New continent, new country, a new page of my travel and why not
a new languge? I speak english quite well after months of practice
but my writing on the other hand need some serious improvement and
what´s the best way to do it? Write of course! So for now on I will
write in English and hopefully my English teacher from high school
won´t see this..
Anyway, after
four months of heat, temples, trekking, beaches, good and bad
accommodations, all kind of strange vehicles, some lost belongings,
thousends of happy faces and a lot of rice and noodles I´m finally
getting a break from it all and I enter Australia and Melbourne.
After watching a few episodes of "Border Security: Australia Frontline"
on TV about the custom and border control at the airports in Australia and been told storys how hard it can be to enter the country I
was well prepared. I had a copy of my visa, printscreen of my bank
account and my accommodation and all the arriving papers in order
from the plane. I was ready for everything. But the officer at the
passport control just asked about my purpose of visiting Australia
(of course he knew because he could see my Working Holiday visa
connected to my passport on the computer), what kind of work I will
do and if I have any friends here. And thats it! Maybe its because
Sweds have a good reputation over here or maybe simply because it was
11.30 pm and the guy was tired and wanted to go home and sleep. What
ever it was, I´m now granted to stay up to 12 months in Australia!
From the first day walking around central Melbourne or Central Business Distrikt (CBD) I like the town. Melbourne
is clean and fresh. The traffic is not overwhelming as in the big
citys in Asia and there are more bikes then scooters around here and every third car is not a big pick up truck. Even though Melbourne is the second
biggets city in Australia with over 4 million inhabitants the central area is quite small and you can
easily walk everywhere.
During my first days in Melbourne I
participats in a course called Responsible Service of Alcohol, RSA, a
course that everyone how wants to work in restaurants and bars and
serve alcohol most complet. You pay 39 AUD and they basically teach
you why you shouldn´t overserve people, the signs for intoxication
and how to handle a drunk person. Nothing new for me since I´ve been
working in nightclubs and bars before but still it was nice to get
some information about the alcohol laws over here.
Melbourne is known for its street art
but when I took a walk around town, with a map from the tourist
information, to look at some popular spots I got really disappointed.
Most of it was ordinary gratffiti, which I also like but I was
expecting more. Later that day I did some more research online for
the street art and where to find it and the day after I found some
truly amazing paintings. And the good thing is that there is still
more to discover.
Jättefina bilder! :) Det är kul med städer med gatukonst. Ska tipsa Stockholm stad om det...
SvaraRadera