Good morning.
Kathy and I spent two weeks in
England and Scotland at the end of September into early October. Here are a few travel notes and pictures
(many of the latter swiped from Kathy's Facebook page). Some of the pictures repeat what appeared on
Facebook.
Even though airplane travel has
become among the more aversive ways to get from place to place, for the most part
the process has been made reasonably efficient even if it's not particularly
pleasant. I've finally conceded that we
don't have to go to the airport four hours in advance of an international
flight. But not every element of travel
in every place is quick and painless.
When we landed at Heathrow, in London, we got into a long line that
snaked down a concourse; we stood in that line for perhaps 20-30 minutes. When we got to the bottom of the concourse,
where it spilled around a corner into a large room, our hearts sank. People were lined up between those temporary
barriers, snaking back and forth, maybe 40-50 people in each line maybe 10-12
lines deep. We guessed somewhere between
400 and 500 people slowly trudging back and forth across the room as they moved
gradually to the front to the immigration officers' check-in stands.
This was especially disheartening
because we usually rent European accommodations beginning the night before we
arrive so when the overnight flight arrives in the early morning we can go to
the flat immediately and take a short nap (rather than await an afternoon check
in). We don't sleep on flights very
well, if at all, so we're pooped when we land. It was clear that that plan had gone awry for
this trip, courtesy of British immigration.
Depressed and tired, we got in the
line. We noticed there was a sign ahead
of us for expedited access (I don't remember the exact wording); no one seemed
to be using it. Another American couple
behind us in the line, equally depressed, decided to ask one of the immigration
officials standing around if "Skypriority" status on Delta Airlines
qualified someone to go in the expedited line.
She said it did. We had
Skypriority status so we marched up to the immigration official in that line,
waited about 5 minutes for people ahead of us, and zipped right through. I still don't know how we obtained
Skypriority status, and I'm even less clear about why British immigration
officials would distinguish between incoming visitors on the basis of flight
status granted by an American airline.
We did not ask questions, however.
So we did get to our flat early and got to lie down for a couple of
hours.
That Skypriority status served us
well on the return trip as well. At 7:00
on a Friday morning, the Edinburgh airport was jammed. The line to check in for our flight to
Amsterdam was, again, long and snaking between those temporary barriers. This time I went to whatever the
higher-status check-in desk was and told the woman agent that we had
Skypriority status and asked if we could check in with her. She said, "if you want to." We did, so we did, and again zipped right
through. Of course, all that did was
give us more time to hang around the airport waiting for our flight, but I
suppose that's better than standing in line and fretting about whether we'll
get through in time to get to the gate for boarding.
Anyway, we got to London and checked
in and took our lay down for a couple of hours.
Over the next several days we saw many of the usual tourist highlights
in London (not all of which I will mention).
The one gray shadow over the trip
was colds: Kathy came down with one the second
day we were in London and it lasted the entire trip; I picked it up half way
through the trip. They were not so
debilitating that we couldn't do and see things, but they made us tire easily,
so we did skip a few sites/events because one or both of us was just too tired.
We toured Sir John Soane's Museum, which anyone who goes to
London should do; it's a fabulous small and wildly variegated collection. We sat in the park across the street from the
museum awaiting our tour time. (Those
amazingly fashionable sunglasses have the University's block "M" on
the bows; they were a giveaway at the State Fair. There were many left over, so Kathy brought
me home a pair.)
One of the sites most worth
visiting in London, in my opinion, is the Victoria & Albert Museum. It is not an art museum; here's from the
V&A website:
The V&A is the world's leading
museum of art and design, housing a permanent collection of over 2.3 million
objects that span over 5,000 years of human creativity. The Museum holds many of
the UK's national collections and houses some of the greatest resources for the
study of architecture, furniture, fashion, textiles, photography, sculpture,
painting, jewellery, glass, ceramics, book arts, Asian art and design, theatre
and performance.
