Sunday 14 October 2012

In September I have been.........

.........Reading

The Hobbit
I have got myself all excited about the film coming out, so the book was definitely worth a re-read. Forgot I still have several months to wait.

Rivers of London
Finally got round to my birthday reading. Good fun story about the Met Police, combined with magic. Good fresh take on the fantasy genre. Have the next in the series waiting for me.

........Watching

Woman in Black
I've watched the play, read the book, and still this film gave me the creeps. This is how scary movies should be - much left unsaid and subtler than the usual Hollywood affair.

Psycho
One of those films which has passed me by until now. Here's an example of how Hollywood horror isn't scary, but I could see how it has become a classic and I enjoyed it all the same.

Brave
Bit of a disappointment for me I must admit - bit too mainstream for Pixar - typical modern day princess story - girl who rebels from her fate. Princess was annoying, but her mother Queen Elinor who showed the true essence of bravery and saved the film. Saw where the plot was going about half way through - would a preferred a bit less predictability, and something to make me think, as Pixar has done previously.

Vikings
What's not to like - history & Neil Oliver combined! Straight on after .....

The Great British Bake Off
Another year comes around again and this wonderful programme is back on our screens. We've been routing for James since the beginning, and now the final is just days away! This leads me neatly onto.....


...........Baking
Blueberry Bundt Cake, courtesy of Hummingbird bakery

Went down a treat. Might make a smaller amount next time though - this one's enormous!


...........buying

This dress, from Oasis




visiting...........

Preston Guild (see last post)

London

Paddington station band - they perform every Friday evening. Absolutely wonderful

Can't resist sitting next to Paddington himself whilst enjoying a doughnut from next door

Evening of tapas with friends here

Eton mess to finish




Saying goodbye to........

Allders of Croydon - closing after 150 years of trading. What will replace it now?



.........learning

to jog again. It's a slow road, but I still have a 10km plan on my mind.


Saturday 13 October 2012

September round up

Well another month has been and gone. It has made me wonder where the time for blogging went?

September 2012 - marked by the Paralympics in London, wonderful end-of-summer sunshine, and the drawing in of the evenings once more.

Here's a few things I got up to.

Preston Guild



I got together with my husband way back in 1999: 13 years ago. He is Preston born and bred, and way back then told me of the one-in-twenty year event that was the Preston guild.

Well the last was 1992, and so 2012 was my first Guild.

What is the Guild, well a city festival: the sum of many parts.

Too many things went on to list, so here is a snapshot of our weekend on the guild.

1) Preston Cake City

Yes, a giant cake map of Preston was built in a big top. Contestants got their aprons on and set about to recreate the best landmarks in the city. My sister in law's entry was the law courts, as below.

Real thing here
Kids made cars during the day to add to the map


My favourite entry

The completed city before being carved up for all the spectators.

Winning entry here.

2) Retro cinema.

After much cake assembly, queuing and crowd shuffling, we trooped off to watch Bugsy Malone in the open air cinema on Saturday night.



 
Free popcorn for everyone!





3) Sunday while the cake city was being put together we went off to the 50s event in the Spiegeltent and learnt a bit of jive!



Me in action

With aching limbs, we headed back to the cakes, running into this band of chefs serenading some ladies along the way.



The weekend finished up with a picnic in the park in glorious sunshine.

Live music to eat by
Thoughts of the weekend. Well, not sure it was momentous enough to be 20 years in the making. The crowds were unbelievable and made getting around difficult. But the events themselves were fantastic, as were the moments sat in the sunshine with family and friends.


Wednesday 29 August 2012

This month I have mostly been........

As usual, I have too many ideas that I want to blog about. What usually happens is that I write none of them, so to change that, I'm just going to do a snap shot of all of them.

Some I might get back to, others not.


So, what HAVE I been up to this month?


................reading

50 Shades of Grey (Sorry!)
Read this for my first ever book group meeting. Won't be bothering with the next two. Why? Just a bit boring to be honest - lacked story line behind all the bedroom antics

The Information Diet
Really making me look at my internet habits. Trying to reign these in a bit by giving up blog reading and Facebook for a while. Still got to control the distractions of the web, but it's a start.

Tales of Mystery & Imagination
Edgar Allan Poe's collected tales. Entertaining stories from a twisted mind.


