Wednesday
19th – Thursday 20th November
Caused our “welcome
party” on Tuesday night, we slept until 10.30 and when we finally got out of
bed, is was with two sore heads… Malene was feeling exactly the same, so we
were all in the same boat, except that she had several plans during the day –
and luckily we hadn’t. We still had to buy some groceries for the next 9 days,
so we walked the 1 km’s to Ashfield Mall, where we had our breakfast in the
food court – I had a Subway sandwich, and Erik had a mega portion of rice and
Asian chicken curry.
We were lazy most of the day, but in the afternoon I
wanted to figure out what was wrong with my knee, it still hurts when I walk.
As I see it there are two options, either too little exercise or the age fact.
I ventured out for my first jog in 1½ months, and I manage to jog 6km without
knee pain. Problem solved – exercise is the cure! Afterwards I took Erik for a
5km walk to the bay, he needs some exercise as well, but doesn’t need to lose
more weight. He already lost too much weight, and I keep gaining weight. It’s
impossible to keep a diet while travelling. We live everyday as if it was our
last, and at the moment we drink too much alcohol, which doesn’t make it easier
to lose weight either.
Thursday was a resting day as well, when I say resting I
mean we’re just staying at Malene’s, most of the time here is spend on the
internet, watching TV and cooking. This
morning we went with Malene to Ashfield swimming pool, swam 1km and was tired
for the rest of the day. The last two days we have been more active than the
last 1½ month together. It feels good.
Friday 21st
November
We figured
it was time to do some sightseeing again. I wanted to do a cliff-top walk
between Bondi Beach and Coogee Beach. Erik didn’t have any wishes, so he just had to
follow.
It was tropical weather outside, 38 degrees and not the most ideal day
for a 5,5 km walk in the sun – but armed with a lot of sunscreen, and a big
bottle of water, we caught the train to Sydney Central and from there, a bus to
Coogee Beach where our walk started. The walk is said to be one of the most
exhilarating experiences around Sydney, we passed 5 panoramic beaches and bays,
all beautiful and full of friday happiness. We were so jealous on the people in
the refreshing ocean, but stupid enough we hadn’t brought our swimmers, I had
mentioned it for Erik in the morning, but we had misunderstood each other, so he
thought I would bring it, and I thought he said I shouldn’t bring it.. So
apparently no swimming for us on this smoking hot day, unless we ventured to
the nude beach up north!!
This was probably the last time we would experience
the coastal cliffs of Australia, since we’re leaving in 7 days, so we tried to
get the most out of this picturesque part of Sydney.
In the end we reached
famous and not so crowded Bondi Beach, where everybody fits in as long as
they’re wearing swimmers and sunblock, even better if they also carry a
surfboard under their arm. We had our lunch on the beach esplanade of Bondi.
Then we took a bus up to Watsons Bay to catch the ferry to Circular Quay. We
got there just in time to see the ferry leave the jetty, and us swearing it
away. We went down on the jetty and had a look at the timetable, it was another
48min before the next and last ferry of the day would depart. Hmm… I turned to
Erik and told him how we could kill time, by visiting the nearby restaurant and
get something cold to drink, so the 48min went by with queuing up in front of
the bar, ordering and drinking our cold beverages - Erik with a beer and me
with a fresh coconut.
The ferry tour in Sydney Harbour was magnificent; with
views over the city and all the bays and we got to see the Opera House and the
Harbour bridge from another perspective than last time we were here. In
Circular Quay we did it again, just barely reached the train, this time only 2
seconds too late. Arrgh, it was frustrating to see the train leave right in front
of us, couldn’t help thinking what we could have done differently to catch up
on those 2 seconds. Luckily it was just 15 min to the next train, so we saved
some money on cold beverages this time.
In the evening we celebrated Malene’s
sons 11 years birthday. He’s crazy with Lego, and every surface in his room is
covered with the latest Lego construction. We sleep in his room, so we know
what we are talking about. Anyway we had bought him this random Lego
construction in K-Mart, and it was spot on. He was overwhelming happy about it,
so it was perfect! Erik had spoiled himself (and me) with an Italian wine, something
we didn’t have had since Denmark, so it was hard to get Erik to bed, since he
thought it was his duty to finish the 1½ l. wine.
A luxurious cemetry with a spectacular view, but why?? |
Bondi Beach |
Saturday 22nd
– Sunday 23rd November
I was happy
to see there was still some wine left in the big bottle on the kitchen bench. The
morning went by with me writing blog and Erik researching about our Fiji tour.
In me and Malene’s case also a bit of sunlight on the balcony.
At around 2pm
our friend Paddy, who we met on our snowboard holiday in Thredbo in June,
picked us up and we went for afternoon drinks in the suburb, Balmain, which is
Paddy’s hometown.
