So I’ve been drowning, here, for weeks. Everything has become fungal. There are mushrooms growing on all surfaces, clusters of miniature hats bursting out of stumps, light harvesting fungi that glow in the dark, an extraordinary fleshy blood red rectangular fungus, meaty stinky fungi, varieties of brown and black and white mushrooms, a phallic fungus with a bright yellow tip that burst out of what seemed to be an eyeball, blue stemmed mushrooms that grow on cow manure and bring joy to faeries. All possible shapes sizes colors textures of mushrooms have exploded into the world during the rain to end all rains. The sun has been missing in action until today, and I shall post some pictures of actual sunlight so i can look at them tomorrow if the sun disappears again.

Blue skies this afternoon
Every morning for weeks on end I have woken to a downpour. The grass is knee high and blindingly green. The hills for as far as the eye can see look like an emerald carpet all lush and springy. We haven’t enough cows to keep it down, since Tippi ran away to join the herd next door. That’s a short story I shall flesh out in a moment.

gingers and cannas off the side verandah
It was the season of ritual festivities that stole me away from the Backyard. I shall give a sketchy overview of the happenings during the summer of sog, which i shared with extended family members and people i had never met but turned out to be most excellent individuals, and intrepid campers all…

sunshine shadows and tongues
Lismore and surrounds is a popular destination for inner urban folk making the annual pilgrimage north looking for an experience of Difference, a change from Wednesday night at the Sly, an alternative to the slick Sydney parties and flesh parades, a chance to slough off the inner urban skin and breathe a little easier, to perhaps find joy peeking it’s cap out of the tall grasses, to jump into a fresh waterhole and dry off naked on a rock in the middle of nowhere. Then there’s Tropical Fruits, the regional queer party of the year, this year held in a bog (formerly the Lismore Showgrounds) and latterly completely underwater as the floodwaters rose to claim parts of Lismore… partygoers attended in fabulous costumes and gumboots.
geometry in sunshine
I invited those making the annual pilgrimage to pitch a tent here at Matiatia, and thus Camp Camp came into being. The rain began last year, days before the travellers embarked upon the road trip, and seems to have stopped this afternoon. Guests arrived and left in the pouring rain, and all stayed longer than anticipated, which was a great thing. Intrepid campers all, they didn’t whimper at the door as the rain lashed the farm for weeks, but each bedtime took torch in hand, and, with mud sucking at their shoes, sloshed off to their tents and slept the sleep of the righteous, sometimes with small drips splashing on their faces in the night.
While some level of cabin fever was experienced by all, in the main the rain provided an opportunity for engaging in all manner of damp activites. Swimming in the local waterhole in the middle of the flood was exhilarating, naked animal feeding with gumboots was hilarious and necessary (changes of clothes and use of the dryer numerous times a day was otherwise unavoidable), gardening in the perpetual deluge was handled enthusiastically by our very own urban gardening glitter faerie (who did a sterling job of Camp Camp updates, complete with great photos of activities and wildlife…) ably assisted by Sarah, who was the engineer of the hay feeder pyramid earlier in the year, brave campers assisted me with the removal of rotting and flooded pet bedding which had begun to ferment in a warm gaseous choking ammonia haze, there was hot apron action with baking by all using the season’s overabundance of zucchinis which eventually exploded in their patch in the excessive wetness, cucumbers were pickled and juiced and sliced and diced for all manner of consumables and all done with muddy chic, style and flair and dressups and morning yoga and evening cocktails and naked dancing in the rain…
So much more happened, recreational activites which are beyond the scope of this blog to record, but all were faithfully documented by the skilled in house photographers, and blogged in other locations. We have thousands of images captured during the flood of 07/08. For pictures of the flood itself, check out the next post.
There were a couple of losses to the rain. Three of the clutch of 7 baby chicks that hatched unexpectedly beneath a bush drowned in small puddles and rivers inside the chook run, since mamma was opposed to keeping them dry in any kind of structure we created for her…
One other animal death occurred which I will record at a later date, which I feel very sad about.
There was a hopefully temporary loss also, as Tippi, daughter of the dexter cow Hinimoa escaped by means fair or foul, we cannot say. She has joined the herd belonging to the farmer next door, and despite repeated attempts to call her home, and luring her with buckets and hay, she simply takes our offerings, shakes her horns at us and heads off to join her newly acquired family. We have lost her to the herd. She may well have been on heat, jumped a compromised fence and with all this rain, it’s been hard to track her down, but the herd comes to visit down by our fenceline in the afternoons, and despite her being so close to home, she is so far away from us. Hinimoa has been pining i think, and often calls Tippi from the fenceline in the afternoons. A visit to the farmer is in order, I guess… though I’d like to think that Tippi would just come home to us…
All in all I think the Camp Camp experience was something magical and hopefully something exraordinary for those who stayed and stayed and went away and came back and went away back to their Sydney lives promising to come back again. A window opening, to show a different view.
I’ll be back soon, with regular backyard reports…
In the meantime, here are pictures of actual sunshine…
the orange tree

zhane and tashi

farmboy zhane

jimmyjack (she was in the sunshine, so makes it into this set of pics)
much love, farmgrrl V xx

So lovely to see the farm bathed in sunshine- jimmyjack looks particularly impressed! Thank you so much again for the camp camp experience, you were such a gracious monstress and provided a glorious space for adventures & magical experiences. Missing the farm lots, and the company, and the freedom to run around a garden nearly-nude (my neighbours would pay far too much attention to attempt it in the city). Hope you’re enjoying the treat of the sunshine and some quiet after the crowds & rains have dissipated- and I will see you soon. xx
Comment by glittertrash — January 14, 2008 @ 7:42 pm
im glad i put the photos up because i woke to another persistent pouring of wetness from the sky this morning which has continued without letup all day and now it is the evening and there are no sunsets to photograph (though i think zhane managed some shots yesterday)but plenty of precipitation rolling across the hills towards the farmhouse… i am decompressing, and finding the quiet somewhat strange and missing camp camp and imagining reunions and recreations and annual events and suchlike just in order to know that there will be a patch of magic in the year/s to come, unlike anything else one is likely to experience throughout the year… i expect to see you soon, ms ali, and any cohorts you can convince to come along with you! xx
Comment by mybigbackyard — January 14, 2008 @ 8:05 pm
great pics, i cant believe how wild and long the grass is in the backyard and zhane looks like she has lived there forever, please say hello to her and i’m looking forward to evening smokos with all of you very soon, deb xx
Comment by Deb — January 22, 2008 @ 7:29 pm
the grass is out of control and the ride on is once aain out of commission and the goat will only eat delicate tidbits handfed… prncess tashi… i’ll say g’day to zhane for you… we’ve taken to dandelion chai with a fervour, that english tea may have ruined your palate forever1 see you on the verandah soon xx
Comment by mybigbackyard — January 23, 2008 @ 1:41 am