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Bristol

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    • Dzień 30

      Bristol Fashion

      25 września 2022, Anglia ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      Day 30 of this bizarre Odyssey. Who knows what's going on back in Ithaca. I'm sure Penelope and Telemachus have everything in hand.

      Today was another day of weird delays and detours. There's nothing to do at this point but to lean into it, and to see every plan of action as a mere prayer to some foreign and capricious god.

      Our plan was to head out to the Clifton Suspension Bridge at 8am, then have a coffee in Clifton, come home and rest, and I would go for a massage on my legs for which I've been taking pain pills.

      What happened instead was we went for coffee at Caffe Nero, took an hour to get the bus to Clifton (our tickets didn't even work), ended up spending an inordinate amount of time at the Visitor's Centre (the charming woman there wanted to give us a free TED talk on the fate of Isambard Kingdom Brunel, but it was pretty cool I will admit), then after coffee we got stuck in a traffic jam on the way home because of the Great Bristol Run. At home, we had to change hotel rooms because the toilet wouldn't flush (right when flushing was R E Q U I R E D [I said "Abandon Shit" and Stu said "Shit shape and Bristol Fashion."]) and then we ended up walking to a super scruffy part of Bristol, me holding onto a failing bag of laundry like a body bag (we lost a sock, and then picked it out of the gutter on the way home), and then FINALLY, I went for my massage and the guy used a massage gun and wouldn't stop telling me conspiracy theories.

      But you know what? Today was GREAT. Coffee at Bar Chocolat in Clifton was beautiful, and the bus ride was fun. We saw SO many great buildings we would never have noticed driving around. The suspension bridge was astonishing, and I loved seeing the rejected designs at the Visitor's Centre, especially a gaudy Victorian gothic style design by the Colossus of Roads, Thomas Telford. I K Brunel's Egyptian styled suspension design is peerless, and in real life, it takes your breath away.

      I got to see two parts of Bristol that tourists wouldn't normally see, a Redcliffe Council Estate and the St Judes market: so much poverty, so much struggle, so much ugliness, and so much camaraderie and nobility.

      And after it all, Stu and I went to The Wellhead and recited the rivers we had now seen:

      The River Thames
      The River Tillingbourne
      The Trent
      The Foss
      The Ouse
      The Tyne
      The Tweed
      The Waters of Leith
      The Clyde
      The Tay
      The River Ness
      and now
      The River Avon.

      Bristol is a jewel of a place. I'm having a great time. And I have a working toilet too.
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    • Dzień 31

      A Façade City

      26 września 2022, Anglia ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

      "Bath is a façade city," said our tour guide Charlotte. "For wealthy Georgians, this place was Las Vegas or Monte Carlo. It was all about tourism. So the money was spent on the front of buildings, not so much on the back."

      She really did look a lot like Imogen Stubbs, did Charlotte. But her tour was progressive and electric. She wasn't trying to sell Bath's image as a place of Austen-franchise romance. She wanted to take us behind the "honey coloured sandstone" to the impulses and real stories behind Bath's architecture and existence. She started with the myth of Bladud, a leper whose pigs were cured of leprosy in the spring waters of Bath, and who founded the settlement the Romans later called Aqua Sulis. Then she talked us through the Roman settlement and the Georgian appropriation of the Roman myth, before talking about more modern controversies - like the overpriced and overdue Thermae Baths, a privatised venture selling "Taking the Waters" in modern architecture. Stuart and I had nearly gone to the spa instead of the tour. We were right to change our minds. A walking tour of Bath, starting at the Abbey, taking in Pultney Bridge, the Circus, the Crescent, Beau Nash's Theatre Royal, the Thermae, Jane Austen's house in Trim Street (Austen hated it, and I loved her for hating it), and the medieval wall just around the corner. It was 90 minutes of ocular delight and intellectual thrill.

      I was in a lot of pain walking around Bath, though. My foot was screwed. I took my last codeine tablets just trying to stay good humoured, but I still cracked the shits when we embarked on tour number two at the Roman Baths, an interminable trove of audio devices we all held up to our ears, shuffling through the (Georgian restored) Roman Baths. I could barely stand the longwinded audio tour after taking such a great walking tour. I turned the damn thing off. Stuart had one of the biggest smiles I've seen on his face this whole trip - he loved the Roman Baths! I felt more in common with the slutty teenage girls taking ass pics by the baths themselves, next to a paid model dressed as a Roman Matron photobombing everyone's instagram. I wanted to take some slutty shots myself, but I didn't want to throw my back out.

