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Closed flood gates at Westminster Underground |
On 23rd June Jeremy and I caught the train to
London to attend an evening Reception on the terrace of the Houses of
Parliament, to celebrate 175 years since the foundation of Hild/Bede College,
Durham University. It was probably the wettest day of the year and many trains
to London were cancelled. Ours terminated at Shenfield in Essex. Serious
flooding on the line put out signals and we had a stop-start journey to
Liverpool Street on a different train. We were worried about the tube but we
made it to Westminster Underground Station. The Lord provided a large umbrella,
which we put to good use, once the rain water stopped pouring down the exit
steps like a waterfall. Arriving at the Houses of Parliament, we passed through
airport like security and had 10 minutes to wolf down coffee and cake before the
cafe closed.
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Overlooked by Big Ben |
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Kathy and Jeremy in the Palace of Westminster |
On the way to the Terrace, we were enthralled by the
building and its long history as we wandered in the corridors of power catching
glimpses of the chambers for the Lords and the Commons. Massive tapestries
adorned the walls and larger than life paintings covered the ceilings
celebrating the union of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
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Kathy and Jeremy on the Terrace |
We enjoyed the evening chatting to old friends from our
Durham days, sipping wine and nibbling canapés. The journey home was worse than
the outward trip with many underground and over ground trains cancelled. After
a two hour wait at Shenfield, a train arrived after midnight and took us slowly
to Ipswich stopping at every station along the way. We arrived home by taxi at
2.30am. My feet were killing me being unused to wearing high heels for so long.
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Walking the Aros Path, Tobermory, Mull |
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Rainbow over Ledaig, Mull |
A few days later we were off to Mull again for about 10
days. This time it rained almost every day. We assembled single beds, worked on
the garden and had days out walking. My abused feet objected strongly and large
blisters formed on the soles of them.
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One new bed in place |
On our return, we stopped the night at my friend Pat’s house
in Lancashire. Here we received the sad news that our sailing friend, Liz
Harcombe, had died and the funeral was to be held in the Lake District later
that week.
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The cottage in Mull |
We had one night at home, booked two nights at different
Travelodges and set off north again. On the day of the funeral we woke to
absolute chaos on the M6 in Staffordshire. A whole section of the motorway was
closed and the surrounding main roads were gridlocked. Jeremy navigated a way
through country lanes, partly by map and partly by guesswork until we could
join the M6 further north. We made it to the funeral, which celebrated Liz’s life
including the time she’s spent with husband, Graham, aboard their ocean going
yacht, Ellida. (Sal Darago and Ellida were buddy boats for 3 months on the Sail
Indonesia Rally in July/August 2011 and feature in earlier posts on this blog.)
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Kathy, Graham, our guide, Juli, Liz and Jeremy |
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Jeremy, Graham and Liz |
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Graham, Kathy and Liz in Bali rice fields |
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Jeremy, Kathy, Liz and Graham with a Komodo dragon |
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On the way home we popped in to see Aunty Joyce in her new
nursing home unit in Brigg. It was good to see her surrounded by her own
furniture, enjoying excellent care and chatting about her friends and family.
1 comment:
Good to see you moving in such high circles! I loved seeing the images of Indonesia - memories of very happy times.
Graham
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