Sunday, April 29, 2012

Pies and Brekkie Reviews

I have spent the last couple of days lazing on the beach. Nothing of note really happened, beside some footy team showing up yesterday morning to go swimming. Imagine 20ish enormous, muscular men in prime physical condition, stripping down to go swimming. No biggie. Sorry, no pictures. I felt like that would cross a line.

I have a few food experiences to update you on- pies and aussie brekkie. I got pies yesterday for lunch- two small ones. One was a beef pie, the traditional pie of choice in Australia, and the other was chicken and vegetables, or pretty much a traditional American chicken pot pie. Naturally, I enjoyed the chicken pie more. There is something just a little sketchy, albeit adventurous about consuming an Aussie meat pie. It is almost like mystery meat, although you're fairly sure it is just ground beef.

This morning, I had decided I was going to go to Sunday brunch for my main meal of the day, so I really did it up. I went to a cafe across the street from the ocean and ordered what was called the "Irish Breakfast." This included eggs, crusty bread, 2 sausages, bacon, hashbrowns, baked beans, and something called white or black pudding. I selected white, thinking that would be the less gross version of whatever they were giving me. Not sure why I felt white is less gross than black, but I I felt like black pudding might be blood pudding, and I couldn't handle that. Behold the amazing platter I was presented:


I did my best to finish off as much as I could, considering this was my one meal today. I ate the eggs, bacon, bread, hashbrown, and most of the beans. I am not a big fan of their sausage, so I ate most of 1 of the two links they gave me- I think they are made of lamb, at least they taste like it. I do not like white pudding. I just googled white pudding to see what it was (courtesy of wiki): "White pudding or oatmeal pudding is a meat dish popular in Scotland, Ireland,[1] Northumberland, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland. White pudding is very similar to black pudding, but does not include blood (good call, Courtney). Consequently, it consists of pork meat and fat, suet, bread, and oatmeal formed into the shape of a large sausage.[2] Earlier versions (pre-1990[3]) often had sheep's brain added as a binding agent. A similar pudding, known as Hog's pudding, is made in Cornwall and Devon though it is much spicier than white pudding, as it contains black pepper, cumin, basil and garlic." Ok, fair enough.

Tomorrow I make my way to the CBD of Sydney. I will apparently have an amazing rooftop few of the harbor bridge and the opera house. I will be in the middle of the town, in the middle of it all. I am sad to see Coogee go, but I may be back sometime. It has been nice to have this laid back week on the beach, but I am excited to get to town and see the opera house again. My week is pretty much planned for me. After checking in tomorrow, I plan to walk around and reacquaint myself with Sydney. Tuesday, I am scheduled for a tour in the evening called Razorhurst in Kings Cross. It is about Kings Cross's violent past (not to scare anyone, but it still has a rather rough reputation these days too, as Sydney's red light district.) Wednesday I am going on a day long Blue Mountain tour. Thursday I will spend bidding Sydney goodbye for now. Friday I fly out to Adelaide to see my Pollock family!

I spent a while this afternoon re-reading my blog from my last trip. It brings memories flooding back and a huge smile to my face to be revisiting those great times. I am so excited to be here again!

Not a huge fan of the self-picture, but when you're traveling alone, you don't have much of a choice!

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Coogee to Bondi, and Back!

I did the famous coastal walk today, from Coogee beach to Bondi, and then back. It was 6km one way, so I walked 12km total (like 7 and a half-ish miles), which isn't like a marathon or anything, but still a big deal, even though it was split in half by an order of fish and chips and a beer.


The map above shows the route I took. It went through areas called Clovelly, Waverley Cemetery (picture an enormous cemetery, on the edge of a cliff, overlooking the ocean- so crazy), Bronte Beach (tonssssss of surfers), Tamarama, and Mackenzie's Point. I was told it would take about 2 hours to get there, so I set out around 10 am and planned to grab lunch in Bondi. Below is a picture from afar of the cemetery overlooking the ocean.


Below is such a gorgeous shot! You can see all the separate beach communities along the walk.



