Wednesday, May 31, 2006

UK Trip - First (brief) installment

We’re home.  I would so much rather be in Scotland!  What an amazing place Scotland is.  I am sure heaven will be like Scotland and every meal will be sticky toffee pudding.  

So, you’re all waiting to hear all about our trip, and I’m anxious to tell you all about it, but it will have to come in bits.  Today is my daughter’s 30th birthday and I am making dinner for her.  It’s 4 pm, they’re coming at 6, and I’ve yet to go get what I’m cooking.  So, today’s post will be limited to ten things I learned about the United Kingdom.

  1. Brits are very thrifty.  By that I do not mean cheap.  I mean they are very conscientious about not wasting stuff – water, power, food, etc.  It made me realize how wasteful we Americans are.  No wonder we are thought of so poorly.  In both England and Scotland, every outlet has an on/off switch, not just lights.  All the appliances are very energy efficient.  Toilets use very little water to flush.  In England, you had two buttons, a low water and higher water flush, depending on the need.  The showers were very water and energy efficient.  The cars are TINY and very fuel efficient.  Even the Ford Mondeo Estate Wagon we had in Scotland, big by comparison to most cars, got almost 40 MPG.  At $8 per gallon for gas, that was really important.

  2. Scots are the nicest people in the world.  Truly!

  3. Scotland is the most beautiful place on earth.  Even the cities are beautiful.  The western highlands, Glen Coe, Isle of Skye, the Great Glen…  if you’ve never been, you need to go before you die.  If you have been, you know what I mean.  Around every bend in the road is breathtaking scenery unlike any I’ve ever seen before.  Words cannot do Scotland justice.  Photos barely capture the beauty.

  4. The Brits are very polite.  Even the road signs are polite.  At the end of a stretch of road construction, the signs say “we are sorry for any delay”.  When you leave a village, a sign says “thank you for driving safely”.  The people are just as polite as their signs.

  5. The central part of Scotland is so green I can’t imagine Ireland being greener, but those who have been there say it is.  Hard to believe.

  6. The roads are unbelievably narrow.  The natives drive these narrow, winding roads at breakneck speeds, and tailgate with a passion, but not in an angry, hostile way like Americans.  Their tailgating was more a result of them knowing where they want to go while being stuck behind some stupid Americans who can barely drive on the left side of street from the right side of the car.  By the end of the week, we were driving at a pretty brisk pace ourselves and the roads didn’t seem quite as narrow (they are, though).  

  7. Scotland is exactly how I thought it would be – small villages with stone buildings clustered around a small town center and lots of stone farmhouses with stone fences surrounding fields of sheep – while England was much more populated and towns were closer together and not as quaint as I thought it would be.

  8. I think there are more sheep in Scotland than humans.

  9. In Scotland, the weather truly does change about every 15 minutes.  

  10. Everything is really expensive.  With the pound worth nearly two dollars, things that seemed reasonable in price – a burger and beer for 5 GBP, for example – looked a bit different once the math was done.  But it was worth every penny!

  11. The food was great.  I think British food has gotten a bad rap.  We ate really well.  

So, that’s the first little post.  We loved Scotland.  We want to go back soon.  We left our hearts there.  There is so much we didn’t get to see – the northern highlands, Angus and Dundee, the Borders, the area around Oban, and Glasgow – that we want to go back and see the rest of the country.  The resort in which we stayed was stunning.  The accommodations were fabulous – clean, spacious, beautiful.  JK Rowling lives just 5 miles away outside Aberfeldy.  

I will post photos on my photobucket sometime tomorrow.  I’ll write more about our adventures in detail beginning tomorrow.  Suffice it to say, it truly was the trip of a lifetime and we are so glad we went!  Charlie, you live in an amazing place!  And I thought we had it good here in North Idaho!  

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Hail Britannia!

Departure - T-minus 73 hours - until we head for Spokane. We don't fly out until 1:15 p.m. but by 8 a.m. Saturday we will leave home. Anything forgotten, well, it will be too late. Not a list maker, I'm making them like mad. I'm so certain we'll forget something important and land in a foreign land without some vital piece of apparel or information, that I'm writing down every thought that enters my head. It's making me crazy. Some who know me would challenge that statement on the grounds I'm already crazy.

