Category Archives: Activities & Adventures

Saying goodbye to Phillip Island

Well today was officially my last day of work at Silverwater Resort in San Remo. I will be leaving here in a few days, doing a day trip to Wilson’s Promontory in the east, and then next Saturday April 20th I’ll be taking the train to Adelaide. I’ve booked a winery day trip tour in the Barossa Valley for Sunday the 21st and a trip to Kangaroo Island on the 22nd, staying there two nights before coming back to Adelaide Wednesday on the ferry. Thursday April 25th is ANZAC day, Australia and New Zealand’s veteran’s day. So Friday I booked a swim with dolphins day cruise. Then the morning of Saturday April 27th I get picked up to start a 6 day/5 night “Rock Patrol” group tour up to Alice Springs and Uluru, ending on Thursday May 2nd, with a company called Groovy Grapes Tours.

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Barossa Valley wineries tour
www3.yha.com.au/Travel-Australia/SA/Barossa-including-Jacobs-Creek-1-day-tour/

Kangaroo Island 3-day trip
www3.yha.com.au/Travel-Australia/SA/Kangaroo-Island-3-day-Super-Special/

Swim with the Dolphins morning cruise
www3.yha.com.au/Travel-Australia/SA/Swim-with-the-Dolphins/

Rock Patrol 6 day/5 night tour
www3.yha.com.au/Travel-Australia/SA/Adelaide-to-Alice-Springs-6-day-Rock-Patrol/

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Tessellated Pavement, Pirate Bay early morning cycling tour rest stop, last compulsory day of cycling tour.

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Pirate Bay, Tasmania

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Wineglass Bay, Freycinet NP, Tasmania

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Update! My life on Phillip Island

Hello Everyone!

Today I am motivated enough to write something down (I don’t write much other than dinner orders at the restaurant I work at these days).

After I left Sydney I spent a couple of weeks in Melbourne doing touristy things (a lot of walks in parks) and looking for a job (unsuccessfully). While job hunting online I came across an advert for “work for accommodations” at a place called The Island Accommodation, on Phillip Island. I called and enquired and soon packed my bags and headed to Newhaven on Phillip Island to work 15 hours a week doing cleaning and odd jobs around this backpackers hostel.

Phillip Island is in the state of Victoria, south of Melbourne (about a 1.5 hour drive), so very far south in Australia. It is very beautiful and has a small town feeling about the area. It was very quiet on the island when I arrived in the last week of November. There were only about six people staying in the hostel with me. Two girls were already in my shared room, – Leone, a British girl trying out the “working for accommodations” opportunity to see if she liked the island (she decided to leave a few days after I got there), and a girl from France, Caroline, who was here for four weeks doing voluntary work at the nature parks on the island. There was another girl and her boyfriend in a different room also volunteering at the nature parks. They left a week or so after I got there as well. The other two people at the backpackers were a German couple Katha and Bjoin, who I became close friends with. They were also at The Island Accommodation doing working for accommodations because they were in Australia on Tourist Visas, not Working Holiday Visas.

Katha, Bjoin and I spent a lot of time together as we were really the main people staying in the hostel for the first three weeks or so of my stay here. They are 29 and 30 respectively, and have been together for 13 years. They already had tourist visas for Australia a few years ago and came back to visit with friends and just to spend some more time in Australia before heading to New Zealand on Working Holiday Visas. They are hoping to find work sponsors in New Zealand and hopefully immigrate someday. Hopefully I will get to go and see them on a tourist visa in New Zealand briefly before I return to Canada.

Since my work at the hostel affords me free accommodations I started inquiring around the area for a paying job. I had many people tell me that they weren’t hiring yet but would be looking for employees starting the week of Christmas. Phillip Island has a population somewhere around 8000 people for most of the year, then Boxing Day and the next few days after that the population starts soaring for the summer. The majority of houses on the island are actually summer homes, owned by people living in the Melbourne area. Australians apparently take holidays as a nation. Many companies shut down at Christmas time for at least a few weeks, and families flock out of the city for summer break. School ends just before Christmas and the kids go back between the last week of January and first week of March (depending on your type of school -elementary, private, college & Uni). After kids go back to school things start slowing down just a tiny bit, but people keep swarming down to the island every weekend in the summer, blocking the one road onto the island for traffic and scooping up all the perishable food in the grocery stores. This is still happening every weekend although I think the first week of March signifies the transition of seasons into Autumn, as I have caught a cold. You couldn’t tell by the weather that its time for fall though, every day this week is supposed to feel like +30C!

