The Sydney Harbor Bridge, A Photographic Journey

Rather than spend yet another few hours at the gym yesterday, I decided it would be more fun to get my exercise crossing The Sydney Harbor Bridge. I certainly wasn’t alone in that thought, and I certainly exerted far less effort than all the other people jogging, biking and even powerwalking the path. But it was still a very worthwhile trip, even if I didn’t burn some serious calories.

On the Bridge

The first thing it’s important to note about crossing the bridge, is that even though the walking path is pretty seriously walled in from the traffic on one side, and the harbor on the other . . .

Caged In

. . . it’s still not a place for people afraid of heights.  Not only can you see straight down the entire time, but the ground under you also jiggles like a SoCal aftershock every time a train goes by.

The View Down

I bet most people also don’t know that you can climb to the top of one of the pylons, for a mere $9.50 (sorry there are no pics from there, because I didn’t have that much on me) which sure beats the nearly $200 that people pay every day to climb to the top of the arch, and doesn’t require you to wear the “bridge colored” jumpsuit, or be chained to a group of your fellow climbers.

Bridge Climbers

The $9.50 (if you happen to have that money handy) will also get you into a little museum inside the pylon, about the building of the bridge.  But I got a little taste of what the museum had to offer on the stairs leading to the entrance.

Inside the pylon

All in all, I would call the bridge crossing a very worthwhile journey.  Especially since all the postcards most souvenir shops here sell are a bit on the cheesy side, and the bridge offers you a great opportunity to take a few of your own.

Postcard Shot

You can check out the rest of the shots from my journey on my Flickr page.

Foreigners and Placeism

It didn’t take very long, and probably mostly because of my extraordinary ability to absorb media, to adjust to the Australian accent.  On a day to day basis, I can have several conversations, watch countless awfully produced televisions ads and read signs that say “speed hump” without thinking twice about it.

The only things that still throw me off are two particular Australianisms.  One is “How you going?” the Aussie’s way of saying “How are you?” “What’s up?” or “How is IT going?”.  And even though I can answer the question without hesitation, it still incites in me a desire to respond with what my American instincts would consider a misuse of grammar like, “I go fine”  or “It be well”.  And the other one the induces a bit of a shudder when I hear it is “Ta” yes, just “Ta.”  I think it’s a shortening of “That’s alright” which is the common response to “Thank you” out here, along with “No worries” which reminds me a bit of the Americanism “No problem” (an expression hammered out of my vocabulary long ago, by a boss who wouldn’t stand for the lackadaisical “Jamaican” nature of the response, and preferred the much more gracious “You’re welcome” (that’s still what I always say)).  But “Ta” like the Hawaiian “Aloha” also seems to mean thank you, hello, goodbye, and many other things I’m sure I haven’t figured out yet.  Personally I prefer “cheers”.

So since my daily interactions with Australians, are only peppered by the occasional language confusion, I forget that I am now the one with the accent.  It only takes one or two sentences before they ask “Are you on holiday?” or get more straight to the point with “Where are you from?”.  It’s easy to forget I’m a foreigner.  Sydney is like an odd collection of the neighborhoods I know from LA and NY, in look, pace, lifestyle and culture.  So unlike when I lived in Italy and felt as obviously American as I’m sure I looked (not that I wore a Mickey T-shirt or anything, but come on, the Europeans know Americans when they see them) I expect to blend in here like a eucalyptus tree.   And I pretty much do, until I start talking.  It’s then that I get a taste of what I’m sure every immigrant in the States gets at one point or another.  It’s pretty interesting being on the flip side of those accent induced conversations.

The other outsider viewpoint that being a foreigner has made me privy to, is an objective look at the practice of placeism.  Placeism, like all isms, is a bad thing, yet it is one that we accept into our everyday lives because it victimizes places, rather than people.  I myself have been guilty of placeism on many occasions.  It’s why I stopped telling people I was from Beverly Hills, often inducing drawn out conversations that go a little like this:

“Where are you from?”
“LA.”
“Where in LA?”
“West LA.”
“What part?”
“About 20 minutes from the coast” (45 by today’s traffic standards)
“Which area?”
“Between Hollywood and Santa Monica.”

That’s when people who know their maps would figure out I just covered a pretty large area of the city, and I would have to admit the truth, which was usually followed by:

“No, there is no West Beverly High.  I live in 90212 NOT 90210.  And no, I didn’t get a BWM on my 16th birthday.  But yes, I know people who did.”

