Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Original Carrollwood and the new Yost Estate
Now the funny thing is about The Original Carrollwood is that if you grew up in north Tampa way back when. There was no need for the "the original" part of that moniker there was only Carrollwood. Then across Dale Mabry they built Carrollwood Village. That was where the 1970s nouveau riche lived. I was decidedly out in the regular 'burbs in Lake Mag. Anyway, apparantly The Original Carrollwood had to stake its claim as everything north of, say, Waters Avenue is now know as generic Carrollwood. So now its famous in a song and everything. Here's Piece of Paradise as sung on WMNF.
Note my Mum is a volunteer at WMNF so this is kind of a plug.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Sunday morning with papers and lace
sunday morning with papers and lace
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Am trying to learn to knit lace because I found this amazing book; Victorian Lace Today. This woman from Oxford did all this amazing research on old Victorian patterns for knitted lace. Its funny, the actual patterns are fascinating, but not something I would wear myself. They do seem like they would be at home draped over a large overstuffed sofa in a crowded room.
But the challenge is really something I am up for! Plus lace weight yarn is so wonderful and light. Once I have put that much effort into something I'm not sure I would actually want anyone to wear it...
Of course its also just a big excuse to sit by a window and knit in the soft winter light.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Green Acres is the place to be...
green acres
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
At the end of October several of us went to the wilds of Kent to celebrate a birthday. We stayed in a renovated oast house
and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves.On Sunday we took a long walk and I was delighted to pass by the Green Acres farm. Do you think they know they named it after an old American television program? As it happens, there wasn't another American on the weekend (three Australians and a Brit) so I didn't get to have a big giggle with anyone else - so giggle with me now, please.
snow on creampuff
snow on creampuff
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Here is day 2 of the big London snow. Actually, it has not been that bad but I did have to leave creampuff at home for the day. I'm not that confident of London drivers, icy roads and my ability to negotiate both of them. It would have been cold but I am now getting used to dressing for the weather.
I still say there is nothing better to put an exclamation point at the end of your day than riding home through the streets of London. If its been a particularly harrowing day; I drive across town and go up through Regent's Park. Its dark and green and in the summer lovely. IN the winter its cold and dark and lonely but its still a nice end.
Hope your last Saturday before Christmas is not too busy.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
I fogot to show a link to this fabulous article about planners in Croyden
It's supposed to snow tonight
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Left the office
Good wine and I met some wonderful new London people; perfect pre-christmas open house. Despite the fact that it was raining and I had to get a proposal out the door, I still went with our new marketing director and it was great.
Note to self: leave the office.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
gosh, I have let down the side and not blogged in an age
Makes me think is BA too big to fail? How many times have you heard that phrase "too big to fail" in the last year? So, I have decided to start thinking of myself as too big to fail.
I am toatlly going to cheat and retroactively post an entry about the ladies who knit!
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Ladies who knit
ladies who knit
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
had to post a pipcture of the newest knitting group. barely holds a candle to the pub group when I first got here.
Yesterday we had the first domestic meeting of the Ladies "who all work together at an un-named place" knitting session. There were loads of tea sandwiches, I even made cucumber ones. I broke out the tiered cake stand, and made massive amounts of coffee. Of course, we all ended up drinking gin and tonics and then wine as the afternoon wore on.
We did get some knitting done though as can be seen in the photo above. Sarah's working on a sampler scarf (which she promptly left in a cab two days later!). Kirsty is working on a small house - she's an architect so I guess that explains it. Rachael is just knitting, we think it may be a scarf but mostly she's just learning.
We also had a roaring fire so it was a wonderful Saturday well spent.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Financial Times visits Macon and Athens
Plus the mention Chad's Band Hank Vegas. The world is officially getting too small.
Saturday night fun
Yipes.
