Our Australia trip was amazing. Communicating was easy since everyone spoke English, well maybe not in Chinatown, but there are still some differences between America and Australia. Here’s a quick list of things I learned while being in Australia for three weeks.
People and The Country
- The country is spread across three time zones. From west to east, the times are actually 0:00, 1:30, and 2. I’ve never heard of an hour and half time zone before.
- The state of Queensland does not do Daylight Saving Time while the other states in the same timezone do.
- The country has 22 million people and about 20% of them are in Sydney.
- Major sports are rugby, cricket, Australian football, and soccer. Which one is referred to as “footie” is still TBD.
- Wifi is not as easy to find as it is here. You cannot assume that a coffee shop has Wifi for you to use. In Sydney, the country’s largest city, only Starbucks had Wifi at $3 per hour.
- There are lots of cute nicknames for things. “Aussies” call Tasmania “Tassie,” football is “footie,” and breakfast is “brekky” or “breakie.” The spelling changes sometimes, too.
- After you think the cute nicknames are just talk, you find out that it’s a little more official and maybe it’s not cute anymore, it’s normal talk. Official forms say “expiry” date and highway signs warn you of a “speedo” check.
- The phrase “no worries” is used here in place of “you’re welcome” or “no problem.”
- All strollers are called prams.
- Toilets have two buttons: one for water, the other for more water. Trouble is, we can’t tell which is which.
- Grocery store hours are pretty weak, with most closing around 6 p.m., or even 5 p.m. on a Saturday.
- Crosswalk technology for pedestrians involves noises from space invaders.
- You are allowed to reject junk mail but placing a sign on your mailbox that simply says, “No Junk Mail.” Read about it here.
Money
- There are no 1 dollar bills. Instead they use 1 and 2 dollar coins. They also don’t use pennies but even with this, you end up with a lot of change in your pocket.
- Everything costs more. Twenty-ounce Cokes are $3.50 at a convenience store, a typical bottled beer is $7, a cosmo will run you about $16, electronics are almost triple in price, and a Redbox rental is $2.95 per night.
- Opening a tab is a process; show ID, fill out a small form, hand over your card, wait for a new card to be issued to you. This card represents your tab and you can show it whenever ordering.
- Produce is pretty normal but location can hurt on certain things. Bananas are $10 per kg but you can get five kiwis for $2.
Food
- Pie shops and bakeries are everywhere and there are pies for all meals. However, use caution when eating some of the meat pies, as stomachaches have been known to follow.
- Eating Kangaroo is not a big deal. It’s a lean, tough meat.
- Ketchup is called tomato sauce.
- Pancakes and waffles are served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top.
- Candies are made with cane sugar instead of corn syrup. This affects the taste of sodas, especially Coke, as well.
- Capsicum refers to a pepper.
- Not surprisingly, chips are actually French fries. (After all, this was a British colony.) They eat a lot of them here.
- Bagels do not exist in this country.
- Mexican restaurants are hard to find and I’m told that they are terrible. Example, they use jasmine rice in their burritos.
Animals
- Kangaroos are pretty common in certain parts and they walk into the road, just like deer.
- Male koalas make a weird burpy, grunting noise that is much louder than you would expect. They look cute but once a male starts making this noise, you think it might charge at you. Their claws are sharp by the way.
- Tasmanian devils are pretty much tiny hyenas but the size of a cat. If you get a glimpse of ones teeth then it’s time to walk away.
- Emus look like an ostrich.
- The duck-billed platypus is very interesting when swimming along. It looks like its limping through the water and sort of fake with its bill and flippers.

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