Sunday, 10 December 2006

Well I got home about 10:15 on Friday night. The flight was a bit of an endurance test as I was determined to switch to UK time as soon as we left Hong Kong to minimise the jetlag. It doesn't seem to have worked as I fell asleep on the dinning room table Saturday night at about 9:00 pm. On the flight I watched four films and two episodes of Top Gear, slept for about an hour and eat two airline meals.

Airlines have such strange ideas about food. We left Hong Kong at 14:35 and were given a meal about an hour into the flight they called dinner. We there then fed again about 2 hours out of Heathrow with a meal called Snack. Both of these were three course meals, or four if you had the cheeses and the desert. Both were served with an apperitif, wine, water and liquers. But one was Dinner and one was Snack!

We landed on time at Heathrow then waited half an hour on the tarmac until a gate was free at terminal three. I think the gate was somewhere near the M25 as I had to walk about a mile and a half to immigration. Once through immigration it was on to the baggage reclaim and by the time I got there my bag was already out so proceeded quickly to customs. The Nothing To Declare channel was devoid of staff, except behind the two way mirrors. On one of the stainless steel tables there was a pair of purple latex gloves. Guess someone should have declared something earlier in the day.

Home safely now, feeling a bit better Sunday. have managed to go to Sainsburys and do the shopping and am about to start trying to rebuild my laptop.

Thursday, 7 December 2006



Well I am on the way home at last. Here you can see the Cathay Pacific Airbus that will transport me over China, Russia, The Arctic and down through Northern Europe (At least that's the way it says it goes in the inflight magazine. There is also a picture of my hotel and one of the Christmas deccies at one of the posher hotels



As usual I have no idea where the pictures will end up and where the text will be.

I walked back down to the star ferry last night and took some pictures across the water to Hong Kong Island. It was quite surreal walking round sweating in my shorts and T shirt amongst Christmas trees and piped Christmas Carols. Christmas is huge and there were decorations and displays everywhere. I suppose it may be for the local populatiopn, but all could be the multinational stores just finding another way to make money.

Nathan Road was really busy, so I walked along some of the side streets that run parrallel to it on the way back. This meant I went through the Temple Street night market, an intriguing collection of stalls selling everthing from underwear to screwdrivers.

Got back to the hotel about 10:00 pm, having eaten out. Decided I wasn't brave enough to try the local Chinese and went to the Mong Kok spaghetti house for Lasagne and Garlic Bread. Having looked at the people eating in the local Chinese restaurants it seems noodles in asoupish broth is very popular. as the menus were all in mandarin and I couldn't identify the broth I thought pasta would be more enjoyable.

Slept from 11:00 through to 7:00 so missed Tai Chi in the park again. Had bfast in the hotel and then got the shuttle bus to the airport. The bus picked up at 4 more hotels so I also got a tour of Kowloon side. Got to the airport about 11;15 and the check ins were open so \i checked in, had a walk round the shops and nearly bought an Olympus digital SLR, then came down to the lounge to check my mail have a beer and write this.

I will post a final instalment when I get home.



The Hong Kong flight left Sydney on time. But arrived about 5 minutes late. I took a taxi from the airport and that immediately told me I was now in Asia. At the airport I asked the man running the taxi rank if the taxi’s took credit cards. “Yes yes” was the answer. When I got into the taxi I asked the driver if he took credit cards, “Yes yes” was the answer. After a death defying trip into Kowloon from the airport that included the taxi driver flashing hooting and shouting at a Supercharged Mercedes that would not get out of his way we arrived at the hotel. I got out my credit card and the driver said “No No cash only” I said “I asked you at the airport if you took credit card and you said Yes” to which he answered “Yes yes cash only”

Fortunately I had changed my left over ozzie dollars and ozzie travellers cheques into HK Dollars at the airport. I f I hadn’t done that the only way to pay him would have been to suffer the hotels exchange rates and a cash advance on my credit card, ouch. I’ve just counted up the HK dollars I have left after my dayout and it looks like I shall have to eat in the hotel restaurant so I can put it on my card. Breakfast in the hotel was good and the restaurant menu looks good, it is Cantonese.

