Now, normally with this
blog, I recap an entire trip or event in one post. It's always a
challenge for me to do so, because I struggle to force myself to omit
certain details so that my post isn't rambling on and on until I
suddenly reach a staggering 5,000 words. Then you all just get bored
and stop reading. That's definitely not my goal. Just like with a
good meal, I want every bite of what I right to be something new and
interesting, a taste so surprising that my diners want to keep
reaching back for another bite until all of a sudden, the plate is
completely empty of any meat, grain, vegetable or sauce.
I don't think I could
confine this trip to Australia with my friend from Boston, Brianna,
to even an eleven-course meal at the famous fish restaurant in NYC,
Per Se, in one sitting. It is longer than any trip I have ever been
on, and, more importantly, not like anything I have ever done before.
As I talked over with my parents how I could document it properly,
the conclusion I always reverted back to was a weekly post as opposed
to one giant one in which my readers grow so intimidated by the
length of the piece that all the events of the second half of the
trip would get wash away in the details of the first. I like to think
I take advantage of every moment, particularly in an adventure such
as this, and would feel ashamed if I allowed certain parts to
aggressively dominate my story. So, here's part one.
After months of telling
friends who planned to spend their summers working of my plans, after
weeks of convincing my mom that we didn't necessarily need a
day-by-day schedule and after what felt like days of packing
miscellaneous items in my 75 liter Osprey pack, I'm finally here. My
long-time family friend from Boston, Brianna, also managed to arrive
despite a delayed flight to New York and a lopsided, near-explosive
pack stuffed with all the clothes and medical supplies necessary for
any situation that towered at least eight inches over her head. We
teetered in and out of the train, down the street and to our first
hostel, exhausted from over 25 hours of traveling and a fourteen hour
time change. Neither of us knew what day it was nor how many meals we
had missed on the plane while we were sleeping. Despite our mental
haze, we knew one thing for sure: we had made it to Australia.
The backpacker hostel
system in Australia, particularly on the east coast where we would be
traveling for the next five weeks, is extremely accessible to
foreigners, so we planned to rely solely on the YHAs until meeting
with our parents the fourth week of our trip in Cairns. We spent the
first three nights of our trip in the Railway Square Youth Hostel in
Sydney. Upon arrival at 11:00 am, we threw our packs in the corner of
the room next to our bunk beds. The dorms in this particular YHA are
actually renovated railway cars from the mid 1800s that were painted
maroon, and are adjacent to the current Central Railway Station. We
shared our cart with six other backpackers, one of whom disrupted our
already disturbed sleep cycle with some of the most aggressive
snoring I have ever heard.
With only a map as our
tour guide, we walked through what I would call Asia-town. To our
surprise, Australia, especially Sydney, has a large Asian population
due to its proximity to, well, Asia. Their Chinatown is quite similar
to that of New York, except with fewer knock-off shops and more
authentic Asian restaurants and food stalls. We were lured into a
restaurant by a neon green sign that read “Emperor Palace.” By
USA standards, it looked like a C-grade restaurant, but the cries of
our stomachs overtook any mental hesitation.
We were led upstairs by
the hostess, and entered the magical world of dim sung, of which both
of us had yet to experience. Asian women push silver carts stacked
with bamboo steamer pots and plates of fried fish. We said yes to
practically everything until our table was full, since we had no idea
what any of it was. Before we could fully comprehend what had just
happened those past thirty seconds of bombardment, we had already
dove into golden fried wontons filled with pork, rice paper rolls
filled with plump prawns bathing in a pool of soy sauce, toasted
sesame rolls filled with prawns, green beans, and, of course, steamed
pork buns. The buns always have been and always will be my personal
favorite. The exterior of these was a thick layer of dough that was
airy enough inside to not sit heavily in my stomach. The pork inside
was cared for so well by the steam circulating in the bun that they
reach a perfect level of melting tenderness, while the browned
bottoms provided the perfect textural balance. I wanted to say yes to
more of the dishes, but we were so full and not at all willing to
push a bill over $50 since there were no prices on anything.
After lunch, we
wandered into a market that sold the usual Chinatown junk and
knockoffs, but also a plethora of Asian spice blends, local
mushrooms, whole fish, and exotic fruits and vegetables. I was in
heaven picking through curry powders, oyster mushrooms, and durian. I
wanted to buy, and even more so cook, it all.
We continued through
Chinatown until we reached the steps up to the bridge at Darling Bay.
