I quite badly want to go cycling in Holland on a gorgeous old bike and ride through some tulips. I don't actually see me having much luck here, as I'm unlikely to do it by myself and Kirby isn't much of a bike rider due to her funny knees. The imagery of it is just so gorgeous.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Favourite Places (#3)
I spent the first part of last year traveling around the South Island of New Zealand with my mum, dad and sister in a beat up car they called Westinghouse with a navigator they called Polly. We got to see some pretty amazing natural sites like Fox Glacier and Milford Sound, but as much as nature interests and amazes me I am still drawn to urban spaces. Dunedin was one of my favourite places during the trip. After our family tour of the Cadbury factory I got to leave my family and explore the place by myself, it's a gorgeous place with numerous alley ways and side streets and great steep roads that lead you to places where you can stare out over the city. I also came across some really interesting street art that was both beautiful and disturbing at the same time. I would love to go back to Dunedin one day and spend some more time roaming the streets and perhaps experiencing it a bit more than I was able to the last time.
Labels:
Cadbury World,
Dunedin,
Fox Glacier,
Milford Sound,
New Zealand,
Red Door,
Street Art
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Places to Visit (#11)
The Georgia Aquarium is apparently the largest aquarium in the world. It has Whale Sharks and Beluga whales as some of it's most famous attractions as well as thousands of other sea creatures. They even have opportunities where you can spend a night camping at the aquarium or dive or snorkel with the whale sharks. Aquariums walk the fine line between amazing me and scaring the hell out of me, but I still think I'd like to go.
Labels:
America,
Aquarium,
Atlanta,
Beluga Whales,
Georgia Aquarium,
scuba diving,
Snorkling,
Under water,
Whale Sharks
Places to Visit (#10)
Labels:
America,
Atlanta,
Cherry Coke,
Grape Fanta,
Las Vegas,
Pepsi,
Willy Wonka,
World of Coca Cola
Places to Visit (#9)
Basically this place looks like heaven. It called Peanut Butter & Co is in New York and has a selection and has a selection of fairly normal sandwich choices (P&J, Fluffernutter, honey with banana and Peanut butter.. and bacon), but then it has amazing things like Spicy Peanut Butter and chilled grilled chicken, with a little bit of pineapple jam. Or Cinnamon-Raisin Peanut Butter and vanilla cream cheese, stuffed with crisp apple slices. If you're jaw is not already on the ground with a puddle of drool perhaps you need to wash it all down with a Fluffernutter Shake! Apart from Bison, I think that my favourite thing about America is their obsession with putting peanut butter in almost anything. Drooooool. Check out their menu!
P.S. Thank you Rhiannon for suggesting this to me!!!
Labels:
Drool,
Eating,
Fluffernutter,
Food,
New York,
Peanut Butter,
Peanut Butter and Co
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Places to Shop (#4)
This is the Apple store in New York, and it looks amazing! We don't have an Apple store in Adelaide, Next Byte is the next big thing. While all the products are obviously the same it's not the same thing at all. I don't think I've actually ever been into an Apple store before in my life. So we will definitely be paying a visit to the one in New York. Although this is places to shop not places to visit and New York probably wouldn't be the first place I'd be likely to shop. We'd probably stop in the the closest Apple store when we first touch down so that we can pick up a nice iPod Classic (as long as they are still around) and perhaps a nice shiny new iPad for me.
Places to Shop (#3)
Urban Outfitters is another one of those stores that either possibly doesn't ship to Australia or has incredible shipping fees. I think I once tried to order from the UK site and it claimed it would cost me £75 to ship a £15 t-shirt. Saying that I like a lot of their stuff and when you're actually buying it in America is seems very reasonably priced. There isn't really an equivalent sort of store in Adelaide from what I can tell. They are once again all throughout America so I don't really care which one we go to.
Labels:
Adelaide,
America,
Postage,
Shopping,
Urban Outfitters
iPad
As previously stated I would like an iPad. Part of me wants one because they are incredibly gorgeous and sexy, but there are also practical reasons why I want them.
- Frankie Magazine has an online subscription. I could subscribe to this and view it on my iPad when overseas because I wont want to be searching for the magazines over there and carting them around with me.
