gwunspoken - Beyond the Plan

Family Bonds and Football Dreams: A Conversation with Jeremiah and His Grandmother

Garry

What makes the bond between grandmothers and grandsons so special? In this heartwarming conversation, we're joined by Jeremiah and his grandmother Liz (affectionately known as "Granny") for her podcast debut.

From the moment they start chatting, their natural rapport and genuine affection shine through. Jeremiah shares stories about playing football for the Dayboro Cowboys, including how he courageously played through not one but two sprained ankles in recent matches. Granny, ever supportive, talks about running healing salt baths to help with his recovery – a perfect example of the care that makes their relationship so special.

Food becomes a delightful thread weaving through their conversation. We discover Granny's beef stroganoff is a household favourite, while Taco Tuesdays remain a cherished weekly tradition. When asked what the best thing about his grandmother is, Jeremiah's answer is beautifully simple: "Taking care of me." These everyday moments of nurturing create the foundation for their strong bond.

The conversation takes an unexpected turn when Jeremiah reveals his fascination with dinosaurs, sparked by a family trip to Winton. His knowledge of the carnivorous Allosaurus shows how these educational adventures with grandparents can inspire lifelong interests. Their shared memories of exploring hot springs, hunting for opals, and dealing with the infamous outback flies paint a vivid picture of intergenerational bonding through travel.

When put on the spot about what she loves most about her grandson, Granny highlights his smile and "cheeky good sense of humour" – qualities that are abundantly evident throughout this warm, funny, and touching conversation that captures the unique magic that happens when grandparents and grandchildren share their stories.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to another edition of GW Unspoken Beyond the Plan, and we're here on behalf of EngageU, and I have two very, very special guests which I look forward to seeing every second week. Who have I got over here, jeremiah and Jeremiah, we've got a special guest here. You've actually bribed someone to come on the podcast with us. Who is it?

Speaker 2:

It's Granny.

Speaker 1:

It's Granny, it's Granny, so Liz is Granny, and so welcome to the podcast, thank you. I'm going to ask Granny a question and because she's it's always nerve-wracking the first. I'm not saying that she's nervous or not, but have you been on a podcast before?

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

Welcome. This is the first one, first one, and you're with your grandson. Yes, how cool, how good is this.

Speaker 2:

It's a first.

Speaker 1:

Well, Jeremiah, tell me about your day. Was it a good day, a bad day, medium day?

Speaker 3:

Good day Was it. It was a medium day actually.

Speaker 1:

What was the standout? What was something that was good about it? I like how you take the time to think. That's actually a good thing too, by the way.

Speaker 3:

Playing video lunchtime oh nice.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't tackle, was it?

Speaker 3:

No it was touch.

Speaker 1:

I was going to say do you sometimes try and sneak and do tackle? No, oh, because Nan was going to listen to that. That's alright, Nan. What was the best thing about your day today?

Speaker 2:

I got my house clean. Oh did you, I did.

Speaker 1:

You want someone to do it for you.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you did it yourself oh you're good. You're good. It's a certain sort of feeling about it, isn't it? When you eat, your house clean there is, yes, it's like your house feels happy as well. That's good. Now, jeremiah, this is your question. Ready, your question is football. Did the Mighty Cowboys have a win on the weekend? Yes, the Mighty Daybreak Cowboys yes, tell me, how many games did you play on the weekend?

Speaker 3:

Two.

Speaker 1:

You played two. Did your whole team play two, or you just had to back up and play two?

Speaker 3:

Me and another person.

Speaker 1:

And you won both of them.

Speaker 3:

No, we only won one.

Speaker 1:

Okay, you won one.

Speaker 3:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 1:

All right Now. Did you score any tries?

Speaker 3:

No.

Speaker 1:

Did you do any tackles?

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Did you take the ball up and do some runs? Yes, I think I've asked you this before, but do you like tackling better or running the ball better? Both you like them, both I have them. Yeah, I don't remember. You love both of them, and did you? Was it a very wet game on the weekend? Yes, both of them, and did you? Was it a very wet?

Speaker 3:

game on the weekend? Yes, definitely who washes the jerseys. They usually just take it.

Speaker 1:

Oh, they just take it. So you're lucky, it gets done for you. Yeah, and can you remember what numbers you wore on the weekend?

