Around Australia with six days to go

Adelaide

On arrival in Adelaide, we were met by Maureen’s cousin Hazel and her husband Ray and they kindly took us to Hahndorf which is a short drive in to the hills from Adelaide.
The small town has a German background so rather than repeat myself I have added a link to a blog about Hahndorf that I posted in 2016. Not much had changed since our first visit because the small town is a protected town.
There was one noticeable change for me because when we visited a German style restaurant for lunch and ordered a German beer for Ray and myself, I was asked to pay $30 deposit for the ‘steins’ and a lot less for the actual beer. I’ve never been asked to pay a deposit for a beer container.

At the end of the lunch, I did receive my deposit back as I paid the bill.

A Stirling coincidence

Melbourne

                                                  Our next stop was Melbourne.
In Melbourne we were met by two old friends that we hadn’t seen for thirty-eight years.
We used to live near each other in the early 1980’s when Maureen I built our first house in 1981 in a small (as it was then) town called Sunbury (named after the London Sunbury). 

Sometime in 1981, I’m with our two children next to the bricks that would be used to build our home. At that time, we lived in rented accommodation about an hour’s drive from where we planned live.
We visited the sight to make sure that the correct bricks (as in colour & texture) had been delivered. I did not want anything to go wrong. As you can see the area was wide open, the only thing that had already been built was the road through the anticipated new suburb.

We were keen to move in to be ready for the new school year for our son & daughter.
The school was a new school, and we wanted our two children to start school at the same time as every other child in the area. 
The above is my son on his first day at school, our daughter experienced her first day at school in the UK.
I posted the above to show the wide-open space that was in front of our house. 

Our first house built in 1981 – photograph taken 2023 – how time flies.

When we moved in we didn’t have a neighbour on both sides – the one on the left was being built and the other side was an empty plot of land. 
I looked across the road and the views were of houses as far as I could see.
We used to be able to see Mount Macedon, where the movie Picnic at Hanging Rock was set, now the view was no more. Below is a link to a blog about the bush fire that we experienced in Sunbury, our first Australian bush fire. The first half of the post has nothing to do with the bushfire.

Christmas 1981 to Feb 1983.

The one place in Sunbury that had not changed in 38 years was the local church, St Mary’s Anglican church. 

In 2017 the church congregation celebrated the 150th year of Christian services.

New shopping centre, car yards on the outskirts, new home site areas pegged out for house after house, the place had grown.

On our return to the ship, I tried to capture the new feel of Melbourne. When we lived in Melbourne the drive from home was along country lanes to the airport area followed by freeway into the city.

Today the three-lane freeway has been upgraded to a five (I think) lane freeway that allows for high speed travel. Passing the airport, which was opened in 1970, the freeway continued a lot closer to Sunbury than I remembered and much of the land around the airport that used to be fields is now a cargo village and other support industries for the airport.
I suppose this is progress.

The journey back to the ship would take us over the West Gate Bridge, which opened in 1978. I lived in Melbourne from late 1980 t0 1985 and never had cause to use this bridge, but we would today. 

Elevated loop of M1 Melbourne highway going through West Gate bridge during rush hour high traffic time with lots of driving cars above local residential houses.

Above picture off the internet

Melbourne CBD as we approached the West Gate Bridge that took us over the Yarra River. 

The West Gate Bridge as we approached the area where the cruise ship was berthed. The bridge carried five lanes each way at high speed, and I was glad that I was not navigating.

I took the above from the road to illustrate how green the area is where the cruise ships dock along a dedicated cruise pier.

At the end of the street our cruise ship can be seen

It was farewell Melbourne.

I’d hate to say – if only . . to our children in the future.

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All ready for a wedding.

The flight from London to Melbourne was particularly good considering the last time Maureen & I flew to Australia, which was not long after we were married in 1970, we were also travelling ‘staff travel’, and we were ‘off-loaded’ in Hong Kong and we were stuck there for about four or five days.
As a couple it was inconvenient, but with two children an ‘off-load’ would have been a problem.

The wedding went well, and we all had a great time, and the children just loved the beach.

After the wedding we stayed with Maureen’s aunt & uncle who had emigrated from the UK in 1951.  They were very hospitable and during one visit to the city via the old ‘red rattler’ we thought we would check something out.

Chelsea

The above shows Chelsea station, although part of the Melbourne network living in Chelsea gave the feel that you were in a small town rather than a major city.
Note the level crossing to allow the train to pass through . . . it was quiet, and the beach just a couple of minutes’ walk from the station.

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Red Rattler 

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inside of a ‘red rattler – I think the red rattlers was discontinued in 1985.

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We arrived at the terminus in Melbourne, which is in the heart of the city.

Walking around the city we passed the Migration Services centre (I am not sure what the exact name was in 1978), but this was what I wanted to check out. 
From memory this office could give you permission to stay in Australia permanently. 

I queued and when it was my turn an Italian-Australian asked

‘What de u vant’

I said ‘I’d like to stay in Australia, please.’

‘What skil av u ?

‘I work for an airline.’

‘We don-t-a need you.’

‘But I can fly a B747!’ said, I lying to my back teeth.

‘We plenty pilot we don-a-need you – NEXT!’

A Vietnamese chap behind me with limited English was smiled at, and asked to sit down – PC had not been invented in at that time . . . 

After our holiday we arrived home in November 1978, and now I had to settle back into the routine of shift work and selling frozen food, and it was cold after the beautiful beach weather of Australia. 
To add to the cold weather mortgage rates were about to go up in early 1979 to just under 12%, we could no longer afford to live in our house or even in Congleton because of the cost of petrol and the proposed mortgage hike.

