Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Slovenians

After Ana left and went back to Slovenia, I went to live with a Slovenian family for a week. I met them in Perisher when I instructed kids, Sam, Madeline and Alex.

















Pic 1: Slovenians

It was very funny. I saw their last name and asked where they are from. They said well kind of from Slovenia ;) I was I bit shocked I admit. Slovenia? Among 200 instructors, how can I get the Slovenians? Funny.

I was their instructor for a week, than got real Slovenian sausages and cevapcici (there is Slovenian butcher in Sydney). MMMM. Well they were actually all born in Australia, including their dad, but Slovenian blood counts right?










Pic 2: Football fans? Of course!! And very good a it!!


I was very happy to stay with them for a week, speak Slovenian learn how to cook Chinese Chicken sticks and mljask, eat Australian desert Pavlova. Delicious!!! I’ll make it for you when we meet. I remembered Bosko now, I am sure he would eat a whole plate just by himself ;)

It was great to feel a bit of Sloveno-Australian family way of life. Thank you!!!

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Sydney









Pic 1: Sydney

Coming back to Sydney and sightseeing mmmm nice… Some shots are from before Fiji, but it doesn't really matter right?

Well what is the first think you have in mind when someone says Sydney? I believe it is Opera house, no; or is it Harbour Bridge?









Pic 2: Opera house and Harbour Bridge










Pic 3: Opera house










Pic 4: Opera house











Pic 5: Harbour Bridge

There are 2 main Sydney beaches, Bondi Beach and Manly Beach, both very nice, one more family kind (Manly Beach) and other more party kind (Bondi Beach)









Pic 6: Manly Beach









Pic 7: Bondi Beach








Pic 8: Mmmmm summer











Pic 9: Mmmmm summer




Few National Parks…









Pic 10: Gap Bluff - Sydney Harbour National Park












Pic 11: Gap Bluff - Sydney Harbour National Park









Pic 12: Gap Bluff - Sydney Harbour National Park










Pic 13: Nielsen Park - Sydney Harbour National Park










Pic 14: Nielsen Park - Sydney Harbour National Park


Didgeridoo …. Sounds Australian? Mhm, Aboriginal art.











Pic 15: Didgeridoo










Pic 16: Didgeridoos

And a few more..









Pic 17: Oceanarium









Pic 18: We caught Nemo!!!










Pic 19: At the end of a day….

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Australia – Fiji –Australia (part two)

Only half of the population of Fiji islands is Fijians. The rest are manly Indian which came to Fiji to work on sugar farms and some Chinees.

On the market we found special fork designed to soak out brains from someone’s body. Mhm. Hundreds of year ago there were cannibals on Fiji island. Buuuuuu freaky.

Fijian traditional drink is kava. Sounds familiar? Well it for sure doesn’t taste familiar, it taste like soil mixed together with water. Drinking it makes your mouth a bit paralysed, similar to chewing coca leaves in Bolivia (jut that coca leaves have stronger effect or maybe I should drink more of this un-tasty kava).

“Kava ceremony” normal takes place every night. Locals gather together, and men are the one preparing it. Women can also drink it. They put crushed kava (kava is kind of a root) into a cloth or sock and pour water on it. They mix it with hands in a special bowl with four legs. Before you drink it, you say “bula” which in this case means cheers but the expression is used also for saying hello, thank you, yes please ... It is most commonly used Fijian word. After saying “bula” you clap your hands 3 times, drink it and repeat the clapping with hands after you finish drinking it. People around you clap their hands together with you.








Pic 1: Kava ceremony

When you visit local village you must wear “sulu” to show respect (long cloth; look what I’m wearing on picture 3 AustraliaFijiAustralia (part one)). Except children, everyone wears it. It is not uncommon also for men to wear a skirt. Actually when a man wants to look nice and tidy he wears a skirt.












Pic 2: Tidy clothes

After getting to know a bit of real Fiji we said we finally needed the beach we were dreaming about since we left snow. In my mind was fabulous beach, lying on sand, getting sun tent, doing nothing. We were close, but not there yet.

We went to Mango bay resort. It’s very nice resort which except from the beach looks like great pictures from the magazine. Palm trees, small cottages (dorms or just made for 2 person just next to the beach), restaurant next to the pool, mini chairs in the pool so that you can have your cocktail in the pool, free sport activities… all for quite reasonable price (dorms (15 €), but much higher prices for small cottages for two).











Pic 3: Mango by resort

Hm … we stayed there for 2 nights. Weather wasn’t very nice, beach wasn’t as perfect as in magazine and I felt a bit like so called “prisoner tourist”. I mean it was nice to stay there for 2 days, but would be very bored to stay there for 3 weeks. It was like in hotel, breakfast at 9am, long way to the city if you needed to buy something … and after 2 days I still didn’t live to see my dreams; nice “sunny “beach, lying on sand, getting sun tent.

