Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Pretty well set-up ...

I've continued to work on my 50-cent adventure bag over the past week.  

Back in the days when we used our trusty trolley for family outings, we quickly discovered that organisation was key.  I made a handled bag to sit on top of the soft-sided esky, which held random stuff.  

It was much easier to lift the bag to access the cooler, rather than try to take out items individually. 
Although my picnic bag is much smaller in scale, I wanted it to be as easy to use. 

We used our usual green mugs when testing the pocket rocket stove but their handles were a bit awkward in the bag.  

I started looking online at possible alternatives, before I remembered these insulated tumblers, bought on clearance in 2022. They looked quite smart when new but the colour coating hadn't fared well.  Aesthetics aside, they were still perfectly usuable. 

I used a scouring pad and was able to remove all the teal coating, bringing the tumblers back to stainless steel. They are larger than the green mugs, and a better multi-purpose size - praps for soup on cooler days. 

I had pre-printed batting for a patchwork bottle tote and adapted that to make a custom holder for the tumblers.  (I'll fold the handle over when the tote is inside the main bag). Nick's sweetener tablets and a mini tea-towel sit in one of the tumblers when packed. The small co-ordinating pouch holds coffee and tea bags. 

I reckon we're pretty well set-up for our next 50-cent adventure!

Monday, 13 April 2026

Red Beverage Case ...

We've enjoyed many picnics over the years, refining our picnic gear over that time. I talk about some of those upgrades, here.

When posting that update, I'd recently changed the contents of our beverage case.

Two years on, the vintage lawn bowls case has been used often and is still going strong, as is the Engel esky that was bought to fit in with the vintage vibe.  

The Engel esky incurred minor damage during our Valentines picnic in February, when it was being used as a windbreak.  It's OK, the blemish is heart-shaped and adds to the cooler's charm!

In August 2024 I spotted a red vanity case on FB marketplace and organised to purchase it, so I could have a matching red set for my picnics.  

The seller had purchased the case new in the 1970s, used it for her makeup business - and then packed it away in 1983!  It was in such great condition!

It's a bit larger than my others (which now live in my craft area, storing various notions), with almost the same footprint as the former bowls case.

The red beverage case came away on our Eight Weeks of Awesome adventure in 2024 and has been used regularly since we returned home.  

These days the red beverage case, the former lawn bowls case and the Engel esky are our usual choices for car-based picnic outings.  Setting up my 50-cent adventure bag has prompted me to cull excess picnic cutlery.  I'm looking at some of our other picnic/camping stuff to see if anything else could be sold or donated.

I regularly use the other, smaller bowling bag as a handbag, particularly when wearing my custom tea towel dress!

50-cent Fun - Adventure Bag Testing!

"It is fun to have fun but you have to know how" said The Cat in the Hat - and the phrase is used here, at times.

After finishing my custom adventure bag, I rounded up items to put in it - and researched others. As much as we bought opshop cushions for our return trip from Caboolture, they were cumbersome for ongoing use.

Bunnings had $9.98 foam kneeling pads.  We bought two of those, which I had considered using for 50-cent adventures.  After more thought, I decided they'd be better suited for car-based picnic outings.

I spotted these Hikelite seat pads on sale at Anaconda. - $9.99 rather than $19.99.  Even better, if I bought two the price dropped to $14.99, plus click and collect orders received a $5.00 voucher.  Bonus!

Nick and I both thought about a hiking stove, pretty much at the same time.  We looked at those when picking up the seat pads.

Erin offered her $20.00 voucher, which brought the sale cost of the Furno Stove and Potset down to $67.99.  I was then able to discount the butane cartridge to just $5.59 using my $5.00 voucher.   

We took our new gear for a local test today, to a park fairly close to home.  Mr Dog was very happy to come picnicking with us!

The 50g seat pads are quite neat and definitely made the bench seat more comfortable.

I tried different ways of packing the stove this morning.  The gas cartridge fits inside the pots, along with the cannister stabliser stand.  

The pot set fits neatly into a padded lens bag that I rarely use, which then sits quite nicely into my adventure bag.

The stove, in it's case, will be packed separately - probably inside the stacked mugs.  I'm still working on that bit.