I had about 6 hours sleep on the plane but I was still tired when I got to the hotel. Was in bed by 1:00 am and slept right through to 6:30 am. Which meant I missed Tai Chi in the park at dawn. Was out of the hotel by 7:45 am and walking down Nathan Road past all the closed shops. I popped into Kowloon park to find that I wasn’t the only one who missed dawn and there was a group of about a dozen locals doing Tai Chi. I recognised some of the moves but it certainly wasn’t 108 move Yang that I am familiar with. So a combination of shyness and lack of knowledge left me watching rather than joining in. Maybe tomorrow before I fly.

From Kowloon park I walked all the way down Nathan Road to the Star Ferry. Then took the ferry across to Hong Kong Island. The views are amazing. How so many people live on so little land becomes apparent as soon as you get on the ferry and see the towers rising above the sea. I walked past a couple of construction projects on the way down Nathan Road, all the scaffolding is made of bamboo and cable ties!

From the ferry terminal on Hong Kong Island I followed the signs along the elevated walkways to the Peak Tram station. Then took the peak tram to the summit of the peak. The tram and summit are owned by Madame Tussauds and like their other ventures it is impossible to do much at all without passing through their merchandising and sales outlets. After going up 5 floors of shopping on escalators I managed to get out onto the rooftop viewing platform, the view is amazing. Out over the sea you can see all of the outer islands and across almost to Macau. Looking inland you can see the whole of Hong Kong and up into the mountains of the New Territories, which if they weren’t there would mean you could see into real China.

I came back down the peak and had a walk round the Central area on Hong Kong Island, even found Marks and Spencer’s. In most places there are two layers of pavement, one at the side of the road and then an elevated section above. There are also some fantastic escalators and shopping centres hidden in the middle of office blocks. Had a walk around a market and then headed back to the ferry terminal.

At the ferry terminal a new shop was being opened and a group were performing a Chinese Lion Dance to celebrate. Stood and watched for a while then caught the ferry back Kowloon side.

Walked back up towards the hotel using side streets parallel to Nathan Road, not sure I would want to use some of them at night, felt conspicuously tall and white in places. Using the side streets did mean I got to see the Tin Hau temple, Jade Market and Ladies Market. Now the Jade Market sells Jade, so guess what the Ladies Market sells? Wrong it sells everything. From dodgy DVDs through to Brass Buddha, also found a stall selling puppies, I think as pets, although there were a couple of Korean restaurants around.

I was approached several times by Indian gentlemen who wanted to make me a suit. One was so persistent that I negotiated with him for two double breasted suits and four shirts, then walked off in the opposite direction when he said we should go to his shop. He had followed me for nearly ten minutes, even though I said “No Thank You” several times at the start of his pitch so when he was still following me after 200 yards I thought I might as well wind him up.

I can’t believe how cheap the Rolex watches are here. Also designer handbags seem to be very cheap at the market too. I am sure they are all genuine. There are nowhere near as many camera and computer stores as I was expecting. I was talking to the waiter in Starbucks at the top of the peak and he said a lot of the electrical businesses have gone to Singapore and the internet. Evidently the overhead of a Hong Kong shop was so much that it was difficult to make a profit and the internet is much more attractive to them.

I am planning to go out in a bit and get something to eat and take a trip back down to the star ferry so I can photograph Hong Kong by night. I’ll post the pictures when I get home.


Well I am sat in the Quantas Club Lounge at Sydney airport. I’ve had a couple of their free drinks, a couple of their free coffees and some of their free lunch. I am sure they sell the tickets as business class, what I can’t work out is, what business are the three screaming kids who are running round the tables in? Maybe they are in the business of disruption. Perhaps they are in the employ of a major multi-national and they have been sent here to upset the travellers of their competitors. It’s working.

