6 November 2011

Home!


Instructions for toilet use in KL. Amused me greatly.


I spent 3 long days travelling home as I booked all my flights individually as it was cheaper than buying a Cairns to Manchester flight. My first flight was down to the Gold Coast. I got some amazing views over the Great Barrier Reef and islands as I headed south down the coast. Next stop was Kuala Lumpur. I stayed in an airport hotel for just 12 hours before I headed to London and then onto Manchester. It's very nice to be home after 569 days (it doesn't feel like that) and the sun is even shining. I'm looking forward to a week of sorting myself out before the dreaded job search.

I really enjoyed keeping the blog and I hope people have enjoyed reading it. I will keep wandering the world in the future (next stop the America's) so the blog will continue but for now it's time to enjoy the comforts of home.

2 November 2011

Cairns



Over the past 10 days I been having lots of fun and relaxing times in Cairns. Cairns is a small city and very tropical. It's full of partying backpackers and coach loads of older people on their holidays. There's plenty to do here with the reef and rainforest so close.

We had a couple of days of rain to start with so I made the most of the weather and went white water rafting on the Tully river for the day. The town of Tully is one of the wettest in Australia and the river is raft-able all year round as the water input is controlled by a dam. The town was badly damaged in cyclone Yasi this year so I think the residents are pretty happy that the rafting is still drawing people to the town. It was a fantastic day and I had a great group who were considerably more adventurous than the other boring bunch and our guide realised this, so we took harder routes down the rapids, hung back so we could go for swims, rapid surfing and flip the raft. We even got wedged between two boulders and took a route down a small but practically vertical waterfall that the guide had never rafted before!

One of the reasons everyone visits Cairns is to have a day out on the Great Barrier Reef. I was in two minds about the reef. There are probably over 100 different companies who will take you out on the reef and a lot of the boats go to pontoons that have swimming pools, sun decks, water slides, hot showers etc and then will charge you a small fortune to go and see the fish. I wasn't so keen on this as I'd been diving in tropical waters before, so it's all going to look the same. On the other hand, it's the Great Barrier Reef, and I'd get some stick at home if I didn't see it, so I booked a day out to go diving. I visited the outer barrier reef where a lot of the slower boats can't get to, so it was nice that there weren't many other boats around. I'd only ever been diving from small fishing boats so it was a completely different experience on the double decked shiny new boat that I was going out on. The staff were great and I had to do very little with my gear which was good and our guide was even on hand in the water to take our fins off as we were getting onto the boat! The diving was great fun, the coral was massive and I saw a 2m long reef shark and got very close to a Green Turtle which was amazing. The big disappointment of the day was the fact that the reef is huge and yet we kept going past other dive groups. I didn't understand why everyone was in the same area. I'm glad that I went out on the reef as it was a different experience to diving in the past as you obviously pay a lot more than in Asia and you get a better service. My diving improved and I got to use a dive computer which I'd never used before. As for the Great Barrier Reef, it was nothing special compared to other tropical reefs but I guess that there is big money to be made from its name.

I also did a day trip into the Atherton Tablelands and to Paronella Park which is south towards Innisfail. Everyone in Ravenswood told me how beautiful this area of Australia was and they weren't wrong. Green fields, hills, lakes and waterfalls made it just like England but with different trees and the sun shining! Our first stop was a wildlife cruise on volcanic crater Lake Barrine which was really nice and despite the lake of wildlife there was a very interesting commentary on the rainforest trees. One of the interesting facts I do remember is that there are no male eels around for 1000km. The female eels swim down the creeks and out to sea to New Caladonia to find a male friend and then only the females make the trip back to the lake. There is a tea room on the lake so I treated myself to cream tea which was so good. I was surprised to see a tearoom in the middle of rainforest but apparently it was set up 100 years ago when the road was single lane and the gates to the road only opened for 2 hours at a time in one direction so you had to wait up to 2 hours before you could get down to the coast. We also stopped at a waterfall and the Giant Curtain Fig tree which is basically a fig tree that's grown on a branch of a host tree so the roots have grown down from way above ground level. The main reason for the trip was to go to Paronella Park which is the equivalent to going to a National Trust house in England. Spanish man Mr Paronella bought the land on the banks of Mena Creek and decided to use the water from Mena Creek Falls to create the 1st hydroelectric plant in Queensland in 1933. He then built his own castle, complete with a ballroom, theatre and cafe. The castle is now an empty shell and is falling down but it was still really interesting to walk around. The highlight to the whole day was seeing a wild Cassowary just metres away!

