I havent seen the Great Barrier Reef, or Uluru or Canberra. I don't even know Melbourne that well, but I do know my local manor, the lovely, grungy seaside neighbourhood of St Kilda. These are some of the reasons why:1. The St Kilda Sea Baths. I swim here every day in the cloudy stingy salt water among eccentric Russians, people who wear flippers, octogenarian back strokers, the St Kilda Football Team, the Richmond Football Team and quite an assortment of people obviously on outings from international insane asylums.
2. The St Kilda Beach. Yes, it's got the odd heroin syringe and paper bag and there is a very strange smell at low tide but the sunsets are to die for and in February its like Rio with a slightly smaller chance of being murdered. Paul Kelly says its better than Bondi.
3. Acland Street. Just round the corner from me with its cafes, bars, cake shops, ice cream shops, chocolate stores and Italian eateries. You gain 3 pounds just window shopping on Acland.
4. St Kilda Primary School. Funky,cool, perhaps a little too hip but always fun. Kids actually run into school in the morning. To quote Mr T I pity the fool who sends their kids to private school if they live in this district.
5. Carlisle Street. Where are we, the East Village Circa 1981? Junkies, Hasidim, travellers, prostitutes, pimps, dealers, artists, meth addicts, bakers, poets, buskers, alcoholics, more junkies. Someone should write about these people perhaps in a lavish Broadway musical, loosely based maybe on La Boheme. They could call it Rent! Or, you know, something. I was in my local Hungarian Takeaway next to the library reading a poster on the wall in Yiddish that my wife translated as a comedy called "The Thirty Nine Schlepps" thinking, I like this street.
6. On the same strip of Carlisle you'll find The Local Taphouse voted recently the best bar in Australia. Lots of beers on tap, a great roof deck and scrummy food. Ask for the five beer sampler or the sour ale or the hoppiest beer in the house, or, if you're my mate Adam, a light Pilsner.
7. The Peanut Farm Preserve. Tucked away behind Acland Street is this charming oval where you can watch St Kilda City play quality Aussie Rules. They won their division last year and the City women's team isn't bad either. For a brief interesting time this season SKC's primary sponsor was The California Club, our local brothel.
8. Fitzroy Street. You can't throw a rock without hitting a hep cat on Fitzroy so lets go get some rocks! Or we could just go a trendy bar and watch the beautiful people float by. Recently the New York Times spent 36 hours in Melbourne and much of that time they spent aqui.
9. The St Kilda Adventure Playground. Walk along Grey Street, ignoring the ladies saying hello darling, turn left and you'll find yourself at St Kilda's dangerous sounding but actually quite safe home made playground with trampolines, tire swings, a pirate ship and lots of cool stuff for the kids.
10. Luna Park. For more danger try the wooden roller coaster which I read somewhere is the third oldest in the world. It's genuinely terrifying especially when the wind is up and the whole thing sways. A man stands between the cars with what looks like a giant brake. They also have a ghost train but I don't know what it was like because I kept my eyes closed for the entire ride through that.
59 comments:
It sounds a bit like Santa Cruz, actually, although on the roller coaster there is no man standing in the middle. What a job, huh?
Have you ever tried writing travel brochures Adrian? All that stuff about heroin syringes, junkies and a local brothel is bound to attract some fun tourist.
Sounds cool!
You'll get no arguments from me on this. It's all true. I might have thrown in a pizza downstairs at the Stokehouse on St Kilda Beach on a summer evening where the busy staff still find time to make a fuss of my eight year old, or a beer at the nearby Esplanade Hotel looking over the same stretch of water.
And yes, the The Local Taphouse ... wonderful because it's largely unknown to outsiders.
Thanks for the mention Adrian. It looks like we keep good company in your list but dubious neighbours in geography! :-)
The Local Taphousers
Adrian, now's the time to hit the Taphouse for a lifetime discount card.
Australia's crime fiction capital, too, isn't it?
Seana
There is a SC vibe. We even had a - small - earthquake last year.
Glenna
I dont think the St Kilda travel authority will thank me.