- Lonely Planet offers PDF Guidebook Chapters. This would be great for places like South America where we are visiting a couple of countries but not spending that much time there. I could download the chapter on El Salvador for $7 or buy the guidebook for $50. Plus it eliminates the need to carry around loads of unneeded guidebooks.
- Superfuture has PDF travel guides that you can download. It would be much handier having these downloaded onto an iPad rather than carrying around pieces of paper that would get damaged and lost.
- I could store movies on it (At least I'm fairly sure I could). This would be handy for plane rides or the long car trips if I needed to zone out from everyone else.
I'm sure there will actually be other reasons, but it really does seem like a great device to me. Sure I can do all of these things on either my iPhone or my Macbook Pro (Yes I was purposely pointing out my Mac obsession there), but the iPad is that perfect portable size inbetween. They haven't even been released in Australia yet, but if I were to get one it would probably be one of those things that is best waiting until America anyway.
- Frankie Magazine has an online subscription. I could subscribe to this and view it on my iPad when overseas because I wont want to be searching for the magazines over there and carting them around with me.
- Lonely Planet offers PDF Guidebook Chapters. This would be great for places like South America where we are visiting a couple of countries but not spending that much time there. I could download the chapter on El Salvador for $7 or buy the guidebook for $50. Plus it eliminates the need to carry around loads of unneeded guidebooks.
- Superfuture has PDF travel guides that you can download. It would be much handier having these downloaded onto an iPad rather than carrying around pieces of paper that would get damaged and lost.
- I could store movies on it (At least I'm fairly sure I could). This would be handy for plane rides or the long car trips if I needed to zone out from everyone else.
I'm sure there will actually be other reasons, but it really does seem like a great device to me. Sure I can do all of these things on either my iPhone or my Macbook Pro (Yes I was purposely pointing out my Mac obsession there), but the iPad is that perfect portable size inbetween. They haven't even been released in Australia yet, but if I were to get one it would probably be one of those things that is best waiting until America anyway.
Labels:
Apple,
Frankie Magazine,
Guidebooks,
ipad,
iPhone,
Lonely Planet,
Macbook,
PDFs,
Super Future
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Places to Shop (#2)
I don't have a particular Cath Kidston store to visit, but I definitely need to spend a lot of time inside at least one of them. I so far haven't actually ordered myself anything off of the site, postage is preposterous and anything that you can buy in Australia is marked up so highly that there is no way I would buy any of her stuff locally. This is why I find myself in a predicament because I am absolutely in love with everything Cath Kidston creates whether it be clothes, home wares, bedding, accessories or bags. I think that purchases from here will deffinately send me towards excess baggage when I do leave the UK (At least it will be very pretty baggage though!).
Places to Shop (#1)
In America I plan on spending squillions of dollars at the American Apparel store in LA. I say LA because that's where it originated and while they are all over the country everything is going to be exactly the same everywhere so I may as well go where it all started. We now have American Apparel here in Adelaide, but despite the exchange rate everything is double what it would cost in the US. I'm not one for their super short shorts or their midriff tops, but I love their stockings and their plain tees and skirts. I'm looking forward to buying American Apparel in a country where it actually is affordable clothing.
Things to Buy (#3)
Okay, so this isn't exactly a thing to buy... because this baby is all mine! At least it will be for my birthday at the end of this year. It's called the DSC-HX5V, and I got it today after a Sony product night where I got it at the discounted price of $379 as opposed to the SRP of $629.
It was a tough decision because I was previously looking at buying a Panasonic, mainly due to their Leica lens and the fact that Canon just hadn't managed to woo me with any of their point and shoot high zoom cameras (Don't worry, I'm still looking at you Mr. Canon DSLR). I hadn't even considered a Sony. It has a Sony G series lens which are generally used in the DSLR lenses, Full HD Video, GPS functions so that during the trip I wont get mixed up over where certain photos were taken, Intelligent Sweep Panorama, and a 10x Optical Zoom. Some good features and ones that are almost identical to the Panasonic. I can't wait to get my hands on it, although I don't think I'll be using it too much for my trip because I don't want it to meet the same fate as some of my other cameras.