Cairns has been a nice town to just hang around in. There's a shopping centre and a swimming pool on the water front so it's been good just to sit and do nothing for a while. I met my friend Yoko for lunch which was lovely to catch up. I shared a room with Yoko in Ayr in March when we waited for farm work. I promised that I'd see her in Cairns but I didn't think it would be 7 months later! I've also had a long walk up Mount Whitfield in the north of the city which was great fun through the rainforest, if a little sweaty and lots of mosquito bites. Another very touristy thing to do is the Scenic railway to Kuranda which was really disappointing as you could barely see out the windows as the people sitting by the windows had their heads out of them taking photos. The main views were rocks on one side and trees on the other. I actually enjoyed the bus trip back more, as the driver stopped so we could see the view over Cairns and the coast.

Today is my last day in Cairns and it's very cloudy after torrential rain last night so I guess I won't be doing anything today!

21 October 2011

The way to Cairns

I finally left Home Hill yesterday after another few weeks. Picking pumpkins in 32 degree heat was pretty hard work and the last few days was very cool and windy, and they say the wet season has started early so I'm glad I left when I did. I started to help train Spot as well. He was running through the paddocks and chewing the plants so he started to come on the packing trailer with me and he's taken a liking to eating the peppers to keep him happy.

The journey to Cairns was very long. The bus was over an hour late and we drove much of the day through rain and low cloud so I couldn't see much. I checked into a hostel last night just outside the main centre of Cairns, so its nice and quiet and I've a single bed! I've 2 weeks in the Cairns area and there are a few things I want to do, but I'm not booking anything until the weather gets better. For today though it's time to browse the shops for the first time in 6 months!

1 October 2011

Home Hill



I headed to Home Hill, about 1 and half hours South of Townsville and very close to the town of Ayr where I was in March. Home Hill is very small with 2 small supermarkets, a pharmacy and a few pubs. I've currently been here for over 12 weeks and have been working full time on a farm for 10 weeks. It was really boring for the first 2 weeks as I only had 14 hours of work but now I'm working about 51 hours a week so all's good. I'm picking pumpkins which is hard work and also packing peppers which is much easier but I have to pack pretty quickly as they are packed on the back of a tractor straight after picking. Thankfully since I'm not picking the peppers so I've avoid all the sore backs. We have also done weeding which is back breaking, pushing seeds into trays, making boxes and also washing trays.

It's definitely the good wage that's keeping me here. The weather's hot and we've also had some cold mornings, days long and the hostel is pretty basic and full of French who only really socialise in French. I am on a small family run farm with only 6 workers so it's been nice to work directly with the farmer. There's a 5 month old puppy who I absolutely love and he's taken a liking to me and spends most of my lunch hour jumping up on my lap. He does bite and chew wrists and ankles though!

We've had lots of run ins with other wild life too. I've seem some huge kangaroos and emus, pigs and lots of snakes. The Burdekin area is full of sugar cane fields which they burn every evening. It's pretty cool seeing all the smoke billowing into the sky and the ash which is locally known as “Burdekin Snow” falling down. We even passed a cane fire right the way up to the highway.

I've the weekend off this week as none of the crops are ready for picking yet. I've headed to Ayr to pick up some bits and pieces. I haven't left Home Hill since I arrived so it's nice to get out even if it is only to Ayr and everything's shut on a Saturday afternoon. I'm staying another 2 weeks in Home Hill before heading to Cairns for another 2 weeks before heading home on the 3rd November.

