I retire from the workforce this week and to celebrate have decided to retire my current blogs and start afresh with a single consolidated blog - My Bright Field - to record the delights of my new life adventure. If you are interested follow me over there. I will still be Sweet Wayfaring and collecting Royal Hotels. The delights I discover along the way will appear together with my gardens and towns where I live.
"To muse, to creep, to halt at will, to gaze ... such sweet wayfaring"
William Wordsworth
But it makes for a glorious photograph.
ReplyDeleteLetty in Ararat will love this ... I will give her a nudge.
You use a lot of corrugated tin for the sides of buildings. We usually save it for the roof. I'm a huge fan of rustic buildings and these are top of the line. I wonder what it's like to be living in these old towns, if anyone is living there?
ReplyDeletePJ, mostly we use corrugated iron for roofs but in some parts of Australia (not a lot) it is on the sides of buildings as well. This seems to one of those parts.
ReplyDeleteThis particular building however has timber walls. We call it weatherboard don't know if you call it that over your way.
There certainly are people living in these towns. We don't have many ghost towns like I have seen in the USA. The population will typically be small (say 500-600 people), proud of their place, very community spirited, and have lived there for generations. I grew up in such a town.
There are modern amenities in the towns, I have chosen to photograph the buildings that show a more interesting history.
Would like to see this house restored but, as Julie says, it makes a wonderful photo.
ReplyDelete