Australia

Shore Mission

I’m officially a farm girl. Well, maybe not quite. Do others believe I am? It is quite apparent they do not because today, two days after arrival, seeing that I have no jet lag they put this city girl in a car to visit the coast. We are on our way to Forster (pronounced foster in Aussie-speak), a coastal town in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales, on country of the Worimi People, Australia. 

But first, we shall stop in Gloucester (pronounced gloster in Aussie-speak) which is the town closest to the farm to do some op shopping (op shop = thrift store). I once had a collectible booth in an antique mall and got great satisfaction from treasure hunting for things at estate sales and thrift shops. Some items I repurposed and refurbished, some remained as is; all gave me joy. So I’m excited. This nation country opens itself to discovery. 

The first op shop we hit is Reviva which is also a recycling center. It’s airy and clean and it immediately becomes a favorite of mine when it presents me with things that remind me of my mom. I find and buy a French press that is dusty but new and jump up and down (in my head) for good coffee is something I don’t want to go without. I also love their tagline “we turn second-hand into second chances”. I think I may apply this to people. 

The French press. Many a good cup of coffee in my future to start my mornings right.

My mom always had a little container, exactly like this one, handy (hers was red) for her lipstick, which was the only make-up my dad ever allowed her to wear.

Next we go into Lifeline. Already I like them due to the name and when I find out that they help to financially support local centers, counseling services, telephone crisis support training and suicide prevention programs, I add them to my “immediately like” and will support list. 

On to Forster after our thrift shop morning. There are “rock pools” all over the coast. Some are natural pools of seawater that form on the rocky intertidal shore and others, often referred as ocean baths, are man-made seawater pools. The one pictured is being repaired. It’s drizzling so I wouldn’t go in even if it wasn’t fenced.

As we go further on we stop at the at a lookout in Pebbly Beach and are greeted by what I am sure is a turkey. It comes as a reminder that Thanksgiving in the U.S. is soon and that this one is probably counting its blessing that he/she does not reside there, where probably it would not see another day. But no, though it resembles one, this one is not even closely related to the American turkey. Its an Australian brushturkey or gweela, a species native to Australia. It’s a clumsy flyer that flies only when threatened or when it roosts in trees at night. 

Before I realize that this is actually a tomb (or not?) I read something that could easily apply to my home town: “Have you ever seen the untamed beauty each time a wave breaks in the ocean. Have you ever felt the coolness of the water as the sun breaks crystallizing the entire ocean. The lip crashes on your shoulder forcing you deeper into the hollow tube. The beauty of life is the personal sensation. This area here is one of nature’s great beauties”. Good for you Robyn Anne Hughes who, born on a familiar year, died at the young age of 24 for eliciting this dedication: “It’s not the quantity of life but the quality. This lady had quality. A beauty as natural as this area, her resting place.” 

Don’t quite know what these locks are for or symbolize since there is no engraving on them. 

I’m still awake and definitely enjoying the view. 

To bid us goodbye, magpies come around. They make me smile. I once was called that. The Australian Magpie is well known for its beautiful vocalizations, and its species name derives from the Latin for “flute player”. My voice is loud but not beautiful. I wonder why I was nicknamed that. 

It’s a mystery to me where I will be next. Chilling at the farm or discovering new land?

Come along; let’s find out together!

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Bucca Wauka?

And off we go! To what or where I still am not fully cognizant of. Neither am I fully aware that I am in Australia. What I am feeling is the warmth of a friend’s welcoming embrace… and of the outside. It’s almost summer here though the sun and the temperature are screaming that the “almost” does not apply. It is “only” about 90° F (about 32° Celsius for the rest of the world). Desert hot, if it weren’t for the humidity being 89%. I don’t mind. After an almost 19-hour journey I have arrived. I left on the 17th and arrive on the 19th, losing a day of my life. Does that make me a day younger? Oops, no, it makes me a day older. Oh well. 

We take a  bus to where the car is. And now we really are on our way. I stopped wondering to where, just happy to be in Australia. Just in case I didn’t know where I was I see the famed and iconic Sydney Harbour Bridge. To the side is the Opera House which I barely got a glance of. Excited to know we are crossing it. Hope to do it on foot as well (like the Brooklyn Bridge walk). 

We have a 4-hour drive home so to break it up a bit we stop at a supermarket where I stock up on items I eat and get disgusted by the sight of Vegemite jars and tubes all over. The spread is made of leftover brewer’s yeast extract, blended with salt, malt extract, and vegetable extracts like celery and onion. It is also fortified with B vitamins, including niacin, thiamin, riboflavin, and folic acid. No amount of fortification will make this thing palatable though. My apologies to Australians but Vegemite is utterly disgusting. 

