We have been over to Oxford to see Mark and Shona and their kids over the weekend. They are off to the south of france - near Perpignan for the last week before school goes back. Big M and little M went to a beautiful village to wander about while Tegan went trail riding (some pony club event). Little M had a short ride on Tegans pony. I took J and Callum out on a hire boat on the Thames while that went on. Boys had a great time - up through the lock, stopped to gorge on blackberries overhanging the river (they are all perfectly ripe just now). Joined the girls for lunch which was a bit interesting - my phone ran out of power so we had no idea which of the several pubs we had discussed they were going to be at, plus there are several pubs in some of the quite small villages they could have been in so did a tour of pub car parks until we saw Shona's car.
Saturday morning we found spot which hired pedal boats and all went out for an hour after lunch before heading back to Abingdon.
We took the guitars over and Mark and I had a great time jamming. Mark is a fair bit better than I am, but we tortured our wives with a short performance (which M videoed and posted on youtube so our shame lives on). Kids got in on the act for a while too but we only had 3 guitars - once we tried to include recorder and clarinet it all got too hard and we had to chuck them out to play!
On the way home we visited Woburn Safari Park. This is the Duke of Bedfords estate, mistake to go on bank holiday weekend though. The roads were all really clear of traffic, so we paid to be in a traffic jam...
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Manchester
Big M went to Manchester to work with one of her co authors and friends so we all went along for the trip. Nick and Denise have a cute house in Didsbury which as about 20 minutes by bus from the city centre. Took the kids in to the see the Museum of Manchester and the Science Museum (lots of steam engines from t'mills). Highlights for them were the local park and playground and riding at the front upstairs on a double decker bus. The canals running through the city are interesting - we even saw a narrow boat passing through the locks under a highway.
The science museum was in Castlefields which, not surprisingly, turns out to be the site a Roman fort and small town (forget the name - probably mancunetium). There is a reconstruction of one of the gates on the foundations of the orginal.
On the way home we drove over the Derbyshire peaks in driving rain (of course) and visited Bolsover Castle. This is a ruined Tudor mansion. The fountain was reputedly the lewdest in England.
The frescoes on ceilings and walls were supposedly by Reubens (according to M).
Since we were in the area we stopped in Sherwood Forest. This big oak is over a thousand years old.
The science museum was in Castlefields which, not surprisingly, turns out to be the site a Roman fort and small town (forget the name - probably mancunetium). There is a reconstruction of one of the gates on the foundations of the orginal.
On the way home we drove over the Derbyshire peaks in driving rain (of course) and visited Bolsover Castle. This is a ruined Tudor mansion. The fountain was reputedly the lewdest in England.
The frescoes on ceilings and walls were supposedly by Reubens (according to M).
Since we were in the area we stopped in Sherwood Forest. This big oak is over a thousand years old.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
London
We took the children down to London to stay with Zoe and visit the Tower, Natural History and Science Museums last week. Hadnt made it to the tower before so we had to make sure we got there before we leave. Managed an overnight trip with just 2 small day packs between the 4 of us which is a major step forward!
M volounteered to work the big catapult in the display of medieval weaponry at the tower. Kids very impressed with mums prowess at knocking down castle walls.
On the second day we went to the Natural History and Science Museums. There was a butterfly house on the lawns of the museums which was a big hit.
After a hard day of sightseeing catch the train from platform 9 3/4 back to Hogwarts.
M volounteered to work the big catapult in the display of medieval weaponry at the tower. Kids very impressed with mums prowess at knocking down castle walls.
On the second day we went to the Natural History and Science Museums. There was a butterfly house on the lawns of the museums which was a big hit.
After a hard day of sightseeing catch the train from platform 9 3/4 back to Hogwarts.
