Edinburgh, Round Two.

One of the delights of travel is constantly having enjoyable things on the horizon to look forward to, but this weekend gone was going to be extremely special because we would be staying in Edinburgh with a group of old friends from Melbourne. Not only that but we’d be hooking up, via complicated internet magic, with many of our friends in Melbourne for a reunion/trivia night.

From the left; me, Sarah, Joni, Leigh, Nikki and Luke. Van Failen in the background, of course.

Nicolette had organised a four bedroom apartment in the middle of the city for us all to stay in and so we arrived, by car, bus and plane and were very happy to see each other. Luke and I have been traveling since March and so, while we’ve been busy and on the move, it was lovely to be surrounded by people we knew and talk about familiar things and experiences. If we’d been homesick this event would’ve been just what a doctor would have ordered.

So, after a few drinks and some catching up we all got to bed at a reasonable time in order to be up at 9am to get everything ready. Our plans were somewhat amended by the hotel fire alarm going off at 8:40. At least it wasn’t 4am, I suppose. We all got dressed and I found my earplugs before going downstairs to see if there was an actual emergency. There didn’t seem to be – just a bunch of the teenage staff and cranky-looking guests standing around. The fire department showed up eventually, turned it all off and sorted it out, well in time for us to get the link happening and get comfy.

Crappy photos look better in black and white, right?

Our friends had gathered at a pub in Melbourne and set up a screen so we were visible to everyone. We couldn’t really see who was in the room unless they came up to the camera on the laptop but lots of people did come up to wave and say hello. Although we were a bit rushed at the beginning we sorted out how we were going to answer the questions and it all went surprisingly smoothly, for a first ever attempt at multi-hemisphere pub trivia. We were all very impressed at Anth’s efforts in organising and co-ordinating the whole event – thanks Anth! We had a great deal of fun and it certainly looked as though everyone at the other end was too – and of course it was great to see Jen and Kupp at their ends as well. Kupp even managed to help us with some of the answers thanks to Sledge holding up the ‘famous faces’ sheet.

After we disconnected we partied on into the evening, talking about all of our adventures and catching up on news from home. Luke and I went to bed at about 11pm, surprisingly exhausted considering all we’d done all day was sit around.

The next morning I was out of bed early and cleaned up the kitchen before taking orders from everyone for coffee and going to a nearby cafe. It’s important, when checking out of a hotel, to make sure everyone has energy ;-). We decamped to the flat Nikki and Leigh were minding for a friend – a one bedroom apartment that, while lovely, was barely big enough for 6 people. That was ok though, mostly people only had energy for lying around or napping. I did some op shopping in the afternoon then we made plans for the next few days. Joni was heading to a conference in Newcastle but the rest of us decided that, with wonderful weather on the radar, a road trip to Skye was in order, so the next morning we packed Van Failen and off we went!

 

 

Interim Post

We’ve been super busy for the last five days hanging out with friends and driving all over Scotland. We’ve got two nights of rest and relaxation (and more importantly, catching up on the blog) starting tomorrow so there’ll be a whole lot of new reading in about 24 hours. I can’t guarantee it’ll be funny, informative or insightful but I can promise pictures of castles. Everyone likes castles, right?

Overnight in Newcastle. Possibly my most boring post yet.

We’re sitting in a dark, slightly dank room in Newcastle tonight, but at 20 pounds for the privilege we’re not complaining. We’re on our way up to Edinburgh for a weekend of fun with some friends from Melbourne. Leigh and Nikki are living in Edinburgh this year (our friends who came down for the beer festival), Joni’s here for a conference, Sarah (of Follow the Open Road) is traveling and there’s Matt, who is English but lived at my place for a couple of years being my butler/gardener/cook and everything else. We’re converging in the north in order to hook up a skype connection or some such with our friends in Melbourne who’ll be gathering for a 10 year reunion.

Cambridge to Edinburgh is a fair drive  (about 7 or 8 hours) which is a distance I’ll avoid doing in one hit if humanly possible hence we are staying the night midway.

