An introduction

Introduction

Hello Readers! Welcome to our blog.

We have decided to create a travel diary to share with friends and family our adventures. We are excited to spend some quality time together and we hope to share with you our highs and lows along the way. Liz is going to expand her photography skills, whilst Andy wants to write short stories. What a perfect combo for a blog, eh! At the end of each post, we will sign it off, so you know who is speaking.

You may be wondering, why Lizard Tracks? The word Lizard is the combination of the word ‘Liz’, and Andy’s initials ‘A.R.D.’ – genius huh. And Tracks, well – I won’t explain that one.

But we made this ingenious discovery when we were on the isle of Tenerife several summers ago. We were hiking up the mountain next to El Teide; you needed a permit for El Teide, of course we didn’t have one, you know us, right? So we climbed the next tallest and looked at El Teide from slightly higher up. It was great. And it was very dry, very hot, and there were loads of lizards scuttling across our path. We were a little dehydrated and a little delirious so of course we talked, and sang, utter rubbish all the way up and back down.

We hope you enjoy our blog and our utter rubbish, feel free to comment and say hello or email us on li3ardtracks@gmail.com. Lots of love and warm wishes to you all!

by Liz & Andy

Siargao 💛💙 Rock pools, waffles and lagoons

Philippines

18th – 23rd June

To get from Camiguin to Siargao took a full 2 days of travel and many different forms of transport. We had to return the bike back to the port we arrived in, and as per usual we weren’t leaving from the same port so had to get a trike 20km to the next port along. The boat to the mainland was really nice, we were sat on the upper deck outside. We travelled past all these beautiful islands, thick forest. Just stunning.

Once on the mainland we had to get another trike to the bus stop and work out which bus was the right bus to take us to Butuan, where we had to swap onto another bus to Surigao City. Each bus ride was about 3 hours. No breaks but lots of people kept getting on and off, so it was very stop/start.

In Butuan we arrived just as the sun was setting, and we had to find food before the next bus. There was a shopping mall so we went to the food court. It was the most built up place we had been since Singapore. It took us a moment to adjust to the dizzying array of shops and lights.

Crazy sunset whilst also raining!

The bus to Surigao city was not too bad but we were starving hungry by the time we arrived. We had chosen a hotel and went to EJ’s bar for food. Of course, they had live music and singing. So much singing.

The next day we got a ferry to Siargao Island which was another short hop. We had a pizza for lunch in the port town, then had to go through the motions to rent a bike.

Now, on all the islands the most we ever had to pay per day was P300 / £4.50, so when an elderly gentleman told us that we would be paying at least P500 per day for a bike, we weren’t having any of it. After an hour or so of threatening to just get a taxi to General Luna, and telling the man we were quite happy to go somewhere else (though looking back I don’t think there was anywhere else), we finally got the man down to P300 per day, and instead of handing over his passport as insurance (erm no no) the man accepted Andy’s Indian tax card. With a little bit of patience we got exactly what we wanted. This island did not value safety as much as other islands so my helmet was too big, Andy didn’t even get a helmet and no one else seemed to be wearing one anyway. Right- well if we are careful we can do this! Andy is an excellent driver, and I was in good hands.

We found our hotel along the main strip out of the small town of General Luna, and went for a wander. It’s a chilled out island. Lots of hippy types of travellers and backpackers were about so there was a big night scene and every other shack was a bar. All the people we saw were wearing ankle bracelets and baggy trousers, with perfect surfers beach bods, clearly not been on the San Miguel Pilsens like we have!

We spent the next few days eating tasty waffles for breakfast from a really cute roadside shack which had an upstairs lounge area. Cushions on the floor and rope railings, really good coffee and loads of strawberry jam! So tasty. For lunches we would test out the various sandwich places, or whatever we could find.. and then for dinners we found an awesome Italian for really good pizza, a nice beach side restaurant which we watched prepare meals one at a time, and a fancy bar for a burger that was definitely overpriced but worth it. on the island we made lots of dog and cat friends. They were all so friendly.

Cloud 9

On the first full day of our stay on Siargao we went to see the famous cloud 9 beach where the surfing competitions are held, in August, each year.

We went swimming in shallow pools in low tide that were so salty and hot, almost like the hot springs in NZ.

The sea was as calm as a pond – the surf shops were not cheap for lessons so we decided to give surfing a miss, though it would have been fun to have a go.

Magpupungko Rock Pools

The next day we decided to go to a little bit further afield and see some deeper rock pools. Armed with our leaky snorkel masks we set off and an hour later arrived at the Magpupungko rock pools. Low tide allowed us to walk over the slippery sea bed to these huge pools.

Plenty of people! There were amazingly some fish in the pools so we had lots of fun diving down to watch them swim about. Trying to cling onto our diving experiences as long as possible!

It was beautiful scenery.

The moped bike ride to the rock pools was an experience. It decided to rain half way so we got drenched. We stopped for cover with lots of other people and waited for the storm to pass. We did go past a look out point and stopped for a photo before being harassed by children selling bamboo.

Del Carmen and Tona Island

Around Tona Island you can swim with harmless jellyfish. This sounded like a really good idea so we got on the old moped again and set off to Del Carmen. From there we had researched you could hire a boat for about P1800 and go over to the island. The boat would come and pick you up after about 3 hours so plenty of time to see and do everything.

Off we went and again it decided to tip it down. We sought shelter under the porch of a house on the road side. There was a family inside watching the tv, but we didn’t want to go in and disturb them, how rude – they didn’t even invite us in…!! so we waited outside. The rain was heavy for about half an hour. A little girl came out and put a water cooler tank underneath the drainpipe and very quickly it filled up. By the time we got to Del Carmen the sun had come back out and we went for a coffee and some lunch near the port.

These umbrellas were along the sea front streets. A colourful addition.

We then chartered a boat to take us to the island. It was again very noisy and we couldn’t talk much but it was fascinating to watch the two sailors steer the boat around the shallows. The water was black and you couldn’t see the bottom, so it was pretty impressive!

When we arrived at the lagoon pontoon for swimming – it wasn’t quite what I had imagined. There were some kayaks and there was a platform to jump from, but aside from that it was quiet and fairly peaceful, aside from the tourists of course!

We rented (by mistake) a bamboo platform which we pulled out into the middle of the lagoon. It was attached to a rope so we could pull ourselves back ok! We only saw the jelly fish after we had swam for a while. There is definitely something disconcerting about swimming with an animal that could sting you, if you got in the way. Supposedly these were harmless but I was suspicious!

After a couple of hours hanging out we got the noisy boat back to Del Carmen and biked back to General Luna. It was a fun day, but after all the waterfalls and pools we have seen, I don’t think it was our favourite.

Manila

From Siargao we decided to fly straight to Manila. It was going to be easier than getting a bus there (which would take 3 days solid). Siargao has been a lovely peaceful island, fully chilled experience and we definitely enjoyed it!

Manila is so big and sprawling that we didn’t do much for the one day that we spent in the city before an outward flight to Siem Reap. We went to the cinema to see Toy Story 4 (laughed so hard I cried, amazing film) and ate a rather pricey Indian meal. Andy got a hair cut and that’s about all we did in Manila. I am sure it has more to offer, but perhaps for another time on another trip.

The Philippines has been incredible. What a place.

Camiguin 💚waterfalls, more diving and yoga

Philippines

The trip from Jagna, Bohol to Camiguin was very straight forward. A 4 hour ferry ride during which we binge watched all the episodes of Black Mirror. Time goes fast when Netflix is on.. Once we got off the ferry we quickly found another bike, the same model and make (Honda Beat) as all the other islands but this time it had a working speedometer and best of all, proper helmets. The guys who lent us the bike were super friendly.

And this is how we travelled. Andy’s bag in the footwell and mine on my back. Not the comfiest way but saved us having to get a taxi!

