Category Archives: Travel

East New Britain, Papua New Guinea – refugees and the readiness/reality gap …., July 2013

General musings

The expats here are philosophical about the disfunctionality of PNG society. It is just how things are.

I am conflicted. It seemed to run at least as well, if not better, when I was here 40 years ago.

But I am seeing this Melanesian world through the prism of the sophisticated organisational expectations of a mostly efficient, developed society. This is not my world.

When I am here the Australian PM Rudd announces his new refugee policy – all boat people are to be housed on Manus Island and their care and processing to become PNG’s issue paid for by Australia.

I am gob smacked about the country’s readiness to implement such a complex policy in the light of some of the anecdotes I hear and I stress all this is anecdotal:

  • I admire a smart new fire truck and am told last week a house burnt down because people don’t know the number of the fire station.
  • The paper has a little story of the disappeared consignment of crabs expected on the Kavieng flight. Did they make it on board or were they eaten on the short flight?
  • In true PNG manyana time the only performance at the annual mask festival one night starts 2 hours after the programmed time.
  • The inaugural Cairns-Kokopo flight started up while I was there. One visitor was assured in Cairns that she could get her visa on arrival at Kokopo. She couldn’t and had to return to Cairns and then catch the next flight via Port Moresby.
  • The second day my friend received a text saying: “Flight crew drunk n didn’t show up in pom (Port Moresby). Still waiting in Tokua (Kokopo airport)”.
  • In January two men with homemade guns  robbed the beachside bar where I was staying. Two Australian men had stumbled into it and also been robbed. When they ran to tell the security man at the gate, his radio wasn’t working and he didn’t know the phone number of his company. The next day, the police still hadn’t been notified.
  • We asked the hotel staff to ring a taxi; this was a problem as the mobile phone had run out of credit.
  • The previous week a newborn baby at a hospital about an hour away had died because the doctor had to be picked up to attend and the ambulance was in for repair. No one had had a back up plan.
  • I asked the manager of the hotel to print something. While he was away someone had borrowed the ink cartridge.
  • No one ever expects anything to arrive by post or to be delivered. It apparently sits in Port Moresby long time.
  • This year, for the first time, school attendance is free. The central government gave schools money to prepare. I am told many teachers now had new cars and computers. Other resources seem to be missing in action as the children are now crowded into the same rooms with many classes having up to 80 students to a teacher.
  • Leaving, I have an internet ticket; I pass through the gate to the security lounge. Why does no one join me until after the allocated boarding time? Am I in the wrong place? No. The ticketing machine hadn’t been working so no one could be given a boarding pass.

And then there is the wonderful sign in the airport: PLEASE DO NOT FORGET TO DECLARE YOUR INFANT.

This area is said to be the safest and presumably therefore one of the better organised in the country. Last week army staff shot up the medical students’ quarters in Port Moresby in some payback. NGOs will not let their staff travel in Lae and Moresby except in armoured and armed cars.

Given its own issues, can PNG exercise a duty of care and speedy processing of refugees? Given that only 3% of the PNG land is not in customary ownership  with a total of approximately 12% on 99year leases to foreign companies and there are already shanty towns of refugees from Irian Jaya, just how could those granted citizenship there under the Rudd scheme, settle there?

It is enough to make me weep.

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Lombok – the place and a celebration ….May 2013

I dread birthdays. I think it’s because when I was an only child I was a star. Birthdays were days when wishes were made real. One year the whole class of (perhaps) 9 year olds was invited to don party hats and feast from tables weighed under cupcakes, sausage rolls and lollies at the local School of Arts. For its day, it would have been hard to top that.

Somehow books and records don’t cut the same style although, bless their hearts, my children knowing my birthday neurosis have striven to fill the void with occasional amazing treats.

This year was one to mark. (Although another childhood idiosyncratic behaviour is the refusal to share my age –a trait inherited from my mother.) Anyway something different had to happen. And it did – so my birthday was magic .

This splendid band was part of the procession that wound its way down the path singing Happy Birthday until it reached us. Our table  was surrounded by candles under a sail on a flagged deck just above the sea. I cried with joy.

