Australia and Tasmania: The Boat Across

I woke up after uneven intervals of sleep, packed up pretty efficiently, and was off by about 7:10am. I was worried I might be late, but I drafted just behind a large bicyclist, while a third cyclist drafted behind me, tucking me into a cushion of roiling air that greatly reduced my energy expenditure. I covered four quick miles this way, and gave a friendly nod to the cyclists as I turned off their route at a stoplight.

From there it was only a couple more miles to the terminal, where I took an elevator to the second floor and bought a last-minute ticket. My eyes felt strangely sore and tired, so I changed shirts and washed up in the nearby bathroom. The car exhaust perhaps? Pollen?

To board, I rode around in a loop through the end of the pier and back, past a long line of cars.

I left my bike just inside the gate.

Away we go!!!

Onboard the ferry, I went through the cafeteria line and bought a fountain soda, since in Australia they are all flavored with cane sugar. This makes them a unique treat for an American, for whom all sodas, canned or otherwise, are made with high-fructose corn syrup. Corn isn’t heavily subsidized elsewhere in the world, so it’s just as economical to use cane sugar here. Hooray!

Of course, a few sips in, and I began to get that vague fuzzy-headed glycemic reaction I always get from soda nowadays. … So most of it went into the trash can.

What shall I rap about to-day? Ah yes, the lovely ocean-going experience aboard the Spirit of Tasmania! Thank you, rap angel!

Nobby’s Nuts. How cheeky. The second I saw this I thought of Lt. Cprl. J.W. “Nobby” DeNobbes Esq. I hear the advertising used to contain the phrase “Nibble Nobby’s nuts!”

Nothing to do on board except write, think, read, nap, and walk around. On, and shop. In the boat gift shop I bought myself a Tasmania hat, to compliment my Alaska hat.

Watching the people walk around, I have some bizarre thoughts. Many of them would be impolite if I voiced them.

For example, on the enclosed landing between two decks, I noticed a large plastic sign standing upright against the far wall. At the base of the sign was a gap, through which the floor was visible. In this narrow stretch of floor between the sign and the wall, a man had laid down beneath a sleeping bag. He was tall, dressed in cheap rugged clothing, tanned, and in good shape, and appeared to be in his mid-30’s. He also clearly had not bathed for a while. Curled across him, also beneath the sleeping bag, was a young woman, in her mid 20’s, dressed the same way and looking just as unkempt. Her head was on his chest and she had one leg thrown over his. The man and the women were both attempting to sleep.

Watching them, my mind went in many directions at once.

“They must be on a low-cost adventure. I wonder how many countries they’ve been through?”

“Why are they asleep? It’s ten in the morning on a Friday.”

“Wow, it appears their only footwear is flip-flops.”

“They must not be from around here – they’re actually embracing. So far Australian society has shown to be unapproving of public affection. I bet Kashy is right. I bet the San Francisco Bay Area is the most touch-friendly English-speaking region on Earth.”

“I bet the woman is deeply attached to the man, and sees him as a free spirit and a rebel and a protector all at once. I wonder if she’ll still be with him in five years, when he’s exactly the same as he is now but 40 years old, and she’s still in her 20’s and evolved into someone else? Probably not. Funny how from the outside, it seems like many relationships appear to just be temporary mutual exploitation. I’m sure these two people are a lot of things to each other but primarily, the woman gets a tourguide, and the man gets a sex partner. I’m not condemning it, exactly. I’m just observing it.”

“I wonder if they are bothered by being that dirty, or if they’re just used to it by now.”

“I wonder if they paid to board.”

This all took about 15 seconds to think as I stared at them from the foot of the stairs to the next floor. Probably the only thought I could speak aloud and not be stared at for is the first one.

Other thoughts:

I should have brought a kilt. That would be amusing to ride around on a bike with, as well as amusing to lounge around on this ferry boat with.

My laptop is one of about fifty opened on this deck alone. Most of the other laptops are dinky little netbooks, and are being used to play movies. I’ve seen two iPads so far. The prized spots around the ship are the tables next to electrical sockets. There are no “official” charging stations so you need to wander around until you spot a free socket. Almost all of these are manned by serious-looking geeks, hacking and occasionally looking up like meerkats on alert.

I have three days in Tasmania, and I really wish I had my camping gear and my recumbent so I had enough room to carry it. Or perhaps better, a local friend I could share residency with. I got very lucky meeting Celia … she saved me a huge amount of money, and eliminated a massive amount of confusion. Just picking me up at the airport she saved me a sixty-dollar cab ride.

And then, on an upper deck, staring out to sea, getting way cerebral:

Here’s a question you can learn something by asking yourself. What does it profit you to be who you are?

