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  • 7-8 California | Holiday 1995-2024 | USA West Coast Road Trip

    Explore our 2007 California travel diary with Highway 1 road trips, Monterey, Carmel, Big Sur, state parks, wildlife, coastal views, and West Coast adventures. 2007 California Travel Guide & Blog CALIFORNIA, USA - HOLIDAY in 2007 A Travel Blog Experience NOTE all words in ITALICS were either written on the trip or before we left (labelled HISTORY) Cali-Forn-I-A here we come UPDATE 31/10/2007 Now left U S of A Arrived safely in Morgan Hill, CA. It's ace!!! Comms: both phones don't work but eMail OK Visited Monterey, Carmel & Big Sur with S&T along the fabulous Californian Highway 1, now one of our New Wonders of the modern world Went for a walk in the Santa Monica County Park and ate really, really well... Went up to the Henry Coe State Park on the back of Morgan Hill (wow, xclent)..Alas have to leave 31st Flight back to LAX, then on AirNZ to Fiji 2350 HIGHLIGHTS Seeing Sherree and Trung again, Monteray & Big Sur LOWLIGHTS None HISTORY Things are starting to shape up. We are staying with my Cousin Sherree and her husband Trung for 4 days and gonna see the Beach Boys coast. Big Sur, Monterey etc. Flight Delta Airlines 7772 LAX to SJC We will be staying in Morgan Hill at the bottom end of Santa Clara County 27/10-31/10 .... "Whatever"...."Awesome"!!! California is a lovely place and the coast along highway 1 truly spectacular. Some of those views will live in the memory forever and images of fields of pumkins, wow! Summary: USA 7 days , Day 1-7, 26/10/2007 - 1/11/2007 EXTRA INFORMATION From our travels, our Holidays, The Gap Year,USA 26 Oct-1 Nov 2007 - California, Los Angeles & San Jose, with family, video now broken into 2 parts in nov2020 ,morgan hills, Monterey, highway 1, carmel, san fransisco images, Californian state parks, santa clara county, leroy anderson lake, reservoir, fishing, quicksilver mercury mine, walks, snakes, henry w coe state park, outside loos, eagles, bald headed, kingfishers, birds & plants, candlestick park, cannery row, steinbeck, clam chowder, rocky creek bridge, sunsets, the big sur, sister hazel, pacific ocean, humming birds, Harley d’s, spindrift inn, jacuzzi’s, gazebos, Travelodge , lax, airports, bush fires, pelicans, bush turkeys, sunset restaurants, compulsory tips, cousins, pumpkins, Halloween, seals, sea otters, harbours, whale watching trips, marinas, arts and crafts market, museums, sardines, garden centres, wild life, town squares, panorama, tranquil, sheep, Japanese food, grits, brekkie out, wharfs, fun times catching up, sherree & trung’s hospitality, big tick 2007 26th October - 1st November We visited California landing in LAX from Heathrow, overnight then up to San Jose, picked up by Cuz's hubby and to Morgan Hills In this California 2007 travel diary, we document our journey across the West Coast, beginning with our arrival at Los Angeles International Airport and continuing through Morgan Hill, Monterey, Carmel, Big Sur, and several California state parks. Our trip focuses on exploring iconic coastal routes, including Highway 1, and visiting well‑known destinations such as Cannery Row, Carmel Beach, and the dramatic Big Sur coastline. We also spend time in Santa Clara County, visiting family, enjoying local food, and experiencing everyday Californian life. Throughout the diary, we highlight key attractions including Henry W. Coe State Park, Leroy Anderson Lake, and the scenic viewpoints along the Pacific Coast. Wildlife encounters — from sea otters and pelicans to deer and hummingbirds — form an important part of our travel experience. We also describe local dining, from clam chowder in Monterey to sushi and traditional American breakfasts. This page provides a detailed, day‑by‑day record of our California holiday, offering practical insights, location‑based observations, and a clear sense of the landscapes, towns, and coastal scenery that define the region. It serves as a comprehensive travel record for anyone researching California road trips, coastal itineraries, or West Coast travel inspiration. Explore our 2007 California travel diary featuring Highway 1, Monterey, Carmel, Big Sur, state parks, wildlife encounters, and West Coast coastal adventures. Diary Los Angeles Day 1 - Friday 26th October 2007 Notts->London->LA The Big day has arrived. We had our hire car delivered yesterday evening. Drove to Heathrow, dumped it off and then caught our Air NZ flight NZ0001 1 to LA.What we saw Pirates of the C, World’s End, Unknown, Harry Potter 3,oh and played Who wants to be a Millionaire.the entertainments system on Air NZ is ACEfood superb A really good flightPlus Travel lodge LAX very good, spacious friendly and free shuttle, T2 under the red Courtesy signs Who we met The fruit hunting dog (LAPD sniffer dog working for the Produce Dept). Soccer coaching History teacher from Arizona who kindly loaned us his phone to ring for shuttle bus and knew of Forest and a guy who played for them in 1970s called Goughapparently he teaches alongside him now. Mexican shuttle bus driver who supported the baseball team (Dodgers?) and had a daughter who graduated from Paulo Alto Uni plus Ginger & Grace from Didley Boinge, Idaho (who offered us a Beach Vacation Condo in Malibubizarre), Ohhh and of course the 40 foot high LAX concrete letters outside the airport Plus Swartzenneger (Arnie) Governor of the state of California declared a state of national emergency yesterday after fires ravaged southern California, San Diego / Malibu areas and Fiji times tells us that SavuSavu was flooded, blimey what are we letting ourselves in for.Hurricane Ivan and Jamaica from a few years back spring to mind Alas neither Phone works can’t get a service despite what Travelmood eKit says,Took some photos of the Travelodge which had a nice pool although no time to use was about 69 deg F Hotel california with an eagle-eye Day 2 - Saturday 27th October 2007,LAX->SJC Good nights kip about 9 hours. Really comfortable king size bed. Needed after staying up I guess about 30 hours Travelodge LAX. Got shuttle back to T5 and caught Delta Airlines flight 7772 to San Jose (left 1.50pm) Flew along the coast, superb views. Was a v small plane, one & 2 seats across the aisle. About a 50 minute flight. San Jose airport fun and a bit like east midlands, v small after LAX Trung collected us in TRN 2 (Blue BMW) He has 2 cars and Sherree one. Showed around their excellent house Huge Jacuzzi, landscaped backgarden,Breakfast far too much at Travelodge. First test email to Boys: Watched game 3 of the World Series (Red Sox Vs Rockies) with Trung in the El Toro Brew House last night....whilst Mum & I ate what was probably the larger burger we've ever had (eat your heart out Heston B) Sherree and Trung have been most welcoming and their house is ace (huge actually we need a map to find our way around). They have just had the backgarden landscaped so sat out with Trung under the pagoda watching the humming birds and saw our first bald headed eagle. Sherree alas was working about an hour away. They have a Jacuzzi so gonna try that. V warm here at the mo which is nice. Off to Monterrey and Big Sur today and we are treating them to a meal in the restaurant at Monterrey which is in the 1000 things to do before you die book we have.Flight over good. You will love the Air Nz flight, best we have ever been on....ace food, entertainment saw 3 current movies (Pirates, Harry P and Unknown...plus wait for it we played computer games) When you and Phoenix get to LA however you have to deplane , fill in the green card, wait in line, go to transit lounge for 2 hours and then get back on....only upside is your luggage stays on the plane so no need to recheck that. Bit of a pain but there you go. We forced our way thru jet lag by staying up the whole way to LAX....probably a good move for you too and then sleep on the bit from LAX to Auckland. Still better go, alas roaming profile phone DOESNT work so probably no phone until NZ (more later) Who we met Trung and Sherree, Aussies at San Jose who like us were puzzled by picking your luggage up on the tarmac Must be a fast track thing Plus simpering insincere waitress at El Toro Brew House restaurant Plus Eagle on the old oak tree from their backgarden. Humming birds. Squirrel, Canada Geese , Local Amber Ales and Californian Wines. Discussions with Trung on everything including Politics and Gadgets,Took some photos of Sherree’s from windows plus one of El Toro. San Jose Day 3 - Sunday 28th October 2007,Monterey, Carmel & Big Sur Got up about 7.40 am V Sunny Clear skies Good Sleep, no real jet lag, Sherree & Trung drove us in TRN2 down to Monterey. Took about 1.5 hours to drive there. Saw eagles circling in air alongside highway. Lovely place. Lots of sea life – sealions, sea otters, cormorants, pelicans. Monterey is a 1900 old fishing harbour with now many new posh yachts moored. Used to be sardine capital of the world, which were processed by canning factories. Walked along the sea front having seen fisherman’s wharf and tasted the countless free offerings of clam chowder They hollow out a loaf and put it in there if you buy the full deal. Walked along Cannery Row which was a street next to the shoreline where the sardine canneries used to be (John Steinbeck’s novel Cannery Row). Had a quick bite in McFlys and then walked back along the sea front. Many posh hotels. Then drove through Carmel and onto Big Sur via CA Highway 1 A superb road. Carmel was quaint, individual shops along a busy main street with a small sandy beach at the end. Lots of tourists here. Sherree said that the houses were very expensive in Carmel even though they were very small old fashioned bungalows c 1920. Further along Highway 1 we stopped at Carmel Highlands area at a hotel and went in the Pacific Edge bar. Had fantastic 180 degree views of the ocean from the bar which was set on the cliff edge. Stopped at bar/restaurant at Big Sur coastline and had dinner under the stars. This restaurant is mentioned in book 1000 Things to See Before You Die. Lovely sunset. Would like to come back again sometime and see it all. Returned to Sherree’s around 10.30pm very tired and went to bed.Talked to the waitress in the restaurant about a old RHCP’s song that mentions Big Sur, reminder to K look it up sometime. Dinner under the stars at restaurant along Big Sur coastline. Watching sunset over the Pacific Ocean. Day 4 - Monday 29th October 2007, Morgan Hill, CA Got up about 7.40 am Did some stuff on the PC mostly photos and updating the Website,Off to Santa Clara County Quicksilver Park. Walked about 2.5miles along trail to quicksilver mine where mercury was produced from 1902 to 1976 when it closed down. Sheet metal factory was dilapidated and rusty (took photo). Great views of Californian landscape which looked tinder dry. Sherree and Anne saw a small snake, about 12 inches long and as thin as a pencil. It slithered away from us among the leaves. Unfortunately Keef had the camera and he was too far ahead of us so did not take photo. After the walk we drove round the road near a reservoir and saw two deer and what looked like wild turkeys crossing the road. The houses at the edge of Santa Clara Park were small hick properties with chairs by the porch and rusted cars dumped out front. Other houses that we saw around the area were palatial mansions in contrast. Took photo of a field full of pumpkins on the road back to Morgan Hill. Then had a late lunch and well earned cold drink in a Mexican restaurant. Returned to Sherree’s house and chilled.Saw a small snake and wild deer. Mexican meal in downtown Morgan Hill. Great Burrito Fajitas Keef had beef, Anne chicken ohhh and we watched an Eddie Murphy Disney movie that Keef snored thru. Sorry! Loved Humming Bird, Santa Clara Park Walk Day 5 - Tuesday 30th October 2007,Morgan Hill, CA Got up about 7.40 am Did some stuff on the PC mostly photos and updating the Website, Sherree took us out for an American breakfast wow, ham, eggs (sunny side up) hash browns, stack of pancakes with maple syrup and cream and endless coffee.boy oh boy just too much food. Then as a first 2 times in one day we went to a Sushi bar for our evening meal. Very nicesushi, sashimi, tempura and teriyakisee we know them all, went in the Jacuzzi Keef had a beer and the ladies some Napa valley Chardonnay. Went to the Henry W Coe State park here in Santa Clara County. Twisty road that climbed the hills away from the Morgan Hill valley – stunning views. Saw another reservoir where people were fishing and waterskiing. Keef took photo of an eagle soaring. There was a campsite at the end of the one way road where there was a sign warning campers that raccoons can bite, but we did not see any, only some blue jays and squirrels. Only saw one other car there so the camp area was very quiet. Again, the grass looked very yellow and tinder dry. From the camp area you could see for miles across hills/mountains and valleys. Tried sushi for the first time. The little plates went round on a miniature Amtrac train. Very nice. Sherree told us that further north in the county two joggers were attacked by a mountain lion/cougar. Pictures of Chickens outside Scrambl’z, Drive up past Leroy Anderson reservoir and Dam plus Henry W Coe park with views across the hlls and valleys. Day 6 - Wednesday 31st October 2007,San Jose->LAX, AirNZ Got up about 8 Did some stuff on the PC mostly emails Packed and got ready to go back via San Jose to LAX and then onto Nadi, Fiji Sherree told us that there had been a earthquake in the San Jose area measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale. Not big but a quake none the less Must confess as we were driving back with S from the Sushi restaurant we never felt a thing.Sherree delivered us to San Jose airport Terminal C. They have both been most kind to us and we really enjoyed staying with them. Then via Delta Airlines 7772 we flew back to LAX terminal 5. LA is HUGE spreading in neat little boxes their grid system spreads from coast to hills as far as the eye can see. Have to say it would be most intimidating to live there. Pushed luggage, we now have it under control – 2 X 23kg bags, the laptop bag and the flight bag. In US you have to take laptop outta bag and shoes off for security checks. Got trolley for luggage and walked from T5 to T2 (Air NZ) Quite a way. Departures are top level at LAX and arrivals below. Flew out of LAX at 11.15pm on a slightly smaller plane than the NZ1 flight (we were on NZ21) but that was cool as we tried to sleep. Met check in guy at Delta Airlines SLC. We were over limit and they wanted 50 bucks per bag, took out one jacket and a jumper respectively and saved $100. Saw tramway alongside Highway 101 on the way into San Jose. Keef saw the HOLLYWOOD sign in the brown hills well away from the coast as the Delta Airlines flight came in. Alas not quick enough however to take a photo of it. Took some final photos of Sherree’s to show her Jacuzzi/ pagoda-pergola Day 7 - Thursday 1st November 2007,LAX -> Nadi,Fiji Whole day ‘Lost in Translation’ or is it flight, weird. Basically to do with crossing the International Date line. Note we also crossed the Equator for the first time into the Southern Hemisphere, what we saw or didn’t – Evan Almighty was on the wide screen (no back of seat entertainment) this time but it was tricky to listen / see To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 17 Cook Isles | Decades of Travel

    “Discover the Cook Islands through decades of travel memories — turquoise lagoons, island life, and unforgettable adventures from our long‑running travel archive.” COOK ISLANDS - We stayed on RAROTONGA Raina Beach House, 10-17 April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY We stayed at the Raina Beach house in Titikaveka, right on the beach front and close to the fruits of the sea lagoon, the best places for snorkeling in the Cook Isles. It wasn't so easy to find in the dark. We had a hire car so explored as well as chilled. Loved the lush interior on the inner road, Wigmore's waterfall, the botanic gardens and lemon cheesecake, Muri burgers, Rarotonga brewery lager and the capital Avarua on the outer road. Nice chill time here on the island at our Raina beach house close to the waters edge. Loved snorkeling, sun bathing, reading , kayaking (well some of us), exploring the island both inner and outer roads, Rarotonga brewery, Little Polynesian restaurant, Botanic gardens, Lemon cheesecake, Muri burgers, University, Museum, Outriggers, Church services, Tropical flowers and customs. April 17 Diary Cook Island's Brewery, guess who visited? "Paradise Home by the Sea" Little Polynesian Restaurant, Titikaveka Jack fruit from the wonderful cafe in the Botanic gardens, which was not far from our cottage Avarua market, great smoothies here 2017 Cook Islands with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/20 Cottage views of our personal reef

  • 10 Nova Scotia | Holiday 1995-2024 | Travel Guide and Blog

    Explore Nova Scotia’s rugged coast, historic towns, lighthouses and maritime culture in this 2010 travel diary revisiting early‑2000s adventures across the province. 2010 Nova Scotia Travel Blog & Guide Suggested 10‑day motorhome itinerary in Nova Scotia Best coastal campsites we used SUMMARY Here are five strong campsite or camping‑base recommendations drawn from that Nova Scotia trip page, with reasons why they stand out for your blog readers. 1. Antigonish campsite (Highland Games base) Great base for the Antigonish Highland Games, bagpipes and dancing, and a very Scottish atmosphere that fits Nova Scotia’s “New Scotland” feel. Memorable story element (caravan awning bending in high winds) that you can use to give practical tips about wind, awnings, and weather awareness. 2. Broad Cove Campground (Cape Breton Highlands NP) Inside Cape Breton Highlands National Park and close to the Cabot Trail’s dramatic coastal scenery. Puts you near Ingonish Beach and Freshwater Lake, so readers can easily combine beach, lake, trails, and viewpoints from one base. 3. Pugwash camping (North shore Bay of Fundy area) Offers access to Bay of Fundy tides from the Nova Scotia side, plus quieter coastal scenery and small‑town stops. Good for travellers who like a less touristy feel but still want big‑tidal‑range experiences and seaside walks. 4. Digby camping (Annapolis Basin / Fundy) Ideal for exploring the Digby area and the Bay of Fundy, famous for its extremely high tidal range. Pairs well with nearby Annapolis Royal’s heritage buildings, giving readers a mix of scenery, seafood, and history from one stop. 5. Yarmouth / Port Maitland / Crescent Beach area Camping around Yarmouth gives access to Port Maitland Beach, Crescent Beach, lobster stalls in old tram/railway carriages, and a working fishing‑and‑ferry town. Great end‑or‑start point for a loop, with the option of the ferry to Portland, Maine, plus classic coastal views and seafood that many readers will love. Practical tips for driving in Nova Scotia Driving a motorhome in Nova Scotia is all about keeping things steady and unhurried. Aim for about 50–60 miles a day so you have time for viewpoints, photos and little detours. Plan fuel and supermarket stops before you leave each base, as services can be widely spaced outside towns. Coastal and highland roads can be narrow, winding and exposed, so take extra care in strong winds and reduce speed. On rural stretches, watch for wildlife at the verges, cyclists and slower local traffic. A smooth, patient driving style makes it easier to react safely and pull in at scenic stops. Overall, a relaxed pace makes motorhome travel in Nova Scotia safer, less stressful and far more enjoyable. NOVA SCOTIA (NEW SCOTLAND) - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. For Nova Scotia the following were some of the highlights, the wonderful bay of fundy, or Baie de Fundy, look at that I am observing the Canadian desire to be multi lingual although in all honesty we were surprised that despite Quebecs desire for this to happen and maybe some elements in New Brunswick the road signs were bi-lingual in all Provinces bar Quebec, no logically how does that conform, yours puzzled bt it does seem to be a bit of a cultural battle that we noticed across Canada…. To summarise the thing about the Bay of Fundy is it is a bay between the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia with a small portion touching the US State of Maine. It has an extremely high tidal range which is the highest in the world. The name is likely a corruption of the French word fendu, meaning 'split'. See our images for more detail of this fabulous Bay. We went back via Nova Scotia to Prince Edward Island to see our dear pals David and Cathy again for a few days, there are many heritage buildings in Nova Scotia especially at Annapolis Royal which was just lovely with its old weather-boarded classy Hotels & Lunenburg which is UNESCO world heritage and we can easily see why, we attended around the time of the highland games at Antigonish preserving their distinctly Scottish roots, watching both Highland dancing and lots of Bag Pipe music, sadly watching someone's caravan awning bend in high winds at the Antigonish campsite, we also visited wolfville, crossing the fab confederation bridge near mayfield (NB) , Cape Breton National Park , the world famous Peggy’s cove @ st margarets bay, Halifax Nova Scotia’s capital and KEITHs beer of course I got the t-shirt, why wouldn’t I ? caught the ferry from sydney to newfoundland, after having fast food at KFC and foolishly drinking far too much fizzy pop in fast food joint (free refill - never again!) had awful gut ache all the way across on the ferry, myt fault and self-induced, still you learn by your mistakes and that was a big one, tee hee there really is no such thing as a free lunch, cap le Moine, cheticamp, Cape Breton island, the truly magnificent views of the cabot trail, do take a look at some of our many pictures, camping at Pugwash, digby, bridgewater, peat bog walks, north river, lakie's head, Pictou, Glenora distillery the only single malt in Canada which I did buy a bottle of and very nice it was too, clearly had to have a taster first but only a very small one as was driving, basically it touched my lips and I got that distinctive peaty taste. Nice. Remember well Ingonish beach and freshwater lake in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park, maybe Jump from ocean saltwater at Ingonish Beach to Freshwater Lake with just a few steps! This welcoming day use area is packed with family-friendly activities. After a refreshing swim, enjoy the playground, tennis courts, soccer field and picnic area. Connect with nature on Freshwater Lake trail, popular with cyclists in the summer and perfect for snowshoeing in the winter. Also loved broad cove campground, joe’s scarecrow visited by billy connolly and us (sadly close 2011), oxford, Amherst, truro, highland national park, Louisbourg and the fortress, wolfe and the french, halifax’s murray-mackay bridge, pier 21, prospect, Shelburne, port maitland beach, crescent beach, lobster stalls at Yarmouth which were either old tram or railway carriages, Yarmouth is famous for both fishing and tourism plus we noted you can catch a ferry here to Portland, Maine no not the one in Oregon, plus lockeport and many more truly fabulous places, we really HEART Nova Scotia and its distinctively Scottish feel and scenery. Louisbourg Here is a little bit about the heritage and history of Louisbourg we visited, the French military founded the fortress of Louisbourg in 1713 and its fortified seaport on the southwest part of the harbour, naming it in honour of Louis XIV , the Sun King, a legend in his own lunchbox, ha-ha. The harbour had been used by European mariners since at least the 1590s, when it was known as English Port and Havre à l'Anglois. The French settlement that dated from 1713. The settlement was burned the first day the British landed during the siege of Louisbourg in 1745. The French were terrorized and abandoned the Grand Battery, which the British occupied the following day. It was returned to France in 1748 but recaptured by the British in 1758. After the capture in 1758, its fortifications were demolished in 1760 and the town-site abandoned by British forces in 1768. A small civilian population continued to live there after the military left. English settlers subsequently built a small fishing village across the harbour from the abandoned site of the fortress. The village grew slowly with additional loyalist settlers in the 1780s. The harbour grew more accessible with the construction of the second lighthouse in 1842 on the site of the original French lighthouse which was destroyed in 1758. A railway first reached Louisbourg in 1877, but it was poorly built and abandoned after a forest fire. However, the arrival of Sydney & Louisbourg railway in 1894 brought heavy volumes of winter coal exports to Louisbourg Harbour's ice-free waters as a winter coal port. The harbour was used by the Canadian government ship Montmagny in 1912 to land bodies from the sinking of the Titanic. In 1913 Marconi established a transatlantic radio transmitting station here. History wise that’s all folks, hope it was of use. Nova Scotia, Canada, Travel Guide for Motorhomers best view on cape breton island, ok maybe not bog plant 1/148 2010 11 Days in Nova Scotia, Canada between 8th & the 24th July INCLUDES 294 PHOTOS We visited amongst others the wonderful Bay of Fundy, Baie de Fundy, back via Nova Scotia to Prince Edward Island to see our dear pals David and Cathy again for a few days, many heritage buildings especially at Annapolis royal & Lunenburg which is UNESCO, highland games at Antigonish, sadly watching someone's caravan awning bend in high winds at the Antigonish campsite, wolfville, crossing the fab confederation bridge near Mayfield (NB) , Cape Breton National Park , the world famous Peggy's cove @ st Margaret's bay, Halifax and KEITHs beer (got the t-shirt) ferry from Sydney to newfoundland, far too much fizzy pop in fast food joint (free refill - never again!), cap le moine, cheticamp, cape Breton island, Cabot trail, camping at Pugwash, digby, bridgewater, peat bog walks, north river, lakie's head, Pictou, lighthouses, glenora distillery the only single malt in canada, Ingonish beach, freshwater lake , broad cove campground, joe’s scarecrow visited by Billy Connolly and us (sadly close 2011), oxford, amherst, truro, highland national park, Louisbourg and the fortress, wolfe and the french, Halifax the capital and its murray-mackay bridge, pier 21, prospect, shelburne, port maitland beach, crescent beach, lobster stalls at Yarmouth which were either old tram or railway carriages, lockeport and more . We have been from one side of Canada to the other

  • 10 Labrador | Holiday 1995-2024 | Road Trip Travel Guide

    Journey to the start of the 2010 Trans‑Labrador Highway—remote towns, gravel roads, ferries, wildlife, and unforgettable adventures through Canada’s wild northeast. 2010 Labrador Travel Blog & Guide LABRADOR - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience We visited the start of the amazing Trans Canada Highway DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. As an overview The Strait of Belle Isle separates the combined province of Newfoundland and Labrador into two geographical parts: Labrador, which is a large area of mainland Canada but in fairness so much more remote, and Newfoundland, an island in the Atlantic Ocean. The vast expanse of Labrador is mainly served by the perma frost road the Trans Labrador Highway, which we visited the start of, would love to travel it in winter, what an experience that must be and scary I bet. For Labrador the following were some of the highlights the Apollo ferry departing st barbe newfoundland at an ungodly hour and arriving at blanc sablon which is 2 kilometres from Labrador's border , cold, wet, foggy, misty and early ha-ha, intra-provincial ferry service, welcome to the big land, L’Anse au Clair (where we camped overnight), Loving the UNESCO world heritage township at Red Bay, it is a natural harbour residing in the bay that gives it its name, both names in reference to the red granite cliffs of the region. Because of the sheltered harbour it was used during World War II as a mooring site for naval vessels. In the bay are Penney Island and Saddle Island, which were used by the Basque fishermen for their whaling operations. The location of the sunken vessel San Juan is near Saddle Island. We also remember travelling a small bit of the jersey trail at L’anse au Clair, here are some words about it, the trail follows the shoreline of the small town of L'Anse Au Clair which is nestled against rugged clifftops and benchland sloping down to a beautiful red sandy beach. You can walk between 3 and 6 km along this easy trail of crushed stone as it weaves along boulder fields, tuck more and beach. Interpretation tells the story of 19th century fishermen from Jersey, an island in the English Channel between England and France. Look for the infamous " Bubbling Sands" feature of this trail. We also remember visiting L’Anse au cotard and its church, the jersey rooms, abandoned tankers rusting, Basque fisherman, Forteau, L’Anse au covert, L’Anse amour, red bay united reform church, dinosaur feet, tapestry, fishing jetties, whaling museum history, sadly little work now on Labrador’s coast so many join the army, fishing is not the industry it once was, Tracey wicking battery and the Tracey Hill Walking trail board walk in Red Bay, some history and advice is, at the start of the Tracey Hill Walking Trail in the town of Red Bay, Southern Labrador, a boardwalk and the first of 689 steps lead the way. The climb up the stairs will reach the destination point at the top of Tracey Hill where the scenery is breath-taking. The trail is moderate on a degree of difficulty and runs for 1.5 kilometres, a return trip of 3. The average time along the boardwalk and stairs of the Tracey Hill Walking Trail is about 30 minutes, but many stop for breaks. Picnic tables, telescopes and a resting area makes the journey longer, but this is a day well spent while visiting Red Bay in Southern Labrador. The Boardwalk and stairs at the start of the Tracey Hill Walking Trail in the town of Red Bay, Highway 510, Labrador Coastal Drive also counts as one of the Viking Trail, in the Straits of Belle Isle, Southern Labrador, Labrador, Canada. Maybe give it a go when you ever visit, we just did the start bit and had a mooch around, sadly not the whole thing, not enough time in Labrador. Plus, the earliest burial mound and monument in the world at L’Anse amour, traditional stone men along the road side, red bay including the museum and look out at old whaling station, saddle, Penney & capstan islands, Fogo island punt race, trapper and whalemen memorabilia, start of the Trans Labrador highway (gravel and permafrost) oh and black fly galore on the Pinware river bridge. Although our time on Labrador’s southern coast was short our memories will be long, it was a fascinating place to visit. Labrador, Canada, Travel Guide for Motorhomers brekkie on the apollo ferry keef at museum red bay 1/28 The Trans Labrador Highway (TLH) starts near Red Bay to Labrador City, known as Highway Route 510, 714 miles in total, back in 2010 it was all gravel and permafrost in winter, in 2022 it was paved in special asphalt blends for extreme weather , i.e. freeze & thaw 2010 2 Days in Labrador, Canada between 12th-13th July INCLUDES 51 PHOTOS We visited amongst others after using the ferry MV Apollo departing st barbe newfoundland at an ungodly hour and arriving at blanc sablon which is 2 kilometers from Labrador's border , cold, wet, foggy, misty and early ha-ha, intra-provincial ferry service, welcome to the big land, driving the Labrador Coastal Drive, l'anse au clair (where we camped overnight), forteau, travelling the jersey trail, l'anse au cotard and its church, the jersey rooms, abandoned tankers rusting, basque fisherman, l'anse au covert, l'anse amour, red bay united reform church, dinosaur feet, tapestry, fishing jetties, whaling museum history, sadly little work now on labrador's coast so many join the army, fishing is not the industry it once was, tracey wicking battery and tracey hill boardwalk, the earliest burial mound and monument in the world at l'anse amour, traditional stone men along the road side, red bay including the museum and look out at old whaling station, saddle & capstan islands, fogo island punt race, trapper and whalemen memorabilia, start of the trans labrador highway (gravel and permafrost) oh and black fly galore on the Pinware river bridge and the Pinware River Provincial Park. We have been from one side of Canada to the other

  • 1999 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Original Travel Guide Canada

