Saturday, 4 December 2010

Destination #16: Adventures in Oz

2 November 2010 – 19 November 2010 + 2 December 2010 – 6 December 2010: East Coast of Australia from Sydney to the Great Barrier Reef


Sydney

Having left London on a Sunday evening we finally set foot on Australian soil early Tuesday morning, having lost a day in the process. First stop on our two-month Australasia trip: Sydney.

We quickly made our way over to Sue and Dave’s (Emma’s aunt and uncle) who didn’t waste much time before heating up the “barby”. They also got us hooked on a brilliant TV show called Junior Masterchef (basically a better version of Hell’s Kitchen with a bunch of 8 to 12 year olds cooking their socks off). I made a desperate attempt at mastering some cricket rules after Friday’s dinner at Keith’s and despite Paul and Dave’s best efforts I failed miserably (Sri Lanka did manage to beat Australia which, although I am not an expert, I am pretty sure it is not great news).


A visit to Sydney wouldn’t be complete without visiting Sydney’s key landmark, the iconic Sydney Opera House (which according to Debs is called “the Opera Thingy”). The Opera House was designed by Danish architect Jorn Utzon who got the sack when he blew the budget. As revenge he took the blueprints back home with him to Denmark and never came back to Australia ever again. That is what I call throwing a tantrum! 

We also got ourselves on the ferry to Manly, completed the Sydney Harbour Bridge climb and walked along the beach from Bondi to Bronte following lunch at Iceberg’s with our old new best friend from South America, Erica. Even good old JdP from DB, who smartly relocated to Sydney, managed to drag himself away from his desk to come out for lunch with us during the week and even invited us for a good old barby over the weekend.

Myall Lakes National Park

After four days in Sydney we started to make our way up to Brisbane in the smallest rental car you will ever see, a small red Suzuki Swift. 



We encountered our first kangaroos while we were staying for the night at the Bombah Eco Cottages, close to Bulahdelah in the Myall Lakes National Park. We didn’t actually spent much time in the town of Bulahdelah, but the name reminded us so much of the movie Team America (“Durka Durka” anyone?) that we couldn’t resist mentioning it.


You know that you are in Australia when the sign on the door of reception reads “Attention guests, there is a red bellied black snake near the water tanks, please keep an eye out”. Needless to say, I stayed well clear of those water tanks because I have a similar relationship with snakes as Indiana Jones and at least he had a whip.

Byron Bay

From Myall Lakes National Park we drove up to Byron Bay, a former hippy beach-side town where surfing is a way of life. Byron Bay also happens to be the most easterly point of the Australian mainland. We spent a couple of days chilling out at The Summerhouse, a cozy small boutique hotel just outside of Byron with great views over the iconic lighthouse. 

We also managed to squeeze in a day-trip to the Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary in the Gold Coast where we had our first encounter with Koalas (basically the laziest eucalyptus munchers you will ever see) and salt-water crocs (quite similar to koalas in terms of laziness but with as main differentiator that they don’t eat eucalyptus). The local croc was around 6 meters long and was weighing over a 1,000kg. He was called “Holy” and it didn’t take a lot of imagination to see why. Like true tourists we of course also had to have a go at feeding the kangaroos and their “Joeys” (the small baby kangaroos).

Brisbane to Cairns

We dropped off our rental car at Brisbane Airport and made our way over to the City centre to meet up with a familiar face from London: the legendary Tom Cribb. Cribb managed to give us a taste of the Brisbane nightlife by taking us to places with shady names such as Cloudland and Uber. The insult of the evening was courtesy of one of the bouncers when he told me that I looked like “that guy from the movie The Hangover”. I guess that means that my attempted Hugh Jackmann look hasn’t really rubbed off.

Feeling “rough as guts” the next morning, we checked out of our motel at the same time as some of the local LJs (ok, this may require some explanation, the Australian equivalent of the Foxtons chain of real estate agents is called LJ Hookers, enough said I hope). We even got a reborn Cribb to drop us off at the train station. After some necessary caffeine intakes, we assembled just enough courage to board Australia’s version of the Orient Express: The Sunlander. The Sunlander goes all the way from Brisbane to Cairns, a sweet 1,750km, or 31 hours. This fantastic journey along the East Coast of Australia took us past some of Queensland finest towns with grand names such as Bundaberg, Gympie North (our personal favourite) and Proserpine.


