Showing posts with label Edinburgh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edinburgh. Show all posts

12th May Edinburgh (2008)

The first thing I did on rising was to gloat over my clean clothes and organised room. I didn’t mind that the hostel was noisy and Spartan because I was well organised. I was very pleased to be staying in a real youth hostel, and after three showers (they were free) I was ready to face the youths, so travelled by elevator to the restaurant.

Actually it was more of a dining hall. Okay, it was a large room with a television in it, and a table with bread and stuff. It was a queue up affair, but that didn’t bother me. The toast was a bit thin, but that was okay, and the juice was sticky and sweet but I didn’t really mind. However, there was no coffee, and the tea was dodgy, and these things concern me. I took my tray and sat in a corner watching the people, who were of course doing the same, though some had books to read. A couple came in, and I watched with amazement as the female of the species collected food for her male. Then it happened again (different couple), but this time, happily, the male prepared the computer for the female so she could talk to her friends over breakfast. I was reminded of a Brazilian homestay student in our house who was found in the laundry holding clothes up to her laptop camera, and taking advice from her mother in Brazil about how to wash each item. I have seen some very odd things in my time, most of them in my own home.

After 'breakfast' (I'm not really sure what else I should call it, but it wasn't the breakfast that I know and love) I travelled by foot to the railway station, and thence by cheap day return to Edinburgh. I wish they wouldn’t call them cheap – it sounds like a nasty cheap rather than a good deal financially (what’s wrong with bon marché, anyway?). It was very pleasant, as I was able to buy coffee on the train, had no luggage to carry, and was very clean. Even my socks smelt and felt good. Edinburgh is a lovely city with an enormous castle in the middle, and a large green area for walking and eating on. I went to the tourist information centre (being a tourist), bought a Sinclair keyring for Rodney (Sinclair is his middle name and his mother's maiden name), and got directions to his family home and chapel, Rosslyn Castle and Roslin Chapel. The bus left from stop 15a at 37 minutes to the hour, but when I got to the bus-stop it was already 45 minutes to the hour. My maths is excellent fortunately, so after spending some time with my cellphone making some calculations, I worked out that I had maybe 30 minutes or more to wander around, so I visited the local art gallery. Actually the British art galleries are quite good. I saw some very famous art works, and the toilets were fabulous. No modern art this time, just lovely old dark ones.

I got the 37 minutes to the hour bus around quarter to, and got to Roslin 6 miles later. Everyone got off the bus at Roslin so I assumed they had read Dan Brown's book or perhaps were Rodney's relatives. Some of them spoke French, so I figured Rodney hadn't told me everything about his background. Roslyn Chapel is very old, very cold, and very interesting. It’s built of a soft stone (is that an oxymoron?), which I guess was comparatively easy to hack at, so it’s intricately carved with all kinds of messages and symbols leaping out from the stone work.

I listened to a tour guide and wandered about checking stuff and noting things, then went downstairs to the crypt and thought about the church cat that crept into the crypt, crapped, and crept out. Fortunately I didn't see any evidence of his visit. I checked out the mason’s pillar and stood under the pointy thing on the ceiling over where the Holy Grail might be. Apparently some people feel a deep sense of peace when they stand there, but I felt a funny feeling in my ankles and a grippy feeling around my throat, from which I conclude that there is at least one body buried under the stone. Probably not worth digging up – it will be too old to be any use, and the teeth will have fallen out. I bought a muffin and a book for Rodney and headed down to the castle ruins, just below the chapel. I loved the castle, which had beautiful views of the Esk Valley below.

Back in town, I checked out the local castle and the Royal Mile. I found a tartan mill and bought some lovely scarves for people at home, and then looked around a working mill. I thought of my ancestors working in mills, and how the machines clanked and rattled so loudly - it looked to me like a lousy job. I guess they couldn't be picky in those days, as the unions weren't the best. I managed to get back to the station in time for my cheap day return and travelled back to Glasgow, where I enjoyed another salad and small bottle of wine, perched on my desk looking at the Clyde and marvelling about how wonderful everything little thing is.

Then while I was eating and drinking and looking at the Clyde, I realised I had to give a presentation the next day, so I hauled out my laptop and rewrote my PowerPoint, which is what I usually do the day before a presentation. I moved things around, then back the other way, changing pictures and font sizes and even the order of the slides until I decided perfection was an elusive thing, quite like a butterfly, and there was just no point in chasing it. So I looked one more time out the window, then went to bed to the sound of football supporters singing as they staggered around Glasgow. I hoped they wouldn't fall in the Clyde.