I got to Bondi a little before noon and relaxed a little on the lawn. I watched people and dogs and the surfers in the ocean as I stretched. I decided to grab a bite to eat, so I crossed the street and got fish and chips (below). I am still sometimes unsure how to act in restaurants. It is so laid back here. In America, servers want you in, order and pay, and out. Here, servers are content to let you sit all day at the table after your have gotten your food and eaten. I am not sure if it is proper etiquette to request a check, but I think my server would have left me all afternoon if I hadn't asked for it. It would never be an issue in the states; they are certain to get their money ASAP.



I spent a couple of hours in Bondi before stretching again and starting my race with the sun to get back to Coogee. It seemed like an easier route going back, until I reached the insane number of stairs right before you get to Clovelly. Ugh.

Also, I met these two guys (below) just before I got back into Coogee! Yes, they are as big as they look. Enough to make your skin crawl and to check your hair and clothes and bag before your get back to your room. And this is in Sydney, the big metropolitan city. Imagine what lurks in the real bush...

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Coogee Sun on Anzac Day and Aussie Burgers

Hello from sunny Coogee!

I have been enjoying this quaint little area of Sydney since Bert dropped me off on Monday night. My room is a single, not very roomy, but with a window, a ceiling fan, a TV, and a mini fridge- pretty much the only things I need to live. The grocery is literally 2 doors down, so I am able to store stuff in my room for brekky and lunch. Tuesday I spent a good part of the morning and early afternoon sitting on the stairs at Coogee Beach reading and people watching. I have come to a conclusion- it is good to know that America is not the only country growing bratty kids. Whining is only slightly cuter when in an Aussie accent, but gets old just as fast as it does in America. A sudden thunderstorm rolled in Tuesday afternoon and I took cover for a few hours in my room. I walked down the street to dinner. I got a ham and cheese croissant and an iced coffee; it was soooo good.

Wednesday, today, is Anzac Day. This stands for Australian New Zealand Army Corps and celebrates the day they landed in Gallipoli during WWI. It is a big deal here- bigger than our memorial day, but the same kind of idea. There are parades, memorial services, television coverage, and even cookies (biscuits) for the day. This also means everyone had the day off and flooded my Coogee today. It meant more people watching, but also more whining aussie babies. One little funny tidbit- I overhead a man talking about brownies and talking about how Americans have invented something to put in the pan that gives each brownie an edge. The other people people he was talking to were mezmorized that the yanks had invented something to let you have a chewy edge on each brownie! I couldn't help but chuckle.


I wanted to give this burger place on my street a try, even though I am not crazy about Australian burgers. They add too much to the meat, instead of just letting it be. It's almost like a meatloaf sandwich, but with more spices. I am not a fan. I was hoping that since the place sold gourmet burgers of various types, including duck and kangaroo, maybe they would get a regular burger right. No dice. It looks like I will not have my burger until November. I was getting really down about this thought when I realized it is also the amount of time I have to wait to see my father and grandparents, so I should probably be cool about it since it is just a patty of ground meat.


I spend the rest of the afternoon reading on the beach (such a hard life!) until the sun went down enough that I was getting too cold to stay out. Tomorrow (or on a day I can ensure the least chance of rain) I want to do the famous Bondi to Coogee walk (Or I guess Coogee to Bondi, then back to Coogee.) It is 6 km one way, so I will probably walk in the morning one way, spend the afternoon in Bondi and get lunch, then walk back before the sun sets.)

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Trials and Tribulations at Wahroonga: My First 72 Hours in Oz

Hi All! After some 22+ hours in the air, I made it to Australia in one very tired, somewhat sore, disoriented piece. After clearing customs (side note- it seems my name has been added to some kind of list for airport security! I was pulled aside at RDU for them to do some sort of cloth swipping test in my bag, then was marked to be pulled aside in Aus customs to have a dogs sniff all of my bags! Do I really look like the drug dealer/ airport bomber type? I guess it is just another headache it looks like I will endure in air travel...), with my huge backpack on my back, my green bookbag on my front, and my purse over my shoulder, I stumbled through the airport, which though it had been over a year, was so familiar that I needed no real direction to know where I was going. I found the pay phones, deposited some assortment of the now strange Oz coins I had from my last trip (I will need to relearn this, along with how to order coffee and basics of Australia Rules footy) and called Bert. Someone had turned the volume way down on the phone, but I managed to hear Bert yelling my name on the other end. I told him I would meet him at the Wahroonga train station as soon as I could get there. And so ensued a very eventful morning...