    Step back into 1999 with a richly preserved chapter of our travel archive—packed with authentic stories, photos, and memories from life on the road. This page brings the year to life with vivid detail, capturing the spirit of adventure that shaped our journeys. Explore a nostalgic slice of travel history and rediscover the moments that made 1999 unforgettable. 1999 Travel Blog & Guide Canada 1999 – Detailed Route Map (Sequential Waypoints) 11 August – 4 September, 25 days Vancouver → Vancouver Island → Inside Passage → Highway 16 → Vancouver → Rockies → Edmonton → Calgary. 1) Arrival & Vancouver Area Vancouver (Downtown) Burnaby West Vancouver Cypress Provincial Park Capilano Suspension Bridge Grouse Mountain (Canopy Bridge & Lumberjack Show) Granville Island North Vancouver Harbour (Seaplanes) 2) Ferry to Vancouver Island Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal Through US waters & Gulf Islands Swartz Bay (Vancouver Island) 3) Southern Vancouver Island Loop Sidney North Saanich Cordova Bay Thetis Lake Regional Park Esquimalt Millstream Victoria (Empress Hotel, Inner Harbour) Sooke Shawnigan Lake Duncan (overnight) Crofton Cassidy Chemainus (Wall Murals) 4) Central & Western Vancouver Island Nanoose Bay Port Alberni Beaver Creek Cathedral Grove (Giant Sequoias) Pacific Rim National Park Long Beach Tofino (Whale watching / Orcas) Gold River Campbell River Strathcona Provincial Park Port Renfrew Lake Cowichan 5) Northern Vancouver Island → Inside Passage Port Hardy (B&B) Inside Passage Ferry Queen Charlotte Sound Glacial fjords Prince Rupert (Tall Trees B&B) 6) Highway 16 Across British Columbia Travelling east from Prince Rupert: Gitnadoiks River Provincial Park Hazelton (Art Ksan) Seven Sisters Provincial Park Burns Lake Fraser Lake Vanderhoof Prince George Quesnel 150 Mile House 100 Mile House (overnight) 70 Mile House Lillooet Pemberton Mount Currie Whistler Squamish (overnight) 7) Back to Vancouver → Swap Car for Motorhome Vancouver (vehicle changeover) 8) Rockies & National Parks Loop Kamloops (camping) Nicola Lake (fishing) Kelowna Aspen Grove Glacier National Park Rogers Pass Skunk Cabbage Boardwalk Yoho National Park Radium Hot Springs Kootenay National Park Banff Banff Gondola (Sulphur Mountain) Banff Springs Hotel Lake Louise (water tank incident!) Moraine Lake Columbia Icefields Athabasca Glacier (Ice Explorer) Jasper National Park Athabasca Falls McBride Robson Bight 9) Alberta – Final Leg Calgary (brief visit) Edmonton (friends, West Edmonton Mall) Calgary (return to drop off motorhome) Calgary Airport → UK 99 Route Visuals Route Summary Vancouver BC Burnaby BC West Vancouver BC Cypress Provincial Park BC Capilano Suspension Bridge BC Grouse Mountain BC Granville Island Vancouver BC Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal BC Swartz Bay BC Sidney BC North Saanich BC Cordova Bay BC Thetis Lake Regional Park BC Esquimalt BC Millstream BC Victoria BC Sooke BC Shawnigan Lake BC Duncan BC Crofton BC Cassidy BC Chemainus BC Nanoose Bay BC Port Alberni BC Beaver Creek BC Cathedral Grove BC Pacific Rim National Park BC Long Beach BC Tofino BC Gold River BC Campbell River BC Strathcona Provincial Park BC Port Renfrew BC Lake Cowichan BC Port Hardy BC Prince Rupert BC Gitnadoiks River Provincial Park BC Hazelton BC Seven Sisters Provincial Park BC Burns Lake BC Fraser Lake BC Vanderhoof BC Prince George BC Quesnel BC 150 Mile House BC 100 Mile House BC 70 Mile House BC Lillooet BC Pemberton BC Mount Currie BC Whistler BC Squamish BC Vancouver BC Kamloops BC Nicola Lake BC Kelowna BC Aspen Grove BC Glacier National Park BC Rogers Pass BC Skunk Cabbage Boardwalk BC Yoho National Park BC Radium Hot Springs BC Kootenay National Park BC Banff AB Sulphur Mountain AB Banff Springs Hotel AB Lake Louise AB Moraine Lake AB Columbia Icefields AB Athabasca Glacier AB Jasper National Park AB Athabasca Falls AB McBride BC Robson Bight BC Calgary AB Edmonton AB Calgary Airport AB CANADA 1999 CANADA IN A MOTORHOME 1999, British Columbia & Vancouver Island Plus Alberta to Edmonton to stay with Friends. This Family Trip is also replicated on the motorhome-travels blog as BLOG 166 INTRODUCTION This page covers our trip to Canada in 1999 11 August to 4th September, 25 days in our hired All Drive Classic 3000 3 berth motorhome and initially a hire car, we started in Vancouver, went to see the Rockies, also across on the ferry to Vancouver island where we went to Tofino to do some whale watching, actually saw a pod of Orca's just magical, also saw the magnificent Pacific Rim National Park, then back to see more of British Columbia eventually travelling up to Edmonton in Alberta to visit our pals David & Cathy & family, magical times with Doug who was 15 at that stage, fishing and chopping logs for our wild camp fire cooking was a true highlight. We stayed in some very remote campsites and managed to avoid the bears! 😉 In summary some of the highlights and places visited were Victoria, Vancouver Island, Vancouver City, West Vancouver, Cypress Provincial Park, Inside passage by ferry, Prince Rupert, Highway 16, Prince George, the BC ferry Tsawwassen thru US waters and various Islands to Swartz Bay, on Vancouver island we visited Nanaimo, Sidney, Cassidy, stayed in Duncan, Crofton, Swartz Bay, Lake Cowichan, Port Renfrew, Nanoose Bay, Port Alberni, Beaver Creek, Sooke, Long Beach, Tofino and then returned to the Islands Capital Victoria which is just such a lovely place with the historic Empress Hotel (by 2022 known as the Fairmont Empress), plus Patricia Hotel, North Saanich, Cordova Bay, Thetis Lake Regional Park, Esquimalt, Millstream, Squamish, Whistler, Banff, Pemberton, Mount Currie, Yoho National Park, Radium Hot Springs, Ice Explorer on the Columbia Ice field, Athabasca Glacier, Lillooet, 70,100,150 mile house, Quesnel, Fraser Lake, Burns Lake, Gitnadoiks River Provincial Park, Hazelton, Seven sisters provincial park, McBride, Jasper National Park, Kamloops, Kelowna , Vanderhoof , Moose Highway 99, Capilano suspension bridge, Sulphur Mountain, Calgary and a whole lot more. PLAY williams lake BC wildlife just outside banff 1/93 1999 25 Days Between 11th August & 4th September 1999 Canada 1999 Mostly British Columbia , Some Alberta to Edmonton and back. Summary: We spent 25 Days in British Columbia and a bit of Alberta We took 185 Photos, all of which are included in the summary slideshows. Our trip to Canada in 1999 was from 11 August to 4th September, 25 days in our hired All Drive Classic 3000 3 berth motorhome combined with a hire car at the beginning for use to get around Vancouver Island and do the Inside passage loop from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert and then back down to Vancouver to swap the car for the camper van, when we had the car we stayed in B&B’s mostly and some motels, clearly once we had the van we stayed at campsites. Initially we started in Vancouver downtown in what was definitely not a nice area but was cheap and afforded us the opportunity to see the City of Vancouver quite easily, then across on the ferry to Vancouver island where we went to Tofino to do some whale watching in the Salish sea, actually saw a pod of Orca's just magical from our boat that left Telegraph Cove, after returning from Victoria, Vancouver Island and picking up the motorhome we went to see the Rockies, then much more of British Columbia eventually travelling up to Edmonton in Alberta to visit our pals David & Cathy & family, magical times with Doug who was 15 at that stage, fishing and chopping logs for our wild camp fire cooking was a true highlight. We stayed in some very remote campsites and managed to avoid the bears! We then drove up to Port Hardy staying in this old house B&B there before getting up very early to travel on the ferry up to Prince Rupert , this was the famed inside passage, we headed up the coast having set sail from Port Hardy through the magnificent glacial fjords of the Inside Passage to the stunning and wild destination of Prince Rupert. It passes through the Queen Charlotte sound but for us the weather sadly was appalling so we were a bit restricted in what we managed to see. We stayed at the Tall Trees B&B in Prince Rupert run by the lovey Kathy Butterfield who was so welcoming and told us quite a bit about the local area. Travelling back down to Vancouver in the car we stayed at a B&B in 100-mile house having had a quick look around Prince George after leaving Kathy. On the 22nd of August we made our way back to Vancouver having seen Whistler the previous day , remember mountain bikers coming hurtling down the now snow clear mountain sides, frightening, even in my hey day I would never have had the bottle to travel quite so fast, overnight we stayed in a B&B in Squamish, we then swapped the car for the motorhome before heading off to Edmonton. In the motorhome we visited Banff, Lake Louise which is where sadly our water tank came detached from the underside of the hire van, a very kind Canadian stopped and applied a rope he had to it to strap it up enough for us to get back into the town of Lake Louise where we took it to a garage having rung the hire company and had it welded back on, we kept the receipt so we could claim back later, on route we also saw Kootenay, Waterton, Roger’s Pass National Park, Skunk Cabbage Boardwalk, Seaplanes over Vancouver North Harbour, Spray Can Art, Bungee Jumping (not us just watching) near Nanaimo, Yoho National Park where we visited and went for a swim in the Radium Hot Water springs pool, it may have been chilly outside but in the water was heavenly. We also saw the Columbia Icefields Park where we travelled on a snow mobile / coach called the ice explorer out to the Athabasca glacier one of the ice fields 5 toes, do remember them specifically telling us all to stay within the perimeter rope for our safety, folk had died falling down the many crevasses, a foolish tourist in our party didn’t follow this advice and hoped over the fence to get a better picture, he was lucky. In summary some of the highlights and places visited were Victoria, Vancouver Island, Vancouver City, Burnaby, West Vancouver, Cypress Provincial Park, inside passage by ferry, Prince Rupert, we drove much on the fab remote Highway 16 thru BC back down through some fabulous scenery to Vancouver swapped car for motorhome and then across to friends in Edmonton, plus we saw at various stages and in no particular order, Prince George, the BC ferry Tsawwassen thru US waters, and various Islands to Swartz Bay, Tsawwassen terminal is a 36 km drive from downtown Vancouver and is located at the southwest end of Highway 17 in Delta. Sailings departing from Tsawwassen provide service to Swartz Bay (Victoria), Duke Point (Nanaimo) and the Southern Gulf Islands. Visit the Tsawwassen Quay for shopping and a range of food and beverage options. On Vancouver Island we visited Sidney, Cassidy, stayed in Duncan, Crofton, Swartz Bay, Lake Cowichan, Port Renfrew, Nanoose Bay, Port Alberni, Beaver Creek, Long Beach, Tofino and then returned to the Islands Capital Victoria which is just such a lovely place with the historic Empress Hotel. We returned via the fabulous Shawnigan Lake, we also visited Sooke on the island where our B&B landlady told us a about the replica Captain James Cook ship the Endeavour on its re-enactment voyage, just wonderful especially as Captain Cook is our hero and we have tried on our travels to visit many of the places he went to , from Middlesborough to 1770, big tick, plus we remember the sordid Patricia Hotel, North Saanich, Cordova Bay, Thetis Lake Regional Park, Esquimalt, Millstream, Squamish, Whistler, Banff, Pemberton, Mount Currie, Lillooet, 70,100,150 mile house, Quesnel, Fraser Lake, Burns Lake, Gitnadoiks River Provincial Park, Hazelton, Seven sisters provincial park, Chemainus and all the wall murals, bit like the place in New Zealand called Kati Kati, Giant Sequoias, McBride, Athabasca Falls, White Water Rapids, MacMillan Provincial Park , the Canopy Bridge at Grouse Mountain and the Lumberjack games display there, The Fraser River, Gaslight Jack and Granville island, ferries galore, Moraine Lake, Robson Bight, Banff Springs Hotel, talk about posh, Jasper National Park, We camped in Kamloops where despite the time of year one of the residents in a caravan had their Christmas decorations up, bizarre but very festive, Kelowna , the pacific rim national park on Vancouver island was spectacular, we camped at gold river and visited Campbell River (later we discovered Annie has current rellies living there, shame we didn’t know at the time, Strathcona Park. We also saw Aspen Grove, Art Ksan at Hazelton, the wonderful Butchart gardens, so loved that what an experience, Cathedral Grove, lots of wildlife along the roadways edge especially in the Rockies National Park, fishing on Nicola Lake outside Kamloops, Glacier National Park, Sulphur mountain which we took a cable car known as the Gondola to the top of , amazing views looking back down at Banff, Keef of course got his Hard Rock Café T-shirt from Banff, why not, smile, we also took the van into Calgary but it was just so busy we decided not to stay long and headed off to Edmonton, remember David clearly saying when we camped some 300 miles down the road, hey you were so nearby, Canadians have a different view of distance, their country is just so huge in comparison to the UK. Also visited West Ed Mall, amazing what was in there, Annie going down the hugely deep-water slide is one memory, the other is denting the side of the van on a bollard in the car park which I didn’t see, oh dear. We eventually drove back to Calgary to hand the van in there and did a deal on receipt against busted water tank and dent in van, so quits no charge for either party, result. All drive hire company gave us a lift to Calgary airport, part of our one way hire agreement and we flew back into Manchester I think via Keflavik in Iceland (but that may have been on the way out, can’t remember) but what I do remember is buying the Reykjavik T-shirt from the Hard Rock Café in the airport tee-hee and then home to Nottingham. A lovely trip with some great memories and shared with Doug in his teenage years, Craig was in Spain with his mates. That’s all folks, I think its quite enough. Poor Doug who often said "are we there yet" was only 15 and a better imitation of "Kevin" by Harry Enfield I have not seen 😉He did love fishing and making real campfires however. Family Time in a Motorhome with Doug aged 15 August 1999 calendar created by KeefH Web Designs colourful calendar to show 1999 month of August Canada 1999 trip plan for August mostly British Columbia created by KeefH Web Designs Day by Day August 1999 travels with Doug Canada 1999 trip plan for September mostly British Columbia created by KeefH Web Designs Day by Day September 1999 travels with Doug August 1999 calendar created by KeefH Web Designs colourful calendar to show 1999 month of August 1/4 1999 25 Days Between 11th August & 4th September To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 7-8 Singapore | Holiday 1995-2024 | The First of Many Many Visits

    A brief 2008 stopover in Singapore filled with sights, food and first impressions—an inspiring travel snapshot that sparked many return visits. 2008 Singapore Travel Guide & Blog SINGAPORE - HOLIDAY in 2008 A Travel Blog Experience My relationship with Singapore has unfolded over nearly three decades of travelling, filming, and documenting my journeys online. What began as a simple stopover on long‑haul trips to Australia gradually became one of my most familiar and frequently revisited destinations. In the early years, Singapore was primarily Changi Airport to me — a place of smooth connections, clever design, and the kind of efficiency that made travel feel effortless. But with each return, I found myself drawn further into the city beyond the terminals. Across my KHWD travel sites, you can see that evolution clearly. My early notes focus on the novelty of passing through one of the world’s best airports, but over time my trips expanded into the heart of Singapore: Marina Bay’s futuristic skyline, the cultural layers of Chinatown and Little India, the green corridors threading through the city, and the ever‑changing attractions that make every visit feel new. I’ve captured these experiences through photos, long‑form diaries, and now video. The YouTube playlist reflects that shift too. It’s a mix of walking tours, food explorations, airport guides, and city snapshots — mirroring how my own travels moved from quick transits to deeper, more curious wanderings. Each clip adds another layer to the story I’ve been telling across my websites: a Singapore where tradition and modernity sit side by side, where hawker centres are as memorable as skyline views, and where I always seem to find something different each time I return. Singapore has become more than a destination for me. It’s a recurring chapter in my wider travel story — a place I’ve grown with, documented, and revisited as both a traveller and a digital archivist, capturing its changes alongside my own. It is especially loved by me as our youngest son and family live there as well as it being a convenient half way house to Antipodean lands, also special to both of us. See some of our many trips to Singapore PLAY Changi Airport Clarke Quay 2008 15th September Day 326 - Monday 15th September 2008, Sydney 2 Hong Kong via Singapore Just passing thru, touchdown at Changi Airport for refueling and change of plane We had about 1½ hours here Maybe you can argue we were doing a reccie for Doug & Phoenix in advance. Really we were just passing through both on the way out in 1995 and the way back here in 2007-08. We remember the slick fast transit monorail from one terminal to another, not eating gum and in 1995 being woken up for my 7th meal in under 7 hours. Back for 2 weeks to really see it in 2013 with the lovely Mr & Mrs Hellinger.Plus again in 2014, 2018 and 2019 Diary Day 326 - Monday 15th September 2008, Sydney 2 Hong Kong via Singapore Long day flying, watched lots and lots of movies on the flight Up about 4.45am , flew at 8.05am although it was 15mins late going Good airplane, Air Singapore had to swap at Changi and use posh fast shuttle train to our next gate The luggage got transferred automatically for us from one plane to the other Taxi at HK was a hoot Service guy wrote down the hotel in Chinese for the driver who we had fun communicating with by hand signals Kowloon a long way Over lovely bridge and under tunnel 45 mins drive Went to wrong hotel then had to go to New SD all fine £75 a night stayed 3 nights Hot 35c and 100% humidity, what we saw today,Airports and movies, who we met, Shuttle guy @ Holiday Inn Sydney who was annoyed we had loaded on our own bags. Jobsworth! Getting on the plane went very quickly when one considers it, taxi driving thru market to San Diego (wrong hotel) was amusing, took 1 picture of Changi airport only! Plus remembering my Dad with love, who died on this day 6 years earlier. Summary: SINGAPORE 1½ hours , Day 326, 15/9/2008

  • Privacy Policy | Decades of Travel

    Discover how KHWD Holidays protects your data with clear, transparent privacy practices designed for trust and peace of mind. Learn what information we collect, how it’s used, and the safeguards we apply across our travel archives, blogs, and digital services. This page outlines your rights, our commitment to security, and the steps we take to keep your online experience safe, compliant, and fully in your control. Privacy Policy Website Design Privacy Policy Last Updated 14th February 2026 General Data Protection Regulation "GDPR" This Privacy Policy explains how information about you is collected and used by KeefH Web Designs. For my website design we NEVER disclose your information to 3rd parties. This Website Design Privacy Policy applies to information we collect when you use our website design “Services”, or when you otherwise interact with us. We may change this Privacy Policy for website design from time to time. If we make changes, we will notify you by revising the “Last Updated” date at the top of this policy and, in some cases, we may provide you with additional notice (such as by adding a statement to our website or by sending you a notification). We encourage you to review our Privacy Policy whenever you access the Services (i.e. use of our website) or otherwise interact with us to stay informed about our information practices and the ways you can help protect your privacy. Collection of Information for website design 1. Information You Provide to Us for website design We collect information you provide directly to us when you make a purchase, communicate with us via third-party social media sites, request customer support or otherwise communicate with us. The types of information we may collect include your name, email address, postal address, payment information (such as your credit or debit card and billing address), and any other information you choose to provide. Note since all our Sales are via PayPal there is additional GDPR protection here. 2.Information Collected Automatically When you access or use our website design Services, any automatically collected information about you is via Google Analytics and this is at a “unnamed” level. Google have their own GDPR. 3.Information Collected by Cookies and Other Tracking Technologies: Our service providers (WIX & Names.co.uk) use various technologies to collect information, including cookies and web beacons. Cookies are small data files stored on your hard drive or in device memory that help us improve our Services and your experience, see which areas and features of our Services are popular, and count visits. Web beacons are electronic images that may be used in our Services or emails and help deliver cookies, count visits, and understand usage and campaign effectiveness. For more information about cookies, and how to disable them, please see “Your Choices” below. Information We Collect From Other Sources We may also obtain information from other sources and combine that with information we collect through our Services. For example, if you create or log into your account through a third-party social media site, we will have access to certain information from that site, such as your name, account information and friends lists, in accordance with the authorization procedures determined by such social media site; we may also collect information about you when you post content to our pages/feeds on third-party social media sites. Note we are featured on Trustpilot. 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We are based in the United Kingdom and the information we collect is governed by U.K law. By accessing or using the Services or otherwise providing information to us, you consent to the processing and transfer of information in and to the U.K. and other countries. Sharing of Information We may share information about you as follows or as otherwise described in this website design services Privacy Policy: • With vendors, consultants and other service providers who need access to such information to carry out work or perform services on our behalf; • In response to a request for information if we believe disclosure is in accordance with, or required by, any applicable law, regulation or legal process; • If we believe your actions are inconsistent with our user agreements or policies, or to protect the rights, property and safety of SerendipityGDDs or others; • With your consent or at your direction. 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These entities may use cookies, web beacons and other technologies to collect information about your use of the Services and other websites, including your IP address, web browser, pages viewed, time spent on pages, links clicked and conversion information. This information may be used by Company and others to, among other things, analyse and track data, determine the popularity of certain content, deliver advertising and content targeted to your interests on our Services and other websites and better understand your online activity Security Serendipity Girls Designer Dresses takes reasonable measures to help protect information about you from loss, theft, misuse and unauthorised access, disclosure, alteration and destruction. Your Choices Cookies Most web browsers are set to accept cookies by default. If you prefer, you can usually choose to set your browser to remove or reject browser cookies. Please note that if you choose to remove or reject cookies, this could affect the availability or functionality of our Services Promotional Communications You may opt out of receiving promotional communications from us by following the instructions in those communications or by sending an email to KeefHWebDesigns@outlook.com . If you opt out, we may still send you non-promotional communications, such as responses to any commentary you may leave. Push Notifications/Alerts With your consent, we may send push notifications or alerts to your mobile device. You can deactivate these messages at any time by changing the notification settings on your mobile device. Contact Us If you have any questions about this Privacy Policy, please contact us at KeefHWebDesigns@outlook.com COPYRIGHT Copyright (21/12/2022) by KeefH Web Designs, © All rights reserved: I take the theft of my original work very seriously and would draw to your attention it is protected under UK copyright law. 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  • 2014 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Europe France Motorhoming

    Explore our 3‑month 2014 motorhome adventure across France—campsites, routes, photos and stories from a 4,611‑mile European road trip. 2014 Travel Blog & Guide - France French Holiday 2014 – Clear Route Summary (Motorhome Trip No.17) 14 May – 1 August 2014 Total: 4611 miles Countries: France → Monaco → Italy → Switzerland → France 🧭 FULL ROUTE IN ORDER 1. UK → France Home (Notts) Folkestone Ferry/Eurotunnel to France 2. Central & Southern France (Provence / Côte d’Azur / Rhône‑Alpes) Lempdes‑sur‑Allagnon (Auvergne–Rhône‑Alpes) Lunel (Occitanie) Agay (Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur) Cannes Nice Grasse Port Grimaud Saint‑Tropez Cavalaire‑sur‑Mer Le Rouet / Salernes Gorges du Verdon Volonne Annecy & St Jorioz (Lake Annecy) 3. Monaco (Day Trip by Train) Biot Gare → Monte Carlo Menton (passed through) 4. Italy (Sanremo) Border at Ponte San Ludovico Sanremo – Villaggio Dei Fiori campsite Local hill walk & Giro d’Italia passing through 5. Switzerland (Lac Léman / Lake Geneva) Saint‑Gingolph (entry) Montreux Lausanne Geneva St Julien‑en‑Genevois (exit back to France) 6. Eastern France → Burgundy & Jura Jura Mountains crossing Mesnois Cote d’Or (Burgundy) Louhans Chalon‑sur‑Saône Meursault Commarin Lac Panthier Lac Marcenay Vincelles Saumur Abbaye de Fontenay (UNESCO) Châteauneuf‑en‑Auxois Canal de Bourgogne 7. Loire & Atlantic Coast Concourson Piriac‑sur‑Mer La Baule St Nazaire → St Brevin bridge Guérande (historic walled town) 8. Brittany (Bretagne) – Finistère & Beyond Clohars‑Carnoët Doëlan Concarneau Bénodet Penmarch / St Guénolé Eckmühl Pointe du Raz Douarnenez Locronan Châteaulin Camaret‑sur‑Mer / Pointe de Penhir Pointe des Espagnols Roscanvel Le Faou Plougastel‑Daoulas Landerneau Brignogan‑Plages Plougasnol Pointe de Primel (Plougasnou) St Quay‑Portrieux Dinan St Malo Domaine de la Ville Huchet campsite 9. Normandy Mont‑Saint‑Michel Granville Les Pieux Anneville Saint‑Vaast‑la‑Hougue Ravenoville Utah Beach Omaha Beach (St‑Laurent‑sur‑Mer) Carhagnolles (Flower Camping) Bayeux Arromanches‑les‑Bains (Gold Beach) Falaise (William the Conqueror’s birthplace) Beuvron‑en‑Auge Deauville Trouville Honfleur Étretat St‑Valery‑sur‑Somme Abbeville Miannay 10. Return to UK Calais Densole (Kent) Home (Notts) 14 Route Visuals Route Summary – France 2014: Folkestone → Calais → Lempdes‑sur‑Allagnon → Lunel → Agay → Cannes → Nice → Port Grimaud → Cavalaire‑sur‑Mer → Verdon Gorge → Volonne → Annecy → Monaco → Sanremo → Montreux → Lausanne → Geneva → Jura → Côte d’Or → Chalon‑sur‑Saône → Meursault → Saumur → Piriac‑sur‑Mer → La Baule → Concarneau → Penmarch → Pointe du Raz → Camaret‑sur‑Mer → St Quay‑Portrieux → St Malo → Mont‑Saint‑Michel → Utah Beach → Omaha Beach → Bayeux → Honfleur → Étretat → Calais → Folkestone. Explore our 3‑month 2014 motorhome adventure across France—campsites, routes, photos and stories from a 4,611‑mile European road trip covering in part Monaco, Switzerland and Italy as well . 🚐 Three unforgettable months on the road, 4,611 miles across France, and a motorhome packed with stories. From coastal drives and hidden villages to favourite campsites, food stops, and the rhythms of long‑term European touring, this 2014 adventure captures the freedom of life on wheels. Dive into the full route, photos, memories and moments that shaped one of our most iconic Motorhome Travels trips. Port Grimaud France The write up is coming......

