Thursday 5 April 2012

Lawn Of Destiny

So there I sat, mowing my lawn of destiny and being caught in the face by the slanty red rays of the setting sun. Behind me across the verge the beetroots grew quietly bigger, dreaming peacefully of the days near at hand when they will blissfully garnish someone's hamburger.

Or so I thought. For as I completed another neat row of the lawn, something caught my eye... something long and green and red lurking in the scrub of the verge. As I trundled closer more and more of them became apparent. All watching me as I mowed. 

Beets! They shuffled slowly out of the scrubby grass to stand in neat rows upon my lawn. MY lawn. The Lawn of Destiny. Fuckers. I pulled up in front of them, my eyes glittering with the sunset light.

"What ho, Beets?" I demanded in my best British General's voice. 

A beetroot raised a finger and took a breath... and my dream went pop. Still I found myself in this place bereft of certain thingies. Beetroot grew everywhere, from the slushy tundra to the sweltering tropics of this place. I pooed beetroot, I sweated vomited and pissed beetroot.

Goddammit.

What I wouldn't give for an honest block of Gruyere.

Ranted by Doomboy

Wednesday 4 April 2012

A Certain Room

One day, as I quietly resisted the urge to vent messy spleen on my colleagues, realisation sprung full blown upon me about the nature of a certain room.

Its a square room, with plain quarter-circle cornice and dark grey glossy architraves and frames. The walls are off white with a hint of ocher; the floor is diagonally laid black and cream square tiles with a mat-red border of oblong tiles. Light glows softly from indirectly-recessed niches in the ceiling. There is a single window, a bay affair made from cyprus pine and sky blue toughened panes. The blue tinge to the glass makes the grassy sward vista appear impossibly green.

As I took note of the view, I noticed also that there seemed to be a crowd of people forming.... stopping seemingly at random on the sward and standing there stupidly, eyes gazing up towards me as if towards the ledge of a messiah.

Just below the window, set into the flawless cream wall, an oblong hatch was positioned above a tapering cone that appeared to disappear big-end-out through the wall. 

I puzzled over this for a minute or two, examining the strange contraption from several angles. My stomach rumbled alarmingly, and as I straightened up from my examination I noticed that the crowd down on the sward was now huge. 

That was it! That was when the realisation sprung.

Opening the hatch revealed the outside, the sward population all staring up with dumb expressions. Quickly I undid my pants, bent over and stuck my arse out of the hatch. With great relief I let forth a huge brraying jet of farts. 

"Suffer, you bastards!" I yelled, amplifying my voice through the convenient cone. "Suck it down!! Ahahahaa!!!"

Summoning my dignity, I stood straight, did up my pants, closed the hatch and departed the room, my work there done.

Ranted by Doomboy

The Hun And The Mullumbimby Madness

I guess the anecdote that first springs to mind while contemplating the last few months is the tale of The Hun and the Mullumbimby Madness. It's a story that begins well enough, with an ordinary trip to the north in a hired car by a group of friends. 

One friend is uncomfortably from NZ, one from Australia and the remainder are Germans of varying pedigrees. The Bavarians are cool, their banter is amusing and they show a distinctly angelic flexibility of thought. The northern Germans though, are at first quite reserved but unfailingly polite. It seemed to the Aussie that they couldn't quite forget the old conflicts... couldn't quite get it out of their minds, for instance, that when 5000 of them parachuted into Crete in 1941 there were 800 Aussies waiting for them with bayonets fixed and a ridiculously stubborn attitude that would see the Germans have to land another batch of gormless Dortmunder's on the island before they'd shot all the antipodeans that were lurking in the feta sheds waiting to stab someone multiple times.

Or it could have just been the fact that their English was poor. 

Anyhow, with the trundling north, many stories and rude phrases were taught to the Germans. Much beer and wine was consumed. Many camping grounds were slept upon and roused from torpor by oompah-loompah-ish chantings. 

Then one night, around the citronella candle, out came the story of the Plantation Bunyip. A Bunyip, for those who don't know, is a mythical creature that dwells in water holes and is quite fearsome of temperament with the tooth and claw to match.

The story was about a man lost in the bush who stumbles upon a shady billabong and there stops to rest and take stock of himself. As he's quenching his thirst up surges the Bunyip, its reed covered hide and horrible fanged visage gurning unattractively forth upon the cowering man.

"What do you at my billabong, little man?" it growled, for Bunyips are reputedly intelligent and imbued with magical powers, and are fearsomely protective of their waters.

"A drink! A drink for a parched throat only, mighty Bunyip!" cried the man, falling back from the water in dismay. 

As I mentioned, Bunyips being territorial are fierce and particularly protective of their water. The Koori's know that to drink from a Bunyip's billabong is a dangerous desperate business, and should you be forced to, its best to present the creature with a gift. The better to ensure one's survival.

The Bunyip though, was intrigued by this strange man. All dressed in strange colours he was, with pink-pale skin underneath. As the billabong was full to overflowing at this time, it felt it could afford to be generous and disposed kindly to the man.

