Thursday, March 3, 2011

San Ignacio, Bahia Conceptcion

Woke in the morning next to the German River and palm trees.

It was about 7: 30 am, when we finally woke up. We were a bit tired, so we in a little slept. We woke up with the sounds of the German, frogs (not French) and water, in addition to our tent. It was a bit strange to see so many Germans on this trip. Many seem to belong to large groups. At least the German no fear, what media of the narco wars of Mexico. Strangely I have not seen a gun battle, bummer! Our view from our tent was lined with Palm trees a swamped River with date. We packed our tent and directed 1 km in the city.

We kept the Kuyima tour agency on a tour to see the booking to see blue whales in nearby Laguna San Ignacio. The Lady informs us that we just van missed 15 minutes but we to go to the camp welcome, we were. Asked us where we were out and immediatly TIJUANA said! I think it helped to get a better price. I used

Clean your toilet to shave and my teeth and then we stopped in the local square (Zocalo), some food go to take. A street vendor had some excellent coffee, Quesadillas and tacos de Frijole y Queso. The food was a good start for the day.

We started our trip to Laguna San Ignacio. The road was very nice...Well at least for the first 26 miles. Once finished the Pavemnet we were the rest of the way on rocks and sand. It would have been great if we had 4 wheel drive, off road vehicle, but we had no - a Chevorlet sedan. Still, it made with our Chevy Sedan by the rocks and sand a bit cautious driving or luck. It took us only about 1.5 hours by 30 km to get but we without any flat tire and the bumper, which still connected. Finally we went to camp Kuiyama and our host came, Paloma waiting for us. Made a statement on the nature reserve and our tour and we were on our boat. We had to zipped a small boat with a small engine in the back but we in the Bay

the mouth of the Laguna San Ignacio. When we arrived, there were other groups out there and we could see that other campsites on the shores. We started Immiediatly the whales, the bubbles to see your bubbles holes from the surface of the water.

Our boat started to follow whales and we have very close to you. We saw some their flowed out into the air and their whole heads out of the water popped a few. Then we have started to follow a mother and her calf. The mother was under our boat, boat a bit jolted and then jumped on the page. Cris could touch your fin. Then circled the mother and calf boot and the calf appeared out of the water with mouth open a noise. I could see that the calf eyes, and I suspect that the calf had seen me. Then the mother came back and remained on the side of our boat, which allow us to your pet. Before you went off let out a huge spew water. I never sneezed of a whale, so that it always a first time for everything.

We went back to the shore and seen how much the flood had we pulled back. We had 500 metres walk back to the original shoreline. It was noon.

We drove back through the large unsurfaced road and headed to San Ignacio. We have then back on Highway 1, Santa Rosalia. Santa Rosalia was an amazing small town. Our guide book had said this was once to leave a place of French citizens who decided, France and no joke. They literally took France to Mexico with a church. The city was picturesque and we had some bread from his famous bakery bath unforgiving. We had some street corn (Esquite), tamales de pollo, a hot dog with chorizo and we share a beam Nieve de Nuez. We then loaded back into our car and drove to Mulege. We stopped only in Mulege for directions as we walked conception outside in the camp of Mulege in Bahia. We were finally a great place for 80 pesos Playa Santipac called. It was a small bar, called Anna's and we had a shot of El Jimador tequila and two Pacifico beer. In the bar we

had the shots and beers as soon as we our aging and drunk Gringo sell bartender could get us. It was fun and drunk! The bar was full of expats or like in Mexico-Gringo's! You all had a great time. The music was blaring, dogs were a and and the patron's pleased the State in their stupor...

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Hollywood, FL



My travel guide advised me to secure my cooler long pine key campground for the raccoons! I learned to be careful how you want to eat what I like to eat, so my cooler to remain extremely secure during my night these critters. Then, on my last night I attended an interpretive talk about alligators. As the topic perished while the Rangers prey stated the questions about the exotic snake problem, that you were having. It seems that within the past one and a half years since my Guidebook was written Burmese Pythons each raccoons ate Park… then he declared on your active capture program of this exotic snakes, the devastation in the food chain rake!

I the Everglades left morning I heard once again on the Anhinga Boardwalk. Since winter dry season in the water park is concentrated in low spots, making the Anhinga trail especially active. It's better than the best zoo, the animals are concentrated along a canal and you trust that people will keep the railings, walls and sidewalks at a safe distance. As well, one of my new friend campground

Let me see through their good binoculars on an Anhinga (relative to a Cormorant), showed that you the most extraordinary Aqua was willing to pairs by turning the skin around the eyes color.

North and leaving the southern tip of the peninsula of Florida was a little scary, especially since I was location madness of the Miami area in the eastern seaboard. Six-lane motorways freak me out! However, my refuge was with friends, Randy and Barbara in Pembroke Pines, and I think had a wonderful time with you although Barbara had a terrible cold. Took me and showed me around and I was so happy for your good company.

The President, I went north of Jonathan Dickinson State Park day.

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Part of the journey: migration trends

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No hoses for us...

29 See Foto(s): 21: extra photos: «previous 1 2 next»
Now had we expected to feel paranoid as soon as we entered this place as we many stories about drugs in beverages and foods belongs, and is the party place where people come to do just that, but we had surprisingly few paranoid moments!

On the first day we got when we went to a local bar and ended, 4 local guys talk; She soon invited us to drink; Whisky Lao Aarrgghh! This is when the 1st paranoid moment came when I thought that perhaps the whisky was laced with something more sinister, but as it is impolite to refuse that I went ahead and it fine well it was but no hallucinations! We wore beer and you more whisky and before we knew it we were pretty funny... One of you wife called and you were then… soon after this call - equally at home

We went into town to get some food, we had heard that friends call retries are played many bars here, but we do not expect, that many of you show. We sat down and were soon sucked, we first

thought we would like that there, but it was the opposite after three months without a mind-numbing TV, terribly Needless to say it sucked we quickly ate our average Western food and went back to the hotel!

The next day we rented a moped and went to explore; were the first few hours in order Street was horrendous, but we soon found a cave (Poukham Cave), which we had said it has a Blue Lagoon below and it was very nice; We went looking at in the cave was not very impressive, and after that we went swimming in the lagoon was the Bliss! Then we have to back we go biking tour in the lonely planet (which by the way we think that a charge had seen garbage) that is when things went a bit shit... Dim saw a bit of scenery, because it focus so hard on the streets, and I had a severe case of saddle sore - then came the little I Bickers say I did not want a bike and you say well why Dim

tell me, that then fair point! We saw some lovely villages, but it wasn't value the effort or the pain, but hey really ho a different experience!

As we back in Vang Vieng we had a well deserved beer and watching the sunset and Aß amazing jacket potatoes, which was nice and went on to book bus tickets get from there for the next day, next stop Vientiane capital.

How we didn't really have much in Vientiane we are able to write a blog for you; an appropriate city with many cafés and some nice shops. We very Ruff guesthouse in a not much except night, some things home post and some cakes, Aß then we caught the night bus Don det.

29 See Foto(s): 21: extra photos: «previous 1 2 next» . . 29 Foto(s): 21 displayed: extra photos: «previous 1 2 next»

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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Sanderson


««North America» United States» Texas
22 February 2011 Sojourner1208

Feb 16 Sanderson
Sanderson arrived safely and stopped and got a fried chicken steak, what I thought was a restaurant and proved to be a dairy King. I asked my waitress where the best place to stay in this city and the outback OASIS Motel told me. So that was where I went. They had a small one for around $40 and larger and much nicer for $60. So I thought I should "live a little" and opted for the bigger room.
There was a band modern shop across the street from her and that was nice. As an added bonus had snakes and reptiles that could see a large display of Texas. How's that for "Bang for the Buck". I went through the only store that I could find in the city and was shocked to find that a package a pound of Parkay was $3.65. And butter about $7.00. Would my shopping at the Super Walmart del Rio. Their Wi-Fi was weak, but adequate and I was alone and regroup to travel the next day by Sanderson, Big Bend National Park...
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Orang utan rehabilitation centre


«««Asia» Malaysia» Sabah» Sepilok orang utan sanctuary
21 February 2011 by madmatt

Just in time to see the wild orangutans always fed. Daily at 10 am and 3 pm. Now, there was only one got out of a cage (someone Confimed, the me the next day) and send it to on the platform, so the tourist-won ´ be t Dissapointet. I was of course I didn't ´ t like this kind of show.
So we Decidet to do a little jungle walk in the Park. It was difficult, stop because it was very wet and muddy. But we wanted to still do it ´s only 1100m. While walking to my parents, I felt something on my femoral (thigh). It was a leech (leech)! I snipped it off and mean parents been told, so they've ´ warned. But only Acouple meters later they ´ ve enough, my father had two leeches as already. You fell I Decidet until the end of the trip, try to avoid the leeches, while fast walking, hoping that I won't bother ´ t a snake. You need to protect yourself otherwise disturbed out of my way. I took a break at the end of the footpath. I signed up for leech and took a view snipping you away, but found its way into my pocket. So, I jumped in a hurry from my trousers, this bloody leech of the bag while others to find that his way by my shoe. I was pretty Hektic, I must say...
The way back, I made a 1000meter Sprint to disrupt Hopeing again to every game live on my way. Jumping out of Treeroot, Treeroot, but still Mudy got shoes. Back at the head office I had one in my shoe a leech on my leg. Too many for my like. Well, we went for a swim in the hotel pool, I felt so leech - clean then
We had lunch at a very nice terrace at the nature reserve hotel. Read later in the bed, and TV I ´ ve heard a sound next to my head, that was something. It was a leech! Don ´ t know how you got there, but I killed in a cup with liquid soap...Trying, as sleep always listen, if it may be a noise...

