Monday, April 30, 2007

Pictures from the Outback

Us on Rocky before our running camel ride :)

Uluru (Ayres Rock)

Sunset behind Uluru

Uluru at sunrise

A canyon within Uluru

Paula and I in front of Uluru


Sunrise

Us after the camel ride with Rocky

The Kata Tjutas


Lizzy (from England), Aude (France), and Marilyn (Australia) at our dorm dinner

Christelle, me, Paula, Aude, and the drug info pharmacist Rodney (he has been so helpful to us!) at our farewell dinner

Paula and I

Laurice, Paul, and Ian Larmour (the director of Southern Health pharmacy)



My new favorite airline, Qantas. Who else serves Cadbury chocolate on the plane?

Flies everywhere!

Hi everyone! Sorry it has taken me awhile to update! The title of this post is telling, as there are flies EVERYWHERE in the Outback. Walking down the street, in restaurants, everywhere! Paula and I bought some fly spray and you could see several people with fly nets on.

Our dinner on Friday night was soooo nice! There were about 30 people there to send us off. The director and his family came and he gave us a big hug good-bye!

We arrived in Alice Springs on Saturday after a nice flight from Melbourne. I didn't get too much sleep the night before as we got back pretty late from our dinner and I have to finish packing! :) We knew immediately that we were getting ready to be in a totally different part of Australia once we got on the plane. About half of the passengers were Aboriginal and were traveling with their babies from Royal Melbourne Children's Hospital, where their babies had received treatment. It was pretty sad because we could tell that these babies were pretty sick!

Alice Springs is right smack in the middle of Australia and is the jumping point for traveling to the Kata Tjutas and Uluru (Ayres Rock). It is about 300 miles from Alice Springs to reach Uluru. The Outback is much, much drier than the rest of Australia and there is dust and red dirt everywhere. It makes for some beautiful, desolate looking pictures! On Saturday, we explored the town center, had some lunch, and came back to the hostel to relax.

That evening, I tried camel lasagna! Our hostel has wonderful $5 dinners and I decided to brave the camel. It tastes a lot like chicken, but is a little sweeter. You would be surprised how many camels there are in the Outback. There are over 1 million and many of them are ferrel.

Sunday morning we left at 6am for our two days trip to the Kata Tjutas and Uluru. I have to say that even though it is easy, I am pretty tired of eating oatmeal for breakfast! :) I keep telling myself that my cholesterol will be better after eating it every day!

We picked up several groups of people along our way and made our first stop at a camel farm. These camels did not look too excited to have someone on their back, but Paula and I decided to do a camel ride! :) Our camel, Rocky, was pretty nice, but when he got up, we had to lean sharply backwards to prevent falling off! The camel guide thought it would be fun to have the camel run for a bit, so Paula and I had a hysterical, bumpy camel ride. I just have to say that I don't think I could use a camel as long-distance transport. They are pretty stubborn. This other camel, Maya, got up while we were riding and got in big trouble from the trainer! :)

We had a very fun group with three couples from Australia, one from France, Germany, the Netherlands, England, and us from the US. Once we arrived to the Uluru area, we set up camp and made lunch. I have to say that it is funny to watch as each group of people fixed their lunch. There were slices of meat, bread, and condiments. Paula and I made sandwiches, the Australians ate the bread and meat separately and put beets on everything, and most of the Europeans put full salads on their bread and ate the meat separately. The tour we were on was very fun as we made our own food and slept in tents under the stars.

Our first stop was the Kata Tjutas, which is Aboriginal for 36 heads. When I upload my pictures, you will see that it looks like the rock formation has many heads. In 1986, the Kata Tjutas and Uluru were returned back to the Aboriginal people as the entire area has religious meaning for them. It had been under control of the Australian government for many years before it was returned to them. The Anangu are the Aboriginal tribe in the area of Uluru and the Kata Tjutas.

