November 15, 2024

Highlights and lowlights from this years month of travels

 It was a month packed with activities - I had wanted to go to New York and on the Queen Mary 2 again but also to attend the last concert of the 2024 Canterbury Festival with my four nephews and nieces.

Highlights

  • Staying at the Yale Club in New York City
  • Attending the tales of Hoffman at the Metropolitan Opera
  • Two plays - the Roommate and McNeal
  • Visiting Newport and the Sailing museum
  • Visiting Cambridge Colleague Heather in Boston
  • Crossing the Atlantic on the QMII
  • A bridge lesson and duplicate game each day
  • Two days in Hampshire with nephew Phillip
  • Three days in London at the Reform Club
  • Meeting up with colleague Tom also from Cambridge days
  • Attending the Phantom of the Opera
  • Eight days in Lisbon.
  • The Maritime museum in Lisbon
  • The Guggenheim museum in Lisbon
  • Staying on the farm for a week in Littlebourne
  • Attending Monteverdi's 2010 Vespers with my four nephews and neices in the Nave of Canterbury Cathedral in memory of my sister.
Lowlights
  • Loosing my laptop in Calgary airport (later recovered)
  • Catching a respiratory virus on the QMII that lasted about three weeks.
  • Having my wallet pickpocketed in Lisbon.
  • Having to manage only with cash for more than a week.


November 13, 2024

On the farm and Canterbury festival







 I’ve participated in events of the Canterbury festival for at least 20 years. In earlier years it was with my mother who died in 2009.(She would be 112 this year). Then I would regularly attend with my sister who passed away last year. The farm has almost been like a second home to me because I have stayed in the farmhouse Garrington at least 55 times over the years . This year is an opportunity for a reunion with my nephews and nieces Robert, Philip, Helen and Carin. In past years I used to go to talks and on walks as well as concerts but this year I just arranged for four concerts. The first was the Festival chamber Orchestra who provided program titled “passion and celebration”the program was organized by Ian Crowther an oboist and I particularly enjoyed a piece by Albertini for two oboes and orchestra. The second was the BBC Big band. They played “a swinging celebration of Gershwin” .  It was great big band music but a bit too noisy for me so I only stayed for the first hour. The third  concert was an evening with “Tenors unlimited”.  Lil and Robert joined me. It was a wonderful selection of opera, popular music songs excerpts from My fair Lady, Les Misérables, Rigoletto, Phantom of the Opera etc.

The fourth concert will be on Saturday night in the nave of Canterbury Cathedral, where the Canterbury choral Society will sing Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers. I will be attending with my four nephews and nieces in memory of my sister who sang in the Canterbury Choral  Society, and also with whom I used to regularly go to this last concert of the festival each year.

On the farm, there is continuous activity and the equipment seems to get more and more complicated and larger.There is about 3700 acres under management, managed by four men. They have just purchased a new driller. 

 Helen is here and is towing two tires around the farm practising for pulling the pulk when she skis to the south pole in January. There is a wonderful bench that was donated to the farm by Roberts contemporaries at Wye College commemorating the lives of and Anne David Spencer

November 12, 2024

Canterbury

 I had a comfortable journey from Lisbon via Madrid to Heathrow, and then the tube to Saint Pancras and train to Canterbury. It was a great relief to be met by my nephew Robert. I had found that on the tube you cannot pay with cash. I did not have any credit cards because they had  all been frozen. I just had cash. I changed my euros into pounds at Heathrow Airport. When  I got to the tube station I called a help phone site and a young helper showed up. I told her my predicament and she said oh well I’ll just let you on the train but don’t tell anybody.  At the other end I went up to a an official and explained that I had a Trainline ticket to Canterbury, but that I had no cash. He just let me off so I had a free tube ride from Heathrow to Saint Pancras. I made the train with 10 minutes to spare.

It was a great relief to be on the farm and feel secure, surrounded by one’s relatives.

