Saturday, August 1, 2009

"I'M Marian Cotesworth Hay!"

I don't think I could adequately explain how wonderful it was to have my best friend visit me in a foreign country. It's been almost six months since I've seen anyone I love from home. It happens quite a bit here that I forget who I am without them--I start believing that I don't have a personality anymore, that I'm fake and shallow and no one really knows me. Having Sara here was more life validation than I could have ever asked for. This shot was from one our first excursions: we trammed to the Shrine of Remembrance, wandered around the observation deck, and then strolled through the Royal Botanical Gardens where Sara taught me how to use T9 on my cell phone (now I actually know how to text!).

The minute it looked like the sun would last for longer than ten minutes, we hopped on a train to Brighton Beach with my IES friends Julia and Sara (not confusing at all!). Though the sky was perfectly clear, the wind brought the temperature down to a frigid 500-below. Approximately. But we still popped off our shoes and strolled barefoot amongst the cracked shells and recently-deceased jellyfish. We didn't stick around for too long, but it was a great trip nonetheless.

Having experienced the splendor (I'd like it to be noted that the first time I typed that word I spelled it with a U. I've been in a former British colony too long!) of Australian Rules Football several months ago, I can now say with confidence that no trip to Australia is complete without attending a game. Sara and I had tickets for what I came to learn was one of the biggest games of the year: the Collingwood Magpies against the Carlton Blues. Now, I've had my issues with magpies in the past (you may recall the incident in which one of them flew into the side of my head) but I was willing to give the team a chance...and it's a good thing I did! They were amazing and pummeled poor Carlton into the ground. Plus they were definitely the more attractive of the two teams.

The stands look fairly empty in this shot, but believe me--they filled up quickly! The fan count at the end of the night was 85,000! Not too shabby if you ask me, especially for Sara's virgin footy experience!

Because IES students are prohibited from driving this semester due to insurance reasons, we had to scrap our plans to drive the Great Ocean Road. I was planning on showing Sara real live kangaroos and koalas in the wild, but we were forced to settle for seeing real live kangaroos and koalas in the Melbourne Zoo. Which was perfect because if we'd just seen them on the GOR we wouldn't have seen this koala baby! We seriously stood and watched him (or her) for a half hour. So so cute. I can't get over it.

This was a very slippery pig. Peccary, actually. Very slippery. This was toward the end of our zoo visit, which we thought would only take us about an hour and laughed when we read on the website that it takes most people around four. Guess how long we were there. Go ahead. Guess. That would be four. Four magical hours.

I never get tired of this animal. It blows my mind how they manage to balance themselves using their tails, and how high they jump when they run. Oh, to be a kangaroo. Yes please.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Orientation: Take 2


For our Fall IES Orientation we took a bus into the Grampians National Park, about 3.5 hours northeast of Melbourne. I have friends who spent some time climbing and hiking and camping there last semester, but I never made it out. Though we stayed on the outskirts, the park that we did see was absolutely breathtaking. We were based near Hall's Gap which has access to incredible sandstone rock formations and lookouts. Hopefully I can go back sometime this semester and do some more exploring, but for a weekend getaway I would say we had a pretty idea location. "That's what I said, I said 'Isn't this ideal!' " (Get it, Mama?).

The view from the top of Mt. Pickaninny. It was a comfortable 1.2 km stroll from our accommodations at the Grampians Retreat. I'm still paranoid about snakes so I was suspicious of every stick that possessed lifelike qualities, but I am pleased to say that I emerged from the hike alive. It was superhumanly foggy that morning and I'm surprised that it burned off enough to get this clear of a shot. It was so gorgeous. Although I think my program coordinator was sufficiently creeped out by my incessant questions regarding the kinds of foods he likes to make. But I learned that Brunswick Street has a shop that sells pomegranate molasses, so of course I'll be hitting that up as soon as I can!