I feel like I’ve been neglecting the blog this past week, mainly through having nothing to write about. After a review of finances and the realisation that Africa is going to cost rather a lot (which I always knew, but my theory with money is if you don’t look at your bank balance it doesn’t change) and I have spent quite a bit lately. We’ve been holed up at Andrew’s since returning from Iceland which has saved us a bit (thanks Andrew!) while also giving me a place to escape from suffering hayfever. It’s the best weather we’ve had yet but if I go out for even 10 minutes my nose is running, my eyes itch and I’m congested all day. I’ve been taking double doses of antihistamines which makes being indoors bearable but going out… it’s just horrible. Today I bought a nasal spray, which is what I usually use at home.

Wait.

I’m imaging by now most people who aren’t parents of Luke or myself have stopped reading. Sorry about this. Truly, we’ve done so little in the last week that there really is nothing more to write about than my ill health (and, as I keep reminding Luke, I am nearly 40 and therefore extremely old and entitled to bore others with my physical ailments). Plus right now I can’t get the remote control to work for the tv in our room and I’ve read all the books on my kindle.

Speaking of which, I think my kindle is the best thing I bought for this trip. I’ve read an unholy amount of books this year. Workmates who read this will understand what I mean when I say that I’ve read 3 times as many as last year (we were all supposed to record how many books we read and I read maybe twice as many as anyone else, which made me seem super smart until you looked closely and realised most of them were about vampires or aliens). I just finished Felix de Palma’s ‘Map of Time‘, which unlike my usual fantasy/sci fi material is actually a prize winning novel that is totally mind bending. If you read it I urge you to get at least a quarter of the way in because that’s when it gets really interesting.

I’ve re-read nearly every Terry Pratchett book, most of the Lois McMaster Bujold, The Time Traveller’s Wife, The Casual Vacancy by JK Rowling (excellent, if you were wondering), a few autobiographies, histories of Mongolia (gory), Iceland (boring), Rome (interesting), nearly everything by Neil Gaimon, some Asimov and more. What I really want is a big space opera or fantasy series to get into but anyone who suggests Game of Thrones will get a slap. I tried. Too many horrible things happening to too many characters. I can feel your judgement from here. Shut up.

This is turning into the sort of long, rambly, go-nowhere post that I normally write in my regular ’empty the contents of my brain’ blog. I’ll get back to the topic of travel.

Oh yeah, money. So, I’m about halfway through the money I saved and we’re getting close to being halfway through out trip. The maths is working out ok I suppose, especially considering we lashed out pretty fiercely at some points re luxury hotels in Asia. However Asia is cheap and we’re not going back to Asia. On the bright side, most of our airfares are covered, our New York accommodation is paid for and it’ll be mostly hostels in Europe then flinging ourselves onto the mercy of friends and the elements (camping) when we get back to the UK.

We’ve been continuing to organise our finances thusly: Luke has a travel card that we both put equal amounts onto then spend on mutual things. We have 28 Degrees credit cards that we also use for mutual spending then tally up periodically and divide expenses. We use our other cards for spending on ourselves. It seems to be working pretty well, although I wouldn’t mind trying to budget more tightly when we’re in Europe and keep a closer eye on how much we’re spending daily. Less drinking and fancy restaurants might be in order.

However, as a last hurrah and semi farewell to England (even though we’ll be back for at least a few weeks in October) we’ve booked two nights at the extremely elegant Merewood House, which you may recall as the place where I stayed with my mother and would’ve probably moved into if they’d been a bit less observant. I swore I’d return on the flimsy pretence of showing the place to Luke when really all I wanted to do was sink deeply into the leather couches with my kindle and eat canapés til I was sick.

So no photos, a bit of whinging, lots of boring detail you’re not interested in…it could be like this the whole time but thankfully we went to Iceland. Go check out those photos if you haven’t already. I too about 2000 pictures in 9 days. That’s definitely a record for this trip. Go! Look!

 

 

London and Visa Applications.

Luke and I returned from Iceland with altered circadian rhythms, a craving for fresh food and somewhat lightened wallets.