It was a tough decision because I was previously looking at buying a Panasonic, mainly due to their Leica lens and the fact that Canon just hadn't managed to woo me with any of their point and shoot high zoom cameras (Don't worry, I'm still looking at you Mr. Canon DSLR). I hadn't even considered a Sony. It has a Sony G series lens which are generally used in the DSLR lenses, Full HD Video, GPS functions so that during the trip I wont get mixed up over where certain photos were taken, Intelligent Sweep Panorama, and a 10x Optical Zoom. Some good features and ones that are almost identical to the Panasonic. I can't wait to get my hands on it, although I don't think I'll be using it too much for my trip because I don't want it to meet the same fate as some of my other cameras.
Labels:
Cameras,
Canon,
DSC-HXV5,
High Zoom Cameras,
panasonic lumix,
Sony
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Places to Stay (#1)
I have always been amazed by ice hotels, or by ice structures in general. When I was in New Zealand last year we went to an ice bar in Queenstown, even though you were only in there for about an hour it was just an amazing feeling being in a room entirely made from ice, drinking from ice glasses while you were rugged up in warm coats. There are a few ice hotels around the place, a lot of them in Scandinavia, one of them is in Canada. The Ice Hotel Quebec has a couple of different options but the standard option really isn't that expensive and it would be a great experience. Whether we stay here depends on what everyone else wants to do, but if the others would like to I'm sure it would be fantastic for one night.
Labels:
Canada,
Ice,
Ice Hotel,
Ice Hotel Quebec,
New Zealand,
Quebec,
Queenstown
Favourite Places (#3)
I visited Belle Ile En Mer when I was about 14, on a school trip to France. It was during the holiday period when I was staying with my host family. All of the other kids were staying with people that were friends with each other, but I was staying with someone in a different grade who lived so far away from everyone else. I was feeling pretty down and home sick, and then my host family took me to this island. I can't really remember it exactly but I remember that it was beautiful. It was on the ferry over to the island that I finally managed to get into Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, and I think it was something to do with the beauty of the island that helped turn it into one of my favourite books. When we were there I had one of the best meals of my life, it left my host family baffled, because I had told them I didn't like fish for some reason and I ordered fish without quite knowing what it was. I'd love to go back here one day, the name is truly descriptive of the place.
Labels:
Belle Ile En Mer,
Favourite Places,
Ferry,
France,
Island,
Mrs Dalloway,
Virginia Woolf
Places to Visit (#8)
I don't like Elvis. Not particularly. I like Suspicious Minds, but that is about it. What I do love is how much other people love Elvis. This is why I want to go to Memphis and I want to hunt out as many 'Elvis spots' as I can. I'd probably feel similarly towards Michael Jackson, if he had also died before I was born. Instead I just don't like Michael Jackson and I also have no intention of visiting any sites related to Michael Jackson. Elvis managed to live, sing, die and be imortalised all before I was born and so because I didn't have to witness it first hand I'm quite happy to relive the mania on a road trip round America.
Labels:
Dead,
Elvis,
Graceland Mansion,
Memphis,
Michael Jackson
Places to Visit (#7)
Theme Parks Issue
1. Disney World - Orlando, Florida
2. Universal Studios (Harry Potter World!) - Orlando, Florida
3. Disney Land - Anaheim, California
4. Universal Studios - Los Angeles, California
5. Six Flags Magic Mountain - Los Angeles, California
6. Kings Island - Mason, Ohio
7. Cedar Point Amusement Park - Cedar Point, Ohio
So, apparently everyone else coming on this trip hates rides. This really isn't a good thing, because although I like rides I am terrible on rides. Mostly the only reason I go on rides is because I get talked into it. I definitely wont be going on any rides if I am the only one out of our group of for to go on one, so hopefully the others will at least give it a go because I think visiting theme parks has got to be one of the main things about visiting America.
I'm still not sure whether it is worth us going to both the LA and Orlando Universal studios. Is there anything LA has that Orlando doesn't? I've already been to the LA one, when I was younger, and from what I remember it was pretty good but it would possibly be a waste of money if there was nothing different between them.
