July 01, 2008

My Choice


Since when did Galaxy become a girls chocolate? Galaxy has always been my favourite brand of chocolate. I much prefer it to Cadbury chocolate. I enjoy Ripples, Minstrels, and sometimes Galaxy Caramel. And I remember Galaxy Counters, which were a kind of shell-less Minstrel aimed at kids, which vanished without trace some time in the 1980's, But my most favourite is a block of original Galaxy, taken with a cup of tea.

Recently though, some of my work colleagues have expressed concern about my masculinity, based on my choice of chocolate bar. Just because I once said I needed, rather than wanted, a bar of chocolate. They said I should be eating a Yorkie bar!

I don't know what it is about this advert but it puts me in mind of Peter Sutcliffe.

Anyway, I'd almost brushed off this slight, but then Galaxy decided to do a tie-in with that awful chick-flick Sex and the City. How their brand positioning has changed in just twenty-eight years...

June 24, 2008

In a rut

I'm not long back from a stag do for my friend Dan. This was held in Oxford over the weekend, and required an extremely early start by us northerners. I'm glad we decided to get down in time for the go-karting, as I really enjoyed this and perhaps because I came second. The conditions were wet, the tyres were slicks, the grip was poor, the spins were many. The day proceeded to the traditional stag format of lots of different pubs visited in a consecutive manner (known in the business as a 'crawl'), a curry, and a rubbish nightclub.

The next day I was denied breakfast in the youth hostel in a particularly 'Falling Down' way by an over-officious man who informed that as it was 9.30 and 30 seconds, and breakfast ended at 9.30 prompt, all the remaining food was no longer available. He generously allowed me to take two pain au chocolat and a cup of tea. We then sat under a dangerous tree for a while, just long enough for me to burn my head. Gemma is currently referring to me as 'Lobster Boy'.

May 18, 2008

The London Times

It’s been almost exactly one year since the last sustained piece of nice weather in the UK. I remember the day well; it was my birthday and we all went for a picnic in Ilkley. This year, a fortnight ago, a handful of us went to Bradford to catch the Cartier-Bresson exhibition and eat cake. Then on the Sunday we caught a GNER National Express East Coast train to London. We dashed south through the eastern counties on what seemed to be a train which was fitted out in comfy 70’s beige.

Once at King’s Cross, we walked the short distance to the newly refurbished St Pancras International (passing platform 9¾ on the way). The newly refurbished station smelled of concrete dust. Resisting the urge to jump on a train to the continent, we used our shiny and new Oyster Cards to catch a southbound Thameslink service under London to Loughborough Junction, where we were met by Sarah who walked us the five minutes to the Brixton / Herne Hill flat she shares with Tom. Here I was welcomed by birthday balloons and a welcoming cup of tea.

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We planned to keep busy each day, and here is a kind of diary-within-a-diary summary of our short break.

Sunday

We decided upon a lazy Sunday. In the afternoon, we (minus Tom) headed over to Dulwich Village. This is a well middle-class enclave full of yummy-mummy’s pushing 4x4 buggies and shouting kids on strange yellow bikes. But the place itself felt like somewhere straight out of the Cotswolds, and was generally very agreeable. Sarah explained that London is full of neighbouring suburbs that are vastly different in class or ethnic make-up, and I think this is one of the reasons why London to me is so exciting and interesting and unpredictable.

Back at the flat, we learned that Loughborough Junction Station is the only one in the UK from which it is possible to see six railway bridges all carrying different lines – it really is a mini spaghetti junction of the rail network. Then we got on to the serious subject of the new Mayor of London. None of us could really believe that Boris Johnson had managed to beat Ken Livingstone, and neither Sarah nor Tom knew anyone who voted for the former. All agreed that this was a disastrous move and that we were sad about it.

Monday

After a lovely breakfast of poached eggs and bacon, plus some really sweet cherry tomatoes and home-baked bread, we all went to the London Transport Museum.

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Tom helpfully pointed out that the advertised entry fee is £10, but £2 of this is secretly a voluntary donation (which we all decline to give on the basis of the museum’s presumption). Here, we were pleasantly diverted for a couple of hours, before finding a kerb in ever-busy Covent Garden on which to sit and eat our home-made left-over chicken and stuffing sandwiches on home-made rolls.

