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Week 521 – Back to Melbourne and Australian Open

Week 521 – 10 years and one week after I moved to Korea and started my blog…2014 was such simpler times .

I finally got my visa sorted a couple of weeks later than planned – at the end of the day Australia basically takes off the period from mid-December to end of January and that was the primary reason for the delay. I ended up flying over at the same time as Sharon who had planned to stay in the US longer than me. Although the weather when we landed was cloudy and rainy when we arrived – this is the first trip where the weather is better in Melbourne than the DC where we left a snowstorm. And nice to return to long days – sun goes down about 8pm.

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Had to dig out enough to get the suitcases out – so worse than Melbourne for once.

Australian Open
Sharon had purchased ground passes for us for the Australian Open back in 2023 – but since it was my first day back at work, she went by herself and I joined for the night session. She got to see a couple of matches in the stadium and Coco’s training session – we both saw Novak Djokovic train later. It is a really good setup at the tennis center – it is more like a festival than a sporting event. According to Google, it is the best fan experience of the Grand Slam events. The sun was out but it was breezy – most people were avoiding shade and wanting to sit in the sun – we found a great spot to watch a big screen, albeit in the shade. Then the sun went down and we about froze to death. But it was such a good experience we decided to go the next day (ground pass $20 USD).

Sharon waited for me this time – she was watching at a public viewing area in the CBD and we walked from the there to the tennis center. It was hot – like above 90 degrees hot and much more crowded as Djokovic was playing an American who could supposedly challenge him. Today everyone was searching for shade – it was like being under a magnifying glass and we failed to find any shape and ended up watching on a 19” TV from 30 feet away in the hallway of one of the arenas. We ended up finding a temporary bar courtside to sit in the shade and eat – but couldn’t see any TVs but watched a wheelchair match. By then Djokovic was in control and easily won. Overall really good experience – not withstanding predicting the weather.

Australian BBQ Experience
My co-workers took me to “authentic” American BBQ to provide a judgement on the food – they had a slow cooker and the meat was great – I wasn’t sure about their sauces – so I pulsed a group of Oklahomans who were pretty unanimous that “coffee and molasses” and “habanero and carrot” wouldn’t be something you found at a BBQ shack in Tulsa.

Selection of sauces – more likely found in NYC or LA than Oklahoma

Winter Holidays in Australia
One reason January is such a long holiday period is that they have Christmas, New Years, their summer school break, and finish with Australia Day at the end of the month. I wished someone a Happy Australia Day and they said thanks – don’t do that – you may get a bad reaction. It is not the independence day from Britain that we celebrate on 4th of July, it is more like Columbus Day as Australia Day celebrates when Captain Cook pulled into Sydney harbor in 1788. So many people call it Invasion Day and a statue of Capital Cook by our apartment was cut down.

Statue near our apartment – you can see the feet. The carcass of Captain Cook had been removed by the time I walked by. The spray paint is still visible after clearing – “The colony will fail”. Happy Australia Day!

But it is related to the 4th of July – Britain had to find land to replace the lost 13 colonies hat we won. Another side note is that holiday’s celebrating independence from Britain are the most common non religious holidays around the world. Done with Britain bashing for today.

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