I also get a reminder of my friend Kitty. This mug, at $13 USD is quite expensive though. Perhaps an indication of what’s to come.

When we arrive at the farm it is pitch black. We go over to Dean’s sister’s house to say hello to her, her boyfriend Mark, and their dad, Dennis. It is a brief visit because I think I am definitely ready to close my tired eyes in spite of my brief adrenaline surge. I made it awake to 11 pm. It is said that to avoid jet lag you must adjust to the time zone immediately. Hopefully I won’t feel jet lagged tomorrow. 

I wake up at my usual time of 7:00 am to the sight of trees and a look of my closest new neighbor, a horse that I later find out was outcast into his own paddock near the cabin because he bullies the other horses on the farm. There are 7 horses on the property. Simone competes on an obstacle course on Belle a white horse. Mark competes wrangling cows on Jeffrey.

I am to be formerly introduced to them later on. I first go to get acquainted with the dogs. There’s Sally, a feisty lovable little girl (a miniature fox terrier). She’s the queen of the castle. Definitely the boss. She puts Starsky and Hutch in their place. They are kelpies, working herding dogs. The work part is not their thing though. We fetch them to go walk around the farm since today will be my day to adjust to the time change and get familiar with my surroundings. The dogs are certainly in their element. Hutch diving into a pool of water that makes him quite wet. I try to stay away but fail as he kindly showers me with a good shake. There’s also a black kelpie that goes to work with Mark every day. They are all so lovable.

Flowers in full bloom brighten my day. Olive trees remind me of travel to Israel and where I saw fields of them. When Simone bought this lot it was full of them I hear. There are trees everywhere each beautiful in its own way. Like us humans I would guess. Doesn’t everybody have at least one redeeming quality?

It’s been such a relaxing, calming, day. Surprisingly I, the city girl, am absolutely comfortable and in my element. The day has been sunny but all of a sudden the wind picks up and the rain falls. Did I bring the rain with me or is this Bucca Wauka’s way of complaining of having one more inhabitant? (I can’t stop giggling even when I write the name).

And as the rain falls -softly at first, quite brutally next- with the winds picking up, I hear Mark on the tractor spreading fertilizer pellets so the horses can have more healthy grass to feed on. Yep, I’m on a farm alright.

Come with me next for a day in town and on the shore.

Categories: Australia | Tags: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Where to Now?

My life has been shaped by goodbyes. Though I don’t like parting, it opens the door to discovery and the sweetness of hellos. I am trying hard to not let myself feel the ache of the one I am about to face, for it is only temporary. I am leaving the town that has been home to many triumphs, a good amount of disappointments, of myself and others, but one of the few cities I have really felt as home. One that I have marveled at and been frustrated by.

So how do I bid farewell to Los Angeles? The first thing that comes to mind when mentioning La La Land (the affectionate nickname of my city) is Hollywood. It is where I forged my career and it is where I am headed to say au revoir. I have surfed the tides of the entertainment business for a while, so I find it apropos to walk Hollywood Boulevard for that purpose.

Grauman’s Chinese Theater
where stars had their shoes and hands embedded.
1958 is a year I’m kind of fond of…
and this is where the first stars were set.

Since I am a bit hesitant of this 3-month trip, I have been stress eating non-stop; until I get on the plane I do not foresee an end to it (I initially hoped to curtail insatiable appetite by stopping at my bank and having a cup of coffee) but go on to eating a pizza and fried cheese and to top it off, dive into an overpriced sundae.

I have made my farewell. In response, my city cries. Rain is unusual here but we had been warned that a storm was coming and surprisingly it has been raining softly for 3 days and when I head to the airport it is coming down hard.

I love airports and when I approach The Bradley International Terminal B, my little heart is pumping hard with excitement. I haven’t left the country in a year and a half which is an inordinately long time for me. I am ready.

I am in a full on international mode so when I approach my gate and see a Spanish tapas bar/restaurant I am drawn towards it knowing full well it will not be the best or satisfy my palate. I order a vermouth and buñuelos. The vermouth is listed as an Aperol and the buñuelos were ham and cheese. $31 USD later, I fail to be reminded of my time in Spain. This has provided me, nonetheless, with two wonderful conversations with fellow travelers.

I’m flying an airline I have never flown before, Fiji Airways to Sydney. Stopping in Nadi, Fiji. I have warned my friend Dean, who is coming to pick me up, that should I not show up he could find me lazing on the beach in Fiji, an island that I have wanted to visit for quite a while now. But of course I will not. Or will I?

I am advised at the counter that the flight to Nadi (11 hours) is 97% booked. In plain English, “Ma’am, there is no way you will be able to relax/sleep on this flight.” But the gods (or/and my Orisha, Yemayá) are in my corner. As I go up the narrow aisle to my seat, the passenger in the aisle seat in my row, swoops my carry-on up and blocks everyone entering so I can go to my window seat calmly.