It is a very large museum with an endlessly fascinating
collection. Like many of the great
museums of the world, one could spend weeks there and not see the entire
collection. (2.3 million objects x
viewing each for 30 seconds = 1.15 million minutes = ~192,000 hours ÷ 8 =
24,000 days, and so on.) As a tiny
demonstration of the diversity of its holdings, here's a picture of the
Hereford Screen and one of its history (the photo is from the web but it's
where the screen is sitting in the V&A; my picture of it turned out lousy):
(The website whence this picture insists I have to give
credit, so: https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8929877) At the bottom of the picture above is a
railing overlooking a foyer or lobby (this photo was taken from a position
floating above that lobby). So if, after
looking at the Hereford Screen, you turn around 180 degrees, you see this (my
photo, which did turn out):
Chihuly!
One shot from inside the museum:
That's Kathy in the black slacks and light top; we were in
the ironworks section of the museum. You
can barely see the vast hallway behind Kathy; it goes for many arches.
Item one
from the Department of Vanishingly Small Chances: While Kathy and I were admiring the ironwork,
I noticed a guy who, from the back, looked familiar. When he turned, he was indeed familiar, one
of the University attorneys with whom I worked over a number of years on
matters related to state and federal research policies and regulations. A very nice guy with whom I enjoyed
interacting. But what are the odds of
meeting anyone I knew in that
setting? In London, a huge city, in the
V&A, a huge museum? We could have
been in the same room in the V&A
and not encountered one another.
You may be familiar with Littlewood's Law. Cambridge University mathematics professor
John Littlewood
defines
a miracle as an exceptional event of special significance occurring at a
frequency of one in a million. He assumes that during the hours in which a
human is awake and alert, a human will see or hear one "event" per
second, which may be either exceptional or unexceptional. Additionally,
Littlewood supposes that a human is alert for about eight hours per day.
As
a result, a human will in 35 days have experienced under these suppositions
about one million events. Accepting this definition of a miracle, one can
expect to observe one miraculous event for every 35 days' time, on average –
and therefore, according to this reasoning, seemingly miraculous events are
actually commonplace. (Wikipedia)
Seems to me a
conservative assumption that humans are only alert for eight hours per
day. I'd like to think I'm alert for
more than that! If so, then miraculous
events occur even more often than every 35 days.
I'm
inclined to think that the chances of running into my colleague at the V&A
(or anyone else that I know) are significantly less than one in a million,
although I have not a clue how to calculate those odds. (The factors involved must include the number
of people I know in the Twin Cities, the number who are affluent enough to
travel abroad, the number who will be in London at the same time I am, the
number who will be at the V&A the same time I am, and the number who will
be in the same room at the V&A at the same time I am such that we encounter
each other).
Anyway, we
had a nice chat for about 10 minutes.
Probably
the highlight of the entire trip, apart from being able to spend time with our
Scottish friends, was the concert at the Royal Albert Hall. The Royal Philharmonic performed Beethoven's
Emperor Piano Concerto and his Ninth Symphony.
The performances were superb. I
continue to marvel at musicians, both performers and composers. The pianist played the Emperor, all 45 minutes
of it, from memory; that Beethoven could compose it still dazzles me.
The Royal
Albert Hall is named after (was constructed in memory of) Queen Victoria's
husband, who died in 1861 when he and Victoria were both 42 (leaving her with
nine children, one of whom was the great-grandfather of Elizabeth II). Victoria was devastated by his death and
mourned him to the day she died in 1901.
Americans (perhaps just Yankees) owe Albert a debt of gratitude: he intervened in a dispute between the U.S.
government and Great Britain about the capture of Confederate officials on a
British mail carrier. There was a danger
that Great Britain would declare war on the U.S., and thus support the
Confederacy; Albert's intervention basically calmed everyone down and avoided
war. He was a leader in the anti-slavery
movement and did not want Great Britain to support the Confederacy; Victoria
and her prime ministers respected his wishes.