Darling Bay is home to the National Martime Museum, Hyde Park
Walkway, a boardwalk lined with upscale cafes and restaurants, and
the day-cruise ships. We walked down the boardwalk, shaking our heads
at all the entrees and beers over $20 that we in no way could afford
at the time but would convince our parents to share with us when we
were all in Sydney at the end of June. From the end of the boardwalk,
we had a spectacular view of the small, residential islands dotted
with giant houses owned by celebrities, government officials, and big
businessmen. The pairing of the new skyscrapers built entirely out of
windows with the ocean and the mansions removed from the main land
reminded me so much of South Beach in Miami.
I noticed this
similarity even more so as Brianna and I passed by the bars bustling
with the youthful corporate culture dressed in pencil skirts and
blazers later that night. Unlike in New York City, where people in
their mid-20s are the minority in the urban, corporate environment
due to the aftermath of the economic recession, in Sydney, this age
group seems to dominate both during the morning hours and in the
nightlife scene. Many of them, us included, had ventured to Circular
Bay downtown to watch the Vivid Sydney exhibition.
The exhibition was
produced by Australian, German, and Japanese artists, and sought to
utilize bright colors projected onto different sights throughout the
city to blend an environment generally dominated by greys with
vivacity. We squatted on the boardwalk in Circular Bay directly
across from the Syndey Opera House until, at 6 PM, a set of lights
projected from the Sydney Harbor Bridge onto the Opera House. For the
next twenty minutes, the projections morphed into different designs
while the speakers on the dock played Ratatat and Explosions in the
Sky. As I watched the Opera House transform from its natural state to
yet another artistic piece, the reality that I was finally in
Australia finally hit me. Maybe it was the jet lag temporarily
fading, but I like to attribute it to the contrast of two very
opposite components of Sydney culture: the iconic, historic Opera
House,and the very modernist, abstract medium of art displayed
through Vivid that is starkly reflective of the youthful, hip
business class emerging in this city. I closed my eyes and let the
autumn breeze detach me for a moment from the bustle of Circular Bay.
I could not for even a split second deny the blossoming happiness
that always flowers just at the right moments whenever I travel.
The next morning was
our real introduction to jet lag beyond just not knowing what day of
the week it was. I woke up at 12 AM when I heard the whistle of the
train just outside our train car. My first delusional conclusion was
that the hostel had a breakfast bell or something at 8 AM. Besides
the bell, our other cart-mates were rummaging around and whispering
to each other. When I looked at my clock though, 12:00 AM blinded me.
I couldn't believe it. First of all, it felt like I had been asleep
for hours, even though it had only been two. Secondly, I swear it was
the morning. Thankfully I fell back asleep, but only until 3 AM when
the infamous snorer shook the room with his symphony of guttural
instruments. I sleep on and (mostly) off until 6:30 AM when I got the
sudden urge to run.
Running turned out to
be one of the best decisions of our first two days. It was lightly
drizzling when I started, and just warm enough for it to be
comfortable. I ran towards Darling Bay the same route we had traveled
the day before, hoping it would take at least 20 minutes to get to
the end of the boardwalk. The streets were vacant; barely a soul
dared to challenge the hangover from their Friday nights at the bar
to enjoy the overcast chill. That emptiness was by no means eerie,
but rather quite soothing. The boats adjacent to the boardwalk rocked
gently in the waves as they waited for their captains to steer them
into the ocean for the day; and the seagulls perched themselves on
the signs for the dock numbers to watch the pigeons below peck at the
air. I ran with ease, breathing in the salted air without the
slightest strain to my lungs or my legs. Just like in Belgrade, my
run soon turned into an exploration of the areas I had yet to see.
I followed the pattern
of the stop-lights. When I thought it time to head back to the
hostel, I caught sight of a statue of a medieval soldier on a horse
with its back legs on the ground and front legs billowing at its
chest in the air and set that as my turning point. Behind it was the
Convict Building, which I later learned was where prisoners from
other countries would be locked away. The Irish used to intentionally
break the law so they would be sent to this prison for seven years,
then granted their green cards to live in Australia to escape the
corruption in Ireland. I continued parallel to George Street and
passed by the Cathedral, the Hospital of Sydney, the Australian
Rotary House, the World War I Memorial and other government buildings.
Never before had I seen an area so concentrated with historical
buildings.They were all gated, made out of smooth, elegant stone,
and adorned with white trimmed windows and pillars. I was
particularly impressed by the Hospital which looked more like the
ornate US Embassy buildings in foreign countries than a city
hospital. In fact, many of the buildings throughout Sydney resembled
such a style that was not necessarily old looking, but rather held an
air of prestige and sophistication over the contemporary glass sky
scrapers.