The course in Wellington finished well and the feedback was good. The sales and marketing director and HR manager took me and a couple of others out to dinner. This was possibly the worst planned project I encountered here in the antipodes. The restaurant they wanted to go to does not take bookings so we did a 15 minute taxi ride from my hotel, got there and found out they were full until 10:00 at the earliest. We then rang another place and they said they could do a table for 5 at about 9:00 pm and we could have a drink in the bar. So we took another taxi 10 minutes back towards my hotel to the restaurant. When we arrived we told them we had rung and the maitre d’ looked blank, told us we would have to wait until 10:00 to 10:30. So we left there and walked 5 minutes across the road to another restaurant, full of office Christmas parties, but with a table for 5! So after a taxi tour of Wellington I ended up 5 minutes walk from my hotel. The food was excellent. I had venison and we accompanied it with an excellent bottle of Greywolf, a full bodied ozzie red.

The venison was evidently local and deer hunting is a popular pastime. I read a very interesting article in The Dominion (Wellington’s newspaper) about an unfortunate gentleman who had gone pig hunting with a friend. Wild pigs are very common on the North Island and pig hunting is very popular. They identified and pursued a fine specimen which whilst being chased ran over a cliff. Now that’s unfortunate enough, but one of the hunters was running so fast after the pig that he couldn’t stop and he fell to his death over the cliff after the pig! Dangerous business this hunting.

Managed to get 4 and a half hours sleep before having to get up to catch the plane. The taxi driver was an expert on British politics and talked all the way to the airport. I asked him how he knew so much and he said “I have a contract with the British High Commission; I take all their staff to the airport”. Is this a threat to national security?

The flight out of Wellington crosses the north end of the south island (after it takes off from the south end of the north island, keep up). The mountains on the south island looked fantastic. It was completely clear and the view was like a geography lesson. The huge volcanic mountains with great glacial valleys leading down into flat bottomed river valleys with meandering rivers forming ox bow lakes and silt and sand spits running out into the sea. Fantastic.

I’ve picked up my email from the public internet access here at Sydney airport and I was going to update the blog from the business lounge, but the connections here are not free! So I’ve written this lot up in word and I’ll post it as soon as I can.

Took some stick about the cricket. They should never have lost that one.

Monday, 4 December 2006




Well here is a picture of the Hotel in Wellington, The view from my window and something else in my room. Post comments if you know what the something else is.
Nearly didn't get here as strong winds over the tasmanian sea delayed the inbound flight to Sydey. Wellington airport operates a curfew and the pilot would not take off from Sydney unless he knew he could land at Wellington. Good idea really. We finally got off the ground from Sydney and after a very high speed and bumby flight caused by the strong tail winds we got into Wellington in 2 and a half hours landing around 12:15 pm. By the time I cleared customs and immigration and got the car to the hotel it was 1:00 am Wellington time.
Clearing customs was interesting. The New Zealanders are very strict on what can be bought into their country. They don't want any nasty visitors bringing in plant diseases etc. So they x ray your baggage to check it isn't full of grass cuttings or anything. I have a colapsible walking pole in my suitcase. The X Ray mad said "Are you carrying an ornamental sword sir?" I quickly answered "No it's a walking stick". "Do you go walking sir?" He asked. He then looked at my boots, still the only shoes I can get on over the swollen ankle and immediately decided I was a walker. He then proceeded to open my suitcase to check that the walking pole was not contaminated.
The car driver was a huge Maori man with a great relaxed attitude and because the city tunnel was closed for cleaning he took me on a guided tour of the bays of Wellington. It is a long time since I came here last but I had forgotten how beautiful it is. Even this morning in the usual Wellington morning fog it still looks great. The mountains come right down to the sea and the residential areas are full of quaint wooden houses with corrugated iron roofs painted in a rainboiw of colours. The commercial district of high rise offices is interspersed with fabulous old wooden houses. The control tower at the airport is on the hill between two bungalows.
The course went OK, couple of cynics in the audience but generally a good bunch.
I have been out for a walk this evening but as we didn't finish until 7:00 pm it was getting too dark for pictures and for walking about on my own. I'm pretty sure Wellington is still a safe place at night but the newpaper is full of stories about an armed brawl in a Rotarua pub last night. I bet the people don't still leave their houses unlocked like they used to.
Off to bed early as I won't get much sleep tomorrow night. The taxi is due at 5:00am to take me to the airport. Supposed to be going for a beer with the Sales and Marketing Director after we finish tomorrow so I probably won't manage an early night.

