Sunday, 19 April 2026

Street Art in Melbourne CBD: Warburton Lane and Guilford Lane etc

  

I heard about beautiful French themed street art in Warburten Lane in the city.  When I had time I rode in and found it was indeed very impressive.  It was lovely to see some fun and thought-provoking street art in the this lane.  I had a quick look in a nearby lane and then went around to Guilford Lane to look at their street art, which had been wonderful on my last visit.

Warburton Lane: 

Above is a "fleuriste" shopfront

 Boulangerie shopfront

 Cafe shopfront

 Eiffel Tower in pink above a pink doorway.


"In 1788 Elizabeth Street was a river".  For those who don't know Melbourne, Elizabeth Street was drained of water and made into one of the main streets in the city.  When we get a lot of rain it floods and there have been some big floods there since the invasion of Australia.

Typewriter with text: "until the wind from the west blows you back again"

Clockwork Orange parody: Missing: have you seen this sheep?

Colourful koala illustration

Worried woman's face with hand to her head

Creepy half human, half robot creature with a tail who is perhaps undersea

A woman strokes a bomb


nearby lane 

Brightly coloured illustration of a majestic pink cat with crown and jewells.  On the right is a buzzard with a cupcake tree.

Exotic woman with pink hair surrounded by pink flamingos and palm trees.


Guilford Lane 


I love this illustration of an old factor and windows that merges into the brickwork of Guildford Lane.  I have posted a picture of this street art before but have shared it again because on my previous 2019 post of Guilford lane street art this illustration did not have the plants either side of it.  As well as enjoying looking at street art, I enjoy seeing how it changes over time.

Young girl crouches and looks with interest through her magnifying glass.  The illustration at the bottom of the wall just above a patch of greenery make her blend in well.

A colourful mosaic disc with text below: "Life is a boundless sea of sorrow, yet art is that lotus vessel in its own suchness."

Note: "what good shall I do this day?" beside an image of a cheeky kitchen hanging off the edge of a brick.

"Please do not lick the walls"

 Cat in an old fashioned aviator cap sitting on a flying fish.  

Green alien with purple background on a corner of the wall.

Three masked workers doing dishes in a kitchen with a big stack of plates.

 
More Melbourne CBD (or city) street art on Green Gourmet Giraffe:

  • Street Art in Melbourne: Hosier Lane 2018-2019   
  • Street Art in Melbourne: Hosier Lane 2021
  • Street Art in Melbourne CBD: ACDC Lane and Duckboard Lane  
  • Street Art in Melbourne city: (CDB) 2019 
  • Street Art in Melbourne city (CBD) 2022-2024  
  • Melbourne street art CBD - Presgrave Place 
  •  

    Thursday, 16 April 2026

    My Monthly Chronicles: March 2026

     

    March was filled with many amazing events that kept me taking many photos and spending too much tune deleting photos on my phone to make space for more. I have written separate posts about our whirlwind trip to Sydney and the delightful Cake Picnic (links in this post) but I would love to write posts about the Pulp gig, Sydney Road Street Festival, Big Alma cafe, my sister's wedding, the Vegan Market and so much more.  I console myself with having this monthly round up of eating out and other outings where I can share a few photos.  If only I had the time to write all the posts I wish I could!  (I have written more about my month at In My Kitchen: March 2026)

    Pulp at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl 

    I was delighted to see Pulp perform at the Myer Music Bowl.  This is my favourite band and it was fantastic to see them perform in Melbourne.  Previously I have seen them in the UK at Kinross (T in the Park), Elgin and Cardiff, as well as a solo support by front man Jarvis Cocker at the Pixies gig at the Myer Music Bowl.  I went through a huge Pulp phase years ago so I found it very nostalgic when they dedicated "Something Changed" to band member, Steve Mackey who died 3 years ago to the day, and had a photo slide show of Pulp photos over the years (see above photo).

    The support act was Bleak Squad (a Melbourne supergroup of Adalita (Magic Dirt), Mick Harvey (The Birthday Party, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds), Mick Turner (Dirty Three), and Marty Brown (Sodastream). They were playing as I arrived.  It was later than I intended to get there but I stopped to eat  Lord of Fries chips (to keep me going before a late gnocchi bake).  I did spend time in the queue for merchandise before I settled in my seat which was where I heard most of their songs, who sang "a quality set of songs tailor-made for those long, dark nights of the soul" (Guardian quote).