Phillip Island holds many summer festivals and local events; there is a Grand Prix Circuit so there are many car and motorcycle racing events throughout the year; lobster and fishing festivals; many music festivals all summer long; farmers markets; Tough Mudder; the Channal Challenge; arts and jazz festivals; a garden and sustainability festival; and this past December the Victorian Bicycle Network ended their annual week-long bicycle tour on the island as well.

I spent my first couple of weeks job hunting, as well as getting to know the hostel and the island. Soon enough I was hired to work food and beverage at the Silverwater Resort, 2.5km away, in San Remo. I started a “trial” on December 14, and everything went ok so I’ve been working there ever since. My shifts bounce between serving dinner in the restaurant, working buffets and weddings and last week I started to learn breakfast and lunch service as well. I have also been able to pick up some housekeeping shifts at the resort when it’s busy to fatten my paycheques (which generally aren’t a lot because I don’t get that many hours but apparently it’s more money than some of the housekeeping department staff make on a general basis so that makes me feel better). Also I haven’t paid anything for accommodations for the 3+ months I’ve been living on the island so that has helped a lot.

Here if you work in the hospitality industry there are standard wages based on the time of day that you work for casual staff. My hourly rate is $21.31 per hour. Working after 7pm on a weekday entitles me to “penalty rates” which increases the hourly wage by $1.86 an hour. Every hour worked after midnight entitles me to an increase of $2.78 per hour. Saturdays are paid at $25.58 and Sundays are paid at $29.84 per hour. Holidays are paid at a little over double wage $46.89 per hour, if I’m lucky enough to score a holiday shift. So far I only got Christmas but I made almost $500 that day! Still waiting for another holiday shift though, maybe Easter.

I have met lots of people and made some great friends here. For a while there were a lot of us here working in the area and living at the hostel. After the bicycle tour ended here two volunteers decided to stay and do work for accommodations as well and to look for work in the area. Philipp and Sarah and I became friends and that is how I learned of the opportunity to volunteer for the Victorian Bicycle Network which enabled me to take just over two weeks off in February to go to Tasmania. Through them I also met Kerri and Katie. The five of us spent a week driving, hiking and camping around western and northern Tasmania’s National Parks including Lake St. Clair, Cradle Mountain and Narawntapu NP. We saw lots of possums, echidnas, wallabies, wombats, 4 snakes, pademelons, a Tasmanian Devil and even a platypus!

During the second week of Tasmania we volunteered to work for the Great Tasmanian Eacapade. That went from Launcestion, Tasmania’s second largest city, located close to the centre of the island, to Port Arthur, south east of Hobart, over the course of 8 days. Sarah, Philipp, Katie, Till and Johann (two other German friends from the hostel) all worked in the food catering department having breakfast and dinner shifts, while Kerri and I working in the Route Operations department while tool care of things actually on the route. This included all the road signs, rest stops, lunch stops and marshaling and directing of riders each day along the ride. Kerri and I were actually deligated the status of “lunch girls” after I announced to our team leader Simon Crone that I have my license. He actually asked Kerri originally of she had hers but she only is on her P plates, which is still a sort of probationary license here. It’s a bit extreme that new legislation in Victoria has made it that young drivers can’t have their full license for about 4 years now, though I do believe that they take the number of hours behind the wheel into account. Anyways, I was originally supposed to work with someone else, setting up drinking water stations at each rest stop, but I ended up getting partnered with Kerri to do lunch. Yay! It was lots of fun. Each morning we had to get up at 5:30am to eat and get ready and all packed up to leave camp at 6:30am to try to be ahead of as many cyclists as possible, and i would drive to the days’ designated lunch spot (Kerri as copilot), hoping that the people putting the signs up we ahead of us on the road so that we could just follow the signs to the lunch stop. Once there we had to choose a good place to unload our lovely Renault cube van and set up our tressle tables, garbage cages, tent covering and sandwich crates, and then wait for the catering guy, Chris from Tasmania’s Liv-eat, to bring us lovely lunches in his borrowed refrigerated truck. Then we would have to hand out the sandwiches and ensure everyone got the right meals. Lots of Vegos and Gluten-frees. Oh. That is something that will never cease to amaze me Australians seem to delight in shortening words. Any words. Christmas her has become Chrissy, McDonalds is Maccas, marshmallows are marshies, etc. Quite ridiculous and extreme if you ask me.

