Friday 20 March 2015

A Weekend in Sydney

Eventually I found my way out of Melbourne Airport Terminal 4 Departure Lounge and boarded a plane, in which the pilot apologised that our original flight had been cancelled, but failed to acknowledge the fact that the flight we were now sat on was an hour delayed itself. So I arrived in Sydney two hours later than planned, but I was happy to finally meet Chris at the airport. We made it to our hostel in time to get to the local pizza place just before it closed for a massive pizza takeaway. I can't deny that my first day in Sydney was a little underwhelming as the sky was so grey, and later on we even had a downpour. Without a blue sky in the background the Opera House is really quite disappointing, looking off-white on the big concrete slab it sits upon. Nonetheless, it did feel special to sit in a coffee shop at Circular Quay with Sydney's two iconic structures at either shoulder. We had a leisurely walk around the nearby botanical gardens and enjoyed catching up after a month spent apart.

I was very grateful on Saturday to have the good weather I had been hoping for, and we leaped upon the opportunity to get out of the city into the Blue Mountains. The landscape truly is stunning, and if you can elbow your way through a thick swamp of tourists there is a blue-hazed and tree-covered canyon of epic proportions in front of you. We saw most of the main sites before travelling a bit further afield, where the crowds disappeared, the day began to draw to a close and we enjoyed a gorgeous drive through the mountains as the sun set. After a long day of sightseeing we returned to Sydney and decided to spend our Saturday night with a leisurely stroll around the harbour at night to see the lights and eat an ice-cream, before meeting a friend of Chris's for a nightcap.

Sunday was another underwhelming weather day, but by now we had accepted that a bit of Melbourne had stalked along with me on my journey, and resolved to get on with our day regardless. Without much of a plan, it made sense to go out for a delicious brunch first of all, and I chose a trendy cafe in Glebe that I had spotted when walking past on Friday. This was a fantastic idea, and we both felt in optimum spirits after a good brekkie (plus a cake for good measure). Next we took a walk down to Darling Harbour, where a Thai festival was taking place. Too full to eat any more, we enjoyed the smells before moving on to the Chinese Gardens. This was a tranquil little spot with a ticketed entry- inside were ponds, water features, bamboo-lined paths and a miniature pagoda. Essentially it was a place for couples and families to come and take photos, and we followed suit, trying to avoid the massive construction sites beyond the garden's perimeters when taking photos.

Later we returned to Circular Quay and bought a ticket for a boat ride over to Manly Beach. I hadn't anticipated what a difference being out in the harbour on the water would make to the view of the Opera House and Harbour Bridge, and now I was truly impressed. Manly was a nice place too, and Chris and I enjoyed a leisurely barefoot stroll from one end of the beach to the other. Unfortunately for us, we were at the very remote end of the beach when a sudden downpour hit us, and we ran to shelter at the local surf club building, which was closed but luckily had its doors open and was occupied by others who had also been caught out like us. When the rain died down we made our way down the wet, empty street until we found a nice-looking restaurant for dinner. Already I was beginning to feel sad that my weekend with Chris was drawing to a close, as my flight back to Melbourne was early the next morning. We waited for our food for what seemed like a long time, until it turned out that the waitress had accidentally forgotten to put our order through, and we were offered a glass of wine each on the house along with many apologies. We didn't mind waiting though- we just wanted to make the most of our last evening. So we drank our wine and relaxed in the cosy candle-lit beach-side joint. We took a late ferry back to the city after it had already gone dark, and it turned out to be a choppy journey. Chris and I had procured the very front space on the outside deck so that we could get photos of the harbour uninterrupted by other people's heads and elbows. However, just as I was looking up at the starry night sky above, the boat hit a heavy wave and a ton of water was thrown into the air and onto our heads- not quite so romantic any more. This was accompanied by a chorus of laughter from every other person on the boat, which only got worse as we shuffled inside shivering and drenched with water. This went on to happen to a few more people, so at least we weren't the only drowned rats on board. Luckily the waves settled down as we made our way into a more sheltered part of the bay and as we rounded into Circular Quay we could enjoy the night views of the harbour from the boat.

The next morning was a very early start for my 8.45am flight, and I made it to the airport with five or ten minutes to spare before check-in closed. Tigerair was more reliable on the way back and I got back to Melbourne as scheduled, although I wouldn't have been too devastated about missing the four hours of lectures I had that afternoon. In the evening some friends and I went to Wholefoods, the student-run vegetarian and vegan cafe that runs a free dinner for students on Monday nights, as funded by the Monash Students Association (which also runs free breakfasts on Wednesdays and the odd free ice-cream as a random surprise- I love it). I'd wanted to go to this for the last two Mondays running and was glad to finally have the chance. It certainly perked me up after feeling low at the end of my weekend trip and saying goodbye to Chris again.

