New Year’s Eve from around Federation Square, Melbourne.





Mostly Harmless…
Since I finished travelling down the East Coast at the end of October I’ve been searching for an IT job in the Melbourne area. This hasn’t been going particularly well. One of the main problems is that nothing seems to happen very quickly over here, and with the New Year fast approaching, I don’t think much is going to change over the next few weeks.
Rather than sit around doing practically nothing I’ve decided to book a flight down to Tasmania, rent a car, and drive around the island for a week. I’m flying tomorrow and other than staying a couple of nights in Hobart, I don’t really have much of a plan. I think I’d like to stick mostly to the coastal routes rather than use the main inland highway between Hobart and Launceston. I’ve heard the scenery around the island described as “spectacular” so I’d like to see as much of it as I can while I’m there!
I’ve called a few dive centres to try to organise some SCUBA diving either around Hobart or further up the East coast off Bicheno. This has exposed one of the downsides to travelling alone — I have no diving buddy. This, combined with my relative inexperience, means that I’ll probably just have to wait until a boat goes out and hope that I can be slotted in with the group. Hopefully something will turn up, as I haven’t been diving since I was sailing around the Whitsunday Islands.
In a little under 2 weeks I’m heading off to Australia for the next nine months or so on a Working Holiday Visa. It’s not my first time travelling down there. A few years ago I spent a couple of weeks with friends around the Melbourne area, and took another week to see Uluru and travel to Alice Springs. This time, after a brief stay with the friends in Melbourne, I’m spending a week in Sydney with a group organised by OzIntro.
Basically, OzIntro help with getting visas, accommodation, health care, and all the rest sorted before you leave home. Organised tours aren’t really my thing, and companies like OzIntro aren’t really doing anything that I couldn’t do myself, but after spending most of my first month in Dublin trying to fix tax benefits and open bank accounts the opportunity to get as much as possible up and running before I leave proved too good to pass up! Another reason is that you’re part of a group of people who all arrive at the same time, and are in much the same position. I’ve been in touch with a few of them already and they seem like a good lot. I have no plans at all after my first week in Sydney (This seems to be a common theme throughout the group!), but I’m sure that before the week is over something will come together!