I can see how
Paradise slipped into the name of
this place. The beach isn’t at all
shabby and for just $145 a night you can stay in a very smart two bedroom
apartment on the 12th floor of a building that’s directly opposite the
ocean. And although you have to lean
over the balcony rail to see the street, it’s the perfect perch from which to
make god-like pontifications about the limited parking abilities of sub-mortals
below. But the view is the real attraction. When we opened the door and walked in, the convergence
of the sky and the Pacific was all we could see and it is superlatively gobsmacking!
Morning breaking |
The car
drop-off, the flight up, the rental pick-up and the drive from the airport were
all uncharacteristically flawless as was the meet-up with the apartment owner’s
agent. After a chorus of vista-inspired
gasps, we headed to Pacific Fair to stock up on breakfast essential plus a few
bottles of wine and some vodka so we could enjoy a wee nip mixed with an
organic guilt-free and completely diabetic-friendly citrus concoction I rather
fancy. When fused with the aforementioned
vodka, it’s rather reminiscent of the tray drinks an extremely kind waiter
saved for us when we were late to the captain’s cocktail party on our Royal
Caribbean Alaska cruise aboard the ‘Peasant Clubbing, Lurex & Diamanté
Encrusted, Vision of the Seas’.
Cheers |
That was
back around 2000 and of course Royal Caribbean has moved on. Their glass elevators have been replaced with
teleporters and all America-based cruises now feature daily on-board executions
of death-row inmates – twice-daily for cruises out of Galveston TX. Themed executions like ‘Pirates of the Royal
Caribbean Walk-the-Plank’ are a particular hit with the kiddies. As usual though, I do digress but you know
how Americans value gratuitous violence with a hefty side-serve of down-home
Judaeo-Christian vengeance.
And
speaking of things Judaeo-Christian, our first engagement of the trip was an après-Evensong
dinner with a certain Reverend Principal and her Cleric-Consort. The RP deserted Public Education
several years ago for the Dark Side and has more recently landed the top job at a
private school that’s so exclusive its name cannot be spoken aloud and may only
be scribed without vowels.
I
nearly choked on my fettucine al fungi when the Reverend Principal revealed
that not only do she and the good lady bishop go shoe and handbag shopping but
that she also sits on the synod – the parliament of the diocese! It is within her power to have McWilliams
port banished from the Eucharistic wine list and replaced with her favorite
Vasse Felix or any other tipple that takes her fancy – red, white or sparkling. Perhaps Grange for Christmas and Easter?
Gold Coast Tucker Tip #1
Try the pakoras but don't forget the chutney |
Gold
Coast Tucker Tip #2
If you prefer the bouzouki over the
sitar why not try George’s at Sanctuary Cove?
Provided you avoid the Miles Franklin Award winning wine list you can
enjoy a stunning meal at an extraordinarily reasonable price. I had a main of the best garlic prawns I have
ever tasted for just $18. They were
served over a bed of perfect rice infused with a butter sauce that would have
made a meal on its own. The serving was
generous but I very nearly cried when it was finished. George’s is already on the list for our next
visit to the Gold Coast.
Aunty Joan & Peter |
And that
should be roughly the same time next year. The reason we go north is to visit Peter’s
lovely Aunty Joan who is a most special lady.
She moved up here some years ago to be closer to her daughter who then
lived at the aforementioned Sanctuary Cove which is, as you probably know, a seriously
flash gated community that’s built on what Queensland does best – a massive
canal development. You are never really
sure about what you’re standing on in this part of the world. Twenty years ago it might have been land or it
might have been water or, more likely, something in between. Never let it be said that Queenslanders
tolerate mangroves – not even for a moment!
We took
Aunty Joan and her lovely little dog, Honey, on a drive up to Tamborine
Mountain which is an excursion to be recommended. Once the grades of up to 20’ are negotiated
you will find yourself in the place where Kuranda meets Mt Wilson. You can wander happily through the forests;
stare in awe at waterfalls; or simply sift through all the tourist detritus –
whatever takes your fancy. There’s even
a scaled-back Georges up there or you can throw the heap in low gear and head
back down the mountain to the waterside Georges as we did.
Aunty Joan, Peter & Honey |
The new
Gold Coast Light Rail is an efficient system that’s worth a ride. It doesn’t yet connect with the Gold Coast to
Brisbane rail line should do so in time for the 2018 Commonwealth Games for
which preparations are well underway without the obscene slave labourer death
toll we are currently standing by and simply observing in Qatar.
Peter & the Gold Coast G:link |
That said,
‘Develop and Consume’ should be the motto of the Gold Coast is it isn’t
already. Since having helped edit that terribly
green handbook a few years ago, the last drop of feral consumerism has been
drained from my being to the point where I crave a daily dose of genuine sustainability
– my chooks, our 10,000 litre water tank, the solar panels on our house and my veggie garden.
Gold
Coast Real Estate Tip #1
Don’t! Properties often come back on the market at
less than their original purchase price.
This is great if you want to live there but it’s not the place to invest.
One of the many Towers of Babel |
A highlight was a visit to the new Tweed Regional Gallery which is built
on a hillside south of Murwillumbah that has spectacular view of Mt Warning-Wollumbin
and the Tweed Valley. I had been promised several rooms of Margaret Olley and assumed there were several
rooms of her work on display but it is quite literally several rooms of the
late artist’s Paddington home/studio faithfully transported and recreated
inside the gallery. I have seen
whole-room installations before but nothing like the organised chaos in which
Margaret Olley lived and worked. The
smell of the dust alone has heritage value.
A repeat visit is required.
Mt Warning-Wollumbin from the Tweed Regional Gallery |
From there
it was on for an audience with the Reverend Principal at the Holy See itself. Both the NSW and Australian
Governments have been very kind to the Dark Side – it was
good to see my tax dollars at work.
OK, that
was said completely tongue-in-cheek. I
remain forever yours, a dedicated free-market socialist along the lines of the Nordic
Model, and an avid supporter of Public Education.
Cheers
comrades
Glenn
A Christo masterpiece at Robina Town Centre |
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