But today, sans jet leg (or at least i thought i was until i tried to pay for a coffee today with my driver's license...) I finally got the ball rolling on my mission to acquaint myself with new parts of the Big Manzana. After I assured him I wouldn't drag him into any museums, my not so little little brother Jared (who happens to be almost a full foot taller than i am) agreed to come along for moral support and to take photographs. In addition to being a fantastic electric guitarist, amateur architect, and ace tennis player, he's also a very gifted photographer. And he's single ladies!
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Wild Wild West (Village)
But today, sans jet leg (or at least i thought i was until i tried to pay for a coffee today with my driver's license...) I finally got the ball rolling on my mission to acquaint myself with new parts of the Big Manzana. After I assured him I wouldn't drag him into any museums, my not so little little brother Jared (who happens to be almost a full foot taller than i am) agreed to come along for moral support and to take photographs. In addition to being a fantastic electric guitarist, amateur architect, and ace tennis player, he's also a very gifted photographer. And he's single ladies!
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Common Grounds
By Haley Cohen Photos Included
Whether you’re hankering for a soy mocha with extra foam, a half-caf iced latte (hold the ice) or just a classic cappuccino, in the coffee-crazed cities of Sydney and Melbourne, you won’t have to walk half a block to find it.
However, it was not until recently that smaller Australian towns joined their cosmopolitan counterparts and jumped on the café caravan. With tourism to smaller towns in Australia on the rise, chic coffee shops are popping up in some unlikely locales.
One such establishment is the sophisticated Wharfside Café, appropriately located on the main wharf in Eden, an industrious fishing town of 3,000 500 kilometers south of Sydney.
The Wharfside was not always so sleek – until 9 years ago when Stojanovic purchased the space with her husband, it served as a take-away joint serving fried fish, chips and lollies. However, Stojanovic and her husband, an interior designer, had different plans for the café. They completely redecorated the storefront – adding floor-to-ceiling windows, sponging rich navy paint on to the walls, and inserting small nautical-themed details such as decorative lights shaped like portholes – to give it what they hoped was a “retro-maritime” feel.
The Wharfside's Chic Interior
Stojanovic also stopped offering a take-away option and filled her menu with more up-market dishes such as fresh mussels steamed in tomato broth ($25) and tuna nicoise salad ($22). But perhaps most importantly, Stojanovic introduced high quality espresso to Wharfside’s repertoire.
“Prior to Wharfside, no one in Eden served espresso of the caliber you can get in the cities. Some little bakeries may have offered coffee but it wasn’t good coffee. We’re trying to offer Eden locals and tourists the same standard of espresso they would find in a cafe in any big city in the world.”
Stojanovic admits that the bulk of her clients are tourists but adds that the Eden locals are slowly becoming receptive to café culture. “It’s going to take time but café society is building among the local populace,” she explains as a young female police officer orders a flat white at the counter. “Its just a new idea to them. Most locals are used to drinking coffee at home, or at a friends house where it’s free.”
Graham Hinkley (correct), owner of Twinkle’s of Omeo, reports that his business is similarly tourist-based thanks to his café’s location on the scenic Great Alpine Road and his quality menu that includes fresh soups, omelets, sandwiches and of course, coffee. Like Stojanovic, Hinkley also founded Twinkle’s to fill what he perceived as a gap in the Omeo culinary and caffeine markets.
“We’ve got a bakery and a few take-away joints with fried foods but before I founded Twinkle’s 2 years ago, there was nowhere in Omeo that travelers could find the higher standard of food and coffee that they were used to.”
Situated in a quaint wood cabin with a rustic interior, Twinkle’s is also a great place to enjoy views of Omeo’s rolling golden cattle fields where the majority of Omeo’s 452-person population make their livings.
“As people from small towns start to travel around Australia more, and become more educated about coffee, they’ll come to expect higher quality and café culture will expand.”
Hinkley’s prediction seems to have come true in Cobargo, a small farming and artisan community in the southeast of New South Wales where partners Kerryn Davey and Erin Tatnell operate the Valley Edge Café.
“While it’s gradual, coffee culture in Cobargo is definitely increasing. In our first year we were surprised to see the local farmers in here enjoying coffee and cake. Now, its not surprising at all. We get as many, if not more, locals in here as tourists,” Davey comments, motioning to the filled wooden chairs in her café.
In addition to its convenient location on Cobargo’s main street, Davey believes that Valley Edge owes its local following to the public becoming more knowledgeable about food quality.
“As they’ve started coming to us, locals have started to realize that its worth it to pay a couple dollars extra for high-caliber food and coffee instead of paying a little less for stale food and bitter coffee. Now that they know what quality tastes like, they’ve come to require it.”
The rise of coffee in Australia can be attributed to a few forward looking Italian immigrants who imported the first espresso machines in 1956 in preparation for the Italian team’s arrival in Melbourne for Olympics. Since then, café culture has taken Australia’s cities by storm. To qualify just how popular coffee shops have become: the Yellow Pages currently lists around 2000 cafes in both Sydney and Melbourne.
