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My European Adventure*, Day 6

Aug16
by berry on August 16, 2014 at 6:22 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

*This time with more cannons

TL;DR: I finished the eastern leg of the Thames Path, I got interviewed(!!!), I saw a good play, and I was shown the light as to why TWTUD didn’t work properly.

Ok, today I had a plan. A good plan. A glorious plan, maybe. But I did have one. “Chris!” You say, “stop pussy-footing around and tell me what gosh-blarned plan was! Geez! What’s wrong with you?”

Good question. Nothing, really. I’ve had an exceptionally awesome day; I just haven’t followed my plan. True, I did one thing, and most of thing two, but the rest? Right out! “Chris!!!” You say, the agitation in your voice as apparent as a supermoon on a cloudless night, “can you get to the fricking point already?”

Fine, fine. Today was supposed to be a day of plays, of literary beers, of epic hikes, and conversations of Rabelaisian proportions. I got it a bit right.

Last night, as you might have guessed from the scattershot quality of my post, I had imbibed. Yea, I imbibed with no thoughts of the consequences. Thankfully the only real penalty I incurred was a loss of sleep. I have children. This, I can manage. It did get me out of bed late and slow me down, however. And, drowsy as I was, when I stepped out into the bright sunshine to begin the day’s ramble, I found I had left my sunglasses in the room. Sigh.

But no matter! I sallied forth, and made my way back to Tower Bridge to continue my journey. My hiking plan included a lot of cycling, but I encountered a supply and demand issue. Today’s the anniversary of the Boris Bike, and, as such, cost nothing to rent (so long as you returned them with the half hour). As a result, the first station held no bikes. Not a sausage. No matter, I had my walking shoes on, and I found some in short order. I biked from Wapping (where I had a Wapping good time, I’ll tell you) to Westferry DLR. Then I walked from there to Millwall, where I found another bike station, and successfully refrained from singing the Millwall chant from Back Books. Yay! I had come close to the Greenwich Foot Tunnel already, but I decided to return the bike and check things out so I’d have as much time as possible on the meter for my next leg of the journey.

You have to wait 5 minutes when you return a bike before taking out another, so I checked out the lift in the tunnel to ensure: a) it was operational; and b) it would fit a Boris Bike. Yes on both counts! I tootled around Island Gardens for a bit, and decided that my 5 minutes had passed. Little did I know that I hadn’t returned the previous bike properly! I learned this when it wouldn’t give me a new bike because I already had one out. Uh? I’m happy to report that the jerk-face patrol hadn’t started their rounds, and the bike sat where I left it, poorly pushed into its receptacle. I did say I didn’t get enough sleep, no? So, another 5 minutes of waiting, and I had a fresh bike!

Down into the bowels of London went I, my trusty sidekick Boris by my side, and exited into a narrow whitewashed corridor festooned with “No Cycling!” signs. No matter, I could walk it (walking shoes, remember?). I stepped behind a person who admonished every single cyclist coming the other way if they rode rather than walked. Then I was out in the bright morning again, the walk through the narrow tube under the tonnes of crushing water a mere hint of a memory, and I began to ride. Then I stopped and set my timer, because I did have to get back to the con, after all, and I didn’t want to end up in . I gave myself an hour, because all the lateness and everything forced my hand.

And so I biked. Quite a nice ride, if you’re interested in working harbours and industrial vistas and the like. I am, so everything was awesome. About a klick before the O2, a group of about 20 cyclists had stopped near an excavator shifting a massive pile of sand. I pulled up as well, thinking that maybe they’d stopped for some safety reason (maybe they thought the sand would avalanche on them or something, I didn’t know). I asked a fellow at the back, and he said that one of the new guys (it was a weekly group ride) was having confidence issues, and they had stopped for him. I shrugged and was about to continue on, when the front of the group started moving again. I followed along, chatting with this fellow, about bikes and paths and Canada, and mayors. He wondered aloud how it was that everyone seemed to know the name of the mayor of London. My reply? “Who’s the Mayor of Toronto?” He knew, of course. Then he asked what all people ask when they see me biking down the street; he wanted to know how the different levels of government in Canada divvied up their legislative powers. Naturally, I told him, and then timid guy got timid again, and we parted ways.