It was still very early, around 7:15 am, but I stumbled down airport hallway to where the train station picked up weary travelers from the airport and catapulted them into the Sydney CBD. I saw the wall of computerized ticket sellers, and typed in where I was going. It quickly occured to me that while I knew the name of the train station, I had no idea what trains to catch to get there. I cancelled out the transaction, realizing I may need to talk to a real Australian ticket seller to find out how to get to Wahroonga. I stumbled up to the counter, and in a jet-lagged, mispronounced mumble, identified where I wanted to go. The ticket seller, visibly amused by my attempt at the strange name and my struggle to stay upright under the exhaustion and probably 150 lbs of baggage, was very helpful, providing me with a map and circling the exact trains I would need to take to reach Bert. I thanked him and attempted to walk down the stairs to the platform without breaking my neck. I looked at the screens reporting where the next train would be stopping and recognized the train stop I needed. I put my bags down to wait the 5 mintues it said it would be until the train arrived. A new batch of less-weary-looking travelers shuffled down the stairs behind me. I don't know why I suddenly looked like an authority on anything, but they took turns asking me about where the trains were heading and if they had the correct one. I did my best to answer, but explained I had just flown in from the other side of the world and was on about 3 hours of intermittent sleep, so do not hold me to the information provided. I caught the train to the central station, packed in with morning commuters, and then the one to Wahroonga without a problem. I will say that it had not hit me that I was actually, truly in Australia until, while on the train, the Opera House suddenly sprange into view, so massive, and I realized I was traveling across the Sydney Harbor bridge on the train. I thought to myself, how lucky all these morning commuters were, to be able to see that sight every morning. None of them looked very enthused, but my sleep-deprived self smiled and almost cried at the sight.

At Wahroonga, around 20 stops down the line and when only me and a quiet Asian girl eating a sandwich were the only people left on the train, I departed. With bags on my back and front and side, I made my way up the stairs to the street, hoping Bert had not had to wait for me long. I walked up and down the sidewalk, not sure where the best place for him to pick me up would be. There was a brick wall separating the road from the sidewalk, so it wouldn't be easy for me to jump into the car if he pulled up. I decided to put my bags down near a visable place and look for him. As I stood there, people walked by, on daily jogs, or walking dogs. An elderly man with a curly haired dog with a very girly name that escapes me now, walked by as slowly as I had seen anyone walk a dog. The dog sniffed my bags and I smiled and petted her. "She'll take any of that she can get," the man said, and I smile as they continued their slow journey down the street. I waited 20 minutes, 40 minutes, nearly an hour, and I was starting to worry. I looked back down on the platform, maybe he walked past me and hadn't seen? Did I have the wrong train stop? No, that couldn't be it, he spelled it for me and I distinctly remember him saying "r- double o", and how many other train stops had that? I had no way to call him with no cell phone, so I asked a passerby if they knew if there was a payphone nearby. There was one! Right down the hill! I carried all my stuff down the hill, now not very visable should Bert come by, but hoping to only take a minute. I picked up the phone and tried to drop in a coin when I saw it- "COIN SLOT JAMMED, CARD ONLY". Fair enough, I figured, and tried my credit card. No dice, it only takes Telestra cards, whatever that is. I begin pacing again, trying to decide what to do. I could catch a cab to his house, but then if he is not there, I would have no way of getting in and no way of calling him. I decide to see if I could buy my prepaid phone plan here and activate my cell phone, or at least see if I could buy this Telestra card the pay phone requested. With all my packs reapplied, I stumbled across the crosswalk and into a newspaper store. Success! I thought, and I spied a sign about Vodafone plans, my cell phone brand. I waited as patiently as I could behind some of the oldest men I have ever seen as they bought lottery tickets, finally giving up and putting my bags down. Tired, sweaty, I am sure looking horrible, I asked the man behind the counter if he sold the prepaid plans or Telestra cards. He wasn't a master of English, but assured me several times he did not sell either of those things, despite the fact it was advertised in his store. Feeling very defeated, fighting tears from sheer exhaustion, I picked up my various bags and heaved them from the store. I went back to my post in front of the train station, still at a loss of what to do.