    I knpw the songs so well up to This is Hardcore that I could sing along to most songs in the set.  Most songs performed were from Different Class and His'n'Hers albums. The lighting was alternatively fun and reflective.  I could listen all night to Jarvis' laconic chatter with his long vowels and dropped consonants from Sheffield.  He struts around the stage and pulls awkward rockstar poses with his lanky limbs.  His wry sense of humour can be seen in announcing that he is about to play an ABBA song and then unsettling expectations by playing the obscure "The Day Before You Came".  

    I would have loved to have some of the older songs (such as My Lighthouse, My Legendary Girlfriend, Blue Girls) or more from This is Hardcore than the title track (such as The Fear, Dishes, TV movie).  They just have too many great songs!  I loved so many of the songs they performed including: Razzamatazz, Do you Remember the First Time, Sorted for Es and Whizz, Babies, Acrylic Afternoons, Mis-shapes, Disco 2000 and the wonderful Common People whose biting social commentary is every bit as relevant today as in 1995.  So much youthful angst, insolence, joy, anger and insight.  My favourite of the newer songs was the gorgeous Sunrise.  

    I booked to see Pulp on the morning tickets went on sale and wanted the front seated section but only got the terrace section behind it.  I was pleased when I arrived to see there was a ledge in front of the terrace behind a walkway.  I could sit there and chat while we waited and then stand and dance and sing along when Pulp started and I had a pretty good view.  (As a short person, I find myself looking for gaps between heads when standing and hoping the people in front of me don't move.)

    I had hoped to be able to see the blood moon while I watched the gig.  The Myer Music Bowl is an outdoor venue.  My seat was so close that I had to crane my head back to see the screens that everyone else had to watch to see the details.  It also meant I was at the edge of the covered area.  No view of the moon.  It was only when I walked back to Flinders Street Train Station that I saw the blood moon.  It is in the above photo but not so easy to see that it is a pink colour.  It was past its reddest moment by then!


    Street Art, Warburton Lane, CBD 

     

    On a ride to the CBD, I had a look at the street art on Warburton Lane off Little Bourke Street in the CBD.  The artwork of quaint French stores and Eiffel Tower is gorgeous.  I heard about it on the local radio from a commentator whose political views often anger me.  It was good to find something I liked about her!  I hope to share more of these photos soon.


    Sydney Road Street Party, Brunswick 

    I hadn't planned to go to the Sydney Road Street Party but as I was out on my bike, I stopped there briefly to have a look at the local colour and catch up with Sylvia and E.  There were some fun things to see.  I loved the chonky orange decorated crockery for sale by hellomaë.  In the craft stalls on Dawson St were so many gorgeous creations and it was even lovelier to see an Indigenous artist at work.  I was surprised to discover that Brunswick has a lacrosse team.  I was so happy to eat a free slice of watermelon from the Greens (political party)'s stall.  I was so hungry but then but waited to get home to have my lunch.  (Sylvia had been pleased to  the Mokum mushroom bitterbollen aka fritters.)

    Brunswick is a suburb with a history of activism and this continues today.  So it was no surprise to see the  have pockets of it today.  I loved that the Victorian Socialists had a booth for anti-racism screen printing and banner painting.  More shocking and amusing was the Smash Fascism pinatas (pictured above).  A group had made lots of orange trump face pinatas and charged people for whacks while the pinata was placed on top of a ladder.  I did not yield to be temptation!

    Big Elma's cafe, Coburg

    My friend Alison was in Melbourne so we had lunch at Big Elma (138 Nicholson Street).  We all had toasties ($16 each).  Alison and I had the Potato: creamy taleggio, rosemary roasted potato, caramelised onion.  Sylvia had the Kimchi and Cheese: miso mayo, vegan kimchi, mozzarella, spring onion.  

    Sylvia and I both had a vegan European hot chocolate.  They were delicious but intense.  Sylvia loved the vegan whipped cream topping and I loved the dense chocolate drink that was so thick it was more pudding than drink.  I ate it with my spoon.  We should have shared one.

