Archive for July, 2019



A sunny Sunday

We finally visited one of Edinburgh’s biggest tourist attractions, the Castle. The fog over our understanding of what the fighting was all about is lifting: the castle of course, but more importantly its riches: immeasurable riches, those already in hand (the Honours, the name given to the Royal Paraphernalia) and riches to be had from all the lands and the taxpayers living off it and any other loot available to the winners. 

We had also been curious about The Stone, the place on which Scottish kings had been crowned for hundreds of years and which the English had kept until not very long ago. Both the Honours and the Stone are back inside the castle after being lost or carted off to England, centuries ago. We lined up with people from all over the world and waited patiently to have a fleeting glimpse of the these symbols of royalty, encased in glass in a tiny windowless room with metal doors of the bank vault type, impregnable and unstealable.

There must have been thousands of people traipsing up and down pathways and worming their way through narrow entrances into small rooms not made for such crowds. Although the audio guide told us we were in for a good 3 hours, we decided not to stay that long as the crowds were getting to us.

We returned to the café to have our smoked salmon for lunch. The Quakers who had gone to the later meeting as well streamed out just as we were served our lunch and bloody maries (Mary’s?)

[Sidebar: I had wondered whether the drink was named after Mary Queen of Scotts, because of her bloody death but later learned from Wikipedia (right or wrong) that it was named after the Tudor Mary because of all the bloodshed she caused.]

We chatted some more with our new friends, making firmer commitments this time.

We finished our lunch just in time to catch the start of the Carnival Parade on the Mound below us. The sun came out (and miraculously stayed out for the rest of the day) doing justice to all the glitter and colors. At least three quarters of the parade was made up of Asian groups, some dancing (the Chinese and Thai) and some not (the Nepali and the Tibetans and their supporters) but everyone was making music on drums, with bells, with trumpets.  Unlike the more serious Carnival Parades I have seen in other parts of the world, this was more of a home-made one and for that very reason very charming.

From the frivolous and the raucous we went to the hushed rooms in the National Gallery since we were standing right in front of it. We admired many great portraits and landscapes until my legs said ‘enough!’ It was the cocktail hour anyway. We landed in an old pub and had our pints. I also sampled a whiskey and learned, from a friendly Polish bartender, how to drink it properly: a drop of water trasnferred via straw from a water glass to the bottom of the whiskey glass. This apparently creates a chemical reaction that enhances the drink (and who figured that out I wondered). Axel’s mother splashed her whiskey with water, doing it all wrong all her life!

I pitied the bartenders being inside on such a lovely day but they didn’t want my pity as they thought it was much too warm. It seems that Poles and Scotts alike think that 65F is warm enough. It must have been in the mid seventies on the terrace outside, lovely!

We finished our day with a bus ride to the Leith waterfront and splurged again on a seafood extravaganza: oysters, mussels, salmon, crab and shrimp, all locally sourced.

New F/friends

I thought it would be interesting to see what an Edinburgh Quaker Meeting for worship would be like. We had looked up where the Quakers congregate and decided to set the alarm very early so we could attend the early meeting at 9:30.  We set it even earlier than necessary so we could have a coffee before retreating in silence.

The Quakers we know are, in general, not great dressers. They don’t put on a clean starched shirt or a dress, but we didn’t know and so we did. That turned out to be unnecessary. None of the women, we discovered, wore dresses or skirts, even the most grey-haired ones.

Since Quakers originated in this part of the world, in the mid 1600s,  Quaker Houses are often in the older parts of towns. The Edinburgh Meeting House is a majestic old building in the Old Town. As it so happened, the coffee we had planned to drink was being served right next door in Scotts Café. We settled into our seats on the veranda high over Victoria Street, sipping cappuccino (served again by Poles) and waiting to see who would open the door of the Meeting House. 

On the door a copper plaque said that worship services start at 11, and here we were at 9. We were already planning a second breakfast (eggs benedict with salmon) when the door was opened. As it turned out, Edinburgh Quakers are given a choice of how much of their precious Sunday they want to give up. If you worship at 9:30 you are home (assuming you live in the city) at 10:30-ish. But if you worship at 11, you probably won’t be home until 1PM because the time for worship is longer (one full hour) and soup is served afterwards leaving much more time for ‘fellowship.’

