Fine Art Friday–Rottnest Island, Australia

I know a lot of my friends at home are mourning the loss of summertime as they returned to the grind this week for work/school. Congrats to all on almost making it to the weekend–here’s a calming screensaver for your Friday.

I photographed this stairway and bench during a day trip to Rottnest Island in Western Australia. I was drawn to the harsh late-morning shadows juxtaposed with the shades of natural blue in the distance. Located only 15 miles off the coastline near Perth, the island feels a million miles away.  We visited during their low season and had the place to ourselves as we zipped down hills on our rental bikes (no cars permitted here!) and stopped to check out many coves, white sand beaches, lighthouses, and overlooks–all surrounded by the stunning Indian Ocean.

Happy Friday!

Beyond Bathhurst Lighthouse, Rottnest Island, Western Australia

Down Under Travel–The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly


When I was 25, I traveled around Australia by myself for four weeks with only a big backpack, a camera bag, a sleeping bag, and a Vineyard Vines tote. Adding a husband and a toddler to the equation this time around has certainly proven to be a different experience!  We moved here for four months for my husband to study at UNSW, but decided to come early to travel and see more of the country before we settled in Sydney. I’ll be blogging more about our visits to Perth, Fremantle, Margaret River, and Broome later this month.

I knew it might be a bad idea to set off on a two-week trip just after a six-day journey from New York, but we needed a large chunk of time and this was when it worked.  We’ve made great memories, but reality also strikes when traveling internationally with a toddler…advil, wine, an iPad, and a sense of humor are definitely required. I’m very grateful for this experience; but as expected, it hasn’t been all roses. Here is my take on the good, the bad, and the ugly from our three-week trip thus far.

The Good

  • The 15-hour flight from Los Angeles to Sydney was not nearly as dreadful as I had imagined.  I think half of the anxiety of flying with a toddler stems from the possibility that they will be horrible and you will want to melt into the floor and disappear. (I once hid in the bathroom on a Jet Blue flight with my screaming infant and wanted to beam myself off of the plane.) After some frustrating seat rearranging by Qantas (after we were settled…I’m not on their fan list, and hell hath no fury like an overtired mom to a more tired child), my daughter ended up sleeping for 10 of the 15 hours. It helped that we didn’t leave LAX until 4am her time- the poor girl had no idea what was happening by the time we boarded.
  • We arrived in Sydney to a crisp, sunny, late-winter morning. We immediately chugged cappuccinos, prayed that our hotel room would be ready in six hours, and took the train into the city for a gorgeous walk on the harbor.
  • The architecture in Fremantle–just south of Perth–made my heart and camera sing…think Edwardian grace paired with peeling factory doors, colorful reclaimed warehouses, and aged brick.
  • We stayed in a rustic cabin in Margaret River where kangaroos bounced past the kitchen window while I was doing the dishes–truly amazing!
  • The trees in the Karri forest were like something out of a dream–sinewy, dark, graceful, and elegant.
  • I may have mastered the art of ordering a coffee here–the cappuccinos are to die for, a flat white is delicious, and babycino’s are the norm (and a great way to get some steamed milk into my toddler.)
  • The turquoise color of the Indian Ocean is stunning.
  • The weather in Sydney is beautiful right now­–about 70 degrees and sunny– and the first day of spring was this week.
  • We’re living in a beach community and the vibe is so relaxed compared to New York–definitely a welcome change.

