Did you ever wonder why a nation of less than 30 million people can produce such good swimmers? The answer is beaches of course but also public swimming pools. Even in small towns you will find olympic size swimming pools. Brisbane has nineteen of them and they are life savers on hot sweltering days. Once when passing through Goondiwindi (pronounced Gun-da-windy) we bathed in the artesian-fed public swimming pool for hours to escape the heat which was a balmy 122F (50 celsius). Most of them has a open-air change rooms, a restaurant and even grassy areas for a picnic.
Check out Brisbane's pools at: http://www.ourbrisbane.com/lifestyle/health-sport-and-fitness/swimming-pools
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Some delicacies you have to try
Musk lifesavers:
One of my favourite candies (lollies), and indeed a favourite of many Australians, is the musk lifesaver. Non Australians say it tastes like soap but it is a great breath revitalizer.
Vegemite:
This salty, yeast-based spread has been exported to many countries overseas. It has therefore lost its surprise factor. I still remember the day my wife to be Marielle slabbed on a thick coating of vegemite onto her toast thinking it was nutella and then took a big bite. Call the fire brigade!
Snack bars:
Australians love chocolate. In every grocery store are large displays of chocolates which we ate as dessert every night. Lucky we did lots of walking during the day. The large family size bars would cost from $3-5 AUD and the tastiest was the Snack bar. The snack bar has twelve different flavours ranging from pineapple (my favourite) to vanilla and even turkist delight.
Surfer's Paradise
Surfers in the distance - taken from Burleigh Heads
Many rich people from Asia have condominiums in Surfers
Cassowary
I will forgive you for thinking that Australia has only one large flightless bird, the emu. However in the tropical rain forests of North Queensland lives another one, the cassowary. Unlike the emu the cassowary is declining in numbers due mainly to habitat loss. Note the large helmut (comb) on the head which is used by the bird to brush aside vegetation as it runs through the rain forest. Looking at this bird you could perhaps support the argument that birds descended from the dinosaurs.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Sydney Opera House
The Sydney Opera House is one of the world's twenty most distinctive buildings. It was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2007 and visitors to Syndey are impressed by its unique design of sails jutting into Sydney hrabour. However its construction was shrouded in controversy and a very sad event. The Opera House was formally completed in 1973, ten years over schedule and a staggering fourteen times over cost, from $7 million planned to $102 million actual. The architect Jorn Utzon left the project before it was completed. The New South Wales government organized a lottery to pay for the overrun and the winner's son was abducted for a ransom. The son was murdered before the ransom could be paid.
Read more at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_Opera_House#Construction_history
Read more at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_Opera_House#Construction_history
Wooloongabba
Don't you just love these aboriginal names? Woolloongabba is an inner suburb of Brisbane best known for the Brisbane Cricket Ground (the Gabba). The cricket ground has undergone some radical renovations since I used to go there in the 1970s to watch intersate games that Queensland invariably lost. In those days there was a large grassy hill, strangely called the Hill, where we could swill down vast amounts of beer from Castelmaine XXXX tinnies. Who cared whether Queensland was winning or not. A lot of beer creates a big appetite. We would turn to our old favourites of fish and chips wrapped in newspaper and chiko rolls. A chiko roll is an oversized savoury snack with almost the same form and content as an egg roll - spring roll combination with one difference. It wasn't pork in the roll rather it was mutton. I can't believe I actually ate those things. At the other end of the ground from the Hill were a series of stands set beneath huge Moreton Bay fig trees which gave a certain exotic feel to the place.
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