Kangaroo Valley Voice

“Dinkum Dunnies” by the late Elsie Dewhurst

There’s some of us calls em “privies”

Though in Potts Point or Vaucluse

They refer to them genteelly

In hushed accents just as “loos”

They are made of tin and canvas

Wheat bags tacked on to logs

And there’s one at Coober Pedy

That’s quite the prince of bogs

It is made of bark and saplings

With a polished mulga seat

It’s perched right on a mine shaft

Going down 300 feet

But foundations are essential

To ensure your peace of mind

And it ain’t inconsequential

Logs just can’t be any kind

Don’t just use soft wood bearers

But red gum or mountain ash

And calculate the long drop

To compensate for splash

Mick Roberts used pine bearers

Then came that fateful day

They busted in the middle

Mick slid in all the way

And site them facing eastward

To catch the morning breeze

Ah to sit there in the morning

While the sun slips up the trees

 

Of course there’s flies and redbacks

With brown snakes large and small

With a sense of rare adventure

When you answer nature’s call

It’s a shame their days are numbered

Since the septic and the sewer

And fair dinkum Aussie dunnies

Sad to say are getting fewer

Cause I can’t get used to toilets

Porcelain and chrome and glass

With sheets of shiny plastic

Far too chilly on the arse

And you can’t read rolls of paper

Like the catalogues of yore

I change mine every Christmas

On the string behind the door

In moods of rare reflection

In the cool out here with “Blue”

I remember with affection

All the dunnies I once knew

For the sight that moves me deeply

 

Just beside my back veranda

Is my dunny nestling sweetly

Underneath the Jacaranda.

 

Joan Bray of Kangaroo Valley Historical Society

 

Photo courtesy of The Shoalhaven and Nowra News

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