The rest of my week was spent much as usual; going to classes, getting last-minute readings done and going to salsa class, which I have started doing on Wednesday lunchtimes. On Wednesday evening I caught up with my Aussie friends Juliana and Cathy to go to the night market at Queen Victoria Market, the second-to-last one this year as summer draws to a close (boo hoo- I hadn't expected it to end so soon after my arrival!). I also went out last night with the Monash Overseas and Exchange Club (MOVE), to a bar crawl they had organised in the city. The first two bars were nice places I'd go to again, but I wasn't so keen on the last place we went to, a massive club with some kind of Middle Eastern/ 'Oriental' theme and lots and lots of people. It was so heavily stewarded that wherever we stood a member of staff asked us to move because we were blocking one thing or another. Thursday happened to be Ladies' Night and all the female members of the group were given drinks cards to a total of $40 each, which was almost so much that I was taken aback. I don't like the concept of giving lots of free drinks to girls (much as I enjoy free drinks), so I was both pleased and sceptical. To resolve this I got myself two amaretto and cranberries and gave the other two drinks cards to guy friends to try to redress the balance a little. As it was a Thursday there was no Nightrider bus home so we had to get a train and taxi back, which all felt like a bit more hassle than the night was worth. Today, despite the fact I didn't drink much last night and certainly wasn't drunk, I have a nasty headache and am feeling sorry for myself, remembering the times I could drink as much as I wanted and spring out of bed the next morning. I'm definitely getting old.

My task for today was to finish my video presentation from my visit to Footscray, Yarraville and Williamstown. It has been quite a frustrating effort due to my lack of technical skills and my hangover, and I was glad no-one else was in the apartment to hear the sporadic shouted swearword and banging of the desk coming from my room. Finally, I finished it and though it is far from perfect and very amateur-looking, it represents many hours of work, not including the six hours it took to complete the walks themselves. Click here to have a look at the finished video! And here are a few thousand photos from Sydney....


A grey first day at the harbour


Coffee spot 

At the blue mountains






The Three Sisters in the background

The Opera House, looking much more beautiful at night

At the Chinese Gardens at Darling Harbour






Lovely view of a building site- you can't rely on other people's photography!




Another one... from the boat this time



At Manly beach



Lovely one minute...

...And a downpour the next

And back to the city

Thursday 12 March 2015

Starting School

I am definitely in a different place to when I last posted, and not just literally. At the end of my stay in St Kilda I moved into my new apartment in Notting Hill. And no, it's not like the one in London! Notting Hill is a pretty insignificant little suburb with almost nothing there apart from some major road junctions and petrol stations. However, it is right next to campus and allows me a pretty little 10 minute walk through the university's 'Aboriginal Garden' to get to my classes. The apartment itself is beautiful, brand new and has a great roof terrace with BBQ facilities. My housemates are Carlos-Eduardo and Fernanda, a lovely couple from Brazil- he is doing a PhD at Monash and she is working. The flat still isn't fully furnished and we are without Internet, but at the weekend I invested in a duvet (called a doona here) and some nice bedsheets and cushions to make my room feel more homely. And so I am feeling very settled.

I have also completed my first two weeks of semester. I found my first day a little daunting and I had a much stronger feeling of being a 'new kid' than I'd expected to have. In my first lecture- a geography class, not my area of expertise- the teacher asked a lot of questions and I was surprised to find that everyone contributed eagerly. I'm not used to this in a lecture and tried to keep my head low so no one realised how clueless I was. Luckily everything has become easier since then, and I am getting used to the slightly different dynamics of classes here. 

It seems that I've chosen my units well, and they all compliment each other even better than I'd expected. My easiest class is 'Exploring Contemporary Australia', a first-year level course aimed at exchange students to help us settle in and understand this strange and foreign culture around us. There is no exam for this unit, and 60% of the assessment comes from a weekly reflective journal about our experiences in, and observations about, contemporary Australia. The first assignment is a video presentation responding to a self-guided walking tour around some of Melbourne's western suburbs, an area outside of our usual radius, as we mostly live and study in the eastern and south-eastern suburbs. I did this walking tour with my friend Claudia at the weekend, on a scorcher of a day. First we saw Footscray, an interesting place with a very diverse community made up of Vietnamese, East African and hipster populations. Our walk took us through Seddon, a more upmarket and quiet district with more trendy shops and attractive cottages on leafy green streets. We finished in Yarraville, with its lovely Main Street complete with bookshops, cafés and the Sun Theatre cinema. From here we hopped on a train to Williamstown, one of the first settlements in Melbourne, where a penal colony was established and a couple of grisly murders were committed by the convicts. Despite this history Williamstown was delightful, with a beach and nature reserve that allowed stunning views across the water to the CBD. 

