Category Archives: Uncategorized

PBears marching band

Image

It is sort of weird isn’t it that you can wave goodbye to the White Cliffs of Dover and a few minutes later have to be singing

Allons enfants de la patrie,

Le jour de gloire est arriv

Contre nous de la tyrannie

L’tendard sanglant est lev

Entendez vous dans les campagnes,

Mugir ces froces soldats

Ils viennent jusque dans nos bras

Egorger nos fils, nos compagnes!

At 20000 feet, one minute the green fields of the mother country, the next the slightly browner fields of the French countryside. It takes about 8 hours to swim (if you are superhuman) the channel and what seems like a few minutes to fly over.

Our flight from the US was tiring. A bit too short to be easy. By the time you get up in the air it is only about four hours before they are trying to organise everyone for landing. Arrived into London at 9 and both felt really queasy. Not real sure what was happening over the Atlantic but boy did that plane bump around. A strong tail wind had us arrive about 45 minutes early. From the glitz of New York, to the staid but very cultured Smithsonians, and now the somewhat comforting sign of red buses, London cabs and young English lads standing outside ye olde English taverns with the obligatory pint of ale.

We decided that the tube was the easiest as had booked into a hotel in Covent Garden/Bloomsbury. I did think of Henrietta as we walked up High Holborn. My third great grandmother Henrietta Harriet Haywood was born on the 7 February 1826 and christened in St Marylebone Christ Church in London. On the 12th of June 1843 she was convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing, 10 cigar-cases, value 3s.; 3 tobacco-pipes, 1s.; 3 pipe-bowls, 9d.; 2 snuff-boxes, 8d.; 34 cigars, 2s. 6d.; 1 umbrella, 1s.; 3 ounces of snuff, 9d.; 1 cup, 3d.; 1 saucer, 3d.; 21 cards, 3d.; 3 cigar-tubes, 1s.; 2 snuff-boxes, 9d.; 1 walking-stick, 9d.; and 1 pound of tobacco, 4s. 6d. Now, one can only assume the black market existed at the time for tobacco products, otherwise my grandmother a few generations back had a large nicotine habit. If so, she had better lungs than me!  Although in London, one can always imagine why one would need to steal an umbrella. She was a servant of Solomon Phillips, a tobacconist who lived in a grand house in High Holborn and 170 years later her direct descendants are booking into a swish hotel a few doors up in one of the loveliest parts of London. We had arrived in London via the US from Bendigo and my grandmother ended up in Bendigo via the convict ship the Woodbridge and a stint in Van Dieman’s land.

We wandered a bit but then the awful waves of tiredness just wouldn’t let us stay standing any longer. A long sleep and then mugs of good English restorative tea and felt somewhat revived. I don’t know what they do with their tea but even good old builders tea seems to taste better in the English air or should I say damn freezing air. Oh my goodness, it was so damn cold. Lydia turned blue and I had to drink a good Chianti to warm up. Well the Brits might deal with the cold by way of keeping calm and carrying on but we followed the adage keep calm and hakuna matata. Simba was fantastic and the costumes and color of the performance spectacular against the gorgeous interior of the Lyceum. I have now switched from Dancing Queen to a bit of Elton and the Circle of Life. The Lyceum is currently home to the Lion King but is a stunning 1834 late baroque, rococo styled building in Wellington Street off the Strand. The ceiling is covered in wonderful flamboyant carvings and you feel like you should be dressed in ball gowns, gloves and diamonds rather that slightly travel weary trousers and walking shoes.

After a proper English breakfast and more builders’ tea, we peaked outside wrapped up like Michelin tyre men in coats, scarves, and numerous layers, but the English had turned on the weather for the colonials. Spectacular English sunshine.

Lizzie had lots of visitors when we called in and as the Queen’s Guard marched up the Mall I expected to see Paddington Bear following. I don’t know what it is but every time I see the Queen’s Guard with their bearskin hats I think of Paddington.

