Saturday, March 7, 2009

The final countdown... 5th January to 26th February 2009

One month to go before we finished our working career in the UK. Dee was starting her new job at Ealing Hospital for a short term contract and James was still working for Her Majesty’s Court Services in his administrative role. London was still cold, with average top temperatures of 5c; coat, scarf and layers weather... Dee needless to say was “over it” (to get by she would envisage herself sunbaking on the Philip Island house decking in the 30c sun!). That month we would visit Oxford. In summary not alot to do in the town, but there sure was alot of colleges (one thing we learned is that there is not one big Oxford Uni, but a collection of colleges that make up Oxford Uni). We celebrated Michelle’s birthday and also said farewell to James’ friend Jase who was returning home.

Next came a West End show “We Will Rock You”, which was a bit different to what we expected but none the less entertaining. A stay in London isn’t complete we believe unless you visit Madame Tusuads! The London one is known as the best in the world and it sure did live up to all expectations, it was incredible. As you can see by the pictures, the waxes were amazingly life like. That weekend we also celebrated Australia Day! There are tons of pubs, bars and places for any expat Aussie to celebrate with other Aussies. We decided to go to The Slug with a group of friends in our hometown Fulham. We can honestly say it was one of the best Australia Days we have ever had because of the comradatory feeling that everyone experiences from being away from home. Snakebite jug after snakebite jug made for a good 12pm start to the day, with some late night Chinese to soak it all up, for a hopeful full recovery the next day for work.

The best venue in London, and quite possible the world, is the Royal Albert Hall. We had both heard good things about it before we arrived and so always wanted to go see a show.... so naturally that is what we did. We saw Cirque du Soleil, Quidam. The show was great, but the hall was even more spectacular. Sitting out on our balcony overlooking the stage was incredible. We had both seen Quidam under the bigtop back in Melbourne, but to see it performed in this exclusive venue was something else. We also toured Lords “the home of cricket” that weekend which James loved, especially the spaceship media stand, best seat in the house.

Our most memorable experience in London occurred on Monday 2nd February, the day London was blanketed with snow and the public transport system all but shutdown. The Sunday night before, our housemate received a call from a mate also living in London saying to look out the window... what we saw was snow coming down on our doorstep. Its one thing to see snow in the Alps, but in your own suburb on your own doorstep is something else. That Monday the entire bus network was terminated, tube & rail services were reduced to 20% operation, Heathrow Airport shutdown and 6million Londoners didn’t show up to work. Dee and I both managed to make it in to work 3 hours after we were meant to have started, only to be told to go home because the snow was going to get worse by the afternoon which meant we would possibly be sleeping at work that night. James managed to get some quick snaps of London under snow though that day, and the rest of the afternoon was naturally spent in the pub drinking cider and outside making snowmen (our biggest was about 6’foot5’).

Ok so if you have made it down to this point of the blog, congratulations we salute you for staying on with us... the next part is a bit of a doozy.

Our last day of work had arrived on Thursday 5th February. That night we were flying to Southern Ireland.... so we thought! Our departure out of Gatwick Airport was for 9:00pm. James had been checking the airport reports and flight departures online at work all day as it was reported southern England was to have a blistery weather front through that afternoon. Nothing eventuated and we made it to Gatwick. As you do when you arrive at the airport you look up the TV screen to see your gate... ours said “report to airline enquiry desk”, which naturally we thought was weird. An attendant was standing out front of the Ryanair desk handing out pieces of paper and mumbling something as we approached... that’s when we discovered it was not Gatwick we should have been concerned about, but Dublin airport. Dublin had had its own snow storm come though that had shut the airport down to all inbound and outbound flights for 24hrs. We were shattered and to make things worse we couldn’t book the next flight until Sunday morning because of the Rugby Six Nations happening on Saturday at Croke Park and all flights being booked until then. So we lost out on our 4 day Shamrocker tour and a nights’ accommodation (luckily travel insurance will come in handy!). So come Sunday morning we were ready to fly out at 10:00am to restart our Ireland trip.... so we thought once again! No it wasn’t snow it was a little thing called “Passports”. On the Thursday night we had them and between us both we can’t decide whose fault it was (Deanne is just being modest here, pretty sure it was James’ fault) but we left our passports back at home in Fulham. If Southern Ireland hadn’t become a Republic some many years ago we would have been fine (you can travel the UK without one), but alas no, we needed the passports. So James had to catch the bus back to Fulham, meet up with his mate Dallas (he was staying with us and agreed to meet with James) to collect the passports. Fortunately the Ryanair attendant allowed us to reschedule our flight free of charge to the 1:00pm flight (she felt sorry that we had already lost out on our Thursday night flight, James put on a sad face). So seeing as though this has been a long story we will make the rest short, in summary Dublin was expensive as they are based on the Euro and not Pound eg. a Guinness pint cost €7.00 ($AUD 15.00) at the Temple Bar! The Guinness brewery was awesome, the city was freezing and we watched on in horror as Sky News reported Black Saturday, something we will never forget seeing on TV ever.

