City Land River

Singapore is a city, at the same time a country and on top of that its capital.

Singapore is very close to the equator, so that the almost vertical sun exposure in combination with the tropical climate (the palm house at the zoo has that temperature for a reason) create some kind of gigantic sauna.
From the pleasant flight, where I got to know a very lovely family, I stepped into this sauna.

The bus got me to a ‘close’ place in the city, from where I started walking towards the hostel. Giant skyscrapers, magnificent buildings and even a McLaren P1 (I think my jaw dropped) got me an impression I would verify later: Singapore is filthy rich!!

But back to me an the weather. So, in this gigantic sauna I walk for 2,7 kilometres my way in full clothing and with all my luggage.
I must add that this luggage is not some you would pack for a 10-day-Southeast-Asia-Stroll, but the one for more than a year abroad…

Finally, I arrive at the hostel and have to be told I have booked the wrong period. I am one day early. If it was the change of the month or the changes in my life, I can’t say for sure. So I get the room for one of two night to myself…
Now I finally realise, what air conditioning is actually worth!

Originally, I wanted to spend only one day in Singapore, as it is said to be expensive there. Now I had one more, which made for some ease at planning my route though the big city.

I went discovering on both days then, as I wanted to know what Singapore is about and to get a taste for the Asian food.

Come along!

Blossomlet on the side of the road.

Is this from the riddle with the man in the red/blue/green/yellow house? 😀

In Singapore, you can always spot the ever-present difference between huge, modern and down-to-earth/ historic buildings. Though shabby none of the areas I visited had looked…

 

 

To eat until satisfied for little money is hardly possible in countries like New Zealand and Australia. At small hawker stalls it is quite easy. That way, both, the culinary desires and the wallet get happy.
I mostly visited the many hawker centres, simple food courts featuring diverse cuisines.

Fried Kway Teow. Many textures and tasty flavours.

This is what it looks like in the Maxwell Food Centre.

 

 

This serves as a confuzzling picture.

 

 

Singapore’s landmark, the Merlion.

Not a P1, but my dream car. The McLaren MP4-12C.

On night I tried the omnipresent fish balls. They taste like fish and are a little denser than jello.

Durian. The high-praised fruit. I got to taste it in the shape of ice-cream. Tastes like fart and fruity. It is said to smell VERY MUCH like fart as the whole fruit. 😀

 

 

Bak kut teh. Very tangy.

Here the making of my favourite beverage: Freshly squeezed sugarcane juice!

And whoever goes for the adventure of the little food stalls, will find oneself far from forks. Here your skills with the chopsticks get challenged.

I once more left the ‘simpler’ districts of Singapore, to walk into riches and pomposity again.
On Sentosa Island you find so much of it, it starts to feel weird. But well, supply and demand…

 

 

Little snack on the run: Fried carrot cake. Doesn’t include sweetness or carrots, but was all yummy. Even when you have to handle those lumps with chopsticks…

Marina Bay Sands. Presumably the most eccentric building of exclusivity. Next to a shopping mall it holds a hotel and who knows what more.

Inside the hotel lobby.

Behind the structure you find the gardens. At that point, I asked myself what would be special about this. Too much wealth makes things seem cheap.

Singapore is a colourful Asia-Mix. As a ‘westerner’ you are often sole in the masses and you can feel properly a stranger. Just like travels are meant to be. 🙂
Singapore is very rich, so you can’t find as much authentic Asia in this small area.
I have found myself inside countless (perfectly air-conditioned) breathtaking shopping malls. Any individual of distinction can satisfy their materialistic needs there. The more iconic the place in town, the more noble it is.
Thanks to English being an official language among others, communication was not hard at all.

Now I am sitting inside my room in Penang, Malaysia, and ask myself whether the fat cockroach, which just zoomed across the wall, will come out behind the cupboard at night…

The bus ride was a hard case, by the way. The proceedings at the border from Singapore to Malaysia were no big deal, though. You get out of the bus, get your exit stamp and drive across the bridge. Then you carry your luggage past the Malaysian authorities and you are there.
But I hope the 3 hour delay didn’t trouble the others as well. At least the seats inside the bus were comfy. 🙂

The underground, which I should have chosen over the bus in the beginning, is a good way to cross the city.

I am hungry, but before I can dive into the culinary amusement I need cash. Wish me luck, I will report back in time. 😉

Steve Irwin’s Legacy

The last day in Oceania comes to an end.
I have to pack my bag, Southeast-Asia is the next destination. But before that, I take my time for this post which serves as a bottom line for the last time here in Australia.

