Thursday/Friday
21/22 June/June Passed through Yugoslavia, going
right into Belgrade this time to pick up someone who didn’t appear. Some nice
tree-lined streets, and the electric trolley buses look far more modern than
the Russian ones. There are condominiums of strange shapes. [One of the
passengers, at the Greek-Yugoslavia border check, was a bit drunk, fell over
outside the bus and cut his hand on the whiskey bottle when it broke.]
Yugoslavia
– some nice country, especially in the north, where it looks like the Austrian
lowlands; we crossed the border into Austria (for a can of Coke [that is, going
through the Yugoslav checkpoint]) and arrived in Salzburg when it was
dark – along the river the buildings, and the castle on the top of the hill,
were all lit up.
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| Austrian Tourism shows Salzburg at Night. |
We went through Munich about midnight – it was very well lit
up, and there’s more to it than I remember (e.g. a rubbish bin on the corner of
a pavement) [We went there in 1970 - I remember that the streets were dug up to build the U-bahn for the coming Olympic Games. The U-bahn started operating in 1971]. Frankfurt early morning (the Airport), Brussels about midday. We
had about an hour and a half to spare, so I went with Steve of Bradford up to
the shopping area and the old square. Nice place, Brussels, lots of murals. Then
to Zeebrugge to catch the ferry to Dover, which fortunately wasn’t as crowded
as the crossing before.
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Well, this ends my diary for the Greek trip. I arrived in London in the evening of 23rd June. My UK diary is another 120 pages in an exercise book, but I'm not going to blog it at this time - maybe next year when it will be 31 Years Ago Today, and who knows, maybe I'll have picked up my slides from Australia by then. At least I can go back to concentrating on the Doodle Book Archives.
On the 27th I picked up a hire car and drove around the island of Great Britain - down to Land's End, around Wales, and as far north as Loch Ness (I think that's about the furthest north I went), and eventually back down to London.
I met one of the fellows who had been on the Trans-Siberian Railway, albeit in a different group from us. He was working at the Youth Hostel in Bangor, Wales - however, it was full so I had to find another place to stay (a rather more remote Idwal Cottage Youth Hostel). Pity, because he was a very interesting fellow.
I had the car for a month. In London, I mostly stayed in a Colonial Club house in Willesden Green, with the idea of getting a job somewhere, but I really wasn't pressed as I had already decided to go back to Japan. So it was another month staying there, visiting people and places and seeing some some shows - I even saw some friends in the Australian Youth Orchestra perform at the Royal Albert Hall (29th August) - and old school friend David Morgan was there, too, taking time off from his violin-making studies in Mittenwald, Germany (and I had missed his letter to me, so I didn't go to visit him there).
I also went to the first match (25th August) of the 1984-85 football season, Arsenal vs Chelsea at Highbury (early kick off). I flew out of England on 30th August to Winnipeg, Canada, and stayed with Bernie Beare, my 6th Grade teacher From there I took the trans-Canadian Railway to Vancouver - that was a great ride.
I arrived back in Australia on 7th September, and went back to Japan in the middle of December on a working holiday visa.

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