Ok only about three paragraphs to go, hold on tight...

Our farewell Friday 13th February! Great night spent pre-drinking at ours with friends and then moving on to “The Fez” club in Putney (only a 5 minutes bus ride from our place in Fulham). It was great to see out our time in London with all our friends at what can be said as a great venue. The light-up dance floor had everyone going till the early hours of the morning. Our time in London had come to an end. We have had such a great experience and nothing will ever take it away from us. People have asked us how we have done so much in such a short period of time, and that comes down to how long we knew we had and also what we wanted to achieve with our experience. We never expected to further our careers while over here, we wanted to work to earn money but still travel to all the countries and cities we had set our mind to. So we left London via Heathrow on Monday 16th February to head to the U.S.A. on our world ticket...

“Start spreading the news, we’re leaving today, we want to be a part of it... New York! New York!”. Yes if you hadn’t picked it we were flying into NY. We had organised a Big Apple Contiki tour that ran for 4 days. What we experienced was beyond belief; NY is a great city, safe, clean and so much to see and do. Our contiki guide Matt took us on the first day for a sightseeing tour of the city... as you drive past places like Rockefeller Centre, State Empire Building, Ground Zero & more, it’s pretty surreal to see it all. The following day did a trip out to the Statue of Liberty (you may notice Dee wasn’t in these pictures as she was a little crook in the morning when we went). Come the afternoon Dee had caught up with us as we visited the NY Stock Exchange and as we walked along we experienced snow in the big apple! That night we saw Shrek on Broadway, which we decided was much better then We Will Rock You. Quite possible our most memorable moment of NY was our final night. We went up the State Empire Building to see the skylights, it was freezing mind you. After that we had the option to catch a limo to our final end of contiki celebrations at a Cuban Lounge in Uptown. Drinks it hand, we caught the limo around the sights of NY, passing Times Square, around the Financial District and arriving at the club (yeah it did kind of feel like a cheesy Year 10 formal arrival). Fortunately for us, at the end of our travel time the funds were a bit low, this club has happy hour from midnight to 1am... we loaded up needless to say.

From NY to LA on the 6 hour flight. Los Angeles was the final stop on our world leg and after travelling most of Western Europe still left us with the biggest Wow! We arrived at LAX and decided on our budget plan to catch the metro to our downtown hotel... I think Dee literally froze and James had to actually tell her to relax once or twice. Dee said it was more the fact we had the contents of our lives from London in our suitcase and backpacks and that we stood out like a tourist that made her uneasy. There were a lot of strange looks coming from the people on the metro, as we discovered most tourists don’t take the metro from LAX, so it was quite unusual. So anyway we did arrive to our hotel, The Milner Ritz, and were greeted by a young Elvis lookalike who enjoyed the wacky tabacy (just the start of our out there experiences in LA). The first day we did a tour of Hollywood, what’s more it was the day before the Oscars! We saw it all being setup to the news reporters in practice, Oscar statuettes going up and that big red carpet. Pictures were taken in front of Kodak theatre, Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and El Capitan Theatre. Of course the stars walk of fame got a drubbing from James goggling down his favourite entertainers. James also bought some random rappers album, that turned from free to a $5 donation, only to find out his whole story of how he is going to make it big someday was the same as the other dozen rappers that were flogging there albums further down the strip... ahh Hollywood. Our tour of Hollywood Hills was amazing. First up Mulholland Drive, housing the homes of the likes of Jack Nicholson, Jennifer Lopez and Matt Damon to name a few, down through Rodeo Drive in Beverley Hills past the Paris Hilton pad & Elvis’ old home, then moving on to Sunset Blvd for the like of the Viper Room and trendy cafes & shops.