That evening, we had a feast of steak and Polish sausages. Miguel and Wal, two of the Australian retirees on our tour, took the task of barbequing our dinner and we got everything else fixed.

After dinner, we headed to Uluru (Ayres Rock) for the sunset. It was beautiful to watch as Uluru changed color as the sun went down behind the clouds. After sunset and a snack, we headed back to camp and got ready for the next day. It was quite a challenge to find anything in the dark, but luckily I had brought a torch (flashlight) with me. I have never seen a night sky as beautiful as that night. There were absolutely no lights and the stars looked brighter than I have ever seen.

The next morning we were up at 5am and headed for the sunrise over Uluru at 6am. We chose to do the 8km hike around the base of Uluru. It was kind of sad because you can actually climb Uluru, but the Anangu people prefer you not to. In their culture, the Mala (a mole that is the basis for their initial creation story) first climbed Uluru and brought the Aboriginals to the area. Unfortunately, many tourists still climb the rock, despite the wishes of the Aboriginal people.

Walking around Uluru was beautiful. It rains about once a year in the area and when it does, water is absorbed by the sandstone and cracks and honeycomb shapes are formed in the rock. As the sunrise hit the rock, it changed from a violet color to a deep rust red. In many of the caves used by the Aboriginal people, there are drawings telling their history.

After our walk, which took about 2-3 hours, we went to the Aboriginal Culture Center and listened to stories by an Aboriginal tour guide. It is also superstition that if anyone takes a rock or some sand from Uluru, they will have bad luck. There was a huge scrapbook of letters from all over the world of people who had returned what they had taken from the area, due to bad luck that had experienced.

We returned to camp for lunch and met another bus to take us back to Alice Springs as the rest of our group was continuing on for 5 days. We slept most of the way back as we were pretty tired from the walk and the 5am waking time.

Last night we decided to do a load of laundry to get some of the red dust out of our clothes and ate a feast of camel burritos, which was delicious!

This morning, we are heading to the Royal Flying Doctor's Museum (the service that connects medical service to everyone in the Outback) and then fly out to Cairns (beach and rainforest!) this afternoon. I hope you all are well and I will write again soon!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Farewell!

This will be a short post as I need to be packing and we are soon leaving for our Farewell Dinner tonight! We gave our presentations today and received lots of compliments! They said they were the best ones ever by Tennessee students.

Tonight, we have a farewell dinner and tomorrow, we head for a 2.5 week adventure to Alice Springs, Cairns, New Zealand, and Hawaii. I can't believe that I have finished my last rotation and that in less than one month, we will graduate!

We had a wonderful patient interaction yesterday. We went on a home visit with a pharmacist as part of the HOMR program (Home Outreach Medication Review). This lady had been admitted to the hospital 3-4 times in the last 6 months and she wasn't feeling well. She was on metoprolol (for blood pressure) and digoxin (for those of you non-pharmacy people, it is just to help control your heart, especially if you have atrial fibrillation). She was complaining of nausea, diarrhea, and had HALOS IN HER EYES (which are classic signs of digoxin toxicity). I measured her pulse and it ran 52 bpm and she hadn't taken any of her medicine since yesterday. The pharmacist called her doctor and got an order for a stat EKG and digoxin level. We had to gently convince her to go to the office because she wasn't feeling well, poor lady, but she did finally agree to go and we drove her. I don't know if we will find out exactly what happened, but I think we were in the right place at the right time, if you know what I mean.

I will post and upload pictures during our trip. Thanks for reading and all of the comments!

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Koala Video!

Anzac Day

We left out very early this morning to catch a train to Melbourne to meet our tour group for a trip to the Great Ocean Road. We saw lots of old cars (like from the 1930's-40's era) and veterans in full uniform preparing for the Anzac parade. As we made our way to the Great Ocean Road, we stopped at Bell's Beach, Apollo Bay, and at the Twelve Apostles National Park. I have attached several pictures for our day trip. The Great Ocean Road was designed after Highway 1 in California and is dedicated to the soliders fighting in World War I and II (the Anzacs), which was especially appropriate today as it was Anzac Day.