  • 7-8 Pacific Islands | Holiday 1995-2024 | Exploring Fiji Samoa Tongad

    Explore our 2007 Pacific Islands adventure through Fiji, Samoa and Tonga—vivid travel diaries, photos, culture, beaches, villages and unforgettable island life. 2007 Pacific Islands Travel Guide & Blog Fiji Western Samoa Tonga PACIFIC ISLANDS FIJI, WESTERN SAMOA & TONGA - HOLIDAY in 2007 A Travel Blog Experience The Pacific Islands section of this site, namely 2007–8 travels captures a vivid, month‑long journey through Fiji, Western Samoa, and Tonga. Blending travel diary entries with hundreds of photos, it documents island‑hopping adventures, small‑plane flights, tropical storms, coral reefs, village life, festivals, and encounters with local culture. Fiji’s Savusavu serves as a base for beach days, kava ceremonies, rainforest walks, and drives through sugar‑cane country. Samoa offers contrasting experiences—from chaotic Apia arrivals to serene beach fales on Savai’i, lava fields, blowholes, and visits to Robert Louis Stevenson’s home. Tonga adds traditional dancing, markets, royal landmarks, and dramatic natural sights. Throughout, the site mixes humour, practical notes, and personal reflections, creating a rich snapshot of South Pacific travel in 2007–8. It also highlights the creator’s later web‑design work, presenting the islands through curated images, slideshows, and storytelling. Fiji Western Samoa 2007 1st November - 10th December We visited Fiji, stayed at Roy & Lisa's, Western Samoa on Savaii and Robin's Fale in Tonga Our travel website design company is here to bring the beauty of the Pacific Islands to life. Specializing in creating engaging, visually stunning websites, we help you showcase the allure of Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga. Let us craft a digital presence that reflects your unique journey and captivates your audience. With our expertise, your travel stories will inspire and attract visitors from around the globe. Contact our travel website design company today to begin your adventure in web design! From our travels, Pacific Islands Overall, 1 Nov-10 Dec 2007,featuring Fiji, Western Samoa, Tonga, such fun, travel to many parts on numerous islands, including 250 images being a summary of the much larger individual islands video now broken into 5 parts in nov2020, , covering plus a whole lot more the following,Savaii, aggie grey, apia, savusavu, atata island, alofaaga blowholes, my tongan driving license issued by the king (smile), captain james cook, sewaka platform, airports, harbours, town, tropical flowers, markets, music, outriggers hotel, insel fehrman hotel, vatu the dog, buses, ferries, auala harbour, salealonga, bougainvillea, boxing, fishing, breadfruit, pelehake, tongatapu main tongan island, nadi, cocktails, coconuts, cruise ships, cyclone daman, earthquakes, Richter scale 8.2, fale shook, nuku’alofa, traditional dancing, museums, cannibalism, hibiscus, local beers, water salination stations, festivals, carnivals, hot springs, Houma, tonga 5th most corrupt nation on earth signs, international dateline hotel, jean-michel cousteaux resort,kaati-ni, vunu road, kava, halafuolafa beach, upolu, seabreezes resort,banyan trees, 3 sisters café, labasa, sugar cane, lorries, conflicts, rocks, princess tui (yuk!), vailima, Robert Louis Stevenson, lovo meals, taro, kings palaces, lava rocks, garlands, vanua levu, miss pacific islands competition, maota, mapu'a 'a vaea blowholes, mongoose, urata, sopu, ports, orchids, pinapples, mangoes, guava, banana bread, samosas (best in the world), paradise cove, cross island road, outriggers boats & hotel, motootua, Savaii lagoon beach resort, pigs, restaurants, Roy & Lisa, music, black rose, roseiloa, peter the keyboard player, royal sunset island resort, rugby, leper colonies (sad!),strelitzia, bird of paradise,princesses & kings 7 palaces,traditional dress, straw skirting, viaola,waterfalls, xmas greetings 2007, coral quays, reefs Tonga PLAY Fiji DIARY FIJI WORDS - Mostly Vanua Levu Bula, Bula UPDATE 13/11/2007 Now left the lovely Vanua Levu We took the bi-plane Sun Pacific flight FJ105/106 from the main island (Vito Levu) to Savusavu on the southern coast of the second island (Vanua Levu) where we stayed in Sekawa Beach Cottages for 12 days (2/11-13/11/2007) Excellent local Fijian beer and we had 2 sessions on the grog, 'mind expanding' local Kava.... Juicy in the Sky with Diamonds..with Roy & Lisa (our hosts)...comes from a pepper plant root which is poundered to a powder which is rinsed in a muslin bag with water into a trad wooden bowl with 3 legs . Although 'ceremony' is common to all South Pacific Islands the bowls are different Contact phone was 011-679-822-0460 and Anne's mobile worked only for Text 2 Wifi Internet cafes in Savasavu Hired car for 3 days Went to Labasa (capital....Very Indian) , Jean Michel Cousteau (JMC) Dive resort and part of the Hibiscus highway. Rained a fair bit but managed 3 swims. HIGHLIGHTS Roy & Lisa's company, Biplane flight (absolutely the best views ever), Tropical fruit, Trip to Vanda & Tukai's children's schools, Savusavu bay , Sugarcane Express, Banana cake and samosas at Nadi Airport LOWLIGHTS None although JMC a little overated even if it is in the 1000 places to see before you die My most vivid memories are of those clear blue skies, humidity, the rattle of thunder, greenery, fresh fruit delivered daily by Roy & Lisa, Fijian music especially Black Rose (Rosiloa) who we still listen to today and the lovely view from our balcony. FIJI DIARY Day 8 - Friday 2nd November 2007, Land in Nadi,Fiji then to Venua Levu Arrived fairly tired in Nadi, Viti Levu, Fiji at 6 am. We really didn’t sleep that well. Main meal served early was chicken frizzled (very dried up) but the breakfast of turkey/cheese croissant was most welcome. DePlaned and waited in the airport on some wonderful leather sofas after having some coffee/ tea (very oz.flat white, tall black etc etc) and cakes. FJD$1.50 (i.e 50p) for the most gianormous wonderful banana cake which they warm. Very very Humid.Had 2 showers today in freezing cold water. Checked in 10am. No boarding cards you just choose your seat. Sat about 18 half full. Great great journey across the mountains of the main island, then over the coast to Savusavu. Most memorable experience Oh just so much words fail me. The view from the De Haviland was SPECTACULAR. Clear skies, crystal blue seas and an abundance of coral reefs. Taxi driver from Paradise Cabs took us to the supermarket and Roy & Lisa (cottage owners) He is from Hawaii (Chinese origin) She is from California. They are most friendly Left a bowl of garden fruit for us.pineapple, guava, lime , bananas and chili peppers. Most kind.I cooked teriyaki lamb with onions/green peppers , rice and salad whilst listening to Sting and drinking well water, loved taking pix from the bi-plane flight from Nadi on Venito Levu (Main Island) to Savusavu, Venua Levu on the second largest island Day 9 - Saturday 3rd November 2007,2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Got up about 6-ish having been to sleep (knackered) at about 10pm after cooking lamb & rice. Had a fine breakfast on the verandah - frosties & fresh local banana, papaya and lime (given by Roy from his garden) and local bread (whole meal with a hint of onion) topped off with local pineapple juice.Walked down track to Sewaka beach looking at the tropical vegetation and bananas growing (still green). Downhill there but hard walking uphill and very hot on the return. Cooled off in the Pacific and sat on beach for couple of hours. Sound of gentle waves on the shore was very relaxing and beach was deserted, although there were two Fijian women fishing. Had picnic lunch on beach and then returned to cottage for a siesta as very hot and humid. Woken by tropical downpour, including thunder and lightning, which lasted about an hour. The temperature reduced and the wind was very refreshing. Just as well the verandah had a deep roof overhang. In the early evening Roy and Lisa invited us to their home for a traditional kava ceremony and told us all about how it is made. It is a root from the pepper plant family that is ground into a fine powder and then mixed with water into a muddy looking liquid. It is drunk from small coconut shells. It has a mild sedative effect and is not alcoholic. On our return to our cottage we had dinner (chicken teryaki, rice and vegetables) and watched the DVD of Savusavu tourist board. Met Jeff, American from New Jersey who has lived on the beach here for 6 years. He and his wife, like Roy & Lisa do holiday cottage rentals and after purchasing the land built both their own house (on hardwood stilts – maybe bark shed coconut palm?). Jeff had just been stung by a hornet whilst gardening so was healing it with ice. He suggested that taxi may be better and cheaper than hiring a car. Also do not stop in villages without first being invited as it is not good karma and visitors must remove any headgear. Plus tried snorkeling but just too unclear to be of use. First tropical rainstorm, thunder and lightning. Woke us from our afternoon siesta. We fed Vatu their (R&L) dog on our left over scraps of last nights meal. He is now a friend for life, even if he barks at everyone else. Roy & Lisa are Jehovah’s Witnesses and going to an all dayer in Lebasa The main town which has a massive Indian influence. Saw a mongoose, alas a little too quick to photo Day 10 - Sunday 4th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Anne rose about 6.15am, Keef about 7.30. Alas K has developed a cold and sore throat from somewhere, maybe the plane with all those folks sneezing. Did various things on laptop, getting ready to email contact the boys tomorrow when we catch a taxi into Savusavu. In the afternoon we were so chilled we just relaxed and read our books, Chart Throb by Ben Elton is ace. So cooked fried chicken, mash & creamed sweetcorn for T and had one of the gardens fresh pineapples for pud, it was just so sweet (Yummy). In the morning we walked up the track to Roy & Lisa’s upper garden. Beautiful tropical plants, including hibiscus, orchids and a flame tree in bloom with big red flowers. On the top of the hill and flattened garden area there was a spectacular view of the bay and Pacific. They had built a wooden deck to sit on. Saw dragonfly but nothing else. Back on the cottage verandah Keef saw an orange dove flying among the trees. We could hear parrots squawking occasionally.Despite the thunder in the distance it did not rain but we had a sudden 10 minute power cut which Lisa said could happen at any time. Sometimes they may have a couple of power cuts a month and others can go for a couple of months without one. The water system does not work when there is a power cut but if it is long lasting then there is a back-up generator. Luckily we had already cooked our evening meal and washed up when the power went and were just admiring the sunset Day 11 - Monday 5th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Went in by Taxi to Savusavu town past one of the best named villages Jerusalem. Used the Wireless Internet from the Computer shop (FJD$4 per hour) as opposed to café Bule Re which is FJD$10 per hour and you end up sitting in the café anyhow using the internet. Tis a bit slow but not complaining. Updated website , read and responded to email. Savusavu is based alongside an inlet/ harbour with lots of yachts. Most relaxing sitting in café on the waters edge. Had lunch there as well Very good. I had beef kebab and Annie had chicken escalope. We were impressed by cooking and have booked there for Weds eve for the Lovo meal (cooked in ground pit in banana leaves, trad Fiji) Booked car for 3 days from 2moro from Tanda. She is gonna pick us up and drive us in to collect. Saw the town and waters edge. We met Tanda and Tuklea , german lady (from Munchen area) and her Fijian husband. Both very nice. They own Bula Re and he is the chef there, having recently returned from cooking at the South Pacific games in Samoa which he says is safer than Fiji.Interesting because we feel most welcome and safe in Fiji, everyone says Bula to you whether you are walking thru town or out in the country. These folk have 2 adopted Fijian children, very friendly. They are also Roy & Lisa’s closest neighbours at Sewaka. It was Guy Fawkes Night,not surprisingly not recognized here in Fiji but all supermarkets well stocked with fireworks which are for Diwali (this Friday 9/11) Day 12 - Tuesday 6th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Got up early and got picked up by Tanda and her husband and two children who took us into town. She dropped her two children off at school and then we picked up our hire car from outside her restaurant. Drove down some graveled roads and even some of the tarmacadam roads had lots of pot holes. Saw some tourist resorts, some of which were still being built, the ferry dock and went past the airport and saw some small planes land and take off. Saw a lot of coconut plantations along the coast. People waved at us and shouted ‘bula’ (hello). Saw the Hot Springs Hotel and then had lunch at the Copra Shed where the yachts are moored at the jetty. Did shopping in supermarket and then returned to cottage for siesta. No breeze at all. Went for cooling swim at Sewaka beach just before dusk and we were the only people there.They are the family who own the Fijian restaurant in Savusavu. We saw the school where the children were dropped off.It was extremely hot from 1pm onwards and swim at the beach was very refreshing.. Heard on Fijian radio in hire car that some people had been arrested for a plot to assassinate the interim Prime Minister of Fiji and were being charged, including inciting mutiny. Fiji Diary Continued Day 13 - Wednesday 7th November 2007,Car trip to Labasa Mostly rained today, so they do get bad weather in Fiji!!! Took our hire car to Labasa the main town of Vanua Levu, 30k residence and in the north of the island. About 75 miles from where we are staying. Much sugar cane production indeed we visited the factory on the outskirts of town and saw the hordes of farmers waiting to have their cane weighed / paid and processed, would love to know what they get paid for a cartload , bet its not much! Labasa itself has an amazing Indian influence, for me it could have been India. Very busy town with lots of Indian shops. Weather turned very hot and we were glad of air conditioning in car. Worth noting that was a good road with asphalt surface (although slightly destroyed in places with deep potholes) so journey took about 1 ½ hours. Much of this island at least is unmade roads. Went over some dodgy looking bridges over rivers. Lots of lorries traveling to Labasa loaded up with sugarcane. Saw pine forests, farms and sugar cane fields and very mountainous in distance. Saw a mongoose run across the road in front of our car. Later on we saw one foraging at the side of the road and Keef took a photo.Met Roy in Savusavu outside the pie shop (Hot Bread Shop) after we had returned from Labasa. Started raining and continued all afternoon. Village funeral of an elder. The whole village were out in force and we saw his/her grave adorned with flowers. As the procession wended its way back alas rather embarrassingly our car was caught in the procession. The village was Urata. In the eve we are going back into Bula Ra for a Lovo feast, although the rain still persists. Note we have car hired for 3 days which is enough, air conditioned Suzuki Jiminy, small but perfectly formed. Lovo meal was lovely – we had chicken, beef, mahi-mahi fish, pumpkin with prawns, tara leaves wrapped with creamed coconut filling, tara (bland vegetable), plantain for dessert with chocolate sauce. Keef had two tropical fruit drinks as he was driving and I had a maitai cocktail, plus coffees all for £9 each. Drive back to cottage after dinner was dark and misty (low cloud in mountains) but at least the rain had stopped. Difficult to see where the potholes were in the road in the dark.Took these memorable pix,Trip to Labasa and sugar cane photos. Also mongoose and photos of lovo meal. Labasa, route back from Labasa and Urata village with pig and mongoose And Lovo feast in the evening. Day 14 - Thursday 8th November 2007,Jean-Michel Cousteau Resort Nr Savusavu Vist to Jean-Michel Cousteau resort. Eventually went back into SS to use the Internet café and hand car back into Tanda and Tukea. Enjoyed the use of the car and the freedom it gave us but 3 days is probably enough @ FJD$92/day i.e 276 (i.e £96) went swimming for the 3rd time at our private beach, easy when you have the car, a hard climb in humidity otherwise. Not that impressed by JMC resort however the colour of fish off the jetty was immense. Big blue parrot fish, travaille and 2 huge blue fish (which I have no idea what they were called). Driving with 4 wheels for first time ever down very muddy track to JMC It was raining and very churned up, having slid there in the first place used the 4WD for return journey, very stable. Resort was very tiny with long jetty for dive boats, small swimming pool and grotty beach which was very rocky and unsuitable for swimming. Did not stay long and weather rainy. Went back into Savusavu and had drink at the Copra Shed by the jetty and looked at the boats. Saw cloud of steam and realized that this was where the hot springs came out of the ground. Found out that the Saturday South Pacific music festival starts at 7pm and is held at the Hot Springs Hotel. Went for swim at Sekawa beach. Torrential downpour pm. Decided to go back into Savusavu to internet café, hand back hire car and then got a taxi back to the cottage at dusk. Fijian lady (can’t remember her name) at Sekawa beach who was baby sitting the Czech couples baby. She had heard of Sherwood Forest and Robin Hood in history at school! Czech family are buying on beach front, wow, plus 4 Russians in Bula Re last night for Lovo feast. Us Northern hemisphere folk are taking over! Day 15 - Friday 9th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Nothing to report, day spent locally Day 16 - Saturday 10th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Venua Levu, Fiji Relaxed in the cottage and then got a taxi at 4.30pm into Savusavu to the South Pacific Music Festival held at the Hot Springs Hotel. Noticed that the ferry from Vitu Levu was in dock (comes to Savusavu 3 times a week).. Arrived at the hotel just at the end of the talent contest where prizes were awarded for the best acts. The compere was either Oz or NZ and she was very patronizing and bossy towards the Fijians. Had some drinks and a meal of fish, chips and salad before the main music concert. We had been told it would start at 7pm but in fact it did not start until 8.20. The best act was a troupe of singers and dancers from the University of the South Pacific, Suva who had come over on the ferry. Their singing was very melodic and dancing was also very expressive and South Pacific. There were some other acts that were more pop group style and the Australian musicians were the worst. The concert was very amateurish and the PA system was also bad with feedback. We had booked a taxi back to the cottage at 10pm so had to leave before the concert ended. Day 17 - Sunday 11th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Vanua Levu, Fiji A day of chillin. Did a few bits of video editing on laptop after last nights Music Festival at the Hot Springs Hotel and read the Fiji Times that Roy & Lisa loaned us. Anne did washing, not the greatest machine in the world and if the programme goes wrong it sucks all the water from the well dry. Oh dear! We then watched a whole stack of movies on DVD loaned by R&L who had once again left us with treats fruit (pineapple & bananas) and diwahli snacks (sweet not savoury). Watched Casablanca, Bourne Identity and About Smidt (3rd time but we love it!). MetVatu, R&L’s dog when I returned the paper. They are in Labasa all day today on a Jehovah’s Witness meet. Day 18 - Monday 12th November 2007,Sewaka Beach Cottage, Near Savusavu, Vanua Levu, Fiji Nice sunny day, got up around 7 -80 degrees plus humid but gentle breeze Had tea/ coffee and breakfast and read out on the verandah I am reading Uncle Toms Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe 1851 Wow devastatingly anti Slave book. Apparently Abe Lincoln claimed it started the Civil War Otherwise apart from reading and watching videos didn’t do a whole lot Had to pack late eve. Saw Capote DVD about Truman Capote and then Dances With Wolves.Managed to supposedly send first TXT messages on Anne’s phone to the boys, we will see. Also rang Parmgeet to ensure Paradise Taxis all set up for 2moro to go to the airport. Had a huge tropical storm at 1.30 with thunder and lightning. Roy and Lisa invited us for more kava and wine as a farewell in evening. They told us about a hurricane which they experienced in the cottage in 2001 where they had 10”of rain and also told us about clearing the rainforest to build the cottage. Said that quite a few Fijian villagers had died when trying to save their animals during the hurricane. There are no hurricane shelters on the island and no tidal wave warning sirens either. Luckily as they are 250 feet above sea level they would not be affected by a tsunami. Offered to copy some music from our laptop for them on their blank CDs which they were grateful for. Rang Mum at 1am, created DVD. Day 19 - Tuesday 13th November 2007,Leave Suvusavu and Fiji and journey onto Samoa Back to the Future or Ground Hog Day We had 2 days today one Leaving Fiji..One version of the 13/11, the other Arriving Samoa. See details under Samoa Summary: FIJI 12 days , Day 8-19, 2/11/2007-13/11/2007 Letter home from Fiji To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key. Western Samoa DIARY WESTERN SAMOA - Savai'i & Upolu NOTE all words in ITALICS were written on the trip. Talofa Lava Folks! Western Samoa not American Samoa for us....... UPDATE 28/11/2007 Now left Samoa Alas!!! Final pictures for Samoa posted We are sad to leave but 15 days of this heat 90+ at night and humid, boy humid...is taking its toll We stayed 1 night on Upolu in the 1848 (that old?) Princess Tui Inn in Apai (13th) We had booked 2 but it was bad so stayed 2nd day in Insel Fehrman hotel (note previous big German influence in people and architecture) where we had lunch (if only) with the Ms South Pacific pageant, then we hired a car for 15 days and went by ferry to Savaii where we stay in the Savaii Lagoon Resort, Beach fale (idyllic). This was a beachfront cottage with its own private beach lagoon with snorkelling on the doorstep plus swimming with turtles 15mins away. 10 nights in paradise and a chance to tick off two of the top1000 things to do before you die! (RLStevenson House on Upolu, (ace) , Hotel Safua Savaii (crap). Take a look at Savaii Lagoon resort to get an idea....Then we came back to the main Island of Upolu to the Outrigger hotel for another few days and saw the whole of that island. The hire car enabled us to travel around all of Savaii & Upolu, we have seen more of it than most Samoans now (alas...they can't afford to travel) Because of the international dateline on our travels we have had no 1/11, 2 13/11's and only a smidgen of the 28/11. Our 16.5 hour epic at Falealo International Airport (45 mins from the capital Apia pronounced 'R-PEA-A') was a delight in how to get no sleep The Samoans sure know how to treat a family members arrival at the airport as a party... HIGHLIGHTS Savaii Beach, Lava flow and blow holes, Ms Samoa, Villages and their gardens (fine if not immaculate) and Robert Louis Stevensons House LOWLIGHTS Long wait at Apia airport in the heat & humidity for a 1hr flight to Tonga Walking outside our beach fale for a private dip in the sea lives on as well as the pineapples growing there and the short hop to the restuarant next door for freshly caught fish with chips, yummy! oh and the taxi driver who ripped us off, git! can i say that, guess i just have, trying to drive us to the other side of the island to a hotel when insel fehrman apia was just down the road, oh and hot being able to close the window in our red jeep, luckily no tropical downpour at that time. Summary: SAMOA 16 days , Day 19-34, 13/11/2007-28/11/2007 Diary Day 19 - Tuesday 13th November 2007,Leave Suvusavu and Fiji and journey onto Samoa Back to the Future or Ground Hog Day We had 2 days today.Leaving Fiji..One version of the 13/11,Arriving Samoa.Is another.Got up at about 8 and had breakfast in Princess Tuipapaya, brown banana in sugar and toast, not bad.however Anne almost left me if we didn’t get out sharp.and agreed it was a S**T hole; the sheets don’t bare descriptionanyhow we got a taxi and went off in search of a hotel for day 2, Aggy Greys (£200/night) full luckily, then Herman took us on a magical mystery tour of various places then started driving to Aggy Grays beach resort (near airport) Keef caught him out and got him to turn back into Apia and a car hire place as well as Insel Hotel still he ripped us off at $WST80 (about £16) for only 25 mins taxi ride. If I’d had my wits about me I would have argued but we did get booked in and got our car (less than £24 / day) and essential on Samoa especially travelling to Savai’I as the 2 supposed car hires didn’t seem to exist when we drove thru Have to say our stay at Insel was ace (if a little expensive £85) but we swam, did lunch with the Ms South Pacific Pageant (see the pics lads!!!) and had an ace evening meal as well as air con and 2 double beds, v relaxing Also called in to checkout Outriggers that we are staying in after Savai’I , very good, pool, rooms, i/net etc.Chatted to young guy from California who was in transit at Nadi from Auckland where he had been studying wine production in NZ as part of a college course in USA. He said that a sparking white wine from kent had won the top wine prize in the world as being the best wine which surprised us. He recommended Raglan beach as an excellent long sandy beach where surfing also was good there. He said that South Auckland area was not a good area at night as young people got drunk and congregated in the main street area and had to be dispersed by the police in riot gear. He also said that Queenstown and Milford Sound and area were beautiful and told us that there are kea parrots in the glacier which tourists are warned will chew on your leather shoes if left outside. These are the largest parrots in NZ. Keef and the yank talked about music and he recommended a band called Tool who were similar to Pink Floyd. On Samoa met Dutch couple (who will pop up again later) that have been traveling RTW for 6 weeks in reverse direction to us plus a oz lady from Brisbane in the legal profession who had been on Vanuatu for 4 months. Sounds a v interesting place, the Happy isles. Said goodbye to our hosts in Savusavu, Roy and Lisa. Lisa gave us a guided tour of her garden and we saw pineapples, limes, lemon grass and papayas (also known as paw-paw) growing. Weather was really hot and humid – sweat was running down our foreheads. Got taxi to ‘airport’ early – just as well we did as the plane left 20 mins early with 8 passengers. Pilot told us that we would do a stop at Labasa to drop and pick up people. Then had 9 passengers on plane. Got good aerial view of mountains, rainforest and sugar cane fields and farms near Labasa. Quite cloudy at times and some turbulence in little biplane.when we went through a rainstorm and clouds. Then we saw a full rainbow from above which was spectacular. Good views of the coral reefs but some mist from clouds. Arriving at Apia, Samoa at 1.30pm and had lunch - banana cake, vegetable samosas and my first true Indian curry (vegetable). The banana cake was the best we have ever had and so were the samosas. We had to hang around the airport until our flight to Samoa at 10pm. As we had our heavy bags we did not go into Nadi town but read books at the airport. Keef posted his DVD to his mum cost about £1.Flight to Samoa was with Air Pacific which was a good airline. Captain was Scottish and his landing in Samoa was hardly felt. We had a snack meal on the plane and sparkling NZ and red wines. Flight took 1hr 50 mins and we landed at 12.17 at night still on the 13 November due to crossing the international dateline. By the time we got through customs, baggage claim etc we saw our name on a blackboard so we could be directed to our courtesy bus. Keef had got some Samoan money from Westpac bank at the airport and by then it was 1.30 and we were very tired. He also had to pay 12 Samoan Tala for a piece of paper to allow him to drive in Samoa as we said we wanted to hire a car.Anne was presented with a flower lei of yellow flowers. Very hot at night. was. international dateline thing again. So we seem to have had no Nov 1st on our journey but two Nov 13 days very strange!! First impressions of Samoa although late at night was of a modern airport, good roads – drive on the rhs of road, wild dogs roaming on roads, private houses looked quite well built with cars and not shanty villages like Vanua Levu. Dropped off some other person at another hotel and then us, a Dutch couple and an Australian woman from Kiribati were dropped off at the Princess Tui after a long drive from the airport. We were given a coconut to drink and then shown to our room. It was dire – dirty, small and the shared washroom facilities were awful. Very disappointed as we had booked this place over the internet. By now it was 2.30am. Keef got to sleep but Anne was awake until 5am. Decided to leave this dump ASAP even though we had booked in for 2 nights. Worst place we had ever stayed in – campsites are cleaner than that place. Will give it bad feedback on internet to warn other travelers. Hope Ian Wright from Lonely Planet did not stay here. Oh and frightened lady in Insel office when Keef wanted to get i/net connectivity via their modem, alas they said no so rather frustratingly no i/net until we get back after Savai’i. Note Nadi is pronounced Nandi. Day 20 - Wednesday 14th November 2007,Upolu to Savai’I, Samoa Got up early-ish (7.15am) and had the Tropical buffet b’fast at the Insel. Ace cooked full English with eggy banana bread. Anne had pancakes with maple syrup plus a banana muffin. Then checked out with some degree of hassle, machine didn’t print our visa docket so a whole rig-ma-roll about no charge vs being charged twice. No worries from our side but Steve receptionist was stressed. I am sure it will be fine. Then drove the 45 mins from Apia to Ferry side. Called in at Aggy Gray beach resort to take some piccies as early for ferry. Then had to have car washed before queuing for ferry. Good journey by ferry (1 hour 15mins) although a little disappointing that you are not allowed up on deck to take pictures. Then same time was to drive up to resort. V hot as window wouldn’t go up, but sorted when we arrived.Excellent Samoan villages on the coast road on Upolu. Lots of smaller Samoan islands passed by the Ferry. Jumping fish in our Fagamalo beach, coral lagoon and breakers on the edge plus hints of what will be excellent sunsets later in our stay. Met Lady samoa 2 (the ferry) and Ini (35 year old mother of 7, and married to mr lazy 54 years old) who is one of our host at Savai’I Lagoon. PS the kiwis who own it didn’t seem to have let the Samoans who manage it know we were coming. Notable - Ambulance with number plate of NHS, fascinating. Samoans sleeping anywhere and everywhere on ferry crossing. It was 32 degrees today, hot and humid!!! Waiter in La Legota restaurant trying to rip us off for a cocktail, Keef caught him out. Maybe we are getting paranoid about being ripped off but it is beginning to feel like more than a coincidence However that said the Fish and Chips were great. Deep fried snapper in spiced batter, quite superb but v filling. Ps believe it or not Anne & I are losing weight Day 21 - Thursday 15th November 2007,Savai’I Lagoon Resort, Savai’I, W Samoa Met young woman who was a uni student from Houston in internet café who was using her own laptop. Her research was about an ant and its interaction with a specific plant and its affect on biodiversity. She said she was in Samoa for 8 months – nice place to study. Went to toilet at 3.45am and cockerel from next door Samoan family started crowing!! We thought it should go on the barbecue! Rain at breakfast time but then sun came out. Breakfast was delivered to our door at 7am – papaya, coconut, 2 bananas, bread, jam and butter and cereal. There was so much food that we saved some for lunch. Drove hire car to a village further along the bay and bought some food supplies from small shop and petrol for car – half a tank cost £5.50. Also we found internet café in village called Manase run by young German woman. They only do e-mails from their own computers so we could not use laptop to update website. Met American uni student in internet café. Returned to our resort and spent rest of morning in the sea and relaxing on the beach. We saw some small fish and keef did some snorkeling. Had lunch and then it was so hot that we had a sleep from 3pm until 4.30pm. Anne had a dicky stomach, first time on travels. Read our books until sunset. Keef took some good photos and we had a stroll along the beach. Day 22 - Friday 16th November 2007,Savaii Lagoon Resort, Fagamalo,Savaii,Samoa Not that much happened today. Anne very ill overnight with Samoan Stomachwe have guessed at what caused it but not really sure. Could be any number of causes. Started boiling the UV water since but as Keef fine and the whole village probably not that Keef went to Raci Beach internet café, 1 of only 2 on Savaii. Caught up on mail wrote to Craig/Doug/Brian/Linda & Jacky, plus put words on website. Sati (german lady who owns it with her husband) will now allow me to put pictures on from memory stick after virus check so although very slow via dial up should be able to get the website done on Monday. Sunday is a big religious day of rest here.Re-met Dutch couple Rolf & ? whom we traveled over on plane from Fiji with and up to Princess Tui in Apia. Great to see them again. Had a very long chat – they had been in 6 weeks NZ (North Island only), Cook Isles, Samoa, and were on to LAX and driving to San Francisco before KLM flight back into Amsterdam. He is some sort of pilot and they both disliked Princess Tui as much as we did plus Sati, been here for 3 years but she goes off for 4 months a year as finds Samoan way of life somewhat restrictive, but loves having travelers to talk to. Day 23 - Saturday 17th November 2007, Trip to the west of Savaii As the weather was very breezy and overcast skies we decided to tour round the north of Savaii. There were lots of villages near our resort along the coast but when the road went inland the habitation was rather sparse. Each village had its main fale meeting house and pigs and chickens wandered around and across the road. Some of the houses were like lean-to shacks and others looked more substantial. Many had lovely gardens with colourful shrubs and plants. Asua was an interesting village. As we left the coast we came across a vast area of an old lava flow from a volcano which Keef had read had erupted in 1911. The volcanic soil is very good for plants but some of the black volcanic rocks were huge. Because the weather was cooler and it was a Saturday we saw villagers walking along the road with machetes collecting bananas and breadfruit, mowing the grass, sweeping up fallen leaves from the overnight winds and the teenagers played volleyball in some villages. Keef stopped by a traditional fale where the wife was selling pineapples at the side of the road. He bought a huge ripe pineapple for 5 Tale (£1). The Samoan lady did not speak much English and her daughter was with her. Also as we were about to drive off for the day we met the New Zealand lady who owns the resort. She said that her and her family come over to Samoa about 3 or 4 times a year. After returning from our drive we had a late lunch and then sat on the beach as the breeze was very warm even though it was cloudy. The NZ family were doing a barbecue on the beach and they very kindly asked us to join them As we already had food for dinner we politely refused as it was a family barbecue. She then brought over some crisps for us and we had a chat about what we had done today. She said that she had asked some Samoans for plant cuttings from their gardens. Meeting Bruce & Margaret McCullen, from NZ. She was originally from Glasgow some 35 years ago. They