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Oh I want to go SO BAD!  And I'd love to also go and see where the new Doctor Who series and Torchwood are being filmed in Cardiff. --JM


Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince : VisitBritain
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Train Travel

 

"Have you ever been on a train?", and my answer is "yes, in four countries". Well, I thought that would be a good topic for a blog entry, so here it goes.

FACT 1: I love traveling. I really do. Only by traveling can you have truly different experiences, meet new people, and really find out how the world works. If you never leave your home town, you just can't do that.
FACT 2: I don't mind flying, I really don't (although the new regulations suck), but I hate airports. I'm extremely claustrophobic, and airports tend to hit my claustrophobia and make it sky high. I got searched for that in Ireland, so... not the best combination. But airports, like O'Hare, especially, are dark, cramped, have few windows, and have you ever noticed -- there are no exits once you get into your flight area. Freaks me right out. But once I get on the plane, I'm absolutely fine. Relaxed. Even excited to be off on a new adventure.
FACT 3: Trains are GREAT! I've traveled by train in four countries and every single time it was a great experience, even when I got lost or went the wrong way.
Here's some great train trips!

Summer, 1987, Chicago to San Francisco (Amtrak, California Zephyr)
My graduation present from my folks was this trip. Mom and I went first class, with a sleeper car. This meant we had our own compartment (with our own porter) and the seats folded down into a flat bed at night. The second bed folded down from the ceiling. So, at night you had a traveling hotel room, and during the day you had a private compartment. The trip also included gourmet meals in the dining car, and a welcome aboard basket of fruit, cheese, and wine (couldn't have the wine, darn it). I spent most of my trip in the observation car. It was GORGEOUS!!!! Everyone, and I do mean, everyone should take a train trip across the US once in their lives. This particular train went through gorgeous red rock canyons, some of which you can only see by train. Way cool!
The return trip was on the Empire Builder across the Northern US, and not quite as pretty - just lots of green. And it was dark when we went through the Rockies.

Toronto, Ontario, Canada Subway, Various trips (late 90s)
Toronto has only two subway lines, the yellow line (which has two branches forming a "Y" before hitting the main yellow line) and the Green line. The Yellow one goes North/South, the Green one goes East/West. Easy-peasy. I sorta' wished I'd used this one PRIOR to the Tube in London, UK, but still.
Every time I go to Toronto, I try to get a hotel on the West side (near us) with free or included parking, and I leave my car there. I then walk to the subway and take that into Toronto. You do NOT want to drive in downtown Toronto. I've done it, but not fun, and parking is a nightmare. Besides, in the summer, the city is a beautiful place to walk -- and the weather is very nice (not as hot as say, Chicago). I've not really been to Toronto in winter, but I know they have "Underground Toronto", "PATH", and various skywalks -- between the three systems you can get pretty far without going outside. Anyway, the subway is the easiest way to get into the city, and to get around quickly from point-to-point. And, yes, like most subway systems, as long as you don't leave the station, you can switch to another line or even go in the opposite direction. (Just don't try to jump across the platforms. Ouch.)
London, England, UK, Spring 1988
The London Tube. The Underground. Color-coded maps that look like a plate of spaghetti. The London Underground actually got it's start in the Victorian age (1800s) and some of those really old lines still exist. And in some of the biggest stations, like King's Cross, all those lines not only cross but are stacked with the oldest (like the Metropolitan, if I'm not mistaken) the furthest down. BUT, with all that, it's still fairly easy to get around (the color-coding helps), and if you do get lost - remember the Golden Rule of subway travel - Do Not Leave the Station. As long as you stay in the Station you can catch a different train and fix your mistake. Trust me, I have done this.  Twice, I think.

I was in London on a college art history trip -- and I really wish I had had more time on my own.  I really only had part of a single day to myself, and didn't get to see a lot of the stuff that I wanted to see.

Still, you know, it was London, so like, awesome!

 

Ireland,  October 2001

A friend and I booked a one-week vacation in Ireland.  We stayed (with a tour group, who turned out to be retirees from Wisconsin, but that's another story) in the middle of nowhere.  OK, it was County Meath, but trust me -- middle-of-nowhere.  Our first couple of days we did the extra-cost package tours that the package tour recommended.  By bus.  Let me tell you - even with a tour guide, you do not want to take buses in Ireland.  Unless you enjoy car sickness.  But anyway, after a couple of days of that we wised-up and started to take the train.  So we went to Galway one day by train, and Dublin the other day by train.  (Where we were staying was about half-way between the two.  To give you an idea, it's like Galway was Grand Haven, Detroit was Dublin, and we stayed in Lansing.)  The trains were again very easy to use.  Also, really, really fast.  The train to Dublin, especially, which was fairly full of commuters with laptops and mobile phones was fast, efficient, and real easy to understand and use.  Once we got to Galway we just walked around the tourist section of town (our second day there, we'd gotten there the first day by bus).  We also walked all over Dublin, though' if I went back I'd look into trying out their public transport - whatever they have.  Great things to do in Dublin:  See the illuminated manuscripts, including The Book of Kells, in the Trinity College library (It was great!  Very pretty.  The only problem was, it was Rush Week for the college, and my friend and I were wearing backpacks to hold our stuff - so the students thought we were students and kept trying to get us to join every organization and sports team on campus.  But still -- the library, museum, and manuscripts themselves, all really neat and definitely worth it.  Have High Tea in Grafton Street.  We found a store that was three different restaurants and a tea & chocolate shop (and I'll tell you -- those chocolates were incredible, and the tea was great too).  My friend and I found this place on the first day in Dublin, and we were a little hungry, so we thought we'd get tea and a little cake or something.  We both ordered tea.  The waiter said, "tea for two then?" and we nodded, and I was thinking, "uh, yeah, there's two of us".  Well, it turned out we got TEA - as in a meal.  Not only a teapot with at least 10-12 cups of really good tea, but one of those little multi-level server things filled with tiny sandwiches, cream puffs, fruit things, chocolate yummy pastry things, and tons of other food that I couldn't even describe.  We'd discovered - TEA - The Meal.  Gosh, was it good.  We couldn't eat it all.  Went back the next day -- still couldn't eat it all.  And not that expensive.

