Friday, January 6, 2012

The last day

There was no way I was passing up the chance to see inside the opera house this trip so given that we were not flying out until 3pm, I left it to the last morning. The boys and I enjoyed the 1hr tour and sitting in the most expensive seats in the smaller theater. The largest is amazing! Inside is all wood for acoustics and not attached to the concrete outer (a few meters space between them). There is a 10,000 pipe organ in there that took 10 years to build and 2 years to tune. Now that is job security and persistence! There is now a way to tune it within a few hours so much more efficient. The entire building was supposed to take 3 years and $7M, but ended up at 16 years and over $100M! It was such a controversy an entire government was voted out because of it and the original architect was fired, went back to Europe and never saw the complete structure. His son is also an architect and continues to work on the building for upgrades.  In order to cover the massive costs, the government created an Opera House Lottery with part of the funds set aside for winnings which was so popular it raised all the money in just 3 years!

Packing up and heading to the airport we shared our favorite moments and highlights. Interesting to hear what the kids were thinking - snorkeling in Fiji, Warrnambool and Great Ocean Road, the golf cart on Hamilton Island and getting to go ATVing to name a few.

This was about to be flight 10 in our trip and the longest at 13.5 hours - all on January 6th, the longest day of 2012 for us! Kudos to Quantas for the massive 'double decker' plane with incredible in-flight computer/entertainment system. Kept us all entertained for hours Arrived safely in LAX and in spite of having a 6 hour layover we only had time for lunch and a bit more after spending nearly 3 hours getting luggage and through customs. We are all really tired but almost there! This has been a fantastic vacation :)


a few photos from inside the opera house 
the architect's dad was a ship builder so there is plenty of nautical themes

down the stairs from the harbour foyer to the main concert hall



not sure what this sculpture is but the boys thought it was pretty fun!
And now home in Calgary, 11 flights later and all our luggage. Into the limo, home and off to bed! Will post photos to all of this over the weekend.

Sydney

The weather forecast was looking good so the kids and I headed across the harbour to Manly on the ferry. We went to OceanWorld, a small aquarium, for the morning and played on the beach.

The boys also got to try being in the clear human hamster balls on water in a shallow pool. Harder than they thought and a great work out! We enjoyed our lunch and took the ferry back while Jeff took the morning to do some shopping.

We had the best afternoon as the temp got up to 26 with clear, sunny skies. We drove to the famous Bondi Beach and enjoyed boogie boarding, wave jumping and playing in the sand - the best way to spend our last afternoon down under in the warm summer.
Sydney Harbour Bridge
I would not be the one hired to do that job!

a huge cruise ship in the harbour,  like the one Jeff and I were on for our 10th Anniversary

the Opera House from the ferry

the Opera House from the side

Sydney Harbour

the boys took this just for Grandma Auty

Kyle the pirate

Help!  We were eaten by a shark!

Kyle getting into his hamster ball


Thomas getting blown up

just can't enough of the Opera House!

gorgeous afternoon on Bondi Beach

I bet those condos cost a few pennies

Jeff and I had some fun with this, just kidding!!

the real version

marble tile work in the harbour quay
The boys were begging to see the hotel pool, because they can't get enough water, so they went straight in for another hour. My turn to check out the shopping while Jeff took the boys for dinner in a historic hotel and then apparently a fantastic chocolate dessert. Yum!

Back to the Coast

Our morning in Alice Springs we vowed not to get up early or set an alarm. The boys had been enjoying their own room the last 3 nights (booked by the travel agent, although we were glad after finding the rooms had double beds) so that helps. We packed up yet again after breakfast and a quick swim and headed to the airport. Alice Springs airport serves is the hub being smack in the middle, but it's really only one large room.

flying high in Sydney

the Opera House restaurant

nope, it's not smooth or white.  the 'shell' is made of bumpy, white and beige italian tile that requires little cleaning and reflects heat



the two concert halls


The Pain family in Sydney

this stairwell from the road down to the quay is 160yrs old and made of sandstone, everything around it is new so it really stands out

notice the worn out spots on the steps from people going up and down over a hundred years
Another flight on time and baggage arrived with us in Sydney after 3.5 hours (gives you an idea of how big the country is). In Sydney we picked up our rental car and headed downtown to our hotel. We didn't realize we were right down town, just 10 minutes walking from the harbour and opera house! So, after getting our bags unloaded off we went for a fabulous evening and dinner at the harbour and showing the kids the opera house, at least from the outside. They thought it was really cool having seen so many pictures of it. The water front has definitely changed since we were there last 14 years ago!

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Kings Canyon

Unfortunately many people don't come out to see this because of the drive, yet almost 1/2 million people see Uluru every year. Apparently only us crazy canucks come in the summer at 43 degrees with the up side being smaller tour groups and less people all around. Only 7 of us came out to from the rock to see the canyon.