We visited Nelson and the lions. London was looking quite regal and restrained. Although maybe it just seemed so, as it was mid week, and the last time I was here there were Aussie flags draped all over the lions and our fellow countrymen were partying with Nelson. We caught the train to Oxford Street and a short whizz through Liberty. Caught up with Pip at the Kings Fund, a gorgeous building on Cavendish Square.

Back to the great hotel that we were staying at, with the most fantastic staff, and then, as always, the entertaining ride in the London cab. Today’s trivia was that there are about 65000 cabbies in London and it takes 3 to 5 years to get your licence. Our cabbie was a martial arts expert who liked doing the run from Heathrow so he could nick into the Marriott to use their gym between pick-ups. He lives near Cambridge and it often takes him longer to drive home than to drive to Belgium. He had been driving cabs for twelve years but still said he thought it was amazing he could drive into the tunnel and pop up in Belgium in 20 minutes. Well in the US you get educated in the subway, in the UK you just need to step into a London cab.

I am looking out the window at 35000 feet and can see huge peaks and snow fields that have probably only ever had Yeti wander over them. Sitting amongst the clouds I often expect to see Botticelli cherubs playing in the clouds, but as we fly over the Italian alps, I expect to see them with their golden bows and arrows chasing Yeti across the spectacularly snow capped peaks.

I do wonder whether this pilot trained with Goose and Maverick… One minute I can see the horizon, the next it feels like and looks like we are swinging between horizontal and vertical. I do hope my stomach settles down though as the voices around me remind me that our decisions about what to eat will be easy for the next few days … It is never too late, too early, too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry for gelato !!!

IMG_3663 IMG_3664 IMG_3666 IMG_3667

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Mao, Motown and the Mafia

Image

 

What is it about the African American gene that makes these dudes so damn cool and such great dancers? You could ride around on the New York subway all day and be totally entertained for a couple of dollars. Between 125th in Harlem and Wall Street we had the gorgeous young man in the cap with the coolest moves and the classiest gold piercings, with Motown blaring from his IPAD, and a lecture on American history and why slavery is still alive and propagated by non-Obama voting descendants of the Deep South.

Off the train, it was apprentice Jordan’s on the basketball courts of Harlem. Yep, the cool dance moves translate to the basketball courts and the gorgeous little tots, with their cornrows and smiling faces all holding on to rings connected by a rope quietly crossing the road like very well behaved ducklings.

Wandered down past the dance clubs of the 20s and I reckon I could hear jazz music and the swinging of skirts. We hopped back on the subway in the depths of Harlem and headed for the Statue of Liberty.

The 46 metre regal lady who has welcomed immigrants since 1886 was still closed as Hurricane Sandy had slightly battered her but we stood on the edge of the water and admired her from afar.

The brass bull, the 3200kg symbol of Wall Street was still standing, despite the state of the economy, and looked slightly perturbed with kids climbing all over him.

I had a moment of hmmm where are we … but then looked up and saw the sturdy face of Mao next to a mafia suited godfather type character and knew we were walking in the right direction. A stroll through Chinatown and Little Italy. I now know why the suited men from Pakistan are selling copy watch, copy handbags in Hong Kong cause all the Chinese are in New York ‘missie missie, copy watch, copy handbag’. I felt like I was in Tsim Sha Tsui.

The train back to Washington was again uneventful. Laura had given us the front door key so we let ourselves into the calm of the Embassy. Our trip to Old Town Alexandria, Virginia was easy on the train. Across the Potomac River, the 1749 Old Town is now filled with great shops and restaurants but there are still signs of the part that it played in the American Civil War.

What does one do just before they leave the US – shop of course. To Pentagon City for serious retail therapy.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized, US 2013 with Lydia

Peanut butter and chocolate milk shakes

Monday May 13

Image

Well it was Mother’s Day and it was damn good!

We are having a fantastic time in the Big Apple’s glorious sunshine. The hotel that we are staying in is fantastic. We are just below the Empire State Building on 35th and 6th in the Midtown, which is terrific for travel in either direction. The subway is just outside the door and really easy to navigate (although we did get stuck on an express train yesterday and ended up in the Bronx). The very large members of the NYPD had me slightly worried on the platform, but I remembered what Tom told me – people in NY are either wealthy or homeless … I think he may be right, with even the Bronx yuppified.