Dpougher
Yes but avoid the Espy when they are recording RockWiz. Nightmare in there. Unless you like that sort of thing. They took Keanu Reeves to the Stokehouse last year I heard. I would have taken him to Bells Beach but thats just me.
The Local
Just keep up the good work. And more hardcore IPA's please.
Luckily I didnt tell people about your neighbours directly across the street.
Oops.
Dpougher
I'm in the Russian internet cafe right next door to The Local as we speak. Interesting place. Definitely not a front for organised crime or anything. 100% not.
Peter
Yup. What was the name of that book? Murder in a Hansom Cab?
And of course Sidney Nolan was an ex pupil of St Kilda Primary.
And of course St Kilda are Peter Temple's team.
The Mystery of a Hansom Cab it is, and it predates the first Sherlock Holmes story.
It's funny how small earthquakes don't actually prepare you all that well for large ones. Small earthquakes lend to the illusion that we are still somewhat in control. Large earthquakes make you realize that you are on the back of something that can flick you off without even noticing.
Another funny thing is that eventually, you tend to ignore those kinds of lessons. Though not completely.
Mike
Cool?
Its bloody freezing today.
Peter
But not The Murders in the Rue Morgue.
Maybe this was the first mystery with a human killer?
Seana
Except in the movies where it becomes an important flashback or "motivation" for something or other.
An odd thing is that just today I was walking to work and I saw a very nice chimney, and the bricks had been put in in an interesting pattern and I thought, hmm, that mortar looks pretty new. And I went on a whole trajectory about whether it was smart to invest a lot in fancy chimneys when we live in an area where everything that's held together with mortar is just going to crumble in the next big one anyway.
So I guess that's the kind of way that that kind of experience stays with you. I suppose it's kind of the way that people in New Orleans look at levees right now. Which is to say, skeptically.
Yep, I was going to specify "but not Poe." I have not forgotten that great American, who wrote much of his best work right here in Philadelphia.
Of course, the RocKwiz presenter's children go to St Kilda Primary - or have you earbashed him already?
David
Dont know the Rockwiz guy and I dont know about Jack's class but there are two kids in Arwynn's class whose parents are rock musicians. That's a pretty high percentage I think. Unsustainable if extrapolated to the entire economy I imagine.
Seana
Hmmm, that does not seem like a wise policy at all. I think I told you before that I was in SC a couple of years after the last major earthquake and it still looked like a disaster area.
Peter
Did you ever read The Mystery to a Solution by John Irwin? Its probably not worth buying but its worth dipping into at a library esp if you like Poe or Borges or best yet both of them.
Nope, I don't know it. Thanks.
OK, I'm moving in with you.
Peter
Like I say, its not worth buying but it's a good one to get from the library.
Like me I'll bet you were sorry you missed "The 39 Schlepps". Leah says it was some kind of Purim comedy thing.
Miss Witch
And we have a spare room.
If Marie Antoinette really did say let them eat cake I know where we could get the cake.
There's no way "The 39 Schlepps" could be as good as its title, so maybe it's best that I can preserve my illusion and not see it -- unless it goes on tour.
I interviewed the husband and wife writers/stars of ABC1's The Librarians recently - they're also StKPS parents. I was pleased that they agree that Monday assemblies are sweet but interminable.
Although it seems St Kilda isn't as good as the Welsh paradise that is Newport ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNfbX6uvA6s&feature=player_embedded
Wowie Zowie, Dave, those kids are enthusiastic! Good thing I was planning on watching an episode of Torchwood tonight or I wouldn't know quite what to do with myself. Probably either write a petition to the city council to become a sister city or buy a plane ticket.
Though I remember vaguely that Wales is a little hard to get to even once you're sort of close.
Peter
You're probably right. Sometimes the title is enough. Like We'll Always Have Parrots.
Peter
You're probably right. Sometimes the title is enough. Like We'll Always Have Parrots.
David
For me its around the four minute mark when my attention starts to wander.
Nice Newport parody. I think Jay Z would approve actually. He seems to have a decent sense of humour.
