Beneath the Southern Cross

Feb 2, 2018, Sydney, cloudy and raining

From Jan 9th to today, we have lived in the South Hemisphere for 23 days. Literally, we live underneath the Southern Cross nearly one month.

It is interesting that both the flag of Australia and New Zealand have the Southern Cross. You can see that the southern Cross is a very important symbol in the South Hemisphere countries. We were lucky to see the Southern Cross constellation in an evening in a camp at New Zealand. It was very bright and obvious. The four stars looks exactly like the religious cross. I think the bottom star is pointing to the south.

It is very easy to mix up these two flags. They both have the blue background and the Union Jack on the left corner, and the Southern Cross on the right. The difference are:

1. number of stars – The Australia one has 2 more stars, one is the Commonwealth star under the Union Jack, another is a small five pointed star near the Southern Cross; the New Zealand flag only has 4 stars, which is the southern cross.

2. color of stars – The stars in the NewZealand flag is 4 red stars with white edges; the stars color in the Australian flag are white.

3. shape of stars – In the Australia flag, there are all seven pointed stars except one five pointed stars near the Southern Cross; the stars in the New Zealand flag are all five pointed.

Yesterday, we went to the Opera House and watched The Merry Widow. It was very happy experience. I consider this is the gift from David for our 4th anniversary. In California, I guess it was January 31. There are few things I love about this show.

1, They arranged 2 breaks, each one is 20 minutes, which I really like( see our pictures taken during breaks).

2, Also, I love the subtitle on the top of the stage. I am always confused by the lyrics when I was watching shows in the US, because there are no subtitles. I really appreciated the beautiful lyrics. I think this is one of the beauty of Opera. For example, “ there are no single way to please women as they are all different”…

3, the air conditioning was not too cold and women with dresses are happy. Another contrast to the US opera house and theaters.

Another positive thing I had was I got a haircut in Sydney. The stylist was Japanese. He speaks with a very low voice and explained his design patiently. This is actually my first time cut my hair by a Japanese. I am pretty happy about it. They gave me 10$ coupon for a 65$ hair wash, massage, and stylish. No worry about tipping too:) I actually found nearly every women I saw on the street of Sydney has a decent hair style. I guess many Japanese stylists here. Compared to emigrate to the US, Australia has better social well-fair and less jet lag, for many Asian immigrants…

We also had a great dinner. We went to a Malaysian restaurant for Laksa. It is noodle soup actually. I had veggie one. They put lemon, mint and raw onions there. I was worried about the shrimp paste, but I am fine. From this, I think the food quality is good there. David had chicken one, it is their specialty. Very tasty soup, with coconut water, the chicken was fresh and tasty. We will definitely go back if we stay Sydney longer. I expect we can try more tasty food in Malaysia later on the trip.

During the 23 days of underneath of the Southern cross, I had a lot positive experience. I love the food in New Zealand, venison, salmon, and lamb especially. I love the gorgeous trails at Mountain  Maunganui. I fell in love of RV life style too. I enjoyed the ferry trip at Brisbane and the lovely loft apartment we lived. I love my new hair style designed by a Japanese stylist. We are heading to Melbourne direction today, do not know what will happen…

Yanmei

Sydney, Australia

Today is our wedding anniversary, happy anniversary Yanmei!

We did a free walking tour of Sydney. It was very busy, there were probably 40+ people on the tour which made the group much too big. A bit surprising for a Wednesday morning with patchy rain, although fortunately we didn’t get more than a few very light sprinkles during the tour. The tour was pretty disappointing. I like the free tours because they work for tips so they are enthusiastic and have interesting and funny stories. The guide was enthusiastic, but he didn’t have much interesting info. I get that Sydney doesn’t have the long history of somewhere like Budapest or Prague, but there is some interesting stuff, like how did the society work as a prison colony. With such a large group we couldn’t really ask questions.

Aside from the Opera House, probably my favorite part of the tour was when we went by the fountain from The Matrix. This is a bad picture of it, but you can really recognize it in the scene with Neo and the woman in the red dress.

After the tour we walked to Chinatown. Yanmei has been to Sydney before, 10 years ago and she had fond memories of a dumpling restaurant in Chinatown. So our mission was to try to find that restaurant, although she didn’t remember the name or exact location. We eventually found the correct street from her memories, but the restaurant must have closed or changed owners since her last visit since we couldn’t find it.

One other funny thing we saw was this “ambulance”, which I just couldn’t understand what it is for.

David

Brisbane to Sydney

Our second day in Brisbane it rained on and off. We did go to the Lonely Pine Koala Sanctuary.

Tasmanian Devils

Ostrich

Update: I think this is actually an Emu, not an Ostrich

Kangaroos

Dingo

The reason Yanmei likes staying at Airbnb’s is mainly so she can use the kitchen and cook. It saves money and is probably quite a bit healthier than eating out.

It was a pretty neat loft we stayed in.

The next day we started South towards Sydney. We considered flying during our planning, since domestic flights are pretty inexpensive, but decided to drive instead. We can see the countryside and it is just convenient to have a car. Plus this way Yanmei can bring all her cooking supplies along, which would be trouble on a plane.

The first part of the journey was along the Gold Coast, which sounds great, but the reality was it was just a pretty nondescript major highway with trees blocking and views. We stopped for lunch in Byron Bay, where we saw some skydivers floating down. After that we continued to Port Macquarie where we stayed for the night. It was a total of about 6.5 hours of driving, which doesn’t sound too bad, but the seats aren’t very comfortable in our car. It is a Mitsubishi Outlander.

The next morning we continued south. It was more picturesque, and we stopped briefly at lighthouse beach.

Huge, beautiful beach and hardly anyone was using it. The other cool thing we saw was a pod of dolphins surfing in on the big waves. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to get any good pics of that.

We stopped in a little town called Bulahdelah for lunch, then continued south to arrive in Sydney by about 3:45pm, just before rush hour traffic.

David