Lydia took some very cool photos in Times Square but I much prefer the quiet areas of The Villages. We caught the subway to Brooklyn for the obligatory walk across the Brooklyn Bridge. We did have a bit of rain that day but not enough to even get damp. We got off the train in Dumbo (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass). It is quite a fascinating historic waterfront area and we recognized a streetscape that we have seen in many movies. They were shooting the next Spiderman movie there that day but we didn’t offer to be extras. Not sure I could really see myself hanging upside down on the Manhattan Bridge.

Apparently, the cardboard box was invented there, but now it seems home to very beautiful things to put in cardboard boxes. Really lovely shops, especially some wonderful looking furniture and lighting ones.

We walked up to Brooklyn Heights and found a great place for breakfast. Fantastic organic café, Siggys, (we were preparing ourselves for the chocolate and peanut butter milkshakes), where we munched our way through beautiful omelets with fresh herbs and goat cheese. As we drank our smoothies, we felt incredibly pious with our oh so healthy choices (hmm can’t quite say that about yesterday). The walk across the Brooklyn Bridge was lovely with views of the Statue of Liberty in the distance.

Lydia hit the shops whilst my head hit the pillow for a nap. We did Macy’s sale – the store is only a few minutes walk away and millions of New Yorkers (probably temporary New Yorker tourists) were collecting armfuls of bargains. I think clothes here are at least half of what we pay at home and we did manage to support the US economy. We keep getting reminded that we need to shop as we walk past massive electronic signs, constantly updating, telling us the size of the US debt. There are so many numbers and they seem to keep going up. Looks like our spending is not making one speck of difference.

Well we danced to Mamma Mia on Broadway and wandered home along Broadway with Lydia shaking her head at her mother singing the Dancing Queen. There are so many colourful characters (and quite a few unwell ones – I have found that a bit upsetting – the number of obviously really mentally unwell young things on the streets) me singing ABBA at the top of my voice seems quite normal (although I keep getting the ‘oh mother’ from my much more refined daughter).

We had a lovely Mother’s Day. Went in search of the supposedly best pancakes in New York. Not sure that the Jewish grandmothers of years past made buttermilk pancakes smothered in maple syrup (if they didn’t they should have) but found the bakery amongst the interesting migrant tenements of the 1940s. On the Lower East Side, the Clinton Street Bakery constantly wins awards for NY city’s best brunch. The queues can be up to 3 hours but we went for a bit of a walk and didn’t have that long to wait. Now, I have eaten at the cheapest Michelin starred restaurant in the world, now I think I can claim to have eaten at the one with the highest calories – but boy was it worth it! The chocolate and peanut butter milkshake was totally yum and we really should have stopped there. But no, Lydia and I managed to do a fair job of polishing off buttermilk pancakes and brioche French toast with banana and pecans. The staff wore t-shirts that said on the back ‘made with love and butter’… We know, we enthusiastically poured our maple syrup butter over everything.

Now before you start to worry that we will come back like whales (highly likely), we did then march across Central Park for four hours. My goodness, that park is so huge. The New York sunshine was out and our stroll, (well waddle for the first two hours with pancakes and brioche swishing around inside us) was just lovely. We both have a bit of a tan (or it could be the maple syrup leaking out our pores).  Some young smooth New Yorker said to Lydia last night, ‘I think you have dropped something’. When she turned he said ‘my heart’. Well it made her smile.

Anyway we traipsed throughout Central Park and sat for a while and were totally entertained by young African American street performers. They are so talented … I love the confidence they exude and their acrobatic skills were fantastic.  They did remind us that they rule, with Obama still in the White House. A bit more shopping, and by that time we were starving (yes hard to believe), so off to Carmines for family sized portions of hearty lasagna. We could have taken ten of our friends and there still would have been enough.

A beautiful morning in NY. Off for a boat ride to Staten Island and then a mosey around Harlem and then I suppose we might by hungry! No Tom .. I think we will bypass the macaroni and cheese ones at Shopsin’s!

