Tag Archives: Victoria

My Top 10 Bad Neighbour Stories

Bad Neighbour Stories

Bad neighbours can make life hell, especially if you just want to be left alone and mind your own business.  Some people seem incapable of not bothering their neighbours though and I’ve had quite a few over of this sort over the years, perhaps in part because I used to live in the crappy parts of suburbs because the rent would be cheaper.

“Please Karen, I’m sorry I used my mower on my own lawn, don’t have me arrested again!”

So here are Big Angry Trev’s Top 10 Encounters with Bad Neighbours:

 

*Bad Neighbour #1: Parking-Spot Parionia Karen

Reservoir Victoria, Australia, 1996.

Was living in a block of 5 units in Reservoir.  We were probably the bad neighbours to most other residents because it was during my Uni days and used to throw lots of parties.  The cops would usually show up and ask us to keep the noise down.  We would apologise and immediately do so, but it must have irked the neighbours that this would happen about 8 times a year.

One morning I’m in the shower.  My girlfriend who had stayed the night came in to tell me the lady in Unit 5 (we were in 3) had just come to the door and told me to stop the harassment or she would call the police.  I had never even said hello to this woman so had no idea what she was on about.

Went and knocked on the ladies door to find out what it was all about.  She accused me of parking my car out the front of her place and revving the engine a lot (never happened) to harass her.  She then went on about how I shouldn’t judge her just because she’s a single mother (I would have been 19, she looked early 20’s), making it sound like I had already decided she must be a slut or something.

I informed her that I had never revved my car in front of her unit, the most I had ever done was pull up in front so I then reverse in to my allotted spot.  Told her that I had never judged her because I knew absolutely nothing about her and that for all I knew she lived with four big guys that would beat me up for even looking at her sideways.

My mother came to visit me a few months later.  She asked where she could park and I told her the end spot because no cars ever parked there.  My mother did so and within minutes this mad woman was at my door demanding we move the car.  As I went to do so the irritation on my face must have been evident as when I passed her she stared to Karen-like blather on about her rights.  I snapped at her ‘why don’t you just move then?’  and then continued to shift my mother’s vehicle.  She left us alone after that but we never dared use her parking spot again, which remained completely vacant until we moved ourselves a few years later.

 

*Bad Neighbour #2: Toothless Nutcase fakes visit by Prostitute

Reservoir Victoria, Australia, 2000

Second place in Reservoir and had moved in with my now-fiancé.  Two units this time, with ours being the one closest to the street.  The unit at the back had a husband, wife and wife’s father living in it.  Had never spoken to either of the men and to her only a couple of times.  She was missing most of her teeth, wore these awful singlets all the time that barely covered her unfortunate physique, and would be constantly hosing down their half of the driveway.  Like, constantly – maybe for a couple of hours each day!

I went away for a weekend to visit friends out of town and that evening my fiancé rings me up screaming.  Apparently the neighbour woman had come over and given her some story about a blond in an SUV showing up and when I wasn’t home had knocked on her door.  This supposed blond was asking where I was and then had left a magazine with the neighbour to pass onto me.  The magazine was like the Prostitute Quarterly for Melbourne or something – all articles about the sex trade in Melbourne and lots of ads for brothels.  One of these brothel ads had all these different messages to me written around it, things like ‘We love your Goatee’, ‘Come back soon Trevor!’ etc, making it seem like I was a prolific and favoured customer.

Took ages to calm my fiancé down over the phone to get her to look at the facts:

A:  If I actually had visited a brothel (which I hadn’t), what kind of brothel would be randomly sending out prostitutes from their business to visit their clients homes uninvited?  Was this meant to be some kind of after-sales service?  And when people visit a brothel, are they required to give their home address?  I’m guessing not.

B: If for some unfathomable reason, when you visited a brothel and for whatever purpose gave them your home address, it was unlikely they would send prostitutes then knocking on neighbours doors and asking to leave incriminating evidence.