Friday, October 09, 2009
Unravel or rip!
unravel
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Oh, no, I finally admitted that I had messed up this sleeve for a UFO (unfinished object) that has been languishing in my basket for over a year. so on a sunny day in the summer I just ripped it out. Painful to see but I documented it. Here it is partially ripped
Rip and wind
unravel and wind
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
here its is all ripped out and partially balled/wound up. Note the lovely day outside and the dappled sunlight. sigh
All neatly re-wound
all wound
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Here is the sleeve all ripped and wound up neatly. Funny thing about knitting all the labour just disapears -- a bit like life I guess
Sunday, October 04, 2009
Shira's unfinished gloves
shira's gloves
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
One of the benefits of being home is you get to knit all the time. Two days in bed mean that I finished one fingerless glove and started the second. Really like this pattern, but it is the yarn which is so yummy. I bought it at Christmas last year in Florida but its a Welsh Collinette yummy yarn. I've lost the ball band but I think its called Jitterbug. It travelled from Wales to Florida and back to the UK. This summer it went on vacation with me to Egypt; last month it went to Tahoe and Chicago; and now its back in the UK.
The pattern is called Porphyria by Cissy Black. I got it off the web when I was home for Christmas. However; when I went to put a link to the pattern to give some props to the designer I find Porphiria is a disease as well as a glove pattern.
Knits up nice and springy, I think its meant to be a sock yarn. I'm sure Lawyer Shira will find a use for them when they make there way back to Chicago! Thanks for the hospitality, Shira and Jeremy!
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Bench in Westminster dedicated to some Atlantan
atl bench
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
I sat on this bench in Westminster and as I sat down I noticed that the bench had a plaque on it (most benches do in London). I turned around to see th estory and was shocked to see the bench was dedicated to the "honor (spelled wrong) of Mr. Boggs, beloved Director of Choral music at Westminster School, Atlanta Georgia."
How odd is that? Any of my Atlanta friends know of Mr. Boggs - sadly it looks as if he passed in 1992, holy cow he was born in 1969 - he was super young.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Sarah's new front door (hopefully)
Sarah's new front door (hopefully)
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Last week, I went to south (pronounced "sowf" and north London is pronounced "norf") London to see my friend Sarah's (hopefully) new home. I say hopefully because buying a place to live in the UK is a long and onerous process. Found this place ages ago, did all her homework, made, offer, accepted, back and forthing now for MONTHS. I do not have her patience. Anyway, its super cute with a nice back garden we went there to speak with builders ---- so she may be getting close to possessing it!!!
Anyway, here she is at the front door saying, "I can't belive you are going to take another picture." But isn't it fun to have something almost yours. I remember both places I bought and how it felt to know that all those changes I made were mine. Hmmmm. maybe its time to settle down again and buy something.
or I could always just live vicariously...
Sarah in her soon to be dining room
Sarah in her soon to be dining room
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
more of Sarah's home buying adventures. Funny thing was once I got home and looked at the pictures there were none of her house just her texting builders and standing in doorways - oh well, the floor boards look nice and that will soon be here living room.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
On a roll
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Sunny Day in "Sowf" London
I have to ration bacon butties... They are the best thing EVER. No thing in the US comes close to a UK bacon butty. What is a bacon butty, you ask? Its an amazing concoction of bacon (not American bacon but British bacon which is kind of like Canadian bacon but somehow better) in bread with "tomato sauce" AKA ketchup. That's it, but its perfect and on a sunny London Saturday, before the crowds make the market unbearable, in the shadow of Southwalk Cathedral, with a Monmouth coffee accompaniment; a bacon butty/sarnie/sandwich is the best thing ever.
Monday, August 17, 2009
creampuff parked
creampuff parked
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
I finally bought a Vespa. I've only been talking about it for about a zillion years. Isn't she a beauty? She's a cream coloured, 1997 ET4 125 cc Vespa. She's had six previous owners and she's only done 12000 miles. There are bits of her which are held on with zip ties (! I love that) but she's still elegant and probably not going to be the first one stolen when it comes to choosing a bike to steal.
I've been scootering to work for 2 weeks now and I'm having trouble remembering what its like to take the bus or the tube. I rush out of work at 6 pm because I cannot wait to ride her home. Last Thursday I left work and just drove around Regent's Park for no apparent reason, other than I could.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
summer Sunday afternoon
summer Sunday afternoon
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
I had another set of visitors on Saturday afternoon. We had a lovely couple of hours drinking Pimms in the back garden, strolling around Hampstead and then having dinner at XO in Belsize Village.
It was great to see Bob, Virg, Ru and Ollie and catch up on all the SF gossip. They brought me some lovely sun flowers which made a beautiful display the following evening on a late Sunday afternoon.