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I passed the O2 (spoiler: It’s huuuuuuuuuge!), and the flood barrier, though I was disappointed that David Tennant didn’t pop out of it as I biked by (Or was it Captain Jack? My brain’s all mushy).Then I biked and biked and biked, past Woolwich Arsenal (which has amazing bollards), and into the wilderness. I didn’t get all the way to the end of the Thames Path Extension in Crayford Ness, but I made it most of the way to Erith before the alarm went off. I ate my little packed lunch (which I was glad I had the foresight to bring, given the sunglasses escapade), and returned to Woolwich, where I dragged the Boris Bike onto the DLR (yes, folks, on off-peak and weekends you can bring non-foldy bikes on the DLR!), much to the dismay of everyone else in my carriage. I had to rescue this kid at every stop because he insisted on not holding on to the pole. Every stop he went eyeball first into the end of the handlebars. I’m glad to say he finished his trip with as many eyes as he started.

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At East India, the first DLR station with bike stations, the lift was busted. I lugged the bike, all 450 lbs of it, down four flights of stairs, mysteriously tapping out with my oyster on the way. I didn’t mean to, but I did. I returned the bike. I made sure it was returned. It was. And I lugged myself up four flights of stairs. When I reached the top, I played back the tapping out scene, and sighed. I lugged myself down again, tapped in, and back up. Nothing like a bit of unexpected exercise on top of your exercise, eh?

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By the time I returned to the hotel, it was 12:45. I had a panel at 1:30 I wanted to see (the Rabelaisian one), but, like in Rabelais, biology took over, and I crashed out for 45 minutes. Showered, to everyone’s great relief, I’m sure and walked back to the con, thinking I’d get a good spot in line, at least, for the staged adaptation of Tim Powers’ The Anubis Gates.

As I idly shuffled through the gaping cavern that is the ExCel, I heard my name. Andrew Barton waved me over to a table where he sat with someone I didn’t recognize. It ended up being Shaun Duke of the Skiffy and Fanty Podcast (or should I say the Hugo Nominated etc etc), and I ended up joining in the interview Andrew was giving him. Ha! The topic was the CCA and its dismissal of the SFF genre in its grants. It turns out that I have strong views on the matter. I hope that what I said was intelligible, because it’d be great to hear! Whee!

After the interview, we all chatted for a bit, then I got into THE LINE FROM HELL. The line was a line that started making the ExCel security people fear for the safety of the building. People started handing out fans. It was like Woodstock, man! I was almost expecting a call out about the brown acid. The play was starting 30 minutes late, and I got to chatting with my line mates. The couple behind me turned out to be American Millwall fans (? I know!), and that proved too much. I whipped out the Black Books chant, and fortunately we all had a good laugh and Bill Bailey didn’t have to show up.

The play was fantastic. It captured the spirit of the book quite well, and the actors performed splendidly. My only quibble was that there was no intermission, and a two and a half hour play needs an intermission. Not their fault, though.

Because it started late, it ended late, and I ended up not going to my next panel (Full-Spectrum Fantasy). Instead, I ate. Probably a wise choice, as I was alert and ready to listen to Gail Carriger et al opine on “The Education and Training of a Young Protagonist”. Gail described something in the panel that I had been struggling with in TWTUD, to the point that I had almost given up figuring out how to fix it. It took all my energy to not jump out of the bathtub I had been lounging in during the panel and shout “EUREKA!” and run naked through the con, my modesty saved only by my ridiculously long beard.