After a day at the
Taronga Zoo, where we caught our first glimpse of kangaroos and
koalas, as well as a snow leopard, lions, elephants, exotic bird,
zebras and mountain goats, we were determined to quell our jet lag
and go out to dinner and a bar. For dinner, we returned to Chinatown
where we tried our luck at one of the “Food Arcades.” We walked
downstairs until a basement filled with yells of order numbers, walls
cluttered with pictures of meat and race plates, and an endless
supply of chopsticks. We began our lap around the arcade, and as soon
as I saw pho, I knew I wouldn't need to scan through the pictures of
food either from the 1980s, from Google, or both. I order a bowl of
chicken pho and the local 'piss' beer as I would call it at home, and
drowned my face in pho noodles spiced aggressively with the chili
flake-chili oil paste the old woman working the stove made herself. I
got a bit nervous when I spooned up a grey hunk of what I think was
supposed to be some type of meat with the bean sprouts and onions,
but I figured I shouldn't expect much more from an underground food
arcade and should just avoid the mystery meat all together.
Just a warning, this is
a little gross but so hilarious that Brianna and I knew I had to
include it in my post. At one point, I rubbed my now tearing eyes
from the heat of the chili paste, and my contact fell out.
Instinctively, I tried to put it back in, forgetting that my fingers
had repeatedly touched the firey, chili-soaked broth I had been
slurping for the past 15 minutes. The edge hit my eyeball, and poof!
my eyeball was bloodshot and burning more than my throat. I tried
again a couple minutes later and blinked to secure my contact in
place, only to hear “Holy shit...” and a burst of laughter from
across the table. “Your contact just fell in your pho.” “No
way. It's in my eye.” I shut my left eye, and everything was
blurry. “Oh my god it did...” Brianna and I kneeled down to the
level of the broth and searched for the light blue piece of plastic.
There it was, resting on a single chili-flake. No way was I sticking
that piece of hazardous material anywhere near my eye. Oh, and that's
not the worst of it. Somehow, my contact managed to float from the
napkin on the side of my plate into Brianna's rice. Thankfully,
neither Brianna nor I extracted anything but pure humor from the
situation, and laughed of the vulgarity as we finished our meals. We
paid $15 for each. Why waste it?
The receptionist at our
hostel had told us about a stand owned by the Emperor Palace
restaurant that sold these magnificent mini cream puffs for 25 cents
a piece. He said the line would inevitably be long, but the wait
would be well worth it. So, we acted against all our normal,
impatient inhibitions and waited for what we would learn to be little
puff balls of lightly lemony goodness. They looked and tasted
somewhat like a Boston Creme doughnut without the chocolate glaze and
with a sprtiz of lemon. We got 7 for $2 (which is a steal for Sydney)
and gobbled them down as we watched two girls in sequin skirts and
black shirts model in front of the Emperor Palace restaurant.
Somehow, we made it to the Sidebar backpackers bar, but only lasted
until about 8:30 before we accepted the control of jet lag and nearly
crawled back to our hostel.
The next day, Sunday
June 1st, we flew from Sydney to Brisbane. After seeing a
chain food stall called Pie Face, that sells hand pies stuffed with
various meats and vegetables that are a staple in Australia, we
finally stopped there for breakfast in the airport. The pies are made
out of croissant dough and finished with a brown, pie face smile. We
grabbed forks and knives from the Pie Face stall. They proved to be
useless since the pies come wrapped in a brown paper bag with quote
bubbles reading “I'm pie faced.” Needless to say the only time my
fork came in handy was to scrape the thick, salty chicken and
mushroom filling that had squeezed out of the back of the pie from
the inside of the bag.
When we arrived at the
Brisbane City hostel, we figured we should ask the reception desk
about bus tickets to Byron Bay, bus passes for the rest of the trip
and tickets to the Lone Pine Animal Sanctuary for the next day. The
receptionist and our new friend, Nick, not only booked all three sets
of tickets on one bill, but also explained the different beer sizes
(jub is two pints, a schooner is a ½ a pint, and a pot is a 1/3 of a
pint for areas that get really hot), clarified why everything is so
god damn expensive in Australia (the minimum wage is $18!), convinced
us to try the Australian wafer cookies called Tim-Tams, corrected our
“vulgur” use of liquor store instead of bottle shop, and
recommended an amazing burger place called FAB- fish and burgers-
where we could get a late lunch before the Brisbane Broncos-Manly Sea
Hawks rugby game we had tickets for later that afternoon.
