Category: Trip

Glasgoing

That bacon sandwich at the front there? That’s “the UK’s favourite” and cost only £1.20. It was salty and dry, which means I loved it 🙂

We’d slept for hours the night before, and yesterday being our only full day here took the chance to explore. I can recommend the local hop-on tourist bus; ours had a live narration and did a fine job not only showing us the city but helping us to decide which of the many sights to see in more detail.

Glasgow has many of these striking murals painted on the sides of buildings. Apparently they were done a few years back using spray paint only by an Australian artist to help beautify the city for the Commonwealth Games. This one shows the patron saint, Saint Mungo, as he may appear today. One of his miracles was apparently resurrecting a bird.

After the bus we went to the People’s Palace, which is a museum dedicated to life in Glasgow through the years. I particular enjoyed all the history of the Glaswegian tenement buildings and what life was like for those that endured the overcrowding of the city 50+ years ago.

Afterwards we (literally) followed a marching band almost all the way to the Cathedral and the large ancient graveyard beyond.

It had become warmer by now (~75F) and the climb to the top of the Necropolis was tiring and sweaty. We ended up walking over 25k steps in total yesterday – over about 9 hours – and collapsed in the room with loads of candy in the end 🙂

There is a lot more to see in this city, but we don’t have the time to see it. Today we head west…

Operation NYC

Last weekend we took a two-night trip to NYC.

We hadn’t been for years, and just wanted to shop and eat and visit a museum.

We took the train down, which is always fun, and stayed in a nice hotel right in the middle of the CBD.

It was very cold! But the streets were filled with people and we didn’t let the temperature stop us 🙂

After we arrived we hit the shops, somehow managing to drop mad dollars at Kinokuniya. Naturally I bought a load of postcards as well. Did you get one yet?

The next day after breakfast we visited the Intrepid, and aircraft carrier docked at a pier right in the city.

It’s part of a museum that includes a submarine, Concorde and even a Space Shuttle! It’s very good and highly recommended.

After a siesta we managed to drop even madder dollars at Koreatown cosmetics and Kpop shops before heading into Times Square for some lights!

And how pretty they were! If I look nervous in this shot it’s only because my face was freezing off.

Then the next day – after a bit more k-town shopping – we traveled home in our own private ‘roomette’ on the train. It even included a meal in the dining car.

It was a great little trip. We’ll probably make this a regular getaway 🙂

Sovereign Hill

Ballarat was the epicentre of the Australian gold rush of the 1800s, and fortunes were made in those Victorian hills. Yesterday we visited an open-air museum called Sovereign Hill that gives an idea of life in the gold-mining towns in those days.

The park features a couple of ‘mines’ and a dig for gold panning, all adjacent to a simulated main street from the period. Employees in costume wander around and occasionally do performances (we watched a ‘wife auction’) and visitors can just wander around and explore as they like. I’m sure Australian readers know about this place (since it’s a major tourist attraction) but to Americans this is like a (permanent) 1800s renaissance fair.

Several of the stores featured tradesmen that manufactured the articles they sold. A few of these workshops featured flabbergastingly elaborate belt-driven machines all powered by a single engine and giant belts (some dozens of meters in circumference) stretching up to the rafters and across the rooms!

We did a self-guided mine tour that took us underground and utilized sound, lights and special effects similar to what I’ve seen at Disney. It was great but unfortunately we didn’t have the time to do the bigger and longer versions. There was also a fancy ‘old photo’ studio that would have been fun and a separate ‘history of gold’ museum that could have filled a day itself. We certainly could have spent more time there.

For me though the highlight of the day was gold-panning. As with many things, I’m an expert at this esoteric method of goldfinding and despite Bernard’s skepticism knew I’d not only find gold but also had a decent chance of striking it rich!

And – of course – I was right. Here’s the nugget I found after only minutes of expert-level sloshing and searching:

Now the killjoys out there are going to say something like “But that’s only 0.5 square mm of gold!!!” and “If a Troy ounce can be beaten to 8 square meters of gold leaf then that’s worth only $0.00009!!” but I look at this as an important first step to riches, and validation of my prospecting skills.

It’s a shame Bernard – only seconds after this photo was taken – hurled the nugget down onto the ground, never to be seen again. All that value, now literally lies in the dusts of Sovereign Hill in Ballarat.