Um, none of that’s true. Well, from the bathtub on. I did run back to my hotel room, though, and I spent a couple of hours moving stuff around in scrivener, and adding new scenes and descriptions of what the scenes are meant to do, and hey presto! This thing has legs! If I ever get this thing published, Gail will be on the acknowledgements page, that’s for sure.

PS: I meant to go to Charlie Stross’ literary beer, but it was full up when I went to register.

└ Tags: LonCon3
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My European Adventure*, Day 5

Aug15
by berry on August 15, 2014 at 6:06 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

*the adventure today was getting my clothes washed. I didn’t get out much.

TL;DR: This one isn’t TL, so just R it, dammit!!!

ed: I know, I know, two in one day. I didn’t want to get to the point where I’m updating my trip two weeks after I got home…

Today was the first full day of the con! I’ve had programming from 10 am! I didn’t go for a walk, obviously. I accounted for that yesterday with my double walk. I was intending on doing that tomorrow as well, but I don’t think I’ll be able to, unless I bite the bullet and pay for the Boris bike. The main problem there is the lack of stations, the word that is actually used, on the south bank. Boo! Anyway back to today…

The day started with an ISBW meetup with Mur. I always assume there’s going to be more people at these things than there are, so I arrived early to get a seat. About a dozen other people joined me and we had a convivial chat with Mur. Lucy, another of the Secret Society of Ink Splattered Fabulists, and I made custom t-shirts to help us stand out. I’ve had many compliments on the final product.

Next, I went to “The Pleasures of a Good, Long Info-Dump”, partly because the name made my laugh, mostly because I wanted to hear Cory Doctorow and Kim Stanley Robinson’s opinions on the topic. I’m glad I went because it was both enlightening, and quite silly at times.

From there to Religion in Fantasy, which was interesting enough but I did bail early as I had a talk I was quite looking forward to in a room furthest from where I was. I needn’t have bothered though, as that talk “Pulling the Trigger” ended up starting 10 minutes late due to audio/visual technical problems.

The talk, a backgrounder, and justification, I guess, of the adaptation and staging of Cosmic Trigger (yes, seriously!). The talk gave me another book to read, about the KLF, and the desire to reread Cosmic Trigger, which I’m pretty sure I have, wait a second, I’ll check. Hmm, it says I have all three, but that doesn’t seem right. I’ve emailed Boj though and she said I thrust it into her hands at some point, so I guess I must have it.

Alas, the talk was awesome, the talk started late, and the talk finished late. This meant that when I reached my next panel, there weren’t any seats, and an ExCel employee came in and kicked out everyone who was standing/sitting on the floor. A good thing that came of this was that Michaela, aka Rantilica was also kicked out. We had met in Croatia, and we renewed our acquaintance over mutual outrage. She brought me to where most of the rest of the Croatian contingent were hanging out, and we chatted for a bit.

Andrew found me there and we eventually went off to get me a cider and to check out the art exhibit. Man, there was a lot of good stuff there. If only I: a) weren’t flying; and b) had already hung up our other art in order to justify getting something else to put up… I guess I know what I’m doing when I get back…

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I picked up my laundry and headed back for a talk entitled “The Girls Who Waited” the thesis of which was that female characters in time travel-films and television are never portrayed as the character with agency, and if they are, the time travel aspects are not at the forefront, instead romantic interests are more prominent. And women get a narrower focus and life in time travel depictions. The panel and the audience did find a few counter examples, but they were few and far between.

After that it was “Beyond the Bechdel Test”. I try to ensure my fiction passes this test whenever I can. The panelists had a great conversation about it, and only had to deal with one bout of mansplaining during the question period.

Then there were parties.

Then I went to Universally Challenged, a new radio quiz show loosely based on all the old radio quiz shows. Actually it’s based on University Challenge, kind of like Reach For the Top. It was a grudge match, pitting science fiction authors against scientists. The scientists won. It was tragic. Though, I understand, the scientists had won the last time this game was contested, and they were only trying to prove the repeatability of the experiment.