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Sporting Endeavours
Its been a sporty kind of few weeks. The kids had sports day on Friday. J excelled himself by throwing second in both the javelin and the shot put. He was great! Little M won the 500m and second in the 100m and we think she won the hurdles also - here she is in hurdling action. R has been playing cricket for Jesus (college that is, but he loves to tell everyone), and for those who havent caught up with him recently, here is the slimline version. We are very busy, selling things (the car is next as soon as its had its MOT), throwing things out at a great rate of knots, I am selling on ebay now too - the kids beds! Trying to get our finances sorted and of course the full horror of having the Canberra house fail to even attract any bidders at auction. We are trying to ignore that one - perhaps should have taken the ANU job after all. We leave in 8 weeks, before then we intend to have at last trip to Rome, all booked and we figure by then it will be all over bar the shouting!! Kids finish school on Tuesday and are now enrolled in school in Tasmania. So progress is happening. Any last minute requests for things to be brought over from Europe should be lodged now - as they will need to be coming on the boat, as we are limited to 20k each on the plane, not that much when you think thats all we will have for at least 3 months (not like some people we know whose companies airfreight their goods, no such luxury for academics!)
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Update!
What a month, its been incredibly hectic. So big M has been to Dublin, Waterloo (in Canada) and Atlanta since last post, all conferences and work visits. Waterloo was interesting in that this is a home of a Mennonite community, so we got to go to the local market and see their wares, bought some pure maple syrup which is totally delicious - we had pancakes for lunch today! There were some quilting exhibitions, the quilts were incredible, all totally hand quilted, and a couple of women sitting at a big frame showing how it is done. Amazingly skilful. So anyone who is interested in this should google for Waterloo and quilting. The place we went was St Jacobs market. Other than that a quite uneventful trip - other than plane being cancelled in Toronto due to the mother of all thunderstorms. Unfortunately my suitcase was on the tarmac when it hit - so everything in my case was soaked and had to be sent to the laundry when I got to Atlanta. Luckily M has done this enough to know that the FIRST thing you do with a cancelled flight is get a hotel room in the airport hotel THEN you get on the phone to the airline where you can sit on hold for 2 hours to get rebooked - that way you dont end up in a line for 4 hours and sleeping in the airport as many poor souls did!!! Only got 3 hours sleep but better than nothing.
SO of course once M got back we were all getting ready for J to have his tonsils out. But of course in the week before he decided to dislocate his wrist (off to emergency) and later that night develop raging toothache resulting in a tooth extraction the next morning. His parents didnt even wait for the dentist to open just turned up there with crying child so they couldnt fob us off with an appointment at some time later in day/week. UK has made us hard with dealing with medical personnel!! Then on Saturday off to hospital for the tonsils. Didnt like the anaesthetic, said he thought his head was going to explode. But the hospital experience was faultless - they were unbelievably good with the kids. One nurse does a long shift so the kids have the same person all day, then a night nurse comes in after they are pretty much asleep and the same day nurse back the next day. It was really very good - strict protocol of dealing with the kids in age order, something they all relate to - the bigger kids quite proud of waiting for the littler kids to be done first. They had about 6 overnight patients (clearly this was a little private hospital) and it was very good. Then J came home and has been recovering slowly - he became annoying yesterday afternoon so we know things are improving. Still lots of painkillers in order though.
R has been playing cricket the last couple of days (!!) He decided he quite enjoyed it, was very stiff after saturday effort, so waiting to see how he holds up today - he has been gone about 6 hours today, so he may be joining J in lying around groaning tomorrow I guess.
10 weeks until we leave roughly. Looks like we will head for HK about 16 September, M has a conference there, kids will do Disneyland and experience a little bit of Asia after spending years just rushing through it, and then aim to be in HObart probably 21 September. New school term starts in tas on 22 September, but that might be just too cruel!! No pictures I am afraid until R uploads from his camera. And as you can gather with all that sickness we havent been doing too much of interest!
