First to Celebrate!!

Rob and I took a walk down towards Cremorne Point – about a 20 minute walk from our flat – around 9 AM on New Year’s Eve Day and people were camping out the night before to make sure they had the best view of the Harbour Bridge.  It was nuts!!
Luckily, we purchased tickets about a month in advance to a house on government property.  It was only $20 per person with some of the best views in the city – AND we were able to bring all the food and booze we could carry (compared to $300 per person just to watch the fire works at the Opera Bar, food and drink not included).
We were sitting on a hill overlooking the Harbour Bridge, right near Rose Bay.
The guys showed up 2-3 hours before the gates opened, thinking we would be standing in an already long queue, but they were the first ones there.. by more than an hour.
Our UK friends, Tom and Lynne

2012 Theme

What’s your dream for 2012?

The City of Sydney has revealed that the theme for this year’s New Year’s Eve event is Time to Dream“. Internationally renowned Australian designer Marc Newson’s theme and logo for the firework celebration were unveiled today along with the launch of a revamped New Year’s Eve website dedicated to the biggest party in the world. Newson’s ”Time to Dream” theme encapsulates Sydneysiders’ endless spectrum of hopes and aspirations and asks them to think about what their dreams are for the New Year. The revamped 2011 Sydney New Year’s Eve website includes detailed information about the 9pm and midnight fireworks, which attract about 1.5 million people to the harbour and are viewed by an estimated 1 billion people around the world.
This year’s theme will be accompanied by a four-coloured ”endless rainbow” logo designed by Newson in his signature minimalist style. The endless rainbow represents the broad range of people from different cultures, backgrounds and demographics who come together in Sydney on New Year’s Eve.
The rainbow includes:
  • Violet to represent community, peace, social stability and connectedness;
  • Blue to symbolise the harbour, sky and future aspirations;
  • Green for the environment, nurturing and growing; and
  • Yellow, which epitomises optimism, happiness and a sunny attitude.
Heath Campanaro, from Imagination Australia, said working with Newson had been a dream come true for their creative team. “New Year’s Eve is a Time to Dream. From the young to the old, from the moonstruck to the love-struck, every New Year’s Eve midnight is a blank canvas for us all. What do you dream for 2012?”

Boxing Day

SYDNEY TO HOBART SAILING RACE
A Boxing Day (public holiday in OZ the day after Christmas) tradition is to watch the start of the Sydney to Hobart sail boat race. Tons of people get to a spot where they can see the harbor and watch the start. We walked to Middle Head and met Megan and Innes to check it out.

The Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2011 will start on 26 December and will be conducted on the waters of Sydney Harbour, the Tasman Sea, Storm Bay and the Derwent River.
Over the past 66 years, the Rolex Sydney Hobart has become an icon of Australia’s summer sport, ranking in public interest with such national events as the Melbourne Cup horse race, the Davis Cup tennis and the cricket tests between Australia and England. No regular annual yachting event in the world attracts such huge media coverage than does the start on Sydney Harbour.

And they’re off!!
(Follow the race minute by minute @ http://rolexsydneyhobart.com/yacht_tracker.asp)

Background on the Sydney to Hobart Race:

Peter Luke, co-founder of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, died on 23 September 2007 at the age of 92.
At that time he still held a race record that he set in the very first Sydney Hobart Yacht Race in 1945–the longest-ever time to finish the course, 11 days, six hours, 20 minutes.  Peter disliked all things commercial and yet still worked for 35 years in his father’s business, which he detested.  He loved everything to do with boats and the sea, but he wasn’t particularly competitive.
The family had a home in Mosman overlooking Taylor’s Bay, and at a reasonably early age Peter’s parents gave him a 2.5 metre dinghy with a one-horsepower outboard motor. It wasn’t long before he converted it to sail, hanging a sugar bag on a broomstick, sailing downwind, motoring back upwind, and exploring every inch of Taylor’s Bay.
He acquired a number of small yachts during his first ten years with the photographic studio and on them explored the NSW coast between Sydney and Newcastle. Then, in 1940, he acquired the ship that he would sail for the rest of his life: the Alden-designed yawl, Wayfarer, launched in January of that year. The name expressed Luke’s desire to roam around out-of-theway places; it evoked dreams of waving palm trees and hula girls.
In about April 1945 an early CYCA member, Sydney artist Jack Earl, was anchored at Quarantine not far from where the Tasmanian yacht Saltair was also anchored. Earl and his family were planning a cruise to Hobart at Christmas time, and Jack rowed over to Saltair, owned by two other early CYCA members, the experienced Tasmanian yachtsmen Bert and Russ Walker, to look at their charts. The Walkers asked if they might join the cruise. Later, Peter Luke got wind of it and said he’d like to go along, too.
In May 1945 Luke invited the well-known British ocean-racing yachtsman, Commander John Illingworth, who was stationed at Garden Island, to address a meeting of the CYCA. That evening Luke told Illingworth that three of them were planning a cruise to Hobart, and would he care to join them. Illingworth is alleged to have said, “why don’t we make a race of it?”
Charlie Cooper, whose brother was a wing commander with the RAAF, managed to arrange air cover for the upcoming Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. A fleet of nine yachts took the starter’s gun on December 26th. One day later they ran into winds of 50 knots accompanied by blinding rain and rising seas. Many sought shelter along the NSW coast. Peter Luke and his crew on Wayfarer sought refuge behind Broulee Island (23 miles north of Montague Island), went ashore to phone home to say they were okay, then got back aboard to forge ahead.
For the next several days the race made front-page headlines, with yachts feared missing. The drama captured the imagination of post-war yachtsmen in Australia, and from that point onwards the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race and other ocean races became the main focus of the newly-formed “cruising” club.
The Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race has become Australia’s first real carnival, with the largest live audience of any single sporting event anywhere in the world, attracting some 300,000-400,000 spectators to Sydney’s foreshores on Boxing Day. In January 1960, a friend of Luke’s wrote him a letter penning these lines of appreciation:
“Should you never have the opportunity to give Australia any more gifts such as this Festival [the start of the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race], it will not matter, as you have cast the traditional die of celebration on the sea and brought to fruition a thousand sail of the line.”
Peter would have been the first to put Charlie Cooper’s name ahead of his own as a partner in this venture, for he always felt that Cooper never received the recognition he deserved for his role in the early days of the CYCA. 