It all made zero sense except for someone going out of their way to punk me and I finally got my fiancé to see that.  When I confronted the neighbour about it she told me the same story she told my fiancé; a blond in an SUV had turned up looking for me and gave my neighbour the magazine.  Then she proceeded to tell me that I shouldn’t be getting married if I was doing that kind of thing.  So obviously her intention had been to break up the couple next door, but for what reason I never found out.

A few months later they broke in through our backdoor and stole our TV, I found it pawned at a local Cash Converters.

 

*Bad Neighbour #3: The Drunken Dog-Beater

Werribee Victoria, Australia, 2001

For a short time I rented a house in Werribee.  Not long after moving in a drunk neighbour in his 40’s knocked on the door and asked could I please give him a lift as he really needed to get into town.  I was sceptical but obliged, part of the reason being I was only 23 and he was much older than me – I hadn’t gotten a handle of saying no to people my senior as yet.  Drove him into town and he insisted on giving me a pack of cigarettes as a thank you.

After that at least twice a week he would show up tipsy on our doorstep asking my partner where I was.  She would always lie and say I was out (I was usually tinkering in the shed) and he would protest that I wasn’t because he could see my car there.  Guy was obviously in need of a friend but I had no interest in being it.

He had 3 big dogs that would howl all the time, pretty certain he was beating them from the way he would be yelling and the anguished noises they would make.  Rang the RSPCA about it and they said there was nothing they could do – was pretty surprised and annoyed by that.

 

*Bad Neighbour/hood #4: Crime Everywhere!

Broadmeadows Victoria, Australia, 2003

Was living in a block of a dozen units in the cheapest part of the suburb.  Don’t know how much of it had to do with my neighbours but I got burgled within a month of moving in, then 6 months later came home to find a stolen car in my parking spot with its inside completely stripped.

 

Bad Neighbour/Housemates #5: The Dodgy Nurses

Cricklewood London, England, 2004

Lived in a slim, 3-story share house in Cricklewood, London.  The two girls that ran the share-house, both nurses, were very dodgy – they waited until we gave our deposit before telling us that if we didn’t find someone to replace us when we decided to move out that they would keep our deposit.  They would never give us a receipt for any of the rent we paid so we were pretty sure they were overcharging everyone in the house so that they themselves could live there for free.  My girlfriend had small items of jewellery go missing as well so we had to start locking our bedroom door.

We were on the top floor and there was another Aussie that had his bedroom across the hall from ours.  He would play the same Dire Straights CD over and over again every single night.  You’d just be starting to relax when you’d hear “We gotta move these refrigerators” come blasting out of his room.  Idiot used to sit up there drinking beer all night every night listening to the same songs, the cops even turned up once because he was throwing his beer bottles out the window onto the busy street below.

After a month we couldn’t take living there anymore so found someone to take our room and got them to give their deposit straight to us.  The nurses were livid, it was obvious they had intended to keep our deposit as well as get the deposit off the next guy.  We ended up moving a week early just to get out of there.

 

*Bad Neighbour #6: Stalked for Sex

Grays Essex, England, 2004

Pushy gay guy that lived across the road stalked me for sex.  Full story here.

The day I learned to have empathy for all women everywhere

 

*Bad Neighbour #7: The Cat Neglecter

Heidelberg West Victoria, Australia, 2005

Neighbour had a cat who he never bothered to feed or look after so I ended up feeding it.  He kept it locked outside 24/7 and I would come home to find this cat waiting at my back door crying for a pat and some food.  Neighbour saw me putting out a bowl of water for his cat once on a really hot day but said nothing so it was an indication he was probably happy someone else was looking after his animal, saving him the trouble.  When I moved out I left a note tacked to the inside of one of the cupboards for the new tenants to find, telling them about the cat and suggesting they may want to pick up where I left off.

Had a break-in there, but my housemate was home so the guy got scared off.