    Family Wedding, Archive wine bar, Geelong 

    My youngest sister had a small marriage service at a local wine bar and and invited us to join her and her new husband for the reception in the same location.  It was a really lovely afternoon with finger food (excellent mini cheese toasties), music, flowers, (gluten free) chocolate cake, speeches and lots of photos.

    Everyone had a great time but we were sad that my older sister and her son wer unable to get to the wedding after her flight from Dublin got turned back.  There are far worse outcomes of the Iran war for others and we were able to take lots of photos to share.  

    Holiday in Sydney 

    We went to Sydney at short notice to use the tickets my sister and her son could not use after the Iran war scuppered their holiday plans It was great to spend time in Sydney with my parents, to enjoy the spectacle of the harbour and eat at some great vegan restaurants. It was also sad that my sister and nephew could not be there with my parents.  

    To read more about our Sydney trip, check out there posts:. 


        
    Cake Picnic, King's Domain


    I went to the Cake Picnic that was held in Kings Domain as part of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival.  It was amazing, delicious, beautiful and at times too much cake and too much waste but I am glad we went.  You can see more photos and read more at my post on the Cake Picnic, Melbourne 2026.

    Vegan Market, Coburg Town Hall

    Sylvia was keen to go to the Vegan Market at the Coburg Town Hall.  There were Easter eggs, bakes, gorgeous crockery, candles,  art prints,  and animal rights organisations.  Outside were food trucks for the hardy vegans who could brave the rain between bouts of sunshine.  Sylvia was excited to buy from Better New Bakes and I could not resist the Little Sweet Things Dubai Chocolate slice or the slabs of panisse.  (See more about them at n My Kitchen: March 2026.)
     

    There was lots of good vegan food to eat there.  We shared a Spinach and cheese borek from Chef's Borek.  It was so good and flaky.  


    Sylvia had good memories of Woking Amazing's food truck's offerings and could not wait to try it again.  She ordered the "Kyiv Mushroom Tempura Burger: Crispy oyster mushroom & fresh baby cos lettuce drizzled with Smokey Aioli & Garlic Butter in a toasted sesame seed bun" with smoky fries on the side.  She really enjoyed it but it was so filling that she took some home.  She also had a chai tea which was nice but a bit sweet for her.


    Coburg Farmers Market 

    We love a reason to go to Coburg farmers market.  When I bought panisse at the Vegan Market, I decided we needed good bread to go with it and there is always a good sourdough at the farmers market.  So we walked across the road in search of bread and were delighted by all the beautiful colourful vegetables that you can see in these photos.  
     

    Green Man's Arms, Carlton and Project Hail Mary

    I got out to the Cinema Nova with my friend Heather to see Project Hail Mary (an interesting and fun movie about a scientist in space on a mission to save the world and who doesn't love ryan gosling's cheeky grin).  Afterwards we had dinner at the Green Man's Arms (418 Lygon Street).  

    Heather had the House Made Gnocchi with carrot puree, thyme beurre monte and almond cream ($30).  I had a taste and it was really good and I wished I had ordered it.  My reason was that we were having a couple of gnocchi meals that week but really, given it shows a love for gnocchi, I should have taken the chance to eat an amazing gnocchi dish!

    In the News

    The news was dominated by Trump and Netanyahu unleashing war on Iran with which was horrible to watch unfold.  The death and destruction in the Middle East, the travel disruptions and the world wide anxiety about fuel prices and the economy has made everyone sadder, less trusting and more anxious.  Thank goodness for Afroman to cheer us up!

    Extreme rhetoric in Australia's right-wing political circles deserves more attention, by Gareth Hutchens, ABC News, 1 March 2026.

    Neither preemptive nor legal, US‑Israeli strikes on Iran have blown up international law, in the Conversation, 1 March 2026.

    Trump, the Six-Year Itch, and the Mirage of a Quick Victory in Iran, by The Snarky Gherkin substack, 2 March 2026.

    Read these words from 100 years ago about immigrants in Britain – and see how history is chillingly repeating itself, by George Monbiot in The Guardian, 5 March 2026.

