20 August 2003

Oxford, England

I have been based here in Oxford for the last five days. Although I have done a lot of daytripping to places outside of Oxford. It has been really nice just to get out of the city and into the countryside. The countryside around here is mostly farming so reminds me of home. Except that there's all these quaint villages and thatched roofed cottages and neolithic monuments.

20030816b Meg and Tina at BrightonThe first day I was here, Tina, Wayne and I went down to Brighton for the day. Brighton was heaps of fun. It was just as I imagined it - stony beach with Brits sitting on it wearing jeans & sweatshirts (ok so the weather was overcast that day and not overly warm), seaside pier with amusement arcades and rollercoasters. Bought some Brighton Rock. Rode on one of the rollercoasters. About the only thing missing was those cardboard cutouts where you stick your head through the hole and have your photo taken. Actually there was one, but it wasn't of a semi-naked girl and dirty old man that I was expecting to see. The pier and waterfront is tacky seaside fun and really great.

The next day I got given the tour of Oxford, including Christ Church college where some of the scenes from Harry Potter were filmed (the dining hall and staircase).

20030818s Bourton on the WaterMonday I went day tripping around the Cotswolds. I should mention that I have a rental car that I'm using to get about in. Driving in England isn't too hard once you get used to all the roundabouts and the naming convention of the roads. Then all you have to know is where you're going and what road numbers you have to use to get there. Except that in the Cotswolds I purposely chose to drive along the roads that are so tiny that they don't have numbers. And it was great because I stumbled through so many beautiful little country villages. I've taken heaps of photos. Everyone keeps asking me if I went to Stow on the Wold in the Cotswolds. Yes I did, but I have to say I don't know what the attraction is. Lots of overpriced gift shops and not the most attractive buildings. Chipping Campden and Bourton-on-Water are much more attractive IMHO.

20030820d Salisbury CathedralYesterday and today have been spent south of Oxford visiting Stonehenge, Avebury, the Uffington White Horse (chalk hill carving), Salisbury Cathedral and the New Forest in Wiltshire. And once again getting lost on little roads with no numbers. Often so narrow that through the villages it's only one lane so you're constantly stopping to give way. Frustrating sometimes when you're just trying to get somewhere but the road twists and turns and you have to keep slowing down. I actually wanted to go to Salisbury yesterday but arrived there at 5pm and had to turn around and go back to Oxford again. So today I went back and saw the cathedral. Very impressive, especially for something almost 800 years old.

Last night I went with Tina and some of her work colleagues to a pub Quiz Night. This is definitely a university town because the questions were impossibly difficult. If there hadn't been so many English questions I might have had a better chance. Between the six of us we got 9 out of 25. The top team got 20. Don't know how they managed it - must be professors or something. The really cool thing was that the pub we went to is the same pub that was frequented by CS Lewis and Tolkein and is where they used to discuss, among other things, their latest manuscripts. How cool is that!

So now after a week and a half in England, I've done all the museums I want to do, have seen all the ancient sites I want to see, and all the churches. Still can't get over all the quaint thatched cottages though. So next on the agenda is some dramatic scenery. Tina and I are thinking about heading down to Dorset for a couple of days. Bank holiday coming up on Monday so everywhere is going to be crowded unfortunately.

One last comment on English drivers - on the whole they're pretty good but I can't believe how fast they drive. On the M roads (major motorways), I've been sticking to around 110kph (around 70mph) which is what I do at home. And every other car on the road passes me. The only things I pass are trucks. Most cars that pass me are doing between 80-90mph. That's up to 150kph! I can't believe it. It just doesn't seem safe to me. I guess the NZ police's down with speed campaign has worked on me. Well really I drive at 109kph at home so that I don't get caught by a speed camera. There are speed camera signs up all over the place here too, but it doesn't slow anybody down...

London, England

20030810f The Thames, London Eye & ParliamentI arrived in London in the midst of a heatwave and on the hottest day ever recorded in England. After having had only one hours sleep on the plane and still being on Central time of 4am while it was 10am in London. At first I didn't realise how hot it was. I thought it was just me still not being used to the heat after coming from an NZ winter. Until I went to the London Eye for my 3pm booking to be told it wasn't running because of the heat and that it was 38 degrees Celsius!! It didn't even hit 30 degrees while I was in Chicago. So I was absolutely wilting. It was tempting to just sit in the underground and wait for that rush of wind that you get when a train is about to arrive. Except that when there is no train coming it is just unbearably hot. And it's even worse once you get on the train and it's packed with commuters. Luckily the weather has since cooled down to a normal 20ish degrees now.

I was in London for five and a half days from Sunday 10th to Friday 15th. During that time I went to: the Royal Observatory at Greenwich, the National Maritime Museum, The Museum of London, the British Museum, the National Gallery (that's a heck of a lot of museums!), Hampton Court Palace, the Globe theatre, the BBC tv studio (for a studio tour), went shopping in Camden Town, rode the London Eye and fell asleep on the grass in Hyde Park.