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Signed, sealed and delivered


«««Europe» France» Centre» tours
22 February 2011 Nils14

A week ago today my future was very uncertain. I had arrived a few days ago and was two a try out to day number. I was still feeling the effects of jetlag and had not fully adapted to the rich cuisine. I worked hard, but not like I was playing on the second day out I felt try the and should I thought is was sent home to crawl through the frustration, start. In fact to stop my missed I second day of training, two serves in a lost line and my page. A long walk back followed a short distance and a long walk to the locker room, when someone told me, general manager and coach wanted to have a Word. I was waiting to hear your opinion, knowing that I had not shown you my best volleyball. If you me, say you want to sign me and you were happy with my hard work and technology, I more than anything else makes it easy.
The next three days were a blur paperwork, apartment, hunting, a car, and interviews with local newspapers and TV stations rental. While I had prepared everything what was going on, be in a game to play, which would take place on the day of I arrived six. Add in the small stresses like not knowing my way around the city or to Internet for a few days, and you can imagine my first match was a huge chance of disaster.
The match went well and I discovered that the fans are very passionate about the team and knowledgeable about the sport go also a chant for me was when I served (and Yes, I have you all). The real highlight for me was the last point when I got a stuff block to end the game. I have not much to do, because the rest of the team is so good, but it is always exciting to get the last point.
I must admit at the end of the game that was most based my emotions towards liberation more than anything else. It was not only at the next morning, when I sat in my new place, coffee sipping a Cup, which I started to get a little excited. Excited, because I'm in a new place with so much to see and do; excited to learn new things and new friends. I'm excited because I soon will ever be one of the most romantic places with the love of my life; Mostly though, I'm not excited because the hard work is done, but because it is only just begun. Thats all for now.

Here is a link to the interview from the local TV station. I was instantly put, but it was fun to do.
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Vegas Chicago



Chris's section

Say Las Vegas, what can I do? I thought I knew, what to expect, but to see slot machines at the airport was the first of many surprises. We saw later in shops - even a pharmacy. This is designed and built a crazy place, to separate the people from your money. It does this very well! Our hotel, the Luxor was really nice. It is solid as all casino hotels. Another surprise was in smoke. It is so long banned in the UK, it came as a shock to see people around smoking. As a result, air freshener is pumped throughout the hotels and casinos. We kinda sick of artificial smell, but I'm sure it was better than smoke and the smell of people!

Our first night on the Strip was impressive. It is a crazy scene of neon, masses of people, who drink in the street, huge themed hotels and casinos. Spacing must go are incredible. The main street's only a few miles long, but it takes you forever, to get anywhere. Often you will find the sidewalk is suddenly by a hotel which is like a maze. They are designed to

leave as difficult as possible to make. The sidewalks are full of Mexicans, distributed flyers, cards, and magazines for prostitutes. Yes, I said prostitute. You can order a pizza. I prefer large with extra cheese.

People come here to celebrate and drink at all times of the day. See Granny and Grandpa in the casino at 9 am with beer. In fact, unless you would have a watch you don't know what time is straight. The casinos which look the same at all times of the day. There are no clocks or Windows. It is all a little disorientation. I'm sure on purpose. Weather in Las Vegas was great. Sunny days and not too cold evenings, until the last day.

Bellagio is fountain a must see. Really well done. We heard the free card outside treasure Iceland is great, but we think it is missing. The Strip can be quite expensive for food and drink. We found a cheap dive bar East Flamingo stage door invites. $1 Beers, yeah baby! Is one of the best value food you places in Las Vegas, just down the road. Ellis Iceland Casino is a 5 min walk

from the Strip and it pretty good food at reasonable prices. I had the steak special (pretty big steak, jacket spud and green beans and a beer!) for $7.99. Persons is £ 5! Eliis Iceland is also brews its own beer. Big beers are $1.75 (£ 1.05).

An important point for other travelers - every ATM in Las Vegas strong a fee for payouts. A minimum fee of $10 had the most hotels (even if you just want out $10), the as increases you wanted to take amount increased. The lowest fees, the we (saw off the Strip) was $3. It is a pretty disgusting con. Thought the mafia left town, I? But this is Vegas, and nothing much is free. We had a bit of a gamble, but we could not really afford to do much. You need money in this city. Our Achilles heel as always! We enjoyed our stay - we were so different from any location above. We would return to - but this time with some cash.

Louise's section

I had a great time in Vegas and won $20 (woohoo!), but nearly drank

to many $1 beers. I think I spent most of my time hung-over.

We had a great time, meet a Chris's last friends on our night, but young, should not had 3 pints before our flight to Chicago... What me to Chundering large scale in the sick bags. Chris be sure whether Ewww with whom I had produced band think, help me or impressed.

We arrived in Chicago cold but fortunately Hotel let's knackered and bloody in the room at 8 am, as many people thank the Allerton (FAB Hotel incidentally for $77 per night).

We ventured finally after a long snooze, I had my haircut (thanks to the trio Salon) and for a mooch, then went back to the hotel to warm up. The next day we went downtown along the magnificent mile pass the Tribune and had a look at the Sears Tower. This was the only day that Chris willingly allowed me to go as it was so cold in the shops and he still had only shirt and jacket on - duh! Needless to say we out for as long as

I think he would have died of hypothermia.

We had planned to go the next day and go to see the Park and Lake, but one day the position was out there pissing, so it ended up down big time to get, some soup and return to the beautiful warm hotel and veg out.

We really like Chicago and would like more have seen or had better weather allow us to do this, but hey ho it is always more money or better weather we need.

Washington DC is next, if we ever get. Sitting waiting at the airport for our flight delay we are and it has begun snow, hmmm tune in to see the next blog in one week if we ever made out!

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Daily travel photo - Angkor Thom gate, Cambodia

Posted by: Gary 02/21/2011
Faces on the Angkor Thom Bridge, Angkor, CambodiaFaces on the Angkor Thom bridge, Angkor, Cambodia

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Breathtaking Sydney

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Please note that this was written in retrospect. I kept a tiny diary that prompted my memory, but it was mainly written whilst trying to adjust to rural life in the small town of Omarama. It is outdated, but a nice record for me anyway. Although I explored Cairns first, that entry is still only half complete (it's only a year late!!)

By the time Sunday arrived I had well and truly had enough of the rain and despite my firm belief that there was no point in getting upset about the weather while travelling as you cannot change it, it was beginning to get me down and I was losing my motivation to explore and was looking forward to Sydney. I had a relaxed last day, chilling at Tropic Days for a while (which I was feeling rather sad about leaving – it had become home in the way that temporary accommodation can whilst travelling). I then headed into town and wandered along the promenade (in the rain). The Kiwi phoned and we had a lovely, long chat that left me grinning like a teenager in love. I walked along in the rain and it no longer bothered me as much.

I was all packed up to leave and said goodbyes and exchanged email addresses while waiting for the bus driver. When he arrived, I realised I was in for a bit of an adventure. He was a big, loud Queenslander who you cannot help but like, despite all your reservations. I was the only passenger and heard about the huge accident he’d been in that had stopped him being able to run his own business as some or other maintenance person and left him with a huge payout, but in a lot of pain and having to give up his business and drive the airport bus. He told me all about how his pain had affected his moods and his moods his marriage. Not for the first time in my life I questioned what it was about my face that made people want to tell me their problems. He then explained that he was as high as a kite on painkillers and I stopped being concerned about my “tell me your problems” face and more concerned about getting to the airport alive. He was also a typical Aussie in that he’d married and had kids young and focussed all his energy on buying and paying off a house (the exact lifestyle that all my London Aussie mates were either fleeing or petrified about returning to). He told me that he thought I was doing a great thing travelling while I was still young (he thought I was 24 – but then again he was on strong painkillers!) Despite the very differing life choices he had made, he made me really feel that I was doing the right thing and made me feel very positive and privileged that I have chosen to see the world.

I got to the airport in plenty of time and sat around thinking about when I had last passed through Sydney. Sydney holds a very special place in my heart as it was my first experience of independent travel. I still remember so clearly when I spent a night there before heading to New Zealand on exchange. It was the first time I had travelled by myself as an adult. The people I spent the night with took me on a drive past the Opera House and Harbour Bridge. I still remember that feeling of awe and wonder that it actually looked exactly like the pictures. That magical feeling of “WOW! I am seeing the world!” The feeling that you are the first person to ever experience this new place, this place you have seen so often on TV and in books and that you cannot believe you are seeing in real life. This feeling is still there sometimes, yet diminishes as you get more and more spoilt with the places you’ve seen and I still remember that first time fondly. I wonder, as I await my flight, if it really is as beautiful, as awe striking, as I remember it or whether my experienced eye will put that initial magic down to youth and inexperience (I fear it will and hope desperately that it won’t!)

