Monday, January 30, 2006

Staying

Hey all. Found a way around this county's anti-blog measures. So, I'll try to update this as many times as possible now. As you now know, I've decided to stay another 6 months. My fate was sealed after I bought an ironing board on Saturday. Obviously, if I'm going to impulsively buy a £7.99 ironing board from the Rainbow Co-op I'm destined to stay so I get at least 6 months of use out of it.

I actually haven't told senior management that I'm staying so there's still an opportunity to back out of it. I don't think I'll do that, though, considering the tremendous drop in work following Easter.

I've also picked up a 21 inch television from a guy I met at the Jolly Sailor Pub. It's only a year or two old and I got it for £20. Well, I bought him a pint, too, so it works out to be more like £23. I works fine but I have to keep it on the low down as England requires all television users to register their TVs and pay the annual stipend of £160. It's money that keeps the BBC going. The BBC shows hockey games every two weeks or so. Wednesdays at 3Am. Yippee.

I haven't figured out how to circumvent the flickr.com ban yet so I can't post pictures anymore. I'll figure it out, though. Believe you me. Without much else to do but watch the Simpsons at 6pm and what ever garbage movie is on channel 4 at 1000pm, I'm searching the web or listening to webcasts of NHL hockey games. At least they haven't blocked NHL.com.

Ed

Saturday, January 28, 2006

28 January

Hello all. It's been a long time since I last posted. It's been really busy at the school with mock exams and stuff so I haven't been able to get out to the internet cafe in the last few weeks. However, I'm here now and let me update you all on what's happening.

As you all probably know, Odette left for Guatemala and Fiona left for London so my circle of friends has dissapated some what. However, Zelresse has moved into flat number three (she's South African from New Zealand) and Len, Carol, and Jackie are still in the flas and that's keeping me sane. She's here until the end of the year but I think she might be having second thoughts. At least that's the feeling I'm getting from her. The school has again officially offered me an extension to my contract and I said no. They suggested that I take until Monday to think about it and now I'm thinking of staying. I know for a fact that the workload gets increasingly easy between April and July and that's the incentive in staying. This, plus I don't have as much money as I thought I had. I actually don't even have enough money to buy a ticket back to Vancouver at the moment. (I don't know where all the money goes...though I guess it's pretty easy to figure out since I'm spending a lot on accommodations and my last gas bill being £212. The woman at the bank asked me if I leave all the lights, heat and hot water running 24 hours a day. It's a lot of money for two months of gas, eh?) Staying another 5 months will provide at least £6000 but then£2100 of it will go to rent and at least £500 to gas and water.

Well, I have another 48 hours to think about it. If I do accept it I'm going to ask for 2 weeks off before beginning at the start of March. Plus, I'll see if they can help me a little more with rent. As well, they'll have to pay the extra £500 required to extend my work visa another 6 months.

Oh, I really don't know what to do.

I hear the weather in Vancouver has been pretty crappy the last 2 months or so. I should say that it's been sunny here the last two or three weeks and we rarely ever get rain during sunlight hours. Actually, we're only a few feet above sea level and we have no mountains in the county so we are said to be the driest county in England. That's good news I guess but it's still very, very cold and the sun sets by 1600hrs.

Hope everyone is doing well. I miss being in Vancouver, though this might be as good a year as any to be away from Vancouver considering the weather and how the Canucks are playing.

Only three more weeks until the Olympics in Turino. Only two more weeks before Barcelona. Yeah!

Go, Arsenal, go.

ed

Sunday, January 08, 2006

Odette leaves.


DSC01070
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
So, it's been a long time since I posted on this blog. The school has determined that blogs are evil, full of half-truths and lurkers so they've banned blogs from the school. Now, I have to go to the internet cafe (yes, there is one in Ramsey...it opened a couple of months ago) if I want to blog. That means it'll be difficult for me to blog much in the coming weeks. Plus, they blocked flickr.com because it may contain offensive pictures. This school is just odd.

I've decided not to come back following the end of my contract in February. Instead, I'm going to take two months to finish up some travelling. I might come back after that for a few months, just because I've been told it's really easy teaching during these months but I'll have to think about it more. In February, I'm heading to Barcelona for five days before flying to Turin for the Olympics. Narv is going to join me in Turin and we're going to Milan, Brussels, Antwerp, Dublin, and London. After that, I'll have a couple of days to pack up the flat and get everything out before heading out for more travelling. Where? I don't know yet. I think I'll try to get to Germany - for the World Cup of Football and Russia sooner or later. As well, I want to get to Wimbledon but past these few things I'm not sure about anything. I'll have to figure something out in the next few days.

Odette left and I am the only remaining member of the group that came over at the start of the year to teach at Ramsey Abbey. It's very quiet and there's not a lot to do here. It's very isolated but all I have to do is think that in five weeks I'll be out and travelling again.

Hope's all is well.

The wall at York


The wall at York
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
On our way back to Ramsey we stopped at York. It is a double-walled city about 2 hours from home. It was pretty cool and has a lot of history behind it. Of course, I don't know any of this history cause we were too cheap to go on a tour and even cheaper considering we didn't pick up a 60p tour sheet. Well, Ross knew a lot about the wall and he told us about it but I forget what he said.