Off we went to the main town of Mambajao to find somewhere to stay! We found a plaza to sit in, just to take stock for a moment and research on booking.com app, and a couple of Americans came up to us and started chatting to us. They were Jehovah Witnesses. Very kind. Said that they knew a couple of cheap places, so we thanked them and followed their directions to the cheapest most basic place we had stayed in the Philippines! Nippa huts are basically bamboo houses on stilts. The setting was idyllic but there were so many cockroaches and lizards scurrying around. No curtains or AC either. And there was definitely karaoke happening somewhere close by. What did we expect for only £7 a night! Setting was pretty idyllic though.

The next morning whilst we were having breakfast this dog came to make friends. Was sweet until we learnt that he had bitten a man before who had gone to hospital! The daughter of the Liverpudlian guy who owned the place was telling Andy all this whilst he was playing with the dog. Yes, perhaps we should be more wary of these animals!!

We had a ‘tip-the-bucket-over-your-head’ style shower because the water pressure was non-existent and banana pancakes for breakfast. It was more like a sponge cake than a crepe. Before we checked out we went to visit a few other resorts and finally settled on one called Casa Roca, recommended in the LPG, and it was much cleaner and nicer. We booked in for 2 nights. Jim the owner was lovely, and when we checked out he told us all about how he’d bought the place, lived there and then made it into a hotel. The back was held up by trees, really cool, but being so close to the ocean had its downsides.

Next we decided to explore the island. It’s not big, we could have circled it in about an hour, but we wanted to see the volcano and waterfalls, so we went on an adventure taking the uphill roads as far as we could. We love getting off the beaten track, and the bumpier the ride – the better it is!

We did have an end in sight: Katibawasan Falls. A 70m waterfall with a really cold pool for swimming, was delicious.

Afterwards it was time to find some lunch and we had looked in the book. It recommended Checkpoint which was a bar, the meal deal options had run out, so I went for a teriyaki chicken not realising that it would be a full half chicken. Unfortunately it was raw – so after that experience we didn’t feel so wonderful!

Later we chilled out at the hotel and ate there in the evening, much nicer food. We bumped into the spanish couple who had been staying in the same hotel in Loboc, it is so funny when that happens. How ever much you think you are alone on your travels, there are always others going the same way!

Black water dives

For our final dives of the trip we decided to go with Black Water – a German guy called Axel ran the shop and had only just opened. All the equipment was brand new. You received a bag at the beginning that had a towel, a bottle of water and soap for your mask, that you could take on the boat. It was cheaper than Alona Dives and the equipment was much better. Our dive master was Romeo. In the group there were also 2 other guys and a girl, all Chinese. They went for a muck dive first but our first dive was to ‘Black Forest’.

We went out on a very loud boat, had to wear ear defenders it was so noisy! We entered the water with Romeo and, unlike our other dives, this time we couldn’t see the bottom. We followed a rope down and down and down, it was just a little bit scary, but finally we reached 18m and the black coral. Under water it isn’t black, but if you brought a piece to the surface it would change colour. It was really cool, we saw lots of sea slugs and a couple of lion fish inside this huge piece of coral, looked like a big plant pot, in a spiral shape, and the fish were in the middle just swimming about! After about 50minutes (we are good at not using up air too fast these days!) we resurfaced and went back to the dive school for our break.

We had a coffee and biscuits and the Chinese joined us. They chain smoked the entire time, and we found out that they had just done their PADI too. The girl had all the gear though, some wetsuit long stockings, a wetsuit skirt, a mini mouse head band, she looked very cool. One of the guys was clearly not keen on doing another dive so he sat the next one out. We, all 4 of us, plus Romeo and Axel, went to Old Volcano. Now, this was awesome.

It had begun to rain but no matter when you are underwater! We first went to around 5m then over a huge canyon and down over a ledge. It was beautiful. The colours were bright and there were more slugs, some interesting coral shapes, lots and lots of fish, and of course turtles too! The Chinese couple were getting on our nerves though.. they were swimming all over the place zipping about.. Andy and I hung back and watched them bump into themselves, bump into the coral, get told off, it would have been funny but I just wanted them to calm down a bit so I could concentrate on what was around me! We followed the bed back up to the shallows and this was my favourite part, just looking at all the amazing colours and fish. I think aquariums are going to be ruined for me for life.

Kurma lodge

Kurma is a hotel that offers everything – free diving (where you don’t have a tank on your back, just hold your breath and go..), yoga, hiking and treks. It also was rated as one of the best restaurants! So we went twice in one day. If we could have we would have stayed but it was fully booked.

First thing in the morning we went for yoga. My goodness I haven’t sweated like that in a while. Literally pouring off my body. Andy and I had a private session with Lady the teacher. She was good and laughed at our discomfort !! It was a good work out and felt amazing afterwards.

We had to leave Casa Roca so moved all of our stuff to July’s Haven jut down the road. The room was fine and had air con with breakfast included. it was on the beach so we went for a swim.

Later in the evening we went back to Kurma for dinner and it was delicious. I had a pearl barley salad with salmon and Andy had a deconstructed beef pie. Yum yum yum! Great end to a perfect little island stay.

Bohol – Chocolate mountains, tiny marsupials and awesome dives

Philippines

9th – 14th June

Travel Siquijor to Bohol

To get over to Bohol there is a short boat trip from Larena, but we had to get back to Siquijor city to return the moped. We had extended our rental by 2 days and had (in fairness to us) told one of the guys at the port when we went to get some cash out that we would return it later. This message wasn’t passed on however so we were not asked for more cash for the extra days, and we had forgotten! A very grumpy Charlie followed us all the way to Larena and demanded we pay him and extra for his trouble. Oops. And fair enough!

When we docked at Bohol we were immediately accosted by people (you want motorbike, hire motorbike?) and they put us in a taxi to take us to their shop to rent another bike. We booked our accommodation while we were waiting for it to be sorted. They wanted a 1500P deposit! Crazy. We decided to stay on Panglao which is another island just off Bohol, but connected by road. The hotel has a pool, so we were able to chill out for the afternoon. We went out into Alona Beach for a drink and may have booked a couple of dives for the next day!

Pool days

We did want to be productive but…

The pull of the pool was just too strong.

We went for a walk in the evening and caught night-rise over the beach. Lots of dogs on this island again.

Balicasag Diving

We booked dives with Alona Divers. They had really excellent reviews on Tripadvisor so I was confident we would be in good hands. It wasn’t cheap but sometimes you get what you pay for! We had to be there bright and early, and got suited up. Our dive master was Manny. He was an excellent photographer and looked after us really well. Andy and I were buddies and no one else was in our group so it was just us and Manny!

We got on the boat to the dive sites and would stay on board for the break between too. There was a French family and a couple of guys who were also French. One of them was an instructor. There was also a Taiwanese girl on the boat too. It was a good mix of people.

The first dive was called cathedral. It was a cliff dive. We swam down initially to 5m and then across the sea floor to the edge of the world. The floor dropped to 40m and it was blue. Bluest of blues I have ever seen. It immersed us and if you only looked out into the ocean it sucked you in, was quite disorienting. We went down to 18m. The other groups were swimming under us and their bubbles kept blocking our view. We hung back and waited for them to go a little way forward. we saw a turtle on a ledge, having a snooze and the Taiwanese girl was so keen to take photos, her buddy had gone ahead and had to come back for her. We are so careful to stick together. The more we learn about diving and about other people, we realise we are very careful!

Looking up you could see all the coral ledges and overhangs, looking down you could just see the bottom but the coral disappeared about 10m below us. I really enjoyed facing the coral wall, and just drifting along, watching the movie of the underwater world unfold before me.

Manny was great, showing us all the sea slugs, frog fish, all sorts. He wanted to take lots of photos and we even have a film of our trip. It’s stunning! The best bit for me though was when a shoal of Jack Fish swam near by and we swam into the middle of the shoal. We have a video of this too, it was amazing. So many fish, hundreds, all moving together swirling around us.

The second dive was called Diver’s Paradise. The landscape was completely different, more sand with outcrops of coral. There were so many turtles the second time. Lots of crazy underwater creatures. No idea what we were looking at but it was all fascinating!

It was an absolutely amazing and breathtaking day.