The Bad

  • I boarded the plane at JFK and realized that I had left my backpack in the gate area. That is, my backpack with my laptop, iPad, headphones…the whole shebang.  It’s a little chaotic bringing 6 carry-ons (don’t ask) and folding up the stroller to gate check while still trying to board early with a young child.  So I begged to get off the plane and look for it, and had to be escorted back (now in a total panic) by a crewmember. It was not where we had been sitting, so I proceeded to have a complete heart attack. But, by the grace of God, a kind soul had turned it in at the gate desk. I have never felt so thankful/lucky. Oh, and I didn’t have a bag tag on it. It’s probably the only bag I’ve ever traveled with that didn’t have TWO tags on it.  Wow…not a great start to the journey.
  • It was 50 degrees and raining in Margaret River during our three-day visit. Though I huddled close to our potbelly stove for heat, I thought I’d never be warm again.  I know I’m dramatic, but we hadn’t packed warm enough clothes so we all wore the same thing all day and then to bed, along with dirty socks for three days. Joys!
  • In the same chilly spot, we (stupidly) decided to go whale watching. It was brisk but sunny, and there was certainly a lot of watching. We sat next to a poor woman who was sea sick the entire time, and the captain felt badly about the lack of whales (but not badly about the woman vomiting?) and kept us out 1.5 hours past the of the return time–circling and circling until we finally found two whales.  Of the reported 40,000 humpbacks in the bay at this time of year, 39,998 were hiding. We kept humming the Gilligan’s Island theme song as we sailed right past lunch/nap time and could not get off that boat fast enough. As my father pointed out, we can always go whale watching on Cape Cod!
  • I got a (self-diagnosed) ear infection and our 3-hour flight up to Broome was downright painful despite my Sudafed/Advil cocktail.
  • Everything here is insanely expensive.  It makes NYC look affordable. Breakfast can cost $40-50 dollars for two adults. And we’re just getting toast, eggs, juice, and coffee. Granted, we are in touristy areas, but a pint of raspberries in the grocery store is $9, and a 6 pack of beer is $20. Eek.
  • To add to my wallet woes, I left a $450 external flash in one of our hotel rooms, and it hasn’t been recovered.  And now I recall why I shouldn’t take anything out of my camera bag to lighten my load on day trips.
  • Traveling with a car seat on a plane in Australia takes more approvals and permissions than one would need to launch a missile. On our Qantas flight from LA to Sydney, we were told–after we had our boarding passes and were settled in our seats with a sleeping child–that there are only two approved seats in our entire section that one can place a carseat in. So we had to move to the back row, where our seats partially reclined into the bulkhead behind us, which the passenger behind me kicked for 15 hours. We’ve since been delayed in numerous airports, needed new boarding passes, and in the Brisbane airport, Qantas required TWO ENGINEERS to board the plane to install the seat, which involved physically reconfiguring the seats in our row.  In lieu of a carseat, they kindly suggested that I use an extra seatbelt to strap my 30 lb daughter onto me, though we had purchased her a seat. We gave up, as did the engineers, and the carseat ended up in the coat closet for that flight. Extremely odd and frustrating.
  • Along those same lines, gate checking anything here is unheard of.  Now I realize how spoiled we are at home to be able to push a stroller to the gate, fold it up, check it right there, and have it magically waiting for you as you exit the plane.  In AUS, you check your regular bags, then proceed to “oversize baggage” to check your stroller, then go through security (where you toddler breaks loose and runs INSIDE of the body scanner), and hope that your gate is close as your child runs all over, plays games by the escalators, and terrorizes the gift shop. Maybe all children in Australia are beautifully behaved and don’t need to be contained in airports.

The Ugly
(someday, these might be comical to me)

  • On our fifth day in Australia, I threw my back out while trying to pick up my tantruming toddler off of a lighthouse gift shop floor (she NEEDED a $15 compass). I felt something pop and could barely sit in a car or walk for eight days, let alone carry several bags through four airports.  It still hurts. I miss my NYC chiropractor.
  • The wineries and breweries here are very kid-friendly–each had a playground and many offered juice in tasting glasses for children as the parents tasted the real stuff. This is a good thing, until you gain a false sense of how long your toddler can last doing adult activities on a trip.  At one winery, my daughter started screaming and threw an entire container of blueberries all over a tasting room.  I had to individually pick them all up while my husband took her outside, still kicking.  Another day, while waiting for a lunch table, my daughter threw an i-Pad onto the floor and melted down in the front doorway of the restaurant. Our fault for giving her the iPad, but at this point in the trip, we had given up on any semblance of good parenting. We left without sitting down or eating. Live and learn…don’t push your luck. And most of all, laugh.
    Top: Gantheaume Point, Broome, AUS, 2013
    Bottom: August Itinerary, 2013

Australian Adventure–By the Numbers

Day 20 and chugging along on our family adventure in Australia. There’s been so much to write about, but we’ve on the road for 17 of the last 20 days with faulty wireless access and power charging dilemmas, so apologies for the silence! I’ll try to catch up now that we are (somewhat) settled in Sydney. We crossed the international dateline on August 19th and have since been in more airports and rental cars than I’d like to remember.  I love adventure, but am very happy to have finally landed in one place for a few months!