"You must pay for your drink!" rasped the monster, deciding not to kill and eat the man immediately, as not only was the billabong full, but also his belly was full of an unlucky wallaby that had strayed too close to the reeds to drink.

The man's eyes opened wide at this demand, and hurriedly he searched his multicoloured pockets for a trinket to appease the beast. His frantic patting and searching became desperate as first one pocket and then the next yielded nothing but fluff. Lastly, around his neck on a string of beads, hung a small tin. With trembling hands the man turned open the lid and with visible relief extracted a long fat joint. 

"I have only this to give, fearsome Bunyip!" said the man, tentatively holding out the spliff. 

The Bunyip pincered down two huge claws and gently took the joint from the man's grasp, a curious expression in its black eyes. The man produced a match from the tin and lit the joint, then mimed taking a drag from it. Tentatively, for the Bunyip being a water dweller is wary of fire and smoke, it brought the lit spliff to its black lips and inhaled. So mighty were the creatures lungs that the entire joint disappeared down to the roach in two breaths. 

Then suddenly it gave a mighty heave, and the most horrific barking gargle issued forth from its throat, draining the blood from the man's face with its volume... until he realised that the great beast was laughing uproariously, slapping its belly and giggling and cackling with its eyes all red and crinkled up. Great tears welled up in those eyes at the gales of laughter that issued forth, and long did they issue, the man joining in for a while in sheer relief. 

After its laughter had subsided, the still-baked creature in a moment of clarity, laid a powerful geas on the man to provide for the Bunyip forever more spliffs of the strongest, finest weed available. 

So the man, not quite unwillingly, found himself establishing a huge plantation around the quiet billabong, hidden from others by the magic of the bunyip. Thus Mullumbimby Madness was born, that rarest of weed enhanced and bred for the Bunyip and indeed enriched by the Bunyip's magic.

Legend has it that that very man, sustained beyond his years by the spells of the Bunyip assembly (for all Bunyips found the weed to their liking), can still be found peddling his wares anywhere from Mullumbimby to Nimbin.

The Germans expressed fascination with the story and demanded to know about all sorts of bush mythology. Bunyips figured strongly in their questions, as did the legendary Mullimbimby Madness itself.
Anyhow, the journey progressed, and much fun and sun was had. Eventually they came to the region of the story, and at majority insistence they turned aside to visit the valley and hamlet of Nimbin. 

As those of you who know the town are no doubt aware, the place is a haven of hippie values gone mad. Buds and cookies may be bought with impunity on the streets from totally baked strangers. This was quite a novelty for the Germans, as you may have guessed, and to put it lightly. Vast quantities of weed of varying quality was bought. The alpha Northern German, lets call him Hans, was particularly intrigued by the tale of the Bunyip and in his conversation with a particularly scruffy hippy he learned that local legends put the site of the billabong near a certain local swimming hole.

The next morning, much to everyone's consternation, the friends found that Hans and the car had disappeared. Later, the police found the car abandoned near the local swimming hole, but of Hans there was no sign. The friends waited 2 days for news of the missing troublemaker, and in the end they decided to return to the city as speculations as to Han's horrible end had rather put a damper on things. Weeks passed, and Hans faded from immediate memory. The Germans flew out, off to another destination. The Kiwi went back to his hole by the sea and sat on his arse. The Aussie went back to reality, speculations about the whereabouts of his missing companion circling occasionally in his brain.

Ranted by Doomboy

Tuesday 3 April 2012

An Adventure With Friedrich

I woke up this morning, the lingering dream of an adventure with Friedrich and the retinal pattern of his enormous mustache fading slowly from my immediate consciousness. It was a particularly harrowing dream, that one, filled with vicious Quolls, ominous portents and legions of dark-suited accountants on roller-skates. 

Nietzsche and I, you see, were charged by the Kaiser with ridding the alps of alien onions. We spent weeks hiking in the mountains, pulling up the dreaded root-vegetables wherever we found them... burning and stamping and grimacing our way along the snow lines. 

Aha, I hear you think.... but Nietzsche was a mad-man! Yes indeed! And much to my horror (and the Kaiser's chagrin) we discovered that not only was he a madman, but that his mustache was also an alien, a fifth column if you like, controlling the philosopher and leading us completely astray. I only found out because, while resting in the town of Füssen, the composure of the noted thinker dissolved into ground-lying fits of sobbing at the sight of a horse being whipped. 

Recognising something amiss, I shook the whole plan out of the man, or should I say his mustache.... You see they had manifested not as onions as we had been led to believe, but as small long patches amongst the manes of horses. Their fiendish plan was to bray and huff about the place, filling our streets with horse poo and rolling their host's eyes a lot. Unfortunately for them... fortunately for us... I was there to put the Germans onto this plan and so they invented the motor-car to save us from this fate. 

Thus the aliens were thwarted, and instead switched to plan B... which involves eating a lot of grass in paddocks, participating in racing events, rolling about on their backs and demanding feed and a rub-down. When the dream ended we had yet to come up with a counter-offensive.

Ranted by Doomboy