Favourite Places (#2)
So I've been to Chiang Mai twice, and both times it was amazing but a completely different experience. The first time I believe I was about 8 and I went there with my family. I remember we were staying in this small guest house that had fish in a fountain downstairs that I would feed. We were there for about a day and then we went on a trek which in my mind was about a week long but was probably no more that 2 or 3 days. We got to stay in a local village, meet lots of people, trek up hills and through rice fields, ride elephants and rafts. It was pretty amazing even if I didn't really appreciate it at the time, because I was 8 and my idea of a good holiday was somewhere with a nice hotel room with good tv channels. I'm also pretty sure that I fell in the river when we were rafting on the trip, I have a tendency to fall in bodies of water.
The second time I visit Chiang Mai was about 8 years later at the start of 2007. I didn't do any trekking, but I drank margaritas at a mexican restaurant, visited the rooftop bar and pretended I was older than 17, watched a thai film at the movies, got snot wiped on my by this baby elephant, taught my friend what a 'beer bong' was and also won a skulling competition with a Chang beer long neck. I was on my trip after finishing school, when most people take months off to visit Europe I spent my summer before uni visiting my parents in Fiji and then meeting up with old friends through Thailand and Vietnam. I didn't do any of the same sorts of things that I did the first time I was in Chiang Mai but I had an equally fantastic time. We also went on a road trip up further north nearer the Burmese border where we visited the Opium Museum which is one of the best museums I've been to in Asia (granted I haven't been to that many).
I would love to go back through Chiang Mai again and hopefully have an experience that would be an amalgamation of both of my previous trips.
*EDIT* That lovely girl in the photo is not me by the way. It is my friend Allie who's birthday it is today, so it seemed quite apt to write about Chiang Mai on this occasion.
Labels:
Baby Elephants,
Beer Bong,
Burma,
Chiang Mai,
Opium Museum,
Thailand,
Trekking,
Vietnam
Things to Do (#3)
One thing I want to do in New York is eat Frozen Yoghurt on the steps of the Met. For 5 minutes I can pretend that I AM Blair Waldorf and that my boyfriend IS Chuck Bass.
Labels:
Blair Waldorf,
Frozen Yoghurt,
Gossip Girl,
New York,
the Metropolitan
Things to Do (#2)
I am not leaving American until I have seen a Bison. Whether it be while we are trekking (okay probably not trekking) through Yellowstone National Park or at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco where they have a Bison paddock. They are such fantastic looking creatures, perhaps their only downfall is that they are not Sky Bison and cannot fly. Other than that I'm fairly sure they are the coolest creatures in the world!
Favourite Places (#1)
Okay, so this isn't somewhere I'll be going on my trip because I wont be going to Vietnam. But this is one of my favourite places that I've ever been to. It's called Sa Pa, and it's to the north of Hanoi. I've been there about 3 or 4 times and it is a truly magical place. At least twice (my memory is a bit shaky) I stayed in a place called the Victoria hotel which is this gorgeous hotel on the top of a big hill and you'd wake up in the morning and it was always cold and you'd walk from the hotel rooms to the breakfast dining area through this mist that was everywhere. It was so unlike the rest of Vietnam in so many ways not only by the climate and the setting but also by the people there. From what I can remember the two main ethnic groups were the H'mong and the Dao and they have amazing traditional outfits and were always so incredibly friendly, we had girls who would just give us friendship bracelets that they were selling for free.
It's hard to recall everything exactly because it's slowly getting on to 10 years since I've been there. I wish I went there back in 2007, but it's not the sort of place I would do on my own. I'd love to go back there one day and I hope that it is still the same. I know I'd be a bit upset if my favourite part of Vietnam had changed as much as the rest of the country.
Labels:
Dao,
Favourite Places,
H'mong,
Sa Pa,
Victoria Hotel,
Vietnam
Friday, April 16, 2010
Places to Visit (#6)
This place is called Alnwick Poison Gardens, in the UK. It contains all sorts of poisonous and narcotic plants, I love things like this!
Labels:
Alnwick Poison Gardens,
Deadly Nightshade,
UK
Places to Visit (#5)
I watched a documentary once and it was about Hemingway's house in Cuba, basically it was about how people wanted to help restore it and stop it from getting damaged by the humid climate but the US didn't want to do anything that could help Cuba's tourist industry. I really like Heminway and ever since watching it I wanted to go there and see his house, unfortunately getting to Cuba isn't the easiest thing in the world, and even though we'll be right round the corner of it when we're in Florida you can't actually visit it from America. That was why I was very happy to find out that there is also a house of Heminway's in Key West that also serves as a Hemingway museum that we will defiantly have to visit when we're down that way!
