Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Random photos from Portland OR, Vancouver & Whistler BC, and San Francisco CA


View of San Francisco from Alcatraz, less then 2 miles away





Kat and I at Whistler BC






Looking down Blackcomb Mountain, BC






Whistler Village






Alcatraz, San Francisco














4th Street, Kits, Vancouver














Burrard Inlet, Vancouver BC








Christina & Simo, Whistler BC






















Portland Oregon USA














Hawthorne Bridge, 1910, Portland














Simo, Kent & Alec playing basketball at UBC





















View from Simo's room, UBC








It snows in Vancouver?!

Sunday, February 25, 2007

The lowdown on Vegas and Seattle

Here's a few thoughts to go with the previous photos.

Las Vegas. I doubt there is anywhere in the world that is similar. Right from the moment we stepped off the plane and into the airport and were greeted by banks of slot machines in the arrivals lounge (I mean what else are you going to do whilst waiting for a friends plane?) we knew we were in for a crazy experience. The craziness started not as we expected as we had to wait 1 hour for a shuttle bus to take us from the airport to our hotel. It was only later on that we realised that Vegas airport is actually at the bottom of the Strip, but in an act of stupidity the airport authority had put the airport terminal on the opposite side of the runway to where all the casinos were, forcing everyone to catch a bus to their hotels instead. Good thinking guys!
Once in vegas you could be forgiven for thinking you are on another planet. We actually only saw the horizon (ie. the surrounding desert mountains) when we flew out of Vegas, as the area is so developed with casinos, hotels and highrises that you wouldn't know you were in a desert except that it was 70F in the middle of winter! The amount of money poured into the casinos is also amazing as to survive in such a compeitive climate it seemed that all the casinos had some sort of unique drawcard:
MGM Grand - Had its own lion pit
Excalibur - Casino looks exactly like the Disney castle
Luxor - Big black glass pyramid 30 storeys high with a light beam shining from the apex that is visible from space
Mandalay Bay - Gold tinted windows
Bellagio - biggest casino there, outfitted with marble and a full japanese tea garden inside
Paris casino - Eiffel Tower replica out the front
New York New York - Rollercoaster that runs in and outside the casino. The casino itself is a facade of New York with the Chrysler Building, Empire State and Statue of Liberty out the front.
The Venetian - complete with canal system inside, just like in Venice!
Circus Circus - gaming floor surrounded by numerous circus acts. gamble whilst acrobats fly 10 storeys above your head.

There is even a whole 3 storey store devoted purely to M&M merchandise, next door to the 3 storey CocaCola shop.

Still, vegas is a place where to have fun you really have to spend money. So we did! Played some Blackjack which I came out from only a little bit down, and played some Texas Hold 'Em poker in which I lost $80, but that wasn't too bad as it took my 3 hours to loose it! And when exiting most casinos you have to run the gauntlet of mexican guys handing out prostitute flyers, I think we collected over 100 between us in the two days, they just don't go away til you take 'em!

After Vegas we flew to San Francisco where I put my snowboard in storage, said goodbye to HB and headed up to Portland, Oregon. On arrival I found that every hostel in town was booked out, so had to endure a 4 hour greyhound bus up to Seattle. Now that doesn't sound too bad, but it gets on your nerves when the bus is 2 hours late to arrive and overbooked so 20 people didn't even get on! Gotta love this country sometimes...

Seattle, in comparison to most american cities is a breath of fresh air. It seems to have the lowest amount of homeless people on the streets which is nice as it means you can walk 100 metres and not be asked for a quarter 20 times and spat at if you don't comply. I managed to find the first Starbucks and had some coffee there, as well as doing a tour of the Seattle Underground, the remains of the city after the great Seattle fire which was just built over. Today I got my nerd fix and visited the Science Fiction Museum and, more importantly the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame, complete with one whole floor devoted to Jimi Hendrix, Nirvana and Soundgarden, all Seattle natives. It was awesome to see all the memorbilia, clothes and equipment.

Tomorrow im off to Portland for 2 days then up to Vancouver to see Simo and get a day's riding in at Whistler... I CAN'T FREAKIN WAIT!!!!!!! (they have had 32 feet of snow already this season... yeah, its insaneo)

PS: Everyone go see Smokin Aces. The movie sucks, but it was filmed in Lake Tahoe at MontBlu Casino, 5min walk from our place. And they do the car chase along Lake Tahoe Bvd right past our street and the Heavenly Gondola. Awesome!!!!!

Photos from Seattle, WA


Puget Sound






The original Starbucks. Note the difference in logo to the one we know (and below). This is because as Starbucks started expanding people started to complain about the nude lady on the side of Starbucks coffee trucks so the logo had to be changed.




The Seattle Underground. Seattle was built on tidal flats and had massive sanitary and structural problems in the 1800s. In the Great Seattle fire it burnt to the ground and the city decided to raise all its property (ie. the roads) by 8 - 30 feet so that the tide didn't consistently wash them away. However the business owners did not have the time or money to do this so they rebuilt at Seattle's original level, creating a waffle iron city pattern with the shops 8 - 30 feet below the roads. It took 20 years for the business owners to raise their buildings up to road level, hence the Underground was created.






The Space Needle and I. Built in 1962 for the World Fair it has now become the icon of Seattle (and Frasier!)


The Experience Music Project, second largest music museum in the world. Originally devoted to Jimi Hendrix. Was built by the same guy that designed Guggenheim, and there is not one right angle in its structure.


Pike Place Market






The Smith Tower (to the right of the photo) was the tallest skyscraper west of the Mississippi for many years. Built in the early 1900's its elevators are still manually operated


The firefighter's memorial

Photos from Las Vegas NV


Binion's, the site of our first Texas Hold 'Em Poker game


We Love Hooters!


The Bellagio


Margaritas before lunch, why not?


Mmmmm nachos!





Its all too much...


The Strip, with New York New York in the foreground


HB outside the MGM Grand, opposite our hotel/casino


HB in M&M World, 4 levels of M&M merchandise... pity I don't like M&M's!


Only in Sin City...


The Bellagio


Leaving Tahoe for Reno airport


Slot machines in Reno airport, Nevada is truely a strange state


Kenny Rogers, he'll take ya money!


iPod vending machine... ya know, for those impulse buys


The view from our balcony, Hooters Hotel and Casino... awesome!

Monday, February 19, 2007

Farewell to Tahoe!

Well its almost time for us to leave, ill put up a general post about the last 10 weeks but here are some random photos in the meantime!


Chris and Imogen


HB and Tory


Mori and Ignatio


Latty


HB, Phil and myself




The tickets staff, Jumana, Viera, Me, Imo, Carrie-Anne and Diamond






Jackie, Jumana, Viera, Imogen, Carrie-Anne and Diamond






The ticket office






My station, 997






Imo





My last day at work, with the tickets team in the vault. L-R Carrie-Anne, Diamond, Joe









Greg




Ricky




Kate


Jumana




Down at 'The Y' South Lake Tahoe




Lake Tahoe