Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Nothing Pneu

Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated…

I’ve been sick lately so the blog (and the adventure) have suffered. I had a particularly ugly combination of pneumonia and a sinus infection. All the coughing, sneezing, nose blowing has exacerbated my hernia and completely zapped my strength. I’m coming up on the two week anniversary of all this joy and am thinking the worst is behind me? Hope so. Even still, I’ve probably slept 19 of the past 24 hours — a sign that I might have been put through the ringer even worse than I had thought. At least the days of 103+ / 39.6+ fevers are over! I’ll give it one more day and if the tiredness doesn’t ebb away I’ll get back to the Doctor for some blood work.

My brother arrives in Sydney early on Saturday — it’ll be great to see him. I’m hopeful my health and energy will be right for the visit.

Briefly, I know there is some interest in the Australian healthcare system so I’ll share my own experiences for all you heath care geeks (Michelle/Lesley) to consume. Once I decided to get to the Doctor I called and had an appointment within 10 hours. I headed to the appointment, filled out a very brief questionnaire (none of it insurance related) and the Doctor was seeing me in 5 minutes. We visited briefly, she did a quick examination, and then we discussed treatment.

The treatment discussion was interesting. It included all types of treatment — not just pills and traditional medicine. In fact, one of the things I was encouraged to take was an herbal remedy from Sweden for sinus issues. Acupuncture, massage, lifestyle choices… all of this came up in the framework of a larger discussion about wellness. In the end, I left with an Rx for an antibiotic, an Rx for an inhaler, and a note for a helpful herbal supplement. Easy, and I thought progressive.

Next stop was the drug store — here, they are called “chemists”. We walked into the chemist with two printed Rx's and we were met halfway between the front door and the pharmacy counter by the pharmacist. She took the script, grabbed the herbal medicine on the way back to the counter area, and we both went to the back of the store and had a quick seat. It took LESS THAN 3 minutes for the rest of the Rx to be filled and that was it! No waiting around (for no reason) for 30 minutes or more (Walgreen model) while they counted out little pills scraping them into a bottle with a special little knife and counting board — they simply grabbed the inhaler, grabbed the pre-packaged antibiotics, and done.

Payment for these services go something like this… Everyone in Australia is covered by Medicare — think single payor health care provided by the Aussie government. Medicare covers the lions share of treatments and the patient pays the balance at the time of treatment. As 457 Visa holders we have additional insurance paid by Julie’s employer which is standard with 457 Visas. The additional benefits we might receive we have to apply for which was really easy. You download the claim form, provide proof of payment, and mail it in. They reimburse us any additional benefit at some point. Not sure how long it takes — hasn’t been long enough to know for sure.

One of the worst parts of being sick is the television programming. I’ve alluded to the low quality of programming here before, and when you are captive on the couch with your sick station all around you, the programming is all the more important. At on point I was half delirious, too tired to even look for the remote, when the show changed to Charlie’s Angels. If that wasn’t bad enough, it was a special episode where the “angels” were solving a case on the friggin’ Love Boat. Burt Convey was the bad guy. OUCH!!!! I was so glad for that episode to come to an end until I realised the show to follow was “Mad About You”. Why couldn’t I get sick during the World Cup?

Later blog stalkers…. be good!

Saturday, July 19, 2014

boats and betas

Haven’t done a blog for a while — probably proof that we have truly settles into a routine. Here’s the latest and greatest…

The REALLY BIG news of the week was the delivery of our container shipment from Portland to Sydney. It took 8 weeks and about $4500 (we didn’t pay for it) and low and behold, we have our possessions. I’d say half of the twelve boxes we received were Julie’s clothing; two were my kitchen essentials; one was my stuff (shoes, exercise materials, a few clothes); and the rest were things like wooden hangers, bedding, towels, etc. Intermingled in the shipment were also family photos and a few keepsakes.

