Garry

Hi, I'm Garry, I've been living in Canberra for more than two years now. I have to say, I've been enjoying it so much that I'm starting to regret all the rotten things I used to say about the place. I love the politics, the parliament (old and new), the public institutions, the walking and talking. I've even found some good places to have coffee and, coming from Melbourne, that is an important consideration. Working from home, I love the variety of offices I have, scattered in coffee shops around Manuka. When I'm not there, I hang out in Bookplate in the National Library. The photograph was taken at Parliament House on Queens Terrace. We went to a wedding there recently.
Location: Canberra

latest reviews :: View all reviews

Eumundi - Kevin Rudd's birthplace

Garry | 2008-02-06 | Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd was born in Eumundi on 21 September 1957, the youngest of four children. | read more

Red Hill

Garry | 2008-02-01 | Red Hill is a great spot to view Canberra. Along with Mount Ainslie and Black Mountain, it rates a mention in Margaret Wade's Canberra's Secrets as a top place to get a sense of the city. One writer, Kevin Cole, is quoted as saying: "like the seven hills of Rome, we've got the three hills of Canberra". | read more

Whale-watching: Head of Bight

Garry | 2007-09-05 | We spent the day whale-watching back at the Head of Bight. The whales delighted us in so many ways. | read more

Muloorina: birdwatching

Garry | 2008-01-08 | Dawn was just outside the back of our campertruck. I opened the doors, curled up under my sleeping bag, and watched the sun rise over the water of Frome River. It was peaceful and beautiful. | read more

 

popular items

0.0 PM's 11 v Sri Lanka, Manuka Oval, Canberra

Photo Garry | 2008-02-01 | PM's 11 v Sri Lanka, Manuka Oval, Canberra, an annual event with a growing following | read more

0.0 Miss Marples Tea Room, a Sassafras Institution

Photo Garry | 2008-02-01 | Miss Marples Tea Room, a Sassafras Institution | read more

0.0 Boyhood home of Gough Whitlam, Australian PM 1972-1975

Photo Garry | 2008-02-15 | The boyhood home of Gough Whitlam, Australian PM 1972-1975. It stands at the corner of Empire Circuit and Melbourne Avenue, Forrest. | read more

0.0 "Have-a-go" youngters strut their stuff on Manuka oval

Photo Garry | 2008-02-01 | "Have-a-go" youngters strut their stuff on Manuka oval during the recent PM's 11 versus Sri Lanka at Manuka Oval, Canberra | read more

latest blogs :: View all blogs

Places and Prime Ministers by ges posted on 2007-07-30 02:18 1 comment(s)
I'm interested in creating a planbooktravel theme that covers Australian Prime Ministers and their connection to various parts of Australia. I thought I would start small by noting just a few curios and adding detail and additional content as time goes on, nothing too grand to begin with.
Gough Whitlam's boyhood home by Garry posted on 2008-02-15 19:00 0 comment(s)
I was taken on a walk of the Canberra suburb of Forrest and on the corner of Melbourne Avenue and Empire Circuit stood the boyhood home of Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam (1972-1975).
The Boy from Boree Creek by Garry posted on 2007-09-02 02:35 1 comment(s)
The title is taken from Peter Rees's biography of former deputy Prime Minister and leader of the National Party, Tim Fischer. Indeed, the book is sub-titled, The Tim Fischer Story. Being linked to a famous Australian political figure has certainly helped put Boree Creek on the map. Fischer was born there in May 1946.
Canberra Home for the Treasurer? by Garry posted on 2007-08-18 22:04 0 comment(s)
The Treasurer, Peter Costello, has recently gone on record backing the idea of a permanent Canberra home for the nation's treasurer.
Creswick, Prime Minister John Curtin's birthplace by Garry posted on 2007-08-05 04:01 0 comment(s)
John Curtin, Australia's great wartime Prime Minister was born on 8 January 1885 in a rented small timber cottage in the Victorian town of Creswick, near Ballarat.
John Howard's Earlwood by ges posted on 2007-08-05 03:39 0 comment(s)
I'm haphazardly exploring the connections between Australian Prime Ministers and Australian places. Wayne Errington & Peter Van Onselen's recently published biography of John Howard opens with a chapter on Earlwood, the Sydney suburb where John Howard spent most of his childhood and teenage years.
Prime Ministers Sculptures, Botanic Gardens, Ballarat by ges posted on 2007-07-30 06:40 0 comment(s)
I remember being impressed by the sculpture garden in Ballarat's Botanic Gardens containing brass, I think, busts or heads of Australia's Prime Ministers.

editors picks

Koala and the Brown Snake, You Yangs, Victoria

janduf | 2008-03-26 | Ever wondered how animals get along with snakes in the wild? We saw a Brown Snake slither calmly past one of our favourite Koalas, while she was drinking at a waterhole in the You Yangs near Melbourne. | read more

Travel Australia

JB | 2008-05-02 | My wife and I set out to fulfil the great Aussie dream back in 2003, that is, to travel Australia and explore Australia’s many diverse destinations, indefinitely…. | read more

Deloraine Stays and Cafes

quamby | 2008-03-25 | Deloraine, a lovely quaint town of 2500 people, established around 1830's. It has some magnificent old buildings with a lot of history attached to them. The picturesque Meander River flows around the outskirt of the town, as you drive past you may see the enthusiastic fishermen trying their luck with catching rainbow or brown trout. | read more

Tooradin - Victoria

JB | 2008-01-31 | Tooradin is a town that we had always driven through on the way to Phillip Island and never thought to stop. | read more

 

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