Just as coffee has become inextricably linked with the cultures of Australia’s larger cities, the development of café culture in small town Australia is not likely to be a passing trend. The way things are going, very soon you’ll be able to get your paws on an soy mocha with extra foam, a half-caf iced latte or plain cappuccino just as easily on Dalrymple Creek Road in Allora (population 923) as on George Street in Sydney (population 4,284,379) - news that is sure to perk up caffeine-addicts all across Australia.
Eden: Wharfside Cafe Shop 3
253 Imlay St
Eden 2551 NSW Phone: (02) 6496 1855 Hours: Daily 8am -4pm, with extended hours during the summer Located directly on Eden’s stunning operational wharf, the Wharfside is a great place to enjoy a salad or grilled fish while watching the fishing boats tow in their catches. Specialty coffee: Muggachino, the Wharfside’s version of a Cappuccino Specialty meal: Catch of the day topped with coconut shrimp and garnished with rice |
Omeo: Twinkle’s of Omeo 174 day Ave
Omeo
Victoria 3898 Phone: 03 5159 1484 Hours: from 7.30am 7 days a week, as well as dinner from 6pm on Friday and Saturday nights and long week ends. Groups catered for, some meals are available for takeaway. Specialty coffee: Cappucino topped with chocolate stars unique to Twinkle’s Specialty meal: Homemade pumpkin soup and any of the Foccacias |
Cobargo: Valley Edge Café 59 Princes Hwy Cobargo 2550 Phone: 02 6493 6007 Hours: 9am to 4:30pm Specialty coffee: Cappucino Specialty meal: Homemade Paninis |
Crocs and Meercats and Otters, Oh My!
Haley Cohen Photos and Factbox Included
The boy is covered in meerkats. The furry critters sniff in his t-shirt sleeves, claw at his cargo pockets, and burrow in between his legs. They clamber up his arms and onto his head, rifling through his hair hoping to find a mealworm they might have missed.
Many people would be horrified to get frisked by a mob of hungry meerkats but 16-year old John Goodman actually paid for the experience as part of Mogo Zoo’s “Keeper for a Day” program.
Located in the historic gold mining village of Mogo, about 10 km south of Bateman’s Bay and 200 km south of Sydney, Mogo Zoo is a small privately owned zoo focused on preserving endangered and exotic species. It is also the only zoo in Australia other than the National Zoo in Canberra to possess white lions. Mogo Zoo recently attracted attention when an escaped white lioness had to be shot, but has since bounced back and continues to be a fantastic place to see snow leopards, cotton-top tamarins, red pandas, and other rare species.
For $550, Mogo Zoo allows animal-lovers 16 and older to interact and care for these animals, doing exactly as the real keepers do.
“We don’t sugarcoat the experience,” says official Mogo Zookeeper Lisa Payne. “Day keepers are expected to pick up poop just like the rest of us. Of course we’ll never force poo on anyone, but the Keeper for a Day program is not just a glorified petting-fest.”
While for safety reasons, “day keepers” are not allowed in the pens of Mogo’s more threatening animals, they are allowed much closer than a normal zoo patron. Often, the day keepers can even feed the white lions and crocodiles an afternoon snack of raw chicken necks through their chain link enclosures.
Tamer tasks include cleaning and feeding the meerkats and red pandas, accompanying the official keepers while they give public talks about the Bengal tigers, sea otters and meercats and preparing treats for the primates. Day keepers also get to pet and feed servals, a rare breed of small African cat, and raking out the straw in the animals’ pens to ready them for sleep.
“As an added bonus you get to play marbles as you rake,” jokes Payne.
Hopefully after washing their hands, the day keepers are also treated to morning tea and lunch with the official keepers – a rare opportunity to ask experienced professionals questions about the animals and life as a keeper.
Despite the authenticity of the program, Payne reports that no one has ever been physically injured while fulfilling their duties as day keeper.
“While we strive to make the experience as genuine as possible, we also ensure that everything the day keepers are involved in is perfectly safe. But we get some emotional pain, which we can’t really prevent. The other day we had a grown man crying because he didn’t want to leave when his shift as day keeper was over.”
“Whereas the bigger city Zoos might offer similar programs, they are much less personal. We rarely have more than one day keeper per day and we let the keepers do much more than they do at the bigger, more commercial zoos.”
However, for those who don’t feel up to “playing marbles” as Keeper for a Day, Mogo offers two alternative programs: the Serval Experience, where two guests can pet and feed the Servals for half an hour ($200) and the Meercat Experience that allows one patron to play with the feisty creatures for fifteen to twenty minutes ($80). In both cases cameras are allowed and encouraged.
“We want people to be able to show their friends and brag about their experience,” Payne explains.
John’s mother seems to have taken that recommendation to heart as she wildly snaps photos of him blanketed in meerkats.
Official Mogo Zoo keeper Cindy McGillivray suddenly interrupts the meerkat talk she’s delivering to the public and orders “Keep your fingers IN, John!” There is a slight twinge of panic in her voice.
“Meerkats are harmless but sometimes they’ll mistake a finger for a worm…” she explains to the audience, all the while keeping a close eye on Cameron and his hands. “They are animals after all. Sometimes even a keeper gets bit.”
