Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Home Sweet Home!

HEY!

Well, it's been a long time, but yes I'm still here :)  Been home for a month now and man has it been hectic!!!  Loadsa emails, loadsa letters, my Graduation Ceremony, catching up with friends, and of course starting Work!  Haha, so far it;s been fun seeing everyone from last summer and also making new friends:)  Going out again with the guys at Deutsche and what with the open bars and random events just remind why I even signed the contract in the first place:D  BUt yeah, first week was like networking and team building- but with a twist.  Rather than shipping us off to some adventure course, we did a "community challenge" type thing, where we basically help a local  under priveleged primary school, by bascially redecorating the place up.  It was fun seeing the kids reactions to our hard manual labour!  haha, i think we were the msot expensive cowboy painters ever!  Last week  was all financial math and stuff and then we had an exam on friday with a 70% pass mark!!!  Hehe, actually it wasn't all that bad, cos the teacher was really really good and the building and catering was fantastic, so all in all it was a really enjoyable learning experience.  This week we're training computer reltated stuff all the way til October.  Yeah, enough said :p

Anyways, gotta run.  Hope everyone is well, and I'll update the last installment of my blog about Tokyo soon!

John.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Day 64:Japan!!!

Yay,
 
We landed in Tokyo last night and man it is been a hectic night!  First it was like 9:30pm when we landed and it took us 3 hours just to get into the centre if town.  Tired, hungry plus no one spoke english we had to change our route 4 times just to get to the first hostel − Tokyo INternational.  Too bad it was closed at 11pm!!  So we had to find the YMCA. With no street namesa or clue of where we were we kinda randomly asked a guy on the street and he was really helpful.  IN fact everyone is really helpful and go out of their way to check obn their docomo mobile phones the directions.  Well after we found the ymca, it turned out they were full.  Haha, so we booked for the next evening and got recommended the expensive Tokyto Green Hotel.  It was like 2am now and the room was 18500 yen for a twin room.  Managed to get it down to 13000 :)
 
First impressions
 
Everyone is really friendly, even if their english is not so good.  Also, everyone thinks I am japanese and start speaking in japanese.  My response is a blank stare followed by "do you seak englsih?".  Hehe.  Also the TV is crazy here.  ON the plane we watched Masqerade where people dress up and re enact some kinda strange scene.  You may have seen the ping pong one.  Also this morning there was a tv show where competitors had to guess which woman, was really a man.  hehe, great way to stasrt the morning.
 
 
Anyways, gonna explore more of this crazy city!
John.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Lovely Photos :D

Check out some new crazy photos here from Australia:

www.flickr.com/photos/johntang

Day 61: Adventure Capital of the World!!!

Yahooo!

We've just arrived in Cairn's travelling up the east coast of Australia and it's bloody been awesome!!!  I guess my pre conception about Australia was outdoor adventure sports and man have we been going crazy out here :D  Today is our last day in Australia and I topped the whole adventure by going up 14000 feet into the sky and jumping out of a plane at Mission Beach!!!  Never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined myself doing something so crazy as a skydive, but hey, it was bloody awesome!!!  I mean this trip has been about facing my fears- of heights and deep water and I think I'm dead chuffed to have now completed a trio, thanks to a little nudge here and there from Oscar :D  Open Water Scuba Diving in Fiji.  Climbing the Sydney Harbour bridge In Sydney.  And now Skydiving in Mission Beach.  What a shit hot time!

Since we left Sydney we've travalled up the east Coast on the Oz Experience bus which is basically like a tour bus with twenty-something guys and gals looking for an adventure.  Met some great people and made some awesome friends along the way up :)  But what makes it really cool are the activities we get packed into less than 3 weeks!  In Barrington tops we went Night White Water Rafting which was just wicked.  In Crescent Head we had surfing lessons and I've just fallen in love with it!!  In Byron Bay we went to the infamous Cheeky Monkeys bar and danced til the early morn :D  We then headed up to Nimbin to check out the hippy capital of Australia which was just funny.  Just outside Surfers Paradise we went Zorbing, where you get rolled down a massive huill in a big infaltable ball filled with 80 litres of water, which had us in hysterics!  In Hervey Bay we took 1 day tour of Fraser Island- the largest sand island in the world which was spectacular.  In Kroombit we stayed on a Cattle ranch and had a go at goat rodeo, bucking bronco and clay pigeon shooting.  Then in Airlie Beach we went sailing for 3 days around the Whitsunday's islands on a Maxi Racign Yacht called 'Matador' which was absolutely awesome!  We lived on the boat for 3 days and made some great friends and had some great times playing 'I never' and chilling on the deck.  Also made use of my Scuba Diving License to check out the Great Barrier Reef.  In Magnetic Island we stayed in a really cool beach resot hostel called Base and what was supposed to be a quiet night in, turned out to be a hysterical laugh at the bar where it was 'ladies night'.  Me, Oscar and a few more Oz Experience crew entered a 'dress like a lady' competition and had to prance around and lapdance on a poor gal.  haha, I managed to win with a name like ' Miss Bancock', which I'm not sure is a good thing, but it really was a hysterical night!  And finally this morning in Mission Beach I woke up at 5am to face my fears and go for a 14000 feet skydive!  F*ck me!  The first 5 seconds were out of this world, then a minute of freefall was just amazing, before 5 minutes of gliding down, admiring the sunrise and checking out the beach from a birdseye view.  What a rush!!!  Absolutely mad, but so chuffed I did it :D  On our way to Cairns we held crocodiles and snakes at a Crocodile farm, Oscar did a mad Bungee Jump (the crazy fool) and now we're here about to party our last ngiht away in australia at the Wool Shed bar. 

Australia has been bloody awesome, and I think the Oz Experience has made the difference to my stay.  Just such a super time along the way and the people have made the difference.  Tommorrow we fly to Tokyo for the last leg of our trip and we're really looking forward to seeing the cultural explosion and contrast!  I'll flesh out this blog some other time, but for now hope every one is having a great summer.

See ya later!
John.

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Day 45: G'day from Down Under

Yoo hoo!
 
So we landed in Sydney on Saturday morning and it is a very beautiful city and very very complete.  It has it's landmarks like the Sydney harbour Bridge and the Sydney Opera House.  It has a long shopping centre with George Street and Pitt Street which serves as the "Oxford Street" of Sydney, and loadsa malls in the market square area.  The best ones are Queen Victoria buidling which joins onto the Westfield (from america!) and walks onto the David Jones department store which is a 2 building, 7 floor equivalent of John Lewis (not quite Selfridges though).  We have the financial district glass skyscrapers intermingled on George Street area.  We have a beaches in the form of Bondi/Manly and Coogee.  We have Darling Harbour which has a great big aquarium and maritime museum.  Finally we have a seemingly massive chinese and otherwise oriental community outside of china itself it seems.
 