I arrived in Sydney that evening and took the airport shuttle which dropped me off straight outside my hostel. The streets were packed full of people which seemed rather bizarre for a Sunday night until I was reminded that it was Easter Monday the next day and hence majority of the world who actually worked, were excited. What a change this was from Tropic Days. The hostel was clean, friendly, but very, very big. You felt like one of very many backpackers who had travelled in and would too pass out. I got up to my room and starting chatting to a very friendly, very young girl. I was pretty tired and was going to have an early one in preparation for my mission to see my well remembered Sydney view. There was suddenly a knock on the door and these two guys marched in with a bag of goon (papsak for South Africans, the bag inside box wine for others). They topped up full glasses and requested we down it. With only a brief moment of concern about taking alcohol from strangers (sorry mum) I had a sip, ok, a mouthful. It was dreadful. This is a staple drink for backpackers in Aussie I later learn. They were the promotion team who for free accommodation went around trying to lure backpackers to the bar next door – the Scary Canary. My young roommate and I twisted each others’ arms and headed down. We were immediately stopped at the door and ID was requested. I, logically, presumed that they were asking her and stood aside while she proved that she was 18 (yes, I felt old!) But no, this bouncer wanted to see mine too. Had I had it on me, I would have been flattered, however it was in my room and proved to be a bit of a hassle. I returned to the bar though for long enough to have my free drink, share a small jug of beer and realise that the bouncer was most likely checking that I was not too old for the bar. (I assure you, I was!) The bar was the kind of meat market, let’s assist people get drunk (as though they cannot do it alone) that is reminiscent of university days, except I didn’t enjoy them much then and then at least I didn’t feel like an old lady. How has this happened, I asked myself? I am still so young. But no, I am no longer 18. Anyway, my roommate was sweet and we had a lovely chat before both calling it a night. (I did attempt to convince her to drink her body weight in alcohol while chatting up a member of the male species who looked like he’d just passed puberty – this covered many males in the bar, but she declined!)

The next day I got up early (the joys of being older and wiser and hence not hungover) and headed off to find the view I remembered so well. My stomach was filled with butterflies as I got closer and closer to where the bridge and Opera House would be. The harbour was gorgeous, but not the view I remembered. And it wasn’t because I was jaded, it was as I was seeing it from a different angle. I was slightly disappointed as I was so keen to see “my” view. As I reminded myself though, this was a different trip and in many ways I too was a different person. This was gorgeous in itself and I was going to enjoy it for what it was and not try and chase a memory from the past. That would remain a memory. I wandered around the harbour looking at all the various boat trips offered and listening in awe to the didgeridoo players. They were all dressed in traditional tribal gear and the older ones had the scars that I had read about. The playing was incredible and after my own attempts in Cairns, I had a new found respect for how difficult it was.

After a few hours of exploring I made my way back to the hostel. A friend of mine from London, Sally, was back home for her brother’s wedding and was having a party at her place to catch up with her friends. I had promised I would do my best to make it too. This was easier said than done. She lived in the suburbs of Sydney and I am not known for my natural navigational skills. I did want to see her though, so looked up the route on the local journey planner website (these I believe are one of the best inventions, ever!), printed the map, wrote down her number, bought some beers and confidently headed off. I would have had no idea how to even consider doing this when I was last here I thought proudly, realising how much more capable and confident I was (as I should be with 11 years of life experience behind me!) I got there hassle free and thoroughly enjoyed the night. Sally’s friends were very welcoming, friendly and made me feel part of the group despite the fact that they were catching up. Many of them had lived in London and all the London talk made me think about how much I love and miss it. And how I was still “living the dream” this side. I got a lift home with one of Sally’s friends. I got back to the hostel with a niggly sore throat, this was exactly what I didn’t want when I only had a few days to explore this huge city. Despite my better judgement, I got my rubber arm twisted into going back to the Scary Canary with my teenage friend from the previous night and two other eighteen year olds, one of whom was heading back to England the next day to get ready for uni! They were nice girls, but I didn’t feel 100% and I felt old. They couldn’t believe how much I’d done in my life, but then, as I reminded them, I had had a decade more to do stuff than them. One of the girls reaffirmed my belief that I have made the right decisions when she said that she hoped she would be like me when she was my age. However flattered I was I felt old and like I was advising teenagers, rather than having a night out with peers. Even if they respected my life decisions, I was different and I felt it. It was karaoke night, the singing was terrible and my throat hurt. I decided to leave the young ‘uns to it and call it a night.

I woke up the next morning feeling less than great, but determined to be part of the free Sydney walking tour that I’d seen advertised. It was free, but with the expectation that you tip depending on how much you feel it’s worth. It was brilliant! It gave me a good feel for the city and the guide was very interesting and knowledgeable. He also had heaps of stories that you would never read in the history or guide books. Like the one about the oldest pub and how in days gone by, they would welcome sailors to port with arms open wide and feed them free drinks. When they were all very drunk, a trap door under the bar would open and they would fall into the cellar. The next day they would wake up with very sore heads to find themselves chained in this cellar. There were apparently underground passage ways that lead them to the harbour where they would be forced onto boats to work for free. Now that sounds like a pretty rotten hangover! Obviously nobody knows whether this is an urban legend or the truth... Although they have found a dungeon, shackles and secret passage ways! You decide. There were many other stories like this and I had no problem tipping him well, it was worth every cent. I also met a really lovely English girl who was over to celebrate finishing her PHD and was more my age. Unfortunately my throat was beginning to hurt and I was feeling far more exhausted than I should after a three hour, slow walk. I knew that I wasn’t well. I could have spent the rest of the day with this lovely girl exploring the botanical gardens and having lunch, but I sadly just didn’t feel up for it. The walk back to the hostel was awful! I felt very weak and gutted to not be feeling well enough to hang out and explore. I never get sick, so when I do, I also get angry. I decided not to resent missing out a day in Sydney and just focus on spending time in bed and kicking this as soon as possible! There are few things more miserable than being sick when travelling and being in a shared dorm is no fun at all. There are people in and out of the dorm at all time of day and night. All you really want is your own bed and somebody bringing you warm drinks and pampering you. The Kiwi was doing great via text pampering, but it’s not really the same as the real thing. I took a med lem, which knocked me out (how happy I am that my body is so unused to drugs that the slightest hint of paracetamol puts me to sleep). I slept fitfully all day and woke up feeling rubbish, but in need of dinner. I walked up to the shop, bought a litre of orange juice and salad stuff. Vitamins will help kick this (lack of vitamins was probably the reason I had got sick in the first place). After dinner, I took another med lem and went back to sleep. I must have slept for over 12 hours (with a few disturbances). I woke late, still not feeling wonderful, but definitely better than I had been and determined that it had to be well enough.

It was a beautiful day and so I decided to take the ferry out to Manly. Manley was supposed to be lovely in itself, but the ferry ride is also a great way to see a splendid view of the Harbour Bridge and the Opera House. It is much more cost effective, yet as good as the tourist boats that go out for just that view. And what a view it was – this was the view that I remembered from all those years ago! And I was delighted that experience had not jaded me. I was once again blown away by its beauty! Despite my still slightly sore throat I sat out in front so that I could fully admire the view. We arrived at the ferry terminal and like a mob of tourist sheep, all with cameras in our hands we headed out to explore. Benches were made of old surfboards and there were a few young guys hanging around in board shorts and healthy tans who looked like they had just stepped off either Home and Away or an Australian tourist ad – the stereotypical, wholesome Aussie! We all headed down the Corso - “a pedestrianised strip of surf shops, burger joints, juice bars and cafes that have not been entirely kind to the strip’s heritage character” (thanks for the description Lonely Planet!) I decided to stop at Manly beach at the end of it for a take away fish and chips and then seeing whether I felt up for the 10km scenic walk that I had read about in my handy guide book and which sounded wonderful. I bought myself a greasy battered fish and chips with a coke for good measure and sat on the steps watching the surfers and the seagulls and just appreciating how very good life was! My lunch was (unintentionally) shared with the seagulls. They had no fear and obviously could spot an unsuspecting tourist miles off. As I sat enjoying my meal, one swooped over my shoulder and snatched a piece of my fish. The shock made me exclaim out loud and I felt rather silly when a few people looked over, trying not to giggle. I was feeling good, and decided to tackle the walk. And how glad I was that I did. If I can recommend anything to do while in Sydney, it is this. It was an easy walk, despite being described as moderate to hard, and gorgeous. You were never far from the road, yet it felt like you were in your own world. It was along the coast with great harbour views and through forest-like areas as well as past some lovely houses (which probably had less lovely price tags). It took about 4 hours and I enjoyed taking it slow, thinking and just really, really enjoying my own company. At the end I wandered along a beach as the sun started thinking about going down, there were families playing on the beach, walking dogs and I even saw a stingray as I unashamedly followed a family as their child said they’d spotted one. The walk left me believing that perhaps the Aussie dream was true after all. If (or should I say when) I return to Sydney, I will re-do this walk and recommend it to anybody. A magical, magical day!

