Borderlines/ A couple's journey through the Americas, South West Pacific and Asia |
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00 Introduction (2)
01 New York (2) 02 Mexico + C. America (4) 03 Florida (1) 04 Brazil (2) 05 Peru (2) 06 Bolivia (3) 07 Argentina (2) 08 Chile (1) 09 New Zealand (2) 10 Australia (2) 11 Singapore (1) 12 Thailand (2) 13 Lao PDR (3) 14 Cambodia (2) 15 China (2) 16 Tokyo (1)
Recent Entries
* Photos from Beijing / Fotos de Beijing
* Tokyo in Colour / Tokyo en color * Cityhopping in China / De ciudad en cuidad por China * Back in Bangkok / De neuvo en Bangkok * Cambodia's past and present / El pasado y presente de Camboya * Onwards to Angkor / De camino a Angkor * A little slice of paradise / Un pedacito de paraíso * Still on "Lao Time" / Seguimos en "Hora Laoense" * Crossing Borders / Cruzando Fronteras * Thailand in Brief / Tailandia en breve * A country within a city / Un país en una ciudad * Queensland: The Sunshine State / Queensland, el estado del Sol * Summer again / Verano de nuevo * Free Fall / Caída Libre * Land of Adventure / Tierra de Aventuras * A Week of Rest / Una Semana de Descanso * The Best for Last / Lo Mejor Para el Final * Back to Civilisation / De Vuelta a la Civilización * Last of Bolivia / Nuestro final en Bolivia * Bolivian Amazonia
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December 08, 2004Summer again / Verano de nuevo
With more landmarks and sights than you can shake a stick at, Sydney has an instantly recognisable identity. During our week here, places like the Opera House, Bondi beach, Centre Point tower and Sydney harbour, which we'd seen so many images of before, were right in front of us. Touristic purposes were not however the only reason for us to visit this fascinating, multiethnic and sprawling urban area. Some good old friends of ours, Andy and Sabrina, have based themselves here and welcomed us with open arms. This couple have been living in Australia for more than a year now and it's no wonder; the warm weather and attractiveness of the city are reasons enough to make the leap over here (let alone the chance to have wild parrots turn up every morning on your balcony). Barely 24 hours after arriving, Sabrina prepared us an exquisatly home cooked meal and the two of them were great at recommending us heaps of sweet spots to visit (not forgetting the super $5 steak places). We were lucky to have them here and without them we would not have seen some of the places which are not mentioned so highly in the normal tourist guides. A trip out to shark island and some walks around North Sydney will stay with us for a long time. In short our week in Sydney was fab! When we took a flight out of Sydney, it was already what we thought to be a hot 30 degrees celcius. Landing in the middle of this huge country a couple of hours later though it turned EXTREME, clocking up to around 42 degrees of dry heat. The red earth of the outback was incredibly stark, looking almost desert-like, but with some scrub and a few trees now and again. We were brought directly from the airport to this strange resort, which was like a small village exclusively fabricated for tourists. There was a hotel placed here, a shopping centre there, a hostel and the most economical of all, a campsite; where we planted our small tent. The reason we came to Yulara (the name of this resort), was to see something different and we certainly got that out here. In the middle of nowhere, the sole reason for the existence of this resort was to provide access to it's nearby natural wonder; an enormous red rock called Ayers Rock (or Uluru to use it's agoriginal name). Again this was another instantly recognisable Aussie icon, which was much more impressive in real life than film can ever do justice. Nearby to this (about 40 km away) was a cluster of huge dome shaped rocks called the Olgas (or Kata Tjutas). We spent a morning walking around the Olgas and were rewarded with some beautiful sights and a fertile green valley hidden in the middle of everything. The isolation of this area was a bit hard to handle at the beginning (the nearest town 450 km away) but the information centre by the rocks was a great eye opener into how the Aborigines of this area survived. After 5 days in the outback, we took a flight eastward bound taking us to a more tropical, but not much cooler weather. **VERSION EN ESPAÑOL** Los puntos de referencia arquitectónicos de Sydney, a parte de ser iconos reconocidos mundialmente, forman la identidad de esta famosa ciudad. Al llegar, lugares como: 'Opera House', 'Bondi Beach' o el puerto, que tantas veces habíamos visto en postales o televisión (en las olimpiadas del 2000), estaban en frente de nuestras narices. Pero una visita turística no fue la única razón por la que fuimos a esta urbe rebosante de vida y completamente multiétnica. Nuestros viejos amigos Andy y Sabrina nos esperaban don los brazos abiertos. La pareja ha estado viviendo en Australia por más de un año y es que el cálido clima y el atractivo de la ciudad son razones suficientes para irse a vivir allí sin pensárselo dos veces (bueno eso y hablar inglés claro!) Sabrina nos preparó una comida casera exquisita y los dos nos recomendaron montones de lugares para visitar y comer (incluyendo un restaurante donde hacían unos filetes riquísimos por tan solo 5 dólares australianos!). Despegamos de Sydeny cuando hacía bastante calor (unos 30°C) y aterrizamos en el entro de este inmenso país cuando hacia un calor extremo (unos 42°C) Aquello era algo como un desierto rojo con pequeñas plantas esparcidas por el terreno. Se nos transportó desde el aeropuerto a una especie de punto turístico. Era como un pequeño pueblo prefabricado exclusivamente para turistas. Un hotel por aquí, un centro comercial por allá, un hostal y el más económico de todos, el camping, donde plantamos nuestra pequeña tienda de campaña. La razón por la que fuimos a Yulara en primer lugar fue para ver algo diferente y realmente así fue. Así que todo y que nos sentimos un poco desolados en la pequeña civilización (el pueblo más cercano estaba a 450Km), la caminata a la luz del alba alrededor de las rocas y las vistas de valle nos sirvieron de recompensa. Al quinto día de estar allí volamos de nuevo al este del país donde un clima menos seco y tropical nos esperaba.
Comments
Jo... deberiais traerme uno de esos Koalas... que guay.... Seguid disfrutando y no os olvideis de los comentarios que si no nos dejais a miles de seguidores en vilo... Un besote enorme!!!!! Muakis,. Posted by: Laura on December 20, 2004 07:15 PMhola, acabo de ver las fotos de Australia. Qué maravilla!Bueno, ya os escribiré más largo. por de pronto. Feliz Navidad para tí y Merry Xmas para Kevin. Han visto un platypus (ornitorrinco)? Posted by: Elfrida Kelly on December 21, 2004 01:27 AM |
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