Sunday, December 31, 2006

Quartzsite

We meet our friends and we all pile in the minivan with luggage and set off for Quartzsite.



This isn't the rush hour. The traffic is like this constantly. Even through the night it is heavy.
Makes me laugh when I think of traffic reports for Perth. If it takes us an extra ten minutes to get home we complain! Oh, well maybe not everyone.


I've heard some people say how ugly wind farms can be but I think they are quite beautiful.

We stopped to get some groceries at Blythe and saw this car in the car park.

Pretty neat, huh?

(Click on this picture and check out the reggo plate.)

Friday, December 29, 2006

Los Angeles


We arrived yesterday; or was it tomorrow? All I know is we left Wednesday, were in the air for days - oh, alright, a day - and landed the same day as we left. I phoned one of my sons to say we'd arrived safely and he said, "Oh, that was quick!" Sydney is 19 hours ahead of US! Almost tomorrow! All very confusing.

Also very confusing for the circadian clock. Sleeping at 8pm, awake again at 11pm, hungry at 2am, sleeping again at 3am, awake again at 9am. But at least the nausea as passed.

Friday, December 22, 2006

December

Winter (June to Sept) - go up northern Western Australia and dig the rock; get it trucked back home.




Oct-Nov:

Sort out the rock and fill orders.

Cut and polish rocks. Pack finished product plus rough rock into drums. Ship to America in time for the show.
Break it to Woody that he can't come to America.

End of December we're off to Arizona where Glenn sells the rock at the biggest rock, gem and mineral show in the world: Quartzsite and Tucson.



Mid February we return - relax. The seven weeks in America is absolutely non-stop so we deserve a rest when we get back. Especially Glenn as he has all the worry and stress of logistics; before, during and after the shows.
Soon it's winter and we start all over again.


So, the shipment that left in November has arrived in America and being trucked to Quartzsite for the first show (hopefully). When we arrive we hope all the gear from last year has also been trucked to Quartzsite to coincide with our arrival.
Organising trucking and customs clearance etc is not easy from the other side of the world. They are nineteen hours behind us. Email is a wonderful thing!

Monday, December 11, 2006

Washing rocks


When rock hunters are prospecting for interesting and/or colourful rock and they want to know how the rock will cut and polish, they lick it. It's the most convenient way to wet the surface and so get an idea of its qualities. I love to watch my partner do this. It's as if he has an affinity with the earth itself. But then, rocks are his passion and always have been. He was picking up rocks from the age of three.





He cuts the rocks in rock saws then polishes them on vibrolaps (large circular flat plates that vibrate). This process reveals the beauty contained inside the rocks.


The polishing powder needs to be washed off each polished face and slab and this is a job I can do for him. I stand in the sunshine holding each piece under the powerful jet of a pressure cleaner and watch the specimens come to life.




Then all the rocks are packed into drums and sent to America in time for the biggest rock, gem and mineral show in the world.


Sorry, Woody, you can't come!

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Dig Dig Dig

During the winter we dig the rocks and in the summer take them to America to sell at the shows. It takes us a day or two to drive to the mines. Up here the temperatures during the day are around 20 to 30 degrees celcius. Warm days and cool nights. Perfect!




Partner is up ahead in truck loaded with backhoe while I follow in the Land Cruiser pulling the trailer.



As you can see, scenery on the way can be a bit 'samey' but it has its moments. I listen to the radio, cassette tapes and do the odd crossword (for hours and hours and hours!).










Beautiful skies here. Clear air. And only the sound of the birds and insects.









The only water is from windmills which pump water up into tanks and there is a pool for the cattle and sheep.

To think, I used to go to an airconditioned office every day and do 'office things'. Now this is my work place. Which would you choose? I'd choose the fresh air every time.









This is crazy lace agate.









You can see more rocks here.


















Some would say the dust and flies could be slightly off-putting. I take them on as a challenge.









After a few days I was on first-name terms with some of the flies. They joined me inside my fly net. Others were just plain ignorant little buggers.









Western Australia has a huge amount of wildflowers during winter/spring. There was colour everywhere.










The dust didn't seem to bother our dog who enjoyed forraging for mice! I know it looks like chocolate but, really, it isn't.












Rock dug, sorted, packed into bags.


Truck ordered, loaded, and away it goes.


Job done!






Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Beautiful Rocks!


It will never cease to amaze me how different people get attracted to different rocks. And the attraction is sometimes insatiable.

There we are in Quartzsite or Tucson, with trestle tables absolutely choc-a-block full of rocks for sale. They are polished faces and slabs and range from stunning reds, mauves, pinks and purples to greens, blues and yellows. Beautiful, exquisite rocks.

I have seen people try to walk past but look twice and find they have to take a closer look. Then they have to touch. One lady picked up a piece of Mookaite and marvelled at the colours and the 'picture' she could see. She continued to walk around the whole booth looking at all the rocks but found herself drawn back to the same piece. As she looked closer at the boxful of unpolished slabs she found the 'sister' piece to the one that caught her eye. She held them up and exclaimed to her friend, "Look! That's Arizona!" It took her just a few minutes to realise that she could not possibly leave our booth without these pieces of rock.

And often people have no idea why they 'must have' that piece of rock. And to be honest, at times neither do we because sometimes they choose a rock that we think is rubbish.

There is a huge amount written on the metaphysical properties of rock and when I see people drawn to various types and colours I feel there really must be something in it.

If you would like to see more Australian rock look here.

Monday, March 13, 2006

Monday


I picked some roses this morning.

They look, feel and smell beautiful.


I also washed some rocks ready for sale.










The rocks look and feel beautiful too.


Almost good enough to eat!


It's enough to make a person turn religious!!

Friday, January 13, 2006

Quartzsite



At the moment we are at The Rock and Gem Show at Quartzsite. The best rocks, of course, are Australian!!! Above is Mookaite and Orbicular Granite. Below is Tiger Eye. End of January we will move on to Tucson until mid February when we will return home to Australia.

America!!

I'm in America and received an email from a friend telling me she had just started blogging!! So here I am. Probably talking to myself. But isn't it amazing???

I am here in America with the love of my life, selling rock from Western Australia at the Rock and Gem Show in Quartzsite.

When I have more time I will write more!! How exciting this is!!

Later.... much much later... Like, two months later. Never did get around to finishing that blog. We finished at the show though, successfully. We have rocks in Western Australia that are absolutely unique. People would wander by our booth which had trestle tables heavily laden with polished rocks of all colours from purples, reds and blues to greens, yellows and golds. I would see them stop in their tracks and need to touch the rocks because they could hardly believe their eyes. Has this beauty come from beneath our feet? It surely did. And they ask questions about the rock and keep touching. What I found the most interesting was how a person would browse the whole booth, dozens of different rocks but keep going back to the same one as if it were a magnet to them. Why did that particular colour or texture mean something special to that person? We might make light of people who believe in receiving therapy from something as 'dead' as a rock but maybe there is more to it than meets the eye.