Friday 25 May 2012

Honey for the King's Mistress


Everyone has a mistress of a mission when they travel. Whether your oats porridge is never the same without honey or you are a honey connoiseur, there is nothing so sweet nor wonderful than the accidental discovery of a beautiful honey. The West Australian wildflowers in late winter and early spring may appear as masses of yellow trees as you drive, to the point that they almost become invisable. If you take a slow sojourn via Jarradale Road, you will drive through a  white snow-like passage of blossom covered bushes... a tunnel of flowers.  Throughout the state, you will find the weeping Flowering Red Gum trees. The flowers are kind of alien and strange sometimes, while the local bees spend spring collecting the intoxicating pollens for wild honey flavours you can only imagine.

On Gingin Brook Road you can find home-made honey icecream at West Coast Honey, while the Swan Valley boasts the House of Honey. If you were wiser and older, however, you would take the road  to the junction of Albany Highway and Brookton Highway (just out of Perth) and in Roleystone, not far past Araluen, you will see a little chalk sign that reads, "Honey, $8/kg". These bees have feasted. Further into the state, in Gnowangerup, past the tractor shop, is a little IGA where you can find honey fit for kings, Fro-bees honey,  heavily disguised in hideous yellow-topped plastic jars.

Fro-bees Honey compares with  Dr Trappit's honey but you will never be priviledged to taste it. Fragrant Red Gum Honey and Mallee Honey are produced by Frobees' hives....... honey will never be the same again. The Mallee honey has a delicate and rare flavour. With Temperature changes and exposure to traces of Red gum, the  honey may begin to crystallise - hence summer purchases are the closest to liquid amber. This is rare, exquisite bee honey: a prize.

www.westcoasthone.com.au
www.thehouseofhoney.com.au

Friday 11 May 2012

Leather jackets



This is one of my favourite leather jackets....in winter it is indispensible. I prefer a very fine cow-hide that will tear easily on rose thorns, unfortunately. On different occasions, I have made up my own trade sketches and had the beautifully crafted coats made up individually by skilled tailors in Bali.


One of my jackets was stolen at an airport while one is due to have the surface redyed and damage repaired (I have added small leather threads to the collar on the one mentioned). The pictured jacket has an almost suit-like collar which bothers me but this coat converts from casual to formal with small clothing changes so has been a versatile travel piece.


The Victoria Markets in Melbourne sell jewellery, textile and clothing items and small goods. Here, in winter, you are quite likely to come home with $5 items or an emerging designer's coat. This is another place where you may come across leather jackets that are priced differently to retail outlets. The leather is much heavier but more durable. This market has a great winter personality and you will go back if you enjoy "the search".