Had Britain supported the South, it is quite likely the outcome would
have been quite different. (And some of
us now muse that perhaps the U.S. would be better off without the South. . . .)
Here, Kathy
in our box with her back to the stage before the performance began:
And me, with the rear of the hall in view:
Earlier the
day of the concert we went to see the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace (which
have only been open to the public since 1993).
Nothing really to show because photography isn't allowed, but here's the
back side of the Palace on the day we were there: gray and drizzly. It's really not a very attractive building,
and there's scaffolding over large parts of it because, after years of neglect,
the Crown finally realized that water was leaking in, ceilings were falling
down, and the general infrastructure of the building hadn't been
maintained. So, now a 10-year renovation
project at a cost of $369 million.
During the audio tour we heard HRH Prince Charles talk about several
aspects of the State Rooms. His comments
were OK, although a little condescending.
The guy's a doofus.
From the
Department of Doing Stupid Things. Anyone
who goes outside the U.S. knows that electrical systems are different. The U.S. uses 120V (for residential
electricity); the rest of the world uses 220V.
We have a bag full of converters and adaptors and try to remember to
bring the right ones to the right country.
I wasn't paying close enough attention to what I was doing when I went
to use my beard trimmer. (I had to use
it in the kitchen of the flat we were staying in because, we were told, the
construction code of the U.K. does not permit outlets in bathrooms. Talk about a different approach to code
requirements. . . .) So I fiddle with
the little mirror on a stand and at the same time plug in what I
absent-mindedly thought was a converter and then plugged in my beard trimmer. It was an adapter, not a converter.
When I
turned on the trimmer, there was a sharp retort, almost like a gunshot, the
little transformer that plugs in for the trimmer flew off the outlet and across
the counter, split open from the current, and emitted an awful smell. That black box is not supposed to be open.
We are all
accustomed to seeing television screens in bars and pubs and some restaurants
that are showing sporting events. We
went to a pub on our first full day in London after we took our customary
nap. The pub had a TV screens with
sporting events. I was both surprised
and amused that the screen we could see was showing the Temple-Tulsa football
game. There cannot have been one person
in that pub who gave a rat's behind about the outcome of a second-tier U.S.
college football game. And perhaps no
more than a dozen people in all of London who cared—if that many. (Temple won, 31-17.)
Lunch (1): Gary's lunch in a pub, including several things I hadn't eaten before--and more food altogether than I could eat.
Lunch (1): Gary's lunch in a pub, including several things I hadn't eaten before--and more food altogether than I could eat.
We visited, merely in passing, Southwark
Cathedral. The cathedral was rebuilt
after a fire in 1212; the church that exists today is that building, although
modified and renovated several times in the intervening centuries. A photo that I could have taken (during the
day) but didn't think of doing so until a couple of hours later, unfortunately: the cathedral juxtaposed with the Shard, a
95-story skyscraper completed in 2012.
My guess is that the cathedral will be there long after the Shard is
gone.
Kathy didn't
get to see one of London's landmarks.
Here's the present appearance of Big Ben. It is undergoing renovation; the Palace of
Westminster (aka the Houses of Parliament) is scheduled to be renovated
starting in 2025, for $3.5 billion and lasting several years.
Those of
you who listen to classical music know of the Academy of St. Martin in the
Fields, led for many years by Sir Neville Marriner. St. Martin in the Fields is an Anglican
church on Trafalgar Square in London (completed 1726), right next door to the
National Gallery. Unlike many churches
and cathedrals in England (and Europe), St. Martin is striking in its
simplicity.
While we were at the church, I used
the restroom. One of the more amusing
signs I've read in traveling, in the men's room:
I didn't know the origin of the phrase "spending a
penny." Of course I made a
donation!
Here's
Kathy in front of the National Gallery (on your left as you look at the photo);
in the rear, the church with the spire is St. Martin in the Fields.
The front of the National Gallery and part of Trafalgar
Square.