Then I stumbled home.

└ Tags: LonCon3
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My European Adventure*, Day 4

Aug15
by berry on August 15, 2014 at 5:52 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

* no asterisks this time because it was actually quite an adventure! Oh, hey, waittaminit!

TL;DR: I took a boat, walked and biked from Putney to Tower Bridge, and had a fun time at LonCon3

ed: currently the photos are showing up as unavailable, hopefully that sorts itself.

So, I woke up late, late enough that I thought I wouldn’t be able to do the walk I wanted to do today. Late enough that I already started working on alternate plans while showering up, but then that stuff upper lip thing happened and I said. “By Jove! I’m not going to sit here and lament something that has yet to happen! Get on with it, lad!”

So I whipped out of the shower, into my clothes and down to breakfast, which was being enjoyed by more people than yesterday, and hence I shared a table with a gentleman who had the courtesy of not being visibly disgusted with the speed of my fork.

Walk! DLR! Another DLR! Walk through the bowels of London to Monument Station! Tube! Walk! And I made it to the Blackfriars Pier with 15 minutes to spare for my river bus back to Putney Bridge. Pretty good, actually. I caught my breath, watched a couple of the Thames Clippers, as they’re called, come and go, and then it was my turn. No one else came to the pier, so I had the boat to myself for the first little bit. Someone boarded a couple of stop later, but he left before me. I stretched out as far as I could, within reason of course. I saw the bridge I had crossed yesterday looming in the portholes, ok, fine, windows of the river bus, alerting me that soon I would return to my rambling ways.

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I got off and headed for the bridge, having decided to take the south bank the entire way this time, it having been such idyll of sylvan something something, you know, whatever I said about it yesterday. Only problem? I couldn’t pick up the path. I looked and looked, and ended up in some particularly dank mud for my troubles. I gave up and joined the trudging masses once again and found myself on the north bank. It wasn’t so bad this time. Though I again spent the first little bit navigating around off-limits bits of the river. At least, this time, I travelled through a neighbourhood rather than an industrial lot. I passed a park with kids around K2’s age playing krislet-style soccer, and posh mums pushed posh prams while their posh dogs pooped on the lawn. I got back to the river and then… Industrial lot! But what a lot! In front of me stood the Lots Road Power Station, once used to provide electricity to the tube, but now disused.  It’s a beaut, if you’re into that kind of thing.

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My thighs began complaining, and as I thought about a sit-down, I espied a journey quickener: Boris Bikes. Boris Bikes all the way down. The collection point (or whatever they call it) brimmed with bikes, all waiting for my touch, and £2. I grabbed one, leaving a hole for someone coming this way to end their ride in peace (Note, this is foreshadowing. I’m pretty good at it, no?), and zoomed along the road behind the power station. A group of kids decked out in dayglo tabards (as they call pinnies here (an interesting side note: Dave, of Salisbury bike ride fame, said, “Oh, pinnies, like pinafores. Makes sense.” when I mentioned this to him. I had never made the connection before that. Huh.) ) rode their bikes up and down the street, an instructor giving them advice on the situations they came across. Brave instructors, I thought. The narrow road was made more so by badly parked delivery trucks that pulled in and out of side streets with disturbing regularity, and a garbage truck wended its way stopping traffic in both directions as the garbage man did his duty.

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This bike suited me. I tore down the Thames Path, not a care in the world. People smiled. I smiled. Little dogs yipped. I took a ludicrous bike selfie, thinking that I could use it as my new twitter avatar (I’m not, rest assured. Looking for one, though. Every selfie I take I have a stupid, or hangdog, or downright exhausted look on my face.), but no. I rode all the way to Vauxhall Bridge, which was supposed to be my stopping point today, but I figured that I’d gotten on so well, I should carry on! And so I did.