Bloomfield Lodge (Great Barrier Reef)

A 40 minute plane ride from Cairns, followed by a 25km bus ride through the outback and a 15 minute boat trip over the croc-infested Bloomfield River got us to Bloomfield Lodge, labeled “the most remote resort in the world” by Forbes Magazine in September 2010. Bloomfield Lodge is in a unique location, situated 30km north of Cape Tribulation and 60km south of Cooktown, it is nestled in between two World Heritage sites: the Daintree Rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef. There is no mobile reception, no email, no nothing basically so you are completely cut off from the outside world. 


Besides meeting some fabulous people (special mention here for Bob (a hopeless fisher, but what a great guy) and Jean, Sam (a confused Englishman who thinks he is Australian) and Erin, David (another banker on the run) and Jenny and Iron Man Andy and Catherine) we also met two great characters: Paulie and Shayne. 


Paulie and Shayne were our local guides at Bloomfield and these guys are the real deal. Shayne once got stung by a baby stingray while fishing and had to get a 12-year old, to drive him to the hospital in his jeep, while he fell in and out of consciousness. They made it to hospital and he just survived. Shayne was full of stories of his adventures in the bush and he is clearly the real version of Bear Grylls. So here we go with a selection of Shayne’s all-time classic quotes during our stay:

On tree-kangaroos and the fact that they tend to fall out of trees: “Tree-kangaroos are great go-uppers, hopeless come-downers though”

On what to do when bitten by a python: “Go home, sit down, have a beer, if you are still alive by the time you have finished your beer, you go to work, if not, well, you don’t really have to worry about work anymore mate will you?”

While making us rub some leaves he found in the Daintree Rainforest between our fingers: “You feel that? Rub it in between your fingers. You feel that texture? Yeah? Just rub it, like that. By the way, those leaves are really poisonous.”

Ten seconds before cracking open a strange looking berry and putting it on the tip of his tongue: “You see these berries, 1 gram of that stuff can kill you”

On reincarnation: “I just hope I don’t come back as a male praying mantis, because you will only get one thrill in life” (e.g. the female praying mantis has a tendency of biting her male partner’s head off after mating…)

On the real Bear Grylls from the Discovery Channel: “He is a tosser”


Shayne told us that he is going to write a book about his adventures in the bush when he retires in a couple of years time. It is going to be called “Toenails in the pizza” and you better watch out for it, because this guy is going to be Australia’s answer to Sweden’s Stieg Larsson. What a legend.


What else did we get up to at Bloomfield Lodge? Well Em managed to catch the biggest – and for that matter ugliest – fish you will ever see during our day-trip snorkeling in the Great Barrier Reef: a 8kg flowery cod. Paulie took us croc-spotting on the local river and we had tea at Bloomfield Falls just north of the aboriginal community Wujal Wujal (which means as much “many falls” in the local language as the Aboriginals have no separate word for big they repeat a word twice in case something is large). After six days in the wilderness we reluctantly left Bloomfield Lodge and returned to civilisation.

Next stop: Destination #17: Thrill seeking in NZ

Thursday, 18 November 2010

Planes, Trains and Automobiles

After 249 days of traveling, we reached - and even passed - the half-way point of our "List of 28", having now completed 16 out of the 28 destinations on our list (and hoping to hit number 17 tomorrow). Hidden deep inside of us, there is a big geek with thick glasses and a love for statistics who is just screaming to get out, so we thought we would bore you a bit with our travel stats to date. 


So far we managed to clock up 160,808 km traveling around the world and we made it over to South Africa, Mauritius, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Ireland, Holland, USA, Spain, Norway, Greece, Canada, Argentina, Chili, Bolivia, Peru, Israel, France, Scotland and Australia in the process.