Friday, August 14, 2009
do i need reading glasses?
do i need reading glasses?
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
This weekend someone asked me if I had reading glasses, yet. The answer is yes and here's a picture of them. However, I don't really need them to read yet. I've been expecting to need them since I turned 40 (that's seven years now).
A whole slew of folks told me its all downhill post 40; but I'm still hanging in there on the presbyopia front.
In anticipation, I bought a pair of reading glasses from Boots and even out them on a chain so I can be a librarian. It struck me as odd that I bought them before I needed them, so I took a picture of them and here they are.
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Guerrilla handman
Guerilla handman
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Dylan (my ancient orange tabby) has been breaking out of the back garden and wandering the neighborhood. All week Bob and Jen had to battle to keep him in. Bob, being the resourceful type, took some wood out of the scary back garden shed and plugged up as many escape routes as we could find.
Unfortunately, nothing stops Dylan, just because he's at least 19, he will not let a little guerrilla handiman action keep him from his appointed rounds with the local news agent.
I'm looking into a harness and leash. If I find one that fits I'll take a picture of that. In the meantime enjoy Bob's antics.
Saturday, August 08, 2009
Bob and Jen: Pub a day no. 675
Bob and Jen: Pub a day no. 675
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
On Saturday we set out to enjoy a stroll around the east end and ended up in a pub, as you do. I managed to scam the only empty table and sent the intrepid pair to secure our drinks.
Must have been their 800th Guinness. I had a lovely fruity Belgian beer just right to recover from an afternoon of strolling and shopping off of Brick Lane. Best section of shops are on Cheshire Street near : Labour and Wait is a favourite; but Mimi rocks, too.
Friday, August 07, 2009
Did we mention Bob is a photographer?
did we mention Bob is a photographer?
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Jen and Sian take another picture. Goodness, I need to brush my hair.
Bob = photographer?
Did we mention - photographer?
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
EVERYTHING was documented! Jen is a patient soul - by the way you can check out here pics of theire trip on her flickr site here.
One of my tube stations - its hot on northern line in summer
One of my tube stations - its hot on northern line in summer
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
August on the tube with Bob and Jen. Its hot and Bob takes pictures of everything. Here's me melting on the Northern line at my tube stop. note Jen's hand in the left foreground.
Thursday, August 06, 2009
Bob enjoys the English seaside
summer beach trip to Brighton
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
My friends Bob and Jen visited me in early August on the way back from a two month jaunt through Europe. We spent a delightful week in London and did a small side trip to Brighton. The day was a complete English seaside treat: it was grey, then it rained, the beach was a pebble beach, it was slightly cold and we had fish and chips. The only think I didn't make them do was change underneath a towel or sit beside one of those weird stripey beach wind blockers they have at the beach in the UK.
As you can see Bob was really enjoying himself.
Sunday, August 02, 2009
Sign in Shoreditch
sign in Shoreditch
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
really not to much to say about this. It is what it is, a lovely message about our current economic times. I liked the Shoreditch neighborhood, where this sign was located.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Tough life day 5
Tough life day 5
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Friday day
Really getting into the pool, beach scene now. I have my favourite chair, got the dance of the umbrella down so I can arrange to be in the shade all day. I am even on short sentence terms with the couple next to be on the chairs. Even got all resort-y and ordered a large bottle of water on ice delivered to my chair. It occurs to me that the biggest expense I will have occrued here is my water bill which will be massive. Anyway back to the lounger. Today I finished book three; magazine seven and even knocked off a few podcasts. Then in an act of desparation, I broke out the baby sweater I am trying to finish for a friend who had a baby in March. If I don't finish it soon the sweater will fit her teddy bear but not her. I could not get the curve right on the collar so I just kept ripping back then finally (EUREKA) it hit me how to do it and then it was smooth sailing until I ran out of yarn (drats!) back to books and magazines and laps in the pool.
Still no blackberry connection, in fact it now says "SOS" where the bars should be. I think that means that I will be able to make an emergency call not that I am in an emergency- will need to breakdown on hook up to internet at some point. but still operating under the it will go on without me assumption, as much as I hope it won't. Why is that?