I have been to Newport. All I remember is rain and a vague feeling of disappointment that we still werent in Cardiff.
Seana
Speaking of Zowie Bowie have you seen Moon yet. Its rather good.
I haven't but I'll keep an eye out for it.
Speaking of movies, I wonder if everyone here has already seen the Google announcement about taking part in creating a documentary about one day on earth. It's here. And it's the twenty fourth, so think fast.
I don't even have a camera, but it sounds fun to try if you do.
You're probably right. Sometimes the title is enough. Like We'll Always Have Parrots.
I've long had a fondness for clever titles, a fondness with which I'm prone to abrade the ear drums of innocent interlocutors, at least once to good effect (scroll to the bottom of the post).
==========================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Gosh, I'd like to know what the Yiddish was that translated into "The 39 Schlepps." Terrific title.
Seana
I missed it. Not that I would filmed anything anyway.
Peter
Did you get a cut? A nice dinner?
Kathy
I wish I had just taken the poster off the wall. It was a lovely poster done in the style of the play of The 39 Steps. A beautiful thing to have. Alas.
Any chance of adoption?
There's only seven of us and we're very tidy.It sure beats Carrick's multitude of pond shops and hairdressers.
That should read pound shops.
Damn those fingers!
No cut yet. I have to wait in an agony of suspense to see if she uses the title.
==========================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/
Anon
You can come but that spare room is going to get pretty crowded.
We'll take in in shifts for the bed.
The post practically had me pining to go back to Australia and I only spent three months travelling years ago.It is a brilliant place.
What's up with the hipster-bashing? Dude!
Hahaha....good listing mate...I'm an old St Kilda head and I used to live right next to the Peanut Farm reserve. I loved going in there and speaking to people tending their vegie plots. Im up in Grey St now and thought the place has changed a lot over the years there are still some cracking places to go and have a damn good night...did you mention Claypots? If not get thee down there, right next to Pure Pop.
Glad to find your blog as I was blown away by your writing style in your written work.
Now time to trawl through some of your stuff....
Glad you're settling back in. I re-read your re-post and realize I'd glanced right over the WOODEN ROLLERCOASTER bit. I moved to Hull, MA just after they torn down their wooden roller coaster. Kind of haunted me that I never got to see it or ride it. It was a seaside resort that had seen better days. Still is. But I love it. So the idea of your coaster being set in a place that's warm, well, the little lady and I are indeed toying with the idear of relocating.
Not like we would stalk you or anything.
Sounds charming, and you sound glad to be back. Welcome home.
Adrian,Home indeed sounds like a rather bohemian 1950s Greenwich Village or at least as I imagine it with great options for kids(Schools sound great). Have you travelled further east to Maylasia,Indonesia,Japan or China? I can see new vistas for your story telling erupting,If memory serves me Nesbro's Hole began his saga in Australia. Travel however is a bit difficult and unsettling to young children.Welcome Home. Best Alan
Sheiler
Yes the roller coaster is actually pretty terrifying because you think the whole thing is going to collapse at any moment.
Lil
Very glad to be back. Now if the heatwave can go away...
Alan
Yeah done some exploring...If you trawl down through the blogposts you can find a few blogs about Japan and Indonesia...
Heatwave sounds good from Blighty....
Are you working on your next book? (Sorry, have been out of the loop for a couple of weeks)
That programme of my brother's - Who's Been Sleeping in My House? starts on ABC soon - mid March I think -look out for it
Deb
I shall check it out either on the telly or the ABC1 player.
In theory I'm working on book 3 but in practice I find it difficult to get motivated unless the deadline is looming and its not looming quite yet.
I suppose I guessed that, since your blogging has become prolific!
I am not reading-or writing- much. Work and a too-long winter are taking their toll. Plus a crazy sleep pattern, weary but wakeful at 4am.
I am looking forward to a few days in London - all archaeology! Lectures,talks,get togethers, should be fun.
Hopefully I will see Adam's programmes when he sends me the DVD.
thanks for share.
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