Author Archives: Theodora Blanchfield

Adventures off the Great Barrier Reef

With Australia Day coming up, I think it’s only appropriate for me to share one of my last Australia adventures. (Sydney here, NZ sheep farm here.) Part of me has been reticent to write these last posts about my trip because that means it’s truly over!

But here we go.

From Sydney, we flew up to the Prosperpine Airport (PPP.) << That fact will come in handy later.

Airlie Beach

What could go wrong in a place this pretty?!

From PPP, we took a 30-minute airport transfer to Airlie Beach, which is considered the “gateway” to the outer Great Barrier Reef/Whitsunday Islands.

We landed by 10am, so we were checked in to our B&B by about 11:30-noon, by the time we waited for bags and the transfer. We had lunch at a cute place called The Deck, overlooking the water before walking around the town to explore, since it was slightly overcast and threatening rain all afternoon.

I was bummed at first at the rain preventing us from beaching, but then I fell in love with the cute beachside town (and cute beachside wares — I bought a whole lot of cute cheap beachy clothes) and finally really and truly downshifted into vacation mode, and quickly. Don’t get me wrong, Sydney was amazing, but another city not that different from an American city felt like a trip, not a vacation, if that makes any sense.

We were walking down the street, and I legit started tearing up out of happiness. I nearly didn’t go on this trip because of some family reasons, so I was so so grateful that I was able to go — and here I was, with one of my best friends on the other side of the world, visiting a place I never dreamed I’d actually get to visit. I felt like an incredibly lucky lady that afternoon — and really, for most of my trip.

Airlie Beach

Because, hello.

In Sydney, we didn’t go out of our way to eat anywhere particularly nice or well-known for its food, so we decided here was the place to have a long, leisurely dinner. TripAdvisor rated a place called Walter’s Lounge #1 in town, so we figured it was worth a try. OMG we are so glad we did. We did their tasting menu with the wine pairings for less than the equivalent of ~US $70 per person. Toto, we are not in NYC any more. We stopped at a bar called Paddy Shenanigan’s on our way home for a nightcap because it was raining and we were lured in y a dry place with live music. 10/10 would dance again.

Airlie Beach

The only negative about the trip: I didn’t sleep very well…anywhere. Whether it was the excitement, the time change or having to share a bed, I don’t know, but I was usually up by 6. So, upon waking up on the beach outside the Great Barrier Reef…obviously, I went for a beautiful run, knowing I’d be on a boat for two days.

When reading about exploring this area, all of our guidebooks suggested the best way to explore was via a live-aboard boat. Well, if you insist! As two single women in our mid-30s, we were hoping to strike a balance of not being with a bunch of 22-year-olds or a bunch of families/couples. (No offense if you’re any of those.) We ended up going with Whitsundays Sailing Adventures’ Wings 2 and had an amazing time!! The exchange rate was heavily in our favor the entire time we were there — we paid about $400 each for two nights on the boat, including all meals and snorkeling adventures, which seemed like a great deal to us. The only thing we had to provide was our own booze. The booze rules included no glass or red wine…well, sweet. Thank god for boxed wine, or “cask” wine, as they called it…

Whitehaven Beach

We moored just off Whitehaven Beach in the pouring rain for the first night, and the captain promised a walk in the silica sand the next morning bright and early before breakfast. It was still raining, but Meg and I decided to go for it anyway — what was a little rain when we were on one of the best beaches in the world? It was worth it to see this rainbow. We came back on board and had breakfast before heading back out to explore Whitsunday Island, hiking over to the magical Hook Inlet. (Note: I only packed sandals on the boat, so hiking in sparkly Birks was fun.)

Hook Inlet

Here’s a magical photo they took on a past trip. Unfortunately, it was completely rainy and overcast when we were over there (and we didn’t have our cameras on us for this reason), but it was still beautiful.

Hook Inlet

(We had one disposable underwater camera on us…)

Other than that, we spent lots of time laughing and lounging on the boat and plenty of snorkeling.

Snorkeling Whitsundays

Oh hi…

Great Barrier Reef Whitsundays

Great Barrier Reef Whitsundays

SO MANY FISH.

Great Barrier Reef Whitsundays

Great Barrier Reef Whitsundays

Oh hello.

Nemo Great Barrief Reef Whitsundays

ALSO WE FOUND NEMO. (Which is what I wrote on all of my postcards…)

Wings 2 Whitsundays

Wings 2 Whitsunday

Wings 2 Whitsunday Flash Tattoos

And this is how we spent our nights…

Wings 2 Whitsunday

Yes, I know my nose is red. It always burns first…

Leaving Whitsundays…

We disembarked the boat around 11am on Friday morning. The captain mentioned, sort of in passing, the night before that btw, sometimes the airport closes because the runway is under sea level and it floods. I heard that but didn’t really process it, thinking, no way the airport will close!

