Category Archives: Travel-General

Frugal Travel in Expensive Melbourne – Part 2

Now that we have the where-to-sleep question handled, let’s move on to how to get around Melbourne quickly and easily without hailing a taxi and paying heart-stopping fares for that ‘privilege.’ The cost of parking in Melbourne can also be prohibitively high, so it’s best to avoid driving your rental car or personal car in the city and being forced to pay $10 or more per hour in parking fees.

Visitor Information Booth on Bourke Street Mall, Melbourne, Australia

Start your trip off right by getting a good map of the inner city since most of the sights and museums are within that area. Consider printing out a map of the CBD prior to arrival and an easy to read version is found online at the only Melbourne website. The map is downloadable in pdf and prints out beautifully.

For a comprehensive range of tourism maps and brochures, the two easiest to find Visitor Information Centres are (1) located inside their own building on Federation Square – corner of Swanston St. & Flinders St. – and (2) in a booth right on the main shopping street, the Bourke Street Mall.

Yellow Yarra Tram on Bourke Street, Melbourne, Australia

For the ultimate in ease and convenience, the extensive tram network in Melbourne is hard to beat. The trams themselves range in ‘vintage’ and size from the lovely and modern ones such as the yellow tram pictured to the right to the last of the old “Red Rattlers” which run on the City Circle route around the fringes of the CBD (Central Business District).

City Circle Tram in Melbourne, Australia

You will need to purchase a METCARD to use any of the trams other than the City Circle which is seen on the left. That one tram route is completely free and is offered as a tourism incentive. For that reason, it is always quite crowded — so just be aware of that.

For all other trams, you will need a valid ticket and signs for the METCARD are found everywhere from the trains stations to the local convenience stores such as 7-11. Although they can be purchased at the coin-operated machines on some of the trams, it is always safer to have a METCARD in hand before you board.

There are quite a variety of fares depending on the time of day that you travel, your age, and several other classifications. The full range of fares are listed online at Metlink’s METCARD page.

An easy to read map of the tram network can be found online at Metlink Melbourne

Now let’s discuss what to eat while you are in the city. Even if you have chosen a budget friendly option like the Cube Serviced Apartment that was mentioned in yesterday’s post, no one arrives in Melbourne with the idea of eating all of their meals in their apartment-hotel, so finding reasonably priced food choices for lunches is the next challenge.

Yes, fast food is available everywhere in Melbourne, but it is almost never a healthy option. For a mere few dollars more you can eat at places like Basic Bites at 26-28 Hardware Lane between Bourke Street and Little Bourke Street. The “Crazed Hen” salad that I had there was actually the most enjoyable lunch that I ate on this trip. And there was so much premium quality chicken breast squeezed into that bowl with all of the salad greens that I couldn’t finish it! Cafe lunches in Melbourne can cost as much as dinners in some other Australian cities, so this small but lovely little cafe is a perfect example of finding good value for money when you do choose to eat out.

Basic Bites cafe on Hardware Lane, Melbourne, Australia

Other budget options for healthy eating include the large Riverside Food Court at Southgate where you can eat inside on gloomy days or outside facing the river and the Melbourne skyline on pleasant days.

If a delicious and filling curry at a rock-bottom price and served with a smile is what you are craving, then head up Bourke Street past the retail district to Funky Curry at 164 Bourke Street. The decor is basic and plastic — but oh — the food. I have eaten there many times and never, ever been disappointed by any of the options which can be fine-tuned to your own idea of how-hot-is-enough.

In our next segment we will look at the visual delights of Melbourne and sources for finding out prior to arrival what’s happening in the arts and entertainment world, sports, special events, and more.

***NOTE*** The author received no compensation during the research for this article from any of the sources which are cited.

Frugal Travel in Expensive Melbourne

Magical Melbourne — one of the jewels in Australia’s crown — a world class city with price tags for hotels and food to match Paris and London. So how then is it possible to travel to Melbourne if you are inclined towards a frugal and healthy approach and inclined away from backpacker style accommodations and ingesting fast food?

The first step in finding an inexpensive place to stay is to register with an online site such as HotelClub which, according to their website, represents “60,000 Hotels in Over 134 Countries.” By registering and selecting the specific countries or cities that you are interested in, you will receive weekly alerts on deeply discounted accommodations.

I was curious about the quoted fee-free price compared to the hotel’s own stated per-room cost, so I selected several hotels for comparison and in every case the HotelClub discount rate beat any specials that were being offered by the hotels on their own websites, sometimes by 50% or more.

