I am slightly embarrassed to admit that though I spent six weeks
in Sydney when they asked about things to do I was rather at a loss. The opera
house, aquarium, tower and bridge came to mind but in hindsight I spent an awful
lot of my time in the hostel just passing the time with my friends. This time
though it was completely different. With only two weeks to see as much of
Sydney and the surrounding area as they could our day together were much better
organised than I had been.
On my arrival we went to find me some food as I had been on
the bus for seven hours. From our afternoon snack we headed to the botanic
gardens with a bottle of wine to toast our reunion and watch the end of the
sunset. We had planned to watch it all but choosing the wine and finding some
plastic glasses took us longer than anticipated. We then made our way to
Darling Harbour to meet up with a friend of mine from my previous stay in
Sydney. I really wanted us to eat there
at least once as I love Darling Harbour; which I am sure makes me very touristy
indeed but I don’t care, I think it’s fabulous. After dinner and some more wine
it was time to call it a night as it had been a long day for all of us. However
I was distracted on my way to my hostel room by another old acquaintance from
my previous stay. One of the nicest things about being in Sydney was getting to
say hello to the people who made my arrival in Australia so fabulous, though on
this occasion I was struggling to string words in to sentences more than usual
so after a quick hello I headed off to bed.
Day two was supposed to start with me doing some necessary
shopping but my body seemed to realise I was on my day off and decided I would
sleep in instead. After a lovely long lie I met up with my friends again and we
headed in to the centre of the CBD in search of sushi for lunch and a touristy
wander round the various shops and arcades. My friend and I then headed to the
Chinese Garden of Friendship without her partner who decided his hayfever would
probably be better if he avoided the garden and headed to the aquarium instead.
I must say as much as I like my friends partner it was nice to spend time with
just her and the surroundings were beautiful. We spent over two hours exploring
the garden fitting in tea and scones at the end of it and much girly chat along
the way.
Garden well and truly ‘done’ we then went to find my friends
partner at a brewery pub he had been keen to visit. My friends had kindly
bought us tickets to go to the observatory in the eveing so we walked to the Rocks
where we visited the Lord Nelson Pub before having the most delicious meal at
Fish on the Rocks. The best thing about dining with close friends is that we
were able to sample on anothers meals so I can confirm that every dish we had
was as superb as the service. At the observatory we checked out some amazing
night photos from a recent competition before heading our side to get a tour of
the Southern sky which of course included pointing out the Southern Cross which
I had so far failed to recognise. We were then introduced to a 150 year old
refractor telescope which was kept in mint condition and worked perfectly
allowing us to have a look at the moon before we moved on to a less retty but
more powerful newer telescope. Sadly the clouds were moving in on us so we
opnly had time to look at one binmary system before it was tio cloudy to see
anything. The tour ended with a few short 3-D presentations which turned out to
be much more interesting once we realised the polariser in the projector was
the wrong way wrong and turned our glasses round to compensate.
My third day in Sydeny with my friends started early as my
body clock seemed to be stuck on the idea I was only allowed one long lie a
week. This allowed me plenty of time to pack and do some much needed shopping
before I had to check out of my room. Check out complete I stored my bags and
headed to Circular Quay where my friends and I took a very scenic ferry ride to
Parramatta. I was very excited to be going to Parramatta as my room mate is
from there. On arrival we decided to wander until a nice place caught our eye
for a hot chocolate before heading back towards the centre and the train
station.
We caught the train to Town Hall and went to the Queen
Victoria Building for afternoon tea, an experience I highly recommend. The
surroundings were pretty enough but it was the afternoon tea that made it worth
the visit. Tiny delectable cakes and rather large scones with proper cream and
a mind bogglingly large selection of tea and my friend was in heaven, as was I.
I am always surprised at how filing afternoon tea is, even though we finished everything
it was a struggle and none of us felt like eating much for the rest of the day.
Though still relatively early the sun was getting low in the sky so we walked
to the Shangri-La and took the elevator to the bar at the top. We didn’t quite
make sunset but we caught the end and stayed for one drink to enjoy the view of
Sydney harbour by night. Lovley though the view was we didn’t feel it was
worthy of more than one expensive drink therefore we wandered slowly up George
Street towards the hostel managing to stop for one last leisurely drink along
the way. However as all good thing do my time in Sydney was coming to an end.
Before I knew it we were back at the hostel and I was waiting for my bus and it
was time to say goodbye again. One overnight bus ride later and I was back in Jindy
with just enough time to get home showered and get ready for work exhausted but
with some fantastic new memories of Sydney to get me thought the day.
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