Speaker 3:

I was number. I'm number 15 for the first game.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Then the second game. I was number 15 for the first game, then the second game, I was number 13.

Speaker 1:

13?, 18?, 18?, 18. Yeah, right, was I? That's good, dan's putting some fingers up here and he's counting them up 18. So you played two games. You must have been tired, were you tired?

Speaker 3:

Not really. Not really, but I did have a sprained ankle while I was playing.

Speaker 1:

Did you A sprained ankle?

Speaker 3:

You rolled it, you rolled it.

Speaker 2:

Then in the second game, you rolled your other ankle.

Speaker 1:

Oh, at least you evened them out, didn't you? And then Granny had heard that you looked after him. How did you look after him?

Speaker 2:

Run him a bath full of salts, oh how good, how good.

Speaker 1:

What a great Granny. In fact, let's talk about this for a second Jeremiah Granny. What's the best thing about Granny? Be very careful, she's listening right there.

Speaker 3:

Taking care of me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she takes care of you. That's sweet. She takes care of me, yeah she takes care of you.

Speaker 3:

That's sweet. She takes care of you?

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Does she do a good job? Yeah, that's cool, that's very good. I notice that Nanny always drives you around everywhere too. Does she go to your football? Yes, does she football as well, mm-hmm? Does she cook for you? Yes, does she cook Taco Tuesdays? Yes, yes, I remember Taco Tuesdays. Are you still doing Taco Tuesdays? Mm-hmm, yeah, very good. All right, should we ask Granny a few questions to you? Mm-hmm, let's put her under a bit of pressure, shall we?

Speaker 2:

Oh no.

Speaker 1:

All right, granny, what about you? Do you have a favourite meal? What if someone said to you they're going to make you a home-cooked meal? What would be your go-to?

Speaker 2:

Beef stroganoff.

Speaker 1:

Oh, does it have mushrooms in it? Yes, sensational, all right. What about if we ask Granny what her favourite dessert is? Is she a sweet tooth?

Speaker 2:

Boysenberry drumsticks.

Speaker 1:

Oh, does that sound good. What's your favourite dessert, Jeremiah?

Speaker 3:

I love ice cream.

Speaker 1:

You love ice cream, mm-hmm, do you have a favourite flavour? Ice cream?

Speaker 3:

I do like caramel drumsticks.

Speaker 1:

Well, you guys are both drumstick people already, aren't you? You like them? Mm-hmm, I was going to ask too, because Granny talks about ice cream. My Granny used to make me an apple pie, apple pie and custard and I never had one of those Rhubarb. Oh, haven't you? No, we've put an order in here Rhubarb. I've never had one of those rhubarb. Oh, haven't you? No, we've put an order in here Rhubarb. I've never tried rhubarb in my life. What is?

Speaker 2:

it. Yeah, what is rhubarb? Is it a fruit? It's a vegetable, oh, and you only eat the stalk. You eat the leaves poisonous, and you just eat the stalk.

Speaker 1:

That sounds dangerous, but yummy, I'll make you one. Oh, look at that, it's all recorded. This is awesome. You have to share it with me, jeremiah, do you like it? No, I don't even know what I did. We've got to try things in life, don't you? You've got to try things, jeremiah, do you like custard?

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Do you like apple pie? Yes, so apple pie, hot apple pie, hot custard and ice cream is like the bomb.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Granny, at one time she would always make it she would always get.

Speaker 2:

I'd make her an apple and rhubarb strudel. Oh, strudel crumble, sorry.

Speaker 1:

Oh, apple crumble's good too.

Speaker 2:

With the custard and the ice cream.

Speaker 1:

Oh, stop it Now. I'm getting all hungry. We haven't even had afternoon tea. I'm starving now. Are you starving? Yeah, can we go and buy one of those or not? Do you know what the best thing I think about grannies are? We used to have mine, used to be called nana Always good cooks. For some reason it must be like a prerequisite to be a. If you're a nan or a granny, you must be a good cook. What do you think? Yeah, what's the best thing that granny makes for you? Do you reckon for dinner-wise? What's something when she's in the kitchen making you go? Oh yes, this is awesome. We're having this for dinner. This is going to be good.

Speaker 3:

Some butter things.

Speaker 1:

Is there? Oh, how good Taco yeah.

