Snap Guide: Sydney

October 27, 2005
Sydney hotels, Sydney restaurants, Sydney attractions

Sydney is more than clear blue skies and sparkling seas; it's Australia's biggest, fastest, richest city and home to one of the world's most recognizable architectural structures--the winged Sydney Opera House. A truly global mix of people inhabit the sophisticated seaside metropolis, enjoying the near-perfect climate, round-the-clock culture, and the opportunity to play as hard as they work--whether it be surfing the waves at Bondi beach or competing in the world's biggest "fun-run". A giant garden ringed by some of the world's most spectactular mountains, Sydney's earthly delights are its greatest assets. Much of its shoreline is a protected national park (whale spottings are an every day occurance), and parrots and pelicans own the airspace.

AIRPORTS

 

  • Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport
  • TRANSPORTATION TO/FROM AIRPORTS

     

  • Airport Link
  •  

  • KST Airporter
  • CITY LINKS

     

  • Sydney & New South Wales Tourism
  •  

  • Sydney Morning Herald
  •  

  • What's On In Sydney
  •  

  • CitySearch Sydney
  •  

  • YOU Current movie and restaurant listings
  •  

  • Ticketek Theater and sports tickets
  • EVENTS

     

  • Sydney Festival January
  •  

  • The Chinese New Year festival January/February
  •  

  • Mardi Gras February/March
  •  

  • The Sydney Film Festival June
  •  

  • Good Food Month, various venues, including night noodle markets in Hyde Park, September
  • Plan Your Next Getaway
    Keep reading

