Distance Traveled: 34,895 kms (BNE-MEL-SYD-BKK-PKT-BKK-CNX-BKK-PP-SR-BB-PP-HCMC-NC-TH-HA-H-L-MR-AG-SV-TF-AC-LL-ML-CZ-TF)
Time Difference: -10 hours (from Brisbane)
Soundtrack: Into cheery pop music right now. Gotye's new one, Jessie J, Beyonce
Currently Inspired by: Ahh, my Mr Adams. I thought of him, and this particular passage below, whilst on the Tenerife ferry. It is my all time favourite piece of writing of his, and I have a tendency to spout it off as a party trick. (OK, just realised I'm a gigantic geek). Cried with laughter the first time I read it, and depending on my mood it can still bring a tear to my eye and a resounding strike to my funny bone. Pure brilliance.
There is, for some reason, something
especially grim about pubs near stations, a very particular kind of grubbiness,
a special kind of pallor to the pork pies.
Worse than the pork pies, though,
are the sandwiches.
There is a feeling which persists in
England that making a sandwich interesting, attractive, or in any way pleasant
to eat is something sinful that only foreigners do.
``Make 'em dry,'' is the instruction
buried somewhere in the collective national consciousness, ``make 'em rubbery.
If you have to keep the buggers fresh, do it by washing 'em once a week.''
It is by eating sandwiches in pubs
on Saturday lunchtimes that the British seek to atone for whatever their
national sins have been. They're not altogether clear what those sins are, and
don't want to know either. Sins are not the sort of things one wants to know
about. But whatever their sins are they are amply atoned for by the sandwiches
they make themselves eat.
If there is anything worse than the
sandwiches, it is the sausages which sit next to them. Joyless tubes, full of
gristle, floating in a sea of something hot and sad, stuck with a plastic pin
in the shape of a chef's hat: a memorial, one feels, for some chef who hated
the world, and died, forgotten and alone among his cats on a back stair in
Stepney.
The sausages are for the ones who
know what their sins are and wish to atone for something specific.
Words written: 53,112. Slow week, am being a tourist
I really need to learn not to have expectations about
things. Most of the time I’m a seasoned
and well behaved enough traveller on these issues, but with the ferry I was so
excited at the prospect of more than two days at sea I did a huge amount of online
stalking of the operator and its fleet.
They didn’t say which ship we were getting but even the most basic ones
they had sounded lovely. Upon boarding I
realised that they mustn’t have their entire fleet available for online
inspection. It had a “restaurant” which
was really just a room full of plastic chairs and tables reminiscent of a high
school cafeteria, bay maries included.
The food was of the overcooked beef, frozen fish, chips & peas
variety, slopped haphazardly onto our plates by insouciant servers who couldn’t
stop their conversations long enough to pay attention to what they were doing. I half expected to see them standing there
wearing torn hair nets and with fags hanging out the side of their mouths. Still, mealtimes were a welcome relief from
the monotony, with a large TV screen playing blockbuster movie after
blockbuster movie, many of which I wanted to see, all of which had been
overdubbed in Spanish. On occasion the
person putting them on would give us the English subtitles for which I was most
grateful, and it was quite surreal watching an American film, overdubbed in
Spanish, with English subtitles.
Sometimes I could tell from the actor’s mouths that the subtitles weren’t
actually saying what they were saying.
Why do you think that is?
These were the kinds of fascinating questions that absorbed
me during my 50 hours on the rolling Mediterranean with no books (I haven’t
been able to buy any books in English for ages). I had booked a seat only as the cabins were
outrageously expensive (much more than a flight) and only discovered once on
there that the seats didn’t recline. All
of the online fleet had reclining seats.