He showed us around the different pubs and different beers.
Later we were joined by two of his mates, and even later by his girlfriend,
Freya and her friend. It was nice to meet some new people and we had an
enjoyable time in their company. Before Paddy and Freya put us on the bus
around 10pm we arranged to have dinner together and experience “The Escape Hunt
Experience” together on Monday, which I will explain later.
We realized that
Sydney’s main train station was far behind modern development, I base this on
the non-existing information screen in the departure hall. So instead of just a
screen that tells you where every train is going, we had to walk to every platform to look at the 10 different screens to figure out which train was going
in the direction we had to go. Erik figured it out by asking some train
employees, we then found the train and arrived safe and sound in Ashfield. Apart
from Erik watching the last Formula 1 Grand Prix together with Rubert (Malene’s
friend), there’s nothing interesting to report from Sunday.
Erik with his new mates. Paddy is to the right |
Monday 24th
November
After
Erik’s late night and a bottle of wine to himself, he needed to recover and
wasn’t worth much during the day, I couldn’t even drag him to the outdoor
swimming pool for a refreshing dip.
I ventured out by myself, even though it
was clear that a thunderstorm was rolling in over the city, the clouds were getting
darker and darker as I was swimming and just as I was about to leave the
swimming pool the lightning and thunder slowly started.
I didn’t even bother
taking a shower, because I was gonna get soaked before I got home anyway. So I
put my clothes outside of my swimmers, and biked homed with wet hair and
clothes. I looked like a retard (mostly because the rain hadn’t really started
yet, and yet the water was dripping of me), I was too busy to put my shoes on,
and the sharp spikes on the pedals hurt my feet, but my one and only goal was
to get home before the severe rain kicked in. It was unfortunate that I didn’t
make it, but it was all right and just as I expected.
Meanwhile Erik had
researched more on our trip to Fiji, there was so many choices we had to make,
and Erik is very good at double checking everything and he really does his
research whole hearted, where as I am much more loose, I don’t have the
patience for it, and I’m more old school, I prefer to read it in a book instead
of using the internet – there’s too many informations and it gets me confused.
In the evening we had a date with Paddy and
Freya, and after circling around in Chinatown in the rain, both getting
annoyed, we finally found the restaurant where we were about to meet them.
Wagana, a Japanese Restaurant where we ordered our food on a flat screen
attached to the table, all the information about the food and drinks was on the
screen, so we didn’t have any contact with the waiters, apart from when they
delivered our food, which they did very quickly after our orders. I was impressed.
We tried a Sushi-Roulette, consisting of 6 nigiri’s where one of them contained
a small handful of wasabi, and the rest contained rice. The plate got a little
spin around before we choose our nigiri. I lost, the wasabi was obviously
uncomfortable to eat in such a big potion, and I didn’t even eat a quarter of
it. Afterwards we went to the evening’s main purpose, The Escape Hunt Experience.
It’s an experience that takes inspiration from computer games, and players are
detectives who are locked into a simple room with objects and a little
decoration and it feels like being inside a computer game while searching for
clues, solving puzzles, and in the end escape. We had picked the theme ‘murder
in the pub’ and against the clock (60 min) we had to find the murder through
clues, puzzles, the suspect profiles and so on. We were all dressed up as
detectives, which was a hilarious part of it. We could ask for help and clues
from our game master, and since we apparently picked the most challenging theme,
we had to do this several times. It was exciting and a fun way to spend time
together. We nailed it, and found the murder just 6 min before our time ran
out.
The experience was $40 each (208kr). We found it a bit pricy, which is
also why we took advantage of their luxurious lounge area, and solved more
puzzles afterwards. We then said goodbye
to Paddy and Freya and took the train back to Ashfield.
Tuesday 25th
November
Yesterday
we rented dive gear at Frog’s dive, so we were ready to go diving in the
morning with Malene and Zandra (the Danish girl that is working here and living with Malene,
while she is saving up money for her travels).
Malene recently became a dive
master, so she’s familiar with a couple of the dive spots around Sydney, and
this day she took us to Bare Island, on the southern part of Sydney.
When we
arrived and unpacked all the dive gear, Malene realized that one of the tanks
was missing a connecting piece, like its valve. It was retarded because she
said that she would bring her spare tank, in case of something like this should
happen, but for some reason she hadn’t packed it in the car in the morning. We
couldn’t dive without that piece, so Zandra and Malene left to find a nearby
dive shop who could fix it, meanwhile the wind picked up and the waves got
choppy. Erik and I got the rest of the gear ready and waited for quite a while
before they came back with a useable tank.
