Or is there?
It occurred to me lately that I live in a very confined
area. I don’t drive distances as I once did, and tend to stay nearer home. A
lot of this is due perhaps because the roads aren’t like they used to be in
what us older people refer to as “the good ol’ days”. I’ve towed an 18 foot
caravan around Australia when my husband had to give up driving after one of
his early strokes, but as much as I would love to take off, and still envy folk
who take to the highways and byways of this beautiful country I call home, I
couldn’t stand the hectic pace on the roads these days.
My pondering came about after reading Sandy’s post of a day
or so ago when I commented that if I returned to my hometown I’d be
hard-pressed after so many years to find more than about six people apart from
family and a few friends who would remember me. Of course my hometown was
London and to be more specific Highbury in Nth London, which was no small town
by any stretch of the imagination.
I then pondered on the fact that perhaps I am a homebody who
likes to be in familiar places, but then I started to think about the places
around the world I have visited and
it occurred to me I’ve been quite a traveller in my time.
My first trip in a plane was to San Sebastian in Spain. In
those days a trip to anywhere in Europe was considered very extravagant. My
sister was getting married at the end of that year and I was to be married soon
after, so we took the opportunity to travel before settling down. While there we took a bus trip to Madrid, where we
walked out of a bullfight in disgust after about half an hour. I guess we only
expected all the grandeur of the parade and never considered the poor bull was
going to die a slow death. I have to say here that we were told afterwards it
was a very poor fight and the matador was not considered very good. We also
went on a bus trip to a coastal resort in France. I can’t recall exactly where
but do remember the horrendous drive where the driver seemed intent on killing
us all, driving along mountain roads like a kamikaze pilot.
That's me on the right--at San Sebastian
After my marriage my husband and I drove every year to Devon
or Cornwall. For anyone who knows that area of England my favorite places were
Crantock or Lynton/Lynmouth. I expect both have changed considerably since the 60s.
Of course the biggest journey of all came when we migrated
to Australia. We opted to come by sea, and sailed on the Fairstar, a recently
refitted liner, in 1966. The sea trips from England to Australia were abandoned
long ago, so we were very fortunate. It took exactly four weeks. Now when I
refer to the Good Old Days you will
understand what I mean when I tell you that along the way we went on a side
trip to Cairo and the Pyramids at Giza. In those days ships traveled through
what was then called The Suez Canal. We left the ship and stayed overnight in Cairo.
Next morning we were up early and took a camel ride to the nearby pyramids.
Then we visited the museum where the stand out was Tutankhamen's artifacts.
Next we went by bus to Giza to see the Great Sphinx and pyramids. We met up
with the ship again and continued on our journey. All this for 8 pounds
sterling!
My husband went back to England about six times over the
years, but I only returned once and that was in 1975. On the return trip we
stayed overnight in Singapore.
I’ve traveled extensively in Australia, been right around
the coastline once, up the inland road to Darwin, over to the west a couple of
times traveling across the Nullarbor Plain. I’ve stroked a dolphin in the sea
at Monkey Mia in WA, visited Uluru in the red center, and swam in the warmest,
clearest water you can imagine off the Great Barrier Reef, walked through
magnificent rain forests, driven across unmade roads and along highways, seen a
platypus swimming in his natural Tasmanian habitat, and emus and kangaroos running
free. I’ve been across to Tasmania more
times than I can remember, sometimes by air and other times on the ferry. For
years we towed a caravan—our preferred means of travel as we could then take
our dogs along. My husband would have spent all his days on the road, but I was
always glad to get home, to sleep in my own bed.
A boab tree near Derby WA
Silverton, near Broken Hill (Many movies have featured this pub and the walls are lined with the pictures of stars and celebrities)
Strahan Tasmania (where we stayed in a haunted cottage--I swear I saw the ghost)
So, back to where I started, there is obviously no place
like home for me. But then home is where the heart is. My early years were
spent in a tenement house in Nth London where I was surrounded by love and had
no idea that we were not rich. But after my mother passed away that ceased to
be home so anywhere my husband and I were together was home. I will remain in
this house until they carry me out. My heart is here.
Tricia McGill's books can be found on her Books We Love page:
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