 

 *Bad Neighbour/hood #8: Pigeon Lady

Northcote Victoria, Australia, 2009

The lady living to our right was quite nice, but had big bird boxes full of dozens of pigeons right up against our fence, which irked my wife as she hated pigeons.  The thing that used to really annoy us though was she would throw tons of white bread scraps over the fence to our dog, despite being asked several times not to because they were bad for our dogs digestion.

One day came home to find the kid over our back fence was throwing rocks over the fence at the clean washing on our line.  Got robbed twice while we lived there, once they stole my laptop, the other time they stole our digital camera which still had all the photo’s from my 30th birthday party on it, so I don’t have a single photo from that night.

 

*Bad Neighbour/hood #9: Our Nature Strip is his Toilet

Swan Hill Victoria, Australia, 2011

In the small town of Swan Hill in Victoria we had neighbours a few doors down that would have a party every Friday night and be blasting really bad country music in their backyard.  Then one night while I was away supervising a camp, two drunk guys decided that one of them couldn’t make it home to use the toilet in time, discussed the issue and decided to take a dump on our nature strip at 3am, my poor wife having to listen to the whole performance in the middle of the night alone in the house.

 

*Bad Neighbour #10: The Grape-Guns of Wrath

Murrawee Victoria, Australia,  2015

Living on a farm you think you would be safe from bad neighbours but we got one when we bought our first property.  Things were OK for the first couple of years, then the neighbours decided they were going to grow grapes.  So they got three of these huge scare guns that went off on timers to blast every few minutes to scare the birds off.  Problem was that they were so loud you could hear them in our house like they were only a meter away!  I looked up the rules regarding scare guns in rural areas and you were only allowed to have one blast every 15 minutes and only between the hours of 7am and 6pm.  He had 3 guns on 10 minute timers so there was a blast every 3 minutes or so and would go from 6.55am to 8pm every day.  It was like we were living in a warzone and it made life hell, as well as disturbing the sleep of our infant daughter and toddler son.

I finally had enough and went over to complain.  When I arrived I found he had put one of the scare guns as close to our property line as was physically possible.  When he and I began to argue about it I said to him in a reasonable tone “Look, come over and have a cup of tea and you’ll hear what it sounds like in our kitchen”.  That chilled him out a bit and made him more reasonable, but the guns never fully stopped during grape-growing season and we were relieved when we moved away 2 years later.

 

Thankfully my family and I live in an even more remote part of the country now, where we can only see our neighbours by standing on the veranda and looking into the distance.  Lets hope our relatively peaceful existence continues.

Got a bad neighbour story?  Pop it in the comments section below!

 

Being named Karen in a world of “Karen’s”

 

Coronavirus Crisis: City Slickers leaving Country Stores bare

As the COVID-19 crisis continues and cases within Australia and particularly NSW continue to rise, its been considered a good time to be a rural resident.

Out here where my family lives we are a solid 2 ½ hour drive from the nearest capital city where the majority of cases are taking place.  So far there is only a handful cases of Coronavirus within a hundred kilometres of us all together.

As such people in situations similar to us haven’t been panic buying.  We didn’t all go mad stocking up on toilet paper, we haven’t cleaned off shelves and we haven’t gotten into fistfights over a bag of rice.  For the most part us rural folk have taken it pretty calm, and in small communities like the one I inhabit, you don’t take ever single item of a product off a shelf as the people you are depriving are your neighbours, your community members and your friends.

Yep, the panic buying had been contained to the big cities.  But now its not.  It’s hitting small country towns and its not small country town people that are doing.

It’s Raiders from the Big City!

An sight no longer contained to capital cities

It’s been amazing!  Tiny towns with populations of well under a thousand are seeing more new faces than they have in years.  And these are not tourists – these are food-filchers!  People driving out from capital cities to hit up every butchers, every bakers and every small supermarket they can, to grab whatever they can, and then return home.  One can only assume the candlestick makers will be next.

In fact it’s not just people in cars – it’s entire busloads! Buses pulling up at little supermarkets in one-horse towns and twenty people disembarking.  These people head straight into the local stores and come out carrying as many bags of groceries as they can lift.  These raiders leave barren shelves behind and nothing for the local people, who depend on these stores, to buy.