We sat down for a nice lunch at the lovely Breeze Cafe…where our transfer company called to tell us that, yup, our flight was canceled. The airport was closed. Effffff. (Airport #1, PPP, for those of you following along.) We shifted from chill vacation mode back to our New Yorker/problem solver mode ASAP.

After several hours on the phone, we found ourselves with a flight the next day out of Mackay Airport (Airport #2 in our tale), about 100 miles away from us. Our original itinerary had us flying from PPP to Brisbane that night for a quick overnight, followed by flying to Christchurch the next morning.

We found ourselves a new hotel, met up with our boat friends for drinks (SO MUCH FUN — clearly the Americans showed them their new favorite bar, Paddy Shenanigans) and were still in bed before midnight for our early, expensive cab ride to airport #2.

Our cab company texted they were at the hotel, and we went down.

“I have bad news,” the driver told us. Pretty sure the look on both of our faces just said WTF all over. “Well, the road to the airport is flooded.”

“Oh! Ok. Can you just take another one??”

“There’s only one. Believe me, I really want this fare, but I can’t do it.”

And…we shifted back to New Yorker mode again.

“I don’t know, can we take a helicopter somehwere?” (Sure, but for $2000/person. Ok, maybe not.)

“What about a boat??”

The half-joking suggestion ended up being our out. Hamilton Island Airport (Airport #3) was about a 45-minute ferry ride away from where we were.

We booked the ferry and even though we still had 2 hours, hightailed over to the ferry terminal to wait.

Now, Meg and I get along really well, but this was a logistically difficult situation, and I tend to shut down in stressful situations sometimes so I don’t snap, so once we figured out the logistics, I was done. I had nothing left to say and for two people who can’t shut up/stop giggling, we ate breakfast very quietly.

I also like to try to diffuse situations with humor or surprises…

and I had really wanted to buy some sort of beachy bracelet, so while in the Billabong store, I bought us friendship bracelets. Because I am an adult.

Billabong Friendship Bracelets

And, by some miracle, we made the ferry and made it to the airport.

Hamilton Island Ferry

Hamilton Island Airport

In some degree of delirium/astonishment we were actually getting on a plane, taking photos of the plane until we got yelled at. Oops.

Lilly Pulitzer Passport Cover

And…this is all we ended up seeing of Brisbane during a super-quick layover.

BUT! We did finally make it to New Zealand…

Craziest travel story? How do you deal with stressful situations, travel or otherwise?

I Played at Switch Playground Tonight

Switch Playground Fitness

Um, whoa, you guys. 

I’ve tried a lot of workouts in my years, but I tried an insane one tonight — Switch Playground. There’s not many workouts I won’t try, so when my coworker Mallory asked if I’d try it, I was game. Playground? OK! 

This workout is no kids’ play.

Walking into it, I honestly had done no research. I walked into the ginormous studio (how did they get such a big space in Union Square?!) and the instructors (yes, multiple — there were 4-5 instructors and one dude who was almost an announcer, booming over the mic to let us know how much longer we had in each set, when to switch) told us this: 8 minute yoga warm-up, 20 stations, two minutes each.

Oh, and we had to sign on the waiver that we acknowledged there was a fog machine. So, I knew there was a fog machine. That’s about all I knew.

You’re given a towel with a number on it when you walk in, and you’re paired up with someone. Luckily Mallory and I got to work/play together. 

With the name Playground, I thought it might be like Throwback Fitness, but I think it’s called that because it really is a fitness playground for adults. Oh yeah, and there’s also a live DJ. 

Among the 20 stations: some crazy Bosus, stairmills, the goddamn Assault bike that’s showing up everywhere lately, box jumps, Arc trainers, treadmills, resistance bands, rowers, steppers, TRX, medicine balls.

Sometimes, circuit training drives me NUTS. When it’s not programmed well, or an instructor is a little dull, it bores me to tears — so I LOVED that once you finished a station, you were done. 

I have some chronic low back pain/tightness, so I sometimes have to make a few adjustments. I’ve dealt with this for a few years, so I know where/how to modify usually — no bent-over rows/flys, no v-sits. I don’t have particularly weak wrists, but renegade rows have never worked for my wrists. When we got this move, I immediately modified and the trainer tried to tell me to try it on my wrists. I told him it bothered them, and he was immediately fine with that. There were several other moves that when I immediately did the modification I knew worked best for me, they were about to tell me I was doing it wrong. 

I really enjoyed the class, but I’d say communication in those types of situations is kind of difficult because it’s so loud and fast-paced. That energy made me feel really competitive, but I also made sure to focus to make sure that I had the right form and wasn’t rushing through the movements sloppily in order to keep up with someone else. Because of that communication, I’m not sure this is the best class for a beginner. Usually, even most high-intensity workouts can be modified down, but I think it’s important to have a foundation in at least basic moves before trying this class.

If you were building your own “fitness playground,” what equipment/moves would be a part of it? 

I’m the sick one who would include burpees, for sure. Probably also an erg, treadmill, and DEFINITELY A TRX. <— Still can’t explain my weird obsession w/TRX.