Friday, July 30, 2010

Hotel Jerbourg

Hotel Jerbourg is located on the south-east corner of Guernsey at Jerbourg point. It has a restaurant and 32 guest rooms and it was the place I called home for four and a half months while living on Guernsey. The staff at the hotel were of many different nationalities. I was the only Aussie and worked with Spanish, Latvian, German, Hungarian, Scottish, English, Portuguese, Venezuelan, Polish and Welsh. It is the most international team I think I will ever work with. Although we all came from different backgrounds we were able to get along and work as an effective team. At times language barriers caused confusing although we were usually able to laugh about it. Many of the hotel guests also travelled to Guernsey from Europe therefore making it difficult for me to understand their requests.

My contract stated I was to work roughly 50 hours a week although this often meant over 60 hours a week and for no extra money. I was paid a monthly wage of 600 pound no matter how many hours I worked. The 600 pound a month was on top of food and accommodation. I once worked it out to be about 2.50 pound an hour. The hours were long and we often had to back up a late night working with an early start. Throughout the months I worked at the hotel I worked three weddings, each a 16 hour day starting at 10am and finishing 2am the following morning with only 30 minutes off to eat dinner.

I had at least one day off a week but never more than two. I organised to have Mondays off which my girlfriend Jess and I would spend together visiting the sights of the island and the neighbouring islands.

Guernsey do not have a minimum wage which is the reason they are able to pay so little, which is also the reason many Eastern Europeans work at the hotels on the islands. The little pay you get would still be a lot more than they would be paid in their native countries.

The low wages and long hours were what I most disliked about working at the hotel. The staff were friendly and helpful and the restaurant was very rarely at capacity. From the first day I started in the job I knew what day I would be leaving therefore I counted down the days and tried to make the most of my time on Guernsey.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Jersey

Jersey is Guernseys bigger neighbouring island. Just like Australia/ New Zealand and Canada/ USA there is a strong rivalry between the two islands. I really wanted to visit Jersey to see what all the fuss was about and decide for myself which island I preferred.

Jess and I both managed to get a Bank Holiday Monday off which was the only way we could visit Jersey without staying the night. A ferry left early on the Monday morning and we arrived on Jersey roughly an hour later. We spent the day catching buses from beach to beach and I really enjoyed it. I thought the most obvious difference between the two islands was Jersey had better and more accessible beaches. For an island I think Guernsey doesn't have a lot of sandy beaches and many you have climb down hundreds of stairs to reach them.

Jersey is much more commercialised than Guernsey and for the first time in months I ate McDonald's food for lunch and Pizza Hut for dinner. Jersey does have a different feel to Guernsey. Jersey to me felt more Australian with lifeguards on beaches and lots of billboards and advertising. I feel I would have enjoyed living and working on Jersey although with my time on the Channel Islands coming to an end I caught a ferry back to Guernsey thinking I may never again step foot on Jersey.

Monday, July 12, 2010

FIFA World Cup

In the months and years leading up to this years World Cup the English newspapers were publishing articles stating just how easy England would win. I was caught up in all the hype and began to believe the English may win. The Aussies again had a strong team and were looking to make it to the round of sixteen.

Many of the pubs and bars on Guernsey played the World Cup on television all day long which lead to some pubs advertising 'World Cup Free Zone.' These pubs had no televisions no newspapers and no radio during the month of the World Cup finals. Out of interest I entered these pubs a few times to find they were playing Michael Buble cd's on repeat and there was never a line at the bar.

Hotel Jerbourg, the hotel I worked at, had a cup sweep. Each staff member paid five pound and were given two teams. I drew out Spain and Nigeria. Spain were the bookies favourite for the tournament although Nigeria were unlikely to win a game. The Aussies lost convincingly 4-0 to the Germans in their first match of the group stage and it didn't look good. Australia then managed a formidable draw against Ghana and beat Siberia 2-1 although it was not enough to continue to the round of 16.

The English didn't fare much better, a 1-1 draw with the USA followed by a 0-0 draw with Algeria and a 1-0 win against Slovenia. Luckily for them the rest of the groups results went there way and they progressed into the round of 16. The journalists were tearing the team to shreds.

With the English looking unlikely winners and the Aussies out I started supporting the Spanish as the win meant a lot of money for me. The Spanish kept doing just enough to win and progressed to the final against the Dutch. England got thrashed by the Germans 4-1 as the Germans were looking good till the lost to Spain.

I managed to talk my way into getting the night off to watch the final as it was on about 7pm on a Sunday night Guernsey time. I headed to the sports bar in the town and found a place where I could see the television. The bar was full of orange as that is the Dutch colours, Guernsey is a very popular holiday spot for Dutch families. The game itself I found fairly boring with only the one goal scored. The Spanish again did enough to win and for it was a good win for me as I collected a handy 60 pound.

The few Spanish on the island partied long into the night as they did all over the World.