mindstalk: (economics)
Toughed out the paint smell. Decided not to linger, heading on to Melbourne tomorrow.

Nov 9, a Saturday: went to the Salamanca Market, a big market every Saturday. Part farmer's market, part food stalls, part art and craft stalls. I'd eaten breakfast before going but still tried a sausage and an egg roll, and bought some fudge I haven't opened yet. Also got some Merino wool socks, for me and as gifts. Mine could be better.

Then checked out the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (TMAG), for 1.5 hours before closing, enough time to eyeball it, then spend time in the coin/money room and a few minutes in the Antarctic room. Money room had stuff on small change shortages, the change to decimal (with an educational cartoon starring Dollar Bill on loop), money boxes (including a ceramic one from the 1500s.)




Nov 10: Went back to TMAG, spending an afternoon exhausting it. Went through the Antarctic room, which is probably their biggest anyway. Southern Ocean, currents, seamount biodiversity, various forlorn islands and their climates, Macquarie being unique in being entirely ocean crust folded up into an island, a stereoscopic video constructed from photos of a 1911-1914 expedition, various stuffed animals, a room on exploration (equipment, base culture).

An Australian design room, largely ceramics, I wasn't that engaged. Cabinets of transfer printed blue and white ceramics, *too* engaging, I took high-res photos to look at later. A painting room, some nice landscapes, some lame portraits. A sad room about the Tasmanian tiger aka thylacine. A Tasmanian natural history room; apparently the tallest flowering plants are some eucalyptus trees, and the most dangerous animal in Australia is one I haven't heard of, the jack jumper ant, which jumps and has nasty venom, killing one Tasmanian every four years. Giant freshwater lobster, the largest non-marine invertebrate. I hadn't realized some placentals are considered native: swamp rat and broad-toothed mouse.

Room on aboriginal culture, and what happened to the Tasmanians. I hadn't realized Tasmania was probably settled by foot from the 'mainland', later isolated by sea level rise. But they had stringybark canoes, which looked unusably shallow to me. They also made water carriers from kelp, didn't know you could do that; not sure if the carriers were used as is or as lining of woven grass baskets.

The central room is bizarre, surreal even, just random unlabeled collections. Bird, antlers, and suit of armor in one glass cage. Stairs in mid air.




Nov 11: the Royal Botanic Garden. I took Ubert; buses would have meant a 25 minute walk from the nearest bus stop. The front gate guy seemed to know his stuff: he asked where I was from, then connected 'Boston' to the sub-Antarctic room. I didn't guess how, despite having seen the answer in the museum the day before: Boston -> whalers -> scurvy -> cabbage and 'cabbage' from Heard Island or so.

Chinese garden was just plants from Yunnan. Fernery small. Japanese garden was cute. Sub-Antarctic room was different, air conditioned way down to simulate the weather, close to a unique collection.

I decided to walk home, 40 minutes supposedly. Do not recommend, would not walk again. Walk is across Queen's Domain, a big park, but dull, mostly dry eucalyptus savannah. Oh right, a sign by the xerophyte collection had said Hobart is the second driest Australian capital. This is incredible to me: Hobart was mist and mine trees, vs. the LA of Brisbane and Sydney. But I think another sign said the Domain is close to the original ecosystem.

Anyway I trudged through that, and then hit a freeway that was hard to get across. Google Maps thought it was easy but it's nuts, there was no crossing where it claimed, unless you want to play chicken with freeway traffic. I found an overpass instead.




Today! Stayed in and did laundry. No dryer here, so I took the wet clothes to a laundrette. $1/5 minutes, eep! But 10 minutes on hot sufficed to dry my week's worth of clothes.

No ibises or fruit bats here. I am sad.

Hobart very hilly beyond the core. Going for a walk certainly good exercise.
mindstalk: (Default)
Looking at Wikipedia, Hobart is cool but very rarely gets cold; the record low is -2.8 C, and monthly minimum rarely go negative. Sea level snow is a once in 15 years event.

Cars seem more colorful than I'm used to, like more red and blue cars relative to the white/gray dominance.