In memory of the great John Candy (and I mean great in every sense of the word), here we go with our own version of "Planes, Trains and Automobiles". We even take it to another level by throwing some buses and a bunch of boats in the mix. Over the last eight months, we took 41 flights, dragged ourselves on 8 trains, got on 12 buses, boarded 2 boats and we hired 13 different cars. So on average we traveled 646 km a day, dragging ourselves on a plane every 6 days. You got to love statistics...


PLANES:
Total distance traveled by plane: 146,763 km
Number of flights: 41

1. London (UK) - Cape Town (South Africa) with Virgin Atlantic in February (9,634 km)
2. Cape Town (South Africa) - London (UK) with Virgin Atlantic in February (9,634 km)
3. London (UK) - Mauritius with BA in March (9,726 km)
4. Mauritius - London (UK) with BA in March (9,726 km)
5. London (UK) - Abu Dhabi (UAE) with Etihad in April (5,478 km)
6. Abu Dhabi (UAE) - London (UK) with Etihad in April (5,478 km)
7. London (UK) - Dublin (Ireland) with Aer Lingus in April (464 km)
8. Dublin (Ireland) - London (UK) with Aer Lingus in April (464 km)
9. London (UK) - Amsterdam (Neth.) with KLM in April (359 km)
10. Amsterdam (Neth.) - London (UK) with KLM in April (359 km)
11. London (UK) - Las Vegas (US) with BA in May (8,423 km)
12. San Francisco (US) - London with BA in May (8,640 km)
13. London (UK) - Barcelona (Spain) with Ryanair in June (1,138 km) *
14. Barcelona (Spain) - London (UK) with Ryanair in June (1,138 km) *
15. London (UK) - Rhodes (Greece) with Easyjet in June (2,792 km)
16. Rhodes (Greece) - London (UK) with Easyjet in June (2,792 km)
17. London (UK) - Bergen (Norway) with Norwegian in July (1,046 km)
18. Bergen (Norway) - Utne (Norway) with a Fonna Fly seaplane in July (123 km)
19. Utne (Norway) - Bergen (Norway) with a Fonna Fly seaplane in July (123 km)
20. Bergen (Norway) - London (UK) with Norwegian in July (1,046 km)
21. London (UK) - Amsterdam (Neth.) with BA in July (359 km) **
22. Amsterdam (Neth.) - London (UK) with BA in July (359 km) **
23. London (UK) - Toronto (Canada) with Canadian Affairs in July (5,731 km)
24. Toronto (Canada) - London (UK) with Thomas Cook Travel in July (5,731 km)
25. London (UK) - Dallas (US) with American Airlines in July (7,659 km)
26. Dallas (US) - Buenos Aires with American Airlines in July (8,455 km)
27. Buenos Aires (Argentina) - Salta (Argentina) with LAN in August (1,267 km)
28. Cusco (Peru) - Lima (Peru) with LAN in August (574 km)
29. Lima (Peru) - Miami (US) with American Airlines in August (4,198 km)
30. Miami (US) - London (UK) with American Airlines in August (7,139 km)
31. London (UK) - Amsterdam (Neth.) with BA in August (359 km) **
32. Amsterdam (Neth.) - London (UK) with BA in August (359 km) **
33. London (UK) - Tel Aviv (Israel) with El Al in September (3,560 km)
34. Tel Aviv (Israel) - London (UK) with El Al in September (3,560 km)
35. London (UK) - Amsterdam (Neth.) with Easyjet in September (359 km)
36. London (UK) - Edinburgh (UK) with BMI in October (534 km)
37. Aberdeen (UK) - London (UK) with BA in October (649 km)
38. London (UK) - Bangkok (Thailand) with BA in November (9,556 km)
39. Bangkok (Thailand) - Sydney (Australia) with BA in November (7,524 km)
40. Cairns (Australia) - Bloomfield Lodge (Australia) with Hinterland Aviation in November (124 km)
41. Bloomfield Lodge (Australia) - Cairns (Australia) with Hinterland Aviation in November (124 km)