We were greeted by Mike the manager who explained everything about the two meeting times and sent us up several flights of stairs to the top floor.  There we sat in silence for 45 minutes, scattered across a very large room that could hold many more than the 10 of us. In spite of the overcast sky, light streamed in through large windows from three sides, high above the hustle and bustle of tourists making their way to Edinburgh Castle.  

At the coffee hour, in between the early and the later meeting, we met with our fellow Quakers. When we were ushered out, not willing to spend another hour in silence, Axel had practically arranged another house swap,  and we had invites to one home, a coffee in another later this week and a garden party.  The welcome was very warm and we may well return next week, now as old f(F)riends.

Dog-friendly

Because we started the day so late, by the time we were done with Holyrood everything was closing, except of course the pubs and the restaurants. The free concerts were breaking up and wherever we went stages and market stands were being dismantled. The good thing was that the rain never came and the sun was out. We sat for a while on a small grassy hill overlooking the Grassmarket with some 50 other people who were not waiting for anything, just having a good time talking with each other and drinking their beers out of plastic cups.

We took the bus back to Portobello and had a meal in the quirky Espy restaurant on the promenade where we had our first meal the day we arrived. We sat in the dog friendly section of the restaurant and were served by the American wife of the Australian waiter we met the first time there. Dogs were everywhere, something Boards of Health in our neck of the woods would definitely not approve of. I sent a picture to Tessa – she’d like this place. Dogs were even stretching out on couches. A sign warned owners that only well behaved dogs were allowed in: no barking, no biting and no humping.  

Unlike in Manchester, dogs are allowed on the beach here, presumably all year round. In Manchester by the sea dogs are not allowed on the beach between May and October for obvious reasons – our beaches are small, narrow and thus crowded in summer compared to the very long and wide beach here. Not allowing dogs in the restaurant would limit patronage. Staff served small liver cakes and bowls of water to the pooches alongside the meals ordered by their owners. 

By the time we had finished our meal the temperature had dropped to 59 degrees (F) and a strong wind gusted along the beach. People were dressed in woolen hats, boots and down coats – none of which he had with us. Axel always says there is no such thing as bad weather, only inappropriate clothing, how true! We shivered as we walked back to the bus stop rather than walking the last mile home. We are on a summer holiday but this felt like fall. I checked the temperature back home: 77F and sunny. I wondered what the winters must be like here.  Back at the house we filled the bathtub with very hot water to get our temperatures up and relax our tired legs.

History lessons

Today was for history. We had intended to rise early and get as much bang for the many bucks we paid for the tourist hop on and off buses. Alas, we didn’t get out of the house until past 12 and the ticket expired at 3:45 PM. We just got in a tour of the old city, see the Grassmarket with the free part of the Jazz Festival in full swing (3 different stages, one at each end and one in the middle). I wished I had been more forceful about getting off – it was after all a hop on/off bus, but Axel prevailed and I waffled, so we ended up at the palace of Holyrood while the sun was trying to get out from behind the thick cloud cover. Rain was predicted at 4PM and I figured that at 2PM we should be listening to jazz ‘en plein air.’ But we didn’t. A mistake.

An excellent audioguide took us from room to room and explained what we saw before us. We were reminded off our tour through Versailles where the sequence of rooms also led, eventually, to the monarch’s bedroom where a few very important people could see him going to bed and waking up. What a strange arrangement this now seems to us. 

We tried to keep track of all the Davids and Charleses and Jameses, Stuarts and Tudors, but the (en)tangled history of the English and Scotts remains hard for us to get our heads around. This evening, when I read the history section in one of the guide books I understood my confusion: James VI and James I are one and the same person (as are James VII and James II), the higher number is what he was for the Scotts and the lower one what the English called him. I also learned more about the intertwining of the Stuarts and Tudors, who was catholic and who was protestant, the Hanoverians, the Jacobites, and who was angry about what with whom, etc. 

We keep finding it strange, now being a tad more familiar with the history of both countries, that they are together. To me Scotland and England seem two very different countries. How a monarch who resides most of the time in one country can show up one week a year (and for special occasions) in Edinburgh and be the people’s monarch here, strikes me as odd, unless you call both countries together the United Kingdom. But shouldn’t kingdom be plural then?

Pounds and pounds and pounds

There are many meanings of the word pound. They are all part of our Scottish experience: the money, a measure of weight (these two related of course) and the manner in which rain sometimes comes down. I’ll explain.