On my ferry ride back to Sydney, I sat outside to see the view by night. I was asked by another tourist which side was best for the view, as I didn’t know either, we took an educated guess and sat together. She was an interesting character. I had initially guessed that she was Italian, however she was actually from the Philippines. I found the ferry ride talking to her rather exhausting as she wanted to know in a very tick box way what I had seen in Australia. Imagine: Her - “Have you been to Ayres Rock?” Me – “Yes, wow, it was amazing, have you been?” Her – “Yes, me too!” Me – “Didn’t you find it...” Her – “Have you been to the Wet Tropics?” Me – “Yes, the rainforests out of Cairns and Port Douglas.” Her – “Me too!” Me – “Isn’t it incredible how...” Her – “Have you walked the harbour bridge?” Me – “No, I would love to, but it’s a wee bit out of this trip’s budget. Have you?” Her – “I am going to tomorrow and then I’ll have done all the major things and can go home.“ We took photos of each other with the night time view in the background. Spectacular, but we couldn’t get any photos that did it justice. Not for the first time I wished I was just a little bit of a better photographer. The ferry arrived back in Sydney and we wished each other well. This exchange left me thinking about the different reasons people travel. For her, she obviously had a check list that she wanted ticked off and so she rushed from place to place ticking it off. Why did I travel? Yes, I had a checklist in some ways too, but not in the same frantic way. The Manly Scenic Walk was never on my checklist, I had never even heard about it, but how less wonderful would my trip to Sydney have been had I not done it, if I hadn’t had the time as I had to rush off to some other “must do” attraction.

I rushed back to the hostel for a quick shower as I was meeting my English friend from Cairns, Lois, soon. She was picking me up from the hostel and we were going to explore some bars away from the Scary Canary (how nice to have some company over the age of 18!!) She had also lived in Sydney previously and so knew the area. We headed up to The Rocks – a quaint area just above the harbour that used to be really rough (until not that long ago). It was prime property location-wise and it was difficult to imagine it run by gangs and infested with rats. The houses were old (well, old considering how young Australia is) and were full of character. This was the sight for the first what I think of as “Green Peace style” protests. The government had wanted to tear down the properties yet many people had (rightly) felt that they were a part of Australian history and should be preserved. The government was determined and would not listen. So the people united together and all the building companies in Sydney refused to take the contract to demolish the area. The government got people from outside. In a last attempt, to people chained themselves to the buildings and refused to leave, leaving the government with no choice but to bulldoze the people or leave the houses as is and so the lovely area was saved. This is where Lois and I were headed for drinks. I told her about the oldest pub, but due to my remarkably bad sense of direction could not remember where it was. We got thirsty and so stopped for a wine. The pub we stopped at was so “English” that we both had to have a bit of a giggle. As we were catching up, this young, quite nice looking but with a strange vibe about him guy, came to ask whether he could join us as “he was lonely”. We politely put him off, but he was pretty insistent. He then borrowed 10 cents from the table next to us so that he could get a beer – he was given some free olives with his (we noticed enviously). It was then that we figured out the reason for the weird vibe – he was a homeless person. Next to him he had his sleeping bag and packet of things for sleeping rough. His things included an i-pod. How much homelessness differs here from back home. Here you have a nightcap at the local pub that kindly gives you a snack (the olives) before heading off to sleep in the cold with your favourite music playing to keep your mind off your dire situation!

We had a couple more drinks before asking a local security guard where the oldest pub was. By the time we found it, it was closed. Yet another reason to return to Sydney one day, I guess! We headed to another area and found a lovely looking Asian style bar with red lights and drapes. We stopped off for a drink for the road. An absurdly expensive drink for the road. Two single vodkas and cokes cost $40!! Maybe this is why the young backpackers stick to the Scary Canary. We got back to the hostel, me rather tipsy as I always am after just looking at a bottle of wine (so the Kiwi says!) I got to my dorm and all my roommates were asleep and my bed was unmade. I put complaining to the front desk now that I was already in my pyjamas and the fact that making it would wake the whole room into the too-hard-basket and went to sleep in a rather uncomfortable position (sleep came easily though, thanks to the wine and overpriced vodka).

The next day I had an early start. Alongside playing tourist, I was also in a race against time to get my New Zealand working holiday maker visa. The 48 hour process wasn’t quite that if you were African in any way. I had applied on my British passport, but had had to state that I’d spent more than 3 months in a country that was not on their low TB risk list – i.e South Africa. I had received notification that I would need to have a chest x-ray before my visa application could proceed. Although this wasn’t really how I fancied spending half of one of my limited days to explore Sydney (remembering I’d already lost half a day being sick) but if I wanted to a visa, I didn’t have much choice. I had booked an early appointment so as not to waste too much of my day. A decision that I regretted as my alarm woke me up with a sore head and dry mouth on an unmade bed. I headed off to the address that was conveniently only about a 20 minute walk from my hostel. This was one of the acceptable places to get your x-ray and a doctor to fill in a medical page for your visa. I went up to the visa level to find lots and lots of people in various different lines with various different bits of paper and ID with the resigned look that comes with having dealt with immigration before and knowing that there is no point in getting impatient. You just wait. I saw my day flashing before my eyes. Luckily, I was on the wrong level and this was Australian immigration, New Zealand medical checks was the level below.

I headed down with my $90, my passport and my filled in forms and asked a couple of questions to the self important looking woman at the desk. She was helpful, but condescending and spoke a little louder and slower than necessary as though I was less intelligent because I was an immigrant or hoping to be one. My blood started to boil (and my hurting head wasn’t helping matters). I was very tempted to explain to this woman that I was very happy in my country (England in this case) where all her countrymen seemed to try and stay and only wanted this visa because of love and not because her country was in anyway superior, but decided to kill her with kindness instead! She then informed me that the x-rays would be back in two to three working days. I panicked! I need these tomorrow, I was leaving to Melbourne on Friday and needed to get this application in as soon as possible. This was a race against time. Now, I am known for creating panic by leaving things to the last minute, but this time it really wasn’t my fault. I had just been in Sydney for a short period of time. I explained my predicament to which she responded (in the same condescending loud and slow voice as though I was a petulant child) that I really shouldn’t leave things to the last minute. For a brief second I saw the sense in senseless violence. I calmly (using my best teacher voice – also a bit slow and condescending, ha!) explained my situation. She reluctantly phoned the doctors upstairs to see if I could get it back by tomorrow and they said it wouldn’t be a problem at all. She looked a bit put out that they had made it so easy. Silly lady on a power trip! I went upstairs to get the x-rays and they were lovely. It was quick, painless and I was treated with the respect that every person is due. It reaffirmed my faith in immigration services and that perhaps I had just stumbled upon a bad apple and this wasn’t how they were taught to treat people. All done, I headed back towards the hostel and stopped off for a greasy fry up breakfast. Again, life felt great. My visa application was back on track and I was loving my own company. Breakfast while reading the paper with a sunny day spread out ahead of me where I had nobody to please but myself. I understood why so many people swear by travelling alone!

After breakfast I took a long, slow saunter to the Botanical Gardens. Everybody insisted that the Gardens were a must-see. I personally never prioritise going to Botanical Gardens, but am so very, very happy that I went to the Sydney ones (and may learn from this near miss and go to future ones if guide books suggest it). They are spectacular. My main reason for visiting the gardens was as there is a colony (I am sure that is the wrong collective noun) of bats that live there. They are also known as Flying Foxes as their faces look so similar to that of a fox. I have always had a strange interest in bats and was very keen to see them. I walked along looking very closely in the trees, scared that I was going to miss them. I assure you, there is no worry about that. There are hundreds, possibly thousands of them hanging upside down in the trees or flying between trees. And yes, they do have fox-like faces. Fascinating! I continued by stroll, stopping from time to time to lie in the sun, read my book, people watch and just thoroughly enjoy my lazy, hungover, wonderful life. I continued my walk aiming for Lady Macquaire's chair. I had no idea what could possibly be so exciting about a chair, but I thought there was no harm in looking. And am I glad I did! The chair itself is nothing exciting (it’s just a seat carved into the stone) it is what you see from sitting in the chair – the most majestic view ever! The harbour and Opera house ahead of you. Ironically, her husband got this “chair” made for her as she loved sitting enjoying the view. Today it is a completely different view to the one she would have enjoyed, but as, if not more, spectacular. I joined the throngs of tourists to seat themselves in the chair and have photos taken and then headed off to enjoy the view somewhere a little bit more private.

It seems that everybody who visits or lives in Australia is either a Sydney person or a Melbourne person. One of my housemates and very good friends in London, Alysha is from Melbourne and loves her hometown. In speaking to her, I was always convinced that I would be a Melbourne person, but sitting in the sunshine overlooking what must surely be one of the most gorgeous views in the world, I had no idea how I could possibly prefer Melbourne to this. And already I was getting afraid of having the break the news to Alysha that I was in fact a Sydney person. That said, I had not yet been to Melbourne and so the jury was still very much out. Sydney would take a lot of beating though!

Eventually, despite the fact that I had not tired of either looking at or photographing the Harbour and Opera House, I decided to slowly head back.

