Saturday, July 19, 2008
Saturday July 12: Windsor Castle
The main spectacle was of course, Queen Elizabeth II's weekend home, the charming, 13th century, sprawling Windsor Castle. We saw guards marching and changing (not changing clothes of course!). We saw the full tour of the outside grounds, gardens, moat, gates, booby-traps (haha Todd, booby!) and enjoyed the company of a charming British tour guide who loved his job and knew everything. The inside was well, expansive and over-decorated in the way that famous castles tend to be. The main dining hall had seats for 160 guests at one long table. 18th century British portraiture covered the walls and plush carpet covered the roped-off floors. Spectacular, but nothing I didn't expect in terms of extravagance, size, and stature.
An afternoon well spent!
All of last week
Monday, July 7, 2008
Monday July 7: Business as usual
It rained like the dickens today. Wonder what the derivation of that expression is. Back to work tomorrow and the rest of the week. Trying to plan a weekend day trip if Steven comes to visit me this weekend (Dover? Canterbury? Brighton?) Depart for Scotland on this Sunday for a week... really excited to go back, despite my job being "man the office and answer the phones".
'Tis late, good night!
Friday, July 4, 2008
Tuesday Jul 1 - Friday Jul 4: Corrour Estate in Scotland!
The territory is vast, very green, and the architecture of the cliffs, glens, and forests is stunning. The hilly and rocky ground billowed, like clouds, covered in moss and ferns. It was not dissimilar from the cloud forests in Costa Rica, just very chilly and with annoying midges (nastier versions of mosquitos). With road grading, construction, IT work all hapenning on the Estate, I just stayed out of the way. It's absolutely invigoring to be somewhere so unspoilt by human interference - the lochs (Scotch for lake, ie Loch Ness) were placid, reflecting the sky and mountain peaks in their shimmering surface. The forests and bogs whispered as water dripped from leaf to leaf and gravel crunched underfoot. Went for a bike ride after work with Hunter, another Harvard intern working at Corrour, and the stunning landscapes and crisp air were inspiring. We got off our bikes to explore an old farmstead foundation, and in that moment, a cloud bypassed the hill (hill here means small mountain), and the heavens opened and we were soaked instantly. I don't mean the kind of soaked you say when a passing city bus sprays puddled water on your trousers. I mean that wet is a spectrum (not a binary!) and there was no further we could go. Hours more of water dumping for the sky would not have made my jeans heavier, my shoes soggier, or my glasses more splattered. Hunter's bike brakes stopped working too, so we walked back, chilly. Character building and fun.
Slept beautifully out in my cabin in the woods and departed after very limited work. Returned to London Friday morning. Played 'Spot the American' on the Tube, a game at which I am skilled. Wished them Happy Fourth of July and I pulled up Red White and Blue outfit subtly. Did ask my co-workers whether the UK might declare independence from the US one day (Travis's line). Got a hearty laugh from all. And with that I sign off. Need to figure out weekend plans now. Will load photos later for the past two week's adventuring.
Friday Jun 27 - Sunday Jun 29: Punting, Scones and English Gardens
as a guy fell into the water while punting. Quite funny. Enjoyed my first visit to a pub! Steven snuck us into
On Sunday, we explored the town more, visited Blackwell's, an immense bookstore which boasts to be the favorite of Bill Clinton. We wandered the Botanical Gardens with the replica of a 17th century garden. I learned tequila comes from a cactus-like plant (the agave). Lastly, and the highlight of the trip was my first proper tea at the Rose Café on High Street in
Thursday June 26: King Lear @ The Globe
I no longer despise Shakespeare! Went to see King Lear with a friend and it was stellar. Tickets that included seats were very expensive, but the plebeian option of standing in the yard (for three hours) for 5-pounds was affordable, wonderful, and cramp-inducing. It was a great show and only rained as the bodies started lining the stage (ie: the very end). Three hours is a long time to stand. Imagine if we had to take our SATs standing up - they even patrolled it and glared angrily, "please sir, I must advise you that standing in the Yard in compulsory!". Seeing it performed well, in Elizabethan English, with no technology, sound effects or microphones was great. Except for the jets flying overhead and the occasional chirp of mobile phones, I could've been transported back to the 17th century (oh, and there were women on stage).
Wednesday June 25: National Gallery
After work I met a friend at the National Gallery, the fancy art museum like the Louve. After a previous visit to the Tate Modern (gag), I was weary to visit another art museum. But, it was free - like nearly all museums here - and well worth it. We enjoyed a bit of classical music (piano, flute, cello) to set the mood. Several wings were closed, but I got to see a lot of works, enjoyed a few 10-minute lectures about the history of a single piece, and got to see the Monet, Van Gogh and others I wanted to see. Van Gogh's famous pieces were the vase of sunflowers and the simple woven chair. One of the 14 Monet water lilies made an appearance. I discovered I do not like British portraits in the 19th century. Too stoic, military-garbed, and porcelain-faced.