We start each day late, catching up on sleep I suppose, but also because we are on a steep and tiring learning curve regarding getting around Edinburgh on not too much money.  We want to spend our money on food, not transport. Our first mistake was to pay nearly 4 pound Sterling (per person) for a train ride into Edinburgh which turned out to be the next stop, five minutes after getting on. 

The parking attendant at the local supermarket is giving us advice on getting around for as little money as possible, very Scottish of course. He offered to give us his cell phone number but I can hardly understand him when face to face so I declined before Axel could say yes.  He told us we should have asked him about the train (a rip off, said with a hard rolling ‘r’). The bus system is excellent and easy if you have the right apps, difficult when you don’t have that nor exact change and a dour bus driver to boot.  It took some time to get all the verifications completed for our online registrations but now I can simply show my electronic ticket to the bus driver, and check out where to get on what bus via my phone. 

Yesterday we visited the  Royal Botanical Gardens (nearly everything on the ‘have-to-see list has the adjective ‘royal’ attached to it). We were lucky because the sun was shining during most of our visit, and even when it was not, it was dry. When we boarded the bus to the next attraction it started to rain. First a sprinkle and then a downpour that lasted throughout dinner and during our mad dash to get to the bus to take us home. 

We picked an indoor attraction to stay (mostly) out of the rain: a visit to the Royal Britannica. The ship has been retired here (berthed being the opposite of birthed) and been pressed into tourist duty.

Axel was most impressed by the picture of the Review of the entire Royal fleet in 1953 (imagine that, all of the ships around the entire world being summoned to this review – the empire unguarded!). The bedrooms were surprisingly simple and basic – the royals’ (separate) bedrooms resembling more a 3 star hotel room than a royal suite.

I kept trying to imagine life on the ship with the royals on board, helped a bit by the many pictures of family members smiling at the camera. I am not sure it was actually a very happy place.  The ship must have been yet another gilded cage, with several hundred people around to serve their every wish and watch over them, no picking your nose without anyone noticing! 

Despite the relative simplicity of the personal quarters (except for the state dining room), the ship is a relic of a bygone era, a time when excessive spending and showing their wealth was what royals did.

I suppose the major means of transportation is now the Royal Airplane, which cannot take on all that silver and crystal, the 5 tons of personal items, food and drink -to feed hundreds for at least a month-, and the royal means of transport (Rolls and Jeeps). I also believe that such display of wealth is no longer cool, at least not in this part of the world. Nor is the display of gifts that required rare species of animals to die or give up body parts and paying respect to dignitaries whose wealth came partially or wholly from destroying these animals’ natural habitat.

By the time we reached the fourth of the five levels – the ground level where the Royal Rolls and the Royal speedboat are parked – it was raining cats and dogs. We skipped the last stop (the engine room) to catch a bus back to the center.

Since we had not spent any money on flying (Delta miles) and lodging (Home Exchange), we decided to ignore the prices on the menu of the seafood tapas place (The White Horse) – yes, click on it and see for yourself). We splurged on exquisite oysters, sampling three Scottish and one Irish variety , scallops, smoked salmon, and razor clams, seaweed salad and white wine (the latter recommended by our Polish waiter).

We briefly discussed Brexit with the waiter who doesn’t think it (Brexit) is going to happen – I suppose this is a matter of self-preservation. He told us that if EU citizens become foreigners, the hospitality sector will find itself very short handed. So far most of our waiters have come from the mainland.

Because we have reserved most of our money for food I am steadily gaining weight – I know this because there is a scale in the house. It is not surprising because nearly everything we eat and drink here is of very high caloric content. And since my daily exercise regimen has stopped altogether (walking doesn’t get the job done), I am afraid I will come back with a lot of extra pounds, these not of the Sterling kind.

Redhead capital

Axel is in ancestral lands. I am in the neighborhood of mine, now buried deep beneath the North Sea but that was thousands of years ago. Axel’s link with Scotland is closer. His maternal grandfather was a red-haired Scott who passed that gene to his mom (recessive) who passed it to him (red beard only) who passed it to Tessa with her copper tresses.

We expected to see many redheads when we first arrived on Tuesday but we saw none. We started to count. By the end of Tuesday, when we tumbled exhausted in our bed, the tally was only 1. By then, all we had seen was the airport and the Portobello section of Edinburgh.

