First, it was the Garage Sale Trail - a national movement to reduce waste by encouraging reuse of items. People and businesses all across the country are exhorted to have a garage sale on the same day. Having everyone on the hunt --or sale-- on the same day benefits everyone: more traffic out looking for sales and more sales for wandering shoppers to find.
We joined the fray. We hoped to find a few pieces of furniture to replace the broken garage sale finds of yesteryear. Not much there but nestled among the usual collection of old toys, 40 year-old Tupperware being sold at new prices, dated clothing and chipped coffee mugs were a few treasures: a Sony Walkman tape player with a solar powered alarm clock, another portable tape player with the all important three equalizer quality controls (neither of these have I seen before) and the a most gorgeous peacock purse. This never-used, antique piece of art decorated with peacock feathers was selling for $60 and probably worth four or five times that. I was afraid to touch it. The seller was afraid to touch it. She kept this beaute either behind a glass hutch door or inside acid-free tissue paper. Which is what her grandmother did with the purse. One would be a hit at the Perth Fashion Festival with this lovely purse but who wants to push the cabinet holding it everywhere?
Highly disturbing and all too frequently found was make-up. Used make-up. Very used make-up. Ewwwwwww. Really, people, I know it's a Chanel compact but the powder is now three-quarters gone and who really wants to use the rest? Crumbling eye shadows, congealed nail polish and mashed eyebrow pencils all had price tags. I almost fainted when I spotted an unused eye shadow refill still in the box. We did not find this day what we have seen at garage sales in the past. Used booze. O.K., opened booze bottles being sold by people who don't drink anymore. And all priced accordingly--the 3/4 full bottle was priced at 3/4 of the purchased price, the half-full bottle asking for half the duty-free price it sold for and so on. I don't know how I made it to the car before bursting out laughing. The entertainment value of visiting garage sales sometimes supersedes the bargains found.
I'm 3 years old! |
The food was different. What would a party be without Fairy Bread? Triangles of nasty cheap white bread spread with butter and doused in sprinkles (called Hundreds & Thousands here in Australia.) Paper cups filled with jelly (translate that to Jell-O) and lamingtons (a small vanilla cake rectangle covered in chocolate and rolled in coconut) all help get the party started. The cake has no ice cream served with it.
There is a bit of a shift in the party itself here in OZ. Fewer people live in homes with big backyards, so parties are in public parks or expensive party venues that have paint tag games or other amusements ($500 for a kid's party, anyone?) And in a public park many of the little reindeer games we all enjoyed--Pin The Tail on the Donkey, Musical Chairs, Pass the Parcel--are no longer done. But this park had Zipline (also called a Flying Fox) attraction and a big mud puddle, so all of the kids were happy.
After all this excitement, I took a nap. It WAS the weekend, after all.
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