Whenever I travel, I love exploring the city and surrounding area on foot, and I usually find myself climbing to the top of things. Monuments, churches, hills, mountains, volcanoes, pagodas; it doesn’t matter. This time was no different. On Saturday I had the opportunity to do the Sydney Harbor Bridge Climb. And lucky for me, being an early morning person, the first Saturday of every month they have a twilight climb. It was destiny. When I went outside the hotel 3:30am to check the weather so I could dress properly, I was surprised by the number of young people out on the streets. This may have had something to do with the bars closing at 3:00. If you’re not an early morning person, I know you’re asking yourself why I went out at that ungodly early hour and if you’re a real late night person I’m asking what are you doing up at that ungodly late hour. It’s all a matter of perspective. Anyway, I was up partly because my internal clock was messed up because of my travel the night before and partly because I had to be there at 5:00am and it was a 30 minute walk from the hotel. By the time I left at 4:30, the streets were virtually empty.
George Street 4:30am |
The bridge climb is a very smooth and professional operation. Once you arrive, they make you take everything out of your pockets, equipment you will remove all watches, jewelry, hairpins, anything that might fall off or could be dropped on unsuspecting motorist. They then have you don a one-piece jumpsuit and clip on all the equipment you will/might need for the climb; hats, gloves, headlamp, oneway radio (so you can hear the leaders commentary) and even a handkerchief. They even have you carry a fleece, if you get cold (and it was pretty chilly at the top), and rain jacket, in case it rains. All of these things are clipped to your suit or harness. It sounds like a lot, but it only takes about 10 minutes to get ready and you hardly notice you’re carrying all this stuff. After a little practice climbing some ladders, you’re ready to go. They have an ingenious device for connecting you to the safety cable. You hook it on at the beginning and it doesn’t come off until the end of the climb 3 hours later. It’s hard to explain, but when I have been zip lining, our safety harnesses had two clips because you had to take one off and put it on the other side of the anchor for the safety cable. With their system, the safety harness would slide through the safety cable anchor. Ingenious!
Chilly at the top |
Starting the climb |
Spectacular view - Sydney Opera House |
Sydney Harbor Bridge |
A three hour walking tour of Sydney completed my day. By the end I was pretty tired, but I looked at it as a warm-up for things to come later in my odyssey. Sunday I visit another icon, the Sydney Opera House.
G’day from down under.
norb
No comments:
Post a Comment