United Kingdom
Gateshead

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    • Day 21

      Erntedankgottesdienst

      September 24, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      In Newcastle sind Verena und ich dann zur Martin Luther Kirche gegangen, die ein echt sehr schönes Glasfenster hat. ☺️ Und auf einer schicken Plakette, die aber nicht ganz vollständig ist, kann man sehen, dass es die Kirche - mit Unterbrechungen - auch schon ganz schön lange gibt. 🫢
      Wir haben mit einer insgesamt zehnköpfigen Truppe einen Erntedank-Familiengottesdienst gefeiert mit vielen schönen Liedern. 🎶
      Danach gab es in einer sehr geselligen Runde noch Tee und Kuchen, wo ich auch mit einem der Menschen sprechen konnte, die ich mit Thomas schon kennenlernen durfte! ☺️☕️
      Das war eine tolle Erfahrung in der Newcastler Gemeinde und wir haben uns alle gefreut, uns gegenseitig zu sehen. ✨
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    • Day 42

      Reunions in the Toon

      July 1, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌬 18 °C

      Today I woke up and got ready to head into Newcastle. THE SUN WAS OUT!!! I walked to Manors which is right near Northumbria University where I did my masters. I met up with Rach, Ori, Jess and Mollie at a coffee shop there. It was so nice to see all of them again. We caught up on everything and especially what had gone on in basketball world. I then hung out longer with Rach, we drove into town and walked around the high street looking for a pub that was playing the English women's football game. We found one but the game started later so we headed to 5 swans which was our drinking place for 2 years while I lived there. It hadn't changed and the beers are so cheap. We chatted and caught up about everything, then Kate and Brooklan arrived from their morning of shopping and visiting the coast.
      It was then time to go and watch the match, we met with Rachs girlfriend Beth and Mollie came back to watch the game too. The game was average but fun to be in the pub watching together.
      We then caught the train back and grabbed frozen pizzas for dinner. We got ready to go to Zoe's house party. We arrived and Zoe was so stoked to see me which was so lovely. We got a tour of her house which was massive and met her roommates and a few partygoers. There was also just dogs walking around and on couches which was the best. Then Ed arrived! He hadn't changed one bit. Kate, Brooklan, Ed and I sat inside and chatted all night, the sun literally hasn't been setting up here until like 10:30pm which is crazy too. We then caught the train back and ordered McDonald's before heading to bed. It was such a great day seeing everyone again and I really do like Newcastle more than I remembered!
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    • Day 13

      On the road again 🎶

      June 22, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      Today we left York behind and made our way to Newcastle. However, before we left Dani prepared a picnic and on the way we stopped at Gibside, an old Georgian era estate that is now effectively a national park.
      It was much less touristy than all our previous stops. We had a lovely picnic lunch, the kids played on a playground and then we went for a 4.5km walk around the estate (it was supposed to be 3.5 km but our navigator took a wrong turn and it took a while to realise that we were heading in completely the wrong direction).
      Along the walk we found a low ropes course that we all tried, and also went past the ruins of the old homestead and orangery. Near the end we stopped for a cuppa and the kids had an ice cream.
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    • Day 41

      Driving to the Toon!

      June 30, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      Today I woke up and went for a quick run while Kate and Brooklan went to the gym. We all packed up the car and started for Newcastle! Estimated time was just over a 5 hour drive but as we started the traffic was horrific. So much congestion, it seemed everyone was escaping London. It was a frustrating drive for both the drivers, I had the tough job of sitting in the back. We stopped for a break and something to eat and set back off. It ended up taking us 7 hours, the traffic around Newcastle was terrible! It was so nice being back though. We got takeaway Thai which Brooklan and I picked up. The restaurant was right in the neighbourhood I lived in my first year which was so fun to see. Nothing had changed. We then watched some TV before going to bed early after a big day.Read more

    • Day 3

      St. Bee's

      May 4 in England ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Today I travelled on the train from Newcastle to St. Bee's. Pleasant train trip. I met Sarah and David from London. They are hiking the first part of the C2C and will be staying at the Ullswater Inn where I will be staying on Day 4. They are carrying all of their stuff but not camping. Hopefully I will meet them out on the trail.

      St. Bee's was quite rainy today. Not a heavy rain but constant. I wandered around for an hour and a half. They had a monastery here which is now a church. Very beautiful. The church was open and inside they had the history of the church and region. Interestingly they had dug up some of the graves a few years ago and discovered the preserved body of a 700 year old nobleman who had died while fighting in Lithuania in the 14 century. He was brought back and buried at the church and forgotten until renovations required digging up his grave. Miraculously his body was intact and they performed an autopsy on him. He had a fractured rib and lacerated lung and hemothorax which led them to believe he had died in combat. They even had pictures on the wall illustrating the autopsy. Pathology is everywhere.