They close the aircraft door and there is no one between us! They look at me and say that they’ll be back to bring my carry on back down but they are going to sit next to their cousin. They are part of 25 people on this plane headed to a Samoan family reunion. They are so joyful. What a good vibe it is. Better yet, my row has just turned into a first class bed!

I’m also loving that Fiji Airways is replacing items like plastic cutlery and cups with sustainable options and has started a program to recycle plastic water bottles that are brought back to Fiji for recycling, rather than being incinerated. 

We are served a snack (it’s about midnight by now) the pizza being even less appetizing than how it looks in this very bad photo. Surprise… Fiji water is actually from Fiji!

The pilot wakes me up 9 hours later, announcing that we are only 2 hours away from landing in Nadi. I get breakfast with horrible pancakes. Only the fruit is tolerable. And before I know it we are in Nadi!

The sky mesmerizes me. It is so very spectacular I can’t keep my eyes off of it. Unfortunately these photos don’t do it justice. I have seen many sunsets and sundowns from planes but this, this one leaves me breathless.

I go through security to go into the airport even when in transit. The Nadi airport is as small and clean as I expected though not as quaint as I would have wanted. Everyone in it, however, is so incredibly nice and helpful. Even at Burger King where I wolf down an $8 USD hamburger and a Coke. Don’t judge, I didn’t eat much on the plane. There’s definitely island vibes all around. What do you think… should I stay?

Before going onto my next flight I go through Australian security. This time I am not so lucky and sit on the aisle seat in the middle row. There’s a young couple, a Canadian and a Colombian, sitting next to me. They are adorable and we become travel pals.

Five hours later (which frankly, felt longer than my 11-hour initial flight) I am picking up my suitcase which was the first one to come out, going through Australian customs in about 10-minutes flat, getting some coffee at the café, chatting with an Aussie guy that had just come back from 5 months in Vietnam, all while I wait for my friend to pick me up. And only a bit later, Tutu, my koala local guide, is staring at me and ready to give me the welcoming tour!

There is so much to come. Bucca Wauka awaits. Come with me!

Categories: Australia, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Sydney | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

QVB and Legally Blonde

Today we are visiting Queen Victoria.  Well, not quite, for that we would have to travel back in time.  I’m visiting the Queen Victoria Building (QVB as it is fondly named) in CBD (Central Business District), Sydney.

It’s the building on the left.  It was built in 1898.  History in stone.  Queen Victoria Building, CBD, Sydney, Australia

And here she is presiding over her domain.

QVB, George Street, CBD, Sydney, Australia

She doesn’t seem jolly, does she?

QVB, Sydney, AustraliaAs soon as I walk in I know I’ll like the place.  Lovely tiles.

It’s an upscale mall.  Most well-known international and the best local designers are here.  I dare not enter any of the shops though. I am already having enough problems with the prices of regular things.  Don’t want to think how high the prices in these stores are.  Besides, I have a knack to pick out the most expensive item in any store I go into.  Sydney, Australia   Queen Victoria Building, Sydney, Australia

So I concentrate on the patterns and burst of colors as I go on the escalator.

QVB, Sydney, Australia

I’m getting dizzzzzyyy!

I have a weakness for colors and stained glass windows, and light coming through and patterns and architecture and history attached and all of them combined!  Stained Glass, Stairs, Color  Stairs, Color, Stained Glass   Stairs, Stained Glass, Color

Unfortunately I do not bring my good camera and capture these images on my small pocket one. I have a small purse and high heels on today for we are going to the theater to see Legally Blonde Theater Ticketsand maybe to the casino.

We drive to Darling Harbour, another busy, bustling shopping center that has a marina.  It is a harbor after all.    Sydney, Australia

The Star Casino is the only casino in Sydney right now and is where the Sydney Lyric Theater resides.   We are a bit early so we walk around.  Sydney, Australia

Lyric Sydney Theater, Sydney, AustraliaWe walk around for about an hour before going into the theater.    Though not exactly embraced very enthusiastically on Broadway it did have good reviews out of which I like Variety’s the best: “It may not be bulging with subtext or boast a score for the ages, but this pinksapoppin funhouse delivers exactly what it promises.”   Click here to read a review of the Sydney ensemble of Legally Blonde.  You come out smiling and that is good enough for me.

Of course, though I can’t hear the hypnotic song of the slot machines, I know they are there and they pull me in as mermaids seduce sailors with their songs.  Hopefully it will not have the same end result on me.  I am happy to report that although I did not win much I left the casino with a bit more money than I went in with.  I may go on a supermarket spree tomorrow with it!

