Sunday, September 18, 2016

Summing it all Up: Home


When we were planning for our trip and dreaming about it, August 31st to September 17th seemed such a long way off, but as time does, it came and it went.  I am reminded each day of my life of the fleeting nature of the moment.  We so need to be aware that it quickly comes and just as quickly goes.

Saturday morning, the 17th of September we awoke to a cool, drizzly Saturday in London knowing that by the time the day ended we would be “back on the other side of the pond.”  We have stored memories, tried to share a few of our little daily adventures, and have felt incredibly blessed to be doing this together. 

We began our day be creating art inside of our two pieces of luggage.  We know we created art because at Blenheim Palace on Wednesday we had seen an art exhibit in various rooms of soft sculptures which looked very much like piles of dirty laundry.  Before we creatively piled our art into the bags we each removed the very last of our clean clothes to wear home.

Our driver called at the Holiday Inn Shoreditch for us ten minutes early.  He had his device in his hands with our destination and names which helped with the language difficulties.  We were quickly on our way past the Westminster University buildings behind our hotel and into parts of the neighborhood that we hadn’t seen.  We went under the river, down through the Greenwich area and onto the motorway that would take us to Gatwick.

There are numerous ways to get to the major airports which service London, but this is one of the luxuries that we give ourselves when we travel.  If we were twenty years younger, we’d use the bus of the rail system, but with the additional luggage, it is not easy in the crowds when you are not, now, as fast as everyone else is.  So, we cut back a little in other areas.  Our trip to the air port in the hired car was equivalent to less than one dinner in an upscale restaurant in London.  It also was not much more than two tickets on the airport bus transport would have cost.

Our driver was good.  He wove in an out of traffic, but I never saw Klep get really pale or grip the edge of his seat the way he did in Greece.  I was quite proud of him…..both the driver and Klep!

We were checked in with Norwegian with our luggage tagged and checked, through security (where I got pulled for special screening) and customs and in the lounge with lunch ordered by 1:20.  We enjoyed our salads and pasta along with a lot of little snacks and sweets, accompanied by tea, coffee, or soft drinks while we read the London papers and watched planes come in and leave. 
By three, our gate was announced and we strolled down the twenty miles or so through all the shops to watch the three hundred or so other people board.  Since we were in Row 1, we were in the last group to board.  We were in no hurry.  We were going to be sitting on that plane for a while! 

We were due to take off at four p.m. London time (11:00 a.m. EDT).  We were boarded, but we lifted off about thirty minutes later.  We had been properly hydrated by then and were relaxing in our seats discussing our trip.  We tend to choose such times to look back and choose highpoints and low points. 

My lowest point of the trip happened before I actually left when I tripped over a curb and fell on the concrete quite thoroughly bruising myself.  I finally got up, decided that I hadn’t broken anything and went to the house and applied ice.  Since that wasn’t enough to make things a little more difficult for my mobility, that night at the Holiday Inn in Valdosta, going in for a Gospel Music performance, the door caught a couple of my toes in sandals and ripped a toe nail off.  Now I was in really fine shape for our trip!  My girls in Sunday School were praying for me, though, and with answered prayer, my injuries were a little uncomfortable, but they didn’t keep us down!

Our high point of the trip was actually getting to do it together:  sitting by the water in Burton-on-the-Water watching the ducks, standing on Wicklow Mountain in the quiet and cool gazing out at the rolling hills, the lake and feeling God’s presence in His creation, feeling the power of the wind at Inch Strand, watching the fat goose waddle across the grounds at Blenheim, sharing the unexpected melodious music in the subway, the beauty of Connemara, the majestic, historic churches in Ireland and England---the list could go on and on.

We learned a few things that we will make note of if and when we travel again.  We will pack wash cloths.  None of the hotels we were in had them.  We will not leave meds out where they can be overturned or spilled and lost by the maid staff.  I will pack a small notebook on which to take notes instead of having to use such things as the backs of receipts, the barf bags on the ferry, and napkins.  We will take a shirt or two extra.  Jeans and pants can be worn more than tops.  If we go to the theater, we will spring for better seats for comfort’s sake.

The weirdest experience, we decided was one that Klep did not share with me.  When we took our trip to the Cotswolds, there was one woman that must have been French.  Anyway, she spoke with a distinct French accent.  Our first encounter with her was at the pay toilet in Burford.  You put your 20 pence (it is an unusual seven sided coin.) in a slot, the door opens, you go in, lock the door, etc.  There was, of course a queue of us to use the facilities.  When the green shows, it means it is unoccupied.  A young woman in front of me, put in her coin and opened the door to the screams of the French woman.  When she came out she kept repeating, “I am claustrophobic!  I no lock doors!”   Anyway, we caught the door so that the young lady who had lost her 20 pence could still use the bathroom. 

Later that afternoon at the palace, I moved ahead of most our group, walked through all the rooms and just as I was about to find a cool place facing the courtyard for some quiet reflection time, I found the lady again or rather, she found me.  “You are in my tour! “  She asserted loudly.  “My tour abandoned me!  I do not know where they are.”

I assured her that she had just followed the wrong group and that if she would continue the way she was going, she would find the group.  After all, the path through the rooms was a circular one.  She followed me outside and continued to berate me because the group had deserted her.  Then she said to me, “Queen Anne was a lesbian!”  Now, quite frankly I do not know if she was or not and I really don’t think there is any way to prove she was or wasn’t.  I told the woman politely as I could that I really wasn’t interested in discussing the issue with her whereupon she decided that I was English and was protecting Queen Anne’s reputation.  Queen Anne, by the way has been dead for about three hundred years.  Then she said, “You are German, then!”

I ask you, how anyone could mistake my North Florida accent for either English or German!

Fortunately, she decided I wasn’t worth her time and left me to gaze out at the quiet of the yard.  All I can say is, "Bless her heart!"

Most of the people we encountered in Ireland, in England, and from other countries were quite pleasant to be around.  We treasured those encounters.

Our flight across southern England, the Irish Sea, southern Ireland, the Atlantic, and the east coast of Florida was a good one.  Other than talking over our trip, we used our individual tablets to put together puzzles, played solitaire, did trivia games, and ate.

We landed at 7:59p.m. EDT.  A little over an hour later, we had finally cleared immigration, customs, and retrieved our bags.  I thought I was going to get arrested when I answered Klep’s cell phone in the baggage claim area, but they let me go with a warning!

As we exited the main terminal, Anne pulled up in front, loaded us into her Honda and whisked us to her house where we visited for a while and went to bed.


Today we took a driving tour up the center of the state of Florida under a partly clouded sky with some of the most brilliant sunshine we had seen for a while.  At the half way point, Klep skillfully
maneuvered our vehicle into a parking place in front of a quaint restaurant with a blue roof where
we sampled the delights of a full American breakfast.


At one p.m. we saw the sign, exited and found the house still standing where we had left it.  Some
dear souls had piled the fallen limbs from the recent hurricane and we were relieved to find that the fridge had held up all right during the power outage.  We had shut off the ice maker before we left, but there were ice cubes in the freezer which still had their shape.  If we had had a serious thaw, they would have melted. 


We created an art object of great beauty by emptying the suitcases into a pile.  Now we enjoy the quiet churning sound of the washing machine.


 Home!


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