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12 comments

Comment from: Hinermad [Visitor]
Hinermad

Diana,

Funny you should mention massage. My daughter starts massage therapy school next week. I’m sure she’d give you a deal on an hour’s worth of abuse if you’d care to fly her ot Colorado. (Grin)

Does tyhe Eagle Peak trail go all the way to the top? My back-of-the-envelope calculation says 9200 feet is 1.74 miles. If teh trail is 1.75 miles long, that’s practically a vertical ascent. (I realize the trailhead is higher than sea level, but it sounds more impressive if you neglect that fact. Discretion is the better part of valor, after all.)

Going to England, are you? I envy you. My fiancee lived there some years ago; she might have some advice regarding B&Bs or transportation. I can ask her to look in here if you think it’ll help.

Dave

06/26/07 @ 20:54
Comment from: [Member]

Hi, Dave. :)

The Eagle Peak trail goes to the top of Eagle Peak, yes. You begin at about 7400 ft, I think (Visitor’s Center).

The trail feels straight up. ;)

I fear most of what I must master to get around London must be learned now on the fly. I’ve been reading the copious info on the London Underground site and studying the tube map, but much of what you need to know is simply not mentioned. These things must be considered “common knowledge.” :roll:

Fiancee, huh? :D Congratulations!

(And clearly, I haven’t caught up on your page. Off I go, then….)

d

06/27/07 @ 20:05
Comment from: Hinermad [Visitor]
Hinermad

Diana,

Thank you, and thank you for stopping by my blog. These past months have been very interesting. (Grin)

It sounds like your friend in the UK needs to brush up on his scheduling skills, if he’s arranged to get married during Wimbledon. Or maybe he’s trying to see how many freinds are dedicated enough to fight the mob and show up.

Dave

06/28/07 @ 17:43
Comment from: [Member]

My mistake. Phil’s getting married in Chester, a town near the border of Wales. I’ll be there with him and his (literally) wee Irish lass for about three days, there will be a giant wedding (centuries-old cathedral, etc), and an even gianter shindig at a palace-like place afterward. The next day, he’ll drive me to London and be off to somewhere tropical with his wife.

I don’t think he’s a tennis man, so of course Wimbledon wouldn’t occur to him.

And I should stop by your blog more often. I always enjoy your pieces. They have a coherence I strive for.

d

06/28/07 @ 21:28
Comment from: hinermad [Visitor]
hinermad

Diana,

I’m not sure how you find coherence in my blog. Sometimes the stuff I write is pretty disjointed. Still, thank you.

So your friend is marrying an Irish lady? Good for him! I like the people of Ireland. They’re very direct. I always knew where I stood with them, and they’re pretty good at keeping things in perspective. One guy called me an obscenity that’s not fit to print, then once he’d had his say, offered to buy me a pint.

I hope your trip goes smoothly - at least more smoothly than the trip to Iraq!

Dave

06/29/07 @ 09:04
Comment from: baldbantam [Visitor]  
baldbantam

Hi diana

Don’t sweat about the Tube - it’s pretty easy to figure out when you are actually there.

London is, as far as I know, the only city in England with such a system, so even though I’m a Brit it was as much a novelty to me as it will be to you the first time I visited.

Enjoy yourself. The Natural History Museum is a must, and it’s located in Kensington which is a nice place to wander around shops wise (Harrods is just across the road).

baldbantam

06/30/07 @ 12:48
Comment from: Doug [Visitor]  
Doug

What I wouldn’t give to go with you….as impossible as it is. Ten years ago I went to Scotland for 3 weeks. I rented a car. Wise choice, but I was going everywhere. London should be a hoot and when hell of an experience. While in Edinborough, I took the “ground transport” and it was adequate. No tube in Scotland.

Although I flew in-country to Gatwick, the only parts of London I saw was in my hurry to get out of the traffic of the M1 and M25! Sheesh…what a drive.

You’re gonna love the quaint towns outside of London and in Wales. I wager you’ll miss them after being in London for a week.

06/30/07 @ 13:58
Comment from: [Member]

G’day, baldbantam. :)

Took me a while to find you. I don’t read all the threads all the time, so I wasn’t aware of the name change. Got it now. A simple search does the trick. Also…a search on “baldbantam” still turns up a lot of stuff. I found you from the links in former posts that had that moniker imbedded in the url.

I take it you don’t live in London, because surely you’d be asking to buy me a drink. :D

Natural History Museum, huh? Maybe I will. It’s pretty close (comparatively speaking) to where I’ll be staying (a B&B near the Putney Bridge stop). We have a decent NHM here in Denver, I’m told (haven’t been there yet).

Doug,

I bet you’re right about missing the quaint towns after I’ve been in a city a bit. I’m a country girl. I enjoy visiting big cities, but I can’t take living in them.

Scotland, huh? Someday….someday, I will. Ireland, also. One country at a time, though.

d

06/30/07 @ 20:24
Comment from: baldbantam [Visitor]  
baldbantam

Hi diana

Yes, I post as Pendaric on II nowadays (the name of my recently deceased cat).

I live in Bradford, Yorkshire. If you’d been staying in Manchester for any length of time I’d have popped over to say hi, because that’s only an hour away, but unfortunately London is too far to be viable.

One of these years I’m going to drag myself across to one of Jobar’s meet-ups and say hi to all you yanks in person.

baldbantam

07/01/07 @ 06:24
Comment from: Aunt B'Ann [Visitor]  
Aunt B'Ann

Hey, Diana! Wish I could go with you! I’ve wanted to visit England, Scotland, and Ireland for many years, now. Probably will never get to go, but I can continue to dream!!!

Has anyone told you I’ve retired? May 31st was my last day at Wal-Mart. Am now re-tired and re-tired, a lot of the time, just keeping up with Uncle Charles!!! :D

07/01/07 @ 22:46
Comment from: rick h [Visitor]  
rick h

Diana,
I highly recommend the Tower of London and Abbey Road Studio (if you liked the Beatles). The Tower is more like a fort and you could kill most of a day there.

07/02/07 @ 13:16
Comment from: diana [Visitor]  
diana

Hi, Aunt B’Ann!

I didn’t know you’d retired a second time. A hearty congratulations is in order, I think. :)

I met several very nice Northern Irish folk (Phil’s new inlaws and close family friends) who sincerely invited me back to visit their part of the world, and I’m sincerely considering it. They’ve traveled in the US a bit here and there, and been invited into homes of virtual strangers they met on the road or loaned cars and campers from virtual strangers, and apparently spent enough time with me to bond and want me to come visit. Sounds nice, huh? I’ve never been to Ireland. I suspect I’d love it.

I’m looking for some good Scottish friends, too, who’d enjoy an American houseguest. I’m just putting that out there….

RICK! Good to hear from you. :) I did check out the Tower of London, of course. Pretty amazing structure and not “just a tower” as I’d always imagined. The yeoman warders who do the tours are fabulous. I was disappointed with two things there: the huge crowds which somewhat spoil the enjoyment of the historical ambiance of the place–I like to stroll around and look at the masonry and read the exhibits and wonder what life would have been like then–and I was disappointed with the crown jewel “tour.” I’ve never felt like human cattle so much in my life. There’s no discussion or explanation, and they actually put you on a conveyor belt as you pass the various crowns and scepters. All you see is a bunch of glittering jewels. (Want to know more? Buy the book in gift shop for an extra 15 pounds or so. Ugh.)

More in a bit. I’m thinking I should perhaps blog about the trip. :) I’m locking the comments here now (it’s the best way to avoid all that unwanted spam, I’ve found).

d

07/15/07 @ 13:19


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