Wednesday, August 11, 2010
on Mount Bogong, the highest "mountain" in the state of Victoria. it only has snow towards the top. i hiked there with the RMIT University Outdoors club!
see pictures of my whitewater rafting trip: http://picasaweb.google.de/108461354618656462428/RaftingTour#
i went on an overnight hike at Wilson's Promontory this weekend and have not downloaded the pictures yet! it was beautiful!
frost on my tent!
yes, this is Australia, and it does have snow! surprise to me!
Hanging Rock, another hike
State Library of Victoria
one of my favorite restaurants
view from my roof a few weeks later
the first day
moving in! with my bike
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
size mattress, so i wont send any pictures of the room yet. you can
see it really well it you click this link to google maps and zoom in.
you can see the building, and my room is right on the corner on the
second floor so i have 3 windows that all open and have window boxes
that i might plant something in.
http://maps.google.com.au/
it will be a bit loud from the road, but i think i can get used to
that. there are 8 people living in their own rooms in the second
floor. it is called a hotel but everyone lives there almost
permanently. there is a small kitchen, 2 toilets, a shower, and a
balcony, and a great view when you climb in to the roof! it is 5 mins
by bike to university, so its close to everything! i think it was the
11th place i looked at. there really IS a housing shortage here, it is
not just a rumor. but i am really happy with the place i found. its a
really old building, but has the cheapest rent of any of the places at
$110 a week with no bills and no bond. most other places were half an
hour away and 130$ a week. and everything seems to work, the
washrooms, electricity, kitchen. it really needs stuff on the walls
and it will look great. i will look around in the next few days. i
bought a towel, clothes hangers, and soap today.
in the last week between looking for a room, i couchsurfed with Laura
and Craig. Craig volunteers at a place where people donate bikes and
volunteers help customers fix their bikes up, so i got a bike for $50
(bought lock, lights and helmet on top of that) after 2 half days
spent changing the handlebars, brakes, seat, adjusting the gears, and
greasing everything. its a really nice blue colour its vintage and
works well. then i rode it all around the city exploring parks, went
to yoga a few more times, went clothes shopping with Jo to some second
hand stores, tried some more restaurants, went to the beach,
volunteered 3 days at this not for profit restaurant run mostly by
volunteers called Lentils as Anything
(http://www.lentilasanything.
place, with live music often, and movies. volunteering there involves
learning how to use a coffee making machine, and serving coffee and
tea, and mostly sitting around talking. it is a lot of fun! and will
look great on my resume applying for a paying job at a cafe. i also
volunteered the last 2 days at a yuppie grocery
store/restaurant/bookstore called Friends of the Earth, also really
fun and mostly socializing, filling bulk food bins, chopping
vegetables, eating gourmet food and drinking tea. so i am definitely
not bored and am meeting some nice people.
another day:
everything is going really well here!!! i am enjoying living in my own
room, and i finally met most of my housemates that i share the kitchen
and washroom with, and to my relief they are all very nice! living
above a bar and bistro is not as noisy as i thought, it is easy to
sleep. the bistro looks quite nice, i am planning to eat there Sunday.
i had university exchange student orientation yesterday and today, and
i met lots of people there. i went shopping, so i now have maybe 3
outfits instead of 2. i still dont have furniture other than my bed
and wardrobe, but i really don't need it. I went to the Melbourne
Museum, which was very nice, biked around some parks, volunteered
making a free meal for people who needed it at a community centre, the
weather has been good.
so i live with 8 people, Percy the landlord i have not met, but
apparently is easy to get along with. his friend Micheal, who seems to
be a happy, friendly alcoholic, works with Percy driving tourist boats
on the Yarra river that runs through the city. Charlie also drives
boats, he seems to enjoy his job. i forget the names of the nice
couple that live across from me, and they guy who lent me a blanket
when he heard i only had a sleeping bag, then there is Kari, a general
practitioner at a children's hospital, and Hayley, a New Zealander,
studies art, but working this year and volunteering with a local TV
station. so i think living there will be quite alright. i have not
been there much of course!
RMIT university is similar in size to U of A, and everything seems to
run the same way, the library, the website for enrolling, the
procedure for getting help with essays, the students union, the
fitness facilities. i think it will be very easy to get used to. and
it is so close to my room, and Queen Victoria farmers market, and
cafes, and right beside the state library where i am now. and it is
closing!
so my first week in Melbourne went very well, i still haven't found a
house to live in, but i made some friends that i can stay with until i
do.