I highly recommend doing a day trip out to Greenwich. It was good to get out of the city (even though it's not really out of the city, especially now that the Docklands rail goes directly out there), and both the Royal Observatory and Maritime Museum are very interesting. There are also other places to visit there but I ran out of time. And the best thing is everything is free to get into. That is one very good thing in London is that a lot of the museums at least are free.

20030815b Hampton Court PalaceHampton Court palace is also very interesting, but quite expensive. You can easily spend a day there though. There are four different tours you can take round the palace or you can wander around by yourself. I probably spent a couple of hours just inside the palace. Then there's the grounds as well. I'd heard all about this famous hedge maze at Hampton Court but it was very disappointing. Very tiny, and therefore impossible to get lost. I wandered slowly from the outside to the middle in five minutes, and back out again in another five.

I have to admit that this time around London wasn't as fantastic as it had seemed the first time I came here. Possibly I could put that down to the heat. It's hard to enjoy something when you feel sweaty and dirty and everything around you is dirty and polluted. Because there was no wind at all to blow the pollution away or to cool you down.

I stayed at a very noisy inner city hostel, but at least it was cheap. After staying with people for the previous week it was hard to get used to being on my own again. And I'd just started getting used to the American way of doing things and had to adapt to the British way. Oh boy did I miss that American habit of putting ice in every drink. Especially on those very hot days. London water tastes foul.

Chicago, Illinois and north-eastern Wisconsin

I arrived in Chicago in the late afternoon about two weeks ago. I managed to figure out Chicago's transit system and caught the famous "EL" (short for elevated ?) train into town where the hostel was. Just down the street from the hostel was a blues club, so what better way to spend my first (and only) night in Chicago, than by enjoying live Chicago blues music. The band were really great and I stayed out till midnight (it was only 10pm on the west coast!). Even at midnight it was still warm outside.

20030807c Looking back at Chicago from Navy pierThe next day I met up with John and he showed me the sights of Chicago: Lake Michigan, Navy Pier, the Wrigley Building, the Water Pump and Tower (survivors of the great Chicago fire), and of course Sears Tower. Now anybody who knows me knows that I don't like heights. I don't even like going up the Sky Tower in downtown Auckland, so why would I want to go a hundred stories up into the air? But you know, when you're surrounded by really tall buildings it doesn't actually look that high. So I took a deep breath and got in the elevator, and pretended I was only going up to the 3rd floor.

And once we were up there it wasn't all that scary after all. The view was amazing. Imagine looking down on clouds (and not from an airplane). You could see for miles on all sides. But it still didn't seem that high up - you could still make out the details of the cars on the ground. But we spent a bit too long admiring the view, and then got to experience rush-hour Chicago style. Actually it wasn't too bad, but it did make it a long trip back to Appleton, Wisconsin.

20030808a Green Bay Packers storeWisconsin is actually a very nice place. Reminds me a lot more of NZ than Washington state does. Flat, wide open areas, farmland, and older suburbs with wooden houses on large(ish) sections surrounding the downtown shopping area. There isn't much to see in the way of sights. Drove past Lambeau field, the home of the Green Bay Packers. Visited a couple of railway yards (just out of curiousity, I'm not a foamer yet!), and although the scale is much bigger, a railyard is a railyard wherever you go.

So after a day sightseeing in Wisconsin it was back to the big city of Chicago and to the airport for my flight to London. Chicago is a great city. The city centre is flat and clean, and laid out in a grid so it's easy to find your way around. And despite the fact that 2 million people (I think) work there every day, it doesn't seem that crowded. I highly recommend a visit.

05 August 2003

Tacoma, Washington

Well I'm coming to the end of five fun filled days with the Hamilton family in Washington State. It's been one hectic ride so far. Have you seen the movie My Big Fat Greek Wedding? Well this is my big fat German American family (in law) - in order to be heard each family member has to speak louder than the next. And that's how *they* describe themselves.

I've probably spent the most time with Gayle, my 13 year old sister in law. She thinks I talk strange and that I'm really weird because I've never tried Sprite Remix or Graham Crackers or Lays. We went to the mall yesterday and she thinks it's strange that I've never heard of any of the stores there. Go figure. (see I'm even starting to talk like them now)

It is so hot over here. High cloud and temperatures in the mid 20's. Today the drought has finally broken. Apparently it didn't rain at all during July so everyone is happy about that. The kids have been in the pool most days and I even ventured in once.

20030805d FamilyI've been playing baseball in the backyard with 8 year old Ian, and "beach" volleyball. I tried to teach the kids bats down and rugby. I would try to teach them cricket but they only have a baseball bat. We've also been for a couple of long walks together. These kids eat lots of sugar and they have lots of energy.

Tomorrow I fly off to Chicago. The flights over from NZ went well. It only took 11 hours to get to LA, then I had a 3 hour stopover and then a 2 hour flight to Seattle. I managed to get a couple of hours sleep on the plane. DO NOT go see the movie Bulletproof Monk. It is really, really bad. In LA it was midday when I got there and so hot that I went and sat in a little park at the airport just soaking up the sun that I haven't seen in NZ for months. I'm already starting to get a bit of a suntan.

Hope you all are doing well.