Flight fine and a well located and smart Airbnb in Kent St. Our plans were somewhat hampered by the rain, so the planned expensive walk over the top of Sydney Harbour bridge did not take place. Nic however managed to spend any of the money we might have saved on increasing his collection of Global kitchen knives which, unlike almost anything else seem to be cheaper here than at home.
On our second morning we took advantage of the time difference from NZ by going on a tour of (you guessed) the Sydney Fish market at 6.40 am, the second biggest in the world, shifting 15 million kg of seafood per year. Brilliant tour with a very knowledgeable guide, included fascinating Dutch auctions.
The next afternoon we went out separate ways, Carolyn continuing the piscatorial theme with a visit to the very impressive Sea Life Aquarium which had a enormous Great Barrier Reef tank and two large pools that you can walk through in Perspex tunnels with sharks and huge rays passing overhead.
Nic meanwhile went to the Australian National Maritime museum.
On another day we dodged the rain in the Botanic gardens and encountered some of the dangerous Australian city wildlife! ( which shot a stream of venom at Nic ! )
We also visited the Sydney Museum and Government House and then could no longer resist a third visit to the fish market for a BBQ cooking class. Carolyn was proud to have prepared her first squid. We made 5 dishes in all and then enjoyed sitting down for a very large lunch!
The weekend happened to be the Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, and the parade of 12,000 people watched by 200,000, an amazing spectacle! It was difficult to choose a few pictures!
The next day we attended the obligatory concert at the Opera House. Having been unable together tickets for the play we wanted to see we settled for an enjoyable 'best of' opera selection. In sharp contrast to the Harbour Bridge the Opera House was actually smaller than I had anticipated but still spectacular outside from different viewpoints and in different lights although a wholly sunny photo evaded us!
As well as walking many miles we enjoyed using the train network (with many interconnecting tunnels enabling us to avoid a soaking) and the many ferries.
We had a particularly enjoyable walk from Bondi to Coogee Beach on a tremendously windy day. The swimming pools along the coast looked particularly exciting!
On our last day we did a circular walk from Manley. After an 'interesting' ferry crossing we enjoyed a last lunch in the sunshine.
Our long return flight included a 5 hour crack of dawn stopover at Tokyo airport where we managed to get a cracking view of Mount Fuji and a pilot window cleaner!
On our second morning we took advantage of the time difference from NZ by going on a tour of (you guessed) the Sydney Fish market at 6.40 am, the second biggest in the world, shifting 15 million kg of seafood per year. Brilliant tour with a very knowledgeable guide, included fascinating Dutch auctions.
The next afternoon we went out separate ways, Carolyn continuing the piscatorial theme with a visit to the very impressive Sea Life Aquarium which had a enormous Great Barrier Reef tank and two large pools that you can walk through in Perspex tunnels with sharks and huge rays passing overhead.
Nic meanwhile went to the Australian National Maritime museum.
On another day we dodged the rain in the Botanic gardens and encountered some of the dangerous Australian city wildlife! ( which shot a stream of venom at Nic ! )
We also visited the Sydney Museum and Government House and then could no longer resist a third visit to the fish market for a BBQ cooking class. Carolyn was proud to have prepared her first squid. We made 5 dishes in all and then enjoyed sitting down for a very large lunch!
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| Balmain bugs: tastier and far cheaper than lobster! |
The next day we attended the obligatory concert at the Opera House. Having been unable together tickets for the play we wanted to see we settled for an enjoyable 'best of' opera selection. In sharp contrast to the Harbour Bridge the Opera House was actually smaller than I had anticipated but still spectacular outside from different viewpoints and in different lights although a wholly sunny photo evaded us!
As well as walking many miles we enjoyed using the train network (with many interconnecting tunnels enabling us to avoid a soaking) and the many ferries.
We had a particularly enjoyable walk from Bondi to Coogee Beach on a tremendously windy day. The swimming pools along the coast looked particularly exciting!
Our long return flight included a 5 hour crack of dawn stopover at Tokyo airport where we managed to get a cracking view of Mount Fuji and a pilot window cleaner!




























