Thursday, May 13, 2010

Grandpa

Born in Estonia in 1917; the son of a fisherman and his wife (who defies classification in any other form than Jack of every other trade bar shipbuilding and fishing) on the banks of the Vortsjarv; Estonia's 3rd largest lake.

He defied his simple birth to complete his education, go to University and during his military service, rose to be a lieutenant in the Engineers of the Estonian Army. In 1939 he met my grandmother Helgi;the same year the Russians invaded. The whole of his unit was put on a train for Russia; but he escaped when they stopped for a comfort stop and hid out in the forests and rural farming areas for the next couple of years

On 22 July 1941, shortly after the start of the German invasion of Russia, he was married to Helgi and was then able to return to his home once the Russians left. Over the next three years he held a job first as a detective in the police force and later second in charge of the Civil Air Defence for Tallinn (the capital). In June 1942, my mother was born in Tallin, but soon she and my grandmother had to be sent to live with grandpa's parents to escape Russian air raids.

In 1944, with the Wehrmacht being pushed back by the Red Army, they left Estonia as refugees and managed to lie their way to Bavaria. Grandpa reasoned that this was where the Americans were and so was the best place in Germany to be when it became occupied. He barely managed to avoid being conscripted to fight for the Germans, and then barely missed out being sent back to Russia as a supposedly displaced Russian.

Having survived the war, they spent the next 4 years in a Canadian camp in northern Germany. Finally they were able to get visas to come to Australia and they landed in Sydney in late 1949. Only the men were promised jobs (generally useless time wasting and inneffective), and so Grandpa ended up digging holes in Townsville. Not content with this, he found himself his own job and worked in a factory for some time before deciding to move to South Australia where most of the Estonian migrants had ended up.

He joined the PMG as a trainee techniscian and rose up the ranks to manage a technical area. I came along in 1965 and after we moved to the Northern Territory I would be sent down to visit my grandparents during the Christmas school holidays. His relentless energy, walking, camping, swimming and extremely robust arguing (this is almost an Estonian pasttime) would keep me entertained. Although fairly stern, he had an wicked sense of humour when he wanted.

After he retired, he slowed down and settled into a fairly regular life until my Grandmother died in 2006. After that he went downhill. I won't dwell, but they were one person and without her he was fairly lost. On the ANZAC day Monday, we got news that his kidneys had failed. We visited him that night but although he reacted to voices, he didn't really know us. He passed that night.

Vale Grandpa. I know you and Grandma are back together wherever that may be.

I miss you both.

Hello? Is there anybody out there?

I was wondering if anyone was actually reading my little musings. I'm aware of one person that does (thanks Ute), but not of anyone else. I tried to add a counter to the blog (epic fail - long story), but I don't really know. Am I just typing away to myself (seems a little deluded and narcissistic all at once), or is anyone else looking in?

Yes I know this is a blatant play for comments but I need to know...

In an entirely sane way....trust me....really...

Oh and I really like leaving dots at the end of sentences...

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

False economy

Where I work, they have pretensions of being green. However, I have a sneaking suspicion that they (at least) are fooling themselves.

About 12 months ago, something disappeared from the troughs of the urinals in our building. I know you're thinking the little yellow hockey puck things that stop it smelling like well a urinal. And you'd be partially right too. They changed to blue cubes. What disappeared was water, which means that pure....um you know was flowing into the sump and generally making things delightful. The place smells bad now and the amount of water saving is probably offset by the lack of hygiene...

The second thing they do is turn off the air conditioning every night. This is undoubtably good for the environment, but not so good for the hamsters that still have to work given we are a 24 hour centre.

The third thing that they did was a classic in dubious benefit history. They mandated that we should all go to company screensavers on our computers. This was apparently going to save 300 tons of greenhouse gases a year...

Not to be critical or anything, but I figure that these massive green efforts are probably offset by another directive which says that we must leave our computers turned on 24/7 in case they want to direct an update to the computers after hours. This has the added benefit that when the day staff clock on in the mornings after the air conditioning has been off all night, it then takes 6-7 hours for the air conditioners to drag the temperature back to normal.

Rant over. Catch you later.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Right,

The funeral is done and as far as these things can be, it was a really nice ceremony. Everybody's speech was nice and it was more like a celebration. The kids helped to lighten it up too.

For those without a scorecard I have a daughter 13 - call her T, son 10 - L, and my brother-inlaw has a boy O who is 6 and a girl E who is 2 (going on 30). It was my grandfather's funeral so only my kids had ever met him. Nonetheless at several times during the ceremony I looked across to see both L and O in tears. It broke the tension somewhat and we were able to smile a bit. L got quite indignant and asked why I was laughing; I told him it was a coping mechanism and turned away to smirk.

I figure that L and O have a career as professional mourners if they want it, kind of like the film Wedding Crashers but with funerals.

Sharon (my wife) may have got a job out of all this. She has always wanted to try her hand at embalming but you need to be sponsored by a funeral home to do the course and the opportunities are limited as most of them are family run. However, she was asked to send them her resume so maybe this could be a change of career. I'm sure she would enjoy it.

Anyway that's it for now (boring wasn't it)