Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Australia’

Carol and Dale Whilden and son Jordan outside the offices of The Ocean Grove Voice.

Trading Places: Carol and Dale Whilden and son Jordan outside the offices of the Australian paper The Ocean Grove Voice. Its editor, on that day, happened to be in Ocean Grove, N.J.

By Charles Layton

My cyberspace pen pal, Alan Barber, edits the local newspaper in our sister city, Ocean Grove, Australia. He just sent me a link to an article he published this week. It describes his visit to our town in mid-December.

As we reported earlier, Barber stopped by here during a vacation in the U.S. And just by coincidence two of our townsfolk, Dale and Carol Whilden, along with their son, Jordan, were on that same day visiting Barber’s town on Australia’s southern coast.

While there, the Whildens showed up at the office of Barber’s paper, the Ocean Grove Voice. One of the staffers there took their picture.

We’ve already posted a story telling you what the Whildens thought about the Australian Ocean Grove. So now I thought I’d let you read Barber’s account of his visit here. We seem to have made a favorable impression. He devoted a great deal of space to his article about us, including a generous display of photos — of the Barbaric Bean, the Great Auditorium, our damaged beachfront and more.

Alan Barber. Photo by Mary Walton

Alan Barber. Photo by Mary Walton at the Barbaric Bean

He concluded by writing that “in a short time I learnt that although we live so far away we certainly share one really important trait — both Ocean Groves are friendly, welcoming and really interesting towns… I’ll certainly return to visit.”

Come back any time, Alan.

-0-

To read his article, go to http://www.oceangrovevoice.com. When you get there, click on the “our latest edition” box at the top right corner and use the side arrows to navigate to pages 12 and 13. You’ll have to left click on the pages to enlarge them enough to read.

To see our previous article about Barber and his visit with us, click here.

Read Full Post »

Alan Barber (left) admires the great auditorium as Lois Hetfield and Charles Layton tell how Woody Allen once made a movie there. Photo by Mary Walton

Australian journalist Alan Barber (left) admires the Great Auditorium as Lois Hetfield and Charles Layton tell him how Woody Allen once made a movie there. Photos by Mary Walton

By Charles Layton

Alan Barber, who runs the newspaper in Ocean Grove, Australia, turned up in our town on Monday. Lois Hetfield, the Chamber of Commerce’s administrator, showed him the Great Auditorium, and then the two of them, plus a couple of Blogfinger staffers, settled in for some coffee and chit-chat at the Barbaric Bean.

While we were talking Mayor Randy Bishop dropped in, and he and Barber proceeded to swap stories and make comparisons between the two namesake towns at opposite ends of the planet.

Barber is vacationing in New York City. Since he was so close by, he said he couldn’t resist seeing his “sister city,” so he hopped on the North Jersey Coast Line and came on down.

He explained that Australia’s Ocean Grove, southwest of Melbourne, was founded in the 19th century by Methodists from our own Ocean Grove. The coastal area where they established a camp meeting, based on the one in New Jersey, was the domain of Aboriginal Australians at the time.

Barber’s newspaper, the Ocean Grove Voice, is a bi-weekly, or “fortnightly” as they say down under. He was born in South Africa, grew up in the United Kingdom, where he became a newspaper photographer, and moved nine years ago to Australia, where he had friends and a brother. He settled in the area of Melbourne, which he considers Australia’s most interesting city, and then “discovered Ocean Grove by chance, really.”

The spot of land where the first Australian Grovers settled, next to a beach, is now a park, but the Camp Meeting Association still survives there, although it isn’t the dominating presence it is here.

The Australian Ocean Grove was originally a dry town, under a covenant that is still sometimes cited when someone wants to prevent a business from acquiring a license to sell liquor. Still, alcohol is now served in that town’s restaurants and bars, and Barber said the local coffee shop, The Olive Pit, just got a liquor license as well.

That’s not the only difference between here and there. Barber said the beach area there has no sidewalks and no boardwalk, just dunes. The town has two business districts with a total of 60 or 70 shops, plus there is a big shopping mall. A second mall is in the works, he said.

