Sunday, 30 July 2017

Goodbye for now Brisbane

I have had the pleasure of living and working in the Brisbane area for the last three months.  I have really enjoyed the area and must say that winter in Queensland is fabulous (though I'm not so sure how excited I would be about summers here as I have been told repeatedly that they are incredibly hot and humid...).  I have also seen some great wildlife and gotten out on some gorgeous hikes.

Koala from my first day on-site
Kangaroos my last day on-site
Kangaroo my last day on-site
As I mentioned in an earlier blog, my work visa is only valid until the middle of August.  It's kind of a weird, long story but I just found out at the beginning of last week that I could reapply for another work visa so that I can continue working for the company that I've been working for.  So, I've spent the last week running around trying to assemble all of the necessary items to submit my visa application. This has involved fun things like getting fingerprinted at the Redcliffe Police Station and calling Immigration so many times that I finally just programmed them into my phone.  I am still waiting on a couple items before I can submit my visa, so I am going to be cutting it very close.  

During one of many phone calls to Immigration, I found out that when you apply for a visa and you are already in Australia, you also automatically apply for a Bridging Visa A (BVA) which, if it's granted, allows you to stay in the country and (most of the time) keep working.  This completely changed my plans as I had been assuming that I would have to go back to New Zealand until my visa was granted (which would be fine because I could see Ross).  There are a couple problems with the Bridging Visa A: 1) I'm not sure how long it takes to find out if you're approved or not, 2) if you are granted the BVA, it's not guaranteed that you will be able to work while you're on it, and 3) you can't leave the country and then return on a BVA.  If I wanted to go back to, say, New Zealand to see my husband, I would have to either 1) apply for and be granted a  Bridging Visa B or 2) stay out of Australia until my other visa is approved.  Needless to say, the last week has been a little stressful and I'm not entirely sure where I will be come August 16th... 

To make matters even better, the project that I'd been working on up in Brisbane has slowed down immensely.  So much so that I've mostly been working from home on other reports and data analysis for the past month or so.  Because of that, I've been going a little stir crazy with no one to talk to.  I had mentioned this to my manager (she's not technically my manager, but I work mostly with her) and she took it up the food chain.  On Thursday afternoon (4 days ago), the managing director for the company called me to let me know that they wanted me to work from the home office in Melbourne for the last couple weeks of my current visa and that I'd be flying down to Melbourne on Monday (tomorrow).  Because of this, I've spent the last couple days packing, cleaning, and working on my visa.  I feel a little weird saying this, but I'm really looking forward to being back in an office setting. The last month has taught me that I do not like working from home.

That was a lot longer story than I meant it to be...sorry. But that gives some insight into the joys of applying for a new visa and getting to move in the middle of it all!

I had wanted to get out hiking this weekend (I've been a slacker that last couple weekends) but packing/cleaning/visa took priority.  Instead, I treated myself to a whale watching trip (I figured that I could take a half-day break).  I went with Brisbane Whale Watching which is run out of Redcliffe (about 2 miles from where I live).  We had fabulous weather - sunny with hardly any breeze and the water was incredibly calm! I tend to get seasick so the calm water was a godsend for me.  




The Humpback Whales migrate past Brisbane from about June through November when they swim north from the Antarctic to have calves in the tropics and then they migrate back south for the austral summer.  We saw some dolphins, a Minke Whale, and a number of Humpback Whales.  The Humpbacks were splashing a bunch with their tails and fins which was really fun to see.  We also had two Humpbacks swim under the boat a couple times.  They were just adolescents but they were still so big!  It was really incredible to be so close to such majestic creatures.  I am so glad that I went - it was a much needed break from the craziness that has been my life for the last week or so and it was so incredible to see the whales up close.





I'm not sure what life holds for me come mid-August but by then I'll be due for another blog, so we'll see...
Lighthouse on Moreton Island
Moreton Island

Saturday, 15 July 2017

Sydney

At the risk of sounding like a total travel snob, last weekend Ross and I met in Sydney for my birthday.  We have both wanted to go for a while and since we're in the right part of the world, why not?  We flew in early Thursday morning and then flew back to our respective homes on Sunday night.  We stayed at a nice AirBnb in Potts Point and walked 50 miles (yes, 5-0 according to my FitBit) around Sydney in four days.  It was great.
Sunset behind the Opera House and Harbour Bridge
After meeting at the Sydney airport, we caught the train into the city, dropped our stuff off at our AirBnb, and set off to explore.  Our first destination: the Sydney Opera House.  We walked from our AirBnb, through the Royal Botanic Garden to Mrs. Macquaries Point.  Most pictures that you've seen of the Opera House, with the Harbour Bridge in the background were probably taken from here.  Since it was around lunch on a Thursday in the middle of winter, there weren't that many tourists around but given that Sydney has ~5 million people, there were still a lot of people out running and walking on their lunch breaks.  After getting the requisite pictures from afar, we walked over to the Opera House and marveled at it up close.  It is a gorgeous building with really cool tile work.




