Sunday 26 September 2010

Post 4 : Life In Transit

G'day from Hobart!

...So it's a good couple of weeks since the last blog which was jettisoned out admist the rush and mania of our last day in the UK before we taxi'd to Stansted in time to catch our flight. I've just had a quick read of my last update (Post 3) and I think it's fair to say that my emtional state that particular day managed a pretty good imitation of Hobart's weather patterns since our arrival here on the 20th - 4 seasons in a day!!

Suffice to say it's been a very busy last couple of weeks for us. We were picked up in a taxi on the 13th of September, together with our hefty 116 kg of luggage, and we drove to Stansted in time to catch our Air Asia flight to Kuala Lumpur. Given that we were supposed to travel with 20 kg (check-in) and 7 kg of hand baggage each ( and were therefore more than double the limits), the check-in procedure with Air Asia and with those that followed before we finally arrived at Hobart International (really?) Airport five flights later was anything but fun. As we lined-up for each check-in, we had to pysche ourselves up for serious battle and you'd have found us ripping open bags, unpacking, packing and then re-packing them, checking stuff with Left Luggage, until we had finally managed to find an optimal solution, minimising our excess baggage fees whilst checking-in successfully (without triggering a riot at the check-in counter)!

Waiting outside our Disraeli Road flat for the cab to Stansted with our 116 kg of baggage!




Needless to say, if we were ever relaxed about flying with too much stuff previously, this notion has now been well and truly beaten out of us for good.


Air Asia Review
We caught 4 flights with Air Asia and as a result, I think we came away with a fair representation of what the airline offers an economy traveller. The flights were very reasonably priced, although you do seem to have to use KL as the central hub for all international travel. Perhaps we were lucky but all 4 flights departed to schedule and arrived on time (or even ahead of schedule). I'd best describe it as the EasyJet of long haul travel, where seats can be pre-allocated online at no additional cost. But after that, you pay for pretty much everything from in-flight entertainment (about £6 for the player) to meals and drinks, although again these can be pre-booked ahead of flying. In short, we felt like we received a value for money service and would use them again - but good to be aware of what you've paid for (and what you haven't) upfront.

Anyway, we arrived into Kuala Lumpur and enjoyed a couple of days' exploring Malaysia's capital city ahead of 3 nights on the beautiful and untamed island of Langkawi...

Highlights
  • Fish Spa & Reflexology - both new experiences for me and seem to be offered everywhere in KL. The Fish Spa basically involves sticking your legs (from the knee down) into an acquarium whereupon thousands of fish swarm in and feed off the excess skin until you've silky-smooth pins and tootsies.
  • Para-sailing above (and island hopping around) the 99 islands that make up the archipelago of Langkawi (103 islands in fact when the tide is out).
  • A new number 1 entry to my "Best Sunsets Ever" chartboard surveyed from the Babylon Beach Bar (awesome vibe and super-chilled) on Cenang Beach (Langkawi).
  • Fantastic value pretty much everywhere in Malaysia (from hotels and food through to shopping and transport), eg the Royal Chulan Hotel in KL where we enjoyed 5-star service at 3-star prices.
  • Wild monkeys - everywhere!!

Our experience at one of the many Fish Spa's in Kuala Lumpur


Sunset from Cenang Beach, Langkawi (outside Babylon Beach Bar)

Lowlights
  • Travelling with 116 kg of baggage between the two of us.
  • Missing breakfast at the Royal Chulan Hotel in KL (alarm set incorrectly). For anyone that has ever travelled with Brierlie, you may well be aware of just how important enjoying the complimentary breakfast is to her. Not a good start to the day, sends a nervous tingle up my spine to think of it...
  • Entirely inexplicable laptop mal-functions (mine and Brierlie's) as soon as we took off from London. They're both in with Hobart's Hypertronics at the moment but with so much critical information stored on mine, it feels like I've lost a limb.
  • And obviously, way up there is missing loved ones back in the UK ;-(



Unforced Errors
  • Shopping in Kuala Lumpur despite being ridiculously over-weight (baggage) before we even touched down.
  • Setting our alarm for 8.30 on what we thought was a 24-hour clock (and missing Royal Chulan's incredible and complimentary breakfast).

So to bring you up to date, we arrived from our adventures in Malaysia into Hobart early last week and since that time it's been seriously full-on and a hazy blur as we have studiously worked through out-of-control To-Do lists, ranging from sorting out bank accounts, tax file numbers (like National Insurance), settling in our new home (currently living with Craig, Brierlie's dad in his beautiful but uniquely eccentric house in Sandy Bay), looking for a car, fixing up phones (ongoing...), sorting out Medicare (equivalent of NHS), driving licenses, joining gyms, catching up and seeing friends and family... not to mention getting stuck in at the Drunken Admiral with gusto! We worked our first two shifts at the DA on Friday and Saturday nights - not the gentlest of starts however, doing over 140 covers on each night.

I will save a proper update on life here in Hobart so far and at the Drunken Admiral for my next update as my head's still spinning.

View over the river Derwent from Craig's house in Sandy Bay (Hobart)
...And to finish off, I'll include a random monkey shot - one of the 1,686 we took whilst we were staying on Langkawi.

Monday 13 September 2010

Post 3 : Hasta Luego...!

Sniff, sniff. Somebody pass me some tissues.

Goodness, it's hard to know what to say at this point. We returned after a fantastic week's holiday in Greece yesterday and today we set off for Tasmania (via Malaysia) in only a few hours. Bags are pretty much packed (although we're waiting for some washing to dry - come on British weather, give us a break!) but I keep thinking of things that I need to do before we go and my mind is working overtime.

