Saturday, September 27, 2008

London


We travelled from Brussels to London by Eurostar. The aim was to spend the weekend with Ghislaine and Paul.

We stayed at the Hilton at Canary Wharf, which meant that we were close to Ghislaine and Paul's apartment. They met us there on the Friday evening and we had a Indian meal (the national cuisine of UK).

On Saturday we went to the Wallace Collection - a fine collection of painting and objects'd art, displayed in the London home of the Dukes of Hertford. The visit was made better by a knowledgable guide. A great place to visit, both to see the collection and also the home - and free.


After lunch at a pub (what else but sausages and mash?), we walked down Bond Street and through Green Park. We took a river ferry back to Canary Wharf from the London Eye bank, so we had a good look at the city from the river on a beautiful sunny day. That evening we went to the new Lebanese restuarant in Paul's apartment block, which was quite good.

On the Sunday morning we went through Buckingham Palace, which was excellent. We had booked tickets the day before, so we got in on one of the first entries of the day to avoid the queues and crowds. The tour takes you through the State Rooms and then through the gardens. As it happened, this was the last day the palace was open for the summer season.

We walked through Hyde Park to Speakers Corner, was was ceraintly interesting. Bring your own steps and away you go.......

Paul and Ghislaine went off home and Bernadette and I visited the Courtauld Gallery, which is located in Somerset House, on the banks of the Thames. This is an excellent collection, with great Impressionist paintings.

That evening we dressed up and dined at Gordon Ramsay's restaurant at Claridges. We had the fixed menu of a soup, two entrees, a main and two desserts. Even though the servings are small, that makes for plenty of food. I thought that the food was great (especially the truffle and corn soup and the lobster and crayfish ravioli), though it is fairly rich. Overall, a great experience.

On the Monday morning, we were off early to get to St Pancras to get on a Eurostar service to Brussels. A fire in a tunnel two weeks earlier was still causing disrupted services and our booked service was cancelled. Nonetheless, we got on a train which got us to Brussels, even if the service was about an hour longer than normal. From there, it's a easy three hour trip to Amsterdam.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

In Bruges


The trip from Melbourne takes as long as it takes - 8 hours to Singapore, a 6 hour transit, 12 hours to Amsterdam and then a 3.5 hour train trip to Bruges. We used the Singapore transit to go into the city and do a small tour of the Arab area, which was particularly interesting as it is the time of Ramadan.

We arrived (tired) in Bruges at about 9.30 am. Very fortunately, our hotel room was available, so we had a shower and a 90 min rest.
Since then we haven't stopped. In two days, we've walked all over the old part of Bruges', seen museums, churches, markets and numerous charming streets and houses. The photo shows Bernadette in the Markt Square, where a market is held every Wednesday. We've also done the obligatory canal tour and had the obligatory chips, chocolate and beer - of which the beer is by far the best. There are very many beers in Belgium and some bars have a wide selection at really good prices - imagine getting Chimay beer at only €3.40!

Bruges is a compact city that retains many of the buildings that were developed in its golden age as a trading centre up to the 15th century. Then their economy turned pear-shaped, because the canal providing sea-access silted up and also the king decided to favour its rival, Antwerp. This wasn't completely unfair - after all, the citizens of Bruge had gaoled him, executed some of his friends and only released him based on promises that he later forgot. So, Bruge couldn't afford to redevelop the old buildings and they remained.

Of course, these old buildings are now the foundation of the city's prosperity. Fortunately, we are at the tail end of the tourist season - tiny Bruges (population 75,000) gets about 3 million visitors a year. There seem plenty here now, but apparently it is now fairly quiet by Bruges standards.
We've had fun here and we do think that Bruges is worth a visit (but not in the real tourist season). Tomorrow we're off to Brussels and on to London on Eurostar.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Ready, Set......

We are just about ready to go. On 23 September, Bernadette and Michael head off for about 7 weeks. Initially, we fly to Amsterdam and travel to Bruges. We then take the Eurostar to London on the weekend so that we can see Paul & Ghislaine. Then it is on the train back to Amsterdam for a few days.

Then we really start. We fly to Istanbul. After two days on our own, we join our tour group. This is an Imaginative Traveller tour titled Istanbul to Cairo, which spends five weeks travelling through Turkey, Syria, Jordan and Egypt. We finish the tour in Cairo and we will take a brief trip to Alexandria, before returning to Cairo. From there, it's home, via Amsterdam and KL. We are back on 12th Nov.

However, before we start we have got to get everything organized. Aside from the travel things, we have Nana Joan's 90th birthday to celebrate (which is why Paul is arriving to spend a week in Melbourne). We also have Michael finishing up at Jemena and retiring (again). Then we'll certainly be ready for a holiday.