The koalas were so cute in the trees! Sorry I keep posting photos of the animals, but I find them incredibly cute! I have a video that I will try to attach of a koala swinging from one tree to the next, trying to get some eucalyptus.

The Twelve Apostles were beautiful, but there are fewer than twelve now due to damage from the ocean.

Paula and I are quickly trying to finish our projects, papers, and presentations by Friday, so I wanted to go ahead and post everything before then, since we leave Saturday morning for our 3 week trip. Hope everyone is well!

Great Ocean Road

Paula and I at the Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

The "Lace Curtains", Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

London Bridge Formation after damage by the sea, Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Me at the London Bridge Formation, Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Limestone formation at the Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road
Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Me at the Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Paula and I at the Twelve Apostles National Park, Great Ocean Road

Rainforest along the Great Ocean Road

The Twelve Apostles, Great Ocean Road

Along the Great Ocean Road

Beautiful water, Great Ocean Road

Me at the Twelve Apostles, Great Ocean Road

Koalas in their natural habitat along the Great Ocean Road



View from the forest where the koalas were, Great Ocean Road

One of a million jellyfish along the beach of the Great Ocean Road

View from Apollo Bay, Great Ocean Road

Perfect waves along the Great Ocean Road

Me along the Great Ocean Road

Bell's Beach, home of second largest surfing competition in the world, Great Ocean Road

Me at Bell's Beach, Great Ocean Road

Bell's Beach, Great Ocean Road

All too true...

Me at the War Memorial on the Great Ocean Road (very appropriate for Anzac Day today!)

Monday, April 23, 2007

Last week in Clayton!

Hi everyone! We had a great trip to Tasmania this weekend. Sorry I haven't updated in awhile, but we had spotty internet access this weekend (15 cents/minute), so I only used it sparingly.

We left for Tasmania early Saturday morning after a fun Friday night. On Friday, we went to dinner with Aude and Christelle at a posh Italian restaurant in the South Bay area of Melbourne. It was delicious! Afterwards, we met one of Christelle's French friends, Sophie, on the rooftop of a venue that was hosting the Melbourne Comedy Festival! It was a lot of fun and they actually had turf on the roof.

Once we arrived on Saturday, we picked up our rental car and headed into the city. Paula was very successful at driving on the left side. The only tricky part is making a right-hand turn and making sure to end up in the left lane again. I was glad I was only the navigator and didn't have to attempt it! :)

We headed to Salamanca Market in the heart of Hobart, Tasmania's capital. The market was a blast and we actually stayed there for about 3 hours! They had all sorts of things from Tasmanian honey to homemade candles and even some mortars and pestles. I had the best ice cream there I think I have ever tasted in my life! It was homemade vanilla ice cream mixed with strawberry ice cream, in a waffle cone, piled on with strawberries, and softserve on top! Yum! After our afternoon shopping, we checked into our hostel and then headed out to Port Arthur, on the Tasman Peninsula.

Port Arthur has a kind of creepy history. Back in the 1800's, it served as a prison for the "worst of the worst" criminals, where they were required to do hard labor. Several prisoners died/were murdered along with several other people in the area, so we went on a nighttime Ghost Tour! It was really spooky and they knew when to scare us at exactly the right times.

Sunday, we headed to Freycinet, which was pretty far from Hobart (about 5.5 hours roundtrip). I had met several Tasmanians on the plane down and they suggested Kabuki Japanese restaurant. It is in the middle of nowhere between Hobart and Freycinet and is right on the coast. We had a wonderful lunch (I had sushi!) and a nice view of the ocean. Luckily, we were inside because it started pouring rain!