TRAINS
Total distance by train: 4,522 km
Number of train rides: 8

1. London (UK) to Maastricht (Neth.) with Eurostar in July (373 km) *
2. Maastricht (Neth.) - London (UK) with Eurostar in July (373 km) *
3. Den Haag (Neth.) - Brussels (Belgium) with NS in September (137 km)
4. Brussels (Belgium) - Valence (France) with TGV in September (834 km)
5. Valence (France) - London (UK) with TGV/Eurostar in September (1,030 km)
6. Ollantaytambo (Peru) - Aguas Calientes (Peru) with PeruRail in September (47 km)
7. Aguas Calientes (Peru) - Ollantaytambo (Peru) with PeruRail in September (47 km)
8. Brisbane (Australia) - Cairns (Australia) on The Sunlander in November (1,681 km)

BUSES
Total distance traveled by bus: 2,441 km
Number of bus rides: 12

1. Salta (Argentina) - San Antonio de los Cobres (Argentina) - Salta (Argentina) in August (328 km)
2. Salta (Argentina) - San Pedro de Atacama (Chili) in August (905 km)
3. Oruro (Bolivia) - La Paz (Bolivia) in August (225 km)
4. La Paz (Bolivia) - Tiahuanaco (Bolivia) - La Paz (Bolivia) in August (126 km)
5. La Paz (Bolivia) - Puno (Peru) in August (214 km)
6. Puno (Peru) - Cusco (Peru) in August (388 km)
7. Cusco (Peru) - Ollantaytambo (Peru) in August (38 km)
8. Aguas Calientes (Peru) - Machu Picchu (Peru) in August (6 km)
9. Macchu Pichu (Peru) - Aguas Calientes (Peru) in August (6 km)
10. Ollantaytambo (Peru) - Cusco (Peru) in August (65 km)
11. Valence (France) - Aubenas (France) with TER in September (70 km)
12. Aubenas (France) - Valence (France) with TER in September (70 km)

BOATS
Total distance traveled by boat: 115 km
Number of boat trips: 2

1. Mauritius - Ille aux Cerfs in March (15 km)
2. Puno (Peru) - Lake Tititcaca (Peru) - Puno (Peru) in August (100 km)

CARS
Total distance traveled by car: 5,967 km
Number of car rides: 13

1. Wineroute in South Africa from Cape Town to Stellenbosch, Franschhoek and back to Cape Town in our Kia Jeep in February (145 km)
2. Day-trip in Mauritius in our Nissan Something in March (120 km)
3. Nevada / Arizona roadtrip from Las Vegas to Flagstaff and back to Las Vegas (US) in our Ford Explorer in June (812 km)
4. California roadtrip from Las Vegas - LA - Santa Barbara - San Francisco (US) in our Ford Mustang convertible in June (1,176 km) 
5. London - Amsterdam - London roundtrip in Ruth's Porsche Cayenne in June (494 km) **
6. Toronto to Parry Sound and back to Toronto (Canada) in our VW Jetta in July (450 km)
7. Toronto to Niagara Falls and back to Toronto (Canada) in our VW Jetta in July (142 km)
8. Crossing Bolivia from the Bolivian border to Uyuni in our convoy of Toyota Landcruisers in August (450 km)
9. Escape Uyuni to Oruro in our convoy of Toyota Landcruisers in August (314 km)
10. Israel roundtrip from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and back to Tel Aviv (Israel) in our Mazda 3 in September (120 km)
11. Scottish roadtrip from Edinburgh to the Isle of Skye, Inverness and Aberdeen in our Ford Focus in October (751 km)
12. The Inverness / Loch Ness tour with Frank and his beautiful Mercedes in October (55 km)
13. Sydney to Brisbane in our tiny red Suzuki Swift in November (938 km)

* RJ only one traveling
** Emma only one traveling

Saturday, 30 October 2010

Destination #14 & #15: Scottish Roadtrip: Edinburgh / Gleneagles

Friday 7 October 2010 - Sunday 17 October 2010

I have recently received some heavy criticism about the blog. I won't be able to disclose the name of the complainant at this stage but it was alleged that the blog is "only about you, your big belly and football and not enough about me or my shoes". So despite the fact I was going to tell you all about the cloning project Hearts football club has going on at the moment (the have put a Latvian wood-chopper in a football jersey, cloned him 10 times and called it their first team) or the fact that I almost got away with Inverness Caledonian Thistle's Division 1 trophy, this blog is going to be all about two blokes called Jimmy and Manolo.