My dad loved birds. He had identification books where he would painstakingly study a particular bird to decide whether it was this kind of whatever bird or another (the sole difference sometimes being the fact that the one had a red spot on the bottom left corner of its wing, while the other didn’t!) He would then mark that he had seen which ever bird it turned out to be. I briefly got into this hobby, the only evidence of this was that a number of extremely rare, hardly ever seen birds were either seen (or misidentified) by me and hence were marked as seen by me. I quickly lost interest as I didn’t then, nor have I since, found birds of any interest whatsoever. This is before I began to explore Australia. Australian birds are stunning! There are many tropical birds with bright, bright feathers. The first few parrots I saw, I initially believed must have escaped from a pet shop or cage where they were repeating bad language they had once heard or an annoying dog bark, but no, they were wild! It was as a headed back that I saw the giant cockatiels (or were they cockatoos) that roamed the gardens – free and fearless and very friendly. A young English guy was trying to lure them onto his hand and get a photograph with them. I got involved and watched for ages. They seemed to scratch, so I wasn’t so keen on having them climb all over me, but I was keen to get some good photos. The cockatiels joined Uluru, Harbour Bridge/Opera House as the most photographed things in Australia.

I got back to my hostel and moved to my new room. Due to the fact that I had only booked a few days to start off with, I was able to extend my stay, but needed to move rooms. My perfect day was just getting better. My new hostel room was fantastic. It cost no more than the previous one, yet was bigger, had its own bathroom and the last free bed (obviously mine) even had a trashy magazine under the pillow for me to read. There were two French girls trying to sleep off their jetlag, who despite the fact that they had no real idea what time it was, were very friendly and sweet. I lay down to relax and read the magazine when a girl walked in and looked very confused to see me lying there. It was her bed and her magazine and obviously the room had been overbooked. She was very nice about it, but once we had established that there were no free beds, I realised that I would have to move rooms. Moving around was not an easy feat considering I had a huge suitcase (quite embarrassingly big and heavy for a “backpacker”). I went down to the desk to explain the situation. I was very pleasant about it, but let them know that I was frustrated, especially considering the fact that the day before my bed had not been made. To give them their due, they immediately apologised and upgraded me to the “female only sanctuary”. These were girls’ only rooms where you had access to tea, coffee, hair straighteners and were given a fluffy towel and small hotel style soaps and shampoos as well as a complimentary glass of bubbly at the Scary Canary. I was interested to see what kind of people would pay extra money for this, but I was sure that my big, embarrassing suitcase would fit in well here.

I felt exceptionally snobby and as upper class as one can when staying at a hostel as I swiped my card that gave me access to this exclusive area. I was disappointed to see that the room was in fact exactly the same as the other rooms and was less nice than the one I had been in before I was “upgraded”. There wasn’t even an en-suite bathroom and we had to leave the sanctuary to use the bathrooms (shared with the people without access to free tea and coffee!) The bonus was that most people obviously shared my views that this was an unnecessary expense and so there were only three of us in a room made for eight – lovely and spacious. The two other women were one very pretty, posh looking and sounding English girl. She had obviously straightened her hair and had a suitcase rather than a backpack. She was exactly the kind of person I expected to meet in the sanctuary. She was lovely though and was on her way back to England after a holiday spent visiting her brother who now lived in Australia. The other woman was an odd case. She was clearly quite a bit older than me, but I couldn’t quite gauge her actual age. She could have been a young looking mid forties or an old looking mid thirties (or any other age in fact). She had a huge backpack and had just come from backpacking around South America. She had been visiting friends in Australia and by the sounds of things making a pest of herself. Many of her stories involved getting drunk, meeting people and staying out drinking with them instead of going home with the friends she’d gone to visit. She also seemed to have a dislike for men. I decided that she was probably recently divorced and going on an “escape it all and regress trip”. Whether or not this was true I will never know as I decided against going to the Scary Canary with Miss Posh and Miss Forty Going on Eighteen. Meeting this older backpacker threw me a bit as she seemed too old for this life, despite the fact that she seemed to embrace the drink specials more than the eighteen year olds they were intended for. I wondered whether the young, just out of school backpackers thought the same about me. Were you ever “too old” to pack up your belongings and go and explore the world. I hoped not. What was it about this woman that left me feeling so sorry for her. Perhaps it was the defiance with which she seemed to be doing it that left you feeling that she wished herself that things in her life had been different. I still hadn’t worked out quite why I travel, yet it seemed there were those who travelled more to escape something than to discover something.

I had one day left in Sydney and one last thing that I felt I really should see is the famous Bondi Beach. It would seem wrong to visit Sydney and not see this beach so synonymous with the city. As I have mentioned before, I was loving my own company – almost a wee bit too much. I am sociable by nature and during my time in Sydney I found myself uncharacteristically seeking solitude. I wasn’t lonely in the slightest, which was my biggest fear about travelling alone. In fact if anything I was arrogantly beginning to feel that my company was the best out there. I saw that my hostel organised a day to Bondi Beach – they took you on the public bus, a guided hike from Bondi to Bronte and it ended with a barbeque and goon. I debated going alone anyway, but eventually decided that it was necessary to seek company and that this trip wasn’t intended to turn me into a hermit. It was perfect timing as well as it started at 1pm and I had a few admin tasks to do in the morning. The most important one being collect my chest x-rays and get them posted to immigration.

The superior lady at the medical centre was marginally nicer. She handed me a huge sealed package with warnings all over it not to open it as may detrimentally affect my visa application should this confidential document be tampered with in any way. I headed outside and half way down the street stressing whether that meant that my chest was definitely OK or if only immigration New Zealand would ever find that out. My worry was less that I would be denied a visa than that there was something wrong with my chest and I wouldn’t know about it. I headed back and asked about this and was assured that had anything been wrong I would have been notified. So now I knew that I was TB free and my visa too looked a sure thing. I sought out the post office, sent it off and marvelled about what a local I felt in this gorgeous city. I think this feeling came from all the “normal” admin tasks that I was doing. I had a bit of time to kill before heading on the Bondi walk. I was very behind on this blog (and still am if truth be told!) I decided to use the couple of hours to catch up and hopefully stop my mum nagging by giving her an update on my travels.

Before settling down to recount my Uluru adventures I had a quick check of my emails. There was one from NZ immigration and there was a problem. In 1999 I spent a year in New Zealand as a South African exchange student. South Africans were not eligible for working holiday maker visas and hence I was applying on my British passport (and again thanking my mum for passing down a passport that opens so many doors). The email stated that this situation was posing problems as part of the requirement was that I was “ordinarily resident” in the UK, having a passport alone was not enough. I was told to hold off on the chest x-rays as unless I could provide further information my visa was unlikely to be granted (too late, the x-rays were already in the post). I panicked. What did ordinarily resident mean? How long did I need to have been in the UK to fit into that category? Not for the first time I cursed the fact that I had not chosen to live in Wimbledon and as such that my chances of falling in love with a Kiwi and finding myself in this situation were less. I also cursed New Zealand for being such an organised country and having such details from eleven years ago (oh why could they not be a normal, chaotic country like South Africa?) After a brief panic I googled ordinary resident and through the mixed messages seemed to feel that I would qualify. All I needed now was proof that I had been living in the UK – bank statements, proof of employment, teachers’ union membership and National Insurance numbers all seemed to be good evidence. The only difficulty being that I all of those documents were safely somewhere in the UK. (For those of you who know me well, you’ll know that I always have things filed away it’s just that I’m not always sure where.) This would not be the first time that I had asked my mum to send stuff over as a matter of urgency and yet was unable to tell her where she was to find them exactly. Luckily my long suffering mum is one of the world’s very good people and so helps out although she would be forgiven for cursing me (I owe you mum!) I sent immigration a long, very articulate email detailing my situation and the fact that although I have proof of residence in the UK it is there and so may take a while for me to get it to them (I left out the fact that my mum may disown me when she has to search for it). I then forwarded immigration’s email and my response to the Kiwi. I refused to be the only one stressing about this. He had taken the attitude that he didn’t really care, he just wanted me to arrive. This changed when I pointed out that that meant I would be gone again after a couple of weeks. I had done all I could for that day and so decided to leave it to fate while I went and enjoyed the beach. The irony of this situation is that when I first considered working in New Zealand I filled in an online form to see what my chances of getting a visa were and in doing signed up for an immigrate to New Zealand newsletter. Whether it was because I was a teacher and New Zealand is short of teachers or just because they had me on their mailing list, but I regularly received letters encouraging me to immigrate to New Zealand. One of them had a link to a YouTube clip about why New Zealand was a fantastic place to live. The background music was “Forever Young” and there were cheesy scenes of couples running through fields with their hair blowing in the wind holding hands. (True story!) On this day that I got this not so positive email, I also had a bulk mail from Immigrate NZ with reasons why New Zealand is a good choice. I was tempted to email back and tell them that there was no point sending me advertising when they weren’t planning on letting me in, but decided this may further jeopardise my chances. The Kiwi agreed that the whole situation was absurd and ranted on about how they are always saying they were so short of skills and now when somebody had the skills they wanted they made it difficult for them. (I like to think that his passionate response was more based on wanting me to stay for a bit than on deeply entrenched views on NZ’s skills shortage.)

