Saturday, November 16, 2019

TEN MONTHS IN!!

So, it's been more than 10 months now! I can't believe how much has happened in the four months since I last updated my blog. 

UK
So, the most exciting news from the UK is that my lovely son and his equally lovely wife have announced that they are expecting - end of April 2020. Which means that I'll be a grandmum, which is tremendous news. Sadly that will be in the middle of Term 2 here, but I've already booked my flights back over as soon as term ends, end of June 2020, to be able to snuggle the new addition to the family. It's so exciting. My mum will also be a great-grandmother for the first time, which is just brilliant. I plan to be the most annoying user of Skype to view bathtime, bedtime, teething, all of that!

Work
I have been lucky enough to win another year's contract at the Catholic school where I've been doing maternity cover - so for 2020 I'll be doing the 35 min commute again, but hopefully teaching the Seniors (Years 10-12) in History (hurrah!) as well as English (my new second favourite subject to teach).  I am still waiting to submit my folder of evidence to move from Provisional to Full status - I have to teach 200 days in a QLD school to apply, so that will be end of Term 1 (Easter 2020).

At work, together with my friend Abbey, who is also a secret historian teaching English, I led the school's Book Week celebrations, including a Mad Hatter's Tea Party for staff. We put on a wide range of activities and raised $650 for an Australian charity called Share-A-Book, which gives books to underprivileged children.  Abbey and I have also been looking after Year 7 English for Term 4, when the previous person moved on - we've had to write assessments and everything! It has been really interesting to get to grips with the Australian Curriculum and a new subject. 

I've also been active in our union, again with Abbey - and we are both on the Executive of our "Chapter" (what a union branch is called here). Currently our union is holding a state-wide series of actions because the employer is refusing to meet requests - 206 Catholic schools are taking part. Very interesting to be on this side of the table, after all these years. 

Walking to class for the last two weeks, I have been amazed by the scent of gardenias flowering (it's spring) along the walkway. How lucky am I, I think, to be smelling these fantastic flowers when I'm about to do battle with Year 8?!

At work, instead of sending cards and gifts to each other, staff are donating cash to buy a "swag" - like a tent/sleeping bag altogether - for the homeless. What a brilliant idea.  

Life
I have been taking advantage of the brilliant venues near me - I've seen Dave Hughes, the comedian at the Shed (15 mins' drive away); I've seen the Sydney Comedy Festival when it toured to Caloundra (literally 5 mins' drive away); and I went to the Caloundra Music Festival and saw the amazing Missy Higgins (walked along the beach there and back, 10 mins from home). 

I managed to complete my tax return online - and even got a refund! I think the principle here is that they tax you more and then give you a bit back? I was pleased to get it right and I liked the way it was pretty interactive - it already knew my bank account, how much interest I'd had, etc.

I've continued my walking in the rainforests and along the beaches - I've made it to Sunshine Beach near Noosa now with my boardwalk route, and have had to pause my walks so that I can fit everything else in! My cousins want to do the last bit with me, through the Noosa National Park, so we might have to wait til the summer holidays.

Spring has been very dry and there have been many hot days over 30deg. Lots of bushfires have also meant a state-wide fire ban - the land is so dry after years of no rain. Here at the coast, where I am, we get plenty of rain, usually a deluge with a thunderstorm. I did plant lots of bulbs in a big pot in my patio.... however, two furry friends decided this was a big improvement on their cat litter box.... so nothing flowered!!

It's edging towards summer now, with daily temperatures around 27-30deg.... the doona (duvet) has gone back in the airing cupboard, and now I just have the duvet cover over me.... still hot and need the fan on, the window open, the air con on!! The hottest day so far this spring was last week at 37deg... it felt like a sauna!! My school has aircon in EVERY classroom, and the staffroom... we hardly ventured outdoors at all that day!

I've stepped up the volunteering, and am doing two different roles now. One is as a bushcare volunteer, so once per month we spend two hours clearing something for Council, near Shelly Beach. I have really enjoyed this - quietly improving the area for everyone, and being invisible (in the most awful khaki shirts you have ever seen) while we do it!  

I've also joined the Ithaca Caloundra City Royal Life Saving patrol team, who patrol at my favourite beach, Bulcock in Caloundra. I did a Grey Medallion course (a whole weekend) - a bit like Bronze Medallion which I did years ago in the police - for fogeys like me who are over 55. I found it fascinating to learn how to treat different stings from a range of "unidentified marine objects". I do Sunday mornings - so I cycle there (I bought a brilliant bike, powder blue with a fabulous wicker basket on the front) to start at 7.30am, until 12.30pm. I've now achieved four "badges" and can use a defibrillator, so I am beginning to feel useful. The uniform is not at all Baywatch - red shorts and a yellow long-sleeved top!

I've been to dinner at Mets on Kings, a surf club restaurant, watching the waves crash on to the sand as I had fantastic food with my cousins. On Friday nights, I've been going along to a little bar near me which does burgers (a very big menu, I'm working through it) and has live music. This signals my weekend!