 

Is it greed that is prompting these people to come out and grab all the tucker and toilet paper they can tote?  Is it desperation?

Because no matter the motivation – it is NOT ON!

 

Big City people don’t get it.  Country people are not surrounded by stores where if one store is out of a product they can simply try a half dozen others down the road.  If you raid a store, then that leaves NOTHING for the locals!  These stores, due to their remote, don’t get restocked every day.  And if that store is empty, the next store is usually a loooong way away.  The town I live outside of has one small butchers, one small bakers and one very small supermarket/bottle-o.  Besides bags of chips at the servo that’s it for places to get groceries.  If those shops are empty I have to drive an extra 10 minutes to the next town which also only has a few small shops.  If they too are empty, which increasingly they have been, my next option is to drive 60km to Mudgee where the major supermarkets are in the hopes that their shelves are also not bare.  Should I have to do that because Big City people have depleted their own stores in panic buying and now are doing the same to us?

You know what is even better than a clean fridge? A FULL ONE!

This isn’t just in our area, this is happening all over NSW and Victoria!  Small town locals going home without any food for their families because these busloads of city slickers have come out and nicked all the grub!  And it has to stop!  Not only because of the effect on the locals, but the potential spread of COVID-19.  People are coming from places like Sydney and Melbourne where the virus is growing ever more rampant, and driving through town after town where the entire populaces are so far uninfected. I wonder if these raiders realize, or care, that if country people get sick the food shortages will only get worse since we are the ones that grow all the food!

 

So, I say this to you raiders.  DO.  NOT.  COME.  HERE!  You are not welcome!  You take all our food and risk infecting us all!  And why?  Because you all couldn’t stop yourselves going nuts and panic-buying out your thousands of stores until there was nothing left.  Stay in your damn capital cities and wait for the stores to restock.  Because when you come here and take all our food, we have nowhere else to go.  We didn’t panic buy, we were sensible.  And now we are paying for it because our cupboards are not overflowing since we didn’t want to deprive our neighbours of their tucker – because, you know, that’s what good people do.

So please.  If you are from a capital city do the right thing, especially these school holidays.  Wait for your stores in the big smoke to restock.  Don’t come and take all our food and risk spreading COVID-19 into rural communities that have managed to remain unaffected thus far.  We managed to make it through the bushfires, we as a society need to pull together to make it through this too.

We, your rural cousins, thank you for your cooperation.

 

Related Article:

Coronavirus: The Toilet Paper Conspiracy

Snake, Earthworm or Lizard? The debate heats up!

Ah the internet, where everyone can agree on the big things like peace and love, but will get into blindingly hateful arguments over something like are Tiny Teddies considered a biscuit or a cookie.

Since the picture I took of a Redback Spider feeding on a ‘Blind Snake’ went viral, there have been dozens of people arguing about species.  Whilst everyone agrees it is a Redback spider and most people seem to agree with my assessment that it is a Blind Snake, lots of people have their own theories about what the Redback is actually feeding on, some arguing for different species of snake and some arguing that it is a completely different creature all together!

Now whilst I initially thought it was a Brown Snake, which some people have messaged me to say they think it actually is, I concluded it was a Blind Snake as it strongly resembled those I have accidentally dug up from time to time around my property.

Ramphotyphlops australis – the Blind Snake. Source: Museum Victoria
But could I be wrong?  Nay, stay your disbelief!  I actually can be wrong you know – it happens about once a decade (anyone who saw my cowlick hairdo in the 90’s or met my first wife in the 00’s knows I can make HUGE errors in judgment).  I was taking photos with one hand and keeping my kids back with the other before I disposed of the whole grizzly scene so I didn’t exactly manage to get my Junior Scientist kit out for a proper examination.  I went via the evidence of my eyes and previous experience, both of which have stood me well in the past.