9th May: Lancaster to Edinburgh to Forres

I got up early and said goodbye to Edith, Mac and Lindsay. Edith suggested I didn't leave it another 27 years before I visited them again. I was sad to say goodbye and decided I would try to visit every couple of years. I took a taxi to the station to catch the early morning train to Edinburgh. I was very nervous about this journey as there were two options, neither of which I fancied. One was to take buses most of the way, which meant restricted movement and a slower journey, and the other option meant changing trains in Glasgow, which included a run (or fast walk) between Queen Street and Central Station. British Rail loves to dig up the railway lines and has been working on the Glasgow line for a year or two apparently. I suspect they are actually trying to build another wall between Scotland and England and are using the railway excuse as a cover for their subterfuge. Anyway, I studied the map for the Glasgow walk several times, but was not confident I could do it in the 30 minutes allowed for it, as I knew deep down I would get lost. I decided to use the bus instead. Well, a bus disguised as a train – you pay for a train and get a bus, which departs and arrives at the railway station, travels according to the train timetable and basically behaves like a train, but it’s a bus. That’s one part I couldn’t figure out. Trains go really fast in England (the gauge is wider there) and I couldn’t see how the bus could go at the same pace unless it went along the railway line. I wasn’t going to put up with that because of the safety risks, so I had to consider the whole thing very carefully. I decided on the bus, with the proviso that I would change to the train if the bus drove along the railway line. Well it didn’t, and I ended up stuck between a very chatty lady and a loud snorer. I will never complain about Rodney’s snoring again. The lady prattled about all kinds of things to do with her life, her family, and her aspirations, and I politely grunted now and then so as to be courteous while at the same time cleverly discouraging. When we finished the journey, she thanked me for our pleasant talk, which I though a little odd, as I had not said more than half a dozen words. However, I guess they must have been pleasant ones.

The bus ejected me at Edinburgh station, which must have been a great relief to the driver, as he had got lost and had to ask if anyone knew Edinburgh. Fortunately someone did. The station was incredibly busy and I clutched my handbag and cases territorially in case someone tried to take them from me. I sent a text to my friend Betsy to tell her I had arrived, then headed off to ‘Upper Crust’ to buy a baguette. I don’t remember seeing baguettes in England or Scotland before, so I suspect they came in the last French invasion, and not William’s one. They are very good.

Betsy rescued me from the station and drove me to Forres where she and her husband Sven live. Although I knew them both, I had not visited their home before, and was pleased to have the chance to journey through Scotland in pleasant company. We talked all the way about all kinds of things – women have a lot of things to talk about. I don’t think she’s a Gemini but she sure can talk, and so can I. It was great. I love Scotland – it looks a bit like the Mackenzie country in places, so it must be okay. We passed through old haunts from my skiing days: Newtonmore, Kingussie, Pitlochry, and various other rather Scottish sounding villages. The stone buildings are beautiful in those parts, so I took a couple of photos. I was pleased to be back in Scotland, even though I’m not a Scot, and my ancestors aren’t Scots. I’m an English-Irish blend with Huguenot on the Gillett side.

Betsy showed me around the working area when we arrived, including the beautiful house they had restored from what appeared tohave been a few crumbling stones. It's just amazing what a few good masons can do. They were living happily in their caravans and huts, and I must say, I enjoyed the minimalist life-style dictated by cramped living. Sven kindly gave me his cabin to sleep in, which had some wonderful books and musical instruments in it, along with the best internet connection I had had for a few days. I stayed up half the night catching up on my work emails. Anyway, it was still light until around 10.15 and the sunset was very clear and pinkish. I was very pleased with Scotland. The air was good.

Preparing to travel

It's hard to believe anyone will actually read this, but I'll put photos up to make it worthwhile. It's mostly for my boss so she knows where I am, honest, but I'm running a few days behind.
In case you manage to read this first, I advise starting at the beginning, particularly as the end hasn't been written yet. And in case you found this by mistake, this is the travel diary of my recent trip from Auckland New Zealand, through Thailand to London, Bristol, Lancashire, York, and up to Forres, Edinburgh, then to Glasgow for a conference, before returning home via Hong Kong. Phew. No wonder my legs hurt.