So, yesterday I stressed all day over whether or not we should buy a rail pass. It would cost us about $778. It would allow us unlimited train travel over 8 consecutive days. We would begin with our trip from Edinburgh to Burton-upon-Trent on the 20th, which means our last day of unlimited travel would be the 27th. We'll be heading to London for two days on the 27th, so all London underground and bus-hopping would not be included. Nor would the train to Gatwick. When I check for fares for the ride from Scotland to England, the only thing available is going to cost us almost $270. With a pass, it will still cost us $125. I'm so confused. While we're in England, we plan to take day trips from the resort at which we're staying to Warwick Castle, Oxford, Nottingham, Stonehenge, and who knows where else. Can we get to these places easily via train or bus? What will it cost each day without a pass? I have no clue. I can't seem to find that information either. Some people who have been to the UK tell me that it's cheap to just buy a ticket each day, no pass needed. Some say a pass will be very economical. I'm thinking a pass would be great if we were heading out from a different town each day, making our way around England, but we're going to be returning to our resort each night, and there isn't a train station nearby. I think we're going to have to walk or take cabs to the nearest public transport, and I'm not really sure how far away that is. Anyway, back to my dilemma. After much (and I'm talking hours and hours) research and testing different scenarios, I finally decided to buy tickets from Edinburgh to Birmingham, which I found for only 30 GBP each. From Birmingham it's less than 30 miles to our resort. We can take another train to Lichfield, which is only 5 miles or so from the resort, or a bus, or rent a car. We just have to decide what to do. So, that's our dilemma. Do we rent a car? Will that allow us to visit all the places we want to visit more easily than taking public transport? But then we have to deal with traffic, parking, the price of gas, and driving on the wrong side of the road with a manual transmission on the wrong side of the driver. And which will be most cost effective? We're not rich. I don't want to spend the majority of our vacation funds on transportation. I was hoping to eat once in a while. So.... any thoughts, any insights, any help.... greatly appreciated. Just make it fast... T-minus 72.5 hours.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Bloomsday Results - and some drama

It’s over.  The 30th running of Bloomsday is history.  Today is the Monday after Bloomsday, and once again, I finished the course in less than two hours – my goal for this year.  Last year I said I was going to train for this year’s run and finish closer to 90 minutes.  That was not to be.  I’m in worse shape this year than I was last year, and yet I finished in pretty much the same time.  I can’t complain about that.  I guess it also goes to show (me, you?) that I can push myself when I want to, and that I’m probably not in as bad shape as I think I am.  I ran (yes, I actually did run some of it) with my daughter and her friend.  They are 29 and 26.  I think my daughter could have finished 5 or 10 minutes ahead of me, but she wanted to have fun, and that meant sticking with her old mom. What a sweetheart!  One thing did slow us down – my daughter’s friend had to use the bathroom.  She had done so just before the race started, but here she was, just about 2 miles into the race, and she had to go again – bad.  So, we had to stop and wait for her to stand in a long line to go pee.  That added almost 4 minutes to our time.  So, official time of 1:50, actual time, about 1:46, which is comparable to last year’s time.

A big part of running Bloomsday is, of course, getting the t-shirt.  The color and design are a closely guarded secret.  Part of the fun for us slowpokes is looking to catch a glimpse of the shirt on someone who has finished well ahead of you.  That usually happens around mile 6.  Sure enough, as we hit the 6 mile marker, I spied someone who was obviously a participant in what looked to be an ugly pumpkin colored shirt.  I told the girls “the shirt is orange”.  They didn’t believe me.  Around the next corner there were three or four finishers wearing their shirts standing along the side of the road.  Yep, it was an ugly rusty orange.  Actually, kind of the color of pumpkin pie.  And the design on the front is ugly.  This is the 30th Bloomsday.  You’d think it’d be splashed all over the front of the shirt.  It’s in tiny print at the bottom of this ugly tall skinny rectangle with an abstract rendition of a lilac bush and a runner in it.  Ugliest shirt ever, in my opinion.  But I’ll be wearing it, like a badge of honor, to work today, as will most everyone who ran yesterday. It’s tradition.

Though rain was forecast, and though it was raining on the trip over from Sandpoint to Spokane, and even in the eastern part of Spokane, it did not rain during the race.  It sprinkled lightly a couple of times, but not enough to make a bit of a difference.  As it turned out, the weather was perfect for running.  As soon as we finished, we walked straight to the Olive Garden in downtown Spokane, as is our tradition.  There was no line, nothing.  We got a table right away and sat our weary bodies down.  I was not the least bit hungry, so I had soup and salad only.  The girls had big meals – stuffed chicken marsala for my daughter and Portobello ravioli for her friend.  They were stuffed.  I felt perfect.  Getting up to leave was tough though.  The muscles had stiffened and it was all I could do to get the appropriate parts to move freely.  On the way home, the girls decided we should stop at Dairy Queen for a Blizzard – another tradition.  This time I let them go in without me.  I had no desire for a Blizzard.  If I was going to run off several hundred calories, I was not going to eat them back on immediately afterward.  Both of them got about halfway through their Blizzards and regretted not having just shared one between them.  It rained like crazy on the way home.  Never did rain in downtown Spokane.  I slept like a rock last night and awoke not nearly as sore as I thought I’d be.  Next year, I do have to get in better shape before the race and really try to do it in closer to 90 minutes.  