Once we made it to Freycinet, we went on an uphill hike to the overlook of Wineglass Bay, supposedly one of the Top 10 Beaches in the world. Obviously, with winter coming, we did not make it down to the beach, but got some great views. At the overlook, we met some Japanese tourists. I asked them if they wanted me to take their picture as a group before we left. As they were leaving, they wanted a picture WITH US! They wanted to take pictures with their new friends. It was quite hilarious...I wish one of us had gotten a copy too. I know, though, I will be in some Japanese person's slideshow of their trip to Tasmania! :)

On Monday, we had reservations at the Cadbury Factory Tour! The aroma was tantalizing! I asked our tourguide if she ever got sick of the smell and she said never! We learned how they made Cadbury eggs and all of their chocolates. For each type that has a filling, they lay the bottom part of the shape in the mold, let it harden, inject the filling in the middle, and then add the top. They were making over 100 bars a minute! Unfortunately, they no longer allow tasting during the tour due to health regulations, but we received a large box of chocolate from the "treasure chest" at the tour conclusion. The best part of the experience was the Cadbury chocolate store! They had EVERYTHING IMAGINABLE (including many things not even sold in the US) and it was all very cheap! I loaded up with a large bag of chocolate presents for a mere $13!

After the tour, we headed to Russell Falls and stumbled upon the "Something Wild" Wildlife Reserve. We were able to pet a koala and feed all kinds of animals. I really have trouble deciding which ones are my favorites! The koalas, I think, are my favorite, but the wallabies and the wombats pull a close second! :) We were able to pet all of the animals.

We hiked to Russell and Horseshoe Falls and ran into some wild wallabies on the way. We had also seen a wombat crossing the road a few nights before! It is really cool to see the animals actually roaming around in the wild.

We arrived back in Clayton very early this morning (after a 6:15am flight) and I spent the day with a pharmacist named Miranda, who is in charge of the Nephrology pharmacy service. We saw some interesting cases and participated in Pain and Nephrology rounds.

Tomorrow is Anzac Day, celebrating the role of Australia and New Zealand in World War I. We are going to go on a tour of the Great Ocean Road for the day, since it is a public holiday.

I hope everyone is well. I can't believe April is almost over! We will be home on May 17th. We have everything planned for a two weeks of travel and leave this weekend for Ayers Rock, Cairns, and New Zealand!

Tasmania!

Russell Falls, Tasmania

Russell Falls, Tasmania

Horshoe Falls, Tasmania

Aude and Christelle, Russell Falls, Tasmania

Paula and I, Russell Falls, Tasmania

Russell Falls, Tasmania

Christelle at Russell Falls, Tasmania

Russell Falls, Tasmania

Koala

Koala doing what it does best...sleeping!

Aude and Christelle, Russell Falls, Tasmania

Paula and I, Russell Falls, Tasmania

Wallaby in the wild, Russell Falls, Tasmania

Baby wombat, Something Wild Wildlife Park, Tasmania

Wombat digging

Tasmanian devil!

Wallaby eating from my hand!

Adorable wallabies eating from my hand

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Koala!

He was sooooo soft!





Cadbury Tourguide, Cadbury Chocolate Factory, Tasmania

Treasure chest full of chocolate, Cadbury Chocolate Factory, Tasmania

Entrance to Cadbury Chocolate Factory chocolate shop.

Us outside Cadbury Chocolate Factory, Tasmania

Wineglass Bay, Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Wineglass Bay in Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

View from Kabuki Japanese Restaurant, Tasmania

Kabuki decor, Tasmania

Before our feast at Kabuki, Tasmania

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

Freycinet National Park, Tasmania

City of Hobart, Tasmania

A scary nighttime tour of Port Arthur, Tasmania. Port Arthur used to be a prison for criminals who had committed very serious crimes!

A nighttime view of the dissection table in Port Arthur, Tasmania!

View from Kabuki, the Japanese restaurant in the middle of nowhere, Tasmania!

View from Kabuki, the Japanese restaurant in the middle of nowhere!