Tuesday, 14 June 2011
i go for a real ale before the tagliatelle
One of those 'hold the phone to the window' videos of the approach to Waterloo.
I was actually heading for a pub in the vicinity of the station to talk of shoes and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and kings with a misplaced friend.
Randomly, on the way I spotted another tie-wearing friend as I cut across the Waterloo concourse and the two of us calculated the gap of some 3 years since we'd last sipped together.
The consequence will be another excuse for a get together somewhere around the city.
And then onward to an evening featuring real ale before moving into the tagliatelle stage. A proper example of "Pronto?"
Monday, 13 June 2011
instigate
A few interesting exchanges over the last few days. As I go about my re-modelling project it is interesting to pick up the weak signals from others.
By weak I don’t mean they are invalid or suspect, more that they you have to look for them carefully.
It’s been interesting, because I’m really planning a bunch of new things to try but need to balance a little prudence into the equation.
Not so much caution that the lizard brain kicks in and says “Step away from that idea” or the coarser version for which “tea break's over, back on your heads” is the punchline.
No, I’m trying to define some self-initiated ways to operate a “lifestyle portfolio” that means I can balance my own control along with sensible economics.
This may all sound a bit weird in amongst my normal blog posts about London Town and suchlike. And I promise it is not some kind of meltdown.
More sensibly, I am keen to look at other ways to operate. It might take a while for any of it to start making sense.
To me, let alone any one else.
But it’s started, and that is a Good Thing.
Sunday, 12 June 2011
you say smile i say cheese
I’m not sure if “you can’t have too many bikes” is like the more well known quote, ”you can never have too many hats” but I suppose if the cap fits, then wear it.
In my case I’ve a modest selection of bikes and today should really have taken one with mudguards because of the drizzling rain as I set out. Instead I have returned with an exclamation mark painted on my back in the colour of damp road surface.
The exclamation mark is quite appropriate at the moment, given that I’m going through another one of my experimental phases partly as an attempt to rebalance my busy working schedule with some other activities.
I’m thinking ‘portfolio lifestyle’ as a phrase for it, but there’s probably already a marketeers’ abbreviation which will become clear to me after I post this and take a look at the spam comments.
Quite simply it’s about reclaiming some bits of time.
I’m very aware that I get to travel and see places because of what I do, but mainly at a speed that makes everything quite blurry. Two weeks ago in Brussels. Did I see the town? Nope. What about when I was in the Haag just before that. I saw a sunlit square on the walk to a taxi. How about Oslo? Oh yes, I walked around the block outside of the meeting area for ten minutes before we were due to start. Greece was different, but I suppose that was on my own time.
But all of this is the problem with cycling. It gives me time to think. To watch the world and consider options. Just like I was doing whilst studying the sky in Mykonos.
Time for some changes.
But first I must get out of this T-shirt with the rainy exclamation mark on it.
Saturday, 11 June 2011
londonist on ipod music choices
A fun post from the Londonist about the music choices of Londoners with their iPods. A mini spin around the central areas included.
Play 'spot the landmark'.
Friday, 10 June 2011
ride on the chrome horse with your diplomat
Friday morning eight a.m. and I'm on the phone to an American in a car. The roads around me don't look so bad, but I know I'm in a bubble.
He's on a handsfree and we're talking about some deal or other. Then I hear a woman's voice. Something about turn left. He mutters "I've never been to Cambridge before" and then "that was the turning, I've just missed it."
Great city, Cambridge.
I muse on the times I've spent there and the right way to stand on a punt.
Three more calls and then I'm on the road. My own sat-nav tells me a different way to somewhere I've visited before. A few red Xs on the map tell me there's a block on the usual route.
So then it's my turn to miss the junction. A right at a roundabout and then onto an elevated section. Except I should have gone hard left after the junction.
I pay the ten minute penalty as I follow an escape-free dual carriageway bypassing Windsor to the M4, where I traverse about four sets of lights while I think about no direction and rolling stones.
Thursday, 9 June 2011
waterloo rain set
Even more Rivers of London. This time it's Waterloo, with plenty of water running down from the trains and onto the tracks.
I've just arranged to meet someone around here early next week and am hoping for slightly better weather at a spot about two or three minutes walk from the station.
Now what was my weather a week ago?
Ah, yes, I remember.
Wednesday, 8 June 2011
a ride across a River of London
Keeping a slight 'Rivers of London' theme going, I spotted this on The Londonist and thought it was worth a ride across the Virtual Thames.
Tuesday, 7 June 2011
I finally read the Rivers of London and have already seen one of the ghosts
I took some books away last week, including one recommended by fellow blogger Nikki-ann.
Well, actually Nikki-ann wrote about the second book in the series but I thought I'd follow her advice and start at the beginning.
'Rivers of London' is by Ben Aaronovitch and a sort of London detective tale, mixed with urban fantasy.
There's parts where the storyline and descriptions are very 21st Century detective and then other parts where it all goes quite wibbly. The main character seems fairly unruffled as he learns about ghosts, mystical rivers and ways to conjure fireballs.
If that stuff is of the heavens, then there's some counterbalance with likably realistic scenes of down-to-earth police processes.
Its also set in the middle of London, with plenty of references to the area around Covent Garden, which should ensure a good number of readers will recognise the venues. Imagine the area between the Punch and Judy pub and the adjacent Actor's church(outside which the jugglers perform for tourists) as the epicentre.