How can you make a $99 rate better? By making that the discount rate on an apartment right in the heart of Melbourne! An alert came into my box on a Monday that 33%-50%-off rates were available for the weekend we had chosen.

Astute travellers know that one of the key ways to stretch your travel dollars is to rent an apartment and do some of your own cooking. Why pay $25 for a breakfast for two when you can cook your own and drink the tea or coffee that the hotel has on hand in each apartment. Having a major grocery store like Woolworths inside the huge new shopping and dining centre QV Melbourne a mere few blocks away means that you can bring home the ingredients for a dinner that totals a fraction of what most Melbourne restaurants must charge with their high overhead and staffing costs.

We were pleasantly surprised when we disembarked from the tram on LaTrobe Street, walked half a block to the Cube Serviced Apartments at 19 Exploration Lane, and discovered that we were staying right in the heart of the theater district. Our studio apartment was quite spacious for two people and was spotlessly clean.

The king-size bed was quite comfortable and the nearby writing desk had enough room to spread out my laptop and various pieces of camera gear.

Cube Serviced Apartment King Studio - Melbourne, Australia

Cabinet Wall at Cube Serviced Apartment in Melbourne, Australia

An entire wall of cabinetry has been divided up to house coats, linens, pantry, dishes and pans, an inset niche for the kitchen functions and an area for the flat screen television and dvd player. The kitchen area has a 2 burner cook-top, dishwasher, and a refrigerator and microwave are neatly hidden behind some of those cabinet doors.

Melbourne is easy to maneuver and the urban heart, the CBD (Central Business District) contains most of the art museums, theatre venues, and a vast array of upmarket and discount shopping. Between the on-foot accessibility of almost all major sites in the city and the splendid network of trams, you’ll soon discover that Melbourne is a joy to travel through.

In tomorrow’s post I will discuss the Metlink network of trains, trams, and buses and the daily or weekly cost of getting around Melbourne. I will also offer examples of wonderful places to eat healthy food at a reasonable price and fun activities that are free or practically-free. Check back for more!

***NOTE*** The author received no compensation or free accommodation during the research for this article.

Ducks In A Row

No, I don’t mean the wild ducks swimming happily in the lake in our front paddocks. We’re well and truly engaged in the ducks-in-a-row stages of preparing to depart from Australia.

My apologies for the lack of updates lately, but the reasons are many and varied and include the new release of one book and a release of a 3rd edition of another one plus lots of other writing assignments.

Freshly baked Irish soda bread and cups of hot tea

We’ve been on a bit of a baking kick as we sip hot tea, eat warm bread, and make lists of things to do. We finally have the darling house on the market, but the prep stages prior to listing took SO much longer than we had expected and had us quite frazzled. Now I can happily report that we have begun packing books and deciding what furniture to keep while we wait for the agent to work his magic and I will be contacting ticket agents in the next week for preliminary pricing.

Since I am (in the midst of all this craziness!) shifting back to journalism and photojournalism, I will be uploading articles and photo essays as often as I can while still ticking off items on the moving to-do list. It’s going to be a finely tuned balancing act!

But there will be exciting new places to examine, new people to meet, and new events to cover in the coming months and I am quite looking forward to those challenges. Big Old World — here we come again!

Dreaming and Planning

Two years ago? Has it really been two years ago since I registered this domain name and began to prepare for an around the world trip?

We had a plan — sell our small acreage instead of building a house on it, put all of our household goods in storage, and go around the world whilst working in a variety of jobs and countries along the way. Then we’d come home to Australia and buy another house. Sounds pretty good, eh — pretty straightforward?

Life didn’t cooperate with our plans and the real estate listing expired with no sale. All of our ideas went on hold for awhile and we went back to our day to day life. But we never stopped dreaming of that big overseas trip — all the while enjoying several smaller ones around Australia.

Kangaroo Warning Sign in Tasmania

The village where we live in Central Victoria in Australia is a gorgeous and historical gold mining site from the 1800s and I’ll include pictures of some of our local sites in a future post. We’ve loved living here and we are currently in the final stages of construction, an addition actually, onto the little eco-cottage that we built on our wee farm. But as we come closer to completion, those plans and dreams have percolated to the surface again and we are back to planning the around the world trip.

We love Australia and our life and friends here — but it’s time for a change. There are lots of reasons including health issues — but the bottom line is that serious change is afoot and 2010 will be the year for the REALLY BIG TRIP!

I will update this site during the coming year as things progress towards departure.

But in the meantime, I will begin by posting stories from our travels around Australia — a beautiful and varied country that everyone should visit at least once during their lifetime. We have been very blessed to live here!