Saturday, September 7, 2013

Back in New Zealand

It's 14hrs from Dubai to Melbourne, then another 3 to Auckland. It's certainly easier in the 380's ,being quieter and roomier. A few movies on your own screen, a little nap and you're there.
 This trip was mostly about the cycling and we achieved our goal of getting to the Danube. If you look at the map we started this time just east of Orleans and finished at the next dot east of Bale (Basel).
We had previously done the first stage from St Nazaire, and the next stage will be along the Danube to Budapest, perhaps even Belgrade.
  It could have been a disaster when we lost our money on the campervan scam, but thanks to the generous help from our friends Andy and Mandy, we had a great trip. Cheers guys
 
Traveling is every bit about the people you meet ,as it is the things you see !
  Now we're home ,it's back into the routine again. Christine's back into her garden and tennis ,
and of course, white baiting 
  Me, with all the kids and grandchildren coming home for Xmas,there's heaps to do ,so it's head down and arse up. 

Monday, August 26, 2013

Dubai

I'd heard Dubai described as everything from a hole , to 'fantastic'.
  Like it or loath it, it's amazing !  Too new to have slums. Clean ,gardens and lovely green lawns by the mile. Where the hell do they get their water from?This is a desert !
The old markets and traditional dhows on the "creek", that's the driver in the center,
We were lucky to have cousin Penny as a guide,our very own 'Arab' 
Penny is a food critic for a large magazine and knows some great places to eat out.
 We ate at an outside seafood place the first night ,right beside the fishing boats. You chose your fish and prawns at the counter, then it was cooked and bought to your table. With salad ,narn bread and drinks, 135 Durand ( about $40 NZ ) for 3 people
Most people come here for the shopping. The malls are mind blowing !
That's a ski field inside this mall, with a penguin enclosure! So funny to see women in full burkas in special snow clothes . Then in one of the cafes next to it, people sitting around fires , sipping their coffees . Hard to believe its a desert outside and over 40 degrees
Another mall had an ice rink, a 4 story high waterfall , a lake with a water show every night ,and boasted the Burj Khalifa.!  This is the tallest building in the world and you can go most of the way up to the observatory deck.
You can see part of the mall in this shot and the fountain piping. The next shot shows the metro and the air conditioned 
walkway to the mall. 
I especially loved the architecture of Dubai. Every building is different and some , quite beautiful works of art.
The malls are so big you can even get a taxi to take you around 
Public transport is good and very cheap. Taxis are cheap also,which is just as well as there's no way you'd want to walk or bike. Water is 60 cents a liter , but petrol is only 30 cents ! 
I skyped Dennis from the tower and he commented that it looked colorless . That's probably the best description so far ,but if you're ever lucky enough to pass through this way, allow at least a couple of nights to look around,as there really is no place like it.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Leaving London


We've decided to bring our return flights forward 10 days and so it's 9pm at Heathrow airport. Our flight leaves at 10.15 for Dubai. It's a long weekend in the UK and the line at customs went for well over 100 meters   
For the last week here we've been living the English life. Walking over farms, something you can't do in NZ, taking the dog to the local ( also something you can't do in NZ ) and cruising down the Thames on Andy's boat
Andy and Black Keith at the White Hart , our local
A lock on the way to Windsor castle
That's Rolf Harris's house ,and then lunch at the Windsor racecourse marina.
  That's it from England , they're starting to board. Next stop , Dubai.
Oh! And our youngest grandchild, Eli ,just turned 1

Monday, August 19, 2013

Life in England

In Katikati we have several people that live in NZ for our summer and in England for theirs. 
 Our friends  Roy and Jill do this and we arranged to meet up for lunch with them at a lovely little pub called the 'Crooked Billet'
Some of their customers need to update their cars I think.
Interestingly, Roy and Jill live in the center of a golf course ,and to get to their house you have to look both ways as you drive across the fairways. 
Running the gauntlet ! A rabbits view of life.
  Bletchley park. 
  On Sunday we drove up to Milton Keynes to Bletchley Park. This is the well preserved site of the most intriguing story  of the WW2 code breakers .
The story starts before the war began in Poland ,where some very clever mathematicians got hold of an enigma machine,used by the Nazis to send secret messages. They nearly worked out how to break the code, before passing it along to the Brits. This memorial recognizes the Polish heros
Churchill directed that a group of the best brains England could muster be formed to break the code. They purchased Bletchley Park, a private estate, to house this department of code breakers .
An enigma machine was captured from a damaged submarine ,with a code book, and with the ingenious machine above,the code for the day was broken. 
 The code was changed once a day at midnight. It was such a huge operation that it took a staff of 9000 over 3 shifts 24 hours a day
The staff explain every step . Hitler's personal messages to his generals was sent by a far more complex decoder, so the code breakers. Came up with this magnificent machine called colossus with which they were successful
In my opinion ,Bletchley Park is a 'must see 'if you're ever in Britain . Opens at 10am and closes at 5pm . You'll need all day.
 

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Back in the UK

Our last night in France was in the walled town of Berges. Once again a Vauben fort. Never realized there were so many of them !
  We headed for Dunkirk the next morning. Our ferry tickets were flexible so we thought we'd bring the crossing forward a week. They didn't say that flexible only applied to 3 days either side ,so ended up paying an extra £60. *%~€!
   
This is our new best friend Daisy. Andy and Mandy are having a holiday in Spain so we're going to babysit.
  Windsor is a short bike ride away so today we rode along the Thames to see the changing of the guard.
The route takes you around the rowing lake used in the Olympics . Privately owned by Eton college.
  We waited with a large crowd for the guard change
They change the guard every 2 days whether they need it or not.
And half an hour later the old guard is marched away, presumably for a good wash and a change of undies.