We booked a cheap B&B in West Drayton, apparently home to the kind of people who enjoy spending a sunny Saturday afternoon with their shirts off, large stomachs on display, drinking pints outside a sticky looking pub by the side of a major highway, shouting at each other incomprehensibly. The B&B was a tad dodgy and the room was tiny but we were close to a train station so we could get into the city.
After an unexpectedly dark night’s sleep after the twilight of Iceland, we caught the train (remarking frequently, as I’m sure all Australians do, how amazing public transport is here) into the city. Our current mission was to acquire our Tanzanian visas.

So we navigated to Bond St, dropped off out passports and forms and then went back after 3 hours and they were ready to collect. Simple! All other embassies take note. If there was a TripAdvisor section for embassies Tanzania would get 5 stars from us.

While we waited I had lunch (Luke watched because he said he wasn’t hungry) at a place called ‘Pitt Cue‘, which I’d read about in one of the newspapers. Only about 30 seats and a very limited menu, they served American style bbq dishes. I had the ribs, which were possibly the best beef ribs I’ve yet had (not that there’s been much competition) and a really great potato and (bone) marrow mash. I highly recommend it if you’re in London and like meat. There’s no booking, you just show up about 15 minutes before opening and are seated elbow-to-elbow with strangers. The service was quick and friendly. The prices were high-ish but this is London, after all.

Served in a tin dish, it made up for in taste what it lacked in presentation. Which isn’t helped by me taking the phone in dim light with my phone.

I also spent a bit of the wait time window shopping around the area and found a shoe shop that many of my female friends would love. Insanely colourful, decorated heels, some reminded me of Carmen Miranda, others were like drag queens crossed with Mexican wrestlers.  The prices weren’t bad and I’m sorely tempted to go back and get a pair of the less insane ones.

I don’t know where I’d wear something like these, or what I’d wear them with but damnit, I’d find a way!

The next day we tried to book two more nights at our B&B so we could go in to the Rwandan embassy on Monday but they were all booked out, so we took it as a sign and decided to head back to Cambridge and grace Andrew with our presence. Lucky guy. First though, a trip back to Camden markets for a wander around in the sun. We ate a giant burrito between the two of us, had ice-cream made freshly in front of us using liquid nitrogen (this means there’s no ice crystals and I must say, it was exceptionally creamy and smooth) and I bought a couple of things.

A splodge of heaven.

After this, what with the weather being pretty much perfect, we agreed Hampstead Heath would be the ideal place to chill out. We were oh-so-wrong. The closer we got to the Heath the more my eyes itched until, once we got there, I could barely concentrate thanks to my sneezing and scratching. Curse you, hayfever! I took some tablets… actually I took a lot of tablets… and we headed back to Van Failen. Luke drove home and I semi-slept in the car then crashed out for several hours after Andrew told me I looked like a hedgehog. I’m still not entirely sure what he meant.

Super Jeep Tour, Iceland.

We only had one pre-organised activity of our Iceland trip – a day out with a driver in a large jeep, hopefully exploring glaciers, volcanos and with a two hour hike in the middle.

We met our driver, Magnus, and the other two passengers, Joan and Carl (about my parents’ age, from Germany) at a campsite not far from our hotel. We piled into the jeep and set off, Magnus warning us that cloud over the volcano could mean limited visibility but there were potential back up plans if we couldn’t do that.

The road we took very quickly went from dirt to boulders and the size of the jeep all of a sudden didn’t seem so excessive. We ploughed uphill and towards the ice sheet but as we tried to climb it became obvious that the rain falling on the snow had made the whole thing slushy and slippery and traction was almost impossible. Then the power steering gave out. Magnus got us out of the jeep while he turned it around and gave Luke and I little plastic paddle-things to play with – you sit on them and slide on your butt down the slope. I was a bit hesitant to give it a go but it was quite fun once you got moving.

Back in the jeep we headed downhill and back to the campsite to meet a mechanic. Magnus really had a hard time with the steering. No power steering on a large car is a pain, none on an enormous jeep over huge rocks seemed almost impossible.

