Sunday, March 30, 2014

Amy's Pink Hair





Amy decided she wanted pink hair- so now she had pink hair! What can I say.


Amy's Cake Making




 Amy has started doing  a bit of cooking lately now that I have my new kitchen. Last week she made a baked white chocolate and raspberry cake as I was having some friends over for afternoon tea. Today she made a red velvet cake and iced it- only we ended up only being able to eat 2/3rd s of the cake as Luna the dog decided to jump on the bench and start licking the icing!


Sunday, March 16, 2014

Work Coast Retreat at Durras Beach








Friday afternoon we headed down to Durras South for a weekend retreat with my work Southside Physiotherapy. It was a lovely weekend and the weather was just wonderful. We had a walk to the beach Friday afternoon and some team photos, then a wonderful dinner with plenty of food- way too much to eat, followed by some dancing - Chicken Dance, Nutbush and Macarina to name a few, then some sing star  which did not seem to appreciate my singing- I barely scored any points and got awful and bad as some of my comments from the machine!

Saturday morning was yoga on the beach to start the morning and then breakfast and then a 3 hour team meeting. After lunch we were finished with the work stuff and partners and families were able to join us. Bill came down so we had a very relaxing afternoon and evening, more food, time on the beach and then some card playing to end the night. I had two late nights in a row- around midnight- I am rather tired but it was nice just to sit around and relax and spend time doing nothing!

Monday, March 10, 2014

Family Gathering in Adelaide for Jim's Funeral

  Front Row(L to R)  Thela (Jim's sister), Marian, 2nd Row Jocelyn, Amy, Hilary, Mary, Sam, Back Row: Sue, Peter,  Tom, Bill, Stuart and Lachlan. (Josephine missing)
 Amy and Lachlan holding Jim's ashes in front of his favorite tree which he planted.
 Amy and Lachlan
 Amy, Bill and Lachlan
 Sue, Bill, Amy and Lachlan Frost
Bill with his Dad's ashes

The memorial service was held in Adelaide on Saturday 8th March 2014. All Jim's children, partners and grandchildren where there to celebrate the wonderful life he had lead. I said to the kids as we traveled home that it was one of the happiest funerals I have been to. There were moments of sadness but it really was about celebrating his life and that is what we did. It was fairly informal, in a funeral home and we just gathered around together, some standing, some sitting. Bill was the MC, there were several pieces of live music performed by Mary and Hilary ( his daughters) and Josephine and Tom- his grandchildren. Marian, Bill and Thela spoke briefly, someone from the Richard Wagner Society, Geological Society and his work spoke, all briefly, it was lovely. There was a lovely afternoon tea and we had a nice time sharing some wonderful memories. Amy and Lachlan were lucky to have had childhood, teenage and young adult memories of their grandfather. Afterwards we went back to the family home and sat around and reminisced and told various stories about Jim and other members of the family.

Sunday morning we all gathered again for a lovely breakfast, some family photos and more story telling before everyone had to depart in various directions. 

James Murray Rennell Frost

 Jim
 Jim and his big sister Thela
Jim, Amy, Lachlan and Bill a couple of years back at our house with a piece of the Red Baron's plane

Bill's dad passed away on Thursday 27th February 2014 aged 90. We were so lucky that Bill had been over in Adelaide barely three weeks before and had spent a lovely weekend with him, before he had a stroke and was then unconscious for 2 weeks before he finally passed away, and the kids had been over in late 2013 with Bill for his 90th birthday so we all have wonderful memories of Jim and he lead a very rich and fulfilling life.

The following is the obituary that Bill wrote about his father that shows what a wonderful man he was:
James Frost, a rocket scientist from the days of the major launches at Woomera and frequent guest on Rocket Range documentaries, has died aged 90 in Adelaide.

Jim Frost was born in 1923 at Swan Hill.  As a boy he moved frequently due to father's poor health (a WW1 veteran whose lungs were affected by exposure to mustard gas and phosgene).  Jim moved with the family to Hamilton, Rochester, Dunedoo and finally Sydney where at 15, his father died and his mother sold their furniture to make ends meet.

He was a good student at Sydney Boys High School and went on to earn an Engineering Degree at Sydney University.  Many times the curious young student watched the man chalking the word 'Eternity' on the pavements of Sydney.  He heard the desperate fire of the guns as they tried to stop the Japanese submarines in Sydney Harbour and once watched the Army shell a Japanese submarine, with one shell falling short into a unit in Bondi.  His occupation was classed as 'exempt from war service', so he designed landing craft for the Americans.  Explosives were in ready supply and an occasional prank for the student engineers was to place a tiny quantity on the tramline and lift the wheels 1 cm off the tracks, but he only ever would admit that 'some of his friends' might have participated.

