I was meeting my friend MrsRev for lunch today, and suggested the RAF Museum at Hendon as being the sort of place we both like, and quite near where she needed to be before and after. We spent most of the time in the restaurant putting the world to rights and catching up with each other's gossip. I had the salad plate again, but although I ordered a small plate, it was far too much and I was nowhere near finishing it. With hindsight, I'd have done better with a jacket potato with beans.... ah well.
Anyway, after MrsRev had gone, I went round to the hangars that I hadn't been able to see last time when I had Boy 2 in tow. I was glad I did - loads of 2nd World War planes, Spitfires and Hurricanes and so on, and you got the feeling of the size of them.
There were a lot more than that, but those were the only decent photos I took! There was also a film about the Battle of Britain - Germany would probably have won if they hadn't kept changing their minds about what to target - first, the radar network. This could have been disastrous, but then they decided to go after the various RAF airfields instead - and then a bomb fell on Berlin which destroyed a garden shed and injured two people, and Hitler was furious so unleashed the Blitz in all its fury. But that gave the RAF time to breathe and recoup, and so the Battle of Britain was finally won and there was no invasion.
Then there was another film about the Dam Busters, which I rather wanted to see as we had seen the dams just a couple of months ago. Unfortunately, I fell asleep during it, and didn't quite like to put it on again when it had finished, as there was someone else there! Oh well.
Then I came away, and found out the hard way that if you want to change at Euston, you need to be on the Bank branch of the Northern Line, which is a cross-platform change. It's not miles if you're on the Charing Cross branch, which I was, but it's not cross-platform! But I would have had to have waited for several trains at Colindale before there was a Bank branch one, so swings and roundabouts....
14 November 2019
09 November 2019
Pompeii, revisited
A family funeral in Oxford earlier in the week. My cousin told me that there was an exhibition at the Ashmolean entitled "Last Supper in Pompeii", and, considering we had just been there, we should certainly go and see it; she recommended it.
So, as there was a little time, we decided to visit it. I'm so glad we did; the exhibition showed us a lot of finds from Pompeii, which we could visualise "in situ" as it were. It was mainly concerned with eating and drinking, both in Pompeii itself and, contemporaneously in Roman Britain. There were lots of cooking and serving vessels.
A figurine of a piglet, that may have been offered to the gods instead of the real thing (though I would have thought the real thing would have been cheaper, but what do I know?)
and even a Roman muffin tin: and carving-knife: There are plenty more photos on the website, so do have a look - or, better still, go and visit the exhibition if you are anywhere in the Oxford area. It is on until January.
So, as there was a little time, we decided to visit it. I'm so glad we did; the exhibition showed us a lot of finds from Pompeii, which we could visualise "in situ" as it were. It was mainly concerned with eating and drinking, both in Pompeii itself and, contemporaneously in Roman Britain. There were lots of cooking and serving vessels.
A figurine of a piglet, that may have been offered to the gods instead of the real thing (though I would have thought the real thing would have been cheaper, but what do I know?)
and even a Roman muffin tin: and carving-knife: There are plenty more photos on the website, so do have a look - or, better still, go and visit the exhibition if you are anywhere in the Oxford area. It is on until January.
01 November 2019
October holiday, 1 November
Cité de l'Europe
Today, being All Saints' Day, is a public holiday through much of Europe. So, in true Bank Holiday spirit, it rained all day!
We drove to the Strépy-Thieux boat lift, but sadly I was too asleep to really be aware of it. Then we stopped for lunch at a services - just a sandwich, but very nice.
Then we were stopped by French Customs - I don't know whether they were unaware that Brexit hadn't happened, or what - but they kept asking where we had been, and why, and what we did for a living, and what was the retirement age in the UK, etc, while one of them with his dirty great feet peered all round the motor home and looked into all our cupboards and so on. Not nice, and I feel violated. This van is as much my home as my flat is, and I don't want customs officials all over the flat, either!
Labels:
Holiday,
Motor home
Location:
62231 Coquelles, France
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