Afterwards we found a new Mac Donald’s had opened on Panglao. Hit. The. Spot. Big Macs all round.

We left our hotel and biked to Loboc.

Chocolate Hills

Our new hotel was set along the river and was very nice and quiet. We had a room overlooking the pool.

The moped is not good for long distances. Bottom is not used to sitting on it yet, and because I’m sat in a kuala position behind Andy, everything aches. We took a very scenic route to see the Chocolate Hills. They were very green and very impressive!

The roads through the Sierra Bullones to Jagna were epic, and I know I was thinking, wow this would be awesome to cycle. They were windy, not too steep, just perfect. And because we were quite high in the mountains it wasn’t quite so hot.

But sitting on that bike for over an hour was turning me grouchy. We stopped in Jagna and found some food from this homestay place and there were different dishes to chose from (dirt cheap, a couple of quid for a lot of food) and it looked a bit dubious, but so tasty! Was much happier after that.

Tarsiers

We had to check out of our hotel and move closer to Jagna for the boat over to Camiguin tomorrow, so we had the morning to go and see the little Tarsiers. These are the smallest marsupials and there was a recommended sanctuary on Bohol.

There were 5 Tarsiers inside a large gated area but there was a constant stream of people. Even though there were signs all over the place people were not approaching quietly. I wasn’t completely convinced that these nocturnal creatures were able to rest during the day.. hey ho. Hopefully the money goes to conservation.

They were very cute though.

Look at those little fingers!

We returned to the hotel, packed up, and took the bike back to Tagbilaran. Not sad to say bye bye to that bike!! We got our deposit back and hopped on a bus to Jagna. We stayed in a small hotel near to the place we got food from.

Siquijor – becoming divers

Philippines

3rd – 9th June

Siquijor was recommended to us by Vicky in KL. We were toying with the idea of learning how to dive and Vicky had suggested this island would be the best place to test it and learn. Thank you Vicky 🙂

Travelling to Siquijor

The journey from Moalboal to Siquijor was a full day’s effort. We woke up early and saw two really large turtles on the floor of the sea just off the shore, just chomping on the grass! It was amazing, but our snorkels were so annoying that we gave up quite quickly.

We got a trike to the bus stop, waited on a corner with some others for the bus no timetable, or bus shelter, dubious that this would work. A non-air-con bus showed up! We squashed on and were stood up for the first half hour. We got a seat eventually and after a couple of hours arrived in Bato. Very glad to get off – so stop-start I felt a little sick!

We realised we were at the wrong port so had to get another trike, which was bumpy and loud. The boat took us to Dumaguette. Another trike through the city to the other port, and another boat later, we were in Siquijor! Immediately we hired a moped from friendly Charlie, and off we went to a cafe to sit our wary bones down and find somewhere to stay. The bike doesn’t have a speed gauge. It is a little bouncy. It will do the trick..

We finally chose a cliff edge hotel, called Emocion, which was on the south of the island, a little far away from the main strip but close enough to bike around easily. We were the only people there, and it was very luxurious. We had a 4 poster bed, mosquito nets and a semi-outdoor bathroom.

In search of Waterfalls

Last night 2 cats were having sex under our room, and we are in a bungalow hut on stilts so this was not what I was expecting to hear in the middle of the night!

We had a leisurely breakfast and made the plan for the day. First stop was Cambugahay Waterfall. It was the end of the dry season so unfortunately there wasn’t a waterfall. Just a big hole. This didn’t stop us going on an adventure though. We found some concrete pools, which didn’t look very inviting, and went for a walk upstream to see if there were any other falls.

These bamboo bridges were not fun to cross over, and then back again when we didn’t find any waterfalls. Very precarious!

Back on the bike! Other falls to see!

on our way we had lunch at the Get Wrecked bar and we stopped off at Sea Pearl Dive school to enquire about a try dive. We organised one for the next day, both of us excited but slightly nervous.

We headed to Lazi at the south of he island to the Lugrason Falls. These actually had water flowing and people. Lots of people. There were swings and Andy took advantage of them!

Came back to the room to discover a big lizard hanging out above the loo. Perfect.

Try Dive

After a nervous breakfast we set off to Sea Pearl and met our dive instructor Riika who was from Finland. She had a great sense of humour, gave us enough information but didn’t bog down on the details for this first dive, and overall she was an excellent teacher. We signed our life away on the very intimidating and scary forms declaring we were fit to dive, and got suited up. Full neoprene wet suits with boots, a buoyancy control device (BCD), 4kg of weights around my waist and air tanks. It was all exceptionally heavy and just walking down to the sea edge was effort. Of course when we got into the water we could put air into the jacket and float easily. Next came the tricky bit. Breathing into the regulator under water! It’s actually not bad, the same mouth piece as a snorkel.

I let out all the air in my jacket, and with the weights around my waist, sank to the sea bed about 3m down and sat on my knees, waiting for Andy. He was having a bit of trouble. He was struggling with the BCD – it was too tight and caused him to breath too deeply, which meant he was too buoyant! After a couple of attempts and loosening of the jacket, he made it down to the floor. We kneeled on the sea bed for a little while whilst Riika showed us how to get water out of our masks by blowing air out through your nose whilst looking up, which we copied, and then we set off to explore! We had to keep equalising our ears, and we went down to 10m. It was awesome. We saw a scorpion fish, a snake, lots and lots of small fish and even clown fish in the anemone:) beautiful. I looked up a few times and the distance didn’t scare me after a while, there was so much going on around me! It was amazing.

Afterwards we were buzzing with adrenaline- it was such a wonderful dive, we were keen on the course. Sensibly we decided to go for food and decide by the end of the day if we were prepared to pay £300 each for the course. It was a lot of money but we thought it was worth it. We had to pay a deposit and the only ATM on the island was in the main town to the north.

When we returned to Riika later that afternoon she handed us an iPad and a book and told us to complete the first 3 sections out of 5 by the next dive, which we scheduled for the next afternoon.

We went to a pizza place for food, and couldn’t eat it all so brought it back in a paper bag for later. We began to watch the video for the first section. At the end of each section was a test, and at the end of the 5 sections was an exam. Each video was about an hour long and the book had all the tests in, so you could practice before filling out the answers online. It was a lot of work!

The first video showed us everything we should have done on our first dive. I felt scared, but in a good way. We went to bed and there was a huge storm. The electricity was cut off for a few hours so the room got very warm, and we heard a mouse going after the pizza!! Argh!! Not a good night’s sleep.

Dive 2

The next morning after breakfast we did the next section. We got scared again, there were a lot of techniques to cover. I didn’t eat much before the dive and I had a mild headache from worrying about all the skills. Of course as soon as we got to the school, and we were in our suits, I didn’t have time to be scared. I manned up!

We had an addition to our lesson, a French Canadian guy called Felix, who had done 2 try dives, and was now doing the course. Riika showed us how to put the BCD and the tank together, letting the air through to the regulators and checking it was all good to go. So much to remember! Then we went into the water. She had briefed us before on everything we would be doing. We walked down to the beach again, and did so many skills it was insane:

  • Half filled mask
  • Fully filled mask
  • Mask off
  • Regulator taken out
  • Lost regulator
  • Sharing regulator
  • Buoyancy exercises

Wow! It was a lot to do! But afterwards we went for a swim, only kidding, we did more exercises! Swimming together on our buddy’s regulator was a bit of a faff, I am not the most agile under water!

Next we swam a bit deeper down to 10m. By this time we had all forgotten what was next in the brief. Riika intimated we were going to do another mask exercise, and Felix went first. He fully flooded his mask and took it off, waited the required couple of seconds and then put it back on, clearing it through his nose. All grand – I copied him, had a slight panic when putting the mask back on because my hair was flying about and I couldn’t secure it properly. Anyway, unbelievably I remained calm and kept breathing. I eventually got it back on. Then Andy did it, except he had been watching us two go, and he’d also seen Riika look baffled, we were only supposed to half fill our masks!! Oops. He did the exercise correctly. We all made it to the surface in one piece. I felt ridiculous ha.

