Saturday, January 31, 2009

The Wild Side of Australia





























Good news! We got the apartment in Coogee! We are still unsure as of today whether we will be in by the 4th when we have to be out of the hotel suite, but the latest we will be moving in is the 10th. We will have to find a place to stay in the meantime, but we'll figure it out! Now we are starting our online hunting for furniture! Luckily there are many people looking to get rid of stuff right in the area we are moving into!

Australia Day here was fun. We headed to Bondi Beach and had the official tour. We saw the "famous" Bondi rescue lifeguards, but did not see any rescues for ourselves. On average, they rescue 100 people a day! Most are not in imminent danger, but have got caught in a rip tide sweeping them out to sea that they can't swim against. Others get stung by the Bluebottle Jellyfish, which gives a nasty sting to anyone that accidently swims into it. The best thing for a sting is a special soothing spray and an icepack, not urine as is the common misconception.
Many people were decked out in their Australian flag gear everywhere we went. Later in the evening, despite some rain, the evening show in the harbour was great. There were Aboriginal performers, a boat parade, great music, and best of all, fireworks!

Yesterday, Friday the 30th, we got up with the sun and went down to Darling Harbour to have breakfast with koalas! With 7 other people we sat and ate breakfast surrounded by koalas - 7 koalas to be exact. We were able to stand in the closure for about 30 minutes right beside the koalas. It was the perfect time to try out our new SLR camera. Petting the koala was interesting as it's fur was a lot rougher than I thought it would be. In the state of New South Wales it is illegal to hold a koala bear (which is not a bear at all, but a marsupial!). The keeper told us this is for two important reasons. One is that the koala bear has very sharp claws and if startled or tickled (yes, koalas are apparently ticklish!), they bat away whatever it is bothering them with their hands, incidentally clawing and scratching. Also, koala bears have extremely fragile bones and lifting them from under the arms or around the rib cage could potentially crack their ribs, which would be terrible for the koala. There are still states in Australia that allow koalas to be held, but the keeper said that it will soon be illegal everywhere to hold koalas.

Here are some other cool facts we learned: Koalas only eat eucalyptus leaves, but not just any type of eucalyptus leaf! Out of the 900 varieties of eucalyptus leaf found in Australia, koalas eat only 80 varieties. Eucalyptus leaves are actually toxic for koalas, just as they would be for humans. Because of this, koalas wake up in the morning, eat their fill of leaves and then spend 16-20 hours a day sleeping to digest the poisonous leaves! Why in the world would they choose these toxic leaves as their only source of food?! Well, because no other animal eats the leaves, and thus there is no competition for food. Pretty smart. Koalas life for 7-10 years. Most of the koalas we saw were 3 years old, which is a teenager in koala years. The "grandpas" were 7 years old.
Just like a kangaroo, baby koalas are born in their mother's pouch and spend some time there until they are able to climb on their own, and no longer need their mother's milk. The pouch on a koala is different than a kangaroo: the pouch is upside down! It has a tight muscle that acts like an elastic bottom to keep the baby in. We were so lucky to see a baby koala with a keeper and then later sleeping in it's mother's pouch very comfortably upside down! We also learned that before the baby koala stops drinking milk it needs to start getting used to solid foods. It can't eat the eucalyptus leaves right away, so in between milk and leaves it eats it's mother's droppings... yes, poop. Mushy baby food isn't looking so bad now, is it?

For the remainder of the morning we explored Sydney's Wildlife World with the 7 other people for about 40 minutes before the front gates even opened. Having the whole place to ourselves was pretty cool. We saw many animals, birds, reptiles and insects native to Australia including kangaroos, wombats, bilbies, skinks, wallabies, pythons, the red-backed spider, funnel spider (most poisonous spider in the world), Inland Taipan snake (most venomous snake in the world), and many more! The neatest animal to us was the Hairy-Nose Wombat. It is the funniest looking little animal I think I have ever seen! We had a close encounter in the butterfly walk-thru: one very large butterfly really loved my orange shirt and just would not leave me alone! In the bird walk-thru I was taking a photo of a colourful bird when splat! a glob landed on my toe and sure enough, I had been pooped on! I like getting close to animals, but not that close.

