Jafo Jafo

Melbourne's the World's "Most Livable City" - Again

Melbourne's the World's "Most Livable City" - Again

We must be good at bribing the Judges....

Pity we didn't Bribe the World Cup selectors instead....;p

 

Canada has been hogging the limelight for a few years....but recent riots.....

 

 

Weird thing is....we're itching to get back to/see more of NY ...and they only came in 50-somethingth....;p

24,060 views 39 replies
Reply #26 Top

Quoting Jafo, reply 22
It's the harbour that causes all the traffic pain in Sydney.... nice to look at but crap for infrastructure.

I suppose that's what makes the two cities so different... they shouldn't try to compete.... Melb does some things better than Sydney and vice versa....

It's damn annoying when they close the Harbour Bridge for a marathon or a cycling event... to close a Bridge that connects the City to the North Shore for any period of time without good reason is ridiculous... put them out at Homebush...

 

Quoting Jafo, reply 24
Re the Yarts ... my sister's portrait of the PM is in the gallery in Sydney .... she's up there frequently.

 

Will look for it when I'm in at the Picasso exh 'round Nov... would like to see it.... I remember googling it when you mentioned it in a thread last year.  Very impressive.....  I particularly like the eyes.... there's a soft intensity about them...    link..     She'd probably enjoy the Fred Williams exhibition...

 

Quoting Jafo, reply 24
As for 'Big Ones' ... I work at 4 of them

That's the thing.... Melbourne people do support their sporting events far more than Sydney people would...

especially the footy... which I could never understand the status of 'religion' it holds in Victoria..

 

did ya see this...  link..    :lol:

 

Reply #27 Top

Quoting Jafo, reply 21
'should' really get to Perth and Auckland some time, too...

what about Tasmania :P , as a lot of people here in Queensland recon that Tasmania is not part of Australia, how do you convince them that it is :rolleyes:

Reply #28 Top

Sigh....had it not been for continental drift, I could be living south of the equator as well. :S

I'd love to see every bit of Australia, including it's "odd" creatures. ( no offense meant if you fall into this category);)   For now I'll have to settle for Google Earth and occasional trips to the zoo.

I love the desert and the beach and you have the best of both on the planet.

Reply #29 Top

Quoting Wizard1956, reply 28
I love the desert and the beach and you have the best of both on the planet.

it's not a bad country I guess, :cylon: XD I would love to visit the USA one day :grin:

Reply #30 Top

Quoting mrs_starkers, reply 27
what about Tasmania , as a lot of people here in Queensland recon that Tasmania is not part of Australia

and we like to keep it that way ... :grin:

Quoting sydneysiders, reply 26
which I could never understand the status of 'religion' it holds in Victoria..

GO THE CATS!!! .... What's wrong Eddie, cat got your tongue.

We are Geelong, the greatest team of all
We are Geelong; we’re always on the ball...

Reply #31 Top

Quoting mrs_starkers, reply 27
Quoting Jafo, reply 21

'should' really get to Perth and Auckland some time, too...

what about Tasmania

I was born in Currie, King Island....so I'm Tasmanian....and am likely the ONLT Tasmanian who has never been there...;)

Yet.

Reply #32 Top

Quoting Jafo, reply 31
I was born in Currie, King Island....so I'm Tasmanian....and am likely the ONLT Tasmanian who has never been there..

My mum and dad lived on King Island many moons ago, long before I was born.

Quoting tazgecko, reply 30
and we like to keep it that way ...

Hmmp,  I now know who my friends are :O :rofl: :rofl: ;) :P o_O just kidding taz, oh well 

Reply #33 Top

two heads are better than one, Mrs starkers.  If people think we are not part of Oz, they will just have to miss out :grin:

We play the game as it should be played
At home or far away ...

+1 Loading…
Reply #34 Top

Quoting tazgecko, reply 33
two heads are better than one, Mrs starkers.

so true lol

Reply #35 Top

For me, Ipswich, Queensland, Australia is the world's most livable city.... and it would take an almighty convincing argument to make me feel otherwise.  

For one; it's because I live here and I haven't the inclination at my age to move anywhere else ever again; two, it has everything I need and more; and three, cos it's a smallish country town and is so much better than living in a sprawling metropolis with impersonal hustle-bustle everywhere and skyscrapers that block out the sun.  

Nope, I never liked big cities that much, so living out here in the boondocks of Ipswich suits me perfectly.  Okay, so our Bremer River isn't as impressive as the Yarra, and it's an upside down river - water on the bottom, mud on the top - but there are some nice family oriented parks and walkways beside it these days that help give Ipswich a greater feeling of community 

Oh, and we don't have a congested harbour that's full of sharks, shady business ventures and likely a few underbelly figures from yesteryear, so I'm not gonna see large and impressive ocean liners, either.  Bit hard 90+ klms inland, but I occasionally see a speedboat on the Bremer...  and that'll do me nicely, thank you.

Yup, Ipswich, Queensland, Australia is bloody great place to be. :sun:

Reply #36 Top

Quoting starkers, reply 35
Okay, so our Bremer River isn't as impressive as the Yarra, and it's an upside down river - water on the bottom, mud on the top

Clearly you've never seen the Yarra....;p  [we invented upside down rivers]

Reply #37 Top

Quoting Jafo, reply 36
Clearly you've never seen the Yarra...

Yes, and it was clean compared to the Bremer  Seriously, it's that thick with mud sometimes... er, most of the time, it is a rich creamy brown... the colour of clay.

Yup, if you were to scoop up water in a miner's pan and sieve for about half an hour, you'd be left with enough mud to make enough bricks to build a granny flat down the back or a decent extension to the house.

Reply #38 Top

Quoting vStyler, reply 11

Quoting ekimragz, reply 10Just kind of wierd that all the action in Middleburg is on Johns Cemetery Road.

lol

 

Hey John, how many dead people are there at present in Holly Hill Memorial Park cemetery just down the road from you?

Reply #39 Top

Quoting Jafo, reply 36
Clearly you've never seen the Yarra....

I grew up on the Yarra.... well.. beside it... in the 50's & 60's...

We lived in Kew down the bottom of Molesworth St over the Boulevard... now called River Retreat... only 3 houses down there in the bush in those days... nice steep hill for the billy cart...

We had our first German Shepherd to protect us from the mental patients who used to escape with monotonous regularity from the Kew Cottages Mental Asylum up the road....

From our river frontage... my sister taught me how to swim... her way was..... tie the longest dog rope round my waist and throw me in the river.... told me to look at how the Shepherd was swimming and copy that....  after nearly drowning the poor dog trying to hold onto her to keep afloat... I eventually cottoned on to.....the dog paddle...

Used to be quite a few snakes whip around us in the water.... didn't find out til years later they were river brown snakes and very deadly.... fortunately... very shy as well....

We had a burrow with a family of platypuses on our bank as well.... used to sit there quietly for ages waiting for them to come out... was always kept secret so people didn't know where it was and come 'round and disturb them.