Melbourne is an incredibly lovely city, i feel very at home here!
there are many cafes and RMIT university looks very cool, i have used
the library which is great. i have used the computers at the State
Library too, which is an old marble building, very beautiful. there is
a huge farmers market in the middle of the city.
i arrived the evening of the 21st, on the 22nd i bought a cell phone
(0061449228958), then started the search! ive been looking at 4
different noticeboards, 3 websites, and talking to a few people, and
have looked at 7 rooms. one i could potentially live in but it is a
little farther away from university than i would like. i think i will
be able to get a room in a share house with other students.
i stayed in 3 different hostels which were okay, until the 26th, and
now am staying with my friend Jo until thursday, then going to another
friends place. Jo and i started going to a Bikram Yoga class, which is
when you do yoga in a hot 40C room for an hour and a half. it is quite
strenuous and really nice to warm up. it gets to 5C at night and 10
-15 in the day so i have to wear a lot of sweaters! ive been to some
great restraunts, one called Lentil as Anything with Tessa, Olly and
Anna, and Vege Burger with Jo and Nick. even the quality of the fast
food here is a little bit better than North America. today i am
exploring a street with a lot of cafes and second hand stores, then
viewing another room, then having supper with friends.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Melbourne is an incredibly lovely city, i feel very at home here! there are many cafes and RMIT university looks very cool, i have used the library which is great. i have used the computers at the State Library too, which is an old marble building, very beautiful. there is a huge farmers market in the middle of the city.
i arrived the evening of the 21st, on the 22nd i bought a cell phone (0061449228958), then started the search! ive been looking at 4 different noticeboards, 3 websites, and talking to a few people, and have looked at 7 rooms. one i could potentially live in but it is a little farther away from university than i would like. i think i will be able to get a room in a share house with other students.
i stayed in 3 different hostels which were okay, until the 26th, and now am staying with my friend Jo until thursday, then going to another friends place. Jo and i started going to a Bikram Yoga class, which is when you do yoga in a hot 40C room for an hour and a half. it is quite strenuous and really nice to warm up. it gets to 5C at night and 10 -15 in the day so i have to wear a lot of sweaters! ive been to some great restraunts, one called Lentil as Anything with Tessa, Olly and Anna, and Vege Burger with Jo and Nick. even the quality of the fast food here is a little bit better than North America. today i am exploring a street with a lot of cafes and second hand stores, then viewing another room, then having supper with friends. I dont have many plans for the next weeks other than looking for a house, and starting school on July 13th.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Summer 2010
The first picture is of a fountain in Albert Park, Auckland, New Zealand. but first: how did i get to New Zealand?
This summer i wanted to travel (of course) so i signed up for and International Student Volunteers project in NZ. i didn't know what to expect...
I flew out of Edmonton, over the beautiful Rocky Mountains, stopped in Vancouver, then straight to Auckland on May 13/14th. i had a free day before meeting my volunteer group so I took the city bus in to Auckland city early in the morning, and chatted with the bus driver while the sun rose and we drove on the left side of the rode past beautiful and unfamiliar plants and trees. then i took a train to get to the centre of the city
I walked out of the train station, found an information centre, walked around. the picture above is of the sky tower, it is a great ladmark that saved me from getting lost a few times.
me with my backpack in Albert Park
i walked around the harbour, sky tower at night. I spent my first night in New Zealand at a friends place. the first thing i ate when i got there was a golden kiwi :) we had supper of chineese vegan dumplings at a cute restraunt on Dominion Road called New Flavour!
early in the morning on the 15th i took a bus back to the airport to meet my International Student Volunteers group! we got on a bus right away and went to our camp close to Waihi in the Bay of Plenty region. there were 27 of us, and we got along very well!
we picked kiwifruit! they grow on huge vines
a part of Maori culture is a pride in their ancestors. they can trace their family trees back to when they came to New Zealand in huge canoes. this is a replica.