This splendid band was part of the procession that wound its way down the path singing Happy Birthday until it reached us. Our table was surrounded by candles under a sail on a flagged deck just above the sea. I cried with joy.

And then the chef presented the cake.

And then the chef presented the cake.

I have been to Bali, island of a thousand temples,  about eight times since 1969. It has gradually changed from an enchanting, free spirited, gracious adventure into a holiday resort for some of the worst examples of what western capitalist me-too ‘ism can produce.  And so much of the gentle Balinese Hindu culture has been corrupted.

Anyway in an attempt to find some of that old laid-back spirit I settled on Lombok, the  island of a thousand mosques just to the east of Bali.

Bali's volcano, Gung Agung, can be seen from this coastline.

Bali’s volcano, Gung Agung, can be seen from the Lombok coastline.

The Wallace Line - the deep water fault line between Bali and Lombok is said to be a demarkation line for fauna. But this monkey doesn't think so.

The Wallace Line – the deep water fault line between Bali and Lombok is said to be a demarkation line for fauna.
But this monkey doesn’t think so.

I invited my three adult children for a week at The Lombok Lodge .

Here's the pool and here's the bar. Who could not be happy here?

Here’s the pool and here’s the bar. Who could not be happy here?

Though there appears to be an another eternal calm embodied in this man fishing  off a rock.

Though there appears to be an another eternal calm embodied in this man fishing off a rock.

Three million people live here; on the eastern side it is apparently pretty fundamentalist Moslem but the growing tourist west was once part of the old kingdom of Bali. So despite a mosque in every small town, no signs of fundamentalism are visible.

We lived in a happy capsule venturing out only for a trip to the famed Gili Islands about 20 minutes away by motor boat and spent another day “touring”.

At a temple along the way, this couple was has having a wedding rehearsal.

At a temple along the way, this couple was has having a wedding rehearsal.

while the woman who weave the famous Lombok Ikat were have the very sensible midday nap.

While the women who weave the famous Lombok Ikat were having a very sensible midday nap.

The Gilis are known for the turtles, the diving/snorkelling, the beauty. The big island is known as party central – we didn’t go there. Gili Meno, the smallest island has no cars and few people.  There’s a knockout little turtle conservation project being run by a local man.  Gili Air seems to be home base for the diving companies with restaurants fronting the beach and some resorts behind.

The only transport on Gili Meno

The only transport on Gili Meno

The turtle conservation project where babies are kept until they are 8 months and then released into the sea.

The turtle conservation project where babies are kept until they are 8 months and then released into the sea.

And the babies....

And the babies….

I am normally a traveller not a resort person though I have stayed at a few. But the star of this holiday was The Lombok Lodge. … only 9 bures, a chef who must be 2 star Michelin, the most beautiful staff in their black ninja uniforms, warmth after a Sydney autumn and an infinity pool and spa. What more could a woman, surrounded by the wonderful adults she has reared, ask for?

Tranquil beauty from the elegant apartment.

Tranquil beauty from the elegant apartment.

One of the delicious creations. A different and terrific degustation every night. Never have I tasted fish so beautifully cooked.

One of the delicious creations. A different and terrific degustation every night. Never have I tasted fish so beautifully cooked.

This wall is indicative of the attention to detail.

This wall is indicative of the attention to detail.

There is a new international airport and negotiations are afoot for direct flights from Australia so get there quick before the developers and the package deals. Down south, at Kuta Lombok the surf and sand are touted. At Senggigi on the north-west coast the main small, tired tourist area boasts a faded Sheraton.

Emerging from customs at Sydney, the first thing that hits you is the aroma of great coffee. The second stand-out is the tree outside my gate now deeply autumnal.

Back home, autumn was on full show.

Back home, autumn was on full show.

p.s. A tip! One day, on the rocks, a painful sea urchin plunged into my foot. The spike looked like a long splinter but the bar ninja took control. Since it was shell, vinegar dissolved it with the help of a pounding with a small rock. I would have spent hours trying to tweeze it out to no effect.