I also still visit the community church from time to time - we did Xmas shoeboxes (see how many we did in the pic!) - which was lovely, something I have done for years in the UK. What I didn't know, and learned here, was that every single box costs $10 to deliver. That is so expensive. So at the church we've all donated towards it.

I've found a great acupuncturist, who has been boosting my energy levels. I've also found a great healer who does a superb sound bath, which again is to clear out negativity and to tune into positive and healing vibrations. I did a Celtic Reiki course too, which I thought was very interesting although I don't think I've got the skill to get any better at it!

I had my first "bingle" (car accident) when I was trying to get on to the motorway via a roundabout and the person in front just stopped. No damage to him and just a little bit for me. No drama, as the Strayans would say.

I've rediscovered Jeffrey Archer as a writer, and have read all seven of his Clifton Chronicles - I can highly recommend them to keep your brain occupied!  I'm also regularly ordering books and audio books at the local library - they have a fantastic online service and seem to get things in stock quickly.


And I've found a new house to rent for the coming year (my current one runs out mid-Jan). I was really lucky and have found one that is in Dicky Beach (named after SS Dicky which ran aground there in 1893). My new place is literally 20 steps from the sand and I'll be able to hear the waves crashing all night. I'm looking forward to moving in, when I get back from the UK where I'm spending Christmas.

Finally, the very worst news in my world over the last four months has been that the person I thought was my Mr Wonderful, who I'd found again after many years apart, who I was anticipating joining me here - decided in mid-September that he wanted to pursue a different path, one that didn't include me. It has been horrific. No word of a lie. It doesn't matter how old you are, does it, when your heart breaks. My two besties in the UK were the ones who ensured I kept on breathing, with endless phone calls, messages, memes - there have been desperate times, I'll be honest, when I didn't want to survive, the pain was so great. But I have. I'm still here. I'm very, very sad, but I'm still here. I do so wish things were different for that person, that he had chosen to be with me.  But I can't influence what that person wants. And it isn't me.

I am looking forward to coming back to the UK for a 3 week trip - hoping to see my children, my friends, my mum and sister. It will be very cold for me!! But I strategically left clothing, coats and shoes all around my special people so hopefully I will layer up! And maybe the UK won't be super-cold, though I have spent most of the last 10 months somewhere above 25 deg - I think acclimatising will be tricky!






Saturday, July 6, 2019

6 months in... half a year!

So for all those people who are following my adventures, you'll know that I like counting things : weeks, hours, days, that sort of thing. So here I am, six months in since I landed, half a year. What have I learned/done/found since I last updated?

Work
True to form I spent the first few days of the Easter holidays planning lessons for the upcoming term so I could hit the ground running in the first couple of weeks. I've got six different classes in Years 7 and 8, teaching Humanities (including Geography and Civics) and English. I've had to learn how to use a MacAir(that's what all the teachers get from the school to use) and to plan lessons from 55 to 70 mins long (it varies on Tuesdays with a shorter school day, finishing at 2:35pm). Students have been really helpful in teaching me how to use a Mac and they laugh when I try to swipe the screen (like my ipad)!

Salaries here are paid fortnightly on a Wednesday - so it's like payday every other week! Some things go out of the bank account monthly so I can't quite work out if I'm ahead or not! But I'm not complaining, as fortnightly income is just great! I treat myself every payday to something: shoes (obviously!), dresses, Xmas gifts for the UK people, smelly soaps from Soap Bar, etc. Loving all of that!

My commute is 35 mins each way on the motorway, which I'm finding just long enough to drink my coffee or listen to the news and then I'm at work. Another bonus has been that a Starbucks has opened near school, and I've discovered that they are selling French Roast beans - these were discontinued in Europe about 3 years ago, so finding these was just brilliant. I bought four bags on my first visit!!

I've joined the union which for our school is the independent Queensland union - the subscription is proportionate to your salary and also includes insurance against injury or accusations.  I worked out that I've been in at least one teaching union (usually two at a time) since 1998 - that must be some sort of record!

At the end of day 1 I had my Mac, a rucksack for it, a name badge which does door opening and photocopying/printing, and keys for the rooms I teach in. Super efficient! Fellow teachers have been helping me with how to make the photocopier staple things, which is great - I think that in the last 3 schools I've led, I never knew how to use the copier!

I'm enjoying being in the classroom with students for the vast majority of my day; it is a 7 day timetable so no two Mondays are ever the same and my four "spare" (free) periods out of 28 are on different days of the week. I've been planning just a week ahead in terms of the detailed powerpoints, but the school required a term's planning in advance (a term is 10 weeks) of learning intentions, success criteria, resources required, learning activities, etc. That sounds quite draconian but I think it's so the heads of department can check that teachers will each cover the curriculum.

I attended a seminar run by Queensland College of Teachers, to learn about moving from Provisional status to Full status. QCT will only accept service in an Australian or New Zealand school, so my 20+ years in UK classrooms won't count. So I have to compile an evidence folder for the 37 competencies that Queensland teachers have to have... and have taught 200 days in a Queensland/Australian school.... and find a principal to review and certify me. My current contract will only give me 150 days, and I've taught 19 days of other contract or relief work, but that still leaves me 31 days short this academic year! So this is something I will have to work on ready for 2020 and whichever school I'm in then.