Saturday, 2 December 2006


Just got back from ‘briefing’ Julie. Her flight was delayed out of Heathrow and she said Cathay Pacific had all sorts of problems in Hong Kong, probably the knock on effect of the typhoons in the Philippines. I’ve checked with Air New Zealand and my flight out of Sydney to Wellington is still showing on schedule, so fingers and toes crossed all should go smoothly. I used my trip from Sydney to Wellington as an example for risk management on Tuesday morning and after the problems they came up with I was wondering if I would ever get there.

Earthquakes usually come out as very low probability when you do risk analysis in the UK, but when you are going to Wellington it all becomes a bit more significant. They have a tremor every day, significant shakes every month and big ones now and then. I understand the whole place is engineered to cope with it though????????

Last night the hotel concierge told me there were some good Indian restaurants in a place called Kings Cross. What he didn’t tell me is it is also full of strip clubs, serious drinking bars, backpacker’s hostels and most of Sydney’s homeless and drug addicts. I found somewhere to eat though and had excellent vegetable samosas, a mixed vegetable curry, peshwari rice and a huge nan for $AU9.95, less than £5! The walk to Kings Cross took me across Hyde Park, would have been quite pleasant if it hadn’t been lashing with rain. Interestingly Liverpool Street is also near Hyde Park. Wonder where those first Sydney settlers came from then.

I’ve just packed everything in to my suit case ready for the next part of the trip to Wellington. I noticed that the plastic shell of my suitcase has been broken on the way out so I went to the shop and bought some duct tape. It’s a cheap impersonation of real Duct Tape and I’m just hoping it will be ok.

I hope I’ll be back online in Wellington Monday night, which will be Monday morning in the UK. The time difference from Sydney is 3 hours so that makes it 14 hours in front of the UK I think. The flight time is 3 hoursish.

Friday, 1 December 2006

Saturday in Sydney








Well after updating the blog last night I decided to go out to eat. I had my eye on the curry restaurant at Darling Harbour. However it was not to be. The first Friday in December is traditionally the night for the works Christmas party and nearly all the bars and restaurants in Darling Harbour were closed for private functions. So I went to get my beard trimmed instead.

Now I know I am spoilt at home as the same person has been cutting my hair for 20 years and still charges me the same price, but……. $AU50 (>£20) for 10 minutes in the chair to put a blade through my beard and number one through my hair! Went to the markets for a mooch round this morning and noticed I could have bought some clippers for $AU16.50, cut my own hair and then thrown them away! The only good point was that the Chinese barber said that if I wanted to stay in Sydney he could find me one of the girls from his family to marry and he guaranteed me Australian citizenship. I am not sure if he was joking or not.

Anyway after I recovered from the shock of the Chinese barber I went into the shopping mall/entertainment complex to find food. The selection in the food court was fantastic. OK there was a Macdonalds, but there was also Sushi, Chinese, Thai, Traditional Australian (Barramundi and chips or lamb and 2 veg), Italian, Iranian, Turkish and a Mongolian BBQ! So I got my curry, Chicken Thai Green Curry with boiled jasmine rice for $AU 9.50, and very nice it was too. I had a fantastic Italian ice cream for afters, a Starbucks coffee to finish and all for less than the cost of a starter in the hotel.