    Trip Coach: Oct. 25, 2005

    Budget Travel Editors: Welcome to this week's Trip Coach. Let's get started... _______________________ Detroit, MI: Which hotels would you suggest in Seattle during the first of April and why? Budget Travel Editors: I'd recommend The Inn at the Market (doubles from $155), a small luxury hotel with stunning views overlooking the Pike Place Market. It's also near some terrific restaurants, including the adjoining Campagne restaurant and the more affordable Cafe Campagne bistro. More info: innatthemarket.com. I also like Hotel Monaco, also located downtown and near the Seattle Art Museum and Seattle Symphony. Doubles from $145. More info: monaco-seattle.com (click on "hot dates, great rates"). You can find these, and many other great rates when you book your rooms through Seattle Super Saver, a program produced by Seattle's Convention and Visitors Bureau: seattlesupersaver.com. Have fun--and don't forget your umbrella! _______________________ Shelbyville, KY: A group (6) of senior citizens (Mid-60s) will be visiting Buenos Aries, Argentina from Jan 7 to Jan 15. What are some not miss sights we should plan on visiting? Budget Travel Editors: Argentina's capital, famed for its European flair, remains cheap for Americans and is currently a hot destination for shopping, dining, nightlife and just about everything else. Among its tried-and-true attractions are the Sunday antiques fair at San Telmo, where you'll find knickknacks, vintage glass soda bottles and chandeliers, local artwork, plus performers tangoing in the street, and Recoleta Cemetery, an elite city of the dead lined with ornate, several foot-high mausoleums and tombs, including that of tango singer Carlos Gardel and of Eva Peron and her family. Guided tours (in English) of world-class opera house Teatro Colon will take you behind the scenes for a glimpse at rehearsal spaces and storage for costumes and sets and treat you to a brief violin performance in the lavish presidential box. The sprawling parks in Palermo are home to lovely rose and Japanese gardens, with horse drawn carriages rides available; the Galerias Pacifico, an upscale mall with frescoed ceilings, carries both luxury brands and inexpensive homegrown ones. Don't leave without catching a tango show (try Bar Sur for the intimate variety or El Viejo Almacen for a more flashy, Broadway-style) or strolling in Puerto Madero, the refurbished waterfront now boasting a stunning, pedestrian-only bridge by Santiago Calatrava. For more tips, download our free Buenos Aires Snap Guide _______________________ St Louis Mo: When is the best time to visit Vancouver Canada? I would like it warm and rain free as possible. Budget Travel Editors: Warm and as rain-free as possible? Then August and September are the best times to visit. Expect mild, sunny weather during the daytime (mid-70s). Nights are cooler (50s-60s), especially near the water, so bring a sweater. _______________________ Opelika, Alabama: Hello, I need some assistance in planning a trip. I am a single woman, and would like to take a relaxing vacation, but don't know where to begin looking. I am not gay, a bar hopper, nudist, or promiscuous- thus I often feel that specialty travel agencies don't have much to offer. I am obviously not a world traveler, but would be thrilled to visit in or outside of the USA. Any suggestions? Budget Travel Editors: First of all there's no reason why you should feel compelled to take a vacation with a tour operator that doesn't meet your needs. It's like you say, if you're not a nudist, then don't take a nudist vacation. That said, there are a number of tour operators that exist just for singles, thus eliminating the hefty single supplement charges that most tour operators charge and providing you with an enjoyable solo traveling experience. However in order to do so, most pair you up with a traveler of the same sex that you would potentially share a room or cabin with. If you like to travel alone and still meet new friends along the way, it's a great way keep costs down on your next vacation. Here are the most popular single travel operators: O Solo Mio Single Tours, 800/959-8568, osolomio.com Travel Chums, 212/787-2621, travelchums.com Travel Buddies Worldwide, 800/998-9099, travebuddiesworldwide.com _______________________ Sonoma, CA: Tahiti Islands: Best way to see them at a reasonable price. Thanks! Budget Travel Editors: Getting to Tahiti and her islands is much, much cheaper than most people think. And fortunately Air Tahiti Nui (airtahitinui-usa.com) is having a huge sale on direct roundtrip flights from Los Angles International Airport to Papeete, Tahiti. You'll have to book by November 15 for select fall and winter departures, but the airline is selling roundtrip flights for $495. Visit its website for more information because you won't find a better deal out there. _______________________ Los Angeles, CA: I have booked airline tickets to Cancun Mexico departing Thanksgiving day. Considering Hurricane Wilma's destruction, do you think it's still wise to go? Budget Travel Editors: As you know, most of Cancun is still underwater right now, and it will take a while for the city--and neighboring resort towns along