The following day we hit up Universal Studios. The studio tour, rides and pictures with Eddie Murphy & Beetlejuice were the main events of the day. The best ride was The Mummy, without doubt as it twisted its way through the dark maze within the massive film studio ending to a sudden climax of screams and well mummies of course! On Sunday night we moved on to our next accommodation (we took the Flyaway bus to LAX this time, as our hostel had free pickup from there). What greeted us was one of those stereotypical American look motels, it was a classic. Good size pool in the middle surrounded by double story building & the buzzing neon light signs out front. The reason we chose this place was because it provided free breakfast, free afternoon tea, free buffet dinner & free shuttle to LAX & Venice Beach... all for a good price. So naturally we took advantage of all that and went to Venice beach the next day. Venice beach is where all the roller bladders, skaters & muscle jocks who lift weights on the beaches hang out. It was quite an experience because there were also alot of bums and homeless people begging on the strip, alongside the tourist shops & stalls. We had some great Mexican for lunch which is also as common around the streets as the homeless. The final day we ventured further up the coast to Santa Monica. Santa Monica is where the rich also hang out, because the houses and streets were incredibly clean and well rich looking. Dee got her shopping fix & James got his riding fix by hiring bikes and riding down the coast. It was a great way to finish of our time in the States.

After a 23 hour flight via Auckland, we arrived back in Melbourne at 3:00pm Thursday 26th February. That was it for our trip of a lifetime, and yes Dee’s dream was satisfied the following week as we write this final update from the Phillip Island decking in the well 20c sun, but good enough...

Monday, January 12, 2009

Experiencing the UK - Wales, Soccer, Christmas & New Years

The next instalment, weekend trips, Christmas & the New Year celebrations...

Our next adventure within the UK was a weekend trip to Wales where we stayed in Cardiff (capital of Wales) & Swansea (beachside coastal town). We arrived in Cardiff at 9.30pm following a 3hour bus ride to one happening city! Walking to our hotel we passed the main street which was alive, Christmas lights lit up the street, every second store was a pub with music being pumped out into the street. The main street was also closed off to cars and people filled the street despite the near freezing temperatures, including a few chavs (skanky girls) in summer dresses, madness! We stopped by a few pubs for some ciders and the Walkabout for some £2 Jaeger bombs! Day 2 was filled with a walk through the heart of town, souvenir shops and lunch down by the waterfront. This weekend happened to coincide with a massive rugby match Wales vs Australia so the streets were filled with supporters filtering into Millennium stadium. Whilst heading to the Castle away from the stadium we hit the jackpot! A Welsh gentleman heading towards the stadium offered us 2 free tickets (worth £55 each) to the sold out game! We could not believe our luck (although Dee was a little disappointed missing out on the castle, compared to James who couldn’t believe his luck) and so followed the gentleman to the stadium just arriving in time for the Welsh national anthem which was amazing! Unfortunately Australia was defeated 21 – 20 however we didn’t mind as we were surrounded by Wales supporters and the crowd atmosphere was incredible when they scored! Oh yeah and I think we stole the phrase ‘Aussie Aussie Aussie, oi oi oi’ from the Welsh who cheer “Oggie Oggie Oggie, oi oi oi’!

Our second night was spent in a cosy bed and breakfast across the road from the beach in Swansea. That night we fulfilled James’ cravings for some Chinese cuisine which was a bit of a laugh as whilst the restaurant was empty the staff appeared very stressed, the heating wasn’t working so we sat by a fan heater whilst other diners watched with contempt as had no heating! The food was great, though unfortunately for James still no dim sims! The next day was spent visiting local markets, strolled along the beach and took a short bus ride to an area with coastal cliff walks for some stunning views and scenery. Unfortunately Dee neglected to bring her gloves so it was a little chilly with each of us wearing one glove and hiding one hand in our jacket pockets, but we survived!