Got up around 8:00 am. The hotel is full of people in Sydney for the weekend and the queue for bfast was horrible, so I walked across to Starbucks for coffee and a croissant. I then took the monorail to Paddy’s market. Well actually the monorail is circular and you pay a flat fare of $AU4.50 so I took the monorail all the way round the circle and then the two stops to Paddy’s Market. The market is the oldest and largest market in Sydney and runs from Thursday to Sunday. Some of the poultry and fish was far more exotic than it is in Leeds indoor market and the range of pirated DVDs, Watches and Clothing was terrifying.

I then walked the entire length of George Street up to Circular Quay. As happiness is a journey, not a destination, I went to Manly again, this time on the ferry. I have to say though that the ferry to Manly and Manly itself both make me happy. I sat for about half an hour just watching the surfers. If this bloody ankle wasn’t still so bad I would have been down the hire shop for a wet suit and a boogie board, but you can see from the beach how strong the rip is and just walking out through the waves would have torn my ankle apart again.

From the beach I went to the Manly craft market. Now I don’t want to spoil the surprise Sharon & Lauren, but I was looking at some fabulous Australian gemstone pendants. The old man selling them saw me looking and immediately came over to ask where I came from. Thinking he would be like so many others I had met with no English geography, I said “Between Oxford and Birmingham” to which he replied “Warwick and Leamington way?” Turns out that he worked for 40 years in mining and quarrying and lived for 3 years between Cheltenham and Evesham where he ran a Cotswold stone quarry. He was also an Opal miner in the Australian outback for 10 years and worked in quarries and mines all over the world. When he retired he bought a property 160kms north of Sydney. After he had been there a week he was digging over the garden and found some stones in the garden, so he built himself a stone cutting saw to see what they were like inside. Now people bring him stone from all over New South Wales and he cuts polishes mounts and sells it. We chatted for about 20 minutes, but unfortunately apart from the Air Balloon in Cheltenham I didn’t know any of the pubs he asked about. He also told me that a couple of weeks ago he gave that great British poet Pam Ayres a set of his stone table coasters when she came up to his stall in Manly. The following week he received a signed copy of her latest book in the post. He now spends all week cutting and polishing stone, drives to Manly Saturday morning and sells it at the craft fair, sleeps in the car Saturday night then goes to another craft fair in Sydney Sunday and drives home Sunday night. Not bad for a 70 year old.

On the ferry on the way back from Manly it started to rain and when I walked out of Circular Quay a huge thunderstorm started. My coat was at the hotel. So Lauren, next time your Mum makes us pack a rucksack before we got out for the day I bet she’ll say “Remember what happened in Sydney, you got soaked to the skin because you didn’t pack your coat”

Thursday, 30 November 2006

Oh yeah and the aboriginal music is at www.koomurri.com



I don't seem to be able to get the captions anywhere near the pictures using this blogware! Anyway I am sure you will work out what goes where.



Tree Huggers welcom What a driveway.









Jeremy has booked me into a hotel next to a flyover! The Icon of Sydney

Old Meets New Crazy Juggler


























Why don't Vauxhall make sensible cars like this?

Well the ankle has put up with a day tramping round Sydney. Still having problems going down stairs and hills and uneven ground is painful. But overall it’s doing fine. Which is a good thing as Sydney is a great city for walking in. I walked from the hotel round to the Opera house this morning. Didn’t get going until 10:30 as I had my best nights sleep yet. Mind and body have adjusted to the new time zone just in time to go to New Zealand and another 3 hours further on in the day.

The area around the hotel, Darling Harbour is a fabulous combination of tourist attractions, bars and restaurants and residential/business developments. I had a good walk round last night and again this afternoon. Looks like there is some kind of free concert this evening so I’ll be going back later. Also found an Indian restaurant, so curry for tea later I think.