 

So what are the other theories out there?   I’ve already mentioned some believe it is a Brown Snake but completely different animals seems to be the order of the day:

 

EARTHWORM THEORY

Michael Piggott of Epsom in Victoria believes it may be a giant Earthworm.

Well I can’t see a head in the picture. It looks pointy at both ends. Snakes normally have a pointy end and a bitey end. I was in the pet store looking at baby snakes on Friday and they look very different to yours. They actually look quite beautiful.”

Victorian Giant Earthworm. Source: Museum Victoria
Despite Michael not living locally, it seems according to Social Media there quite a few Swanhillians who agree with Michael’s assessment and it is usually the people who live in an area that are in the know.

 

LEGLESS LIZARD THEORY

The most prevalent theory I have been presented with is that it is a Legless Lizard.  This has been touted by everyone from day workers to former school Principals.

Legless Lizard – photo provided by Tabatha Tihomimov
Tabatha Tihomimov, an avid snake enthusiast who boasts 80 live snakes in her personal collection is one of the people getting behind the Legless Lizard theory:

“I think it’s a Legless Lizard because of the scale pattern (smooth scales) and the tiny little leg, shape of the head etc”

It seems most of the people who don’t think it is a Blind Snake believe Tabatha to be correct on this score.

 

SLIDER SKINK THEORY

After the photo had been circulating for a few days, we had interest come from the scientific community itself!

Heath Butler, who  has an Honours degree in Zoology and has studied the movement patterns of Tiger Snakes had a new theory:

“It’s a Slider Skink (Lerista punctatovittata).  They are practically legless.  No Australian blind snake has a pointed snout like that, or a tapered tail”

This was soon supported by Heath’s former professor, Mr Nick Clemann.  Nick is a Senior Scientist at the Arthur Rylah Institute, where he leads the Threatened Fauna Program. Nick specializes in reptiles and amphibians and has spent years studying the Mallee and Riverina herpetofauna

“The pointed snout clearly shows that this is a Lerista skink – and most certainly not a Ramphotyphlops. I have worked with both for many years, and I can assure you that Heath is correct. Furthermore, you will notice that the lizard changes colour from where the body ends and the tail begins (tellingly, right about where the rear legs are!). At the very bottom of the photograph you can see the alternating black and white colour pattern that is typical of the dorsal surface of Lerista punctatovittata, and does not occur on Blind Snakes. Lastly, you can even see the tiny, vestigial forelimb.”

Image provided by Nick Clemann
This was also supported by Geoff Heard, a Post Doctoral Researcher at the University of Melbourne. Geoff studies frog movement and disease, and works with Mr Clemann on reptiles around Victoria, including in the Mallee, where he has an ongoing trapping program to examine the effects of fire on reptiles.

“Heath is spot on”.

Someone else who asserts it is a Slider Skink is Mr Michael Swan who has been a Senior Reptile Keeper with Zoos Victoria for 17 years.

“It’s definitely not a snake…….and it does appear to be Lerista punctatovittata”

I asked Mr Clemann about Legless Lizards and how that seemed to be the popular choice for what this creature is and asked was there really much of a difference between a Legless Lizard and a Slider Skink. He answered thusly:

“There is much confusion around common names, which is why scientists like to use scientific names. There are 5 families of lizards in Australia: skinks, dragons, goannas/monitors, geckos and legless lizards. Legless lizards are technically very closely related to geckos. So a skink is no more a legless lizard than a goanna is a gecko. And skinks vary enormously in size. Australia’s smallest lizard (called Grey’s Skink) is about 3 to 4 cm in total length when fully grown, but things like Stumpy-tailed Lizards and Blue-tongued Lizards are also skinks.
Like legless lizards, some skinks have greatly reduced limbs, usually because they have evolved to live underground, or to ‘snake’ their way through thick vegetation. Leristas are an example of this. But they are NOT legless lizards, they are skinks.”

 

So what IS it?

