Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 August 2019

A week in Melbourne

My last week in Australia was spent in Melbourne, there's so much to do here, but we just touched on the main tourist attractions, as well as getting some rest after spending 2 weeks on the road.

We stayed in an apartment overlooking the docklands which was in the free tram zone area making it easy to get around. It also wasn't far to walk, but it was winter and exceptionally cold during my visit, windy and a lot of rain.


Street entertainment

China Town

Tram stop

One of many shopping arcades

Lots of restaurants to chose from but make sure you book

Vietnamese 

Day 2
Just over an hours drive south of Melbourne and a visit to the Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park to pet Victor the 3 year old Koala and feed the wallabies and kangaroos.



Day 3 St Kilda Beach
View of Melbourne


We found a penguin hidden under the rocks.

Day 4 I've watched Neighbours since it started in 1985 so I drove out to Pin Oak Court for a visit. The street is much shorter and narrower than it looks on the TV. They only film on location once a week, the rest is done in studios. It was a 20 min drive from the City.



In the afternoon we explored melbourne's street art


Finishing with a visit to the Winter Night Market.

Day 5 A day on my own as Jamie (child 3) had been out and about in the evenings with friends of his. I took the tram to the far end of the city and took a 20 min walk out to the Botanical Gardens, then back along the river to the sea life centre. We finished the trip with a meal out in the evening.




Wednesday, 5 September 2018

Kaltenberg Knights' Tournament. 6 days in Bavaria. Places to visit and things to do.

Kaltenberg Knights' Tournament is a Bavarian festival that takes place in July every year in the grounds of Kaltenberg Castle, an hours drive west of Munich.


There are more than 1,000 artists, including knights, jesters, musicians, acrobats and performers whisking you away into the fantasy world of the Middle Ages.

There are more than 100 market stalls and live workshops presenting medieval crafts and traditional goods. Visitors can watch live demonstrations and the camps give an insight into life in the Middle Ages.

There is an array of bars and food outlets.


Entertainers move between the guests and once a day the artists and historical groups take part in a ceremonial parade through the castle grounds.




HRH Prince Luitpold of Bavaria announcing the winner of the Jester's staff in the jousting tournament.



I visited with my friends who I was staying with, it was a great event for people of all ages, with or without children. It's somewhere I visit again and would happily roam around for the day on my own.






Sunday, 7 January 2018

Bluewaters Island and the Dubai Eye

Dubai will never be finished, there are so many building projects going on here, it is difficult to keep track of what is going where and when. However there are several projects and areas that I've been keeping an eye on and taking photographs of since we moved here. The Dubai Mall, The Dubai Water Canal and the Dubai Eye, seen below. 

The Dubai Eye is a 210 meter tall Ferris Well and the tallest in the World, scheduled to open in April 2018. It will carry 1,400 passengers in 48 capsules will views of the Marina, Burj Al Arab, Palm Jumeriah and the Burj Khalifa. It will also have a view of our villa which is 4 miles away and seen here from our garden.


Taken in January 2014 from the Sheraton Hotel, on a visit to Dubai prior to us moving here at the end of the year. New land created in the sea.


The frame for Dubai Eye in place in August 2015, but another 20 months before the wheel was started to be assembled.

 Although I visited The Beach in 2016, there was no work on the Dubai Eye so I didn't take any photographs, by March 2017 the first piece was in place, resembling a Pirate Ship.

By  December 2017 the wheel was almost complete. I missed the rest of the sections going in during the year as I was out of the country.

In January 2018 the final piece was in place. Just the capsules to add now.

25th January 2019
You'll notice some of the struts have been removed and the new buildings behind.

31st January 2019
Night time view, more struts removed over the last 6 days. You can really see the scale of the project from the beach in a similar location to the 2nd photo.



Friday, 1 April 2016

When did holidays become all about spending money to entertain the children?

Like everywhere else in the world there are things to do with your kids and you'll know that just like being at home these things cost money. Dubai is no exception, while it does things bigger and better it also does things at a higher price.

Just like anywhere else in the world where you live there are things on offer that are just too expensive to factor into weekly activities. Not all expat kids and families spend their weekends skiing, at sporting events or having weekly brunches. Most kids do after school clubs, play for local football teams, do ballet or gym or dance classes, go to brownies and cubs, just like you'd do with your kids back at home on a weekly basis.

Family days out back home in the UK usually included a picnic, visit to the local park or soft play. Bigger trips such as visits to Safari and Theme parks were reserved for holidays and special occasions, just as they are here, now.

In Dubai you can take your kids skiing, visit a water park, can go to Adventure HQ to go climbing, spend the day at Kidzania or go trampolining at Jump Box. Go bowling, visit the aquarium, go to Ferrari World in Abu Dhabi, the zoo, Dubai Dolphinarium and swim with dolphins, ride a banana boat and various other water activities on the beach.

I've seen lots of blog posts recently about 'Things to do in Dubai with children' All well and good, but without a bottomless wallet, most are out of people's price range, you may find that depending on where you stay some things are included in the price of the hotel, for example free entry to water parks and beach access. However, there are many other things available to do that aren't included in the price such as 10 minutes on a banana boat at the cost of AED100 which at the current exchange rate is £19.

I have no idea what happened to just being on holiday at the beach, being good enough for a family holiday, with a bucket and spade, going for walks, wandering around local malls, having picnics in the car park in the rain. My kids haven't suffered for being dragged around historical sites, visiting museums when it's been too hot or too cold and wet to be outside. Yes they moaned at the time, but we'd factor in a day on the beach, one or two treats, if they behaved such as boat trips or tree top adventures and a day in a water park.

My kids now look back on the holidays as adults now with wonderful memories 'do you remember our bus trip to Tunis, the mud baths, the beach with the turtles, the cathedral in France, the day is rained none stop and we still went on the beach and climbed the sand dunes?' They also talk about the less exotic holidays, camping at Bream sands in the rain, the donkey rides on the beach, the picnics eaten in the car in the rain, the day the car broke down and we had to wait 5 hours for a tow on the side of the M5. The lights at Blackpool, taking advantage of a family English Heritage membership and only going places with free entry and being told firmly at the beginning of the day there was no money for the gift shops, but they could have an ice cream. Of course there was always something one of them wanted and a strop would ensue but we stood our ground and the matter would soon be forgotten, when we got home.

Everybody these days seems to think that if they don't spend a fortune making sure their children are occupied every single minute of the day, especially on holiday that their children will be bored or heaven forbid, upset and feel hard done by. Nearly every child I see these days is walking around with some kind of electronic device, they own phones, tabs and laptops, loaded with apps, downloaded films and TV shows, 3G internet access so they can keep themselves entertained every single second, of every single day. They bring all this on holiday with them, then the parents spend a fortune on top of this to entertain them.

I just don't get it.

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