      We had Sicilian for lunch. Our waiter had platinum curled hair and dark brown eyes. I had an espresso with lemon and sugar in it.

      Anyway, I loved Bath. And the fact that we got a parking ticket for 25 pounds because their own parking system was broken didn't depress me. Stu is disputing it. He is right to dispute it, but I am more "this river lives in Mombasa anyway" about it all. And let the record show: if the council hadn't been so shitty with their parking, we would have spent a LOT more money in their little town, so, lol. #TooBadSoSad

      After we got home, I went and had a quick shave (just with foils, not with a blade) at Exposure Barbers, then Stu bought a book, we had a beer, and some KFC for dinner.
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    • Dzień 32

      Unwinding

      27 września 2022, Anglia ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      We left the alarm off this morning, and slept in for an hour and a half. Today was to be a day without obligations or commitments.

      We went for morning coffee at Bristol's Oldest Cafe in Corn Street. I imagine the building has seen better days, but I was aware that in the 18th Century that coffeehouses were centres of economic and political decision making.

      From there we walked the Christmas Steps to Bristol Museum, greeted with a very welcome display about anti-racism, and about Bristol's long connection to slavery, slave money, and white supremacy. It's not just the "great men of Bristol" like Wills and Colston who derived their wealth from slavery, but the very buildings and assets of the city were funded from sugar and tobacco plantations in the Americas. Bristol's riches are Black riches. It's great to see Museums pivoting from Nationalist mythologies to egalitarian truths.

      I enjoyed the art gallery, especially the chance to enjoy another Hubert Robert, and a spectacular statue of Daedalus and Icarus. The Gift Shop underwhelmed us for free, but we still gave a 10 pound donation to the Museum. It looked a little worse for wear.

      The rest of the day was unremarkable. Some shopping at Next and House of Fraser. A beer at the art nouveau Clayton Hotel (with its magical Kubrickian toilet). A few griffin sightings. Some squid. Paying the congestion tax for tomorrow's return to London. And a nap.

      Stu and I are starting to reflect on the trip as a whole, and reminding ourselves that the important thing is to look forward to the future, not dwell in the past. We've just been through such a riotous hurricane of hedonism, exoticism and inconvenience over the past four weeks, it's hard not to be captivated by Whatever The Hell Just Happened. But we are making plans for work, for Stu's retirement, for my mental health, for our physical health. And I have been nurturing the seed of another trip for years now anyway - back to San Francisco, down to New Mexico, and then to wherever Stuart wants to go. It's important to have something on the horizon.

      I've just paid the 15 pound congestion tax in the middle of typing up this footprint. We discussed tonight that we probably won't want to do another driving holiday. It is a world of trouble for us. So far from liberating our movements, it has lumbered us with this huge chunk of metal we're supposed to care for, protect, and pay for. Parking has been a nightmare. Driving has been a needless stress. And catching buses, trains, ferries, taxis, and ubers is such a great way to get to know a city.

      It's our last night in Bristol, this deliciously imperfect place, everything just a bit scuffed and scarred, but pointed resolutely toward the future. I hope I take some of this energy with me.
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    • Dzień 83

      Bristol? Really?

      21 października 2023, Anglia ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