All in all I'm presented by a city that just reminds me so much of every city I have been to.  Just walking around different parts of town I suddenly have a strange feeling I am in London.  Other times in central station feels like I am in Hong Kong with so many chinese people speaking cantonese.  Gazing up at skyscraper skyline just reminds me of New York.  It's winter here which is strange in July but it's like raining and damp and cold so the weather reminds me of London.  Around The Rocks it is the oldest part of Sydney and has hints of London especially the stone Harbour Bridge base.  The harbour bridge itself is like a very very big tower bridge but less blue.  The skyline is engineered like New York financial district with great viewing points from Milson's Point, the bridge and the opera house.  George street is the main shoping street and reminds me of Oxford street back home.  All in all, everything here is just bigger, newer and improved version of a city.  Makes sense I guess cos it is quite a new city and has done a great job of taking inspiration from every other city in the world and made a new improved metropolis. 
 
Aussie Football
But anyways, enough reminiscing.  We've been in Sydney for 3 days now and have done a fair bit.  First evening we went to see a Aussie Football game- Sydney Swans vs. someone else.  $27 for the tickets, free drink and a cap so not a bad evening.  As for the footy itself, it is hard to understand how to play and quite violent!  Like some guy got kicked in the head and got knocked onto the floor, and not like english football rolling around in pain..no he was like unconscious.  Another bit a guy got rugby tackled even though he chucked the ball away a second ago.  Strange strange.  The rules are basically 18 guys on each team, playing on an oval pitch, and they have to kick the ball through 2 rubgy posts for 6 points.  There are also another post either side of the main posts which score 1 point.  The pithc is oval cos it is a converted cricket field.  Lovely, thats all I could figure out.  After 4 quarters of 20 minutes with very random overtime, we ended up sitting int eh cold and rain for 3 hours and I haved to say, I won't be going back to a aussie football game anytime soon.  Fun, but just a once only experience.
 
The Skyline
Naturally we spent a day exploring the notherly Circular Quay area of sydney with the massive Sydney Harbour bridge, Sydney Opera House and botanical Gardens.  It was a Sunday so there some free outdoor music which set a very nice tone for the area, coupled with the sunshine, magnificant view and the aroma's from the coffee festival, it was a great introduction to Sydney.  walking through the cool market sunday, and then turning around to see the city skyline was magnificant.  The view from Milson's point is even more spectacualr.  Opera House to the left, Bridge to the right and the center piece of the Skyscraper skyline was beautiful.  Milson's point was engineered for one purpose it seems, and it works.
 
Bridge Climb
Now when you're scared of heights like me, it's probably not a good idea to, well, go on high things.  Well, it's fine in enclosed buildings like the Empire state, Sears, and Rockerfeller, but climbing up the structure of a 150metre high bridge is probably a bad idea.  Haha, either way I ended up going on the Sydney Bridge Climb which was daunting to say the least.  Basically you get to go right to the top of the arc that holds the structure of the bridge up :s  Crossing it the previous day to Milson's Point was a tester to see how high and big it was, and it was bloody humongous.  Not quite as long as the Golden Gate, but just absolutely massively wide and high.
 
I was half expecting the bridge climb to be a shady affair of "here'd the ladder, off you go, see you back at 5 :s".  But actually no, it was a very classy, space age affair.  They give you some proper suiting where you strap everything like glasses, gloves and jackest to.  You're not allowed to take any loose stuff like watches, for obvious reasonl.  You also get a useful strap and are harnessed into the structure at all times.  You get a pre climb training and have to sign the usual waivers of liabilty :s  hehe, but once you start the walk under the bridge up the ladders, with the cars driving right past your face, and the trmble of the train on the ladder, it is a very very spectacualr view of Sydney.  And I'm glad I did it :D  haha, okay it wasn't that bad, but the bit about the spectacular view was true.  Something like 1439 steps took you from base to the top of the bridge.  Scariest bits were the see through mesh flooring areas where you could see what you would land on if you fell..  hehe, just don't look down!  But no, it was easier than I thought and a great way to view the sydney skyline.
 
I NEED MEAT!!
So on with our "saving money" saga.  Oscar checked his account balance yesterday, and he is at 0-zero-nil!  :s  Not a good sign, but luckily he is borrowing some money so hopefully it will clear soon.  But we have been doing some proper backapaking and actually doing away with our prententious ways and skimping ans saving money where we can.  Like accomodation we stayed the first night at a rather luxurious hostel in Central- the Central YHA - which was a converted hotel.  $36 a night so we moved down the road to the maze hostel for $21 a night, plus the third night gave us $10 discount and we got upgraded to a 2 person private dorm cos our keys for the 6 person dorm didnlt work :D  Freebies are always welcome to our cause! 
 
Food wise we have actually been doing our own "cooking".  I say cooking, but not sure if boiling spaghetti and opening a tin of baked beans counts!  Haha, it's such a laugh going down the grocery store and hunting for the cheapest loaf of bread, cheapest tin of beans \, tins of tomatoes, milk etc.  We were even laughing during dinner when trying to plan a 7 day meal plan to last the 3 weeks in Australia, mainly cos the thought of pasta with tinned beans/tomatoes/sauce was hilarious.  Either that, or we were laughing in denial and little peice of our pallet was dying inside.  But yeah, 3 days so far with no meat!
 
Our daily meal consists of Muesli for Breakfast; Peanut Butter Sandwiches for lunch; and then spaghetti with tinned beans/tomoates for dinner.  Lovely, but not very appetising to say the least.  Lol, I think I am having meat withdrawal symptons!  Can't wait til I get home and ahve some proper grub.  Also been missing my daily Pret!  All day breakfast..oooh...crispy bacon, saucy relish, tender sausage..mmmmmm...all day breakfast.  Schucks, my mouth is watering.
 
Whitsunday cruise
So even though we are running low on money, we still need entertainment up the east coast, seeing that we paid so much to get out here in the first place.  2 places we were recommended not to miss were Fraser Island and Whitsunday.  but rather than have 2 crap activities, we decided to do 1 properly,  So a cruise on a super fast maxi cruise boat around the Whitsunday islands is the order of the day!  Gonna book something today hopefully :D
 
Right it's 11:10am here at the mo (GMT +10), so gonna go sort that out and explore the beach later.  Raining at the moment, but luckily I've had years of English weather training.  Tomorrow we leave at 6am (!) to Barrington on the first leg of the Oz Experience up the east coast.  Surf Camp after that i think, so not sure if there will be internet around.  But in case, have fun, and I will speak to you guys soon!
 