IMG_3594 IMG_3595 IMG_3596 IMG_3607 IMG_3609 IMG_3612 IMG_3616 IMG_3620 IMG_3625 IMG_3626 IMG_3635 IMG_3638 IMG_3639

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized, US 2013 with Lydia

Jack and the Giant

St Michael’s Mount

When darkness fell, Cormoran, a massive giant waded through the water to raid the surrounding farms for sheep and cattle to satisfy his huge appetite. Puts a new spin on takeaway!

I was driving along a quiet country road when something made me stop the car; a castle out at sea swirling in the mist. It was a ‘my goodness me – what is that moment’. I hit the ‘points of interest near me’ section of the trusty GPS and it said that St Michael’s Mount was 5km away – it seemed to be pointing in the right direction so drove toward the rock coming out of the sea with a sense that I was caught in some Lord of the Rings fantasy. Drive into the pretty, ancient market town and the castle on the rock was closer. I needed to catch a small boat to the island across the beautiful bay. Marazion goes back to the 1200s and is ringed by the stone chimneys of the Cornwall mines.  The myriad of Cornish churches, as in all small villages, but the surrounding fields the home of pagan stone circles. The Island off Marazion has the legend of a giant, slain by a young boy Jack. Today, the castle is the home of the St Aubyn family, complete with family photos with Charles and Camilla in the blue room. The sea bound castle has a walkway that has attracted pilgrims for many centuries to walk across water. The walkway was submerged with the tides when I visited but the boat ride with the dog at the helm was atmospheric. The climb over heart shaped cobblestones, past the massive stone heart of the giant was strenuous; a climb up, that again made me think of grocery deliveries.

Back to St Ives and a guided walk to hear the history of the fishing industry, the mines and Cornish pasties. The guide talked about the places the miners went to teach others their trade and Eaglehawk near Bendigo got a mention.

My night with the totally eccentric Shanty Baba made me once again running back to The Loft terrified that the ghosts would get me. Standing on the windy hills above the crashing waves in the pitch black at 11pm surrounded by gravestones was not for the faint hearted. Just imagine my reaction to the story of giant rats dragging bodies from coffins into underground tunnels that criss cross the graveyard or the man who betrayed the smugglers and was caught, wrapped as a mummy, had his eyes dug out and was dressed as a scare crow in a field for the ravens to feast on him. Yes the totally unique Shanty who is described as a ‘Storyteller, animator, toy theatre impresario, the UK’s only pseudo-surrealist morris dancer, James Joyce “skoalar”, performer and all round creative maverick’ also conducts a Victorian Miniature Toy Theatre  and spent time in India with a Yogi spiritual leader – Susan would have fallen in love!

Tonight I am off to Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor and am hoping that Sir John Falstaff will chase away thoughts of massive St Ives rats – although on second thoughts I still need to come down through the dark, shadowy, cobbled lanes of murderous deeds – Ohhhhh

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

In search of Camelot

Tintagel – the birthplace of Arthur

On either side the river lie
Long fields of barley and of rye,
That clothe the wold and meet the sky;
And thro’ the field the road runs by
To many-tower’d Camelot;
And up and down the people go,
Gazing where the lilies blow
Round an island there below,
The island of Shalott.

My fanciful imagination was ignited as I went in search of Arthurian legend. As I drove past wind farms overlooking fields of barley and rye I wondered what the knights would have made of the massive white turbines so prominent across the landscape.

The eerie, steep cliffs of Tintagel sure feel like the birthplace of a legend. Merlin’s cave, dark and foreboding beneath the Cornish cliffs; the climb high above the dark sea to the castle ruins.

There she weaves by night and day
A magic web with colours gay.
She has heard a whisper say,
A curse is on her if she stay
To look down to Camelot.
She knows not what the curse may be,
And so she weaveth steadily,
And little other care hath she,
The Lady of Shalott.

