Showing posts with label Taronga Zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taronga Zoo. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 November 2010

The Blue Room

The Blue Room

Mr & Mrs Shrimpton welcome you aboard the Blue Room......

This fantastic vessel was the venue for the reception, a five hour cruise around Sydney Harbour including a three course meal.  We boarded the Blue Room at 6pm from the private wharf at the Opera House to be greeted with two decks of the finest hospitality.  Downstairs were tables set out for the meal and an area set aside as a dance floor, upstairs was a bar and informal seating area, half of which was covered to offer some protection from the sun:



























We were encouraged to go upstairs to the bar area for welcoming drinks where we could study the table plan.  The tables were all named after the bays surrounding the harbour and were covered with scattered pink and white crystals.

After setting sail out into the harbour we followed the shoreline in and out of various bays at a leisurely pace until we arrived at a sheltered cove which is home to the Taronga Zoo.  It was in this sheltered cove that we stayed for the delicious three course meal and speeches.  The meal was wonderful, with a way of serving that is unfamiliar to anyone from the UK.  There are always two choices, that is two starters, two mains - one of these is fish based and the other is meat based.  The plates are put down alternately around the table and guests swap plates with a neighbour if both are agreed.  Sounds strange but in practice works really well. 



The starters were:

Glazed Pork Belly with Honey, Five Spice, Soy and Queen Scallop

Symphony of Sydney Seafood which includes Steamed Ocean Trout, Carpaccio of Smoked Salmon, King Prawn and Mesculin Salad

Both starters were excellent and followed by the first round of speeches.  Announcements were made by our MC for the evening, a close friend of Tim's who goes by the extremely trustworthy name of Lee, however this Lee was also taking bets on the length of the best man's speech!  First to speak was the father of the groom, whose story of a young Tim suitably embarrassed but cannot be repeated here.  For details please see a guest....

Second speech was from a very proud father of the bride, who I know had been thinking about his speech for many weeks.  He had it all prepared, written out and practised - no doubt under the watchful eye of an equally proud mother of the bride.  When it came to standing in front of people the speech was put back into pocket and a truly heartfelt tribute to his beautiful daughter followed - interrupted only by the fuse blowing on the PA system.....despite this setback the speech was delivered with confidence and feeling and I'm sure that I saw tears in a few places......

Next came Tim's speech, kind responses to the words of wisdom offered by both fathers, thanks for everyone involved especially the bridesmaids and complimentary words of love for his wife.



By now the sun was setting on a fabulous day, the main course was served in the fading light and was delicious:

Beef Fillet, Asparagus and Kumera with Irish Whiskey and Pepper Cream

Barramundi Fillet with Prawn and Avocado Salsa Infused Dressing

Mixed Leaf Salad and Chat Potatoes

After the main course it was the turn of the best man to speak.  John had not been allowed to bet on the length of his own speech for obvious reasons but the air of anticipation was rising as he stood up and everyone looked longingly at the pot of over $300......

John's speech was legendary, stories of Tim's antics throughout their years of friendship both entertained us and also disappointed each of us as our time passed with no sense of John drawing to a close.  The final time was a little over seven minutes and the pot was won by Kay's one-time house mate Alex who very kindly donated the winnings to Kay and Tim for their honeymoon at the end of the month.


It was time for Kay and Tim to cut the cake, and I apologise that I cannot remember what the cake was although I will find out and add to this blog.  What I can tell you is that it was not the fruit cake with sponge layer that is traditional in the UK.



Once the cake was cut the Blue Room set sail into the harbour once more and continued to follow the shoreline in and out of secluded bays and coves, under the Harbour Bridge, through Darling Harbour on it's way back towards the Opera House wharf.  Cake consumed along with a selection of Australian Cheese with Lavosh it was time to get to the dance floor.  As is traditional the bride and groom took to the floor for their first dance and the usual scrum for photographs followed......



The rest of the evening was spent by many on the dance floor and a great time was had by all involved.



The Blue Room docked at the Opera House just after 11pm and it was time to leave this wonderful vessel behind.  Most descended on the Opera Bar to keep the party going, a great place to experience on the lower concourse of the Opera House.  It was well past midnight when I left and there are rumours of some not getting in until 6.30am - they shall remain nameless.....

The night was over, but for Kay her life as Mrs Shrimpton has begun.  Another chapter in her wonderful life has opened....

I'd like to thank Kay and Tim for the great memories that the 12th November 2010 has brought to so many people.  I'm sure that whether you were here or not you will join me in wishing them a long, happy and healthy life together and I hope that my ramblings have helped to describe Kay and Tim's special day.

