Saturday 28 April 2012

It's best when it's West!

Somehow I was repeating the same thing but shorter on the West-Coast, I have been doing on the East-Coast:
First spending some time in the city (Sydney / Perth), then staying close to the beach in a smaller town (Newcastle / Yallingup) whilst discovering a bit the area around it and finally WWOOFing on an organic farm (River Flats Estate in Hunter Valley / Redtail Ridge in Preston Valley).
But when we look at the details, everything is soooo different... (if I didn't already give the Cambodia-story the title "same same but different" it would have fit here)

But first of all: no worries my dear train-loving friends, I will write a detailled story only about the train trips. Because after having travelled so much on such different trains in various countries I feel the need for special train-story. This will come up soon!

Well well, my dear readers, let’s see how attentively you had been reading my blog months ago – and I am really going a long way back – back to Beijing!! Because the people I met in China were the reason for me to come all the way to PerthTrish was so nice to welcome me in her house and into her family. Furthermore, she introduced to me an important part of Australian culture I had so far not experienced to full extention: Aussie Rules Football (which is neither like soccer nor like rugby!! Don’t you dare comparing!!). 

So together with Trish, her friend John and her daughter Ros I went more or less straight after spending 3 days on the train to the AFL Match between the Fremantle Dockers (our team) and the Brisbane Lions. Of course our team won!! Oh man, I love sport emotions - and they are even better live in the stadium! Aussie Rules Football is so much better to watch live because the game is not easy to follow or to understand when watching on TV. You get a far better overview being in the stadium, whereas in soccer I tend to look at the screen in the stadium more often.

My few days in Perth were quite filled: I was having a nice walk through the overwhealmingly beautiful Kings Park with Trish, after which I enjoyed some schooners of beer with some Scottish guys in a pub near the swan river. 
The center is nicely set up with some major shopping streets. Everything seems nice and tidy.


To me Perth is like a big and rather quiet countryside town: it is really spread out and the section I stayed in (and everywhere I was driving through) reminded me of the suburbs you’d see in American movies: small houses (usually one, sometimes two storeys high) with nicely set up gardens, a car in the driveway and trees all along the footpaths. 
And of course – Perth has various beaches!! Don’t you ever forget the beach in Australia!!

One day I went to Rottnest Island, a small island off the coast of Fremantle. Fremantle is a small but really nice and sympathetic town South of Perth - and sympathetic not only because of the big and stylish brewery Little Creatures... 

Rottnest Island is car-free and the little holiday get-away for Perth citizens. Most people hire a bike and just ride it all along the island. It is definitely beautiful with salt -lakes in the middle, which look just as if there was snow along them. They are amazing! And beautiful bays all around the island. I definitely enjoyed this day in the green!






The island is called Rottnest because the Dutch sailors who came to it first in 1610 and named it after the quokka - an animal which is native to this and other islands off the coast of West Australia. For them it looked like a rat, so they called the island "rat's nest" - Rottnest.
You can easily spot these sweet little animals in their wild life on the island as they are really used to humans hence not afraid of them: 


After this far too short time in Perth I went with Trish and her family down to Yallingup close to the wine region Margaret River, where they had rented a holiday house for 4 days. And now I am for the first time talking about a beach without an ironic smile: the beach of Yallingup is AMAZING!! I have never NEVER NEVER seen such big waves in my life (and again, they don't look half as impressive on the pics as in reality)! It is simply terrific!! Wow wow wow!! 




I guess you didn’t overread the word “wine region”. So yes, of course we spent one afternoon wine tasting and tasting cheese (no story in Australia without that word…)! Guash, my heaven!

