"I never travel without my diary. One should always have something sensational to read in the train."
Oscar Wilde
Thursday, 30 December 2010
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=584411&id=554625160&l=7d3aa01b62
In a few hours I fly to India. I have six weeks for my Indian Adventure, (taking me to mid February - five months since I left in mid September! Crazy I know).
HAPPY NEW YEAR to everyone… I will be flying over New Years Eve so I will have a rum based drink and think of you. Again, it will be from one extreme to another as I fly into the overwhelming city of New Delhi and begin the last leg of my journey…
Everything is upside down when you’re drinking Pimms in the sunshine on Christmas Day…
The second amendment is to take back the comment about how I can’t imagine living in a "one horse town". I can understand it a bit better now, with incredible countryside on your back doorstep and quad bikes to ride at break neck speeds, rounding up big angry bulls and dodging kangaroos as rampant as rabbits. It’s all part of the fun. I even take back those "remote" comments. "Remote is being out where the driveway to the house is five miles long," I was told. "This is not remote". I suppose it was less remote than I had imagined but still, I’m not use to towns like this.
98% of Australians live within a stone’s throw of the coast. That leaves a very vast, lonely land in the centre. The annoying Australian Sat-Nav frequently tells us to, "Continue 160km along Bruce Highway," and then remains silent for the next hour and a half, shocking you when she suddenly asks you to make a turn. No wonder the highways are littered with signs challenging you to "Survive this Drive"; it can be pretty damn boring. But along a lot of these roads the scenery was stunning with waterfalls and gorges round every corner. The rainforests and National Parks we visited have been beautiful (especially Dorrigo National Park). The Snowy Mountains and the Blue Mountains are both impressive sites, and to roam the farm was something else altogether (they have their own sunset views points).
But as pretty as the farm was, drinking Pimms as the sun shines on Christmas Day is just wrong, wrong, wrong. I can’t see it any other way. There was a storm in the afternoon, that made me feel more at home, but still it was so warm! I got to see the Christmas Special of Spicks and Specks (the show I watched being filmed back in Melbourne) and the puddings were better, chocolate mousse and Crunchie ice cream, instead of boring Christmas pudding. England needs Christmas more than Australia does, they’re pretty happy without the build up and without the hype. It’d be nice if you were used to it. For me it was upside and strange.
After Christmas, I visited Canberra on route to The Blue Mountains. It was a ghost-like, ready-made city, with a new Parliament House built in 1988 and a town that reminded me of The City in London, emptied in the holiday season as people fled to Sydney for New Year.
The pounds gone crap (note my financial knowledge) and even budget travelling is kind of impossible for me here. Luckily though, if you look at the weather map of Australia I can pretty much say I’ve been to most of the major places on it (excluding Adelaide, Perth and Darwin)! And that’s a strange thing to be able to say for such a huge country, after only being here five weeks. I’ll miss the BYO (bring your own) alcohol system they have in most of the restaurants (I’ve heard alcohol is often served disguised in India, in tea pots or under the table), and I’ll miss the friendly people who ask "how are you going?" all the time. I can see why people move here too. It’s got all the good bits of England and then sun, sea and a lot less stress on top of that. But then a small part of me doesn’t want random people asking me how I’m going all the time, and that’s my Englishness kicking in. The only reason I wouldn’t emigrate here is because it’s too far away from England. That and it has too many flies.
Photos to follow...
Wednesday, 22 December 2010
Scuba Diving and One Horse Towns (where the horse goes to bed at 7pm)
This does nothing for my new “Zen” outlook on life. I haven’t been on a family holiday for almost a decade. On one of the last holidays together we visited the Grand Canyon. My Dad and I had a blazing row because I just wanted to read and wouldn’t get out of the Camper Van to look at yet another canyon. “They all look the same”, I shouted at him, and I didn’t go on many family holidays after that. I also haven’t lived at home for almost four years and I forgot how heated the family arguments can get. But after three months of slow, ambling travel there is now just a hint of stress in the air.
Granted, I really can’t complain. My eating habits have shot from one meal a day (and the occasional stolen food) to three square meals plus “snot buckets”, that’s Vanilla Slices, and “Rat Coffins” (for my brother), that’s meat pies. These are shortened Ozzy names apparently, but I don’t see how? My “budget” (another thing I meant to work out before leaving England but didn’t get around to) has gone crazy since entering Australia, so it’s another relief to see my family for a couple of weeks. Australia is currently more expensive than home and I was not prepared for this! I still have six weeks of travelling through India to do yet! And of course it’s nice to see them. My mum came through security to meet me as I actually disembarked the plane (I didn’t even know you could do that without being shot). Also, to my delight, my Dad got pulled over by a flashing police car while driving our hire car (complete with reindeer antlers and red nose) to Agnes Water. He was breathalized and cautioned for speeding, (he never lets me forget my speeding points). When we eventually found Agnus Waters, after a two and a half hour detour to avoid the floods (Australia has very few roads), we arrived to an apartment on the sea front with a huge sitting room, balcony and two bathrooms (showers the size of my Cambodian friend’s homes). And it had A BATH! I had my first bath with a mug of tea and chocolate and then with a big glass of wine. For me this was a place to call home for a while, a place that I didn’t have to leave every day or keep my bag out of people’s way or creep around in or share a shower. It made every possible stress worthwhile.