Speaker 3:

I did like the beef tongue and that they ate the other week yeah, and sausages, yeah. Curried sausages oh yeah, oh, nice Rice pork.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, Curried sausages, oh nice. Roast pork, oh yeah.

Speaker 3:

I love roast pork. That's good.

Speaker 1:

You're lucky, aren't you? You're getting sport over there. Yeah, that's good. Is there anything that Granny makes that you actually go? I don't know if I can eat this. What's your challenging food? What's something you eat and you go? If I can eat this, what's your challenging food? What's?

Speaker 3:

something you eat and go.

Speaker 1:

I better eat it, but I don't know if I really want to.

Speaker 3:

Tomatoes, tomatoes, and I think it's just tomatoes.

Speaker 1:

Anything else, granny? Broccoli, don't like small trees, no, no. A minor. Anything else, Granny? I don't know? Broccoli eggs Don't like small trees, no, no.

Speaker 3:

No, what else I don't like beetroot.

Speaker 1:

Don't like beetroot. No, I don't like beetroot. No.

Speaker 2:

Beetroot's a big no.

Speaker 1:

No, what about you, granny? Do you have any challenging food? You don't like Any foods that you food you don't like, I think, foods you sort of go, mm.

Speaker 2:

Oysters.

Speaker 3:

Don't like oysters yeah.

Speaker 2:

I don't like oysters too. No, I'm not a fan of oysters.

Speaker 1:

No, but do you like other seafood?

Speaker 2:

I like fish.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, prawns and crabs and bugs and lobsters.

Speaker 3:

Oh, wow okay, what's that fish that I like?

Speaker 2:

You like flake.

Speaker 3:

And so what's the other one that starts with a W?

Speaker 1:

Whiting, yeah, oh, you like whiting.

Speaker 3:

No, wasn't there another one?

Speaker 1:

Walrus, oh sorry.

Speaker 3:

You can't even cook.

Speaker 1:

I was trying to trick you. You're too clever Not whiting Whale. Whale, you don't eat whale.

Speaker 3:

I trick you, you're too, clever, not whiting.

Speaker 1:

Whale Whale. You don't eat whale? I hope not, you can't eat whale.

Speaker 3:

Why not? You can't?

Speaker 1:

Can't you.

Speaker 3:

I don't think you can eat whale. We might have to do some research.

Speaker 1:

I hope not. People listening to this won't like people catching whales to eat them. Mind you, if you did catch a whale to eat, you'd have a big freezer full, wouldn't you? There'd be lots of fish.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but you can't even catch a whale.

Speaker 2:

Whales are a protected species. You're not allowed to eat them.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you can't.

Speaker 1:

How would you catch a whale?

Speaker 3:

You can't catch a whale.

Speaker 1:

Oh, can you?

Speaker 2:

I mean if you want scuba diving and you're wearing a spear.

Speaker 1:

You need to look up your history books, what do you?

Speaker 2:

mean they used to poach them and catch them all the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And get the fat out of them.

Speaker 1:

Sell the oil from them yeah. Have you seen Finding Nebo? Yes, can you speak whale?

Speaker 3:

No, I can't speak whale.

Speaker 1:

Do you want to try and speak whale?

Speaker 3:

No, I don't even know the whale I was trying to get.

Speaker 2:

He speaks well, really well.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you don't have a guard doing that.

Speaker 3:

No, I haven't watched it in a long time.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 3:

I don't know how she does.

Speaker 1:

No, you have to watch that and see it again. It's actually quite funny. All right, did you? Hey, jeremy, I've got a question for you. Do you want to ask Granny a question On the podcast?

Speaker 3:

What's your most not favourite thing?

Speaker 2:

Tank trimps.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's my sister.

Speaker 1:

Who's tomming your sister in, but it is Hmm.

Speaker 3:

Did she have his handkerchief?

Speaker 1:

What if I asked? What if I asked Granny what would be her favourite holiday destination ever?

Speaker 3:

Tyler please.

Speaker 2:

The beach, any beach.

Speaker 1:

Love the beach.

Speaker 2:

That's pretty much all the things.

Speaker 1:

Do you like the beach where there's like ocean crashing, or just doesn't matter?

Speaker 2:

Doesn't matter, no, as long as it's the beach. Nice, seeing the waves.