Wednesday, 20 February 2008

Goodbye to Sydney and Hello Hong Kong

Such a lot to catch up on.

On Saturday we met up with Kay's friend Tanya and headed to Darling Harbour to watch the Dragon Boat Racing - which was part of the celebrations for Chinese New Year. One of Kay's work colleagues, Nicola, was racing and her team won! We couldn't see much in the harbour as the place was packed but it is one of the places on the must see in Sydney list. We met up with another of Kay's friends on the way back - Crystal, who Luke has promised to marry - and Lee got to visit the Bavarian Beer Cafe (and drink a Gentleman's pint - a litre!). We also met Amanda, who Kay works with and went to New Zealand with, before they headed out for the night.

We were in a bit of a quandary on Sunday morning as to whether to wake Kay up for our planned visit to Taronga Zoo. Amanda had kindly lent us her guest passes so we could get in for free. Kay not only got up but made us a picnic lunch Amanda joined us too. Our only trouble was parking when we got there as it was slightly busier than we expected and we had to park several streets away - okay but there seemed to be huge spiders in gigantic webs strung from every hedge to every lamppost (and that was in the posh suburbs outside the Zoo). We had another photography session with Koala's - but this was much better as besides the 'official' photograph we were allowed to take our own ans she took some with our camera too - PLUS when we realised we'd forgotten to have a picture with Luke's nursery Lion (Roary for those that haven't met him) they kindly took him back into the enclosure and held him next to the Koala so we could get a good shot. Luke's favourite animal was the 'orange monkey' - which was actually a huge Orangutan. We returned to Kay's for a BBQ with some of her friends and Luke DID NOT want to go to sleep.

Our final day wasn't spent as we'd planned as I spent much of it at the GPs and then the hospital. It was a false alarm and I am fine - don't panic mum - but it was better to be sure. Luke did get to spend some time on the beach as Auntie Kay came to the rescue and took him to build sand castles. We also found that you may be on the other side of the world but it still takes 8 hours to get out of A&E once you are in!

Yesterday we had to get up early as the taxi was booked for 8am to take us to the airport we waved goodbye to Kay as she left to catch her ferry to work and 45 mins later we were crossing the harbour bridge and saw her ferry arrive. If it hadn't been for the 3 cases and the pushchair it would have definitely been easier to travel to the airport by ferry and train (and a lot cheaper and quicker too). We did a bit of souvenir shopping at the airport (okay it was mostly for us) before our flight to Hong Kong.

Luke kept asking 'Are we on the runway yet?' and as soon as I said 'yes' he was asleep he slept for 3 hours but them was awake for the remaining 9 hours apart from the last 10 mins of the flight - he must be affected by a change in air pressure!

Today we had a pre-organised tour of Hong Kong courtesy of Quantas. We met 'Billy' our tour guide who has the weirdest turn of phrase I have ever heard - his English sounded like he was originally from Sweden and there was more than a little innuendo and lots of weird substitution of words - glorious for genuine, switching for scaffolding, - the end of every comment was punctuated by 'yeash' or 'you da boss' and he kept talking about 'fat cats'. He has a son in LA so that might explain it. He also seemed to have lots of little sidelines - he had an associate who took our pictures a the first stop, then disappeared and came back later to sell us a copy of the picture plus a cut out of the same picture stuck onto a plate for £15. The bus driver was selling postcards and I am sure Billy took a cut from every stop.

First we went on the 'optional' extra trip on a Sampan around a floating fishing village and restaurant, then we went to a jewelry factory - which was looking through a window at 3 men putting gems into settings and then the hard sell in the shop, then we went to a market where everything was $100 (for 3, 6, 7 items) but we could only stay for half an hour, finally we went on the Peak tram ride (for the return trip only) where we travelled down the peak at a 45 degree angle - very weird experience and I hope the photos/video do it justice. With several hours to spare after the tour (we declined the optional extra of being dropped off somewhere in Kowloon to make our own way back via the Star ferry) we explored the shopping streets - again we were travelling with our mini celebrity - Luke and is red hair - so he did get a few waves. We made quite a few purchases of Thomas the Tank Engine items - including the Chinese Dragon for his train set - and may be back to buy a suitcase to carry all the extra baggage in!

Our plan for tomorrow is to brave the local train system and visit Disneyland Hong Kong (about an hour away by train) - ahh you understand now why we need the extra suitcase!

Claire