Sunday, March 21, 2010

Just another day in paradise…


Monday:
11:30am Biology midterm

1:15pm Psychology midterm

Tuesday:
1:00am board a bus bound for the ferry

8:30am arrive at breakfast spot, a McDonalds near the ferry, after a very long drive

11:00am ferry to Heron Island

1:00pm arrive on Heron Island and be amazed

Spend less than 30 minutes walking around the perimeter of the entire island



4:00pm snorkel safety lesson

Shortly thereafter, find out that we are evacuating the island due to the impending Cyclone Ului

Try to watch the sunset, get caught in random rain, run away from beach

Go hang out on the jetty looking for sea turtles, find a few

Stay up late watching a movie, get a few hours of sleep

Wednesday:
7am breakfast

Snorkel until 9:30

Walk around island again, see at least 100 rays and 2 sharks not 5 feet away

Pack, leave room by 11:00am

11:15 lunch

Hang out on the jetty watching sea turtles, Gus the giant groper, and rays. Try to catch the rays jumping up out of the water.

1:00pm leave our island paradise after only 24 hours

2 more hours on a ferry, 7 more hours on a bus, dinner at a truck stop, arrive back in Brisbane around 11pm on St. Patrick’s Day and crash asap.

Brisbane, part 1

Queensland museum
Not my favorite museum, but nice anyway. Free, which is always a plus.

Salsa dancing in the square
Tough, tiring, and a lot of fun. Also free.

Pub crawl
$15, 5 bars, Jay’s birthday celebration, excellent night.



Pulp Fiction
We saw this at an old theater just down the street from our hotel. I had never seen it. It was good.

Pan’s Labyrinth
We could have seen this at the old theater, but we had the DVD so we watched it at the hotel. I really enjoyed the movie, even if you do have to read it all.

Casablanca
I had never seen this one either, which is surprising since it’s such a classic. I loved it. I’ll have to watch it again soon.



That’s all I can really remember doing in Brisbane. We haven’t been here for very long, though. I’ll post more later.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

3 weeks in Sydney, AUS



La Traviata at the Sydney Opera House
Price of the ticket (just a few rows from stage, almost dead center): $275
Price I, as a student, paid for that ticket: $55



Wicked
Front row center, price of ticket: $30, thanks to the daily lottery for cheap tickets

Bondi Beach
Only cost us the bus trip there, and dinner/Sangria on occasion. Awesome place.

Taronga Zoo
Adult price: $41
Student price: $28 Thank you, Tech
Drew and I got to pet a wallaby (tiny kangaroo) and a wombat (huge mammal, looks like a teddy bear). The wombat tried to climb the fence, and tried to bite Drew. He was completely adorable. Also adorable, the tiny sugar gliders that ran across the glass walls of their cage. Too cute! We also saw an emu, grey kangaroos, and a platypus.



Mardi Gras
Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras, to be precise. We went to see Wicked the night of the parade. It was an interesting weekend, though.

Avatar and Alice in Wonderland at IMAX
I had never seen Avatar, so this was awesome.
Alice, obviously amazing (if you know my love of Johnny Depp)
$23 for students

Fish market
I didn’t like fish before coming on this trip, but I’ve opened my mind to some of it, including mussels, which I never thought I’d like but I do

Kangaroo
I ate kangaroo. It was interesting. The chef wouldn’t cook it past medium, which is the rarest I’ve ever eaten a meat, but it was pretty good regardless. Way too expensive though. $25

Caving
Awesome! We went into the Blue Mountains to a cave called the Plughole, and we went adventure caving. It was my first time really caving, and I loved it. I can’t wait to do it again! $70



Sydney Aquarium
Pretty cool place, definitely worth the trip. We saw dugongs, which are like ocean manatees. Also had a student rate, but I don’t remember what it was.



Markets
We went to several markets in Sydney, including Paddy’s, which wound up being our main shopping center for three weeks.

Possums
We got to pet wild possums in the park just up the street from our hotel! I sat in the grass near a tree and let them come up to me, and I got to pet at least 5 of them. It was amazing. They’re adorable, not like our possums back home. Cost: nothing at all

If you didn’t catch the common theme, Sydney is very student-friendly. They want students to be able to experience things that we would otherwise be unable to experience, like amazing seats at an opera. No student would ever pay $275 for their first opera, and even if they wanted to they probably wouldn’t be able to. We were able to gain an appreciation for opera without breaking the bank. Overall, Sydney was a great success.

Monday, March 8, 2010

South Island Tour, and Farewell NZ

Sorry this has taken so long. Between traveling, packing, finals, papers, moving, and exploring some more, I’ve been too busy to sit down and write about all of the awesome things I’ve seen and done. But here’s an attempt.



Our last weekend in New Zealand was amazing. We left Wellington on Thursday (February 11) afternoon and flew into Christchurch, a town on the south island. The plane ride was great, and lasted all of half an hour. We leveled out for maybe two minutes before beginning out descent into Christchurch. Crazy!