Categories: Australia, Darling Harbour, Queen Victoria Building, Sydney, Sydney Lyrical Theater, The Star Casino | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Walk, But Not on By… and not Laboring on Labour Day

Though I’m living in the Bronte/Waverly area and I can see the ocean from my window I have yet to go to Bronte Beach or finish the upper part of the Coastal Walk which goes from Bronte to Coogee.  I’m sort of in the mid-point.  So today we are off to walk it all!

It’s October 1 and Labour Day (labor for Americans), a national holiday in Australia.  Though a bit on the chilly side the sun is out and it is just the perfect weather to walk around. Being an Angelino has diminished my tolerance to cold and at the least breeze I am shivering!  Don’t know how I am going to handle the real cold in New Zealand.

Keep healthy, Sydney, Australia

Healthy Body, Healthy Mind!!

The street has these clever signs painted on the floor indicating what you will find ahead and the benefits of walking.  Wish I had taken the time to photograph them all, they were so amusing.  I took a photo of only one and it was far from being the best.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bronte Park, Sydney, AustraliaWe have to cross Bronte Park to get to the beach.

It’s literally like venturing into a forest.  Bronte Park, forest, Sydney, Australia

 

The green starts thinning out eventually and the most wonderful blue peeks through.  Trees, forest, Bronte Park, Sydney, Australia    Blue Sky, Bronte, Sydney, Australia

Up till now the park had little to no people but as we see the beach ahead of us so come the masses.  It’s a holiday, it’s beautiful outside and hence it is crowded.  And though I am not one for crowds there is a festive air that makes it all okay.     Bronte, Sydney, Australia

Bronte, Sydney, Australia

Bronte Beach, Sydney, AustraliaPeople don’t seem deterred by the Dangerous Currents sign.

 

 

 

 

After all, the surfers here all seem to really know their thing…  Bronte Beach, Sydney, Australia

Even when the seagulls just stare and wonder what the heck they are doing.

Coast Walk, Bronte, Sydney, Australia

Why do they surf?

The sea is rougher here and rockier making it more fun to photograph.  This photo doesn’t show me at my best but it does show well how I felt.

Happy 🙂

Bronte Beach, Sydney, Australia       Bronte Beach, Sydney, Australia

We climb heading out towards the Coastal Walk path and what I hope will be a bit away from the crowd.   Bronte, Coastal Walk, Sydney, Australia

I still am just smitten with the custom of having these tidal pools/swimming pools next to the beach.    Sydney, Australia

Ah this dilemma of mine.  Should I point my lens towards the rocks?  Coastal Walk Wall, Sydney, Australia

Sydney, Australia Or towards the water?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Further up there’s Waverly Cemetery which has to have the best view ever!  If I were to be buried I want to be in this prime real estate spot.

Waverly, Sydney, Australia

This is really resting in Peace!

And if I were a lawn bowling enthusiastic I want to belong to this club on top of the hill with the most incredible view.  Bowling club, Sydney, Australia

Of course if I were a bowler I would be looking down as this one is, and not out.  Sydney, Australia

This chatty father and son duo were having so much fun!  Turns out they are from the bowling club close to home that was closed today so they all landed at this club to play. Sydney, Australia

Another beach.  Another swimming pool.  Sydney, Australia

This one was rockier.  Sydney, Australia

 

Some mosaic steps beckon us to take a short cut.  

 We continue on.  Sydney, Australia

 The sun is hiding and as we go we see a photo shoot.  She must be freezing!  

 We end up in Coogee.  Time to take the bus back ‘cause we are definitely walked out!

Categories: Bronte, Bronte Beach, Bronte Park, Coastal Walk, Coogee, Sydney, Waverly, Waverly Cemetery | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Seeing Red and so much more…

Starting today with last night won’t confuse you, right?  It seems perfectly normal to me since last night we were surprised with an offer from a friend of Dean’s of two tickets to see a play I knew nothing about:  Red by John Logan, an American playwright.   A play I should have been well aware of since it won six Tony awards in 2010.  It’s about an episode of a Russian/American painter’s life in the late 50’s: Mark Rothko.  Only two actors in it. Quite intense and I thoroughly enjoyed it.  We went into a pizza place Pizzeria Rio afterwards.  The owner is Greek and the pizza was wonderful.

I was not about to let the remainder of my 24-hour double-decker fun go to waste and since I realized Bondi Rd. (a street very close to home) was on the bus’ route, I headed over there.   Unfortunately, Citysightseeing Tours stops are not clearly marked –in fact, not marked at all- and I couldn’t find one, so I walked over to Bondi Beach where I knew there was one.  Though still on the breezy side it was a lovely day and off I went.