the Yucatan--to dry out and rebuild. The President, Vincente Fox, predicts that Cancun could reopen before the Christmas holidays, but the Cancun mayor has been less optimistic. The city is still evacuating tourists who had been in shelters to ride out the storm. That said, it's extremely unlikely that Cancun will be up and running again as soon as Thanksgiving. Before you do anything about your trip, call the hotel you were planning on staying at, and the Cancun Convention and Visitors' Bureau to get the official status of the city. _______________________ Athens, AL: My wife and I celebrate our 10th year anniversary in 2006. We celebrated our 5th by going to London with Go-today.com. I would like to celebrate our 10th by taking her and our child to New York for the Macy Thanksgiving day parade. Where would I go about getting tickets, are there hotel on the route, or are there any package deals. Thanks for the help. Budget Travel Editors: Congratulations on your 10th! Here's some advice for tackling the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. There are no tickets to purchase; it's free and spaces go on a first-come basis. The parade kicks off at 9 A.M. on Thursday the 24th, but for a chance at a sidewalk spot with a clear view, you'll need to show up two or three hours in advance, bundled in heavy layers and with comfy shoes. (No folding chairs allowed.) The route stretches from Central Park West and 77th St. down to Columbus Circle; swings onto Broadway; heads to Macy's doorstep at 34th St., Herald Square; and veers west to finish on Seventh Ave. Live entertainment accompanies the floats and giant balloons swaying in the often gusty wind. Hotel rooms overlooking this route are often booked up to a year in advance at spiked rates of several hundred dollars nightly. A few to try: Comfort Inn Central Park West, Crowne Plaza Manhattan, Doubletree Guest Suites Times Square,Ameritania. You can also catch the balloons being blown up with helium the night before the parade, Wednesday, 3-10 P.M., along 77th - 81st Sts., between Central Park West and Columbus Ave. _______________________ Currituck, NC: My credit card company just announced that it was charging 3% for international use. I appreciate the convenience of using a credit card for trips. Do you have suggestions about the least expensive way to pay for hotels, meals, and entertainment? Many thanks. Budget Travel Editors: The quick answer is that using a credit card, even with the 3% transaction fee, is still the easiest and cheapest way to pay for things when traveling. That three percent surcharge for international transactions is the result of a one percent charge that your credit card adds to the bill before handing it over to the bank that services your card, and a two percent fee your bank charges you on top of that. The only bank that (so far) doesn't charge additional fees on overseas purchases is Capital One (800/955-7070, capitalone.com). _______________________ Homewood, IL: I will be traveling with my four year old daughter to Montpellier, France over Thanksgiving 2005. I thought it might be fun to see a real "princess castle". Are there any close to the city? Are there any other day trips that would be worthwhile from the city? I have another daughter studying in Montpellier, and will probably visit again in the spring. Budget Travel Editors: You are in luck; while there might not be exact "princess castles" near Montpellier, there is Carcassonne, a medieval fortified city complete with towers, turrets, crenellated walls, and ramparts from the 1st century only an hour and a half away by train (voyages-sncf.com, trains leave about every hour in both directions, round trip adults $48, kids 4-11 $24). The fortified section of town is about a 30-minute walk from the train station, or a quick $8 taxi ride away. For more information, contact the Carcassonne tourism office, carcassonne-tourisme.com, 011-33-4/68-10-24-30. _______________________ New York City: What are the best ethnic restaurants in Montreal? I am leaving October 26th through 30th from NY - meetng my husband who is flying from Virginia - meeting at the airport Montreal. Budget Travel Editors: Montreal has a well-deserved reputation for great ethnic restaurants, and great restaurants in general. The most difficult part may be in choosing between them. Here are a few suggestions: St-Viateur Bagel Shop (263 St. Viateur West, 514/276-8044) for Montreal bagels, which are denser and sweeter than NY-style bagles; Schwartz's Montreal Hebrew Delicatessen (3895 St. Laurent 514/842-4813) for smoked meat; Rumi Restaurant (5198 Hutchinson, 514/490-1999) for Middle Eastern and Turkish cuisine; ChuChai (4088 St. Denis, 514/843-4194) for vegetarian Thai food; Le Nil Bleu (3706 St. Denis, 514/285-4628) for Ethiopian; and Cuisine Caraïbe Delite (4816 Parc, 514/274-4509), for, well, you can guess. You could also take a chance, wander through some typically ethnic neighborhoods such as Villeray, Park Extension, Côte-Vertu, or Jean-Talon, and follow your nose. _______________________ Budget Travel Editors: Thanks for all your great questions, we're sorry we weren't able to answer all of them. See you next week! _______________________

