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Today's quote:

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

"Let's wait a bit and do a Brookfield."

 

 

This property is being sold sight unseen, as is where is. Due to the overgrown and unsafe nature of the property there are NO INSPECTIONS PERMITTED. Welcome to 77 Nioka Street Brookfield ... a true diamond in the rough." So began the advertisement for a property which recently sold for $1.281 million - click here.

 

 

Prospective buyers were not allowed inside the building – or even inside the property – because of the risk to their safety. It wouldn't have been easy to take a thorough look anyway, as overgrown vegetation dominated the garden on the semi-rural property, while some rooms were chock-full of household stuff. Despite the property’s condition, it garnered forty registered bidders and about 130 people attended the 25-minute auction that had to be held in the street for safety reasons.

As the auctioneer - obviously tongue-in-cheek - remarked, "There are no easily comparable properties on the market." Which is what every seller wants: a unique property. So next time Padma tells me to get rid of some old stuff, I'll tell her, Let's wait a bit and do a Brookfield."

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

What a novel idea!

 

 

Apocryphal (that means being of doubtful authenticity, Des) or not, it is said that one day an excited young man came to Alexander Dumas (author of 'The Three Musketeers', remember?) with the most superb idea for a novel.

"You have a good plot?" Dumas asked. "A plot that is full of excitement; characters that breathe; settings that bedazzle the eye; and a suspense that is truly unbearable", the young man said. Dumas grabbed him by the shoulders and cried, "Good! Now all you need to make it a novel is 200,000 words".

I was again reminded of this apocryphal story (of doubtful authenticity, Des, remember?) when a reader emailed me "I feel a novel coming on" after having read through the 'My family tree is more like a bonsai' post.

I already came up with a great title - "Grave Expectations" - but I doubt I can cobble together the necessary 200,000 word. I put the following story through an online word counter and it comes to barely fourteen hundred words, so you may want to embroider it a bit in your own mind:

As I wrote elsewhere, no-one ever emigrates because of the success they've enjoyed at home. No one ever says, "Well, I have a happy home life, I'm rich and I have many friends - so I'm off." The only reason anyone has for going to live in another country is because they've cocked everything up in their own. Being just nineteen years old, my opportunities for cocking things up had been rather limited; in fact, my only cock-up until then had been that I allowed myself to be born to parents who were so dirt-poor that they packed me off to work as soon as I had reached the minimum school-leaving age of fourteen.

That this cock-up happened at all is entirely due to my older brother who was born in December 1932, just two months after our parents had got married. It must've been the most overdue shotgun wedding of the day! Those were the days before birth control, and my oldest sister followed eighteen months later. That should have been it but Hitler's war machine demanded that German women produce more cannon fodder, and so a second and third sister - presumably destined to nurse the returning wounded soldiers - were born in 1940 and 1942.

That should definitely have been it but then Hitler started giving out the Mother's Cross. Had the war lasted another five months, my mother would have been awarded a bronze Mother's Cross for me and been on her way to a silver one, but was awarded with scorched earth instead.

The immediate post-war years are one big blur - you don't remember much when all you can think about is food, or rather, the lack of it - but I do remember when my oldest sister died the same year I started my schooling. It was never much talked about and only later, when I was almost an adult, did I hear the downcast-eyes-hand-in-front-of-the-mouth whisper that she had died following a botched-up abortion.

By that time my old but then still young nineteen-year-old brother had already left what we euphemistically called 'home' but was little more than a daily unfolding disaster, which he had escaped by living with his girlfriend's parents which is the last time I saw him until thirty-two years later - and of which later - but I heard of him ten years later.

That was when I lived with my by then already divorced mother and my newly acquired stepfather, and my brother's girlfriend - by that time engaged to be married to my brother - stood on our doorstep, bunch of flowers for my mother in her hand, and promptly dissolved into tears. My brother had been transferred by his employers to another town where he had met another woman and had promptly married her after having sponged off his fiancée's parents for more than ten years. I didn't start to learn English until I had decided to emigrate to Australia several years later, but had I known some English words then, the word "b*****d" would have been the mildest one to describe my brother's action.

