I realized this morning that I have lived
just a touch more of my adult life outside of Sydney than in it (assuming I was
an adult at 18, which is debatable).
Other than our hometown, Graham and I have
lived in Old Bar (Mid-North Coast, NSW), Perth (WA), Cambewarra (South Coast,
NSW) and Dubai (UAE). In Sydney, we lived in four different homes, and
spent most of our childhoods there, which means we have a fair breadth of
diversity even within Sydney.
Most of the years that I have lived outside
of Sydney I have not missed it for a second. That’s the city itself, of course.
I have missed my loved ones who (inexplicably) continue to inhabit it. But I
have not really missed Sydney town, per se.
Yes, it has excellent coffee, but
so do Perth and the South Coast. Yes, it has beautiful beaches, but so does the
rest of the country. Yes, it has great shopping, but so does Dubai.
And in none of those places does it take 60
minutes to travel 10 kilometres at peak hour.
There doesn’t seem to be anything else in
the world that makes my otherwise rather low blood pressure reach
steam-out-the-ears point other than a Sydney traffic jam. That’s because the
narrow, meandering roads were built for horses and carts in the mid-1800s and
all the red tape in the state keeps them that way.
And the Spit Bridge is just too stupid to
talk about.
But, until this year, I have always lived
at visiting distance from Sydney, and maybe I didn’t realize how much I enjoyed
reconnecting with special little bits of it from time to time.
Now that I can’t,
I know what they are. Here are three:
The harbour
Well, that’s obvious. For those who haven’t
been there, it looks like this.
Now that's a harbour. |
Every city should have one. Stunning, hurt
the eyes, gob-smackingly beautiful. When I lived in Manly and travelled to work
on the ferry, it was a daily blessing to suck in that salty air and enjoy one
of the prettiest commutes in the world. I miss the slap of waves on creaky, old
jetties, the cold, sandstone walls that line the harbour and even those pesky
seagulls, noble rats of the air.
The parks
Makes you want to climb it, don't it? |
It’s the trees,
particularly, that I miss. Oh my goodness, the trees. Those enormous, eminently
climbable Morton Bay figs in the Botanical Gardens, which could house a family
of tree-dwelling hippies with ease. And those stately, old-fashioned rows of
date palms in Centennial Park. As a child, I thought date and canary island palms were Australian
natives, they were such a feature of old parks and gardens in established
suburbs of Sydney. Now that I live in the Middle East, I still get the
occasional pang when one of them reminds me of home.
The magpies
This one is a little more personal, and
very specific. No, I don’t miss the way the magpies swooped my head in
spring. What I miss is the sound of magpies in the afternoon, particularly a
late autumn afternoon. Maybe it’s rained, there’s a chill in the air. It’s that
tender time of evening when the bruise of darkness is just beginning to bloom
over the sky. The air smells of camellias and the damp crush of liquidambar
leaves underfoot. I don’t know what they’re doing – calling each other home to
bed? – but the magpies sing this warbling, ecstatic song for half an hour or so
that is better than Mozart. Wherever else I’ve lived in Australia, it is not
the same. It’s a very Sydney moment.
Sob!
What do you love about your hometown?