Scary cave thingy


DSC01033
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
Upon our attempts to find an internet cafe, Fiona found a weird museum instead. I don't know how she found it - it's up a flight of stairs a couple of doors down from the cafe and the stairs were pitch black and smelled like pee - but she did. The first thing we saw was a weird museum dedicated to torture. Then a scary - super scary - catacomb thing. We walked down through one end - in complete darkness before we got freaked when we saw a candle flicker. We ran out. On our last night in Edinburgh, we went back to see if we could get back in and check it out completely. All five of us climbed the staircase. We entered the door but I guess Marie-Anne and Ross were kinda loud (kept asking where we were going and stuff) and a bouncer type guy caught us. However, instead of stopping, Fi said run so Odette and I ran away with Fi deep into the dark catacombs. We could hear Ross and Marie-Anne trying to talk their way out of trouble. We ran and ran until we got to the end. This is a picture of the last room in the caves.

Edinburgh Castle at night


Edinburgh Castle at night
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
Edinburgh is a great city. It's probably my favorite next to Vancouver, of course, and Stockholm. It has a population of only 550,000 but it seems it should be much bigger. They have a great transport system (I hear) and there were very few cars on the roads. The city is full of magnificent buildings and interesting sights and everything is within walking distance. Someone mentioned to me they thought that if you could take all of the interesting and significant things in London and get rid of all the other stuff you'd be left with Edingburgh. You need just walk a block and there'd be another cool thing to see or do. The only complaint was the prices for fish and chips. They charge £5.50 ($11CDN) for a small order. Highway robbery, I say!!

Haggis


DSC00907
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
Our first night in Edinburgh we all agreed that we had to experience a Scottish Pub. So, we went into this one. (I can't remember the name but it was well Scottish and everything inside was either green or red...somewhat of a tartan theme, I presume.) How disappointed were we when the first waitress turned out to be Canadian (Toronto) and the second waitress from somewhere in the Southern Hemisphere like NZ or Oz. I don't actually recall hearing a Scottish accent during our stop here. Even more disappointing was that the only Scottish beer they had was tenants. Well, at least they had haggis on the menu. It didn't taste like chicken but it didn't taste bad at all. If anything, it tasted a lot like very, very greasy ground beef with lots of chewy bits. I don't even want to think what the chewy bits might have been.

Entering Scotland


DSC00902
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
This is the sign dividing Scotland and England. Of course, we were kind of disappointed because we heard a rumor that the road dividing the two was painted a green tartan color. Another urban myth shattered. Everyone expect me and the dwarf weren't willing to come out of the warm car for this photo op. So, Fi drove across the street - remember cars drive in the right lane - and parked underneath the sign so we could get this picture. If you look closely you can see their teeth chattering.

Odette and the perfect man


Odette and the perfect man
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
We pulled into a small village(?) to make a snowman. Odette had never made one and we thought it was important for her to experience this. Except for a few pieces of dog poo I think our work was pretty damn good. (At least, the dwarf looks happy.) The snowman is wearing the latest in fashion. It has Fiona's cap, my scarf, a piece of tree for a mouth, two twigs for arms, and two AfterEight mints for eyes. Fi ate the eyes afterwards. Following this important experience, Fiona taught Odette and Marie-Anne how to make dinosaur foot prints in the snow. On our way out of this town we got kinda stuck in the snow. We all had to get out of the car - except Fi - and push to get out. This drew a few curious onlookers. We couldn't figure out if it was because we got stuck in the snow or because we were probably the first tourist in this village...ever.

Dwarf in Sherwood Forest

Though it was close, we went into the famed Sherwood Forest. It was kinda disappointing that we weren't jumped and/or attacked by some guys in tights (is one ninja asking too much?) and that the visitor centre was closed but you can't get everything. Sherwood Forest, like many other forest, has a lot of trees. Because we were visiting during the winter months, it also had snow on the ground. We saw some birds but nothing else, really. Sherwood Forest, which averages 500,000 visitors in a calander year, was kind of disappointing. But we had an amazing snowball fight in the car park. I got Fi good and Odette fell trying to throw a snow ball at the same time as she was trying to dodge one. Heehee. Novices.

Fi packing the trunk...thanks mom.

Organizing the car trip to Scotland was pretty easy. I left it in the hands of Fiona and Odette. We got this weird van - a Kia Sportif, I think it's called. Eventhough it had something like an 8L engine and ran on diesel it was super wimpy. Plus, it took something like 30 minutes to go from 0 to 60km. I might be exaggerating a bit but not too much.

Tuomiokirkko Cathedral


Famous Church in Helsinki
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
This is a huge cathedral in Helsinki. It sits on a hill and can be seen from everywhere. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to go in. Actually, I didn't get to see anything in Helsinki except the outsides of famous and interesting things because everything was closed for Christmas. I looked through a lot of windows - double glazed...only makes sense in a Northern city like Helsinki - but that didn't give me a true effect of the city. Helsinki is the largest city in Finland with a population of about 1 million. Really, it was like being in a really isolated, really small town because everything was so quiet. However, even if it wasn't Christmas and everything was open and everyone was out and about I don't think that this city would have been much more interesting. Very small, very expensive and the people weren't as friendly as in Sweden.

Church from boat


Church from boat
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
As I said, you can see this church from anywhere in Helsinki.

Royal Guards


Royal Guards
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
This is the Royal Square in Old Stockholm. The buildings surrounding this square include the Royal Palace, Royal Apartments, and a couple of Royal-related museums. The Guards that were protecting the square looked pretty imposing but they didn't shoot me or ask me to put my dwarf down...slowly. I thought it was a very well protected area considering there weren't a lot of people about.

Dwarf on a boat


Dwarf on a boat
Originally uploaded by cherubichomer.
This is a picture of a small rock in Finland somewhere. I took it at about 6am...2 hours before getting into Helsinki. By how dreary and plain this looked I should have anticipated what was coming in Helsinki. Oh well. At least the dwarf looks happy.