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I parked the bike at a collection point and scurried across the bridge, hoping another bike would present itself to me immediately. It didn’t. At this point, I think I should have an aside. Another one of the silly things that I’m doing on this trip is relying solely on the maps that London has quite thoughtfully peppered around the town. I have a guide-book for the Thames path, but that’s only so I have some sort of reference to the things I come across. For instance, it’s the book that told me I passed the Lots Road Power Station. If I had to guess, I’d have come up with some compelling, but wrong, explanation for it. This experiment has worked out quite well, with me only having to ask for directions once. That one time ended up being a complete disaster, by the way, complete with not only bad directions, but punctuated with a random, unasked-for dash of racist invective. But done oh, so politely. Anyway. So, I figured there’d be a bike depot on the other side of the bridge. There wasn’t. No matter. Follow the water. That’s all I have to do. But, O! The thighs. Maybe I should give up, I thought.

I plodded sadly along the riverside, thinking these sad thoughts of bailing on myself when, what’s that? Another Boris Bike depot? Fully stocked? Foreshadowing? I leapt to it, crossing the 50 metre distance in a single bound. No I didn’t. I wanted to see if you were paying attention. I do ramble on a bit, I know. But grab a bike I did, and ride it I did, all along the Jubilee path (um, I think), a path festooned with signs saying “we welcome considerate cyclists”. So I stopped kicking people as I biked past them and said pip pip and all that. And then I went under Westminster Bridge. If you’re wondering where the tourists are on any given day in London, it’s on the other side of Westminster Bridge. I had forgotten this, at my peril. I now had a bike, which I couldn’t ride. Time was ticking (it’s the opposite of pizza delivery in the 80s. 30 minutes or it’s not free!). The crowd was thickening. I had what now felt to me a boulder of sisyphean qualities that I had to roll up the path, only to be blocked and back track and generally start to bemoan the incessant need for humanity to go other places and look at stuff they hadn’t seen before. The irony dripped like the sweat down my back. Finally, Finally! I managed to find an open space, near where the Sci-Fi London parade started last time I was in the area (Boj knows what I mean, if no one else, sorry, everyone else, it’s near the National Theatre, at any rate), and I hopped on the saddle and bolted. My timer had gone off and I had mere minutes to return my bike to a depot (I’ve decided this is a better word than collection point, FYI) before being charged the grisly sum of £1. Success! I found one almost immediately. But, and you can guess from my excellent foreshadowing, I couldn’t return it there as there wasn’t anywhere I could put the bike. They have a system wherein you can complain about the lack of spots and it’ll spot you 15 minutes to go find somewhere else. So I did that, just in time! The handy map on the kiosk pointed to two more depots within a 5 minute ride. I found the first: full. I found the second: full. Uh-oh. The second showed two more. I found the first: full. I found the second: a solitary slot gave me a sideways wink, and I knew that I had escaped a fate worse than totally awesome, that is, having to bike on quiet, bike-friendly roads, travelling from depot to depot, adding 15 minutes here and there until I gave up and called the city to tell them my woes. It doesn’t sound that bad, really, other than having to _talk_ to somebody. Plus I had somewhere I needed to be, namely LonCon3, namely the actual reason I’m here.

So, with bike stowed, I made my way back to the riverside, and plowed through the ice-cream-eaters, and Tower-Bridge-selfie-takers (oh, wait, I did that too!) and made it to Tower Bridge, my final destination for this extended walk. Chosen because the DLR line that passes the hotel ends there, and I wanted to zoom back, no changes. I’m half convinced that I forgot to badge in when I got on the DLR, so I’m expecting a big dip in my available cash on my Oyster card. Oh well. Maybe I did it, hard to say. I don’t think I’ve been here long enough for it to have become a habitual thing though, and I don’t actually remember doing the action, so eh.