Cheeky buggers! Fortunately there
were less than thirty people in the seated section so we all had pretty much at
least a row of three seats to ourselves, and this is where I would stretch out
for the night’s “sleep”. They would
leave the lights on all night, and the seating area was in the same room as the
bar and restaurant so people would stay up talking until the wee hours and it
wasn’t exactly comfortable as the seats were leather bucket seats, so it wasn’t
an even surface. Also it was a narrow space,
and with the rolling of the ship, was difficult to stay on. It was too cold and windy to spend any amount
of time on deck so basically I sat alternating between two spots for two days, first
in my chair, and when that became unbearable, I sat in the restaurant and
looked out at the window. You know,
people say sea views are fabulous, and they can be, but they really require
some perspective don’t they? When it’s
nothing but sea, and a grey sea under an overcast sky at that, it isn’t
terribly exciting. The first night I was
so bored I bought some whiskey and got very drunk while watching episodes of
the West Wing on my iPad. The benefit of
doing so is that I was so ill the next day, I couldn’t really feel that bored
because I had a hangover to nurse.
Needless to say the remainder of the whiskey is sitting in my bag,
glaring at me and serving as a solemn reminder of the evils of the devil’s
nectar. I feel funny when I look at it. “Why didn’t you spend your time writing?” I
hear you ask, and it’s a valid question.
I was in a fairly regular phase of hating my book and everyone in it,
and wanting them all to die. If I killed
all my characters before I finished the book I wouldn’t have much else to write
about!
Tenerife is funky, and much larger than I expected. There are nearly a million people on this
island, and about 300,000 of them live in the capital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife,
where I am staying. I was planning to
just pop over to another area called Playa de las Americas, a famous beach /
resort town with lots of nightclubs in the hope of meeting some English
speaking tourists, and it’s 70 kilometres away!
I don’t even know how to get there.
There are about 30 gazillion tourists here at the moment, however they
all appear to me to be Spanish, and Spanish speaking. I’ve encountered a couple of people who I
believe were some other type of Europeans, after eavesdropping on their
conversations. What does a girl have to
do to meet some English speakers around here?
Talk about language barriers. Now,
don’t get me wrong, I have learned SOME Spanish while I’ve been here, enough to
be able to ask a variety of pertinent questions and understand the responses,
but I certainly can’t converse on any meaningful level.
Fortunately, music and dancing are universal, and there is muchos musica y bailar to be had. The first night I was here saw a huge parade
to kick off the festivities properly, so my timing was perfect. I have never seen costumes as elaborate and
detailed as there were in this parade, and it went forever. Unfortunately I left my brain in the hotel
room, along with my wallet and my camera, so I couldn’t get any photos of the
parade! Tut. My favourite part about this whole festival
is that just about half the town wears fancy dress around the streets, whether
they are performing or part of a group or just coming along to watch. There are so many costume shops in this place. I have seen at least half a dozen, and only
three supermarkets, if that gives you any indication. I have a feeling it is a fun place, year
round. The funniest part is getting up
and going for a walk in the morning and seeing people still in their costumes
from the night before, makeup smeared, wigs askew, shoes covered in beer,
looking and smelling absolutely worse for wear.
You know you’re getting old when instead of thinking “looks like a top
night” you think “Gee I’m grateful for my good sleep last night, and the fact
that I am clean and smelling good right now.” The costumes are so great though. I have encountered lady bugs and cows and
kitties and birds. Flamenco dancers
tango with nuns, and monks walk arm in arm with criminals. Batman fights Superman fights Wonderwoman
fights Darth Vader. Big shiny smiley
faces hop around putting smiles on our faces, clowns of every shape, size,
colour and demeanour cavort and sing at the drop of a hat. Nasty hockey and Ghostface masks keep us on
our toes and the sexy police keep everything above board... from the waist
up. There are an inordinate number of
men in dresses, wigs and makeup, just the way a gigantic fancy dress party
should be. My favourite characters so
far were Bender, Fry , Leila and the Professor from Futurama. Classic.
I really wish I had brought my camera to the parade!