Literature is full of stories about passionate heroes who are driven to accomplish glorious feats, or die in a blaze of defiance. People love to hear about these characters, sure, but I wonder how many of these tales exist because writers like to write about them. Put another way, I wonder how much of history is preserved simply because it impresses writers, and how much is lost and plowed under and untold because no writer saw a personal profit to it.

If the answer is “a lot”, then what should one do with that information? Add more skepticism to history? Live to impress writers?

I say: Look for an alternate way to define your life, as an adult. Step out of the frameworks offered by stories, and out of the hamster wheel of ever-increasing qualifications and wants and cut a middle path. Because life will definitely end up either too short, or too long, to neatly encapsulate your goals.

Wise-sounding people all around you will proclaim that “the journey is the reward,” and quietly believe that the lesson of their advice is to trick yourself into enjoying the same work you would otherwise pursue in misery. They see it as self-deception.

I think a better way of phrasing that advice is, “find a journey that is rewarding.” Or as Chairman Mao put it: “Work hard; make progress every day.”

Boy, it sure is true what my sister said. Wherever I go, I bring myself along with me.

Here’s a trip. You are looking at this picture on your computer. The picture was sent to you from a repository somewhere in a midwestern data center. The picture was taken by my digital camera on a ferry boat between Tasmania and Australia. In the picture is a television receiving a satellite feed. The feed is of a local news channel, which is currently showing a weather report. The graphic in the weather report was given to the news channel by a weather station, which generated it on a computer. The computer used data gathered from thousands of instruments and probes all over the continent of Australia, as well as at least one satellite in space. I typed this caption about half an hour after I took the picture, on the upper deck of the ferry boat. Hours after that I, I combined the caption and the photo in Aperture and then sent it to Flickr via the internet connection at my hotel room in Tasmania. And here it is. Just think of all the hundreds of details and steps I left out!

A first view of Tasmania from the deck. Or, as the little kid standing next to me said, “Look mummy! Is Taz Main Nun Nan! Taz Main Nun Nan Nan Nan Num Naaan!”

The coastal town of Devonport.

One of the crew, guiding the boat up the river delta.

From the port it was only a short ride over the river to my motel.

45 bucks a night, at the Formby Hotel. Spartan but serviceable. And so, the adventure continues!!

Australia and Tasmania: Melbourne Coast Ride

Part of my grand fish-and-chips-themed tour was a ride down the coast, along the side of Hobsons Bay. See that dotted line labeled “Spirit of Tasmania”? Soon I shall be boarding that craft, and heading for Tasmania, or “Tassie” as it’s affectionately known around here. But first…

The Royal Botanical Gardens! ("The treasure is buried under a big three!")

… The Royal Botanical Gardens! (“The treasure is buried under a big three!”)

And Fawkner Park!

The weather was clear and sunny, and most of the route was a procession of interlinked bike paths that hugged the coastline. Mile after mile scrolled along with fresh air and music and sips from my canteen.

It was quite pleasant, though not particularly exotic. It felt like I was pedaling down the coast back home in Santa Cruz, passing along that two-mile stretch of sand and boardwalk inside an endless loop that would keep going as long as I stayed on the bike. I didn’t even take out the camera to record the scenery.

Stopping for fish and chips in Sandringham. The place was called Sandy’s Fish And Chips, and they were pretty good. The five dollar fries turned out to be an enormous box – several pounds of salty, crisp fries. I ate way too many of them. They also had a unique fish listed on their board – flounder – but there was absolutely no way I was going to contribute to the hunting of flounder, even if I was doing the Aussie dining experience. I have very special feelings about flounders.

Energy is measured in kilojoules here, instead of calories. I enjoy that.

My room for the night, at the Buckingham International, actually a glorified Best Western. Relatively posh. It better be, for over a hundred bucks… While here, I did some more calculations and realized that instead of riding all the way around Hobsons Bay, I wanted to have an additional day in Tasmania. So I decided to ride north instead of south next morning to catch the early ferry.

I got room number 42! Hellz yeah.

Australia and Tasmania: Night Market

This is the Melbourne Night Market. The primary attractions are greasy food and clever t-shirts.

This is the Melbourne Night Market. At first glance, one could assume that the primary attractions are greasy food and clever t-shirts.

Nice to see gangs of motorbike riders on this side of the Earth too. They look a bit cleaner and nicer than their American counterparts.

Nice to see gangs of motorbike riders on this side of the Earth too. They look a bit cleaner and friendlier than their American counterparts.

Check out those huge boxes of vegetable oil. Make way for greasy food!

Check out those huge boxes of vegetable oil. Make way for greasy food!

... And clever t-shirts!

… And clever t-shirts!

My mission, as given to me by the locals, was to attend the Night Market and procure a sausage-inna-bun. At first I thought I was out of luck...