On Wednesday we continued the count as we made our way in to Edinburgh. During those moments that the sun shines, the redheads stand out. Our lunch waitress was red. By the time we were done with lunch we had counted about 15 redheads who had passed us as we were sitting in one of the rare moments of sun on an outside terrace. Once we started walking around we stopped counting because they were everywhere. 

Our waitress told us that 34% of Scotts have red hair. It turns out she got that slightly wrong:  DNA research on the British isles, and particularly the south east of Scotland, has found that about 40% of the population has the gene for red hair, though  that doesn’t mean they have it.  The numbers of actual red heads differ. There is a lot of boasting between Ireland and Scotland about who has the most redheads – one or the other claims to have 10% of the population, the loser with only 6%. A quick search on Google however,  indicates that most agree that Edinburgh is the red head capital of the world. 

Scotland Holiday

We are in Scotland now. We exchanged Manchester at its summer best for a cool, rainy and cloudy Edinburgh. After a short flight from Boston we arrived mid-morning just when the sun was (kind of) peeking out from behind the massive cloud cover. It’s a familiar climate – like Holland, probably a bit worse. 

The Exchange home we will be inhabiting for the next two weeks is lovely. We can see the bay over the roofs of two more rows of houses that separate us from the beach at the most eastern end of the Portobello promenade. A big deck and decent size garden will be nice once the sun comes out (not in the next few days, unfortunately).

We exchanged leftover monies, some very old British and Scottish pounds, for real money at the bank (except for the 20 Shillings piece from 1964 which is worthless now). We had our first encounter with a singularly uninformative and unhelpful bus driver who gave us no change from a 5 pound note (sorry ma’am, exact fare only) for dropping us off at the wrong stop. 

Around lunch time things got better. We got eggs, ham, bread, some beer and a bottle of wine at a local Co-op. After messing up the self checkout, the co-op staff who came to our rescue, gave us several ideas for out of town outings, written on a cash register receipt, and pointed us to a place for lunch. It was a nice contrast with the dour bus driver. 

The recommended lunch, Espy on the Promenade in Portobello, was exactly what we needed. We sat outside (according to locals it was warm, 68 degrees), drinking great beer and enjoyed watching the activities on the wide sandy beach (mostly dogs and kids). We noticed no one was swimming. This was later explained by an electronic signal that said the water quality was poor (we suspect the water temperature was also poor). It felt a bit like Holland (especially seeing only clouds hanging low over the water) except that there was a city across the bay (Edinburgh) and hills on the horizon. We were served by a young man from Australia who had studied aeronautical engineering at Purdue University in Indiana, where Axel studied as well (Indiana, not Purdue).

We paid a price for all the walking we did (having no exact change for the bus fare back and underestimating distances).  Back home we watched a video on how to get the knots out of our leg muscles and relieve our sore legs and ankles. We sat across from each other on the small Ikea couches (in this Ikea-furnished house) massaging our legs with ‘Tranquil Chamomille’ oil. Axel is better at this than I am – he has done it before and is treated by the guy from the videos so he knows the drill. I got impatient quickly. 

I brought my ukulele. I have stopped taking lessons in order to focus fully on my violin. Without a teacher to hold myself accountable to I figured that taking it on this trip would impel me to keep playing. I now use my computer teacher (Yousician), who I pay 10 dollars a month to help me get better.

This morning I watched out over a rather bleak and wet garden (thinking with a sigh about sunny Lobster Cove) and reading a very funny introduction to a guide about pubs in Edinburgh. Being a rainy day today (and tomorrow and the day after), I see at least a few pub visits in our immediate future.

Holiday

We are now, what the Brits call holiday makers. We exchanged Manchester at its summer best for a cool, rainy and cloudy Edinburgh. After a short flight from Boston we arrived mid-morning just when the sun was (kind of) peeking out from behind the massive cloud cover. It’s a familiar climate – like Holland, probably a bit worse. 

The Exchange home we will be inhabiting for the next two weeks is lovely. We can see the bay over the roofs of two more rows of houses that separate us from the beach at the most eastern end of the Portobello promenade. A big deck and decent size garden will be nice once and if the sun comes out (not in the immediate forecast unfortunately).