On the first day, we went to visit a pumpkin patch. Robert and Lil were very interested in the business behind developing this pumpkin patch. The farmer George is a great friend of  theirs. He has a large farm where he has arable, beef and sheep land but each year he creates a pumpkin patch on a couple of acres and invites the public to come and pick their own. It has developed over about five years and now has turned into a wonderful cash cow for the farm. Here are some pictures of the pumpkin patch and George the farmer dressed up in an inflatable dragon costume.







November 11, 2024

Castillo de sao Jorge

 I found Rick Steves's  snapshot of Lisbon booklet very helpful and at times I’m quoting from what he says. His descriptions of museums and castles, etc. are much better than perhaps the lengthy descriptions that you get if you take a tour guide or an audio guide. 

The Castelo de Sao George dates to the 11th century, when the Moors built it to house their army and provide a safe haven for the elites in times of siege. After Alfonso Henriques took the castle in 1147, Portugal’s royalty lived here for several centuries. The sloping walls typical of castles from this period were designed to withstand 14th century cannonballs. In the 16th century, the kings moved to their palace on Praca do Comercio, and the castle became a military Garrison. Despite suffering major damage in the 1755 earthquake, the castle later served another stint as a military Garrison. In the 20th century it became a national monument. 

I walked up to the castle which is high above the city but took the bus back down to the centre of the city near my hostel.










Cascais

 It was probably 60 years ago that Penny went with her mother to Cascais when she was able to get a discount fare while she was working for British European Airways.  Cascais is a 45 minute train ride from Lisbon. It was a beautiful sunny day between 21 and 25°.  Today Cascais is a an attractive tourist town with narrow streets multiple tourist  stores, a fishing fleet, there was a marina  in the distance that I saw, but I didn’t make the time to walk to it. Before the rise of the Algarve, Cascais was the haunt of Portugal’s rich and famous. Today it is an elegant and inviting escape from the city with pleasant beaches and relaxing ambience.

Before the 20th century aristocrats wanted to avoid the sun and exaggerate some of their white skin and a day on the beach just made no sense. But about 1900, a Portuguese queen made Cascais a summer vacation getaway – and Portugal’s high Society followed. A train line made Cascais accessible from the city and the area was developed as a kind of Portuguese answer to the French Riviera.











November 09, 2024

Maritime museum

 On my last day in Lisbon, I visited the National Maritime Museum. I have visited many Maritime museums - in Greenwich, England,  in Oregon, in New Zealand and in Australia but this one has to get the medal for the most amazing number of models, etc. It documents Portuguese maritime history  in the 15th and 16th Centuries. Henry the Navigator, Bartolomeu Dias, Vasco de Gama and Magellan.  The museum is loaded with artefacts and reproductions, nautical paintings, model ships, cannons, uniforms etc. A map illustrating Portuguese explorations exhibit takes you right up to the present day, covering not just explorers and military vessels, but also the fishing industry. The Kings and Queen's State rooms on the Amelia King Carlos's royal ship have been reproduced. There is a huge warehouse of boats, including a massive Royal barge. It was last in the water in 1957 when Queen Elizabeth II visited. For those who like Maritime museums I would highly recommend this on a visit to Lisbon. 













November 06, 2024

Gulbenkian museum

 For anybody who likes art even there if they are not an expert (like me) there is something very enlightening to visit grand collections that have been made over the years. Calouste Gulbenkian (1869 -1955), an Armenian oil tycoon gave Portugal his art collection in gratitude for the hospitable asylum granted him in Lisbon during WWII. Of Armenian origin he was born in Constantinople (now Istanbul) then part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1889 he left Turkey and settled in London with his family.  With the outbreak of the second world war, he settled in Lisbon where he would remain until his death. Here is a Wikipedia link to the museum.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calouste_Gulbenkian_Museum








Highlights and lowlights from this years month of travels

 It was a month packed with activities - I had wanted to go to New York and on the Queen Mary 2 again but also to attend the last concert of...