John.
 
 
tan level: fading
hunger level: need meat!
weather: cold and raining

Friday, July 21, 2006

Photos

Ooh, I put some more photos up too.  Internet is not bad price if you can find it.  $3 an hour, plus inrestricted access to the OS.  Yeah, but quite hard to get to when we were on the island, so doing a blitz now before we leave.

www.flickr.com/photos/johntang

See ya later!
John.

Day 35: Seven days in Paradise

Wow!

So we just spent 4 amazing days on a sunny island in Fiji called Nananu and it was bloody beautiful! Fine white sandy beaches, sunshine, kayaking, corals, volleyball, scantily clad ladies, great home cooked food, and lovely people just made this camp on Nananu just truly awesome. Also I did my open water Scuba Diving certificate here and seeing that I can't even swim that well, I'm dead chuffed with that! More on that later.

LAX
First thing I need to talk about was the flight out of LAX- man that airport is dead boring! So bloody crap it's unbelieveable and spending 12 hours waiting for our flight makes it even more unbearable. Well after sleeping in the car the night before we rolled into LAX at 12pm to return our car, but our flight wasn't util 11:30pm! So we decided rather than walk around with our massive backpacks we'd explore the airport. Yeah well, after 15minutes of exploring we had exhausted the 5 shops that they had so that was that. Anyways, we killed time by lounging and playing cards until the checkin desk for Air Pacific opened. The stupid thing was that after we checked in, they gave us seats totally in opposite ends of the plane so we quickly got them to fix that. The other stupid thing was that after we got tickets we had to take our luggage to a strange area across from the checkin so that they couild scan our luggage and then we had to go back to the checkin desk to confirm our seats. yeah, just a bit confusing. Anyways, luckily the flight itself was very comfortable and the food was nice too.

Fiji
The first thing we quickly learned when we landed in Fiji was the concept of "Fiji Time". Being a very big island everyone is just so laid back which is perfect for our week off to recover from america. So bascially Fiji time means "whenever". You order a taxi for 15 minutes, it will arrive "whenever". You want to wait for a bus that comes in half an hour? It will come "whenever". Your morning dive is at 8:30? It will be at "whenever". Hehe, you get the picture. Reminds me of that advert for Malibu- yeah mun! But seeing that this week was for relaxing it's nice to just be laid back. So we get a cab to our hotel- the Grand West Villa - and I have to say it is really nice and new. Nice pool, nice clean rooms, nice restaurant and bar. We were however told that there was a beach 5 minutes away, which wasn't a lie as such, but the beach in "New Town" was very horrible dirty black sand affair, in a town that was far from new. So after that dissapointment we were feeling abit dejected so we decided to at least get some quotes for diving courses. Now the first quote was FIJI$520 for a 3 dayu open water course which was convenient as it was in the New Town beach. We then headed into Nadi town for lunch and more quotes via bus. We waited for an hour and the funny thing is that random people will hoot you to see if you wanted a "lift" to whererver you needed to go. BUt it's a dogy affair cos they ain't no taxi and they'd probably take you to a ditch and rob and rape you. hehe, okay thats an exaggeration. But either way, after an hour of waiting for bus that was supposedly imminent (in Fiji time) we decided to go for a random driver. Think of images of cars and buses in New Delhi. Old run down bangers Toyotas with cheesy 70's fur covered seats. Also I made the mistake of sitting in the back, where there was no legroom so I had to literally sit sideways on. Haha, Oscar also had no seatbelt so we were actualy paying money to sit in a death trap :s We did however make it to town and paid the FIJI$4 for the lift so it was good. Fiji$1 is about 33 pence so it's a good exchange rate. Food is cheapish which is good too.

Nadi Town
The town is very run down and yes, they have a McDonalds! After lunhc we found another quote for diving and get this. It was the same 3 day Open Water course on a remote desert island, with all inclusive transfers and accomodatino for 4 nights, all for FIJIJ$531!!! Thats just $11 more than Nadi and it's actually on a gorgeous beach! Well, naturally we snapped it up and the very next day we were on our way in a minibus to the North Fiji to catch a speedboat to Nananu island resort. Our first thought that maybe we got conned cos it was too good to be true so on the mini bus there we were like "um, are were gonna get robbed now?". But then other people got picked up that were no native and we were on our way. the drive was nice cos we got to see the contry side of Fiji with palm trees and mountains but that was nothing compared to actually on the speedboat approaching Nananu island. Wowza! Imagine a summer camp with a hint of the hospitilaty of Adam Sandler's "50 first kisses" and the island off of Lost or "The Beach" and you will be close to my first encounter of paradise. I've never really been to a beach, nor had the interest of visiting beached before, but man oh man, this really was like how it is in the postcards. We were greeted by swaying palm trees and native Fijians, though the camp is run by Englsih geezers and everyone who visits is british or australian. As we walked onto the sandy, coarse and warm sand and through the hand carved "Welcome to Nananu Island Resort", we just knew that yeah! this was exaclty what we were expecting of Fiji and how it should have been from ther beginning.

We walked through the camp complete with Volleyball net and Dive Shop and onto the reception where we got our breifing from a scouser, which was a welcome voice to hear seeing that we had been away from home for so long. We then found our dorm's, booked up for the diving to start the next morning with a really cool German dude called Christian and got some kayaks out. Stupidly, Oscar decided he wanted to Kayak to a distant beach like 3 miles out, even though he had never kayaked before. haha, even more stupidly I went along with it and what with Oscar kayaking in circles most of the time, we got there in an hour. Though, what a bummer, there were corals in shallow water so we had to turn back so we didnlt break them, and the sun was starting to set too. An hour later it was like 6:30pm and it was like pretty dark and yup, we got a bollocking cos we were suppose to return the kayaks by 5:30, or at least before sunset so they could search for missing people in sunlight. Hehe, after that they scribbled in big black writing in the hire book "KAYAKS MUST BE RETURNED BY 5:30PM!".

Diving
I didn't think there was a stereotypical diving instructor, but everyone here is really friendly and like "hey dude! How's it going?" Hehe, I guess it is more of a stereotypical sun, surf, beach guy/gal. But it does make learning more fun. We had to read a book about the theory of scuba diving like how long you can stay in water and safely breath compressed air etc. We then learnt how to put together our scuba gear and started diving. 8:30am start, multiplied by Fiji Time meant 11am into the water. Hehe, but that always gave us time for breakfast at least of cornflakes and powdered milk. The island is fully self powered so hot showers, milk, running fresh water etc. is a luxury. But hey, being on a gorgeous beach kinda makes up for all that. So the first 2 days we had 4 training dives, and basically involved going under water and doing various scary things like taking off your jacket, breathing apparatus (the regulator), weights and mask- and then putting it back on again. OKay, not all at the same time, but still daunting for me, seeing that I can't actually swim that well. I really hated taking my mask off, cos the mask also covered your nose and I kept on taking water up my nose when I put the mask on filled up with sea water. But either way, on the 3rd day I passed it all and we went for "fun dives" to actually see real corals and fishes which was amazing! Cool thing is the "Navy Seal roll off the speedboat", though they push you in so you don't get much chance to get worried about sinking. There are truly amazing reefs here and though the visibilty is not quite the same as in all the pictures, it is still very very cool to be underwater and swimming around like a big goofy fish. Your whole body is light and suspended in water and feels like a whole new world which makes it even more exciting. Notable fish was a white tipped Shark, though they don't attack people...unless provoked, so I steered clear of that one.