Making the most of our time in London we thought it was fitting to see a few live English bands. In November we went to the Forum to see The Wombats play which was awesome, followed by The Kooks in December at Brixton Academy. The atmosphere in both venues was fantastic, getting some close up views to the stage, great acoustics and of course a cider or two!

Living in Fulham we made the decision to support our local premier league team and got some awesome tickets through the Fanatics to see Fulham Vs Manchester City. The score was tied at one all however a great day was had. Sitting directly behind the goals in the second row we were very close to the action behind our fellow Aussie Mark Swartzer who is the goalie for Fulham!

Christmas time in the UK/Europe is second to none! It seemed fitting to experience a winter Christmas. Suppose that’s the way it’s meant to be according to the movies and a white Christmas was to be had for us in the French Alps!! But to begin with a Christmas fiesta was held at our place a week prior to Christmas with our housemates, Michelle and one of Dee’s friends from home Sue-ean. We cooked up a massive English roast (from Iceland-discount supermarket!) and popped Christmas bon bons over a few drinks. We could also not by pass one of the many winter wonderlands scattered around the UK, with our choice being Hyde Park where we consumed some mulled wine (hot red wine) to get into the festive spirit then donned some ice skates for a spin around the rink. By far the most entertaining part of the evening was laughing at the expense of some; let’s say inexperienced skaters, watching them stumble to the ice quite spectacularly!

Living so close to Europe Dee made the most of things and went on a weekend bus trip to Belgium with Michelle to explore the Christmas markets, and of course to indulge in their famous waffles and chocolate, and also taste some local beer. The trip included a stop via Brussels (Belgium’s capital) on the first day and a night in Brugge. Both of which were beautifully decorated and filled with little wooden huts selling Christmas gifts, Belgium food and sourverniers which we made the most of! Having visited Brugge already in the summer time it was interesting to return in the winter giving quite a different experience.

After finishing up at work for the year (Dee finishing at Epsom Hospital & James granted 2 weeks leave from Her Majesty’s Court Services) we were off to Chamonix in the French Alps for a week of skiing and Christmas celebrations with 7 of us Londoners heading away. Following a 23 hour bus trip we arrived at our destination UCPA resort/hostel! The accommodation was very good, all meals inclusive and a week’s worth of ski lessons with our French instructor ‘Julien’ whose English was not great but kept us entertained all the same. It was quite a French experience as out of our group there was only one other English speaking person, so all instructions were given in French first and then translated in English, not always perfectly e.g. ‘follow my tracks was translated ‘follow my trust’! Christmas Eve was the main event of the week as the Europeans celebrate Christmas at this time. We had a cultural feast including pizza, cheeses, duck, salads, soup, prawns and stir fry’s, not your traditional English roast but brilliant all the same. Even so some of the guys in our trip ate so much they had to throw up later in the night (not alcohol inflicted)! Chamonix was the perfect place to be on Christmas Eve as they were just like in the movies. The town was lit up with Christmas lights and decorations, and carollers in the streets, crowds gathered around a bon fire with a visit from Santa, French street performers and of course mulled wine stands. As Christmas day was not particularly celebrated in Chamonix the 7 of us went out to a French restaurant for dinner followed by cocktails at a nearby bar.

Following two brief nights back at home we headed (by plane this time!) to Scotland for the New Years Edinburgh Hogmanay street party. We booked the trip through First Festival where we stayed at the Ibis hotel. On the first night we met another couple from Canberra also living in London and two girls on holiday from Sydney with whom we spent the 3 night festival with enjoying plenty of snake bites, wines, beers and vodkas. The main evening being New years Eve commenced at 11am at the Three sisters pub where we welcomed in the New Zealand new year, followed by Australia at 1pm. Footage of the fireworks displays was beamed from big screens around the pub so we really felt at home....well in Sydney anyway! After a brief nana nap our newly formed group headed out to dinner at a little restaurant in the Royal Mile before bravely hitting the street party with countless layers as the temperature outside dropped to a blustery minus 2 degrees! Approximately 150,000 people filled the main drag of Edinburgh with several stages and music being pumped out into the crowd. A spectacular fireworks display up at the castle signalled in the New Year. A few vodkas was however not enough to keep us warm after 4 hours out in the cold so headed back to our hotel bar. New Years day commenced in a small town 20mins out of Edinburgh for the annual Looney Dook swim. We were not brave enough to take a dive but had fun all the same watching the crew marching to the Loch to the beat of a Scottish bag piper and plundering into the freezing water all in costume dress. One of our house mates may have even made it onto the BBC news!