After serving the 600+ cyclists their lunch, it was our responsibility to pack everything back into the van, as well as whatever leftover food and the full to the max garbage bags. Yuck that we had to transport that, but sometimes people driving other Route Operations people would transport either some of our leftover food or some of the garbage bags to the camp for us, to be dealt with. That was always helpful. Then we would drive on to the new camp, unload the garbage and leftover food, wander around camp trying to get people to eat the leftover sandwiches, then try to find our tents in their new locations. Every day was pretty busy for us, working from 6:30am until about 3:30pm or so, whereas the catering staff only worked about maximum two hours or so per day. But I think we had more fun. They got bored, hahaha.

We had some beautiful lunch and rest stops along the way. My most memorable stops in Tasmania were at Cradle Mountain, Lillico Beach at night seeing the Fairy Penguins returning to their burrows, Hiking in Narawntapu NP, seeing the Platypus in Latrobe, wandering around Derby at 7:30am on a Sunday looking for a place to get coffee and tea (no luck), Freycinet NP walking UP and the DOWN to get to Wineglass Bay and run into the water with Kerri, Stewart Bay swimming (freezing and apparently a very close to a great white shark frequented reef in certain seasons) and lunch serving, “Remarkable” cave and the still under-construction McHenry and Sons Distillery tour and tastings, complete with Cointreau infused chocolate ice cream. My time in Tasmania ended too soon!

Now I am back on Phillip Island, working once again. Last week was very busy; for once I worked over 40 hours at the resort and I finished off the week by getting a full blown sore throat graduating to a sinus cold. Almost better now!

I have a few weeks left here. When I leave here at the end of March/first of April, Sarah and I plan to head over to Western Australia to find jobs for a couple of months before touring around Southeast Asia with Philipp and Jaimee, an Australia friend who works for $$$ here at the hostel! Lots of planning and researching in the next few weeks for both WA and SE Asia but I still want to do a couple more trips to the beaches and the rock pool at Woolamai with Fenja (who is another German girl here working for accommodations at the hostel) and the others still here. We are also hoping to plan a short trip to Wilson’s Promontory in the east of Victoria, and maybe a trip to one of the big malls in Melbourne, possibly Fountain Gate before I leave.

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I saw a sailboat in the bay one of my first days on Phillip Island as I walked across the bridge to San Remo.

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Week in Sydney

My flight from Vancouver to Sydney was pretty uneventful. I slept off and on for the first several hours (the first ten I believe) interrupted twice to eat dinner and a snack. This was great because it prepared me for a full day when I finally arrived in Sydney at approximately 10:30am local time. I caught a shuttle van to my hostel, called Glebe Point YHA, just a short bus ride west of the Central Business District. It was a nice hostel, but not as close to touristy things to see and do as the place I stayed in last year. Two of my roommates here were British and they were doing what is called “work for accomm”, where you do approximately 15 hours a week of odd jobs around the hostel and then you get to stay there for free. I stayed here for a week.

The coastal walk route between Coogee Beach and Bondi Beach

While here I explored Darling Harbour (on the west side of the CBD) a bit. I did last year as well, visiting Wildlife Sydney.  Darling Harbour is home to the Sydney Aquarium, IMAX Theatre, Australian National Maritime Museum and the Powerhouse Museum.  It is also home to the Convention Centre and Exhibition Halls, plenty of restaurants with superb patios, Star City Casino, Sydney Wildlife World (a small zoo housing only Australian wildlife) and the Chinese Garden of Friendship. I didn’t get to see all of these places but at some point I hope to go back to Sydney for a few days and visit the maritime museum and the Chinese garden.

