Kim gave me tickets for a performance called Bale de Rua (Brasilian street dance). This satisfied the criteria of experiences rather than objects as presents.
The performance took place in the opera house and it was really good. There was some really cool tricks.
I am still wondering why the dance crew consisted of 15 men and one woman...the woman didn't do anything that required her being a woman so it was a bit odd and could just as well have been a performance consisting of 16 men.
Kim had bought really good seats on the 4th row (almost too close) so we could see every drop of sweat.
While my dad was in Sydney we went to a number of different restaurants. We tried to find venues of the sort he hadn't tried before or that is unusual for his side of the hemisphere.
There was the Yum-Cha (For those that are not familiar with this...it is a sort of chinese dumpling place where you just point at the items you want from trolleys). And my dad was brave enough to try the chicken feet this time.
We also did Japanese a couple of times (once at Liverpool St which was terrible) and then later at Wagaya at the entertainment centre (which was excellent).
We also did brasilian (no, we did not all get a close shave). This was a lot of meat and we were all very full afterwards.
We also did French food at Tabou in Surrey Hills.
And one evening we did hot-pot at home with friends.
New years eve we celebrated first with Kims family in Coogee. Here they had a firework at 9.30pm which was rather small.
Since my dad is in Sydney we though that he should have a look at the proper midnight firework, so after Coogee my dad and I drove into the city to watch the firework at Sydney Harbour.
Kim stayed back with her family because we expected to walk a fair bit to get into the city and especially to get back afterwards (and it would be hard to walk with her being pregnant).
I brought my camera gear and this is some of the shots I took (I haven't had time to photoshop anything).
One day when it was raining and we were unable to do any work outside, we took my dad to the Blue Mountains.
It was nice and warm up there considering that the weather was sort of drizzling. My dad wanted to go and have another look at the Three Sisters, but they were covered in clouds, so instead we came up with taking the scenic railway as an alternative into the Jamison Valley.
As soon as Kim saw the drop into the valley she immediately bailed out and said that she didn't want to go....too steep.
My dad and I continued into the valley and went for a walk along one of the tracks there. While there I did some close-up photos of some of the local fauna.
After the walk we headed back up to the top with the cable car and then to Katooma for some lunch.
After lunch it was clearing up a bit, but the sisters were still covered. Instead we went for a walk at Wentworth Falls. My dad had never been there so that was something new for him.
After the walk it was getting late and we headed back to Sydney.
Every year on Boxing day (26th December) the Sydney to Hobart Yacht race kicks off.
It is a great event for anyone interested in sailing to see the large boats exit out through the heads of Sydney Harbour.
My dad was interested in seeing the race start and I wanted to get some great photos with the ships and the north head in the background.
We arrived at Watsons bay about 30 minutes before the race start and only just made it up to the viewpoint as the boats went through the heads. We were running the last 500 meters so as not to miss it (it has been a while since I've seen my dad run that sort of distance).
It was spectacular to watch all the ships and the follow boats head out through the harbour and head south towards the Tasman sea.
On the way back to the car we walked past the nude beach full of perverts (I don't mind nudists...but when it is old men with hard-on's standing facing the public swinging their willy's back and forth or pouring beer on it then they are exhibitionist perverts....click here...and....here...so see what I mean).
The winner of the race this year finished after 2 days and 9 hours.
This may
also come as a surprise to you....but Santa Clause does exist and he visited
our house on Christmas Eve.
We did the
traditional Christmas dinner with friends coming over along with some of our
nieces and nephews. Soeren and Nui joined us with their daughter and Andy
joined us with his daughter so it was an almost equal representation of adults
and kids (if you count me as a kid).
Later on in
the evening Santa Clause appeared (Ethan asked where the reindeer were and
apparently they were parked on the roof).
Ethan had been asking all evening whether Santa would be coming. Eventually we told him that Santa is a very busy man and that he visits all the good kids first and leaves all the naughty ones until later...that kept him quiet for a while.
He gave the
children lots of presents and soon afterwards he headed off again...he is a
very busy person this time of the year (I think he borrowed a couple of beer from the fridge).
By the end
of the evening we were so stuffed with food that we had to be rolled into bed.
My dad arrived early January to spend Christmas and New Years Eve here with us.
Before he arrived i asked him if he'd mind helping with a couple of jobs arround the house. I told him that the biggest job was the tiles in the outdoor area in the back yard.
When they built the house they only tiled a part of the area. Later they extended the area but didn't level the area properly so where the joint between the old and the new area was the tiles weren't the same level and were either loose or broken. My dad thought it was
Perfect Moments Photography | A Rene Pallesen Journal
2004 was the year I started working for Captaris. One of the first things I did was to visit our office in Calgary to learn about our workflow product.
My visit coincided with the Calgary Stampede, so lots of cowboys in town, indians and rodeos. I also too a bus ride up through the Canadian rockies through Banff, Lake Louise and up to the Columbian Ice Fields.
In 2004 Australia was being drawn into the war in Iraq. A lot of Australians were opposed to the war, but the politicians wouldn't listen.
On a nice sunny day several hundred thousand people gathered around Hyde park in the middle of the city to demonstrate and express their opinions against Australia entering into the war.
I was of the belief that the war was a mistake in the first place and was totally unjustified, so I was decided to join the demonstrations and at the same time see if I could take a few photos.
My photo collection is vast. Many of them are in my albums, others scanned as images here. I have tried to include the best of the best, and will keep doing so. Feel free to explore any of the links - it make take some time to peruse them all...
( We recommend viewing of the photos through MS Explorer )