Of all of these boxes, the kitchen boxes made me the happiest. Sure it’s nice to have family photos and my wooden eagle carving, but the kitchenware was really impactful to me on a daily basis. The kitchen that came with our furnished apartment had most of the necessary elements though the quality of the same was pretty poor. It’s as if they stocked the gadget drawer with leftover Easy Bake oven items. Now…I have my wusthof knives, all-clad pots and pans, as well as my specialised gadgets for zesting, paring, squeezing, peeling… you get it! I never would have believed that I loved my kitchen stuff so much! Oh yeah…cookbooks too.

Julie scored a lot of wrinkled clothes that are all laid out on the guest bed ready for her to sort and store. STORAGE IS GOING TO BE A PROBLEM! Small apartment….

In other news, I made my first trip to a medical provider. I severely loosened a lower tooth while eating a piece of toast with a poached egg….I know, right!???!! In any event, I called a local dentist after researching a bit on google and was in within the week. Now, for all of you people that think a single payor healthcare system is bad, or it doesn’t work, or whatever, stand by to be educated. THIS WAS A SIMPLE JOY! You fill out a very brief questionnaire and fork over your health card and in you go for treatment. At the end of you visit they swipe your health card and your benefits are reconciled on the spot. There are no claims reports, no explanation of benefits, none of that wasteful nonsense that is really intended to let the insurance company hold on to your premium payments (also known as their investment) for protracted periods of time. It’s all done on the spot like a credit card transaction, and the balance is then paid by you…simple, easy, no fuss….so much better!

As for the dental treatment itself it was slightly different than US dentists. Many of the same tools are employed and certainly modern dentistry is modern dentistry…. the biggest difference was with the cleaning. They (sort of) sandblast your teeth with a baking soda (?) formulation after they have cleaned your teeth with a cavitron. Messy but good and fast. They also provide a routine fluoride treatment as part of the service to help keep your teeth healthy. All-in-all, a better experience than I have had in the US where I had some of the finest dentists around.

Other than all of this rather boring stuff, things are routine. Julie’s mentor, a lovely man named James Dewar, has asked for our assistance beta-testing an exciting new project he is involved with called lifetile. The testing script came in today and I am looking forward to spending several hours putting this new site through it’s paces to make the actual product rollout better. There are a lot of other beta testers that I am joining though I like to think that my experience working with eCommerce sites, web development, web programming and social media integration strategies (including marketing) will make my insights valuable and slightly different than most and will be at least a benefit to the team. Very excited to be doing this beta testing. Very grateful to know Jim Dewar too.

I’ve been trying hard to understand and “get into” Aussie sports. I was truly surprised to find that I love watching cricket. What a great and exciting sport. I’d imagine I will like it more as I learn more about it. I’ll also talk more about it in a future blog for my fellow sports fans. Nearby we have a lawn bowling club (10 minute walk) so we are anxious to give it a try to see what that’s all about too. Footy is our obvious joint passion and we are hopeful to get to another Swan game in the next week or two… Julie will never really endorse Rugby though I still enjoy watching it - have for years. I also enjoy soccer where Julie really doesn’t… I’m sure she is just waiting for Duck football.

It’s Saturday morning and we have yet to decide where we will visit this weekend. We’ll pick an area and I’ll see you back here tomorrow. Later blog stalkers.

One last note: our cribbage board was in our overseas shipment…let the competition begin anew!

Sunday, July 13, 2014

whales, swans, and youth

Our Saturday started with us doing all sorts of dirty things around the apartment. Once we finished cleaning, we started our day…

Whale watching

Sydney has one of the longest migratory periods in Australia. There are many varieties of whales that pass through here and today we were out looking for humpbacks. They are 50 ton creatures that migrate from their feeding grounds near Antarctica to the warmer waters of northern Australia where they mate and give birth. That’s about a 5,000Km commute; in fact, there have been records of humpbacks travelling as much as 18,000Km. Ahhh, the power of sex!

To quote George Constanza, “the seas were angry my friend”. We got out for the whale searching in what they claimed were moderate seas… they might have been moderate to an experienced boatsman but to your average potato farmers daughter (Julie) they were pretty heavy. Julie got a little green around the gills on the route back and asked that I leave her alone once we got back to shore. (Like she had to ask! I already cleaned enough stuff at the beginning of the day) She soon recovered with her intestines intact… Moving around the catamaran boat was challenging to say the least… the rocking and tossing was quite a workout and it trashed my already bad knee pretty significantly.