Friday night
Still managed to have not burned myself to a crisp by the end of day 5. You really have to work to keep this level of pallor! Big Friday night here in the resort, I enjoyed the sea front again and had a glass of wine with dinner. I really never, never want to see another buffet when I'm done here.
Thursday afternoon
Met an American couple and their young son today. They are living in Cairo and come down to Sharm on weekend to get out of the city. It was nice chatting with them both and watching their 4-year old son splash around. I realised that other than waiters and the concierge I hadn't had a long conversation since lunch on Tuesday, oddly for someone as chatty as I am I really didn't miss the conversation. I suppose I might be finally relaxing. Now the days are going by too fast; when, on Monday, I was feeling a bit trapped. Like most things, getting to the halfway part takes some time and then it zips by on the downside.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Tough life day 4
Tough life day 4
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Wednesday night
OK, I am officially tired of eating alone. The maitre d' lady now says, "Only one?" in a perky voice now. Yes, I answer, no luck yet finding a dinner partner. After my fifth meal eating alone--I mercifully had lunch with two Mancunians yesterday--I have discovered all sorts of interesting things. I think it would be worse to be eating in one of those painful couples who don't seem to have anything to say to each other. It just looks so bleak. Eating by yourself can be kind of fun. A) you get to eat what ever you want, b) you always get the smarmiest waiters and c) you can read a book and it's not rude.
So I'm over the eating alone thing but I may not be able to take another buffet. I am starting to appreciate that the tactic for a buffet is to avoid all meat and go for salads as they don't really go stiff on you as they sit out. Soups are also good. Fruit salad is another winner. Let me tell you in Egypt the coffee is good so I recommend that.
Tonight after dinner I went for a walk to the beach — well really the ocean front. It's not so much a beach as a rocky outcropping. Still very hot, had a nice little sit down on a racking chair perched above the sea. A bit like sitting in a hairdryer, very dry hot wind rushing around you but with the sounds of the waves lapping at the shore. Didn't smell like the sea, no screaming seagulls, no strange sea life on the shore. Sort of like a big pool really. I think I may need to arrange for a snorkel to get up closer to the actual water.
Ack, no connectivity on the blackberry do I worry or not? I decide that the world will go on without me.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Tough life day 3
tough life day 3
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Tuesday afternoon
OK spent the full day out today from about 11 - 5 by the pool. I was so covered up in sunscreen that I barely knocked the blue off my pale legs. Good thing. My face is getting a nice glow. Its hotter than hell out there, if you are in the sun. I can't decide if its this hot in Florida. I'm not really the resort type and never went to one in Florida so I'm comparing apples to oranges. It certainly drier here than Florida, I keep thinking of Yost saying that in Tampa, "It's Africa hot" this year. So now technically I am in Africa so I should be able to tell. I'm told the weather forecast for tomorrow every night- for the last 3 nights it's been listed as high of 39C and low of 29C with the ocean temp of 28.2C on Tuesday and 28.5C on Wednesday (suspiciously accurate those sea measurements). Now if I could just get to the internet I could tell you what that was in F - which is the only way I really know how to compare.
Checked my blackberry today and had a few text messages with friends around the world. Had felt slightly guilty that I hadn't checked before but there is no reception in my room, only by the pool. Strange. I tell everyone I will check back in on Thursday.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Day Two: the good life?
Today I walk around the resort. Get my bearings and check out multiple pools. Lots of helpful folks giving you towels and saying "my pleasure." Sort of worried about how I am going to spend six days in this place without going mad. Guess I'm glad I brought all these books and magazines.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Travels with other people
Sunday
Funny thing about airports is that I usually encounter them as a professional. By that I mean, I am in a business suit and getting ready to go somewhere for work. When I travel for holidays, it always feels weird -- especially after the last five years in which I have done some serious planing about. So today I am headed to Egypt for a package holiday. This means that I am at the airport on a Sunday afternoon, getting onto a flight from Gatwick South Terminal; seems to be package tour hell. I am surrounded by families in all states of happiness and misery. Children crying, laughing, screaming, squatting by huge piles of luggage concentrating on a video game, staring blankly into space while the MP3 pounds in their ears. How you parents do this is beyond me as cute as children are they grow up into surely teens who seem like they are walking around with a huge cloud hanging over their head. I'll have to ask Mum and Dada if we three were like that, if so let me just thank them now because I would have been tempted to abandon myself (if I had behaved that way. Luckily I don's remember it.)