From Darling Harbour I walked through the working docks past a cruise liner and a car transporter ship. The area between the docks and the skyscrapers of the central business district is full of quaint colonial houses, mostly painted in mellow fawns and browns, looking glorious in the sun. I then found my way into some very expensive and trendy looking pier developments for my first good view of the harbour bridge. The expensive was confirmed when I noticed that each one comes with a parking space and yacht mooring.

I then went under the bridge and round to The Rocks. The Rocks is old Sydney, with warehouses, terraced shops with verandas and a couple of large traditional hotels (pubs). I had a mooch round the rocks and thought about giving it all up to become an outback opal miner. They must make a few quid looking at the price of opal jewellery. From The Rocks I carried on to Circular Quay, the main ferry terminal and ferry rail connection.

The Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art is also at Circular Quay, but unfortunately only one of the four floors was open as ‘a major installation’ is going on. The sign didn’t say what was being installed. The one floor that was open had an exhibition of Australian poster art and signage from the 1930’s to current. Some great stuff including a fantastic gate sign reading ‘Beware of the god’ maybe you had to see it to appreciate it.

On the grass next to the museum is a 50 foot high TV screen erected especially to show the cricket. I didn’t hang around there long. Instead I moved along circular quay to listen to some aboriginal didgereedoo players busking. I bought a copy of their album and I’ll see if I can post music on the blog or at least post a link to their website. So high tech these aboriginals. Sorry the typing slowed down there but it has just gone 6:00 pm so I had to stop and open a cold beer. For the connoisseurs it is a Carlton Draught. Not as good as the Pure Blonde I had in the week, but OK. I though the guys from Imperial were winding me up on Wednesday evening when they sent me to the bar for 4 Pure Blondes. Was disappointed when the barman gave me four bottles of lager.

Anyway back to today. I then spent nearly half an hour watching a crazy English fire juggler build up a crowd from nothing and then get $5 off of each of them including me, for his wild and very funny show. I went from Circular quay round to the Opera House and had a lunch time beer in the bar on the terrace below the Opera House with a fantastic view of the harbour and a pleasant sea breeze. From the Opera house I walked round to the Botanical Gardens for a stroll in the indigenous trees and then from there back across the peninsula to Circle Quay for the ferry back to Darling Harbour.

I am going to post this blog entry, drink me beer, take a shower and go find something to eat and, hopefully, watch a free concert. Had a text message from Julie Dunn this morning and her flight was delayed out of Heathrow so she won’t be in Sydney now until 7:15 on Sunday morning, so not sure if I will see her, may just pass like ships in the harbour. That reminds me I have to send her an email.

Here is the view from my hotel room window

Well the second one is done. It all went well and they were happy bunnies.


Got a chauffer driven Ford Falcon V8 from the hotel into Sydney. This was a company recommended by one of the course members who uses them a lot and said they were cheaper than a taxi. They are also picking me up on Sunday to take me to the airport.


The Crown Plaza at Darling Harbour is a typical cuty centre hotel. I ordered Sirloin, chip, asparagus and mushrooms and they bought rib eye, mash and green salad. When I said it wasn't what I ordered the waiter said "yes it is". I got the original waiter who took my order to come over and confirm what I ordered and eventually they admitted they were wrong. Think I'll eat out tomorrow.


Went for a walk round Darling Harbour, looks like their are plenty of options for eating out.

Wednesday, 29 November 2006

Second Course

Just got back to my room from post traing dinner on the verandah. Temperature has dropped today and it has been very cloudy, not very summer in Sydney at all. We had the plastic verandah curtains closed and the gas patio heaters on.

Second course is going well, another enthusiatic group with good questions and a healthy air of practicality. We are planning 3 more projects and all seems to be going well.

Put my washing into the hotel laundry this morning and was told it would be back by 5:00 pm. Checked my room at six and it wasn't there. Checked again at 8:30 and it still wasn't there. Was starting to worry as I have to pack tonight to move into Sydney tomorrow. Hotel had been chasing it up since 6:00 pm they said. Just got back to my room at 9:45 pm still not been returned as far as I could see. Rang reception, they said they would chase it up again.

