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Member Since Feb 26, 2006
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A Quickie - Carvoeiro, Portugal
4 Stars This place was Great visited Nov 10, 2007
Ok Ladies and Gentlemen,

Sorry to dissapoint you all but there is going to be no waxing and lamenting of all the beautiful things that we saw all the historic places that we visited or even the life changing interactions we had with the people of this lovely country! Why might ask? Simple! I was travelleing as a brit... Please don't throw rocks food and anything else you can lay your hands on at me, it was the first time and hopefully one of the last times i'll stay in such a beautiful well presented great facilities 5 star restort with a fantastic sea side view (Ok i know i know it doesn't sound so bad but it was a boozy lazy long weekend away from the hussle and bussle of the big smoke).

Anyway, after leaving work at midnight ,getting home and packing, catching 2 hours sleep, a ride to the airport, dodgy cafe breakfast, a 3 hour flight and finally a grilling by a portugese customs official. Kate, Bronson, Robyn, Michelle, Matt and myself finally arrived in Portugal. What resulted was 3 days of drinking, swimming, relaxing and generaly trying our best to catch the last of the european summer. This bone idleness was punctuated by hard runs along some very unforgiving terrain and hours spent exploring old portugeuse costal towns. Overall Portugal is a very relaxing place to spend a long weekend.

No so much carpe diem.

But always!

Ralph Bragg

trip itinerary logo This entry is part of the trip itinerary European Sojoun

posted Dec 4, 2007 | Comments (0)


A Good Friday to Forget - Dublin, Ireland
2 Stars This place was Poor visited Mar 30, 2007
To all those that hate flying this is a good reason to try it anyway. After much fun and excitement that i could handle from work i managed to score myself 4 days off and decided to escape from london!

My destination, a bed and breakfast on the Emerald Isle where i was to meet up with Rhys Bowman and explore the supposdely amaying cliffs of Moher on Irelands west coast. After a very late night partying (work function) which proved to be a very interesting night to say the least. (The London Stock Exchanges new trading system had gone live succesfully) i finally stumbled home at about 3am got 2 hours sleep and then started to pack. Packing at 5:30am slightly drunk and trying to anticipate what your going to need for 4 days travelling is something that by now i'd gotten quite good at. So i found myself on the tube at about 7am heading to Marylebone station.

Wales i've been told is an amazingly beautiful country filled with beatiful lakes and scenic peaks, as for me, i missed most of it sleeping. And when i finally did awake i was told that the train had been standing still for 45 minutes due to kids throwing rocks. Oh well, back to sleep i went, 7 hours later (The entire jouney should have taken 4) i arrived at Irish Sea Port, only to be told that the least ferry on Good Friday departed 3 minutes ago... What an easter this was shaping out to be! Having plenty of time on my hands (The next ferry wasnt until 2am the following morning) i decided to explore that small little welsh town i was in. 15 minutes later i was pretty much down with that town... there was litterally nothing there apart from the seaport and a big statue that was a memorial to the fisherman lost at sea. Buying a couple of beers from the local supermarket i decided to climb up the cliff to check out the statue more closely. I still cannot believe the condition that the towns people let their memorial momumnet degenerate too, the plaque could not be read, the entire 'park' was covered in cans and thousands of beer bottles and even the occiosional condom wrapper.

Heading back to the ferry terminal i comondeered all the coffe tables and made myself a make shift bed and got some shut eye for a few hours...

12am Im woken by a family of 'Travellers' that are crossing to Ireland (They had come to wales because on Good Friday it is impossible to buy alcohol in Ireland) Needless to say these kids were annoying the hell out of everone they could, stealing sleeping bags wallets everything they could lay their hands on (An english gentlemen remarked to me that they were simply doing what their parents had trained them to do) eventually one english gentlemen in his mid thirties gave the child a gentle tap on his bottom and sent him on his way... Way Wrong Move! Within seconds he was beaten up bloodied nosed and lying on the ground, within 2 minutes the police were arresting the entire Picky family within 5 minutes they had released the Picky family (No Fixed Address, apparently means that it is not worth the effort to press charges) and then arrested the gentlemen nursing a broken / bruised nose, brusing (physical and emotional) for what i was told was Child Abuse... Ah a fine effort from the welsh constabulary...

trip itinerary logo This entry is part of the trip itinerary European Sojoun

posted Apr 29, 2007 | Comments (1)


Living In London - London, United Kingdom
5 Stars This place was Amazing visited Aug 15, 2006
G'day guys i know that i haven't posted in a while i've been far far too busy. Well what news do i have. Well so far i have an apartment that i've signed a 6 month contract for (In reflection i always thought that my first place that i called my own would have been in Australia not London). I have taken a 6 month contract with Accenture at the London Stock Exchange which has so far proven to be one of the best decisions of my life.

In general i've been settling down and getting used to the rat race! To all my friends out their in the big wide world whenever you're in town and need a palce to stay my door is always open

trip itinerary logo This entry is part of the trip itinerary European Sojoun

posted Oct 25, 2006 | Comments (0)


Munich Terror - Munich, Germany
3 Stars This place was Average visited Aug 10, 2006
My God,

You know what i'm now firmly convinced that someone upstairs really doesn't want me to get to London. I have had this fantastic trip around europe, a wonderful week with the Biesingers recovering and slowly weening myself of party mode and then i made the tragic mistake of trying to fly to London on Augaust the 10th in the year of our lord two thousand and six.

After bidding a sad goodbye to family in europe i jumped on a train, more excited and eager than i've been since leaving brisbane. I was off to to London where the streets are paved in gold, the queena and the london bridge etc etc. After a pleasant trip through the german country side and an additional 30 minute ride to the airport I bounded up to the information desk to ask what time my flight to London was.