Family
I was spoilt by my cousins over Easter, having dinner with them on Good Friday and Easter Saturday, and I returned the favour by cooking English Breakfast on Easter Sunday - that will hopefully be a new family tradition!

It's been fun to share out with my cousins English family things from our joint grandparents - so, for example, we now all have a split share of the Queen's ware Wedgwood dining service and I like to think that we're all eating off the same plates in our different parts of the Sunshine Coast!

I've been able to repay cousins' kindnesses by dropping them at Bris Airport for their holidays when I can - they've all been so helpful, not just in telling which shops to go to, but supporting me with finding a car, putting up curtain rails, finding a car service depot, etc.

It's been great to rekindle my cousins' friendship and companionship over these last six months. I've had very special times with them, sharing their grandchildren's outings, having meals together, walking, swimming, going to the cinema, eating their citrus fruit. Such a joy. And something I could never have done if I hadn't made the Big Move.

UK
I get my re-directed UK post each week, via my cousin, and of course I keep in touch by email. I'm able to use both Amazon and Ebay UK versions from my laptop, ensuring I use my UK credit cards to pay any UK bills! The only hard thing is phone calls - the time difference is 9 hours currently (British summer time) and so if I need to speak to someone live in the UK about an issue, I have to wait until 18:00 here and go outside in the dark to make a call! I can't make them indoors - I think it's something to do with the amount of solar panels on the roof blocking phone signals!

My children are doing really well and I get approximately fortnightly Whatsapps or Instagrams. I've found that it's easier in my head to think that they are just in another city here in Oz, like Melbourne, and that I could actually just pop over if I wanted. 

I'm still calling my mum by Skype every Saturday night, which she's doing really well now - great that at 80 she's using Skype! She's also started emailing, which again is brilliant for our communication!

I've also managed to send funds from my Australian bank to my UK bank. This incurs fees and I've used Currencies Direct to do it in the past. Doing it UK to Australia was seamless; however, sending it the other way (to ensure my UK bank doesn't go overdrawn) took two weeks and a failed transaction, with funds coming back into my Australian bank. I think I've got the hang of it now, so I'll be able to do it again when I need to.

Life
Election fever really kicked in mid-April when the current Prime Minister called the election: Scott Morrison hasn't been prime minister long, he replaced Malcolm Turnbull when the party had some sort of reshuffle before I arrived. The election campaign has been quite fierce - a party called Australia Party did lots of TV advertising, with phrases like "give these losers a thong slap and send them on their way" - fascinating! I can't see that type of advert working in the UK!


I had a letter from the Australian Electoral Commission, confirming my right (and expectation) to vote, telling me which ward/senate area I'm in. Voting here is always on a Saturday, and is compulsory - if you're registered, you're voting. There is a proportional representation system here, where preference votes are counted and can make a big difference -very different from the first past the post system in the UK. What I liked enormously was how helpful the parties were in suggesting how you should vote! They had worked out what combination of numbers/candidates they needed and then printed leaflets for voters to use when making the vote.  And for those who needed to, there are two weeks of early voting opportunities - where you can turn up to the voting centre and vote, from 9am to 6pm, for two weeks. This was really helpful because it transpired that school had an open day (recruiting new students) on the Saturday of the election.

Just like in the UK, one day over the Easter weekend is a total close-down of shops/shopping - here it is Good Friday, while in the UK it's Easter Sunday. Lots of visitors descended to the Sunshine Coast so the beaches, towns and pubs were all busy, which is great for the economy. Everything also shuts for "normal" bank holidays (like 6 May) - so you have to make sure you've got food in! Only petrol stations and pubs seem to be open then. And many restaurants charge an additional 15% on all bills on a bank holiday - interesting idea!

I finally received my Tax File Number (after 3 months) - I never did hear why it had been so convoluted but it means that I can now file a tax return at the end of the tax year (30 June). Everyone here has to do a tax return, but the ATO has a good online set of instructions and leaflets for particular professions, like teachers, so I can see what allowances are and how to include them. We have to keep receipts for five years, so my previous habit of shredding everything each month has had to be modified!

You'll remember that I have been following the Barefoot Investor - opening a number of different savings and other bank accounts. I've found that principle to be really helpful as I can began to save up for the next lot of rental bond and advance rent for my next move in January 2020. It's been a good discipline for me - my whole adult life I have used credit cards - sensibly of course - but delaying financial planning. Now I'm living on actual cash banked and only spending if I've got it. I don't even have an Oz credit card and I don't think I'm going to get one just yet. I still have plenty of UK ones at the moment which I can use for UK purchases and when I'm back over for visits. The Barefoot Investor plan talks about taking around 40% of your salary and investing it each time you get paid. I thought that would be too hard to do - but actually, I'm doing it well. And I'm proud to be re-stocking my banking well after spending so much on the Big Move. It feels good!