Opened the cupboard to get my passport and travellers cheques out of the safe so I didn't forget them in the morning. Noticed what looked like my shirt sticking out of one of the draws. All my washing had been neatly packed into the drawers!

The thing that puzzles me is, if the hotel had chased it up why had they not been told it had been delivered? Did they ever chase it up, do they care about my socks?

Tuesday, 28 November 2006




Here you go, how the other half live.

Well it has been a good days traing with a happy bunch of people. We successfully defined and planned four of their projects and they were all ahppy bunnies. I've just watched the sunset over the Blue Montains from the hotel veandah with a cold beer and eaten an excellent steak and chips followed by chocolate and ginger pudding and more beer.
Fantastic thunderstorm this afternoon with about 3 inches of rain in 40 minutes. Temperature is in the low 30s C and air con is runnin g flat out in my hotel room. Will have to turn it off to sleep so it will be a hot sticky night.
Sorry there are no pics today, batteries went flat in the camera and I have had to walk to the nearest garage to get new ones.

Monday, 27 November 2006



Well not much to report today as I have been running a training course. The participants are a lively bunch who have been keen to learn but a bit cynical that their UK bosses should send some pomme out here to tell them how to manage projects. We had a great dinner out on the hotel veranda with traditional Ozzie barbeque fair. Big Shrimps, beef styeak and beef sausages with loads of salads. I am confused by the potatoes, it said on the label they were jacket potatoes, but their jackets had been removed! When I questioned this they said “yeah they are jacket potatoes, roasted in the oven” I said “where is the skin” and they looked at me like I came from another planet.

No pictures today so I’ve posted some more from yesterday.

Taking stick about the cricket.

Sunday, 26 November 2006






Scenic World at Katoomba is a bit touristy, but with only a day to spare and an injured ankle it seemed like a great way to see the mountains, The Jamison Valley and some rainforest. You buy a ticket and then get taken to the valley floor by the world’s steepest scenic railway. When you sit in the seat at the top station you are laid on your back, when you get to the bottom station you are leaning forward in the seat trying to stop yourself falling out. It was steep.

There is then an elevated boardwalk through the rainforest that takes you on a tour of the flora and fauna, with the odd story about ghosts from the mine and mining disaters. The whole place was originally a coalmine. After the walk you are transported back to the top on a Swiss built cable car.

You can then cross the valley on a glass floored cable car. Sounds a lot more spectacular than it is, but great views and fun. The Jamison valley is evidently 15 times older than the Grand Canyon, but less than a tenth the size!

I then drove back over the Darling Causeway and down through Richmond and Windsor. No not a trip west out of West London, but a fantastic mountain road that winds it’s way along the top of sandstone cliffs, drops down through Australia’s major fruit growing region and then crosses the Hawkesbury River valley. Soon after Windsor the Sytdney suburbs start again and there is a McDonalds every 10 miles, a couple of KFCs and three Red Rooster fast food restaraunts. I wonder if Mr Macdonald realised he was going to make the world so uniform?

Got back to the hotel about 6:00 pm. It was empty, had a phone call from reception to ask if I was planning to eat in the restaurant as they only had two other bookings and would close once they had fed them.

Got to read through the notes for tomorrow and get some sleep. The jetlag’s not been too bad so far, think my body has made the 13 hour adjustment, not sure my mind has.

Sunday The Blue Mountains


Lithgow High Street The Groom's Harley



Met my first ‘real ozzie’ at breakfast today. The restaurant was very busy as many of the wedding guests had stayed the night. I shared a table with a guy in his late 50’s who admitted to being the bride’s uncle. He had driven over 600 miles to come to the wedding from his cattle station in somewhere unpronounceable. He was very interesting. Won’t go into detail about him but here are a few quotes.

“The kids don’t have a clue, all they want are computers and mobile phones. They’ll be no bloody good if the genny breaks down.”