................watching

The Godfather
Finally watched this movie (even this time took two attempts to get through). Can see why it's up there, but not going into my favourites list.

Great Ted talk this month:
The Shared Wonder of film
Definitely encouraged me to watch some other classics (some good suggestions here)

Great British Bake Off
It's back - hooray!


.............learning

Sailing
Something I've been meaning to do for a while. Finally got out in a boat last Sunday on the River Tay. Shame there wasn't a scrap of wind in the air. Next outing planned for next week.

Yoga
Back doing this again now that I've discovered a lunchtime class at work. Hoping to build up a bit of strength (already flexible enough)



...............cooking

Slow pot lamb (now that the butchers is filled with this year's lamb)

Lemon drizzle cake (a fine cake, but needs more raising agent next time)

Sunday 19 August 2012

Another August, another Edinburgh Fringe

August for me is all about the Fringe. Last year a few big weddings got in the way of doing it properly, but I made up for it this year.

If just to remind myself, this year's shows were:

1st Weekend (just us two):
- Wanderlust
Jim Carey-style story teller tells of his journeys through Africa. Storytelling becomes gripping poetry
- Tumble Circus
Arguing couple do amazing acrobatic/trapeze sequences
- Mat Ricardo
Juggling vaudeville entertainer who alas was a slight let down after last year. But will remember 'security theatre' to describe airports.

- Edgar Allan Poe
Best of his stories strung together in a lunatic asylum

Mid-week (with OU)
- Skeptics on the fringe - Cock  & Bull
Statistical/medical slant on penis size and the lengths (!) men go to to increase


2nd Weekend (with OU)
- Domestic Science
Noodles are like litmus paper and Dan Schreiber is a name to watch for. Also got to practise alien drawing on iced doughnut
- We the Chemicals
Stand-up free show in Izzard style, but lacked memorable phrases (wish I could remember some now)
- Numb and Number
Awesome show about numbers, and general world observations. Very funny

- Lullabies to make your children cry
Great storyteller/poet/singer, put off a bit by strong feminist slant. Stories were great.

3rd Weekend (with sis/bro-in-law)
- Supervillain
Single man sketch show - good voices, but sketches weren't as funny as the accents.
- Am I Good Friend?
Crazy 19-year old Australian girl talks about friendship and the Chicken of mystery. 
- Young & Strange
Awesome magicians - lots of slight of hand
- Thinking Drinkers Guide to Alcohol
Bishop's Finger Beer, Jagermeister, Rum (Angustura) Gin (Tanqueray), Absinthe, Belvedere Pink Grapefruit Vodka, all in one show with anecdotes of each history
- One man Lord of the Rings
Amazingly voiced whistle stop imitation of all three films in 60 mins. Very funny in places.
- How to predict the future
Edinburgh Skeptics show - half debunking psychic predictions, half magic.

Of course all of this was interspersed with good eating and drinking.
Yesterday's food highlights in particular were La Favourita's pizza van (with proper pizza oven on board), Pubbledub burgers, and the best waffles I've had outside of Germany!

Fortunately I do not have to wait another year for the waffles! Just for another fringe - which after that little lot is probably just as well.



Wednesday 15 August 2012

Olympic cheer

There is one obvious thing that all of us British will look back on this year - the year of the Olympics.

The Jubilee is a distant memory - maybe it was the crowd's version of a warm up?

The Olympics has eclipsed utterly though. 2 weeks of total excitement, filling the papers each day. Me eagerly looking at the medals tables every lunchtime and hometime to see if we'd notched up anymore.

So I'm a total patriot, I genuinely believe Britain is Great, and it was nice to see for once everyone else has come round to my way of thinking.

As well as all our medal success, the opening ceremony stands out for me: I was gripped the whole time, and summed up both my country and my city perfectly.

I was kicking around London at the start of proceedings. London had a lovely buzz to it, and clearly a sense of generosity (I left my phone in the loos at Selfridges Oxford Street, and thought it was a gonna, yet someone wonderful handed in). And the weather was hot and great.

I was there for family reasons. Spending time with distant relatives that I don't get to see much of. Travelling up to London, and more chilling over drinks and food in the sun rather than rush rush rush.
Here's the Thames at Richmond where we paused for cider and Pimms.