On ANZAC day in April (a bank holiday) my cousin and I went to the dawn service at Kings Beach in Caloundra where the RSL had organised a brilliant remembrance service. There was something really special for me that day: the thunder of the waves crashing on the beach, the audience all holding candles, my father's and grandfather's medals on my lap, and the haunting bugle player, made this an unforgettable experience. If my father, and grandfather who I never met, had been there, they would have been thrilled to see how the Australians are still remembering the sacrifices from 1915 onwards. And of course, at that point, Australia as a nation was only 14 years old. Amazing that such a young nation contributed so many troops and resources to a war being fought on the other side of the planet.

Friends from the church group I've joined invited me to breakfast on Easter Monday, which was delightful -they live right on the coast in an apartment block with superb views - a secure unit, with 3 entry pad doors!! They also took me to the Caloundra RSL (returned services league I think) which is like a massive social club, where we took part in a weekly Trivia competition - at one stage, we won coffee and cake vouchers, which I thought was impressive! I've been back since and we won $50 and then $10 vouchers for the RSL - and that time I joined the RSL for the rest of the year ... a whole $3 for a year's membership! I've also tried out the Mets on Kings bar with my church friend - it is a surf rescue club which does pub meals and drinks at night time, and looks right out over the surf. Amazing. And its membership is only $1 per year! I'm thinking that my next house move needs to be in walking distance of the Mets!

I found that the hardware store I've been frequenting with my cousin (hammer, batteries, etc) also has a garden centre attached - so as you'll appreciate, that has become a regular haunt. I've bought an orchid (which can live outside!) and lavenders, to remind me of England. I've also started experimenting with Australian national plants, so I can learn what they do and where they'd go in a big garden. My current rental house has a very small patio (with plastic grass, which means no mowing - tick!) so I'm adding pots and tubs to that (need to remember to take them with me when I go).

One Saturday afternoon I decided to treat myself to a sunset - it was a clear day and I thought, I fancy fish&chips for supper so I'll go down to my favourite beach (Bulcock) in Caloundra and watch the sun set over the west and also look to the east, before I go to the beachside shop. I was rewarded with a fantastic surprise visit from some dolphins - I put the video on to twitter if you'd like to see it. Amazing! I've never seen dolphins that close before.  I've taken to doing this on paydays (Wednesdays once per fortnight), as a way to celebrate the end of a pay period and to break up the working week!

I'm still doing my weekend walks - usually Sundays, as I'm lesson planning and doing domestic chores on a Saturday - where I'm trying to walk every inch of the coastline from Caloundra to Noosa. Slowly does it! I'm about two thirds of the way up now. As I move further north, of course, I need to drive further to pick up the boardwalk.  I also did a walk along the tramway in Buderim to Palmwoods with my cousin; it was great to hear from the local historians who had been getting themselves dirty digging out water drains all along the line! I've added a photo here of one of the original railway sleepers for the train line, which is still in position.

My accent hasn't changed, I don't think - maybe because I'm so old, I won't lose it! I do pronounce some words in the Australian way now e.g. Australia is Straya - we don't bother with the rest! And I use the Australian words such as fireys, tradies, cactus, crook (translations: firemen, tradesmen, broken, ill!). My best learning is always on the radio - I listen to Sea FM on my way to work and there are so many new words to wrestle with! I also like listening to Hughsey, who is a comedian and has a show at 4:30pm for the drive home, he's brilliant and so irreverent. I've bought a ticket to see him live at the end of August - can't wait to see if he's as funny in person as he is on the radio.

I've also bought a ticket to the Caloundra Music Festival in October - it's at Kings Beach (another reason why I want to move there!) and I've got a Saturday ticket, because my favourite female singer, Missy Higgins, is performing then. I plan to park at Golden Beach and walk along the sea boardwalk to the Festival. I've been checking out other events and now have organised tickets for me and the cousins to see Ross Noble and the Sydney Comedy Tour on different dates in September, again in Caloundra.

Winter weather (June-August) so far has been great - warm days (22-25 deg), light breezes, sunny skies, chilly mornings (say 15 deg). It's still warm enough to dry all the washing in an afternoon! The best part for me is never having to scrape the ice off the windscreen, I always absolutely hated that.

I've also experienced being ill in June - so ill not to be at work for 2 days, which for anyone who has worked with me, will know never happens! I had vestibular neuronitis, which is an ear infection/inflammation. I woke with it one Saturday morning and couldn't move without vomiting or the room spinning for days!  But it did mean that I could begin to find medical support in Oz, which I hadn't needed to do before then. You do it all online, via an app, and appointment bookings are scheduled that way. I got myself to the appointment, which lasted 30 minutes and cost $115. He was very thorough and sent me for blood tests, gave me steroid and anti-emetic prescriptions which I then got filled at Chemist Warehouse (super cheap chemists) for $6.99 and $7.99 (way less than any UK prescription charge I've ever had). What I found bizarre and still don't really understand, is that within a couple of hours of the appointment with the doctor, where I'd paid for the appointment and shown my Medicare card (like NHS), there was a refund from Medicare to my bank account of $72.80.  Very welcome, of course, but I don't know why the doctor doesn't just charge less and miss out Medicare altogether!

