Showing posts with label Disability access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disability access. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Australia, Queensland, Sunshine Coast at Bli Bli; The Finnish Memorial Park



On the Finland Rd at Bli Bli, at the Sunshine Coast, there is a park that would interest the Finnish immigrant population to Australia, if not all the immigrants to Australia. It is the Finnish Memorial Park, created by the Finnish cane cutter families that lived there during the times when cane was still cut at the Sunshine Coast.

It was about 17-years ago that I had last visited this place. Then it was just cane fields, but the place for the park had been selected and the organisers of the planned park were just getting to ordering the memorial sculpture. After much discussion they settled in inviting Martti Väänänen, a sculpturer from Kiiminki in Finland to create the memorial. The park itself was opened in 1997. At the same time it was also donated to the Council for upkeep.

The Finland Rd as such is a long and lumpy ride amongst the last cane fields at Sunshine Coast. Not much of them is left as the new suburbs are born across the coastline. However, it is a delight to suddenly end up in a small, well tendered park that makes one remember those people who came to Australia on ships, after spending weeks on the oceans, and months on the migration centers in the south and ending up in Queensland on the cane fields.
The Migration Museum at Peräseinäjoki in Finland, previously presented on this blog, carries matching information about the emigration of the Finnish people to around the world. I am hearing that more than million Finnish people live permanently abroad.

One of the highlights of the Finnish Migration Museum is the cane cutters cottage that was actually dissembled in Ingham, Queensland and sent to the Museum at Peräseinäjoki, where it was reassembled in a totally new surroundings to the delight of many people interested in the migration history of the people of the area.

The Finnish Memorial Park at Bli Bli carries on the delightful tradition of people building spaces for themselves where they can comfortably meet and have a picnic in memory of the times gone by. I, for one, can very well see this park as a functional meeting place for a family gathering, even a wedding as there is a kind of Finnish style pavilion included in the park just inviting dancing.

When choosing a place where people could meet at Sunshine Coast for a celebration, the Finnish Memorial Park is a good pick. It is well kept, secluded and spacious. See you there sometime on your travels.

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Saturday, April 14, 2012

Australia, Queensland, Sunshine Coast; Bellingham Maze

If you are looking for a very cool, wonderful and compassionate day with your family, friends or business partners at Sunshine Coast, Queensland and unsure of what to do, I would recommend choosing to 'get lost' at the Bellingham Maze. A day of fun and games there will make your visit a memorable addition and give your brains some extra exercise. The main attraction of the site, a large star shaped hedge maze was designed and planted in 1991.

According to maze masters website 'a maze is a tour puzzle in the form of a complex branching passage through which the solver must find a route.

Mazes have a long history, the famous Cretan Labyrinth being the oldest and the most famous one. It was where the king kept a minotaur. Hedge mazes have been planted since the 16th Century in Britain. This is when gardens became places for games and fun for the noble families.

The original hedges at the Bellingham Maze are of Cypress Tree, but they are now being replaced with the native Australian plants for better sustainability.

I can just imagine the start of it. About 20 years ago, somebody at Sunshine Coast, who was fond of British mazes and puzzles had a bright idea of starting a tourism business. You can clearly see that the place has been developed with love and compassion for the environment. It is a nice Australian adaptation of the European mazes.

There is a very curious water fall to walk through at the entrance, a tropical garden, plenty of purposefully designed puzzles to solve, a friendly cafe to rest you feet at, have a 'cuppa' and discuss some serious or frivolous problem solving issues. The large aviary is a nice addition, displaying local birds.


The maze itself is good fun. It will take a while to solve. At the same time, the visitor can look for how many gnomes are hiding in the maze. Your reward is finding the secret fountain in the middle. And then you have to find your way out, or, you could find the 'give up gate' like my friend did.


It is possible for a family or a group to spend a whole day at the
Bellingham Maze solving puzzles, playing around, drinking tea, walking in the forest, looking for birds and visiting the Snow White House. Apparently, she even shows up at the house herself. The place calls for a peaceful and friendly day amongst the busy time during holiday or weekend fun. There is a natural feel to it! That is it's charm. I would definitely classify this attraction as a compassionate place to visit.

We dragged a wheelchair along the corridors of the maze with some effort, but it worked and provided lots of fun and entertainment to try to get through the openings. Finding our way back was a 'piece of cake' as our 'tracker' just followed the previous wheel tracks in the gravel. Very clever of her, I thought. I am certainly looking forward to taking my family there another time and seeing how the new Australian type of maze will look like.
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Friday, November 4, 2011

Australia, Sunshine Coast Hinterland, Chenrezig Institute a Centre of Buddhist Study


Chenrezig Institute at Eudlo, Sunshine Coast hinterland is a centre for Buddhist study, retreat, meditation and practice. It is one of the oldest established Buddhist centers in the Western World, being founded in the early 1970's.