Our primary mode of transportation for the weekend was a van, but since we had 13 people we also booked a car so that everyone would have a little bit of breathing room, and room for bags. Our poor van was interesting. We weren’t entirely sure if it would survive the weekend, but the van, and all of its passengers, including the moss growing in the windows, made it safely back to Christchurch on Monday, so it worked out nicely. That’s right, we didn’t bother going back to Wellington until Monday, because we get one free absence per class and it seemed like the perfect time to get some extra travel time in before leaving the country. Our hostel that night was huge, and we were in a room with 38 people, sectioned off into groups of 4. My room (which was 3 walls and a curtain) had 3 of the girls from our group and one random guy who we never met because he came in after we went to sleep and wasn’t awake when we left the next morning. It’s fun meeting random people in hostels. We ran into a guy from Alabama in the hostel. He recognized the GA Tech clothes most of us were wearing and introduced himself. Small world :)



We spent Friday morning exploring Christchurch, which turned out to be a beautiful city. We walked along the river, where we saw people in gondolas. I wanted to ride, but we were on a tight schedule. We ended up at the Botanical Gardens, which were beautiful. I took lots of pictures of bees on flowers. Biology has ruined me. Anyway, we left Christchurch early that afternoon and headed towards the glaciers, stopping along the way to admire the beauty of New Zealand one last time. We stopped at Arthur’s Pass, where we met some very friendly keas. Keas are parrots, and they’re notorious for getting into everything and tearing up the rubber around car windows. These keas were definitely used to people being around and feeding them. They would pose for a picture, then approach you expecting some food. It was kind of sad, since they are learning to depend on humans for food, but it made for some great photo ops. We made sure to close our car doors and windows before chasing them around with cameras.



Kea on the car. The doors were shut soon after.



Kea on the van :)

At some point during the day, we climbed a really pretty waterfall. I managed to hit my knee on a rock, and I still have a little bit of a bruise 3.5 weeks later. It was awesome though.
Some of our group took the car to a place called Pancake Rocks, which was apparently beautiful. The rest of us were already tired and were not willing to take an extra few hours to get to the hostel, so we opted to take the van and continue towards Franz Josef, a town near the glaciers. We stopped at a few lookouts along the way and took some amazing pictures.



The hostel was nice, although I can’t remember too many details about it. The next day was foggy and rainy, and our glacier walk was canceled. This was especially discouraging because some of our group had opted to do ice climbing (much more dangerous, I would say) at a different glacier very close by and their tour had not been canceled. So we decided to crash their party and go see the glaciers from as close as we could get. Turns out, you don’t really need to be on a tour to get a really good view of the glaciers, and when it’s that cold, you don’t mind not standing on the actual ice. After seeing the glaciers, we headed towards our next hostel, stopping at several points along the way for more pictures. We stopped in Queenstown for dinner at a place called Fergburger, which is listed in every guidebook we have and is relatively cheap. It was amazingly delicious, and we actually ended up going back on our return trip a few days later. I honestly can’t remember too many of the details from the rest of that day, but I remember it being a lot of fun.

Once again, we crashed fairly soon after arriving at the hostel. Sunday started much earlier than we had anticipated, with a bus showing up to take us to another bus to take us to Milford Sound. Crazy morning. The bus to Milford Sound was great. Our driver told us things about New Zealand along the way, and although we had heard most of the things in biology class (for the last 5 weeks) it was nice to see some of the things firsthand, and to hear a Kiwi’s take on everything. It rained most of the day, and it was cold, but we couldn’t have cared less. We took a cruise, and on the way out we had dolphins following along beside the boat. We even saw a baby dolphin! Through the mist we could see cliffs and waterfalls and caves and seals, all of which were beautiful despite the low visibility. We went really close to one waterfall and wound up in the mist, where some of our group got completely soaked. I stood behind a wall so that only my face and my rain jacket would get wet. It was effective, and fun.



After our cruise and the bus ride back to the hostel, we headed back towards Christchurch. We were staying in a hostel about halfway between our last hostel and Christchurch so that we could get to the airport without having to drive for hours on end the next morning. We got to the hostel fairly late, but we ended up staying up for hours anyway. The hostel was a collection of buildings in a field in the middle of nowhere, and we filled the entire thing. It was very cold, but the clouds had cleared so we decided to do a little star-gazing before bed. We took our comforters out into the field so we wouldn’t freeze, and we watched shooting stars until well after midnight. It was the perfect ending to the perfect weekend on the south island.

Monday morning came way too quickly. We left the hostel before daylight, since some of our group had to catch an earlier flight to make it to the class they had missed on Thursday. We got to Christchurch around noon, returned the car, and began exploring some more. We went to an art gallery for a little while, had lunch, and began preparing for our flight back to Wellington. We were very sad to see the weekend, and this half of the program, end, but we definitely made the most of our short time in NZ.