Ocean Grove, Australia, has about 12,000 residents now, but Barber expects it to grow to 25,000 in the next 15 years “because there’s a growth area at the north that’s developing.” Bishop told him that our Ocean Grove has between 5,800 and 6,000 people, but that our population can swell to as many as 21,000 on a busy weekend, counting day trippers and hotel guests. (Hetfield said we have about 500 hotel rooms now.)

Mayor Randy Bishop of Ocean Grove gets the low-down from Alan Barber of Ocean Grove

Barber told Randy Bishop (left) that The Barbaric Bean reminded him of The Olive Pit in Australia. One difference: The Olive Pit just got a liquor license.

Barber was especially impressed by our Great Auditorium, with its seating capacity of 6,500. He said the only performance space in his Ocean Grove is in a little place called The Piping Hot Chicken Shop, which features local blues bands and an occasional visiting band from Melbourne. Bishop wanted to know whether any of the street names in Australia matched those in our town, so we all started ticking off the names of our local streets — Lawrence, Cookman, Heck, Abbott… There was only one match: Ocean Grove, Australia, has an “Inskip,” Barber said.

According to Barber, his Ocean Grove has had a much harder time preserving its historic buildings. Development “is almost a free-for-all at the moment,” he said. People are leveling older structures and building “square boxes,” and there is no historical protection under the law. He said there was a local uprising that managed to keep a McDonald’s from moving in, but the town has allowed a KFC and a couple of smaller chain businesses.

As darkness was falling, Barber caught a train back to New York. He flies home to Australia on Thursday. He invited us to come and visit any time.

Oh, but here is a coincidence. Barber told us that while he was visiting here, the president of our Camp Meeting Association, Dale Whilden, and his family just happened to be visiting Ocean Grove, Australia. Barber said he was told the Whildens had dropped by his newspaper’s office to say hello.

If you want to read Barber’s newspaper, go to http://www.oceangrovevoice.com.

Read Full Post »

By Charles Layton

It has not been a quiet week in our namesake town of Ocean Grove — that’s the seaside resort in Victoria, Australia, the one that sits on the shores of the Bass Strait, facing south toward Tasmania.

The last time we reported on life in Ocean Grove Down Under, it was to inform you that a man was threatening to cut off his girlfriend’s feet. He had previously been in trouble for committing armed robbery with a tomahawk. It was said that he had an anger management problem.

Previous to that, we told you about another Ocean Grover who nearly killed his roommate by bashing him with beer stubbies. (Translation: a “stubbie” is a short, squat beer bottle. It is different from a “tinnie.”)

As you can probably tell, I’m becoming obsessed with those people. It’s an alternate universe down there.

Shark victim. Photo from the Geelong Advertiser

Today I checked the local papers and discovered that an Ocean Grove man had been bitten by a shark while surfing. He arrived at the Timboon hospital with a 7-centimeter gash on his right foot. Some of the old-timers were quoted as saying it wasn’t a very big deal. Sharks regularly lurk in those waters, and once in a great while, though not often, they take a nip out of somebody. A fisherman told a reporter he had recently seen a shark attacking and eating a seal near shore.

But the big news wasn’t that. The big news was about another Ocean Grove man, who pleaded guilty to trafficking in ecstasy and illegally possessing steroids, weapons and ammunition. Two of the weapons were samurai swords. (No indication as to whether he was a friend of the guy with the tomahawk.)

The man’s lawyer asked the magistrate to go easy on his client due to mitigating circumstances, which were these:

The client, Dylan McEwan, 20, had started taking drugs because of a traumatic experience in the recent past; he had had his ear bitten off in a fight. This had left him with feelings of fear and insecurity, for which he’d turned to drugs. Also, the lawyer said, “I understand the steroids were to bulk up because of fear from the assault, being a small guy beaten by a larger guy.”

He had started selling drugs to friends after losing his job as an arborist. And the reason he’d lost his job as an arborist was, his ear injury had rendered him unable to wear the required safety headgear.

The magistrate accepted into the record a psychological report about the impact of the ear incident, but he said a conviction was necessary because of the seriousness of the charges. He fined McEwan $1,000.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking, what about those samurai swords? Well, those were a present from McEwan’s brother, who acquired them in Thailand. They were a non-issue.

Read Full Post »