Our trip so far by the numbers:
15,581 miles flown
35 hours on a plane
21 hours in a rental car
21 hours remembering to keep left in the rental car
12 hours waiting to get on a plane
6 flights
6 airports
6 carry-ons
6 checked bags
5 hotels
4 timezones
3 rental cars
3 hours trying to get permissions to bring a car seat on an airplane
2 tired parents kept partially sane by sense of humor
1 toddler, doing well but on the brink of meltdown at any moment
1 smuggled bottle of chilled wine (in carry-on cooler)
1 speeding ticket (blame it on km)

In general, we’ve made some great family memories, but my 2.5 year old keeps crying to “go home to New York City”…hopefully that will improve in the next few weeks. Stay tuned for a post this week detailing The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly from our 20 days of travel, as well as more images from gorgeous Western Australia.

 

Top:Warehouse Wall, Fremantle, Western Australia, 2013
Middle: Sky Over Pacific, 2013* iPhone
Bottom: Sunset Over Central Australia, 2013 *iPhone

 

[…] as expected, it hasn’t been all roses. Here is my take on the good, the bad, and the ugly from our three-week trip thus […]

Fine Art Friday–Margaret River, Western Australia

We arrived in Australia (!) and I’m still on the road, but promise to share more travel updates soon. In the meantime, here is an image from a gorgeous place that I visited last week. The trees in Margaret River (think Napa Valley with a Big Sur coastline and a twist of Vermont thrown in) are like something out of a dream…so visually arresting that you literally can’t look away.  While driving through their Karri forests, the trees are imposing yet welcoming; beautiful individually but most striking as a whole. Some bend gracefully over the road while other ancient giants stand tall.  As I shot this, I knew that even the widest angle lens would not translate the feeling of being surrounded by this beauty. But this image comes close!

I hope everyone has a great weekend planned to somewhere equally as beautiful. Happy Friday!

Caves Road, Boranup Karri Forest, Margaret River, Western Australia, 2013

Beth - August 30, 2013 - 1:54 pm

Sarah, I would frame this and put it in our new house. Not enormous, but big enough that it could be a focal point in a room. It is striking and calming at the same time.

Georgina - September 1, 2013 - 9:12 am

Gorgeous! Can’t wait to see more photos from your adventure!

Sarah - September 4, 2013 - 7:47 am

Thanks Beth- what a compliment! It would look great, printed large and maybe on metal- let’s talk when I return!

[…] trees in the Karri forest were like something out of a dream–sinewy, dark, graceful, and […]

Fine Art Friday–Throw off the Bowlines


Today I embark on a six day journey (including 21 hours of flying with a 2.5 year old!) to reach our new home for the next four months: Sydney, Australia. We’re stopping in LA for the weekend to see some of my best friends before the dreaded 15 hour flight on Monday.  And Tuesday? It just gets wiped off the map! Thanks to the International Dateline, I will have no August 20th in 2013…leave on Monday, land on Wednesday. Good thing it’s not my birthday.

While thinking about this new adventure, I was reminded of my old obsession with quotable magnets.  I used to travel to LAX a lot for work, and during each visit, I’d find my 23-year-old self in the card shop in the American Airlines terminal, reading through the rack of clichéd quotes and purchasing the one that most inspired me that day. Obviously, I was the picture of optimism and inspiration as my magnet collection grew (note sarcasm).  But I still have several, and one of my favorites is this:

Life is short, break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you laugh. Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover. 
-Mark Twain

Thank you Mark Twain (Hartford, CT Pride). I’d like to think that I’m throwing off that bow line, sailing away from what’s comfortable and easy, and planning to explore and discover what Australia has to offer our young family for four months. That is, if I ever finish packing. Back to it!  It wasn’t the easiest decision to uproot for four months, but it was the choice that wouldn’t cause regrets. I’m certain that my camera will enjoy the journey, so stay tuned for updates from Down Under, and feel free to subscribe above to receive posts as I write them from fourteen hours ahead of the East Coast. Cheers!