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New York, New York – you gotta love this city …September 2012

It used to be said that New York was where the future came to rehearse. But that edginess has been overridden by the highlights of global aspiration. Whether caused by Mayor Giuliani the Tidier or by the imperatives of the new century, this city now seems to be where the most polished of the present resides.

Day 1. We arrive jet shocked at 2.30am but are up and out before lunch. Walk walk walk…past Rockefeller, down the Avenue of the Americas and to MOMA. What pleasure to see the old faves on the fifth floor…1880 to 1940, Cezanne Dali Kahlo Matisse Monet Picasso van Gogh.

View from window of MOMA

It was in this gallery that the penny first dropped for me about painting; that’s why I think I overinflated the whole shebang here. The collection post 1940 seemed less capturing this time.  Maybe it is the curating, maybe the  2004 renovations are too grand for the collection.

Art Class in MOMA

Dinner at Osteria al Doge just over the road from the apartment. Good Italian despite being so close to the ever moving crush of Times Square.

Day 2. Walk walk walk uptown to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on 82nd. For me the collection far overshadows MOMA. My  faves  are the Impressionists. Am I a conservative romantic at heart?  Then there are the galleries of Roman, Greek, Middle Eastern antiquities while the Friends of Iran haven’t been too shabby in their donations either. Rich friends of the old Shah I presume.

I could spend a month in this museum.

The Upper East reflected in a Central Park pond

A walk thought the pleasures of Central Park and I drop briefly into Saks. The loos are on the same floor as the shoes. Wow! extremity, opulence, fashion victimisation all come to play here. Some of the fashion names that seem to have lopsidedly penertrated the culture are  represented in the most ridiculous, extravagant collection of shoes to be beheld. Only great wealth and weird values tarry here. Why in a sane world would I have heard of Jimmy Choo?

Some window has fish and shoes.. Mad fantasy stuff.

Who do they think will buy them? Cinderella?

This night we see Clybourne Park at the Walter Kerr Theatre. It’s a sharp, satirical look at changing race relations in the USA across two decades. It was good and must have touched a an American nerve given the standing ovation.

Day 3. Walk walk walk down 44th to Battery Park with a few meanders along the way. Twice when I ask directions I am told, “You should take the bus”.  Sure it was 30 degrees but? Was it my age, the heat or just the New York way?

One meander was to Century 21. My memory from 1998 was that It was a great warehouse with racks overstocked often with designer clothes at amazing prices. Now it seems to be a tawdry department store chain. Ah America, where enterprise is rewarded.

The streets are alive with images.

Shoes again!

Psychics are plentiful

The poet in the park, Garrett Buhl Robinson, read aloud from his work.

Even an old van can become a garden

A common sight

 

 

After trying online for a few weeks and then being told by the concierge that one would have to kill to get tickets…I walk to where the Book of Mormon is on and manage to get 2 good ones. Why am I going to a musical? Just because it was written by the people who wrote South Park? Just because it won this year’s Tony award? Just because I’ve never done it before?  Have to see a Broadway musical before you die?

Anyway an excellent Marguerita at the Blue Bar of the Algonquin is one way to celebrate. A strong one too. The famous old haunt of many from Faulkner to Dorothy Parker and Hemingway (who seemed to haunt so many places it is a wonder he had time to write) is now a refurbished shadow of its grand days … A few days later I see a tour group emerge.

Just enough tele to see the Republican campaign excerpts. This county cannot be so silly as to support this man who looks like a charactature of a TV evangelist.

The ferry to the Staten Island is free. Imagine. Mostly tourists though.

Day 4 . Walk walk walk. First I call into the NY Democratic campaign headquarters on Broadway. At this stage it looks like early days in the office of a State candidate  at home. A very young bearded man is giving a training session to 8 people. I am reminded of the Greens.

The door to NY city campaign HQ

Down to Chelsea to the fabulous refurbishment that is now the Chelsea Markets with a 6/10 lunch at the recommended Spice Market….perhaps Pastis on the next corner would have been better but it looked a bit Woolhara. Not surprising since the whole area had a Paddington air especially the gentrification of the Meatpackers district with the very smart small new craft markets.