    The government granted Iranian footballers asylum. Then, it moved to block 7000 Iranians from Australia, in 9 News, 12 March 2026 

    Raising rates while petrol prices soar shows the RBA ignoring reality and basic economics, by Greg Jericho, The Point, 17 March 2026.
    'The Reserve Bank has completely misread the economy and risked sending more Australians into poverty on Jobseeker by raising the cash rate to 4.1%.'

    The media wants disabled people to be locked inside until they die (disinformation on NDIS funding), by Jon Delmenico, The Shot, 18 March 2026.

    Afroman prevails in cops' music video defamation suit after a brief but viral trial, in NPR on 19 March 2026.  
    'Afroman was just trying to turn lemons into "Lemon Pound Cake" when he started making music videos and social media posts mocking the law enforcement officers who conducted a heavy-handed raid on his Ohio home.'  Also check out the hilarious Jon Stewart Show report.

    The left brought a thesaurus to a knife fight, in The New Daily, 20 March 2026

    Growing up means realizing that none of the worst villains are in prison, by Caitlin Johnstone, 31 March 2026

    Watching, Listening and Reading: 

    How to get to heaven from Belfast: a hilarious ridiculous and brilliant show with a convoluted plot. The middle age characters aren't quite as loveable as the creator's previous show Derry Girls, but they have baggage and unrealised dreams as well as odd anxieties and quirks.!  

    Coal Black Mornings: a beautifully written autobiography by Suede's Brett Anderson of his council house childhood in the home counties and student days in London where he channeled his life as a misfit and a dreamer into becoming a musician.

    It by Pulp (which is meant to read as Pulpit) : I've enjoyed listening to their debut album in 1983 with the wide-eyed dreaminess 19 year old Jarvis Cocker and wishing they played some of the song at their gig this month.

    How Can We Live When the World Feels Broken? The Stoics: By Carrying On, by Jack Maden on Philosophy Break: this was shared by Nupur on her One Hot Stove blog who writes with such warmth and thoughtfulness in every post.  I found this post comforting to read when the world around us is filled with leaders that let us down and make the world feel unsafe.

    Dirty Dancing: I've never watched this 1980s iconic movie and was surprised to discover it was set in the 1960s.  It was a enjoyable enough but the lead actors don't really appeal to me.  (Give me Rebel without a Cause over this any day!)

    Building an Underground Shipping Container Pool Home - I've watched this video too many times and dreamed of a bedroom with the light rippling in through the swimming pool on the other side of the window. 

    Wednesday, 8 April 2026

    In My Kitchen: March 2026

     

    March brought darker evenings and cooler days.  Our salad days were transitioning to days of hearty fare.  It was such a busy month that we cooked less at home but brought home lots of good food.  Over the month I had the the Sydney Road Street Festival, a Pulp concert, a family wedding, a short trip to Sydney, a trip to the hospital Emergency Dept, the Cake Picnic, local theatre, a vegan market and a trip to the cinema.  It was exhausting though (mostly) lots of fun.  I will write up a lot more about it in My Monthly Chronicles (March 2026) but you will see quite a bit of it below.

    The Iran war has put pressure on budgets with rising petrol costs and another interest rate rise.  In addition I have had a plumber call-out  and holes to repair at the dentist.  I am fortunate that we have some backpay coming up from the implementation of our Enterprise Bargaining Agreement at work (they always have a lag between agreement and implementation).

    Above is my brilliantly green St Patrick's Day dinner.  I was sad I forgot to wear green at work in the morning so when I got home that evening - soaked by riding in a rain that would have made Ireland proud - I changed into green tracky daks and a green t-shirt.  Sylvia celebrated by making Zucchini pesto pasta -  which was lovely with lettuce, green capsicum, rocket and celery, and a squeeze of lime juice (from the garden).

    It is nice to see that the Take Me Home Gnoccheria at 89B Harding Street has expanded into a Grocer and Mangia (cafe) to replace the space that was Harding Street Convenience Store at number 89A.  The milk bar had been run for 18 years by Andy and Phoebe Lee until the landlord sold the building last year.  I am glad the space continues to be one for community, albeit a more gentrified version of the once common milk bar.