After lunch, we split up and Gemma and I headed over to the shops around Neal’s Yard (which by chance features in the Palin Diary that I am currently reading – he and a couple of other Pythons bought 2 Neal’s Yard as a studio in 1975). A short hop on the tube took us to Embankment. We walked across the river to the Royal Festival Hall, where we took a polite look at a small organic food market and had an ice cream, before deciding that we were sufficiently hot and tired enough to return to base. Diner and a pint at the local pub saw the evening out, and we fell gratefully into bed.

Tuesday

First day back at work for our hosts. Tom started a new job today and was happy that his commute time was quartered from 2 hours to 30 minutes. We too had a reasonable early start, for we had an appointment with Parliament.

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Anyone can pay to take a tour during the summer recess, but did you know that you can book a free tour any time of the year simply by writing to your MP. I did, and despite the best efforts of the District / Circle Lines we arrived promptly at the Wonkaesque time of 9.44am, as instructed on our Commons-headed invitation. The tour group was larger than I expected, and there were many groups being shown round this morning. Our guide was a kindly but extremely posy little lady called Malka, and she whisked us efficiently round the Houses Lords and Commons, the Queen’s robing room, the shelf of Hansard’s and other choice parts of The Palace of Westminster that you don’t normally get to see. I was happy to be taking a peek inside one of my top-ten favourite buildings, and it was strange to find myself standing where a few hours later Gordon Brown would be leaning against his dispatch box.

After dispatching a parliamentary muffin in the cafe, we headed back to the flat (after having a quick look round Brixton High Street). Newly enfreshened, we got to Regent Street a little ahead of schedule and called in for a few minutes at Hamleys, where a salesman asked me how old my child was. ‘It’s not born yet’, was my true yet satisfying sale-killing response Actually, I just remembered that I haven't posted here about our exciting news - this will be done in a few weeks after the twenty-week scan.

Just down a side street we found the Mason’s Arms, where we met up with Dan and Camille for a night of comedy. I am sorry to say I did not note the names of the fist six stand-ups (all bar one were pretty funny, notably the slightly overweight stockbroker who made good use of a bar-chart to help illustrate his points about Internet dating). The headliner was Richard Herring, who I thought would be on longer than his allotted 20 minutes; still, he was very funny and, following a bold statement about his knowledge of the Guinness Book of Records, coaxed Dan into confusedly asking him if he knew the name of the man ‘who ate the Eiffel Tower'. We all laughed.

Wednesday

So far we had gotten to wherever we were going using the Victoria Line from Brixton. This morning, we decided to travel overground, and caught the 345 Bus all the way to South Kensington. The 50 minute journey gave us time to eat our lunch as we weaved through the increasingly posh houses and shops of Battersea and Chelsea. We were soon at the Victoria and Albert and the Natural History Museums. Both collections are housed in amazing buildings, and, unbelievably, both are free. In the V&A, we took in the 20th Century rooms, and I saw the photography room and the current Chinese Design Now exhibition (while Gemma lay in the sun outside). Then we popped next door, where we had time to see the Dinosaurs and the Mammals, rooms full of massive skeletons of the extinct and even massiver actual specimens of Elephants and Whales. It was literally awesome, and I can only imagine what the pre-mass-media-and-Internet public made of these collections. You could definitely visit for days on end and not see everything.

We did not have days, for we had to get to the West End for a show. Avenue Q was my choice, and despite the front-row seats being stupidly close to the high stage and causing a little neck ache, we both enjoyed this funny, simple, adult-orientated puppet-based musical.

Thursday

To St. Paul’s Cathedral today, via train. I got confused by the discrepancy between the name of the nearest station in the A to Z (Ludgate Hill) and on the network map (Thameslink), so we got out at Barbican, and soon discovered that the two stations were one and the same. Ah London, you mysterious deceiver!