So we finally get called to the plane. I am flying with a company called Viking Air; never heard of it. I won't bore you with the check in details, but lets just say it wasn't BA standards — and they aren't that high. It involved several desks, more money and three attempts. I felt annoyed and I hope those behind me where going to be patient. The family in front of me had about 15 members, I cannot imagine travelling like that.
Anyway, once on the plane we take off and it turns out it's a Canadian flagged plane so all announcements must be in English and French; which was kind of annoying the fact that we are headed to Egypt from London meant Arabic might have been a better second language choice.
The other interesting thing about flying a charter flight is the passenger participation. First one baby starts to cry and everyone cranes their necks to see, then after about five minutes baby 1 starts to calm down and baby 2 starts up and soon they are duelling wails going on with full other-passenger harumphing as back up. We finally start taxiing, passengers then burst out with an excited clap — "yay! We are underway!" When we take off there is a large exhalation of collected breath; then as we bank there is a "whooo" noise from most passengers. All I can think is that this is going to be a long long flight if there's going to be a passenger soundtrack. Basically it settles down for the 4 hour flight; except for the mandatory applause when the pilot sets the plane down with a "Welcome to Africa" notification' which causes a ripple of consternation through the e passengers — "I thought we were going to Egypt."
I get to the Sharm el-Sheikh airport at about 10:30, I'm not leaving the resort so I don't need a visa. I just need to pick up my bag fill out a landing form, fill out another form in case we all come down with swine flu. Then try and find my ride.
Finding my ride is a bit trickier than I had expected. Eventually a man tells me to go to the white Range Rover. I have flashes of white slavery and then look around me. If you were going to recruit for a brothel you wouldn't pick me out; you would pick out one of the 20 year olds who are all wearing next to nothing. So I climb in the White Range Rover and set off.
It strikes me as I am driven through the blasting hot night that many of the places I've been in the past couple of years were all designed by the same folks. They all have HUGE roads — well over the required capacity. They tend to be divided highways (dual carriage ways for my Brit readers) with U-turns only available every so often. Barely any sidewalks (pavements) and no shade if you were so foolish as to walk. So clearly all these places were planned by traffic engineers who created them so that folks could drive. I was weirdly reminded of the roman roads in Britain which are dead straight. I have seen the following roads similar - Abu Dhabi and Dubai (dead straight massive and completely full); Bucharest and Tripoli (not as well maintained and clearly designed by the same guys who did Moscow, Warsaw and parts of the Czech Republic). For comparison I've also driven or been driven in Florida, California, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, London, Edinburgh, Cardiff, York, Bristol, the Yorkshire Dales, Devon, Cornwall, Penzance and other bits of the South west of England. Lots of different roads. The little ones are best.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Summertime and the living is easy
What a year it has been. I'm still finding it hard to believe that I had my gallbladder out in March, my parents came to help me recover through Easter and now its already July. If I didn't have the scars to prove that I had someone digging around in my gut, I wouldn't believe it.
Workwise it has been a tough year, economies tanking, clients not wanting to pay or taking long to pay, there just not being a lot of work to go around. Here in the UK, the design field has been hit really hard in this downturn. We have been luckier than most but its grim out there. I remember in Atlanta in 1991 the rumour was that 50% of architects were out of work at at the height of that recession. Here the statistics are equally grim - with massive increases of 861% for architects signing up as unemployed! Probably doesn't help that last year may have been the most frenzied year I had ever seen in the fight for urban designers and architects. Planning also continues to be slow and the Landscape Institute (body for LAs here in UK) is having to reorganise itself.
Outside the industry things are pretty tough. Unemployment in UK is reaching above 2.5 million. I hear from friends in the States that things are also down there - I think we are all just worrying about another shoe dropping or are we headed up, out the other side?
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
You gotta love cricket
CIMG1112
Originally uploaded by sillewellyn.
Sunny Green, Cava, old, new, traditional, contemporary...beautiful
Saturday, May 09, 2009
Nice Day for it
Anyway, LLG's sweater will not be finished because I cannot get the arms right they are too short and flare our to quickly from the wrist. they look silly, so I'll rip them out and start again on both sleeves. Its a good day for it because its supposed to rain.