    We enjoyed browsing through the interesting rage of groceries with some vegan offerings - pistachio spread, choc top ice cream cones, burgers, fresh fruit and vegetables and Back Alley Bakes breads.  We left with a bar of Alessandro Luppolo smoked dark chocolate.  It was a very nice smooth chocolate with ingredients listed as cocoa beans, sugar and paperbark smoke! But at $13.50 for a 68g block it would be a rare treat.  Sylvia caved to the temptation of a vegan tiramisu. The ingredients list was longer with a lentil-based cinnamon cream layered with chocolate and biscuits soaked in coffee.  She was most impressed.  Later in the month, we also had a packet of Take Me Home's delicious green olive, parsley & chilli gnocchi from their stall at Coburg farmers market.


    We have had this excellent  TikTok viral dumpling bake twice in March (we got the recipe from #kuzyinks).  Vegetables, coconut milk and Thai curry paste are mixedin a large baking dish and then gyoza dumplings are arranged on top so the bottoms are soft and their tops crisp..  The first time Sylvia made it with enoki, been sprouts and bok choy as on the recipe but the second time (photo above) we wnt with our preferred combination of edamame, napa cabbage and enoki mushrooms.  On the second outing, we also mixed about a teaspoon of cornflour into the sauce, which has to be thin to cook the dumplings but a slight thickening was prefereable to the watery sauce of our first go.  The dumpling bake is great with basmati rice.

    We returned to the  crispy rice salad (from emily's eatings on tik tok) that we enjoyed only weeks before.  This time we didn't have most of the ingredients so we winged it and made the crispy rice to serve with lettuce, chickpeas, corn, green capsicum, and celery.  It was really good, yet again!

    Another favourite salad is this Carrot, couscous, bean and feta salad that we enjoyed over the past couple of summers.  This time we veganised it with Damona feta and garnished it with cornichon pickles.  Sylvia had a few weeks where she was eating cornichons on everything.  I think life got so busy that she forgot about them and this week we found one of the jars at the back of the fridge and put it to good use.

    We recently had too much cabbage and I looked up ways to use it up.   I found a recipe suggesting that it goes well with gnocchi in the way cabbage and potato go well in pierogi.  Then I found a couple of recipes that added sausage to the mix and I was sold.  The photo looks pretty beige but it was a really nice way to fry up the cabbage as a meal.
     

    Another TikTok recipe from rhi.scran,  Sylvia was really keen to make these veagn meatballs (cheatballs?).  They were a matter of squeezing vegan sausages from their skins (we used Beefy Brats from the 'unreal co'.  These were air fried until crispy.  While they fried, Sylvia made a sauce of coconut milk and Thai curry paste and served it over the meatballs and rice.  I served mine with Japanese cucumber salad, red cabbage and red capsicum.  The success of the meatballs depends on the sausages and if we tried them again, we would use different sausages.  It was a pretty good meal, nonetheless!  

    After our trip to Sydney, we brought home a wonderful loaf of light rye bread from the Bourke Street Bakery in Surry Hills.  It was so good I could have eaten it slice but slice but needed more veg in my life.  So I rescued a box of neglected Casarecce pasta and added it to a stew of old cherry tomatoes, the remains of a bunch of celery, as well as reliable onion, carrot, a tin of tomatoes, a tin of chickpeas and frozen peas for a token green vegetable, plus tahini and seasonings.  It was lovely with the bread and I stored some in the freezer for work lunches.

    Here is another of Sylvia's gorgeous collage cards that she made for my sister's wedding in March.  The wedding was a great and I was very relieved to be able to wash my hair before the wedding after a bit of pre-wedding drama.


    A couple of days prior, our washer gave out and we could not turn off the kitchen sink tap without turning it off at the mains.  I had a look at the tap but it was so old it was probably the original from the 1960s and I could not get the handle off the spindle.  It was the Friday night before the long weekend.  We had to do an after hours call out because 3 days were a long time without running water.  My regular plumbers were not available.  I asked for advice but ended going to HiPages to find a plumber with a reasonable rate who was able to get to our place in about 30 minutes and replace the kitchen taps. An experience like that really made me appreciate being able to turn on and off the tap.



    I have written about our experiences at the amazing Cake Picnic, Melbourne 2026 run as part of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival in March.  I still plan to write more about the chocolate coconut layer cake I made.  Today I will share a bit of the cake picnic in my kitchen.  Above is our fridge when we parked our cakes into cake boxes there overnight after hours of baking and decorating.  You can see that we had to squeeze everything else in the fridge on other shelves.