We were hugely impressed with the little stove, which has been dubbed "pocket rocket"!  It was so much quicker than the butane stove we take on our car outings - we know cos we did some back-to-back time-trial testing!  It's also much, much quicker than the Spacevan's gas burners, so it might become a multi-purpose gadget!

I've used our kitchen scales to weigh the various components.  On it's own, the stove is 109 grams, then 140 grams packed.  The lighter adds an extra 15 grams - so 155 grams in total.  

The pot set weighs 194 grams and 217 grams with the stabiliser.  The 230 gram cartridge weighs 337 grams?!  When all items are packed into the lens case, the total weight is 888 grams - which is less than my large lens!

Sunday, 12 April 2026

50-cent Fun - Adventure Bag!

For our first few 50-cent adventures, I used my pink basket bag.  I think it had been a $2.00 opshop find - and then I replaced the handles with a pair I made.

As an adventure bag it was OK but not really what I wanted to use long-term.

It took time to decide on a suitable replacement. I don't find backpacks comfortable, so opted to make a custom bag, using fabric from my infamous stash.

My Granny was born in 1915 and relied on public transport all her life.  I remember when she travelled by train from the Blue Mountains to visit us on the Central Coast.  

She would pack all kinds of stuff into many pocketed bags. There were always small gifts for all of us, even a bone for our dog!

Nick carries two lunchboxes in our insulated backpack but I wanted some insulation in my bag, also.  Just in case I carry any provisions.

I used thermal batting between the main body and the lining, then wool batting for the pockets.  The bag is lined with the bright batik print and there was enough for a matching tablecloth.  All fabrics were on-hand, with some of the batting having been sourced from opshops. The vintage tea-towel with steam train graphic is perfect for a bag that will spend lots of time on the railways!

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

50-cent Fun - Witton Barracks and Walter Taylor Bridge!

Brisbane Greeters offer a free tour of the Walter Taylor Bridge - an activity that had been on my radar for at least seven years!

Tours run on select days, with only four participants on each - so scheduling a suitable time had been tricky due to Nick's shift-work.

Today's tour was eagerly anticipated!

We caught the train to Indooroopilly and met our tour guide in the park, beside Witton Barracks.  

We had a morning tea picnic in the same park, on our previous visit to Indooroopilly.

We'd read some of Witton Barracks history, during our heritage trail walk but on this tour, we entered one of the buildings, now converted to office space - and viewed a former cell.  It was a very interesting site.

It was a short walk from Witton Barracks to Walter Taylor Bridge, our primary focus for doing the tour.

The bridge is one of only a few in the world designed for residential living and the only one of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere. The north tower was home to the Green family for more than 75 years.

I'd been keen to see inside the bridge apartment since realising tours were available - but as we listened to our guide, we realised there were lots more interesting facts about the bridge and it's builder, including a link to Sydney Harbour Bridge.

We had plenty of time for a good look through the rooms, photos and records.  We even stood on the balcony to view trafffic below!

(Some people remember driving on the bridge and seeing washing hung over the balcony)!

The National Film Archive has a short film from 1954 - titled "Living in the Walter Taylor Bridge".  

At the end of the tour, Nick and I walked back to the Jack Pesch (pedestrian and cycle) Bridge, to cross the Brisbane River.  We then walked under the four bridges to the Walter Taylor Reserve, where we sat beside the river for our picnic lunch.  It was a great shady spot to view the bridges from another angle and we stayed for a while, watching the world go by.

After lunch we walked back to Indooroopilly, on the Walter Taylor Bridge footpath. By that time, out of the shade, the temperature was 34 degrees and we made a snap decision to have a drink in the Indooroopilly Hotel (which had been a point of interest on our previous heritage trail walk).  We really appreciated the air conditioning while we waited for our train home!

Total fare cost was $2.00 - 50c each way, for each of us. How good is that? 

Our previous Indooroopilly train adventure was 12 days ago.  Since then the price of diesel at the same fuel station had risen to $3.21 per litre. Using the same calculation method, today's return trip would have cost just over $16.00 - plus $6.00 for parking, so $22.00 total.