Gordon’s Bay

Another of my roommates was a young guy named Eric, on a holiday from Japan.  He told me about the beach walk, a multi-hour coastal walk along the eastern beaches, so one day I took a bus from downtown to a place called Coogee Beach.  From there I walked for approximately 2.5 hours along a paved path, from beach to beach, heading north.  The first one, Coogee Beach, seemed quite nice, and large, with a “bath” (swimming pool) cut into the rocks on the south point and a green park on the north point, where I sat and ate my lunch 🙂  There were periodic maps along the walk and I noticed many of the local beaches also had “baths” cut into rocky areas nearby.

Beached boats at Gordon’s Bay

Just north of Coogee Beach was Gordon’s Bay. Then came Clovelly Bay, where I noticed that there were two guys apparently doing the beach walk at about the same pace as I. We would alternate passing each other every beach or so, while stopping to take photos and a break.  Clovelly Bay was interesting, it was very narrow, more on an inlet with a beach at the end and along one side.  Also there were quite a few people swimming in the inlet battling the waves pushing them in to shore.  Next stop was Bronte Park, with only a tiny beach, nice but not interesting enough to take a photo.  It seemed more of a local park with kids playing soccer and people picnicing.

Tamarama Beach just as it started to rain

As I walked around the next rocky outcrop I saw a huge cemetary.  I think the sign said it was a Chinese cemetary.  About this point I noticed the sky getting quite dark just to the west so I started to hurry my pace.  I made it just to a covered picnic area at Tamarama Beach before the storm hit.  Big storm, heavy rain, lots of lightning, plenty of hail.  Very unexpected, not so pleasant but I did have the pleasure of sharing the picnic area with a small group of people form Belgium who

Hail at Tamarama Beach

informed me that the prince was currently visiting Bondi Beach. “Prince of where?” I asked. Well “The Prince of Wales, of course. Prince Charles.”  Oh. Apparently so. I guess the storm delayed his speech at Bondi Beach because I made it there just in time to see a giant crowd on the middle of the beach with news helicopters and a small yacht hovering closeby.  Didn’t recognize Prince Charles, but it pretty much looked like the beach was crawling with colourful ants from where I was standing.  Bondi Beach was the last stop on my beach walk.

Captain of the Bounty and Governor of Sydney, William Bligh

While in Sydney I took a few other walking tours, both guided and self-guided:

An evening walk around highlighting the haunts and history of a region of Sydney Harbour named The Rocks, guided by Ross, from I’m Free! Sydney Tours. He and his girlfriend, Justine, created this tour company in Sydney, with two routes. At 10:30 am and 2:30 pm there is a three hour walking tour with highlights of Sydney’s CBD, and at 6pm there is a 1.5 hour tour of The Rocks, highlighting more sinister places and events of Sydney’s historical past. http://www.imfree.com.au/sydney/rocksat6.html

Susannah Place Museum and Gifts

The Rocks tour began in front of Cadman’s Cottage, in Circular Quay. {insert map}  Cadman’s Cottage is the oldest structure in the harbour, built in 1816 as the barracks for the Superintendant of Boats and his crew.  Right beside the cottage is a monument of William Bligh, 1754-1817. William Bligh was a British Sea Captain, Captain of the famed ship, The Bounty.  He later became the governor of Sydney.

Ross explaining the the pub in the background used to feed men beer until they passed out. when they awoke they would be imprisoned and out to see to work as deckhands

Next we stopped at Susannah Place, a former workers’ housing unit, which housed (I think ) 6 families at a time, and is now a museum.  Along to tour Ross also told stories of famous historical immigrants (many of whom met untimely demises) and pointed out spots where law enforcement performed executions and other public displays.  There also seem to be a number of hotels in the district claiming to be Sydney’s oldest hotel and pub.  A section of The Rocks became infested with a plague approximately 100 years ago and the government had that region demolished.  Now the area is known as Walsh Bay and is covered with extremely pricy harbourside condos with private docks.  The tour ended on Observatory Hill, where the Sydney Observatory is. Walking to the hill we went through a pedestrian tunnel, which has white tiles that are covered with all kinds of dirty shoe prints.  Apparently it gets cleaned once a month, but you can never see it without prints because it seems perhaps the cleaners start the prints and joggers and bypassers follow suit.  On top the hill there is a huge gazebo with great views of the harbour.