As for the whales…we finally caught up with a pair of males about 3Km offshore and 10Km south of Sydney Harbour. The choppy water made them difficult to spot, and even more difficult to photograph. We managed to hang with them for about an hour. For me, watching a pod of dolphins surfing the wake of a sailboat in the harbour was probably more fun…but I digress. Anyway, above are the better shots of the whales. I should have taken photos of the people standing on the bow of the boat for over an hour…soaked doesn’t begin to cover what they looked like. :-)

SIDE NOTES: When I describe our boat as a catamaran I am technically correct. However, it’s an 80 foot three story craft with twin diesel engines. On the topic of boats…Sydney has an unbelievable variety of watercraft. It seems that there are no two boats that are the same except for the harbour ferries. There are single person kayaks, sculling boats, small personal boats, skiffs, large personal boats, yachts, mega-yachts, ocean-going freighters, cruise ships, aw hell, there are A LOT of different boats in the harbour.

Swans "Footy"

It’s no secret that Julie and I are rabid Oregon Duck fans. In fact, we worry on a daily basis that seeing a Duck game (in 51 days) might be difficult in Oz. (Rest easy, we signed up for the online service that streams games around the world) We knew before we moved that we’d have to have some sort of a replacement sport (methadone for our heroin addiction) while we are in Australia. Julie’s workmate, Jane Lancsar, hooked us up with two Sydney Swan tickets. The Swans are one of two Australian Rules Football teams in Sydney. (The Australian love of abbreviating everything refers to it as “footy”) We arrived about an hour before game time at the Sydney Cricket Grounds. (Cricket is big here too — all sports are pretty big here.) Our working assumption was that we’d be able to score some dinner at the grounds before “footy”. We did that although the selection of foods was shockingly dismal. So…yes…we had fish and chips in our seats at the game. (The guy sitting next to me ate three meals….wow!) One last point of interest is the cricket grounds themselves….it’s patterned after Churchhill Downs so there is a mixture of architecture that is at best eclectic, at worst odd, but pretty fun and comfortable. It’s immediately adjacent to The Fox Studios where they make movies — in fact, one of the seating areas is named Bill O’Reilly (that falls into the “odd” category of the stadium.

Now I don’t want to bore everyone by describing the game of “footy” so I’ll bullet point the basics:

  • The field is an oval.
  • There are very few rules and the clock runs like soccer; with 4 quarters instead of 2 halves.
  • You can’t pass the ball - you have to either bump it to people or kick it
  • If you kick it and it’s caught you earn a “mark” which means you are free to kick or run or whatever from that spot without being hassled.
  • If you run, you have to bounce the ball off the ground every 15 meters or it’s a penalty. It’s also a penalty to simply hold the ball.
  • You score by kicking the ball through one of two goals posts; inner or outer. If you make it through the inner you get 6 points; outer you get 1.

The Swans are in first place. In fact, last night's game they tied the longest winning streak in team history for wins in a row (12). They smashed the lowly Carlton team last night 124 - 51 scoring nearly 50 points in Q3 alone. It was fun and exciting and COLD! It’s winter here and the last few days have been pretty cool — 14C/56F (<—guess conversion) Anyway, thanks Jane! We are already somewhat hooked on the Swans — hell, we even bought team scarves!

The last reportable moment was the bus ride back to Circular Quay from where we caught our ferry home. We got on the bus and sat in the middle of 10 local kids heading out for the night. The scarves we were wearing were real conversation starters — the fact that we left after Q3 and didn’t stay for the whole game was disappointing to everyone we encountered. As soon as we spoke they had a lot to say about America. Again, they knew about Oregon and even the Ducks; they talked about LeBron James and Michael Jordan; they covered various geographic places they’d visited. It was a dizzying experience where we had 10 people talking to us all at once about everything you can imagine. One young girl (there were 2 girls and 8 guys) shared information about Australia that I wanted to hear but I kept being pulled away by the rowdier boys. It was fun overall. The biggest shock (for me) came when they got off the bus near Kings Cross (Kings Cross is party central; red-light district; nightclubs, you name it, the Cross has it.) We continue to be amazed by how hard the people of Sydney party and how dressed they all get for a night of clubbing. It’s kind of cool to see young people caring so much about how they look when they go out for a night on the town.