    Inspiration

    Save the Date

    Nov. 1: The Dresden Frauenkirche Destroyed by the British Royal Air Force in World War II, Dresden's historic chapel has finally been rebuilt. (Britain donated the golden cross atop the dome.) Consecration services begin on Sunday, Oct. 30, but the celebrations climax on Tuesday with an All Saints' Day mass at 10 a.m. and unescorted tours from noon to 5:30 p.m. Frauenkirche-dresden.de, free. Nov. 1: Melbourne Cup The annual horse race, held at Melbourne's Flemington Racecourse, is so important to Aussies that teachers have been known to wheel TVs into their classrooms so students can watch. In fact, the day is a holiday in the state of Victoria. The main event begins at 3 p.m., but arrive before noon for Fashions on the Field--a beauty pageant that's nearly as popular as the race itself. Melbournecup.com, $50. Nov. 6: Athens Classic Marathon It's not just any marathon--it's the original marathon. In 490 b.c., a messenger ran the 24 miles from the village of Marathon to Athens, spreading the news of the Greek victory over the Persians. He certainly couldn't have imagined that 2,500 years later, more than 3,500 runners would follow in his footsteps (plus an additional 2.2 miles). 011-30-210/935-1888, athensclassicmarathon.gr, free. Nov. 8-15: Pushkar Camel Fair Every November, the town of Pushkar, India, attracts more than 200,000 people (and over 50,000 camels) for a week of livestock trading, camel races, and festivities, including Rajasthani folk dancing. If you want to see camel trading at its peak, you should arrive a few days early. Rajasthantourism.gov.in, free. Nov. 11--13 Los Angeles International Tamale Festival Carlos "The Tamale Man" Melgoza will try to break the record for the world's longest tamale--the current record is 40 feet, 10 1/2 inches--during the inaugural tamale festival in Los Angeles. Purchase spices and cornhusks in the festival marketplace and experts will teach you how to make your own. 323/223-7469, eastlosangeles.net/tamalefestival, free. Nov. 13: Andy Warhol/Supernova: Stars, Deaths, and Disasters A major exhibition of Warhol's photo-silkscreen paintings--including iconic images of Marilyn, Liz, and Jackie--makes its first stop at the recently expanded Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (through Feb. 26). Also on display will be his "car crashes": news pics of accidents, manipulated on canvas. Next up: Chicago, March 18-June 18; Toronto, July 8-Oct. 1. 612/375-7600, walkerart.org, $8 (free Thursdays 5-9 p.m. and the first Saturday of every month). Nov. 18-19: 36 Hours of Keystone To kick off the ski season, Keystone, Colo., opens its slopes for 36 straight hours, from 8 a.m. Friday to 8 p.m. Saturday. For $36 per person per night, you can stay in a two-room suite at the River Run Village (based upon four-person occupancy) or a double room at the Keystone Inn. 800/468-5004, keystone.snow.com, 36-hour lift ticket $55. --David LaHuta

    Inspiration

    Turkish Hostels Are Going to New Heights

    The backpacker set is nesting in large numbers on the southern coast of Turkey. Amid beautiful beaches and ancient Lycian ruins, the port town of Olympos has several tree-house hostels that find hard-partying travelers lurching up ladders to get to bed. "It's a little bit Robinson Crusoe, a little bit Gilligan's Island," explains 21-year-old Australian Zoe McDonald. The rickety pine affairs, with crooked walls and asymmetrical stairs, cost under $20 a night, including breakfast and dinner. Even in the height of summer there's usually plenty of room for impromptu arrivals. Anyone with designs on a particular hostel, however, should reserve in advance online. Kadir's is the most social, with a raucous nightly bonfire at an open-air bar. Forty shacks, some sleeping as many as 10 guests, are built around trees, and can be up to 40 feet off the ground. (Kadir's also has on-ground cabins and bungalows with bathrooms.) Staff and former visitors have given the tree houses names, such as the Betty Ford Center. With space for 450, Turkmen Tree Houses takes Kadir's overflow. It uses the term "tree house" liberally: The buildings are aboveground next to tall pines or on large trunks--they don't wrap around them. Each sleeps two to six in actual beds, not just on mattresses on the floor. Saban Pension has 12 tree houses with room for only 100--which means a shorter buffet line, if nothing else. It's by far the most mellow: Most guests spend their days playing cards under lean-tos or on the nearby beach. The 25 tree houses at Bayram's, which tower over orange groves, look like log cabins on stilts. A resident DJ spins Turkish rock while guests take the on-site Blotto Bar's name very literally. --Rich Beattie   Kadir's Tree Houses 011-90/242-892-1250, kadirstreehouses.com, from $11   Turkmen Tree Houses 011-90/242-892-1249, olymposturkmentreehouses.com, from $16   Saban Pension 011-90/242-892-1265, sabanpansion.com, from $15   Bayram's 011-90/242-892-1243, bayrams.com, from $15