I sat on the stairs in the main reception area of the hostel waiting for the beach gang. I got chatting to a young girl who looked rather odd and from her speech was obviously from a non-English speaking country, I just couldn’t place the accent, so I asked her. She was from England! She continued to sound like a non-English speaker for the duration of our conversation. She told me that it was her birthday that day (she was turning 22) and that she was feeling very nervous. I asked her what she was feeling nervous about and she told me that she just often felt that way. She hadn’t long been in Sydney and was here on a year’s working visa. She’d left a boyfriend behind and showed me a picture of him on her phone. She met him after she put in the visa application and so decided to go anyway and do a long distance relationship. I wonder how she is getting on? If she was nervous about a beach walk I have serious concerns about how she’ll get on looking for work and coping overseas all by herself. Good luck to her. Eventually we got our group together. Our guide was one of the guys I had met previously forcing goon down my throat and trying to convince me to come to the Scary Canary – the marketing team. This was clearly one of their other responsibilities. He had the backpack that he had come overseas with – this time filled with goon, we were to stop at the supermarket on the way to buy some sausages and bread. We stood on the street waiting for him and watching a very bad clown do some very bad tricks, badly. It was heartbreaking in the way that clowns often are. It was made sadder by the fact that a young (somewhere between six and ten years old) girl was with him assisting. She also had clown face paint on and I’m guessing was his daughter. She handed him juggling balls (which he would drop within seconds) or whatever other trick he was doing. I have no idea why he/they were trying to earn money this way. He obviously was not good at this and surely she should have been at school. What added to the pathos was the fact that she stared at him with complete admiration - obviously believing he was the best clown of all time. I wonder how she will look back on it one day? As a special time they spent together or as a very sad childhood? I wish I could have found out their story, but I didn’t and so now they are just a scene from my travels.

Eventually we had everything required for a backpackers’ day out at a famous Aussie beach. We weren’t dissimilar to those tourist busses you see filled with Japanese tourists. Except, replace the air conditioned, recliner seated tour bus with public transport and replace the special camera lenses with goon and you’ll get the picture. We all followed the leader to the bus stop where he distributed our tickets and then piled onto the bus like a bunch of school children (probably as loud and obnoxious). For somebody who had spent the whole week as an independent traveller, it was funny how quickly I morphed into another sheep-like backpacker. I would have struggled to retrace our steps I was paying so little attention. I was happy I had decided to go with a group though as they were a nice group of people and I re-found my social self and enjoyed chatting to people about their various experiences, backgrounds and travels. There were a few young guys whose obviously only aim in visiting Australia was to “get pissed in the sun”, but each to their own. After a just over half an hour bus trip, we turned the corner and there in front of us lay the iconic Bondi beach. As it wasn’t peak season, it wasn’t as packed as it can get, but there seemed a fair amount of bodies to me. It was a beautiful beach and definitely something I associated with Sydney, but I didn’t get the same rush seeing it that I did seeing the Opera House and Harbour Bridge. Maybe I have just been spoilt with beaches coming from Cape Town, or maybe it was how very exclusive it seemed. There were many flash looking houses surrounding the beach and a very exclusive bar/restaurant that had a sign on the door that led me to believe very strongly that goon carrying backpackers would not be welcome. We took our photos and our “guide” explained how dangerous the rift is on Bondi and that so many backpackers die whilst trying to surf that it is nicknamed “Backpackers’ Rift”. I had a picture of English backpackers (they are the largest casualty) with no understanding or respect for the sea who just want to be Aussie style surfers in between getting pissed in the sun and how easily it could all go wrong. We then headed off on our walk to Bronte beach – the less well known sister of Bondi. It was an easy, but lovely walk punctuated with photo stops and chats. We arrived at Bronte and after a walk in the sand, a swim for some (the 22 year old jumped in with all her clothes on in a birthday celebration understood only by her and then spent the rest of the evening shivering in a bizarre towel/dress thing, leaving me wondering once again how she was possibly going to survive the year). We headed up to the Barbeque area for our sausage sizzle and some more goon. I need to explain something about Australia and the best analogy is one of those retirement estates designed for lifestyle – there is a gym, a golf course, a swimming pool and park benches in the sunniest spots. In Australia it seems as though the whole country is designed like that. It is a country where things are built with the wholesome, outdoorsy Australian in mind. Beaches have built in barbeques so that you can enjoy the beach and beer with home cooked dinner – it’s great. There are dustbins everywhere and a presumption that you will clean up after yourself (should you consider not doing so, I have no idea that the people at the barbeque next to you would come over and insist you do). It works and it’s great, and is possibly even more typically Australian than Bondi beach that we all just took dozens of photos of. After our “Barbie”, we all hopped back on the bus – a bunch of cold, tipsy and happy backpackers.

On the bus home, our guide, who must have been in his early to mid twenties, started telling me his Australian story. He had a trade of some kind back in England (I forget what) and had worked and saved to buy a house. Just as he had saved enough money to put down a deposit on a house, the recession hit and the banks stopped lending money and so he was denied a mortgage. In a rage he decided this was a good opportunity to travel. He had been in Australia just less than a year and other than a short trip up the east coast, had been in Sydney for all of that time. He had spent his whole mortgage (over £20 000) mainly in the Scary Canary on booze. I felt sick to the stomach for him. He had just asked his dad to sell his car for him so that he could get a little bit more capital. I hid my shock and said that I hope he’d had a really good time. It did leave me wondering about the value of money. I am sure there are many people who would be shocked if they calculated how much money I could have saved had I never travelled (I think I may be shocked if I did the maths too and so choose not to). They may look at what I could own in property or technology or clothes and yet all I have to show for it are abstract things such as memories and experiences. I personally however, would not swop those experiences for money and all that it could buy me. Though, I am pleased that my experiences are more than just blurred nights in the Scary Canary (although if I am honest, many of my memories are blurred and many bars feature strongly!)

We arrived back at our hostel and everyone headed to the Scary Canary for a drink, I joined them for a quick one, but then had to have a shower and get ready to meet Lois who was taking me to another Aussie lifestyle invention – the lingerie bar. She had told me about these when we had met for drinks earlier in the week and I was sceptical. “You mean a strip club?” I had asked her. She had assured me that it was just a normal bar, designed particularly for tradies to have an after work drink and that there were a number of them about. It was basically a perfectly normal bar, except that there were one or two waitresses/barmaids who wore only their lingerie. This I had to see! She picked me up and we went to this working class looking bar. It wasn’t rough or sleazy, but it was plain with lots of pokies (the Aussies seem to love their gambling as much as they love their beer and barbies). Inside were a few men sitting around having a quiet after work drink – nothing out of the ordinary or unusual. I was disappointed, where were all these lingerie ladies? I went up to order my beer from a fully clothed person and in walked a lady with bra, knickers and high heels – that was it! That however, wasn’t the weird part. The weird part was that it was utterly normal. She wasn’t drop dead gorgeous; her body was average, nice, but nothing to be taking your clothes off about. She stood behind the bar, asking about her next shifts and then calmly said goodbye to the table of obviously locals who barely looked up from their beer to say goodbye. That was it – nothing special really, but I felt like I had walked into the story of the “Emperor’s New Clothes”. I wanted to yell, “Does anybody else realise that she’d not wearing many clothes?” Once the lingerie waitress had left, there seemed little point in hanging about so we headed to a couple of cool bars where despite everybody being fully clothed, the music was good and the drinks better. We had a few wines with the beautiful people of Sydney before I called it an early night in preparation for my trip to Melbourne early the next morning. I fell asleep thinking of half-naked waitresses, bags of goon and how very excited I was to see my friend Sara the next day!

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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

34 Chengdu China

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Now it was written a short while last since I. In particular, because nothing really significant happened and we were pretty busy with our regular routines. This semester Laura and I are all teaching from drama club to preschool up to 9 years old. On the days we teach not to do, we still have the lessons and the design plan and develop curriculum and such. My days are Mondays and Fridays during Laura off on Tuesdays and Fridays.

In addition to teaching still Laura blog for safe international road travel Association and freelance writing articles on travel, fashion and lifestyle China Global times. I have every Thursday that Beijing Handball Club and practice connected. The weekend tournaments going too hard for me to visit with my curriculum but perhaps something can be arranged. Wednesday evening we did go to a pub quiz from our apartment and Friday, we would, like to go to the Chabad at least if we can. Next month we start our Chinese lessons.

We would like to host sofa surfers to start. We were so many friendly hosts, we

Want to give back. As of yet we have not hosted, but we have a Latvian and a pole which come in the next few weeks. I have many requests, but we are not a hotel. Backpackers or people on their around the world are a few like to welcome called once in a while though. Fortunately for the Spring Festival is about... Fireworks was almost non-stop every night for the last 3 weeks to go. Finally we are all enjoyed celebrating honest Abe's 202nd birthday in style, all of us dressed in top hats in a log cabin restaurant in Wu (our neighborhood.)