One highlight of the National Gallery was Hans Holbein's
"The Ambassadors." As she
wrote on her Facebook post: "Always
wanted to see this in person. See the skull? Not really? Check the next pic." It took me a little time to see it.
I know it's all in the history of the city of London, but at one point I amused myself by wondering why we can't have train stations with names like Elephant & Castle, Cockfosters, Peckham Rye, Pudding Mill Lane, Tooting Broadway, Bromley-by-Bow, Shepherd's Bush, Barking, and Chalfont & Latimer. (Yes, those are all stops on the London Underground/the Tube). It's true that there are many other more pedestrian station names, but even those are more interesting than ours (e.g., 54th Street, Franklin Avenue). As long as I'm on the subject of the Tube, here's a photo. It has some of the longest escalators I have ever seen, with Kathy riding one of them. (This wasn't the longest one, just one I happened to get a picture of.) Some of the train lines on the Underground are *really* underground, way deep.
One of the Underground stations (Westminster)
looked like a 1940s sci-fi vision of cities of the future (the first two I
cribbed from the web; the third is Kathy's photo).
Lunch 2: One day we
stopped at the Sherlock Holmes pub (which, despite its name, didn't appear to
be as much of a tourist stop as one might expect). Kathy had a good lunch: "chicken and mushroom pie with gravy and
mash."
A random
shot Kathy took of me while on the Jubilee Bridge, two walking bridges on
either side of a railroad bridge, built in celebration of Elizabeth II's 50
years on the throne.
The last
day we were in London we went to the Churchill War Rooms (which everyone who
saw the movie "Darkest Hour" is familiar with). It's one of those cases where you had to be
there to really get a sense of the spaces.
Here's Churchill's bedroom:
And just a couple more pictures.
The war rooms include a large Churchill museum, in which we
spent well over an hour. By that time,
late in the afternoon, we were a little fatigued, so we sat down to relax in St.
James's Park.
Kale is popular in London
salads. I have decided, after having it
several times here and cooking it at home once, that it is one of those foods
that needs to be chopped into tiny pieces to eliminate its rubbery texture and
then drenched in spices and/or liquids to disguise its flavor. Other than that, I'm sure it's good and good
for you.
A couple of notes on male attire in London about males dressed professionally, apparently for work. (1) Quite a number wear brighter, livelier socks than men in the U.S. Like orange and green and multi-colored stripes. (2) A significantly higher number than in the U.S. (I think) wear cuff links. I can't remember the last time I've seen anyone wearing cuff links in daily life. It may be that in the case of cuff links, I didn't see many because I
was in a university setting; my friends who work or worked in business settings
can perhaps inform me if they are more widespread than I thought.
After our
week in London, we took the train to Oxford and stayed one night. The ride was only about an hour, so we
arrived mid-morning and met our guide for a scheduled walking tour right after
lunch.
Oxford
University consists of 38 different colleges, the oldest of which date from the
12th century. The colleges
are independent; here's how the University describes itself:
There are 38 Oxford colleges, which
are financially independent and self-governing, but relate to the central
University in a kind of federal system.
Almost every student at Oxford is a
member of a college. Most colleges admit both graduate and undergraduate
students.
Admissions
The undergraduate admissions
process is co-ordinated by the University, but colleges are ultimately
responsible for selecting and admitting their undergraduate students.
The University admits graduate
students, but once they have been offered a place by the University, graduate
students are also selected by a college.
Facilities and resources
Colleges provide accommodation,
catering, social spaces, pastoral care and other facilities for their students.
The University provides centralised
student services, including careers and counselling, as well as resources such
as libraries, laboratories and museums.
Teaching
Colleges organise tutorial teaching
for undergraduates. Tutorials are central to studying at Oxford, giving
students an opportunity to discuss and explore their subject in small groups
with an expert in the field.
The University supervises graduate
students and examines graduate theses.
The University determines the
content of degree courses, and organises lectures, seminars and lab work for
both undergraduate and graduate students.