After our wildlife experience we headed to the aquarium to check out the fish! Here we saw many species of coral, fish, eels, sharks, stingray, seahorses, sea stars, sea turtles, crocodiles and octopus. One octopus was very tiny and cute, but very venomous! It is called the Bluering Octopus and it hides in the rocks along the ocean. We have been warned never to stick our fingers into any rocky tidal pools! One sting from this little fella can paralyze and even kill someone! The coolest stingray was about the size of a large 2-person bed! We got to walk through tunnels underneath the water to get an up-close and personal look at these amazing creatures! One sea creature that I had never heard of is a dugong. It is an endangered mammal and reminded me of a beluga whale.

What a great introduction to Australia's diverse environment! We can't wait to get out and actually see all of these beautiful creatures in the rainforest, the desert, the forests and the ocean!

Monday, January 26, 2009

We're Here! Pictures








We're Here!






After a 15 hour flight from Vancouver we made it! We were very fortunate to fly executive first class (thank you Kurtis!!!) so the trip was very comfortable... and I slept for 12 hours of it (thank you Gravol and melatonin!), so the remaining 3 hours was just right for breakfast and a movie! Our first day in Sydney began with us lugging our 8 70 lbs. suitcases and giant 70 lbs. Tupperware bin through the airport, out into a sunny, humid, 31 degrees, and into a van cab. We spent the day exploring the downtown area and harbor located near our hotel. For the first 2 weeks we are staying in a hotel suite. It has a little kitchen, living area, bedroom and bath. The great part is it is right downtown so we are in the middle of all of the action! For the month of January there are many events happening around the city for the Sydney Festival. On Saturday the 24th in the evening the Sydney Symphony Orchestra performed in The Domain, which is a botanical gardens just a few blocks from our hotel near the downtown. For such a large city (4.2 million people!) there are many green spaces and lush areas, even in the downtown. Everywhere you look there are palm trees, and other forms of vegetation. For the event there were thousands of people gathered on the grass, and the music was beautiful. Much to Kurtis' discomfort and my delight, there were literally hundreds of large fruit bats that were just waking up, flying overhead looking for their breakfast! My photo that looks like a flock of birds, is actually a flock of bats!

Summertime is in full swing here in the Southern Hemisphere so we took advantage of a day off and headed to spend the day at Manly Beach... Ok, it was actually an hour at the beach, in which time Kurtis got a roaring red burn, and I a touch of colour. I was prepared with a giant sun hat to cover my face and shoulders, and of course loads of sunscreen. Apparently Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world! Yikes! Bring on the hats, t-shirts, beach umbrellas, SPF 45 and zinc! We were see-through when we stepped off the plane so we will be exposing ourselves very gradually from here on in (will we ever learn?). Sunburns aside, it was so great to be by the ocean! There were people practicing their surfing skills on the waves and I was watching their every move, trying to figure out some techniques. After watching some pretty hard falls I will definitely be taking some lessons before I head out with a surfboard!

In order to get to Manly from downtown we took a half hour ferry ride. This is when we saw the Sydney Opera House for the first time! Very cool. It is fantastic to see such recognizable monuments in person. The details on it are beautiful and the whole view was stunning from the water.

We have also commenced our quest for an apartment! We had a bit of an adventure using the bus system for the first time, but once you know what you are doing it is a reliable and convenient way to get around such a large city. Kurtis was very thoughtful and bought a street map to help track down the places on Saturday... only the map book did not include the Coogee are where we were looking. Slight problem. After wandering around aimlessly for a few minutes a friendly local responded to our cries for help and came down off her balcony to assist us by giving us her 2004 phonebook, which had a handy street map... Did I mention it was the hottest day Sydney has had in 3 years?! A whopping 38 degrees! Phonebook in hand we ran, but missed the first appointment. We continued our ridiculously hot journey and were lucky to find  a lost taxi driver to take us to the second place, which ended up being a miscommunication and was not showing that day. Urgh. With no other choice but to give it one last go, we walked in the heat for 20 minutes to our third and final destination. It was worth the sweat, and carrying the awkward, heavy phonebook/map. The apartment is 2 blocks from Coogee Beach on a side street above the cutest funkiest cafe I've ever seen! We had some time to kill so we sipped lattes (or "flat whites" as they call them here) ate fresh savoury muffins and pumpkin, goat cheese quiches, ad if you couldn't tell already, completely fell in love with the place! We will be applying on Tuesday and (fingers crossed) we hope we get the apartment!

Monday is a national holiday: Australia Day (the same as our Canada Day). We happen to be 2 blocks from where the big celebrations are taking place in Darling Harbour so we will have perfect views of the fireworks right from our balcony! We intend to spend the day enjoying the festivities at Bondi Beach and then head back downtown on the bus to finish the day off at the harbour. 

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