we went on hikes, saw a "small" kaori tree that had a trunk that a car could fit inside, guides talked at us about conservation... fantail birds, volcanoes, medicinal plants. We were traditionally welcomed by the a Maori group with much ceremony and singing which was very fun. they were converted to Chritianity but maintain their old beliefs too, and they have church/community centre buildings called Marae in many towns with wonderful carvings and woven panels and painted paterns all depicting legends. This is a hill we climbed where a Maori settlement used to be, there are stories about all teh islands and caves:
these pictures are from Cathedral Cove where we went one weekend. we stayed in Coromanel for one night in a hostel on the beach. 3 of us went swimming in the freezing Pacific Ocean water in the middle of the night in the waves, and stayed in for a long time because the waves were so fun! the mexy day 4 of us went kayaking in the waves! i flipped twice and it was great!
here are some pictures of where i slept for the 2 weeks at camp, quite comfortable bunk beds in a big room. the camp had a dining room in a different building, where we played a lot of card when it was raining. we only planted trees for 3 days, about 2500 trees on a very steep valley above a small river. the trees were about 50 cm tall, 4 different native species. we formed chains to pass them down teh hill, and paired up so one personn dug holes and one took the plastic bag off the roots and planted the tree.
we also visited an elementary school for a day and taught them about our home countries. we made posters and everything!
another day we visited a training centre for disabled people, which was very cool, mentally disabled people were supported so they could work and make money. they had a great facility where at least 100 people were sewing, doing carpentry, growing trees for volunteers like us to plant, making dartboards, art, cooking, maintaining a park, it was a really happy place.
another day we worked on a hiking trail in a park, we walked for an hour to get to a river where we built up the trail with wheelbarrowfuls of clay and spread a huge bag of gravel that a helicopter dropped off, and pulled weeds growing over the trail. it was really fun, we worked as a team very well.
I had my birthday at camp on a tree planting day, and in the evening we had a cake and everyone signed a card :)
the food was pretty basic, i had vegetarian meals which was very nice because i got better quality groceries especially for me! lots of penut butter and honey sandwiches, muesli every day for breakfast :) noodles, rice, soup, lasagna... the fruit was Very good, we had mandarins, persimmons, fejoas.
the next picture is at the natural hot pools called Hell's Gate at Rotorua, they were bizare, some pools were grey, some black, some of the ground was orange and yellow, there was steam coming from everywhere, mud bubbling up, one pool actually boiling, a steaming waterfall, it was an amazing little area.
CouchSurfing is an international non-profit network that connects travelers with locals in over 230 countries and territories around the world. Since 2004, members have been using our system to come together for cultural exchange, friendship, and learning experiences. Today, over a million people who might otherwise never meet are able to share hospitality and cultural understanding.
Our mission as an organization is to create inspiring experiences: cross-cultural encounters that are fun, engaging, and illuminating. These experiences take many forms. CouchSurfing's initial focus was on hosting and "surfing" (staying with a local as a guest in their home). Alongside these core experiences, we now also facilitate a growing array of activities and events.
We have a vision of a world where everyone can explore and create meaningful connections with the people and places they encounter. Each CouchSurfing experience shared by our members brings us closer to that vision.
How does CouchSurfing work?
CouchSurfing members share hospitality with one another. These exchanges are a uniquely rich form of cultural interaction. Hosts have the opportunity to meet people from all over the world without leaving home. "Surfers," or travelers, are able to participate in the local life of the places they visit. We also give more people the chance to become travelers, because "surfing" lowers the financial cost of exploration.
Is CouchSurfing safe?
When a lot of people hear about CouchSurfing, they wonder if it's OK to invite someone new into their home, or stay with someone they've never met. Our members think about safety, too -- and that's exactly why CouchSurfing is a safer way to meet people than you might think. As a tight knit community, CouchSurfers help protect themselves and each other by educating themselves and sharing information.
With CouchSurfing, you have a lot more information about new people than you do in most circumstances. Think about when you meet someone at a hostel or on a train. What information do you have? Just your own first impressions. Through CouchSurfing, it's more like meeting a friend of a friend. You have the chance to read all about other members' experiences with that person, whether positive or negative. You have a full profile's worth of information about their interests and perspectives. You can see who their friends are and how they know them. And you have the ability to correspond with them as much as you want before you meet them.
Go to our safety page for more information about the different types of information systems that help you make educated decisions while using CouchSurfing. "