That's a wrap blog stalkers. Have a great day!

Thursday, July 10, 2014

a rather pedestrian post...

Not much to really report to you blog stalkers….it’s been pretty routine around here lately.

Last night was “date night” so I made the trip to Julie’s work building and waited for her to trudge out for an evening together. It rained last night, the first time in the three plus weeks we’ve been here, and the winds picked up and blew the litter all about CBD. Rather than getting caught out in the elements waiting to find a cab (even though cabs are plentiful and easy to find) we hopped the light rail in front of her building and headed to The Star. We goofed off there for a bit, had some Pad Thai, and got home relatively early for some much needed sleep.

In the three weeks I’ve been here I’ve had occasion to speak to multiple Aussies and have been particularly interested in their perceptions of America. The “gun rights” debate that is always main stage in American media confuses people that haven’t been to the states. I get the impression that people here assume there are gun toting Americans everywhere you go… you know, people walking around armed. It’s funny because one of the chief complaints the Aussies have concerns the stereotypical American view of life down under. Television commercials and movies have falsely informed the US populace that Aussies walk around prospecting for gold with a gigantic can of Fosters in one hand and a shrimp to toss on the barbie in the other. Not really a shocker that the media has created a false narrative in both directions. For the record, I don’t think I’ve even seen a Fosters or a shrimp on the barbie since I arrived.

One IMPORTANT distinction for my fellow Americans… Australia has very strict gun laws and as a result they don’t have the senseless mass shooting tragedies that have become far too common in the US. They simply don’t understand why gun rights (owning automatic weapons and banana clips) is tolerated in the states. Neither do I, nor do most people capable of higher reasoning.

On a personal note, I’ve been working hard to get my knees and legs in better condition for the past few weeks. I have an hour long stretching regimen every morning followed by a 30 minute strengthening program. I am already reaping significant dividends that have made me more mobile and cut the pain back significantly. It’s been a welcome change.

Big weekend on the horizon for us. Whale watching Saturday morning; an Aussie Rules Football game on Saturday night (Go Swans); a trip to the local mega mall on Sunday morning; dinner with Julie’s work mate and his spouse on Sunday night. It’l be good to have a busy, fun-filled weekend.

Finally, all the kids back home are doing well. Connor has been hanging in Portland for over a week. He’s got a good job interview in Bend when he gets back there later this week. Brandon is banging away on summer school and doing well. Jenna is working additional shifts at her hostess job while she waits for her big break. It’ll come. Dan is wrapping up his studies in Chicago and anxious for it to come to and end. Our container ship shipment of household goods arrives next week -- pictures of the family are in one of the boxes!

That’s it blog stalkers. Weather is here, wish you were all beautiful.

Monday, July 7, 2014

a different perspective

and now for something completely different…

Since Friday, Christina Barber and Annie Glenn have been our house guests. Tomorrow afternoon they shove off again for their respective locations: Christina back to Melbourne and her advanced studies in Speech Pathology, and Annie, back to Los Angeles to her full-time job. The two were buddies in undergraduate studies and remain close today.

Since we’ve spent very little time with them since their arrival (youngsters want to play, old farts want to rest) we took it upon ourselves to interview them for the blog. We thought they might provide different insights into life in Oz that you might find interesting…. we’ll see if it works?

Q: The coolest thing you’ve seen in Australia?
Annie: Birds
Christina: The Red Center (Uluru a/k/a Ayers Rock)

Q: Most unusual person you met?
Annie: Bart the tour guide. He loved his job, could say turtle in a lot of different languages, was super active and knowledgable.
Christina: Aboriginal guy who said she looked like a giraffe but not really.