We exchanged leftover monies, some very old British and Scottish pounds, for real money at the bank (except for the 20 Shillings piece from 1964 which is worthless now). We had our first encounter with a most uninformative bus driver who was singularly unhelpful and gave us no change (exact fare please!) from a 5 pound note for dropping us off at the wrong stop. 

Around lunch time things got better. We had a wonderful lunch at the Promenade in Portobello,  overlooking the wide sandy beach, drinking great beer and enjoying weather that the Scots said was warm (68 degrees).  It felt like Holland except for the views across the bay and the hills on the horizon. We were served by a young man from Australia who had studied aeronautical engineering at Purdue University in Indiana, where Axel studied as well (Indiana, not Purdue).

We paid a price for all the walking we did (having no exact change for the bus fare back and underestimating distances).  Back home we watched a video on how to get the knots out of our leg muscles and relieve our sore legs and ankles. We sat across from each other on the small Ikea couches (in this Ikea-furnished house) massaging our legs with ‘Tranquil Chamomille’ oil. Axel is better at this than I am – he has done it before and is treated by the guy from the videos so he knows the drill. I got impatient quickly. 

I brought my ukulele. I have stopped taking lessons in order to focus fully on my violin. Without a teacher to hold myself accountable to I figured that taking it on this trip would impel me to keep playing. I use my computer teacher (Yousician), who I pay 10 dollars a month to continue the teaching job.

Plans for two

In the middle of our celebration of life, all 34 four years of it, with Tessa I received news that a colleague from my early days at MSH had stepped out of life while he still had plans, hiking up Mount Denali. That left his wife alone with those plans. Poof, no summit, not ever again.

I remember, when my parents were in this phase of their lives, hearing from them that this or that friend or family member had died, some suddenly, some shortly or long after being diagnosed with this or that terminal illness. Now this is happening to us. Mortality playing peekaboo, now you see me now you don’t. 

I am thinking about all those people left behind with plans that included the person who left. These plans now need to be re-fitted for solo adventures or thrown out. I think about people who moved or re-modeled their houses to be able to live out their final days together, more or less independently but without having to do stairs, hard chores. Now what, live there alone?

We have many plans that include both of us. One of them we hope to get started this fall: to move our bedroom downstairs and turn the G&T porch with its heavy winter windows into part of that bedroom, with a summer porch attached. No more removing of the weighty windows in June, but yes to the G&T (winter and summer). Would that still be fun without my life partner, I wonder. The line in John Lennon’s Beautiful Boy (“Life is what happens to us while we are making other plans,”) comes to mind. And here I am, with a suitcase full of plans for two.

Older

Today is Tessa’s birthday, a momentous day 34 years ago.  The lore of that day includes Axel burning the croissants we had brought to a crisp in the birth center’s oven which had clicked shut to self-clean. The smoke summoned the fire brigade. All this while I was in labor or resting with a baby on my belly. That I cannot remember.

This is the first time we are celebrating Tessa’s birthday in her own house. I got up early to collect the flowers necessary for decorating her chair. Our daughters and their families have added a new habit by adding various tchotchkes found around the house (and for the kids, their favorite toys). But the first order of business this rainy morning was finding the flowers. There aren’t as many here as there are at our house because the chickens eat most flowers within their reach. I found enough to do the chair.

And now Tessa is one year older. According to one Google search (quoting an unnamed study), she is entering the last year of her youth. Others claim that middle age or middle adulthood starts at 40 or even 45 – at any rate for our daughters middle age is coming into view. Imagine that!

When she was very little I wondered what it would be like to have grown up children. I couldn’t really imagine that, immersed as we were in the demanding tasks of childrearing.

At that same time I found my parents rather old.  And now we are these old parents ourselves, though I am not sure I daughters see us as old the same way we did way back when.

When I look at pictures of my parents’ age group at the age I am now I see old people, dressed in old-looking and tired looking clothes. When I go another generation back I see 50 year old grandmas in rocking chairs. Times they are a-changing.

We feel still rather young, even though we are what the French call our ‘third age.’  Is there a fourth, I wonder? Some years ago I decided that my aspiration was to reach 130 years. Then, one day, someone said that she felt sorry for me, as she noticed my joints are already problematic now. This led me to revise my aspiration downward a bit.  It’s 95 in my retirement money needs calculator, so it will be somewhere between 95 and 130. By then all my joints should be titanium.


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