Whilst at the same time I feel like a walking emotion, red raw and ripe for picking. Our good friend Mark just sent a farewell note with a You.Tube link (see below) which certainly struck a highly strung chord with me this morning after an emotional farewell with my parents and Sarah at Gatwick at 2 am yesterday morning, many "goodbye's" to lots of amazing friends yesterday during the day, a Last Supper at the Hare & Tortoise in Putney and then waved my brother and sister off to work this morning.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DArtWpCU-IE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DArtWpCU-IE

So it's with a very mixed bag of feelings that I (attempt to) zip up my over-stuffed bags, clear out my room (for the first time since we moved in to the flat back in 2001) for Sam to move in to, feed Teedle some special treat cheese gratings, consider how on earth we are going to avoid extortionate excess fares at Stansted later today (yes, I know - Stansted!!) and cross fingers that we haven't forgotten anything absolutely vital.

But as fragile as I may be feeling today, I am also very excited and I am so grateful to be embarking on this adventure together with Brierlie, safe in the knowledge that we have a whole host of friends and family waiting to meet us on the other side of the planet and ready to help us to get stuck into this next chapter...

And as I keep reminding myself and all our friends and family here in the UK, it's not "goodbye" at all. I have always hated "goodbye's" and will do what I can to avoid them. And ever since my first Spanish lessons back in 1994, I have had a particular affinity for "hasta luego" which translates (as I'm sure you don't need to be told) colloquially as "until later" which sums up perfectly how I feel about things as we face down the barrel of the Air Asia* flight that we'll be boarding in a few hours' time.

* Perhaps we will provide a review on this relative newcomer to the air industry (it's allegedly the Easy Jet of long haul travel - could be painful

Speaking of the flight, it's a strange one thinking about it. It's the first one-way itinerary that I have booked since my flight over from Hong Kong to London back in the summer of 1995 on my way to start at Warwick University. Looking back on the last 15 years, it's very easy to feel very nostalgic and I could easily get lost in thinking back over all the incredible experiences and adventures I have enjoyed whilst based out of the UK. In short, I have loved my time here and I feel like I have evolved (in both positive and less so ways) significantly since I moved to London in the back end of 1999. I have loved the weather and crowded tubes and roads a little less if truth be told but it has been a blast and I'm far from done with it yet. I cannot wait to come back soon and enjoy new adventures down the line. But what's absolutely irrefutable (sorry, no time for spell-check right now) is that it's the people that I have shared this period with that has really made it so incredibly special and memorable (aside from the Spoof evenings ;-)) for me and I will miss them dearly and I cannot wait for them to come and visit us (did I mention free accommodation?) and for when we come back to visit them...

It feels fitting to offer up some snaps with this particular blog capturing just a few of the fantastic evenings, trips and experiences that we have shared with some of my favourite people to say our "hasta luego's"...

After dinner at Busaba Ethai with Mark, Oliver, Phil, Rory, Simon W, Anna and us two


More of a Goodbye than an Hasta Luego - whilst I have made some very memorable trips in this fella (and loved this car in the way I now understand how a man can bond with a car), I do hope that we manage to sell it before I return in 2011!

Feeding Teedle some very creamy (grated) cheese - her favourite! I will miss Teedle and I'd like to think she'll miss me too! Even if just for the cheese supply.


Hasta luego Putney Lawn Tennis Club (PLTC) - for the relatively brief period I've been a member, I have loved my time at the club. This is me and my coach Stu after a particularly sweaty (for me) last coaching session.

The family in Greece on our week long sports and action-fest on Kos and the surrounding islands. Great trip, huge fun and lots of amazing memories!

On our last day of holiday, trying to re-create the infamous Toyota ad.

And some shots of London that we took when we drove ourselves round on our own late night London tour - an amazing city and somewhere that finally felt like "home".


Houses of Parliament

Good old fashion red phone box - not many of these in Tassie!
The Last Supper (12.09.10) @ the Hare & Tortoise, giving out some "presents"

The Last Supper gang

Thursday 2 September 2010

Post 2 : Packing Up & Shipping Out

Turning Life Upside Down : Step 2 : Box up your life and get it shipped


There's little else so far that has made this move seem much more real and imminent as sorting through 10+ years of life, working out what to take / what to leave / what to throw out and boxing it all up. Whilst we setout with a "ruthless" mindset to weedle out taking anything with us that wasn't absolutely essential, somehow we still ended up with 23 packages to ship!

Carnage in the bedroom
 Some random shipping trivia:

Strangest item shipped:
It's a close call between an Indiana Jones style leather whip and zebra spandex leggings
(All part of the fancy-dress collection, I assure you!)

Heaviest item shipped:
Brierlie's new KitchenAid food mixer (compact but so heavy!)

Most extravagant item shipped:
Simon:  4 x tennis rackets
Brierlie: boxes (upon boxes) full of handbags and shoes!

Most pointless item shipped:
3 x inflatable seagulls (where was the ruthless mindset here??)

Item most sorry to leave behind:
The Beamer ;-(
(Excluding Teedle (our flat cat), family and friends of course.)

Current consignment status:
Boxes packed, collected & enroute (we hope!)
 
Expected date of arrival:
8 - 12 weeks (with a hope and a prayer!)
 
...So now we're living out of a couple of suitcases essentially and that's far from ideal. Here's hoping that Brierlie's impressive shoe collection doesn't weigh the ship down too heavily...

23 packages ready to go
Blind descent

Bye bye stuff, hope to see you soon!