    Inspiration

    Supermarket Souvenirs

    Love foreign supermarkets as much as we do? Now you can prove it. Send your supermarket souvenir photo and caption to Letters@BudgetTravel.com with the subject line "Supermarket Souvenir," and we'll consider your photo for our slide show. Each spring, Cambodian farmers hold their breath as trays of food are set before a pair of oxen. The specific dishes the beasts choose to eat predict the bounty of the next harvest. The maker of this jerky has given the bovine an even greater ability—the power to fly. —Naomi Lindt In Mexico, cleaning your clothes is a sultry affair thanks to Tango soap ($2). A dancer seduces you with her bare shoulders (is her bra in the dryer?), while the product promises to "express passion." Added bonus: clean undies. —Andrea Sachs In Italy, cool design pops up just about everywhere, even on packages of $1 snack food. Each bag of Virtual chips features a lone corn chip, lit as if it were on display in the Uffizi Gallery. At a mere 154 calories per bag, it also leaves you feeling virtually no guilt. —Sean O'Neill There really is something in the bottled water sold in the tiny Middle Eastern nation of Bahrain. Not only is Al Kamel's cardamom water ($1) used as a flavoring for milk and coffee, but its label claims that if you drink the water three times a day it will function as a "digestive inducer, sexual stimulator, tranquilizer, and tonic for the heart." —Summar Ghias In Colombia, the health benefits of soy can't be oversold. Not only do packets of Leche de Soya, a powdered soy milk ($2), sport a spokesman who looks a bit like Richard Simmons, but the instructions include illustrations of sports that are ideal for soy-milk drinkers—bodybuilding, rollerblading, desk jockeying.... —Liz Ozaist These Gluco-Max tea biscuits look like they should be from Japan, but they're actually from Uganda. Munch on enough of them and you might end up sumo-size, too. (18¢) --Laura MacNeil Here's one way to stand out in a market flooded with bottled water: Replace the streams and mountains usually found on labels with a snarky sense of humor. Another Bloody Water is about $1.75 in Australian groceries. --Celeste Moure Swing Ernie is a curvaceous, heart-stamped sponge that seems to be romantically involved with a hedgehog. In commercials, the two dance and roll around on a countertop to Paul Anka's "Put Your Head On My Shoulder." Why use sex to sell a sponge? "It's very French," laughs Spontex's marketing manager. Sold for $4 or so across France. --Ellise Pierce Bottled in St. Kitts, the honey-based (and nonalcoholic) Giant Malt is sold at island supermarkets for around a dollar. But what's with the buff bod on the label? "Giant Malt makes you strong," claims Mark Wilkin, Carib Brewery's managing director. --Amy Chen This makes twist-off caps look traditional: Iron Wine sells malbec cabernet and chenin blanc in aluminum cans. The 12-ounce cans ("When a bottle is too much but a glass is too little!" says ironwine.com) are available at upscale shops and bars in Argentina for $2 to $6. --Celeste Moure There's nothing minor about a candy bar that combines the rich cocoa goodness of Swiss chocolate with chopped, roasted hazelnuts. It comes in various shapes and sizes--including this 46-gram bar made solely for rest stops and kiosks ($1.20). Yes, in Switzerland, even the snacks sold at gas stations are fancy. --Mike Iveson In Greece, people tend to eat dinner at 10 p.m. or later, which explains the large number of light mezes (small plates) on most taverna menus. Thessaloníki-based Zanae has been canning traditional appetizers--such as grape leaves stuffed with rice, and giant butter beans or meatballs in tomato sauce--for nearly 70 years ($2). --Laurie Kuntz Guidebooks say that in Portugal, food without wine is a snack, not a meal. But carrying a bottle for lunch isn't always practical. The solution: a single-serving box of white or red wine from the Estremadura region in western Portugal, available for 80 cents each. --Tom Berger When