This weekend we had 4 days in a row and decided to leave Beijing for a bit. Laura added a Chengdu article and I found flights out of Beijing, Chengdu, $99 to get the capital of Sichuan, so we decided. It is also our last weekend to may. Sichuan is known for its spicy food, its temples and of course its pandas. We stayed at the wonderful youth hostel. It had everything a traveller could possibly including TV and DVD player in each room

a huge DVD and book selection, many corners and angles, a nice bar, gardens, a play area with ping-pong, table football, billiards, a scale a range trading clothes, free drinking water, is a travel desk, many lounging room... I mean, you name it, they had it. Simply the best hostel I've ever been the. The rooms were big with fluffy beds, pillows and heating so hot, we had to open window! All for only $7 per night!

What's with the temples? Not huge Temple fans are one of us anyway so perm for 4 hours Laura got her hair while I went the convent and temple grounds to explore our Chinese tour guide, us for the day to your off time to hang out with offered. In addition to the numerous Buddhas the experience was "Unfit for human consumption tea". It is so called because you start with a large glass with a forest of leaves and flowers on the bottom. Then every time you take, the hot water man comes a single SIP and "tops you." I never got beyond the top inch!

So the most important

Reason we came down due to the pandas. They were so sweet. No matter what you did, it was always so much fun to watch. Even the Red Pandas were fun to watch. I have to keep even a 5 month old from nursery. He was really like a cat or a big baby; I'm not sure which. He remained fit and try to get more comfortable. He liked his belly rubbed. The thing is surprised me, there was no bone. He was like a heavy pillow just soft and fluffy. When he got bored he finally got a honey soaked bamboo stick to suck.

We were a Sichuan cooking course to take, but in the end, for a Sichuan chosen hot pot with friends. They are known for your spicy food. In fact, it was all so sharp that I could hardly eat a thing. We down tamed the hot pot and drank some Chinese wine called Bijou (are more like whisky), to help us get through the meal. Then who large took back at the hostel I was beaten by Chinese table tennis player 3 times pleasure

from my defeat. It was fun. Then we saw a Julia Roberts movie, I don't seen somehow had "Fireflys in the Garden" called, and slept for about 12 hours.

He in downtown Chengdu Tianfu square coffee drink our last morning spent, read and watch people. Chairman Mao is also a huge statue which was probably over 300 meters high. The Park was very peaceful and was a big weekend a wonderful end. And now back to Beijing for us. Talk to you in March again.

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Mantanita surf Spanish School-Cabaas


: Happy birthday, I hope it was wonderful, we will have to celebrate again when I get home. This is too late as last year, white not, dates or days here and I'm down a few days, but it is very important to me. I'll try to get by phone one hold, love you, Dad

Please note: there are 2 pages of photos.

Big, big day today taking me on a trip (1.5 hours) to Mantanita with Sonia.

Mantanita was exciting, colorful, fun, tranquil full Druggies, serious students, surfer, Mochileros (backpackers), etc. The city changes every month with all Dilapitated building reader or gates on hotels, restaurants, shops, etc. make way for new Hostals (small hotels in Ecuador are called Hostals),.

The place is full on weekends week and onthe it completely by hand obviously is out as it every evening where people are here serious Partiers, that didn't stop to between 3 and 5 in the morning. Luckily my cabanas (small cabins at all that ñ as Nya) are a few blocks from the heart of the city. The site has photos, etc here:
http://www.infomontanita.com/montanitacabanas/
I wandered

on the Hill to the school and was immediately sold on your program.

We were off some on the way home drop green bananas for a friend of Sonia's. On the market, the maybe 5 or so for $1.50 (US$ in Ecuador), so you get a bunch (bit) for $3 on the roadside in a small town we went though grabbed you otherwise as a bundle in Vancouver. They are cooked and go with crabs.

We have at home (Salinas) I thought we were in a fancy apartment/townhouse type complex. It wasn't it was David, s (Boston, great Boston accent) home and his young 2nd family David junior and Angie. You treat me so well there, was as old friends were very fast. Everyone was so nice. Even Pepe, an elderly man, the kind of gruff fellow was very nice and welcoming. Sure you broke the stereo type of conservative Ecuadorian. They were far from conservative.

All in all it was an amazing day of my trip to South America, there were many special days.

Answer some Q's Eric and cousin Jim and Dwayne:
1.

Would someone have fun with no Spanish? For me it is really important as much Spanish as possible know. But, saying that people fun without it. I think more so, if you are lucky enough to encounter people who speak a little English. There are living Gringos here speak almost no Spanish.

2. All 3 of you guys are very outgoing (more than me) I am sure you would do well. A smile is more important than a sentence in Spanish.

3. Dwayne: how to decide where you go? I wanted to just out of the city (Medellin) for a while. I suspected the Ecuador coast over the Colombian coast was diversified. Ecuador famous for surfing and Spanish schools. A new country to see me. Dating here seems not as simple as Colombia. Much less available females. And to sum it up: some days are better than others. I don't know how much good luck and and or bad luck.

4. Cousin I guess good luck Jim Wunsch big Jim, he is doing really well. I know others that have done well in this situation as well as me. No use

than anything else, that absolutely positive. Eat much broccoli, turmeric and keep up with the Baby aspirin.

And I got a message from my friend Edgar in Medellín and his Novia Margarita post. Thanks to Edgar and for your kind words.

February 22nd 2011 SALUDO "EDGAR"
HOLA WILLIAM, RECIBE UN CORDIAL SALUDO MIO Y DE MARGARITA. ESPERO DISFRUTES DE VIAJE POR ECUADOR, TENEMOS GRATOS RECUERDOS DE LOS MOMENTOS COMPARTIDOS Y TU TE DESEAMOS SUERTE. HASTA QUE REGRESES. EDGAR.

It took 3 hours to handle today's great blog. Upload photos, resize, labels and Edtiting. I enjoy, do it in General as it is a review of the last days for me.

..
Part of the journey: Ecuador coast, Salinas and Mantanita

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1. Brazilian post


Hola friends!

Today I arrived in Brazil!

To do even more, I had a flight a 6.50 morning from Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, and then another from Rio to Salvador, with two different to take airlines.
As you may recall, I have a flight to pack since beginning my journey, everytime I missed almost it. There are no exception.
This time I left the hotel in advance to ensure that I will be on time. The taxi arrived at the 4.00 am. After 5 minutes we stop because the car (thanks Renault..) Was overheating. Another taxi picked me and we drove 40 minutes to the airport. And at the airport, what think? I you wrong one! There are two airports in BA, a major one for a smaller mainly for domestic flights and international flights. My flight was of course a planned for the small... So I created another taxi and I don't know me, if you remember in the movie TAXI with Samy Nacery, but it was more or less the same. The driver was going super fast to ensure I will my flight to fly (but unlike my dear friend Samy this one had no wings or spoilers) almost over other cars and almost burning the engine! I made it in time for Rio thanks God. I have just 90 km for nothing...
But I was given my luggage directly to Salvador, just with the same airline, apparently here is not possible with 2 different ones. Time with only 1 ½ hours between flights, go through customs, to get my luggage, run around the Rio Airport (you know, one of the largest in South America..), I came only 2 minutes before checking in closed! Lucky again!

Antoine came to pick me up and we went to his place. First thing: the beach. Yes, I must say the Antoine lives next to the beach, overlooking the sea from its terrace. Very nice house, I have my own bedroom and an en suite bathroom. Better than all hotels that I went to!
To the beach is just amazing: empty, clean, clear sand and beautiful waves. The sea is almost too hot. But I dont worry guys manage...

It starts just perfectly! Tomorrow we will go that old town (Antoine lives in the North) and then let's see you! No plans...
I post pics as soon as I can.

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Part of the journey: my Panamericana

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The travel Troubleshooter: Can I repeat my Disney vacation, please?

Q rage: I recently a Disneyland through Southwest vacations package booked holidays but I accidentally entered the wrong date - September instead of December. We were noticed the error way, and I if the tickets were delivered, until it was too late. We were "No-shows" for our holiday.

This error is very unfortunate because we this trip planned for my husband's birthday. It was an honest mistake.

I contacted Southwest vacations and you said you would be willing to change our airline tickets and remake our theme park tickets, but there would be a fine of $500 for the Disney hotel. Southwest asked Disney to renounce his rules, but Disney has not responded. I know you don't have to book our package, but you can help us? -Pamela Metcalf Kunelis, Fair Oaks, California

Answer: I agree with neither the Southwest vacation as the Disney was obliged to reimburse a part of your holidays. The fact that Southwest had agreed, was reprint your tickets and theme park tickets could have asked for more than you - or I.

I let go, except for one thing have this case. Requirements like yours typically ignore Disney. I thought that was odd enough that I felt a little investigation on my part was installed. Not customers give the mouse the cold shoulder in my experience.

But before I Disney, let's talk about your reservation. Booked a holiday and then it went without first checking? Not a good idea. If your booking and you expect by phone a route you will be sent your agent ask you to repeat your dates. (Admittedly, September and December on the phone, identical sound paper can, why you have routes.)

If you reserve online, give a summary again provided. If you had done, none of this would have happened then. Fixed a bug that caught early can be in the process much easier than later either after you return from an extended trip, and of course, before you start your holiday.