Keeper for a Day Program Essentials: Cost: $550 Only available for those aged 16 or older Day lasts from 8:30am-5pm Lunch and Tea included |
Address: Mogo Zoo 222 Tomakin Road, Mogo NSW 2536, Australia
Telephone: 02-4474 4930
Fax: 02-4474 4855
Email: info@mogozoo.com.au
Website: www.mogozoo.com.au |
How to get there: From the North (Batemans Bay)
Follow the Princes Highway 10km south from Batemans Bay (approximately 10 minutes) until you reach Mogo and follow the signs turning left into Tomakin Road. From the South (Moruya)
Follow the Princes Highway 15km north from Moruya (approximately 15 minutes) until you reach Mogo and follow the signs turning right into Tomakin Road. |
Types of Animals at the Zoo: Mogo Zoo has over 200 specimens of more than 39 rare species. Highlights not mentioned in the article include Burmese pythons, Sumatran Tigers, plains zebras, fallow deer, pygmy marmosets and Brazilian tapirs. |
Other attractions in Mogo: Mogo boasts many quaint cafes, arts and crafts studios and old fashioned lolly shops. It is also a center for the Aboriginal population in the area. |
Fashion-Forward
By Haley Cohen Photos Included
You might expect to find more fishing lines than fashion lines in Bermagui, a working maritime town 380 km south of Sydney. But situated smack in the middle of Bermagui’s main shopping stretch, the very flash Soulique boutique discredits that assumption.
$300 studded leather bags are stuffed into cubbies next to $200 designer jeans and leather belts hang from ornate wrought-iron hooks over a counter covered in gladiator sandals. Abstract paintings by local artists adorn the walls, graphic throws drape across streamlined coffee tables, and colorful jars of organic teas sit serenely on a wooden bureau. The space housing these fashionable wares is large, sunny and uncluttered.
“I wanted the store to have a clean, sophisticated look,” says Simone Ellis, a soft-spoken brunette who owns and runs Soulique, in addition to designing and manufacturing clothing for her own clothing label Ruby Vivant.
After finishing her design degree at TAFE in Sydney two years ago, 27 year-old Ellis returned to Bermagui where she was born and raised - unable to resist the lure of its pristine beaches, ocean-water swimming pools, and lush green forests.
While most Bermagui locals dress casually, often in work boots and jeans, Ellis’ outfit is eclectic. She dons black skinny pants, brown over-the-knee boots, a black turtleneck and a pink down vest reminiscent of a get-up Jane Jetson might wear. But Ellis insists fashion is less about looks and more about life.
“I believe I can use fashion as a way to educate people so it isn’t merely superficial. I can take it deeper,” she says, her soulful brown eyes sparkling.
She carefully removes a very rock-and-roll black velvet vest from its hanger and points to a message scrawled on its price tag that reads “Love is always in my pocket.”
“See here,” she prompts as she reaches into the vest’s breast pocket fishes out a chain with a heart charm attached to the end.
“I like to put little pieces of life philosophy in my clothes,” Ellis explained as she stared pensively through her shop’s glass doors towards the ocean. “If I’m in a clear energy state when creating a garment, that energy is transferred into the garment and wraps around the body of whoever buys it. I hope the clothes that I make will heal their wearers.”
Ellis approaches the atmosphere and outfitting of Soulique with a similar mantra. She streams soothing massage music over the store’s speakers and carefully considers the energy of each garment, pillow, and piece of art before displaying it. She sheepishly admits that recently she even asked one of the artists she was exhibiting to take down their painting because it had “bad energy”.
“I felt really awful because that’s just about the worst thing you can do to an artist – agree to display their art and make them take it down. But the painting was infecting me, and everyone else who came into the store.”
Ellis’ doctrine may be a bit New-Agey for some, but even cynics can appreciate Soulique’s sleek design and interesting stock. Though it will probably be a while before fishermen start to march around in Ruby Vivant talking about “energy transfers”, Soulique’s mere existence in the utilitarian town proves that in Bermagui, expectations are often blown out of the water.
Fact Box |
Contact Information:Soulique, formerly known as Ruby Vivant Boutique and Gallery, is located at 14 Lamont Street in Bermagui, NSW. The store’s phone number is 0405 451 184. |
Labels Stocked:Lee Jeans, American Apparel, Children of the Sun, Religion, All about Eve, T-Lux, Mox, Wrangler, Lucky 13, and Ruby Vivant. |
About Bermagui:380 Km South of Sydney on the South East Coast of New South Wales, Bermagui boasts a scenic wharf, unspoiled beaches and a stunning ocean water swimming pool. It is also in close proximity to several heritage villages including Central Tilba and Cobargo. |
Where to Stay:The Bellbird Cottage offers privacy and comfort in a rustic environment. Book ahead as there are only two rooms. Tariffs per room including breakfast, afternoon tea, port and chocolates range from: Single - $145 - $165 per night Double - $155 - $175 per night. 88 Nutleys Creek Road, Bermagui NSW Australia Tel: #61 (0)2 6493 5274 Mobile: 0466 443 980 |
"Wifi with Wings"
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Irony
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