Apparently it is also filled with about 60 descendants of Heminway's 6 toed cat.
Atlas Obscura
So I discovered this website, Atlas Obscura, today. Expect many more posts because this site is full of awesome places all around the world!
ALSO today I went to kikki.K and picked up my travel organiser and yesterday my Lonely Planet USA arrived, so now I'm all set to start planning and (hopefully) stop spending!
ALSO today I went to kikki.K and picked up my travel organiser and yesterday my Lonely Planet USA arrived, so now I'm all set to start planning and (hopefully) stop spending!
Labels:
Atlas Obscura,
kikki.k,
Places to Visit,
travel organiser
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Places to Visit (#4)
Countries I would love to visit in Europe:
England
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Portugal
Spain
France
Italy
Belgium
Germany
Netherlands
Poland
Greece
Belarus
Ukraine
Switzerland
Austria
Russia
Denmark
Sweden
Norway
Finland
Iceland
Luxembourg
So not too many then...
England
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Portugal
Spain
France
Italy
Belgium
Germany
Netherlands
Poland
Greece
Belarus
Ukraine
Switzerland
Austria
Russia
Denmark
Sweden
Norway
Finland
Iceland
Luxembourg
So not too many then...
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Things to Buy (#2)
Saturday, April 10, 2010
101 Things to Do Before You Die
I bought this book a couple of years ago, I would have been about 15 or 16 at the time. My brother in law bought a copy for my sister and I was really intrigued by it. Because of this book I got past my fear of sharks and went Scuba Diving in Fiji and I made sure I convinced my dad to take us to Taveuni to stand on the international date line where we stayed in a gorgeous eco-lodge. So on our trip this book will be prompting me to visit some of the fastest and biggest roller coasters or go see the Northern Lights or maybe even make me sky dive or bungee jump or go on a hot air balloon ride.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Things to Do (#1)
One thing I would love to do, but would probably be nearly impossible would be to get a tattoo done at Kat Von Dee's tattoo parlor, High Voltage Tattoo. Firstly I think that is is almost impossible to get a tattoo done there unless you're on the show or on a really huge waiting list and I think they would be very expensive. Getting on the show would be cool but also very doubtful because I don't think me or Kirby would have interesting enough stories to get on there. I have noticed that you can get tattoos done there not on the show, and even that would be fantastic because I really love the work that goes on there!
I've wanted to get a tattoo for a long time, but it not something that I would want to take lightly. It's also probably not something I would get done more than once. I have a few ideas which circle around either getting a paper crane tattooed on my wrist or getting an SLR camera somewhere. Both of these actually mean something to me, and they aren't likely to be transient. I suppose I'll have to start working on some ideas!
Labels:
High Voltage Tattoo,
Kat Von Dee,
LA INK,
Paper Crane Tattoo,
SLR Tattoo,
tattoos
Places to Visit (#3)
Kansas isn't actually on our plan for the trip around America, but after seeing this I'm determined to explore whether it will be possible to go there. This is the Kansas City Public Library. Do I really need to explain why this looks like an amazing place to go! There are a few other reasons why I'd like to go to Kansas but it really is off the track a bit from the path we're planning. The more detours, the more expensive the trip will be. I suppose the itinerary will need a bit of a rework to see if it would even be possible at all.
Places to Visit (#2)
(I'm hoping I'm not stealing by posting this. This is the person who took it)
This is another place that I want to visit. I love books. There is a second hand store across the road from the Adelaide Central Markets that has a huge book section in the back and I love going and just browsing through the shelves. I love books, and while I love new books there is just something about second hand books that draws me in. This place is called John K. King Used & Rare Books and it's in Detroit. As soon as I saw this picture (that popped up in my tumblr feed after the photographer posted it) I had this urge to go there. It's not only a place obviously full of books but it was a very captivating picture. Apparently the building has four floors filled with books and I can't wait to go explore them all.
another photo from the same used book store
Labels:
central markets,
detroit,
John k king,
photography,
reading,
used books
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