Page 73 - 101+ Tips for Solo Women Travelers
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1    When tea is not tea                             RECOMMENDED

                                                              Reading
              If someone in Australia or New
          Zealand invite you to tea, they mean
          dinner. “Tea” is how Aussies and Kiwis
          refer to the evening meal.                A Town Like Alice
                                                    by Nevil Shute (Fiction, Australia)
          2    Buy real indigenous art              The Fatal Shore

                                                    by Robert Hughes (History, Australia)
               Among the most popular things
          to buy in Australia are art and artifacts   A Traveller’s History of Australia
          made by Aboriginal people, be it a        by John H. Chambers
          handmade boomerang, a “dot painting”      (History, Australia)
          depicting mythical symbols, or a          In a Sunburned Country
          hand-carved didgeridoo instrument.        by Bill Bryson (History, Australia)
          But sadly, there is a brisk trade in

          imported knocko s, and many cases         The Harp in the South
                                                    by Ruth Park (Fiction, Australia)
          where the local artist is just not fairly
          compensated. One way to be sure that      Come on Shore and We Will
          the item you purchase has been ethically   Kill and Eat You All
          sourced is to ask the shopkeeper who      by Christina Thompson
          the individual artist is. They should be   (Memoir/History, New Zealand)
          able to tell you. Look also to see if the   Once Were Warriors
          store displays the Indigenous Art Code    by Alan Duff (Literature, New Zealand)
          seal somewhere in the store. This is a
          voluntary organization that seeks to      Whale Rider
                                                    by Witi Ihimaera (Fiction, New Zealand)
          prevent the exploitation of Indigenous
          artists and promotes ethical ways to      Do they Speak English
          buy Indigenous art.                       Down There?
          It’s considered the                       by Susan C. Tunney
          “gold standard”                           (Memoir, New Zealand)
          among art dealers                         The Luminaries
          and gallery owners.                       by Eleanor Catton
                                                    (Fiction, New Zealand

               Always swim between
          3the flags in Australia
          You’ll certainly want to get out and enjoy some of Australia’s many spectacular beaches.
          But don’t just dive in anywhere … There are stinging jellyfish, sharks, and yes, some-
          times crocs in those ocean waters. Even Sydney Harbour has many bullsharks, which
          are very aggressive. At public beaches, lifeguards put flags up to denote the areas that
          are safe—not just from the creatures, but the dangerous riptides and currents.

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