We kicked off our Scottish roadtrip in Edinburgh, ticking off number 14 off our List of 28 in the process. We checked in at The Edinburgh Residence and met up with our dear friends Hugh and Lesley. In between buying shoes, we managed to squeeze in some nice restaurants, starting off with Ondine, where Em had the hand-dived Scottish scallops as a starter and the chili-squid risotto as a main. In order to comply with the new editorial guidelines of this blog, I won't bore you with what I had that night. 

The next day we did what we, or at least some of us, came for: shoe shopping. This basically means that two guys called Jimmy and Manolo take turns at plundering my bank account. Today it was Jimmy's turn and he managed to convince Emma to part company with a small fortune, equaling the GDP of a medium-sized African country, for some, and I quote, "elegant black heels which are the most beautiful shoes I have ever seen". After this purchase we have been forced to change the name of our blog to The List of 27. Best thing about the new shoes is that they are so precious it would of course be a waste to actually wear them. 

We said goodbye to Edinburgh in style by having dinner at Kitchin. Tom not only served some fantastic game, scallops and lobster, but also a soufflé which was more than a worthy competitor to Angela Hartnett's one when she was still cooking at The Connaught in London.

From Edinburgh we moved onto Gleneagles, now officially passing the halfway line of our List of 28 as this was number 15 on our list. Gleneagles is a fantastic place, with some great restaurants, an amazing golf course and a delightful spa. As Em spent her time in the spa, I went out for some introductory gundog training. Ptar was the lucky black labrador who got a morning of exercise. Ptar is probably the most excited living being I have ever met. And stopping mid-track was clearly not his forte. But Ptar loved running around and getting those rubber duckies out of the water must have been his favourite activity. If Ptar would have been human, he would probably have been the perfect General for the US Army: shoot first, ask questions later.


The Gleneagles experience wouldn't be complete without some good food. So we kicked off our dinner with the whisky smoked salmon as a starter, had the chateaubriand as a main and finished it all of with a vanilla brulée as a dessert all accompanied with some Pouilly-Fumé, Chateauneuf du Pape and a Port. In one word: fantastic.

From Gleneagles we drove our rental car all the way up to the Isle of Skye. Although I thought I did a good job driving around Scotland, somebody, who will again remain nameless, labeled my driving style as a "freakjob". Besides that little incident, it was a beautiful ride through the Scottish Highlands with some absolutely stunning landscapes. On the Isle of Skye we found the perfect get-away, the Skeabost Country House Hotel. OK, it needs a lick of paint, but what a perfect get-away with beautiful views over the loch this is. Here we had a go at fly-fishing with the local fishing guide, or ghillie, Derek. Derek, a lost Englishman from Oxfordshire, came to the Isle of Skye six years ago to build a house, but ended up acquiring a 20 year lease on the Snizort river instead. He also provided us with his fantastically cheesy fishing mantra which is "The way to a fisherman's heart is through his flies". 

Fly-fishing was great fun, but we were absolutely rubbish at it. We managed to swing our line everywhere except into the Snizort river. No fish were hurt or caught in the process. After a morning of unfruitful fishing, Derek introduced us to his girlfriend who had just moved in with him - having arrived from Australia only a couple of days earlier. Annie was lovely, although she did look remarkably similar to Patsy from Absolutely Fabulous. Fortunately Jimmy and Manolo had missed the Isle of Skye in their bid for World Shoe Domination so no further purchases were made, a fact we celebrated in one of the nicest restaurants on the island called The Three Chimneys.

