City Of Churches (long post)
I live in Adelaide, which is nestled beween the Gulf St Vincent (which flows into the Great Southern Ocean and the Mt Lofty Ranges (aka the Adelaide Hills). I live in the foothills. Adelaide is the cycling capital of Australia, with the Tour Down Under and the Australian Championships held here each year. The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) cyclists train here, and amazing world and Olympic champions like Kerrie and Anna Meares live here. Stuart O'Grady is also from here, as is Lleyton Hewitt (tennis) and Jason Gillespie (cricket, a game we former colonials play with gusto). Oh, and Andy Thomas is our astronaut (flew on last space shuttle).
We host the Adelaide International Festival For The Arts which includes Writers Week and Artists Week, and the Adelaide Fringe Festival, which is huuge - Edinburgh Fringe in Scotland is the only one larger (we suffer from a tyranny of distance). We also host WOMAD, a world music and dance festival held in particular countries aross the planet, initiated by Peter Gabriel. With all that music, it's quite appropriate that we're also a sister city to Austin, Texas (I went to SXSW in 2002 - fantastic!). Um, there's a big car race too, but I just don't get it. Early next year we're hosting the World Police and Fire Games - all those big strong cops and fireys - swoon!:D
An hour north and south of here is the Barossa Valley vineyards and the McLaren Vale vineyards respectively - a trip the locals make quite regularly! The TDU runs through both these regions, while the Aust champs are in the Adelaide Hills (which also boasts a very strong viticulture history).
We enjoy what is termed a mediterranean climate - long hot summers, balmy autumn (fall) and spring and quite cool winters (which feel bloody cold to me!). Thousands of bikers for about nine months of the year, from the hills to the coast. Then hundreds.
And why are we known as the City Of Churches? South Australia was the only free colony settled in Australia - the others began as penal colonies for the British. Lots of very radical thinkers flocked here from all over Europe, and one of the cornerstones of the colony was that every person, regardless of their religion, had the right to worship whom they pleased, and to build places of worship to that effect. Hence, amongst the first substantial buildings, were mosques, synagogues, temples, and eastern and western churches. Very soon, tis true, the public houses far outnumbered the churches, but the sobriquet is about the variety, rather than the number, so all's well! If you ever decide to come to the Tour Down Under (remember there's a century for the public to ride over the same route as the pros), give me a hoy.