After all this walking under the sun, not to mention getting lost more than once, Claudia and I were knackered and I was hit by an incredible hunger that will be familiar to those who know me. Therefore it will be understandable to hear how disappointed I was by the fish and chips I bought from a little pier-side chippy that was filled with people. It's amazing that so much British culture arrived with the early colonists that Cockney rhyming slang was spoken in Australia, but still white Australians have failed to deliver on decent fish n chips. So after my meal I was full but far from satisfied. Nonetheless, the views in Williamstown were beautiful and a ice cream as we walked to the station for the two hour journey back to Clayton was a nice end to an interesting and exhausting day. 

On Tuesday we had another field trip related to the same unit, although this one was as a group. In the morning we went to the National Gallery of Victoria and joined a number of school groups who were also having a guided tour of the gallery- we were the only group not wearing gingham dresses, knee high socks and Panama hats (really). I had been to the gallery before but with a guide the artworks were contextualised and explained to us. I was particularly interested in Frederick McCubbin's 'The Pioneer'. This painting had caught my eye when I last saw it, but sitting down and having a discussion about the artwork helped to further explain its significance: the painting consists of three panels telling the narrative of a couple who presumably had just arrived in Australia from England and were beginning a new life. In the final panel, the city of Melbourne can be seen appearing through the trees. We concluded that it is a representation of the vision of Australia as a land of new opportunities and freedoms (at least for the white settlers who arrived there). The gallery displayed Aboriginal artworks around and alongside such colonialist pieces to signify the parallel history.

We had a three hour break in the afternoon which Claudia and I spent relaxing at Flagstaff Gardens. When we met up with the group at the Koorie Heritage Centre, an Aboriginal culture and history educational centre, we were surprised to be taken back to the park again by Lennie, our guide, who was an Aboriginal man (although admittedly I didn't realise this at first as I saw him as being a white man, and did not realise there were some Aboriginal people who don't have dark skin- I now know otherwise). 

Lennie explained how Flagstaff Gardens had been an Aboriginal camping ground for thousands of years, although there are no memorials to this history in the park, while there are memorials to other things, such as the burial site nearby the grounds. He also found some possums in the trees for us to look at it; in Australia they are overpopulated and carry diseases, but are still a protected species. Aboriginals traditionally make clothing from possum skins, but now have to import these from New Zealand to make their traditional cloaks. We returned to the centre for more Aboriginal history and to see and feel some of the exhibited items. 

I am also taking a unit from the Indigenous Studies department, called 'Race and Power'. I am finding this one very interesting, particularly as a follow-on from the African American history module I studied in Liverpool, which focused a lot on critical race theory and the study of racism. I like the way the tutor is structuring the course- half of the readings don't relate to Aboriginal Australians but provide some background in the study of social constructions of race- last week we studied Edward Said's 'Orientalism' and this week looked at a chapter from Frantz Fanon's 'Black Faces, White Masks', a very poetic and moving account of his frustrations at being defined by others primarily by his skin colour and not by his intelligence or life experiences. 

I am also really enjoying my literature unit, which is called 'On the Road: Travel and Representation' and looks at the histories of travel and travel writing. I was very excited when I first found this unit and am so glad to be taking it- it is very much up my street! This week we have been looking at some travel accounts from the 14th to 18th centuries. It is fascinating to see how travel writing was essentially synonymous with fiction at a time when audiences had never travelled and would basically believe anything they read- such as John Mandeville's claims to have seen one legged people whose feet were big enough to shade them from the sun. Jonathon Swift satirised this very well in 'Gulliver's Travels'. 

Next we came to the 'Grand Tour' concept of 18th century Britain, in which aristocratic university graduates would travel in order to become more refined and cosmopolitan. It's interesting that the concept that travel is good for the individual is still almost universally accepted, and seen as a praise-worthy enterprise that will make you more wise, mature and employable. But, as our teacher pointed out, perhaps travel can also narrow the mind, if one carries too much of a sense of cultural superiority and stereotypes of the places they are visiting, which may well be the case for the Grand Tour experience. This to me sounded a lot like Said's concept of orientalism, that argues that western perceptions of the east are more of a reflection of their own culture than the one they witness and comment upon. Therefore the readings from all my classes seem to help my learning in the other ones, and some of the things I learnt in Liverpool last year are applicable here too. 

But it's not all been about studying of course, and I hope it never will be! As I write I am en route to Sydney to spend a long weekend with Chris and to do some sightseeing. Like most budget travellers I chose to travel with Tigerair, and like most passengers with Tigerair, I now find myself over an hour delayed. I hope I will be boarding soon, and I can't wait to get out of this miserable boarding lounge and arrive in one of the world's greatest cities, which I haven't seen in ten years.