Since we got to Fiji I wanted to see that beach from film Blue Lagoon. It was supposed to be filmed on Vatulele, an Island close to Mango Bay. Prices: renting a cottage for 1 night in a Vatulele resort costs around 740€, flight there and back (from main Fiji Island to Vatulele Island) costs around 400€. MMM Now what? What if we would go by local boat and stay a night with locals, since we’re used to it? There must be a local boat going there. First offer we got was 200€, which still sounded a bit too much locals could afford. When we made it clear we want to go “with” locals (not having our own local boat) we finally got a boat for 12€. Happy as we were to finally make it, it turned out to be “the” most and scary experience of my life. I think I can’t call sky diving or bungee jumping or hitch hiking by myself in Peru “adrenalin” any more. You would probably put me across your knees and punch me like a child if you would know how this looked like. The boat was around 3m long and only 1m was covered with roof. Wind speed was around 30 nuts and there were supposed to be plenty of sharks in the water. After 5 minutes we grabbed each others hands, catching our breath and screaming every few minutes as the wave hit the boat lift it out of the water and smashed it back down. Local women kept on saying “vinaka vinaka” meaning “thank you”. Thank you god you didn’t sink us. Dreadful. The captain just smiled at our scary faces and kept on going. Waves kept on falling into the boat and on the captain. We were all soaked. Ana started asking locals on the boat: “Do you have children?” “Are you married?” Meaning you do need to get there, right? We spend one and a half hours on the boat (they first said one hour and the additional half an hour was not very welcomed, but what could we do, the weather just wasn’t good). As we were finally getting closer to Vatulele, the wind calmed down and last 10 minutes on the boat were calm.

Well as you can see, we made it and the captain later on told us, he can make it even if wind speed is 70 nuts or even more.

Was it worthy? Check out the photos, but I would definitely not go on the boat like this again (but I had to, to get back to main Fiji Ireland).









Pic 4: Our boat










Pic 5: Beautiful









Pic 6: Beautiful

It was the sunniest day we had on Fiji islands. We also did some snorkelling for around half an hour. Beach was breath taking. We’ve actually seen the glamour rich people experience (Rich people don’t go to main Fiji Island, but to small islands around it).

Vatulele is supposed to be he only place on earth with red prawns. You know … prawns… normally turning red when you put them in boiling water… Well on Vatulele they are red without having to cook them (which you anyway shouldn’t else your boat will sink).









Pic 7: Red prawns









Pic 8: Dinner









Pic 9: Paper making

We turned back to the main Fiji island with a bit less of wind (we as well had baby on board this time), but it was still freaky with the waves suddenly coming from the side this time. Our 10 days adventure was getting close to an end.

We turned back to Australia. J As coming home. In a way very nice, but on the other hand: “Where are all nice people with smile on their faces all the time?” We stayed a week in a youth hostel in Sydney, sightseeing lovely Sydney again.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Australia – Fiji –Australia (part one)

Well it’s good if you don’t have time to sit in front of the computer isn’t it? I got stuck in repeating “tomorrow”

Time to pay off all the luxury I had before has arrived. Here I am in Griffith, Irena Fili, with economic degree doing wine pruning ;) Yeeeee!!!!!

My every day companions are flies. There are hips of them and they come together with 35 degrees temperature. MMMMMM As Tamara said it’s good for your spirit and your body (Fizicno delo krepi telo in duha).

Pic1: Flies

Turning back ….I left Jindabyne and snowy mountains (I made a mistake in one of the previous posts saying I’m in Blue Mountains) on the 16th of September. It was high time to leave, snow was getting more and more slushy and after bad season we had (it was supposed to be the worst season ever recorded in Perisher) it didn’t have sense staying any longer. I was supposed to travel with Jasmina, one of the instructors, but she suddenly changed her mind and went straight back home. Well I didn’t have any particular plans so I just went to Fiji. J I went together with Ana (also one of the instructors).

Fijiiii OOO I always wanted to go there. Do you remember the film Blue lagoon? It was filmed in Fiji and when I saw the movie I thought that one day I really have to go there. And that day has arrived. Wonderful experience, not wonderful weather (10 days of rain), but still awesome!!!

Pic2: Ana and me with frangiapani in our hair

You can find this beautiful flower in every garden. They are like some kind of national symbol. Locals (specially the one working with tourists) always have them in their hair.

Pic3: Frangiapani

We spent most of the time with locals. As we arrived to Fiji they wanted to send us to this or that trip, Fiji experience or Irelands …. just somewhere they could charge us, but instead we sat on a local bus and went somewhere south. Who knew where we are going to end up….

We spend the third night on Fiji with a local family. Really very generous people who would offer you their own bed, share food with you, always with a smile on their faces is something “third world” has in common. After absorbing things during the day we sat down on the floor (Typical Fijian house has a big living room with only mattress on the floor) and talked. Even the old grandmother came out and joined us. One guy took a guitar in his hand and magical night began. This people have something we don’t. Ana once asked them “Are you ever angry or upset?” It looked like they don’t know what that mean and their facial expression said something like “not really”. Good to learn..

Pic4: Our host

Fijian eat food with their hands. Most common part of every meal is Casava (it’s a root).

Pic5: Eating with hands

To be continued…