So overall, after six months here, I've learned loads about a different lifestyle, climate, pace of life, attitude to work, friendships and family. I feel very blessed, to have been born here in Oz, have had a full and meaningful life in the UK with my children and friends, and then to have my final chapter of my time here in Oz again, surrounded by natural beauty at every angle.  It has taken an enormous amount of planning, resilience, determination and sheer courage to do this - and of course there are times when I am lonely, or miss my special people - but on balance, this is the most perfect step I could have taken. 






Saturday, April 6, 2019

3 months in....

THREE MONTHS!!!! OMG!! It has gone so very fast. At times, it feels like I've been here for years. And then something will happen and I'll think, "OK, that's new, add it to your list of things to learn v. fast!"

Work
So, I completed the 3 week contract at the state school this week, on Thursday - I'd been looking after a Year 8 form group, teaching them English, Humanities, Visual Arts (!!) and My Journey (a bit like PSHCE), for 3 days per week. I really enjoyed the focus and the different subject areas. I was covering for the regular teacher who was taking long service leave - after 10 years' service, teachers are entitled to take paid time off. What a brilliant way to retain teachers' skills in the profession! I also had to assess the work against the criteria for each task and provide feedback, enter all the marks into a global markbook and would have written the reports, if the MIS system had been working.  There was no formal lesson plan template but all teachers have laptops and many of the resources are on a system called C2C, which is the whole Australian curriculum with activities, etc, for all to use.

What I've learned about assessment so far, is that students have control over their exercise books, for all subjects. Teachers don't mark these at all. Assignments for every subject, including the PSHCE one, are set every term and students are provided with the criteria way in advance. The assignments span around 4 weeks; teachers then mark the assignments against the shared criteria, grade it A+-E and report back to parents/carers once a term.

Teachers have to have a Learning Intention or Goal on the board at all times (like the UK) and also a Success Criteria for every lesson, which the students write in their books.


I had two duty slots on my timetable too - the main job is to ensure that everyone is wearing a "bucket hat" if in the sunshine. There is a longer break in the morning ("morning tea") and then a shorter break in the afternoon.  I've also come across a school which is running a 7 day timetable.... that's a new one on me! I'm used to 5 or 10... but 7? I don't know what the rationale is but I know that I'm going to really have to focus on what day it is!

I did lots of online CPD too over the last month; CPD has to be recorded and every teacher has to do 20 per year to continue being a teacher. I've already done 24!! I like the fact that it's online and you can do it at your own pace. I've now done 3 different types of child protection: state, Catholic and private/independent schools!

Students are fascinated by the accent ("do you have an ACCENT?!") and also by the fact I've been away in Europe for 44 years and now I'm back. It's great to teach European history (I was doing medieval life earlier this week) but to put an Australian spin on it. Truly fascinating.

School buildings have been interesting at the schools I've been working in. Mainly concrete with airways through at ceiling level; very little glass around the sites; solar panels to reduce electricity bills; corrugated metal roofs to protect us from sun and rain over all the pathways; ceiling fans everywhere.

I've now come across some textbooks - if you remember, I hadn't seen many in my first two schools! What I really like about them is that they are written for the Queensland curriculum by serving Queensland teachers - there's an info page about who is teaching where. Also, there is only one exam board - Queensland - for the final year exams, so no competition there. It also means that there should be comparability across the state? The textbooks have online videos, animations and workbooks to go with textbooks - I'm wondering if this is because of the remote regions where maybe teachers can't get access to more resources; but also, this might be helpful for those students who are remote and can't actually get to school.

One of the schools I've worked at is really well resourced; the students all have a Mac provided by the school (but paid for by the parents). When I took a supply lesson I saw that all the laptops had the students' names printed on them - facing me when they're using them - so straightaway I knew which student was which, such a brilliant but simple idea.

Uniform is often like a sports shirt and shorts, with the house colours and name on the sleeve. Students sometimes have different coloured hats for their different houses too. At some schools the girls have to wear ties but the boys don't - I'm not sure why that is but the girls don't like it! At other schools, the girls are wearing uniform dresses. The boys told me at one school that their winter uniform (for term 2, which we're about to start after Easter) has trousers, not shorts. 

So the best work news is that I had two interviews and got one - which is for a Humanities/English maternity cover from Easter to Christmas. Lovely staff and a great feel to the school, my own set of classes (6 of them) and all Year 7 and 8. I think it's a superb way for me to understand more about Queensland education and what I can contribute. I have done supply at the school and been made so welcome, so I'm really looking forward to being part of the team for three terms.