Following the end of the New Year festivities we left Edinburgh on a 16 seater minivan for a 3 day trip to the Scottish Highlands with the ‘Wild in Scotland’ tour company. The name of the tour company should have given away a few hints when we booked as the entire tour was spent either on the bus or outdoors!! Whilst the cold was a little draw back our crazy & passionate Scotsman guide/driver took us to some amazing scenery and told us countless stories of the history of the sites we visited which helped to distract from the cold and made it all worthwhile! As a ‘Ross’ Dee has ties to Scotland being part of one of the clans and thus took pleasure in hearing about their history and collected souverniers along the way. James’ highlight would have to be sliding with wellies (gumboots) in toe along frozen creeks and even tempted his fate walking across a frozen Loch or two. Our accommodation for the trip was quite cosy (yet rumoured to be haunted!), being a large house located in the middle of nowhere next to a loch. A trip to Scotland would also not be complete without a taste of Haggis, which our guide purchased at a local butcher in Skye. Despite knowing what is actually contained in the mix, haggis was actually quite nice, a little like a sausage although I don’t think we will be tracking it down for future purchases in a hurry!

We have updated the pictures quite considerably, so have a look if you get time and you will see the journeys that we have experienced since our last update.

Well that it for 2008, onward to 2009 bringing a new job for Dee at Ealing hospital, a trip to Ireland and some unique Australia Day celebrations install!

Sunday, November 16, 2008

A new life in a month...Life in London - 4th September to 16th November

And so the next instalment begins... well it has been sometime since our last update and by the title it has been quite a journey. By new life we mean; house, bank account, job, mobile phones and learning the transport system aka. the tube, overground and limitless double decker buses that trawl the streets day and night!

We arrived back on the night of Thursday 4th Sep to head to our base for the next 10 days at Streatham Hill, located in the outer southern suburbs of London, where we were dossing (sleeping on the floor) at Michelle's house (Dee's sister). During these 10 days we were registering with numerous agencies where James came to realisation that the job market over here was very bleak with the current "credit crunch". It took nearly a month before James found work, and Dee a couple of weeks... which leads to another story...

Dee was called the day after registering with her OT agency by her consultant informing her he had a role within Acute/Neuro..... (rehabilitation although this was not clearly specified). This conversation took place at Victoria station which is a busy, loud and overcrowded place that doesn't help when speaking on the phone. After telling her consultant she would be happy to speak with the hospital manager about the role her phone began ringing 30 secs later and it just happened to be the manager from Royal Free Hospital, which is located in Belsize Park in the northern suburbs of London. Before she could even blink an eyelid Deanne had a new job beginning Monday the following week....which she was not all to rapt in considering she had zero experience in rehabilitation and with Neuro being one of the more complex areas too! Fortunately for us both, Dee was able to find work easily that pays well, however the hospitals tend to be a little distance out of London. Since her initial post Dee has begun work at Epsom Hospital which is located roughly 1 and a half hours from where we live... 6am wake up calls can be rough and the UK health system is somewhat ‘interesting’ to put it nicely however it’s all about earning the pounds for the next trip!!

James, whilst not quite what he expected commenced his employment within a telesales role at Haymarket Publishing. Even though the pay was terrible, the location (Hammersmith, 15 minute walk from home) and the people he worked with, being a young office with mid 20's people, made it easier to do the job. The London economy can be brutal and this contract only ended up lasting a month, so after another week of job searching (now he knows how the unemployed feel and it is not FUN!) he again landed back in Haymarket Publishing doing administration work for two weeks. Week 12 in London is job number three; however it is an ongoing role with Her Majesty’s Court in customer service.