“This country’s full, we can’t take any more of those boat people and refugees”

“I’ve seen the world, I was in the air force for 5 years before I settled down, and I don’t want to see any of it ever again”

“Sydney is full of poofters and foreigners”

“The government want to send me some of the unemployed, I’ve got plenty of work for them”

“The Blue Mountains, they’re not bloody bush, they’re suburbs of Sydney”

I have to say he was very interesting. He was very concerned about what will happen to his cattle station that he inherited from his father. All of his kids have left for the city and have no interest in the cattle station. He also manages his neighbours station. She lives 45 miles from him and is an 80 year old woman who has been on her own for 5 years since her husband died. She has no children or other living relatives and he thinks she will leave it all to him, but what will he do with it?

Anyway he got me going fairly early so I was off to the Blue Mountains. Arrived at Katoomba (renowned for its spectacular views of the Jamison Valley) in thick mountain fog at 9:30 am. The locals said it would burn off by noon. So I got back in the car and headed over the mountains to Lithgow. From Sydney to Katoomba it didn’t feel like real Australia. The Great Western Highway is a string of ribbon developments each with its own fast food restaurant and Holden dealership. But west of Katoomba was a different matter altogether. The settlements seemed to consist of a few houses and a large hotel (ozzie for PUB!). Most also had some kind of liquor store and a petrol station doubling as a car repair shop and supermarket. From Mt Victoria to Lithgow was stunning mountain road with great views and little civilisation. There was supposed to be a place called Bell on the way, I saw some signs and a cross roads, but no houses.

Lithgow was like something from a 1960’s BBC/ABC joint production. The quaintness was helped by the fact that it was Christmas Fayre Charity Sunday and the main street was full of tombolas and bric a brac stalls. There was an excellent display of classic cars. After walking round the stalls I headed back to Katoomba to see if the fog had gone. The route back included the climb of Mt Victoria where the road goes from 300m above sea level to 1370m above sea level. Would have been more fun in the Subaru or a Land Rover but the Toyota hire car did the job.

Saturday, 25 November 2006

Saturday Beaches




Jez had said go to Manly, so I started north of there at Mona Vale and drove down the coast stopping everynow and then at a beach. The beaches are fantastic and the surf was awesome. Unfortunately the ankle certainly wouldn't stand up to a dip in the surf so I watched from a safe distance.


Manly was very nice and after an ice cream and a coffee I drove over the Harbour bridge and went to Bondi. Bondi is awful. It is a small beach, with rubbish urf and feels a bit like Scarborough on a very sunny day. Stayed about 10 minutes. Drove back to the hotel.


Now the hotel, there is a place. Last night when I arrived there was a charity ball going on and the police were in the car park breathalysing any one who went near a car. Tonight there is a wedding, and the groom is a hells angel. car park full of harleys and bar full of men in leather waistcoats with long spade beards.


Tomorrow the Blue Mountains.


Graham



Saturday excursion


Went for a drive in the bush. as you can see there are several bushes. Went to the Ku-ring-gai national park Lots of eaucalyptus trees, the sound is amazing and the picture really doesn't show the smell. The trees are full of exotic birds and the air is full of eucvalyptus vapour.

The Flight Out

Well it was long. The first leg from Heathrow to Hong Kong was uneventful in a 747-400. Cathay cabin crew are very good and the whole thing wizzed by. Watched Talladega Nights and Fast and Furios.

The second leg from Hongkong was hilarious. Sat next to an ozzie geezer (his words) who hated kids. Unfortunately a family with 2 kids had been moved back from first class as their headsets didn't work in first class. The parents treated the cabin crew like hired help and expected them to look after the kids while they got on with sleeping. Cabin crew did a great job.

Decided to hire a car and drive to the hotel from the airport. Girl on the car hire desk gave me directions and said it would take an hour. Took me 90 minutes, mainly because her first direction was "turn right out of the car park" which would have had me going against the flow of a one way street!