
How do you pronounce “Tucabia”?The dirt road passing our property is called the Tucabia road. Further on is the tiny, sleepy township of Tucabia.
We had heard from neighbours that somewhere out there were Swiss people living.
We went to the Tucabia post office to inquire where these people might live. Like mentioned before we were not really sure if they were Swiss or Swedish. When we arrived at the post office we could not believe our eyes.We had never seen a post office like that.
The weatherboard house was dilapidated to the stage of collapse. To get into the post office we had to walk over an array of household items laying around, old rusty iron sheets, washing which probably had fallen from the line aeon's ago, old bikes without wheels, rusty bits that by the look of it must have been ones a car or two.
The floor in the post office was badly sagging and by the look of it someone had the misfortune to have fallen with a foot through a rotten piece of flooring, as still the heel of a black shoe was sticking out of the hole.
The floor in the post office was badly sagging and by the look of it someone had the misfortune to have fallen with a foot through a rotten piece of flooring, as still the heel of a black shoe was sticking out of the hole.
After we reassembled our shocked faces we called out for the lady of the house, as nobody was around. After a while a friendly, comfortable looking lady presented herself as the postmistress. We asked her about the Swiss people we were told lived somewhere in this area.
She looked us up and down and said there was a new family living along the Tucabia road. They are really weird people. It is said they have only one entrance door in their house because they are afraid of snakes. And then she let out a roar of laughter she had not heard of something so hilarious for a while and with a little sniff practically as an excuse, foreigners.
After we got the hint what and about whom she was talking, we said that we were actually the people she was telling us about. She swallowed once, but caught her equilibrium very quickly. Accentuating her answer with a vague hand gesture said there are some Swedish people living out there somewhere. She did not know exactly where so we left it at that. We will never know if we missed something, we never met the Swedish-Swiss people.
Tucabia is a sleepy village isolated like everything around it. It is very flat and sandy, has already a tiny whiff of the sea. The houses are far and wide nestling on acreage. Only a few tall, stately gumtrees dot the landscape.
Some of the tall Eucalyptus have big, black ants nests attached which are cleverly used by Kookaburras as nesting places. Around Tucabia is bush…bush ..bush…it is a village in the bush. (bush is the word used to describe woodland.
The road a straight, narrow ribbon leads the way up and down along bushland towards the coast and the small holiday village of Wooli.
On our way we encountered a forest completely ring barked. The skeletal trees a cemetery of ghostly, ancient giants, limbs broken, numb and powerless under a deep blue, innocent sky. Yet the trees even in their battlefield status have not lost all their purpose. Lots of birds and small animals still find shelter and nesting places in the hollows of the trees.
Coarse ferns, scrub and tough blady grass still provide shelter and hiding places for lizards and other animals. Small saplings raise intimidatingly their vulnerability towards the light. The bush looks rough and unkempt, primeval and still there is serenity to it that a groomed and landscaped ground can never achieve.
A wooden chapel stands lonesome on the side of the road oblivious to its neglect.
Cherishes now the only occupants, the spirit of its long dead worshippers.
The landscape is bare where in earlier times the trees have been ring barked to make room for more farmland.
Now only rusty, holed iron sheets bear witness to a lively homestead that occupied the site and oddly, completely intact stone steps lead up to nowhere.
A small tumbledown shed ,its roof caved in, are the sad looking leftovers.
Tough, hardwood fences, silvery from sun, wind and rain hang on for a while longer and still display the craftsmanship and hard work of people long gone. They give suddenly way to a tangle of never mended wire fences.
Ground hugging Banksias with their golden candles held up high grow in dense profusion along the road. The road is a narrow ribbon of bitumen with on both sides half a car space of dirt road. You have to drive half on the bitumen and half on the dirt track; if you don’t follow this rule you’re pushed out completely into the dirt and further down into a ditch, as the oncoming cars pass with astonishing speed in the middle of the road which they abandon quickly to hug the other half of the dirt road leaving only a cloud of dust.
Ground hugging Banksias with their golden candles held up high grow in dense profusion along the road. The road is a narrow ribbon of bitumen with on both sides half a car space of dirt road. You have to drive half on the bitumen and half on the dirt track; if you don’t follow this rule you’re pushed out completely into the dirt and further down into a ditch, as the oncoming cars pass with astonishing speed in the middle of the road which they abandon quickly to hug the other half of the dirt road leaving only a cloud of dust.
The road wends its way up and down, along grazing land, the odd homestead, bush and more bush then suddenly you arrive on top and from there you have a breathtaking view of the Pacific Ocean, like a glorious gift presented to you. The horizon merges sky and sea tantalized by transparent sunlight. Born of the sun and lives by the light fits perfectly here, so Alphonse Daudet said this about the Provence. Golden, sandy beaches hug green blue water, sparkling, inviting and besieging, we have arrived in paradise.