Our other major task in London was finding a place to live. Fortunately for us, this exercise was pretty quick and not to painful. Gumtree the website of all websites to find rooms delivered us four different houses that we were interested in. We had decided on the Fulham or Putney areas after one weekend of visiting both locations (most people decide on places close to where they work, however we decided we would rather live in an area that has everything we are looking for eg. close to shops, tube, pubs and of course a good room). Our main dilemma is that most houses like to exclude couples because of the "added person" factor and so that effectively eliminated two third of the ads we were looking at, coupled with Dees one request of having an ensuite, our search became quite limited. Our very first place we looked at in Fulham met what we were looking for in the ad... until we saw it in person... run down, located on a busy road and not great on the eye, it was a quick NO. The following night we visited three places, one in Putney and two in Fulham. Putney place was a no, small house with too many people, the first Fulham house of the night was nearly on the mark except for the small bedroom and finally our last visit of the night landed us at 37a Niton Street, Fulham. Like a street out of Toorak, with big maple leaf trees lining the sides of the road, we met with Hunter who was one half of the couple that was leaving. 37a is a two story house that has a large lounge room, good size kitchen/dining area and enter the bedroom, large bright room with built in wardrobes and great ensuite, all for a fairly reasonable price... Dee’s eyes that night lit up on arrival. We both agreed on inspection this is our place for the next five or so months. We agreed on a moving in date on Sunday 21st September and also that we would doss for one week before that date.

Our housies, Bec who is in marketing, Allyce a PA, Renee in HR and Scott an Electrician are all great and we couldn't ask for better roommates. We welcomed our arrival by having a Saturday BBQ one weekend on our webber in our spacious backyard by London standards anyway (great cricket pitch), this was before the cooler gloomier weather really hit so it was a great sunny day.

October was a great month for the big reunion for Deanne & Michelle as Ian & Linda arrived at the start of the month for their month long visit. During their stay we all managed to pack in plenty of sightseeing of London and surrounds and numerous Sunday roasts and home cooked dinners. Deanne went on an Evan Evans tour to Oxford and Shakespeare country with them as well as a ‘west end’ theatre show Buddy (chosen by the parents of course) which was great.

Since we have been in London we had made use of every weekend that has come and gone, its incredible how much there is to do in London and surrounds. We have been exploring the Camden & Portobello Markets, been rowing on Hyde Park lake and just recently went to Bath for Guy Fawkes Day celebrations. We found a little gem of a place at Bath Uni to see the fireworks in what was a wet and blustery night which sadly our umbrellas did not survive! The town is famous for the Roman Baths and Pump room.. and course of we visited them. The hop on, hop off bus was a great way to explore the city also with the like of The Jane Austin house, Nicholas Cage’s 4million pound home and famous bridges that are in and around town. We also made a daytrip out to Stonehenge the famous pieces of rocks that appeared from nowhere... in the middle of nowhere. No one really knows how they got there all those many hundred years ago, but it was fairly interesting even if it was freezing out there.

James also ventured back to Munich for the celebrations of all celebrations.. Oktoberfest. Pictures tell it all... an amazing time, with alot of beer, pretzels and weiner sausages (strangely they also love whole chickens and these were sold everywhere).

In the coming weeks and months we plan on visiting Cambridge, Wales, Ireland, the French Alps for Christmas and Scotland (Hogmanay festival) for New Years. But most interestingly and most randomly, James is going to be on BBC’s Bargain Hunt (if you are bored one day watch Channel 9 at 5:30pm to get an idea of the show!!!). A friend from uni is over and rang him up one day to ask if he wanted to go on the show with him.. so why not remember London by going on the BBC. He has NO IDEA how to shop in a flea market, but by god he is going to give it a go! He has £300 between the team (for which there are two teams of two competing against each other) to buy three items and then it will go to auction two weeks later. The idea is that you have to gain the highest profit from the three items that are sold, beating your opposing team. Fingers crossed!

There has been so much more that has happened, but we think that we have said enough for now.

