Once again, a big thank you to everyone who helped me raised $500 for charity to the Cambodian Kids Foundation and Melbourne's City2Sea race! The race was early Sunday morning, and conveniently just around the corner from the apartment where I was staying with John and Jenny. There was music playing and so much good energy in the air! The race felt surprisingly long, for only 14k (about 9 miles), every kilometer felt so much longer than usual! And my knees started to give out at about 5k, which meant that it was a fairly painful run, but still fun. The course ended at St. Kilda's, at Port Philip Bay, right on the beach. I had a great finish and sprinted the last 500 meters, one of my favorite things to do since XC back in high school! I spent the rest of the morning recovering, getting free stuff and hanging out in the Movember tent, having a few beers and food. I was with four guys, my coworker Cal and his mates, all of whom are fundraising for Movember, and raising awareness by growing moustaches! The night before the five of us got a fabulous dinner at Trunk in Melbourne's CBD.
I spent the rest of the day exploring Melbourne on my own, walking (or more like hobbling) around Chapel St, which is one of the best shopping districts in the country. Little boutiques with fabulous but affordable shopping on Chapel St, which extends from the Yarra River down to Prahran. Melbourne is easily one of my favourite cities. With the wide boulevards, the comprehensible tram system, endless shops and quirky neighborhoods, it has been such a pleasure to be back in this lovely city. I wouldn't mind living here one day. Beats the chaotic frenzy in Sydney!
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Tuesday, 8 November 2011
Adventures in the Blue Mountains
The Three Sisters |
Cal organized a group of about 24 students (all girls, except for Cal and Julian) and since this was big enough for two groups, my trip was comped (so awesome). Getting out to Katoomba in the Blue Mountains is actually not bad, considering the expensive train fares within the city. A return trip to Katoomba, a 2.5 hr trip, is only $11. Which means...I'm officially going to the mountains a lot more often!
While the novices practiced abseiling on a rockface, Cal and I enjoyed making faces with sticks and taking funny pictures on Julian's camera (oops). Our first cliff was a 15m drop, I absolutely LOVED the heights and the adrenaline rush you get from standing over a cliff! Our next feat was double that height, standing 30m over a a cliff where your feet are only on the rock for about 5m before you hit a giant overhang. Without a rockface to plant your feet as you descend, you just kind of dangle in mid-air, twirl around and enjoy the view.
The view from up there is absolutely stunning-- the Blue Mountains are so named because of the abundance of eucalyptus trees, which give off a chemical that appears blue to the human eye. In the distance, the mountains (which look more like plateaus here and there) have this glowing, blue haze to them. The combination with the blue sky, green trees and the sandstone cliffs is breathtaking.
Quick stop for lunch before we hit the canyon. It was quite difficult to manage the hundreds of steps down to the canyon and Empress Falls with what felt like a food baby in my belly. The farther down we climbed, the trees and leaves went from hard and brittle to a lush rainforest that smelled of tea tree oil and fresh dirt. We spotted a lyrebird, a bird that been around for millions of years and is known for digging up dirt and causing the steep hillsides of the forest (a lyrebird can move up to 62 tons of dirt a year!)
We got on our wetsuits, which was probably the most difficult thing I did all day...not an easy task. My wettie was wayyyy too small on me, Roberta was lifting me up entirely as she was trying to pull it up over my knees. Ha! What a disaster. We filled our helmets up with water and dumped them on our heads to increase our overall body temp (also makes it easier to get in the water if your head is wet).
Empress Falls, our last 30m rappel |
Just as rewarding was watching our fellow canyoneers coming down the abseil, some of them struggled more than others! We had a good laugh..
Then for the lonnng hike back up alllll. those. stairs. This time I had the pleasure of carrying the 100m wet, heavy rope up on my back. But we were soon rewarded with a stunning view (what you'll see at the end of the video, when I'm drinking my water bottle). Cal, Julian and I went to a little Indian restaurant that was in the middle of nowhere and in an old house, weird, but the food was UNREAL. I haven't had such good Indian food since I was in India!
We booked it to the train station after finding out that we had only one train left to get back to the city.
Sunday afternoon I took the train down the Illawarra line to Woonona, to celebrate with beautiful Amanda and her friends at her bachelorette party. Here, they call it a Hens Party (and a bachelor's party is a Bucks party... don't ask me why) We were served fresh cocktails by naked butlers (well, almost naked. They wore little aprons) and played all sorts of hilarious games. My favorite was the wedding dress design, where we had to make a wedding dress with two rolls of toilet paper and some tinsel. Our model, lovely Julie the maid of honour, looked great...until Amanda pushed her in the pool!
**Pour mes amis francais: samedi j'ai fait du rappel et du canyon avec des amies dans les Montagnes Bleues, 3 hrs de Sydney. Les montagnes sont magnifiques, avec une brume bleue partout. Cette couleur est grace à les eucalypts qui donnent une couleur bleue. Le matin, on a fait des rappels de 15m et 30m pour s'améliorer à le hauteur et de maitriser un rappel. Dans l'apres-midi, on a fait un petit canyon, avec des sauts sympas, des chutes d'eau, et un grand rappel dans un cascade!!! Regardez le video pour avoir une idée du grandeur du canyon... Trop bien!!!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
Melbourne Cup
Cal, Caroline and me on Melbourne Cup day! |
It's the race that stops the nation! Melbourne Cup is the biggest horse race in Australia, and practically a national holiday since nearly everything stops for the afternoon to watch the glorified race.
Let me start by saying that when I first arrived here in Australia, I thought the Melbourne Cup was another name for the AFL Rugby Final (my coworkers got a good laugh outta that one. It's like mixing up Mardi Gras and the Superbowl.)
As is tradition, we closed up shop here at BU at 12:30 and headed to this fancy-schmancy Spanish tapas, Postales, right in the heart of the CBD. The ladies typically wear fancy hats made by milliners, or fascinators (like a fancy headband). Here is a photo from last year's Melbourne Cup of the models outside our venue at Martin Place.
Mr. Best Dressed |
The closest race in its history! |
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