Then up onto the aerial walkway ..the elevated greened old railway tracks which are packed with walkers or loungers on the smart wooden benches. Just another example of the lack of civic imagination in Sydney.

A different architecture seen from the walkway

Reclining along the high rise walkway

The streets are gun barrel straight

Art along the walkway

That night we see Old Jews telling Jokes At the Westside Theatre.  The jokes were so good I bought the CD:

CNN interviewer, ” Mr Goldberg for 50 years you have prayed here at the wailing wall every day. What do you pray for?” Mr Goldberg, “I pray for world peace, for Arabs and Jews to be brothers, to an end to this Israel problem.” Interviewer, “So how do you feel after 50 years?” “Like I am banging my head against a wall every day”. Most of the other jokes were about sex. mothers and marriage.

Day 5. First to Grand Central to find the Apple shop that has entombed itself in this iconic building. Fix the problem but another memory has been shot. The old Oyster Bar I first went to in the 80’s where row upon row of tiered shell fish were on display for the selecting is now a tame red checked tableclothed  claustrophobic cafe. Oh well! Apologies to all those I pointed in that direction.

Ferry to Brooklyn for the Sunday flea market.Wow, such quality product.

I get an invite to Friday night dinner in Williamsburg.

Sophie and I have many talks over the weeks about how the sheer population density can produce so much that is better than we can experience at home. The best of the best is so much better here. Be it the craft at markets, or the art, or the streetscape and urban spaces; perhaps not the best of the restaurants. The monumental architecture and the treasured streetscape scale  add to the sense of the grand. The vibrant and seemingly easy multiculturism also adds to this sense of a society that has arrived. But we see only glimpses of a many layered Manhattan.

The monumental architecture

The monumental architecture

And the monuments of the new twin towers

We walk through Williamsburg with its boutiques and bars and what a pleasure to see Toby’s Estate coffee shop.

This was the small boy who grew up over the road playing with my kids. I felt proud of you Tobes and am I remembering right?

Jay knocked out your tooth. Hey, it was only a milk one.

Anyway home through the rocking Brazilian masses celebrating their national day.  That night we see the new Batman movie..a bit freaky seeing Gotham under attack and then walking home at midnight through the same stage set.

Day 6. Shop till you drop. It is worth it. Jeans that cost $250 in Sydney are less than$100 here with the tax break. So I buy 4 pairs. Good shoes on sale for $30 although you could pay $3000 at Saks. Food is half the price.

The window of Louis Vuitton celebrates Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama who has collaborated on a collection.

Schwartz do bigger lollies

Despite the debt clock that had increased substantially by the end of a week

Sophie is out that night so I take myself to the John Dory Oyster Bar on the corner of Broadway and 29th in the Ace hotel.  The first pleasure here is the George Washington cocktail – ginger, lemon, egg white,hard cider and applejack. It tastes so good and must be good for you. So I have two.

And the food…first whelk and then chorizo stuffed cuttlefish and toffee date pudding to finish. Yum.

The Ace hotel is an experience in itself. A design based place where it becomes a private club at night with cutting edge art on display. When I wander through a few dozen hipsters are playing with their laptops at long tables in the dark lobby. Tonight is comedy night I’m told.

This place is a creation of the time – techno and organised happenings. I wonder if it is the Chelsea Hotel of the new century.
On the box it’s all Obamarama tonight in readiness for tomorrow’s democratic convention. Much more palatable than the other. MSNBC seems to be a fan. It becomes the only watchable channel.

Day 7. Today the Frick. The Turner ports (Cologne and Dieppe) are wonderful and their light seems to infuse me. I want to breathe it in. There is a Memling portrait of a man whom I could have once become obsessed with. But many of the old Masters whilst objectively fine, don’t ring any bells except the obvious historical appreciation.

It is a Grand House. Frick bought the Fragonard room in its entirety from the JP Morgan estate. What a tradition of benevolence these Americans have. And how bloody rich on the backs of others they became. Nonetheless Gina and her ilk could learn a lot about giving.