Mt. Abrupt, site of my first abseiling experience. If you are unfamiliar with the concept, "abseiling" is basically a fancy word for "thrashing yourself down the face of a jagged rock as you pretend to look like you know what you're doing." Given this definition, I believe I was highly successful. Sure, other people repelled with swiftness and ease. But I like to keep things interesting. Unbruised knees are so last year.

Okay. This is the most adorable creature I have ever seen in my entire life. How is this level of cuteness even remotely possible? I just want to squeeze him (or her). I think the people I was with thought I had problems because I took about 13 pictures of this guy...and he never moved. I took 13 of the same picture. Those of you who know me probably aren't surprised by this. But it's sick. It was like I'd never seen another creature besides my own reflection in my life.

Monday, July 6, 2009

The Docklands and Other Adventures

Last week I ventured to the other side of the city. It's a magical land brimming with sidewalks and tram tracks and small yachts and grassy knolls and orange construction cones. But. It's precious. I took the City Circle Tram for the first time which is the same as any other tram but more old-timey...and free. This was some random sculpture made of curved metal bars and a couple sheets of pink metal mesh. Wow, that's fun to say.

This is just a rainbow building. No big deal. Except that it's awesome. I have no idea what purpose it serves but I want to live here. I imagine it's probably an apartment complex, which is perfect. It would be a bit difficult to make a home for myself in a row of cubicles or an empty mechanical warehouse.

This is a sculpture in a children's play area. Each of the cup-like attachments spin with the wind. It's really cool.

For our IES Farewell party we went to dinner at a delicious Greek restaurant (which served stuffed tomatoes and zucchini and bell peppers, or "capsicums" to the people who didn't eat the platters of tiny octopi. And by people, I mean me). After dinner we went to this underground bowling alley. Overall a wonderful night.

There was a festival going on in Federation Square for about a month called A Light in Winter. It was a celebration of the symbolism of light in a vast array of different religions. There was a raised platform (not in this picture) with probably about 50 7-foot tall pillars covered with LED lights. When you walked around them, sensors in the floor created specific patterns in the lights. So cool. And these lanterns were hanging from cables with red lasers shooting across them.

Craziness comes on quickly when we're bored. I believe here Laura was whipping her side ponytail in time to "Beautiful Day" by U2. This was moments before we decided to give Kate a unibrow with one of my curls. Best decision ever.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Ramblings

It occurred to me this evening, as I peeled my fourth mandarin orange of the past hour, that such high levels of citrus could have a damaging effect on my health. This being me, I panicked for about four seconds then kept peeling.

I think I need more friends here. Not because I'm lonely or anything, but because I've been playing "Fields of Gold" so many times on my guitar and forcing my friends to sit through it that I need some fresh meat, lest I drive away the few people that have humored my buzzing strings to begin with.

I spent the greater part of my afternoon sweeping my cage--I mean, apartment. I would like to point out that my room is carpeted. I swept my carpet. I don't have a vacuum. I don't know what's more depressing: the fact that I cleaned the god-awful red carpet with a hand broom, or that the venture took me over an hour. Good work, Team Olivia.

I have finally registered for classes for next semester, after being sent on quite the scavenger hunt from my program coordinator, to the Old Arts Building, to the internet, then back to my coordinator and back to Old Arts. I'm now pleased to say that Zoe the Receptionist is my new best friend and she knows everything there is to know about me. What's scary is that I actually think I mean this. I bet people with her job learn a lot about students based on the courses they choose. I wonder what my selection of the Victims class says about who I am as a person...

For lunch this afternoon I decided to saute some carrots and red potatoes with chili powder and rosemary. I poured the oil into the pan, heated the veggies in the microwave to get them partially cooked, then added them to the oil. For the next half hour I was back and forth between the kitchen and my room where I was watching an episode of (surprise surprise) The West Wing. Every time I checked on my food it wasn't even remotely done. It took me 45 minutes to realize that I never actually turned on the burner. In my defense, there's a lot one must consider when cooking food. Naturally when one spends so much time chopping and microwaving and sprinkling with herbs, one cannot be expected to actually cook the food too.