We then did a controlled ascent on the surface, which I didn’t get at all; it was meant to be done from 5m down but we were just practicing swimming forwards on the surface. Got there eventually!

After the dive we went for food, drank lots of water and watched section 3. Even more terrifying.

2 brown outs over night, very warm in the hotel room.

Dives 3 and 4

Breakfast was a muffin from the shop, I couldn’t have a big breakfast again, too much food and it wasn’t sitting well!

We also moved hotels yesterday, closer to the strip and to the dive school. It is on the sea, but there wasn’t a beach. Ah well. Cheap and cheerful! A short bike ride later and we were ready for the first dive of the day.

We got a boat to the dive site and we practiced first getting into the water with mask and snorkel and flippers on, then putting on the BCD, which required some nifty lying back on top of the inflated BCD, whilst doing up all the straps, then finally the weights. This was the tricky bit. You had to lean forward and breath through the snorkel, whilst getting 4kg over behind you, and doing up the strap at the front. Goodness – took some effort. Anyway, got there in the end, and we were off.

At 5m we all stood up on the sea floor, and one by one took off the BCD, then put it back on again, then we took off our weights, and put them back on again, sodding weights, they are my nemesis! Then we had to do a fully flooded mask (no taking it off!) which was fine. Afterwards we did an alternative air source ascent. I went with Andy. Not the smoothest. You are supposed to go as the same speed as the smallest bubbles coming out of your regulator… We went slightly too fast. Science bit, as you rise to the surface, pockets of air will expand, causing you to go even faster, so you have to let out air all the time, so that you don’t go too fast. This is of course the most important aspect of diving. Keep breathing. Never ever hold your breath, if you change depth you could burst a lung. What a lovely thought.

On the video we had just watched we knew we had to ‘sip’ air out of a constant stream of air from our regulators. It looked impossible. I was worried I would breath in water, but actually doing it was so much easier!!

After all those skills we just about had enough air in our tanks to go for a little swim. We saw turtles, lots of fish and we followed the reef wall. Stunning.

We did an emergency ascent one to one with Riika, Andy had to do it twice, but I rocked it 🙂 we then had a break! The break is very important – it allows all of the nitrogen in your body to dissolve and then you won’t be at risk of getting the bends! Or decompression sickness. To give it the official title!

The second dive was really fun. We had to navigate with our compass and take off our masks at depth, all easy! We could then enjoy the swim without any more exercises!

We saw an octopus – just coming out from under a rock. So amazing to watch it change colour, it was just awesome. We went down to 18m depth and all the fish – breath taking.

After the dives we had to get more cash out to pay tomorrow and get the final two sections done. We were keen to finish it all this evening, so amidst brown outs and the heat, we finished the course and took the final exam! Woop!

Dive 5

All last night I had dreams of rising to the surface too fast and getting decompression sickness. Totally irrational! I know how to control my buoyancy!! plus we would never get to our limit, and Riika was awesome. So silly.

We did our final dive with Sea Pearl Divers and it was great. Saw so much reef life including a frog fish (took me a while to recognise it!) and turtles, and we didn’t do a single exercise!

Felix’s girlfriend came with us, she was already an advanced diver. Felix used his air a bit too fast so he went up before us, and we got extra time under water. We passed the course and got our certificates! Back at the dive school we met a couple and they gave us tips on where to go diving next! All very exciting. Get such a high from it, it’s so wonderful.

We celebrated a week of intensive learning by going to Charisma Beach and chilling out with some friendly puppies.

Cebu Island – We 🧡 Lechon

Philippines

29th May – 3rd June

Cebu City

We were finally in the Philippines and started our island hopping adventure on the larger island of Cebu. Famed for white beaches, sardines, and some questionable ethics when diving with whale sharks at the southern tip: we flew into Cebu city and stayed in a colourful but basic hotel recommended in the Lonely Planet Guide for a couple of nights. The lift was not working but the signs on the way up to the fourth floor told us how many ‘steps to fitness’ we were getting.

The one full day we were in the city we were determined to cram a lot in. First stop a library which I thought was a tourist office, but no, actually just a library. It was a very pretty library though!

Next to the downtown basilica. It was lovely inside, nice and cool. As always I feel a sense of calm when entering all spaces of worship. It was good to get out of the heat for a few quiet moments. We didn’t stay for mass, just in case Andy burst into flames.

We then walked to the fort and found out all about the history of Cebu and the Philippines. The take over by the Spanish, and then later, the Americans. The Fort has many buildings inside its walls, some with art works in, others with old photographs.

We researched where to get lunch and found a pork lechon stand inside a supermarket. It was a dubious setting but my goodness – it was the tastiest thing ever. The pork was succulent, the rice came squashed inside banana leaves and we were given plastic gloves and dug in. Messy but delicious. Topped off with a coke.

Next on the LPG agenda was going to the Carbon Market. Folks, I don’t recommend going if you are easily queasy – lots of fish guts, lots of rats. Quite disgusting, unclear why the LPG recommended it.

We had to buy more sun cream and who knew that this would be such a faff! Instead of SPF rated creams the Filipinos use ‘whitening cream’. Hmm! After several trips to several pharmacies we eventually found some suncream but blimey- very expensive.

We went out for food and cheap beer at a roof top bar, over looking the city, with a Beatles cover band randomly playing. Odd but fun.

Journey to Moalboal

The next couple of months would be broken up into days of doing the tourism stuff, days of relaxing by a pool or more oft watching YouTube or Netflix videos inside the hotel room escaping the heat, and days of travelling from one place to the next.

Today was a travel day. We had nothing booked. Reading LPG seemed to suggest hopping on a bus was very easy and there were no websites for booking anyway. So off we went. We got a taxi to the bus station (Cebu city has Grab!) and asked people wearing yellow where the bus to Moalboal was. We got on a bus, and then got off it again when it was decided the air con wasn’t working, then we all stood squashed together whilst the bus reversed out of the plaza and another came in. I was worried we wouldn’t get onto the next bus, visions of us having to wait longer in the heat was causing me some dread, but all was fine and we squeezed on. We managed by some miracle to get a seat, and waited to see what would happen. I think this whole experience took around 45 minutes, just to get on a bus!! Anyway, we finally set off and then the ticket man came up the bus and gave us punched pieces of paper with the the date and cost of the fare. The next time he came round we paid him. It was a slow process. The bus stopped a lot, and took about 3 hours or so, no toilet breaks!

We made it to Moalboal and got a trike to our hotel. There is sort of air con, and it is on the sea front but we can maybe find something better and cheaper tomorrow! What a journey.

I have to say, sunsets are incredible here.

Kawasan Falls

We had breakfast free at the hotel and went for a swim in the sea. Beautifully warm water. Clear and inviting.

We looked around for another room just down the road, and found one in a smaller hotel, tiny room but in our minds it would get cooler quicker! And it was P1000 cheaper (approx £15). We moved all of our stuff over and then hired a moped for the day for P300 (£4.50). On the agenda was Kawasan Falls.

The falls were busy and full of tourists canyoneering into the water. It looked fun but we decided we were ok just going for a walk instead. We hiked all the way in flip flops to the tipity top of the multi layered falls. It was cool water, very slippery to get in and out but ahhh lovely for a cool down. Andy did some jumps off the cliff edge, I wasn’t feeling the need for danger so watched from a safe distance!

We got back on the moped and drove back. Had sun downers overlooking the sea, magical.

White beach

Yesterday we bought some fairly heap snorkel kits with the intention to save cash and do some underwater exploration! Turned out that they weren’t very good. They had to be on super tight to stop water getting in around the sides of my face and the snorkel was utter crap. It let all the water in. We kept hold of them for the entire time we were in the Philippines but what an error. You get what you pay for!

We hired another moped and went to white beach, there was very little shade and a lot of people. The summer holidays were coming to an end (apparently) so there were a lot of local tourists everywhere. We walked away from them to a quiet area.