Monday, May 04, 2009
May Bank Holiday
Yay!
Sunday, May 03, 2009
Sunday
Had a visitor this week, Dr. Hand. She was in town to attend a hand surgeon's meeting. I think she enjoyed her London stay, especiallyas she got to visit the Royal College of Surgeons Museum. Oddly I had been there last year when another friend visited - she was not a surgeon just some one who liked odd Museums. There are lots of those in London.
Anyway, Dr. Hand rolled out this morning around 9:30 and Ben and Michelle should arrive this afternoon. Ben is celebrating his 50th Birthday with a surprise visit to Oxford, where his Dad did a sabbatical in the 1970s. Apparently May Day (his birthday) is celebrated quite lavishly in Oxford. So after five days in Oxfordshire, they are headed to Hampstead for a day before their return flight to ATL.
In other news I now have Skype - so all readers should get skype and lets get in touch.
Friday, May 01, 2009
bad bad bad week
Will spend the next three days over the May Bank holiday weekend working on an attitude adjustment.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
day two back at work
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Rambling
So parents came three days after my gall bladder was removed. A very fun time was had by all and if the nifty device I bought to down load pictures off my camera had worked I would be illustrating this post - but no I am technologically challenged again.
However, I did get some great help from the 'rents while they were in situ chez Sian. French doors got draught excluded, bathroom fans got reconnected, my new printer was installed and many a gin and tonic was quaffed. In fact, I now find that I have NO MORE GIN. Dad left after a week and Mom stayed on for another week plus; that last night she was here we were reduced to vodka tonics due to lack of gin. Sad but true; I forgot how much I liked vodka tonics.
We also got to do some serious tourist stuff (in between my naps! seriously who knew that surgery knocked you on your a** so badly) we walked through Regents Park up to view the city from Primrose Hill; went to the V+A to see silver and fashion; checked out the new Henry the VIII installation at the Tower of London; walked through Hampstead Heath to Parliament Hill (again for the view); ate and drank at the Holly Bush pub (another view); bought expensive chocolate and drank flights of wine at Fortnum + Mason. Really enjoyed that last week off.
Speaking of Fortnum and Mason - my peeps in Atlanta sent me a lovely basket of F+M goodies. Really great get well gift - lovely cheeses, pork pies, beer, wine, mustard and more. We ate from that for more than a few meals - thanks, Atlanta friends!
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Loo of the Year
Friday, March 20, 2009
Very delayed
This winter was weird, I think (despite my endless complaining) I got used to the dark dank days of winter in the UK. I did have a good trip to SF in February and of course it was sunny and lovely as was the trip to Florida in January. After writing all that I realised that I can't really complain as I spent at least three weeks AWAY from London and the winter weather.
Meanwhile I had some odder issues, which have now been diagnosed as gall stones. After some exciting moments involving the Accident and Emergency room at the Royal Free, I find I need to have the gall bladder removed. All of which means that I will have loads of time over the next couple of weeks to post and catch up with everyone.
So sorry for the long delay and I hope to be a posting fiend in recovery.
Tuesday, February 03, 2009
alternative transport
Lots of glorious pictures on London in the snow but I liked this one from a real cyclist. and not just because he was blogging about our Waterloo Competition entry. Lots of friends here in London cycle as their primary mode of transportation. Its truly amazing to watch them suit up and go out on cold, rainy, and/or dark mornings or evenings and race through the traffic. I'm slightly scared to cross the roads and thy bravely wizz on. Oh well at least this one bike was still for the day.
sian
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Epiphany in Tarpon Springs
This photo is the moment when one of the divers retrieves the cross from the water were the priest has tossed it. You can read all about the celebration in the attached link. It was a great day for it, much better than the cold day it could have been. As you can see it was a gloriously sunny day.
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
Is it just me or are there a lot of guns here?
The Epiphany Celebration starts with a parade from the church to the bayou. The parade was bit bit haphazard; at one point we heard a guy on the phone to the color guard asking them, "why didn't you wait? You left the rest of the parade behind!"
The thing that I noticed was that every police, sheriff and all other security people were armed to the teeth. Only took two years in London for me to think its odd for parade marshals to be packing serious heat.