As I wrote, I never saw him again until thirty-two years later when I flew back to Germany to attend my father's funeral in January 1984. Luckily, I was at the time working in nearby Greece and had already flown back the year before to sit with him for a week even though he no longer recognised me. And neither did my brother who not even shook my hand at the funeral which, given the importance of the German handshake, tells you more than I want to tell you here. I did, however, shake hands with my two remaining sisters with whom I stayed in contact through the obligatory Christmas card. Those were the days before the internet which came even later than the German Reunification which, if it hadn't happened already, finally destroyed what little was left of our family.

As part of the reunification, the government of the new Germany undertook to pay reparations to those who had left their properties behind when they fled Russian-occupied East Germany for the West. My father didn't live long enough to see it happen but my stepmother, whom he had married after his divorce from my mother, was suddenly a rich woman, as were her two children who would be her inheritors.

By this time I was safely back home in Australia where I had just bought "Riverbend" when my youngest sister urgently contacted me to join the fight over my father's inheritance. Apparently, there was such a thing as "Pflichtanteil" which gave all surviving children a legally guaranteed portion of the inheritance even though my stepmother was the sole beneficiary in our father's will. The knives came out and my younger sister also came out to Australia for me to sign over my share to her since I wanted nothing and wasn't going to join into the fight. She was gone as soon as she had my signature. That was the last I heard from that sister except for a bill from her solicitor for 'my' share of his fee.

The last time I heard from my other, my oldest surviving sister was in December 2005 through her palliative nurse Marco Dörner who had been by her side as she slowly died of brain cancer, just sixty-five years old. In a letter which she dictated to Marco, she wrote, "Rückblickend hatte ich kein gutes Leben, im Grunde genommen war es eigentlich Scheiße!"

Then, through the internet, in an idle moment I typed my brother's name into the search engine and was immediately confronted with a 'Letter to the Editor' written - in German, of course - by some malcontent signed with my brother's name and - most helpful! - an email address. Letting bygones be bygones, I fired off an email, "Are you my brother?" I didn't have long to wait for an affirmative reply, after which we continued our brotherly love-ins on a more or less regular basis, including some face-to-face conversations through WhatsApp.

I remember when at one time he wrote that he was going through a bad patch domestically and wanted to divorce his wife. He was scared, including of losing half his superannuation, and could he come out to Australia and stay with me? I knew no more of my brother than of my neighbour next door - less, probably! - but what little I knew of him told me that he was such a typical Ur-German that he would have made Göring look positively cosmopolitan, and no amount of brotherly love, even if I could have drawn on any, could ever make me live with him.

Strangely, in later years his selective memory denied any of this ever having happened, but I continued to assure him that he hadn't outlived me yet by sending him regular links to my blog posts, to which he eventually objected - not to the 'outliving' bit but to the blog posts since, as he had pointed out to me again and again, he could read no English and was not about to learn it - and our contact went dead.

While my brother's memory seems to be selective, his son's is absolutely hyperthymestic. I don't know what prompted him to write to his 'Uncle Peter' in Australia some fifty years ago, but it was such an imbecilic letter that I refused to reply. While none of my kin have much going for them, we all seem to have above-average intelligence and I could not believe that my brother's son could have written something so stupid.

With no contact with my brother and wanting to renew it, in recent months I searched for his son's email. Having found it, I wrote, "Good to find your email address. How are you?" His reply was almost immediate, "Danke, good. Ich nehme an, das war Deine Antwort auf meinen Brief, den ich Dir vor 50 Jahren als kleiner Junge geschrieben habe. Dann sprechen wir uns also etwa 2075 wieder. Bis dann." Touché!

That's all the contact I have had bar a letter from the German embassy some years after the fight over my father's will. It seems my sister's solicitor had sent them his bill for 'my' share of his legal fee with instructions to collect from me. I told them that not only was I now an Australian citizen and no longer answerable to them but also thought that their remit was to represent the German government in Australia and not act as debt-collector for some suburban solicitor in Germany.

 

 

With my limited schooling, I never read Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina" until I was well into my retirement. Its opening line really spoke to me: "All happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way". I think I put that on the flyleaf of my novel "Grave Expectations".