The University sets and marks
examinations, and awards degrees to students.
So a college at Oxford isn't quite the same as a college at
the University of Minnesota. We walked
around a few of the colleges in central Oxford; they're scattered all over the
town. Both Kathy and I decided we could
have been perfectly happy spending our college years at/in Oxford. A charming place.
Item two from the Department of Vanishingly Small Chances. Our tour guide, Brigitte, was Austrian by
birth (but at Oxford for 40 years, including two degrees from it). There were 10 people in the walking tour, so
a total of 11 people. Brigitte began by
asking us all where we were from. When
she got to us, I said Minnesota in the United States. She exclaimed in response that her son-in-law just
finished his law degree at the University of Minnesota. I was startled, to say the least. One of the people in the tour group, an
American from Nevada, then turned to me and told me that her daughter was in
her fourth year of medical school at the University of Minnesota. Startled became astonished. I don't know how to calculate those odds, but
"vanishingly small" seems like an exaggeration: out of nine people (excluding Kathy and me,
of course), on a tour in Oxford, England, two of them had direct family
connections with the University of Minnesota.
As Kathy put it on her Facebook
post, "a little walk to our little hotel." The sign is for our hotel, which dates from
the 17th century.
Divinity School:
originally for oral examinations, now the robing room.
Robing room, this part used for an infirmary scene in one of
the Harry Potter movies:
Door into the Divinity School:
Here's a
wide-angle view of Christ Church College and Cathedral:
The quad at Christ Church:
And here's the dining hall, which was the model for the
Hogwarts dining hall in the Harry Potter movies. Yes, the students and dons have dinner in
this room; at the far end is the high table, where the dons sit.
Other scenes from Oxford.
Hertford College and the "bridge of sighs" (which it isn't)
linking two of the college buildings.
After our overnight in Oxford, we
took the train to Oxenholme, where our friends Rod & Morag picked us up. They brought us to the cottage they'd rented
in Ambleside. Here it is:
Yep, it's
only as wide as it appears: from the
white door on the left to the window on the right over to the white drain pipe. Perhaps 10 feet wide. It dates from the Napoleonic wars, built
about 1804, and was originally for local workers of some sort. (The third story, which was our bedroom, was
added later.)
The road from town to our cottage:
An afternoon walk in the woods near our cottage after we
arrived:
And here are Kathy and Rod on the
street in Ambleside:
One element
of the scenery in the Lake District struck me immediately and repeatedly: the slate.
Everything is built of slate.
(Well, almost everything.) Our
cottage wall is partly slate. Look at the buildings in the photo above; the
buildings on the right are slate. Here's
a photo of a short wall (or maybe it's a fence):
These little walls, some higher, some lower, run for (I
think in total) hundreds of miles along the roads and through the fields. I can barely imagine the number of manhours
(and I'm sure 99% of it was man) that
went into building and maintaining them.
They are still maintained in most places, as far as I could tell. So are the buildings. In the picture of our cottage, you can see
slate mixed in with the stones.
Wordsworth,
Potter, and Ruskin, P.A. OK, there wasn't
really a Professional Association, but the three names conjoined sure sound
like a law firm. We arrived in the Lake
District of England (the far northwest of the country) after a week in
London. The three full days we were
there were spent in part visiting—in this order—the homes of William Wordsworth
(1770-1850, the great Romantic English poet), Beatrix Potter (1866-1943, Peter Rabbit and many other books), and
John Ruskin (1819-1900, art critic, social reformer, and many other things,
considered by many to be the greatest mind of Victorian England). They all lived within a few miles of each
other, although not at the same time. I
knew of all three—but not very much.