SO of course once M got back we were all getting ready for J to have his tonsils out. But of course in the week before he decided to dislocate his wrist (off to emergency) and later that night develop raging toothache resulting in a tooth extraction the next morning. His parents didnt even wait for the dentist to open just turned up there with crying child so they couldnt fob us off with an appointment at some time later in day/week. UK has made us hard with dealing with medical personnel!! Then on Saturday off to hospital for the tonsils. Didnt like the anaesthetic, said he thought his head was going to explode. But the hospital experience was faultless - they were unbelievably good with the kids. One nurse does a long shift so the kids have the same person all day, then a night nurse comes in after they are pretty much asleep and the same day nurse back the next day. It was really very good - strict protocol of dealing with the kids in age order, something they all relate to - the bigger kids quite proud of waiting for the littler kids to be done first. They had about 6 overnight patients (clearly this was a little private hospital) and it was very good. Then J came home and has been recovering slowly - he became annoying yesterday afternoon so we know things are improving. Still lots of painkillers in order though.
R has been playing cricket the last couple of days (!!) He decided he quite enjoyed it, was very stiff after saturday effort, so waiting to see how he holds up today - he has been gone about 6 hours today, so he may be joining J in lying around groaning tomorrow I guess.
10 weeks until we leave roughly. Looks like we will head for HK about 16 September, M has a conference there, kids will do Disneyland and experience a little bit of Asia after spending years just rushing through it, and then aim to be in HObart probably 21 September. New school term starts in tas on 22 September, but that might be just too cruel!! No pictures I am afraid until R uploads from his camera. And as you can gather with all that sickness we havent been doing too much of interest!
Saturday, June 07, 2008
York and Casualty
We spent the second weekend of the half term in York catching up with some friends from our 2003 trip to Cambridge. They live in Minnesota so we dont get to see them unless they happen to be in the UK! Owen was J's best friend when we were staying at Clare Hall so J was keen to catch up. M couldnt come with us as she was still in Groningen/Paris.
Little M had a great time with Janet (they have 2 boys so I think a little girl to talk to is nice from time to time).
The squirrel stole a banana from someones picnic and dragged it up a tree - at the same time another squirrel fell out of the next tree - perhaps the fruit was fermenting.
Little M has managed to fracture her left arm again! Luckily (?) she did it before M headed off to Toronto so a bit easier to deal with the trip to casualty. J leapt off the swing they were on and she thought that looked fun, but was too scared to jump feet first so dove head first.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Camping at Southwold
We headed down to the coast at Southwold for a few days at the beach over the half term with some of the kids friends from school and their families. The weather was bit rough but went anyway to see how bad it was.
Turned out to be pretty bad! Wind was howling in at 20+ knots and waves thundering onto the beach. The camp ground, which like many english campgrounds is a big open space was rather lacking in shelter and consisted of a series of islands in one vast puddle.
Kids had fun playing on the beach and going to the sweet shop in town. We wandered down to the pier and they ferreted aroung the arcade on the pier - a whole bunch of 'alternative' arcade games made by some local artisan. A lot of fun, then off to play on the cannons and have dinner of cod and chips at the Harbourside pub. Just about the best cod I have had in the UK.
Apart from the beach and beatiful old houses Southwold has an Adnams brewery. Looked at the real estate agents (what else do you do on a wet day) - one of those funny little beach huts along the sea front costs 70k+, 2 bed apartment 400k.
J is pretty wrecked today, M chafing at the bit and annoyed that her brother is so flaky. Big M still in Netherlands, must be heading to Paris soon.
Turned out to be pretty bad! Wind was howling in at 20+ knots and waves thundering onto the beach. The camp ground, which like many english campgrounds is a big open space was rather lacking in shelter and consisted of a series of islands in one vast puddle.
Kids had fun playing on the beach and going to the sweet shop in town. We wandered down to the pier and they ferreted aroung the arcade on the pier - a whole bunch of 'alternative' arcade games made by some local artisan. A lot of fun, then off to play on the cannons and have dinner of cod and chips at the Harbourside pub. Just about the best cod I have had in the UK.
Apart from the beach and beatiful old houses Southwold has an Adnams brewery. Looked at the real estate agents (what else do you do on a wet day) - one of those funny little beach huts along the sea front costs 70k+, 2 bed apartment 400k.
J is pretty wrecked today, M chafing at the bit and annoyed that her brother is so flaky. Big M still in Netherlands, must be heading to Paris soon.
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