Food
The dinner on the island was absolutely delicious! It was made by a native fijijan who I ordain as "masterchef Nina", who is your tyoical round, short always laughing grandma. She really is lovely, and the dinner is just like home cooked grub. Rice, potatoes, veg curries, salads, chilli beef, spaghetti bolognese....YUM!! And it is a buffet too so eat, eat, eat! :D The best night was "Fiji Night" to introduce the westener to the delights of Fijian culture. Dinner was ground roasted chicken, fish, potatoes, vegetables and the most succulent lamb I have ever, ever had! Yum! Haha, I am licking my lips right now, but yeah, it was probably the best meat meal I have had on this entire trip (I say meat meal, cos Skip Jacks was seafood, and yummy in a different class). Yeah, so getting carried away by foos again, love it. After dinner was traditional fiji dancing, followed by beers (local fiji bitter), and then a Kava Ceremony, which is like a tea ceremony, but with a ground up plant called Kava. Supposedly a narcotic, it was suppose to also make your lips go numb, but I think I had too much beer allready, so didn;lt quite have the desired effect, but it was nice. Tastes like doughy, mud water. I do have to say though, eating here gives me a bad tummy everyday so I'm on the shitter alot. To much fibre and sea water i guess.

Beach
Though Fiji was suppose to be a week of lounging, we quickly found ourselves on aquite a busy schedule with the Diving. Only 2 dives a day, but in Fiji time, that meant it was dinner by the time we got back from the 2nd dive of the day. So 4 nights at this tropical island became 5 nights, just so we could actually chill and explore and appreciate the beautiful surroundings and sunsets. So that was the whole fo yesterday. Just lounging in hammock for the morning, then hiking to a secluded beach on the other side of the island up some mountain. We thought the fron beach was nice, the back beach was even better. Literaly secluded, the sand was nice cos it was coarse like very shelly. The water was clear and warm and the sun was shining down. I have to meantion, it is actually their Winter over here, cos naturally we are on the other side of the world from home. But man, what a winter! It is still so nice over here, like a very fine spring day back home and actually probably the best tiome to visit cos I can only imagine it getting very very hot in the real summer here.

So on the other beach we topped up our all-over-body tan, and made it our personal challenge to open a coconut- partly cos we were hungry and partly cos once we discovered how hard it was just to get the outer husk off and after half an hour of trying we didn't want to turn back and face defeat. Luckily after an hour we got the damn thing open using but only the strength of our fingertips and a big hard rock..grrrr! It was very sweet (and tasty) success!

Money
Yeah, we are running low on money, Dangerously low. We've realised that America was very very very expensive, expecially the car bit of the road trip. So we are literally down to our last grand. Luckily in Fiji I have only spent a couple of hundred squid so not too bad i guess. I hear Australia is cheapish and Tokyo can be cheap, but I think I with our pretentious tastes, we are gonna starve before we get back to UK. Haha, we'll see when we get there.

Tomorrow we fly out to Sydney, so for now Goodbye! Nananu island will stay in my memories forever. Speak to you soon!
John.


tan level: body cathing up with arms and legs

music: jack johnson/

bowel movements: watery



Thursday, July 13, 2006

Day 30: California!

Hey all!

So we're sitting in the Airport in LA and waiting for our flight.
Thought I'd update this cos I left out some stuff from before. Plus
we arrived 1pm to return the car and the flight to Fiji aint til
11:30pm..we are making ourselves cosy.

First things first, the weather in California is awesome but the place
itself is a real mixed bag! It's our last day in America *sniffles*. Can't believe it and yeah,
america has grown on me, I'm gonna miss it! But to catch up, so far
we started off in San Diego, just in time to celebrate July 4th on
mission beach; then moved along to the super beaches (venice/santa
monica/muscle beach) of Santa Monica just east of LA itself; cruised
down Rodeo Drive and visited malls in Beverly Hills; explored
Hollywood and visited Universal Studios; and now we're in San
Fancisco! Phew, all in a week:D

San Diego
So we arrived in San Diego after a very long drive from Flagstaff via
Pheonix. The fun part was when we passed a sign "next right Mexico"
and then a few miles down the road we end up at a "border control".
Haha, I thought I had taken a wrong turning somewhere but it was for
mexicans entering usa. So it was the 4th July celebrations and we
ended up meeting some random ladies from England and heading down to
Mission beach with some coronas and wine we picked up from the grocery
store. Not the most stimulating conversations I have ever had, but
just sitting on the beach with the fireworks in the background and a
corona in my hand kinda set a nice tone for my impression of
California. We didn't see much of San Diego but the area we stayed in
was really nice, trendy and lively in the evening. Think of Covent
Garden but with newer & nicer shopfronts and bars. The next day we
checked out and headed down to Seaworld which was amazing! Just how
they train dolphins and killer whales to jump and listen to their
trainer is absolutely great! The best shows were the killer whale and
dolphins doing their acrobatics, but there was also a cool night show
that was like a spoof of daytime shows, but with sea lions and
monkeys. All the shows had a "wet zone", where the dolphins or whales
were trained to splash a wave over the audience. Actually, also the
RL Stine 4D thing was pretty cool too, but you got abit wet. We left
San Diego in the evening and pretty much missed what the town had to
offer- I think I'd like to come back and explore some time in the
future.

LA
We rolled up in Santa Monica the following day and it was a similar
story. Great looking area with trendy bars and shops. The hostel on
2nd & broadway was just in a superb location! 3rd street was a long
high street "promenade" with loadsa great shops and a mall.

The first day in Santa Monica we headed straight for the beach.
Walked down the santa monica beach, onto venice beach and passed by
muscle beach. The weather was absolutely superb and walking by the
cool waves of water was awesome! Muscle beach is cool cos not only is
there an outdoor gym with muscle men strutting their stuff, but also
basketball courts with some real street ball games happening. We then
headed down to Hollywood via Santa Monica Boulevard and I have to say
LA itself is a bit of a dump. Not quite a ghetto land as I had
imagines but still a dump. As for Hollywood itself, there is one long
street called Hoolywood Boulevard, but again it is a bit of a dump
too! Some nice cinemas like the Mann Chinese theatre and also the
walk of fame, but all laced with grubby souvineer shops. Abit of a
dissapointment really, and I can only imagine what a bigger
dissapointment it would be for someone to come to "Hollywood" in
search of their big break in showbusiness. However, to cheer
ourselves up we decided to check out Hooters :) Now we were expecting
some kinda seedy gentlemans club with food. To our surprise we found
a family diner with girls with big breasts. Basically they actually
try to make it feel tacky but it was very much like the last scene in
that Adam Sandler film "Big Daddy". Hehe, the food was actually quite
nice though and not too expensive.