We went for a nice dinner for our 6th anniversary and made friends with another couple. Andy and Welsh Paul hit it off, and vibes were flying all over the place. They bought us far too many beers and when they left at midnight we felt quite bereft! We ended up going to a club (in the same shop where we hired the mopeds from) and had a good ol boogie session. It was such a fun night. But oh so sweaty!!

Next stop, Siquijor!

Kuala Lumpur

Kuala Lumpur

25th – 28th May

Andy’s phone is on the fritz. We discovered this recently and it is infuriating for him, and for me, as he keeps on trying to sort it out by Googling YouTube videos to see if anyone else had this issue. The screen is broken, it’s lost its sensitivity at the bottom which is where all the home and back buttons live. We went to a shop in Singapore to see how much it would cost to get a new screen, and the price was more than what the phone is worth. So now in Malaysia hopefully we can find a discounted store to buy a replacement phone. The last straw came when we attempted to text Holly from the plane to say we were delayed and the darn app kept throwing us out. That’s it! We are buying a replacement!

When we landed in KL we bought my phone a new SIM card as we are only here for 4 days and it was pointless getting one for Andy. I downloaded Grab (similar to Uber but you could pay cash) but unfamiliar with how it worked, we went to the taxi rank and bought the fare to get us to Holly’s, which is where we were staying for the weekend. Holly and her fiancé Matt are both teaching in Bukit Utama which is a 40min drive from the airport. When we landed and finally got to their apartment it was nearly midnight. They live in a very spacious 3 bed flat on the 19th floor overlooking the city. We could see the Petronas Towers glimmering in the background, and it felt marvellous to be here with them!

Day 1 – Centerpoint, Helipad, Jalan Alor

The view from the flat.

Holly made bacon bagels for breakfast and we went for a walk down to the Centerpoint mall near by. It’s hot and humid here too. Get used to this Liz, this is it now for a couple of months! We went to exchange our Singaporean money to Ringgits and again see if Andy’s phone was able to be fixed. It was no good, too pricey still.. we were told there was an entire electronics mall in KL, we would go there!

We went for lunch in the food hall of the mall, we ate fried rice and noodles, quite basic but good. The room was not air conditioned, it was all rather sweaty!

Afterwards we went to a bar and we drank peach belinis, delicious! It was fun to catch up.

After a freshen up we went into the city to meet up with Vicky and Riaz. Vicky and I lived together at Uni, and this trip was the first time I got to meet both Holly and Vicky’s partners, so I was very happy! The Helipad bar was on the top of a skyscraper some 36 floors up. It was incredible to be there for sunset!

Me, Holly and Vicky

We next walked to the ‘main strip’ Jalan Alor. Very touristy and all the restaurant staff were very grabby, come here, eat with us, specials today! We quickly chose a place and settled down for food.

Andy, Vicky, Matt, Holly, Riaz, me

After eating we walked the whole stretch but it’s always a bit stressful being pestered constantly; no we have eaten, no thank you, no we don’t want to try Durian fruit. (Bleugh!) after a while we went to a different area and had a final drink in a bar before setting off back to H&M’s.

It was great, lovely first day in the city eating and drinking and catching up with old friends 🙂

Day 2 – Sunway Lagoon

Today we went to a water park!! It was epic fun and the rides were great. Matt couldn’t come along because he was playing footy, but Vicky and Riaz’s friends also came along so there were 7 of us in total. 7 is a bit of an awkward number, most rides require pairs or groups of 4.. so there were a few round robins of people going up and down with different people!

The best ride was Vuvuzela, after going down through a flume tube you enter a huge trumpet shaped zone at the highest point, and slide your way up and down the sides to the narrowest part. It was terrifying and hilarious.

Another ride I didn’t think I would be able to do was one where you got into a glass case, a bit like a space time freezing capsule, and after a countdown from 3 the floor opened and you drop through it. It wasn’t actually that bad because it became a flume slide pretty quickly but you had to wear this back float which protected your neck. If there is protection then you know the peril risk is higher!!

It was so much fun, love water parks.

After a full day of walking around we got a taxi back to Holly’s and Andy went to watch Matt’s game. We then all of us went out for food at a tapas bar which was very tasty!

Day 3 – Batu Caves

Andy and I were again left alone to explore whilst our hosts sadly had to work. We spent a lazy morning booking flights out of the Philippines and researching where to stay in Cebu. Eventually it was time to leave the flat.

We got a Grab (now that we understood how to use the app) and set off to the Batu Caves. We got a little ripped off, or maybe it was a miscommunication thing.. either way we paid a fair amount of ringgit over what we should have but in the end it was about £2, so we decided it wasn’t the end of the world.

We arrived at Batu and it’s very impressive.

So colourful!

I was showing off my knees so received a scarf. It went quite well with my tee shirt.

The view from the top!

When we got to the top of the steps we were very hot! Inside the cave there were more temples, all brightly coloured.

We came down the steps slowly. They were pretty steep! The monkeys were very crafty. They knew that the bananas were for them so if you had one it wouldn’t be yours for long!

The trip to the caves seemed over before it had begun so we went in search of more temples and caves. There was one further down the road, which you paid to get into, it was empty of people. Inside was cooler, and it had the story of Rana and Sita, depicted in life size models.

There was a staircase which we decided to climb. Nothing said we couldn’t go up, and it was lit so we thought there might be something up there! There wasn’t anything up there except you were further up in the cave! How disappointing.. So we climbed back down again.

The lighting was very gaudy and in your face. I quite liked it though.

Next we got on the train (why not..) to Central Market on route to Lo Yat Plaza which was the shopping mall of electronics. At the market we got some food but it was very salty.

Next the plaza. We dotted about between Oppo and Samsung and Andy finally decided after a coffee, that he was going for Samsung. One of your finest cheapest smart phones please! For £95 you can’t go wrong. We complemented it with a see through plastic case so it wouldn’t immediately get scratched, and off we went back to H&M’s. The rain had started, and boy was it coming down. Thunder and lighting all the way back. The taxi driver looked a bit scared!

We went to a pub for food for our last evening with everyone, which was very tasty. Lovely way to finish our stay with some awesome folks!

Thank you Holly and Matt for hosting, and Vicky and Riaz for coming over the other side of the city to see us each evening.

Singapore

Singapore

21st – 24th May

We landed late into Singapore, caught the last train into the city to get to our hotel which was near Little India.

The hotel is ok, it looked better on the photos, but it was in our price range and wasn’t a hostel! There is construction ‘hacking’ occurring during the day, but that doesn’t worry us, we will be out! The air conditioning works well, so that’s a relief.

Day 1 – Museums and Marina Bay Sands

I was excited to be in Singapore. My good friend Jack is Singaporean and he was going to give us all the top tips on where to go and eat. Food is one of many shared interests we have, and he has been slowly introducing me to Asian food over the last few years. It’s been epic. My taste buds were yearning for salt and spice and noodles and chicken and all the ramen I could eat. But first there was breakfast to conquer. Being British I am not a fan of anything but bread and sugar for breakfast. Rice and savoury food items other than egg and bacon, don’t sit well in my head, so I have to say we flaked a little in our first adventure into food.. settling on a pretty standard English breakfast, with differences, like brioche bread and white sausage.

Tomorrow we will be more adventurous.

Next we walked out in the heat to the national museum and had a guided tour of the tremulous history of Singapore. Ah those brits are at it again.. for a small country we got about a bit..

The guide was amazing, I learnt lots. There were many many school groups in the museum, so she did well to guide us through throngs of children!

After the history section we went to see the other exhibits including Japanese artists TeamLab. Again, I was very excited to see a group who’s work I had heard so much about, in the flesh. We walked into a dark space with projections of flowers and trees falling around us, then into a spiralled walkway that showed a collection of paintings brought to life. Periodically as we walked down the ramp there would be a thunderstorm and the rain would change the paintings. There were speakers along the opposite wall and above following us with sounds of the forest, and the animated animals stopped to watch us as we went past. It was very cleverly done.

By the time we were done in the museum it had started to rain, heavily. We quickly walked to Raffles hotel for a famous Singapore Sling. The bar was fancy; there were special leaf shaped fans that were motorised in a very pleasing back and fro way, there was dark wood everywhere, bags of peanuts that we steadily got through, and a machine that mixed the cocktails 8 at a time.