5 July 2011

Townsville and Magnetic Island


Townsville is a bit of an odd city. It has a nice waterfront but there isn't actually anything in the centre. All the shops are in out off town shopping centre. I spent the first 2 nights basically catching up with life and not doing alot really. I then got the ferry to Magnetic Island which is 8km off the coast. Maggie Islands nice but not as great as everyone goes on about. I did a couple of nice walks and sat on a beach for an afternoon (not intentional but i missed the bus back!). On one of the walks I saw a very active koala which was pretty cool. No swimming done though. The water was freezing and so were the winds.

I headed back to Townsville for another night. I'm staying a newly refurbished hostel so the beds are very comfy and there is free WIFI throughout (partly the reason I stayed the extra night but sadly the net connections been very dodgy today). Between here and Cairns there's no where worth stopping at the very little work but to the recent cyclone destroying pretty much everything. As Cairns is the end of the road and from what I here jobs hard to find there I've decided to head back south to Home Hill to try and get some farm work with hopefully more success than last time! I have a 3 hour wait at the bus station tomorrow for the bus. Great!

1 July 2011

More greetings from Ravenswood



It's still pretty busy down the pub as the weather gets colder and the tourists form the south come up for a nose around town. We had a group of ghost hunting kids stay in the haunted room 12A but no ghostly happenings reported.

Lots of various motor bike clubs and schools coming for roast dinner (thankfully no fires the second time round) and different BBQ's. We also got the TV up and running for the State of Origin football (English rugby league) game which is 3 matches between Queensland and New South Wales. People seem to be very passionate about it so thats been a busy night.

I've also been out to Charters Towers which is the closest largest town. Its another former gold mining town which is kitted out with lots of nice building but not much else. I climbed up the very steep Towers Hill which is where gold was first found by Jupiter Mossman, an aboriginal stable boy. Theres a few information signs and lots of WW2 bunkers at the top, plus a great view over the town.

On the wild life front we have had an owl flying around upstairs which was cool as i've never seen a wild owl before. Also, I flushed the toilet and a green tree frog came through with the flush and jumped out onto my leg!

On the job front, I met with the Geology boss from Carpenthia Gold. Sadly he couldn't give me any work yet as he has too many junior Geo's and not enough experienced ones. Never mind.

The last month has been pretty busy with parties of uni students, high schools, motor bike clubs, a funeral, plus a man who was a spit of Hugh Jackson in the film Australia and a man who thought that England was very big and Australia small. He obviously had never seen a world map! We have also had mass panic as the only freezer broke down and a mega cold day where bar temperatures never reached more than 13 degrees.

I also finally got to the Burdekin Falls Dam about 80km away. The dam was huge. The spillway is 504m long and 40m high and water was still flowing over which was pretty impressive. When the water stops flowing over the road at the bottom of the spillway opens and you can get to the other side. The dam forms Lake Dalrymple which hold 5 times more water than Sydney Harbour. On the road we saw kangaroos (alive), wedge tailed eagles which were massive, and a baby pig. Sadly no emus! We also stopped at White Blow, which is just outside of Ravenswood and is a large quartz outcrop.

In my last week in Ravenswood I had a look around the court house and the original jail cell. I have been replaced by 2 English backpackers. Nice girls and it means that I have had a few evenings to drink on the other side of the bar. Time definitely goes quicker on the other side of the bar and after not a single alcoholic drink since arriving in Ravenswood there were a few people who owed me one! Stupidly I drank them all and i'm suffering today on my journey to Townsville.

