Showing posts with label Aussie Rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aussie Rules. Show all posts

Monday, August 17, 2009

From Punk Rocker To Pink Rocker

Nature's Fairy Floss Comes On Delicate Branches

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


One of the many things I really love about living in Melbourne is the fact that the winter solstice arrives on 22 June, exactly three weeks after the official start of winter on 1 June. In other words, our days actually start get longer even before we are one-third of the way through winter.


Then the trees start to herald the promise of warmer weather. There is still ice on the cars and cruel frost on the ground when the wattle trees begin to bloom, with golden clouds of miniature blooms that dance in the cold breeze.

Come the last week of July and the fruit trees start to show puffs of light, dreamy pink. By the middle of August, the sun’s embrace brings a different quality of light and warmth.


These images were shot on the weekend, showing the most vivid promise that our winter only has two weeks remaining. The football season is drawing towards the business end. There is less need to wear a scarf on a cold morning. The sunlight breaks through our windows earlier than ever. And the light brings great promise for photographers.


When I shot these images, the sun was mostly hidden behind thick cloud and wild winds hit the state hard. All in all, not the best conditions to photograph tiny blooms like these. But that's the real challenge - of being able to work with Nature, to depict Nature.


Visit Luiz Santilli Jr for the home of Today's Flowers.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Sudden Debt Playoff

Smells Like Team Spirit

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON


One of my American buddies, Brian in Oxford, recently asked me a question on his post The Bitter End.

He mentioned an NFL-related contest where everyone chooses one team to win a game each week. ``If the team you pick wins its game, you keep playing. If they lose, you're out,'' explained Brian. He then asked, ``David, is there anything comparable in Aussie Rules?''

Yes, Brian. There sure is. It's called a Tontine - and it runs parallel to the universally popular Aussie ``footy tipping'' contest. This is akin to religion in the Aussie Rules season, where tipsters try and predict as many winners in the eight-game round each weekend. Every office has a footy tipping contest and so do most homes.

But the Tontine? Ah, the Tontine is sudden death like never before. As in the NFL, we have to nominate just one team we think is certain to win each week. It's mayhem, because the competition, unlike the English Premier League soccer, is so evenly balanced that there are always form reversals. Nothing is a sure thing.

But why is it called a Tontine? I asked several erudite work colleagues yesterday, and even the resident oracles shook their heads. But I found the answer in the Macquarie Dictionary.

Basically, a Tontine is an ancient financial scheme. Subscribers to a common fund share an annuity. The longer you live, the greater your chances of becoming rich because as each subscriber dies, his or her share goes to the others, with the lump sum going to the last survivor.

Finally, the word Tontine derives from the French language and refers to the name of Lorenzo Tonti, a Neapolitan banker who started the scheme in France in the mid seventeenth century.

Wonder if he knew anything about football .....

Friday, September 07, 2007

Get Your Kicks With Aussie Rules

Repeat After Me: Adopting A Team Is My Goal

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON


Time for everybody to get involved in Aussie Rules football. This weekend, the Australian Football League finals series gets under way and I thought since more than 95 per cent of my readers are from overseas, I'd ask you to``choose'' a team to follow through the series. Yes, that includes you, too, Dawn, Bart, Dan and Brian!

As an interesting aside, there are three ex-Aussie Rules players in NFL teams - Ben Graham with the New York Jets, Mat McBriar with the Dallas Cowboys and of course Saverio Rocco, who will take the field this weekend for the Philadelphia Eagles.

After 22 rounds of the home-and-away series, only the top eight teams now face off in the quest for the Grand Final. The first four teams are safe this week, but a loss this weekend for at least two teams ranked 5-8 is a slippery slide to oblivion. The eight teams and their stats are listed below. Come on. Embrace Aussie Rules. Let me know which team you're choosing ....

Geelong Cats: 18 wins,72 points
Port Adelaide: 15 wins, 60 points
West Coast Eagles: 15 wins, 60 points
Kangaroos: 14 wins, 56 points
Hawthorn Hawks: 13 wins, 52 points
Collingwood Magpies: 13 wins, 52 points
Sydney Swans: 12 wins, 1 draw, 50 points
Adelaide Crows: 12 wins, 48 points

Click here: Pentax K100D, Shutter speed 1/60, F6.7, ISO speed 200.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

This Is Aussie Rules Football

Black And White (And Cred All Over)

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


There can be nothing like the pain of a loss in the Australian Football League. Well, yes, there is, actually - it's even worse when your team gets beaten in a complete upset that even has the bookmakers shaking their heads at the size of the total payout. Yesterday we headed to the Melbourne Cricket Ground to watch the Collingwood Football Club (black and white club colours) take on the Richmond Football Club (black and yellow club colours). This is Round 19 of the national Aussie Rules competition and Richmond, having won only a solitary game all year, came out firing and thumped Collingwood. This shot (above) was taken on the concourse near Gate 6 of the MCG.


We got to our seats very early and I took this shot (above) to give you an idea of the size of the historic sporting arena. We call football ``footy'' and night footy has a completely different feel to afternoon football fixtures. My fellow blogger Dan, who recently posted a glowing review of my novel Vegemite Vindaloo, might be interested in this shot. You see, the novel begins (and ends) with the depiction of a night Grand Final here at the MCG.


Here's a sight (above) that you don't see too often at the footy. The woman on the left is a Collingwood loyalist, while her father (right) is a Richmond fan. When we first came to live in Melbourne 20 years ago, most families has single-club loyalties, with children barracking for clubs because their parents barracked for them. But now that the competition has gone national, it is more common to see members of one family who follow different teams.


This shot shows the black-and-yellow colours of the Richmond cheer squad, celebrating an all-too-familiar sight - a Richmond goal. But we won't go into too much detail on that subject! But you might be interested in the configuration of the goalposts. A goal (a kick through the centre posts) earns six points, while a behind (a kick between a centre post and a shorter side post) earns one point. Hope you enjoyed your brief introduction to Aussie Rules.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Krusty The Crown

Royally Plastered After A Night On The Tiles

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON


Wanna buy what every good king or queen needs, a decent Crown? Cost ya four bucks here. Okay, so I'm kiddin'. Let me explain, a Crownie is actually Aussie slang for a Crown lager.

This shot was taken at the Racecourse Hotel in Caulfield, just a stone's throw away from the racecourse that is home to the Caulfield Cup, which is the precursor to the world famous Melbourne Cup. We love adding the ``Y'' sound to our words here in Australia. Hence board shorts are ``boardies'', firefighter are ``fieries'' and sunglasses are ``sunnies''.

And the same rules apply to surnames. Thus, a Sutcliffe becomes ``Suttsy'' and a Payne becomes ``Payney''. Even Steve Bracks,who stunned the nation yesterday when he resigned as Premier of Victoria, is hailed as ``Bracksy''.
But just to confirm your suspicions that we're an oddball bunch Down Under, guess what we do with surnames that actually end with a ``Y''? We remove it! That's why Aussie Rules legend Kevin Sheedy, whose contract was not renewed this week by the Essendon Football Club after an incredible 27 years as coach of the Bombers, is not Sheedy, but ``Sheeds''.

Click here: Pentax K100D, Shutter speed 1/250, F9.5, ISO speed 200.