I've also learned about the Teacher Classification Teams - unlike in the UK, where it's the school/principal who decides the pay grade - here it's an external team who look at your qualifications, your experience and then say "you're 4 years qualified". What??!! You have to provide "statements of service" to prove where you've worked and as what - I had to get this notarised as a statutory declaration by a JP... luckily the local library provides a JP every single day, which is free.  I thought this was brilliant - and it shows you how many people need to get statutory declarations done for work/life! I'm hopeful that for my 3 term contract the team will review my "you're 4 years qualified"... it's 20 years!! But it's made me research how to become more qualified in the QLD system so I am paid for the years I've done.

Life
The furniture FINALLY arrived last Friday, just under 3 months since I last saw it. 156 boxes were delivered and I spent the weekend trying to make sense of it. I've been ruthless again with clothes and took 9 bags to the Salvation Army store in Caloundra. I've kept all the packing boxes because this lease runs out at the end of Jan 2020, and I'll need to pack again. Three items haven't made it to me yet: my grandmother's bureau which I use as a desk (needs fumigating due to borer beetle?!), my grandmother's antique oak blanket chest (ditto) and my pressed corsage framed after my son's wedding in June (has to be gamma rayed due to seeds?!). I've had to pay $1876 for the privilege of the fumigation/gamma! And it should be arriving later this week, fingers crossed.

We've had some storms and rain in the last month, as summer turns to autumn. My cousin Will is regularly updating me on what's coming at us from what direction! I notice that there are more biting bugs (like mosquitoes) after the rains, so I've invested in bug spray, flyswatters and after-bite cream! Temperatures are still around the top 20s to 30, so still warm enough for shorts! I've now got a duvet on the bed (very lightweight though) for the 3am chilly moments.

I've bought blockout curtains for the west side of the house - keeps the sun out, and therefore the heat, which means I don't need the aircon on as much.

The water bill came for my first 2 months.... $18! Madness. I think it's because I had no washing machine or dishwasher, though I was having 3 showers a day at the height of the humidity!

I've been playing the Lott (lottery) each week and actually won a couple of times, which is encouraging. Pokies (arcade machines) is a big social issue here - they are in pubs etc and lots of people are struggling with an addiction to them.

A national election is looming so there are lots of TV ads and debates on the news channels. There are also lots of expose TV programmes investigating wrong-doing by those in power - a regular 7pm nightly programme!


I've been avidly reading Scott Pape (the Barefoot Investor), who writes in the Courier Mail (on Sundays) about finance and all things moneywise in Australia. He gives great advice about which bank account to use, what super (pension) to get, etc - a bit like Martin Lewis in the UK. I've found it supremely useful and I've written lots of notes for when I'm in a position to do those things. Barefoot says you should have FOUR bank accounts - you put 60% in an everyday one for bills, 20% in a fire extinguisher one (for emergencies), 10% in a splurge account (for holidays) and then 10% in a grow account. I'm aiming to do this when I've got a regular income - now it's still a bit hand to mouth.

A big blocker to my organisational prowess has been the Australian Tax Office (ATO) and the lack of a Tax File Number (TFN). This is something you apply for online, print out (which for me meant a trip to the library to print until my furniture came!), then a visit to the Post Office for them to verify your identity with passport, driving licence, etc.. and then you wait 28 days..... and wait.... I did it the first time on 19 January at Nambour Post Office... waited... lost a lot of money from my February salary as no TFN number... then I rang the ATO... who couldn't find it (despite it being online and instant) and said do it again......did it again on 13 March at the Caloundra Post Office (didn't trust the first one)... waited 14 days and rang the ATO.... who couldn't find it (despite it being online and instant) and said do it again..... this time I escalated the complaint to a supervisor.... and then complained to the Post Office in Caloundra, who were lovely and confirmed it HAD gone to the ATO... I still don't have it, so next week will be the 28 days and I'll be ringing the ATO again!! People say, it will come back when you do your tax return in July.... but I'm keen to get it sorted now so I know what my salary will be/should be.

One of my favourite activities is after a hot day at school, just drive to the beach, change into my swimsuit (which is always in the boot of my car) and plonk myself into the sea to cool down. Those are the moments when I realise how different my life really is now!

Cats
They've settled much more since I last updated, and in particular are loving the furniture - both of them slept on the kitchen chairs after they were unpacked last night, rather than the bed! They still like to get up early (currently 5:15am) to check out the birds, especially the noisy miner (boy it is noisy) who lives in the front garden. They've caught another gecko which I saved from them but then it ran under the fridge - I have no idea if he ever escaped. And the worst thing they've caught this month - a beautiful blue-green dragonfly. As it's cooling down, they're eating more of their food and also losing less fur. A vet appointment is already scheduled for end of May for their annual jabs and a good check up. I've also found a new catsitter team who will be looking after them when I'm away. Little one really likes the ottoman which was delivered a few weeks ago, goes with the lovely Sadie chair which spins round!

UK
My lovely children are really well; my son and his wife will move into their new place in a few days in London. I've loved seeing their renovation (reno we call it here) photos and am really looking forward to seeing it in person in December. My daughter and her husband are now back in harness in London after their 8 week honeymoon - I think they missed their puppy hugely while they were away! I've used online Hotel Chocolat to send Easter eggs, which is so helpful - I did that last year from Leeds too!