My mission, as given to me by the locals, was to attend the Night Market and procure a sausage-inna-bun. At first I thought I was out of luck…

... But then I found a booth with plenty for sale.

… But then I found a booth with plenty for sale.

Sitting on the ground chomping food is apparently a Night Market tradition.

Sitting around on the ground chomping food is apparently a Night Market tradition. Can do!!

The evening's entertainment was a klezmer/gypsy band hailing from Russia.

The evening’s entertainment was a klezmer/gypsy band hailing from Russia. Hey look; more redheads!

... Accompanied by a wedding dance.

The performance included a traditional wedding dance.

It was a fun way to spend an evening, and it got me thinking about all the things that I would insist a foreign visitor go see if they were staying in Oakland. One of the local farmer’s markets? A ride in Bike Party? A walk around Lake Merritt? The botanical gardens? These are all things that I enjoy as a local, and in that way they constitute both local color, and a good time in general.

But then I thought about what happens when I go traveling: Often there are small, surprising experiences that affect me in ways no one could predict. A local might direct me to an event like the Night Market, knowing I could enjoy things as they do, but what about my own biases and history?

When I visited New York I was told, “You’ve got to see something on stage here. It’s a classic and unique New York experience.” With help from my sister and our hosts, I got to see Les Miserables live on stage, and I enjoyed that for sure. But one of the most insightful experiences I had there was when I got up in the morning seeking breakfast, and walked in the deep shadow of the towering buildings for less than half a block before I ran into sidewalk deli that was crammed so full of produce and candy and drinks and papers that there was hardly room to breathe inside, and a guy in a suit was having an animated conversation in Italian with the guy behind the counter.

That little experience gave me a sense of uniqueness of place, and of history, and of my own limitations, all at once, and I remember it just as clearly as I remember anything about my time in New York.

As a local, well-established in your own environment, what are the experiences that you can recommend for visitors that are not just a good time, not just impressive or unique, but are truly insightful? Experiences that might lead a visitor to some new personal understanding?

Tough question!

Australia and Tasmania: Hanging Rock

Today, Celia gave me a ride up to Woodend, since she was headed that way anyway to help her friends Brad and Jane work on their new house. My first stop was at a local bakery, where I bought a "lemon slice" and a sandwich. Further up the street I found a fish and chips shop, and decided to sample their food. It was pretty bad. All the items were pre-fried, and lacked that crisp quality only found in fresh frying. I think it's true what Celia's friends say: The farther you get from the coast, the lower the quality of the fish and chips.

Today, Celia gave me a ride up to Woodend, since she was headed that way anyway to help her friends Brad and Jane work on their new house. My first stop was at a local bakery, where I bought a “lemon slice” and a sandwich. Further up the street I found a fish and chips shop, and decided to sample their food.

It was pretty bad. All the items were pre-fried, and lacked that crisp quality only found in fresh frying. I think it’s true what Celia’s friends say: The farther you get from the coast, the lower the quality of the fish and chips.

My next destination was a local park called Hanging Rock.

On the way out to Hanging Rock, through gently sloping farmland. Plenty of sheep and cattle around.

On the way out, through gently sloping farmland. Plenty of sheep and cattle around.

Watch out for roo crossings!

Watch out for roo crossings!

Most of the way up Hanging Rock. You can see my beard is getting a little out of control!

Most of the way up Hanging Rock. You can see my beard is getting a little out of control!

Dammit, I blinked!

Dammit, I blinked!

Part way up, a couple of kids shouted, “Hey! Take our picture!!” I didn’t catch their names. Now their photo is online but they will never find it. Hah!

From the top of Hanging Rock, having a look 'round. I drank some water, took this photograph, then just rested, with my hands on my knees in front of me. I put on my bicycling gloves to keep the sunlight from roasting the backs of my hands. Sun protection, also, is SRS BSNS here in Australia. I've heard it said that the government has issued such stern warnings to citizens, against going out into the sun, that there has been a sharp rise in vitamin-D deficiency as a result. They've had to step up fortifying their foods.

From the top of Hanging Rock, having a look ’round. I drank some water, took this photograph, then just rested, with my hands on my knees in front of me. I put on my bicycling gloves to keep the sunlight from roasting the backs of my hands. Sun protection, also, is SRS BSNS here in Australia. I’ve heard it said that the government has issued such stern warnings to citizens, against going out into the sun, that there has been a sharp rise in vitamin-D deficiency as a result. They’ve had to step up fortifying their foods.

House construction, temporarily suspended by the inclement weather. This photo was taken on a bike path at the edge of a small park, and the wind picked up just then, and I had a terrible sneezing fit. Something in the air makes my sinuses go completely crazy for a short while. Don't know what.

House construction, temporarily suspended by the inclement weather.