Second day we went up to Universal Studios which was really cool. We
decided to upgrade to the vip ticket so we could feel prententious and
skip all the queues. The rides like back to the future were really
dated but T2 3D was really cool still cos it used live action & 3D
glasses. Actually we've seen a lot of 3D stuff, like they had Shrek
4D there which was really good.

Third day Oscar & I decided to go our own separate ways. He wanted to
goto the 6 flags magic mountain thing (which he says is absolutely the
best theme park he has ever been to, though he has been feeling ill
ever since!) and I decided to to explore more of LA myself. So I
dropped him off to the theme park in the morning and drove off around
town.

Graduating from LA school of driving
Driving in LA is a real tricky affair, not as least as the highway
management is as awful as it is. But other drivers are quite
malicious like when you try to change lanes they speed up like to try
and ram you. But anywaus, after having the car all to myself today
and cruising down the highways, I have to re iterate how crap the
highway management is! Roads are in terrible condition; signage is
absolutely diobolical in that if they are not covered by shrubs then
they actually have no continuation from one another; exits on the
interstate have no numbering yet so tracking where you are is hard;
and even with 6 lane interstates they intend to expand even more
lanes! :S It's like hard enough to change lanes as it is with maniac
drivers. The worst thing is that sections of the interstates are
pitch black with no lamps, no cat eyes and non reflective signs, so
driving up to pick Oscar up after the game was tricky! Anyways, even
with these slight hiccups I somehow managed to have a really nice
(&scratch free) day cruising the roads of LA. And if I can drive
here, I feel comfortable driving anywhere!

My Day cruising LA
It is nice to spend some time doing exactly what you want. So after
getting a bit lost on the way back into town after dropping Oscar off,
I managed to drive and navigate back onto the Santa Monica Boulevade,
Route 66 :) I decided to check out Beverly Hills so cruised down
Rodeo Drive and Sunset Boulevard. Basically think back to that film
Clueless, where there are palm tree clad streets, nice sunshine, and
massive mansion houses. I checked out the westfield mall in beverly
hills and temporarily forgot where I parked my car. The car park is
massive, so I had to get a parking attendant to whizz me around in his
golf kart thing whilst I clicked my car key. I was adament someone
had jacked my car but luckily found it like the other side of the car
park. Next I cruised back to Santa Monica and parked up (though the
car park was supposedly full), checked out the mall there and strolled
down 3rd street promenade. I have to say again, Santa Monica is a
great place to be! Great beach, great weather, great shops, great
food...what more do you need!? One thing that is great about
california is the parking. Well, there isn't like big open free
parking but every parking complex I went to was like reasonably price
or free for the first few hours, unlike New York which was trying to
tax us everything! In the evening I rounded to day off at the Staples
Center, home of the infamous LA Lakers...but that night I was there to
cheer the ladies NBA team on- yup the LA Sparks. Haha, actually the
previous day we came to see a game too and it was great! Though, I
can watch basketball all bloody day and not get bored- I just love the
game!

Sports
The funny thing before a bball game and the baseball game we went to
was the American national anthem before each game. Hmm, why oh why??
Haha, one observation is that the MLB and NBA are supposedly "World
Series"!? Haha, not sure how that can be since only American teams
enter them! So basically I'd say they like to sing their national
anthem because they believe they are competing against other
countries...of all had invitations lost in the post.

False Advertising
This talk of the self confessed, all american dominated "World
Series", brings my discussion onto advertising standards in the US- or
lack of it. For example, there was a memorable ad that started by
asking "Does your car give you 66 MPG?" as a sales pitch, then they
present a list of cars. Now at this point I was expecting cars that
actually gave you better petrol consumptin, but NO, just bog standard
30 mpg. In general shops will make outrageous claims and basically
not live up to it.

Interlude
Okay back to the bball, which I have to say were 2 great games where
the team I was supporting actually won (go sparks)! A fun thing they
have in the basketball game are the interlude entertainment when they
have a time-out or break etc. Like "name that tune", or "dance for
your dinner" where the outrageous dancers get a free pizza; or "silly
cam" where you pull silly faces on the big screen so everyone can
see.; and some kinda half time show like acrobats or break dancers.
Basically anything to keep the americans from falling asleep. Imagine
if they had the same for the football back home when there was a foul
or half time. So my suggested analogies for English football games.
Name that tune could easily be translated to british version, but
maybe with football anthems. Silly Cam would sought after the biggest
beer gut. Dance for dinner, would be renamed "danced for beer".

One more afgter thought though- does a female basketball team have
male cheerleaders? Answer is no, instead they use kids.

Route 1
So, after our spell in LA and outskirts it was time to move north to
San Francisco, and what better way to get up there than by cruising
down scenic route 1! Just a spectacular drive by the coast line,
through twisty mountains and through little sleepy beachy towns. Just
crusing with the windows down, sunshine and freah sea air is
spectacular.

Word of warning though, part of the route 1 goes onto the highway 101,
so if you pass by Port Hueneme just before Oxnard/Ventura then don't
take the "coastal scenic route", cos there is actually no coast there
at all! Plus to get back to the highway there was a massive
detour...around the malls and new housing estates. Hmm, sounds like
the whole "scenic route" was a big advertising gimmick!

Spanish Villa Influence
But anyways, once we got back onto the interstate it was back to
beautiful views. We stopped off at Santa Barbara which again was just
beautful. Just being in California you can really see the Spanish
influence over the living and buildings. This is true to history
since Spanish settlers claimed California all those some time in the
past before Mexcio gave it up to the US of A as another state.
Anyways, the weather couple with the beach fronts and beautiful
buildings just remind me of a nice spanish villa (well what I'd
imagine as a spanish villa since I haven't been to one before). San
Diego, Santa Monica, Santa Barbara and now San Francisco all have
buildings with a pretty villaesque taste. All definetely somewhere
that I'd consider living.

Big Sur
Part of route one was spent driving through a really twisty moutain
side track and through the "Big Sur". After like 2 hours of twists
and turns we were feeling sick so stopped off at this grill in the
middle of the mountain and had a really tasty Buffalo burger. Tastes
a bit like beef but lighter.