The beach next to the apartment was long, sandy and pretty much deserted. The water was gloriously warm (surprising after the chill of the Sydney sea). The waves were high and proper, sucking you right into their curling arms, tumbling you underneath them and spiting you out like foamy gristle. I momentarily scared myself when I saw a triangle piece of dark wood bobbing towards me like a shark’s fin. Then I scared my brother to the point that he ran out of the sea like a frightened girl.
The Great Barrier Reef was an hour and a half boat ride out (Agnes Water is where the reef is closest to the main land). I did some snorkelling and an introductionary Scuba Dive, which was my second highlight after teaching in Cambodia. The reef life and the colourful fish were absolutely incredible. The coral is beautiful. After getting use to the breathing our dive instructor poured fish food in front of me and I was instantly swarmed by hundreds of flashes of colour as the fish darted in. Agnes Water only got electricity in 1987 so is a very new little town but rather cute with great sunsets on the rocks.
After Agnes Water we made our way driving down the coastline back in the direction of Sydney. We passed through some coastal and inland towns. Australia is very strange. It’s such a large country but has very few big cities, towns and main highways. Outside of the big places (such as Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, etc) are the small coastal resorts, mainly made up of sailors and surfers, and the inland towns. The inland towns (off the coastal tourist route) are small one-horse towns, much like small American towns. I find it just as hard to believe that people live like this as they do in Cambodian shacks. And this is the East Coast which is “very populated” in Australian terms. One road, a few shops selling riders hats and boots and a “bar” room (which does food through a hatch) and that’s the town. I feel like I’m on a western film set and Clint Eastwood is about to clip his boots round the one corner and shoot at me.
Here are a few words on some places of interest that we passed through:
Noosa: VERY nice houses, it is where Nicole Kidman lives apparently. The main street is full of boutique shops and over-priced coffee. There is a more earthy side at Noosa Junction where we had lunch (it’s much cheaper too).
Lismore: A strange town. I’ve not much to add except it had a pathetic excuse for a Christmas tree (a normal tree with a few pieces of tinsel thrown on it) and a Koala Sanctuary, which cared for sick and injured Koalas. A volunteer told us all about Koalas and then showed us the ones they were caring for, a blind one with a baby and another female Koala. The baby was so cute. It was amazing to see them so close. I’ve also seen two Koalas in the wild now. (I have also seen one snake and one live kangaroo, and ten dead ones on the side of the road – they get run over A LOT).
Coolangatta: Disgusting high rise buildings, hated it – but that was because it rained and the dodgy Motel gave me bed bugs all over my arms and back, (again after Thailand I was the only one to get bitten, NOT happy). You could see the Brisbane skyline from the beach but then again; the Brisbane skyline is pretty ugly.
Croffs Harbour: Best beach, long and deserted. I walked along the beach as the sunset and a huge full moon came up. It was absolutely stunning.
Nimbin: Some uneven roads and dirt tracks took us to Nimbin. A “town” with a population of 400 hundred, it originates from the Aquarius festival in 1973 when people simply decided to stay on after the festival had finished. It’s like the Hippy part of Glastonbury on steroids. It has an amazingly odd museum and a few “new age” shops and cafes. The guidebook assured us we would be accosted by weed sellers with “dreaded hair and tie die t-shirts” but I was disappointed to find these guys looking exactly as they do in London. Still, this did happen approximately seven seconds after we had parked the car and there is something funny about people trying to sell to your Mum.
Dorrigo: As you drive into Dorrigo you pass a sign telling you the population there is 1192. Do they have to change the sign for every birth and death? Do people never move out or in of Dorrgio? Apparently not. In one of the shop windows there is also a “Santa List” of the naughty and nice children that year. It’s definitely aforementioned “one horse town” but by the time we showed up for dinner at 7pm the horse had long gone to bed. The only shop showing life was a Vodka distillery with a man making huge vats of potato and lime vodka. How can people live here? In this sleepy town where people live and die and drink potato vodka.