Yesterday I learned that “Bondi” or “Boondi” is an Aboriginal word meaning water or noise of water breaking over rocks.  The Australian Museum records show that Bondi means a place where a flight of nullas (nulla being an aboriginal hunting stick) took place.   Bondi Surf Bathers’ Life Saving Club is the world’s first surf lifesaving club.  Bondi Beach, Lifeguard, Sydney, Australia   After asking around I finally found the Tour Bus Stop but have to wait about 20 minutes before their first pick up at 10:00 am.  So I sit on a mosaic bench and stare at the beach.  Breeziness turns the temperature to cold.  Beach, Bondi Beach, Sydney, Australia  When the bus arrives it takes me up a street I had not been to before. We are headed away from the beach. Dover Heights, Sydney, Australia

It gives me a different perspective and view of the city.   Dover Heights, Sydney, Australia

We go through an area called Dover Heights which I really liked.  Of course it’s one of the most expensive areas in the city.  Property values are above $2 million. It’s hard to avoid views of water no matter where you go.  Sydney, Australia

We go back towards the CBD (City Business District) and we pass Woolworths, Woolworth food store, Sydney, Australia a store that reminds me of the now defunct Woolworth’s of my youth though this one is essentially a food store.

That’s another bus like the one I’m on and The Sydney Tower Eye I went up on yesterday.  It’s a Westfield mall on the first five floors. Sydney Tower Eye, Westfield mall, Sydney, Australia I love that the buildings here have names.  This was one of my favorites.  Sydney, Australia  Town Hall, built in 1875 maintains its dignity while being restored by the scaffolding being cloaked with a veil imprinted with its original façade.  Town Hall, built 1875, Sydney, Australia This Coca-Cola sign is heritage protected.  How lucky for Coke that their ad is a historic landmark!  Heritage protected, landmark, Coke billboard  Coke billboard, Sydney, Australia   After going through city, the bus loop takes me back to where I started.  I have to get off since my 24 hours officially end at around 1:00 pm.

It’s quite chilly so I’m craving something warm. I stop at Chocolatería San Churro which caught my attention when I arrived.    Touring is serious business and considering the weather, I succumb to a cup of hot chocolate before I walk back home.

Back on the road with my legs as transportation I see graffiti that makes me smile…  Graffiti, Park Bench, Bondi, Sydney, Australia   And graffiti takes baffles me, this one is inside an apartment.  Graffiti, Bondi, Sydney, Australia

Though Sydney people are not exactly friendly and outgoing I love how courteous they are.  Something that is reflected even on their mailboxes…

No Junk Mail

Respectfully Decline…

They even give reasons for rejecting things.  This photo is out of focus but it’s kind of appropriate it is so.

No Junk Mail

Your Junk Mail Will Go Unread!

My artist side was fascinated by a whole window display that started off with an explanation of what art is.

Art, Storytelling

Art is About Life

The rest of the window display explained that through the months, a piece of a story would be added and illustrated through found and borrowed objects.  I spent a while reading the story and saddened that it also had a good-bye note saying that the storyteller/artist was asked to vacate.

Storytelling, Art

A story unfolds…

I’m getting hungry and start searching for a reasonable place to eat and find a fish place, The One That Got Away, (half fish market, half fast food restaurant) that has a whole instruction manual on how to order.

Instructions to Order at The One That Got Away

I’m not reading all this just to be able to order!

The One Who Got Away menuAs I order a guy asks me where I’m from and starts talking to me.  I am surprised by the fact that he is a local, they don’t normally approach you and initiate a conversation.  But he was charming.  We exchanged some travel stories, he told me about the big Footy (Australian Rules football) that was on and that he was headed out to the stadium.

Today would be a day of conversation.  When he left, I approached a couple that were talking in Spanish.  He was from Uruguay and she from Argentina.  They shared my same thoughts.  They were shocked at how expensive Australia was even when they knew it wouldn’t be cheap.  They had planned to stay about a month and a half but were returning in a few days after being here a month.   The lady on the left was also speaking Spanish to her mom as she fed her.  It was obvious that her mom had Parkinson’s. My mom had Parkinson’s and their interaction brought back so many memories.  I still miss her so very much.

The One Who Got Away, Sydney, Australia

The One That Got Away

I still have a ways to go and decide to explore a supermarket and get some things to snack on at home.  Found a brand that reminded me of home.  🙂

Latina!!

The city reminds me once again that even with the chill, it is Spring.   I go by a flower store with orchids, trees in full bloom and flowers at ground level.             Orange Flowers

As I get close to the apartment (flat for Aussies and Brits) the bowling club (lawn bowling for us) is in white.

This is how I picture lawn bowling.  So civilized.

