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Tag: day trips

Peeeectures!

Posted on May 29, 2007 By admin

Katy bullied me into taking two days off last week so we went on a pair of day trips, one to Cadbury World and another to Hunstanton seaside.

Cadbury world was a childhood fantasy for Katy and was actually more fun than I thought it would be – once we managed to lose the 5 busload of hyped-up ADHD kids. We came back with a bit more than a kilo of chocolate and a stuffed parrot for Katy. I almost bought a 5kg bar of dairy milk, but I couldn't justify it. It would have gone bad before we'd have been able to eat it all without getting sick. Figure that one square of the bar is the equivalent of 3 normal dairy milk bars…

Our second trip was to the seaside, via Norfolk Lavender, a huuuuuge lavender farm. Hunstanton isn't the nicest of seasides. It looks a bit old. It probably didn't help that it wasn't completely open when we got there, but the bits that were were less than impressive. Southwold is nicer for a non-commercial seaside and Yarmouth is nicer for a commercial one. Still, we saw otters being fed and the beach itself was nice. The sea was completely calm and the sky was the same colour as the water, so both were indistinguisheable from each other.

The cliffs were also very cool. Apparently, they're a great source for fossils. As we were walking along the beach, we came across a rather unusual sight. An old dude was working at the base of the cliffs, apparently sorting out the fallen rocks into colour-coded piles. We didn't ask why; we figured he was probably bored and it took him out of the house.

The tide as out and had left tons of boulders covered in seaweed. Very funky indeed. The day itself was a bit overcast, but the sun was trying to shine through. I still managed to get a bit of a sunburn on my arms.

It was nice to spend some quiet time with the girl though :)

More pictures online at:

http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/hunstanton_may_2007/
http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/cadbury_world_may_2007/

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Bury St-Edmunds and Greene King Brewery

Posted on May 14, 2007 By admin

We went to the Greene King Brewery in Bury St-Edmunds last weekend. It's a nice little market town about 30 minutes from home. There's a big parc where an old Abbey used to stand and the brewery offers hour-long tours with tastings of about a dozen beers for only £8. We discovered a shop that specialized in game meats. We need to go back there.

  
   

More pics here: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/bury_greene_king_may_2007/

Next weekend: WINE!

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We have a herb garden. Yes, we do!

Posted on April 30, 2007 By admin 2 Comments on We have a herb garden. Yes, we do!

We went to Southwold this weekend for a day trip to the seaside. It was a lovely day.

It started in Saffron Walden, where we went to pick up some food and a parcel from the post office. Katy got nibbled on by a duck, which we took to be a good omen for the day to come.

The weather was lovely, and the tourist route we were on to to take us to the seaside was a perfect windy, meandering road (if a bit narrow – we almost had the side of the car taken off by a very wide tractor going rather fast. So wide we were actually relieved that the vehicle behind it was a LGV…) We stopped at a little teapot pottery along the way but didn't buy anything.

Southwold is really, really lovely. It's what I expected a seaside town to be like (not the crass and tacky version I'd seen in Yarmouth). We walked along the beach and stopped here and there to collect nice looking pebbles. I officially love the sound of the ocean. It was sooo relaxing, especially since the beach was mostly empty (except for a few lads drinking beer and people walking their dogs). One thing that shocked me though, which I've only found out today. Those dinky little seaside shacks that have no utilities and look a bit tacky and decrepit sell for about 20K – and you don't own the land they're on – you still need to apply for a license from the council.

Southwold is home to the Adnams brewery. We wanted to go have a visit but apparently they stopped doing those years ago. We did walk next to one of the fermenting room buildings and the smell of the hops coming out of the ventination ducts was beautiful :) We had a quick pint at a local pub then went shopping at the Adnams wine and kitchen shop. I could have spent waaaay too much money, but we were reasonable and only spent about £20. I did succomb to temptation though and bought stout beer-cured bacon. I mean, beer and bacon. Hmmm, bacon. It's nature's perfect food.

We walked around the high street for a bit and then headed home. On the way back, we stopped at Shawsgate Vineyard in Framlingham. The wines are not bad at all, but in our heart of hearts, it doesn't compare to Chillford (but then again, nothing probably will). Their Baccus dry white is nice (we had it with a baked camembert last night for dinner – LOVELY!) and their medium-sweet Harlequin will make a nice dessert wine.

