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Thread: Employment Opportunities

  1. #191
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    Thanks

    Quote Originally Posted by mikel View Post
    I'm in awe of your insight and obvious respect for the various different cultures that you have come in contact with. I have just spent the last two hours reading this thread from the start and am a better person for it(I intend to share this link with the important people in my life). It is a pity that this sort of respect and insight can't be passed on to all the "know it alls" that seem to be every where these days. Might I make an observation, it does seem that LR people do tend to lead more interesting lives. This may have something to do with the need to be practical and enjoy the simple things in life without all the bling.

    Safe travels.

    Regards
    Mike L
    Mike,

    Thanks for your kind remarks. In itself, writing this up and scanning through my photos, it has been a bit of a journey, in itself. A lot of good memories in all of the photos, especially the people.

    It is my experience, in dealing with people from the different cultures, with which I have had the pleasure to interact, it has always been about treating people with the respect your would like for yourself.

    Taking the time to learn to try and learn their languages wins a lot of ground with people. You will never run out of teachers.

    Tolerance is another virtue. I may not believe in some of the beliefs of people I interact with but, I do know that their beliefs are real to them, and in that way I must respect their beliefs.

    Spending time in amongst other peoples also will teach you that concepts of things like time, individual and familial responsibilities, and social mores have to be appreciated to best understand the people you are working with. Show frustration, and you can lose them.

    My greatest teacher has been my wife. In her culture, you meet and take people at face value. The normal thing for an Australian to do is be up front and say..."G'day, how are ya going? My name is Bla Bla...whaddya do for a crust?" In Shangaan culture (and most others) in Mozambique it is rude to ask someone of what they do...it does not matter if they sweep the streets or, are the President. In time, when you know that person, that will knowledge will come.

    It took some explaining to my wife, after being in Australia, that many Australians mean nothing by the question and that we probably think we are very egalitarian...but maybe not as egalitarian as we might like to think....the 'and which school did you go to?' question seems to, at times, both open and close doors.

  2. #192
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    Something I prepared a little earlier.....

    There is a thread down on the NSW/ACT forum which I have a special interest in. It is of a recent trip made by Dobbo and his mates.

    The following photos I sponged off the thread and I give credit to Scouse and Lokka for their use.

    Scouse’s Photos:





    Lokka’s Photos:




    The view down from the bridge










    It does me good to see the bridge being used. In Nov 90 as the Lieutenant Troop Commander of the recently re-raised 3 Tp (Mech), 1 Fd Sqn, RAE, I was tasked with constructing the bridge.

    We took a team out to construct it and knocked it over in a week. If you felt it swayed a lot, consider building it, when the steel wire ropes were not contained by the tread plates and sides. We had to put 3 blokes out at a time each of them working on a side, or the treadway. They used to become affected (motion sickness) and we had to replace them frequently.

    Having been the new Tp Comd in a re-raised Fd Engr Tp which had earned it's reputation as the pioneering Tunnel Rats, in the Tunnels of Cu Chi in Sth Vietnam. I thought the bridge would offer a great opportunity to recognise the service of someone who had gone before us.

    Sandy MacGregor had been the Troop Commander in Vietnam and has written a book called ‘No Need For Heroes’. It is a crack of a read. The Tunnel Rats are a tight organization and do a great deal for all the Sappers who had to do the job underground.

    This is the foreword to the book:

    “This is the thrilling hilarious and inspiring true story of a ragtag band of Aussie Army Engineers who redefined the word Heroes ... and reinvented larrikin too.
    Among the first Australians to fight in Vietnam, they faced death every day defusing Viet Cong booby traps - then partied all night in a casino they'd built in secret.
    They led hundreds of American troops to safety, but fought US military police to a standstill in the bars of South Vietnam. They built the Australian Task Force base - then sabotaged a headquarters conference, booby trapped showers and blew up a generator rather than kowtow to newly arrived officers.
    And that's before we mention sex ...
    Most importantly, the men of Three Field Troop discovered a huge Viet Cong tunnel complex and were the first allied troops to follow the enemy down into their underground city.
    They were the original Tunnel Rats and this is their story.”