After a couple of days on the Isle of Skye we made our way over to Inverness, the capital of the Highlands, where we were welcomed by Frank. We have had our fair share of guides over the last couple of months, whether it was Claire in the Grand Canyon or El Gato on the Inca Trail, but Frank was definitely the best researched and most dedicated of them all. He took us around Inverness, showed us Loch Ness (ex the Monster), got us to the Culloden battlefields in one piece, dragged us to the Tomatin whisky distillery (which happens to be owned by a bunch of Japanese, don't ask) and even organised a tour around the Inverness CT stadium for us (where Frank and I almost got away with the Division 1 Trophy they won last year). We loved Frank and he is without a doubt the best guide we have had so far (anyone who adopts a duck and calls it "Crispy" is a legend in his own right). We may have to tempt Frank out of retirement and off the golf course with a knock-out bid for his services and take him with us on our upcoming trip to Australia, NZ and Japan.

One story worth telling is about a bloke called Steve who we met at Dores Beach on the shores of Loch Ness. 19 years ago, Steve left his girlfriend, sold his house, quit his job, and pursued his dream to become a full-time monster hunter on the shores of Loch Ness. He bought an old mobile-library van as his new home and sells little statues of Nessie to fund his "Nessie-sery Independent Research" activities (as true tourists we are currently the proud owners of one of these statues). Steve told us he hadn't seen the Loch Ness monster yet but he had "definitely seen things that were not fish". Well at least we have some more inspiration regarding what to do after we have finished our sabbatical.

After two days in Inverness, we checked out of the Rocpool Reserve and drove up to Aberdeen where we handed in our rental car. Here we reached full circle as we caught up with our friends Hugh and Lesley again for some relaxing and to show off the newly acquired Jimmys. This concludes a beautiful 10 days spent in Scotland, an absolutely stunning country, even more so in the Autumn.

Next stop: Destination number 16: Oz

Sunday, 3 October 2010

Destination #13: Fat Camp in Fons (France)


Sunday 19 September 2010 - Sunday 26 September 2010

After eating our way through Israel, we decided to make our way over to the family chateau Mas du Rosier in France (also referred to by some elements of the dark side of the family as Fort Knox or Alcatraz) for number 13 on our list of 28. Here we met up with the Queen of the Castle, my aunt Ada, and my cousins Freek and Johan.


This also enables me to tell a story I was told when I was still a terrified (and mainly clueless) first year investment banking analyst and which I have been dying to tell ever since. So here we go. When the Dutch incumbent telecom operator KPN was privatised by the Dutch government in 1994, the management team was sent on a roadshow to the US to drum up demand for the soon to be listed shares. Unfortunately, nobody had given much thought to how the names of the Dutch CEO and CFO would sound to the North American pension funds. I still pity the accompanying US investment banker who had to utter the now legendary words "Ladies and gentlemen, it is my pleasure to introduce Wim Dik and Freek Monster, the CEO and CFO of KPN". A gulf of laughter erupted as the US institutional investors tried to come to terms with the fact that two funny sounding blokes called Wim the Dick and the Freakmonster not only were running a company in some Western European banana republic but were also trying to get them to buy into it when it listed. It is probably funnier when you are still a clueless junior banker wearing green suits. 


Anyway, this is also the only fun I will be able to make of my cousin Freek, who beat me fair and square 2 out of 3 times for our evening runs from Fons to Ailhon, a distance of probably about 5km but at a steep and steady incline of 126m. A distance I used to run in below 30 minutes when I was young, fit and pretty but I found out the hard way that 10 years in banking has added 10 minutes to my time (and that is on a good day). Below how we fared (Freek's time in between brackets):

Monday: 40.36 min. (40.51)
Tuesday: 41.18 min. (-)
Wednesday: 42.48 min. (42.33)
Thursday: 41.17 min. (-)
Friday: 37.50 min. (37.00)


What did we do for the rest? Not much to be honest. Em managed to finish a bunch of books, we dipped our toes in the freezing pool, I read L'Equipe every day and managed to locate Ajax's former Greek striker Charisteas, nowadays plying his trade at Arles-Avignon in Ligue 1 (seven games, zero goals, some things never change) and we had a good go at making a dent into Ada's wine collection.

Next stop: Destination #14 & #15: Shoe shopping in Edinburgh / Fly-fishing on the Isle of Skye

Monday, 27 September 2010

Destination #12: Crashing weddings in Israel

Wednesday 1 September 2010 - Sunday 12 September 2010

After a couple of days rest following our South American adventures (and of course catching up on the football, which eventually literally made our TV implode), we dragged ourselves on a plane again, this time with final destination Tel Aviv.