Swarovski crystal decorated Christmas tree in the Queen Victoria Building shopping centre

Angel Place. A laneway decorated with hung bird cages, with recorded bird calls and names of bird species native to the area carved into the cobblestones

I also took the three hour walking tour with Justine a few days later, starting at Town Hall.  It highlighted historical and well-known buildings, famous shopping areas, gardens and monuments.  Highlights were the Town Hall; Queen Victoria shopping mall, attached to Sydney’s extensive pedestrian tunnel network; David Jones department store, with yearly Christmas musical miniature displays;

Me in front of the Sydney Harbour Bridge

Hype Park Barracks, a World Heritage Site; the rum hospital; Martin Place, a pedestrian street used for public displays and entertainment; various government buildings and churches; and Sydney Harbour.  Quite interesting, but I’ll let the pictures explain spots of interest.   www.imfree.com.au/

Another day I took a stroll through a section of the Royal Botanical Gardens, through an area called the Middle Gardens and I spent a couple hours in the Palace Gardens, which is full of various roses.

A passing sailboat on the way to Manly Wharf

A postcard of the Manly beaches area

The day before I left Sydney I took a ferry north to beautiful Manly Beach.

Me at Manly Beach

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BC Lions Game

Singing of the national anthem

“Presenting your BC Lions!”

While I was in Vancouver (Nov 1-5th) Lisa and I went to the BC Lions vs Saskatchewan Roughriders CFL game on Saturday, November 3rd. We had fun and both of us commented that we were glad we went. They also tributed Canada’s Veterans at halftime. Many of BC’s veteran’s drove around the perimeter of the field, riding on military jeeps and a few of the eldest had signs with their ages. One man was over 100 and another in his 90s. BC won the game 17-6! GO Lions GO

Halftime tribute to Canadian Veterans

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How to start and end a letter or email: Salutation and Valediction

Here’s a topic for a moment: formal and informal greetings in an email, or letter, any form of written communication.

For several years I would not use any form of sign-out at the end of an email or message, except in email I would include

-Tom

Now it seems people don’t do that, they leave it to the automatic insertion of a signature.  But then, it cuts out the option of choosing the emotional tone of the close-out.  Granted, I ignored that by the “-Tom” ending in so many messages.  But I’m more aware of it now.

Today I sent a fax, a task I do less than 5 times a year.  Thinking about the proper use of words to convey meaning, while avoiding the dramatic and excess bubbly emotion, I cut it down to:

Attention RECIPIENT
From Tom ****

My address has changed as of May 2011:

from:

52-1000 Somewhere St
Somewhereville, SW  S0M 3W4

to:

20-1000 Somewhere St
Somewhereville, SW  S0M 3W4

Tom *****

I don’t need my name at the bottom, if it’s a short note to announce my change of address.  But I want to close it off, very neatly and cleanly.  Yet, having the name appear by itself seemed an unnecessary duplication of the “From Tom Pace” line at the top.  So I opted for a sign-out greeting.

A sign-out greeting, is called a valediction.  It is the counterpart to a salutation, examples such as “Dear NAME,” or “Attention NAME” or “To Whom it May Concern”.

My emails sometimes include valedictions, and I use valedictions in verbal communication… The one I have used most frequently in written messages came from my adoption of the verbal “take care”.  But several other places and people I’ve seen using “Regards” and “Best regards”.  So I tried it out, and it feels clean but also a bit distant.  So, in the last couple years, whenever I use a valediction in written messages, it will be one I come up with at the moment, to match the tone of the message or the tone of the saluation.

In this above example, I thought about “Yours truly”, “Sincerely”, “Regards”, “Best regards”.

Yours truly is excellent, but feels much older, and it’s mostly a simplification of “Truly, I am yours” or other similar expressions.

So here’s the end result: I chose Sincerely.  It is not a match of the salutation “Attention NAME”  as much as it matches the opening sentence announcement “My address has changed…”.

Sources I referred to for the writing of the valediction are:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salutation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valediction
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/180872
http://springboardsconsulting.com/sbblog/%E2%80%98cheers%E2%80%99-or-%E2%80%98best-regards%E2%80%99-sign-offs-that-match-the-mood/

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Chocolate Hallelujah! The search for chocolate nougat in gold wrapper concludes

Have you ever bought a product that you love, then later when trying to buy it again you discover the company that makes it, or else the company that sells/retails it… goes out of business?