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In March of 1979 the Prime Minister, James Callaghan lost a vote of confidence in the House, and he was forced to call a general election.

As all this was happening Maureen and I were discussing our future and we both considered that since our last visit eight years earlier, Australia had change in a positive way.  The living standard of the average man had increased considerably, but Maureen & I had the feeling that we were going backwards in the UK, because we were being forced to move closer to work because of the high mortgage rate and the cost of petrol to get to work.
Discussion in Parliament anticipated that the mortgage rate in 1980 would reach 15%. 
By July 1979 petrol prices for 2-star petrol had jumped to £1.40 per gallon (£7.13 today). The fall of the Shah of Iran in 1979 caused oil prices to skyrocket.

Instead of moving closer to Manchester airport we decided sell up and migrate to Australia – if they would have us.
The decision was made easier for me than Maureen, because I woke up one morning and found myself looking forward to retiring, I was only 33! 
I had to do something!

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We booked a meeting with the Australian High Commission branch office in Manchester and arrived at the appointed time.

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Chatsworth House in Manchester, where the Australian Migration offices were located. 

The meeting started a little ‘coldly’ because the person that we were meeting did not like living in England and told us so.
He complained about the way the British park their cars on the wrong side of the road. In Australia one would not dream of parking a car facing the wrong way.
He then told us that he was being posted to Germany and he was looking forward to the Munich beer festival because he did not like English beer.

We did not feel as if the meeting was going well.

He then asked if I had a criminal record, and in a fit of trying to lighten the meeting I replied that I did not think that I still required one. There was a long, long silence.

At that time migration to Australia was based on a point system, the applicant had to reach a certain number of points in total.
Points were given for being able to speak English, the education level of the applicant, the number of children, the age of the applicant, job skills of the applicant, the amount of cash that we were taking and so on. 
He then told us that if it was up to him he would not allow us to migrate because I was unemployable and at the top end of the age group, and he expected me to go on the dole as soon as we arrived in Australia.
But, under the points rule he had to sanction our migration because we were paying our own way and did not require government support – at that time the £10 POM had finished, and it was now a £50 POM system, which was not available for us.

We had our interview on the 9th April 1979 and it was 15th October when we received permission to migrate. 

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On the 24th October, our passports arrived, which contained the visa to live in Australia. We had until 20th September 1980 to arrive in Australia, any later and we would not be allowed to migrate.

On the same day we put the house up for sale. 

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I took this picture in 2008, during a driving holiday in the UK.

When we lived in this house the front living room window was a picture window from ceiling to floor giving us spectacular views over the valley. The bow window must have been put in by the new owners.  

The house was sold in two days, on the 26th October 1979. We could start packing . . . Australia here we come!

The legal process began at the speed of a snail. 

Late November / early December the mortgage rate increased to 15% and our buyers withdrew their offer.  

Should we or shouldn’t we . . .

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Before we emigrated to Australia we lived in a small town (small for the UK) of about 11,000 people called Congleton, which is in Cheshire.
During the time we lived there we took part in the celebrations for the town’s 700 th anniversary.

I worked shifts for BOAC (later British Airways) at Manchester Airport, which was 50 kms from home.
We enjoyed our time in Congleton, and loved the location of our house, which was one of five that over looked the River Dane.

The above picture show the view from our bedroom window.

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The above view is from our living-room window.
The above photographs are getting old.

Life was good until the interest rates went up to 18%, petrol climbed to stupid prices (I didn’t have a company car, so I was paying for my own petrol) and the weather could be a pain.

The whiteness of the above two photographs is the frost – not snow.

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Come Christmas we had snow, which was fine and felt very ‘Christmas’, until you had to dig the car out and try to get to work – if the road was open.
At times only four wheeled drive vehicles were allowed out of the town.

So a decision had to be made, because the cost of living in such a beautiful area was killing us. We decided to move closer to the airport, but which airport?

Instead of moving closer to Manchester we decided to move closer to Melbourne airport in Australia, so we began the long process of gaining permission to emigrate. Which is another story.

After about a year we finally had permissions to emigrate.

It took us over a further year to sell the house, due to the high interest rates – we sold the house twice, but the first time it fell through because the buyer couldn’t secure the loan due to the interest rates.
Finally we sold, but we had to be in Australia by a certain date or else our Australian residency visa would expire.

We left power of attorney with our solicitor and flew out just in time. We paid full price for all our tickets, I was too old, at thirty five, to emigrate for £50.00.

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 Our first Christmas in Australia on Chelsea beach in Victoria.

I was out of work for eleven days, and was offered three jobs. The best job interview I’d ever had was in Melbourne. I was taken to a pub for lunch by the State Manager & the Admin manager of an international courier company, and at the end of the lunch they asked when I could start.
I started the next day and was given a company vehicle as part of my package. At the end of my first day I left the office in the dark on a wet rainy Friday, driving a strange vehicle and I didn’t know the way home.
In the end I kept Port Phillip Bay on my right and kept going until I recognised the railways station near where we lived.

From then on we’ve never looked back, Australia is a great country.

Melbourne

Welcome to an early morning arrival in Melbourne on Good Friday.

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Had a feel of the Enterprise from Star Treck.

Rain and drizzle on a very dull day.

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with The Sprit of Tasmania ferry boat along side the next wharf.

The beach started at the passenger ship wharf, but even this gave the place a feel of out of season visits.

After visiting a local Anglican church in the morning, it was back on board for lunch and a quiet drink in the Explorers Bar

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