gained a pretty color …

Embarrassed with its freedom – though,

And falls into a coveted coverlet

Dancing down the sky

Winding round the air

Landing on the massive ground without a …

Rivers of red – hot ruby lava

Making a cup – for a new kava

Drunken and winding

Arms of violence

Cover an ancient landscape

Lost in a moment — carries its leaf – burnt

Into the ocean – briny lazy wake

And then it’s all over – steamy

The volcanic quake.

Anna

There's a bay not far from Samurai called Anna Bay – but it's still some way round from the town called Anna Bay. In fact Anna Bay the town and its namesake bay cannot be seen together. You may be confused if you use an older nautical chart , but google has it right if its the town you need to get to.

I like this place for the colours not the beach. The colours come from the rocks and the sky on the water. The best colours are at dawn and dusk, just on sunset and afterwards till the bright stars and planets fill up the black sky by a cold cold midnight.

Camel fence

  
I collapsed upon the floor in the tent.

My car , a prado wrecked outside the flaps.

My host offered me coffee from a golden pot and some dates to eat. I was shaking from the shock of course and shivering from the mental flight.

‘What’s your problem mate ?’

‘I think it’s a case of the camel and the needle’ big bloody camel just came onto the car. Lucky I rolled it actually. The car that is. Otherwise it would’ve come straight through the windscreen. Just like a kangaroo.  Of course you can’t really build a fence to keep the Kangaroos off the road. But I see you have a pretty decent fence here.  So what’s with the camel?’

‘Inshallah someone will keep the gate closed next time.’

‘Well like I said, the car is a wreck out there in the heat and dust., had some water sat least and it didn’t get chucked out., but I hit that palm tree pretty hard. It all happened so fast.   The brakes, the camel, the rolling flight through the air, thinking… This is going to be bad… And then hittin the palm half way up and bouncing off that with dust and burning all around.’

‘You kill the camel ?’

‘Must’ve grazed it at least’

‘Maybe it hopped back over that camel proof fence you got out there.’

‘You got a bit of a graze there though mate. How’s the head ?’

‘Think I hit it on the roll.’

‘Hope the camel’s ok though. It’s got a much longer neck- and a heavier head really.’

‘Sure – / – you sure it was a camel ? I mean – there is a fence – no gate / camels can’t jump – and they usually don’t survive entanglement with a prado — you get my meaning?.’

‘You must be dreaming’