I had a dream the other night in which my friend Sara (who is visiting me in July) arrived in Australia, took one look at my apartment, and hopped on the next flight to L.A. I have yet to tell her that I'm concerned she might really do that.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Western Australia

Well, I have been home for two days so I figure it's about time for me to post some form of representation of my past eight days in the land of hot winter sunlight. Our journey began somewhere near the beginning, as most journeys do. We arrived in Perth, spent a relatively sleepless night in the loudest hostel we've ever experienced, and left in the morning to pick up our campervan (Bertha...because of her large girth). We immediately drove to the coast to a town called Fremantle where we wandered around the open-air markets and spent a sufficient amount of time driving around lost through narrow alleyways that barely allowed Bertha room to pass. From then it was a straight drive down the Great Northern Highway to the Brand Highway to a small (and by small, I mean ghetto) "caravan" park in Regans Ford. It was our virgin trailer park experience, and it was truly magical...magical in the most sarcastic meaning of the word.

Up early the next morning for a two(ish)-hour drive to Nambung National Park to see the Pinnacles Desert. It consists of thousands of these limestone pillars and scientists still disagree about how they got there. Some think they used to be tree trunks and some think the salt and sand blew up from the Indian Ocean nearby and started these pillars. The desert was huge - it stretched on for several miles, and we took our time exploring by foot and then making the 4km drive that wound through the sand.

This is one of my favorite shots of the week. We hit the Pinnacles at such a good time - late morning/early afternoon when the shadows created just the right level of creepy.

This is Hangover Bay, part of the Jurien Bay Reserve and our first real glimpse of the Indian Ocean. Cold. But so clear and beautiful - the kind of beautiful that you would never think could possibly exist. We stopped here for a quick stroll, then drove several minutes to Kangaroo Point which afforded a similar view, and we had our lunch of peanut butter and banana and Nutella sandwiches and carrots with hummus ("is yummus"). Also, I think it should be noted that I'm listening to "Alice's Restaurant" while I'm writing this and it's really hard to type while Arlo Guthrie is telling his story. Just FYI.

Several hours north of Nambung was a small town called Northampton that boasted a population of 842. We parked in the caravan park just off the main road and went for a walk right as the sun was setting. There was a cacophony of squawking and we noticed a whole swarm of pink cockatoos zig-zagging through the sky. They all settled on this energy tower - it was incredible! I believe there were more birds in this shot than there were people in the entire town. The caravan park was also delightful, as there was constantly Irish/gaelic/Riverdance music playing in the bathroom, which Laura said sounded like the fairies and elves were having a dance-off.

When we went on our massive grocery excursion before leaving Perth, we purchased supplies for makeshift s'mores because our campervan came equipped with a gas stove. We were dismayed to discover that Australia does not have graham crackers, so we improvised (I just had to write that word four times because I couldn't remember if we Americans spell it with a z or an s) with some graham-cracker-like "biscuits." The marshmallows here are also strange: they're white and pink and they're supposed to be different flavors but they all taste exactly the same and they're strangely shaped and powdery. We managed to make some mean s'mores, though, with our mobile campfire.

These are stromatolites: the world's oldest living fossil. These particular ones are in Hamelin Pool (part of the Shark Bay World Heritage Site) and are 3.5 billion years old. It was so crazy to imagine everything they have seen in their lifetime. Oh. And for those of you who don't know what stromatolites are (which I'm guessing is every person who is reading this...unless you're Laura or the friendly volunteer ranger woman half-napping on the bench next to the boardwalk), the are colonies of cyanobacteria that clump together and create these sort of puzzle shapes in the water. When they die off, new layers grow on the top, so the oldest layers are at the bottom. Overall this stop was a bit of a letdown because after all the hype surrounding these fossils we thought they would be a huge tourist attraction. Quite the opposite, actually. They were down an unpaved road with a lack of adequate signage. We had to go into the historical Hamelin Telegraph Station-turned tea room to ask how to get to the stromatolites. And this was after we bypassed a "petrol" station with 1/4 tank of gas because we thought that there would be a place for us to get gas...you know, because it can be assumed that stromatolites would bring in quite the crowd. We were horribly mistaken. We wound up with less than an 1/8 tank about 35kms from the nearest fuel station...which, naturally, was the one we had passed. So we had to backtrack driving well under the 110km/hr speed limit so we would make it without, you know, dying. When we finally made it to the station I doubt we had enough gas to drive another kilometer. It was petrifying.