      Heute Nacht mussten wir die Fenster zumachen, weil der Sturm den Regen bis in unser Bett geweht hat. Es war wirklich richtig unbehaglich da draußen. Und heute früh waren, trotz ordentlich Brandung, auch erstmalig keine Surfer im Wasser. Also haben auch die Engländer eine Schmerzgrenze - nicht beim Essen, aber immerhin .
      Wir starten den Tag im Waschsalon. In direkter Nähe ist ein kleines Café mit sensationellem Cappuccino und genau den gönnen wir uns zwischen Waschen und Trocknen.
      Das eigentliche Ziel heute ist Stonehenge, das schließt aber schon um 15 Uhr, wir sind 270 Kilometer und zwei Waschmaschinen entfernt. Das wird also irgendwie knapp. Ein neuer Plan muss her und der sieht im ersten Entwurf so aus: wir fahren nach Bath und von dort aus morgen nach Stonehenge. Bath ist sehenswert und wir suchen dort ein Hotel. Das kostet ungefähr soviel wie die Tenne zum Streifwochende, also brauchen wir eine Alternative und die heißt Bristol. Sagt es Bristol nicht, aber wir sind nur aus Preisgründen hier -und wir wurden positiv überrascht. Dazu gleich mehr.
      Nachdem wir jetzt keinen Zeitdruck mehr haben, bleiben wir noch ein wenig in Newquay und kaufen eine Dryrobe. Das ist ein gefüttertes, wasserdichtes Zelt, das man sich gegen das englische Wetter überzieht. Und heute ist die Dryrobe DAS angesagte Kleidungsstück. Es regnet ohne Ende und der freundliche Sturm drückt den Regen von oben und von der Seite in jede offene Ritze - denkt Euch jetzt, was Ihr wollt 🤭.
      Trotzdem laufen wir durch die Stadt und finden wieder neue Strände und wunderbare Landschaften. Cornwall ist einfach schön 🥰.
      Gegen Mittag fahren wir nach Bristol und kommen am Nachmittag an. Wir lassen den Bulli stehen und machen uns auf den Weg in die Stadt.
      Erwartet haben wir nichts, gefunden haben wir eine aufgeweckte Stadt mit vielen gut gelaunten Menschen auf den Straßen. Das ist eine kleine ( sehr kleine ) Version von Kopenhagen. Sogar einen Radweg haben die hier, das ist für England eher ungewöhnlich.
      Die Kathedrale ist leider schon geschlossen , wir staunen einfach von außen .
      Am Wasser finden sich viele Bars und die Engländer starten hier gut gelaunt schon um 18 Uhr mit Drinks und Tanz in den Abend. Dabei trägt das Partyvolk maximal ein T-Shirt und wir sind mit unseren Mützen und Jacken sofort als Touristen erkennbar . Das ist jetzt nicht weiter schlimm, wir erkennen den gemeinen Engländer im Sommer in Italien ja auch sofort am Sonnenbrand und der aufgesprungenen Schweinebratenkruste am Nacken 🤭.
      Fazit der 3 Stunden in Bristol: wir entschuldigen uns aufrichtig dafür, dass wir uns hier nur aus finanziellen Gründen hin verlaufen haben . Bristol macht Spaß , ist hübsch und man kann hier sicher auch zwei spannende Tage verbringen. Und für Uli haben wir sogar noch eine Statue gefunden und fotografiert - leider war sie nicht nackig 🤔
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    • Dzień 32

      Bristol Museum

      27 września 2022, Anglia ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Today was our last day in Bristol, and in many ways, the last day of our trip. Bristol is the last 'new' place we have been to. Yes, we are having three days back in London before flying home, but for both of us that feels more like a coda than something new. A time to decompress, a time to process, a time to relax and gather energy for our journey home.

      So, today was a day we decided would be a day without plans. The only thing we did decide beforehand was to have breakfast/coffee at Cafe Revival "Bristol's Oldest Coffee House". Three floors of coffee antiquity. A pleasant experience with a decidely good coffee.

      During breakfast, we decided we would walk slowly up the hill to see the University sector and the city's justly renowned Museum and Gallery. We walked up the Christmas stairs - there are specially named stairs all ove the place in the UK - and on toward the University.

      The Uni's tower has to be seen to be believed. It is called Wills Tower after its benefactor. More about him and his brother later. Today however, there were Uni staff picketing out the front for better pay conditions, so even though we were not staff going to work, we did not cross their picket line out of respect, even though I was keen to go in and see the interior of this behemoth.

      The tower is enormous. It can be seen as a bastion of academia all over the city. Pale white sand-stone, highly ornamented and chunky. Yes, chunky. It is a big, wide, heavy edifice that towers into the sky.

      Adjacent the University is the Museum and Gallery, also benefiting from the Wills' family. You'll know the Willses. They are the tobacco people, W. D. & H. O. Wills. They made their money from vast tobacco plantations worked by slaves. They even kept their slaves working a few decades after slavery was abolished and criminalised in the UK in 1833.

      The Museum is housed in a purpose built grand Edwardian building replete with sandstone on the outside and marble and arches and galleries on the inside. It is a beautiful and remarkable building. And it was built on the misery of other human beings. Bristol Museum owns this horror up front in its first gallery. It states it loud and clear and declares modern-day discomfort with such a past and asks today's patrons how they feel about this as they proceed through.

      Surrounding the Museum's acknowledgment is a massive art work called Black Lives Matter, and the statues of former slavers toppled in the town by today's youth, with paint tins on their heads and spattered with paint.

      We did not look at the whole museum. Chris had a look at some Japanese ceramics, a special exhibition, while I looked at the Museum's dinosaur collection. Particularly interesting was the whole icthyosaur fossil in situ, and the life-size cast of the front leg of a Portugeuse dinosaur called a Camarasurus. I am sorry I did not take pic of me standing next to the leg as it would have given some sense of size. This leg was at least three times the size of me. Extraordinary.