One
question that occurred to me was whether the three of them knew or had met,
with Ruskin being the link between Wordsworth and Potter. It turns out that they had, in a way. According to the website spartacus-educational.com,
"Ruskin spent most of his time reading books and writing and in 1839 won
the Newdigate Poetry Competition. Ruskin had the pleasure of meeting one of his
heroes, William Wordsworth, when presented with the prize." And Wikipedia tells me that "In 1884,
the 17-year-old Beatrix Potter spotted Ruskin at the Royal Academy of Arts
exhibition. She wrote in her journal, 'Mr Ruskin was one of the most ridiculous
figures I have seen. A very old hat, much necktie and aged coat buttoned up on
his neck, humpbacked, not particularly clean looking. He had on high boots, and
one of his trousers was tucked up on the top of one. He became aware of this
half way round the room, and stood on one leg to put it right, but in doing so
hitched up the other trouser worse than the first one had been.'"
Here are
the three primary residences:
(1) Rydal House (Wordsworth), from the gardens; this was
the house he bought after living in the smaller Dove Cottage for eight years,
where he wrote some of his best poetry:
The view from the gardens at Rydal House:
In the
Department of Some Things Never Change, here is a little plaque in Dorothy
Wordsworth's garden at Dove Cottage (on, of course, a piece of slate):
("The peas are beaten down. The scarlet beans want sticking. The garden is overrun with weeds. D. W. 1802")
What the U.K. is doing with many of those red telephone
boxes (and more slate):
(2) Hill Top (Potter), with me walking toward it:
Potter had a residence in London as
well; in this house, she refused to have electricity or running water (and she
lived here into the 1940s, when both were available). One docent told me she hated electricity and
was afraid it would burn the house down.
Potter's approach to her work foreshadowed the work of many
artists: she was a careful guardian of
her brand and was involved in every major decision about commercializing the
Peter Rabbit books. She made a great
deal of money and invested some of it in farms.
When she died, she donated her estate to the nation—it was the largest land
donation the National Trust had ever received, something like 4000 acres. The trustees decided to put in electricity
(and maybe running water—not sure about that)—but they only allow lighting to
the extent the rooms would have been lit by candles or gas lamps. So, for instance, the dining room:
A road sign near Potter's house:
(3) Brantwood (Ruskin) (note the slate wall):
Kathy and Morag walking up toward Brantwood. The row of windows above and to the left of
Kathy's head is the dining room (next photo).
I would love to have friends for dinner in this dining room
in this setting!
And I could spend much time in Ruskin's study:
The view from the dock at Brantwood, with the clouds kissing
the hilltops. We took a Victorian-era steamer
from town to the house; here's the view across Coniston Waters as we were
awaiting the return of the boat to pick us up (with the ubiquitous slate wall):
A great picture of our friends Rod & Morag, on the boat:
On the way
back from Brantwood, we stopped at a Victorian structure that now serves as an
overlook to Coniston Waters.
One of the
odder places we have visited while traveling was a bobbin factory (you know,
spools for thread). It operated for
about 150 years, only put out of business by the spread of plastic
bobbins. The factory made all kinds of
other wooden items as well, but the diversification wasn't enough. The factory was saved, however, and turned
into a museum—and it still produces bobbins (and maybe other items, I don't
recall). Our tour guide was among the
more enthusiastic we've run into; she *really* liked her bobbin factory
history. We also had a live
demonstration of how a bobbin was made.
I was prepared to find this utterly boring—but it wasn't at all. (I can remember sitting on the living room
floor of my current home as a child, visiting my great aunt and uncle, and
building things with wooden spools, of which my aunt had a great many.)
Surely among the most picturesque settings for a mini-golf
course (we didn't play).
After
pleasant touring and walking days in Ambleside, Rod & Morag brought us to
their home in Musselburgh, Scotland (now a suburb of Edinburgh). We had busy days there as well.
One night
we went out to dinner with a guy I had worked with at Edinburgh University when
I was there on leave in 2006. We have
stayed in touch over the years; he and his wife joined Kathy and me at the
Tower restaurant, atop the Scottish National Museum (and right next door to the
building I worked in while at the University).