The steps of St. Paul’s were full of lunching office workers. We weaved deftly through the melee, and into the cool environs of the cathedral. Starting in the crypt, and momentarily eavesdropping on a guided tour, we worked our way up the 259 steps to the Whispering Gallery. Up here in the dome space, many tourists talked into the walls in the hope of experiencing the phenomenon of having their friends hearing that whisper on the opposite wall. It sounded to me like a whole lot of European snakes. I carried on to the Golden Gallery, a further 271 steps which take you 280ft out into the London skyline. Despite my healthy natural fear of heights, I loved it out here in the sun, with just a few fit brave tourists for company. I had been looking for an alternative to the Eye for getting a first class view of the capital, and I have to say this was it. Until I get a new copy of Photoshop, I can't stitch together the snaps of the wonderful 365º view, so you'll just have to make do with North, South, East and West instead (and in that order).

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Back on the ground, we lunched at Leon’s, before hopping on a tour bus. We usually take a guided tour in an open-top bus; it’s so touristy and tacky but you do get to see all the ‘sights’ whilst taking the weight off your feet. Due to toilet commitments, we experienced commentary in both an Australian and a Russian accent. We hopped off at Shaftesbury Avenue, and after a light dinner took our seats in the Lyric Theatre for Gemma’s choice of show, which was Cabaret. This production starred Alastair McGowan. Gemma did not like the show much (she claims to have seen better versions at her university in Newcastle), whilst I pretty much hated it. The story was slight yet very depressing and dark, the music and dancing corresponded exactly with the sort that I dislike, and the seats were uncomfortable. I was glad to eventually leave and head south on a variety of tube trains and buses.

Friday

A train and a tube took us to Tower Hill, where we boarded a big white boat which took us to Greenwich. A young crew member provided some genuinely interesting commentary as we headed east through the former dockland (now, inevitably, the river here is lined with endless soulless apartments). But I was excited to be showing Gemma one of the lovelier parts of the capital. The boat docked and we split from the real tourists by ducking into the market, before having lunch at an empty Spanish restaurant (weird prawns and patatas bravas for Gemma, tiny fishcakes for me). Afterwards we strolled up to the Royal Observatory, where we straddled the meridian and marvelled at the camera obscurer, before heading back down for an ice cream.

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An alarmingly wobbly DLR train conveyed us back to town, and we decided that the above constituted enough for this week thank you very much. Back at Sarah and Tom’s flat, we had a bath (I enjoyed shedding a weeks worth of factor 50) and read the Guardian, before our hosts returned from post-work drinks to cook up a vegetable lasagna and discuss our week (for we saw nothing of them during over the previous few days – they always left for work before we woke, and we usually returned after their bedtime).

Saturday

I was sad to be leaving friends and also to be leaving London this morning. We got to Kings Cross in ample time to catch the 12.10 north. As we accelerated through Hertfordshire, I reflected on why I like, indeed love London so much. I find the place mysterious and confusing, exotic yet familiar. There is literally a limitless amount of amazing things to see and do, much of it, if not free, then at least reasonably priced. It’s so big, but very easy to get around. Its size works to pull entertains and comedians and musicians into the large arenas and small rooms above pubs and even the streets.

I reckon that if I put my mind to it, I could learn more of the city’s geography and cultures and customs, but I actually enjoy not knowing – it keeps the mystery going for me.

March 30, 2008

Stealing is the dirtiest form of flattery

What's going on with the new Sugar Puffs advert?

It's undeniably a crimp, the a capella scat singing developed by Vince and Howard from off of The Mighty Boosh:

Michelle wondered whether Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding actually had a hand in the advert, but this article casts doubt on this (although the original source of the story is The Sun, so I guess it's accuracy cannot be guaranteed). She also suggested that if Quaker did steal the concept, they might have thought that The Boosh was sufficiently underground to allow them to get away with it. If they did think this, they were extremely misguided to rip-off a popular and successful show that has seen three series on BBC television and had an extensive, sell out UK tour.

March 27, 2008

We all scream for Ice Cream

On my way home from work, I saw an Ice Cream Man driving his Ice Cream Van, eating a single-scoop cornet. I enjoyed this view very much; he must really like the product he sells.

March 24, 2008

Moveable Feast

My Easter break started with a quiz organised by work. The team I was in was apparently 'hotly tipped' to do well, and in fact we won. The prize was a tiny plastic trophy and a extra half-day holiday. Which was nice.

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The next morning, we travelled to the Midlands to visit my Mum and Dad, who we haven't seen since Christmas. It's always nice to visit my homeland, and staying in the house in which I haven't lived for nine years makes it feel like we are stopping in a Bed and Breakfast establishment. This impression is enforced by the fact that my Mum wouldn't let anyone help out with any cleaning or cooking unless they insist.We stayed there until today, which seemed a reasonable thing to do considering the weather on Sunday was less than ideal for travelling.

On Saturday we tried to go to the Sea Life Centre, but the queue stretched out of the door and onto the bridge over the canal basin, so we repaired to Cafe Rogue to regroup and plotted instead to go to the Science Museum. This has moved since I last visited (many years ago) from it's original site in the city centre to a purpose built complex near Digbeth, and has been re-branded as 'ThinkTank', presumably to make it more acceptable to the under twenty-ones. We spent an hour or so looking at the displays of machinery that helped Birmingham grow from a sixteenth century small town to the UK's second city. It seems that there isn't anything that wasn't manufactured there.

I also had the best curry I've eaten so far this year; on Saturday night, we all went to the Bangla in Halesowen, which is my folks' current favourite. I went back to basics with a Lamb Rogan Josh, and it was good.

March 05, 2008

Jello Pages

I came across a gorgeous set of images from a cook book with a heavy jelly bias, compiled by Curly-Wurly.

Jelly

January 27, 2008

t'Getting away from it all

So, we did go to Egypt. We came back last Monday night, and have been collecting our thoughts and washing our shorts since then. Going back to work is always a drag, but processing the pictures we took has brightened my evenings. For this review, I thought I’d categorise and ignore chronology.

t’There and Back

We set out from Leeds at 5am on a dark, cold, windy and wet Monday morning. Did I mention it was windy and wet? The journey over the Pennines was horrendous, and we were buffeted about like a heavy four-seater leaf. Upon arrival at Manchester Airport we found that our bags were pretty overweight and we had to swiftly stuff our heaviest clothes into our hand luggage to reduce the excess payment. The 757 was packed full of seats, and each one was occupied. The flight was therefore cramped, but the 150mph tailwind thoughtfully reduced the flight time to something approaching reasonable.

The return journey felt like a kind of hollowed out version of the above; we were pretty tired from all our holidaying and wanted more than anything to get back and have a cup of tea. Upon our return, we fell gratefully into clean sheets and slept.

t’Hotel

We booked a package holiday via Thomas Cook, something we have not done before. We opted for ‘allocation on arrival’ for our accommodation, and we pretty much lucked out in being placed at the Sheraton, a five star hotel on a spit of land between the airport and Naama Bay, the local town. It felt new yet a little dusty, and strangely Disney in its existence on the rocky nowhere of the Sinai Peninsula. The hotel is built into a cliff, so that the lobby, ground-floor at the front, leads to restaurants at the rear with amazing seventh-floor views into the Red Sea.

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We chose only to pay for bed and breakfast, and this was the correct decision to have made as the food certainly was not five star. It wasn’t terrible, it just wasn’t great, and it was pretty expensive. We mostly eat out in town. The Egyptian staff, all male, were on the whole very friendly but a little too deferential and this felt weird.

t’Getting About

I reckon it would have been possible to walk to Naama Bay from the hotel in around 20 minutes, had there been a coast path. But the only walking option available was the unattractive and dusty inland route via the Peace Road. The hotel ran an irregular and over-subscribed shuttle bus, with which we were seldom able to get involved. We mainly caught an expensive hotel taxi the couple of miles, and returned using an unlicensed but more reasonably priced taxi back.

Even during our first short sojourn onto the Egyptian roads on the transfer from the airport we were shocked by the standard of driving. I was going to make a list of all the British driving rules that are flouted, but this proved impossible. Basically there appeared to be no rules, and this was confirmed by our guide when we when to Cairo, who explained that there is no driving test in Egypt, drivers simply buy a licence. He also told us that the only rule of the road is ‘if you see a gap, get in it’. The horn is the Egyptian driver’s best friend; it is a multi-purpose tool that warns, greets, alerts, invite, or simple proclaims that ‘this car is fitted with a horn and I’m going to let the world know it’.

t’Weather

The average temperature of both the Red Sea and the south Sinai air is around 22°C in January. This was very pleasant, thank you. During the central portion of our stay, it was pretty windy and this took the edge off the temperatures. During the last few days it became increasingly cloudy, and on the day we left it began raining.

t’People

As I mentioned above, the hotel staff we friendly but a little too subservient for my liking. Yet they were a welcome relief in comparison to the shop-keepers and restaurateurs of Naama Bay, who seemed to be powered by the same instincts as mosquitoes, homing in on the naive pale-skinned tourists and putting up a sheer wall of small talk in almost any language. Actually, not at all like mosquitoes. For approximately 3 minutes it was a novelty; the next couple of days were spent working out the best tactics for avoidance, the final week was spent employing these ploys, which essentially involved politely ignoring everyone.

The main places where the tourists were from, in order of attendance, seemed to be Russia, Britain, Germany and Italy. We had quickly gleaned from our Egyptian hosts that the Russians were disliked, but we were unsure why. I regret to say that we eventually came to the conclusion that all of the Russians in Sharm el-Sheikh were rude, miserable and without style.; many of the males sported mullets.

t’Food and Drink

Not all of the hotel food was poor quality; just most of it was. The exception was the Lebanese restaurant, where we dined but once. Here we had a variety of Mezzah, and it was good. The fare available in Naama Bay was a lot more varied but only moderately better. Highlight meals were the Italian and the Indian restaurants either side of the Camel Diving Club, and the Mexican near Little Buddha, which was in fact my meal of the fortnight. We mainly drank water and cola, and occasional Stella, the local beer. Tap water was strictly off limits, and our stomachs were certainly glad of our restraint and care in this matter.

t’Entertainment

The hotel-based disco held no interest for us, nor did drinking until the small hours in Naama Bay. We like the quite life, us, and tended to stay in the hotel of an evening. Spurning the initially reassuring yet ultimately rubbish CNN, we tuned into the Showtime family of channels, as it delivered to us Bones, CSI: Miami, and Napoleon Dynamite.

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Gemma’s iPod provided general music, whilst my new ZEN Stone gave me up to 3 hours worth of songs. I was especially digging the Ride best of, Midlake and the new record from The Broken Family Band, as well as a bunch of ace compilations made by my friend John. I completely read Waterlog, The Undercover Economist, and Urban Grimshaw and the Shed Crew, and we both read snatches of Charlie Brookers’ collected writings in Dawn of the Dumb. Small gaps were plugged by Mojo and National Geographic.

t’Celebs

One day we took a stroll further along the beach, and stumbled upon an extensive film crew set up in one of the hotel bars. Dozens of Egyptian cameramen and technicians buzzed about the place, and at the centre of this activity was a couple of Eldorado/Hollyoaks-style young actors waiting to ‘put one in the can’, as they definitely say in televisionland. Also of note in this category was the fleeting visit to Sharm el-Sheikh by President George W. Bush of the USA; he met briefly with the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. We saw neither them, nor Air Force One.

t’Shopping

The shopkeepers must have developed some kind of instinct to home in on green tourists who have not long stepped of a plane. On the first evening, we went for a wander around of the hotel. A charming gentleman got chatting to us, and upon discovering we were from England invited us into his perfume shop to ‘sign his guestbook’. He then ordered his colleague to get the tea on, and chatted a little about the state of the world. Ultimately, he managed to sell us some essence for a price so vastly inflated that I am shy to reveal it here. Suffice to say that our new friend most likely took the rest of the night off.

We learnt our lesson quickly, and although we would be once more led semi-willingly into an shop, we did not pay too much again. Shops mainly sold one or any number of the following goods: essences; fake-brand clothing; ‘traditional’ middle-eastern clothing; jewellery; souvenirs; papyrus. Walking down the street was very tiring, as we had to fend off the advances of every single proprietor. And having to haggle over the price every time we wanted or needed to buy anything quickly got boring.

t‘Sharm el-Sheikh and Naama Bay

Sharm el-Sheikh, Sharm to it's friends, is the city nearest to where we stayed. It is known as ‘The City of Peace’, even though it was bombed by terrorists in 2005. Historically a minor fishing village, it became a major naval base for Egypt during the middle of last century. It lies on the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula, which is a rocky, triangular land bridge between Africa and Asia. The Sinai was occupied by Israel between 1967 and 1981, who renamed Sharm el-Sheikh ‘Mifratz Shlomo’, though this never caught on. Naama Bay is a slightly scruffy, vaguely dusty Disney town, and does not represent Egypt. It is entirely tourist orientated, and is full of un-Egyptian restaurants, bars, and shops.