Christmas in Australia is LAME. There are hardly any decorations or signs of Christmas and every time I catch the odd Christmas advert on the television or radio it just makes me feel really weird. So I have totally missed Christmas this year. Maybe Australia doesn’t need Christmas as much as England does. We are about to enter “The Outback” where I will spend my Christmas on an Australian cattle ranch with no phone signal or Internet. It will defiantly be another “experience”. I’ll write about that and add the rest of my Australia photos before I fly to India on New Years Eve. Sending lots of Christmas love to everyone. X
Thursday, 16 December 2010
Sydney
There was more up my street in Sydney than in Brisbane. As I mentioned, the only thing up Alice St in Brisbane was the Botanical Gardens, but in Sydney Alice St crossed over Kings St in the area of Newtown, a long road full of vintage shops, little bookstores and cafes. Nick (my brother) and I spent the day wandering the length of King St, popping into every interesting little shop and having coffee and beers on the way. I found Newtown from talking to a Chugger (Charity Mugger) because it is a little out of the CBD (Central Business District). It was like Brunswick St (Fitzroy) in Melbourne or Chapel St (in Melbourne) where my first hostel had been.
The other highlights of Sydney for me included The Old Fitzroy pub, which was very close to were I was staying and had a theatre inside it, served delicious Laksas and played a lot of Jonnie Cash and Bob Dylan. The other was a moonlight cinema in Centennial Park, which played films just after sunset on a hill, where you could take your own picnic and beers and sit on massive bean bags in the grass. We went to watch “The Ghost Writer”, while hundreds of flying fox bats flew over our heads and the sun set and the stars popped out.
The Sydney Botanical Gardens were huge and gorgeous, home to 22,000 of the former named bats; the largest bats in the world with a wing span of 1 to 1.5 meters. Sadly, they are slowly killing off all the trees and need to be moved on somehow (although it doesn’t seem to be working). There are also fantastic views of the Sydney Harbour Bridge from the gardens. I walked over the bridge (it cost $195 to climb so I opted to walk) and the views of the harbour from there are stunning. I was a little disappointed with the Opera House. After seeing so many pictures of this iconic building it didn’t really have the effect I thought it would have. It is a beautiful bit are architecture with it’s segment cream pieces (inspiration taken from the sexual mating of turtles…apparently) and shinny glass face, but it seemed dwarfed next to the magnificent bridge. It was littered with fluorescent jackets and steel structures as workers turned the attractive Opera House into “The Oprah House”. As Oprah was visiting on the 14th December (newly christened “Oprah Day”) I couldn’t get anywhere near the windows to see inside. I saw a giant O smoked into the sky, an O constructed on the Sydney Harbour Bridge and “Oprah Watch” all over the television. She isn’t even Australian and yet they hailed her like a Queen. The only option to see inside was a tour of the Opera House, which (like a lot of things in Sydney) was stupidly over priced. Its not like you have to pay to take a look inside the Royal Albert Hall, but every entrance to the Opera House was firmly guarded and that was disappointing.
We caught a ferry to Manly and the northern beaches, which were very beautiful. White sand and lots of swimmers but freezing cold water, even colder than the English Channel, so there was no way I was swimming in it (I can’t understand why so many people were). “The Rocks”, which used to be the centre of Sydney, is now a little network of small streets, old fashioned shops and a market selling food and juices. The CBD is like any other big city and has some good shopping centres, and a monorail (Sky train), as well as buses, a train network and trams. The London names throw me a bit. I walked down Oxford Street, across Hyde Park, through Paddington and could catch a train from Kings Cross, not far from where I was staying. I was staying in Wooloomooloo…definitely not a London name with its eight o’s.
I liked Sydney and could have stayed longer. I don’t rate it as highly as Melbourne but I agree with Oprah when she commented on how friendly and happy everyone is, and how she’s not surprised they are happy because they live in Sydney. Now I have met my family, (my Mum, Dad and brother) and we have flown back to Brisbane and driven to Agnes Water to go diving. Agnes Water is the where the Great Barrier Reef is closest to the coast line, and to dive on the Great Barrier Reef is one of my main reasons for coming to Australia. (I did this yesterday and after teaching it's definately the next highlight to my whole trip - I'll write about it on the next post!) Then we will go and stay with my Mum’s cousins in the real Australian outback on their cattle ranch for Christmas, which should be um, interesting…so I will keep you updated with how that goes…
Three Adventures in Brisbane
As I mentioned before “Brisvegas” wasn’t a patch on
Firstly, holding a Koala has been a life long dream ever since they became my favourite animal at the age of three. We visited Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary, the first and biggest Koala sanctuary in
Tuesday, 7 December 2010
Skydive
It wasn't too scary until the plane door opened and we were ready to jump. Then you can see my reaction of terror! I am pretty petrified. We jumped from 14,000 ft and free fell for about a minute. It was amazing experience. I always wanted to know how it felt to fly...
Australia Photos
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=584411&id=554625160&l=7d3aa01b62
I fly to Sydney tomorrow morning. I'll write again soon...
Much Love xxx