    In doing some research I found out that CPL Bob Bowtell, of 3 Tp, had been the first Royal Australian Engineer killed in Vietnam. He was killed clearing a tunnel. It also happened that he was born in Katoomba, so I thought it fitting and appropriate to name the bridge after him.

    His surviving family had to approve firstly, and I was able to trace them and they were very touched and keen for the recognition for their father and husband.

    His children turned up for the opening and it was a very proud moment for me to see them thank my men for their efforts. This was the first time anyone had really recognised their Dad.

    Since the opening ceremony I have never been back. I want to walk out from Katoomba one day and take my kids for a look. I think the bridge will prove to be one of my more lasting efforts.

  3. #193
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    Reading these posts prompts me to stop and think. Examine myself and my life.
    And I hope that makes me a better person.

    From one Aussie to another......Thanks Digger. I appreciate your efforts and those associated with you. I'm proud of you.

    Good on ya,
    Danny

  4. #194
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    He is not the Messiah!!!

    Hold the adulation...! As my Mum says...'He is not the Messiah!...He is just a very naughty boy!!'

    My apologies to the 'Life of Brian'...possibly the funniest movie ever made.

  5. #195
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    Follow the Gourd...this is HIS gourd.
    NO!!!! follow the shoe

    Why do we aussies have such trouble accepting praise, when it IS due?

  6. #196
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    Tiptoeing...through the tulips...

    This is getting back into Mozambique.

    A sizable part of the border between Mozambique and South Africa is the eastern boundary of Kruger National Park. It is fenced, and used to be mined. We had an inquiry one day by a chap who was studying the old migration paths of elephants. He wanted to know what we knew, about the old, supposedly cleared (by the Moz military...never trust the military to clear a minefield!!). I took it up myself to drive out that way with some copies of the mapping we had available.

    The area he was surveying was an area to be opened up, to the north of the Massingir Dam in Mozambique. It is now known as the Limpopo National Park, and with Kruger, and to the north, Gonarezhou in Zimbabwe, it comprises the first cross-bordered park in Africa.

    One thing though, that was not being well managed, was the interaction between the people of the bush, and the increasing numbers of wildlife. Both people and animals of course, have detrimental effects on each other.

    I overnighted at Massingir in the camp with this bloke and his team, and in the dark, the fact there were elephants around was very evident by the noises they made, crashing through the mopane scrub, and trumpeting to each other...keeps you awake thinking...some.

    The next day, the local Chefe or Regulo (Headman), came out to complain about the increasing numbers of elephants that were coming into their area, since the fence had come down. In all truthfulness, these people were supposed to have been relocated.

    We went down to the nearby village to see what he was talking about. They people had been there for...well...forever, and they had well developed field (machambas) in which they grew corn, manioca (cassava), and chilis. The evidence of the elephants from the night before, even to a novice tracker like me:



    Now, what sort of fence would you need to keep these buggers out of your veggie patch? Any suggestions?

  7. #197
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    Great Wall of China?

  8. #198
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    Quote Originally Posted by BBC View Post
    Now, what sort of fence would you need to keep these buggers out of your veggie patch? Any suggestions?
    String has been effective... when smeared in grease and crushed chilli.

    Elephants, being mammals, are irritated by capsaicin - the active component of chilli peppers. A Zambian NGO, Elephant Pepper Development Trust, has been teaching farmers how to use chilli-based techniques to protect their crops, like growing defensive barrier crops of chillis, burning crushed chilli dung bricks and smearing fibre fencing with grease and chilli.

    The chillis also provide additional income for the farmers.

  9. #199
    Treads Guest
    Thanks for your contribution BBC, this is great

  10. #200
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    Sounds sensible....

    Quote Originally Posted by Ben View Post
    String has been effective... when smeared in grease and crushed chilli.

    Elephants, being mammals, are irritated by capsaicin - the active component of chilli peppers. A Zambian NGO, Elephant Pepper Development Trust, has been teaching farmers how to use chilli-based techniques to protect their crops, like growing defensive barrier crops of chillis, burning crushed chilli dung bricks and smearing fibre fencing with grease and chilli.

    The chillis also provide additional income for the farmers.
    Ben,

    That would probably work. They can't be seen in the photo but chilis are quite often grown as an undershrub in many areas where they are cropping. The African Birdseye chili is a particularly potent piece of gear. Chemical warfare.

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