This was at Shell Beach, which is comprised entirely of countless millions of dime-sized cockle shells. Evidently the layer is about 25-30 feet deep! According to the website, there are "many photo albums across the world of persons throwing these snow-white shells." Yes. Here's one more for ya.

I looked up the exact length of this beach: 60 kms. And the reason there are so many shells is because the waters are hypersalinated (ideal for these creatures) and the bivalve shellfish have no predators so they multiply in massive quantities. It was pretty breathtaking, and by far one of our favorite stops.

After departing Shell Beach (somewhat reluctantly), we stopped at Eagle Bluff which had a spectacular view of the Shark Bay sea grass beds - the largest in the world, and a key reason that Shark Bay is a World Heritage Site. This tiny island is now a sanctuary for endangered sea birds, and apparently many a manatee and dugong (manatee-like creature) and shark come to feed on/in/near (and any other preposition imaginable) the sea grass.

We spent that night in the small town of Denham. It was by far our favorite coastal town, located on the shore of Shark Bay. We watched the sun set from this pier where these two adorable elderly men were fishing for squid. Before this, though, we spent a couple much-needed hours of relaxation on the beach reading and writing in our journals and taking pictures after a long day of driving.

The next morning we trekked to Monkey Mia Reserve. The word "mia" (pronounced "my-uh") is an aboriginal term meaning "home," and apparently the "Monkey" part came from the fact that the earliest settlers came by boat and brought monkeys with them. This reserve is famous for the docile dolphins that have grown accustomed to human contact and swim up to the shore within feet of tourists to be fed by the park rangers. I had never seen a dolphin before this day, and it was the perfect introduction. I didn't get to feed one, but they were so close and such beautiful animals that I didn't care. As we were heading toward the parking lot after the feeding, we heard a man say, "Excuse me!" and we turned around. "I'm sorry," he said, "but did you spend last night in the Shark Bay Campervan Park in the Maui campervan?" We nodded and he said, "You left your power cord." Dear. Lord. First of all, what are the odds that he would run into us? And secondly, kudos to him for recognizing us. We definitely would not have recognized anyone else in that park. He saved our trip, for sure.

This day's driving was brutal - nine hours - but so worth it because we managed to get twice as far as we had anticipated, allowing us an entire day in Coral Bay to explore the Ningaloo Reef and to sign up for a snorkeling trip with a whaleshark! We met a lovely couple from Melbourne at this lookout who had a pair of binoculars and spotted whale spouts far off in the distance, and they let us take a look and talked to us for quite some time about our studies and how we liked Melbourne. They were charming. And we were exhausted, so we went to bed soon after sunset.

My underwater pictures are forthcoming because I have to go through this whole Stone Age process called manually developing my film (who does that anymore?) because I used a disposable camera. But. I do have this shot of the whaleshark we swam with, who Laura has named Albus. He was over 30 feet long and was so gentle and friendly and curious and hung around our boat for way longer than any of the guides expected him to. They said he was the best whaleshark they've seen all season, and I guess he was the first they'd seen in about a week. We were lucky, because to find the shark the tour company launched a small plane that located the shark's position. It can be a bit of a waiting game, because since they are wild animals they're not necessarily in the same area they were the last time. Luckily the plane found Albus after only about a half hour, and we all had a good hour total in the water with him before calling it a day. On our way back to the shore we also saw a sea snake which Laura says is one of the deadliest creatures in the sea, and I had my very first whale-sighting: a pod of humpbacks circled around our boat for about 45 minutes!

