To visit Sydney is to check off a list of clichés,
the beaches, the bridge and the Opera House (does any other building so define
a city, let alone a country as much as the Opera House does for Sydney?). But
there is more than one building to Sydney, many places of note to visit in this
sprawling metropolis, sprawling at least by Oceania’s limited standards. A day
trip out to the Blue Mountains is a popular excursion, catching the train out
to Katoomba, one of the small satellite towns that serves as a entry point into
the Blue Mountains, a spectacular mountain range that borders onto Sydney’s
western suburbs. You roll past endless suburbs, shopping malls and sports
fields that all start to blend into one, the suburban dream (or nightmare) for
some, recalling the lyrics of an Arcade Fire song,
Train
followed bus and two hours later, we were back in Sydney, one of us thankful
for the chance to go shopping the next day and the other wishing we had more
time to explore the back roads and trails of the Blue Mountains (you can guess
who was who). At least we can agree on one thing, kangaroo scrotums, despite
their ubiquitous nature, don’t make suitable Australian keepsakes.
“Living
in the sprawl, dead shopping malls rise
Like mountains beyond mountains
And there's no end in sight
I
need the darkness, someone please cut the lights “
The stations get
smaller the further we get away from central Sydney; the names of stations
blurted out over the intercom as we approach them, in heavily accented tones disguised
in feedback that are a far cry from the four languages broadcast over Seoul’s
subway to announce incoming stations. It did make me appreciate the fact that
I’m familiar with the nasal Sydney drawl, people less familiar with antipodean
accents would have struggled to understand what any stations were called. As
the stations got smaller and the train starts to climb, the view changes from
suburban to semi-rural, views framed by the gum-trees so familiar of
Australia’s countryside. There were regular glimpses of parakeets and rosellas,
a flash of colour as they flitted between trees. Occasionally, you would be
able to look out over the Blue Mountains themselves, a seemingly endless plateau
of those ubiquitous eucalyptus, who emit so much chemicals into the atmosphere
that the air over the range acquires a blue haze (obviously leading to its
current name).
Katoomba must be
thankful for the scenic beauty that lies within a half hour walk of its train
station that sustains this small town of 7,000 in the middle of what seems
no-where. Katoomba is an Aboriginal term for “shining falling water” or “water
tumbling over hill”, which shows that the beauty of the spot has been
recognized for millennia. It also helps that the sights in the Blue Mountains
are legit. You know how some sights have been talked up that they can’t help
but disappoint. I remember going to the Chocolate Hills in the Philippines, a
place I had always wanted to visit and was disappointed I had made the effort.
At least, talked up is better than invented. This is the case for one of the
major attractions of Koh Samui in Thailand, which consist of two rocks called
Grandmother and Grandfather Rocks, rocks that slightly resemble genitalia.
Grandfather Rock: a major drawcard in Koh Samui. Utterly forgettable. |
Our first stop, a
twenty-minute walk from the centre of Katoomba, was at one of the most famous
sights in the range. Known as the Three Sisters, they are a formation of three
sandstone rocks that tower above Jamieson Valley, a picturesque canyon that
drops perilously away from the large viewing platform. Buses carted tourists to
the platform. There were groups of excited Japanese school students running
around, a busload of middle-aged Koreans, clothed in cliché, the women visored
and draped in flowery leisure suits, the men in their finest hiking gear.
Tourists pointed excitedly and posed in front of the Three Sisters, looking
down into one of the most spectacular vistas that rates as one of the prettiest
I’ve seen.
The Three Sisters overlooking Jamieson Valley. |
The aboriginal
tribes that have lived here for eons were said to have had a legend that
explained the Three Sisters. They were initially three sisters who, in a Romeo
and Juliet of the outback, fell in love with three men from a rival tribe.
Marriage was forbidden but the men sought to capture the sisters by force. A
battle of epic proportions ensured and the sisters were turned into stone by an
elder to protect them from the men they love (something is wrong about this
story). Anyway, the elder was killed in the fighting and no one could turn them
back, resigning the three to an eternity of being stone. However, this
well-known story turns out to be a falsification, like so many “indigenous”
stories that were spun by colonial settlers in both Australia and New Zealand.
The tale was devised by a non-Aboriginal Katoomba local, who thought it would
attract visitors to the area (not that the views require an embellishment).
The road into the
Blue Mountains was made using convict labour (Sydney, along with Western
Australia and Tasmania was the home of one of Britain’s Australian penal
colonies). These colonies used to be a stain on Australia society (and a source
of mirth for New Zealanders sick of Australians making taunts about our implied
relationships with sheep) but the important role that convicts played in early
colonial Australia is now being acknowledged and celebrated. This change in
mindset was apparent when we visited the Hyde Park Barracks in Sydney that
allows Australians the chance to see if they have any convict heritage. It was
also seen in a group of statues, placed just around the corner from the Three
Sisters, that commemorates the role that convicts played in colonial Australia
and, in particular, in the construction of roads that led out of civilization
and into the hinterlands. The statues consist of a gentlemanly looking officer
overseeing a trio of workers, their work observed by two curious aboriginal
men. The aboriginal men are outsiders looking in, marginalized just as aboriginals
are now in modern-day Australia. I noticed the same thing in paintings at the
Hyde Park Barracks, where aboriginals were drawn on the outskirts of Sydney,
never integrated into this new town and European way of living.
Statues of Aboriginals seem bemused by the toil of convicts. |
The canopy
of the sub-tropical rainforest was dense, blocking off the chance that sunlight
had of reaching the forest floor, making for a cool walk down to the bottom of
Jamieson Valley. There was little noise here, save the chatter of fellow
walkers- no bird calls to be heard, no birds to be seen in contrast to the
bird-life that we had seen from the train. Notice boards said to be on the
look-out for animals like quolls (species of cat-like marsupials) and wallabies
but we had no such luck. Fungi relished the damp environment that was oddly
reminiscent of New Zealand’s rainforest, despite the prevalence of eucalypts,
betraying its Gondwanan roots. Waterfalls pierced the landscape at regular
moments, a little underwhelming in terms of water volume but quite spectacular
in other ways, as the water contrasted and cascaded down the dark brick coloured
walls of the valley.
From a look-out point on our walk. |
At the bottom of the valley, we saved a walk back up to
the top by catching the scenic railway, reputed to be the steepest cable-driven
funicular railway in the world (whatever that dubious claim means). It is
certainly the steepest cable-driven funicular railway that I have been on as
well as the fastest. It was more like a roller-coaster in reverse and for a
couple of old New York women it sounded like the scariest thing that they had
ever been on (which maybe it was). It certainly knocked a lot of time off the
return trip as the powerful winch that pulls you up to the top, 200 metres up,
in less than a minute. At the top, there is what is reputed to be Australia’s
largest souvenir store made up of the usual tacky wares, just in greater
quantity; kangaroo scrotums, koalas and boomerangs all on prominent display.
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