A tasty but expensive $77 later (ooosh a one time thing I reckon) we left for a wander about the downtown waterfront area. It was fantastic to see all of the famous buildings all sat neatly together. Every bit as impressive as I knew they would be.

We went inside the Marina Bay Sands hotel shopping complex to get out of the heat and then for something to eat at the food court. Here we go! This is more like it. Lots of food stands, selling a variety of amazing sounding dishes from all over Asia. I was only interested in the Singapore Chicken and Rice. A simple but very tasty meal.

We next walked through the Marina gardens and saw the tall man made trees. Their structure was impressive and there were loads of them, far more than I thought there would be!

It was time for a nap. The humidity was exhausting. We jumped back on the train, which wished us a ‘happy happy’ time on the platform (well that’s what we heard) and we went to cool off for a bit. Jack had put us in touch with an ex colleague, Andrew, who now worked in Singapore and we were meeting up with him later on in the evening. I had met him the one time in SF a while ago, but it was great to see him again and find out what living as an expat was like in Singapore (him being from Melbourne). He showed us around and it was a lovely evening. We went back to the gardens to watch the light show. The lighting of the trees in the gardens was an Arup project so I was keen to see this! It didn’t disappoint. We lay down underneath and watched as a symphony of classic tunes ranging from the Beatles to ABBA, with lighting reflecting the mood and beat of each song. It was incredible.

We then went to Satay by the Bay for food. I asked what we should try and this is what we went with. A very tasty concoction of Beef Hor Fun and Seafood Mee Goreng. Yum!

We took a walk over the helix bridge and Andrew took a photo of Andy and I – postcard style! Thank you Andrew!

We watched a dress rehearsal show at the Espaland outdoor theatre. It was very odd. I believe the premise was that there was a group of individuals who were stuck in their day jobs, and at lunch they didn’t socialise at all, just sat on their phones, but through the show each of the group had a talent they shared; juggling, acrobatics, dancing, baton throwing, (each act got better as the show went along, unclear if that was intentional) so by the end the group was able to connect and share the other side of themselves. That’s what I got out of it anyway. No words – so was tricky at times!! It was very good though.

After the show we said goodby to Andrew, who pointed us in the direction of a strip of bars. At this point we were absolutely pooped! So we walked over all the bridges, some lit better than others, and headed back to the station to get the train home. What a fabulous day of geeking out!

Day 2 – Botanical Gardens and Little India

After all the excitement yesterday we had a much more chilled day today. We had a lie in, which meant that by the time we did go for breakfast the bakery was open! We had butter puffs and coffee with condensed milk. Ah so yummy.

We got the train to the botanical gardens and paid to enter a section of it to see the orchids. It was hot. Much hotter than yesterday. The rain never came so we went from shaded veranda to shaded veranda, the sun cream sliding off our sweaty faces.

After an hour or so we headed back to our hotel. Jack had recommended a dim sum place near us so we went there, to Victor’s Kitchen. It was yum. Soup pork dumplings, friend prawn dumplings, some fun noodles, mmmmm tasty!

It looks horrid, but it wasn’t.

We went back to the hotel to cool down and chat to my mum. Relaxed for a little while, then went to little India for dinner. There was a happy hour in the square adjacent to our hotel, so we took advantage of some cheaper beverages, and we went to a vegetarian Indian for veg thali!

So delicious. Today was a good food day.

Day 3 – Art Science Museum and the Jewel

We were checked out by 10am this morning, meaning we were too early to go to the bakery for breakfast. We went instead to an air conditioned mall near by and had Kaya toast with poached egg. It was very tasty. The eggs were put into a bowl with boiling water and we were told to wait 8 minutes. We cracked them and out popped a perfectly poached egg. Amazing!

We went to the art science museum which was near the Marina Bay Sands hotel, to see another TeamLab exhibit; ‘Future World’. It was so good, I loved it.

This projection of a waterfall sensed our location and moved accordingly.

when we wrote on this touch screen sounds were produced, and the flowers exploded to create more shapes. Really interactive.

This was a fun one, there was a drawing station where you could colour in a line drawing of a vehicle or building to create a city scape. It was all themed around the bay. You scan your artwork and voila, out it pops on the projection and it’s 3D! If you touch the projection of your creation it jumps, spins around and changes size. It’s crazy!

There was another light tunnel which we walked through, on the other side you could watch the whole effect and it was beautiful.

We had lunch at the food court again, we liked it there! This time I had a laska soup and Andy had noodles and dumplings.

Yummy!

We chilled out for the rest of the afternoon in the shade. It was sunny again and very hot.

Next stop was to the Changi Airport for our flight to Kuala Lumpur. We were going to get there early but that was ok, we wanted to visit the Jewel.

The Jewel is astounding. A rainforest with a 4 storey waterfall in the middle, with walkways all around it. There were the usual things you’d expect in an airport; fancy shops and restaurants, but then there was a cinema and entertainment lounge, a sky treetop walkway (not open currently) and an immersive zone. It was so cool!

After wandering around there for a while, we went back to our terminal which seemed rather dull in comparison!! We were flying with Scoot airlines (never heard of them before.. cheap cheap but fine). It was only delayed an hour and a half. Pretty good by normal standards. Off to KL we go!

Sydney

Australia

17th – 21st May

When we first arrived in Australia from New Zealand, we had a full day in Sydney before our flight to Brisbane. Due to the early flight time from Auckland, the day was very laboured, we were shattered! We did manage, though, to see all the ‘main sights’ of the city during the 6-7hr layover.

Arriving at Sydney airport was not stressful. Immigration was fine. No fuss. Quick with the chip passport readers. No need to wait in line to see an official here! We heard so many horror stories but it was nothing compared to the US.. we had a coffee in Mc Donald’s to decide what to do for the day. After some research I found a walking route from Hyde Park to the waterfront. We got an Opal travel card and boarded the train. What a rip off. $17 each way. Fffflipin eck!! Oh well.

We wanted to see the botanical gardens, of course, but walking aimlessly around with our back packs (heavy 28 litre bags that will be our luggage for the next 3 months) was a struggle, so a lot of sitting down was required. We met some of the new Australian wildlife along the way; a long beaked bird with a balding patch on the back of its head (later found out this was an Ibis bird, a scavenger bird) got the name ‘long beaked dicker decker’ by Mr Drennan. He has such a way with words 😉

After having a nap on the grass, we decided food was the key. Gotta keep eating to stay awake! We went to a rather posh food court. Felt rather out of place in our travelling get up. We watched all the young professionals, me with a sort of nostalgia, this had been my life for the past 3 years, lots of expensive lunches. We ate our posh lamb Turkish kebab wraps, and afterwards we hauled the bags back on our shoulders to walk to the Sydney opera house.

Magnificent as always. It was not my first time here but it holds a very strong appeal. We didn’t go inside but walked right up to it.

Soon another nap was calling to us. We had an ice cream which melted too fast, and got onto the train again back to the airport. The flight to Brisbane was on time! We did have to do a bit of a shuffle with all of our stuff (too heavy for the 7kg limit). This involved taking all the technology out; phones, battery, camera, and putting it all into pockets. Christ what an ordeal!

When we returned to Sydney 11 days later, we were staying with my friend Katharine and her boyfriend Brett. Katherine and I had known each other from the womb, our mothers met and made firm friends, and even though K and I had never been to the same school, we had grown up together.

Andy and I got a taxi to their place in Randwick, which was considerably cheaper than the train experience, and let our selves in. A gorgeous apartment 10 minutes from Coogee beach. Katherine arrived back from work and we had a delicious meal with lots of wine, met Brett, and spent the evening catching up!

Day 1 – Coogee to Bondi

There is a coastal walk from Coogee to Bondi. We were now completely hooked on Bondi Rescue (a very terrible TV programme about idiots going for a swim at Bondi Beach outside the flags and the life guards’ tales of how they had been saved, it’s amazing) so of course, naturally, we wanted to go for a swim there.