Q: What about Australia would surprise your parents the most?
Annie: Indigenuity (the embracing of aboriginal beliefs and practices.)
Christina: ditto

Q: What do you miss most about US?
Annie: My bed.
Christina: Mexican food (Many of her answers involve food)

Q: What do you miss least?
Annie: Job
Christina: Americans (arrogance and indifference)

Q: Most beautiful thing you’ve seen in Australia?
Annie: Uluru sunset and rainbows
Christina: Red Center (Uluru area)

Q: Favorite animal in Oz?
Annie: Kangaroo and Koala
Christina: Cassowary (it’s a funky bird)

Q: What should you bring with you to Australia?
Annie: Warm Clothes
Christina: Money

Q: What does Kangaroo taste like?
Annie: Not a meat eater.
Christina: Deliciousness. Chicken/Beef combo.

Q: What surprised you that it cost so much?
Annie: Make-up
Christina: Seafood

Q: Best deals you found in your travels?
Annie: Tourist stores are pretty cheap.
Christina: Party Mix Candy

Q: Four oddest words?
Annie: Rubbish, Lolly, Blokes, Wanker (tr. Garbage, Candy, Men, Asshole)
Christina: Bogan, Pissed, Reckon, Ta (tr. Hayseed person, Drunk, Agree?, Thanks)

Q: Best time swimming?
Annie: Whitewater rafting on the Tully River and MillaaMillaa Waterfall.
Christina: Same answer. It’s MillaaMillaa is where they filmed the Herbal Essence commercial.

Q: Best Cultural Experience?
Annie: Learning about the aboriginal history including constellations in the Red Center.
Christina: The Red Center.

Q: Rowdiest thing you did?
Annie: Whitewater rafting.
Christina: Drank a whole bottle of port wine.

Q: Are American men or Australian men better looking?
Annie: American
Christina: Neither, but Sydney has the best looking men in Australia.

Q: Major fashion differences?
Annie: Lots more dreadlocks and 1980’s short shorts (on men). Recommends a greater investment in deodorant.
Christina: At least with summer clothing it appears that Aussies are stuck in a fashion cycle currently featuring 90’s fashions from the US.

Q: Three things that remind you of the US?
Annie: Fast food franchises, major retailers, TV shows
Christina: ditto

Q: Worst foods in Australia?
Annie: Vegemite
Christina: Chicken Parm (over-rated)

Q: Must do’s when visiting?
Annie: Uluru, Sydney
Christina: Cadbury Marvelous Creation Bar (you won’t regret it)

Q: Don’t do when visiting?
Annie: Great Barrier Reef, drink Goon (boxed, cheap wine), stay away from Red Center in summer (too hot and buggy)
Christina: Agree and don't drink goon.

Q: How much cash should you bring for a two week trip?
Annie: $3,000 on the eco-plan with planning.
Christina: $5,000 for a more upscale adventure.

There you have it… lovely girls… both of them!

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Manly "Rocks"

It’s Christina Barber’s birthday today! We are lucky to be able to celebrate her birthday with her after they (Annie and her) are done exploring Syd. Happy 25th birthday Christina!!!

Manly beach. While the name might conjure up Venice beach-like visions of muscle heads throwing around barbells not much could be farther (or is it further?) from the truth. Lesley Robertson, as my resident grammarian, please tell me, “further” or “farther”? Manly beach is a quaint seaside area near Sydney filled with little shops and cafes and a world-class beach. This is off-season in Oz so the swarm of humans/tourists is low - still, there were a good number of people out enjoying the 70/21 degrees and sunshine.

Now, my son Brandon informs me that my blogs are too long for him to read so I am going to try a more visual blog with pictures including brief captions. Note to Brandon: College students that don’t like to read are probably destined to live life with a shovel in their hands. On to the pics of our day’s journey….

Our journey began with a ferry from Balmain East to Circular Quay (the main ferry hub for Sydney)

We passed under the harbour bridge where we got a good look at the Opera House from under the bridge. We also got a close-up look at the Aussie flags flying on top of the bridge and there were fit people doing the bridge climb (look like ants).

