Pointless Stories: Memoirs of an Albany Boy
By Graham LeesDedication:For Steve
Foreword
Before you start reading these stories, it might be a good idea if I tell you that this is a work of fiction. Most of the things that are recorded here are very loosely based on events that really didhappen, but not necessarily in the way I have depicted or to the characters involved, except me.Before you get hot under the collar and accuse me of telling spare ribs, remember this! After all,Napoleon Bonaparte is credited with saying “What is history but a fable agreed upon?”You will note that I seldom come out of it smelling of anything less than roses! Naturally thiswasn’t really the case but when I did something stupid or made an arse of myself, I haveattributed it to one of the other characters. Let’s face it, I am hardly likely to go out of my way tomake myself look silly, am I?Some of the characters are completely figments of my imagination. Some have been givendifferent names. I do have a brother and a sister who are very unlike me in nearly every way anddid not necessarily behave in the way I have depicted. Sometimes they did, though!One or two of the events are completely made up and I don’t know that they ever happened toanyone, anywhere, ever.Albany, however, does exist, so do all the geographical features mentioned.And I really did have a Ford Anglia . . .
Albany
First, let’s get one thing straight! The town’s name is Albany!Not Orlbany like the Poms say, or Arlbany, as North Americans call it. In fact, if you were trying topass yourself off as a local, you would pronounce it Owl-bany. But even a trained actor have to doa lot of homework to succeed!Albany is in Western Australia, right down the bottom on that little rounded bit that other Sandgropers call “The Buttock of Australia”. Yeah, that bit!The town nestles between two small hills, grandly called Mount Clarence and Mount Melville.They’re not really mountains at all, though. Albany is too insignificant to have real mountains so itgot Clarence and Melville instead. These are often referred to as the “Pimples on the Buttock of Australia”.Immediately to the south is what looks at first like a big lake until you see that it has a wharf withocean-going vessels tied up to it. Then you realise there is a passage at the eastern end thatleads out into King George Sound.This large inlet is called Princess Royal Harbour and its main use, other than to house the wharf,is that it is the finish line for the Perth to Albany Yacht Race, which is where yachts race fromPerth to Albany. Albany people don’t suffer bullshit very easily and call a spade a spade and theycall the Perth to Albany yacht race the Perth to Albany Yacht Race!It is also the start line for the Albany to Perth Yacht Race for reasons similar to the above!
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