The trip got off to a rocky start due to an altercation with Israeli border control, who bluntly ignored my desperate pleas and put a big stamp in my passport rather than putting it on a separate piece of paper as requested. I got a better treatment at the Chilean-Bolivian border from the massively corrupt Bolivian custom agents than what I got at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport. Anyway, let's call it karma as a week earlier, our friend Kingsley spent over an hour in a small room at Schiphol Airport trying to explain what a Nigerian investment banker from London thought he was going to do in Amsterdam for a weekend. Grand conclusion of this all is that any trips to Bahrain or Beirut are now firmly off the agenda, at least on this passport, and that Kingsley will think twice before going back to Amsterdam.

After a month of back-packing through South America we felt we deserved some luxury. So we spent an afternoon struggling through a pile of travel magazines before booking our trip and I can say the hotels didn't disappoint. We had a fantastic time in Jerusalem's funky Mamilla Hotel, which boasts a very chilled-out rooftop bar together with a private sun-deck on its top floor. As per Conde Nast's recommendation make sure to get room 706 for a perfect view over the old city. Also Sunday Times' Traveller's favourite boutique hotel in Tel Aviv - the 12 room Montefiore Hotel - is something worth coming back for, if only for the fact that breakfast is being served until 17:00. We loved it.

The real reason for our trip was of course to act as true "wedding crashers" for Shaul and Tamar's wedding in Ma'ale Hachimasha. A beautiful wedding which, with circa 450 people, we were told, is deemed to be a "small" affair for Israeli standards... It was also a good occasion to say goodbye to my 5-week old Che Guevara bushy beard. I have found out that having a beard has many advantages, the biggest being that food tends to get stuck in it so you will never go hungry (not that the latter is an issue which I struggle with as many of you know).

Meeting the extended Israeli part of the family was a real treat, we were invited for lunches, dinners and we even managed to squeeze in a breakfast. It was a real pleasure to, see again (for Emma) / meet for the first time (for RJ), the Israeli part of the family. Special thanks to David, Audrey, Shaul, Tamar, Gallia, Nadav, Yariv, Moran, Nick and Nelly for making our stay so memorable.

So what else did we get up to? Well we lounged at Tel Aviv’s superb beaches, met up with our dear friends Danny and Hester, visited the hugely impressive Yad Vashem holocaust museum, admired the Wailing Wall, managed to get lost in Jerusalem's old city, were close to buying some David Kracov shadow-boxes from the hip Jerusalem art gallery Eden Fine Art and of course had loads of food, from kebabs to spicy peppers and from falafel to humus. So here come our restaurant recommendations for Tel Aviv: Itzik haGadol restaurant for some traditional humus, Yakimono for the best sushi in town and for the best ice-creams make your way over to the renovated old train station, Tachana.



With two stamps in my passport richer we left Israel 10 days later, this time without a bushy beard but with a big belly.

Next stop: Destination #13: Fat Camp in France

Sunday, 5 September 2010

Destination #11: Watching the sun come up at Machu Picchu (Peru)


Sunday 15 August 2010 - Friday 27 August 2010

We spent two weeks in Peru, but to be brutally honest, Peru is all about Machu Picchu, the rest is more about going through the motions of actually getting there.

Yes we did go to Copacabana (no, not the one from the song), yes we went to the largest lake in the world above 2,000m (Lake Titicaca), yes I found myself a new mum and found God at the same time (well sort of) during our home-stay (we stayed with the lovely big mama Julia and her son Jesus for a night in Luquina), yes, the floating Uros islands on Lake Titicaca are just another tourist trap, yes Elvis is still alive, he is running for mayor in Cusco, and finally, no, they clearly have never heard of offside in Peru (we lost 3-2 against a bunch of kids at an altitude of c. 3,500).

So after having passed through the completely forgettable city of Puno, and following another 8hrs bus ride we finally arrived in Cusco, the gateway to Machu Picchu. Cusco was the capital of the Inca empire before the Spanish moved the capital to the port city of Lima in 1535 (apparently the clueless Spanish invaders chose Lima as new capital in January, one of the few months in the year the city is not covered in thick layers of fog. When they discovered their mistake it was too late to reverse the decision).