I felt justified in my defensiveness, because judgements were often placed upon me because of where I was from.  And why shouldn’t they judge?  We all do.  But since I’m no longer in a place where I get why people from New Jersey say they are from New York (you’re really not), and us blue state residents feel compelled to make fun of the red states, I can tell you first hand that placeism is pretty pointless.

The Australians I’ve met have either vehemently defended where they were from, or preemptively made fun of it before anyone else could.  Each city seems to come with it’s only set of preconceptions.  Sydney is the urban active city, Melbourne following as a close second, while Brisbane and Adelaide are considered country, and Perth might as well not even been on the map.  Or at least, that is what I have gathered from these conversations, although I can’t really remember, because I don’t really care.  I came here completely free of any knowledge or preconceptions about any part of the country, and very willing to experience every part of it, good and bad.  So when people begin to launch into conversations about which places are dodgy or where the bogans live, I usually zone out because, in reality, I’d prefer to find out for myself.

So the next time you meet a foreigner, even if they seem to think that all Texans are George W. Bush, and all Californians are Paris Hilton, instead of launching into a well practiced diatribe in defense of your hometown, give them a chance to figure it out for themselves.  I, for one, will stop hiding the fact that I’m from Beverly Hills.  They can figure out for themselves that I don’t have a trust fund.  It shouldn’t take long.

Keep Watching the Skies

Even thought the east coast has seen it’s fair share of seasonal crossings (days that push 60 degrees in December, snow in April) and LA seems to be constantly stuck in a state of spring, this winter in Sydney has been, by far, the most confusing of my life.

To being with, weather reporting lacks a certain sense of specificity.  I know I could stand to have a better grasp of Celsius, but even though I’ve never understood why barometric pressure was so important, it never prevented me from getting the gist weather reports in the states.  And instead of offering additional information like UV ratings and pollen counts, Australian news programs opt to show a map of the entire country, accompanied by a series of wavy lines and numbers, which I think indicates wind speed or pressure or bunny rabbit density, I’m really not sure.  And I don’t understand why they are compelled to put up the entire map, when doing the local news.  Even the weather channel, a channel dedicated to worldwide reporting, knows how to zoom into specific cities.  You would think that with the overwhelming majority of Australia’s population parked in six major cities, they would do the same thing here.

Perhaps the most confusing practice in both television weather reporting, and the only slightly more helpful website, is the use of a term that I think should be banned from all proper reporting . . . fine.  Fine is a relative term.  Fine to one person might not be fine to another.  So unless there is a scale related to temperature, cloud cover, humidity and all other things weather related, with tick marks indicating when one might use the term fine as opposed to crappy, I think they ought to stick with sunny or cloudy.  The terminology only gets worse on a rainy day.  I have yet to figure out the difference between a shower or two, a chance shower or two, a few showers, coastal showers (almost all of the dang city is coast) and chance showers, mostly fine.  Although I will give them a certain credit for trying.  In a city where the cloud cover moves faster than the public transportation, and it rains in full sunlight, it can’t be too easy to predict what might happen next.  Like a saltwater croc, the weather just sneaks up on you.

The lack of heating systems in most buildings, also does not help the day to day confusion.  Relentless sunlight will heat the bedroom to boiling during the day, while the wind getting sucked in through the kitchen window chills my coffee before I’ve even added the milk.  And even though you can dress to stay plenty warm during the colder nights, if you sit still long enough, your fingers turn blue and the tip of your nose feels like a snowy mountain peak.  To all my friends who knit, consider inventing some finger only gloves and nose cozies.  You could make a fortune out here.

But for the most part, I really can’t complain.  It’s far from freezing rain pelting me in the face, deceptively deep puddles of sludge that remain on certain street corners until June, and being forced to wear the same pair of salt stained boots for two weeks straight.  And the swiftly changing conditions here become a sort of theater of the sky.  The rainbows are intensely vibrant, often set against deep gray clouds that sweep in and obscure them behind a vail of distant rain.  The water in the harbor changes color with the sky, going from a vivid sapphire blue to a placid mercury gray.  And the fluffy flock of clouds turn a cotton candy pink at sunset.  So I’ll enjoy all these “fine” days while they last, before it’s as dry as a “nun’s nasty” or a “dead dingo’s donger” outside.

Sydney Sunset