And here's the closest I got to the Olympic events (was feeling nice so gave my rowing tickets to my family).

Very civilised way to get to the games - via a boat along the Thames from Windsor Castle!











Everyone was dead surprised at all the friendliness in London and the high spirits. Which is funny, because I think Londoners are really friendly and happy people most of the time anyway - the grumpy commuter image is just a front really.


Sunday 5 August 2012

A Scottish Jamboree

So, what I have been up to since I last posted?

Well, it is shaping up to be an awesome summer, and to top it all I have received a distinction for my Science course - I now have a certificate in Natural Science!

A couple of weekends ago we were up in Blair Atholl for the bi-annual Scout Jamboree.

Hundreds of Scouts from all over the world descend on Scotland for a fortnight to do usual scout stuff - bushcraft, hiking, climbing, fencing - you name it. But most importantly it seems to be about mixing with people all around the world and making new friends.

Great for any teenager to be a part of.

We went along for the open day. Lots of food stalls from all over the world, where you could stuff yourself for around £2 on chicken teriyaki, Dutch waffles, BBQ lamb, S'mores etc. etc.



In the afternoon we sat in the sunshine and enjoyed looking out over the site.



There are 6 sub camps where the Scots host the international patrols.


Then the evening is rounded off with a good old fashioned campfire and sing-song.
Here's the scouts with some torches of their own ready to light the fire.





Made me reminisce a lot about my guiding days, even if I was never part of anything as big as this. Nice to see Scouting on the increase again and hopefully it's events like this that draw the numbers in.

Sunday 22 July 2012

Geocaching: An addictive pursuit

One of my favourite hobbies of the past few years has been geocaching. It started with our move up to Scotland and has been brilliant in helping us get to know the place.

Basically it's a game played with a GPS where you get a list of hidden caches and their co-ordinates, then using your GPS you have to go and find them. The cache will be a box of some sort (from the size of a bolt head right up to a big Tupperware container). It will include a log book which you sign to say you've found it. Then you set off for the next one.

from smallest:


to largest:


So, why do I enjoy this seemingly mundane activity?

1) It gets you outdoors
I love being outside. It's like an addiction to me: I get withdrawal symptoms if I'm trapped indoors for long.
Geocaching gets you off your seat and out into the great wide world



2) It takes you to unexpected places.
Caches are placed by other people. They tend to place them in their favourite spots - which you would never find on your own: a secret meadow, a hidden cave. For us moving to a new area, it's a great way to get to know the area.


Here is a waterfall in a picturesque meadow behind an ordinary row of houses!

3) It tells you a story
Many caches give details of the local area. There are several cache trails in Edinburgh which give you as much detail as any paid for guided tour!

4) It's a puzzle
Some caches are not easy to find and have you digging around for some time. Others have clues to solve before you know where to look for them. Some you just don't know how to reach.




5) It's a team effort!
The more people you take with you, the more likely you are to find the caches you're looking for. Everyone can join in!



Just take one look on www.geocaching.com

There are thousands to find!

Saturday 14 July 2012

National Museum of Scotland

One of my aims in starting a blog was to include a few guides to places I love.

The first place to make it on here is the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. It's just great. I've raved before about the free entry policy to many of the UK's finest museums, and this one makes the list.

This humongous building is absolutely on a par with the finest London museums such as the V&A (although I still think the British Museum trumps them all).

I've now been in twice, and still feel I've barely scratched the surface. But I'll say it again - when these things are free then there is no limit to the number of visits you can make, even if you have 30 mins to spare. 

Firstly, it's beautifully placed in Edinburgh's Old town. This is the view looking out of the museum:


Secondly, on stepping into the museum, you walk into this fantastic atrium:


Very inspiring in itself.

There are many treasures (from the Lewis chessmen to Dolly the sheep, plus the ubiquitous Tyrannosaur), but the highlight is the guided tours.

In my opinion, it is these which put the NMS into the premier league. Three times a day, and again free.

My tour today was on Art and Architecture - something I know little about and when it comes to art something I don't even care much about. But the guides' enthusiasm rubs off on you.

Here's a few things I liked today:








We then ate at the Museum Brasserie - proper table service and pretty tasty too (I had fishcakes).

In short, a must if you visit Edinburgh, even if you only have time to stick your head around the door.