Astro Forever wrote:An easy one: that Sydney is the capital of Australia (it's Canberra, for those who would like to know).
I used to think that when I was younger. Sydney and Melbourne are easily the two biggest Australian cities, about 4 million people in each. They had an argument over which one was going to be the capital, so in the end it was decided a new capital would be built in between them. So Canberra is comparitively tiny (about 300,000 people). And it's not in a State either, they made a little Territory called the ACT (Australian Capital Territory). I think States are a little more independent, and Territories have more ferderal control.
Astro Forever wrote:Also, since Australia's past as a penal colony is well-known, at least in Canada, as there were even a few French Canadians who were deported, I've always felt that as a result, the proportion of Australians that are descendants of those deported convicts is greatly overestimated... as in most of Australia's population (are there numbers on this, BTW? I might as well use this opportunity to learn the facts!

)
We hear Australia's penal colony history mentioned occassionally by American comedians (and in school), but otherwise people don't think about it much. The state I live in never had any penal colonists so maybe there's just less history of it here.
I found it hard to get solid figures, but roughly:
1788 - First colony established (penal)
1828 - 36,000 people, 85% convicts
1851 - 400,000 people, 20% convicts or ex-convicts
1905 - 4,000,000 people, ?% convicts
I don't think anyone knows how many people today are descended from convicts, it's been so many generations. I doubt there would be many. The amount of regular immigration by the mid-1800s was huge. Convict transport ceased in 1868. In total, there were 162,000 convicts. By comparison, the USA had 50,000.
I think the biggest sticking point about this in history is that the very first colony was penal. First impressions last.
Astro Forever wrote:For some reason, the explanation about how the water of the toilets gets flushed the other way around seems to spread easily among children (you do have a sense of humor, right?

). I don't know if that one is a myth or not, but the fact that this seems to be a relevant fact about Australia seems somewhat like a misconception anyway to me.
Toilet water doesn't spin in Australia. I think we use a different flushing mechanism.
It spins in sinks and baths though, and my Dad tested this while on holiday in the northern hemisphere. Unfortunately, no one can remember the result.
When I was little I would let the bath water out, and swish the water around to change the spin. Once it had stabilised, I would swish it in the other direction, and see how many times I could do this before the bath was empty.
Astro Forever wrote:along with original animals
I have to admit I've always found kangaroos kind of bizarre looking. I'm not sure if it's something you can ever adjust to.
Astro Forever wrote:While we're at it, what about Canada?
On the whole, I see Canada, Australia and New Zealand as kind of an axis-of-ex-british.

That is, I think we've generally kept the Queen's English but lost the pomp of Britain (no offence to our British members!) . We were colonised by the British, in one way or another, but lack the cultural zealotry of the USA (no offence to our American members!).
As for specifics, I think of Canada as a big country that blends across from English to French with sensibly drawn borders.

Lots of natural beauty like forests and, um, beavers. I can't actually think of specific things apart from Niagra Falls. Snow, beer, nice people gathered in bars or bowling alleys enjoying a beer together and getting out of the snow, mounted heads of animals with big complicated horns (antelope?). Towards the north it's like my memory; vague, fragmented, barren, and the occassional polar bear.
Great people to meet while backpacking in foreign countries, because they speak English and you can make fun of the Americans together.
Everything else I learnt from Degrassi Junior High, which I try to relegate to accents and environment rather than specific social interactions, because I'm aware of how distorted the British view of Australia is after watching the soap opera "Neighbours".