So what this creature be?  Brown Snake?  Giant Earthworm? Do we believe the large group who think it is a Legless Lizard?  Do we believe the scientists and experts with their years of training and their consensus that it is a Slider Skink?  Or do we believe Big Angry Trev who stared at it for 2 minutes before crushing it with a watering can that it was a Blind Snake.  Yes yes, I know your first instinct is to simply agree with me and believe whatever I say – it’s usually where the smart money is.  But I must admit, I tend to defer to scientists and Heath and his crew make very persuasive arguments but then the likes of Tabatha certainly knows more about reptiles than I.

The photo that sparked a national debate!

Write in the comments below what you believe the creature is, I would love to read your opinion!

Related Blog Posts:

Redback Spider killing Blind Snake – my morning surprise!

Spider kills Snake – the media storm hits!

Redback Spider kills Blind Snake – television news report

Redback Spider killing Blind Snake – my morning surprise!

This is the tale of an amazing natural sight I saw yesterday.

 

It’s 9am on a Friday morning.  The missus has left for work, I’ve gotten the kids up, fed and dressed and it’s time for me to start the farm chores of the day.

I grab my keys and go open the shed door, anxious to get the more onerous of the jobs over with before the temperature reaches the forecast 37 degree’s – typical for the Mallee in January. Just inside the door is my big beer fridge and close to that is a black crate I’ve been using to sort my Transformer books and DVD’s (yes, as well as being a hobby farmer I’m also a big TF nerd).  I notice immediately that there has been a big web spun between the crate and the fridge that wasn’t there the night before.  There are a few bits of twig and dry grass in it.  Also a great big Redback Spider is busy in the web, hungrily sucking on the tail of… a snake.

A snake.

A bloody snake!

I’ve got a real thing about snakes.  I didn’t used to, affording them due respect so they wouldn’t bite me but otherwise not worrying about them.  However several years ago I lost an immediate family member to a bite by a juvenile brown snake.  Combine that with the fact that I live on a farm and have two small children, I’m pretty damn paranoid about them now.  Don’t want to lose my kids or for them to lose their dad the way I lost an older sibling.

I recoil immediately but morbid curiosity quickly brings me back (that and I’ll want to be able to grab a beer that evening).  It is indeed a young snake and quite dead.  We only get three types of snake on our farm that I’ve seen; brown snakes, red-bellied black snakes and blind snakes.  While I initially think it is a brown snake, as they are the ones we seem to get most commonly, I realize upon closer inspection this is a Blind Snake, in particular a Ramphotyphlops australis.  I’ve usually encountered them when I’ve been digging up various big bull ant nests around the farm but they are known to come to the surface on warm humid nights, which is what we had experienced the night before.  It’s grey, about 20 centimeters long and as stated, very dead.

Holy Hell!

The Redback Spider, which judging from it’s size and the nearby egg sacs is a female, has cocooned the Blind Snake’s head thickly in webbing and the rest of the body to a lesser extent.  The snake at its lowest point is hanging about an inch above the floor and the spider is chowing down on the tip of its tail – maybe where the skin is thinnest and easiest to suck the undoubtedly now pureed innards out of.  It’s a pretty disturbing sight but fascinating none-the-less.

I dash back to the house to grab my phone to take a picture.  Of course with a child’s instinct to run towards danger both my kids follow me back out.  I manage to take a few photos whilst blocking my daughter (my son is old enough to know if Dad says ‘Stay back – it’s dangerous!’ to do so but my daughter just gives a frustrated yell and tries to push past to see what all the fuss is about).  I then reach for my watering can.  Whilst having a spider that can take down snakes seems to be very desirable, having one right in the doorway to the shed all the family goes in and out of 50 times a day is most certainly not.  I instruct the little ones to look away and then Daddy turns spider, snake and web all into a memory with a couple of decisive bangs.