I savored as quickly as
I could a chicken burger with an avocado-pesto spread on sourdough
(one of the best burgers I've ever had) and a Summer Ale beer from
Queensland so that we wouldn't miss the crowd of maroon and gold
Broncos jerseys walking to Suncorp Stadium. First order of business:
jerseys. We knew we stood out because of our style of dress in all
areas of Australia, so we figured we would fit in at least at the
game if we wore the home jerseys. We wandered around the stadium
searching for a merchandise table to buy jerseys until we convinced
ourselves they didn't sell any inside the standium, and pushed one
another towards one of the stadium employees to ask. Brianna stepped
towards her, anticipating a condescending scoff that said, “You
stupid Americans...We don't sell inside the stadium!” Much to our
relief, though, she happily pointed out the stand (next to the
beloved beer counter) that sold the...wait for it...$170 jerseys.
Now, Brianna and I both agreed we'd spluge on jerseys, but $170 for
one item on one day in a five week trip was asking a bit much. In my
beer-buzzed haze, I pointed to the cheapest t-shirt, handed over $25,
and threw it on over my shirt. Finally I looked the slightest bit
Australian.
We got to our seats
just as the game started, and for the next eighty minutes, devoured
every tackle, every sprint, and every pass made by each team. The
stands roared with cheers as the Broncos slid by the Sea Hawks, and
exploded with “F*** you, ref” and “Manly sucks!” when a play
favored the opposition. The Broncos managed to minimize the
belligerent banter, and crushed the Sea Hawks 36-10. Part of me
would've loved a closer, more competitive game, but, regardless, I'm
a sucker for fast-pace, high-intensity sports (just look at my
obsession with hockey), especially if a beer or two is involved.
Then we experienced the
infamous Tim-Tams Nick had felt insulted that we hadn't tried yet.
All I can say is that they are a whole lot of chocolate, as in a
chocolate filled chocolate wafer covered in a chocolate ganache
glaze. As someone who doesn't eat a lot of chocolate, I gobbled down
three and still wanted more.
The next morning, we
grabbed the bus to the Lone Pine Sanctuary, where both of our
Australian dreams would come true. We immediately flocked to the
koala center with our passes in hand, and ooo-ed and aww-ed at the
koalas sleeping in the trees adjacent to the photo area. When our
time came, the trainer introduced the koala I was to hold as Kai Kai,
and told me to hold my hands one on top of the other next to my
belly. I smiled and laughed giddily as he placed Kai-Kai in my hands.
He immediately latched his claws onto my shoulders and looked up into
my eyes. His fur was nearly as soft as I had imagined, and was coarse
and slightly dry. His nose looked like an enormous black, oval
button, and his ears were like tiny half moons with white rays
spewing outwards. Brianna and the photographers snapped plenty of
pictures until Kai-Kai turned around towards the trainer with wide
eyes that longer for his adoptive father. Needless to say, my life
ambition to hold a koala was complete. I mean, it was Facebook
official within two hours.
Next was Brianna's
dream. We pushed the grey fence open with bags of food pellets in our
hands, and entered a world of kangaroos and wallabies. All the
kangaroos laid on their sides quite blasé and indifferent to the
parades of humans, pigeons and ducks passing by; that is until
someone held out a palm full of food in front of their faces. The red
and grey kangaroos would lick the food slowly out of our hands, then
turn away to gaze into the open space of their enclosure until we
produced more. The younger kangaroos and the wallabies, though, would
hop towards us and paw at our hands with their short, scrawny arms.
One even held onto my hand with both of his as he ate, hoping I would
never leave. Brianna was in heaven, especially when she managed to
(half) hug one of the younger kangaroos that followed her for at
least ten minutes. Her smile in the picture may seem posed and
exaggerated, but was really candid and only a fraction of her true,
explosive excitement at her new friends.
The rest of the day we
saw more koalas, exotic birds, dingos (which we learned are identical
to dogs but are actually Australia's largest carnivore!), lizards,
Tasmanian devils and a platypus (which are in fact very, very small
and love to constantly swim without a break in pace). We hopped on
the bus back to our hostel in Brisbane, hauled our packs onto our
backs, and trekked to the Greyhound Station for the bus to Byron Bay.
After only four days in cities, we were ready for swimsuits, sand and
surf.
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