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I ate another ridiculous sandwich, this time an “All Day Breakfast” consisting of egg, bacon, sausage, ketchup and mayo on whole wheat bread (taste = yum! Texture = gag!), and grapes and a shower (because no one needed to be around me post 20 km bike and hike in a black t-shirt on a sunny day), and I was off to LonCon3! Except, I shouldn’t have bothered with the shower, as the rain pelted down, pelted so hard I had to check the calendar to make sure I hadn’t fallen asleep in the hotel. It had been so nice and bright when I finished my walk, and now: buckets. I wanted to go to Mur’s literary beer though, so I braved the elements, and got soaked through because of my bravery. Nothing like sitting through a con in wet pants (erm, trousers? I’ve already reached the giggle phase when the word pants comes into my head).

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It was all for nought. By the time I had my badge and all, the signup sheet for her LB was gone, and I was left looking for a number two choice, which happened to be George R.R. Martin and Connie Willis in conversation with Paul Cornell. Fantastic! The next couple were interesting, too. The first, “Governing the Future” gave me an idea for a story, and the second reminded me of how little TV I watch nowadays. I went to my obligatory steampunk talk, and then it was the Retro Hugos. Fun times! I tweeted my impressions of it, so I won’t bother repeating myself here. I mean, 140 characters should be enough to get one’s point across, right? Hmm, let me check my word count on this post… 1875! Um, fine, I’ll say something, I guess, if only to get this up to a nice even 2000. Mary Robinette Kowal and Rob Shearman emceed, with the Brideshead Ballroom Stompers providing the period music. The ceremony, set up as a 1930s live radio broadcast,  started with Mary singing a “Retro Hugos” song to the tune of “Anything Goes” (not the Monty Python version), and was followed by awards, ads for anti-concrud medicine, and a martian invasion. A recipe for an enjoyable evening. There was a swing dance after, which I considered staying for, and of course, the parties, but I figured I was so tired, I needed to go to bed early, and so instead I wrote all of this, and it’s now late. Go figure.

└ Tags: loncon3 thameshike
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My European Adventure*, Day 3

Aug14
by berry on August 14, 2014 at 5:49 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

*ok, ok, this one had a touch of the epic to it. Just not that much, so don’t get your hopes up too much!

TL;DR: I walked, a lot. I saw a comics exhibit and a funny play

Today was the first (and hopefully not last, oh my aching calves!) day of my epic journey across London. I mentioned this before, but I’ll reiterate for those that only read the first couple of paragraphs: I intend to walk the entire length of the Thames Path, or at least that part which is contained within the limits of London. This constraint is important as it cuts a 290 km walk to a mere 80 km.

From Richmond Bridge

I started off relatively early, getting out of the hotel fed and washed and feeling good about my prospects at 7:50 am. A DLR, tube, and commuter rail ride later, I found myself at Richmond Rail station. (Here’s the point when you say, “but Chris, surely the start of the London leg of the Thames path starts at Hampton Court!” And you would be correct. I’m being cheap. Hampton Court is a £17 ride during the week, £8 on weekends. Eh.)

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Before I started, I knew this walk would be a slog. It’s the longest one I have planned, and I had decided to start off on the North Bank (um, capitalization!) to shave a couple of kilometres off my total for the day. This was a mistake. The north bank of the Thames Path was annoying because it didn’t spend a heck of a lot of time being anywhere near the river from whence came its name, rather it spent a lot of time on high streets, or in industrial parks, or pretending I was Mario (see below). Meanwhile, the glimpses I had of the south bank were of verdant idylls, people strolling, smiles on their faces, not worrying a whit about lorries the width of the street coming straight at them. Oh, how I envied those people. It wasn’t all bad; for instance I passed a dry dock where these awesome dudes were reassembling a ye olde Thames barge into something awesome-balls, and I sadly saw two kids kicking a ball. It was sad because one had a terrible habit of toe-pegging it, and it ended up on the deck of a derelict barge in the middle of the Gand Union Canal. I left them calling hopefully to the boat, just in case someone happened to live there.