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Padma's next career move

 

 

I have my books, Padma has her cookbooks. Trouble is there are only so many cookbooks she can read before she gets bored, and so she has applied for a casual position at the local Business College. In fact, she's been there before, literally! — see below:

 

Padma is on the far left (but, thankfully, not politically)

 

Of course, these days even the lowest position has a most detailed Job Description. This one could've just read, "Do whatever needs doing, and don't forget to switch on the kettle in time for morning tea", but that wouldn't have sounded important enough. Here it is, chapter and verse:

 

 

Anyway, Padma sent off her application:

 

Dear Larissa,

I read of this position at your Batemans Bay College on facebook and wish to apply.

Having read the Position Description on your website, I am positive I meet all your requirements.

For your information, I completed a business course at your College in 2007 - see attached newspaper cuttings.

Kindly read through my online c.v. at nelligennet.com/cvpadma.html, and if you believe as much as I do that I could make a valuable contribution to your office, please contact me via email or phone.

I am ready to come to your office at any time convenient to you. I am also ready to start work at any time, as I have my own transport and can work any hours required.

Yours sincerely

Padma Goerman

 

Something may come of it or nothing may come of it. If something comes of it, it will give me lots of quiet time to read my books; if nothing comes of it, Padma can always read her cookbooks again.

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

Dressed for another day on the Stock Exchange

 

 

Given the far more volatile state of the stock market these days, I've decided to spend a little more time watching the share price gyrations and buying in low and selling out high whenever the opportunity of a quick profit presents itself.

There seems to be no rhyme nor reason in the way the market moves, but more times than not, if it's going to be a down-day, it'll start with a sharp fall in the morning, then a bit of a lull at lunchtime when everyone has gone to the wine bar, and then a very gradual recovery in the afternoon, before dipping down again towards the four o'clock close. And the opposite is true on any up-day, and any other day when the market behaves in a seemingly irrational way - which is every day!

In other words, there's no way of telling what's going to happen from one day to the next, and it's more important to know about your own pain threshold than any economic data or the state of the world.

Of course, there's always an outlier such as Trump who, whenever he and his cohort want to make millions, make some stupid earthshaking announcement, buy in low, then say the exact opposite and sell out high. I was going to buy up big after spreading the word that the world is coming to an end, but the Global Warming brigade had beat me to it.

It's ten past four in the afternoon, the Sydney Stock Exchange shut its doors, and I've taken off my cufflinks. BHP reached an intra-day high of $55.33, which is about the same as New York's close this morning at $55.25. At the end of today, it closed lower at $54.75, but that's still 73 cents up on yesterday. I did four trades: on one trade I pressed the SELL instead of the BUY button which cost me a couple of thousand, but the other three made a profit of fourteen-and-a-half thousand, leaving me comfortably ahead. LESSON LEARNT: PRESS THE RIGHT BUTTON!

 


Googlemap Riverbend

 

The day has started well ...

 

 

The day has started well, with BHP hitting $55.20 straight out of the box! I had placed a SELL-order at precisely $55.20 just before the market opened and made a nice little profit, even though the shares continued to rise to $55.33 before retreating to their current $55.05.

I don't trade often or much but sometimes when the market is getting a bit too hot, I take a bit off the table. And the good thing is that all that profit is tax-free since I trade inside my SMSF which is now in pension phase and therefore tax-free — well, at least until Labor can think of something else to get their grubby hands on all that untaxed money.

For the life of me I can't believe that people who have even only a slightly above-average amount of intelligence and even only a slightly above-average amount of money could leave it in one of those industry superfunds where they're being charged exorbitant fees even when the money is not being worked with or, worse still, is being worked into the ground. Of course, they frighten people into believing that it's all too difficult and "leave it to the experts". What experts? Are those so-called "experts" eighty years old as I am and have seen it all before as I have?

 

SuperHelp

 

All I pay in fees is around $1,200 a year for my friends at SuperHelp to crunch the numbers at the end of the year, and to lodge the SMSF's tax refund, and then to mail me yet another fat refund of franking credits.

I see that BHP has dropped below $54.90. Maybe I buy back in again as soon as they get down to around $54.70. That would end the day well!

 


Googlemap Riverbend