Sunday was a bit of a weird day. I'd planned to go to the Cambridge Gliding Center open day as they'd announced cheap trial flights. Unfortunately, my headache came back with a vengeance and submitting myself to G-forces would not have been the best thing to do. Instead, we went to Tesco for a shop and then went to the garden center to pick up some herbs for our new herb garden. I planted most of those. I did! Yes, me! Those of you who know me well know that I'm not the most outdoors-y type, but Katy and I spent a good hour outside with our hards dirty. We now have two types of sage, two types of oregano, coriander, chives and lemon thyme. They smell really, really nice :)

Finally, I leave you with more pictures;

Tolstoy: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/tolstoy/30_04_2007/
Southwold: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/southwold_apr_2007/

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Peeectuuuures!

Posted on April 13, 2007 By admin

Tolstoy, the mighty scavenger waiting for us to leave the driveway so he can go scrounge for food on the countertops:

It's a hard life, innit?

This is how dirty the back patio was…

Nothing more need really be said.

Random graffiti at Norwich Castle:

I bonded with a pigeon:

Right next door to the world-famous Coleman's Mustard shop

The Norwich Cathedral. It's a shame it was such a gloomy day :(

Many more pictures here: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/hinxton_easter_2007/ and here: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/norwich_mar_2007/

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An entry that's been 4 days in the making

Posted on December 27, 2006 By admin 1 Comment on An entry that's been 4 days in the making

It was Katy's birthday last Friday. Did you all remember to send her love?

We went to London for a few days of pre-xmas R&R. We got there on Thursday morning and went to the hotel to drop off our bags. When we got there, we were told that our hotel was closing for the holidays because they didn't have enough guests to warrant staying open, but since it was part of a large chain, they relocated us to another hotel just 5 minutes down Tottenham Court road (the Radisson Kenilsworth). Got checked in and went walkies.

We ended up in Soho and found the pub where we had a snack the last time we were in town (it's called the Brewmaster. Nothing fancy, just good cheap pub food). We wandered around Leicester Square and went to Chinatown in search of a tea shop where I could buy a tea boat. We never found one, which is surprising really, but we found tons of shops that sold Peking duck (most of which was hanging in the window).

We went to Fortnum & Mason to gawk at stuff that was too pricey for words. F&M is a shop that must be seen to be believed. The xmas display is new each year. Last year was Dickens' Christmas Carroll. This year was Alice in Wonderland. It's impressive. It's completely over the top. Given the snootiness level of the shop, it's completely appropriate. F&M is a playground for people who have so much money they don't bother about little things like prices and if they can afford the stuff anymore. They have things that I can't even put a name to or even begin to contemplate a purpose. When even the props they put on the sales display are out of our league. I mean, who the hell needs a full size leather rhinoceros??? Don't even get me started on the hand-decorated soap bars! And the food! The food… If you want to buy overly posh, snootily exclusive, overpriced and hunted to the brink of extinction things, this is the place. True story that made me laugh my ass off. Food Uncut, a cooking show, recently reviewed 3 xmas puddings by doing a blind taste test. They were testing cheap (Morrissons, £3/kg), moderate (Waitrose, £10/kg) and ludicrously expensive (F&M, £35/kg) puddings for taste and texture. Unanimously, all the testers raved about the cheapest one and slagged off the most expensive one. Made me giggle :)

When we exited la-la land and went back to the real world, we walked to see the lights on Bond Street and Regent Street. Last time we were in that area, Katy drooled at the sight of a pastry display in the window of the Patisserie Concerto on Piccadilly Street. We decided to go in for a tea break this time. It smelled really nice and the menu looked really promising, but we already had dinner plans so we decided that we'd come back for lunch tomorrow and settled on some tea to get warmed up.

Our dinner plans were to go to Itsu, the sushi restaurant chain that gained notoriety recently for being the last meal of the ex Russian spy who got poisoned with polonium a few weeks ago – though not the same branch, for obvious half-life decontamination reasons. That place was a real letdown. It looked pretentious – the type of restaurant where the sushi goes around on little conveyor belts and you pick what you want and hope for the best. Also, since all the stuff is made in advance, it's no good for me because all the rolls had sesame seeds on them and apparently (Katy asked), all the dipping sauces have garlic in them. So yeah. No sushi for us. We were disappointed, but the evening was saved when we found a little hole in the wall called Niko Niko that served really good sushi and soba for dirt cheap. It doesn't look a lot from the outside (and the inside is nothing to write home to mom about either), but the food is good, not pretentious and you get a lot of it :) My kind of place.