My mum has settled in on the Isle of Man, where she now lives with my sister. I Skype her every weekend and she has quickly got the hang of that at 80! They have been doing a reno too, to create a bedroom and en suite out of a garage!

I'm using Whatsapp every day to chat to my loved ones, which is so easy - and free. I still use Twitter and Insta too, but I'm not as focused as I once was on the latest Ofsted consultation update, etc!

Finally, my Mr Wonderful is due out here next week to spend some time in the sunshine with me after a big operation. I'm hoping that he really likes the climate, the beaches and the lifestyle and doesn't go back at all!






Saturday, March 9, 2019

Two months in....

So.... two months in! In some ways it feels like years, and in others, just days. So after two months, what is life like?

In terms of work, it's been very interesting. I've visited 16 local schools (some private, some faith, some state) to drop off my CV, as well as using the Catholic team's app and the state relief line. I've now done 4 days' supply (teaching everything from English to History to Snorkelling - I kid you not, thankfully it was theory!!) in two state schools and I have found it fascinating. Here are some of the differences in learning I've spotted so far:

- Students are expected to have their own pens, pencils, scissors, exercise books; school does not supply any of this.
- Students are expected to have their own electronic device (tablet, laptop mobile) in order to access the curriculum
- Much of the curriculum is electronic on MyLearning or ELearn; I have seen only a couple of textbooks in all of the rooms I've worked in
- Teachers mark work electronically and send it back to students for corrections
- Lessons are 70 mins long, with a longer morning break (40 mins) and a shorter lunch hour (30 mins)
- Playground duty is HOT!!! And you need a hat and sunglasses
- Calls from school admin start at around 6:30am, so you need to be awake!!
- Most floor surfaces are concrete which means your shoes aren't absorbing the shock, so your feet will hurt way more than normal!
- Every room has a fan or an air con or both - find the way to switch them on quickly as you walk into the room!
- You walk much slower, to conserve energy and reduce sweating!
- Early start to the day (8:30am) means an early finish (2:30pm)
-Sites are really open (no fences) and so "lockdown" procedures are vital
- Because all doors are open (to create a draught) there is no shouting, it's all quiet voices
- There are lots of Teacher Aides (like teaching assistants)
- Salaries are paid every 2 weeks ... so no great big gap between payments into your bank

One of my relief schools has offered me a 3 week contract doing English and Humanities for Year 8, so I'll be doing that for the last 3 weeks of term. Yay! And I'll get to plan and deliver lessons, assess work, use the school's reporting system - fabulous. I'm also applying for maternity covers and other short contracts, so that I get more experience of the QLD system. All good for me continuing to work in the classroom.

On my non-working days, I'm walking to the gym (new one, 24 mins' walk from home), doing a pilates or yoga class or the exercises the personal trainer lady has set me for my triceps, then walking back. I try and do this early because if I leave it to lunch time or later, it's super hot. I'm also beetling into Caloundra to the library - I've got a favourite parking spot and then a little walk. And of course visiting the beach, the walks and just revelling in the climate.

It's great having family nearby too - having dinner, going for a walk/swim, borrowing an iron - all great for me! And being able to do things for them is also great, like giving a lift somewhere. I like being useful!

So in the last month, I've been.....

... receiving birthday cards and gifts and texts, thank you everyone! ... at a retirement planning seminar held by the library - really interesting, as I knew nothing about superannuation and what to do with it, when, etc.
... to the cinema in Caloundra, which is air conditioned, yay - saw "The Mule" (terrible, don't make any more Clint please) and "Green Book" (brilliant, glad it won at Oscar time)
... taking part in the Clean Up Australia Day with the BELLS group near me
... for coffee after the clean up!
... to Pilates and Yoga at least twice a week at my new gym near me and made friends in my classes
.... researching giving blood here, as I've done 50 donations in the UK - would you believe it, that as I've lived in the UK between 1980 and 1996, I'm not allowed to give blood here as I might have mad cow disease?!!
... watching the weather to see where Cyclone Oma went - thankfully veered away from our coastline
... visiting the laundromat twice a week ($6 per time) as my washing machine is still on the ship.. I was in charge of closing the windows last week, I'm so trustworthy!
... contacting the removal people to see where my ship is!! It got caught up in the Cyclone and had to sail to Sydney not Bris. Now my belongings are being examined by the Customs crew and the Quarantine crew. I have no idea when they'll get to me!  Everything was packed up on 2 Jan.... it will be nearly 3 months when I unpack stuff!!
... using Ebay AU and Amazon AU... :)
... registering for the Lott (like the lottery) online
... ordering wine online (thank you son and daughter-in-law for birthday vouchers)
... learning how to use my own Esky (thank you cousins for birthday gift)
... face-timing the TAG group on Friday night for me (afternoon for them) to hear about progress etc
... using my Fitbit to check on steps and sleep (thank you daughter and son-in-law for birthday gift)
.. acclimatising slowly - not having the fan on all night!
... paying bills - $48 for a month's electricity, even with the aircon on.. great to have solar power here!
... made contact with former primary school schoolmates
... sent and returned my bowel cancer kit
... received my "you have to vote" letter from the Electoral Commission - it's compulsory to vote here, which I think is excellent
... getting loyalty cards for all the shops I go into like Dan Murphy's, Woolworths, IGA


So overall, I'm thinking that's a pretty successful two months. I can't wait to see what happens next!