Speaker 3:

You do not like Fraser Island.

Speaker 2:

It's not that I don't like Fraser. Yeah, it's because the dingo I just had an experience with a dingo one time.

Speaker 1:

Did you?

Speaker 2:

We're not going to talk about it.

Speaker 1:

Well, we're not going to talk on it Very inappropriate. Very inappropriate that's a good word Very inappropriate.

Speaker 2:

It is very inappropriate.

Speaker 1:

We might talk about it when we go for an afternoon tea this afternoon. This might be our second episode. We'll get Granny on to talk and maybe she'll talk about it. And if it is appropriate, what do you think? Granny's laughing over Shaking heads like no chance. We'll have to start videotaping some of these. It's actually quite funny. I found something else about you today too, about something that you're interested in, something scary. Some are scary back in the old times and some aren't scary. Some are carnivores and some are herbivores, and some people find their bones in the soil from ages ago.

Speaker 3:

Winton oh yeah, dinosaurs.

Speaker 1:

You like dinosaurs? Mm-hmm, do you have a favourite dinosaur?

Speaker 3:

Allosaurus.

Speaker 1:

What's that? What's that one do?

Speaker 3:

It's a big dinosaur.

Speaker 1:

Aren't they all big.

Speaker 2:

Allosaurus is from Australia, isn't he Really?

Speaker 3:

His name's Banjo. No, it's not. Allosaurus is way bigger than a Banjo Is it really. Is that Matilda? No, Banjo's a little. Brenna's going to do that research, banjo is a little and it has white eyes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

But it does have a little dot, but you can't really see it, and it has this thing on its head where it goes up and then down.

Speaker 1:

And so is it a herbivore or a carnivore. Does it eat meat? It eats meat. Oh, so it's a dangerous one.

Speaker 3:

So if we were around we'd have to run for cover. But dinosaurs aren't alive.

Speaker 1:

I mean, they are like crocodiles, the carnivore ones, eat humans. If we were around, then they'd eat us.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but there's no more.

Speaker 1:

No, allosaurus is. What would you do if you found one? What if you went home today and there was one in your backyard? What would you do? I would run away, even though you're lucky. If you went home today and there was one in your backyard, what would you do? I would run away, even though you're lucky if you'd run away. Have you seen any of the Jurassic Park movies? I've seen all of them. What I've seen? The first one? I got scared. Does it make you scared?

Speaker 3:

No, I just watch it.

Speaker 1:

But you're not looking at it waiting for the music, it's all quiet.

Speaker 3:

You think, oh, one is going to jump out here. There's one movie of the Jurassic World and he's on the toilet and then the dinosaur comes and he eats him.

Speaker 1:

Oh my gosh, While he's on the toilet.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and he breaks it and he eats it.

Speaker 1:

That's scary. That would give me nightmares.

Speaker 3:

Do you get nightmares? No, okay.

Speaker 1:

So why dinosaurs? How long have you liked dinosaurs for? I don't know Well when did you go to Winton?

Speaker 3:

This last year.

Speaker 1:

Did you? When did you go? When was it now? What time of year was it when you went to Winton? Remember?

Speaker 3:

It was hot, it's always hot out there.

Speaker 2:

It was hot out there, but it was the June July school holidays.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay, nice, Lots of flies.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so lots of flies. Yeah, I said only ate one.

Speaker 1:

Oh, did they charge you for that? Did it cost you money? Bit of free protein yeah. Makes you good for football, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I didn't play football last year.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 3:

I only played a new one, and then I stopped playing it and I played this year you had a bit of a rest year, and then you're back into it.

Speaker 1:

We took some school kids out to Winton to look at the dinosaur bones too. That was two years ago.

Speaker 3:

School kids that went to Winton. Wasn't that going on that bus? And all the school kids were there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there was an excursion. Might have been a private school, I'm not sure.

Speaker 1:

Well, we were a private school, but I think we usually go the one week before the holidays. You guys went in the holidays, did?

Speaker 2:

you? Yeah, no, it was definitely school holidays.

Speaker 1:

Oh, no, so we just missed you, I reckon.

Speaker 3:

No, didn't we leave on.

Speaker 2:

No, we had a week at Charlotte Plains remember. Yeah and then we made our way up to.