The following day, we went back to the The Tea House, on Neal Street in Covent Garden. We'd gone there the previous day but it was so packed that it was unbearable. This early in the morning, it was possible to buy a cast-iron japanese teapot that I'd spotted the previous day and fell in lust with. I also got some orange-flavoured oolong tea that I'm keen to try. We returned to Fortnum & Mason because we wanted to get some clotted cream fudge that we'd noticed in one of the xmas hampers the previous night. After 30 minutes of looking around and not finding anything, we grabbed some poor floor clerk and got him to do the looking for us. Poor guy was sent from clerk to clerk and nobody seemed to know (or care, really) where the damn thing was. In the end, he said that they were sold out on the floor but he could have a look in the storeroom. I wasn't really looking forward to waiting another 15 minutes for him to go and come back saying he couldn't find any, so we left it (though Katy did buy some nice biscuits that subsequently had to be rescued from her mom a few days later).

We had reserved tickets to the London Eye, so we made our way to the waterfront. On our way there, we walked passed a woman who was having her chauffeur pack the boot of her Rolls Royce. She was the stereotype of the socialite, and again, it reminded us that we're so not even in that game that we don't even want to think about it. We stopped at Trafalgar Square so that Katy (i.e. bladder woman) could go powder her nose. I snapped a few pictures of Nelson's column and developed a heartfelt relationship with a pigeon, and then we were off to the eye.

The trip itself was a lot better than I thought it would be. My vertigo never really kicked in, even though the cabin we were in went through a 360 degree revolution around its center axis while the whole thing circled around the eye. The engineering of the thing is freaky. It was still a bit foggy, so we didn't get the best view of the city but it was fun nonetheless. What was funny though is that I'd forgotten that they do a search of your bags and the same restrictions as air travel apply so the Leatherman that always lives in my back pocket would have been a problem… if they'd seen it. They were too busy harping at the fact that I couldn't bring my tripod in the cabin and I had to take it out of my bag now please!!! to bother actually running me through the metal detector. Apparently, a tripod is considered more dangerous…

After the eye, we went to eat at the Oxo Tower for Katy's birthday. I think they thought we'd lower the tone of the restaurant, so they stashed us completely at the back of the restaurant. I didn't really mind though, cause it was nice and quiet. The food was good and the company was brilliant. A nice evening all around :)

We were a bit tired the next day so we took it easy. Bought another teapot and crashed at an internet cafe to waste a few hours. We had tickets to go see the matinee showing of “We will rock you” at the Dominion on Saturday. That was Katy's birthday present. She'd been wanting to go see that show ever since it came out. The show was… ok. It's a musical that uses Queen songs to score a story. The plot revolves around the following premise

On Planet Mall all musical instruments are banned. The Company Computers generate the tunes and everybody downloads them. But Resistance is growing in the form of the Bohemians – rebels who believe that there was once a Golden Age when the kids formed their own bands and wrote their own songs. Legend persists that somewhere on Planet Mall instruments still exist. Somewhere, the mighty axe of a great and hairy guitar god lies buried deep in rock. The Bohemians need a hero to find this axe and draw it from stone. Is the one who calls himself Galileo that man? But GlobalCorp is also looking for Galileo and if they get him first they will surely drag him before the Killer Queen and consign him to oblivion across the Seven Seas of Rye.

The idea is good, but the implementation left me bleh. I found a lot of the performers to be, well, annoying would be a good word. Still, Katy loved it so I'm happy. We got our bags from the hotel and headed home.

Katy's parents and uncle were coming down on Sunday to spend xmas eve, day and boxing day with us. We were hosting our first ever xmas dinner and I was doing all the cooking. I'm glad to say that it went really well. We had waaaaaaaaaaayyy too much food.

Let me re-emphasize this.

We had a STUPID amount of food.

As in, half of it is now frozen because there's no way in hell we can eat it all before it goes bad. Even with having handed out leftovers. Even with not having thawed out food to begin with.

We had too much food, but it was damn good!!!

My cooking was well received, which made me happy. It's a good thing too, because I spent most of my time in the kitchen preparing stuff :D Everybody ate their fill (and a bit more) and we had a good time.

Katy had to pop into work for a few hours on xmas day, so we waited for her to come back before we attacked the mountain of presents underneath the tree. As a side note, that tree managed to survive the cat, but just barely – poor battered thing. Santa's been really generous this year. I got a mountain of chocolates, some cookbooks, Bobbles snow globes, a new wok, a hand blender with a bajillion attachments, season 1 of Rome on DVD and an ipod with Shure E4C headphones. I've been hemming and hawing for those for the last year and I finally have them. My preciousssss!!!

We discovered that the cat is a catnip fiend. Katy had bought catnip tea bags from Whittards. They send him completely batty! We had to wrestle the bag away from him cause we were afraid he was going to have a fit or something :)

Katy's family left yesterday afternoon and we both crashed for a nap. It's been hectic, but now it's all quiet and should stay like that for the foreseeable future. We're going to be spending a quiet new year's eve because Katy is working on the 1st. We don't have plans to go anywhere or see anybody, and to be honest, I like that. I'm not a hermit by any means, but I like spending quiet downtime with my wife. (my wife, hee hee, that still makes me giggle).