the competition sports names like Rockstar and Monster, why link your energy drink with unwanted e-mail and a potted-meat product? Because that's living on the edge. Spam Energy Drink, $1, throughout Belgium, Finland, and the Netherlands. --Mike Iveson Caviar for breakfast? It sounds like something out of a Jackie Collins novel, but there it was at the hotel buffet in Stockholm: creamed cod roe cut with potato flakes and tomato paste. Toothpaste-size tubes are sold at supermarkets for $1.40. Evidently, it's a popular after-school snack (on bread) in Sweden. Somehow we don't think Skippy has much to worry about. --Erik Torkells In Myanmar, née Burma, people love tea so much they eat it--pickled, no less. Ah Yee Taung (which means "big aunt basket") steams and ferments green tea leaves, then pairs them with roasted sesame seeds and fried beans. "Pungent" is the kindest way to describe the concoction, which can be bought throughout the country ($5). --Laura MacNeil It's only a .78-ounce bag of crispy puffed kernels, but if the peppy hiker on the package is any indication, Quinua Pop is all the fuel you'll need to trek across the Andes. Called the mother grain by the Inca, quinoa is heavy on protein, iron and vitamin B. Four-packs of the breakfast cereal are sold for 75 cents at Metro and other grocery stores in Peru. --Laura MacNeil Despite the packaging, Leverpostei is actually not a puree of a small blond boy. Rather, it's a Norwegian pork liver pate best paired with salty crackers. It's sold in seven-ounce tins--some are decorated with girls, but contain the same tasty contents--for $1.70. --Litty Mathew With these animal crackers, there's no question who sits atop the food chain: kids. Wildlife Cookie Company makes foxes, bears, and mountain lions (available at Yosemite and other national parks, $1.75), while Oahu-based Diamond Bakery opts for bite-sized Hawaiian sea creatures such as humpback whales, octopi, and dolphins ($1). --Brad Tuttle Made with Scotch bonnet peppers, a Caribbean favorite, Hell Sauce, is named for the Cayman town of Hell. (According to the label, nearby rocks resemble "the smouldering remains of a Hell Fire.") The sauce is a kick, even if Hell is a tourist trap, just as one always suspected. It costs $4 for a five-ounce bottle at Foster's Food Fair on Grand Cayman Island. New Zealand has four million residents, and about as many dairy cows. So it's small wonder that milk shows up everywhere, including the candy aisle. Heards Milk Chews ($2 for a seven-ounce bag at Foodtowns across the country) taste like milkshake-flavored Tootsie Rolls. Sweet. --Paul Brady Slow-cooked, marinated quail eggs are considered fertility boosters in Taiwan, where they're sold as pang ti neng (in Taiwanese) or xiang tie dan (in Mandarin). Both translate as fragrant iron eggs--not that you can smell a thing through the serious vacuum packing. (Come to think of it, that's just fine.) They cost $6.50 at supermarkets and convenience stores. --Christine Y. Chen Kranky and Crunky aren't just descriptions of hip-hop star Lil Jon after a long night. In Mexico, Kranky is a brand of chocolate-covered cornflakes; and in Japan, Crunky is a Nestle Crunch-like bar. Each brings attitude adjustment for under $1. A mix of Indian spices and German sausage, Curry-Wurst is popular with munich clubgoers looking to line--and test?--their stomachs. A sliced pork sausage is doused in tomato sauce; toothpicks and a curry packet are tucked underneath. Plke holes in the lid, microwave, and sprinkle on the spice. It's sold refrigerated in grocery stores, including the MiniMal chain ($1.80).--Marilyn Holstein With Toreras (female bullfighters), cocktail onion company Kimbo combines two Spanish signatures--bullfighting and tapas--in one neat tin. On the inside, toothpicks skewer stacks of olives, pearl onions, and hot peppers. On the outside, saucy chicas in matador pants play coyly with spears. Olé! Available across Spain at El Corte Inglés Carrefour, and Eroski supermarkets. 1.50 (about $2). --Lisa Abend