I have basically just been wandering around every afternoon
and evening until I locate a pocket of chaos, colour and noise. It doesn’t take long. There have been nearly constant musical
groups on a variety of stages, from traditional Spanish (terrific) to modern
acapella and percussion groups, who I find too shouty and aggressive, and not
terribly musical at all. It’s basically
a whole stack of men yelling in three part harmonies into too many microphones,
with a percussion group playing behind them.
Today I stumbled across what can only be described as a large outdoor
rave, with a main stage, DJs, tons of dancers, singers, performers, guys shooting
beer cans out of big gun things and lots of jumping and screaming people. Helicopters kept going overhead and the
ground was literally shaking from the bass in the speakers. It was insane! Especially in the middle of the day, outdoors
and with children everywhere. I have
never been to something like that sober and it was quite a hot and heady
experience. I was enjoying the dancing
and cheering, I couldn’t understand anything the MC was saying of course but I
just screamed when everyone else was.
Caught up in the moment, you know.
I can only hope he wasn’t saying “Give it up for a privatised healthcare
system!” or “Shout if you love Jesus!” I
think I was pretty safe. I danced and
smiled and gambolled around with the best of them and only decided I’d had
enough when a small boy threw up at my feet.
Thus far I have managed to ignore all of the naughty food stalls except
for one very small (and expensive) hot dog the other night when I was
starving. Just the smell of all the fried
dough and sugar gets me high, but I don’t know how much longer I can hold out,
and I worry that the longer I hold out, the worse the binge is going to be when
I finally cave. They have toffee
apples. TOFFEE APPLES.
Tomorrow there is not much happening here during the day,
festival wise, so I am getting a bus to another region called Puerta de la Cruz
which has a large attraction called Loro Parque. Basically it sounds like SeaWorld with the
addition of the world’s largest “collection” of parrots. (Is it called a collection? That doesn’t seem right). Then more festivities at night. Every night until I leave there is something
happening, so I will no doubt have many more colourful photos for next week’s
blog. I am also going to attempt to go
up to the highest point on the island (and in Spain) Mount Teide, which is the
third largest volcano in the world.
Exciting times ahead!
Cadiz was my next stop, and I was really only there for one
night and half a day before boarding my ferry to Tenerife, so I didn’t see that
much. It was a few degrees colder than
Malaga and you definitely feel it at these temperatures! I went for a long stroll on the second day
and stopped at a couple of the lovely little cafes I encountered on the way and
enjoyed some leisurely hot drinks and tasty tapas while people watching. It’s nice to be able to eat out again, I must
say. The tapas experience in Spain is
very different to Australia, no doubt due to the availability of ingredients
and also the availability of tapas restaurants.
Here it is very seafood and cured meat based, and the idea is that you
have one or two dishes at one place, and then move onto the next venue. I like it, and although I frequently have little
to no idea what I’m actually ordering, I haven’t had a bad dish yet.
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| Ship in Cadiz port (not my ship! I wish!) |
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| Coming up to Tenerife |
Note: It has been three nights since I got off the
boat, and I am still experiencing “sea legs” where it feels like the ground is
moving the same way the boat did. It is
causing me to stumble on occasion (like I needed help in the department!), I
can’t really walk in a straight line, and at the parade I kept swaying into the
people either side of me. It’s
embarrassing, and has now officially gone longer than the boat trip was. Should I be worried?
![]() |
| One of the many fountains |
Lots of people have no idea about where I am at the
moment. Click here to read about the Canary Islands.
![]() |
| The Shouty Men |
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| It's sad that he looks better in that than I would |
Click here to see the photos of Tenerife I haven't taken that many of the actual town, because honestly apart from the festival activities there isn't that much that sets it apart from mainland Spain. The same architecture, cute streets, lovely gardens, lots of monuments and fountains. When I get out of the city and onto the beaches and up the volcano, that will change, no doubt.
![]() |
| This afternoon's madness |
Til Next We Speak
*LOVE*
N






Yeah! Givin' it up for a privatised healthcare system now! Yeah! Woo!
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