are the owners of Savaii Lagoon resort despite their protestations that they have leased the land off the Samoans and handed it back to them they are the ones making the money, witness the 4 holidays a year to here . Lava gardens, and phenomenally good produce / growth i.e. the pineapple which will last for at least 5 meals Pictures of a day out west, some of lagoon resort and plants, others of coastal and inner land areas especially Auala on Asua bay with communal swimming /washing pools and lava gardens, plus fishing .Samoans with major tattoos, kids trying for breadfruit and the most bizarre church made of lava stone and painted white. Western Samoa Diary Continued Day 24 - Sunday 18th November 2007,Savaii Lagoon Resort, Samoa We had a relaxing day on the beach although it was very breezy and overcast, although the wind was very warm. We walked along the beach to the next resort and discovered that the sea water was deeper for swimming nearer the Le Lagota resort. We went to their restaurant for dinner in the evening and had yellow fin tuna and chips which was delicious. Then watched Miss South pacific on the TV in the evening. Miss Tonga won with Miss Cook islands runner up and Miss Australia & Torres Strait Islands in 3rd place. Interesting to see the traditional costumes of each country which featured exotic headdresses and shells and feathers everywhere. We also saw a fire dance as part of the show by Samoan men which was spectacular, Day 25 - Monday 19th November 2007, Trip south to Salelologa After breakfast it was very overcast again so we went to the internet café but unfortunately it was shut. Decided to go along the coast to Salelologa to visit the supermarket. Road goes through an old lava field where the now black lava had flowed towards the sea and went past a place where you can swim with turtles which we will investigate another day. Torrential rainstorm just as we went into supermarket. Choice of food was very limited but managed to buy some canned food, noodles and sausages. Driving through villages we had to avoid dogs and pigs wandering across the road. Lots of houses had very nice gardens but some were just shacks. Also lots of Samoans were asleep in the fales along the beach and in one village they were building a church.Retuned to our resort for late lunch and then went swimming and read our books on the beach. Weather was still cloudy and breezy but pleasantly warm and not humid like Fiji. Had G&T and R&C as the sun set!!! Ace. Met Staff in the Hotel Safua, one of the 1000 places to see before you die and the only one on Savaii. Actually it was probably one of the 1000 places to help you die, Annes words,excruciatingly aweful Day 26 - Tuesday 20th November 2007, Savaii Lagoon Resort, Samoa Nothing to report Day 27 - Wednesday 21st November 2007,Savaii Lagoon Resort, Samoa Beach day, as heading towards a full moon very low tide first thing and very high tide last thing. Spent the whole day, 8-7 on the beach topping up the tan and reading. Probably the best day weather wise since we have been in Samoa. Saw some tiny electric blue fish in some coral a few yards odd our beach plus a black and white striped fish. Keef saw an eel poking his head out of some coral – moray eel.Met an Indonesian girl who is studying in NZ who showed me the coral reef with the eel and brightly coloured fish. Took pictures of them but none really came out, Now discovered the UNDERWATER setting on the camera so gonna have another go on Friday. Day 28 - Thursday 22nd November 2007, Car trip all the way round Savaii, Clockwise Gorgeous blue Pacific which looked turquoise in the lagoons. Drove along the coastal road all round the island. On the south and western sides of Savaii there were breakers coming ashore in the sea and there were cliffs, lava flows and coconut plantations. Met Lonnie, his wife and baby both at the Alofaaga blowholes and at the beach BBQ fale. They had (coincidence) lived in London in Wimbledon in 2001 working initially for a Kiwi in a pub on the common. Its in their DNA. He works for Bruce and Margaret McCullum (owners?) as well as the Maori guy whom they call their adopted son. Had a good chat with them all things UK & NZ. Looking forward to arriving now, They live 1 hour north of Auckland and said don’t be put off by the airport and lack of public transport. For them to get to Samoa it is only a 3hr flight from Auckland.When we were chatting to the NZ people at Savaii Lagoon they told us that they had seen dolphins in the bay this morning but as we were driving round the island we missed them. Hope to see them tomorrow. Coastal road in south and west of island was very interesting and weather was hot and sunny in the morning when we set off at 09.15. The blowholes through holes in the lava were spectacular as the plume of spray went up 30ft in the air.. Drove down a long track to get there and paid 10 tala fee (£2 ) but the scenery was worth it. Took lots of photos and video of blowhole and waves breaking against lava rocks. Skies suddenly filled with storm clouds so walked quickly back to car. Had snack lunch in car whilst downpour took place. Got back to our resort at 3.15pm. Keef went swimming and Anne had a siesta then we had a cup of tea on the beach and chatted to the NZ crowd.58 pictures taken on our trip round, Savaii. The south side of the island has a spectacular coast line and the blowholes especially Day 29 - Friday 23rd November 2007,Savaii Lagoon Resort, Samoa Spent the day chillin on the beach, well at least in the morning. Had a rather broken nights sleep with torrential rain at about 3am which continued through until about 10am. Took A & I ages to return to sleep after closing (slightly) shutters to prevent rain coming in All Pacific windowry (if that’s what you call it) is fitted fly screen on the outside and louvred glass slats (in 2 shutter sections) on the inside, idea with fans is to keep you cool whilst keeping the pesky insects out.Went out at low tide to take pictures of coral and the bright blue fish, alas the eel wasn’t to be seen again. Met again Bruce/ Margaret/ Lonnie, wife & baby and Suvisuvi (Part Maori guy Margaret likes to call her son) All Kiwis , nice folk. Gave us their food leftovers Cheddar cheese/ chutney and pineapple, v kind. Bruce has good sense of humour a good sign for our Kiwi visit Plus he suggested I could go up the water tower to get better pictures, now that is a good sense of humour from a nation who are into their extreme sports. I.e NZ weather said a ‘great weekend for taking your granny skydiving’.Lots of rain plus we checkout (alas) of Savaii 2moro. We have both found it most relaxing. Day 30 - Saturday 24th November 2007,Ferry trip back from Savaii to Upolu, Salelologa Wharf to Mulifanua Wharf Waited in terminal building (if you can call it that) and got a passenger ticket for Annie. Lady on desk at outriggers who was v friendly. Ini gave Annie and I a frangipani etc garland as a leaving present (ah bless) car fine this time, no problems with windows not shutting. V hot on ferry. Took some video off the back of the boat. Nice to be back on main island, smooth run into Apia (about 45 mins) 3 cars overtook when they shouldn’t near the wharf. As Annie said they mooch around all day but once behind the wheel they drive amazing aggressively (Note Updated later; the Tongans don’t maybe that’s a difference between races) Day 31 - Sunday 25th November 2007, Outriggers Hotel, Apia, Upolu – Trip around Upolu Saw everything drove all the way round the island in about 7 hours See the photos There are lots, albatross island, the leper colony, beach fales you name it, delicious day.Briefly met a Samoan band at the Coconut Beach Resort (by 2013 now called Coconut Beach Club) at the south end of the island. Hot and sultry day. Ate (expensive) in the restaurant on the beach front. Classy Burger and then Anne had a chocolate truffle desert, yummy. At the end of today we have been away a whole month. The big thing for us was the way the Samoans treat Sundays. It may be a day of rest Mon-Sat but Sunday is for Church and Sunday best. Mostly full white clothing,shirts for the men, white lava-lave/sarong, full dresses for the ladies Day 32 - Monday 26th November 2007,Outriggers Hotel, Apia, Upolu Got up early and went to the Robert Louis Stevenson house in Apia. Excellent in every way. Guide good, info good well worth the visit .Visited soap factory(?), this samoan guys house. He was married to swiss lady and showed us around his garage and the process of making his handmade soaps from coconut oil, caustic soda (help!!! But OK) and a myriad of scents. Frangipani etc etc Lovely, Anne bought one of each and v cheap they were to $WST8 each about 80p.Kiwi backpackers who had been to Manolo and stayed with a samoan family in the village. No roads on that island. The guy reckoned he messed up big time on most of the village customs (seated when elders present, point toes away etc etc). Swims in the Outriggers pool to cool off and finally finishing Uncle Toms cabin, gr8 book used Wifi at CSL and had a shake and meal at MCD (bad eh) but we are on so much fruit at the mo we are definitely both losing weight Day 33 - Tuesday 27th November 2007,Outriggers Hotel, Apia, Upolu Last day in Outriggers Bit of a cockup on no of days stay (my fault) so had to pay and extra day so we used the room to store baggage and have some cold showers. Doesn’t really work in that humidity cos you are dripping again the moment you have finished drying yourself. Security guard helped us load bags in car (but only when it looked like Anne might collapse).Returned car at 3.30 full tank and joked with the lady (who I’d teased when we got the car) that it had seen more of Samoa than she had. She told me that she had never been to Savaii in her life. Caught taxi to airport arrived about 4.30 (in for the long haul16.5 hrs wait, 1.5 hrs flight to Tonga) Bizarre. Made sure this time I told taxi driver what the price was i.e $WST55 (about £11). Excerpt from letter to Brian & Gina that Anne put together and sent from our Lavaspot Wifi session in CSL (Computer Services Ltd) shop (air con) opposite McDonalds (also air con) .guess how we kept cool.96 deg .” Greetings from Samoa. Temperature here is a very hot 90F plus at night time and even hotter during the day. Craig e-mailed us to say there was snow in Nott’ham! We found the Samoans very friendly and when we tell them we’re from Nott’m they all mention Robin Hood! We have seen the contestants for the Miss South Pacific and now the Commonwealth & Oceana Games – Weightlifting is being held at the moment in Apia. We are looking forward to moving on to Tonga as hopefully it will be cooler there. Considering we are in the wet and cyclone season we are glad that the weather is not too bad.It seems strange to hear Xmas music & see decorations in the shops. Trust you are all well as we are (albeit very sweaty!) Day 34 - Wednesday 28th November 2007,Faleolo Airport Plus the day that didn’t exist (again) except up until 6.45 am (another International Dateline oddity). Spent waiting for our flight in the Samoan airport. No air con, no open shops, no water, no nuthin except parties , immense humidity (was over 95 degrees at night) and 2 flights to Auckland (one Air NZ, one Polynesian Blue) And heard.all night long the sound of cellotape being twined and ripped plus black bin liners being taped up round boxes of produce.coconuts, bananas, papaya, breadfruit, flowerswho knows what else.and you may ask why didn’t they prepare these in advanceand probably more importantly with NZs hot customs rules and foodstuffs and wood are not allowed, so dumb question how does that work, surely it will all be dumped on arrival in Aucklandoh and they have to pay excess baggage for it. Met 3 Tongan US marines, who had flown in from Pago Pago (US Samoa) who had to wait longer than us. Spoke to a few of them especially the big guy (linebacker with US passportwhose parents and child lived on Tonga) so they were getting a break from duty for home visit. Mark my words you wouldn’t cross him (although he was most pleasant with US accent) he was the size of the proverbial ‘brick s..house door and then some’.Went into main store (CHOWs) in Apia. I got flipflops and water, Anne some very nice material . The blue bit which is 3 yds long was only about £1.50 English Free almost.Various Uk & Kiwi med students doing ‘time’ in local Samoan hospitals and staying in Outriggers fales around the pool. Excerpt from standard letter sent to Friends and rellies on arrival in Tonga (29/11 due to IDL).We had the most amazing 16.5 hour wait in the Samoan airport last night before our short flight to Tonga, no open shops in airport i.e no water, so I had to get a taxi to take me to a village 'shop' where they had no water and didn’t understand me but i was able to buy 4 bottles of coke and sprite (with no top opener) to at least stop us expiring in the immense humidity that was Samoa....about 95 at night...met a load of Samoan US Marines from Pago Pago (US Samoa) who had been waiting longer than us...still each plane that arrives in Samoa is a huge 'event' wow at 3am truck loads of large families would arrive, to greet one of their extended family returning from NZ, party time, so no sleep all night. We both loved Samoa, very different from anything we have ever experienced before....whilst being almost 3rd world, they are great people and 'village' life will stay with us forever....pigs, cockerels, amazing gardens, getting up at 5am, church frying pan gong, mooching - a national pastime, and boy what views....still we are now in Tonga and have 24*7 i/net so intend catching up with a few folk. Alas Fiji & Samoa i/net is sparse and costly...so please write, we would love to hear from you. We are in our 'exec' fale (trad cottage) listening to Black Rose (our fave Fijian band at the mo) and thinking of family and friends....but not too hard.We have noticed throughout the South Pacific islands they are all extremely religious and very very family (extended and we mean extended) orientated. They all have loads of little kids and seem gobsmacked that we only have 2 children and this is the norm in Europe. 7-10 is not unusual here and village chief mentality rules. So as a big fella I’m applying for a ‘leadership’ roleAnne now calls me King (or elseshe has just told me to remove this bit) In most cases feudal rights rule and as education has to be paid for if you are poor you remain so and learning which we all know changes life and cultures /opportunities are just not available, many kids don’t go to school. Robina the Kiwi (Tongan/Japanese dad....Tongan/German mum) who owns this place is most friendly and interested in tourism (as such it is) in Samoa so she can implement stuff here in Tonga. Its early days but they seem to be a much more reserved race than the Fijians & Samoans and the climate is 10 degs less that those 2 and although this is unfair Anne & i remarked on arrival England with Coconut palms....there is a lot of green grass (cultivated) still more when we have to report....proud to say i now have a photo of the Rose Cottage Tshirt in all the places we have been....watch out for further additions to the website To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key. Tonga DIARY TONGA Nuku'alofa & Atata Island NOTE all words in ITALICS were written on the trip. The Friendly Isles - Malo e lelei UPDATE 10/12/2007 We have now left Tonga. Grim last day with cyclone and quake, plus we saw on the news from NZ some sort of coup/riot, we are investigating. Anyhow even though we enjoyed it pleased to have got out. Last day at 8.45pm house, tables and everything shook. seems to have been a quake nearby, deep underground , no tsunami warning, storms raging. Cyclone Daman. But apart from that things we did were,visted Atata , idyllic desert island, hired a car on the mainland (Tongatapu) for 3 days and leisurely went round everything over 2 days (i guess you could do it in a 1/2 day) and on the 3rd day went to the Cultural centre. Saw trad outrigger boat, Houma Blowholes (ace), National Holiday procession for King Tupou 1st on 4/12, village traditional dancing and a cultural dance eve at the International Dateline Hotel. Tonga is slightly different from Fiji and Samoa....All the ladies wear what appear to be mats over their skirts, and sometimes the chaps as well. Plus visible signs of protest against goverment in the streets. Great inequality , see some of our pictures! In Nuku'alofa town we saw the Kings Palace, had lunch in the 2 Sisters (often, its ace!) and Robinas Express cafe. She is half tongan/ quarter japanese and a quarter german and is gr8 (forceful business lady with 'high' connections) generally the town is not that inspiring but the market excellent HIGHLIGHTS Atata Island, Blowholes, 2 Sisters restuarant and village dancing LOWLIGHTS cockroach, rat, tongan tummy, dead sea krate (the worlds deadliest snake) on atata beach, cyclone daman & earthquake HISTORY Boy most of the reviews we have read of Tonga denegrade its infrastructure and believe it or not their people...bad stuff...we keep an open mind and are really looking forward to it....We will be staying at Nukuma'anu cottages Vuna Road Sopu (check it out on Google Maps below, near the Black Pearl appartments, it may well be closed 2020 but there is still an internet listing) on Tongatapu (the main southernmost group of islands) in the Executive fale cos guess what they have 24*7 internet....no water (joke)....now thats not bad for reports of a decaying infrastructure...more when we arrive. We are there 11 nights 29/11 to 10/12 ...have just found Nov is close of parliament and last year at this time there was civil unrest, fires and looting....Oh dear, let's hope no repeat this year.... Remember the Fale, Robina, Nuku'alofa market - coconut drinks, Black Rose (Rosiloa) album bought in market, New Eagles album downloaded, outsized washing,tonga's stonehenge,Captain Cook monument, cockroaches, earthquake & cyclone and getting out alive. Summary: TONGA 11 days , Day 35-45, 29/11/2007 - 10/12/2007 Diary Day 35 - Thursday 29th November 2007,Arrival in Tonga, Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Flight over quick and easy. Good NZ plane. Odd to see some 150+ people have to deplane in Samoa even though they were going on to Auckland, plus they would have to do the same in Tonga.Very little sleep. We had to have a 3 hour kip when we arrived to recover. Fale here at Nukama’anu is ace, Air con Inet 24/7, Sat TV etc.Met Silva, Margaret (PA) , Robina (owner) and handy man , who I had a chat to about Rugby and Hard Rock Cafes plus v friendly taxi driver who took us to 2 supermarkets and a stall for provisions and bananas.I drive a hard bargain and got a whole tree for $TOP4 (£1p) The currency is Pan’anga although for our benefit (I wish they wouldn’t) they call it a dollar.Plus lady in shop around the corner where we got bread, water and cheese (fondue style) who was having her kids talk to her ex in Stockton in California on a mobile, hoot or what! Most memorable: Christmas decs outside our cottage Day 36 - Friday 30th November 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Morning spent on laptop catching up, bank stuff with Craig (our hero) and sally jacks (Barclays), website redo, audible book download (savage garden) research on Tonga and associated islands. Both feeling a little jaded and oh I hope not but experiencing Tongan Tummy.Anne ankles bad and she is resting whilst I catch the daily diary up as haven’t done it since we returned from Savaii to Upolu.Just chillin will get a car for 3 days. Researched beaches and roads / places of interest. Very laid back here. Most ladies (married?) wear black and a mat skirt over their skirts. It is warm but not humid here and sea breeze and air con a big plus Lovely cottage Sat TV which we haven’t tried yet but will .Silva gave us 4 bananas (with mine we could overdose on them if we are not careful) plus returned our washing (along with her underwear) Very cheap $TOP10 (about £2.50) - the bananas not her underwear! Walk along beach to shop to get more water and bread. Coast is v interesting as inner coral reef but not advised to swim in. Taxi driver and Robina said they collect fish/ crabs/ all manner of marine life to eat from there. It was covered in folk at low tide doing exactly this. Plus kids all playing rugby by the side of the road. No posts , in Samoa each village at least had wooden tree stuff for posts Day 37 - Saturday 1st December 2007, Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Went by taxi into town and walked around. Saw market and bought tomatoes, lettuce, carrots, peppers and a small pineapple. Keith looked at cotton shirts but none his size. We saw taro, yams, kava root, ginger, garlic and other vegetables which we did not know the names. Very interesting. Internet café had a lot of NZ backpackers and Europeans. People were friendly and helpful in the shops. Bought a map & postcards. Some Tongans were in western clothing and others in sarongs with pandanus mats wrapped round their hips, both men & women. Saw local youth band singing & playing music in car park.Saw King of Tonga’s official residence (one of six) which was a colonial white clapboard building along the seafront. Town had a huge tree near the Westpac bank called a rain tree. Had lunch in restaurant, by then market was closing and traders were going home in pick-up trucks with unsold fruit & veg. Saw a pig in a wooden cage in back of truck being driven down main street. Weather was warm, sunny & cloudy & temp was 79F. Town looked very small considering it is the capital of Tonga – unremarkable buildings with colonial flavour – wooden with tin roofs but a small arcade with some modern shops and café. Got taxi back to our fale and then wrote postcards which we will send on Monday as the PO was shut. Watched ‘Around the bend’ on Sat Tv quirky family/road movie with Christopher Walken and Michael Caine (briefly before the cheque ran out!) – good (plus best quality picture since we started traveling) Tonga contribution to Broadcasting is a few local (hammy) adverts for beach resorts! Had interesting walk around market and town. Had lovely lunch in 2 sisters restaurant – chicken escalope in lime sauce with fried potatoes, garlic bread and side salad. For desert we had strawberry and chocolate gateau slices and nice coffee. Day 38 - Sunday 2nd December 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Chillin.alas Keef has Tongan Tummy so he is on water only all day, which should sort it. Reading, listening to music, researching facebook, laptop not much really. Waiting to get the hire car 2moro for 3 days so we can travel. Researched map also for islands worth visiting (Atata & Fala).Nuku is the uninhabited one where shipwrecked was filmed (teen reality show) Gentle walk left out of cottage along Hake Vunu (hake is road), our road.Robina and her 2 children dressed smart presumably for church. Note all ‘married’ Tongan women seem to be dressed from head to toe in black. She paid tribute to the Tongan customs of mat or belt mat with long ‘dangly’ bits by wearing an equivalent in silver. Met no one – Sunday is a very family/quiet day here in Tonga, Margaret and lady in 2 sisters said they slept as tired. Have to say as temperature is about 80, i.e 15degs less that Samoa folk here are far less ‘moochy’.Whilst writing our postcards we had a long chat with the Tongan gardener who was sweeping up leaves outside our fale. His name was Alex and he said he had been to France by cargo ship in 2000 and went via New Caledonia & Suez Canal which took over 2 months. Said he is going to visit his brother & family in NZ before Xmas for 3 months. Tonga Diary Continued Day 39 - Monday 3rd December 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Sent email to D&P-here is the extract which tells something of our day ,interesting one as first day of 3 with hire car***Hi Doug & Phoenix,Alas we didn’t get your text msg, both our phones don’t work here in Tonga and the only texts I have got are when i email phones and they respond...I’ll try l8r. Good stuff here in Tonga although i've got a rather bad dose of 'tongan tummy' at the mo, probably via water on salad but who knows, mum is ok. Got hire car 2day and saw LHS (left hand side) of the island, blowholes at Houma ace, plus saw surfing beach at Ha'atafu beach where we were talking to 4 ozzie surfers when a coconut that dropped narrowly missed all of us and the car (luckily). Gonna do the RHS 2moro. King died recently 84 and 33stone, fattest monarch in history, so being large (although we are both loosing weight a bit) is seen as good in Tonga. His main palace is just down the road from us, we saw his son (ex PM, King elect....its a bit / lot corrupt here I would suggest) drive past this a.m with police escort and blacked out bullet proof windows, public hols 2moro for his birthday and plaques everywhere celebrating what seems to be each of the previous kings 84 b'days (bizarre!) have to say not really enough to do here for 10 days, its very small We both preferred Samoa, still not complaining We will (if we can work out how) get to 1 or 2 of the surrounding Islands....Nuku is apparently where they shot the TV reality show Shipwrecked (never heard of it!) Still in answer to your quessies, bag 59 has dougs rucsac in it, i guess your tent is probably in that (unless we bought it over to you) ...no probs mum & i will get you a mattress and 2man tent when we get to NZ...not long now. Saw England result (did Beckham play?) , blimey that’s a heavy group, no I am not interested either....bet Craig’s mates who pre-booked tickets are pig sick bye love M&D/K&A.***saw 3 beach resorts(?) that you would really question, 2 ripoff taxi merchants and 1 resort ripoff, but apart from that a fairly good day!!! Houma Blowholes (ace), King elect Tupou V.Alex bought us 5 more bananas, we could open a shop, pity no blender cos banana milkshake is gr8. we did find out that 2moros public holiday is to celebrate King Tupou ,we more or less followed this route by car over our 3 days Day 40 - Tuesday 4th December 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu National Holiday in Tonga to celebrate birthday of King George Tupou 1st – he died in 1893 having reigned for some 48 years and was single handed credited with reforming Tonga,needs an update now from new King George Tupou 5th. Went round the right hand side of the island in the hire car (see pictures for details) Reasonably overcast day and about 79degs. The island isn’t that large , guess about 20*10 miles. After a few false starts getting out of Nuku’alofa down backstreets to avoid the town procession (after we had seen it) all roads from which seemed to lead to Queen Charlotte’s wharf we finally got out on our way, spend about 4 hours slowly traveling around. Memorable was Village dancing, protest banners against corruption, strip light (in our fale which was on the blink). Loved float procession thru Nuku’alofa , Captain Cooks monument, Paepe ‘o Tele’a (300 year old burial mound, started like pyramid (well 2 layers) – most UNIMPRESSIVE, Tonga’s Stonehenge (Ha’amonga’a Maui) , Lots of coconut/banana plantations, appalling roads, airport , Tongan boys college (red including mat uniform), dancing in village in SW Tongatapu,amused by Robina who said that the Princess regent came to her restaurant for a worship breakfast at 5.30 am (and she had to be up at 3.30 to prep for it) plus the father of her youngest child (boy) who has been visiting is returning to Oz 2moro. Day 41 - Wednesday 5th December 2007, Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Last day of the hire car so went to the Cultural Centre ($TOP3 each) which was very interesting, lunch @ café express then market to buy Rosilea by Black Rose and then chilled (reading / laptop/ music) whilst the builders removed the stones outside our door and put up ‘police tape’.talk about holidaying by a building site, I will ask for a rebate, and Keef did some DIY to try and fix the light tube/ starter motor.Visited cultural centre, had tapa, saw outrigger boat, andsome great old tongan photos, especially those of the royal family. Called into International dateline hotel on vunu rd opposite wharf (empty) to see about the cultural show, it is tonight so we are gonna go. 9 pm UPDATE it was ace and cost us zip, mixture of tongan, hawaian and moari dances and a great band. See videos and pictures. The Tongans seem better at this than the Samoans (or maybe we just happened to be in the right place at the right time here). Met Ozzies on Queen Charlotte wharf who were waiting for their ferry to Fafa. They had just flown in to Tonga and were in transfer. We asked about ferries as it is so unclear and we want to go to Pangaimotu 2moro 10/11 trips out and 4/5 return, Robina reckons $TOP15 that you pay on arrival at island but as always its not clear. Will consider! Had to move the car parked in the shade outside the cultural center when some tongan guys shinned up the coconut tree and started machetteing off the fronds and nuts One almost landed on the roof (and that would have cost us) Went to Café Express (Robina’s) in Western Union Funds Mgt building for lunch. Chicken and pineapple toasty for me (my first food for 2 days and touch wood I seem to be over Tongan Tummy), Chicken and lots of things panini for Anne, plus 2 chocolate milkshakes (best so far on trip) and banana cake/ coffee cheesecake. Day 42 - Thursday 6th December 2007,Trip to Atata Island Took our hire car back this morning. Took boat to Atata, a small island north of Tongatapu at 10 am where there was a resort called Royal Sunset. Boat was very small with 7 tourist day trippers and open sea was very choppy due to wind. On arrival at 10.25 we were greeted by a Tongan lady on the jetty who gave us all an orange juice. Our day boat trip included lunch. We walked through some paths past some of the tourist fales and came upon a small village, then walked back to the resort along the lovely sandy beach. Some village children were sitting on the beach & greeted us and there were quite a few fishing boats and nets along the beach. Was very hot. Sat down for a rest on the decking in the resort and then got changed to go for a cool off in the water. Sea was only knee deep in the sandy bit but stiff offshore breeze. Keef still had Tongan tummy.One of the American ladies told us that she had seen a sea snake which put us off going swimming. There was an option to go out in a boat snorkeling but Keef did not go. Had lunch (Keef had mahi-mahi fish with sweet potato chips and salad and Anne had a burger). Relaxed and read our books and sunbathed. By now there was a pleasant sea breeze. Noted that the resort swim pool was very dirty and had never been cleaned so we did not risk going in. Also more dogs and puppies wandering around as well as hens, even in the restaurant bit. We were the only tourists on the island as even though there were 26 fales, they were empty. Lady who had greeted us asked us if we wanted to stay on the island in a fale but we said no. Would not like to spend more than a day on the island. Had a brief dip in the sea again and then walked a bit further along the other side of the island but saw a dead sea snake on the beach .aargh! Did not get too close to investigate but it was as thick as Anne’s arm and black and green.. Anne ran away. Tongan lady confirmed that it was a sea snake. Got boat back at 4pm and trip back was just as choppy – small boat was like a roller coaster at times and lots of sea spray over us. When we arrived back at the pier we got a taxi back to our fale.Boat trip to small island Atata. Saw dead sea snake. Saw unusual coloured circle round sun and took photo. Day 43 - Friday 7th December 2007, Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Chillin..got up about 8 had breakfast (slowly) Peanut butter on toast, fruit juice and T Did stuff on laptop whilst listening to music Avoided taking ITunes and Ipod software updates. Will wait until NZ and faster line. Just too slow here and would maybe based on fragility of s/ware mean we ended up with no music. Did DVD for Mum of Samoa/Tonga. Sent lots of e-xmas cards and e-birthday cards to Doug & Nikki. Not much, some sun whilst we sunbathed. 84 degs.Met Margaret to pay the bill. $TOP1200 for remaining 8 days.Chatted to a young couple from the UK who were waiting for a boat to another island where they were staying. They were traveling round the Pacific, NZ, Vietnam, Thailand and India. On our boat trip to Atata island we met 5 sisters who were all born in Tonga but now live in Alaska, Sydney & NZ & all sounded very American. One even gave me her business card. 2 bits of lovely chocolate birthday cake courtesy of Suki, Robina’s 8 year old daughter. Sent lots of Xmas Greets email card from Tonga Day 44 - Saturday 8th December 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Caught taxi into town. Went to Friendly Islands bookshop to get envelope for DVD for Mum. Alas post office closed (or never open) before 11 so will have to take with and post in NZ. Hope it gets there for Xmas. Had coffee in Friends café, walked around looking for tropical shirt for K, none his size however. Lunch at 2 sisters (we seem to be their only customers) They even send the chef out to say thanks for eating there. Then argument with taxi driver who tried to charge us $TOP7 (its only 4) we let him know in no uncertain terms he was trying to rip us off!!! Then back to sunbathe and do I/net research for NZ. Overnight real storm, maybe something to do with cat3 currently hitting Fiji.Bit of sun during sun bathing. Lady in trad costume in town. 102 Dalmatians (film with Glenn Close on kids TV channel) FOX News TV (crap-US).Tongan married to US guy (Stockton,CA) in shop where I went to get water and bread. Plus Corinne (previous Ms Tonga) in 2 sisters restaurant and her sister Andrea who chatted to us for a while as she was keen to try out her English and told us she had never been outside Tonga. Chicken escalope in lime sauce , herb pots and salad (again). Our fave Tongan food at 2 sisters restaurant followed by spaghetti ice-cream (Anne) and strawberry cake (kef) yummy. Alas Keef still had Tongan tummy, which is tricky to shift Day 45 - Sunday 9th December 2007,Nukuma’anu Cottages, Nukualofa, Tongatapu Last day on Tonga before traveling to NZ. Not much really. I/net catch up, backups, reading, scrabble, listening to music. Pack. Thought not much happening and then bang, Cyclone Daman and a quake. The quake off Raoul island some 355miles SSW of Tonga was 7.8 on the Richter scale (8.40pm) but luckily some 93 miles below ground under the sea so no real risk of a Tsunami. Tonga is so flat if it got hit you would definitely be a ‘gonna’. Cyclone had narrowly missed Vanua Levu (Fiji) but was arriving at pace on Tonga. Big winds/storms. Filled in visitors book for Robina.Felt Cyclone Daman.Alex and Robina called to mention the Sunday eve bread run to get fresh hot bread and cakes. A little too stormy for us outside so gave it a miss and watched Lethal Weapon 1 with Mel Gibson instead. Then they kindly bought us back a loaf, 2 cream buns and 3 choc donuts Had a real feast that eve as had pasta and fresh pineapple planned anyhow. Left a bit of food for them as you cannot take it out of the country.Pack, pleased to leave Tonga now. 10 days on reflection was probably too long. It is not big enough. Main town only really has as many shops as Sandiacre PLUS quake Was sitting on sofa which started to move. Bizarre, didn’t last long but it was big. I thought the walls of the fale had moved and jumped up to grab hold of them. To glasses on table at 45degs and liquids came out. Anne thought she was ‘having a turn’ in kitchen but then realized the clothes cabinet in bedroom was swaying. Amazed that the tiles on the floor didn’t split. Bit panicky after that especially with the howling gales outside so packed immediately and placed stuff reasonably high up. This happened at 8.45 pm. By midnight although it was still stormy it was a little calmer. Checked on Inet for quakes (recorded) and Daman, which it said had dropped to Cat2 tropical storm and cyclone warning for Tonga removed as it had veered off to the south west (thank god) After Jamaica and Ivan we vowed we wouldn’t get involved again . To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 2007–8 Gap Year Adventure | Explore Online Holiday Diary Ideas with KeefH Designs