Up and at the bus by 5:15am and into the canyon by 5:30am (that includes having a fast breakfast on the bus again). We hiked a steep accent about 500 steps to the top (the rest was pretty easy, walking the canyon rim) and watch the sunrise on the rocks.

There were signs of the ancient oceans everywhere right from the start. Wave pools, tide pools, wavy rocks where water lapped and even fossils of jelly fish and crustaceans all through the amazing sand stone caves and along the path of the canyon rim. This was a 6km walk/hike over 3 hours and with a little extra sleep, we did swimmingly! Thomas looks like a cherry tomato when he heats up near the end but nothing a few sprays of water can't help. Kyle was doing par Coeur on the rocks the entire way (like skateboarding up walls with your feet) and having a great time.  There was only 6 on our tour so our guide Tony really let us in on the depth of history in this place and it really is fascinating.

As we walked around the rim, we continued to see the beauty of the land and signs of water millions of year ago. One part of the walk had us go down sets of steep stairs to the floor where a very deep crevasse holds water from the recent rains. We followed that down another path to a swimming hole about 12m deep that Jeff took a plunge in. We were told it would be very cold but apparently they don't know us Canadians! It was the same temperature as a lake mid-summer :). Back up the other side of the canyon on steep stairs to the rim and continuing our walk, we started to the see the canyon in it's entirety and it was huge! Not like the Grand Canyon huge, but you would never know this was here from the road and miss out completely on the beauty of it.

We actually enjoyed the canyon better than Uluru. There is no commercialism here with far less people and the air is so clean. Back to the 'motor inn' by 9am and pack our bags for the next stage. Off to the pool for a few hours to cool off and in for lunch. By 1pm we are back on the road for a 500km drive to Alice Springs. Again, not really that far but that dang lake is in the way of the direct 300km route. We are all tired and ready for another nap on the bus, maybe a movie or 2 on the iPad.

Just passed a herd of wild mustangs with a little foal on the highway! The Aussies call them Brombies, if you haven't seen The Man From Snowy River, that says it all.
we start out in the dark, ready for the day

500 steps to amplify brotherly competition at 5:40am

the canyon rim is the highest point in the desert for a long distance in every direction




ah, youthful exuberance ready to start the hike!

sunrise on the canyon wall



thank goodness for he pack mule carrying the water :)  handsome too!

sunrise on a red world and two warriors

you have no idea what it took to get me out there, and my family wanted to go further left to the real edge....no thank you!!


the water remains shaded most of the day so it stays longer and is very clean and fresh, it will evaporate to low level after the summer

the grotto swimming hole

that is one steep canyon wall and a very refreshing swim!

the steep stairs down into the canyon that lead to the water hole

the walls of the canyon look like they were cut with a knife they are so smooth, and much bigger than they look in the photo

deep crevasses are all around spreading out from the canyon

the mouth of the canyon seen after 2 hours of walking around the rim, the swimming hole is just on the other side of the crack in the rim with the tree (above and right of the centre of the photo)


waves of an inland ocean leaves their mark after almost a billion years

do you see the two faces? this is what happens to brothers who fight and aren't nice to each other - they are frozen in stone forever.....or so the guide tells us ;)

A peacock in Alice Springs

the Todd River is said to be one of the oldest that has never changed course over the evolution of the land


Actually, we had more energy than we thought and after checking in at our Alice Springs hotel and a fantastic Thai dinner, the boys went to the pool in the dark and 30 degrees. They hate sunscreen and sun shirts so it was a real treat not to use them in a gorgeous lit up pool at 8pm. Had I known this part of the tour would be this demanding on time with early mornings and afternoon travel, I may have put it in near the beginning and given us more time in Ayers rock to sleep before jumping right in. Then again, there is little to do out here so getting right to it was not bad with a little more mental preparation.

A little note about Alice Springs.
There was a semi-wild peacock in the hotel courtyard that came right up to our balcony when we called it.  Probably would have eaten from our hand if we had something to feed it too!
You would think in the middle of the desert the land and homes would be dirt cheap. Actually not at all. Alice Springs is the hub of this desert land and surrounded on two sides by cattle stations. Those are on aboriginal land and may never be used for anything else. The 3rd side is the mountain range that geologists think is over 2 billion years old and perhaps the oldest in the world. Then there is the airport and the rest is aboriginal land. Houses here are more expensive than in Calgary!
The rivers here are called upside down rivers and the river beds are sand, filled with water 2-4 times/year during the heavy rains.  The water actually flows a few feet under ground through sand as the heat on the surface dries up any moisture very quickly.