18 comments:
Tucabia sounds indeed like a sleepy village. I guess it's not too far from the beach and I can imagine the beaches there being quite empty which is perfect. Do you grow anything there? Grüssli Bill
nice to have found your blog!
we don't like in Sweden, but close:
http://abenteuerskandinavien.blogspot.com/2009/04/birthdays-geburtstage.html
and we've got family down under...
You described your surroundings vividly! It's exactly the Australia I know. My daughter lives outside Cooktown in the rainforest. The beaches are dangerous because of the crocs. She has plenty of snakes in her garden. Well thank you for sharing and for your comment! Have a great day!
A lovely story and so well written. Your English is fantastic.It sure is paradise along the NSW coastline.
Wilbo thank you for your visit, no, now it is holidays only!
Sarah Sofia, thank you for your visit. Great, which area?
Reader Wil, thank you for your comment.
Diane; it is always so nice to hear from you.
Like always I completely sucked in every word of this remarkable piece of written report from your travels. It is described in such a manner that mental pictures force their way into ones mind at the same rate as the story moves on from one passage to another. The post office and it's inhabitant become clearly evident in ones head without any pictures to support the image.
The limbs of the dead trees and the ragged old fence swaying in the wind and finally the glory of the ocean. A wonderful journey and with its amusing pointers too.
Really quite difficult to comprehend how people would not notice a differense between the word Swiss as supposed to the word Swedish but i guess they live rather isolated from the outside world in reality. Still they must at least have televisions there.
I have rarely read with such pleasure
a narrative like this. It is being a l o n g while..Perhaps George Orwell's 'Shooting an elephant' comes to mind.
And that was thirty years ago.
Congratulations and thanks for the pleasure of reading as in watching
a film. Not many can do that with apparent ease, flowing as the wind against the tall grass..
Also down...in the Caribbean...
Titania...the story was wonderful!
Thank you for stopping by the Porch so I could discover your fantastic blog!
Carol
Antigonum,
Carol,
thank you so much for your visit, interest and very kind comments.
Thank you for your meaningful comment my kindness friend. I REALLY appreciate that...
Wunderschön hast Du die Geschichte von deiner Reise erzählt, obwohl man nicht dabei war, kann man sich die Menschen und die Natur richtig vorstellen. Es ist schon seltsam was man für Erlebnisse haben kann, aber das macht das Leben auch interessant in so einem Land. Du könntest bestimmt schon ein Buch über Deine kuriosen Erlebnisse in Australien schreiben.
Liebe Grüsse Melontha
Liebe Titania
Du schreibst so bildhaft, ich sehe die Landschaft, die Du so wunderbar in Worte kleidest, direkt vor mir! Allerdings mithilfe des Englischwörterbuches, das muss ich schon gestehen *lächel*.
Ha, ha da hätte die Postfrau auch über mich gelacht, mit Schlangen habe ich es auch nichtso, bin froh, gibt es keine hier. Bestimmt habt Ihr Euch jetzt an diese gewöhnt, gäll.
Herzliche Grüsse
Elfe
Tucabia, what kind of name is that? An Aborigine word?
So you have only one door? How many snakes entered your house? LOL
It's so lovely to return and catch up with the saga of your early days. Loved the stories of the pigs, wallaby and cow.
And, how prolific are you.....ANOTHER blog! Must investigate that.
Thanks again for all the pleasure you give, Titania.
Thank you Tarolino, I am pleased that you really enjoy my story.
Melontha Ich danke dir fuer dein Kommentar ich schaetze es sehr.
Elfe, danke, Ich freue mich immer wenn ich deine Kommentare lese. Die Schlangen, ja gewiss, in a funny way, gewoehnt man sich auch an diese!
Ann, Thanks for your visit. I really do not know where the name comes from. You are laughing but the snakes found even ONE door.
Dear Ladyluz it is always such a pleasure to hear from you. Thank you.
Hello Titania
Regarding the wooden chapel by the roadside, can you publish the photo of it. I'm quite interested. I'm dying to see Tucabia, but I'm very far here in New York. I have told about you to Jean and Roy Bowling, the towncrier, but they are inquiring about you.
thanks a lot,
Dolores Sta Ana
email:
dolores.staana@gmail.com
Hi dee, thank you for your comment. You must understand that this is from my diary 1974, when we settled in the Clarence Valley. Unfortunately I have not made a photo. I guess the tiny chapel has been removed to be made into a dwelling what happens all the time. It was not in the village, standing on the roadside perhaps, "central" to serve the surrounding homesteads in the 19Th century. These tiny, wooden chapels were build in the countryside, but have been removed or let to decay. Tucabia is a very small village and unfortunately one does not find much of it on the Internet except about some real estate. The last time I was there, a few years ago, the village had not changed much except there were more houses. It did not have that abandoned look any more.
It is Sunday, as a child there was no greater pleasure than reading
the comics in long format newspapers then with my passed away dad close by.
In the hot sweaty days of August, five months later, this story is still
around, fun reading. One of those rare things as One Hundred or Tropic of Cancer, readings to repeat.
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