This photo was taken on a bike path at the edge of a small park, and the wind picked up just then, and I had a terrible sneezing fit. Something in the air makes my sinuses go completely crazy for a short while. Don’t know what.

Brad and Jane, taking a break from house restoration.

Brad and Jane, taking a break from house restoration.

I helped out for a little whole, scraping old paint from the walls. After an hour or so, Brad went out and fetched dinner for all of us. I ate happily, thinking it was his way of thanking us for the work. Later on Celia pointed out that the food had been expensive and it would have been polite of me to at least offer to pay for my share.

In retrospect I was a bit surprised at my own behavior. After thinking about it I realized that two things were going on:

First, my attitude towards food was very Californian. The total cost of living is very high in California, but the high price of property throws the cost of other things out of proportion. In effect, food is a small portion of the budget, so we think less about spending money on it. In Australia, food is not just relatively expensive, but expensive in absolute terms. My biggest lesson about that came when I went to a shop called Brunetti, intent on buying a treat for my hosts, and ended up spending 75 bucks on what seemed like barely enough macaroons to fill a plate.

Second, I was going through a very inward-focused, and somewhat selfish, time in my life. My usual sense of gratitude was off-kilter, and I didn’t even notice. I was too busy trying to rediscover and redefine myself.

This trip has certainly given me plenty of food for thought.

Distant Touring With The iPad

An iPad is a bulky device, relative to a phone. How well does it perform as a piece of kit on a bike tour? Well, that answer is bound to be a bit subjective. Here are my own impressions.

I used mine extensively when traveling in Australia. My local host Celia took me to a phone store where I got a month-to-month data-only SIM for the iPad. So for 25 bucks, I was able to use the 3G in the iPad all through Australia, including Tasmania.

I used it every day, multiple times a day. I used it to find motels and restaurants, read local news, chat with people on AIM, make reservations and book tickets, send email trip updates from cafes, look at my environment in satellite and street view, etc. It’s even got Skype on it, which is MUCH cheaper for international calls to the folks back home. When the battery was low I could (slowly) charge it using the same adapter I used for the phone, saving a bit of weight.

In restaurants it was a conversation starter. I used it to show people photos from back home. Played a little jazz on it when I was relaxing. I used it with Celia to co-plan my outings the day before, since it was big enough for both of us to see and easily poke at the same time.

I placed the iPad in a saddlebag on the bicycle. Whenever I wanted to know where I was, what was around me, where I needed to go, et cetera, I had to go through a short routine: I stopped, walked around to the back of the bike, fetched the iPad from the bag, and used it while standing there over the rear tire. When I was done I packed it away and got back on the bike. Not a big deal, as long as I don’t have to refer to it often, and as long as I’m in a low-crime environment.

(I had an iPhone on the handlebars but it was for the wrong kind of network, so I couldn’t buy a SIM for it in Australia. The only reason I brought it at all was to use it as a music player while riding.)

The one thing that held me back when using the iPad was that I couldn’t immediately call ahead to the hotels I found that didn’t offer digital reservations. I’m pretty sure some cleverness with Skype would have solved that problem.

So, would I travel with an iPad in the future? After all of these use cases you’d think my answer would be an instant “yes”, but here’s the thing: If I bring a laptop, and I already have a phone with a data plan to tether it, then I just don’t need the iPad. … And I am a huge nerd, so a laptop is probably a given for almost all long journeys.

It’s worth noting one more difference between an iPad and a laptop: You stand a chance of charging the iPad with a solar panel. You could conceivably go camping in the woods for a couple of weeks, and use your iPad the whole time, while the laptop would die after a day or two. But on the other hand, when you’re on a bike trip, you’re on roads – and where there are roads, there is almost always electricity nearby. You’d have to be a very particular individual on a very particular bicycle trip – say, a gadget hound meandering through Kazakhstan – for that to shift the balance.

If I had a phone but could not bring a laptop, would I want to bring the iPad?

That’s a more interesting question. Different people have different ways of navigating or documenting their travel, and personally, I’m used to having a laptop, and would still want to do all the things I usually do with it. Most of those activities are difficult or uncomfortable on a phone screen.

With the iPad along I could:

  • Import and store photos from my camera without filling up my phone.
  • Edit and organize those photos more easily than on the phone.
  • Type journal entries and emails, and chat using instant messaging, a lot more comfortably and quickly than on the phone.
  • Research my route a bit more comfortably. (Any notes and screenshots I take will sync over to the phone.)
  • Relax by watching movies and TV shows a lot more comfortably than on the phone.
  • Conduct video chats more comfortably.

In summary, it’s mostly a matter of comfort. Is that level of comfort worth the extra one pound that the latest iPad weighs? For me, the answer is yes. For others, perhaps not.