It is a delightful experience for the compassionate traveler to spend a few hours there, having lunch and partaking in a discussion on the meaning of the Buddhist tradition. You can also spend longer time there in a retreat enjoying Buddhist teachings. Currently the Centre is a home of two Tibetan Lamas and a community of ordained nuns and monks, students, residents, volunteers and guests.


To get there requires a drive up the hill and an effort to walk lots of steps or drag a wheelchair up a steep hill but it is really worth it. The lunch at the cafe is excellent. The scenery and the atmosphere is breathtaking. Even the insects like it as they are not harmed or killed for sticking to your fingers.

What you need to do though, when planning your visit, is to get on Internet, check the current program and either send them an email or phone to book your lunch and other planned activities.

If you require wheelchair access or otherwise need help, you need to let them know. The centre is not well prepared for this as it is very high on the hills with gravel roads and steps everywhere. There is lots of goodwill and kindness available and thus all the hardship will be overcome.


A visit to the Garden of Enlightenment at the retreat is also a treat. It has a large Stupa that is surrounded with a lovely garden hosting smaller Stupas.





Our time was well spent there. We also took some time visiting the gift shop listening to music, browsing books and other information about the centre, it's activities and the general Buddhist way of life.

If a compassionate traveler would like to know more about the Buddhist tradition. The Chenrezig Institute is a member of the Foundation of Preserving the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT). Lots of worthwhile information about this can be found by googling the Internet.

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Friday, September 23, 2011

UK, London - Madame Tussauds


Did you know that the building where Madame Tussauds is situated in London was built in the 1880's? At the time nobody thought about inclusion or the fact that someday it would be an attraction that requires several hours long wait outside on the street in order to view the collection. For certain nobody thought about disabled entry.

And why would the compassionate traveler spend a day at Madame Tussauds anyway? Would that add to the compassion in action that we are looking for in this blog?

Well, it would be an interesting day, to say the least.



Our experience

Last I visited Madame Tussauds in London was approximately 10 years ago. The collection on view is totally different from that one I saw then. Even the setting has changed. Certainly, I have never visited it with someone in a wheelchair. So, this time around our experience was totally in it's own category.

Due to the fact that the building is so old, some very inventive modifications have been made to allow for lifts, ramps and such and still it leaves for some places where it is just not possible to accommodate for people who cannot walk. Only three visitors with wheelchairs are allowed in the building at any one time. For the visitors, this is both good news and bad news.

Firstly, there is a booking procedure where you have to go the entry door and negotiate a time to enter. Good news is that you do not have to be cuing for hours to get in, you can do something else, like visit the rose garden at the near Reagent Park.

Secondly, you need to prepare for somebody watching over you at all times and rushing you on to keep to the two hour timeframe that the museum has predicted an average visitor spends there. Unless you remember to tell them that you want to shop at the store, you will miss it.

Otherwise, everyone at Madame Tussauds wants you to have a wonderful experience. They are very helpful and attentive. You get to see really finely fitted lifts and even have to walk around the whole building outside with a guide to get to the amphitheater. But all in all you'll have a very enjoyable time.




Why compassion in action?

Ten years ago, while visiting Madame Tussauds, I was struck by a one single doll. Then, it was the oldest doll in the exhibition called 'The Sleeping Beauty' and it was made out of the death mask of Marie Antoinette, the beheaded Queen of France of the French Revolution. The historian in me was intrigued.

What is pictured here is a replica on exhibition now and wait for it, it breaths. Just keep watching and the breastplate moves.

Marie Antoinette was a friend of Madame Tussaud's before the revolution. The doll artist, namely, had been modeling wax representations of famous people even before the revolution.

During and after the revolution she was ordered to collect and make death masks of the beheaded people, many of whom she knew. Marie Antoinette was one of them.




It has always intrigued me of why would all the macabre scenes of horror be so carefully kept at display at Madame Tussauds in London. Now I know. It is that we do not forget. That they might strike someone as what they are, a tremendous memory of suffering.




After spending a day at the overcrowded Madame Tussauds peaking at the famous wax people being photographed with exited modern visitors, I look at it as a testament to a lady who managed to turn her horrible war experiences into the art of fun and excitement. That would be compassion in action.








In my mind a visit to Madame Tussauds in London is a must for a compassionate world traveler. It is worth waiting in the cue and trying to fit into a room filled with excited people. It brings a smile on your and your companions' face, whoever they are and inspires to think about the fine art of wax doll making as a truly spectacular trade.

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