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Dragging my clotted cream body up the steep steps made me grateful for 21st century handrails. Even my wild imagination couldn’t extend to the thought of Knights clambering up the hills in full armour. Romantic images of Guinevere see her being led on a horse – I am sure though that she was far too sensible for that nonsense – two feet firmly planted was the order of the day.

It was fantastic. The dark, rolling clouds adding to the atmosphere of dark lords at play. The practical side of me fought with the romanticised images of knights and maidens. Oh god it would have been dark. How an hell do you get home safely after a night of frolicking in the fields? What if you needed to nick out for milk or felt like a cuppa in town? I am fairly sure you would have had to do Coles Click and Collect – no one in their right mind would deliver groceries up that hill.

The thought of the castle standing high above the cliffs, the spells of Merlin and the dark arts at play made me quite relieved to return to magical 4G networks, machines that spit out paper for trading and motorised chariots that stop at Tesco on the way home for gin and biccies !!

From knights to smugglers – the fiddler outside the 1312 Sloop Inn was fantastic .. but I dragged myself off the sea wall and ran as fast as I could in the dark and sombre cobbled street – the key in my door wouldn’t turn – was the ripper ever in Cornwall? – quick inside and bolt the door – so the ghosts don’t get me!

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Mrs de Winter and her neighbour Jenny

September 10 2012

The wharf St Ives

Well I am totally useless as far as the Brits are concerned. Wandering the narrow, uneven streets of the beautiful village of St Ives feels like being in a postcard at every turn. My few hundred year old cottage is just off the Digey in the centre of the old Fishermans Quarter. The cottages are solid, weather beaten stone, with the sloping street worn down by the steps of generations of fisherman and the dragging of fishing nets.

Watching retired Brits attempting to drive their brand new, four wheel drives down a street narrower than their cars is a highly entertaining tourist pursuit. We all stand and watch and breathe in as the shiny metal scrapes with unforgiving stone. Why is it that men with tweed hats think they can somehow bring Land Rovers down streets made for fishing rovers? The great chats that occur in the street and the collected breath holding as the car gets stuck, with the irritable English man attempting to reverse a stuck car, with his nagging wife reminding him that she told him so, creates a sense of friendship that traverses country of birth. We all give directions, reassurance and collectively groan as the car gets wedged tighter and tighter.

 

The lovely retired Brits hear the Aussie accent and express rushed excitement that I am not American; and then it starts. You might know my sister’s second cousin Tim who lives in Toowoomba, you might know my Uncle Henry’s first wife’s daughter in law Cheryl – hmm where does Cheryl live – in Sydney do you know her? – My neighbour Jenny moved to Australia – I know it is a big country but I thought you might know her – she lives just outside Perth – No I am so sorry – I live in Bendigo, two hours north of Melbourne – OH WELL you will definitely know … Percy, what is cousin Emma’s, boyfriends, sisters, father in law called? – oh that is right – it’s Cyril.  I am sure you know him – he lives in Melbourne.

The very lovely, broad English accent from the crowd – oh we do love Australians – we know all about Australians – Neighbours is our favourite telly show – we never miss it – and the whole crowd starts the discussion of Neighbours – The dumb founded look on the faces of my great English hosts when they realise British Border Control have let someone into their country who is so uncultured she has never seen Neighbours or Home and Away has me slinking off past the glorious Porthmeor studio and cellar.

The studio and cellar is a couple of minutes from The Loft (my cottage) and dates back to the 1800s. It is a wonderful old stone building, with the cellars the workspaces of pilchard fisherman and the lofts the studios of wonderful artists, drawn to the light of St Ives.

I love standing on the massive beach walls looking out to the Celtic sea. The walk around the Island Head makes one convinced they can see mermaids, pirate ships and smugglers– the salty air and walk to the medieval Church of St Nicholas that stands on the hill high above the steep cliffs; a fantastic viewpoint down on the village.

All that sea air sure creates an appetite – have developed a penchant for custard, rhubarb and clotted cream ice cream – I wander back along the Cornish cliffs imagining blinding rain, high winds and  shipwrecks – back to my oh so fitting reading ‘”Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again”

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized