Archive for the ‘Family’ Category

The First Day In London

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

We arrived five days ago, and our first two days here were spent in London.

Day one we were (obviously) tired after the flight – we’d arrived at around 7am. We dropped our bags off at the hotel and decided to take a bus tour of the city to see the main sights without too much effort.

This included such things as the London Eye and Big Ben amongst others.

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Many of these sights we want to see in more detail, but it was very exciting to see them all from the top of an open-topped double-decker bus ๐Ÿ™‚

We were all very tired as well, and at various times all of us were nodding off on the bus! Our ticket included a boat trip on the Thames as well, which was a lot of fun.

Late in the day we headed back to the hotel, including walking through Hyde Park

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That’s the lake in the park, called Serpentine.

On my notes I described the hotel we stayed at in London – the Ibis – as a “ripoff hotel with insane internet prices”. And by insane I mean ยฃ20 for four hours (that’s about $8/hour). Oh well, here I am!

I don’t even remember how the first day ended, how tired we were.

The Streets Are Full Of Tardii!

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Finally, after five days, we’re staying somewhere with internet!

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And since we’re only here one day, and have no idea if any future accomodations will offer the net, expect the next (possibly *only*) post to be length ๐Ÿ™‚

Go East

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

The poster is finished! Later today we’re off to Rochester, and then tomorrow England.

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I will, as usual, strive to blog the post as best as possible (internet availability pending). So please watch these pages for fascinating tales of great wonder!

If you want to email me during the trip, please use my school email since I’ll be checking that most often.

And expect a postcard or two. Cause, you know, I’m still oldschool ๐Ÿ™‚

And yes, if I happen to see the teapot above, I will certainly purchase it!

The Great Escape

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Last friday, SFL and I went to The Great Escape, a Six Flags amusement park about an hour north of Albany.

I’d been wanting to visit this place ever since we moved to Albany. In that time it had changed from an independent park to a Six Flags park, and when Six Flags had gone into bankruptcy protection there were mutterings of it closing. All I cared about was the fact it had rollercoasters and was close to home, and the regret I would have felt had it closed without me ever checking it out.

I’ll spare you the suspense: The Great Escape is ‘not very good’ ๐Ÿ™‚

But a bad destination can be fun when visited with a good friend, and even though this is far from the best park in the world we certainly had a good day!

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The first two rides we went on were the two coasters (of 4 running) closest to the entrance. On the left is the ‘Canyon Blaster’ and on the right is ‘Steamin Demon’. There was some trepidation from my companion before riding the first one, which I kept dismissing as a ‘baby ride’ (and saying “as a physicist… you shouldn’t be scared!”). But even though it had no real drops, the Canyon Blaster banks more than it appears to on the big downward spiral so it had some measure of thrill. The Steamin Demon on the other hand was a very vanilla three inversion ride that was extremely short (under 30 seconds). An instantly forgettable coaster.

Incidentally the pictures above illustrate another big problem the park has: very poor landscaping. Not only are the trees and flowers mostly random and ugly (and much of the greenery in the park looks like weeds…) but the layout of the rides is uninspired. The best theme parks do such things as put their coasters over the walkways so even those not riding them can see them. At Great Escape they hide them behind fences or put them at dead ends.

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The park opened aeons ago as a homemade ‘fairy tale’ park. Some elements remain, such as the above sculpture of the Three Little Kitties and a gondola ride. We rode that gondola. It starts nowhere, goes forever, and then turns around and heads back. It is insufferably slow and terminally boring: 21 minutes and 8 seconds of soporiphia. When you visit The Great Escape, skip this ‘ride’.

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The above left photo shows the most interesting ride at the park: Alpine Bobsled (inspired name isn’t it?). It is a coaster of sorts, but lacking a track. Instead the four-person car free-rolls on wheels through a fake bobsled track, only being railed through the very tight corners. It was thrilling and even a little scary since it was easy to imagine it tipping on the banked turns. But ultimately it lacked the true thrill of a coaster since the walls were so high you didn’t know how high you were off the ground.

Now, now we get to the good stuff. The (terrible, again I blame landscaping) photo on the top right shows The Comet. This hybrid (wooden track on steel framework) coaster was built in 1948 in a park in Ontario and moved to The Great Escape in 1993. It is known as one of (if not the) best wooden coasters in America and after riding it I’m inclined to agree. The ride is very long, very smooth and has an incredible amount of ‘air time’ (the illusion of weightlessness) on the hills. There are three or four great drops as well, and many very fast and tight turns. In fact the only negative I have is the deceleration at the end is brain-squeezingly rough, but that wasn’t enough to stop us riding it twice.

It’s worth pointing out that although SFL was a bit hesitant about riding the coasters at the start of our trip, by the end she was hopping onto The Comet for a second run like a professional ๐Ÿ™‚

The conventional rides only ate up about 2 hours of our day. The rest were spent in Splashwater Kingdom, the waterpark inside the main park. This was clearly the big draw, for it was packed to the gills with people enjoying the water rides on a very hot day. We rode seven different innertube rides and splashed around in the wave pool (more like a ‘ripple pool’) for a good few hours, managing to each get nice sunburns. Since the camera was stashed in a locker, I did not take a single photo of this part of the park!

Speaking of the locker, another notable aspect of Great Escape was the extreme price gouging going on. Here’s a shot of our lunch. As you look at it, please estimate the cost:

DSC01155 < How much?

If you guessed twenty five dollars, then give yourself a prize! It is perhaps indicative of the ludicrous prices that $13 for the (free refillable) cup seemed like a good deal at the time. The locker at the waterpark cost us a whopping $11 as well. And even snack items – such as fried dough or popcorn – was $9 and up. Outrageous!

With more than half the rides designed (and scaled) for childrenย  it is clear that Great Escape thrives on family business. But if you are looking for thrills this is not the place. Even so, we had fun, especially because the waterpark is actually very good.

So all things considered, a good day was had by all ๐Ÿ™‚

But now I’ve been, will I ever return to The Great Escape? I doubt it.

International Man Of Mystery

Monday, July 5th, 2010

Happy Birthday JAF!

I thought for myself, “What can I do for JAF on her birthday?”. Only one thing sprung to mind:ย  I thought I’d use modern technology to answer a question everyone has been asking for aeons: “What does JBF look like without a beard”

Here’s the gentleman in question:

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He has worn a beard for so long no-one can remember what he looked like without one! It’s possible that KLS has never seen him without a beard, and the jury is out on whether he may have even been born with a beard.

Happily, modern technology allows us to answer this ultimate question:

jgb

Ta-da!

Ok, ok. I just did a quicky ‘shop by pasting his eyes and nose onto George Bush! Sue me for being funny I say!

But – just for JAF on her birthday – enough joking! I now present the stunning reality:

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Very film noir isn’t he?

OK OK! Yes, I did it again! The source image of Telly Savalas was so handsome I couldn’t resist! I apologize m(_)m

Enough joking. This time for real, as a special gift for JAF for putting up with me all these years – her hubby, beardless:

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You can praise my ‘shopping skillz in the comments ๐Ÿ™‚