What do you do if you threw out the packaging, and were not certain exactly how to get it again? Another supplier? Another company buying the original company and re-releasing the product?

Granted, this is assuming you need the product and are unable or unwilling to take alternatives, because of whatever reason, it just doesn’t seem right.

This is the case for me and the nougat chocolate bar. I only ever bought one, and it was beyond beautiful.  It came in a very nice gold foil wrap, and I bought it with a bunch of other chocolate from a confectionary shop. The bunch of other chocolate was very good, but after the purchase, let it suffice for this story, individuals in the store had nasty behaviours and attitudes.  The merchandise was good, but I didn’t go back. The chocolate stash disappeared over time, including the beautifully gold-foil-wrapped nougat bar. “This chocolate nougat is so amazing, keeping the package is a great idea, for a reference to buy it in the future!  I’m likely to go to another confectionary store soon.” was my thinking, but unfortunately it went in the trash.
And soon after, the chocolate store went out of business, for whatever reason I won’t speculate on.

Thus an insatiable craving has harassed my sweet tooth for several years. Of course, hershey’s kisses come and go, sweet tarts/mini-pies from specialty shops and the like… 30 LBs of chocolates from World’s Finest chocolate factory outlet store in Campbellford, Ontario including several pounds of delectable mint meltaways… and so much more.

But I keep looking for this one product, that gold-wrapped foil nougat bar.

Now I knew this: the nougat bar had a gold wrapper, it didn’t have any diacritic like the two-dot diaeresis/umlaut above the u, and it was not white candy, rather it was chocolate brown… and chocolate tasting. Oh! And it tasted quite a bit like Toblerone, but I was much more enamoured with this nougat chocolate than Toblerone bars. And yes, one last thing: it was not manufactured in North America… Europe somewhere. I did read the back of the label, and I think it was the UK.. but not certain.

So there isn’t much to go on.. a lot of vague notions of the product, and that’s all anyone in a chocolate or confectionary store would get from me, as I sought the candy.

Finally, tonight, something clicked… I thought “Google is your friend.” Yes! Yes it is! Try “nougat gold wrapper” in a google search and see what comes up.

WOW!

One of the first pages is Mondo, and behold, the description for their Vanilla Soft product ends with: “Yes, this is the original and famous nougat in a golden wrapper”.

My search had ended! But reading the description of the main products of Mondo nougat concern me, the description of the nougat products makes no mention of chocolate except their explicit “Chocolate Nougat” bar, and yet the word chocolate was extremely absent from the Vanilla Soft product.. And the pictures of the Vanilla Soft wrapper were small but unfamiliar, so another search for some better images was important.

At this point I think it’s important to say, I want to try out several of these Mondo Nougat products, they do look very tempting.  Cherry.. mmm. Cappuccino, Vanilla crunchy!

Clicking back, I decided, before doing an image search, to just check out the rest of the search results from “nougat gold wrapper”.

Another in the list caught my eye… and made me laugh. The part of the google search results that displays an excerpt of text containing my search words contained the following:

” this one with its classic gold wrapper caught my eye”

Hey! So lets check this out…
the page is http://www.seriouseats.com/2009/08/german-nougat-chocolate-bars-from-wendler-of-nurnberg.html

This article shows up-close pictures of a gold-wrapper product, and my taste buds and eyes danced a duet. The wrapper looks just like I remember it (as long as memory isn’t totally failing with a fake memory) and it’s from a German company called Wendler.

Another search for “Nougat Chocolate Bar from Wendler of Nürnberg” lead to the product page on germandeli.com where some product reviews included:

the best chocolate ever!!! (by dom&tay) We bought this at a german fair in Chicago and we took it back home and ate it in class and it was just AMAZING!! We want some more please!

and

Awesome chocolate
(by Marianne) This chocolate bar is the best you will find. My grand mother lived in Germany and sent me these ever since I was a child. I am so excited to find them here online. I couldn’t find them in any store in our area and Milwaukee has a lot of German items for sale. My son has been asking me to find them for him, too and now he will get a couple along with his b-day gift, I know he will be thrilled. Enjoy!

This has brought much happiness to the sweet tooth, and it is waiting, salivating for the chance to order some of these.

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