Hope all is well back home and enjoy the upcoming Christmas holidays.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Nice (France) including Monaco – 1st to 4th September

Our final stop on Busabout was completed arriving back in Nice where it all began 10 weeks earlier. It was quite a sad day, however our European adventure wasn’t over yet, three sensational nights were still to be had!

Our first night was spent with a crew from Busabout at the Irish pub for dinner and trivia. It was quite an interesting trivia night as it was compared by both a French speaking and English speaking host. One of the questions which was hilarious to be heard in French was ‘which cartoon do the lines Yabba daba do come from’ the French didn’t get it at all!!

Our second day was spent exploring the local markets for some fresh produce for lunch and happy snaps from the lookout across the bay. We also went on the Busabout excursion to St. Tropez and Port Grimmaud along the French Riviera which is a 2 hour bus ride from Nice. The boat cruise which coincidentally offered bottomless beer, wine and punch also passed through the famous Millionaires bay where the likes of Paris Hilton, Bruce Willis, Geri Halliwell, the Beckhams and Denzel Washington holiday. The cruise also included a tour guide who pointed out a few of the mansions along the Riviera including the holiday homes of Bryan Adams, George Michaels, L’Oreal, Chanel and a notorious importer/exporter who hosted a Red Hot Chilli Peppers gig on his front lawn for his girlfriend...wonder what he imports and exports!

MONACO - As Monaco is only a 30 minute bus ride away of course we needed to make a visit, but first we stopped by Eze Village. Eze Village is a quaint little town famous for its French perfumes and aftershaves. Needless to say our credit card got a work out in Fraganauds perfumery! With bags in hand we made our way to Monaco, the second smallest country in Europe behind Vatican City. It is also the home of the infamous Gimmaldi’s Royal family, flash cars and of course the Monte Carlo Casino. Basically everything in Monte Carlo comes with a price tag! After spending the afternoon exploring the town via a road train we ventured into the Sun Casino (one a little more affordable to us). However, it still came at a price as playing Roulette consisted of a minimum 40 Euro ($AUD 60) buy in and if playing on the outside boxes it was a minimum 25 Euro ($AUD 40) bet! If you were wondering we didn’t leave the casino with fat wallets, but we also didn’t leave empty handed.

Travelling on Busabout has been amazing, we met heaps of people and explored countries, cities and towns we had never seen or even expected to see.

Well that finishes our European summer of a life time, now onward to London town to commence the next chapter of our adventure...

La Spezia for Cinque Terra (Italy) – 28th August to 1st September

Cinque Terra is known for its five fishing villages that are stretched along 9km of Mediterranean coastline. Beginning with Riomaggiore this is the first of the five villages and also where we stayed for the first 2 nights. On the day of arrival we were greeted at the hostel reception to find out there were three sites and that we were required to trek our way up to the peak of the hill with 20 kgs worth of baggage each in heat in excess of 30 degrees, where we would eventually find our place. After recovering from our climb we were amazed to find that the place we were staying at was an Affittacamere (in English it means private house) with balcony and an amazing view overlooking the bay included. We had our private room, or parents room as some would say, while the other six Busabout crew (including Adele who was with us) stayed in one large dorm room, trundle beds included. This place turned out to be a gem as the people we were sharing with were friends we had met in Florence on Busabout. The place was ours to enjoy some drinks and do what we wanted in it, so that’s what we did, within reason of course. We found some hidden rooms with chairs, a spare trundle bed and lounge chairs and setup camp on the balcony for a night in to drink and watch the sunset.

The following day was the Kakota trail of Italy. Beginning at Riomaggiore we set out on the trek along the coast, passing through the other four fishing villages; Manorola, Corniglia, Vernazza and ending at Monterosso. Whilst the walk/trek was quite gruelling at times with endless dirt tracks and countless uneven steps it was all worth it as the views were incredible!! Needless to say we consumed countless bottles of water to rehydrate as it was another scorching day and Dee acquired some nasty blisters as a trophy of completing the trek. As a reward we finished off the day with a swim at the final town Monterosso with a swim at the sand beach (yep not pebbles)!