      After that, we came together to look at the Gallery. Bristol's collection has some old masters as well as a wonderful collection of different art works throughout the different ages. Of particlular interest to me was a fabulous image of a handsome knight almost bewitched by a lady on a horse. The picture is called La Belle Dame Sans Merci and was painted by Frank Dicksee who died in the year Mum and Dad were born, 1928. Keats wrote a poem of the same name, a poem I used to teach to senior High School students, and the inpsiration for Dicksee's painting. The knight doesn't come off very well at the end of the poetic narrative, and our lady without mercy, is an example of a femme fatale.

      After our fabulous time at the Museum and Gallery, we headed back down the Christmas Stairs and went to Cabot Circus, a large shopping mall, there to do a bit of clothes shopping. Portuguese explorer Sebastien Cabot launched his trip to find the New World from Bristol and was partly funded by the city. We both picked up a few bargains and then headed to the Mercure Clayton Hotel for a drink and a chat about processing our trip. This building used to the Everard Print Works. The Hotel has protected the original facade, an art nouveau design. It is something quite special.

      Dinner and a restful night back at the hotel where we write these footprints before leaving Bristol tomorrow morning and commencing our UK trip coda.
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    • Dzień 1

      Von London nach Bristol🚕

      5 lutego 2023, Anglia ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      Am Flughafen von London (Heathrow) angekomen wurde ich abgeholt von einem Taxi, welches ich gebucht hatte.
      Der Taxi fahrer und ich hatten gute und lustige Gespräche.
      Nach einer 2 Stündigen fahrt, kam ich bei meiner Gastfamilie an. Ich wurde nett begrüsst und besichtete alles.
      In einem Haus mit 4 anderen Studentinen ging mein Abendteuer los. 🗺
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    • Dzień 30

      Bristol and The Bridge

      25 września 2022, Anglia ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      Bristol is an interesting city. Right in the heart of it where we are staying, it's all shopping and franchises. There's not an independent cafe to be seen. But just head on out a bit, or catch the bus for five to ten minutes, and the franchises disappear, and people are doing bsuiness the old-fashioned way, marketing their shops so that passers-by will come in and where customer service really counts.

      Out there too, you see art galleries and museums, courts of law and lawyers' chambers, hospitals, schools, the University of Bristol, and of course, it's England after all, pubs. Walking our washing to a laundrette this afternoon, we walked 20 minutes into an inner city suburb with Franciscan friars operating a church and charity right next door to the Islamic community's base. I liked that. To be sure, it felt rougher out there, but I felt safe the whole time.

      Today was a day where we decided to try the Bristol Bus Service. We dutifully watched a YouTube vid on how to do this, how to download and use the bus app, and how to activate your ticket which you can pre-purchase. While this was all interesting and we felt we were ready, the whole thing came undone when the city put on some kind of half marathon or fun run. The streets were jammed, the buses ere running more than an hour late, and Chris and I had the wildest bus ride I've ever encountered.

      You see, we caught the bus out to Clifton. Clifton is where Bristol's famous bridge is located. This is the Clifton Suspension Bridge of well-deserved fame, engineered by that Victorian innovator and clever man, Isambard Kingdom Brunel. IK Brunel is to be found everywhere is Bristol. There are portraits and images of his bridge as well as his other great feats of engineering.

      Poor man died before his Clifton bridge could be completed. The towers either side were done, but the suspension cables that give it, and other suspension bridges, their unique look, were not in place before his untimely death by stroke in 1859, exactly 100 years before I was born. Untimely I'm not so sure about given that IK Brunel smoked 40 cigars a day and he was never seen without one in his mouth. He only slept four hours a day too, and devoted the rest of his waking hours to work. Not the healthiest lifestyle.

      Our bus ride out to the bridge was relatively uneventful. We alighted and walked to the nearest side of the bridge and took photos from grassy parklands adjacent the nearer tower. Then we walked across it. At the very middle, you can reach up and touch the suspension cables where they hang lowest in their grand upsidedown arch.

      Some of you may recall that in the last few years, I have developed a mild case of vertigo, so when I am up on these kinds of heights where I can see through to the abyss below my feet or just over the edge to the aforemoentioned abyss, my tummy turns (too much epinephrine) and my legs feel a bit wobbly (too much norepinephrine) and I experience a mild fear (limbic system upregulated and situational hypofrontality as part of a stress response). There is no rationalising my way out of it.