Here was our view from part of our dinner table (Edinburgh Castle):
We went to
Stirling Castle, a classic medieval castle that's fully intact (and one that
saw a lot of battle between the English and the Scots over a period of about
500 years). A picture from the web:
The Great Hall, in white (actually a tan/yellow wash) has
been restored to its original finish.
A view from one of the interior gardens (the Great Hall is
peeking above the wall):
The gardens and countryside:
The view of the Scottish countryside from the Stirling
Castle ramparts:
On our last
day in Scotland, we drove to the new V&A museum in Dundee. It's brand new; had only been open a little
over two weeks when we were there.
We were surprised at how little gallery space there is in
the building. What we saw was fun, but
there's not a lot to see. The café,
however, was excellent: looking out over
the River Tay from our lunch table:
On our way
back from Dundee, we stopped along the shore of the Firth of Forth (the large
inlet of the North Sea upon which Edinburgh sits). There are now three enormous bridges that
cross the Firth, and the shoreline provided an opportunity to get all three in
one photo. Farthest away, the orange, is
a railroad bridge finished in 1890 after eight years of construction; it's a
UNESCO World Heritage site (but also continues to be a working railroad bridge). With work on it in recent years, it is
expected to last for at least another 100 years. In the middle, barely visible, is the Forth
Road Bridge, which carried vehicular traffic from 1964 until a year ago or
so. Closest in the photo is Queensferry
Crossing, the new suspension bridge opened in 2017 (that cost about $1.6
billion).
(Firth Road Bridge, from the web:)
(Queensferry Crossing, from the web:)
The
Queensferry Crossing was built because it was determined that the Firth Road
Bridge was unsafe for the volume of traffic on it. We were told that in evaluating the cables
holding up the roadway on the Firth Road Bridge, engineers could hear "pings"
as the small cables within the larger ones were snapping; there were also small
cracks appearing in some of the steel trusses.
When we lived in Scotland, we drove across the Firth Road Bridge a
number of times; now we drove across the new one. It's a pretty spectacular feat of
engineering. (The Firth Road Bridge is
undergoing repairs but will apparently be limited to buses and bikes and
pedestrians.)
If you were driving along the road one day, and saw indications of road construction ahead, what would you think you were coming upon if the caution sign "adverse camber"? As Rod was driving, that was the sign, twice. Kathy and I wondered aloud what it meant; we figured that if one of us had been driving, we'd just keep going (along with the rest of the traffic, unperturbed) and see what came. It's the opposite of a banked curve: the inside of the curve is higher than the road's edge, in this case during road work and construction of a temporary lane. (I learned after getting home, by Googling the phrase, that there are also visual representations of it on some signs, which we might then have figured out. But when we saw them, the signs had only the two words.) Maybe we're just inexperienced drivers!
If you were driving along the road one day, and saw indications of road construction ahead, what would you think you were coming upon if the caution sign "adverse camber"? As Rod was driving, that was the sign, twice. Kathy and I wondered aloud what it meant; we figured that if one of us had been driving, we'd just keep going (along with the rest of the traffic, unperturbed) and see what came. It's the opposite of a banked curve: the inside of the curve is higher than the road's edge, in this case during road work and construction of a temporary lane. (I learned after getting home, by Googling the phrase, that there are also visual representations of it on some signs, which we might then have figured out. But when we saw them, the signs had only the two words.) Maybe we're just inexperienced drivers!
One form of
plant life that I don't think I'd ever seen before (which came as a surprise to
Kathy, Morag, and Rod) is holly with the berries. This isn't a great picture, but that's
because the holly leaves are so highly reflective that it's difficult to get a
clear photo. Holly is all over the place
in northern England and Scotland. If we saw
it when we lived there in 2006, my memory of it has long ago faded.
We got up
the next morning, flew to Amsterdam, sat there for three hours, and flew home
to Minneapolis. Of course, the first
time that both of felt like we were back to normal health was when we were
sitting in Amsterdam waiting for our flight home.
My best to
you all.
Gary
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