Monday, 26 November 2007
Jolly Auld England
Tuesday, 20 November 2007
Impressions of Kiev
Wednesday, 7 November 2007
travels ahead!
Mary is heading to Birmingham on Wednesday for a meeting of people who work in her field. Then we are hoping to meet in London on Saturday and stay overnight...just trying to arrange accommodation that is even halfway affordable.
I am spending a lot of my time on the internet, looking for cheap flights, hotels, looking for directions and maps...it is amazing how much time it takes. Luckily I am not busy with work and other things so I have the hours to spend.
England is just an amazing place with so much to see. I am having to get used to the idea that we will only scratch the surface of what is available while we are here because there is just so much...and we are also limited in time and energy. And Mary DOES need to do schoolwork--she is coming up to due dates so is starting to feel the crunch a bit more.
I'm driving a bit more, still freaked out by the narrow roads and those roundabouts--I just can't get the hang of who has the right of way. But I just slow down and if someone else is stopping then I figure I can go. Mary is driving like she's been here for years but she tells me she went through her own nervous adjustment at first too.
The days have been sunny mostly, which is so great, and the nights are getting COLD. Imagine, we are in November already! We are looking forward to Bill's visit--he's a friend and colleague of Mary's from New Hampshire, who is travelling to South Africa, Zambia and Ghana for work (I may have one of those countries wrong) and then is stopping over for a few days in early December to visit with us.
I went to Bristol last Friday, where there is a Centre for Deaf Studies at the university. Took the train, then a bus--of course I missed my stop, but some very helpful women on the bus were kind enough to describe how I could get back to the right spot...so I found it, and attended a seminar they were presenting. Then had lunch with the presenter and other professors, and met Paddy Ladd, who is a brilliant author and researcher in the field. I am so impressed with many Deaf people--they know 2 or 3 sign languages, and lucky for me, one that is common is ASL, which I know, so I am able to talk with them. I'm trying to learn some BSL (British Sign Language) but well, it IS another language, so it takes time.
A Deaf woman I know from Vancouver is attending the university to do her Masters in Deaf Studies, so I saw her last Friday, and it was great to connect. We are planning to do some exploring of the surrounding area together.
So that's the news from this end. Lovely to keep hearing from all of you, and if I don't post again before Ukraine, you will definitely be hearing from me after my return!
Karen
Sunday, 4 November 2007
University Life
This is my first time in England. I find that the villages are similar to those in Bosnia except for not as many bombed out structures. The quaintness is cute and everything is so tailored. The systems in England are not so good for someone who is living here. Customer service is really poor, technology is inferior and this is really problematic when all of university life is dependent on the web and e-mail.... When it doesn't work, it is too bad even though you are required to get lectures off of the web or notes or articles to read before the class. I do have a desk which is in a small office i share with 3 others. My office is one of the smaller one, most offices have about 10 desks in them. But i have a window in front of mine, which is fine with me. In the office there is no wireless so I cannot use my laptop and i am forced to use a very slow ancient desk top. What i don't understand is if wireless is on campus, why wouldn't you have it in the offices? What ever....
Traffic is unbelievable for the country side. No wonder the concern for carbon footprints is foremost on every one's mind here. It is bumper to bumper for miles with fields and cows on both sides of the tiny road. To miss traffic i head out 2 hours before class to do the 20 minute trek, otherwise it will take 1 hour in the car.
My cohort is not very tight, as that is not really an emphasis here. I have become friends with a fellow from Finland who has done some work in Kenya with colleagues of mine there. A Thai fellow has also become part of our posse even though he is in 2nd year. He is brilliant with computer systems and analyzing data. My advisers are pretty good. Not too stuffy. One joined us at the fire works to celebrate Guy Fox Day.
They also had all sorts of rides set up at the university, like a mini PNE or CNE. Of course they were for teenagers who could handle the speed. Karen and I went on one that was for 4-8 year olds--tea cups that spun around very slowly in comparison to the others. it was good fun! Unfortunately we have no pictures of that :)
Karen and I are taking in a few movies at the Bath International Film Festival this week. Today our film is on an apartment building in Cairo and all the scenes that occur in each flat. Should be interesting.
I am swimming several times a week at the university 50 meter pool which is great exercise. I'm not sure how long that will last, but it is working right now.
I don't know how people do this kind of thing on their own. My colleagues here who are on their own really suffer from loneliness. For sure we are cordial at school, but the days get dark early and then you go home to your room. It is expensive for all of us who are foreigners here so going out isn't really an option. I really do not get why higher education has to be so emotionally tough. The separation between emotional and intellectual pursuits is really so not necessary but it seems that is a prerequisite to being successful in the academic world. I'm not going to aspire towards that and i find it disturbing. I feel very fortunate that Karen is here with me. Just coming home to a light on and fantastic smells coming from the kitchen counteracts the working alone at the university.
So that's it for now.... it is great to hear from people. We do miss home of course, but our little home in the village is cozy and homey for the meantime.
Signing off for now, mary
Thursday, 1 November 2007
Happy Hallowe'en
Here's Jackie O'Lantern, wishing you all a Happy Hallowe'en. (I had to take the picture in dim light because there were ink marks on the pumpkin where we designed the layout.) Mary added the eyebrows--very unique!
Hallowe'en was quiet here, maybe 8 kids in total so now we have to eat lots of little chocolate bars. A much bigger deal here is Nov. 5, Bonfire Night (aka Guy Fawkes day). You probably know a bit of the story--he tried to blow up the Parliament buildings in London with gunpowder, was caught and hanged for treason. So I am not quite sure why they celebrate it every year, and the Brits I've talked to are vague on it as well. I guess kind of similar to the half-hearted explanation I've given to Americans who ask why we Canadians celebrate Queen Victoria's birthday in May. Ummmm...because we want a holiday I guess?
Mary and I went to a tea house in Bath on Sunday--that clotted cream and jam on scones could get seriously addictive! Then we went to the Thermal Spa--there is natural hot mineral water in Bath (hence, the name--the name is actually Bath Spa...and there is not only the University of Bath, where Mary goes, but a Bath Spa University as well. Whenever I hear that name, I always get the image of students wrapped up in towels, sitting in a steam room for their classes :-)
Anyways, any of you who plan to visit, bring a bathing suit (or a swimming costume, as they say here), because it is definitely a treat--rooftop open air pool, and one floor down, glass encased steam rooms that are so full of steam you can't even see across the room. Very relaxing! You can check it out at www.thermaebathspa.com.
This weekend the Bath International Film Festival starts so Mary and I are heading to films, plus we'll go to the cricket pitch to watch the fireworks Saturday night. I'll send along impressions of Bonfire Night after I've experienced it. For now, I will just say, "cheers", and be back again soon
Karen