However: So many people have talked to me about Margaret River and told me that it was sooo beautiful, that of course I had high expectations and was not astonished or overwhealmed by the beauty of the region. And I must admit I much more liked the Hunter Valley, where I have stayed for my 2 weeks WWOOFing on the East-Coast. The Margaret River wine-region is of course beautiful (every wine-region is! I simply love the nicely set up vinyards). But the area around Margaret River it is rather flat. And even though I am not a mountain-freak, I am still too Austrian to find a region without any hills or mountains particularly beautiful…

While being with Trish and her family I learned a lot about the way of life in Western Australia. In this part of the country mining (gold, nickel, iron ore, sand mining, oil and gas off the coast...) is big. So were all the topics around mining. We were talking a lot about the nowadays typical fly-in-fly-out practice where miners would fly into a mining place usually for 2 weeks and fly back to Perth for the upcoming 2 weeks. Even though the wages are really high, it is now proved, that on an hour-basis they were not better than a regular job in Perth. Apart from that the effect of this practice on family- and personal life as well as on the life in mining towns is really bad. When living and working in a mining town, like it used to be before the fly-in-fly-out, people would socialize in the town, have a more regular work-life-balance. While now the people flying in and out would not socialize with the people in the various towns close to mines, as they are living next to the mines in camps and moreover their high daily working hours more or less don’t give them any more time to socialize at all. All this doesn’t really interest you,I know, me however I found it really interesting to be surrounded by people for whom the mining industry is part of their everyday life, and talks about it are. Maybe people in Linz, next to Voest Alpine, are more used to that, but me bloody naïve country-girl from Vorarlberg I’m not.

One more thing I found really interesting was Trishs experience in the Kimberleys. She used to work for the Catholic School as a consultant and visited many of the Aboriginal communities for her job up in Broome. She saw the schools there, learned about the problems the teachers have with the Aboriginal kids: their communal values are simply not compatible with the Australian type of school and their traditional walkabouts are even less compatible with the Australian school calendar. She explained me why these Aboriginal kids up in the Kimberly having completely different values would never want to become lawyers or doctors. All they want is to stay with their community. As a result they don’t see how they could profit from Western style education. They are living in a far less individualistic society, so being with the community is much more important for them than it is for us...
It was really interesting to me to see and understand this side of the medal as well – because the other side of the “Aboriginal medal” is not so nice. And other people had different stories to tell me: most of the Aboriginals living in the cities have big problems with alcohol and are in consequence causing a lot of problems. They do not fit in Western society. But well, I am not telling you anything new, do I? – they have the same issues in America with the indigenous.

But yes, back to the topic: with her photos, artworks (she's a brilliant artist - the two photos are in fact her paintings from the Kimberleys) and stories of her time up in the Kimberlys Trish nearly made me change my whole travel-plans within Australia and skipping what I had planned for a trip from Broome to Darwin right through the Kimberleys. But well, I can’t… 
It is simply too expensive at this stage. And as I still have up to 8 months to go till I get back to Austria, every cent is important – especially in an expensive country like Australia. I have a great train-ticket with which I can still see a lot of this huuuuuge country. So, sorry Kimberlys, I’ll come around next time I’m here.

What?!
Up to 8 more months?

Oh yes – I am not changing my travel plans within Australia, but I quite surely will concerning my entire trip: my plan is to continue like initially planned through Australia, New Zealand and Fiji, but then make a 180° turn and go straight back to Hong Kong, and travel west-wards through China (this time including Tibet), Central Asia: Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan,  Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. I am really excited about that and am even looking forward to buying the Lonely Planet Central Asia - and to all the annoying visa-work that's coming up haha!!



But the biggest challenge will be to get the visa to Iran. Yes, after Turkmenistan I plan to travel through Iran together with Niku – the girl I travelled with in China for two weeks!! Wohoooo, so much looking forward to travelling with you again sweety!

(PS: guash, going through my old blog-stories from China was really weird just right now... it feels sooo long ago and still so new).

And maybe I will then end my trip Azerbaijan and / or Georgia… We shall see. But you will be updated on my travelroute...

So yes, you're right: all the information on this blog will end up being wrong: east-wards turns into west-wards, my travelmap is half-wrong, and “around the world” is not true neither. But no, I will not change my URL nor will I change the header of this blog! 

Alrighty then, all for now my dear readers. But you won’t have to wait long, because the next story about my second WWOOFing is already in the typewriter. I will publish this story in the upcoming days - after my trainride to Adelaide. So if you want to learn more about organic farming – and I did learn a hell lot of interesting stuff -, check this page again in the next days.

1 comment:

  1. your blog is just superb...Western Australia's places especially
    Dunsborough and Yallingup
    is famous for their holiday homes and luxury hotels.

    ReplyDelete