Sunday, February 10, 2019

One month in....

So it's just over a month (month and 5 days to be precise!) since I set off from Heathrow on this great adventure. And I think it was fitting that on the exact date of my departure (6th!) I did my first day's work as a supply teacher in a coastal school in QLD. 

What a great bunch of students and staff, and what a great commute - around 45 mins northwards up the coast from my little unit.I really enjoyed working, feeling useful and being part of a team.  I was also really impressed by the Dept of Education's payroll team, who rang me the very next day to say, "hey, we want to pay you, what's your account number?" - how helpful is that!  

And now I've got a folder (I know, you're already saying, that's just typical me, very very organised) with directions to the schools I'm registered with, phone numbers etc, so I can dash out of the house quickly when needed.


I'm now really settled in my unit - 3 bed, one storey house - and the cats have really calmed down significantly. I've had to buy new scratching posts and litter houses for them because they're relaxing so much they've been scratching new sofa chair and spraying cat litter all over the floor. I also bought them two new mice toys... they lasted a day before the innards of the toy were torn to pieces! Pip is still catching a cricket a day; Squeak is more selective and is aiming for flies, around two a day. No more geckoes - I have seen some at the front of the house but the cats can't get there so they're safe!

The weather has been amazingly good - still over 30deg during the day and with some heavy rain mainly at night. Weekend before last was a bit cloudy but it meant I could do a 3 hour walk along the coastal walkway paths - really lovely wooden traditional boardwalks in a lot of places. Last weekend it was way too hot so I only managed 2 hour walk. I'm doing all of the coastline over a few months - loving the sea breezes, the white sand and the smell of the banksias!


So what have I learned so far about life in Oz as a grown-up?

- Australia has the best range of "slaw".... brocslaw (broccoli), kaleslaw (kale) etc! Each week I'm buying a different one to try it out
- Turning left at a red light - I seem to remember that in the USA you can do this too! But be careful!
- Driving an automatic is actually way easier than a manual
- Entering and leaving your house via the electric garage door is acceptable practice
-Being ahead of the game on the weekly rubbish bin placement on the kerb is a global practice
-Bananas really don't keep very long at all in 30deg heat but you can't put them in the fridge
-Using the aircon is not a luxury!
-Supply teaching is the same experience in both countries; it all depends on the quality of the work set by the absent teacher
-Queensland's education payroll team are super-efficient and helpful
-Dentist services are just as expensive as the UK
-Going for an x-ray is really easy - and you need your Medicare card to make it free
-Petrol here is super-cheap - currently $1.21 per litre (about 66p) and there is an even cheaper one called 10% which has some ethanol in it, my new car takes that thankfullly
-Rush hour and gridlock are relative terms but exist - just not like the Armley Gyratory
-Using those windshield reflective covers when you leave the car is definitely a bonus if you can't park in the shade
-Whatsapp is a brilliant tool, keeping me in touch by video, phone and message - and it's free!
-Bus services are relatively cheap ($3 for a trip into Caloundra) but train services are more expensive ($37 for a single journey from Bris to Nambour)
-Driving in central Brisbane is a bit scary but no worse than Leeds
-Helpfully you can log on to the website after you went through a toll without a transponder!
-Feeding lizards is not acceptable in a cafe, they are pests like pigeons/seagulls in the UK even if they look more interesting
-Roads are much, much wider and distances are way longer/bigger than you think they are on the map
-Cashpoint machines are less obvious and there are fewer of them
-Chemist Warehouse is a brilliant invention and is saving me a fortune in supplies!
-"Married at First Sight" is a superb TV programme and makes for addictive viewing four or five nights a week!
-I'm not the only one who has moved here - most of the people I've met have moved here at some point; in fact, I'm the odd one out really to say I was born on the SC!
-SkyNews is just as fab here as it was in the UK - but I don't have to have Sky (Foxtel) to get it here
-NBN (national broadband network) is a great idea and I'm glad that Caloundra West already has it!
-Flights out of Oz are expensive, there's no quick fix or cheap way out!
-Seeing friends from England is an ace way to get a quick slice of Englishness, even if you had to drive 2 hours via a toll motorway to catch them!
-Yoga and pilates are harder to enjoy when you're super-hot!
-Hairdressers are clever at working out what colour you actually have on your hair!
-Buying a bed with a built-in reading light in the headboard was an ace idea, when you don't have any lamps because they're still on the ship

Overall then, it's been a great month and I feel I've made good progress. House, cats, car, identity stuff and work - all achieved in the first month. I now need to settle into more of a routine work-wise and begin to feel that this stretch of coastline is my home. I still get a bubble of shock/excitement when I drive over the hill to Caloundra and see the sea stretching out ahead of me!