      But dear reader, I wasn't going to let a bit of neurological disequilibration stop me from walking across Isambard Kingdom's bridge, not when it was right in front of me. No siree! Chris was good. He was calm with me and just set a gentle pace and I stayed with him. The problem with vertigo is that you don't get to see much because looking out or looking down makes it worse, so walking across the bridge looking at my feet and the roadway is clearly not the ideal view of the vast expanse set before me from such a high up vantage.

      And what a structure! Brunel's bidge is gorgeous. It is not only an architectural marvel, it is a thing of great beauty. Each tower stands like a giant letter A, the suspension cables coming from anchorages on top and cables connected to bedrock deep in the earth on either side. It spans the River Avon and is truly majestic. I have seen the Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge and I can now add a third awe-inspiring edifice to these great wonders of human ingenuity. And bridges! Who doesn't love a bridge! I love what bridges do. I love the very concept of a bridge. You're over here, and then, as if by magic, you're over there.

      We went into the visitor's centre on the other side and had a good look around and read all the important information about Brunel himself, how he did it, and how it was finsished after he died, as well as some interesting tid bits about the bridge's place in local life over the years.

      Coffee at a local Clifton cafe and then the bus ride from hell back to the city. A fifteen to twenty minutes ride typically. But today, with this half marathon/fun run thingy, the streets were jammed, and the bus was forced to stop multiple times. Our driver, a man from up north and with the most wonderful 'Time Bandits' accent, was cheerful and very clever as he wove this giant behemoth through tiny narrow streets, parked in on both sides, and forcing his way through the middle in places, otherwise we'd still be there. How he didn't take off a dozen side-mirrors from parked cars I'll never know. It was a magnificent feat and everybody on the bus was clearly impressed and thankful for such a ride to be in the hands of so skilfull a manoeuvre-er.

      A drink at the hotel bar and dinner in again tonight, a walk in the park, and we're off on a day trip tomorrow to a city I have read about in Jane Austen's novels all my life.
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    • Dzień 2

      first day at school📚

      6 lutego 2023, Anglia

      Der erste Schultag war super. Ich habe viele nette Leute kennen gelernt und ganz viel englisch gesprochen. 🤗
      Nach der Schulführung haben wir noch eine Citytour gemacht. Es gibt so viel schönes zu sehen, dass ich gar nicht weiss wo anfangen.😍 Czytaj więcej

    • Dzień 3

      Steam, bridge and observatory (and stick

      10 kwietnia 2023, Anglia ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

      This morning we got on a bus to Go to the square and choose a ride each. Next we went to the Mshed but it was closed so we just got on the train that went up and down the track . After that we went to the observatory and went in the giant's cave and finally got to the end of the cave and it was so INTERESTING. Finally we had dinner at the ivy. Czytaj więcej

    • Dzień 4

      Gastfamilie Nummer 3🏡

      8 lutego 2023, Anglia ⋅ ☀️ 9 °C

      Fishponds
      Eastpart of the city

      Heute Abend hatte ich ein erneutes Gespräch mit dem Schuldirektor. Er informiert mich, dass ich eine neue Gastfamilie bekomme aber nur als Übergangslösung bis am Sonntag. Er hat mir ein Taxi bestellt für zu meiner aktuellen Gastfamilie bei meiner Schwester, um dort meine Sachen einzupacken. Ich konnte mich noch bei der Gastfamilie bedanken und die Kosten begleichen, dann ging es nach 15 Minuten schon weiter in einen anderen Stadtteil.
      Dort angekommen wurde ich sehr herzlich willkommen geheissen. Das Haus ist sehr schön und die Hostmother unglaublich lieb. Ich habe mich ab dem ersten Moment sehr wohl gefühlt, in einem warmen und sauberen Haus. Mein Zimmer teile ich mit einer anderen Studentin, die noch in den Ferien ist.

      Sind wir gespannt, welche Informationen ich am Freitag vom Schuldirektor bekomme...
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    Możesz znać też następujące nazwy tego miejsca:

    Bristol, Bristón, Bricgstōƿ, بريستول, Горад Брысталь, Бристъл, Bryste, Μπρίστολ, Bristolo, Brístol, بریستول, Briostó, בריסטול, ब्रिस्टल, Բրիստոլ, BRS, ブリストル, ბრისტოლი, ಬ್ರಿಸ್ಟಲ್‌, 브리스틀, Bristolium, Bristolis, Bristole, Бристол, Bristo, Бристоль, برسٹل نگر, Bristullu, บริสตอล, בריסטאל, 布里斯托尔

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