20 May 2011

Still in Ravenswood



A quick update from Ravenswood. It's been so cold the past week or two, down to 15 degrees so I've had to put on most of what I own. I've no idea how I'm going to cope with English winter! The days in the pub are so variable and we have had a couple of very busy but short nights recently, including fish and chip Friday which is crazy! Things are still never boring in Ravenswood. We've had a pretty big BBQ fire whilst John decided to cook roast beef on it and I saw a huge bird (looked like a skinny emu but it flew, so apparently its a plains turkey). We've also had fire alarms going off in the middle of the night. Apparently geckos get into the alarms and play amongst the wires. The poor things were probably just sitting on the battery in a bid to keep warm. I've finally taken a stroll around some of town, walking past the primary school which has 1 mixed ability class with just 16 kids in it. I also visited the cemetery, which most of the graves were from the late 1800's. Pretty old for Australia but not so old when you compare it to England. I've got pretty lazy here so I took Leroy and Rosie (the 2 puppies) out for a walk and had a great time wandering around all the old mining relics and watching out for snakes. The other night there was a huge python just lying at the side of the road which was pretty cool. The weeks are going so quick that I've decided to stay here until the end of June before moving on. I just hope that it doesn't get any colder but I'm assured it will not snow here!

3 May 2011

Ravenswood



I have been working at the Imperial Hotel in Ravenswood for over 3 weeks now and I'm loving it. Ravenswood is a small town South West of Townsville and consists of 2 pubs and a shop/post office plus a few houses. I'm working mostly behind the bar at lunch and in the evening so I've learnt lots of new skills which I would never have been given the opportunity to learn in the UK plus I'm widening my taste in country music. The town is heritage listed and was booming with around 50 pubs at the start of the 20th century when gold was discovered in area. Customers are mostly tourists and locals during the day, and in the evening the workers from the local gold mine and cattle stations turn up for and rum. It's been really hard work at times as everyone seems to drink so fast and the accents and slang has taken some getting used to. Everyone's really friendly and the locals are something never seen before- no teeth (one claims a rat stole hers) and everyone seems to have a dog! Although I've liked meeting other backpackers in the hostels it's been great to chat to the people who actually live in Australia. Living wise, I'm working about 45 hours a week for a flat rate and I get my own room and can eat meat and chips every night and I don't have to cook it which is great.

Despite its size there hasn't been a dull moment yet in Ravenswood. I don't want to do everything at once though. Behind the pub there's a huge disused open cast mine and everywhere you look there are remnants of the gold mining past. We have also had a magnitude 5.2 earthquake whilst I was working behind the bar which was pretty cool and last week we had a King Brown snake slither into the dining room! Thankfully it was spotted as there was just me in there eating breakfast. If a King Brown bit you, you would die before getting to hospital so sadly the snake had to be killed with the help of a couple of spades.

I have not internet or phone signal in Ravenswood but I managed to grab a lift to Townsville with the beer run so I can pick up some bits and pieces today. It's getting into Autumn and it's cooler so I'm wishing I hadn't sent home my warmer clothes. I hope to stay working at the pub for at least another month (flights to London are crazy expensive here) and then I think I'll head to Townsville and back into the land of communication to try and see if I can get a geology job with the local mines as my degree is actually worth something here due to a shortage of geologists. For now though I'll continue serving the beer.

7 April 2011

Still in Ayr

After 16 days in Ayr and not a single bit of work I'm officially bored. 10,000+ photos sorted, 20 films watched and 6 books read and i',m ready to leave. We are in now into the harvest season which lasts until November and fruit and veg are ready to be picked but the farmers apparently arn't ready and the fields are too damp. I can't understand it as surely the food is going to rot! I had a spot of luck this week as a lady from a hotel in nearby Ravenswood called the hostel and was looking for someone to work for her. I've happily said yes and i'm hopefully getting picked up tomorrow. Even if I only stay a month it beats sitting around here so hopefully it will all work out. We are currently on Tsunami alert after a earthquake in Indonesia. Quite exciting since we are only a few kilometers from the coast!

