Friday, June 29, 2012

Books to Read While Travelling - if you have time!!

An ideal way to ensure a busy and enjoyabble travellling holiday is to take along plenty of books. Because if one does not, many ideal opportunuties to read, arise. So while we were at the Rocks, Sydney we ducked into our favourite bookshop to stock up. As well as today’s latest popular books there are titles by Australia’s most esteemed authors. However I have found that short, easy to read works are better when busy travelling from place to place around England, Ireland and Scotland, as we were, on this adventure. After seeing the movie ‘Kapote’ in which Kapote himself spent many years hounding a prisoner for the ‘truth’ before he was executed, I was most interested to read some of his stories and came across ’Breakfast at Tiffanys’ amongst other short stories. Kapote’s written style is flowing, easy to read and immediately captures the reader in the lives, personalities and relationships of his characters. You may think one is crazy to spend a fortune to see an exhibition at the Natural History Museum in London, about Scott and his ill fated expedition to the South Pole. As a child I learnt about his failure to be first to the South Pole, but not much else. So it was most interesting to read about all the significant scienific information Scott’s crew gathered and the impact it has had on Antarctican knowledge today. I was delighted to be introduced to an author, Sara Wheeler who spent quite some time in Antarctica, gathering research for her book Terra Incognita - Travels in Antarctica. Upon an assignment to Chile in 1991 she was abliged to visit the Antarctic Penisnula which the Chileans regard as part of their country. As she stood on a plateau of whiteness stretching to eternity she knew that she and antarctica would have a very close mutually beneficial infinity and Terra Incognita was an outcome of this moment of realzation. This entertaining, easy to read book demonstrate the massive amount of research Sara undertook and by the time I have finished the book I believe I will have gained a massive amount of well rounded and intimate knowledge of this imsporing continent and the people associated with it, over the years. For those who enjoy boating stories, Swatchways Magic, by my friend Charles Scoones and Paul Antrobus is a very entertaining and easy read. Around 50 years ago Paul Griffiths cruised all the nooks and crannies of the Swatchways river estuaries in a small boat, documenting all its idiosyncracies in his book, The Magic of the Swatchways. In 2000 Charles and Paul, who both grew up sailing in these waters, followed Griffiths’ travels comparing then to now. While little has changed, the anecdotes are told in such a way leaving the reader with the feeling of timeless and intimate familiarity of the area.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Syndey - warm winter magic

Sunday June 20, 2012 Sydney, Australia, no matter the time of year is a great city for travellers to wander around. Even the old haunts, such as the the Sydney Opera house with its clean timeless architecture, the Circular Quay for people, busker and boat activity watching, the ferries come and go, the Rocks historical precinct, and Darling Harbour with its soothing water gardens and walkways. It is an ideal place to stop off on the way to ones oversea’s trip, to transfer one’s mind from work and, packing and ‘I am sure I have missed packing something!!’ mode into a relaxing and ‘sniffing the air’ one. Sydney turned on a warm, blue skied day for us on this winter Sunday. So balmy it was, that a lovestruck person wrote a “I’m Sorry, I love you’ message in the sky. OWe immediately booked to trip out to see the Humpback Whales just outside the Syndey Harbour heads. It was so easy to book online, and instead of printing off a booking form, all we had to do is show the booking form on our iphone. NOTE - if you are planning on going - make sure you book on http://www.whalewatchingsydney.net/ - a large and very comfortable vessel with plenty or viewing platforms. Every year from about June to November about 1200 humpback whales make an over 5000 mile trek from their breeding grounds in the north following the EAC current down Australia south to Antarctica to feed. As the current passes about 2 - 3 miles from the coast at the Sydney heads so it is very easy to find the whales. Within an hour of crusing through the many yachts Sunday racing on the Harbour we were out on open waters and our knowledgeable captain had us within the precint of three small pods of whales. Almost as soon as we arrived at the 100 metre allowable distance the whales started performing. Two whales swam close together, breathing simultaneously, like a chorus, while the third frequently breached, launching itself straitght up and completely out of the water at times so that we could see its whole white underside. it rolled around, waving its long flippers then breached, again and again. Atfer this awe inspiring adventure we slowly came back to earth by strolling around to the hstorical Rocks shops, bars and cafes - a must, we believe, for all travellers to Sydney.