From there we headed around Sydney Cove, through The Rocks, and up to the Harbour Bridge.  For $15 you can go up into the southeast pylon and it is well worth it for the amazing views over the harbour, Opera House, and city.


We then went to the Museum of Contemporary Art for about two hours before it closed.  From there we went back to the Opera House because there was a light show (Badu Gili Water Light) projected onto the side of the building at dusk and 7 pm (it was on every night that we were in Sydney).  It was set to music and was incredible.  Well worth sitting on cold concrete steps for.


We then wandered around the CBD (central business district, aka downtown) for a bit, had awesome Malaysian at a hole-in-the-wall place and then slowly made our way back to our AirBnb with stops by the State Library of New South Wales (open late on Thursdays and has an amazing mosaic map of Abel Tasman's journey around the South Pacific), St. Mary's Cathedral, Hyde Park (where we saw some possums!), and the Anzac Memorial.

State Library of New South Wales
On Friday we started off with stops at St. Mary's Cathedral and the Anzac Memorial.  The art and architecture of the cathedral was gorgeous and the Anzac Memorial was extremely moving.  I never fully appreciated how detrimental WWI was to the populations of New Zealand and Australia until living here (almost 40% of males aged 18-44 were enlisted or a little under 10% of the total population of Australia).

St. Mary's Cathedral

Anzac Memorial

There are more than 164,000 stars on the ceiling of the Anzac Memorial;
one for each person from New South Wales who  was enlisted in WWI.
The main event for Friday was another trip to the Opera House but this time we went inside and attended a Sydney Symphony Orchestra performance of Mozart and Haydn in the Concert Hall.  It was a Tea & Symphony event, so we were given tea or coffee and biscuits (aka cookies) prior to the concert.  It is an incredibly surreal experience to sit in the sun in the Sydney Opera House, looking out the floor to ceiling windows across the harbor at the Harbour Bridge while sipping on tea and realize that you're not imagining it all.  The concert was fabulous!  I am so glad that Ross suggested looking to see what was happening while we were in town because it never would have occurred to me.

The Concert Hall at the Opera House

After the concert we got back to our extensive walking tour of Sydney.  We stopped by Parliament House, which has been the home of the Parliament of New South Wales since 1829, making it the oldest continually operating parliament building in the world.  After passing through a metal detector, we were basically given free rein and could wander where we pleased in the building.

Legislative Library
Legislative Council
We then headed down to St. James' Church.  Built of convict-made bricks in 1819, it is Sydney's oldest church.  It  was small and homey but had a gorgeous stained glass window ('Creation Window') from the 1950s.

Creation Window
We then went back to St. Mary's Cathedral and paid the small fee ($5) to go down into the crypts.  They hadn't been open before we had to head to the Opera House for the concert and I'm so glad that we went back because they were incredible!  The crypt floor is 12,000 square feet and most of it is covered in an amazing mosaic.  Best of all, we were the only people down there for a while so we could actually see the floor in all of it's glory (and yes, I am aware of how odd that statement is).




After spending a lot longer in the crypts than we thought that we would, we went and spent the rest of the afternoon in the Art Gallery of New South Wales.  It has an amazing selection of work and an incredible Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander gallery.  There was also an exhibit of O'Keeffe's work but you had to get a ticket for that and there was more than enough in the free sections of the gallery to keep us busy.




On Saturday we decided to escape the city for a while by taking the ferry out to Manly and doing the Manly Scenic Walkway through the North Head section of Sydney Harbour National Park.  The ferry ride was great - smooth and scenic!  Manly is a cute little suburb and the scenic walkway is pretty.  It was nice to get out in nature after so many people and so much concrete.  We ended up spending most of the day out in North Head, wandering around.

View from the ferry
Sandstone cliffs and the Pacific
View toward the city from North Head
Collins Beach
Fort Denison
Once we got back to Sydney we did a quick jaunt around the Royal Botanic Garden and stopped by Government House, which is the official residence of the Governor of New South Wales.  It was closed by the time that we got there but it was worth swinging by for a peak.

Government House
Sundial in the Botanic Garden
On Sunday, we had a more laid back day (for us).  We started off in the Royal Botanic Gardens because we had missed some sections on Saturday that I had wanted to see.  After that, we headed over to the Australian Museum.  The big exhibit was about spiders so we went to that (Australia has some crazy spiders!) and then spent the rest of our day wandering around the museum.


Sydney Funnel Web (deadliest spider on Earth) at the museum
Eventually we headed back to the AirBnb, collected our stuff, and caught the train back to the airport. As much as I complained as a kid when my parents would drag my brother, sister, and I to every museum and church within a 50-mile radius when we travelled now I just have to laugh because I do the exact same thing.  It was a crazy, busy, fun weekend and, despite having incredibly sore feet for a couple days, I'd do it again in a heartbeat.