Speaker 3:

Winton, but when we went to Charlotte Plains it wasn't the school holidays, no. Oh, okay, but then we went to Winton. After we went to Charlotte Plains, we went straight to Winton.

Speaker 1:

There's not much in Winton, is there? Well, there's not much really to see, apart from dinosaur bones there is. What else is there in Winton?

Speaker 3:

Opal thing that we were going to do, but we didn't do it.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

The Opals remember them, but we did get some.

Speaker 2:

You got some sapphires.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that's cool.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, where were we for that one, do you remember?

Speaker 3:

We were still in Winton.

Speaker 2:

No, not in Winton. When we got the sapphires, you got Opals from the Opal shop. Yeah, you got a lucky dip that had little apels on it. Oh, that's cool.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, straight from Winton. Yeah, because last time we went through Winton there was like a lot of shops closing and stuff too.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, there was a bakery, oh that's always good. Two.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Would you ever live in?

Speaker 1:

Winton no. Granny's saying no chance.

Speaker 3:

Lots of flies in there.

Speaker 1:

And very hot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's very hot over there.

Speaker 2:

How expensive? Do you remember how expensive it was for a punnet of strawberries? No, and we had to throw them out because they were yuck.

Speaker 3:

How much were they?

Speaker 2:

$22. What For?

Speaker 1:

one punnet.

Speaker 2:

For one 250 gram punnet no way.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, $50.

Speaker 1:

And.

Speaker 3:

That's insane. We went to at the caravan park. They had a pool and park, but at Charlotte Plains, they had a hot, the hot springs. The hot springs, and then a bath too. At the outside Was it hot. And then there was a big, there was a tank that they cut and then they put another.

Speaker 1:

Water in it too. Yeah, and when you hopped in the pool, was it really warm from the hot sun out there at Linton?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but the hot springs they were just, it was like sand around it.

Speaker 2:

Oh was it and it was just Artesian water.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, okay, so the natural natural spring yeah. Was it hot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it was, and there was yabbies in there too.

Speaker 1:

Was there.

Speaker 3:

And fish.

Speaker 1:

Really so. Did you hear something really disgusting? You'll probably like this, this little story. When I first started teaching, it was in a place called Cloncurry, so it was about three hours from Winton, actually further west right. Really really hot, and I had to stay in the caravan park for the first week while I was teaching.

Speaker 1:

And guess what? I used to like to swim. So they had a pool and I thought I'll go for a swim. In the morning it was like 29 degrees. It was hot. As and as I was swimming I kept feeling something hit my hands. Do you know what? It was? Disgusting toads that got in there overnight and so I'm trying to push toads away while I was swimming. I'm still scarred Disgusting. Did that happen to you at Winton? No, oh, that's lucky. So you wouldn't live in Winton because it's too hot. Yeah, and the flies and the flies, yeah, yeah, all right. So let's do a bit of dream building here, all right, because, by the way, your memory is really good and you're speaking very well. If I said to Nan, she said she'd love to live where the beach is. Where's somewhere you'd like to live If it's not Winton?

Speaker 3:

where would you live and why? I don't really know where I want to live.

Speaker 1:

Don't have anything special. Would you like to live in the city, in the country, in a different country? I just want to live in Australia. You do want to live in Australia. Yeah, what makes Australia so good? I?

Speaker 3:

don't know it is safe in Australia because we don't really have any natural disasters.

Speaker 1:

Oh, so clever. That's a great answer. Where are you, Granny? Would you live anywhere else?

Speaker 2:

Oh hell no.

Speaker 1:

No Love.

Speaker 2:

Australia, just Australia.

Speaker 1:

Australia.

Speaker 2:

Not even interested in travelling.

Speaker 1:

No, and have you lived anywhere else growing up here? Have you always lived in this sort of Brisbane area?

Speaker 2:

I actually come from Western Australia.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

And then to Canberra, and then to Queensland.

Speaker 3:

Oh.

Speaker 2:

Why do you want to New South Wales, northern New South Wales, and then to Queensland?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, yeah, so who does Granny go for in the State of Origin? Jeremiah, she still goes for Queensland. Who do you go for? And then they lost. I was going to say you told me you were going to sit up and watch the game. Did you watch the whole thing? No, just half. Okay, still half time. What did you think of the game? It was fine. We've got some work to do, haven't we in Queensland? Maybe Jeremiah needs to play. You run out in the field. Play for Queensland.