We moved northbound, direction Brisbane. For in that area you find the ‘Australia Zoo’.
This zoo is founded and built by the parents of Steve Irwin.
Many know Steve Irwin as ‘The Crocodile Hunter’ from countless, partly daring, documentaries all around his greatest passion, the animal kingdom.
The zoo still is a zoo, where animal are in cages, though they are fitting and spacious. Steve Irwin’s life’s work is mentioned at every corner, as his family still is present and keeps up his legacy in the great zoo…

 

 

But before we arrived, we had to make some long way. The days here are that short, you have to work with the sunset a few hours after waking up already…

 

 

We placed our funds in a fine camping site right next to the zoo and saw some colourful birds in the trees. These Galahs are as common in Australia as blackbirds back home… 🙂

 

 

After the long car ride we were all fed up with driving and went for the 2-day-admission, so we could visit the zoo all relaxed and without any pressure…

 

 

During the day, they show off some animals here and there.

Of course the zoo features the iconic Australia animals as stars! And crocodiles are ever-present in any colour or shape, of course. They were Steve’s favourite, without a doubt…

 

 

 

 

Koalas have a very much desirable life, don’t they? 😀

 

 

 

 

The Fierce Snake. The most venomous snake in the world!

 

 

 

 

Great price question: What is this and which animal does it belong to?

 

 

The tiger cubs go for some….walkies? 😀

 

 

This one is enjoying! 😀

 

 

The great animal show presents the most spectacular beasts with pomp and splendour!
The centre piece are of course the crocodiles, which you want to handle with care! 😀

 

 

Here, a volunteer was involved in the feeding of a ferocious reptile.

 

 

But it is all different with the grown up versions.

But also other predators, which one only knows from his picture-books, hover across the scene majestically.

 

 

This parrot will be a master thief one day, given you hold the note right. 😀

 

 

A wooden clap accompanies the closing of a crocodile’s jaws.

Steve Irwin died in 2006, being stabbed to the heart by a stingray during filming. That way, his life got to a sudden and greatly mourned end.

 

 

When focusing on the claws, a Koala looks less cuddly than previously assumed.

One of the most impressive animals to me, was the cassowary. Just look at the thing, the dinos still exist!!

 

 

This tiger is blind. Still, he plays like any other wild cat, because he knows every inch of his enclosure by heart. Not less was the dedication of the wrangler, who got into the water with him…

2 days are enough even for a pretty big zoo and without stress we had seen the lot of it.
For a little donation you can take a look inside the wild life hospital. In there, emergency cases are taken car of, which you can see quite some in a short visit.

 

 

Look Lea, here one of your dearest friends is aided, a magpie! 😉 😀

 

 

First, this Koala only reluctantly ate his eucalyptus leaves, but even in the animal kingdom you have to eat healthy…

We didn’t see much of Brisbane, as my plane takes of from the neighbour city, Gold Coast. Thus, we spent the last days here and relaxed with some last treats…

 

 

This is kangaroo meat. It tastes great! 🙂

 

 

The beach at Surfers Paradise at the Gold Coast. Like Miami…or something like that. 🙂

 

 

 

 

And this concludes my rather short adventure in Australia…
Soon I will, if it is possible, tell you about my experience in in Southeast-Asia. For soon, I will stand alone again. In the foreign. On the journey.

Sydney

Can you imagine that the only copy of the following pictures had been deleted? A mistake of mine led to this perfect scare.
The great day in Sydney, especially great on the pictures side, would be left only in my memories!
But thank god I knew a way to get pictures back even beyond the recycle bin on the computer…
So, this post is just as usual and seemingly for granted features pictures:

We got to spend a day of our journey in Sydney.
The biggest city in Australia was foreign to us both, so we parted and spend our day each the own way…

In the end I was more than satisfied, as my expectations got far more than exceeded!!

 

 

Surely the most popular sight of the city: The Opera House!

My goal: A nice cup of coffee, capturing the city for my readers, eat something nice and maybe even experiencing some culture inside the Opera House itself.

Sydney is the biggest city I have ever visited. That is why the skyscrapers made a huge impression on me. Also, some historic sites are well preserved.

 

 

The Strand Arcade is far older than 100 years and today prospers just as the founder must have dreamed of.

 

 

Bar Bellaccino. You just have to crave some cappuccino there, aye? 🙂

Hard to say whether the building look more impressive from the side or from the front…

Inside this 200 years old botanic garden I found HER!! 😀
But unfortunately, she didn’t want to talk to me. 🙁 (Maybe it was the Kiwi accent??)

The day was clouded by the prospect of rain and its foreshadowing clouds, because of which I didn’t plan on having much activity outside.
Nevertheless, I got a surprisingly fabulous sunset which I got to capture next to the Opera House and the Harbour Bridge.

