The Fish Market is a great place to begin. It being a strenuous task to sit on a tram for a few minutes, my first action after alighting was to head for the nearest coffee provider, buy coffee and sit in the sun before starting off. Some serious walkers (the kind who wear lycra) might decry such lack of commitment to beginning the walk, but I still completed the circuit, so what's to mind?
On a weekday, the Fish Market is quiet. I'd only ever been here before on a weekend, when the crowds of people fight with the crowds of seagulls (and sometimes pelicans too) for space. So it was an unexpected pleasure to find I could sit in stillness and contemplate the odd directions that life suddenly takes.
Resisting the temptation to fuel my walk with hot chips, I moved off and headed up the sweeping ribbon ramp onto the Anzac Bridge. This path takes you almost within reach of some of the many apartment buildings that litter Pyrmont. The traffic noise is constant, and I wonder how anyone can bear to live so loudly. Some of the balconies have tables, chairs, barbeques and children's toys, so the residents must spend time out there, despite the lanes and lanes of traffic that ceaselessly rush past. At one point, there are offices at eye level, and I was suddenly filled with a sense of good fortune at the fact that I was outside walking in the sunshine instead of sitting behind the air-conditioned glass.
I love the elegant beauty of the Anzac Bridge. I remember loving it from when I first came to Sydney to live. Sydney, the home of the iconic Harbour Bridge. But for me, the Anzac Bridge tells me I am home. For the first few months here, I crossed it twice daily travelling to and from work. One night, I was driving home in heavy fog after dark. The arches of the Anzac Bridge soar up towards the heavens at any time. But that night, fog obscured the top of the arches and the road ahead, so that as I passsed through the first arch and headed towards the second, all I could see was the base of the arch opening into the fog. I felt as if I were driving through the very gate of heaven.
Walking across the Bridge should be lovely, and there are aspects of it t
hat indeed are. From the middle, you can stand at the rail on one bridge, looking across the old Glebe Island Bridge that was its predecessor, to see the Harbour Bridge further on. The Glebe Island Bridge, now home to seagulls and weeds, was once the gateway to the western suburbs. An opening bridge, I can only wonder now at the disruption to the road traffic flow that must have happened whenever it swivelled to allow marine traffic through. Now it is permanently open, and the cars flow unceasingly and unknowingly high above on their alternate way.
I stopped to look at a single weed clinging tenaciously to the edge of the bridge, high above the water. Quirkily, the wind had wrapped some cotton wool debris around it, as if to protect it as it grew. I took another photo. It occurred to me as I clicked away with my camera, and spoke my thoughts into the dictaphone I now carry on my walks, that I might create some suspicion on such a public bridge, so vital for Sydney's transport, in our terrorism-obsessed community. The Anzac Bridge has CCTV monitoring at all times, and a white van waited at the end of my path...
But my dreams of notoriety were short-lived as I walked off the bridge and turned down the hill towards James Craig Rd unchallenged. So much for "Be Alert But Not Alarmed". I'm going to throw away the nation's fridge magnets.
At the end of the road, the walk turns and heads east into Bic
entennial Park at Rozelle Bay. This is a beautiful park, and an ideal spot to stop for a picnic lunch in the sunshine by the water's edge. So I did. Spreading trees and wide swathes of green lawn abut the sparkling water of the bay, where dogs swim for tennis balls and dance in greeting around one another. The whole is somewhat lessened again by the constant noise of the traffic passing over the Anzac Bridge. The fact that the park is on the flight path doesn't help either. But the view more than makes up for it.
From this aspect, seeing my beautiful bridge across the water, I was struck by the balletic nature of its pose. I have always seen how it dances lightly across the water, but now I also see the slow dancer's plie as the roadway at the base of the spreading tutu is held carefully balanced on symmetrically bent concrete knees.
From here, it's a lovely stroll along the waterfront, passing some of the grand old houses of Glebe, until you are almost back at the Fish Market. At the last, buildings find their way to the water's edge, and so the walker must turn inland briefly to enter the Fish Market through the back entrance, from Bridge Rd. I had thought of another coffee, but as I walked in past the tables of lingering diners in the late afternoon sunshine, I saw a man with a beer, which seemed like a very suitable ending to a most enjoyable autumn walk. So I sat with my beer at a table in the sun, and watched the seagulls watching me.
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