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Great Yarmouth, by the sea

Posted on August 21, 2006 By admin 3 Comments on Great Yarmouth, by the sea

I had my first taste of a traditional english seaside town this weekend. The Grogan clan took me to Yarmouth.

Pics are here: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/yarmouth-aug2006/

Apparently, the place hasn't changed. It's hard to describe. Well, actually, it's not :) Tacky comes to mind. Every shop by the seaside sells deep-fried, salty or deep-fried sugary food. All the side-streets are packed with shops selling the same old cheap and nasty souvenirs that they've always been selling and that you'll find in every other seaside town (except the name printed on the crap will be different). It's tawdry, it's touristy, and people love it :)

Katy's IQ and mental age practically dropped by half as soon as we got out of the car. While I don't have the historical background to fully appreciate the seaside experience, I had fun. The SeaLife center was amusing (though I was disappointed that it was no longer possible to pet the manta rays) and the crazy gold (North Americans, read mini-putt) was a good laugh (except for the small child that kept getting on our putting greens and made me lose by a swing when I had to pull a shot to avoid hitting her. I should have, because Katy's dad won and was unbearably smug about it. I do have the bragging rights for the first hole in one though, but I digress).

I was disappointed by the fish&chips, but that's because the place we had lunch was apparently crap. Still, Katy won me a Tasmanian Devil plush toy from one of those grappling-claw type games (and one another toy for her dad, which impressed the hell out of me because I've never seen anybody win anything from those machines, let alone twice).

It started pissing it down with rain at one point, but it didn't last long and cleared the air. All in all, after a good day's walk and generally goofing off and eating too much crap (though I now want to get a waffle iron for home!), we all headed back home. I'd do it again, but I honestly don't get the same out of it as a true Brit :)

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I love London but hate Londonners

Posted on January 23, 2006 By admin 2 Comments on I love London but hate Londonners

We're back in Cambs after a rather long weekend.

Thanks to a shady, back-room deal†, I managed to score 4 tickets to go see Alegria in London at the Royal Albert Hall. Katy and I left Cambs at 11 on saturday and met up with Katy's parents at St-Pancs. The hotel I'd booked was ok. Nothing to write home to mom about. Seriously, next time we have plans in London, I'll go back to the B&B we stayed in but get a better room. The rooms we had were big and had en-suites, but we had to call the front desk to complain about one set of neighbours who were having some sort of party in their room at 11pm. At 1:30am, I was awakened by the other set of neighbours who were doing god-knows-what. Anyway…

We had a pootle in Kensington parc, where large swans threatened to eat small children. It was a nice day out and I took some cool pictures. They'll be online when I can be assed. We went to eat at an italian restaurant on Kensington High Street called Sopranos. It's a little mom&pop place that has lots of good food for reasonable prices. It was funny because it was one of the restaurants Katy and I ate at the first time we spent time in London, about a year ago now, when we were in town to go see Dralion.

The show was good. Katy and her folks enjoyed it, but I secretly think that it wasn't as good as the other times I'd seen it. The clowns were better, but some acts weren't there (like the strongman) and some acts seemed less impressive than memory served (like the speedtrack and the trapezes). Anyway, maybe I'm spoiled and biased because I've seen Alegria so often now (this was my 3rd time). Katy and her folks hadn't seen it before and were quite impressed. The show was also incident #1 in my I-am-really-starting-to-hate-people phase. The family behind us kept talking really loudly in arabic. The father of the family kept belching. I wasn't impressed. Katy told them to be quiet during the intermission. For the most part, they were. Except for the belching and the munching noises.

We spent most of today wandering around the Victoria&Albert museum, where I saw a kick-ass collection of stained glass, and the Natural History Museum, where incident #2 of my IARSTHPP reared its ugly head. The museum was packed. It seems like a really interesting place. Just the architecture of the building made me want to stop and gape. There was just WAY THE FUCK TOO MANY PEOPLE. You couldn't move at times, and when you wanted to stop and look at the exhibits, there was a queue of people pushing you in the ass to move forward. Throw in a ton of hyped-up kids who couldn't care less to be there and preferred to run and scream, parents who indulge them instead of giving them a good smack once in a while and it all made for a situation I was glad to get out of. And then there was the fat kid who kept trying to kick the pigeons (and when that didn't work, her strategy devolved to barking at them). Classy.

All in all, a good weekend, but people need to learn manners and social graces. I don't say that I don't burp (dear god, people who know me know that's not true). But I do it at home, or at least I try to be discreet…

† I asked Nat.

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