Monthly Archives: May 2015

Hey look kids, there’s Big Ben and there’s Parliament

As Sara mentioned, I had my first official driving assignment of our stay last weekend.  Luckily it worked out much better than Clark W. Griswald’s experience in London.

The adventure began with the car rental.  I rented from Hertz in the CBD because they would be open on Sunday afternoon when I preferred to return it.   I thoroughly researched my planned route from Hertz back to our apartment.  Hertz decided to throw me a curve ball though and had parked the car across the street on the 5th floor of a garage (car park here in Australia).  So, here I am trying to get used to the wrong side of the car and I’m met with what I can only call a diabolical garage design.  To get down from each floor I had to make TWO left hand U-turns to / from a super narrow ramp.  The walls were marked with others’ failures.  After a few adjustments, I make it down the first ramp and then I get to watch a guy park a BMW.  I hope it wasn’t a rental, because as he was backing it in, he raked it along the concrete pillar next to his spot.  The definitely made me a bit more methodical on the next four floors.

Finally free from the garage, I discover I have been dumped onto an unexpected street.  All of my preparation was for naught.  I manage to make a few correct turns and see the street I need to make a right on.  Then I see the sign:

Ugh
Ugh

I’ve been on the city streets less than a minute and I’m met with the dreaded hook turn?  NOPE.  The car park experience had left me feeling extra cautious so I made a nice safe left followed by a mid-block u-turn (Note: may have been illegal) in order to proceed on the road I wanted to originally turn right on.

Luckily the rest of the route back to the apartment was as planned in relatively light traffic.

Feeling bold, I even drove to my basketball game that night while repeating my Australia driving mantra in my head: “The right turns are the dangerous turns”.

The next morning my navigator (Sara w/ Google) put me on a course to the Mornington Peninsula.  Since I’m sure you’ve already read about our adventures down there, I won’t go into the details.

There are lots of things that are awkward about driving here for me. I tend to drive on the very left edge of the lane because since I’m on the wrong side of the car, it feels like I’m too close to the right.  The prevalence of traffic circles is much higher here, and others seem much more confident at entering them at high speed.  They don’t use yellow paint for the center line, so it can get a bit confusing if there are no other cars around.  The turn signal is on the right side of the steering well.  For this rental, I had 3 unexpected windshield wiper engagements by thinking the turn signal was on the left side.  I think that is pretty good.

One weekend of driving under my belt, it was time to return the car.  I made it all the way to the edge of the CBD when I remembered I needed to get gas.  I consulted my phone and found a gas station just a bit away from Hertz, but I’d have to again throw away all of my route preparation / memorization.  So, with a new route to the gas station quickly memorized, I proceed on course – and am met with some kind of protest march.  No idea what it was for, but a u-turn was in order and with a few left turns I’m back on course.

Hmmm
Hmmm

I arrive at the gas station and see a sign like this.  This autogas seems nice and cheap!  Unfortunately, I need unleaded “petrol” – autogas is actually liquified propane gas and a surprising number of cars here are outfitted to run on that. I proceed to pump gas while trying to figure out how to convert Australian dollars per litre to US dollars per gallon.  I give up when the pump stops.

Now to finally drop off the car.  One right turn to make and I have no trams to deal with *and* a right turn arrow.  I get to the Hertz and am left with one last extra narrow concrete driveway to conquer.

All in all, it wasn’t as hard as I remember when we visited here in 2011.  Maybe it is the mindset that if I’m going to be driving anytime soon, it is going to be on the left.  Or maybe I’m just older and wiser.

 

Mission Accomplished

Jon and I vacationed in Australia in 2011 and I always felt a nagging sense that we missed out on something. I am here today to let you know that nagging sense is completely gone now that we’ve seen…

Roo1Roo2

That’s right, not just one, but TWO kangaroos in the wild. I can’t explain how exciting this was for me. I am not sure why, but it was just fantastic and now I feel like I’m really having an Aussie experience.

Backing up a bit, Jon and I took a trip this past weekend to the Mornington Peninsula. Jon rented a car and managed to do a superb job of driving us around on the wrong side of the road on the wrong side of the car all weekend.

Jon Driving

It took about an hour to drive to Mornington, the town we stayed in. We found a place to grab lunch in town and decided to head to Arthur’s Seat where I’d read we’d have a decent chance of seeing wildlife. We hiked the Arthur’s Seat circuit which allowed us to see these amazing views…

View from Albert's Seat

Against our better judgement, we ventured in this dark forest Scary Forest

to see what we could see. And we saw NOTHING. Don’t get me wrong, it was beautiful,

ASHike

but NO roos, NO koalas, and thankfully no snakes. As I dejectedly walked back to the car, Jon got my attention and pointed out the best thing ever – a kangaroo in the wild! And then we realized there was another roo. Absolutely fantastic.

We’d already won the weekend, but decided to stay around anyway and checked into our lodging to celebrate. We stayed at the Mornington Bed and Breakfast which was fantastic. The view was even better than advertised and while the window between the bathroom and the bedroom was a little odd, putting down the curtain solved that problem.

BandBView BandBview2

We decided to check out God’s Kitchen, a restaurant and bar in a former church, a strange combination that somehow worked. We had a couple of good meat burgers for dinner and a couple of Sierra Nevadas to wash them down before settling in to watch whatever random movie was on TV.

The next day we enjoyed a home cooked breakie at the b&b and headed out along the coast to explore. We ended up in Point Nepean National Park where we hiked all the way out to the point with fantastic views along the way there and back.

Point Nepean Views

Point Neapan View
PointNeapanView2Point Neapan Jon Beach

Since we ended up hiking much more than originally planned, we decided we deserved a big lunch at the lovely Portsea Hotel followed by some scenic driving on the way to a pit stop at the Red Hill Brewery where we ran into a fellow wahoo – go figure!

The Portsea Hotel
The Portsea Hotel

That evening we decided to get Chinese food and found that the restaurant was BYO. We weren’t sure if that just meant wine or whatever. Fortunately, it was whatever, so we ventured up the street to buy beer and headed back for delicious Chinese food. I was about to order beef with chilli sauce. Luckily the waitress suggested I get rainbow beef instead. It turned out to be crispy beef which my Bowie pals will know well from Grace’s Fortune. So good! After that we decided to watch Young Guns from the b&b’s DVD collection – shockingly, it doesn’t hold up.

The next day we made our way back to the big city with Jon basically a total expert at driving on the wrong side now.