The story clicked into supernatural almost from the start although the expected reactions from the main protagonist were surprisingly restrained considering the alarming and gory events unfolding. Also a revealed plot-line which I then found a tad too predictable - although I guess the point was to speculate how it would be accomplished.
I also found myself studying the dialogue; Aaronovitch writes with a tight style that cracks the pace along nicely. He's written a fair few screenplays and scripts and this shows through in the craft of his writing style.
That created the necessary page turner effect which was very compatible with the beach.
I must admit that when I bought it, the next book was also available as a twoofer so I suspect that the 'Moon over Soho' will be amongst my next reads. Thanks, Nikki-ann, for the suggestion.
And weirdly, when I was in Covent Garden recently, I saw the man in the picture below leaning against the columns, right underneath the Punch and Judy pub and across from St Paul's Church.
Spooky?
Monday, 6 June 2011
hold that hippy fish thought
Today was a suitably hectic restart after a few days on a sunny island in Greece.
Firstly, the rain. Then my sat-nav awakening with little red cars all over the routes to where I needed to be. An extra hour blended onto the journey.
Discovering two last-minute meetings had been snuck onto my schedule.
One was for most of the morning, with a visitor who had flown over specially from Sweden on some kind of Swedish public holiday and the second was for me to present to a group of around 20 people on an unexpected topic.
Before this, my PC decided it was important for me to immediately change my password and follow complicated instructions to press my nose, pat my head and turn around three times before anything would work again.
Fortunately I managed to swerve my way through all of it, and could still smile at then end. I'll admit that thoughts of last week's time at Hippy Fish helped.
Sunday, 5 June 2011
nose approaching grindstone again
Back to base today and a reasonable amount of unpacking.
Just emptying a pocket produced an interesting mix of items ahead of the re-filing of everything into separate compartments, including (don't laugh) the Euro coins back into a Ziploc bag.
I've just rebooted the work PC and am waiting for about 35Mb of messages to tumble in. I'll quietly admit to taking my blackberry along but also to being rather selective about the ones I opened.
I fear my nose may be as ground as the statue of Artemis in Delos by the end of tomorrow. I see I'm back to 19:30-20:00 meetings again already.
Saturday, 4 June 2011
sunset over Mykonos
Watching the sun go down for the last time before the return trip to the UK.
Of course, we found a beach taverna to sit in with candles on the tables and flaming torches along the shoreline. Add some Greek music, good wine and local food and we were all set.
The next morning didn't need a particularly early departure to catch the plane so we could enjoy the start of another fine and sunny day before packing the few remaining items and heading for the airport.
It rained slightly when we got back to Athens, but we were sure that the weather would remain fine at the little crossroads of the Mediterranean and Aegean where we'd spent the last week.
Friday, 3 June 2011
Delos weaves its spells
I've managed to load some of the pictures from Delos. The first one is of the hilltop sanctuary to Zeus, on Mount Cynthia. This is where Leto gave birth Apollo and was the reason for many early pilgrimages by the Naxians to Delos.
But let's go back in time - it's a complex plot.
Delos started out as Adelos which was an invisible island floating in the sea.
It was made by King of the gods Zeus when he amorously pursued Titan goddess of the night Asteria. She escaped his advances by turning into a bird and diving towards the sea. But Zeus was angry and turned her into the rock that became the invisible island.
Unabashed, Zeus then turned his attention to Asteria's sister Leto, who he made pregnant. This somewhat annoyed his wife Hera who cast a spell to stop Leto from giving birth anywhere in the world under the sun.
Leto's labour lasted nine months, whilst Zeus sought a solution so that Leto could give birth. He asked his brother Poseidon, god of the sea, to help and Poseidon took the invisible rock of Adelos (not of this earth or under the sun) and made it stable with four columns of diamond chains. He renamed it, removing the 'A' which is like removing the 'in' in invisible and so the rock became anchored and visible as Delos.
Leto was grateful and immediately pledged to the island that in return for safe birth she would help the inevitably barren island become the richest part of the realm.
Leto found a safe spot to give unaided birth (Hera's spell also prevented Eileithuia - goddess of midwifery from visiting) and the goddess Artemis was born, in the area now known as the Sacred Lake.
A single palm tree marked the spot. Nine days later, the newly born Artemis helped Leto give birth to her twin brother Apollo.
Apollo was the god of light and that's another of the powers of Delos. It’s in the sunniest part of Greece and has a light quality all of its own. It became a place of pilgrimage, a place of sport and celebrations and a great trading power of many civilisations through to Roman times.
And to illustrate, further down the hill can be spotted the remains of the much later Roman temple to Isis - an Egyptian goddess.
Isis was the goddess of motherhood but also knew the secret names of gods, giving her great magic protection powers, which was significant in the eventual downfall of Delos.
Despite its great economic power, Delos defended itself with mysticism and magic, rather than conventional fortifications. This made it a pushover when Mithridates, a duplicitous enemy of the Romans looted and destroyed the whole island in 88 BC.
Also take a look at the picture below. It’s of a small part of the island close to the harbour. See the columns rising from what was once a huge and bustling metropolis.There's the remains of a massive sanctuary (forum) area for multiple generations of gods, a complete multi-storied town, a theatre, a huge hippodrome and a huge gymnasium for games of Olympian stature.
Greek mythology and a civilization rise and fall over a 9000 year period, and all occurring before the modern western calendar even started.
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