Awesome-balls

Finally, finally! I reached Kew Bridge, the point were I meant to join these shiny happy people. I crossed the Kew Bridge to cheers and welcomes and an explosion of confetti. Ok, not really. But it did get better. The biggest industry I passed were rowing clubhouses, and Kew Gardens. And pubs. Yes pubs. The entire time I was on the north bank, not one pub. South? Pub-a-rub-a-dub. Didn’t really matter on the north anyway, since it was so early, but I was starting to get hungry, and I wanted something more than another amusingly filled sandwich. So I idylled in a most sylvan manner, until I reached The White Hart in Barnes. I was hot when I got there. Very hot. Too hot, even. I ordered my food and my pint and took a seat by the river, in the shade. The bartender asked me, when I ordered, if the wind had died down. I hadn’t noticed any wind, but I had my trusty backpack on, and the canopy of green sheltered me from whatever Mother Nature sent my way. No longer true once I sat, wind on my wet (sorry, but it’s true and I strive to paint the most accurate picture I can for you, dear reader) back, and I found myself thankful for packing my sweater. The food was good, the loo hilarious (see the sinks below, and, while the rest of the pub was quietly playing unobtrusive poppy type music, the bathroom speakers were playing a reading of Cinderella. Seriously.), the beer tasty, and the service very friendly. A couple of guys came with a dog and they brought out a water bowl for the pooch. Very nice.

I realized when I left that I had reached the time that I had estimated I’d be done with the trek, and I still had about five and a half kilometres to go. Oops! I decided it would be a good idea to skip the Great British Beer Fest at this point, since I still had a full roster of things I wanted to accomplish today. Sorry folks, no update on that, I’m afraid! I idylled, and idylled, being passed by cyclists, saying good morning to dog walkers, being amazed at the fitness (and the free time available to do this at 11 am) of the joggers, or, I should say, runners, since there was not one amongst them that ran less than 15 km/h. I, in comparison, strolled to the point of walking backwards.

South Bank

My body started complaining moments before Putney Bridge came into view. Timing! And as my body started complaining, I had my first (and only) run-in with a kamikaze cyclist, resulting in me stepping to the side, right into a patch of really hard, really sharp thorns! Ouch! Blood everywhere! But no matter, I persevered and all that.

mario barrels

Having decided not to go to the GBBF, and having only arrived at the tube at 2:15, I headed to the British Library for their Comics Unmasked exhibit.  Interesting, and all-consuming, and occasional naughty bits.

I intended on going to the mass signing at Forbidden Planet next, but I arrived early. Aha! I thought. I will walk to the theatre to pick up my ticket for Perfect Nonsense, have dinner and walk back to the bookshop! This way I’ll know how long I can stay without missing the play. It turned out that while it was only a 10 minute walk, my feet did protest too much, and I ended up sitting outside St. Martin’s for a bit, people-watching and starting to draft this. I didn’t eat in the crypt this time. I went, but nothing appealed. Instead I ate at Chandos, an opera bar near the theatre.

The play was a treat. I’m working on a proper review of it, which I’ll post later.

Finally a trip on a double-decker home (or, to the DLR) and to bed!

Note that the TL;DR is more to the point this time, as I actually wrote it last! Ha! In fact, I haven’t written it yet as I type this! Ha! Hopefully I don’t forget to put it in now! Ha?

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My European Adventure*, Day 2

Aug12
by berry on August 12, 2014 at 4:51 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

* Still no swash-buckling, but there was a bit of sheep-bothering…

TL;DR: I biked to Stonehenge, and saw not only a couple dozen barrows, but also the “Fields of Gold” of Sting fame.

I was paranoid, nay, worried to the very deepest part of my marrow that I would sleep in this morning and miss my “very special thing”. My “very special thing” was a guided bike ride I booked to Stonehenge and beyond. I needn’t have worried, because my level of worry had me up at 5:30 (NB: I am freaking exhausted now, and expect to fall asleep at the keyboard at any moafgasdf hogres uh, where was I?) and raring to go. A tasty hot buffet breakfast with nuns and clergymen (theological college, remember?) and I was ready to go.

