Saturday, May 19, 2007

Melbourne and the Great Ocean Road

Hello All,

Melbourne was great! And over a month ago… nevertheless, presenting Melbourne:

Melbourne was a last minute enterprise borne out of Easter Day ticket sales, spontaneity, and a final frantic internet scramble. Caroline and I bought the tickets, and then didn’t see each other again, due to different travel and field trip schedules, until four days before we left. It was going to be quite an adventure.
Melbourne is known as the multicultural city of Australia, which basically translated into (at least for Caroline and I) an opportunity to eat a lot. We gorged on Chinese, Italian, assorted cakes, and a LOT of gelato. We somehow missed the Greek “district,” though I would contend that it looked more like a block than a district on the map we had.
Melbourne is also, as we found, filled with a lot of weekend markets. There was the big Queen Victoria market that sold everything from fruit to clothes to Australian chatkes. I made an exciting purse purchase, which I “bargained” for. Actually, I asked what the price was and he told me the price, then lowered it before I even said anything. Nevertheless, I was very proud. There were also some fun crafts fairs on the other side of the city that we poked around at.
Of course, we had to see the Crown Casino, which is the biggest Casino in the southern hemisphere. This was the first time I could legally gamble, so of course I had to “give it a go.” I was only planning to gamble $2.50, but ended up gambling away $6. Worried that I was developing a problem, we decided I should cut my losses and run! We also met up with Zoe, a friend from New Trier studying at the University of Melbourne, and caught the last night of the International Comedy Festival. It was great to see Zoe, and the guy we saw was pretty funny, even though some of the local humor went over our heads. Other highlights in the city included meeting up with Caroline’s friend Chris, the botanic gardens, the Shrine of Remembrance and riding around in an old fashioned trolley.
Caroline and I also decided to take a day trip to the Great Ocean Road. The GOR runs from Melbourne to Adelaide along the south coast of Australia. When they built it, they were trying to create something like Route 1 along the California Coast. Not quite ready attempt left-side driving for the first time on a winding cliff road, we decided to join an all-day bus tour. The views were amazing, and I quickly overcame my annoyance at being herded like a sheep (By the end I was thinking “herd me more places, please!”). It was an entire day of looking at rocks and water, so I really couldn’t have been any happier.


Hooray!


Melbourne! (Complete with old train station and tram)




Caroline and I.








Morning tea at the Royal Gardens.




Cool tree.




Old observatory built outside of the gardens. The observatory was built for one night to observe the passing of Venus, in order to make some sort of important astrological calculation. Thankfully, it was done in time, otherwise that would have been a huge waste of effort!




As a side project, they also decided to build a magnetics house to study the Earth's magnetic field. Iron would throw off the instruments, so they built the entire house out of copper nails. Of course, less than a year after it was finished, (iron) electric tram tracks were laid right across the street from the building, generating more electromagentism than anyone had ever seen before and rendering the building useless. oops.




The Shrine of Remembrance was built to honor the fallen from WWI (the war Australia has lost by far the most troops in). I actually was there the day after ANZAC day, which is Australia's WWI memorial day, so the entire inside of the shrine was covered in flowers. (ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corp.)




One of the many neat little alley ways lined with cafes.








One of many gelatto runs we made. yum.




Caroline and her friend Chris, who was studying for the semester outside of Melbourne.




At the Queen Victoria Mall.




One of the many chalk drawings on the sidewalk. Melbourne's having a big problem with the drought.




Zoe and I after a successful night at the comedy festival.




Begin the Great Ocean Road. Stop 1: Bells Beach.








I think Bells Beach is in a famous movie, so I decided to take a picture of the sign as proof of my visit there.




Next stop, the lighthouse. First, I had to get a picture of myself infront of a particularly good rock.




The lighthouse.












A "wild" koala. I think it's chained to the tree so the tour buses can say they showed people a koala. Call me cynical.




In keeping with the great Andrew Ratoff tradition, I had to stick my feet in the body of water I was looking at. It was a little colder than expected...








The Twelve Apostles. Actually, in this picture, the 4.5 Apostles.




Big sky.








"London Bridge." There used to be a bridge connecting the remaining bridge to the mainland, and people used to be allowed to walk out there. Then, one day the bridge collapsed, stranding two people on the outside part of the bridge. Tour bus lore has it that when the people were being rescued, they were trying to hide their faces from the cameras because they were having an affair. I think the more exciting part of the story is that someone got to make a phone call saying "London Bridge has fallen down!"

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anna,
Glad you recorded that sign. Bells Beach is in fact the location for the movie Point Break (1991). IMDB has the plot as:
"An FBI agent goes undercover to catch a gang of bank robbers who may be surfers." It stars Patrick Swayze as Bohdi.

Melbourne trip looked like lots of fun...too bad about the Magnetics house.
Love,
Dad

Anonymous said...

You're cynical. And all I want now is to hear more and more about bus tour lore. Seriously.

Anonymous said...

Well said.