We set off to Coogee and had a coffee in a fancy cafe. After reading the local magazine about rescue dogs (errr, yes please, so cute) we set off along the path around the coast. There are so many beaches and swimming pool areas, it’s beautiful.

We made it to Bondi! It’s just like the show!! We did go for a swim but my goodness, the currents were so strong. Yes I can see how you can quickly get panicked in the water. It’s is constantly pulling you away.

We received notification my glasses had arrived at the Randwick Specsavers branch! Hurrah! Went to collect them, yay I can see again.

We returned to K&B’s and had homemade gnocchi and roasted pumpkin for dinner. Scrummy! We watched an AFL game on the TV, Brett’s team won, I don’t mind this sport. It’s exciting!

Day 2 – Marrickville and Newtown

Today is Saturday so Katharine and Brett were off work and we had a very nice boozy day of bar hopping.

First thing we did some organisation, we booked our flights to the Philippines. That’s it! We are going. Oh it’s nice to have a plan.

After a delicious cheese toasty (hats off to K – we’ve had some awesome food this stay) we got an Uber to Marrickville. Wandering around the neighbourhood, it felt a little like the Dog Patch area in SF, very industrial but some hidden gems.

Our route took us from Stockade Brewery, where we sampled a nice pale ale, to Sauce, where we also went to a nearby bakery to get meat pies. Yum! Next we went to play Boules at the local club, it was hilarious fun. We played in couples and for the whole match to 15, K&B were clearly winning.. until Andy and I got our act together and won the last few rounds. So much fun!

Photo credit: Katharine Aries 🙂

We next went to Newtown which was the neighbourhood K&B lived in initially when moving to Sydney, it’s got a younger feel, more bars, more restaurants. We went to the Courthouse to watch the AFL, but Katharine and I were getting hungry so we went to Mary’s for a burger. Delicious! The boys joined soon after and we got a taxi back to Randwick. It had been a very good day!

Day 3 – Lazy Centennial Park

Today was very quiet, very relaxed. The morning was spent watching the telly, then Andy and I went for a walk to the park. It was huge, lots of ponds and parrots. We met up with K&B at the pub in Randwick to watch the football final between Sydney and Perth. It finished nil-nil after extra time and went to penalties. This is why I prefer AFL.. at least people bloody score during the game!!

We ate an Australian delicacy, a parmy, which is battered chicken breast (bit like a schnitzel) coated in tomato, cheese and a special sauce. It was tasty!

Day 4 – Spit to Manly Coastal Walk

Everyone was back at work after the weekend, so with nothing else to do we decided to get on the bus, using those Opal cards, and travel over to the Spit bridge. There was a 10km walk all the way to Manly beach and stops along the way.

The bus trip was easy to navigate, and we soon got to the start of the walk at the Spit marina.

We walked through some leafy areas, and up and down lots of steps. Quite the work out! There were plenty of people running it, and lots of hidden cove beaches. It felt remote.

We went off the trail on a detour to see a lighthouse, love a lighthouse, and all I kept thinking was, what if a snake comes out.. we aren’t wearing those knee high garter things..!!

On the return from the lighthouse we met a naked man. At first I was confused, ok topless I get, sure it is warm today, but fully naked? Really – it’s not that remote. So in the end we did see a snake in the bush… it just wasn’t the type we were expecting.

We got to Manly beach and caught the ferry back to the harbour. Fantastic sunset, and gorgeous photos.

What a lovely walk!

Our last evening with Katharine and Brett was great, we ate and drank and fondly said our farewells. The next day was a flight to Singapore to begin our travels in Asia. Thank you both for a fabulous stay.

Melbourne

Australia

11th – 16th May

Day 1 – AFL

We arrived with Richard and Hazel Smart at 3am with an Uber from the airport. Shattered, we whispered hello to Richard who let us in, showed us the kitchen, bathroom and then to our room. Gladly we fell asleep.

The next morning at around 10am we woke and said hello properly! A breakfast of our left over crunchy nut and croissants was eaten whilst we told them of our travels to date. Andy used to work with Richard in Leeds before he and Hazel moved to Melbourne 18months ago. Hazel works for Arup (small world eh) and we had met once in SF. Despite being a stranger to one half of the couple, awkwardness was never apparent as they welcomed us into their home, and again we feel so lucky to know wonderful people living in amazing places!

We discovered R&H lived a 10minute train ride from the world famous MCG which this afternoon would host AFL with Collingwood vs Carlton (a strong rivalry). We soon learnt that AFL was something we needed to quickly get into. Everyone was talking about it, so might as well immerse ourselves in Australian culture! The tickets were cheap at $27 and there were 69,000 people watching in the stadium! The atmosphere was friendly and the game close, exciting! I was on the edge of my seat, mainly because I was struggling to see long distance but even so. It was a thrilling game! We drank a few pints of Carlton beer and ate a meat pie with ketchup. Proper Ozzie style.

After the game we went for a walk to Federation Square, through the graffitied streets of AC/DC lane, and finished at the Arbury Afloat waterfront bar for a glass of wine.

We had food back in South Yarra and it was very tasty. Melbourne, we’ve decided, is pretty cool.

Day 2 – Brighton to St Kilda Pier

The day started by going to the very nice, organic, Prahan market to pick up some food. We were having a bbq later (despite the chilly weather). I popped into specsavers (it’s apparently a thing here too) whilst the others were shopping. I left purchasing a pair of clear glasses and a pair of sunnies (up sold to polarised..) with the promise that they would be in Sydney by the end of our stay in Australia! Fingers crossed.

Met up with R&H at the market and had a coffee. Gosh it’s lovely here. This afternoon the plan was to get the train to Brighton Beach (sounds familiar) and walk to St Kilda Pier.

The painted beach boxes: a classic Instagram post for anyone passing by.

The pier!

My friend Tania has moved from SF back to Melbourne and it just so happened she was available to come along with us, though because it was Mother’s Day in Australia, she caught up with us in Elwood where we stopped for a drink. It was so lovely to catch up with her. She now works at ANZ bank working on sustainable projects, which sounds ace.

We were at the pier to watch the penguins. There were lots of people, so clearly this was the thing to do! We saw them eventually come out of the water and jump up over the rocks to their nests. So cute!

Tania introduced us to the awesome combination of wedges, sour cream and sweet chilli sauce. It was delicious! We then got a lift with her back to the flat.

After a scrummy bbq and a few episodes of Bondi Rescue (new favourite tv programme) it was bed time.

Day 3 – Brunswick and the Docklands

We are picking up a car today for a road trip! We decided to pick it up today so we could leave early tomorrow morning. The cheapest car available was from Live Jucy. God – we are now ‘one of them’ and it makes me slightly sad as we go to a warehouse outside St Kilda to pick it up. We write our name on a white board (what no iPad registration?) and sit at one of the green stools to watch the promo video of Live Jucy global. They are even in SF! I hadn’t heard of them before NZ but I can’t say I ever went camping in California.. Except for that one time with Jacinda. We finally get shown to our car and it is a beaten up specimen, scratches everywhere, and 300,000km on the clock. The girl basically marked the whole car as ‘scuffed’ and off we went. We parked at R&H’s building garage, and then set off to meet up with Ruby for lunch.

Ruby is another ex-Arup friend who has now moved on to do exciting things. We went to a quirky cafe for a tasty lunch in Brunswick and caught up. It was great to see her and she was enthusiastic telling us about her latest projects. Go girl!

Next we visited the New Gallery of Victoria. It was full of interesting stuff. We picked up a thank you card for R&H and then went into the Melbourne Arup office for a tour. I knew the lighting lead Tim, and he showed us around. It was gorgeous, and credit to him, the lighting design was mostly working! It looked very good in the evening. The office boasts a gym, light lab and all sorts of little break outs, with plants that looked healthy!

We were next going to meet up with Tom, a friend from Sheffield who now lived in Sydney, but randomly was in Melbourne on a project! We enjoyed a couple of bottles of wine and a pizza! It was getting quite late so we headed back to R&H’s, to catch up on their day. Quite busy seeing everyone but a lovely day!