Entering Circular Quay we passed the very cool area known as “The Rocks”.

In Circular Quay we caught the Manly ferry (F1). This ferry boat is much, much larger than the little guys we normally putz around in -- three stories with a cafe, television, and like all the ferries wi-fi. The views from the boat were great. Here we have a reverse angle of the Opera House and Harbour bridge and a cool shot of a sailboat cruising by....

You arrive in Manly (after a 30 minute ferry ride) at Manly Wharf with a couple dozen shops and restaurants...all under cover...all pretty cool (if you're not from Sydney). You step off the wharf, cross the street, and enter the Manly Promenade. The Prom is about 5 or 6 block long, no cars (though wide enough for 4 lanes) and scores of shops, cafes, groceries, etc. It's awesome even though my photographs suck pretty badly.

The beach is wide and deep (no idea how wide but LARGE) with perfect sand, nice waves, surfers and amazing views. There are apartment buildings all along the waterfront road as well as stores, cafes, you name it. We're still considering this as a place to live.

Not far from Manly beach (15 minute stroll along the ocean) is Shelly Beach. Our friend Hilda suggested we walk down there and get a bit some nibbles and nosh at a local cafe. We did that although the cafe was closed for repairs we hung out on the beach for a bit and encountered this gigantic pelican. So huge! I'm a bit fixated on birds and this one certainly caught my attention. His eye had to be the size of a saucer and his bill held gallons and gallons easily.

We had a hankering for Japanese food and decided to have a nice meal in The Rocks area of Sydney. The Rocks is “high-tone” for our Japanese readers; swish for our Aussie friends; posh for our American viewers. We ate at a Japanese fusion place named “Sake” and enjoyed some truly exceptional Japanese food. Sashimi appetiser followed by wagyu beef carpaccio, pork belly skewers (kushiyake) and seared scallops in a ginger/miso cream sauce. Oh my - yum!

There you go blog stalkers. Back to Fishermen's Wharf today for lunch. Can't wait!

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Fishermen's Wharf

After a visit to Fishermen’s Wharf it looks like Julie and I are about to become “pescetarians”.

I fell in love with this place — so many varieties of fish and other sea creatures that it made my head spin! I mean, really, who knew there were 10 kinds of octopus (seems like there should have been 8) and squid…. Oh My God! Stuff I never even heard of before…. I could cook a different item every day for 6 months and might still have things left over that I didn’t get to….

Let’s talk prices too. In the land where a grocery store steak costs upwards of $50 this place is a bargain. Imagine this, 1Kg of Ahi Tuna pieces for $10! That’s 2.2 lbs. for $10.00. Unreal. It really is the land of bargain proteins.

The Wharf isn’t simply fish purveyance either. There are restaurants that serve humungous portions of fresh seafood that make me hungry just thinking about it. Everywhere you turn there are people with decadent portions of food chomping away happily. It’s stunned me — I can’t wait to go back with Julie. Next time I’ll take my good camera and get some shots that really show this place properly. Note: Julie tells me that this is the largest fish market in the southern hemisphere… I believe it.

In other news, and for tomorrow’s blog, we have our first house guests. Annie and Christina are visiting us from California and Melbourne — two lovely, sparkling young women that we’ve enjoyed having….but that’s for tomorrow.

Today, for our Saturday exploration, we are heading to Manly. The whales are all about so we are hoping for a glimpse and definitely looking forward to returning to Manly for a good look around with residency in mind. Peace out blog stalkers!

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

randomgram

It’s the little things…

  • Why does my kitchen dishwasher have a light that says “salt” that is seemingly always illuminated?
  • Why is the board game Clue named “Cluedoh? in Australia
  • Why is our water closet so small that you have to close the door to have room to sit? Seriously, the sink is so small I have to wash my hands one at a time!
  • Why don’t they sell scallions in the grocery store? OR why do so many of my recipes call for scallions?