It is rare to find an Egyptian in Sharm who comes from the area; most are from Cairo. Those who are local are likely to be Bedouins from Arabia, Jordan and Palestine, who settled on the Peninsula because it was on the trade route to the Nile.

t’Trips

We didn’t confine ourselves to the hotel for two weeks, no sir. We opted to go on a number of trips. The shortest of these was an hour and a bit on a glass bottom boat, which scuttled around Naama Bay and afforded us pretty amazing views of some coral and some tropical fish.

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I got closer to the coral on the ‘adventure safari’, which first took us into the desert to a Bedouin camp for tea and bread, and a camel ride. The crazy driver then bounced us to Dahab, a rubbish approximation of what Sharm el-Sheikh was like about ten years ago. Near here we snorkeled. Getting into the sea was painful on the feet, and Gemma in fact gave up and went to get a drink. But I stuck with it and the rewards were immense. Breathing through a fat straw took a little getting used to, but supported by the Red Sea (the saltiest living sea on the planet) I began to enjoy floating across the coral and the fish. My only regret is that we didn’t buy an underwater camera. After we got back to the hotel, I realised my mobile phone was no longer in my pocket. I can only assume that it was teased out of my pocket by the insane driving of our Bedouin host.

Also on Sinai, we took a ride up to St Catherine’s Monastery, which holds the title of the worlds oldest continuously function Christian monastery. It is also the sight of the ‘burning bush’, which is an actual bush through which the fictional character God spoke to Moses in the popular book ‘Bible’. I enjoyed deliberately confusing the burning bush with the talking tree at the West Bromwich branch of McDonalds.

We left Sinai twice, both on long and tiring trips. First, we went to Cairo. We opted to be taken there by aeroplane, as the alternative was a seven-hour coach journey. I went to Cairo when I was about thirteen as part of the Dudley Schools Cruise, which delivered hundreds of Black Country teenagers to numerous Mediterranean destinations at the end of the 1980’s. The city was just as I remembered it: big, loud, busy, dusty, chaotic. We firstly visited the Egyptian Museum, where we saw thousands of things that were thousands of years old. I am actually not at all interested in ancient history, but it was impressive to see artifacts from this advanced civilisation from 4500 years ago, and it was mad to think that they just faded away over time. The tomb and mask of Tutankhamen was pretty amazing.

After a buffet lunch at the Hard Rock Cafe (where the Egyptian staff danced uncomfortably to YMCA) we headed out to see the main event – the pyramids of Giza. The Giza bit is important, as there are hundreds of pyramids in the north-eastern corner of Africa. These though are the pyramids everyone knows. They were actually more impressive than my teenage self remembered; they suddenly loomed above the suburbs like alien spaceships.

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The three pyramids here were the tallest man-made structures on the planet for 43 centuries! Inside the Pyramid of Khafre, it was small and hot and airless, but incredible. The annoying woman from Stoke on our coach told us later that she hadn’t bothered going in (entrance fee £2.50) as ‘there’s no point, there ain’t nothin’ to see’. Quite. We also squeezed in a visit to a papyrus ‘museum’ (museum is an Egyptian word for shop, I think), where we were given an interesting demonstration in the art of making papyrus, and an opportunity to buy some product.

The longest excursion was to Petra, which is in Jordan. The total journey time was around sixteen hours, yet we were only at the site of the Rose City for a little over three hours. We were very tired and a little grouchy when we got back to the Sheraton. Our trip took us by coach to the small port city of Taba, near the Israeli border. Here, we queued for around two hours at the inefficient border control, before boarding a ferry full of Russian tourists for the thirty minute crossing of the Gulf of Aqaba to the Jordanian city than gives the country sea access and its name to this particular branch of the Red Sea. We were initially worried when our passports were retained here, but we were reassured by our guide that this was normal, and would speed things along upon our return. A fresh coach took us north into the mountains, and soon(ish) we arrived at a visitor centre which featured reasonable toilets for which we didn’t have to pay baksheesh. The decent into this ancient hidden city was awesome; each step bought the red rocks narrower and higher, until we popped out in front of the treasury (made famous in that Indiana Jones film). It put me in mind of an out of control Kinver Edge.