The old man with the curly dog came walking on their return route, no less than an hour since they passed earlier. "Still waiting to be picked up?" he asked. I jumped on the opportunity, explaining I just needed to borrow his phone for a second to make a local call. He agreed, fumbling with his iPhone for several minutes to get to a keyboard. I thanked him profusely and finally reached Bert. Somehow, there had been a miscommunication and I guess he thought I was going to call him when I got to the train station, although I had no way to do so. He said he would come get me, and so I am forever grateful to the slow-walking old man and his curly haired dog. Bert picked me up within 10 minutes. We were both trying to figure out what had gone wrong. I almost got out of my mouth that I had been afraid he had maybe been in an accident when -***BAM***- we were in an accident.

While we were trying to do an u-turn, a postal deliverer on a motor bike tried to pass us on the wrong side and ended up almost under our front wheel. Bert pulled over the car to speak to the man and I slumped in my seat, trying to decide if it was time to pass out from nerves. The man wasn't hurt and neither the bike nor Bert's car was affected. The rest of the day was uneventful, really just me on the couch fighting to stay awake until a reasonable hour while watching daytime Australian TV. I made it until about 10 pm, but I did sleep on and off all afternoon as well.

Saturday I activated my phone in Hornsby. Joel, the phone guy, actually knew where North Carolina was because he said a girl used to work there from North Carolina. He commented on her accent and affinity for the word "y'all". I said, yep, that's North Carolina. Bert took me to his club for dinner and to watch what he calls "league" which is Aus rugby, which is different from Aus rules football, but from what I can tell is still huge men with little clothing and no padding or helmets attacking each other for a ball. Very entertaining.

Sunday, today, I did almost nothing. I think my sleep is almost back on schedule. I have rediscovered my love from Australian dairy products. I don't understand how they could be so much better than American, but they just are. A couple of things I gathered from my "nothing" of watching tv and reading the paper: Bikies, what they call biker gangs (I love Australians' ability to give things cute names that take all fear and danger out of something) are a huge problem currently. Apparently they use tattoo shops as a front to sell drugs, so they are outlawed from owning tattoo shops (not sure how you enforce that). Someone high up in the government is in trouble for some sort of sex proposition. Another Australian, and one who has an opinion column, thinks the US has 52 states (avid readers of Courtney's Australian blogs will remember last trip that she encountered a tour guide who informed her that the US had 52 states.). Is this something they are teaching wrong in school? Or are they counting Guam and places like that?

Tomorrow I move to Coogee. It is a cute little beach town south of Sydney. I will probably chill a few days, but I need to see the Blue mountains, use my coupon for scuba, and do my king's cross tour before I fly to Adelaide on May 4th.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

ONE WEEK!!!

ONE WEEK!!!

I haven't updated since January, but here is what is happening:

* I fly out in ONE WEEK! April 18th, 4pm. RDU to ATL, then ATL to LAX, then LAX to SYD. I will land in Sydney April 20th, about 7am.

*I am going to stay with my friend Bert the first weekend, until I am thoroughly on Sydney time.

* Monday, April 23rd I will check into a hostel in Coogee beach and apend the next week in my single room lounging the beach, exploring Coogee, traveling to the city when I want.

* I will move to a hostel more in the middle of the city for the next few days. I want to at least take a trip to the Blue Mountains, spend my scuba coupon and tour coupon, and spend a day at the harbour.

* Friday, May 4th, I fly from Sydney to Adelaide to begin my "real life" in Australia. I will be renting a room from my good friend Sarah and her family. I will start looking for a job in or around Adelaide. I will pretend to be Australian!

I am going to try my best to update this blog as frequently as possible. I still have lots to do this next week (I haven't even begun to pack!), but I am trying not to let the stress get to me. I still need to try and see a few people before I leave. And lots of people have promised to visit me (they better!), so hopefully I will not be without some of my favorite Americans for 6 whole months.

Getting Excited!