Young Bowling Fan

 

The church a block from the apartment is usually closed.  Today, as I pass, it bids me to come in.     

Australia is a very laid back country.  Even the signs take a rest at times…   My turn now.

Categories: Australia, Bondi Beach, Bronte, Dover Heights, Kings Cross, Queen Victoria Building, Town Hall | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Double Decker Fun and in London I Am Not

The washer dryer for our floor is very conveniently located next to the apartment and since I have woken up early I decide to be domestic and do a load of laundry.  I go out in my pajamas for I intend to climb back into bed and write my blog.  And I do so, however I am not alone.  Sox decides that I am an okay human to cuddle up to and as I go into bed he jumps up and snuggles.  I try to put my computer somewhere on my lap but Sox is quite big and heavy and is already asleep.  And I wouldn’t want to disturb him.  cat  cat shoe repairI have other errands to run once my laundry is done and, fortunately, Sox decides he will continue his nap under the sun so I am free to go to the shoe repair place.  I have brought my Born boots that served me so well in the fall when I went to Paris and I hope that they will keep my feet warm and dry in the cold that we will encounter in New Zealand.  But the heels are worn and I want to have them in tip-top shape for the trip.   Once I hand them in I’m off to the bus (I’m so glad to have my bus pass.  Bus Pass This is a pre-pay only bus. Bus stop) that will take me to Circular Quay which is where I saw a stop for the City Sightseeing Hop on-Hop offbus that I am taking today.

The tourist bus stop is in front of the Customs House (which is a library now, as you must know by now).  The place is not very busy today and a Silver Gull (the most common of gulls around here) is the one who greets me.  Customs House, Sydney, Australia  Silver Sea Gull

  Today I am focused on reflections and the juxtaposition of old and new construction.  Sydney has a lot of that to offer.  Reflections, Old and New, BuildingsBuildings, Old vs. New, Sydney, Australia    But I am visually digressing.  I must get my tourist mode on and jump on the Sydney Sightseeing double-decker bus to get a lay of the land and get an idea of what areas I would want to revisit.  The bus is $40 for 24 hours.  It’s a bit breezy today but I am just taking the plunge.  Here we go…  City Sightseeing bus, double decker bus We pass the area of Kings Cross that I would equate a bit to 42nd St. in New York when it was filled with adult entertainment both in the buildings as on the streets.  Love Machine Woolloomooloo with its converted warehouses (into apartments –flats for the Aussies- on the upper floors and hip restaurants on the ground floor) also offers a really nice view of the city.  May be a place I would like to revisit.  Woolloomooloo, Sydney, Australia  Woolloomooloo, Sydney, Australia

Harry’s Café de Wheels is famous for its meat pies which is a staple for Australians.   Harry's Meat Pies, Woolloomooloo, Sydney, Australia Terrace Houses, terraced housing, sydney, AustraliaTerrace houses are my new obsession.  They were built in the 1800’s and are heritage protected so, at least on the outside, they are exactly as they were back then.  They are everywhere and my camera likes them just as much as I do so please bear with me for I will bring them to you a lot.    Terrace Houses, Terraced housing, Sydney, Australia

Mary’s Cathedral will definitely also bring me in at some point. St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney, Australia

 The new always follows and this is the RTA (Road and Transportation Authority) headquarters building.  

Back to the old.  Central Station’s (train terminal) clock.  Second to the Customs House it is a very common meeting point.  Central Station Clock, Sydney, AustraliaCentral Station, Sydney, Australia

Onward to Darling Harbour where the only casino in Sydney is.  It is also a huge shopping center.  Bustling.

    

Still liking the new/old overlapping.       And still enjoying looking at now familiar fixtures from a not so common perspective.  Here is the Harbour Bridge from below. And the top of old buildings at eye level.   So far this has been a “hop on and just don’t get off” bus for me but as soon as I spot the Sydney Tower Eye I know I’m hopping off and getting on that elevator to the top.   Bus Driver, please stop!  He did.  I buy a ticket for the Tower at $25 so I won’t have to wait on line and though it would later turn out that there was no line, I did save $1 by buying it on the bus.  As expensive as Sydney is, every little bit counts!  Just in case I am not going to get dizzy enough up on top, the stairs to get to the fourth floor from where the elevator departs, is dizzying enough! There is a Skywalk where you actually walk outside but it’s very windy, you have to change into what looks a skydiving outfit, I’m scared of heights, I can’t take my camera and it costs $40 so I am content to just look outside through the windows.  The photos speak for themselves so I’ll shush up now and let you enjoy.  

 

        

  It’s getting late      so I must take the ride down  (2 ½ min)     I take the double-decker to a few blocks from home.  Turns out I could have taken it there all along.  Ay!

