Miscellaneous Musings

Now that we are home, just wanted to “wrap up” with a few odds and ends that we thought rather amusing or interesting.  I do want to add that some of our friends have been to New Zealand/Australia and everyone’s impressions are, of course, different.  However, Jeff had not been there for 38 years and this was my first time, so please keep in mind that we are not experts but just travelers and if we leave out something you think should be there or if we mention something you disagree with just take it with a grain of salt.

We liked New Zealand best, the people were so friendly (but so are Australians), they have a great sense of humor, and the country is spectacular.  Too bad it is so far away or we would go back.  These long plane rides are hard on old bones!

In New Zealand, you get an egg on just about any sandwich you order; BLT, cheeseburger, hamburger.  If you do not specify, you get the egg.  You will have a choice of fried or poached.

Australians eat kangaroos!!!  OMG!  Enough said about that.  They call “Sprite” soda “lemonade.”  I should have asked them what they call lemon juice/sugar/water drink.

Couldn’t get over how friendly everyone was.

Never saw baggy pants on young men, not once.  No boom boxes.  Lots of grafitti everywhere.  In 3 weeks only saw one homeless person, an elderly woman in Sydney.  In New Zealand they don’t have unemployment benefits because, as our guide told us “there are plenty of jobs and no reason for anyone to be unemployed.”  Makes sense to me.  In Australia, our friends (who live in Melbourne) estimated Australia’s unemployment to be about 8%.

Christmas decorations everywhere, including Nativity scenes, which were lovely.  It will be summer at Christmastime there.

Public school children wear uniforms.  The boys wear ties, knee length shorts and knee socks, the girls also had the shorts and socks, but sometimes we saw them in skirts.

Not so many people walking down the street with cell phones to their ear as here!  We did see them playing/texting while they were seated on public transportation however.

Their “paper” money is plastic, which makes a lot more sense since it won’t tear.  Seems like it would be harder to counterfeit too, and it’s colorful.

We met a man in Richmond walking a border collie down the street.  Since we had seen millions of sheep – more sheep than we had ever seen in our entire lives – I asked him if it was a sheep herding dog.  He said “Naw, he’s never seen a sheep in his life!”  We all had a good laugh and moved on.

We wondered if the lady’s voice on the GPS in the rental car would have an accent.  She did!  ha ha

In Auckland, downtown intersection lights all 4 turn red for cars at the same time and peds can cross diagonally in addition to the regular way.  No, they don’t all turn green at the same time!  Street lights have sounds so you know how much time you have.  Sorta hard to describe..  Didn’t see anyone trying to squeeze the yellow out of the light like we do here.

Kangaroos like to be scratched between their front legs.  If you try to touch the tops of their heads or backs it means “go away.”

We saw Kangaroos, koalas, kookaburras in the wild, and saw them at wildlife preserves and the zoo too.  New animal to us called “Bilby” and I will try to post a picture later.  Looks like a cross between a rat and a jack rabbit.  Wombats are adorable and BIG, so are the koalas.  Someone had told me the koalas stink.  This is not true.  They eat eucalyptus leaves and smell sort of like that and they are slow moving and sweet natured.  They have 2 “toes” together like a thumb, and 3 “toes” together like fingers.

Wombats and koalas are related.  Wombats have square poops.

So many nocturnal animals, couldn’t photograph like the kiwi, bilby, platypus, wombat, Tasmanian devils, possums.

Sydney and the Taronga Park Zoo

We could get close but not touch.

We could get close but not touch.

Kookaburra in a tree

Kookaburra in a tree

Anzac bridge in Sydney

Anzac bridge in Sydney

Tassie, I got to feed him Tasmanian devil pellets!Tassie, I got to feed him Tasmanian devil pellets!

Famous Sydney opera houseFamous Sydney opera house

Dead mouse dinner for owl, yummyDead mouse dinner for owl, yummy

I didn't know they were this big!I didn’t know they were this big!

Today we finally got off the cruise ship after 14 days and disembarked in Sydney.   Sydney has about the same population as Melbourne but seemed much busier – perhaps it was because we were downtown and it looked like there was some sort of streetfair going on.

Our main activity today was to visit the Taronga Park Zoo (called the zoo with a view) where we saw a bird show which the volunteers in the zoo told us to see because it was “absolutely brilliant.”   It certainly was very nice and we were astounded to see black cockatoos with flashes of red in their tails.     We also saw several white ones sitting in trees around the zoo as well as quite a few kookaburras.

But the highlight of the day was our private tour (only 8 people, all of who were Americans) of the Australian part of the zoo where we truly went behind the glass and got to feed the animals and birds while the rest of the zoo’s visitors watched us do it.  Carol got to feed a Tassie devil and Jeff got to feed a ring tailed possum, which crawled all over him while she occasionally ate from a bowl of fruit that he held.  We also had a chance to take a whole lot of pictures with koalas and saw a platypus, another wombat, a rufous owl (who seemed to be very surprised to see us but enjoyed the dead mouse we brought him),  an echinda, a bilby, and a whole lot of other animals which seemed truly out of this world.  As we really like to see any kind of animal on our travels, this made for a truly excellent day.

We will likely not do a post tomorrow because we will fly all night from Australia to Honolulu and, because we will be crossing the International Date Line from west to east, we will arrive in Hawaii about 12 hours earlier than the time we left Australia.

Kangaroos, Koalas, and Good Friends

Kangaroo in the wild

Kangaroo in the wild

 

Can you spot the kangaroos?

Can you spot the kangaroos?

Part of Melbourne.

Part of Melbourne.

The bldg we went to 88th floor and stood on glass floor.The bldg we went to 88th floor and stood on glass floor.

Better wombat picture than previous postingBetter wombat picture than previous posting

What a wonderful day!

In the morning we headed out to the You Yang Range to see kangaroos and koalas in the wild – and it was unbelievable.    The koalas, which are very picky about what trees they will eat from, had a whole eucalyptus forest to chose from but will only eat selected leaves on selected (6 species out of 200 species of what the Australians call gum trees) trees so they were really hard to spot.  Luckily our guide was in touch with some researchers in the park who had already spotted some so we got to see two.  They look very cute and cuddly, but they sleep a lot and move even less.

The kangaroos were a whole different story.    Our guide suspected that they would be hiding in some small trees on the edge of a large open grassfield (which they call a paddock) and once we got into the trees they seemed to be everywhere.  We kind of lost count as to how many we saw, but it was at least 7 and likely more.  Although these were definitely wild animals, they let us get within about 30 feet before they bounded off.  Two of them had joeys ( the name for any marsupial baby) although one was out of the pouch and still nursing his mother.   The guide said they don’t leave the mother until they are at least a year old, but this one looked like he really needed to be on his own.   As an extra added bonus we also saw three white cockatiels with yellow crest in the wild.

When we arrived back at the ship we met our friends Nikki and Gerry, who live in Melbourne, for a very pleasant afternoon of lunch and sightseeing.   We went up in the Eureka 88 building and went out on a ledge 88 stories above the ground and looked down through a glass floor on buildings and traffic below.   We had about 3 hours together but it went much too fast and we hope to see them soon in the US to show them the Pacific Northwest – to include Mr. Buffalo.   Melbourne is a truly beautiful city.

Tomorrow is our last full day on the ship but we will have a couple of days in Sydney before heading home.  Because that last full day on the ship will be at sea, we will probably not do a post tomorrow as we expect it to be uneventful and we will be packing.   We’ll try again in Sydney and maybe in Hawaii.