Now, for a little intrigue and mystery.  As we were walking along the Centennial Trail, (a path along the Spokane River that actually runs all the way into Coeur d’Alene from downtown Spokane) heading to the convention center to pick up our race numbers and the nifty little RFID chip that we were to strap to our ankles and which would give us each our own, accurate finishing time (new to the race this year), we saw a cell phone in the ivy in a landscape border that separated the Marriot Courtyard hotel from the path. My daughter picked it up and handed it to me.  I turned it on and saw it worked perfectly.  I decided to call the last number dialed and find out whose phone it was so we could get it back to the owner.  A girl answered saying “Alex!”  I told her that we had just found the phone and asked her who it belonged to.  She said it belonged to her friend, Alex, and she’d been trying to reach him.  We talked about options for getting it back to him, but no plan was decided upon.  I looked at his list of recent calls.  He’d madly been dialing family and friends from about 2:30 a.m. until almost 3 a.m.  It didn’t appear he’d gotten a hold of anyone by the length of the calls.  The girl I’d called said she was worried.  He’d tried to call her multiple times.  I finally decided to call the listing that said “Dad” since he’d tried to call “Dad” at 2:40 a.m.  Turned out Dad was on his way to run Bloomsday too.  But the fact that I had Alex’s phone, and we’d found it alongside the river, scared him.  He asked me to hang on to the phone and we’d keep in touch.  I had to call him on my phone because Alex’s phone was almost dead.  Dad made several calls.  I tried to get more info from Alex’s phone by looking at text messages he’d sent and received, etc.  While I was looking at Alex’s phone, it rang.  I answered it and told the caller what the deal was.  The caller was a friend and knew who Alex was with the night before.  He said he’d start calling around and he’d call Dad.  Now everyone is getting really worried.  Apparently, Alex has his jaw wired shut and, according to Dad, shouldn’t be out drinking (my first assumption was he’d been drunk and lost it), but then, we all know how our kids do things they shouldn’t do (does the name Jonathan ring a bell?).  So, as I’m waiting at the start of Bloomsday, Dad is frantically looking for Alex.  He calls every few minutes to ask me questions like where exactly did we find it, was it where it might have fallen off the overpass? (no), how close to the river was it?  I knew what he was thinking – the same things I’d be thinking if it were my kid, the same things I was worried about myself for this kid.  Finally, Dad decided he’s going to forego Bloomsday and keep looking for his kid.  Turns out, he was out drinking with his friends, got separated from them, and was walking around in a drunken stupor alone.  Now we’re all worried.  Dad calls and decides to meet me along the Bloomsday course and get Alex’s phone.  About three or four blocks into the race, I see Dad talking to me on his phone describing himself.  I give him the phone, ask him to please let us know what happens, and tell him we’ll be praying for him and Alex.  So, we run, worrying and wondering about Alex.  

After the race, once we order our food at the Olive Garden, I call Dad.  He starts off by thanking me for finding the phone, for making such a concerted effort to get it back to Alex, and for calling him.  He has just retrieved Alex from Taco Bell about a mile or so from where we found the phone.  Apparently, Alex was robbed.  He was beaten up some too, but was okay.  His dad didn’t go into much detail.  He’d only had Alex for about 15 minutes.  He said Alex would call me in a couple of days to thank me.  I asked how old Alex was.  21.  Of course.  I’m sure Alex is not too happy with me.  He’s probably glad I found his phone, but now his dad knows about his night, and he probably would have rather told his dad about it at his convenience as opposed to have a frantic dad, friends, mother, and half the world looking for him.  I don’t know yet where he spent the night, how he got to Taco Bell, or how his phone got separated from him and in the bushes by the Marriot (did the thieves toss it there?  Did he lose it?) but I’m definitely going to ask Alex to fill me in when he does call.  So, that was our dramatic back story as we ran Bloomsday.  Thankfully, Alex is okay and not floating in the Spokane River, as was our deepest fear.  Maybe this will be a wake-up call to Alex as to how he should spend his Saturday nights.  We’ll see.  After all, he is only 21.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

MIA? Sort of.

I’ll probably be mostly MIA for the next few days, maybe the next few weeks.  Only eleven days until we depart for the UK.  I am trying desperately to complete some projects at work before my departure, line up my back-up help in case the library has any problems while I’m incommunicado, and get myself together at home as I prepare for the trip.  Next weekend we have to move most of Jonathan’s stuff home from school.  The following week is finals week, so he’ll be swamped.  Sunday I’m participating (I’m not going to even suggest that I’ll be running) in Bloomsday with my daughter.  I’ll be a wreck for most of the day after that and probably won’t be able to walk for the next two days.  The following week will be filled with packing, making lists against which I will check to make sure we don’t forget anything important, like passports, airline confirmations, and hotel/condo confirmations.  In addition to all this frenzied activity, I will be mowing the lawn twice a week in an attempt to keep up with the seemingly steroid-induced growth of our lawn.  I’ve got to find a power converter for my curling iron and laptop, arrange for my cat to be fed and tended to (son-in-law usually takes care of this on his way to work), and borrow camera lenses from my dad.  There is almost too much to do and so little time in which to do it.  So… I may not blog, may not comment on blogs, though I’ll probably read them when I can.  I’m thinking of you all.