I delight in the snapshots of daily entertainment the bowling club provides me as I walk home.       I look up and love what I see.   And once home am happy that it is not dark enough and I can still grab a quick view of the water from my window.    Feeling almost as if I’m a part of it all here.        The local newspaper, The Australian

Categories: Australia, Central Station, Circular Quay, Customs House, Kings Cross, Ramblings, Sydney, Sydney Harbor, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Woolloomooloo | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

On the Move

Today, 27th of September, we have another change of address.  We are subletting an apartment in Bronte.  It is a close walk to the beach, really on the border of Waverly and Bronte.

Espresso, Kitchen

Getting My Caffeine Fix!

The owner is an American from Boston.  He is at the apartment when we arrive which was good since he showed me how to use his espresso machine.  Yay!!!!  I won’t have to go in search of a café for my morning caffeine fix.  There it is… in the far corner.

Studio in Bronte

Home till we go to New Zealand

I don’t hear a Bostonian accent and it turns out he has been here for 15 years.  However he has American mayo, mustard and hot sauce in the fridge so he still hangs on to some American customs.  Mayo here is nauseatingly sweet, as is the tartar sauce. I am liking this place already.  The studio is nice and airy with pretty much everything that you could need.

Bill is going to Cambodia and I am immediately jealous.  But what am I saying?  I was there and I am now in Australia all in one year.  And New Zealand is next.  I think how fortunate I have been.  This year has been truly chockfull of incredible experiences.

AlleywayWe also have a cat.  Though he doesn’t technically belong to the apartment since it’s Bill’s girlfriend’s cat who lives two apartments down the hall.  But he visits… a lot.

Cat

Meet Sox

And fancies himself as the local “Don”

Cat

Overseeing His Territory

You can’t see it in this photo but we can see the ocean from here.  

The day is spent unpacking and making myself at home and when I wake up the next day I am ready to become Lidia The Explorer once more!  I am dropped off not far from the Circular Quay where the impressive Sydney Opera is.  I choose to come back to this area since I am familiar with it.  Tomorrow I will be more adventurous.   Besides, I needed a place to meet someone who I have been emailing with, Dianne.  I belong to a travel group on-line called The Travelzine.  We have GTG (get-together) with local people from the group when someone visits.  It is really a lovely set of people.

Already I am enjoying the walk.  I like to walk leisurely and capture familiar scenes from unfamiliar viewpoints.

Train Tracks

Train Tracks from Above

It is around 10 am and the city looks almost deserted.  This is a city that sometimes makes you wonder if it really is inhabited.

Street

I am spotting a yacht I wouldn’t mind being on.

Yacht

I forgo the water and head inland where I will meet with my Travelzine friends.  The easiest and most recognizable place is the Customs House which is a library now.  Makes me smile that the street has a reminder as to where to look before you cross.  My mind adds “You, clueless visitor, do not cross before looking both ways or else you will be run over.”

But it would  be hard to be run over here ‘cause drivers are -as a rule- super courteous towards pedestrians.

There’s a bird roaming around the street.  Nobody pays any head to it.  I figure this is Aussie’s equivalent of pigeons.  I’ll have to find out what they call it.   The photo isn’t a good one –the darn thing would not pose- but I think I will easily be able to capture a good one on other walks.    Sydney is starting to bloom.  Keep forgetting that it’s spring.  This is a reminder for me.  Flowers

I get to the Customs House. A local meeting point and a building you will see in more of my posts.  Customs House, Sydney, Australia

Though I was going to avoid the harbor, it beckons and after I find my new friends Dianne and Murray we head to the water for a drink and a chat.  After a few hours I say good-bye and head out to do some more exploring.

These stairs try to guide me back up to land.  Stairs  But I do not climb them and am rewarded with the image of this duck, calmly swimming in the harbor among ferries, yachts, and others.    Duck

I am feeling a bit tired.  The bus pass comes out.  Bus PassYou can buy these bus passes in most newspaper stands.  Handy to have since some buses are “pre-paid only”.

Once back in my neighborhood I am reminded by this sign that though we speak the same language I may actually need (considering the accent and the slang) a dictionary to translate some things.

Do Not Queue

Translation: Do Not Block the Intersection!

 Tomorrow I am taking a sightseeing double-decker bus and expanding my horizon.  

Categories: Australia, Bronte, Customs House, Sydney Harbor | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Out On The Farm

We drive about an hour to Peat’s Ridge where Dean’s sister lives.  It will be our home until the weekend.  I don’t see much along the way since it’s pretty dark outside.  We arrive late night but Simone has waited up for us even when she has to wake up quite early to prepare Lily (her horse) and herself and go off to compete the next day.