    Explore online holiday diary ideas and immerse yourself in our 2007–8 gap year journey through stunning destinations. Start today! Discover Inspiring Online Holiday Diary Ideas from Our 2007–8 Gap Year Adventure Explore and create your own online holiday diary ideas with inspiration from our 2007–8 gap year journey. Travel through picturesque locations like California, Fiji, and New Zealand, and let our tips and resources guide your storytelling. Begin your adventure today and craft memories to treasure forever! Step into our journey and explore unique online holiday diary ideas. Discover unforgettable experiences, tips, and resources to document your travels. Start your adventure today with our online holiday diary ideas! 🌍 2007 Travel Route Map (Up to 31 Dec 2007) USA → Fiji → Samoa → Tonga → New Zealand (North Island) 1) USA – California (26 Oct – 1 Nov 2007) Route sequence Los Angeles (arrival) San Jose (Delta 7772 to SJC) Morgan Hill (base) Monterey Carmel Big Sur (Highway 1) Santa Monica County Park Henry W. Coe State Park Leroy Anderson Lake Quicksilver Mercury Mine Cannery Row Rocky Creek Bridge San Francisco (Candlestick Park etc.) Return to LAX → onward flight to Fiji 🌴 2) Fiji – Viti Levu & Vanua Levu (2–13 Nov 2007) Route sequence Nadi (arrival on Viti Levu) Flight to Savusavu (Vanua Levu) Sewaka Beach Cottage (base) Savusavu town Hibiscus Highway Labasa (north Vanua Levu) Hot Springs Hotel (Savusavu) Jean‑Michel Cousteau Resort Urata Village Return to Savusavu Airport Flight Savusavu → Labasa → Nadi → Samoa 3) Western Samoa – Upolu & Savai’i (13–28 Nov 2007) Route sequence Upolu Apia (Princess Tui Inn → Insel Fehrman Hotel) Aggie Grey’s Hotel Apia town & harbour Ferry terminal (Mulifanua) Savai’i Ferry Upolu → Savai’i Savai’i Lagoon Resort (base) Alofaaga Blowholes Lava Fields Swimming with turtles Villages along the north & south coasts Return ferry Savai’i → Upolu Back on Upolu Outrigger Hotel Robert Louis Stevenson House Cross‑Island Road Beaches & coastal villages Faleolo Airport → flight to Tonga 4) Tonga – Tongatapu & Atata Island (28 Nov – 10 Dec 2007) Route sequence Nuku’alofa (arrival) International Dateline Hotel Tongatapu Island loop Houma Blowholes Atata Island Local villages, markets, harbours Royal Palace area Return to Nuku’alofa Airport → flight to Auckland 5) New Zealand – North Island (10–31 Dec 2007) (Covers only up to 31/12/2007 as requested) Auckland Region (10–16 Dec) Auckland (Remuera base) Newmarket Parnell Downtown Auckland Harbour Bridge Glenfield Sylvia Park Auckland Botanic Gardens Mission Bay / St Heliers / Kohimarama Devonport (via ferry) Herne Bay Sky Tower Ice Bar (Lenin’s) North of Auckland (16–25 Dec) Orewa Warkworth Snells Beach Sandspit Puhoi Dargaville Baylys Beach Waipoua Forest (giant kauri) Rawene → Kohukohu ferry Mangonui Coopers Beach Doubtless Bay Paihia Haruru Falls Waipu Cove Central North Island (27–31 Dec) Base: Golden Springs (between Rotorua & Taupo) Rotorua Wai‑O‑Tapu Thermal Wonderland Polynesian Spa Huka Falls Jet Prawn Park Lake Taupo Taupo town Turangi Tongariro National Park (volcanoes, Chateau Tongariro) Ends 31/12/2007 Taupo (New Year’s Eve at Finn McCoull’s) Return to Golden Springs 7 Route Visuals SUMMARY Los Angeles San Jose Morgan Hill Fiji (Nadi) Fiji (Robinson Crusoe Island) Fiji (Nadi return) Samoa (Apia) Samoa (Savai’i) Samoa (Apia return) Tonga (Nuku’alofa) Tonga (Fafa Island) Tonga (Nuku’alofa return) New Zealand — Auckland New Zealand — Whangarei New Zealand — Paihia New Zealand — Kerikeri New Zealand — Waipoua Forest New Zealand — Dargaville New Zealand — Hamilton New Zealand — Waitomo New Zealand — Rotorua New Zealand — Taupō New Zealand — Tongariro National Park 🌍 Travel Route for 2008 (Starting 1 January 2008) New Zealand → Australia → Singapore → Hong Kong → UK & Home New Zealand (North & South Islands) 1 Jan 2008 → mid‑Feb 2008 Auckland Coromandel Peninsula Whitianga Hot Water Beach Hahei Rotorua Taupō Napier Wellington Picton Nelson Abel Tasman National Park Greymouth Hokitika Franz Josef Glacier Fox Glacier Haast Wanaka Queenstown Te Anau Milford Sound Dunedin Oamaru Timaru Christchurch Kaikōura Blenheim Picton (return) Wellington (return) Auckland (return for onward flight) Australia mid‑Feb 2008 → March 2008 Sydney Manly Bondi Blue Mountains Katoomba Cairns Great Barrier Reef (cruise/reef trips) Kuranda Brisbane Gold Coast Surfers Paradise Byron Bay Coffs Harbour Port Macquarie Newcastle Sydney (return for onward flight) Singapore March 2008 Note in fairness in 2008 we were just passing thru Changi en route but all the following we have been to on our many trips to Singapore Orchard Road Clarke Quay Boat Quay Singapore River Chinatown Little India Sentosa Island Mount Faber Singapore Zoo / Night Safari Raffles Hotel Marina Bay (early development era) Hong Kong Late March 2008 → trip end Kowloon Tsim Sha Tsui Nathan Road Mong Kok Hong Kong Island Central District Victoria Peak Aberdeen Stanley Repulse Bay Lantau Island Po Lin Monastery Big Buddha Star Ferry Temple Street Night Market 8 Route Visuals SUMMARY Auckland Coromandel Whitianga Hot Water Beach Hahei Rotorua Taupō Napier Wellington Picton Nelson Abel Tasman Greymouth Hokitika Franz Josef Fox Glacier Haast Wanaka Queenstown Te Anau Milford Sound Dunedin Oamaru Timaru Christchurch Kaikōura Blenheim Wellington Auckland Sydney Blue Mountains Cairns Great Barrier Reef Brisbane Gold Coast Byron Bay Coffs Harbour Port Macquarie Newcastle Sydney Singapore Hong Kong Our Outdoor Travel Blog for 2007 & 2008 GAP YEAR Travel Blog | HOLIDAY 2007-8 | KeefH Web Designs On the 31st July 2007, I had the opportunity to take early retirement and a redundancy package from my then employer, which afforded us the chance to travel and realize a lifelong dream of returning to Australia, the place of both our youths. We named this experience HOLIDAY 2007-8. While planning that HOLIDAY 2007-8 opportunity and packing up our property (we let it through an agency to Polish railway workers, which helped provide additional funding for our HOLIDAY 2007-8 adventures), I also focused on ensuring our website reflected the best travel website design standards to share our journey effectively. We decided to include stops in California, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and several Pacific islands, drawing inspiration from my love of rugby, especially the Fijian 7s rugby. Annie took early retirement too, and together we embarked on the first big adventure of a lifetime. Created for customer by KeefH Web Designs, a travel blog website that covers the holiday 2007-8. This site covers a gap year long holiday to America, California, the pacific islands, Fiji (both main islands), Western Samoa (both main islands, savaii and upolu), tonga (and 1 island , daydream resort), Australia, New Zealand (all 3 islands, north, south and stewart) and a break touchdown at changi airport, singapore. That is Holiday 2007-8 in a nutshell. Read on, see more of our exploits from our Holiday 2007-8. annie, close up, cable beach reflections of watsons bay 1/66 postcard to mum 180508 from broome postcard to mum 060508 from kalgoolie airmail letter from savusavu fiji page2 091107 postcard to mum 180508 from broome 1/18 2007 and 2008 A Gap Year "Down Under" We visited California, USA, Pacific Islands...Fiji, Western Samoa & Tonga, New Zealand, Australia, Singapore & Hong Kong Family-Friendly Activities for Holidaying in 2007 and 2008 Creating Cherished Memories for Everyone When it comes to planning a family holiday, finding activities that cater to everyone's interests and create lasting memories can be a challenge. Thankfully, Holiday2007-8.co.uk offers a wide range of family-friendly activities that are sure to delight both children and adults alike. With a focus on creating cherished memories, this website is a go-to resource for families looking to make the most of their vacation. One of the highlights of Holiday2007-8.co.uk is its extensive selection of outdoor activities. Whether you're looking for thrilling adventures or more relaxed outings, there is something for everyone. From hiking and biking trails to water sports and fishing, the website provides a comprehensive list of options to suit every family's preferences. With picturesque locations and breathtaking scenery, these activities offer the perfect backdrop for creating unforgettable memories. For families who prefer indoor entertainment, Holiday2007-8.co.uk has got you covered as well. The website features a wide range of family-friendly attractions, including zoos, museums, and amusement parks. With interactive exhibits and exciting rides, these venues provide endless fun for children while ensuring that parents can also enjoy their time. Whether it's learning about wildlife, exploring historical artifacts, or enjoying thrilling roller coasters, families are guaranteed an unforgettable experience. In addition to activities, Holiday2007-8.co.uk also offers valuable information on family-friendly accommodations and dining options. The website provides an extensive list of hotels, holiday cottages, and resorts that are known for their excellent facilities and services for families. From spacious rooms to on-site recreational activities, these accommodations go the extra mile to ensure a comfortable and enjoyable stay for all. Furthermore, the website also offers recommendations for family-friendly restaurants, ensuring that delicious meals are always within reach. What sets Holiday2007-8.co.uk apart is its emphasis on creating cherished memories. The website goes beyond providing a list of activities and attractions by suggesting ways to make the most of these experiences. It offers tips on capturing special moments through photography, journaling, and even creating personalized keepsakes. By encouraging families to document and reflect on their holiday adventures, the website helps create a treasure trove of memories that can be cherished for a lifetime. In conclusion, if you're seeking a family holiday filled with fun and memorable experiences, look no further than Holiday2007-8.co.uk. With its multitude of family-friendly activities, accommodations, and dining options, this website provides all the necessary resources for a successful vacation. From outdoor adventures to indoor entertainment, there is something for every member of the family to enjoy. So, why wait? Visit https://www.holiday2007-8.co.uk/ and start planning your next vacation, where unforgettable memories are waiting to be made. For more information contact us anytime via the KeefH Web Designs website PLAY FULL TRIP DIARY The first 160 days Motorhome Travels Blog 162 Part 1 & the next 169 days Motorhome Travels Blog 162 Part 2 PART1 PART 2 oct 2007 calendar nov 2007 sept 2008 oct 2007 calendar 1/12 near san jose california usa California USA keef at the sewaka platform Venua Levu, Fiji's second island Visit family, east coast australia 1995 Trip to Australia near san jose california usa California USA 1/20 GAP YEAR TRANSPORTATION : Below is the detailed summary of our round the world travels in 2007-8, where we travelled on trains, boats and planes and a whole lot more for 10½ months through America, Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, New Zealand, Australia, Singapore & Hong Kong - starting and ending at Heathrow interestingly our Round The World (RTW) ticket said we started and arrived at Heathrow Terminal 1,but by the time we returned Heathrow had been reorganised and we came back to the now infamous Terminal 3 (T3 Tears as it is known in our family) 2008 Diary Pre Trip Planning 01. 01. 01. 01. INTRO Words from our 2007-8 gap year trip were written before we left home , we constructed the old photo website, which we used on our travels to let people back home know what we were doing or possibly more importantly that we were still alive. A few pictures and details were added pre-travel to show what we expected and had planned to do. The reality as always was probably slightly different but the big picture in the plan we fundamentally achieved and we are very proud of that fact! (Note our original words written on our travels are in ITALICS ;) ) You will see them at the start of each page. They were culled from our old Graphicorps website. NOTES it was Polish railway workers who rented our house not as suggested by Belvoir! Austrians. Whilst we were away on our 2007-8 trip , we paid A$31 each for a 6 month Australian Visa. Post being there, Samoa has since swapped to the other side of the international date line, which makes travelling from Fiji to Samoa to Tonga, which we did a whole lot easier. “where did we lose that day?” Also whilst there our rip-off Samoan taxi driver told us they were looking at changing the side of the road they drive on, which would be a huge expense for a poor Pacific Island country, not sure they ever did! WORDS We leave on the 26/10/2007!!!! for our HOLIDAY 2007-8 trip, yippee! A few things as we prepare for our GREAT ADVENTURE. It has been interesting packing, getting lodgers (we now have a bunch of Austrian engineers) and generally booking the trip. In between we have been visiting / saying our goodbyes to various friends and relatives (you may be in the rogues gallery here!!!) we will miss you all but remember a year isn't that long and technology (one of Keef's favourite words) will keep us in touch. It just ain't like Vasco De Gama's day these days....Bon Voyage, and hopefully enjoy the site All overall feedback on this site should be directed to keefhwebdesigns@outlook.com and should cover only HOLIDAY 2007-8 Note: You can leave ratings against any photo, we would love to see them UPDATE in 2020 Sadly you can no longer do this technically for site HOLIDAY 2007-8, apologies 02. 02. 02. 02. 03. 03. 03. 03. To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key. To play, press and hold the enter key. To stop, release the enter key.