San Francisco
So that brings us to our current and final stop- San Francisco.
Everyone we have met along the trip has told us how great San Fran is
but when we rolled up at midnight down Ellis Street with no Gas our
first impression (albeit a false one) was a negative one, but I have
to stress it has now since changed! First thing we noticed was the
very British temperature- cold, wet and foggy mainly due to the fact
San Fran was on the coast of the Pacific and very north. Second thing
we noticed when walking from our car to the hostel were the druggies,
beggars, needles and hoes :s Haha, basically we were staying in a
shithole, so reknowned later on we found Ellis street features in
a lonely planet travel book as a very dodgy area. Hehe, luckily we
weren't raped or mugged, the hostel itself was actually decent, and to
be fair none of the shady characters actually approached us.

In the morning we explored and literaly a few blocks East is the
financial district and really nice shops and a Hilton. It all reminds
me of England tbh, what with the weather and just the grubbiness of
downtown. We walked down to Fishermans Wharf and suddenly entered a
totally different world- a really nice cosy fishermans village with
the golden gate bridge and alcatraz as backdrops. Though the walk as
actually a mission what with the steep steep (steep) hills!!! No
exaggeration, cos San Fran is the hilliest place I have ever been.
There is one road called Lombard Street with the "worlds crookedest"
road since it is so steep they have to twist it round and round so
cars don't fall forwards! Even driving up with the accelerator on
full, the car struggles up some of the climbs. But anyways, the
first day was spent exploring before heading back to the hostel for a
free guided tour.

Strangest tour ever
Basically the tour was conducted by a Economics lecturer who claimed
that by the end of the tour would "change our lives". Now at that
point I was waiting for the free bibles and was looking for the
quicket fire exit. But no, he was actually okay and the tour was very
interesting. He laced in lots of history and his theme was "irony" or
something like that. Anyways, by the end of the tour of downtown we
all went to his office and he cleverly tied all the visited sights to
his preaching talk. Basically about an economist called " Henry
George". Now, in the simplest terms (since I have no clue otherwise),
he posed the question: "why should anyone pay someone else for use of
the land?". For example, how can someone claim a part of land to be
their own and then charge another human being for that plot of land
whether for building permission or for rent etc. Now this was very
deep and stimulating and me and Oscar we talking about it for the rest
of the night even though we have no clue about economics! Just the
moral concept made sense. The Earth is inhabited by humans, we should
all share the land and spread any money we make off of it.

Haha, okay you are now thinking I have been brainwashed. I'm gonna
stop talking about it now, but I liked it anyways.

Yesterday we started off the day with a visit to the Asian Museum of
Art, which houses a massive collection of ancient
chinese/japanese/korean and south west asian stuff. Very interesting
but I would have liked more modern art. We also drove down to Coet's
Tower which gave us a bargain city scape view of San Fran with a mere
$3.75 fare for the elevator. We then moved out of shothole Ellis
Street and into a hostel closer to the lovely Fishermans Wharf. The
only problem were the communal showers. Now the hostel is in an old
navy Fort so the showers are fully communal. Haha, very intimate
though luckily I was alone when I showered. Later on we had the
highlight of our visit to San Fran.

Bike ride
So we figured we wanted to see the golden gate bridge, the fog had
just cleared and sun was out so we also wanted to cross it. So we
decided to hire some bikes and cycle up and across it:) It was an
awesome bike ride! Great views and going downhill with the frsh sea
air was refrshing. The funny bit was the wind! It was so windy on
the bridge that once you came to a pillar the way the wind funneled
around the pillars blew you off your bike! Haha, very scary but fun
none the less. Also since crossing it meant we were rewarded the most
stunning views of San Francisco from a small town called Sausalito.
Again very picturesque town and very much a european villa next to the
coast. After some nice dinner we headed back to the Pier on San Fran
side via a ferry. I have to say my thighs were aching for the rest of
the night and Oscar was having trouble walking straight :p (you
awake?).

Stupidman
That evening we decided to take it easy and rest our legs by watching
Superman Returns in 3D at the local Imax. Every major city in America
seems to have an Imax. However it was the mosy awful film film ever.
Crap story, crap acting and compared to the load of 3D shows we've
seen, crap 3D! Basically a crap film so do don't watch it. Plus it
is 2 and a half hours of torture.

Last full day in America :(
That brings us to today- our final whole day in the states. Today we
went to the exploratarium which is like the science museum. Fun but
not that stimulating. We also explored Alcatraz which was okay but
nothing special. It's now 7:30pm and in a minute we are leaving for
our 8 hour drive back to LA and tomorrow we fly to Fiji. Finalising
some stuff on the internet cos not sure if we can get any in Fiji.

Diet
So far I have refrained from weighing myself for lack of self
confidence, but I swear I have put on weight! Oscar has a beer belly
now that I didn't notice before but he may have brought that from
england. So we checked our bank balance this week and I have to say
it is not good news :s I've spent like $4000 in the US! Yeah, kind
more expensive than I thought. So we have to save and skimp and rough
it for a bit. Last night on the drive back to LA we inititated our
first money saving scheme: sleeping in the car. Haha, suprisingly
comfortable though I woke up with a crick in my neck. Had a strange
dream too where we tried to upgrade our flight to 1st class by Oscar
wearing a lighted hat thing and doing a all dancing all singing
routine to impress the female clerk. Yeah my dreams are strange. We
haven't found a shower yet so had to brush our teeth at the airport.
Haha, all part of the experience. My second phase was: peanut butter
sandwiches. Yup, gotten sick of jam cos it is sooo sweet over here!

Final impressions of America
So we leave this evening and I have to say I am gonna miss this place
loads! Travelling across from New York seems a distant fond memory
but I do remember still stepping out of 52nd street station like a
country bumpkin and looking up in awe at the tall tall skyskrapers.
Each city is so unique and each State is basically a country in itself
with unique climates and surroundings. It's strange cos we are so far
from home but it still feels like home, like we are still in England
but on some strange long day out. I think it's mainly waking up and
spending time with a familiar face every day so it just seems like we
were going out in Londond. Just happens that everyone has a strange
accent. Favourite places that I'd like to live in are New York and
somewhere on the Coast of California like Santa Monica or maybe even
San Fancisco. Places I'd love to come back and visit are New York,
Santa Monica, San Francisco and Las Vegas :D But the fact of the
matter is that America is so vast, its just hard to tell you in one
paragraph what it's like. All I know is that I was expecting big
things for my first time in America and it has totally lived up to my
expectations. 2 observations though. First everyting is big...real
big! The cars are bigger, the skyscrapers are bigger, the roads are
wider, the food portions are greater, fat people are fatter and fit
people are fitter. Everything is engineered to be bigger or
underestimated to make it seem bigger! Like show sizes are UK-1; their pint is smaller than our pint; their mile is smaller than our mile etc. which is all engineered to give them feel bigger and better, like they have bigger feet and bodies; like they have had more beers to drink; and like they have driven further. Silly billys. Second observation is that shop clerks are generally more friendlier than back home in Tesco's etc. Maybe they feel it is just part of
their job but I just find that they seem to enjoy and respect their job. Most of the time in UK shops they seem unhappy with their job or something.