Morning comes and I wake to the most tranquil of settings.   It is quiet.  Really quiet.  It is so conducive to just relaxing.  I make my morning tea and with my cuppa (Aussie speak for a cup of tea) I open the door and go towards the gate I opened last night in pitch darkness.

Wisteria gives a touch of color along the fence which I thought was lavender (though I have a green thumb I would not be able to identify most plants).  Fortunately Marty, Simone’s boyfriend, knows them all and later helped me name them.  I cut a branch filled with flowers and put it in and I sit with my Mac on the porch to catch up with friends.

I’ve been told to go up the hill for a good walk.  

I think it’s because I love to travel so much that I have a slight fascination towards paths.  So this one is calling to me.  Off I go.  

More flowers along the way which Marty would identify as  Gymea Lilies  You have to look up for these since the flower blooms at the end of a long stalk.  

These two horses held my attention.  I was curious about the patch on the white one’s eyes.  I watched them interact.  It looked as if the brown one was looking after the white one.  He didn’t leave her side.  Later, Simone would tell me that one was blind in one eye and that the brown one was 30 years old, pretty ancient for a horse.  They are the best of buddies and are always close to each other.  

I was going to take a right at the end of the road and go to a Tough Mudder competition that was being held in the area but decided to go back to the house.  Why would anyone want to stress their body to that limit is beyond my comprehension.

As I return the old tree -it is bigger than the house itself- commands my attention.  

Marty comes home.  Simone comes home.  She’s placed third in the dressage competition and scored really well on the other.  Dean comes home.  Dinner in front of the TV and catching Big Brother Australia.  I might be hooked.

Today, Monday, Sept. 26 we are going to Terrigal.

It is a charming village.  The bay is filled with boats.  

This combination of a Sea Rescue and a boat named Dream Catcher attracted me.  Perhaps Sea Rescue is rescuing a dream that may have escaped the Dream Catcher?  Don’t shoot me… I spin tales from very little.  

We go grab a bite to eat at the kiosk on the beach.  Today’s menu is Fish and Chips (French Fries to Americans).    

As I eat I look up, and wonder why these pelicans have chosen to pose on an electrical pole as opposed to the lovely tree they have right next to it.   Up close the bird’s eye looks almost painted on.

 

The sun is coming down so off to Coles it is to get stuff to cook dinner with.   Simone’s son is coming to dinner.

The next day I learn that two little foals have been born that morning and I am taken to see them.  They’re in a field with their two moms.  One of the mares is colicky which can be dangerous for her so she is closely monitored by her owners and vet. The other mare, Gypsy, is in the middle of the field with her brown and white foal.  She sees us at the fence and comes halfway and stands there staring at us and then calmly turns around and goes back to the foal.  She has given us a warning and expects to stay away.  Mothers of all types are immensely protective of their offspring.   What a treat it was to see this.

The rest of the days before we relocate to Bronte, I spend the day relaxing, working around the house, and sharing meals and TV time with Marty and Simone at night.  Really enjoying being part of their daily life.

Categories: Australia, Peats Ridge, Sydney, Terrigal | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Bye, Bye Bondi

It’s Saturday, September 22.  Tonight we head over to Dean’s sister’s house in Peats Ridge.  So today I pack in the morning so that I can have the rest of the day to say good-bye to Bondi Beach.  It has truly been wonderful to be at a beach in an apartment where I got to know my neighbors and surroundings and live a bit as a local.

I was going to do the Coastal Walk once again but decide to stay close to home.  It is the weekend and the weather is still beautiful so the people are out and about the beach.

The grass along the beach is also packed with people enjoying the sun.  Perhaps these are the people who do not consider sand between the toes as enjoyable or romantic but still want to be at the beach. I can’t resist some of the graffiti walls and as I pass I photograph.  

I cross the street into Bondi and am fascinated by the mosaic benches.  No one seems to notice them or care.  No one is even sitting on them.  I just photograph them and do not listen to them beckoning for me to sit down since I have barely started my exploration today. 

  

I’m hungry and consider eating at one of the fish places on the beach but decide to go further into the town itself. I pass Gertrude and Alice  that seems to be a café but basically has books outside for sale.  I continue and then make a U-turn.  Has been a while since I’ve heard the name Gertrude.  I imagine very prim and proper women having tea around an inviting fireplace when I read it.  Need to investigate this place. People are having coffee and I smell food.  I go in and it is in fact a café and bookstore.  It’s cozy and I’m digging the vibe inside.

Once done I go back home where I will wait to be picked up and head to our next home: Peats Ridge which is about 45 minutes from town. After getting into the apartment and checking all is ready to move I go outside and as the sun goes down I bid Bondi Beach farewell.

Categories: Australia, Bondi Beach, Sydney | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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