  • 17 Australia | Decades of Travel

    TBA for australia by KHWD it needs doing after the page has been created AUSTRALIA - Aussie Adventures 4th February - 9th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Arrived in Perth, WA from Singapore. We saw the town before picking up the motorhomes and seeing Monkey Mia, Carnarvon, Rottnest Island & the adorable quokkas, Margaret River, Cape Leeuwin, Albany, Northam, Wave Rock, the wheat belt and a whole lot more before picking up the wonderful Indian Pacific railway to Adelaide, flight to and from Alice springs before picking up a 2nd set of motorhomes to see the Barossa Valley and more. We crossed over into Victoria from South Australia at Portland where we saw a Koala crossing the main road right in front of us. We headed around the coast taking in the fab Great Ocean Road, London Bridge, Loch Ard Gorge, The 12 Apostles to name but a few sights before crossing into New South Wales just above Mallacoota. We saw a lot of wildlife in Victoria especially at Kennet River where once again the Koalas obliged. Once in NSW we headed up for family time in Sydney, oh and Tassie for K&A. In Sydney thanks to Allyson we saw the wonderful spectacle that was Carmen in the harbour. Feb 17 Diary Mar 17 Diary April 17 Diary "From Carnarvon in Northern WA, On the Indian Pacific Railway, Thru the Red Centre and then around the Coast Adelaide to Sydney, Plus Popping over to Tassie & Rellies" Our 39th Wedding Anniversary at the Shag Inn, Perth #haha Desert Park, Foothills of the Gap, Alice Springs, Northern Territory BBQ at our place in Beacon Hill, Sydney, NSW - April Fools Day (who knew?) haha Roadhouse Blues, Western Australia, halfway between Geraldton and Carnarvon 2017 Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/9 gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/5 £10 Poms return to Connor's landing, Freo, Western Australia Australian Ad Campaigns - so much better than ours 2008 2017 Australia has never been shy about shaking drivers awake, and two of its most memorable campaigns hit harder than a rogue kangaroo on the bonnet. In 2008, the anti‑speeding ad “No one thinks big of you” used a tiny finger‑wiggle gesture to mock macho drivers, turning bravado into national embarrassment overnight. Then in 2017 came “Hey, you tosser!”, a gloriously blunt litter‑shaming campaign that called out roadside rubbish‑dumpers with the subtlety of a megaphone. Both ads worked because they were bold, funny, and brutally direct — classic Aussie public‑safety messaging that sticks in your head long after the drive is over. WESTERN AUSTRALIA 4th - 27th February 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Includes Perth (3 days), Freemantle (Freo), Ledge point, Pinnacle National Park, Cervantes, Thirsty Point, Jurien Bay, Indian Ocean drive, Greenhough hanging tree, Geraldton, Northampton, Nerren Nerren, Billabong & Overlander roadhouses, World heritage drive, Monkey Mia, Shark Bay, Shell beach, Denham, Carnavon, Nanga, Hamelin Pool (where the desert meet the sea), Space Museum, Gascoyne River, Port Denison, Badgingarra, Moora, Brand Highway, Avon River, Northam, Crossing the flooded road nr Hyden, Wave Rock, Kalgarin farm stay, Wheatbelt, Snake, Blue tounged skinks, Tin Horse highway, Kulin, Dumbleyung, Bluebird, Mens Sheds, Railway, Farming, Boot fences, Kojonup - possibly the best campsite in the world NOT!, Rosellas, Mount Barker, Porongurup, Albany Highway, Castle Rock at the Porongurup National Park, Brig Amity, Princess Royal harbour, Middleton beach , Scenic drive Wilsons bay, Denmark, Greens pool, Elephant Rocks, Parry beach (for lunch) and the hippy in the van, valley of the Giants red tingle trees and tree top walk, Quokka on the path, Northcliffe eco park and roos plus roos jumping across road at dusk,Pemberton, Augusta, Cape Leeuwin and lighthouse, Leeuwin-Naturaliste national park,Margaret river, cape Mentelle winery, Lenton Brae winery plus tour and ladies picture of a family house in Lenton, Nottingham, we will try and find it, cheeky monkey brewery, Cowaramup, Busselton and the pier / jetty, Bunbury and Koombana bay , plus non dolphin watching, although in fairness Chris & Allyson did see one on their walk. Mangrove board walk, sub tropical flowers, Lechenault inlet and estuary, swimming in the site pool, sunbathing, chilling, intersting sub tropical birds, Avalon beach, Mandurah, Rockingham, Penguin island, seals, little blue penguins, board walks, conservation areas, Freemantle or Freo, Ferries, Van bumps, Rottnest island, Quokkas again, cycle rides, swims, guided tours, walks in the sun, history, lunch, cafes, ice creams, friends, fun, rocks, boats , blowholes, blue seas and skies and ice creams , royal perth hotel, lucky shag bar and aqua bar for our 39th wedding anniversary in perth Feb 17 Diary SEE THE FULL WESTERN OZ EXPERIENCE, 1hr 19mins Gold Class Ale across the Nullarbor One small step, about to enter Apollo 11 "From Perth to NASA at Carnavon" Album cover, Busselton pier Make like Quokkas, Rottnest Island And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 2017 Western Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/32 🌞 The Great WA Ramble: A Humorous Chronicle of Two Travellers, One Van, and Several Quokkas We began in Perth, easing into the adventure with three days of sunshine, city strolling, and the smug feeling that comes from knowing you’ve remembered your sunhat. A quick hop to Fremantle (Freo) gave us coffee, markets, and the first of many moments where the van made a noise we pretended not to hear. Then it was north — Ledge Point, Pinnacles National Park, and Cervantes, where we admired the limestone spires and tried not to think about how many snakes might be admiring us. At Thirsty Point we were, indeed, thirsty. At Jurien Bay, the Indian Ocean sparkled like it had been Photoshopped. We cruised the Indian Ocean Drive, stopping for the Greenhough Hanging Tree (a tree that looks like it’s had a very long day), then on to Geraldton, Northampton, and the legendary roadhouses of Nerren Nerren, Billabong, and Overlander — each one a reminder that civilisation is optional in WA. The World Heritage Drive took us to Shark Bay, Monkey Mia, and Denham, where dolphins turned up for everyone except us. Shell Beach dazzled, Hamelin Pool impressed (“where the desert meets the sea”), and Nanga and Carnarvon kept us fed, watered, and slightly sunburnt. We even squeezed in the Space Museum, because nothing says holiday like contemplating your insignificance in the universe. Southbound again: Gascoyne River, Port Denison, Badgingarra, Moora, and the Brand Highway, which delivered us to Northam and the Avon River. Then came the flooded road near Hyden, where we bravely crossed like pioneers… except pioneers didn’t have rental insurance. Wave Rock waved, Kalgarin Farm Stay hosted us (along with a snake and several blue‑tongued skinks), and the Wheatbelt rolled on forever. The Tin Horse Highway at Kulin gave us comedy sculptures, and Dumbleyung gave us Bluebird history and a reminder that Australians will race anything. We admired Men’s Sheds, railways, boot fences, and then reached Kojonup — “possibly the best campsite in the world… NOT!” The rosellas were lovely though. Onward to Mount Barker, Porongurup, and the mighty Castle Rock in the national park. Albany brought the Brig Amity, Princess Royal Harbour, Middleton Beach, and a scenic drive to Wilsons Bay that made us consider buying a drone and pretending we were travel influencers. Denmark, Greens Pool, Elephant Rocks, and Parry Beach delivered postcard views and a hippy in a van who looked like he’d been there since 1974. The Valley of the Giants gave us towering red tingle trees and a treetop walk that tested our bravery and our knees. A quokka even appeared on the path, clearly moonlighting away from Rottnest. At Northcliffe Eco Park, the roos greeted us politely, then later jumped across the road at dusk like they were auditioning for a wildlife remake of Fast & Furious. Pemberton, Augusta, Cape Leeuwin, and the lighthouse kept the coastal drama going, while Leeuwin‑Naturaliste National Park and Margaret River added wineries to the mix — Cape Mentelle, Lenton Brae, and a photo of a house in Lenton that we now apparently need to track down in Nottingham. Cheeky Monkey Brewery lived up to its name, Cowaramup gave us cows (of course), and Busselton gave us the famous jetty. Bunbury and Koombana Bay offered dolphin‑watching… except the dolphins didn’t get the memo. Chris and Allyson saw one though, so we’re counting it. We wandered the mangrove boardwalk, admired sub‑tropical flowers, and enjoyed the Leschenault Inlet. There was swimming, sunbathing, chilling, and bird‑spotting — all very civilised. Then came Avalon Beach, Mandurah, Rockingham, and Penguin Island, where we met seals, little blue penguins, and enough boardwalks to close our daily step rings twice over. Back to Freo for ferries and van bumps, then across to Rottnest Island for more quokkas, cycle rides, swims, guided tours, sunshine, history, lunches, cafés, ice creams, rocks, boats, blowholes, blue seas, blue skies, and — did we mention? — ice creams. Finally, we wrapped it all up in Perth with drinks at the Royal Perth Hotel, the Lucky Shag Bar, and Aqua Bar, celebrating our 39th wedding anniversary with style, views, and the knowledge that we’d just completed a trip worthy of a book, a documentary, and possibly a sitcom. Then it was up early in Perth to get a taxi out to the Indian Pacific Railway station for our wonderful train journey across the Nullarbor to Adelaide between the 26th and the 28th February, magical travels! SOUTH AUSTRALIA 28th February Plus 3rd - 9th March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Arrived by Indian Pacific Railway to the Adelaide Parklands station, we to BIG4 campsite, C&A started their cricket ground tour. Pool, beach, swimming, relaxing, reading. Adelaide airport, lockers,off to NT for a few days in Alice springs. Glenelg,Oyster bar, sunset walk, Tram, Fringe, Marina pier, Collect the vans, Tanunda, Barossa Valley, Wolf Blass, Stockwell, Angaston, Rowland Flats, Jacobs Creek, Hahndorf, Pioneers Park, Rubble,Everything Germanic, McLaren Vale, Tintara estate, Hardys, Strathalbyn, Langhorne Creek, Milang, White cockatoos or Corellas, South Australian Light railway museum, Wellington chain ferry, Charles Sturt, Lake Albert, Salt marshes, Meningie, Chinese cigars, Birdman of the Coorong, Kingston SE, Rosetown, Larry the lobster, Cape Jaffa historic lighthosue, Norfolk pines, Robe, 9 mile beach, circular town walk, Customs House, Matt Flinders,Chinese memorial, Flag hill, Harbour, Marina, Ray, Arthur Fennell Way, Pier, The Obelisk, Millicent for lunch, Mount Gambier, Blue Lake, Crater Lakes - leg of mutton (empty), valley (green algae), Hentys Monument, Wildlife park, Centenary Tower,Limestone sculpture, Pukeko or Australian swamphen,Town centre, Cave gardens, Sink Hole, Northumberland point, Port MacDonnell, Border crossing into Victoria Feb 17 Diary Mar 17 Diary SEE THE FULL SOUTH AUSTRALIA EXPERIENCE, 18 mins Outside Jacob's Creek Winery, SA Cheers, Oyster Bar, Glenelg "South Australia fun times, Glenelg Oyster bar, Hats in Hahndorf & walking Robe(s)" It's gum nuts, you numb nuts haha The Langthornes at Langhorne Creek Cool hats in Hahndorf, larking about Larry the Lobster, Kingston SE, Naff Icons 2017 South Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/17 And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 🍷🦞 The Great South Australia Wander: A Humorous Chronicle of Lakes, Lobsters & Light Railways We rolled into Adelaide Parklands Station courtesy of the mighty Indian Pacific Railway, feeling very trans‑continental and only slightly crumpled. Straight to the BIG4 campsite, where C&A immediately launched into their personal mission: visiting every cricket ground known to humankind. We, meanwhile, heroically tested the pool, the beach, and the art of doing absolutely nothing except reading. A quick detour to Adelaide Airport to stash bags in lockers, then off we flew to the Northern Territory for a few days in Alice Springs — because why not add another climate zone to the itinerary. Back in SA, Glenelg welcomed us with the Oyster Bar, a sunset walk, the tram, the Fringe, and the Marina Pier — basically everything except a marching band. Then came the big moment: collecting the vans, our trusty chariots for the next leg. Into wine country we went: Tanunda, Barossa Valley, Wolf Blass, Stockwell, Angaston, Rowland Flat, Jacobs Creek — a tour so full of vineyards we’re amazed we didn’t start photosynthesising. Then Hahndorf, where everything is Germanic, including the souvenirs, the sausages, and possibly the pigeons. Pioneers Park offered rubble, history, and the sense that early settlers were made of sterner stuff than us. Southward to McLaren Vale, Tintara Estate, Hardys, and then Strathalbyn, Langhorne Creek, and Milang, where flocks of white cockatoos/Corellas screamed overhead like feathery car alarms. The South Australian Light Railway Museum delighted the inner trainspotter, and the Wellington chain ferry carried us across the Murray with all the drama of a slow‑motion action scene. We passed Charles Sturt country, Lake Albert, salt marshes, and Meningie, where we discovered Chinese cigars (don’t ask) and the legendary Birdman of the Coorong, who may or may not be a myth, depending on how much wine you’ve had. At Kingston SE, we met Larry the Lobster, a giant crustacean who looks like he escaped from a 1970s tourism fever dream. Rosetown, Cape Jaffa lighthouse, and rows of Norfolk pines led us to Robe, where we tackled the 9‑mile beach, the circular town walk, the Customs House, the Matt Flinders connections, the Chinese memorial, Flag Hill, the harbour, the marina, Ray, Arthur Fennell Way, the pier, and the Obelisk — all before lunch. After a refuel in Millicent, we reached Mount Gambier, home of the Blue Lake, the crater lakes (one empty, one green, one dramatic), Henty’s Monument, the wildlife park, Centenary Tower, limestone sculptures, and a pukeko/Australian swamphen who strutted around like it owned the place. We explored the town centre, the Cave Gardens, the Sinkhole, and Northumberland Point, before cruising to Port MacDonnell for a final blast of sea air. And then — with a flourish, a cheer, and probably a van rattle — we crossed the border into Victoria, leaving South Australia behind with full hearts, full cameras, and a strong suspicion we’d eaten our bodyweight in oysters, wine, and bakery goods. NORTHERN TERRITORY 1st - 3rd March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Flying from Adelaide to Alice Springs over the Simpson desert and the red centre outback, MacDonnell ranges, salt lakes, dirt tracks, Elkira motel, pool, heat, humidity, flies, cockroaches (poor Allyson),Court house, The residency, Queen & Prince Phillip, Heritage area, RFDS-Royal Flying Doctor Service, Aboriginal Art, Anzac park, Anzac Hill lookout, Red Ochre Grill, Todd River & boat race, Alice springs desert park, Bush Bird display, Nocturnal red centre animals, Dingoes, Many Birds, the town of Ghan, MacDonell Ranges, Great talk from Margaret on bush tucker and medicines, Cinema experience, Roo at the Red Ochre and Pizza , Shuttle to and from airport, Airport displays, Desert scenes and clouds, close up on Adelaide and the shores.... and back in South Australia March 17 Diary See the full Northern Territory experience, approx.. 8 mins Near the Royal Flying Doctor Service "Flew into Alice for a few days, Desert Park and all, Red Ochre Grill but no Didge Show" Flying over the Simpson desert, Adelaide to Alice Springs, NT My all time favourite Aboriginal art by Helen McCarthy Tyalmuty 2017 Northern Territory, Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows 1/10 Desert Park views, just outside Alice A Humorous Summary of Our Alice Springs Adventure Flying from Adelaide to Alice Springs felt like we were being dropped onto Mars — if Mars had salt lakes, dirt tracks and a motel pool we could dive into fully clothed. The Simpson Desert and MacDonnell Ranges stretched out below us like someone had tipped a giant bucket of red paint across the outback. We checked into the Elkira Motel, where the heat, humidity and overly friendly flies greeted us like long‑lost cousins. Cockroaches also made an appearance — much to poor Allyson’s horror — proving even insects enjoy a good getaway. Alice Springs rolled out its full cultural carpet: the courthouse, The Residency (complete with Queen & Prince Philip history), the heritage area, and the RFDS where we learned how heroes fly doctors across half a continent. Aboriginal art, Anzac Park, and the Anzac Hill lookout added proper gravitas… before the Todd River boat race reminded us that Aussies will race anything, even a dry riverbed. The Desert Park introduced us to nocturnal critters, dingoes, and birds that looked like they’d been designed by committee. Margaret’s bush‑tucker talk taught us which plants heal us and which ones probably don’t. Evenings meant cinema trips, Roo at the Red Ochre Grill, and pizza — because nothing says “authentic outback experience” like a good slice. The airport shuttle whisked us past desert scenes and clouds, before the plane carried us over the coastline and back into South Australia. A trip full of heat, history, wildlife, and just enough insects to keep us alert. VICTORIA 9th - 19th March 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Entered Victoria from South Australia just after Mount Gambier near Portland, Koalas, Non Fish & Chips, Speeding fines, Frightened waitress, "Kind" man who disconnected my electrics, Cape Breakwater, Discovery bay, Petrified forest, Coastal Walkway, Wind farm, Port Fairy, Poor pies, 41st Folk Festival, busy busy, Flagstaff hill, Warrnambool, Logans beach, no whales but surfers, The Great Ocean Road including Bay of Islands, Bay of Martyrs, Loch Ard Gorge, The Arch, The Grotto, London Bridge, 12 Apostles, Apollo Bay, Scenery and then some, bank holiday weekend, Princeton DOC, Giltbrook river, failed campsites then the 5* motorway service station outside Geelong, Echidnas, 3 Koalas at Kennett River, Snakes, Rock wallaby, Mt Macedon, The hump, Hanging rock, Reserve, Summit, Picnic at Hanging rock, Historic Woodend, Coburg, Melbourne, Federation square, Heritage Trams, MCG, Rod Laver arena, Olympic park, Shane Warne sadly passed aged 52 in 2022, there is an image of us posed by his statue at the MCG, the Don , Dennis Lillee, Greek Quarter, Chinatown, James Squire brewery , Busy drive out of Melbourne, Mornington peninsular, St Kilda, Brighton, Luna Park, Elwood (keefs old home in pine avenue), Beach and pier at Mordialloc, Chris for a swim, Lunch at Mornington, Shopping in Frankton, Drive to Traralgon BIG4 on Princes Highway, Historic Port of Sale, White cockatoos, Lakes Entrance lookout, Lakes entrance connecting Gippsland lakes to the Bass Straits, 90 mile beach, Wood carvings, Fishing trawlers, Wood carvings, nice walks, Orbost, Snowy River, Marlo, Sammy the seal, Where the snowy river meets the bass straits, Banjo Paterson, Quirky Hats, Dredging, Sailors grave beach, cape Conran, Steps, Mackenzie river rain forest walk, Gypsy Point, Roos, Boats, Mallacoota, Pelicans, Harbour, Nasty brown snake warning, Koala at campsite, Lucy's for brekkie, Shady Gully walk and nice plants, Tasman sea lookout, boats and more, Double Creek in the Croajingolong National Park fairly near the border with New South Wales. March 17 Diary SEE THE FULL VICTORIA EXPERIENCE, 22 Mins Picnic at Hanging Rock , Macedon plus a hand break turn by a very tall roo, mid run "Victoria, my many homes as a child in suburbs of Melbourne, home of the Great Ocean Road" The best place to find Koalas, Kennett River Iconic, my home area destination station for quite a few years, Lalor to Flinders And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! Time for a rest, vans parked up at Portland 2017 Victoria Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/23 🌊🐨🚐 Our Wild & Wonderful Wander Through Victoria 🇦🇺✨ We rolled into Victoria from South Australia just after Mount Gambier, cruising toward Portland with the confidence of seasoned travellers and the diet of people who thought they were getting fish and chips… only to discover they were getting “Non Fish & Chips,” a culinary mystery best left unsolved. Koalas lounged in trees like they owned the place, while we collected speeding fines like they were souvenirs. A frightened waitress fled from us (we swear we were polite), and a “kind” man helpfully disconnected our electrics — because nothing says welcome to Victoria like accidental sabotage. Cape Breakwater and Discovery Bay gave us windswept drama, the Petrified Forest looked like a set from a sci‑fi film, and the coastal walkway tried to blow us into the ocean. The wind farm waved at us with every rotation. Port Fairy offered charm but terrible pies, and the 41st Folk Festival was so busy it felt like half of Australia had turned up with a banjo. Warrnambool’s Flagstaff Hill was brilliant, Logan’s Beach promised whales but delivered surfers, and then came the big one: The Great Ocean Road. The Bay of Islands, Bay of Martyrs, Loch Ard Gorge, The Arch, The Grotto, London Bridge, the Twelve Apostles — scenery so spectacular it made us forget the bank holiday crowds and the fact we were basically living out of the car. Princetown DOC, the Giltbrook River, and a series of failed campsites eventually led us to the unexpected luxury of a 5‑star motorway service station outside Geelong. Honestly, it felt like the Ritz. Wildlife kept us entertained: echidnas shuffling around like spiky vacuum cleaners, three koalas at Kennett River doing their best “don’t care” faces, snakes slithering about, and a rock wallaby posing like it wanted a modelling contract. We climbed Mt Macedon, tackled The Hump, wandered Hanging Rock, and debated whether we’d vanish mysteriously like in the film. Woodend charmed us, Coburg bustled, and then Melbourne swept us up in its energy: Federation Square, heritage trams, the MCG, Rod Laver Arena, Olympic Park. We posed by Shane Warne’s statue — bittersweet knowing he passed in 2022 at just 52. The Don and Dennis Lillee watched over the cricketing faithful, while the Greek Quarter, Chinatown and James Squire Brewery kept us well fed and watered. Escaping Melbourne’s traffic required nerves of steel, but the Mornington Peninsula rewarded us: St Kilda, Brighton, Luna Park, Elwood (Keef’s old stomping ground in Pine Avenue), and Mordialloc where Chris bravely went for a swim. Lunch in Mornington, shopping in Frankston, and then off to Traralgon BIG4 on the Princes Highway. We explored the historic Port of Sale, admired white cockatoos, and took in the Lakes Entrance lookout where the Gippsland Lakes meet the Bass Strait. Ninety Mile Beach stretched forever, wood carvings popped up everywhere, fishing trawlers bobbed in the water, and the walks were gorgeous. Orbost, the Snowy River, Marlo, and Sammy the Seal greeted us where the river meets the sea — Banjo Paterson would’ve approved. We admired quirky hats, watched dredging, wandered Sailors Grave Beach and Cape Conran, and tackled rainforest steps on the Mackenzie River walk. Gypsy Point brought roos and boats, Mallacoota gave us pelicans and a peaceful harbour, and a nasty brown snake warning kept us alert. A koala at the campsite supervised us like a furry park ranger. Breakfast at Lucy’s was perfect, the Shady Gully walk was lush, and the Tasman Sea lookout reminded us how far from home we really were. We finished at Double Creek in Croajingolong National Park, not far from the New South Wales border — tired, dusty, happy, and full of stories. Victoria had given us scenery, wildlife, mishaps, pies of questionable quality, and memories we’ll laugh about forever. NEW SOUTH WALES 19th March - 4th April, then 8th-9th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY A Potted History Entering New South Wales (NSW) from Mallacoota (Victoria), Eden, harbour & whale museum, Old Tom, Ben Boyd , Whale lookout, Twofold bay, Pambula beach, fishing, roos, birds, Rosellas, Brewery (closed), Farm stores, Horse food, Merimbula, Tura beach, Tathra wharf and beach, Catching flatheads, plaice and salmon (well almost), Bermagui, Dalmeny, Central Tilba Historic Village (went there in 2007-8 but had forgotten its name), Borrell, Meeting up with Steve & Laura, Forsters Bay, Wagonga inlet, Narooma, Wagonga princess, Sexist jokes (not good!),Eurobodalla NP, Mill Bay boardwalk, Rays, Rain (lots), Overpriced fish & chips by campsite, Mogo, Batemans Bay, Kings Highway (B52), Great Dividing Range - no pics too scary driving,Braidswood, Bungedore,Bywong,Goulburn, Marulan, Mittagong, Rural NSW, Balmoral, Buxton, Thirlmere, NSW Railway museum, Cockatoos, Horses, Silverdale, Warragamba dam, visitors centre, Haviland Park, Narabeen Lakes, Class driving campaigns, Handing van back at Britz in a new area of Mascot by airport , Public transport (bus/train/bus) back to Beacon hill apartment, Chilling, Views, Pool, BBQ, Movies, Food, Wine, Beer, Friends, Family, Bus to Manly, Manly Ferry, Harbour & Manly views, Voyager of the Seas cruise liner (D&P&C were on it 2 months later), Botanic gardens, Picnic, Mrs Macquaries chair, Sunsets, Opera, Carmen, Voyager of the Seas, last ferry back, Possum in the park in the dark, Sunny pool days around the Bali hut, No 169 bus route & timetable i.e the Manly bus from our pad in Beacon Hill, if you are NERDY enough click HERE to see that full bus timetable, anorak's at the ready, Opal cards, Seeing LION at Warringah Mall on a rainy day , C&As time in Sydney with Laura & Steve visiting Blue Mountains & Parkes observatory , Jervis bay, Snakes, Walking, Rain, Hannah and Connor visited and we had a play in the pool, Balgowlah, Lamb dinner (yummy), Lovely seeing David & Hannah again, heavy rain for a day, bright sunshine, day out in sydney centre, manly ferry, circular quay, barangaroo wharf, cockle bay wharf, darling harbour, harbourside, Hard Rock Cafe, Circular ferry trip, Pyrmont bridge, History, Milsoms point, MacMahons point, Balmain East, Luna Park, Emerald Princess, Maritime museum, Endeavour, Sunsets, Rained all day so watched goldstone (poor), noctural animals (good) and oz gogglebox, Train trip to Broadmeadow, Newcastle to visit Annies cousin Susan, Gosford, Wygong, Hawkesbury river, back from Tassie, Ibis budget airport, Doughnuts (never again), fire alarm, Flight to NZ March 17 Diary April 17 Diary SEE THE FULL NEW SOUTH WALES EXPERIENCE, 47 mins Beers at Manly just by the Ferry terminal "NSW from Eden to Newcastle cousins, Beacon Hill stay in Sydney, and meeting up again for NZ" Opera Sydney, harbours edge sadly had to leave before the encore to get the last ferry back to Manly The Opera House from our Ferry to Watson's Bay Beacon Hill, pool and BBQ fale, our Air B&B Historic Central Tilba store, National Trust colonial village Our boat trip on the Wagonga inlet, Narooma 2017 New South Wales Australia with Pals Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/30 And now videos of our images that accompanied the Diary, you may want to read that as well! 🌊🦘🚐 Our Big, Bold, Bonkers New South Wales Adventure 🇦🇺✨ We crossed from Victoria into New South Wales via Mallacoota, rolling into Eden where the harbour shimmered, the whale museum beckoned, and Old Tom the killer whale stole the show. Ben Boyd’s history loomed large, the whale lookout scanned Twofold Bay, and Pambula Beach gave us fishing, roos, birds and Rosellas — basically a wildlife documentary with sand. The brewery was closed (rude), the farm stores were open, and we somehow ended up buying horse food. Merimbula, Tura Beach and Tathra Wharf kept the coastline gorgeous, while our attempts at catching flathead, plaice and salmon were… optimistic. Bermagui and Dalmeny drifted by, and Central Tilba — which we’d visited in 2007–08 but completely forgotten — charmed us all over again. We met up with Steve & Laura around Forsters Bay and the Wagonga Inlet, cruised on the Wagonga Princess, and endured some sexist jokes that really should’ve stayed in 1973. Eurobodalla National Park, the Mill Bay boardwalk, rays gliding underfoot, and rain — lots of it — filled the days. Overpriced fish and chips by the campsite filled the stomachs (barely). Mogo, Batemans Bay, and then the Kings Highway (B52) hurled us over the Great Dividing Range — no photos because the driving was too terrifying. Braidwood, Bungendore, Bywong, Goulburn, Marulan, Mittagong… rural NSW rolled past in a blur of paddocks, cockatoos, horses and towns with names that sound like they were invented during a pub quiz. We wandered Balmoral, Buxton and Thirlmere, where the NSW Railway Museum delighted the inner train nerd. Silverdale and Warragamba Dam gave us engineering, a visitors centre, and Haviland Park. Then it was up to Narrabeen Lakes for some “class driving campaigns” (your words, Keef), before handing the van back to Britz in a new Mascot depot that felt like a maze. Public transport whisked us back to Beacon Hill — bus, train, bus — and then came the good life: views, pool, BBQs, movies, food, wine, beer, friends, family. The Manly bus (Route 169) became our chariot, the Manly Ferry our cruise ship, and Sydney Harbour our daily screensaver. We spotted the Voyager of the Seas (D&P&C would be on it two months later), picnicked in the Botanic Gardens, sat at Mrs Macquarie’s Chair, and watched sunsets that deserved applause. Opera night brought Carmen, the last ferry brought a possum in the dark, and sunny pool days around the Bali hut brought pure bliss. Opal cards kept us moving, and a rainy day took us to see Lion at Warringah Mall. &A had their own Sydney chapter with Laura & Steve — Blue Mountains, Parkes Observatory, the works. We squeezed in Jervis Bay, snakes, walks, rain, and a pool play‑session when Hannah and Connor visited. Balgowlah hosted a lamb dinner (yummy), and it was lovely seeing David & Hannah again. Sydney gave us one last weather mood swing — heavy rain then blazing sunshine — before another day out in the city: Manly Ferry, Circular Quay, Barangaroo Wharf, Cockle Bay, Darling Harbour, Harbourside, Hard Rock Café, a circular ferry trip, Pyrmont Bridge, Milsons Point, McMahons Point, Balmain East, Luna Park, the Emerald Princess, the Maritime Museum and the Endeavour. Sunsets wrapped it all up like a postcard. A rainy day meant movies: Goldstone (poor), Nocturnal Animals (good), and Gogglebox Australia (chaotic brilliance). Then came the train trip to Broadmeadow and Newcastle to visit Annie’s cousin Susan — Gosford, Wyong, the Hawkesbury River — and finally back from Tassie to the Ibis Budget Airport, where doughnuts betrayed us and a fire alarm kept things lively. And then… the flight to New Zealand.New South Wales had given us beaches, rainforests, ferries, friends, fish (sometimes), snakes, sunsets, possums, culture, chaos‑free fun, and enough stories to fill a season of travel TV. 169. Manly – City a Sydney bus via Narraweena & Seaforth Our stop Highlighted - full anarak 209541. Belgrave St near Raglan St, 209542. Pittwater Rd near Steinton St, 209543. Pittwater Rd near Pine St,209544. Pittwater Rd near Collingwood St 209545. Pittwater Rd near Balgowlah Rd,209546. Pittwater Rd near Eurobin Av,210030. Pittwater Rd near Queencliff Rd, 210032. IPittwater Rd near Oliver St 210033. Pittwater Rd near Riverview Pde,210034. Pittwater Rd near Western Av,210035. Pittwater Rd near Wakefield St ,210036. Pittwater Rd near Kentwell Rd 210037. Pittwater Rd near Sterland Av,2100111. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Mall,210015. Pittwater Rd near Roger St 210016. Pittwater Rd near Winbourne Rd 210017. Pittwater Rd near Pine Av,210018. Pittwater Rd near Federal Pde,210019. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Rd,209911. Pittwater Rd near May Rd 209912. Pittwater Rd near Pacific Pde,209913. Pittwater St Davids Av ,209996. Fisher Rd near Lewis St,209997. McIntosh Rd near Vale Av,209998. McIntosh Rd near Victor Rd 209999. McIntosh Rd near Beverley Job Park,2099100. McIntosh Rd near Mundara PI,209917. Alfred St near Oceania St,209918. Alfred St near Warringah Rd, 209992. Warringah Rd near Consul Rd,209993. Warringah Rd near Northcliffe Av,210067. Warringah Rd opp McKillop Rd,210068. Warringah Rd near Beacon Hill Rd (see 24-30 March) 210069. Warringah Rd near Willandra Rd,2100141. Warringah Rd near Earl St,210070. Warringah Rd near O'Connors Rd,210071. Warringah Rd near Goverment Rd, 210072. Warringah Rd near Jones St,208642. French Forest Rd near Patanga Rd,208643. Frenchs Forest Rd near Hurdis Av (Annie's old residence), 208644. Frenchs Forest Rd near Skyline PI,208637. Wakehurst Pwy near Frenchs Forest Rd,208674. Warrringah Rd near Bantry Bay Rd 208638. Wakehurst Pwy near Warringah Rd 208655. Wakehurst Pwy,208712. Wakehurst Pwy near Manly Dam Res,208713. Wakehurst Pwy near Kirkwood St,209254. Wakehurst Pwy near Judith St 209246. Wakehurst pwy near Burnt St,209247. Wakehurst Pwy near Armstrong St,209231. Wakehurst Pwy near Lister Av,209232. Wakehurst Pwy near Castle Cct 209233. Clontarf St near Montauban Av,209234. Frenchs Forest Rd near Montauban Av,209235. Frenchs Forest Rd near Baringa Av,209257. Frenchs Forest Rd near Macmillan St 209252. Sydney Rd near Hope St,209335. Manly Rd near Heaton Av,209212. Manly Rd near Avona Cr,208812. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,2088186. Spit Rd near Medusa St 2088187. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,2088188. Spit Rd near Stanton Rd,2088189. Spit Rd near Awaba St,2088243. Spit Rd at Clifford St,2088190. Spit road near Military Rd 2088192. Military Rd near Wudgong St,2088193. Military Rd near Lang St,2088194. Military Rd near Belmont Rd,209059. Military Rd near Cabramatta Rd 209019. Military Rd near Hampden Av,208944. Military Rd near Rangers Rd,208913. Military Rd near Wycombe Rd,208959. Military Rd at Bydown Lane,208960. Military Rd at Watson St 208912. Military Rd near Watson St,2000133. York St at Lang Park,200035. Wynyard Station, York St - Stand N,208657. Cemtery Front Gate Hakea Av,208671. Forest Way near Warringah Rd 208697. Naree Rd near Rabbett St,208649. Rabbett St near Holland Av,208664. Warrringah Rd near Bantry Bay Rd,200025. Wynyard Station, Carrington St - Stand E,200021. Wynyard Station, Carrington St - Stand A 208947. Military Rd near Watson St,208948. Military Rd near Wycombe Rd,209021. Military Rd near Hampden Av,209058. Military Rd near Cabramatta Rd,2088176. Military Rd near Prince St 2088177. Military Rd near Lang St,2088178. Military Rd near Bond St,2088179, Military Rd near Cowles Rd,2088180. Spit Junction, Spit Rd,2088181. Spit Rd near Awaba St 2088182. Spit Rd near Bickell Rd,2088183. Spit Rd near Quakers Rd, 2088184. Spit Rd near Medusa St,2088185. Spit Rd near Pearl Bay Av,208811. Spit Rd near Parriwi Rd,209213. Battle Bvde near Manly Rd 209214. Battle Bvd near Seaforth Cr,209215. Palmerston PI near Alan Av,209216. Ponsonby Pde near Palmerston PI,209222. Ponsonby Pde near Panorama Pde,209223. Ponsonby Pde near Sydney Rd 209224. Frenchs Forest Rd near Ellery Pde,209225. Frenchs Forest Rd near Macmillan St,209236. Frenchs Forest Rd near Baringa Av 209237. Frenchs Forest near Redman St 209238.Clontarf St near Montauban Av 209239. Wakehurst Pwy near Castle Cct,209240. Wakehurst Pwy near Lister Av, 209241. Wakehurst Pwy near Armstrong St,209242. Wakehurst Pwy near Burnt St 209243. Wakehurst Pwy near Judith St,209253. Wakehurst Pwy near Kirkwood St,208711. Wakehurst Pwy near Manly Dam Res,208630. Wakehurst Pwy,208631, Wakehurst pwy near Warringah Rd 208639. Frenchs Forest Rd near Skyline PI 208640. Frenchs Forest Rd near Romford Rd,208641. Frenchs Forest Rd near Inverness Av,208617. Frenchs Forest Rd near Patanga Rd 2100142. Warringah Rd near Jones St 2100143. Warringah Rd near Ellis Rd 2100144. Warringah Rd near Oxford Falls Rd,2100113. Warringah Rd near Cornish Av,2100114. Warringah Rd near Willandra Rd 2100139. Warringah Rd opp Beacon Hill Rd ,us again on the return journey, 2100140. Warringah Rd near McKillop Rd,2099106. Warringah Rd near Princess Mary St 2099107. Warringah Rd near Waratah Pde,2099108. Warringah Rd near Alfred St,2099119. Alfred St near Warringah Rd,2099120. Alfred St near Amaral St,2099122. Alfred St near McIntosh Rd 2099115. McIntosh Rd near Mundara PI 2099116. McIntosh Rd near Victor Rd 2099117. McIntosh Rd near Vale Av 2099118. Fisher Rd near St David Av,209922. Pittwater Rd near Howard Av 209923. Pittwater Rd near Pacific Pde,210021. Pittwater Rd near Harbord Rd,210022. Pittwater Rd near Carter Rd ,210023. Pittwater Rd near Mitchell Av,210025. Pittwater Rd near Chard Rd 210026. Pittwater Rd near Orchard Rd,2100131. Pittwater Rd near Warringah Mall Stand A,210041.Pittwater Rd near Sterland Av 210042. Pittwater Rd near Corrie Rd 210043. Pittwater Rd near Wakefield St,210044. Pittwater Rd near Western Av,210045. Pittwater near Riverview Pde ,210046. Pittwater Rd near Oliver St 210047.Pittwater Rd near Aitken Av 209547. Pittwater Rd near Eurobin Av,209548. Pittwater Rd near Balgowlah Rd 209549. Pittwater Rd near Collingwood St 209550. Pittwater Rd near Pine St 209551. Pittwater Rd near Carlton St,209552. Pittwater Rd near IRagIan St,209553. Belgrave St near Sydney Rd 209554. West Esplanade Stand B - MANLY 🌅🚍 A Day in the Life: Riding the 169 From Beacon Hill Morning light slid across Pine Avenue, catching the tops of the gum trees and the cockatoos already arguing about absolutely nothing. We stepped out of the old Beacon Hill pad, that familiar mix of sea breeze and eucalyptus drifting up from the valley. The hill sloped away beneath us — steep enough to wake the legs, gentle enough to pretend it wasn’t exercise. Down Pine Avenue, past the houses with their sun‑bleached fences, then left onto Beacon Hill Road. Cars hummed along Warringah Road below, the great concrete artery of the Northern Beaches. That was our target: the 169 stop, the gateway to Manly, Narraweena, Seaforth and the city beyond. We reached the stop just as the bus crested the rise — that classic blue-and-white Sydney livery, the driver giving the tiniest nod as if to say, “Hop on, mate.” Inside, the air‑con blasted like a gift from the heavens. Seats were a mix of schoolkids, office workers, and the occasional surfer who looked like he’d been awake since dawn. The bus rolled down Warringah Road, swung toward Dee Why, and then began the climb into Narraweena — the exact stretch you’ve got open on YouTube right now, maybe if you are viewing the Bus route video, it is an exact replica of the route. The houses leaned into the hill, the ocean glinting in the distance. At the top, the view opened up like a postcard. Through Seaforth we went, the bus weaving past sandstone houses and jacarandas. Then came The Spit Bridge, that iconic pinch point where the harbour suddenly appears — blue, bright, and full of boats that cost more than the bus itself. Neutral Bay brought cafés, commuters and the smell of fresh pastries we never quite had time to buy. And then, as always, the final glide into Wynyard, the city rising around us like a steel canyon. We stepped off into the hum of Sydney — ferries, trams, skyscrapers, the whole lot — knowing that at the end of the day, the 169 would carry us back up the hill, past the ocean, past the gum trees, and home to Beacon Hill (our Air B&B with pool for a week) and gave us and especially Annie many memories from her teenage years. A simple bus ride, but one stitched into memory like a favourite old photo. TASMANIA 4th - 8th April 2017 INTRODUCTION & DIARY Early morning flight from Sydney to Launceston, Car hire, Evandale, Midland Highway, Powranna, Epping Forest, Cleveland, Campbell Town, Convicts, Nice egg and bacon pies, Wood carvings, Sunshine, Elizabeth river, Loggers, Conara, A4 Esk main road, Avoca, Fingal, St Mary's, Volcanic Mount, Purple possum café, Break O'Day municipality, Cornwall, Gray, Chain of Lagoons, Seymour, Douglas River, Tasman Highway, Bicheno, Picnics, Views, Scuba Divers, whales (if only!), Apslawn, Cranbrook, Swansea, John & Diana - so nice to see them again, wonderful hospitality, 9 mile beach, Mayfield, Rocky hill beach, Spiky bridge & beach, Swansea pier and beach, Freycinet national park, visitors centre, Wine glass bay, Cape Tourville lighthouse, the Road rage guide, Gravel roads, Friendly beaches, sunshine, fun, walks, Surfing, pristine empty beaches, Oyster bay, The Hazards, Coles bay, Triabunna, Maria island, Ferry, Tassie devils, Orford, Prosser estuary, Café, Cricket, Raspins Spit & beach & dunes, Petanque, History, East coast heritage museum @ Swansea, Tarleton, Thylacine, Family, Up early, Say goodbye, Back to Launceston Airport, John and Diana had moved to Swansea from Huonville, which is why we came into Launceston airport April 17 Diary SEE THE FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE, 10 Mins Memorial to the convict road, Campbell Town "Fun days with family in Swansea and beyond " So lovely to see John & Diana again Sunset over Swansea, we love Tassie Drive slowly, usual clever Kiwi road sign 2017 Tasmania, Pals stayed in Sydney & NSW with their family Click to enlarge and scroll thru slideshows gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/13 ✈️🌞 THE FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE — IN 10 MINS! With a small injection of Humour! 🛫 Launceston Landing & The Great Pie Pilgrimage Touchdown in Launceston, grab the hire car, and off you zoom through Evandale and along the Midland Highway, ticking off towns like you’re speed‑dating Tasmania: Powranna, Epping Forest, Cleveland, Campbell Town. Campbell Town, of course, offers: Convict history Wood carvings Egg & bacon pies so good they should be heritage‑listed The sun is shining, the Elizabeth River sparkles, and the local loggers look like they’ve stepped straight out of a 1970s forestry calendar. 🚗 Eastward Ho! Through Volcano Country Onwards via Conara and the A4 Esk Highway, through Avoca, Fingal, and St Mary’s, where a volcanic mount looms dramatically and the Purple Possum Café tempts you with wholesome goodness. You officially enter the Break O’Day municipality, passing Cornwall, Gray, and the wonderfully named Chain of Lagoons. Then Seymour, Douglas River, and finally the Tasman Highway leads you to… 🐧 Bicheno — Where Whales Should Be Bicheno delivers: Picnics Views Scuba divers And whales… well, theoretically. (They must have been on their tea break.) 🏡 Swansea — The Reunion Tour Through Apslawn, Cranbrook, and into Swansea, where the real highlight awaits: John & Diana, freshly relocated from Huonville and offering warmth, hospitality, and enough food to feed a small rugby squad. Local attractions include: 9 Mile Beach Mayfield Rocky Hill Beach Spiky Bridge & Spiky Beach Swansea Pier Swansea Beach Basically: beaches, beaches, and more beaches — all pristine, empty, and showing off. ⛰️ Freycinet: Where Postcards Come From A day trip to Freycinet National Park brings: Visitors Centre Wineglass Bay (ridiculously beautiful) Cape Tourville Lighthouse Friendly Beaches The Hazards Coles Bay You also consult the Road Rage Guide, which is presumably a polite Tasmanian pamphlet saying, “Please don’t.” Gravel roads, sunshine, walks, surfing, fun — the full Tassie sampler platter. 🦘 Triabunna, Maria Island & Devilish Encounters Next stop: Triabunna, where the ferry whisks you to Maria Island, home of: Tassie devils History Wildlife And the kind of scenery that makes you consider quitting your job and becoming a ranger Back on the mainland, Orford and the Prosser Estuary offer cafés, cricket, Raspins Spit, dunes, petanque, and more history than you can shake a thylacine at. Speaking of which — the East Coast Heritage Museum in Swansea gives you a good look at the legendary thylacine, plus a reminder that Tasmania does museums just as well as beaches. 🧳 Homeward Bound - Well Back on the trail to Beacon Hill Air B&B and Sydney Up early, bags packed, hugs exchanged. Back to Launceston Airport, because John & Diana’s move to Swansea means this is now the official family gateway. A whirlwind, sun‑drenched, pie‑powered, beach‑blessed FULL TASSIE EXPERIENCE — all in one glorious loop.

  • 2016 | Holiday 1995-2024 | Europe Scandinavia Motorhoming

    Practical tips for motorhoming across Europe and Scandinavia in 2016—routes, costs, campsites, planning advice and insights from months on the road. 2016 Travel Blog & Guide - Scandinavia 🗺️ SCANDINAVIA 2016 — MASTER ROUTE LIST Chronological - All locations extracted directly from Blog 100 motorhome travels 🇬🇧 UK → 🇳🇱 Netherlands 8 May – 11 May Harwich → Dovercourt (Green Acres) Harwich → Stena Britannica ferry → Hook of Holland (Europort) Zandvoort (De Branding campsite) – 2 nights Amsterdam (day trip) 11–13 May Zandvoort → Koudum (Vakantiepark De Kuilart) – 2 nights Koudum → Weidum (Wiedumerhout campsite) – 2 nights 🇳🇱 Netherlands → 🇩🇪 Germany 15–16 May Weidum → Wingst (Knaus Campingpark) Wingst → Wischhafen → Elbe ferry → Glückstadt Rendsburg → Sehestedt ferry → Schlei-Karschau (pitch 7) 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇩🇰 Denmark 17–19 May Schlei-Karschau → Flensburg → Mommark Marina Camping (pitch 63) – 2 nights Sonderby → Rømø → Havneby → Ribe → Esbjerg (2 nights) 21–23 May Esbjerg → Billund → Silkeborg → Viborg → Farsø Farsø → Limfjorden → Aalborg → Hirtshals → Skagen (pitch 76) 23–26 May Skagen → Randers → Aarhus → Jelling → Middelfart Middelfart → Odense → Svendborg → Tåsinge → Langeland (Emmerbølle Strand) – 2 nights Langeland → Sio → Tåsinge → Nyborg → Storebælt Bridge → Roskilde → Holbæk (2 nights) 28 May Holbæk → Helsingør → Kronborg → Fredensborg → Frederiksborg → Holbæk 🇩🇰 Denmark → 🇸🇪 Sweden 28–29 May Holbæk → Øresund Bridge → Malmö → Lund → Kristianstad → Åhus (campsite) 29–31 May Åhus → Karlshamn → Karlskrona → Kalmar → Öland Island Beijershamn Ottenby / Långe Jan lighthouse Mörbylånga (campsite) 30–31 May Mörbylånga → Borgholm → Solliden → Pataholm → Mönsterås (pitch 8) 31 May – 1 June Mönsterås → Oskarshamn → Västervik → Sandvik → Källvik → Valdemarsvik (fjord campsite) 1–2 June Valdemarsvik → Göta Canal (Norrköping) → Oxelösund (campsite) 🇸🇪 Sweden — Stockholm Region 2–5 June Oxelösund → Stockholm (Bredäng campsite) – 3 nights Gamla Stan Vasa Museum Harbour cruise ABBA Museum (outside) Hard Rock Café City sightseeing bus 5 June Stockholm → Kapellskär (campsite) 🇸🇪 Sweden → 🇫🇮 Finland (via Åland Islands) 6 June Kapellskär → Finnfellow ferry → Långnäs (Åland) → Naantali (Finland) Naantali campsite (sea views) 7–8 June Naantali → Hanko → Helsinki (Rastila campsite) – 2 nights Helsinki HOHO bus Market Square Cathedral Olympic Stadium Harbour Hard Rock Café 9–10 June Helsinki → Porvoo → Vaalimaa (Russian border) → Hamina (campsite) 10–11 June Hamina → Turku → Naantali (pitch 51) 11 June Naantali → Finneagle ferry → Kapellskär (pitch 16) 🇸🇪 Sweden — Northbound 12–14 June Kapellskär → Uppsala → Dragon Gate → Gävle → Rättvik → Mora → Orsa → Älvdalen (2 nights) 14 June Älvdalen → Nusnäs (Dala Horse factory) → Särna → Idre → Cross into Norway 🇳🇴 Norway — Fjords & Mountains 14–15 June Idre → Engerdal National Park → Hedmark (campsite) 15–16 June Hedmark → Hanestad → Tynset → Tolga → Os → Røros (UNESCO) 16–17 June Røros → Støren → Hell → Trondheim → Vikhammer → Flakk (campsite) 17–18 June Flakk → Halsa ferry → Kanestraum → Surnadal → Kristiansund (Byskogen campsite) 18–19 June Kristiansund → Molde → Vestnes → Stranda → Loen/Stryn (Lo-Vik campsite) 19–20 June Loen → Jostedalsbreen NP → Fjærland Glacier Centre → Sogndal (Kjørnes campsite) 20–21 June Sogndal → Mannheller ferry → Fodnes → Lærdal Tunnel → Aurlandsfjord → Nesbo Tunnel → Hovet (Hol) 21–22 June Hovet → Gol → Dokka → Lillehammer → Øyer → Hunderfossen (campsite) 22–24 June Hunderfossen → Oslo (Ekeberg campsite) – 2 nights Frogner Park Fram Museum Viking Ship Museum Royal Palace Harbour Karl Johans Gate 🇳🇴 Norway → 🇸🇪 Sweden → 🇩🇰 Denmark 24–25 June Oslo → Ski → Momarken → Ørje → Töcksfors → Årjäng (Midsummer festival) 25–26 June Årjäng → Trollhättan → Göta Canal → Stenungsund → Orust Island → Ellös (campsite) 26–27 June Ellös → Gothenburg → Varberg (campsite) 27–30 June Varberg → Helsingborg → Malmö → Copenhagen → Køge (Stevns campsite) – 3 nights Køge Rødvig Stege 🇩🇰 Denmark → 🇩🇪 Germany → 🇳🇱 Netherlands → 🇬🇧 UK 30 June – 1 July Køge → Farø Bridge → Guldborgsund → Lolland → Sakskøbing Rødby → Schleswig-Holstein ferry → Puttgarden Puttgarden → Plön (Plönsee campsite) 2–3 July Plön → Hamburg → Garlstorf (campsite) Garlstorf → Hemslingen → Bremen (campsite) 4–5 July Bremen → Osnabrück → Tubbergen (Netherlands) Tubbergen → Bilthoven → Utrecht (day trip) 6–7 July Bilthoven → Gouda → Delft → Delftse Hout campsite Delft → Hoek van Holland → Harwich (delayed ferry) Home (3 a.m., freezer disaster!) 16 Route Visuals SUMMARY United Kingdom – Essex – Harwich Netherlands – South Holland – Hook of Holland Netherlands – South Holland – Rotterdam Netherlands – North Holland – Zandvoort Netherlands – North Holland – Amsterdam Netherlands – Friesland – Koudum Netherlands – Friesland – Weidum Germany – Lower Saxony – Wingst Germany – Lower Saxony – Wischhafen Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Glückstadt Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Rendsburg Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Schlei-Karschau Denmark – South Jutland – Flensburg Denmark – South Jutland – Mommark Denmark – South Jutland – Sønderby Denmark – South Jutland – Rømø Denmark – South Jutland – Ribe Denmark – South Jutland – Esbjerg Denmark – Central Jutland – Billund Denmark – Central Jutland – Silkeborg Denmark – Central Jutland – Viborg Denmark – North Jutland – Farsø Denmark – North Jutland – Limfjorden Denmark – North Jutland – Aalborg Denmark – North Jutland – Skagen Denmark – South Jutland – Jelling Denmark – Funen – Middelfart Denmark – Funen – Odense Denmark – Funen – Svendborg Denmark – Funen – Tåsinge Denmark – Funen – Langeland Denmark – Funen – Nyborg Denmark – Zealand – Roskilde Denmark – Zealand – Holbæk Denmark – Zealand – Helsingør Denmark – Zealand – Fredensborg Denmark – Zealand – Hillerød Sweden – Skåne – Malmö Sweden – Skåne – Lund Sweden – Skåne – Kristianstad Sweden – Skåne – Åhus Sweden – Blekinge – Karlshamn Sweden – Blekinge – Karlskrona Sweden – Småland – Kalmar Sweden – Öland – Beijershamn Sweden – Öland – Mörbylånga Sweden – Öland – Ottenby Lighthouse Sweden – Öland – Borgholm Sweden – Öland – Solliden Sweden – Småland – Pataholm Sweden – Småland – Mönsterås Sweden – Småland – Oskarshamn Sweden – Småland – Västervik Sweden – Östergötland – Valdemarsvik Sweden – Östergötland – Norrköping Sweden – Södermanland – Oxelösund Sweden – Stockholm County – Stockholm Sweden – Stockholm County – Kapellskär Åland Islands – Åland – Långnäs Finland – Southwest Finland – Naantali Finland – Uusimaa – Hanko Finland – Uusimaa – Helsinki Finland – Uusimaa – Porvoo Finland – Kymenlaakso – Hamina Finland – Southwest Finland – Turku Finland – Southwest Finland – Naantali (return) Sweden – Stockholm County – Kapellskär (return) Sweden – Uppsala County – Uppsala Sweden – Gävleborg – Gävle Sweden – Dalarna – Rättvik Sweden – Dalarna – Mora Sweden – Dalarna – Orsa Sweden – Dalarna – Älvdalen Sweden – Dalarna – Nusnäs Sweden – Dalarna – Särna Sweden – Dalarna – Idre Norway – Innlandet – Engerdal Norway – Innlandet – Hedmark region Norway – Trøndelag – Røros Norway – Trøndelag – Trondheim Norway – Møre og Romsdal – Kristiansund Norway – Møre og Romsdal – Molde Norway – Vestland – Stryn Norway – Vestland – Sogndal Norway – Viken – Hovet Norway – Innlandet – Lillehammer Norway – Oslo – Oslo Sweden – Värmland – Årjäng Sweden – Västra Götaland – Trollhättan Sweden – Västra Götaland – Göta Canal region Sweden – Västra Götaland – Orust Island Sweden – Västra Götaland – Ellös Sweden – Västra Götaland – Gothenburg Sweden – Halland – Varberg Denmark – Zealand – Copenhagen Denmark – Zealand – Køge Denmark – Zealand – Farø Bridge Denmark – Lolland – Rødby Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Puttgarden Germany – Schleswig-Holstein – Plön Germany – Hamburg – Hamburg Germany – Lower Saxony – Garlstorf Germany – Bremen – Bremen Germany – Lower Saxony – Osnabrück Netherlands – Overijssel – Tubbergen Netherlands – Utrecht – Bilthoven Netherlands – Utrecht – Utrecht Netherlands – South Holland – Gouda Netherlands – South Holland – Delft United Kingdom – Essex – Harwich (return) Practical tips for motorhoming across Europe and Scandinavia in 2016—routes, costs, campsites, planning advice and insights from months on the road. 🗺️ Planning a European or Scandinavian motorhome trip? Our 2016 guide brings together real on‑the‑road experience: routes, costs, campsites, border tips, fuel insights and the little things that make long‑distance touring smoother. From Norway’s dramatic landscapes to Europe’s easy‑rolling highways, this guide captures what we learned over months on the move so you can plan with confidence. Camping with a view, Norway The write up is coming......

