Sunday, October 30, 2011

Our Cars

In the order of when we acquired them.

The Rover Stable; 1988 Range Rover, 1971 Land Rover, 1997 Disco, 1963 Land Rover (in car hole)
  1. 1969 Chevy Nova. Free from a friend of my Dad. It was hand painted gray with a roller. Accessories from JC Whitney were artistically attached with rusty screws. Had a big 350 engine, but back then gas was cheap.
  2. 1973 Datsun B210, Yellow with black cloth top. We installed the cassette tape player in the glove box.
  3. 1978 Datsun B210, Burgundy. More refined looking than the 1973 model.
  4. 1986 Honda Si Hatchback. Our first new car. It was kick ass, easily got it up to 100mhp once and it would have gone faster, but that was my limit. Nowadays, my limit is lower.
  5. 1977 Dodge Charger. A dog. Bought it new, the dealer didn't have a spare in it when we picked it up and we had to go back. Basically a Dodge Omni/Plymouth Horizon with a different front end. Room for a small wading pool in the hatch and 2 feet between the front bumper and the radiator.
  6. 1990 Izuzu Amigo. New. Fun and practical. It had a habit of calling in the rain when you had left the top at home. The rear seat folded and flipped up to provide more of storage.
  7. 1992 Honda Vx hatchback, new, very good gas mileage.
  8. 1963 Land Rover Series IIA Long Wheel Base (109 inch) with Safari Top AKA "Lump". See here.
  9. 1971 Land Rover Series IIA Short Wheel Base(88 inch) AKA "Ort". Sold it for more than we paid. A real barn find, had hay behind the seats and a letter asking the owner for use of his stud. Also had a bullet hole I surmise from a rifle carelessly thrown behind the seat.
  10. 1988 Range Rover, "Bessie". A sturdy vehicle, the original upscale SUV. Replaced the engine and got a few more years out of it.
  11. Bessie's last day
  12. 1997 Land Rover Discovery "Willow", willow green. Easy to drive, excellent visibility, great off-road and in the snow, room for a pony (a small one). One of the best vehicles we had. Took it on a bunch of vacations. Purchased used.
  13. 2003 Jaguar X-type. Based upon the Ford Mondeo chassis. It can take curves faster than I can. Purchased used.
  14. 2008 Volvo XC-90. The new college transport vehicle, replaced the Disco. Purchased used.
  15. 2016 Subaru Crosstrek. First new car in awhile. Replaced the X-type.

I was ready to post this, but somehow I deleted the wrong draft and had to start over.

    Sunday, October 16, 2011

    Past Trip: England 1998, The Barbie Tour

    In 1998, we took our third trip to England. This time we were joining up with some members of the Land Rover Club to which we belong and we were going to the Billings Land Rover Festival and also touring the Land Rover Factory. It was also our youngest child's first trip to the UK. She had brought her Barbie and lots of outfits. Barbie had fun.
    Barfly Barbie having a pint
    Highlights:
    • Ride back from the Land Rover Festival in a Jaguar (a real one)
    • Land Rover Festival
    • Land Rover Factory tour
    • Watching the "Big Breakfast" almost every morning
    • Castles
    • Beer

    Sights we Saw:
    London (4 days)
    Tower Bridge Barbie
    • Hop-On Hop-Off Bus tour
    • The Royal Mews - housing the Queen's state vehicles
    • Buckingham Palace, Changing of the Guard (abridged version)
    • Changing of the House Guards, the extended cut.
    • Tower Bridge Exhibition
    • Covent Garden
    • Toy and Model museum
    Household Calvary, The Blues and Royals, love those boots.
    Tonbridge (1 day)
    Heaver Castle Courtyard
    • Heaver Castle (Gardens, water maze, hedge maze) One hundred additional rooms were added behind the main Castle in the form of a Tudor village. It included Visitor rooms, Servant's quarters and the Estate offices.
    • Tonbridge Castle ruins
    Sevenoaks (1 day)
    • Knole House - Beautiful courtyards, much quoted fact "365 rooms, 52 staircases and 7 courtyards" I didn't count. Tis a big 'ouse.
    Salisbury (1 day)