Speaker 3:

Why don't you do a junior state?

Speaker 1:

That's a great idea. That's a great idea. Would you try and play in that one? Would you play for Queensland?

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

That's lucky. Do you watch the Origin? Yes, that's lucky. Did you watch the Origin? Only half, only half as well, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I just looked up Skrull the next morning.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, had a bit of a cry in the morning when we found out Can you say that you were lying in bed.

Speaker 3:

You didn't watch half of it.

Speaker 2:

No, I just listened to half of it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you didn't look at it.

Speaker 1:

Oh, little Miss, yeah, little Miss over here is on to everything. I can tell you how many points. Oh, you're keeping Granny informed, yeah but I never saw Quincy. Sorry, no, you only came in the second half. I did see one fight. Did you have a wrestle?

Speaker 3:

yeah, yeah, there was only one wrestle in the first half.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, a little bit fired up. I would have got out of bed for that Old school, isn't it? People like the old school. You can't punch anyone anymore. You get instantly sent off if you punch. Yeah. In the old days you used to punch your knee and it used to all happen, yeah, but they weren't punching, they were just touching, they were just wrestling. Yeah yeah, In the old days they used to do it. It used to be very dirty, like very dirty play, compared to what we do now.

Speaker 2:

We used to call it the biff.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we used to bring back the biff.

Speaker 3:

That's it I don't know why they started fighting. They just started. Well, I mean, we did have penalties, but they had more penalties than us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I wonder if that was from the referee or we just weren't very well disciplined. We need to work on our discipline. What do you think? Have you ever been penalised on the football field?

Speaker 3:

I've never done a penalty.

Speaker 1:

Haven't you? That's good. You haven't done a head-high tackle or anything like that. Yeah, that's good. And so who do you play this week in rugby league? Do you know who you play this weekend? I'm not Not sure. We have Granny's looking up on here for us. We put them on the spot here. So the Daybreak Cowboys oh, tell everyone what colours Daybreak Cowboys wear.

Speaker 3:

Yellow and blue.

Speaker 1:

A bit like Parramatta. Okay, so Granny's going up now this weekend. What will it be about? The 6th or 7th of June? Play the Albany Creek Crushers. The Crushers you're going to play on Sunday, the 8th of June, around 6 at 9.45am. Have you played them yet, Crushers, Crushers versus Cowboys.

Speaker 3:

Yesterday, I burst the Jets.

Speaker 1:

Oh, from Ipswich, Ipswich.

Speaker 2:

Jets.

Speaker 1:

No, bepp and Gary, oh, bepp and Gary, jets, of course, of course, the local ones. Yeah, yeah, that's good. Oh, that's good, mate, that's awesome. Now I've asked you about the best thing about granny and you said the best thing was that she looks after you. Let's put granny on the spot. I'm going to ask granny what the best thing about jeremiah is. I'm sure there's lots there as well. Jeremiah's looking at granny like a little puppy dog face and smiling going. Come on, tell me how good I am, no pressure.

Speaker 2:

Granny, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

There must be lots.

Speaker 2:

I like his smile. Yeah, very good, and he's got really cheeky.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean good.

Speaker 1:

Good sense of humour.

Speaker 2:

He has got a good sense of humour. Yeah, good sense of humour yeah, yeah, it's good.

Speaker 1:

All right, jeremiah, we're going to sign off soon, you and Granny. Is there anything on the podcast? We haven't spoken about that you want to speak about? No, Granny, anything.

Speaker 2:

No, it's all good.

Speaker 1:

It's all good. Well, I'm hoping. I'm thinking about the Dinko thing. What's about a dingo thing? We might go and get some afternoon tea now and then play some outside games. What do you think You'd like to do that? Well, on behalf of EngageU, this is GW, unspoken NDOS, beyond the Plan, and I want to thank you, liz Granny, for coming on the podcast, getting over your podcast fears, your first ever podcast. She did a good job, didn't she Give her a clap call. All right, jeremiah, fun as usual, great memory. I learned something about you today, about your dinosaurs, even the scary ones that eat humans if they were still around but your language and your speech very well. So well done, champion, and well done to the Cowboys winning this week. Yeah, all right, thanks for coming on the show guys Outro Music.