We really enjoyed Cusco. I know it is just another backpackers' paradise and the only reason everyone is there is to go on to Machu Picchu, but the place has something. Maybe it is Jack's, the best lunch-place in the whole of Peru. Their burgers and pancakes are divine and definitely worth the wait. Or maybe it was the completely over the top restaurant Fallen Angel, which has bathtubs - with real goldfish swimming in them - as dinner tables. Maybe even better is that the local football club, Club Cienciano, won the Copa Sudamericana a couple of years ago, by beating the mighty River Plate from Argentina in the final (the European equivalent of this would be QPR beating Real Madrid in the Champions League final, i.e. extremely unlikely).

Having missed out on the final permits for the Inca Trail, we were adopted by the salsa and karaoke-mad tour-leader Carlos and his GAP group. So with a bunch of guys from Brighton (Joe, "speedy gonzales" Chelsea and Chris), two Nottingham natives (Gemma and Dan) and one lost German giant (Alfred) we embarked on one of the alternative Inca treks: the 3-day Lares Trek.

With Carlos having decided that boozing with his ladyfriends in Cusco had his preference over struggling through the Peruvian Andes with us, our local guides El Gato (which means "The Cat") and Edith took charge.

Emma loved hiking so much that we had to restrict the complaining to one 5 minute interval per hour. She has also filed a claim for emotional and physical damages suffered to be compensated through the purchase of 1 Mulberry bag, 1 pair of Manolos and the guarantee that she never has to hike again. Never ever that is. What Emma really means is that she loved our trek through the Peruvian Andes and didn't mind using a toilet which consisted of a hole in the ground for 3 days.

The weather was typical Andes weather, hot during the day, freezing our asses off in our little tent during the night. Or as El Gato said: "The weather in the Peruvian Andes is as unpredictable as the mood of the Peruvian women". Well-spoken.

So after a three day hike, a quick bus ride and a fantastic train-ride from Ollantaytambo we made it to Aguas Calientes, the final stop before Machu Picchu. After sleeping outside for 2 nights, we slept as babies in our otherwise crappy hotel. Special mention for the "wake-up call" which consisted of knocking on all doors, regardless if you wanted a wake-up call or not. The knock on our door arrived at 03:30. Well in time for us to get in line for the first bus to Machu Picchu at 04:00. We made it onto the 3rd bus, which left Aguas Calientes at 05:30 and got us to Machu Picchu just before 06:00. 


Well-hidden between the Andean mountains, Machu Picchu is a magical place. Dependent on who you believe, Machu Picchu was either an Inca hide-away in times of war, or a holiday resort for the Inca rich and famous. It gave me an incredible desire to watch all Indiana Jones films again (the place was discovered by an American professor from Yale in 1911, who didn't waste any time in shipping most of the artifacts to the Yale museum in the US). We saw the sun come up at 07:00. It was fantastic and definitely the highlight of our trip.

Machu Picchu, literally means "old mountain" or as I found out the hard way, "old penis" when pronounced with a Dutch accent. There also is a Huayna Picchu or "young mountain", which (G)emma and I climbed as well (special mention for Gemma here for trying to push me off the summit in order to get the perfect photo shoot opportunity).

After having spent most of the day at Machu Picchu we made our way back to Cusco for some late night clubbing at Myhtology and Ukuku's. Once we recovered from our "hangovers from hell", we boarded a flight for Lima where we finished our South America trip in style: we went for a coca pisco sour and some ceviche together with our New Best Friend Erika at La Mar restaurant.

This completes our South American adventures. We spent an amazing month here, eating big steaks in Buenos Aires, risking our lives while sand-boarding in Chili, escaping dynamite-throwing miners in Bolivia and finishing it all with seeing the sun come up at Machu Picchu. It was a truly fantastic experience. We loved every minute of it. And Emma wants to go on the record that her favourite part was the 3-day hike through the Peruvian Andes....

Next stop: Destination #12: Weddings in Israel.