    Cloister at Salisbury Cathedral
    • Book shoppes
    • An exciting jumble of half timbered black and white buildings and brick buildings and more modern structures.
    • Salisbury Cathedral - Britain's tallest spire, sat through the end of a service, the choir was very good.
    • Market
    Avebury (2 days)
    The Stone circle at Avebury is better than Stonehenge and it has a pub in the center of the stone circle to boot. We walked from Avebury to Silbury hill (1/2 mile) to West Kennet Long Barrow(1 mile) and then back to Avebury (1.5 miles).
    • Stone Circle - you can walk around the stones and hug them and dance around them.
    • Silbury Hill - a big hill covered with grass which you are not supposed to ascend.
    • West Kennet Long Barrow - long chambered burial mound. 
    • West Kennet Avenue - pairs of large stones leading away(?) from Avebury to another neolithic site, The Sanctuary. There are not any stones left at The Sanctuary though.
    • Crop Circle - we went to investigate one and were chased by an in-bred farmer and I fell over a gate into a pile of shite.
    • Alexander Keiller Archeology Museum - not very big, but was free because we had the Great British Heritage Pass. It actually had some interesting exhibits.
    Oxford (1 day)
    On the bus from Avebury, the younger was briefly stranded on the bus at the depot when she didn't stop reading when she was told. We got off and the door shut and she was briefly locked in. The old ladies queuing for the next bus all went "aaah". Later that day the eldest passed out while we were waiting to book a room at the Tourist Information Center in Oxford. She met a doctor though, too bad she was too young.
    • market, I bought an alto recorder, it is only slightly less annoying than my soprano recorders.
    • Guide Friday Hop-On Hop-Off  bus tour
    • Blackwell's Bookstore
    Northhampton (2 days)
    Mainly stayed here to be close to the Land Rover Festival, it was the 50th Anniversary of the Land Rover. Walked around the town, saw one of Britain's 4 round Churches. Had lunch in a dark smokey pub "The Wedgewood" and walked around some more.

    I applied for the Camel Trophy, but my application apparently failed to impress.
    • Land Rover Festival at Billing's Aquadrome. Saw more Land Rovers in one place than I ever had before. Saw demos and new products for Land Rovers and lots of used parts. Even the kids had fun.

    Expedition Barbie
    Warwick (2 days) Pronounced "Warick"
    • Warwick Castle
    • Warwick 4x4 Land Rover Shop
    • Cadbury Factory tour with a ride that reminded me of "It's a Small World"
    • Land Rover Factory Tour and Special Vehicles Tour
    Lodging:
    Windermere Hotel, Victoria, London
      We had stayed here on our last trip and it started to be "our" hotel, till we discovered the London Elizabeth.
    St. Mary's Guest House, Tonbridge
      Small fire the morning we left, the cooker had gone ablaze, thank goodness for fire blankets.
    The Moorings Hotel, Sevenoaks
      The owners were none too friendly.
    Hayburn Wyke, Salisbury
      These people were very nice and helpful and not just in comparison to the previous hoteliers.
    The Old Vicarage, High Street, Avebury
      The girls had their own room and it was reported that the younger fell out of bed.  The Landlady had a lot of rules and was too busy plotting world domination to provide us with new towels.
    The Beaumont, Oxford
    The Coach House Hotel, Northhampton
    Ashburton Guest House, Warwick
    Barry House Hotel, London
        So bad we fled the next day to a hotel across the street.
    The Alexandra Hotel, London

    Pubs:
    Shakespeare , London, lunch.
    Henry VIII, near Heaver Castle, for a drink awaiting a cab.
    Primrose, Tonbridge, dinner.
    Haunch of Venison, Salisbury, dinner. I had a haunch of venison. There were no plumb or level surfaces throughout the whole building. They supposedly had a mummified hand found during some reconstruction. I forgot to look for it.
    Red Lion, Avebury, lunch, dinner, dinner.
    Folly Bridge Inn, Oxford. Dinner.
    The Wedgewood, Northampton, now Momo. Lunch.
    The Crown Hotel, now the Crown and Castle, Warwick. Dinner.
    The Dickens Tavern, London.
    The Sawyer's Arms, London.

    14 days
    $1 = 0.61GBP
    1229 GBP expenses, 87GBP/day
    1036 GBP lodging

    1998 Trip Expenses (2 Adults, 2 children)
    $2384 - air fare
    $  630 - Britrail Flexi Pass rail pass 8 days in 1 month, (1 adult/1 child $315)
    $2003 - daily expenses
    $1688 - lodging
    $6705 - Total

    Sunday, October 9, 2011

    Saint Martin's Summer

    A period of unusually warm weather in Autumn. The term, quite popular before the discovery of the new world refers to St. Martin's day (Feast of Saint Martin, Martinmas), celebrated on November 11, it is a harvest celebration. St. Martin is the patron of beggars, vintners, equestrians, soldiers, tailors, innkeepers, alcoholics, and geese.

    Was heating up my sauteed sauerkraut and venison sausage lunch and opened the fridge and this is what I saw. What a selection. That is the great thing about a poor memory, the  Surprises! And I had just bought some of them 5 hours ago.
    The size order arrangement was totally accidental. I am not that rigid.

    The weather is glorious and it is even nicer than yesterday. Have not posted any plant photos for awhile, we missed the Saint Michaelmas daisys(purple), the yellow fall blooming crocus (yellow), the Russian sage bush (purple) and the sweet potato vine flowering(also purple). 

    Here are some cyclamen. I'm sure I mentioned it before, but I used to hate these. We sold them at our florist business and I hated moving them, hated touching them, they could get very slimy. But growing natural in the ground they are so pretty. Like little butterflies hovering. Had to look this spelling up, didn't want to imply that they were vacuuming.

    Fall blooming Crocus.