Favourite memories
New York: Stepping out of 52nd street station and looking up in awe at
the tall tall skyscrapers like country bumpkins. Getting our photo
taken with 2 police officers then walking down to Times Square.

New Jersey: Rolling up to our first motel on the way back from 6 flags
towards New York.

Boston: Celebration dinner at Skip Jacks with beautiful view of church
contrasted with massive black shiny skyscraper, and my favourite meal
out here so far!

Niagara Falls: The friendliness of the chinese hostess at the hostel;
first sight of the falls themselves and also standing under the
waterfall and getting drenched in the "Cave of the Winds" attraction.

Chicago: Our first baseball game supporting the Chicago Cubs. They
lost but it was exciting and I wanna get a jersey still!

Denver: Meeting a cool biker dude from Portland in the hostel and
going for a drink. Great conversation about American history.

Las Vegas: Walking down the strip both on 1st night and 2nd day by
myself. Just visiting all the casinos like bellagio, venetian and
ceasar was awesome! Also entering the Poker tournament was fun!

Flagstaff: Meal at for pizza with Oscar & Clara was fun and tasty.
Grand Canyon: The Bright Angel Trail trek we did down the side of the
steep moutain. It was scary on the way down cos we started so high
and was recommended for 2-4 hour trek. We did it in an hour and forty
minutes:)

San Diego: Seaworld!

Santa Monica: The first day walking down Santa Monica Beach; Venice
Beach; watching the outdoor street ball on muscle beach area and
having a nice cold corona outside in a bar.

Los Angeles: Both basketball games at the Staples Centre supporting
the LA Sparks

Route 1: Stunning views and stopping of at the picturesque Santa
Barbara. So many of the most beautiful beachy towns in California
still have a pretty Spanish villa feel to them.

San Francisco: Bike ride across the Golden Gate bridge and over to the
picturesque town of Sausalito

Music
Mainly been listening to the radio which has more adverts than songs
but I did pack a few CD's. Orson cos they are from Califronia and the
songs are super sunny! And Sergio Mendes for some Latino flavour on
Route 1 matches the spanish villaesque scenery. But I picked up the
soundtrack to Dumb & Dumber in Santa Monica and it is really really
appropriate since the film was so great (probably still my favourite)
and they road trip to Aspen.

Bye!
So this is goodbye from America for now. Hope everyone is having fun
and I'll be thinking of you whilst lying on the white sandy beaches.

Take care & speak soon!
John.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Day 21: Viva Las Vegas!

Viva Las vegas!

So bloody hell wow! Las Vegas is just amazing and I managed to gamble
pretty much for free:) More on that later:p First things first we
need to catch up cos it has been a bitch finding free internet or
wireles so far and also cos so much has happened! Like England losing
to Portugal. What a load of bollocks!!! I was so grumpy and probably
would have been like that for the whole morning if it weren't for the
fact that we were in Las Vegas:D We also picked up a hitchhiker along
the way... Oscar's girlfriend, Clara. Unexpectedly I have to say, but
it's been fun having another person to talk to and just after a day on
the road I think she appreciates the kinda fun adventure we're having.
Wish all of you guys could experience the same feeling out here too!
Right now we're in a town called flagstaff and visited the Grand
Canyon yesterday:)

Back on the road

So wowza, lets rewind to our last day in Chicago where we went up the
Sears Tower though I have to say the New York skyline is still the
best i've seen so far. Last day on the East was a turning point on
our trip seeing that it was mainly urban city scapes, whereas where we
are now is just mountain scape. So we fly over to Denver and the
first thing that hit us was the heat! It is soooooo hot on the West
side!!! The scenery is also very very different too. In contrast
with tall tall skyscrapers, driving through the Colorado Rockies we
have tall tall mountains. Instead of wide spread buildings we have
sprawling desert scape with trailer parks and ghost towns. It's like
a totally different world, but at the same time pulling off the dirt
track onto some random all american diner is still so familiar as
stereotypical america. Just part of the experience I guess, but its
great.

Arriving in Denver, finding our way to our hostel was a funny affair,
since we didn't have a car til the next day. There's a long and very
very dodgy road called Colfax where the most dodgy people hang out.
Basically think of Brixton or Peckham but down a like 5 mile road that
we had to walk down :s Yeah quite scary but luckily we met a guy on
the coach who was heading the same way so led us down safely. Hehe,
one guy followed us for loose change so we gave in and gave him a
quarter to get rid of him, cos there was no way I could fight with a
massive heavy backpack.

Anyways the morning we walked down the mall street which is basically
a brand spanking new mile long street of malls & shops which I thought
was really cool. Well we tried to walk all the way down but the
blazing heat just got to us so we took the free bus down to the
station and went to pick our lovely car :D Yay, I love my cars. We
didn't get an upgrade this time so sticking with a compact we got a
white Toyota Corolla. It doesn't move like my little baby V6 but it
does the job. A big grrr grrr SUV would have been better but Oscar
prefers the small cars :p One slight hitch though, was we still had
to put the car under my name cos Oscar doesn't have a credit card, and
for Oscar to drive he has to pay an extra $420+tax cos he's under 25!
It's a expensive luxury, but looks like Oscar is going for it.

Driving
So I'm really learning a lot about myself on this trip, though I'll
fit that into another blog. The main thing is that the thought of not
knowing where we're gonna stay or eat the next day is not daunting
anymore- its like exciting. We drove the 12 hour journey to Las Vegas
through the Colorado Rockies. It was just absolutely beautiful to see
such big mountains, colours and scenery on a drive. It really was a
scenic route if ever I have seen one and so much more interesting than
boring metal & concrete barriers on the east side. Along the way we
stopped off at a random motel which are dotted around everywhere and I
have to say compared to the 4 star Wyndam in Toledo, motels are the
same if not better and newer facilities. We also stopped off in our
first Walmart :) And yes they sell shotguns and shells in store! We
also picked up our grocery for free cos the clerk charged us wrong and
being in the land of walmart, you get it for free if they get it
wrong. Okay granted it was only a bag of apples but still welcome
donation to our deserving cause.

Vegas, yeah baby!