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t’Summary

We took some pictures of our holiday – they can (soon) be seen on my Flickr page. We wouldn’t go back to Sharm el-Sheikh; not because we had a bad time, we didn’t, but because we don’t normally take package holidays and we pretty much exhausted our options as far as seeing the sights went. But it was just really nice to get away for a couple of weeks and do not much.

November 05, 2007

Hotter than Hell

We had the usual suspects over this weekend for halloween / bonfire related activities. I spent most of Friday evening and Saturday afternoon carving and painting four pumpkins so that they resembled the rock group Kiss. I don't think I did too badly.

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On Saturday evening we went to watch the fireworks in East End Park. But they weren't happening, and we ended up standing around near the north gate for a few minutes, whilst some teenage girls drinking White Lightning and listening to music on their mobile phones eyed us suspisiously. I turned out that the event was being staged on the actual 5th November. Doh! Aah well, we still had our chilli, parkin, and home-grown pumpkin soup to warm us, and sparklers to swirl.

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October 30, 2007

Cold Wind

Arcade Fire played in Manchester on Saturday, and we (me, Gemma, Deb, Neil, John, Christina) were there to watch. We travelled variously over, through and under the Pennines by train, which due to engineering works was slow and diverted to Victoria station. This suited us as our hotel was this side of town.

The band were amazing; really tight but refreshingly energetic, with a big sound that comfortably filled the massive and sold out MEN Arena. I forgot just how many ace-rockin' songs they have. They easily had the seated crown on their feet. The only down point was that Clinic, the support, must have come on super-early as we totally missed them.

Afterwards, we we conveyed by taxi to the 'curry mile' in Rusholme. We picked a restaurant based on a recommendation, but my Lamb Biryani was only fair to good.

During the early hours, I was woken by a crazy wind whipping round the ninth-floor edges of the hotel. Although I got back to sleep for a bit, I woke up a few more times. Thank parliament for BST. Interestingly, Premium Travel Inn have a policy which guarantees a good nights sleep, or else gives a full refund. I decided to test this policy when checking out, and had a full script rehearsed in my head. But the receptionist gave me my money back without asking any questions. Wonderful.

This unexpected refund was easily swallowed up by the purchase of new shoes for me and new boots for Gemma. We also spent a little time and money in Urban Outfitters, which is one of our favourite shops and one which we had though was our secret from New York and Boston. We finished the day in another favourite shop, the truly independent Oklahoma, a shop cafe that seems to pack in as much quirky stock as Albert Arkwright did with comestibles in Open All Hours.

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    ...for massively overestimating our final bill, issuing a threatening debt collection letter (despite me calling them three times to tell them they got it wrong), making us pay the incorrect amount until they 'resolved' the problem, and then allowing another debt collection agency to write to us asking for a random amount. Since then, they have cold-called me a couple of times asking if I was interested in hearing about their current 'special offers'. Er, no thank you.
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  • Coca Cola
    ...for their involvement in the kidnap, torture and murder of employees and union leaders at their columbian bottling plants. No, really!
  • Domino's Pizza
    ...for (former owner) Tom Monaghan's anti-abortion stance.
  • Enterprise Rent-a-Car
    ...for telling me literally one hour before i was due to pick up a hired van that there was no van available.
  • Home Delivery Network
    ...for leaving a cardboard package fullof books and DVDs in our back garden for over twenty-four hours, in the pouring rain. No common sense - it is noly through luck it was not totally damaged (or even stolen).
  • Nestle
    ...for continuing to promote their baby formula over breastfeeding in the world's poorer countries.
  • Plug-in Air Fresheners
    ...for being the biggest waste of the planet's resources. Does your room smell? Then why open a window when you can buy a small plastic device that requires further expense in re-fills and electricity?
  • UnicaHome
    ...for totally letting me down over Christmas; I ordered a product from them as a present for a friend in October; in December, they said they would finally ship it to me, but have not responded to my numerour emails since then. Utter cowboys.

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