As you know I've moved to Brisbane, and since being here I have
discovered a few things that bring back some wonderful
childhood memories.
discovered a few things that bring back some wonderful
childhood memories.
Play the player below and think about where you would hear the
sound on a day to day basis...
sound on a day to day basis...
I know you'll say the sports field, but unless you're e ref or
player, then you're not really going to hear this regularly every
day.
player, then you're not really going to hear this regularly every
day.
It's a whistle alright, but if you're from Melbourne like I am, then
it was a part of the white noise that was the background to your
daily life... up until about 20 or 30 years ago that is.
In my youth we enjoyed a twice daily domestic postal delivery
service... and whenever the postie placed letters into your
letterbox, he blew a burst on his official GPO issued pea whistle.
GPO being the acronym for General Post Office... the name used
before it became known as Australia Post and started become
so much more than a letter delivery service.
letterbox, he blew a burst on his official GPO issued pea whistle.
GPO being the acronym for General Post Office... the name used
before it became known as Australia Post and started become
so much more than a letter delivery service.
But the postie wasn't the only whistle blower that I remember so
well. There was also the Train Guard. The guy in the back end
of the train who's main job, it seemed, was to hang out of the
door at stations and blow his whistle, as both a warning to the
people on the train and the station to stand clear, and to signal
to the driver that it was all clear and safe to pull away from
the station.
well. There was also the Train Guard. The guy in the back end
of the train who's main job, it seemed, was to hang out of the
door at stations and blow his whistle, as both a warning to the
people on the train and the station to stand clear, and to signal
to the driver that it was all clear and safe to pull away from
the station.
Oh and of course on the major intersections of Melbourne's CBD
when the police were on traffic duty... trying to keep trams,
people and motorists from getting tangled up in a big mess...
especially those motorists performing a traffic manoeuvre unique
to Melbourne (well in Australia it is) called a 'hook turn'.
A brilliant solution to ensure that drivers turning
right don't impede a tram's progress.
Anyway, I honestly can't remember the last time I heard a
whistle being blown in the normal course of my day... until I
arrived in Brisbane that is.
whistle being blown in the normal course of my day... until I
arrived in Brisbane that is.
It's not a big deal of course, but when you hear something you
haven't heard for such a long time, it really doe evoke some
memories of a long gone era... well for me it does.
I ride the trains to and from work each day and I hear a
whistle being blown by staff on the busier stations. The first
few times I heard it, it sounded very strange, foreign in
fact, yet very familiar at the same time. It really did stir
up some very old memories.
The other thing that's stirred up memories was organising this;
haven't heard for such a long time, it really doe evoke some
memories of a long gone era... well for me it does.
I ride the trains to and from work each day and I hear a
whistle being blown by staff on the busier stations. The first
few times I heard it, it sounded very strange, foreign in
fact, yet very familiar at the same time. It really did stir
up some very old memories.
The other thing that's stirred up memories was organising this;
A pile of packages ready to post.
I used to love, as a kid, getting a package in the mail from
my Grandmother or Great Aunt. Every birthday they would
send me a card in the post, and sometimes even a package.
It was always so exciting to get and even more exciting to open.
Well the other day I went and bought mailing boxes so that I
could send some little gifts I bought for my younger kids and my
two grandsons... but it wasn't until after I was back home and
wrapping the gifts, writing the cards, packing the boxes and
addressing them, that I realised for the first time what it must've
been like for my Grandmother to be doing the same thing for me
all those years ago. It really was a special thing to do... very
satisfying. I looked at each one after addressing it and I could
transport myself back to when I was about 5 or 8 or 11 years old
having just received a package in the post. Wow... it really felt
good to know that the same feelings could well be evoked