Yeah, the street parallel to Elizabeth, sampled further down, was car rental and hospital and university. No reason for a pedestrian to be there. Hobart is like 240,000 people, and I recall yesterday trying to get to the Cenotaph and found myself walking along a near-highway (with sidewalk) out of two. So like a small town core and then lots of blah.
mindstalk: (Default)
I've slept really well the past two nights, much better than usual. Maybe it's the quiet street, or the soft bed (not quite too soft), or the naturally cool room. Or maybe I'm being drugged by the VOCs: there's a strong chemical smell, especially with the windows closed. The host has no idea why, "no one has complained before, we didn't paint or put in new bedding" but the handyman who came by to open my windows (painted shut) could smell something too.

Yesterday I went out for lunch, some Vietnamese food, then walked down to the city center. Elizabeth is like the main street; a street parallel to it looked more like the street of car sales lots. Got down to the coast (of a bay). It was cold (8-10 C) and frequently rainy, often with sun (fellow guests said today they saw a rainbow, I hadn't even thought to look.)

I'm hear for a week and I'm thinking it'll be just a week, I'm not feeling an urge to hang around. Unless it was a lot cheaper than alternatives, but it's not... though my smelly room *is* larger than I've gotten used to.

Found a game and book store, though not game events I can go to before I leave (D&D wednesdays). Warhammer store right across from it, lol.

Had dinner at Sakura, a cheap and highly rated 'Japanese' chain, more like Japanese/Chinese melange: sushi, dim sum, various Japanese and Chinese dishes. I had beef noodle soup (basically light ramen), was decent.

Wednesday night I'd been heading to a nearby grocery store but was caught in cold rain in my T-shirt and shorts and went to a convenience store instead, which cost a lot more than I thought. Yesterday I took a bus back and got to the first destination, and discovered that "Hill Street Grocer" is actually an IGA, a full supermarket, though with some local quirks.

I also had a quest: finding some place to fix my luggage. Somehow, I suspect security opening my bag, the zipper got in severe trouble. The handle of my canvas shopping bag somehow got threaded *through* the zipper. I suspect the zipper backed over it, then pulled it forward; I can't see how it would be possible otherwise. I noticed no difficulty when I packed, which is why I suspect security or JetStar. I tried cutting the handle and pulling it out, but that just broke the other side, leaving a bit of cloth still jamming the zipper. Tried pulling, nothing; tried oil, nothing.

I was going to ask at a dry cleaner, but a friend had suggested a shoe repair store. I looked one up, and they said "nope but try Country Leather". Went there, and they said they'd take a look.

So today I emptied my luggage and took it down, and wow, he fixed it in two minutes.

He pulled at the cloth a bit with pliers, then did something to pull the zipper last leaving the cloth in the zips.
Then poked at the cloth with a pokey thing, until the zips opened up and the cloth could be removed.
then push the zipper back past the loop and everything's back to normal.

Didn't even charge me, though I ended up buying a new hat (not leather).

I'd realized on the way that the luggage has two zippers, so even with a jammed one, I could have forced it down and used the other zipper, at the risk of having the closure point on the bottom (letting things fall out if the zipper caught and opened). But it's nice to recover full functionality and have redundancy in store against a future break.

Otherwise I've been sitting at a cafe with my laptop, not wanting to drag even empty luggage around, and not wanting to camp out in my VOC room.

My host offered to let me cancel with a refund, and I said I didn't need that, partly because I feared moving with broken luggage. But now I have options... we'll see how things develop.
mindstalk: (Default)
Now in Hobart.

JetStar bag drop in Sydney was way less efficient than Qantas in Brisbane. 17 minutes after I had printed my bag tags, just to be able to hand the bag over. A friend snarks that the purpose of JetStar is to make you wish you had paid Qantas. Wait, that might actually be literal:

"It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Qantas, created in response to the threat posed by low-cost airline Virgin Blue. Jetstar is part of Qantas' two brand strategy[6] of having Qantas Airways for the premium full-service market and Jetstar for the low-cost market."

Once again, no one asked for any ID -- not at bag check, not at security, not at boarding.

Flight was okay. Announcements were loud. I was glad I paid AUD$18 for exit row legroom. Nothing is free, even a small bottle of water would be $4.

Hobart airport low but sprawling, and far from the city. More to the point, no public transit to the airport; ended up taking a SkyBus shuttle. Got yet another transit card, and headed to my place.

And yet another Australian bus system doesn't announce stops. They did have numbers on bus stop signs, but I missed #6 and got my #7 only because of GPS. The stop there didn't even have the number. So much for that coping mechanism.

Tasmania gets rain! It's grey and green! With pine trees, not palm trees! So different.

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