Pika and Pot

Of course (Linda) we named our two lorikeets. We went with Pika and Pot though in retrospect maybe Lori and Lawrence would be better names. Thus far we have not fed these little darlings, though, it seems obvious that someone that lived here previously did fed them. It could be too that they are simply accustomed to being fed by humans so they are incredibly trusting. Yesterday, I was sitting on the patio working on my laptop when Pika and Pot appeared. I pulled out my phone to shoot video of them literally 2 feet away from me and that drew them closer… apparently, they thought my iPhone might have been food? Not wanting a bird to poop on my keyboard, even a cute bird, I closed the lid to my laptop and sat back to watch them. Pot (the mentally slower of the two) decided that my laptop might be food so he hopped down on the table and licked it (yep, they have little black tongues). Soon Pika joined in and once they realised that a laptop is not food they hopped onto my arm and squeaked at me. It was really fun and funny. I love these little fellas.

Free-wheelin’ in the US

Even though we have moved to Australia, apparently our US Visa card has not. We were alerted by Chase Bank Fraud Protection today that there was suspicious activity on our card. Sure enough, someone in California has been using our account to eat at really unhealthy restaurants (Burger King, McDonalds, etc.) All toll, they have spent about $300… That’s the bad news. The good news is they will not live long and healthy lives eating like they do. More bad news, they will probably need angioplasty and no doubt will show up at the emergency room without insurance to spend the collective money of all of us. Now, I don’t want to rant on this for too long but let’s face it, there exists plenty of ways to track down where the CC number was stolen, and, to track down the people perpetrating the fraud. Heck, snap there picture and google facial recognition can probably ID them. If only there was a will amongst law enforcement to track these people down and bring them to justice. Long story short, credit card cancelled. Next step is to identify all of our direct pay accounts and provide them with the new card number. We’ve already changed our user passwords for all of our internet accounts… even my little blog here.

And more free wheeling’ in the US

When we moved we had to get new cell phones. The US standard with Verizon is CDMA and that is not compatible pretty much anywhere else in the world. I left my iPhone5 with Jenna with a box to mail it to Connor after we left so he'd have a new data phone in Bend. Of course, it never arrived. No doubt it’s still in California with whoever stole it from the postal system. Years ago, our Disney souvenirs got stolen in California from our checked luggage. Let’s be honest people… California continues to be one of the most overrated places on planet earth. This is just another reason to dislike it. I have many other reasons too but again, let’s keep this blog positive. :-)

Date night Wednesday

Tonight is our date night in Oz… that means I won’t be cooking and we’ll go out to eat. I’ve been eager to try and Indian restaurant right here in Balmain East. There is nothing better than really good Indian food. Fingers crossed!

Visitors coming

Traci, Julie’s cousin, first introduced us to Brian and Shireen Wright at her wedding, We’ve seen them now and again since then and have stayed connected via Facebook too. They’re really good people and have been good friends to us and the kids. Shireen’s sister is backpacking around Australia (she is attending University in Melbourne) with one of her pals and it’s been arranged that they will spend three nights beginning this Friday at our humble little place. I hope they are prepared for our spartan circumstances. Our US freight shipment still hasn’t arrived so we are essentially living out of a giant suitcase we call our apartment. They have to bring their own towels. :-) Still, it’s better and safer than a youth hostel and it’ll be good to make a few new friends in Oz.

Team USA in the World Cup

It’s been exciting for sure. I didn’t like it one bit to watch the US fall to Belgium. I give props to the whole team for the whole cup except for Bradley (#4) - the guy was simply lazy and out of the game too much. They could have used his good passing skills and decision making — pity he never showed up!

Grocery Shopping challenges

It really is the stuff you don’t anticipate… having to convert your ingredient measures to metric equivalents… searching online for green peppers to realise they are called green capsicums… searching for stuff online like a clothes line and FAILING until you understand it is clothes airer…. I didn’t even know that was a word. Eventually I’ll learn the new names and be fine, eventually I learn that metric system more fully…in the meantime… pain in the arse.

I guess that’s enough for now. Catch you later blog stalkers…