Merry ‘Chrissy’!!

Christmas morning, football on in the background!
Lindsey’s complicated gift, had to open about ten different things to find the actual present.
Still searching for the gift…
Getting frustrated…
Almost there…
And… it’s a voucher to go hang-gliding!
Christmas barbie at Neilson Park, a park on the harbor right near the beach.
We had a ham, a turkey, and lots of other stuff. Perfect weather, low 80s.
Went for a swim
More twister
Later on we had cheese and ‘Port’ (a British tradition) at a friends house.
Weird to spend Christmas away from home,
in hot weather,
on the beach,
but we still had a very fun day.

Summer Eve

Megan and Innes prepared an amazing Christmas Eve dinner.

We did a White Elephant gift exchange

Tim showing off his gift

Here is my gift, a Santa suit

About to pop our “crackers” Aussie Christmas tradition.
You pull both sides, it pops,
And inside you get a paper hat, a joke, and a little toy.

Santa showed up

Everyone got a turn for a photo with Santa

Santa heading home, couldnt find his sleigh…

…So he had to hail a cab

Hunter Valley

We rented an awesome 6 bedroom house in Hunter Valley – about 2 hours northwest of Sydney.
Hunter Valley is known for their wine.
Pokolbin is the centre of the Hunter Valley Wine Country and is primarily located within the Cessnock and Singleton LGAs. Much of the rolling countryside around Pokolbin is under vine with the traditional varieties Shiraz and Semillon as well as extensive plantings of Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and small quantities of Pinot Noir. The Pokolbin area has a large number of vineyards, restaurants, shops, golf courses and country guesthouses. Other parts of the valley including the Wollombi Valley and Broke Fordwich Wine Region are also well known for wine.

 

Here is the gang, Jack, Amy, Megan, Innes, Tom, Tim, Lynne, me and Linds


Played some Kings Cup

I broke one of the rules so I had to play with my chin on the table

A shuttle picked us up the next morning at 9:00 am
And took us to tastings at four vineyards
Here is the first one
Stopped at a brewery for lunch, Tom did his Stevie Wonder impression
Lindsey and Lynne
A little Twister back at the house
On the barbie
Teaching the guys in Sydney how to play the
“touch the other guy with your finger” game (that sounds weird)

Rob’s on TV!

A few months ago, I (VP of Sales – Barb Swanson) asked a dedicated team of Intercall employees to volunteer their time towards Project Spielberg.  Project Spielberg is an effort on behalf of APAC to explain to EMEA and North America sales how best to do business with us in an entertaining, proactive manner.   Today, after a major investment of personal time by the PS Team, we present to you:

InterCall APAC: We Do Crazy Better

Production Manager – Brett Johnson
Screenwriters – Justin Krueger, James Burgess and Alexia MacPherson
Director – Chris Franke
Talent & Location Manager – Alexia MacPherson
Editors – Sean Maritz and Joe Cocca
Promotions Manager – Jess Stephens
Key Grip – Paul Bell
Executive Producer – Barb Swanson

Starring:
Jack Duffy
Rob Camp
Tim Devereux
Brett Johnson
Amy Bodley
Angus Pollitt
Jessica Jiang
Shelly Cai
Zoe Hu
Tomonori Ogushi
Akira Kakihana
Fagun Parkar
Pritesh Mistry
Sinwee Choo
Sherman Li
Jean Pau
Mary Lu

Please take a moment (22 min 27 sec to be exact) to view an advance screening of the rough but “InterCall APAC – We Do Crazy Better”.   Once final edits have been made, the promotions team will work with EMEA and US sales to launch as appropriate.

http://events.unisfair.com/rt/apactraining/log_thru.jsp?seid=73&standaloneparam=txnMJJDz-akcSzOvg93i2u6VXKnKwq14Mv7ZtIeszVmF4baT1zgJfFXC_TItoHJq7KK9vcuxSVxwlgG8Wandiw

The Great Ocean Road

We caught an 8:00 am flight to Melbourne to head to the Great Ocean Road. The Great Ocean Road is supposed to be the most senic drive in Australia. It follows the southern coast from Melbourne to Adelaide. Lindsey wasn’t able to join us, unfortunately. She text me at around 7am asking if Eggers had fallen asleep on the airport floor. Sure enough, I sent her the above picture.
Quick catch along the Great Ocean Road

The highlight of the Great Ocean Road is the 12 Apostles. A few have fallen over the last few years and there are only 8 standing now.

We stopped at Bimbi Park where we saw several koala bears

The New Apartment

We finally moved into a one-bedder, after 3 months in our studio apartment.
Neutral Bay, NSW Australia
 
Rob claims that we have a view of the ocean from our patio
 
Found a good spot for the hoop!