Then we walked down to Bare Island,
and slowly on rough rock surfaces entered the water. Zandra had a problem with
her descending , caused by too little weight in her weight belt, I gave her one
of mine, but that resulted in me having problems with descending, so I got one
of Erik’s, while all this happened, Malene already started her dive, and didn’t
even realize what was going on. Sooner or later she appeared on the surface and
that’s when our dive could finally start. Quite a tough start if you ask us. Especially
for a new diver as Zandra, who only has had around 10 dives. The visibility was
only 3-5 meters (our average visibility in all our dives has been 12-15 m.), so
it was pretty bad, maybe because the wind had picked us so fast and the waves
had become choppier than before.
Anyhow, it was a shallow dive, maximum depth
was 14 m. We dived around boulders and some corals. The water was filled with
jellyfish, sometimes so many, that the water in front of us was totally blurry,
we saw loads of sea urchins, but the fish life was almost non-exciting. I
realized that there was plenty of nudibranches to explore, since there wasn’t
much else to see I focused on finding these small, tiny, colorful, slimy
creatures. They are really magnificent, but usually hard to spot.
I was in my
own little world, when I sensed something on the right side of my viewing area,
I turned my head and literally screamed into my regulator, the first few
seconds I was terrified… An immense blue grouper swam just 10 cm in front of
me. Erik heard my scream and as he turned around the grouper was swimming in
his direction, and he got scared as well for a few seconds. Oh my god, it was
intense… Quickly we realized he didn’t mean to hurt us or scare us away. He swam
further on up to Malene and Zandra. Malene started feeding him with sea
urchins. He’s apparently so use to divers and since he can’t get into the sea
urchins himself he’s begging divers to do it for him. We are happy that we got
to see this, and that Malene knew about this shiny-blue friendly and hungry
grouper. It spiced up the otherwise boring dive a bit.
Diving always makes us unbelievable
hungry, so the first thing we did back in Ashfield was to eat. I then went for
a sleep, I had been up early to jog in the morning as well, so I deserved a
nap. Meanwhile Erik was helping Malene’s daughter Hannah with finding a roof
rack and a bike carrier for her car. After a two hour nab I was ready for the
night, and so was Erik after his shower.
This night we met up with my old
school friend Rene and his girlfriend Sarah, they’re living in Sydney and have
been here the past 3½ year. They both grew up in Erritsø, so Erik also knows
who they are, from back then. Sarah was in the class below Erik, and Erik and
Rene was kind of in the same outer friend circle back then. It was really funny
to meet up so far away from home, and yet we all have our childhood memories in
the same little suburb on the other side of the world.
We met up with them on
the Oaks hotel in Neutral Bay, and spend most of the evening there with good
pub food and plenty of beers. We enjoyed our last beers of the night in their
apartment. Rene is working for LEGO and we were lucky to get a super hero LEGO
construction box home with us, which we can surprise Adam with.
At midnight we catched the
last bus to Ashfield and we were knackered when we arrived. It had been a memorable night in Danish company. Unfortunately we forgot to take a nice picture of us all in the pub, and the one below is pretty bad, but better than nothing.
Bare Island, the divesite. |
Sarah, Rene & Erik in the end of the night. |
Wednesday
26th – Thursday 27th November
Our last
days Down Under was spend on getting ready for backpacking again. It was kind of
strange to pack our bags, we almost forgot about how little space we used to
have, all of a sudden the amount of space we had in the car seemed massive.
We were
both struggling a bit to fit all our stuff, and more important the weight of it.
Some of the flights in Fiji only allow us 15 kg luggage and 7 kg carry-on
baggage. We are both a bit over the limit, which means we’ll have to throw out
more before the domestic flights.
We got our Australian bank accounts closed,
and can now look forward to a couple of days with a lot of cash on us. We have
kept our money belts, so it’s not a bigger problem than using them for a while.
We bought ourselves a couple of early Christmas presents – I got a small board
with plastic sheets on, to have around my arm when we dive – so that we can
communicate by writing under water, instead of only using sign language, and
yelling into the regulators. Erik got a new smart camera light that attaches to
our GoPro camera (underwater camera), so hopefully we can make some even better
underwater videos from now on.
Erik is acting like a little child these days,
not because Christmas is near – but because we have booked 2 dives on the World’s
best shark dive, not that I’m not excited about it – I definitely am, but more
in the nervous kind of way!!! We feel
ready for our next adventure, and are looking forward to the good diving and
luxury that waits for us on Fiji. We deserve and needs a holiday away from our
travels… How good is life treating us!?
Thursday night Malene paid our fabulous
Indian dinner, and we said goodbye to Hannah. Malene’s daughter who is gonna visit us in Denmark when we eventually get back.
Not the best shot in the world, but a memorable moment with Malene and Hannah |
The moment of truth |
Thanks for this time Australia.. See you in the future!! |