  • 17 Calendars | Decades of Travel

    Discover the full story behind the Big Trip 2017. These before‑and‑after travel calendars reveal how plans evolved into unforgettable reality across Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and beyond. Perfect for travellers who love detail, inspiration and real-world adventure planning. A unique month‑by‑month window into six incredible months. CALENDARS INTRO We show both the before and after plans. Understandable they differ slightly for all manner of reasons, but mostly because the reality is whatever you plan you must ensure that you replan en route, there will always be something. BEFORE THE TRIP Pre trip, calendar of our adventures, i.e anticipation of where we are going and when, it was our combined plan for the travels JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2017 Flying to Singapore via Dubai leaving January 31st early in the morning. 2 days stay with Doug and family, maybe the 1* michelin street hawker food, then onto Perth, WA to have a good look around. Maybe a Swan river trip. Then its pick up the motorhomes at Great Eastern Highway and go off exploring. So much to see in WA - Wave Rocks, The Pinnacles, Dolphins at Monkey Mia.... can't wait! At the end of Feb we catch the Indian Pacific Railway, Gold Star Service. MARCH 2017 Having got off the train in Adelaide we will stay in acabin on the beach before flying up to Alice Springs and bathe in the famous Todd River. C&A are off to Uluru (Ayres Rock). We fly back after 3 days and pick up the motorhomes to explore amongst others the Great Ocean Road (GOR), koala's at Kennet River, wine in the Barossa Valley, the 12 apostles, whales at Warrnmbool, Sale, Mallacoota, Tathra, Eden and so much more. APRIL 2017 In the first week of April we will still be in Sydney, K&A in their apartment with pool in Beacon Hills and C&A off with Laura and Steve having fun. K&A visit John & Diana in Tasmania. We will then stay at the Kiwi Motel in Mangere, Auckland (did the NZ census here in 2013) overnight before jetting off for a relaxing week in the Raina Beach house on Rarotonga. On return its pick up the motorhomes in mangere and off to explore North island. MAY 2017 Mid may-ish we will leave north island and take the motorhomes across on the interisland ferry from wellington to picton, and see the fab queen charlotte sound. Captain Cook knew it well. Then its off to explore south island. Milford and no doubt(ful) sound plus dunedin and a whole lot more. At the end of the month we fly out of Christchurch together to Sydney where we say our good byes JUNE 2017 After Sydney C&A are flying off to Hong Kong for a few days before making their ways back to the UK. K&A will visit family for a few weeks in Singapore and then jet back home from Changi airport. SUMMARY Jan thru June 2017 There is a complete proposed schedule of our trip included in the slideshow Jan/Feb 17 before calendar Mar 17 before calendar Summary Jan-June 2017 Jan/Feb 17 before calendar 1/6 BEFORE THE TRIP Post trip, calendar of our adventures, i.e where we went and when #loved every moment of it, such lovely shared memories JAN-JUNE 2017 Note the only difference is that at the end Chris & Allyson flew to Hong Kong for a few days and we went to Singapore for a couple of weeks before returning to the UK. What is shown in this gallery is the complete booked flight schedule. Luckily no dates or times changed during our 6 months away, unlike in 2013 when our flight from Perth to Changi was bought forward by 3 hours meaning we almost missed it, the company alledgedly had no way to contact us to warn us "as if - internet was working!" ACTUAL CALENDAR FOR THE BIG TRIP 2017 Comparing what was planned against what we actually did, surprisingly there wasnt really that much difference in the schedule, maybe a few days here and there as we hadnt gone to that level of detail. It is worth reading Annie's diary in unison with these calendar views, if you would like to please click HERE OLD WEBSITE IMAGES History of what the old site pre 2020 looked like is preserved for prosperity, maybe 😉 We preserved some of the page images before removing old site pages in Aug 2021, they are recaptured here gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/10 Luckily this didn't happen 😉 flight details created and uploaded by KeefH Web Designs for the Travel Photography site flight tickets 1/3 CAMP SITES SLIDESHOW TIME! This is a pictorial history of all the campsites we stayed at our our Big Trip 2017 in both Australia and New Zealand in our hired Britz / Maui camper vans DISTANCES SLIDESHOW TIME! To recap we travelled in our hired motorhomes in both Australia and New Zealand on our 2017 Big Trip 9337 Miles or 15026 Kilometres, WOW! Distances travelled by Keef & Annie. NOTE Here are the distances we drove ourselves whilst on THE BIG TRIP, HOLIDAY 2017 which by implication as Chris & Allyson didn't go to Tasmania and did far more walking than us and drove the west coast of North island, New Zealand whilst we did the east coast means their total distance is likely to be some what less , but in reality probably not by that much. gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/5 WILDLIFE SLIDESHOW TIME! Wildlife spotted in Australia Western Australia Blue tongued skinks, Major Mitchell Cockatiel (white & pink feathers), emus, turtle, pelicans, eagles, goats, galahs, small frog, flock of white & yellow cockatoos, small lizard, green parakeets with yellow ring round neck – could be yellow ring lorikeets, alpacas of a farm, kangaroos, dead snake on road, budgies, quokkas, magpies, small black lizard 6-8” long, stick insects, dolphins, Australian sealions, 4 Ospreys, pelican colony, Little Blue Penguins, New Zealand fur seals. Northern Territory Lots of Aussie mammals, birds & reptiles in Desert Park, a wildlife park outside Alice Springs. Cockroaches in pavement in Alice at night. South Australia Corella parrots (white with lemon feathers under wings), large moorhens, stingray. Victoria Dead snake (brown) in middle of road. Koala crossing road, budgies, black rock wallaby, echidna, 4 koalas, wallaby, baby black snake, bandicoot, red & green parakeets, 2 Sulphur crested cockatoos, seal by a jetty, grey kangaroo at Hanging Rock, thin lizard, large group of grey kangaroos & 1 albino one, black swans, large 3ft stingray with orange spots on top & orange underneath, koalas, bellbirds, small lizard. New South Wales Kangaroos, rainbow lorikeets, stingrays, white cockatoos, small geckos, dead wombats by highway, wattle bird, heron, ibis birds, possum. Tasmania Dead Tasmanian Devils by roadsides, plovers & sandpipers, kookaburra, wallabies. Wildlife in Cook Islands (Rarotonga ) Plovers, sandpipers, small crabs, sea cucumbers, fish, geckos, black/brown birds. Wildlife spotted in New Zealand Green Praying Mantis, weka (bird), 3 kingfishers, eagle, dead possum, bush turkeys, black swans, large black eels, fantail birds, pet emus & small wallaby at campsite in Murchison, whales, rock wren, Kea alpine parrots, 2 dolphins, NZ fur seals, small albatross, white heron, grey herons, Little Blue & Yellow Eyed penguins, seals. gallery images created by KeefH Web Designs for this Travel Photography site with care and love 1/43

  • 10 Ontario | Holiday 1995-2024 | Travel Guide and Blog

    Explore Ontario through a motorhome adventure packed with big lakes, wild drives and classic KHWD humour. This 2010 Ontario travel blog covers Nipigon, Wawa, Elliot Lake, Lake Superior Provincial Park, Toronto, Niagara Falls and more—372 photos, real diary notes and unforgettable routes across Canada’s central province. Perfect for RV travellers, road‑trip planners and long‑haul adventure fans. 2010 Ontario Travel Blog & Guide ONTARIO - HOLIDAY in 2010 A Travel Blog Experience DIARY During 2010 we have now been from one side of Canada to the other in a motorhome, British Columbia to Labrador, we loved it, it is a fabulous country and quite an achievement with memories we shall treasure forever. For Ontario the following were some of the highlights, nipigon, wawa, elliot lake, new liskeard, musselmans lake, Toronto which we are glad we visited although in reality were not that impressed by (along with Montreal in Quebec province, maybe as travellers we prefer being away from the big cities I suspect that is the answer, anyhow we did see the CN tower and surrounds and walked along the river’s edge to see all the restaurants, note the G20 conference was due to be on in Toronto whilst we were in Canada that year, getting up early to watch England get knocked out of the world cup football and flying our flag on the motorhome, tee-hee, Niagara falls which was just magical, we did do the maid of the mist boat trip and put on those flimsy pak-a-maks which in reality afforded little or no protection against the force of that water, we got close and also marvelled at some of the history of the fool hardy who went over the edge into it in a barrel, I ask you would you, we also read and saw how the devil’s hole whirlpool in the accompanying Niagara river was so forceful, we loved the Niagara area, 1000 islands boat trip from Gananoque which was just fantastic and covered that really weird Boldt Castle on route and an amazing number of very small but mostly exclusive islands with yachts etc and either Canadian or American flags proudly displayed and sometimes both, when we returned from the boat trip armed with the recipe Keef made 1000 island sauce to go with our salad, see the recipe below, percy lake, ignace, sault ste marie, wabigoon lakes, agimak lake & beach, rossport, terrace bay, pays plat, thunder bay, the great lakes-superior, huron, ontario & dipping my toe in them – I made a point no matter how cold the water was of taking one sock off and dipping my toe in them so I could say I had “swam” in all of the great lakes which along with the Prairie Provinces I remember studying at school with our Geography teacher the somewhat outlandish Rev Rooney who had spent much time in Africa being a missionary and photographing tribes and showing us schoolkids on the big screen – maybe I learnt my interest in travel from him, maybe it’s just in my DNA, the reality is I did do the toe dipping in all of them bar Lake Michegan, we didn’t go over the US border into that State, maybe another time, you never know, Niagara on the lake, the snow goose, Sinclair cove, mounties, ottawa, aguasarbon falls, entering central standard time, lake superior national park, latchford, spanish, temigami, temiskaming shores, bobbie rosenfeld olympian & park, Wilson island, passport, squirrels Canadian style, white river views, cousins in parry sound, a big welcome to Ontario but sadly not being able to meet up with annies cuz Jamie, bottles in the sewage systems at campsites to prevent odours when using the provided triple services, ha-ha, the lovely Ontario capital Ottawa, stouffville, niagara botanical gardens, floral clock, devils hole whirlpool, st Lawrence river, Gananoque town and harbour, rideau falls, river and canal, byward market, haileybury the home of Annie's rellies and all those kid ex school pupils of Uncle Ralph’s who were now either teachers at his old school or worked in the local museum who helped us locate places of interest and aided our family research. Genealogy is fun, fact! Here are a few words and facts in summary about Niagara Falls. Niagara Falls, city in the Regional Municipality of Niagara, south-eastern Ontario, Canada, a port on the Niagara River opposite Niagara Falls, New York. The city overlooks the Horseshoe, or Canadian, falls cataract of Niagara Falls; the crescent-shaped cataract is 54 M (177 ft) high and carries nine times more water than its United States counterpart. Niagara Falls is an enormously popular tourist destination, and it also serves as a major source of electricity for Ontario. The city is connected to the U.S. side of the falls by several bridges, including the Rainbow, Whirlpool, and Queenston-Lewiston bridges. Principal manufactures include processed food, abrasives, chemicals, automotive parts, metal and paper goods, and wines and alcoholic beverages. Logistics, i.e., storage and warehousing and information technology/call centres are also important to the city's economy. Points of interest include Queen Victoria Park, adjacent to the Canadian Falls and principal site of the annual Winter Festival of Lights; the historical museum at Lundy's Lane, site of a brutal battle between American and British forces in 1814; The Maid of the Mist, Marineland, with Friendship Cove which provides interaction with Killer and Beluga whales, an aquatic theatre and a game farm; Skylon Tower and Pavilion, containing a revolving restaurant and an observation deck overlooking the falls; the Butterfly Conservatory at the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens; Canada One Factory Outlets which features brand name shopping And the accompanying Maid of the Mist, America’s most iconic boat ride since 1846, which was its maiden voyage. See the raging currents. Hear the deafening thunder. And feel the refreshing mist of 600,000 gallons of water falling before your eyes every second. Experience it all aboard the iconic Maid of the Mist. It’s the one and only tour boat fleet whose captains have safely navigated the mighty waters of the Niagara Gorge for over 100 years, taking tens of millions of visitors directly into the centre of the swirling mist. Dress code: blue rain poncho optional. But we highly suggest you wear it, or else… 😉 Before this date, rowboats ferried passengers across the Niagara River below the Falls. By 1846, however, entrepreneurs decided a bigger craft could profit by transporting people, luggage, mail and cargo. So, the first Maid of the Mist steamboat, large enough to carry a stagecoach and horses, was christened. In 1848, construction of a suspension bridge curtailed business and the Maid of the Mist was re-branded as a sightseeing adventure that still operates to this day. Maid of the Mist Official Photo Ontario, Canada, Travel Guide for Motorhomers Recipe for Thousand Islands dressing. If you’ve been there (and even if you haven't) you have to try it and we did in the van so here goes, Ingredients List 1/2 clove garlic, minced 1/4 tsp salt plus more to taste 190ml prepared or homemade mayonnaise 60ml bottled chili sauce 2 tbsp tomato ketchup 1 1/2 tbsp minced onion 2 tsp sweet pickle relish 1/2 hard-cooked large egg, pushed through a sieve or finely chopped Freshly ground black pepper How to make Make a paste with the garlic and 1/4 teaspoon of the salt by crushing them with the side of a chef's knife. In a small mixing bowl, whisk together the garlic, mayonnaise, chilli sauce, ketchup, onion, relish, and egg until combined. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Use now or store covered in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. 2010 15 Days in Ontario, Canada between 4th-20th June INCLUDES 372 PHOTOS Visiting amongst others dryden, wabigoon lake, nipigon, wawa, marathon, heron bay, elliot lake, lake superior pronivcial park, montreal river, echo bay, lion beachfront walk, espanola, sudbury, lake nipissing, parry sound, wabi bay, french river provincial park, white river, old woman bay, mississauga, hamilton, st catherine, katherine cove, sinclair cove, voyageur trail, new liskeard, musselmans lake, camppark resorts niagara falls, toronto, 1000 islands boat trip from gananoque, 1000 Island dressing, johnstown, percy lake, central standard time zone, ignace, sault ste marie, wabigoon lakes, agimak lake& beach, rossport, terrace bay, pays plat, thunder bay, the great lakes-superior, huron, ontario & dipping my toe in them, niagara on the lake, Niagara Falls and the magnificent Maid of the Mist boat trip, Sinclair cove, mounties, ottawa ontario's capital, aguasarbon falls, lake superior national park, latchford, spanish, temigami, temiskaming shores, bobbie rosenfeld olympian & park, whitchurch-stouffville and a potential parking fine, niagara botanical gardens, floral clock, devils hole whirlpool, St Lawrence river, gananoque town and harbor, rideau falls, river and canal, byward market, haileybury the home of Annie's rellies, MacDonald Cartier Bridge to Quebec Province & all ports in between. We have been from one side of Canada to the other, hey did I mention that? 😉 taken by a kind tourist after 3 failed selfie attempts, smile 120610 camp park resorts niagara falls 1/188 Boldt Castle within 1000 Islands George Boldt’s devotion to his wife Louise became one of North America’s most enduring love stories. A Prussian immigrant who rose to fame as the proprietor of New York’s Waldorf‑Astoria, Boldt set out in 1900 to build a full‑scale Rhineland‑style castle on Heart Island as a grand tribute to her. More than 300 craftsmen worked on the six‑storey, 120‑room masterpiece, complete with tunnels, Italian gardens, a powerhouse, a children’s playhouse and elaborate stonework. Every detail was designed to celebrate the woman who had supported him from his earliest days. Construction stopped abruptly in 1904 when Louise died suddenly, and Boldt, heartbroken, never returned to the island. The unfinished castle stood untouched for decades, a silent monument to their love, before later restoration brought it back to life for visitors.

  • 2013 Singapore Travel Blog | Holiday 1995-2024 | Third Holiday of a Lifetime Asian Trip

