Tag Archives: sydney

Sunny and Soggy Sydney

Well I made it to Sydney twice over my travels. I have come to the conclusion that the city, no doubt has bi-polar weather. It just so happened  whilst I was in Australia, the worst summer they have had in 50 years. Some days I admit it rained, however I also found myself  caught up in a heat wave that scorched up to 37°C.

Arriving from Hong Kong, but back to a western style of living I still experienced some culture changes. The biggest things I picked up on were:

1. You can’t by alcohol in supermarkets. You have to go to a ‘bottle shop’. A lot of these are in fact Drive-Thru boozers. Does that make any sense?

2. Woolworth‘s is a thriving supermarket that sells absolutely everything you need, and not a run down sweets and toy shop.

3. Without any warning at 2 am a nightclub transforms into a Football loving pub. I went to the toilet and returned to the music off, the clubbers gone, and Arsenal v Norwich kicking off. Not only is it strange watching your team scrap a win at 2am, it’s even weirder following a heavy session of Jagerbombs.

4. The cost of living in Sydney is very expensive. For example,  $3.90 (£2.70) for a small bottle of coke, not on my watch sonny boy! On the other hand, buy a bigger bottle and get your name on it!

Places I recommend:

New South Wales Art Gallery

The Rocks, Sydney Harbour Front.(below) A great place to stop for a drink, enjoy the harbour views, explore some unique market stalls and buy a kangaroo bollocks bottle opener.

Wake Up! Hostel near Central Station. – Out of all the hostels I stayed at in Oz. Wake Up was certainly one of the best, cleanest, and spacious. I stayed in a 10 man room and had my own lockers, loads of space and no waiting time for the bathroom. It’s quite pricey, but believe me sometimes it’s not always better to go cheaper in Sydney.

Hyde Park Barracks ( below)

Take an interesting, and quite cheap (with a student/young persons card) tour of the old prisoner barracks restored to its prime. See how the UK’s prisoners lived and were distrubuted into developing Sydney.

Hyde Park – It’s not as big as ours but its just as epic!

Im Finally on My Way!

So it’s currently 5pm in Sydney as I type my first post away on my 2 month adventure.

I flew in from Hong Kong early on Saturday and finally caught some sunshine before the rain has caught up with me!

Lets start from the beginning. The 12 hour flight to China was the longest flight I have ever had. I manged to sleep  well as Qantas changed my seat for me when I arrived at the airport. I had the whole row to myself to rest on..Booyeah!

Hong Kong is quite a weird but awesome place. The Skyscrapers are huuuuuge, its strange to see so much wealth juxtaposed next to Chinese street venders trying to sell me alive crabs.

The transport system they have there is simply so much better than we have in the UK. It’s always on time, very clean and costs around 40p to jump to the next stop or 3 pounds to travel to Lantau Island 25 mins away.

It was funny to see locals panic when they scheduled loading time for the Ngong Ping 360 Cable Car up to the Tian Tan Buddha  was delayed by about 2 minutes…

I walked around alot admiring the views. I travelled to Lantau Island to see the Big Buddha, walk along the Buddha Wisdom Trail ( Where I forgot to bring spare  batteries for my camera..Wisdom fail) and see the Po Lin Monastery.

Here are a few pics:

The last thing I did was go up to The Peak…amazing views of the Skyline, Kowloon and behind this shot the massive Ships on the shores. Here is lost my sunglasses which I never actually wore once…bugger!

Hopefully I will be able to upload my Camera photos soon and not just my mobile pics.

In Hong Kong all mushrooms are apparently magic.  You will see an Asian character for simply everything, from mushrooms to Bus timetable space men.

NEXT POST:  Sydney and Auckland. Watch this space!

Live the language of LA, Sydney & more through Gustav Johansson’s films

If you read the Bloggiest Bloggy Blog regularly, you’ll have read that I’m sailing across the Pacific (!!) in November with Yaz.

Unfortunately timings don’t permit us to sail across the Atlantic (as previously planned) so we’re flying out to Los Angeles, California, in mid October to meet some family, cruise Venice Beach & shred the skatepark (pictured) before saying a prayer and hopping on board and sailing to Australia.

To get me in the mood, I’ve been checking out these sweeeeeeet films from the ‘Live the Language’ series created by Gustav Johansson to promote Education First. I love the lighting, editing, typography and narrative of each – it makes me excited to meet people of different cultures and languages and learn about them too.

See the Los Angeles & Sydney films featured in this post but also check out the London, Paris, Barcelona, Vancouver & Beijing films too – they’re quite inspirational.

Thanks to Fubiz for the heads up.