I go to Central Station where Apple has colonised an entire wing. There is light drizzle going in at 5.20pm; half an hour later a guy is trundling a trolley selling umbrellas. Ah American enterprise!

Tomorrow night Maria Carey is singing at Rockefeller Plaza for the start of the NFL season so there is a half a kilometre of huge equipment trucks along 48th.

In my street and they are filming “Person of Interest” (for TV) just down the block. The rain isn’t helping either. Here on 44th we have the Harvard Club, the revamped Algonquin and the New York Bar Association. Hard to see why any person of interest would be here in 2012 but I rubberneck to see a crane drop a dummy from the Bar Association building. There must be 50 crew for the single shot.

To night is the Democratic convention. Michelle Obama is a class act.

Day 8. Enough of midtown and uptown, we walk walk walk down to the lower east and then across to the Village. How things have changed here. Boutiques abound and I remember when I found Washington Square scary. Now on Prince near Mercer I can see Louis Vuitton, Mont Blanc and Calvin Klein stores.

Charming Chelseas neighbourhood

Lunch at Katz’s deli. Matzo soup, pastrami on rye in the packed, blissfully unglossed old deli. A sense of what the New York of a few iterations ago would have been like. But the table where Sally had her pretend orgasm for Harry has brought in the tourist hordes.

Dinner is at a Zagat rated 93% modern American seafood, Oceana. Posh but half as good (and half as expensive) as an Australian equivalent, say The Pier in its heyday.

Day 9.  The train to another icon, Coney Island. The subway is a kaleidoscope of  life in this town. Opposite are a young mum with a stroller, a Hasidic Jew, an African American guy in full sports outfit, an old Asian man, a tough looking presumed Brooklyner and a young well dressed WASPish woman.  The trains are sparkling clean with no graffiti.

Coney Island is a sad sight but perhaps ever thus when a fun park is empty. Four separate fenced fun parks are fringed by a wide boardwalk and then a huge expanse of dirty sand to a flat dull sea. We walk out on the pier and chat to the fishermen.

The plastic palm
It’s a little bleak here
And the desolate gym equipment

Thursday night…time for the musical. It is an absurd fantasy about Mormon boys in Uganda. The entire audience rises to a standing ovation. What is it with these guys?

Day 10 Walk walk walk downtown again. This time we lunch at the chic tapas restaurant, Casa Mono, near Union Square. The blackened beets with summer beans, goat’s cheese and mixed granola win the day; then on to the Farmer’s Market in the Square. After casing the lower west, finding a rare good cup of coffee and missing Robert de Nero in TriBeCa, I call in on Kate and the dear new 4 week old in Soho.

How lucky to be living here. She points me to the Hudson Parkway which runs alongside the river from top to bottom. We tarry there watching football in a revamped industrial building, people jogging and sunning. Again, where is my city’s corresponding civic imagination?

In Bryant Park there is a reading room and table tennis
And young people dancing

Sophie is having another night with friends and wild horses won’t keep me from going back to the whelks at the John Dory Oyster Bar. I drink their take on the mojhito, the Lonsdale Mojhito. It has mint, lime, white rum, cachaca and soda and Gill, it is far far better than those many sugar infested cheap rum ones in Cuba.

Back up Broadway where half the road has been turned into garden and cycle way for 15 blocks and yet we complain about a small bit of Sydney being taken from cars!

If they can close off blocks of Broadway, why not George Street?

Again I pause and watch the constant crowd buzzing good  naturedly Batman, the Naked Cowboy, Grover, Sponge Bob Squarepants and others. Frustrated actors spruik every show in town. It’s always party time here.

Day 12 What a great farewell gift. The Labor Day parade. It goes on and on. Three hours of marchers, some of whom started below our windows at 7 am. Surprisingly few teachers, firemen and health workers and no police union. But the blue collars are out in force. The Harley riders from the Electrical Trades and the Teamsters make my day.

Tradies on bikes

    

  

While the workers watch on

                               

                                                           

and finally

      The only sad note is when a barman tells us Obama hasn’t a hope in hell.

                                     Sad also to leave a great time in a great city.

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