Finally, go to the St. Stephen's Green in Dublin (near Grafton Street), but it was like Central Park in New York, I guess.  The thing is - the minute you got in the park it was totally quiet, no car horns, or traffic noise - just birds and stuff.  There was all sorts of historic monuments, which were cool to look at, if a bit sad.  There was a big duck pond with a bunch of confused-looking Mallards (My friend kept wondering what they were doing there) and other ducks.  There were flower gardens and all sort of stuff.  We only went in the park once, but it was way cool and I'd love to go there again.

Finally, in terms of shopping, the one place we went, again, twice, besides a lot of really good candy and chocolate shops, and various bookstores, was Forbidden Planet - the SF bookstore chain of the UK and Ireland.  Great place.

 

So anyway, I like traveling, and I like train travel.  I've also done short hops in and around Chicago (yep, been on the "L" but only with a native guide).

--Olivia

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Hi all,

OK, first I must apologise for being so late in posting.  I've been swamped at work catching up from the last two weeks.  I swear, when I was figuring out tickets to see Wicked, I thought I had a week between PenguiCon and Wicked.  Instead I had two days!  I drove back from Detroit Sunday night, taught my class Monday night, had lab on Tuesday afternoon, then drove to BoilingBrook, Illinois, on Wednesday morning, went to IKEA (that's a story in and of itself), then Mom drove downtown into the (Chicago) Loop.  Now, the traffic IN to Chicago wasn't all that bad, but our directions sure were! (It would have helped if we had known that we had to stay on 90/94, rather than follow the signs for Downtown.) Before we knew it, we had one exit and then we would end up on the Congress Exwy.  Well, I couldn't quite remember where the Congress actually went, but I was pretty sure it wasn't the direction we wanted to go.  Needless to say, I got Mom to exit.  And we were downtown, and it didn't take us all that long to figure out how to actually get to the hotel.  Mind you, I'm sitting in the passenger seat, with two maps, neither of which was a map of the Loop.  I even got some help from another driver when we were at a light (Did the roll down window and asked for directions thing - and it did work, I mean, I found out we were driving in the wrong direction, what a surprise!)  We stayed at the downtown Howard Johnson's, and it was OK.  I mean, it was clean.  There was a pub less than a block away, where we had dinner, and the hotel had a restaurant where we had breakfast.  Now, neither one was particularly great, and I think our waitress gave both Mom and I decaf (and I'm a caffiene girl all the way).
The play was marvelous.  I was actually reading the book, when I saw the play, so my mind was like constantly comparing the play to the book (which I finished the next day or the day after).  But it was like when you see a movie made from a book or play you're familar with, y'know?  I just kept comparing the two in my head.  Overall, I liked the play much better than the book.  The book is very slow in places, and gets a bit philosophical which kinda' drove me nuts.  The play has a straight-forward plot, that's kinda' fun and light (if your not familiar with it Wicked is a musical which takes "The Wizard of Oz" and turns it on it's ear -- re-telling the story from the pov of the Wicked Witch of the West).  Some things I liked about the musical -- Glinda was wonderful!!!  In the play, she's a bubble-headed blond, full of malapropisms.  She's the type that goes to college, not to get an education, but to get a ring on her finger.  (And she marries someone different in the play than in the book). Oh, and both the book and the play spend a lot of time with Elpheba (the Witch) and Glinda at Shiz University in the North of Oz.  In fact, the Witch to be and Glinda are roommates.  (There's a wonderful duet where they are both writing letters home to their fathers, talking about settling in to school, and their  only  problem being  their  roommate).  Glinda,  however,  isn't  stupid,  she's  simply a  product  of  her  background
-- spoiled, rich, innocent, and totally unwilling to even question The System much less buck it.  Whereas Elpheba grows up at Shiz, becoming fascinated with chemsitry/biology as well as learning magic (which Glinda also learns).  Elpheba also becomes involved in Animal rights (Animal with a capital A is a talking animal; where animal, lower case, is a normal animal).  There's a lot more detail about that throughout the book, but the play covers it good enough.  What I liked, tho', was the interesting, contrasting friendship between Elpheba and Glinda.  And, overall it was a fun musical play.  And I saw it at Chicago's Oriental Theatre, which was gorgeous!  Drop-dead gorgeous!  You wouldn't believe all the gilt work, painting, frescos, sculpture -- it was incredible.  Getting a cab after the show was... an experience.  We ended-up walking a couple of blocks, then finally haling a cab.

But it was a great birthday present!

 

--Olivia

PS.  Driving distances, FYI

GR to Troy: 130 miles as the crow flies (roughly 2.5 - 3 hours) according to the "How Far Is It?" website

GR to Bolingbrook, ILL:  151 miles (244 km) (132 nautical miles) (Again, about 2.5 - 3 hours) according to the "How Far Is It?" website, Indo.com

PPS -- If you've never played with the How Far Is it? website -- it's great fun!

March 2019

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