It was glorious to have a day of no driving, but we knew that meant we'd have even further to drive the next day if we were ever going to make it back down to Perth for our flight back to Melbourne. After several hot and grueling hours behind (and beside) the wheel, we made it down to Kalbarri National Park which we had bypassed intentionally on the way up because we wanted something to look forward to going back south. We made it to Rainbow Jungle - the largest free-flight aviary in the world - before the sun fell. It was the perfect way to end a tense day of car travel. From the aviary we stopped at Jacques Beach across the street, then parked Bertha at a caravan park, then watched yet another (and unbeknownst to us, our last) sunset from the beach. We got sufficiently lost multiple times in the maze that was the Murchison River Caravan Park on our way to and from the bathroom, but luckily the confusion was short-lived.

Before leaving Kalbarri altogether we had to stop for a quick (500-meter) walk along the top of the red sandstone cliffs of the Murchison River Gorge to Nature's Window, a breathtaking lookout point. We had to drive 25ks along an unpaved bevelled road driving at about 20km/hr. Slow going, but worth it. And it had been fairly cloudy and misty as we drove in, but right as we neared the lookout (several minutes after this picture was taken) the clouds parted and the sun emerged and angels sang. True story.

This park put the gorge in gorgeous. I can't get over the striated rocks! The colors! Again, this is before the sun came out and the glare from the clouds was messing with the light balance on my camera, but it was fine. Little did I know that my batteries would throw in their collective towels before we left Kalbarri...

I feel the need to include endless pictures of the gorge because it was so incredible. We had every intention of stopping at another lookout point closer to the highway on our way out, but as we were driving back down the 25kms of sand, a torrential downpour started with wind that blew the raindrops perfectly parallel to the ground. I had the windshield wipers on hyperspeed but we had to pull over at the edge of the main road until we could see enough to keep driving. Stupidly I parked the van at an angle, and realized almost too late that we might be sinking in the sand. Indeed we were. I hit the gas but the tires only sputtered. Reversing proved more fruitful, and we managed to narrowly escape a death-by-Australian-rainstorm.

Last one. I promise. This is Nature's Window, and you can actually see blue sky - the very last blue sky of the week. The drive back to Perth after this was quite bipolar: apocalyptic rain and wind so hard we thought we would lose control of the car that alternated with the occasional burst of sunlight that created tons of rainbows in the last two days of the trip. We saw more rainbows that living kangaroos, with a ratio of about 8:2. Dead kangaroos were another story, though. In five minutes of driving I counted 14 lying along the side of the road. They come out at dusk and Laura and I refused to drive anywhere near the end of daylight because we were terrified of hitting one.

We returned Bertha to her owners in what turned out to be quite the tearful goodbye. True to our bum-like travels, we walked from the car rental place to the airport. That's right. We walked. And got there so early that we had to wait two hours before we could even check in...at which point we had to wait two more hours to board our flight. We arrived back in Melbourne at 1am and I was in bed by 2:30. Thus ended the most incredible trip of my life. I would also like to mention that Laura left for home this morning and I miss her so much already. It's so strange that she's not here, that the home we've all created for ourselves in Australia is crumbling.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

As promised, here is my follow-up list of everything I adore about Melbourne (and really, all of Oz) that it will kill me to leave behind:

-The Brighton Beach bathing boxes
-Taking the tram downtown, and taking the train...anywhere
-The squawking rainbow lorikeets that hang out every night in the tree next to my balcony
-How everything smells after it rains: lemon myrtle, parched soil, eucalyptus
-My friends (having tea in Laura's room, playing the guitar and reading with Cari and Kate in Cari's room, going on daily excursions for frozen yogurt or groceries or coffee or picnics, spending the night at Mish's house in Ferntree Gully, watching Anne of Green Gables with Belinda).
-Australian television - specifically the commercials and news stations. Fascinating and hilarious.
-Accents! I don't want to return to the Land of the Laccent (lack of accent). Every time Mish says "no" in response to something I've said (or for any other reason), I am totally the obnoxious two-year-old that mimics her accents. She usually shoves me (oftentimes into a nearby telephone pole) and tells me jokingly to "f*** off" which I just think is so Australian and I love it. Really I'm just fascinated by how much effort it takes to say one syllable the way she says it. It has to be exhausting.
-Being a foreigner. While this is oftentimes more frustrating that it is rewarding, I love being able to weigh in with my opinions in class when my tutors ask how something is done in the U.S. Actually, they would say "America." No one here calls the States "the U.S."
-Writing group. Not much writing is done there, but I have several notebook pages full of stunning quotes that illustrate just how excited five people can get over tropical fruit juice and homemade sushi rolls.
-Being able to walk two minutes outside of my apartment and hop on a tram and know the city so well that I don't have to wait for the driver to announce the next stop before I have already pulled the cord.
-Cooking for myself. This gets tedious, and Mama, I have no idea how you do it every night for four people...but it's really fun. Especially making dinner with friends, when we pump up the Disney and sing along as we sit on the kitchen floor and eat slightly charred omelets with potatoes and spinach and tomatoes and cheese.
-Aussie lingo. It's priceless. My favorite phrases include "keen as mustard" and "how ya going?"

I should go finish editing my Australia Now paper on sexual assault in aboriginal communities. It's a real upper, let me tell you. Oh. One more thing I'll miss: joking with my friends in Australia Now about procrastinating, and how it's "Australia not now! Australia later!"

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Lest you forget how homesick I am (despite how much I love it here), I thought I'd jot down a list of things I miss the most about home--an updated version. Keep in mind that it's 12:07 a.m. and most of this post will probably be wildly incoherent.

-My bed, complete with my body pillow and the blanket my mama knit me for Christmas
-Bike rides to Gas Works Park while listening to the Rent soundtrack and Peter Gabriel's "Solsbury Hill" on repeat more times than I care to share
-Evening walks through my neighborhood
-An OVEN! I will never again take for granted my ability to make cookies whenever I want.
-Pike Place Market (specifically the pasta stand, the doughnut hole stand, and the underground bead shop).
-Hearing the sheep every morning when I wake up
-Picking fresh vegetables (tomatoes, green beans, etc.) from my mama's garden for dinner
-As a continuation of the last bullet, fried green tomatoes!
-Cleaning the kitchen every night while listening to the music that I'm shocked my parents aren't sick of yet
-Summer barbecues and rolling around in the grass
-Playing guitar with my daddy
-Making ice cream on the kitchen deck with our Stone Age ice cream maker, and in the process spilling what probably amounts to a liter of rock salt down the slats between the wooden planks
-Mowing the lawn
-Walking down the driveway to get the mail and having Mt. Rainier staring right back at me
-Orcas Island. Everything about it. Teezer's, Bilbo's (I just wrote "Bobo's" and had no idea why that looked wrong to me), the Island Market, Orcas Island Pottery, Crow Valley, Moran State Park, Turtleback Mountain.
-Not living in the middle of a city
-Being able to talk to my friends and family without having to factor in a 17-hour time difference
-Having a wider wardrobe selection than the approximately two shirts I brought with me

That's it for now. I'm tired. I should sleep. "Should" being the key word. And I think it should be noted that I probably won't actually sleep. I'll probably load another episode of West Wing. Oh, the brilliant choices I make when I'm alone in my apartment and finished with my papers. And by brilliant, I mean really really stupid. Tomorrow (or sometime in the possibly near future) I'll post a list of things I'll miss most about Melbourne when I leave. Seeing as how that's not for six months, clearly there's no rush. Goodnight, all. I love you.