30 March 2011

Ayr



I spent just 1 night in Airlie. It's basically just a little town full of bars and not much else which serves as the leaving point for overnight sailing trips to the Whitsunday islands. As I wasn't going sailing I had a nice afternoon lounging around the artificial lagoon on the sea front. You can't swim in the sea here because of lots of jelly fish. From Airlie I got a bus to the little inland farming town of Ayr which proudly declares that it gets 300 sunny days a year.. This town has more fruit and veg picking work than workers in the peak season so I was hoping to pick up some work here. I been here 7 days now and there's still no work due to a very rainy couple of weeks. I think i'm going to sit out the boring and costly wait though as I will get the hours when the work comes which should be within the next week. Theres not a huge amount in Ayr. A couple of pubs and supermarkets, a McDonalds (besides the library, the only place to get internet) but no actual shops to buy clothes and things which is good. The town is also stuck in a time warp. Instead of the usual DVD hire shop there is one filled with videos so the hostel is full of people lounging around watching very old videos and reading books. The places is also full of geckos and tree frogs wandering the walls in the evening which is pretty cool.

21 March 2011

Bundaberg

Bundaberg is a typical working class Aussie town with some cool architectural building typical of the tropical north- large through windows and balconies. The town is also home to the Bundaberg rum distillery which is advertised by a polar bear so there is a bit of a theme to town. I headed to Bundaberg in the hope of finding farm work but what I got was lots of rain, a horrible hostel, crazy humidity and a town that shuts entirely at the weekend. Bundaberg was hit badly by the Christmas floods so there is very little farm work which has been divided up between the 100's of backpackers here. I've asked around and most are getting just a couple of hours a day which pays the rent and thats about it. I've decided to push on north towards Cairns but after a day of sleeping with nothing to do in town, the only bus I can get is late this evening and I've had to check out of hostel so I'm left which nothing to do for the day but sit in the library whilst it's pouring down outside. My legs did get picked up my a PR for a camera company which was a little bizarre! I'm getting on a night bus to Airlie Beach which will take 12 hours this evening.

Fraser Island



I booked on a 4wd tour of Fraser Island which left from Hervey Bay. The idea of these tours is that you are put into small groups, given a 4wd land cruiser and then drive around Fraser island for 3 days, 2 nights following a lead car so that you don't get lost or caught out by the tides.

Fraser Island is a 30 minute ferry ride from shore and is the largest sand island in the world and what makes it cool is that it's covered with rainforest and it's inaccessible without a 4wd. The aboriginals call it K'gari which means Paradise.

We spent our first day swimming in Lake Mackenzie which was amazing. The lake was huge and the waters crystal clear. We also swam in Eli Creek and drove down long empty beaches. The sea looked really nice but you can't swim in it as it's shark infested and full of nasty jelly fish. Our camp was already set up for us- very basic tent, toilets and showers with some very scary spiders that I'm slowly getting used to. Dingos also roamed through camp which was really cool. The wild dogs however can attack if they feel threated and we were told just to stand still if they approached us. This training came in good use when a toilet trip saw a few of us between a dingo and a rubbish bin food source!

More swimming on the second day and we were having the best weather I've seen in Australia. We swam in the Champagne pools which are large rocks pools that the waves fill making the water bubbly. We walked to the top of Indian Head which is an aboriginal massacre sights which gave us amazing coastal view and we also swam in Lake Wabby which is at the foot of a huge sand dune.

As we were due to catch a lunch time ferry back to the mainland we had limited time on the third day but we still managed to fit in a swim in Lake Birebeen and a trip to see the Maheno ship wreck which lies on the beach shore. The rusty wreck was once a passenger liner which sank in a cyclone whilst being towed to a Japanese scrap yard. It was pretty cool to see the waves crashing through the empty shell. We also saw a much hated Cane toad in camp that morning. It was absolutely massive!

Fraser Island has been a brilliant trip and it's amazing how much fun you can have when you give people a bit of sand, plenty of swimming opportunities and a campsite. Although there were 30 people in all the cars you only really mix with the people you share a car with as you spend 24/7 with them. Thankfully I had a great group- a mix of English, Swiss and Brazilian and we had a fab time and it was sad to leave them as I headed next to Bundaberg.