We made it down ok though and Joan and I talked about their travels, our travels and what different countries were like.

While the mechanic worked on the car we walked to one of the waterfalls near the campsite. It fell down into a narrow chasm that was all green with moss and very beautiful. It’s funny how many times we’ve been waiting for something here and people have suggested ‘While you’re not doing anything why not go look at the waterfall just over there,’. It seems like there’s a waterfall behind every rock, almost all of which are more impressive that any I’ve seen in Australia.

So it was plan B. We drove to another campsite via a rocky valley cut across with lots of rivers. No bridges though, we ploughed across each river in proper Icelandic style, spraying water everywhere. Luke loved it.

From the campsite Joan and Carl were directed to the easy walking trail and Luke and I directed to go up the hill and see the view, we’d all meet Magnus at another campsite on the far side.

That tiny dot of red is where we’d walked up from. This photo in no way captures how amazing the view was, or the fact that the panorama extended nearly 360 degrees.

The walk up was steep but mostly ok. We stopped a fair few times and then again for a while at the top to admire the view, which cameras simply don’t do justice to. Just picture a ring of craggy, glacier-capped mountains, deep valleys, amazing rock formations… that’s pretty much it. The landscape in Iceland looks so raw – like it only just stopped moving yesterday. Which, we were about to find out at our next stop, was pretty much true.

Getting down from the mountain was not entirely enjoyable. I don’t like heights or slippery surfaces and the path was narrow, there was pretty much nothing in the way of railings and only a short set of stairs on one particularly steep bit. I think walking in Australia really spoils you because safety is always considered and there’s signs, proper steps and hand rails everywhere there’s an edge. Here there was just edge. At one point we thought the path ended in a cliff but no, if you get right down to the edge there’s some tiny stairs cut into the face of the hill… I actually fell once, sliding on some loose rocks. Fortunately I was already pretty much crouching to keep my centre of balance low. By the time we got to the bottom I was sweating with the adrenalin of it but hey, we got there and Luke only had to hold my hand nearly the whole way.

At the bottom there was a neat little man-made pool full of geothermally heated water. Magnus met us at the end of the path and we had several bowls of soup and bread while we told him to warn people next time that the path might not be for people who don’t like heights. I’m pretty sure he was thinking we were wimps, although he kindly didn’t say it. Still, it was a pretty epic view and I did feel somewhat amazed that I’d made it through such a challenge. A feeling only slightly deflated by the four-year-old who’d skipped down the path as we’d been going up. I swear, every time I’ve done some kind of testing physical challenge there’s been a small child somewhere along the route making me feel pathetic.

Next stop was a glacier that descended steeply into what looked like a huge coal mining pit. We drove down into a huge bowl-shaped crater that had been a lake until only a few years ago, when a mountain had blown a chunk of lava and rock into the air, which had landed in the lake, emptied it, and filled it with gravel and enormous chunks of ice. When the ice melted it left huge craters everywhere so the place was really moon-like.

Until three weeks ago there’d been a small lake to one side of the glacier, but since then something had destroyed one side of the lake and now there’s a river running through the canyon. As Magnus said, he loves his job because every time he visits places he never knows what he might find.

Luke and Magnus jumped across the river rocks and got right up to the glacier but Joan, Carl and I took photos from a distance and examined all the different kinds of rocks at our feet.

On the drive back to the first camp we quizzed Magnus on all things Icelandic – what do they do for fun, how did he get the job, how much money do people make, how do kids from remote places get to school. He was great with answering our questions and asked us some too. In our discussions it turned out that I was the only one onboard who didn’t realise that in Walmart in the US they give people motorised scooters to drive around the store. I know this is a bit of a tangent, but ..seriously? I couldn’t believe it. Luke reckons we can do a whole video on Walmart when we get to the US. We’ll see.

We thanked Magnus profusely when we said goodbye and farewelled Joan and Carl, who’d caught the ferry over and had three weeks to drive their own car around Iceland, lucky buggers. We returned to the hotel, debating whether to eat chips or biscuits for dinner.