Dave, the husband half of the husband and wife team that make up Heritage Cycle Tours met me in front of the college with a bike, helmet, water, and cycle-friendly comestibles to keep us going. I was the only one on the ride, which was great, because it meant we went at my pace (which ended up being quite quick, go go pedal power!), and we chatted the entire way. The route was mostly on National Cycle Network (NCN) paths, or quiet roads. We spent a lot of time on NCN 45, which follows the Avon. At one point we were between two fields of grazing sheep, riding uphill on the barest hint of a track in the grass. Definitely wouldn’t have made it on *my* bike! We also passed Sting’s estate, and Dave made a point of taking my picture in front of it. The building, I admit, was a fabulous Elizabethan specimen. And there were fields of barley. Eh? Eh?

I’m totally a fanboy of cool old stuff, and cresting the hill in front of Stonehenge sent a shiver of wow down my spine. The one drawback was the A303, one of those ridiculous british roads that make me wonder what Beeching was thinking about. Silly Beeching. IIRC it’s the road that makes people discuss travel to the West Country in hours rather than miles, just so you don’t get a false sense of how long it’ll take. Anyway, we had to get across this road to get to the henge. Not impossible, but we had to wait a bit for a sympathetic wave.

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It took 15 minutes to get my ticket (and had we dallied, it would have been double if not more, as the line snaked out after I arrived), and then into the interpretive centre and out of the interpretive centre and into the neolithic houses built this summer. I followed the build on Twitter, so standing inside them felt like a link of digital with the extreme end of analog. One of the buildings was closed as there was an ongoing flint-knapping course. I told Dave (who hadn’t come with), and it got on to a conversation about Phil Harding of Time Team. According to him, had he known I liked the show, he would have arranged for me to have a beer with Phil last night. Oh Well.

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We biked back down to the henge (the visitor centre, for those that have been in the past has been moved 2km uphill from the site), and I oohed and aahed for about 30 minutes and took 50031 photos. It was good. As you can see, I was (erm, am) pretty exhausted. Go jet lag!

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On the way back, we took a path behind the site. A trio of sheep stood in the path, lazily chomping away at the grass between the wheel ruts. I soon learned that these sheep, unlike the sheep of Cres, are completely unimpressed with humans on large metal contraptions coming at them at high speed. Fortunately, I managed to jook and shimmy and not head down the hill without my bicycle, and not have to pay a farmer for bicycle extraction, though I have been craving mutton ever since. Go figure.

The rest of the ride was idyllic: quiet, quiet roads, thatched-roof houses, and a break at the Bridge Inn where I ate a chicken caesar wrap and drank a Hopback Brewery Summer Lightning (which was so good I wish I had another one RIGHT NOW!) in their garden overlooking the Avon River. Dave and I discussed books and technology and bikes and it was all good. Alas we couldn’t stay there all day, so we finished our ride, and parted ways at the college. I collected my bags and headed for the train station.

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I lucked out at the station. The machine couldn’t read my finger for some reason, so I went to the ticket window, and the ticket agent sold me a special one-day return to London for £15, as opposed to the £37.10 single I was trying to buy at the machine. WOOT! £22.10 more for real ale! 100 minutes of train and 40 minutes of tube/DLR and I was in my hotel, trying to will myself to eat, rather than fall asleep.

I won, and went out without a raincoat, which meant that massive clouds began scudding across the skyline. My plan to cross the river on the Emirates Airline and go to the real ale pub near the Millennium Dome became a plan to go to the pub across the street. It was OK, but they only had two hand pumps and both of them were empty, so I settled with a Bass, the only english ale they had. And now? I write this before passing out from exhaustion, yet again! Whee!

PS: Going over this post, I realize that I didn’t say anything about the barrows. It’s because they were ubiquitous. That is all.

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