My thirst for culture was to be quenched by a visit at the seasonal Opera on the Harbour. This year, ‘Turandot’ would be featured. A Chinese tale about a horrifying princess, a stubborn prince, true love and heroism.
For a first-ever opera visit, it is no bad thing to look out onto the Sydney Opera House over the water, is it? For the stage is situated on the opposite side of the harbour.
And to have the first opera of your life backed with fireworks, feeling lucky about the bargain at the remaining tickets sale and having no rain at all, against the forecast; all that made the experience whole! On the premises they served Asian food in style, so I could satisfy my culinary needs at the same time.
What else can I say?

On the way back I got to a place I had looked for a long time now: A place above the highway at night. The conditions might have been less than ideal, but look at my Headlight-Stripes-Arrangement anyway:

 

 

For a single day I have experienced very very much of Sydney!

Bairnsdale

There is no better headline for the last few days.

On the way to Sydney, where we have arrived and want to see the city tomorrow, we had to have our car repaired.
In the middle of nowhere we noticed some fluid leakage. This nowhere was Bairnsdale, an idyllic city 3 hours west of Melbourne.
As we noticed the things with the car on the Saturday night, we decided not to continue out of caution.
On Sunday, no workshop was operating, so we had a whole day to kill in that little town. Thus, you see one or the other cafe and shop from the inside, where you would have just zoomed by…

The special church in town with remarkable paintings.

 

 

On Monday, at the workshop we got promised the fix on the same day, but it would take some time. We could have a look around the city for the day, using a rental. And so we did; again. Some more places we visited and in the end we pretty much knew our way around Bairnsdale…

At half price (we noticed the coupon on the back of a receipt) an iced coffee is always welcome.

You couldn’t wish for a better looking rental! 😀

Up to Sydney, our way led us by some more attractions:

So you are driving around a neighbourhood just like that one night and there are kangaroos in the front yards!

The Kiama Blowhole. An awesome phenomenon! 🙂

That way, a plan gets mixed up a little and you just go with the flow, instead of surfing the big waves only. Pretty relaxing, I must admit…

My travel plans for the 10-Day-Southeast-Asia-Crash-Course get more important now. One adventure chases the other, you don’t get much time to catch your breath. But for that, time is just too precious, isn’t it? Mind agrees, body disagrees…

Great Ocean Road and Return

In our car, we rode out of Melbourne then.
Direction Great Ocean Road.

This part of the coastal line offers many stations and didn’t leave us disappointed! On the contrary!
See here some impressions of the far and wide country:

 

 

Cockatoos on the side of the road like pigeons. The sacrifice of a bread roll in exchange for pictures and the experience was totally worth it! 😀

 

 

Exotic birds everywhere!

And sleeping Koalas.

This one had expunged all of his current radius and seemingly would rather take another nap than move on. Likeable beasts. 😀

Who started this one day??

Late that night we arrived at the 12 apostles, a remarkable chain of free-standing rock pillars, of which not all 12 exist anymore.
Punctually at sunset we joined hundreds of tourists to take our pictures…

 

 

Back in Melbourne, we followed the advice of our fellow travelers and ordered a ‘Freakshake’.
It’s something else… 🙂

 

 

The War Memorial. A place of remembrance.

The second highest building in Australia, the Eureka Tower. Almost 300 metres tall.

And this is what Melbourne looks like from above. The Eureka Tower has a visitor floor, which is worth it!!

 

 

 

 

Now we are on our way to Sydney. One of the many stations on my journey home…

The Dessert

Up high.
Down low.

Scattered clouds. Window seat. Wing. Daybreak. Picton! Next to it Blenheim. The gate to the South Island. My heart is filled with content, seeing the country I have traveled for the last time at dawn of a new day.

 

 

 

 

The plane swiftly carries us over the sea towards Melbourne. We land there. And we are in Australia.

Suddenly, New Zealand is far away. And we find ourselves in a city that holds almost as many people as New Zealand as a whole.
Gigantic skyscrapers make our heads tilt. We realise very quickly: Australia is somewhat larger of an undertaking.

 

 

 

 

The first days I struggle through a clogged ear from the flight. It was to take a few days, until the water had vanished and I could hear the same on both ears.

Another hurdle we took and now we are owners of a massive backpacker’s station wagon. This car is to bring us up to Brisbane and to be Elvis’ loyal companion from there. Or to be replaced with an off-road truck. All up in the air. 🙂

The first stop with the new vehicle we took at the St. Kilda Beach. Fittingly, we arrived at sunset…

 

 

 

 

Thus, the adventure Australia awaits! I will let you know of all impressions.

Next to that, anticipation and longing for home rise every day. Soon I will wake up in my own bed again and only think back on how many beds I woke up in…
And I will cherish these memories.

 

At this point, saw news: Poppy (from popcorn), one of the chickens at the flat in Hastings, died. To her I said the last goodbye back then…

R.I.P. Poppy