    A real 2013 travel diary across Malaysia, New Zealand, Australia and Singapore. Photos, stories and motorhome adventures from a once‑in‑a‑lifetime trip done 3 times. Singapore Travel Blog 2013 – Family Adventures, City Highlights & Photo Diary Singapore 2013 Including spending time with family , Jurong Bird Park, Marina Bay Sands, Gardens by The Bay, Raffles one visit 7th-21st April, 14 days in total Arrived slightly earlier than expected due to a time change in our Quantas flight into Singapore that everyone knew about apart from us. Absolutely lovely to meet up with the newest Mr & Mrs Hellinger again and spend 2 weeks with them. So we have a much better feel for life in Singapore and it makes you feel closer to folk if you have seen where they live, eat and hang out.Singapore is a very modern country / city with fabulous architecture and eateries to die for. Someone coined the phrase that Singaporeans eat 24/7. Whilst staying with Doug & Phoenix in the lovely Geylang East we had the opportunity to see many of the tourist highlights whilst they were at work and see them in the evening for some lovely food. They looked after us so well. In the middle weekend we had a great family trip away across the border back into Malaysia & Melaka. See our diary and pictures both here and under Malaysia. Big love to Doug &Phoenix. We have been through Singapore many times in the past , 1995 & 2008 but never stayed so it was lovely to do so this time. After 2013 we have revisited in 2014 & 2019 HIGHLIGHTS:- Spending time with Doug & Phoenix Geylang swimming pool & library Food, MRT, MBS..... oh and TLAs Gardens by the Bay,Botanic Gardens Clarke Quay & 2 river cruises (day & night) Jurong Bird Park The long bar @ Raffles Hotel & Singapore Slings Durian LOWLIGHTS:- Bad tummy on last night Saying goodbye Singapore with Family, Meeting up with the new Mr & Mrs. Douglas Read the Travel Blog Diaries, Look at the Travel Blog Slideshows, See the You Tube Videos, Use the 2013 CHOICES MENU to Explore, 3 Days at a Time (mostly) Have Fun, This travel blog is referenced as our 3rd Holiday of a Lifetime to cover our trips in 2007/8 (Downunder) & 2010 (Across Canada), we have since had a 4th in 2017 (Downunder) All the usual travel blog information can be found here. and for Singapore it is broken down into Hop On Hop off bus travel, trips to Sentosa Island, Jurong Bird Park and the Little India area of Singapore. PLAY SINGAPORE, Hop On Hop Off (HOHO) Bus Day 1, Geylang, 7-9 April 2013 Hop On Hop Off bus booked for 2 days, this was day 1 and covered Suntec City, Bugis, St Andrews, Cathedral, Cricket ground and all major sights since we did a whole trip around, first time around to get our bearings. What else does the bus cover? Here you go. Covered MRT to Suntec City to pick up the bus, then amongst others Geylang, family, eating out, trying durian, Clarke Quay, Singapore River there are 5 waterways in Singapore, Marina Bay Sands Hotel, The Singapore Flyer, The singaore Formula 1 grand prix track, all the wonderful architecture, rain, covering amongst others 175 selective slideshow images, shop houses, river boat cruises, the Merlion, colonial hotels and much much more, see the images. Plus visiting family in Geylang and being tourists on the Hop On Hop Off bus ,Singapore 7-9 Apr 2013, Geylang area & HOHO bus, family fun, Geylang, arriving 2 hours early from Perth, catching taxi to family, east avenue, foo hai chan monastery, the protector dharma, dharma = truth or reality, MRT = mass rapid transport system, sri shriven temple, MRT stations, aljunied, paya lebar, dhoby ghaut, markets, suntec city, cross street, raffles place, raffles, club street, old hill police station, yachts, merlion, marina bay sands, Clarke quay, fort canning, shop houses, old colonial buildings, F1 grand prix, art and science, Singapore flyer, gardens by the bay (GBTB) Local info, very useful we found #humour #hintsandtips Kopi-C-kosong = Coffee with evaporated milk but no sugar. The “kosong” means “nothing” in Malay. 6) Kopi-O = Coffee with sugar only which is “black coffee” in layman's term. 7) Kopi-O-kosong = Coffee without sugar or milk, note the "C" stands for carnation milk my all time fave restuarant in geylang, lamb bbq who is winning the race 1/88 Sunday April 7th 2013 Summary, fly to Singapore depart Perth 11.55 a.m. Arrive Singapore 17.25 a.m. Note that got changed read on! We rang for a taxi from the Wattle Grove Motel, 6.9 kilometers from Perth airport in Western Australia, at 7.30 a.m. and it arrived quickly. We got to the airport in 20 minutes and found that the flight time had been changed to 9.55 a.m. i.e., 2 hours earlier with no notification that we had received from Quantas nor or tour operator. It turned out later when I contacted our tour operator they had sent an email which we never received as travelling for so long. Not even in our spam folder. We thought we had 3 hours to kill at the airport when in fact we were boarding in less than ½ an hour. Really good job we went to the airport early as we were up already. Not pleased but so happy we did arrive early as we would have missed the flight all together. The flight took 5 ½ hours to Singapore. Rang Doug as clearly, he was not there to meet us as he had our original time of arrival. So, we got a taxi to their flat instead. They were stood outside to meet us when the taxi arrived and guide us to the lift with our luggage. It was so nice to see them again after the Wedding looking so happy and relaxed. They took us out to dinner to a local Geylang seafood restaurant and then gave us a brief guided tour of their area around the apartment block. It was very hot and humid. The dinner was very nice with the local Singaporean delicacy, black pepper crab and lots of other dishes. Quite a feast. Doug pointed out their local swimming pool complex, the local library, shops, hawker food centre and then we all walked back to their flat past a Hindu Mosque, a Buddhist Temple, both of which were very interesting and ornate. The Buddhist temple had a monastery attached. Tired as it had been a long day and even though the time zones are the same we were tired from the travel and Doug & Phoenix had work the next day. They gave us the keys to the flat so we could come and go as we pleased in the day. Monday April 8th 2013 Summary, Geylang, very hot and humid Spent the morning doing washing and communication with everyone on the internet to say we had safely arrived with D&P in Singapore. We were both dripping with sweat the whole time as our bodies not used to the humidity as yet, maybe they never will be. It is tropical heat as Singapore is on the equator. We visited D&P’s local swimming pool at 2.20 p.m. Found out it closes on Monday morning for cleaning but reopened at 2.30 p.m. so not long to wait. Now this is lovely, we got OAP tickets 50 cents each for the whole day or 25 pence English, amazing they kindly treat anyone who is over 55 as a pensioner in Singapore. We had a refreshing swim initially and the pool was empty until a class of school kids arrived for a lesson. Then there were storm clouds and thunder, so everyone had to get out of the pool. No risks are taken in Singapore especially if there is a risk of lightening. We sat undercover and read our books. We chatted to a friendly local lifeguard who gave us free bottles of chilled water which was most refreshing. We then had a late lunch in the Thai restaurant nearby the pool. We chatted to a man from California who was a tourist. We then returned to the flat and waited for D&P to return from work. They took us to Geylang East Central, we walked and to a restaurant that did barbeque food at each table. It was a Chinese restaurant, and we had a whole leg of lamb with a spiced outer crust that had been marinated and mostly cooked out the back, along with other dishes they bought to the table. Once at the table we continued to cook it on the table BBQ / firepit, never seen anything like it as good or since as it was charcoal in a pit on the table. Keef still rates this as the best lamb meal he has ever had, praise indeed. The whole meal was so nice, we both really enjoyed it. Everyone seems to eat out in Singapore at restaurants and cafes, the city that eats 24 by 7 as the locals say. The streets are all very busy and hectic, thronged with people as we walked back to the flat at 10.30 p.m. We walked past lots of interesting fruit stall and saw some strange vegetables we had never encountered before. It’s what I love about going to different places one should always immerse oneself in the cultures and customs, it’s what is just so interesting. Tuesday April 9th 2013 Summary, Geylang and then the Hop on Hop Off (HO-HO) Bus Day 1 from Suntec City. We got into central Singapore by the MRT, Mass Raid Transport system, from Aljunied station which was a short walk from Doug & Phoenix’s flat. The NRT is clean and modern, you are not allowed to eat or drink on the trains or the station platforms and be fined if caught. We booked tickets at 12.05 p.m. for the 48-hour HO-HO tourist bus. The cost was $39 per person and included a river cruise and coach to Sentosa Island. We got on the heritage tour bus which took about an hour around to get our bearings. It went through the older areas of central Singapore and we had ear phones for the commentary, available in a variety of languages, not surprisingly we chose English, tee-hee. Then we got on a different hop on, hop off bus which did the city tour including the Central Business District (CBD to all Kiwi’s and Aussies). It went through the shopping districts, Orchard Road, all designer shops, clothing etc. and around the marina, we saw Marina Bay Sands hotel (MBS) which Singapore is famous for, the infinity pool on the top is quite a landmark and a feat of design and engineering, curved and sleek. There were floating football pitches, Clarke Quay, the Merlion and lots of both colonial and unusual architect designed buildings, all in all a real feast for the eyes and senses. We had lunch at a café on Olive Grove, Suntec City shopping mall, panini with tuna mayo, cake and a drink costing $8 each. We then got soaked on the bus tour after lunch as there was a tropical storm with thunder and lightning, about the same time as yesterdays at the pool, maybe this will become a recurring theme. We were on top of the open topped bus which had a small, covered section at the back, all customers tried to huddle in there to keep dry, but it just wasn’t a large enough covering for all. Still the downpour certainly cooled the humidity levels. We had coffee (kopi-c-kosong) in the café next to the tour start and tried to dry off. We then did the included river cruise at Clarke Quay, quite touristy but interesting for the shop houses along the Singapore Riverbank and the old ferries we were carried on. It took us right up as far as MBD , the Art and Science Museum and the Merlion water fountain. We ate in the food hall in Suntec city mall in the evening and got back on the MRT after all the commuters had returned from work., although it was still busy in the evening. Doug goes to the gym every Tuesday evening. SINGAPORE, Little India, 18-21 April 2013, to the 1* Michelin Street Food, sadly closed but not in 2017 Bugis, Little India, Nightime at Harbourfront and sadly leaving for UK, Singapore 18-21 Apr 2013, Bugis Centre, Little India, Night meal at Harbourfront or side, Keppel Island, Leaving 4 UK ,covering amongst others 57 selective slideshow images, ironman movie plugs, indoor craft markets, sir stamford raffles, governor, history boards, Singapore MRT, Harbourfront, Little India & Farrer Park MRT stations, Mustafa's which we have been to often, maybe not this time though, strange fruits, exotic vegetables, best samosa in the world, lotus flowers, nelumbo nucifera to give Indian Lotus flower it proper name, fascinating back streets, liitle india arcade in serangoon road, Arab Street, love Singapore it is so multi-cultural, traditional shop houses, looking across at Sentosa, Singapore at night time, shabu shabu restaurant, wagyu beef, hot pot, durian, king fruit, jack fruit, late evening volta, chinese bakery in Geylang (yummy), sadly having to leave family to return to UK love this pic coming out from dunlop street 1/29 Thursday April 18th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Bugis Shopping Centre, Little India, Arab Street area, Singapore Visited Bugis shopping mall and bought 2 towels as a gift for D&P, from a large department store. Bugis Centre is one of the biggest shopping malls in Singapore and take our word for it there are a lot of them. It is on so many levels and you could easily get lost. We had lunch at Nando’s in the Bugis Centre which was very nice, and in Keef’s case very spicy. Then we went to Little India on the MRT alighting at the Little India station stop. If we are going to Mustafa’s department store, we would get off at the Farrer Park stop, we would highly recommend it for just about everything at a reasonable price, it’s always busy and Keef buys their Samosa’s. It was very hot and humid again. We saw lots of fruit stalls with exotic fruits and other good and even saw a lot of lotus flowers. Anne bought some fabric and then we walked through the famous Little India Arcade. It was originally a market with stalls but has now been translated into a culturally exquisite arcade with all things Indian. It still retains a few old stalls but is now hugely touristy. We loved it. Keef bought what are probably the best Samosa in the world from here, even better than those at Nadi airport Fiji in 2007 and / or Mustafa’s department store on most of our trips to Singapore to visit family there. By now it was late in the afternoon, so we returned to the MRT station and then back to Aljunied and the flat. Phoenix returned from work, and we got back on the MRT to meet Doug at a restaurant near Arab Street, where there were lots of shop houses and many restaurants. Singapore is amazingly multi-cultural, Singaporeans, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, Malay, Arab, Bugis even the odd European, ha-ha. A little history here about Shophouses In Singapore, the shophouse is one of the most popular forms of local Singaporean architecture. It is symbolic of the heritage of Singapore, and as a result they are more commonly found in the more historic cities throughout Southeast Asia, Shophouses have a few features that make them distinctive from other buildings you may find in south-eastern Asia. They have a narrow face to look at, but they have a greater depth. Shophouses are a part of Singapore’s colonial history, stretching all the back to the 18th century. As Singapore started to grow in the 1960s, many Shophouses were flattened for new developments. Understanding the importance of conserving some it’s heritage, the 1970s and the start of the 1980s saw a change in policy. State owned shophouses along Murray Street and Tudor Court were renovated and restored to their original state which brought with it a change in perception as to the value of these pre-war buildings. The 1980s brought with it a renewed interest in preservation and conservation. A good example is the pedestrianisation of Emerald Hill Road in 1981. In 1986 the URA unveiled their Conservation Master Plan to renovate and restore Singapore’s historical areas. Starting with 9 Neil Road in 1987, it was a catalyst for increased restoration of Shophouses throughout the Tanjong Pagar precinct and other areas too. Heading towards the late 1980s, over 3200 building were earmarked for conservation in 10 historical districts across Singapore. Those districts were: Chinatown (Telok Ayer, Kreta Ayer, Tanjong Pagar and Bukit Pasoh), Little India, Kampong Glam, Singapore River (Boat Quay and Clarke Quay), Cairn hill and Emerald Hill. To date, conservation status has been given to over 7000 buildings in more than 100 areas. We love them. We had a lovely evening meal with D&P in Arab street and then walked through this splendid heritage area, we saw a beautiful mosque and old colonial buildings. When we returned to the MRT it was packed with people and it was 10.30 p.m. that’s the difference it’s so much cooler in the late evening and people like to relax, eat, chat and volta. Friday April 19th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Singapore Did more laundry, it rained in the morning, so we decided not to go swimming. Instead after visiting the local Chinese bakery to buy something for lunch, they do great breads and cakes, we took our e-books to the local library which was almost next door to the flat. The library is fully air conditioned and has very comfortable leather seats, plants, quiet rooms for private reading plus areas for magazines and newspapers. The Straits Times is a favourite. This is a much nicer library than our one at home, just so much more modern and funded. Lots of elderly Chinese people were asleep in there, bless! We saw a man trying to rob one of the people who was asleep until Keef gave him a long look, he stopped and left promptly. Appalling. Doug & Phoenix were out for the evening so Keef cooked us noodles with black peppered chicken, lovely. Saturday April 20th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Harbourfront, Singapore Phoenix must work on a Saturday morning 9-1 a.m. She works in a Chinese factory as their Finance Director. So we went swimming with Doug to his local Olympic sized pool. Doug did 30 lengths, and we did a few widths in the middle-sized pool, it’s just so refreshing to be in the cool water. Doug then left to meet and go shopping with Phoenix. We stayed at the pool to read our e-books. Then we all met up at 3 p.m. and walked to Geylang East main shopping road to taste some Durian fruit from a local stall. Keef liked it but Anne reserved judgement, thought it smelt like spring onions., looked the colour of mango but was quite custardy in texture. It does have a rather pungent smell and it is banned from the MRT in Singapore because of that smell and I remember back in the De Baron Hotel in Kuah Town on Langkawi in Malaysia there were signs on all the lifts saying it was banned for carrying inside. D&P like the fruit, it is extremely popular in Singapore, Malaysia & Thailand, and most other southeast Asian countries. In all these the smell is so strong it is banned from planes, trains, taxis, and lifts. We then got the MRT to Harbourfront station where D&P had booked a table at a Japanese restaurant. It was a shabu shabu restaurant where there was a hot plate on each table and a container with a meat and veg stock and you cooked your own thinly sliced beef (wagyu), chicken and vegetables. Wagyu beef was thinly cut a bit like Parma ham and is just so tender. It was a very nice meal that D&P treated us to. We then went for a walk along the harbour side and saw the cruise terminal and all the pretty lights across the bay to Sentosa Island. The palm trees were all lit up with fairly lights. We really liked Harbourfront as an area, shopping mall and views of the harbour. We also caught glimpses of Keppel Island. Sunday April 21st 2013 Summary, Geylang, Singapore plus sadly leaving family for UK at the end of an Epic HOLIDAY2013. Doug and Phoenix went to a large supermarket to do some food shopping and we stayed in the flat. Keef was ill with an upset stomach, maybe the Durian, who knows. Not so good as we were flying back to the UK in the evening. They bought back a Subways roll for Anne, but Keef did not eat anything. Phoenix made some crocodile soup. Watched some TV as we had done our packing earlier in the morning. We set off in the taxi to the airport, Changi with D&P. By now it was dark. We all got there about 8.30 p.m. We claimed tax back on some receipts that Phoenix had worth $16. We said our fond but slightly sad farewells with lots of hugs and kisses all round. We sadly won’t be seeing them again except for Skype until next February when they come over for Craig’s wedding. Our flight was at 10.50 p.m. i.e. a night flight with a faint hope of sleep, Not, it never works for both of us. The flight was delayed 20 minutes due to an alleged fault in the air conditioning unit (AC) at the back of the plane where we were sitting. It was not working; it became uncomfortably hot. Our conspiracy theory is they shut off the AC to conserve fuel and therefore save dosh whilst waiting to taxi. In hot climates that is very bad news. This was British Airways, not a nice journey, food, and cabin crew rubbish, we vowed to not fly with them again. It was a 13 ½ hour flight back to Heathrow where we arrived at 4.50 a.m. Tired but glad to be back after a truly memorable holiday, away for 3 months, January 22nd to April 23rd, we went on to see Mum for a couple of days in Ewell before returning the hire car to the East Midlands Airport. Nice to see the spring blossom and lambs again. SINGAPORE, Sentosa Island, 10-12 April 2013, then it was onto Melaka , Across the Border into Malaysia for 2 Days with Family Hop On Hop Off bus booked for 2 days, covered Raffles Hotel, Sentosa Island & the Singapore Botanic Gardens, Singapore 10-12 Apr 2013, Hop on Hop Off (HOHO) bus for 2 days, Raffles & Sentosa, plus Mass Rapid Transport System (MRT) to Singapore's wonderful and exotic Botanic Gardens, covering amongst others 172 selective slideshow images, MRT stations Aljunied, Dhoby Ghaut and Botanic gardens, Cluny Park Road with mega posh houses, Raffles hotel long room bar, courtyard, peanuts, tiffin, billiard room, Singapore slings, SunTec City Mall, palm valley, Sentosa island, resort world, hard rock café, Coach to Sentosa, 48 hour travel passes, Singapore port area, mist house, ginger area, shaw foundation symphony stage, lake with turtles swimming in it, water lilies, orchids, hire car JB, Sat Nav, Toll booths on Malaysian motorways, cannon ball tree, ancient clock, silosa beach, cable cars, buses, trams, sun, rain, humidity, bananas, Geylang east and community swimming pool, prep for trip to Malacca raffles hotel siloso beach sentosa 1/85 Wednesday April 10th 2013 Summary, Hop on Hop off bus day 2 including Raffles Hotel & Sentosa Island We used the MRT to go back into the city centre from Aljunied station to Dhoby Ghaut. We were using day 2 of our ticket for the hop on hop off bus. This time rather than going all the way around, as we now know the route, we got off at the famous Raffles Hotel. We wandered around downstairs and in the courtyards but only guests are allowed upstairs. It is a very old colonial hotel and as it is on Beach Road was literally that once before reclaimed land from the coast moved it somewhat inland. We bought some gifts and a tea towel for us in the Raffles Shop. We then went to the famous Long Bar and had a Singapore Sling $26 (£13.50 in 2013 prices, £16 by 2022) and a fruit punch $14. We shared both, that’s what love is. Very expensive for a cocktail but lovely and you just have to do it don’t you. We had fish and chips and lamb satay for lunch there in the Long Bar. Peanuts (monkey nuts in shells) on the tables, traditionally people break them open and nonchalantly drop the discarded shells on the floor. You get that distinctive crunch as you walk around the bar, ha-ha. You also , and this wasn’t hygienic, had birds who flew into the open bar, fans on ceilings and the cool breeze of open windows, to peck at both shells and nut pieces. The service in the bar was poor, speed wise, but the atmosphere was great. There were lots of tourists there and large groups of American businessmen drinking Singapore Slings all afternoon, obviously on company expenses, tee-hee. We then returned to Suntec city Mall on the bus and then got a different coach to Sentosa Island which was all part of our 48-hour voucher. The coach went past the Singapore port area, thousands of containers piled 8 or 9 high. Singapore is a very busy port as witnessed by the number of ships moored of Sentosa / East Coast Park. Sentosa was a themed purpose-built tourist island reclaimed from the sea. Full of mainly Chinese tourists, there are a huge number of casinos on the island which culturally is a huge draw for the Chinese nation. Witness the island of Macau. There were lots of rides and activities all of which cost money. Fountains everywhere, it was extremely hot and sunny today so dipping one’s hands in the colling fountain waters was a true delight. Not surprisingly Keef bought a T-shirt in the islands Hard Rock café shop. We walked around a bit and decided not to go into Universal studios, we are getting on a bit now, tee-hee, white knuckle isn’t what it used to be. We then took the free tram to the man-made beach and paddled in the sea with the background of container ships moored up off the coast. Bit weird. We then returned to the coach and the driver dropped us off in the wrong place on the way back to Suntec city, so we had to walk ½ mile back to the MRT station near Suntec city. We bought a sandwich on the way back to the flat. Yummy as hungry by then. Thursday April 11th 2013 Summary, Geylang and Singapore Botanic Gardens. Did laundry in the morning and then got the MRT and bus combo to the Botanic Gardens. It free to go in, we had lunch there in the café and then wandered around, it is a well-kept and stocked garden, everything is very tropical and very green. The lake in the centre has turtles swimming around. Just lovely. We then visited both the Ginger and Orchids gardens; they were both spectacular with amazingly exotic plants. We saw a turmeric tree, the spice comes from the root of the tree, it looked a bit like a banana palm. It was hot and humid in both these gardens which is what the plants love to thrive. We must have walked about 2 ½ to 3 miles around the Botanic gardens as we were there some 4 ½ hours. We then walked back to the MRT along Cluny Park Road with very posh houses and the French Embassy and ambassadors’ houses for many nations. It is clearly an exclusive area but well worth the stroll along despite our tiredness. We then got the MRT back to Geylang East to avoid the 5 p.m. rush hour but still packed with people and school kids, Singapore seems to always be mega busy. When D&P got home from work, we went swimming at the local pool at 8.30 p.m. It is an Olympic sized pool. Doug did 20 lengths, we pottered around doing widths in the medium sized pool. There was also a kids play pool with water apparatus. We then all ate in the nearby Hawker centre. Then we went to the supermarket to buy chicken and provisions for the trip to Malacca at the weekend, so looking forward to that. The supermarket was busy even at 10.30 p.m. Friday April 12th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Singapore to Melaka, Malaysia Did more laundry including D&Ps in ethe morning. Clothes get very sweaty here in Singapore, but they do dry on those poles hung out of the flat windows very quickly. We went swimming again early in the afternoon at the Geylang East community pool. We love this place and at 50 cents a go how could you not, the best place we know to cool off apart from maybe air-conditioned libraries. The sun was very intense today so lots of waterproof suntan lotion liberally applied. We returned to the flat after lunch at our new favourite Thai restaurant near the pool. Keef cooked black pepper marinated chicken pieces and added to salad for our evening meal this evening before swimming. Then after swimming he cooked a whole chicken and baked yam for D&P in their rotisserie oven. All the cooking made the kitchen unbearably hot; K was cooking in just shorts, no top. Phoenix had management meetings 2-5.30 at work but then rushed home after that. Doug got home before her and then we all sorted out our stuff to the weekend trip away to Melaka in Malaysia. After eating and a swim we caught a taxi to border control to cross over to Malaysia at Woodlands on the Singapore side and Johor Bharu (JB) on the Malaysian side. There was passport control on both sides with a ridge in between where we had to get a packed bus to get across it. It was totally grid locked with people everywhere, workers trying to get home for the weekend to see family, and it was hot and sweaty and just generally very unpleasant but worth it for our weekend away with D&P. Hot, humid, noisy, and packed buses and even though it was crammed with people we all managed somehow to get a seat, luxury. Then we got a taxi to the lady’s house Phoenix had been negotiating with to pick up the hire car. Keef drove the car using our Sat Nav to the guest house in Melaka which we finally reached at 1 a.m. There had been quite a hold up at the car hire stuff. Our Sat Nav helped on the motorway and with which turning to come off at as we headed north out of JB towards Melaka. There were entrance and exit toll booths on the motorway as travel on them we had to pay for, it wasn’t very expensive however and good raid surfaces. Because it took so long at the border crossing and picking up the hire car it was very late at night when we finally arrived but the Tea House owner, the very kind Mr. Li, had stayed up for us. Exhausted we all had showers and flopped into bed. 700‑Word Summary: 2013 Singapore Family Visit & Travel Diary The 2013 Singapore Family Visit & Travel Diary captures a warm, nostalgic return to one of Asia’s most vibrant cities, blending family time, sightseeing, and the unique rhythms of everyday Singapore life. The trip forms part of a wider long‑haul adventure that year, but Singapore stands out as a place of familiarity, comfort, and cultural richness. This diary reflects not just the places visited, but the atmosphere, the people, and the small moments that make travel meaningful. The journey begins with the family arriving in Singapore after time spent travelling through Malaysia, New Zealand, and Australia. Singapore immediately feels different — cleaner, more organised, and more structured than many of the destinations visited earlier in the year. There’s a sense of returning to a place that balances modernity with tradition, where the efficiency of the city blends seamlessly with its multicultural character. A major theme of the diary is family connection. Much of the visit centres around spending time with relatives living in Singapore, catching up over meals, exploring neighbourhoods together, and sharing stories. This personal layer gives the trip a deeper emotional resonance. It’s not just about ticking off attractions; it’s about reconnecting with people and places that hold meaning. The family base themselves in Geylang, a district known for its mix of traditional shophouses, food culture, and lively streets. The diary captures the sensory experience of the area — the colours, the heat, the bustle, and the unmistakable aroma of hawker food drifting through the air. Meals become a highlight of the trip, from simple breakfasts to evening feasts featuring local favourites. Singapore’s food culture is woven into the narrative as an essential part of daily life. Sightseeing forms another key thread. The family visit Gardens by the Bay, one of Singapore’s most iconic attractions. The Supertrees, Cloud Forest, and Flower Dome leave a strong impression, offering a futuristic yet serene escape from the city. The diary reflects on the scale and ambition of the gardens, noting how they blend engineering with nature in a way that feels uniquely Singaporean. Another memorable stop is Jurong Bird Park, a long‑standing favourite for families. The diary describes the colourful aviaries, the interactive shows, and the sheer variety of birdlife. It’s a nostalgic visit — the kind of place that evokes childhood memories while still offering something new with each return. The trip also includes time on Sentosa, Singapore’s dedicated island of leisure and entertainment. Whether relaxing on the beach, exploring attractions, or simply enjoying the views back toward the mainland, Sentosa adds a lighter, holiday‑style contrast to the more urban parts of the trip. The diary captures the island’s playful energy and the sense of escape it provides. Throughout the narrative, photography plays a central role. The diary is structured around images — street scenes, family moments, city skylines, nature shots, and snapshots of daily life. These photos help tell the story visually, giving readers a sense of being there. They also reflect the KHWD style: honest, personal, and rooted in real experiences rather than polished tourism. Music also features, with playlists accompanying the diary. These tracks act as a soundtrack to the journey, adding emotional texture and helping to anchor memories to specific moments. It’s a small but distinctive detail that gives the diary personality. The summary of the trip emphasises how Singapore serves as both a destination and a touchstone — a place that feels familiar yet always evolving. The city’s blend of cultures, its food, its architecture, and its people all contribute to a sense of belonging. Even short visits feel rich and meaningful. By the end of the diary, the family prepare to continue their travels, but Singapore leaves a lasting impression. The visit reinforces the importance of family ties, the joy of shared experiences, and the value of returning to places that hold personal significance. The 2013 Singapore diary stands as a warm, detailed snapshot of a city that continues to inspire, comfort, and surprise — a place where memories are made and remade with each visit. 🌴 Dreaming of Singaporean Travel? 2013 Singapore Family Visit & Travel Diary Step into the vibrant heart of Singapore with this warm and nostalgic travel diary from our 2013 family visit. This long‑haul stop became one of the most memorable parts of our year of adventures, blending family time, iconic attractions, and the everyday rhythms that make Singapore such a captivating place to return to again and again. Our journey begins in the lively district of Geylang, where colourful shophouses, bustling streets, and the irresistible pull of hawker food set the tone for our stay. Singapore has a way of wrapping you in its energy from the moment you arrive — the heat, the scents, the mix of cultures, and the sense of order woven into the city’s fast pace. For us, this visit wasn’t just about sightseeing; it was about reconnecting with family, sharing meals, and rediscovering the places that hold personal meaning. Food plays a starring role throughout the diary. From simple breakfasts to late‑night snacks, Singapore’s culinary scene becomes a thread that ties the whole trip together. Whether it’s a steaming bowl of noodles, a plate of satay, or a sweet treat from a local bakery, every meal becomes a moment worth remembering. Pinterest readers who love food, culture, and authentic travel moments will find plenty to enjoy here. Of course, no visit to Singapore is complete without exploring its world‑c lass attractions. One of the highlights of our trip was Gardens by the Bay, a futuristic wonderland where nature and architecture blend seamlessly. The towering Supertrees, the misty Cloud Forest, and the vibrant Flower Dome left us in awe. These spaces feel almost otherworldly, and the diary captures the sense of wonder that comes with wandering through them. We also spent time at Jurong Bird Park, a classic family favourite. With its colourful aviaries, interactive shows, and peaceful walking paths, it’s a place that brings out the childlike joy in everyone. The diary reflects on the nostalgia of returning to a spot visited in earlier years, while still discovering new experiences along the way. Another highlight was Sentosa, Singapore’s island playground. Whether relaxing on the beach, exploring attractions, or simply enjoying the views back toward the mainland, Sentosa added a fun, holiday‑style contrast to the more urban parts of the trip. It’s the kind of place that invites you to slow down, soak up the sun, and enjoy the moment. Throughout the diary, photography plays a central role. The page is filled with snapshots of daily life, city skylines, nature scenes, and family moments — all captured in the honest, personal KHWD style. These images help tell the story visually, making the diary perfect for Pinterest users who love travel inspiration boards, family memories, and real‑life adventures. This 2013 Singapore diary is more than a travel log — it’s a heartfelt look at a city that continues to evolve while still feeling familiar. It’s about family, culture, food, and the joy of returning to a place that always feels welcoming. If you’re dreaming of Singapore, planning a future trip, or simply love exploring the world through stories and photos, this diary offers a rich, colourful journey worth saving to your Pinterest travel boards. SINGAPORE, Jurong Bird Park and Gardens by the Bay,15-17 April 2013, after returning from Melaka Malaysia Post Malacca, Gardens by the Bay, Jurong Bird Park, Geylang Swimming, Singapore 15-17 Apr 2013, Gardens by the Bay, Jurong Bird Park (by 2022 part of the Mandai Wildlife Reserve or as we used to call it "Singapore zoo"), covering amongst others 172 selective slideshow images, marina bay & Jurong east MRT stations, South African gardens, baobab & bottle trees, Flowers , trees and perfumes from World climate zones, The Cloud Rainforest, easter eggs, pollen café, marina bay sands hotel, Buddhist monks, Singapore flyer, Art & Science Museum, Geylang swimming pool, supermarket fun, multiple tropical flowers, Jurong, pool amphitheater, hornbills, toucans, Lorikeet loft & walkway, waterfalls, cloud forest with mist and ferns, trams, model railways, sunsets, Singapore at night, funnels at night, boardwalk by 2020 moved to singapore zoo area buddhist monk tourist 1/86 Monday April 15th 2013 Summary, Geylang. Phoenix went to work but Doug was off sick as he also had food poisoning and was ill during the night after our weekend away in Melaka. Annie did more laundry; in this humidity it is endless, indeed eventually (bit like Darwin in Australia) jour clothing just disintegrates. In the morning we stayed with Doug who looked poorly having been sick all night. He rang his work to tell them he was ill and would not be coming in today. Keef caught up with emails and backed up all our holiday photos for safe keeping. Would hate to lose them. Doug had a nap but still felt ill so went to the doctors for a sick note. Annie did laundry / ironing again. 2.30 p.m. we went to the Geylang pool for a swim, becoming regulars these days, know a few of the lifeguards. Doug rang at 4 p.m. to ask us to buy some eggs and bottled water from the supermarket on the way back. We met P at the supermarket as she had left work early to look after Doug. He had been sick again in the afternoon and when we got back to the flat with Phoenix he was stretched out on the sofa in the lounge. We think, like P, the food poisoning was either from the street kebabs and / or the shellfish in Melaka, but honestly who knows. Neither K nor A were ill, and we didn’t eat either of those two options. We had jacket potatoes, grapes and nuts for tea and D&P had steamed fish, rice and greens. He perked up a bit after that and looked much better. He said his body ached from being sick so often, understandably stretching your stomach muscles. We watched telly together, a Korean channel with a game show and then a programme like Dr Who but set in ancient Korea, very different but educational. Then we had showers, a great way to cool at the end of the day and then bed. Tuesday April 16th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Singapore, Gardens by the Bay Laundry and ironing initially for Annie, Keef made cheese cobs and we took apples for lunch. As Doug was recovered and they were both back at work today we took the MRT train from Aljunied station to Gardens by the Bay as Doug had kindly bought us tickets and a river cruise as our Xmas presents. We got a free shuttle car from the MRT station to the Ticket Office, how cool is that? We had our lunch sitting on a lovely long wooden tree bench under fans at the entrance. Most relaxing and enjoyable. We then went into one of the two huge glass domes that are Singapore’s Gardens by the Bay. The flower gardens inside were laid out in different climate zones with trees and flowers from the countries in those parts of the world. Lovely flowers, loved the hibiscus trees in large pots , baobab trees, colourful Mediterranean flowers etc. Just so much to look at and admire, puts our limited gardening skills to shame, tee-hee but I guess we have less of a budget. They did not have any frangipani trees surprisingly. We loved the flowers and perfumes coming from every section. We then had coffee in the Pollen café, appropriately named, somewhat expensive in there but very nice and classy. We met a woman from Adelaide who now lives in Singapore and had done for 15 years. Quite interesting, the average salary was $1,500 per month but many people were on less around $800 per month so she said. Then we went into the second glass dome which was plants in rainforests and called the cloud forest. It had a fantastic indoor waterfall and lots of water and mist everywhere, orchids, bromeliads, quinine trees, mosses, ferns, busy lizzies etc. all very exotic. We got the lift to the top of the Cloud Forest and walked along the gantries suspended out of the central garden pillar to the ground floor, the walkways afforded such a close-up view and atmospheric experience. So worth going, will remember the experience forever. The whole thing looked like the Hanging Garden of Babylon. Back on the ground level we then watched on the big screen a video about climate change effecting the world habitat in the future. This was 2013, by 2022 COP 26 was finally doing something about it, do hope we as a world aren’t too late. We then visited the Marina Bay Sands hotel, a definite Singaporean icon. From the foyer of the hotel as it was now dark, we walked through to the Marina Bay mall for dinner in a pizza restaurant, it was very expensive but yummy. There are lots of designer shops in the mall, we watched a laser light show at 9.30 p.m. just outside by the Art & Science Museum on the bay. It lasted about 10 minutes and projected laser light streams onto MBS, very atmospheric. We then got the MRT back to Aljunied station and the flat and chatted to D&P about our day and how much we had enjoyed it. Doug had been to an Amazon works seminar all day. Wednesday April 17th 2013 Summary, Geylang, Singapore, Jurong Bird Park Annie did ironing and laundry 8.40-11.20 a.m. after a huge tropical storm had hit at 6.50 a.m. Thunder, lightning and sheet rain coming in onto the floor even though the flat is on the 10th floor. Doug had to shut all the windows to keep it out which increased the humidity inside 10-fold, however once it stopped and the windows were reopened, we really felt the benefit as it reduced the humidity and temperature dramatically, however as ever in Singapore that benefit didn’t last long, we are on the equator. We then went to Jurong Bird Park using the MRT to Jurong East station. We had to get a bus for a short trip from the train station to the bird park entrance. Arriving at 2.30 p.m. The weather was now full hot and humid again. We saw penguins, flamingoes, parrots, scarlet ibis, and lots of other tropical birds. We used the parks road train to get around the various sectors. We sat and watched one of the shows which featured a giant hornbill called Alfred, he was a massive bird but well trained. The show also featured a talking and singing cockatoo, parrots flying around the auditorium and flamingoes and pelicans, all very entertaining as well as colourful. We really enjoyed the show. The park closed at 6 p.m. so we left then and got a combination of the bus followed by the train back to the city centre. We then took the train to Clarke Quay so we could redo the river boat cruise but this time at night, which was very atmospheric. This was another part of our Christmas present from D&P. After a relaxing cruise and seeing all the lights we returned to the flat late evening, a lovely day. Jurong Bird Park & Singapore Travel Diary This three‑day Singapore travel diary (15–17 April 2013) captures a vivid slice of life in Geylang while exploring two of Singapore’s most iconic attractions: Gardens by the Bay and Jurong Bird Park. Blending family life, daily routines, tropical weather, and immersive sightseeing, the diary offers a rich, authentic look at Singapore beyond the typical tourist itinerary. It’s an ideal resource for travellers researching Singapore family holidays, Jurong Bird Park reviews, or Gardens by the Bay experiences. Life in Geylang: Heat, Humidity & Everyday Singapore The diary begins with a grounded look at daily life in Geylang, a neighbourhood known for its colourful streets, food culture, and lived‑in authenticity. Much of the first day revolves around caring for Doug, who is recovering from food poisoning after a weekend in Melaka. This slice‑of‑life detail adds realism and shows the slower, domestic side of long‑term travel in Singapore. Laundry, ironing, supermarket trips, and cooling off at the Geylang Swimming Pool paint a picture of what it’s like to stay in Singapore rather than simply pass through. The tropical humidity is a recurring theme — clothes take ages to dry, storms roll in dramatically, and the heat returns just as quickly as it disappears. These details help readers understand the climate challenges of travelling in equatorial Southeast Asia. Gardens by the Bay: A Full Day of Iconic Singapore On 16 April, the diary shifts into full sightseeing mode with a complete day at Gardens by the Bay, one of Singapore’s most famous attractions and a major SEO keyword for travel planners. The journey begins with an MRT ride from Aljunied to Marina Bay, followed by a free shuttle to the entrance — a useful detail for visitors researching how to get to Gardens by the Bay. The couple enjoy lunch under cooling fans before entering the two massive conservatories. Flower Dome Inside the Flower Dome, the diary highlights: Mediterranean gardens Baobab and bottle trees Hibiscus and tropical blooms Fragrant climate‑zone displays The narrative emphasises the scale, beauty, and immersive design of the dome — ideal for readers searching for Flower Dome reviews or what to expect at Gardens by the Bay. Cloud Forest The Cloud Forest is described as a standout experience, with: A towering indoor waterfall Mist‑filled walkways Orchids, bromeliads, ferns, and rainforest plants Elevated gantries offering dramatic views The diary compares the structure to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, reinforcing its visual impact. A climate‑change video exhibit adds educational depth, making this section valuable for eco‑travel and sustainability‑focused searches. Marina Bay Sands & Evening Activities After the conservatories, the couple visit Marina Bay Sands, explore the luxury mall, enjoy dinner, and watch the 9:30 p.m. laser show by the ArtScience Museum. These details support SEO queries like Marina Bay Sands evening activities, Singapore light shows, and what to do at Marina Bay at night. Jurong Bird Park: A Classic Singapore Wildlife Experience The diary’s final day (17 April) focuses on Jurong Bird Park, a beloved Singapore attraction that, by 2022, became part of the Mandai Wildlife Reserve. This section is rich with SEO‑friendly content for travellers researching Jurong Bird Park reviews, Jurong Bird Park shows, or how to get to Jurong Bird Park. After a dramatic early‑morning tropical storm, the couple take the MRT to Jurong East, then a short bus ride to the park entrance. The visit includes: Bird Exhibits Penguins Flamingos Parrots Scarlet ibis Lorikeets Tropical aviaries The diary highlights the park’s lush landscaping, waterfalls, and humid rainforest atmosphere — ideal for readers comparing Singapore’s wildlife attractions. Bird Shows A major highlight is the amphitheatre show featuring: Alfred the giant hornbill A singing cockatoo Free‑flying parrots Flamingos and pelicans These details help the page rank for Jurong Bird Park show times, hornbill show Singapore, and similar queries. Evening River Cruise After the park closes at 6 p.m., the couple head to Clarke Quay for a nighttime river cruise — another Christmas gift from family. The illuminated skyline, bridges, and waterfront architecture create a memorable end to the day and add SEO value for Singapore river cruise reviews and Clarke Quay at night. A Rich, Realistic Singapore Travel Snapshot Across these three days, the diary blends: Family life Local culture Iconic attractions Weather experiences Public transport tips Honest reflections This makes it a strong choice for anyone planning a Singapore itinerary , researching Jurong Bird Park , or exploring Gardens by the Bay . Little India 13 Singapore travel summary

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