Right that brings us to Las Vegas:D And again wow! Walking down the
"strip" are all the different casinos on one 4 mile road, I was just
in awe of the over the top, flambouyant themes of each casino funded
by so much money! Basically every casino is themed, has a buffer :) a
shopping mall of some description, a hotel and of course a casino
floor:D So pretty much they design them so you never have to leave
their facility. Other things that lock you in are the maze that is
the casino floor where exits are never signposted, and hourly prize
draws to get people to stick around the casino. The great thing
though is that everything evolves around the gambling so everything
else is subsidised and quite cheap. Food comes in the form of
reasonably priced buffets (buffets get bonus points), rooms are the
same price as most of the hostels we've stayed in, and parking if
free. After 2 good days of walking up and down the baking hot, super
duper face melting sun my favourite casino for interior was probably
inside the Venetian which had a replica of a Venice town complete with
gondola's and fake sky. The town doubled up as a shopping mall with
the likes of prada and gucci lining the streets. Totally over the top
and pretentious but amazing all the same. Favourite for classiness
was the Mirage with it's super swanky black marble poker rooms;
Caesers Palace for super marble and gold and the Bellagio for it's
super water works display outside. Favourite for food was the
Treasure Island buffet which had everything from crab & sushi to fried
chicken & pastries :D Also the after dinner show was a firework laden
pirate ship all singing all ancing show with scantily clad ladies...:D

Gambling luck
But favourite for luck and gambling was the Sahara where we stayed our
first night. After checking in we signed up to a random clubcard for
the half price buffet and got entered for some prize draw. Halfway
through our buffet the announcer calls out my name and haha I won
something so go to choose a envelope and get $100. Okay not that much
but enough to enter a poker tournament we saw earlier for $42. Only
problem was that the money I had won could only be used on slot
machines, so I ended up on the 1 armed bandit style machines next to
all the old ladies hehe, but I did win $50 cash- just enough to enter
the poker tournament :) After a lesson we enterd the next day and it
was really exciting, not that I was expecting to actually win
anything. $42 bought us $2000 worth of poker chips, but to win you
had to come like top three out of like hundreds of entrants. Well
Oscar made it to 10 minutes. I, with some tips from chow yun fat,
managed to stay in for 3 hours through 7 rounds :D Kinda funny cos I
made +500 at one point, then was down to my last few chips and then
went all in to break even again, before finally doing a kamikaze move
cos Oscar was waiting for me. Man, I will always remember I went all
in and only needed 1 more spade for a flush! Hehe, maybe next time.
Ooh, the best bit of playing any of the games is free drinks.
Magaritas and coronas were the order of the day for me, and I guess
its just another way for the casino to get drunkards to lose their
money.

What I did find annoying was that the casinos charged more than double
for a room on weekends, so ended up staying in 3 different ones on
each night. Sahara on Thursday, then Excalibur was the only casino
that didn't count Friday as weekend, then we had to go off the Strip
and end up in a casino called Terribles...luckily the name didn't
reflect in the room.

Shopping Malls
The day Clara arrived Oscar went to met her so I let them have some
time together, and also so I could explore the malls on the strip. As
I mentioned all the best casinos have malls inside like the caeser,
venetian and alladin all have indoor fake towns with painted skies and
stuff. But the best mall is the Trump "fashion show" mall- its just
huge and so fresh. Man, bluewaters will never be the same again. The
next evening we also went down fremont street where all the classic
casinos are, like the one with the neon cowboy sign with a moving
hitchiker arm (though it wasn't moving anymore). They installed a
massice LCD canopy that had a cool video show on it.

Leaving Las Vegas
So Sunday we left Vegas and headed back East towards Grand Canyon and
Clara came along too, to experience the thrill of the ride. Oscar's
been driving well so far, though there was one incident in Vegas where
he pulled out of a gas station...on the left hand side of the road
towards oncoming traffic :s I was like "er..Oscar, should that car be
heading towards us like that!?". Haha, he quickly swerved right and
drove over the central pavement.

Route 66
On our way to Flagstaff, Oscar was pretty knackered so I took over and
for the best bit too, via route 66 :D But just my luck, taking over
the driving and cruising down route 66 I drive straight into a bloody
thunder storm, and I mean like so much rain that I can't even see my
car bonnet storm!!! So I had to slow down to 55mph and with lightning
whip cracking around and on windy moutain top roads it was bloody
scary! Oscar and Clara will confess too that it lasted for ages and
visibilty was non existent. Hehe, but somehow we managed to get
through it. En route we made a random stop at Grand Canyon Caverns-
basically a very deep cave. It has nothing to do with the grand
canyon as such but made a really intersting detour as the air flow
from the cave actually comes from the Colorado River. When we arrived
in Flagstaff the first we noticed was the cool temperature! Yay, no
more heat. Plus it was raining. Yay, British weather at last! Hehe,
we had a really nice dinner at a pizza place called Picazzo's. Pizza
was lovely, local beer I had was called "stone a bastard", but best
desert 8 had in USA so far was here! Giant macademia nut cookie with
vanilla ice cream...YUM!!! Mmmm, can still taste it :)

Grand Canyon
Yesterday we headed down to Grand Canyon National park, in through the
South Rim and worked our way all the way round east and out of the
East entrance. First thing about grand canyon is that is totally
different from what I expected! I was expecting blistering heat, all
red rock, and sandy desert dirt tracks. Instead it was perfect
temperature, nice breezes, foresty areas surrounding the canyon with
vegetation on the tracks down. Either way the view was just stunning-
vast expanse of mountain.

When we got into the national park ($25 entry!) we took the free buses
to the west side view points which were just awe inspiring. We then
went and did the Bright Angel trail which was basically a bloody scary
one & a half mile long trail down the edge of the mountain side, and
then back up again, with a recommended time of 2-4 hours round trip.
It took us about an hour to get down and it was quite steep and with
loose rocks and so near the edge it was just abit dodgy :) The way up
was just totally knackering, especially after 3 weeks of an all
american fitness plan of fried lard, but we razed it up in 40 minutes,
haha. Must have been crazy!?

The evening we got back to Flagstaff around 10pm, but when we went to
find a restaurant, every one was closed! What's that about!? So we
had to plump for some random bar called Blues and Pools and had some
pizza again. Annoying thing was we entered the bar area first and
they bar tender was being a gay and insisted we show our passports as
ID's just to sit in the bar area. Unfortunately we only had driving
licenses which every other bar we had visited before had accepted.
This geezer was a real ass though, so he sent us out back to sit in
the "restaurant area"...that also actually had a bar. Anyways, the
food was actually quite good so I'll let them off.

4th July
So today Clara sets off back to Las Vegas and we head off to San Diego
via Pheonix. Also it is America's biggest party- 4th of July
Independence day. Yeah, not sure how they will welcome 2 guys from
England, but hopefully we won't be part of the bonfires.

Okay it's 8:30am now so gonna wake the other 2 up and find breakfast.
Hope everyone is well!

Speak soon!
John

*******

special message: keep smiling cos "a brighter star is on the way"

tan level: char grilled

temp: spit roast hot!

feeling: hungry for buffet