Another trip to Australia was on the cards and we had planned to find an AirBNB that would allow us to some home cooking rather than sterile hotel rooms.
We found a very impressive room high in a building near the Parliament buildings on the east side of the CBD. The room and patio had large glass windows with views out towards East Melbourne
and if you craned your neck a little a view of the MCG (Melbourne Cricket Grounds) which I had grown up hearing about on the radio and seeing on TV during cricket tournaments between South Africa and Australia.
The first order of business after checking in was to head over to the Queen Victoria Market. The trick after the 15 hour flight from LA is to hit the ground running and try not to sleep for that day. Our body clocks were almost the inverse of the timezone we had left so arriving at the AirBNB at 9ish in the morning felt a long way off and a few coffees short.
We knew that the Market was the authentic small-trader marketplace that you might find in Europe with vendors selling goods from fresh meat and fish to (hopefully)
some authentic South African biltong and even more hopefully some good coffee. We had tasted the coffee on offer in Australian coffee shops before and knew that finding one would be and essential first stop.
By the first evening, barely able to keep our eyes open we were back at the apartment with provisions and a meal and I took the first of many evening shots from the balcony of the cityscape facing Northeast.
And North
And SouthEast
We were in Melbourne for business, but as with previous trips, the street art was fascinating and worth the few walking trips to find alleys with beautiful graffiti.
This one involved some reconnaissance because the route was pretty remote and once we arrived there we had some stick men in trouble warnings at the beginning of the route.
We ended up heading up an established path to the top of an outlook
and then bushwhacking our way back down to a road dirt road that brought us back to the car as it was getting dark.