Flemington’s impending celebration might stop a nation, but it also gets certain sectors moving. As trainers and thoroughbreds all over town intensify their pre-race fitness campaigns, it seemed only appropriate that this punter hit the track too.

Who does a girl have to smile at to get a drink around here? Photo: Herald Sun

Accordingly, the weekend saw me set off on 3 km of what looked like jogging, only slower. As I turned for home, I was really digging deep, deep into that space where a person’s mathematical ability is supposed to be. Taking into account the time and distance, would I have burned off 5 barbecue shapes or pushed it out to 6?

Distracted by these calculations, I inhaled a little seasonal joy, in the form of some kind of airborne plant matter. This particular piece of plant matter was actually big enough for a person to duck, but unfortunately it went straight in, resulting in a full-blown, public gagging episode.

Yet, even as I entered vomiting like spasms, I felt buoyant.  Why so upbeat I asked myself?  Well, because it’s spring.  And spring has always been about the F word - friends, frocking up, free champagne and Flemington.

Recently, I saw a presentation on the prescription for longevity.  It highlighted the importance of maintaining good friends – which advice may come as a salutary reminder for those of us with reclusive tendencies.  We always knew that kind of behaviour wasn’t very friendly, but who knew it could be lethal? 

A week earlier, a mature gentleman advised me that when we stop making new friends we start dying. This sounded like another wake up call.  I grabbed a stamp and flipped it over to record new friends made over the course of the preceding year.  If this amiable old codger was right I was looking at a life threatening deficiency. 

The net effect of these experiences was to add a whole new dimension to the Spring Carnival - those marathon days of high intensity social interaction with existing friends, the very real prospect of meeting new friends. Attendance was basically imperative for anyone taking their health seriously.

An established practice of drinking in moderation has a number of advantages. Principal amongst these is that it gives you something solid from which to depart. After all, what can the concept of bending mean to someone who doesn’t know what it is to be straight. 

Should the Spring Carnival find you departing from an established practice of moderate drinking, it will be useful to bear in mind the late words of John Maynard Keynes, who famously observed on his deathbed that his only regret in life was that he did not drink more champagne. While this comment demonstrates a remarkable level of critical self-awareness, it is also a call to action to each of us, to ensure we do not pass on with the same tragic regret.

You can’t buy brains or beauty.  Personality is a different matter.  It comes in a curvaceous, green glass bottle.  Admittedly, personality from a bottle doesn’t last that long.  But, as with fake tan, a premium product, skillfully applied, can produce a rather convincing effect. Unlike fake tan though, champagne can’t create something out of nothing. 

This is because it works more like Silvo - revealing what is already there underneath – the truth, as it were. 

Graham Greene understood this well when he observed that,  “Champagne, if you are seeking the truth, is better than a lie detector.  It encourages a man to be expansive, even reckless, while lie detectors are only a challenge to tell lies successfully.” 

So the trick must be to find the line just after expansive, and just before reckless - to consume, in the words of the imperturbable Mr Carp, “so much and no more”.  While always bearing in mind that truth, like the alcohol that induces it, can be toxic in its purest form - the real potential of both substances only being revealed through skilful dilution.

Once you’re through those turnstiles there is no such thing as a sure thing. Although anyone that’s put a hat on their head, or a flower in their buttonhole, and opened a bottle with an old friend, or their heart to a new friend, has already backed their first winner.

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    • acotrel says:

      08:08am | 02/11/12

      Who was that old biddy who had a go at Julia for not curtsying to the Queen ?  I saw a bit on TV last night - old report where some old molls had a go at Jean Shrimpton for wearing a short skirt at Flemington .  The Shrimp looked stunningly beautiful.  I wonder where these old sheilas get off exercising their jealousy in public ?  It is interesting t o watch some of t hose old news reports and remember how things really were - so petty and parochial !

    • Gregg says:

      09:17am | 02/11/12

      You’re not attempting to put it that just because Julia starts with a J, she would look a shrimptish dish are you? and then could in a shorter skirt curtsy more easily!
      The woman has trouble just keeping on her feet not to mention saying anything meaningful at the same time.

      I reckon there’s a heap of people interested in older events that have not been so well reported on.

    • Gregg says:

      09:46am | 02/11/12

      Yes, bit like that party trick of challenging a smoker to get all their cigs held between their fingers and it better be their king hitting hand for when they do and you’re holding the packet for them, it’s Oops, I’ve just crushed your packet in the excitement!

      But you can easily enough tune up a selection process which is time proven.
      There have always been a number of good lead up form predictors shall we say and so you do things like:
      1. Any previous Cup winner ought to be on your list, probably place getters too if you want to extend it.
      2. Winner and place getters from Caulfield Cup
      3. Winner from Cox Plate and place getters from races like Vic Derby and LKS Mackinnon stakes if it is still called that.

      So you might have a list of up to 10 horses and then you rule out any three year olds and those seven or older for if you look at past winners you’ll find there are not too many that are not 4-6 YOs.
      In the past this might get you down to as few as four hourses and I have been close to a trifecta at times by boxing them, it too often being bugger that outsider!, so always a good insurance to have a close look at what may be considered rank outsiders, #22, Seahaze I think it was that ran third once just pipping a third selection in my box!

      It is much more difficult these days as some of the imports may still just be finding their land legs in any of the lead up events and so that box might get a bit weighty.
      Then it could be a bit of gut feel and stuff like who the trainer is, jockey, horse genes, condition of track, is form trending or spasmodic etc.

      You might need to go and have a chat with the horse too, smuggle them a few Mars bars etc. , dipped in castor oil for those who might challenge your selection.

    • sunny says:

      10:05am | 02/11/12

      Good system, and it can be used for lotto too. I think I’ll stick to my time honoured tradition of picking my runners by their name - for example if I see any one of the following: Dilatory Dawdler, Straggler’s Pride, Stuckinda Barrier, Miss Thejump or Just Warming Up then I’ll pile a not insignificant proportion of my johnny cash onto it and watch with shock and surprise as it lives up to it’s name.

    • Rosie says:

      09:00am | 02/11/12

      Beautiful very feminine style of dress that has the quality and traditions associated with women that have no issues about being who and what they are. Love it!

      Would hope our PM if attending the Melbourne cup slip into something more becoming of her than her usual straight skirt and jacket. Perhaps she can get some advice from our classy and very stylish Governor General who is always pleasure to watch.

    • Gregg says:

      09:24am | 02/11/12

      It’s always a body shape/size that will make a success or not out of something one wears.
      Julia had better stay off the high heels for that turf around Flemmo can be extra soggy in places.
      She’ll need a great head piece and better be careful with the hair that she doesn’t look some sort of cockerell.
      Maybe she had just better take a look on a big screen somewhere.

    • Gregg says:

      09:27am | 02/11/12

      It may not be too late Amy for you get out the lyrca and a kayak and take a good paddle down the Yarra from somewhere and up the Maryibnong Creek to see what all the boaties are feasting on and see if there’s an invite.
      You’ll need your better outfit stashed and still a ticket of course if you want into an in crowd marquee.

    • Swarley says:

      09:32am | 02/11/12

      Oh, it’s that time of the year again.

      Bogan men in cheap, polyester suits swigging VB tinnies and swearing at passing cars while they women totter along, clinging to the men for dear life, or, alternatively, throw their shoes at passing cars and join in the swearing.  That’s assuming they get their heads out of the nearest rubbish bin or can stop urinating on the side of the street for long enough. 

      November is when Melbourne gets classy.

      I’m told there is a layer of civilisation in these events, somewhere.  I’m yet to witness it, however.

 

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