Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Easter Break Trip

Hey All!

I'm about to embark on a seriously fantastic trip.  Tomorrow I leave bright and early (4:30 am) to go to Sydney where hopefully I'll meet Nemo, then onto Cairns for some great diving and rain forest adventures, and then Fraser Island, the largest sand island in the world to see some dingos and go four wheeling.  Hopefully good weather follows on this trip, as I'll be going north to tropical lands:
I probably won't post much during the trip as I won't have internet access for most of the trip.  However, I will be sure to share my adventures when I get back in 10 days!

Cheers!
Paul

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Bendigo

Hey All,

As you may have noticed, my adventures have slowed down a bit.  Not to mean that I'm enjoying my time any less, but I've been focusing on what I'm meant to be doing here: studying.  Last week was a quiet week in Melbourne, which was very nice.  I even made it out on a bike ride (one of my friends let me borrow his bike).  But this week I ended up going to the town of Bendigo.  Two hours north of Melbourne by train, it's home for many of my friends at St. Mary's. 

Sacred Heart Cathedral, iconic to the one and only Bendigo

I went with my friend Em and met up with my friends Seamus, Anne and Xavier.  I went to a friend of a friend's going away party (going on her gap year, I'll explain in a second) and got a grand tour of Bendigo.  Much like Ballarat, Bendigo is a gold rush town with much of its wealth coming from the mines.  A couple years ago, Bendigo reached international news because forest fires burned a chunk of the town due to intense drought that Australia had been experiencing. 

Gap years are something that we don't have in America.  At least not the way that Australians have them.  Many students decide to take a gap year to travel, work and generally relax before diving back into higher education.   It also seems to be a British phenomenon as well. 

Wrong kind of gap

It was good to see yet another part of Victoria.  As Easter Break approaches, so does my trip along the eastern seaboard!  That's right, by Thursday I will be in Sydney, onto Cairns and Frasier Island near Brisbane.  I'm getting pumped.  More on that for sure.

Cheers,
Paul

Saturday, April 9, 2011

How to Speak Australian: Part 1

Hey all,

Here's a bit similar to one that my friend Maggie Olson has been doing on her study abroad experience.  She's in Canada at the moment and you can find her three (quite humorous) blog posts on "how to speak Canadian" here, here and here.

We've all heard the stereotypical "G'day mate!" and "throw a shrimp on the barbie!" from such characters as Steve Irwin.  While the latter isn't really accurate anyway (Australians call shrimp "prawns"), those phrases aren't as common as Americans tend to think.  First on the list, any American has grown up with Heinz Ketchup on our burgers, hot dogs and french fries.  Australians don't have ketchup; they have tomato sauce.  Just slightly different in taste, it really isn't a huge change from ketchup.  You'll get funny looks if you ask for ketchup, so make sure you remember to ask for tomato sauce!

Australian culture is relaxed and laid back.  This is why I believe that Australians tend to shorten everything.  For example, afternoon translates to arvo, breakfast is actually brekkie, and when you're sorry for something you're actually soz.  Here's an example of something you might hear: "Soz mate, I missed you at brekkie.  I'll catch you in the arvo!"  You can imagine my first experience with arvo.  I was constantly asked what I was doing in the arvo, and for the life of me I couldn't understand what was being asked of me.

Finally, I would like to note that Americans are the only English speakers who say "zee" for the last letter in the alphabet.  In Britain, Canada (reference Maggie's post vol. 2) and Australia the name for this letter is zed.  My first math class we covered the cardinal 3D coordinates x, y and zed, and I kept getting taken aback by it.  I'm still partial to my American ways, so I'll stick to "zee" please.

There are many other differences between American and Australian English, so I'm sure there will be more posts like this!

Cheers (which is also an Australianism),
Paul

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Ballarat

This weekend's adventure was Ballarat!


Ballarat is a small town two hours from Melbourne about the same size of Champaign-Urbana.  It grew rapidly during the Victorian gold rush in the 1850's.  I have a friend, Jemima, who lives there and offered a place me and several friends (Dani, Hilary and Justin) to stay.  It's my first experience with the Australian bush ("the bush" or more colloquially "DA BUUUUSH" is the country side, not necessarily desert).  I was happy to get out of Melbourne and see a new part of Australia!

On Saturday we went to the Ballarat Wildlife Park.  It's a small park outside the main city where you can go to pet and feed kangaroos and emus!  They were so cute!  We walked about for a couple hours chilling with the kangaroos.  The wildlife park staff also had a demonstration of the most poisonous snake in the world.  There's some statistic that some 7 out of the 10 most deadly animals are in Australia.  They make them tough here.

Here are some more pictures with the roo's!
Dani feeding kangaroos!




I also got to pet a koala:

The rest of the day was spent with Jemima and her family (who were gracious to house and feed four young Americans).  Overall a quality day.






Lets pan for some gold.
The next day was filled with a trip to Sovereign Hill, a reenactment town much like old colonial towns of New England.  Like I mentioned earlier, Ballarat was a gold rush town, so this was a gold rush reenactment.  The original mine is still there and you can go down (for a fee).  There were all sorts of things that any original Australian mining town should have: a blacksmith, a confectionery (sweets shop), candle makers, a couple parlors and a river where you can pan for gold.  To be honest, it is a bit of a tourist trap, but it was still really interesting.  My favorite part was wheel making (for horse carriages).  They have a working machine shop like the one from the 1850's.  All the machines were powered by a large steam engine in the corner via a huge pulley system.  It was so freakin awesome.  I am such an engineer:

I thought this was a pretty cool thing they were doing to make the wheel hubs:

 
As well as some cool machines, we got to see someone melt $150,000 worth of gold into a bar.  We also go to pan for our own gold.  I was wildly successful:

I reckon I'm about 1 cent richer
 Though these adventures were both really cool, nothing quite compared to the stars that I could see during the night.  They were breath taking.  I really want to go camping so I may see the true extent of a perfect southern starlit night.  Just one of God's gifts while in Australia.

What will I do next week?  Stay tuned and you'll fined out!

Paul