 

And that’s the story, one of the most amazing predator-prey events I’ve seen up close!  It even led me to make this meme:

After all this I wondered how the spider managed to get the snake off the floor and into its web.  Subsequent research I’ve done says that Latrodectus hasseltii (Redbacks) attacking and killing snakes is a very rare occurrence but it does happen. I believe the incident I witnessed however may actually be the only recorded case of a Redback taking down this particular species of snake.  Apparently the process with other species usually involves the Redback turning it’s abdomen towards a snake slithering on the ground after it gets caught in a trap line and shoots web all over it.  As the snake thrashes and becomes more entangled the Redback slowly hoists it up into the main web where it can then bite, kill and feed at its leisure.  Despite the fact that Blind Snakes are not venomous I assume this happened in the same manner and it makes the above meme all the more appropriate, don’t you think?

 

Care to comment on the story you just read or have a similar story of your own?  Would love to read it in the comments section below!

Related Blog Posts:

Spider kills Snake – the media storm hits!

Redback Spider kills Blind Snake – television news report

Snake, Earthworm or Lizard? The debate heats up!

Comic Shop Review: Good vs Evil

Living in the countryside for a pop-culture fanatic can be hard.  Everyone plays footy instead of watching sci-fi and good luck when it comes to finding someone that can translate a Klingon text for you.  However if you are in Victoria, at least if you are into comics you are covered, thanks to a shop called Good vs Evil.

IMG_3470

Located in Bendigo, Good vs Evil would easily have the biggest comics range in central Victoria.  A whole wall in adorned in comics and there are usually plentiful stacks of all the latest issues to come out that week sitting on the counter for you to peruse.

IMG_3472

 

Like many comic shops these days, Good vs Evil has diversified to take into account the ever expanding needs and interests of the Pop Culture enthusiast.  There are sections of DVDs, a full section of various Manga and of course the obligatory collectables such as Pop! figures and and board games based on movies and video games.

IMG_3473IMG_3474

There is also the Games Workshop section.  Now all that stuff is kinda a closed book to me, I tend to look at it in the same way outsiders look at me collecting Transformers, thinking “Wow – do the guys into this ever get laid?”.  But I’ve seen on Saturday afternoons the store opened up with tables set up for big groups of guys all sitting there playing this stuff so it must have its appeal, and its great to have somewhere to meet to indulge the interest.

IMG_3475

Speaking of Transformers, here is why I personally shop there. Matt, the owner, is a fellow TF fan and I have been relying on his faithful service to get me every TF comic I require for the past five years.  He always comes though, and something that is a sign of a proprietor that genuinely cares about his clientele, I’ve often rocked into the store for him to say “Trev, I saw this and knew you would want it and chucked it aside for ya”.  After this fashion I’ve gotten all the FP TF publications over the last few years as well as the physical copies of what were originally net comics.  And if ever I find out about a comic that is now years old that I want, Matt is sure to do his best to track it down for me – a top bloke indeed!

How can you not trust two dudes in Grimlock t-shirts?
How can you not trust two dudes in Grimlock t-shirts?
So if you are after a Comic Shop experience where the owner is the guy behind the counter and will look after ya, will cater for everything you need to the best of the stores ability, and can be a great place to just hang out, then I heartily suggest visiting Good vs Evil in Bendigo.  Tell’em Big Angry Trev sent ya!

 

P.S: There has been no ‘Comics for Comments’ deal here.  If anything I’m slightly resentful towards Matt – I’d love nothing better than to run my own comic shop and that bugger is living the dream I should be!

 

Note: If in one of the major cities I can recommend Pulp Fiction in Adelaide and Comics R Us in Melbourne.  Pulp Fiction is small but the owner is great for a laugh and will pour through box after box to find you what you want.  Comics R Us in Melbourne has a funny crew of guys who have often had Bill Hicks playing on the store speakers of a Sunday morning and their glass cabinets often have a range of old 80’s toys in there that the rare toy hunter will drool over.  Minotaur in Melbourne has a huge range of pop culture stuff but it can all be quite expensive.  There is also Kings Comics in Sydney that I visited many years ago that I found some HOC figues at and I quite liked Daily Planet comics in Brisbane.  I’ve been to one other there but can’t remember which.  Should I ever hit up these big cities again a more detailed review will come your way!