'Monday' was the only response that i got, i couldn't understand why the airport staff was being so rude. Knowing that i had a few hours at least before flying out, i posted home Tom Kaye's box of tricks. Flopping out on a couch in the airport i started hearing people taling about, 'London' 'Terror' 'Bomb' 'USA' 'War' and then i really started to sit up and pay attention.

When i asked the german couple sitting next to me what was going on, they both stopped talking looked at me and asked 'Where have you been... Under a rock!?!'

Now i realise that Traunstein Bavaria is a relatively small quite country town but a rock?!? I wasn't quite sure so i laughingly told them where i was.

'Traunstein?'

They laughed, a lot.

Anyway, it turns out that the day that i picked to fly to London was the day that terrorists decide to blow up the place. Great timing.

Watching CNN and the BBC i could see the absolute chaos that was occuring.

Quick summery of the rest of the day.

4's waiting, 3 transfered flights (All Cancelled)

No offer of accomodation so back on the train to Traunstein.

Monday morning's flight?... well thats another story!

As Always

Carpe Diem

Ralph Bragg

trip itinerary logo This entry is part of the trip itinerary European Sojoun

posted Sep 17, 2006 | Comments (0)


The Home Of Death - Oswiecim, Poland
5 Stars This place was Amazing visited Jul 22, 2006
The sun is shining, the birds are chirping in the trees, the flowers springing up through luscious good quality soil all the sights and sounds of a mid summers day abound yet my soul is cold, my bones are freezing and the a deep chill runs over my skin.

Work Makes Free

Auschwitz, the final resting place of millions of men women and children, who liked me listened to the birds felt the sun on their face and watched children skip and jump all the way to their deaths. Millions walked in, very few came out alive.

Auschwitz is a must see for all humanity, the worlds greatest testament to human cruelty, barbarism and failure. Arriving in the middle of the afternoon on a bright summer day, the truly staggering loss of life that occurred in the 3 death camps that make up Auschwitz cannot truly be comprehended. Despite the exhibitions, the bales of human hair and several hundred thousand pairs of shoes, even after looking at the photos and the endless lists of names it is difficult to comprehend the number of lives that this place claimed. There are no graves to mark the fallen, no Jewish synagogue where people can remember their lost loved ones, only a pond where the ashes of some 1.5 million Jews were scattered after being incinerated.

This place will anger the hearts and mind of even the most even tempered of men, this is a place where ghosts live and the sense of despair and dismay that permeates the very ground can almost be felt as you walk by cell block after cell block.

When a train pulled in, men woman and children were separated into two columns those that could work and those that were undesirable.

Those old men, young children and women where sent straight to the showers or so they thought, many people wonder how could so many be fooled into believing that that was where they were really going despite the sombre looks on the male only population of the camp.

Many photos exist that were taken by Nazi medical specialists that show the crowed of people willing walking quite happily to what many of them suspected would be their deaths. As I looked at the last photo I couldn't help but be moved at the sight of two young boys arm in arm skipping down the road to the gas chambers with out a care in the world as if this was a great adventure.

Less than 30 seconds after leaving these photo two young children came skipping through the group of people that I was with laughing and giggling arm in arm, we all stopped. Stopped moving, talking, breathing even thinking. Disbelief and shock that was written on my face was reflected back in the eyes of all those near me. No one moved as we watched these two young boys stop and turn and look at us and wave and then keep on skipping. They could have been ghosts, we all expected them to simply vanish or slowly fade away in this place of hell I wouldn't have been at all surprised.

At the end of the march of death I reached the memorial to the millions murdered. A simple black marble slab lies in the remains of furnace 1 and furnace 2. In this very area I was standing over, one million people were killed because of racist bigotry. Political prisoners, blacks, Jews, poles and gypsies were murdered simply because they existed.

Next to the memorial are errected two simply black marble head stones that stand on the east side of a simple 10 foot by 10 foot pond. These two black markers each represent the ashes of five hundred thousand Jewish men women and children.

Standing before these two simple unmarked grave stones with the sun on my face, the birds chirping and the breeze lightly blowing I wondered how could the world have ever let it happen, how could the civilised world stand back and ignore what was happening around them. How could the people whom the Nazis occupied not know what was going to happen to those that were in any way different to the ideals of the madman Hitler.

And so I whispered a prayer for the millions fallen to whatever divinity may choose to listen, knelt and placed a rock at the base of the graves as so many visitors have done before me and turned and walked away. As I crossed back under the archway and out onto the main road I realised that was one of the few, one of the few who entered the home of death and then walked out again.

Right then and there I vowed that this should never happen again, that the world should learn from one of its darkest hours so that the sacrifice that the millions who died during the Second World War made would not be in vain.

As I stood there a German curator walked over spoke to me.

'I've seen that look on so many men's face.'

I replied, 'What look?”

'The look of those who have seen this place of death and swore that this should never happen again, but you know what, It is still happening'

I was shocked but I pondered on his statement and realised he was right, in Africa as well as eastern Europe ethnic cleansing still occurs millions are discriminated, ostracised and murdered simply because they are of a different colour or race, or worship a different god or follow a rival leader. I'd have liked to believe that the world had learnt its lesson but it seems that man kind has a long way to go and I hope that it doesn’t require our complete extinction before we better ourselves.

And so for those of you that come to Europe too travel and experience the wide variety of food, wine and women. Take a day out of your trip to visit Poland, beneath the surface of this beautiful country hides some of man kinds most hideous scars that time should never be allowed to completely fade. Take a minute to visit Auschwitz; only a minute, to learn, to remember so it never happens again.

As always

Carpe Diem

Ralph Bragg

trip itinerary logo This entry is part of the trip itinerary European Sojoun

posted Jul 27, 2006 | Comments (1)


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