Post war he joined the Long Range Weapons Establishment at Salisbury in South Australia where he was in the new and exciting field of rocketry.  In a war-ravaged economy, where regular overseas travel by air was undreamed of, he set off on his first overseas work trip aged just 24, to England on a flying boat.  This took 9 days and each night involved landing on a major river such as the Ganges, the Nile and finally the Thames.  A charming couple he met on the flying boat were 'Black Jack' Galleghan and his wife.  Galleghan had only been freed three years before from the horrors of the responsibility of Allied Commandant of the infamous Japanese prisoner of war camp in Changi, Singapore.  In England, Jim studied the lessons being learned from the German V2 program, specifically techniques for tracking and controlling rockets in flight.  When Australia's first satellite was launched in 1967, it was powered by what was essentially a modified V2 rocket.

Jim was literally a rocket scientist - there were 30,000 parts on these rockets and his speciality was making sense of those parts used for flight tracking.  Highly skilled operators used a kinetheodolite, a converted two-seater anti-aircraft platform now equipped with a theodolite and camera to track the flight path.  The role of the instrumentation team was to ensure that the primitive computers of the day could interpret, plan and predict rocket paths - reconciling the onboard instrumentation data with the observed data in the new and exciting discipline of telemetry.  These days, your Android or Apple phone can do most of this, but in Jim's day it required an engineering degree, slide rule, logarithmic tables and knowledge of spherical trigonometry.  Sophisticated timing was the key and Jim & a colleague designed the Frost-Moran chronograph, still used 30 years later.

In 1953 he married his wife Marian, who he first met at the Weapons Research Establishment, his companion for the rest of his life.

In 1957, when the Soviets literally shocked the world by launching a satellite into orbit, Jim was the Adelaide team leader of the small group of volunteers, part of a worldwide science program called Moonwatch.  Millions of people watched in awe as the rocket that carried the satellite circled the earth, but only a tiny handful including Jim and his group ever saw the tiny little satellite itself, not much larger than a grapefruit.  Australian Moonwatch groups were the first to see and report Sputnik and Jim's group, perched on the roof of the Physics building at the University of Adelaide, recorded their observations with a cine camera, a Doppler graph and a line of small telescopes originally built for WW2 tanks.

It wasn't too long before the secretive desert town of Woomera beckoned and Jim, Marian and two children moved to the distant desert town, then at its peak in the halcyon days of a major expansion.  Frequent rocket firings, pilotless aircraft and numerous scientific and military tests kept his interest high.  Woomera was a very isolated town at the end of a 180 kilometre dirt road, where Commonwealth police permanently on duty stopped anyone who was not on official business.  Jim and Marian threw themselves into the life of the town, with music, theatrical performances, desert photography and natural history excursions.  A third child was born and some lifelong friends made.  Trips to destinations such as Alice Springs could be taken, travelling (with permission) straight up the centre of the rocket range where few passenger cars ever ventured and a breakdown would lead to a wait of several days for assistance. 

After five years in Woomera, the family returned to Adelaide and Jim and Marian bought their house in Toorak Gardens, now in debt to the bank for several thousand pounds.  This was to be his home for the rest of his life and as the use of Woomera for rocket firing waned after 1970, Jim continued to work for the Defence Research Centre Salisbury until his retirement.  His final role was to project manage and input a lifetime of knowledge on behalf of the department into Dr. Peter Morton's wonderful book 'Fire Across the Desert', an official government publication launched in 1989.  On Jim's last day before his final admission to hospital, Jim's son showed him some pages in the book where his photographs of Sturt Desert Peas and other wild-flowers feature.  "Yes, I took those on a Saturday morning", was the instant response.

With retirement, his interest in music, growing Australian native plants and geology flourished and right until the end, he was a frequent concert-goer. 

He is survived by his sister Thela, wife Marian, three adult children and five grand children, who appreciated his insight, wide ranging interests and the love he had for his extended family.


Jim Frost, Defence Scientist, 1923 - 2014.

Fancy Power Points For My Splashback


Having electrical apprentices in the house means they are up with all the latest trends. Lachlan and Amy knew about these coloured Clipsal Power Points, so we got some put in to contrast with the splashback and I must say I am very pleased with the outcome- better than the plain old white ones- we just will not tell Bill how much they cost!

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Fudge Making With the Missionaires










We had the missionaries over from church on Saturday night and got Elder Howse to make some more of his fudge. He was excited to try it out in my new kitchen. We made Rum and  Craisins with pistachios and almonds and it was very yuumy! It was great fun, Elder Howse was not completely happy with the result, but we were- we told him he will just have to come back again to perfect his fudge making!

Kitchen Splash Back




Splashback went into the kitchen this week- ended up choosing Treasure Trove- a shimmery brown colour and am very pleased with the way it all fits in. I had wanted a green colour to match the colour of my blinds but when we put some of the green colour tiles up against the bench it did not look right so came up with the brown- fortunately I had Amy at home to help me select the colour as I am hopeless at colour choosing.

Now just waiting for a bit of painting, the lights to go in and the dishwasher to be fixed. It is a great kitchen to work in and has been worth all the effort!