    After the cake picnic we brought home some of the goodies.  Queen was a sponsor and as part of our entrance price, we got the merch bag of a tote bag, vanilla essence, fondant letters and a choice of a wooden spoon or a tea towel.  We got one of each.  

    The cake picnic vanilla essence bottle was gorgeous.  When the organisers announced at the picnic that there were lots of leftover bottles of vanilla essence if anyone wanted more.  We were about to get more until we saw the queues the announcement had created.  It wasn't worth that much hassle!

    This is my cake picnic box of slices.  A lot of them went into the freezer and I still cannot face all the sugary cake.  So much frosting!  I was sad that it was such a mess that I could not take it to work or share it with my neighbours.  I don't think I will be able to eat a lot of it but will probably pick at a bit of it eventually.

    The day after the cake picnic, I went to a community play (Little Voice) with a couple of neighbours to see one of our neighbours perform in the play.  We brought food to eat at the tables and it was fun that we were the cabaret audience in the play.  There was some great singing and great piano, but a lot of sadness in the story line!  I took along hummus and vegies with some Arnotts seeded crackers.  One of my neighbours was very happy that the crackers were gluten free.  It was good to eat some fresh vegies after the sugar fest at the cake picnic.

    Sylvia had tickets but needed a day of rest after the cake picnic.  She had been so determined to go there after being in the Emergency Department at hospital for acute tonsillitis only two days prior to the picnic.  After making a big effort to attend the picnic, she was pretty worn out and needed a quiet day.


    We went to the Vegan Market at the Coburg Town Hall at the end of the month.  By then I was so tired and had eaten such indulgent food that I wasn't that keen on buying a lot.  However, I will always ben tempted by Dubai chocolate and really loved it in a slice from the Little Sweet Things stall.  

    Sylvia was excited about the Better Now Bakes stall.  They do amazing baking (as any former Great Australian Bake-Off contestant should) and bought a great though a bit spicy kimchi and cheese scroll; a lovely pandan lamington that was green under the coconut; and a slice of the superb "Jai's wedding cake: lemon myrtle cake slices with a strawberry & pepperberry jam filling, dressed in hibiscus buttercream".  We ate well when we got home.

    Sylvia was keen to eat a borek and a burger but I really really loved the South-Co panisse.  I admit to tasting a few of the crispy fried squares of chickpea 'tofu' with smooth soft flavoured insides.  It was all I wanted for lunch so we walked across the road to the Coburg farmers market to buy a fine loaf of Flinders Sourdough bread.  We also bought kale, tomatoes and yellow zucchini.  This was the sort of good food I really needed.

    Here is a close up of the slab of pesto-flavoured Panisse that I crisped up in the air fryer and ate on sourdough with relish the next day.   Right after the market we had air-fried panisse with lettuce, tomato and mayo in a sourdough sandwich.  Fried panisse is the best!  It is not just how wonderfully soft it is inside but the delicious mellow chickpea flavour with the addition of aromatic pesto.  

    When Sylvia found that Sebby Scrolls were serving vegan cinnamon scrolls in the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival Bakers Dozen in Fed Square, she organised to go with her dad.  They told me it was very busy and bought back some of the lovely mini scrolls - that were sold in pairs - for us to enjoy at home.  They were very soft and very sticky with all that frosting.

    As the fickle autumn weather veered from balmy warmth into a rainy day, I made gravy. We don't have it often but it is great comfort food.  I had planned to serve baked potatoes for tea but had a problem when I remembered I had forgotten to buy some big potatoes. We had sausages and a couple of small potatoes.  Sylvia was delighted to have sausages covered in hearty gravy.  I didn't use a recipe but just fried onions, added flour, vegemite, tomato sauce, seasoning and water.  It was so so good.  I must make it again now that the weather is cooling as we gallop towards winter!

    I am sending this post to Sherry of Sherry's Pickings for the In My Kitchen event. If you would like to join in, send your post to Sherry by 13th of the month.  Or just head over to her blog to visit more kitchens and her delightful seasonal hand drawn header.  Thanks to Sherry for continuing to host this even that brings together some wonderful bloggers who share glimpses into their kitchens.