The following days were spent lapping up the sun lazing on the beaches between the five towns but this time we took the train! A great investment of 3.50 Euro ($5.50 Aussie dollars) was also spent purchasing a blow up tyre to float about in the sea, James also explored under the water snorkelling.

To mix things up our last two nights we stayed in La Spezia (larger town about a 10 minute train ride before Cinque Terra). It was here in La Spezia that we experienced breakfast in the true Italian style. Breakfast consisted of croissants and coffee standing at the counters of the little coffee shops. We felt a little like confused tourists here as the staff didn’t speak much English all adding to the experience. Great strong Italian coffee though!
Cinque Terra was definitely up there for one of the best places we have visited and a must for anyone doing Busabout or travelling Italy in general.

Florence (Italy) – 25th to 28th August

Firenze as the Italians call it, is an Italian pearler of a city! The reason being the camping ground we stayed in was like a little communal Busabout village. We all had cabins that were all grouped together so meeting new people wasn’t hard. The other thing that was funny about this camping ground (particularly something James thought was great) was that to swim in the pool you had to wear a swimming camp... James’ thoughts: ahhh brings me back to my Bondi lifesaving days... anyway this meant the pool was really clean, one it stops hair from floating about in the pool, which did happen at the Venice and Rome campsites and two it prevented alot of people from swimming as you had to pay for a cap. This meant a quite pool to relax, swim and bake in! The other rule to the pool was that you couldn’t wear any footwear, inc. thongs, around the pool. Firenze’s have some funny concepts!

So Florence town, well the main attraction is of course ‘The statue of David’. David has nothing on James, but it was absolutely incredible and well worth the 12 Euro ($AUD 18) to get in to Galleria dell” Accademia where it was located. Michelangelo designed what has to be the best statue in the world as the attention to detail is incredible, you can literally see David’s veins (he has really big feet and hands aswell, not sure why because it doesn’t show... for those interested check our blog pictures!) The other big drawcard for Florence is The Ponte Vecchio or the Old Bridge. This bridge is a famous medieval bridge over the Arno river and is known for having some 60 shops on it, with nearly 50 of those jewellery shops specialising in gold. This is also the only bridge in Florence that wasn’t destroyed during the war, rumour has it when Hitler visited before the war began he loved it so much he told his SS pilots to bomb everything, minus The Ponte Vecchio...

The final, and one of the most important drawcards to Florence for Dee and girls alike, is the leather markets & shopping. Dee could finally buy her long awaited leather handbag, for those who were travelling with us they are all too familiar with our “Schmanbag” which was our security conscious, slash proof, over the shoulder, you beaut travel bag worn by both he and she... you may have noticed it in such pictures as “Deesa and Jimmy do Berlin Wall”. The other purchases made that day were scarfs, belts, wallets and other delights. Gelati capped the day... just to full the addiction of a gelati a day.

Siena (Italy)– 23rd to 25th August

Sienna was a stop we hadn’t planned on originally, however we decided a few weeks before we visited, that we would stop on in. The 2 nights we spent there were enough, Siena is a town you can do in a day really. We did manage to check out a few sights of course, mainly the town square. Siena has one of the most famous town squares in Italy as it is massive and shaped like an amphitheatre that slopes downwards towards the town hall, it was pretty amazing. It can be hit and miss sometimes when you stay in 2-3 star hotels, some can be great, others can be like this one that is more like a convent or grandmas house with floral bedspread, a desk and that talcum powder smell that always seems to waft around in the room.

A stop to an Italian city wouldn’t be complete without three essential things; pizza/pasta, gelati & a visit to a church... so naturally we did all three. Also of course, travel around Europe in August wouldn’t be the same without running into another festival. We think this was a political festival as there were banners and posters up (in Italian of course) mentioning about the candidates, oh and the fact there were more geriatrics at the festival then there are in my grandmas hostel! Amazingly however, Italy will always surprise and the festival turned from cheap dinner and drinks (one litre of wine for $AUD 3.00) to a battle of the bands concert. Pearl Jam, Muse and The Killers were all tunes belted out by some of the bands. A few too many drinks that night and we were off to Florence the next day, fortunately it was a day stop which meant a 1:00pm pickup, enough time to catch up on some sleep.