Day 4 – Grampians

We packed up our little bags and dropped Richard off at work this morning, on the way to Ballarat. I went panning for gold in Ballarat with my family when I was 13 and the trip came flooding back. Squashed into the back of Uncle Nigel and Aunty Sheila’s car, my mum, dad, sister and I sat. I vividly remember the rain on that day, and all of us having a great time, wearing our tie dye jumpers. What weirdos.

We didn’t stop in Ballarat this time, we drove through to the Grampians preferring to hike than search for gold. It took about 3 hrs. Half way we noticed a strange sound from the car. Took a look and the mud guard around a front wheel was coming loose and required bolting back together… gah this was an old car.

We arrived at Hall Gap and had lunch, picked up snacks for the walk and then hiked up to the pinnacle.

These photos were taken at the top and during the descent back down!

We returned to the car and then drove south to the coast at Port Campbell. We stayed in a holiday park! In a cabin.. feeling quite luxurious, we marvelled we were now one of those people that tenters would be jealous of! Oh how quickly we forget..

We had a meal at a nearby hostel, which had its own brewery and pizza oven. Delicious food, and early to bed for tomorrow’s adventure.

Day 5 – the Great Ocean Road

In the morning we found a shop and bought muffins, orange juice and a coffee. We sat at a picnic table by the port and ate our food, watching the sea gulls.

The first stop was Loch Ard Gorge. We walked around the headland, reading about the boat that crashed here with only 2 survivors. Quite a harrowing tale. There was a cemetery for the 100 odd people who died. The colours of the landscape were amazing even though it was quite a blustery windy day.

We took the Gibson steps down to the beach, worth a trip.

Andy being the gentleman.

Next stop was the Apostles! There were 12 supposedly at one point but wind and sea erosion meant that now there are only 7 still standing.

The road then took us to Cape Otoway where there was a lighthouse apparently. But along the way we saw 2 kuala bears IN THE WILD!!! The fuzzy ball in the trees was just noticeable and it was amazing!

Here is the lighthouse. They were charging $12 or something to go inside so instead we went to see it from a short distance. We weren’t that fussed..

We had lunch at Apollo Bay, fish and chips, not the best we had ever had, and the tartar sauce was questionable!

Because Andy’s parents have a van in Anglesea, Wales – we had to stop here too for a quick wee and a photo! We finished our drive at the super quaint Chianti cottages in Torquay. It was a lot of driving to do.. but some lovely landscapes along the way. We fancy coming back and cycling it next time!

Tomorrow we will take the car back to Live Jucy at the airport, and fly back to Sydney to stay with my friend Katharine and her bf Brett. We will be staying with them until next Tuesday! Melbourne and the surroundings has been wonderful. Definitely want to come back!

Brisbane

Australia

7th – 10th May

We stayed in a self service apartment close to the bridge. It was basic but good enough for our needs, and certainly more comfortable than the tent had been! It was located next to a construction site that had work being undertaken from 6am in the morning, and needless to say with curtains that didn’t close properly (fixed later on with the bed spread looped through the curtain rail..), we were up early every morning.

We had four days in Brisbane and had hired a car from East Coast rentals. We wanted to see as much of the coast line as possible. The weather was spectacular; sunny and warm. If this is winter in Oz…

Day 1: South Bank and the CBD

After breakfast of crunchy nut cereal, we did all of our chores. Washed our clothes, went shopping at Cole’s and bought sufficient supplies for the next few days. I made up some sandwiches (salami, cheese, tomato, cucumber, lettuce and mayo.. mmm yummy!) and off we went.

We love a botanic garden, so naturally this was our first stop, and we followed the scenic river walkway to the bridge.

I enjoyed the shading!

We arrived at the Streets Beach, which was in South Bank. It was very cool, and we enjoyed the vibe! There were swimming pools, beaches, kids play parks, fountains to cool off in, and bars and restaurants. It was pretty quiet, gladly not the weekend!

This guy was watching us eat our sandwiches, hoping for a bite! We chilled at the beach and went for a swim.

Chilly water but very refreshing.

Spot the Andy…

We wandered back to the hotel and cooked, early to bed after an episode of ‘Lego Masters’. It was tense, but apparently it’s been on the telly for months, we are only getting into it for the finals week. God these people are geeks. Apart from the one woman involved. She’s very artistic!

Day 2: Noosa Headlands

The builders woke us up at 4am this morning, pouring concrete. It was so loud whilst we were having our breakfast on the balcony we could barely hear each other!

We drove north for a couple of hours to the Noosa Headlands. The drive was all along the highway, and there wasn’t too much to look at. Missing cycling already..

We arrived and there was a Californian vibe of too many people, not enough parking, and queues of cars slowly inching through the town. We did the loops but ended up parking a little way away. We walked along the paved path to the end, keeping our eyes pealed for koalas! We reached sunshine bay and, sweaty and hungry, we stopped for lunch. We ate our sarnies, and were all of a sudden swarmed By flies. Except they weren’t flies they were mosquitoes! Day time mosquitoes!?!?! Argh. Went for a swim to wash them off. We walked back via the bush walk, which was a quieter route. Didn’t see any koalas – they have all gone 😦

Walked back to the car and got an ice cream along the way. I went for a pistachio flavour – delicious!

Day 3 – Coolangatta

The builders started work hammering later this morning, how reasonable of them.

We had to get more breakfast items and bread for sandwiches but soon set off for the Gold Coast. After some speedy research on best beaches I found a place called Coolangatta which proclaimed to be quieter than Byron Bay but still beautiful. That’d do.

We arrived and set up a spot, it really was beautiful. We went for a swim and I blogged for a while whilst Andy read the news.

After the customary amount of time we went for a walk to the snapper rocks. Google told me there was a good look out, and always in search of a hill to climb, off we went!

Gold Coast city in the background.

Lots of people were gathered around some railing and there was a rig of lights being installed. We were told there was filming going on for a new film called ‘Monster Problems’ staring the guy from Maze Runner.. ooh. We watched them all and marvelled at Hollywood in action.

We walked back to the original beach and went for a final swim. As we were showering off the sand I realised that my glasses were nowhere to be found. Rats. Retracing our steps we raked our eyes over the sand but to no avail. They were gone. Oh well. The score of ‘lost items’ is currently running at 2:1 to Andy. Mine are just slightly more expensive though..

We drove down the road to Currumbin where there was a look out point called ‘elephant rock’. The sunset was incredible. Gorgeous.

Day 4 – Australia Zoo

I woke up early to research where I could buy glasses. Luckily I had a recent prescription. Could I order a pair in England and get M&D to send them here, but how long would that take? And where would we be? Could I buy some in Australia? But where from? Did they allow that, or were they madly expensive and strict like the US? In the end I decided not to worry about it. Today was our last day in Brisbane, glasses or not, I was going to enjoy it!

On the top 10 things to do in Brisbane is the Australia Zoo. It professes to be kind to animals, allows animal encounters, and has good reviews for a family day out. We could get a bit of discount from our hotel so we went for it.

Both of us are now very cynical about zoos, you hear of all sorts; cruelty to animals and awful living conditions. But we were surprised with the space in the zoo today. All the animals seemed happy to be there, the kangaroos and lemurs allowed you to get close up, the kuala bears hung out in the trees, smelly and cute, and we saw a few rhinos and giraffes too. There was a show in the croccoseum (ha ha) where the crocodile Graham (odd choice of name for a crocodile, surely Curley the Croc is better. If Andy and I ran a zoo there would be alliteration all over the place).

Again – trained wild animals not my favourite thing to watch.. but it was a good show as this guy was just trying to kill Dave the zoo keeper (not his real name).

After we had our fill of the kuala bears, we drove back to the airport. On the way we stopped off at the Glasshouse Mountains. Wowee, stunning!

Our flight was scheduled for 7.30pm but guess what… delayed until 11.15! We were annoyed for our hosts in Melbourne who would now have to wake up at 3am to let us in. But, such is the way when flying with budget airlines in Australia!