I am not suggesting that this was your fault entirely. Online booking systems can be confusing. It is easy to select the wrong date on most websites. The pull-down menus in exactly the same way by the Web browser Web browser behavior, so you think you may have selected December than you indeed, September clicked.

Just as many phone agents speak English as their mother tongue. This can lead to big misunderstandings if you book your trip by phone are. You hear you say, September, December; Heard you say December, to September. The only way to be absolutely sure is the confirmation as soon as possible in writing - by post, days later.

I contacted Disney on your behalf, but as the date of your birthday approached, neither you nor I heard from the company. Finally, before you supposedly to leave to holiday heard with a few days of Southwest. It turns out Disney had finally respond your request, but by a communication problem between Disney and Southwest, received the notice never.

Disney waived his $500 transfer fee in the amount and allows you to repeat your needs.

? Receive the latest travel news, tips and commentary by Elliott's E-Mail, subversive newsletter of the consumer advocate Christopher Elliott. You will travel like a pro. Sign up here. It's free.

Related Posts with ThumbnailsTagged as: Disney, error, SOUTHWEST vacations

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The monk said "dropping a bomb" and the Chief who said, "just throw in a little bitch"


It is my last day in Bangkok for a while, because in a few hours I the big silver bird take Beach need you on the southern islands... oh, how I! I bought swimsuit vintage black 50's, and I can't wait until it is the bronze bikini wearing Aussies sport.

So I went to the Thai cooking school, it was probably the best thing, I have done so far. I met a sweet Kiwi Geneviève named and at sight together could see next day. Nusi, the master led us to the market and explains each variant of the ginger, chili, garlic and every other conceivable spice. We cooked 6 courts. When I get home, I'll Cook for everyone that will have me! I took some of his lectures and will post when I get home, because I cannot describe, how funny he is. One thing the note worthy of Nusi is cooking he says often, "OK,..., each look here on Thiiiissss little ginger... drop not much inch... you put just a little bitch!" We laugh would yell, and he would giggle.

Yesterday, I wandered around the Indian district of the city near the Hindu temple. The air was warm with incense and lotus

Flowers. I found myself in a group of people moving the same direction. Before I knew it I was a Hindu holy man gave me a blessing, then spiked my forehead with red paint. It all happened so fast, and I feel, that you extend regardless of your religion, never back someone should turn a blessing. This is a reasonable and sensible thing to do. However, I was stumped when and where you pull out the red color on my forehead. So I had to wind for several hours to Bangkok red dotted. I explained my situation to the Lord and assured him that I was still a strong believer in Jesus. I washed it out when I came to the Buddest monastery You must have thought I was a big Poser.

The monks offer free meditation classes, who is interested in. I told Geneviève and met me. Us and an elderly man Aussie put before the monk and our will to meditation experience. We received a fascinating and colourful presentation for the next 1 1/2 hours. A rough guide:

"You"

Think too much... You make things too dramatic... Their minds run and run and all day, and you never know what you are doing. Sit and wait in line or in your free time and you think of things things you don't like and one thought leads to another and before you know it is your own mind to keep you entertained and the time has passed you by.

You have 5 senses... Sight sound, taste, touch, smell... Listen to decide things and I like or I don't know how. But the easy thing, it is only a sound. It is when your thoughts on that one is solid, has meaning. All your problems come from this. It is your ego and your own ideas making, sorrow or pleasure.

The point is meditation... to observe this is where wisdom comes and be in the present. If said anything to you, instead you apply all your ideas and emotions to the sounds, sounds you hear and watch. If you get offended, it is your problem. If someone loud bangs the door and it pisses you off (Yes, he said,)

(Piss) it is not the noise that is the problem, is it for you.

Meditation practice presence and observe what you are doing. You have to live in the present. If you hiking..., or if you hear my rant, you not me up can shut, you can't control me or anyone else, but you can be present and listen... If you are far-reaching... dirt from the floor or you dropping in the toilet a bomb... "Make your opinion, where you are currently"

Yes, you read it.... the Holy monk said "dropping a bomb". I was in an ever so present stupor. I was so shocked, I could not even laugh or smile.

He took us through a two hour meditation in the go, we were ten steps as SLOW as a man in a nursing home. Singing to each step. 10 Steps we would stand and sing that we know, we are..., then we would sing that we wanted to turn around and go back were. OH it was painful.... was every muscle sore, I felt I had wedgy I had to pee, I was hungry, I was thirsty, my leg ellt...I didn't have to concentrate every reason in the book.

I called me at only two steps without regard for anything other than my walking... on foot quite impossible. I thought I was trapped, and I had no idea when it came to an end. But I could not offend and leaving.

I appreciated the premise and was grateful that a monk took from his life to teach us, just because we up went 4 hours and asked.

After gene went and I had a drink.

I love you guys.

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Part of the journey: Thailand

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Participation of the tourist attractions of Milan the amazing treasure of southern Europe


«Europe» Italy
22 February 2011 Ayala58

The charming tourist and trapping you for days has Milan a solid history continuously. We took a fun walk to remarkable Opera House that is Fitzgerald Opera. It was extremely praised to visit the Opera House Fitzgerald Opera House because we wanted to enjoy the wonderful sights. Fitzgerald Opera House is clearly an attraction to go away toured Milan must be. We went down for the exciting cinema that is Haney cinema. One of the most remarkable the city of the most impressive entertainment, Haney cinema is great and exciting. The Haney cinema Cinema is eminent for his extraordinary visits. This cinema offers the most remarkable entertainment. We took to exciting floor which is McKenzie arena lekker stroll. In the course of the years some of the largest European Athletic events in the McKenzie arena hosted was. McKenzie arena is a place that must be known in Milan without doubt. Further, we paid a visit to the extraordinary Ward Casino. Because we feel fun at Milan's tourist attractions featured gambling house visit was acclaimed Casino ward. It features the most excitement. Milan has no costs make the city as a tourist friendly, as it could be spared. We set the course for the impressive Theatre, Haney theatre. Unusual, exciting Haney Theatre is a little-known small theatre. It is prominent for its remarkable visits. Haney Theatre is an experience we could afford to leave Milan without feeling, no doubt. Through this city streets alone Melendez gives cinema a rudimentary awareness of Italy. One of the most precious treasures of Italy's short, Milan is superb for our future holiday destination.

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Monday, February 28, 2011

Sure back in BA and goodbye Argentina


A very comfortable 22 hours by bus from Bariloche I came Buenos Aires's Retiro bus terminal for the last night of my trip. I was very impressed by the Cama facilities on the bus and how well via Bariloche us fed! I slept six hours during the night, which is very unusual for me when I traveled overnight on all modes of transport! But rather I still, as I places very much quicker get to fly. This time I had with the bus travel, because I was not ready, the Aerolíneas Argentinas's extortionate one way air to pay rate of Bariloche! You know how to overload, even if the price I quoted was a foreigners on their flights was "cheaper deal" of my travel agencies!

I took an expensive Depot to downtown, because the bus terminal in a non-hedged portion of the city is also if the Carriage House Office disagree. I read and heard of incidents where travellers and local have got robbed and attacked, to walk away from the bus station and the city and vice versa. I wanted to risk a further victim Epseically on the last day

a very successful trip!

Of course I was not up to more exploring so I hung around the pedestrian streets Florida and Lavelle. I stayed but pleasant at Florida the Florida suites, a large and impersonal Hostel street. Each floor had a theme of an Argentine "hero" bedroom. My floor had the Diego Maradona theme (instead I would have prefered Astor Piazolla) and the wall Exhibiits called the "hand of God" issue in the 1986 workd quarter final Cup football match between England and Argentina scored Maradona. This was still interesting in view of the Argentine. I visited also the infamous Richmond Confiteria, Florida Street, for a coffee in the morning before I flew out. The coffee was not exactly cheap but it's worth to experience, to watch, especially when you see the locals who come to a coffee or a brunch to read your newspaper while you cafes's ambiance and people.

Time was when I took a bus transfer to the airport for my flight home. I met Ahmed (Ben) on the bus, the Moroccan but lives in Canada. Ben was later in the day to catch his flight,.

like me, and we had an interesting chat. We talked mostly about personal safety while in Buenos Aires and we had taken what were to ensure that measures were not victims of crime on our travels. Remember my personal experience, I am so glad that I pretty much money, from a to b safely as always budgeted remises and taxis to the and from the airports and bus stations and even if I went on a night. I felt that this my minimized risk and took my immediate environment also proudly, vigilant and watchful. I felt so sad and suffering for those victims of crime in BA fell and met a few people on my trips and learned the horrors of distraction methods that are used for the people possessions to steal. Unfortunately Buenos Aires has a great petty crime problem, but it is no larger or social issues is important as in a big city with its all over the world. If you are alert, no need to paranoid and take the necessary precautions, it is unlikely that you a victim of petty crime. I felt safe in Buenos Aires and never feel threatened at all, but it is best prepared and warned as my guide book which puts it.

After a very long flight to Paris and then to Manchester my parents met me and took me home, where I was with a nice long bath spoil; Mama roast dinner; and my own bed for a good night's sleep. It is well at home, but I am sure I will planning another trip to Argentina in the not too distant future!

Will I summarize another blog in due course my trip total once I I have to sort many many photos!

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