The sights and smells of the family property in Markwood mean as much now as they did then for Darcy Vescio – maybe even moreso.
For it was here, at the foot of the Stanley Range halfway between Myrtleford and Wangaratta, that the old world of Vescio’s paternal grandparents met head-on with the new – and with profound consequence for the vibrant Carlton footballer.
“As you get older you start to think a little more about how you came to be here,” said Vescio, in the lead-up to the AFL’s Multicultural Round.
“You look back and think about your grandparents and what they went through, and you think about all their struggles in coming to Australia.”
Vescio’s maternal grandparents Cheong Lip Louey and Annette Louey are Cantonese, her paternal grandparents Frank and Lina Vescio Calabrian. Like so many of their ilk, they saw opportunity in Australia in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War.
“Mum’s parents settled in Melbourne and my Mum’s mother died before I was born, but I grew up with my folks about 100 metres across the paddock from Nonna and Nonno. They are still around on the farm, while Goong (Vescio’s maternal grandfather) is 91 and living in Melbourne.
Darcy with her paternal grandparents Lina and Frank. (Photo: Supplied)
For Frank and Lina, the lure of northern Victoria was tobacco cultivation which, with changing standards, has all but disappeared.
“Growing up there were still tobacco fields and kilns,” she recalled. “Even now I can remember the smells of the tobacco plants drying out.
“I’ve got two brothers and we were pretty close to Nonna and Nonno. We used to go there every night after school and Nonna would look after us. There was always stuff cooking slowly on the stove – pasta and peppers – and while I’ve since tried to cook I can’t cook as well as Nonna.”
“I remember always being out with her and the garden, or helping her collect eggs from the hen house – and once a year we’d be there for the salami-making.
“I also remember that we’d get home from school, walk into the shed and see a pig cut right down the middle. Nonna would be there cleaning out the intestines, while Nonno would blow up a bladder and tie it to a tree so that we could speed-box with it. That’s a vegetarian’s nightmare.”
Reflecting on these enriching times at Markwood, Vescio knows she’s been truly blessed. It is why she continues to draw inspiration from those who came before.
A few months ago, at the request of an organisation for promotional purposes, Vescio articulated her thoughts in writing about a woman who most inspires her.
Not surprisingly, she wrote about her Nonna.
“Thinking about it now, Nonna came to Australia with two kids under five. She didn’t have a word of English, she couldn’t drive, and out of all of that she somehow built a life. It’s incredible really,” Vescio said.
“Of all the grandparents, Nonna is the one who’s probably talked the most about values, of working hard and of setting yourself up right. I do think of what she and them have all been through and why they did what they did, which was to create these opportunities for their kids and grandkids.”
Though she is yet to have frequented the old villages her grandparents left forever, Vescio will soon realise that dream . . . and her life will have come full circle.