      I walked down to the Irish Sea where the trail begins and got a pebble to carry with me to the North Sea. I also dipped my feet into the Irish Sea which is a pre trip tradition. It was raining pretty hard so I walked back to the Fair ladies Barn where I am staying to chill out before dinner. I was pretty wet by the time I made it back to the hotel.
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    • Day 8

      Newcastle upon Tyne

      April 6 in England ⋅ 🌬 18 °C

      Newcastle upon Tyne - gibts einen schöneren Namen für eine Stadt?
      Newcastle ansich ist recht schnuckelig - für mehrere Tage aber bestimmt langweilig.
      Wir haben die Charles Grey Statue „besucht“ -> Namensgeber für den Earl Grey Tea und haben natürlich auch ein Haferl Tee dort getrunken.
      Sonst einen langen Spaziergang an der Tyne entlang gemacht und die 7 Brücken dort bewundert. Auch das Castle ging beim Vorbeigehen mit.

      Abends sind wir dann im Hotel-Pub gelandet (OYO Royal Hotel -> altmodisch und schnuckelig) und haben ein paar Gläschen vernichtet.
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    • Day 4

      ALTE Studentenstadt Cambridge

      August 23, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Heute in Cambridge. Im Jahr 1285, noch ein ige Jahre bevor es bei uns hiess "wir wollen sein ein einig Volk von Brüdern...", erhielten sie ihre erste Universität. Heute hat es 10tausende von Studies, die sich in einem der renommierten Colleges abmühn. Eingetaucht in eine wundervoll historische Harry Poter Architektur.Read more

    • Day 21

      Limits

      September 16, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      It's our last morning in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne as I type this from our posh renovated flat in Akenside House. This place was built as offices over a century ago with a granite lower storey (now Akenside Traders Tavern) and three floors of sandstone. Our flat at the top has sandstone lions standing aflank the windows. The view looks down on Akenside Square, the Tyne Bridge, the Tyne River, and over a clutter of Victorian rooftops. For all my love of hotels and the way they keep throwing clean towels at you, it's hard not to appreciate that no hotel would ever have given us this location at this price.

      Yesterday was a slower day, and I needed a slower day. In fact I still need more slow days so I can work. I tried to do an illustration yesterday and couldn't get anywhere in the 1 hour I had. It's all starting to feel like life back home: persistently out of this weird mystical tripartite substance I call TimeFocusEnergy.

      Stuart was feeling brave and volunteered to get our Sherman Tank out of its tiny mousehole carpark and drive us to Hadrian's Wall. This was easier driving than York or Harrogate: it takes a second to get outside the city limits of Newcastle, and once you're out, things are wide and fine. We plugged "Hadrian's Wall" into Google Maps on my phone and just let the algorithm decide where we should go. After all, Hadrian's Wall slices Great Britain left to right, and people walk the whole length. Theoretically we could visit the wall at many points.

      Google decided we should go to Birdoswald, a very intact garrison with a cafe, toilets, informative posters, and yes, a souvenir shop. Google knows us so well. This was a great choice.

      The very first thing the attendant Maura did was to try and sell us an $80 ticket to all the English Heritage sites - just to save us money, you understand - and preceded to ask us how long we were staying and where were we going? Who the hell did Maura think she was? Google?

      My face morphed into some menacing artifact while Maura plied her sales techniques on us. Stuart stayed blithe and informed her that our next stops would be Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Inverness. Maura recoiled at the mention of those places and ceased all sales efforts. Those are in Scotland, and this heritage is English heritage only. Maura was herself Scottish, by the way. She claimed she only wanted to save us money because she was a Scot haha, which is a joke that would've landed if I hadn't been so unimpressed with supersizing, bundling, upgrades, and add-ons. But anyway, when we invoked those Scottish places on the Southern side of the wall, we were given tickets and sent away, encouraged to enjoy the archaeological site.

      I enjoyed the morning well enough. The exhibition itself had some anti-colonial and anti-racist flavours in it that I especially appreciated. There was a cartoon of an Indigenous person flinching underneath Roman speers saying to the viewer "How would you like it if your home was invaded?" This was the same sentiment I saw curated as part of the Jorvik Viking Museum: this honesty about colonialism.

      And it also underscored something about the English that I've never really appreciated before: the English believe that invasion and colonisation is an inevitable part of reality because they've been invaded and colonised multiple times. Little wonder that they should feel justified in colonising more of the world than anyone else: they believe it's either settle or be settled.

      We had cold bright weather standing there at the very limits of the Roman Empire. I was really haunted by the spectre of what happened in the 5th century with the Romans leaving. I don't understand why Empires withdraw and relinquish, but I need to understand it. Because my history education has this massive gap between the Julio-Claudians and Martin Luther (which is partly my fault, since studying history in my time was like taking an empty tray to a a cafeteria and filling it with only the morsels that look most appetising), I had always just assumed that the Romans basically... I don't know... assimilated.

      I was partly right. When the garrison at Banna (Birdoswald) was decommissioned, many of the people who lived there stayed there, and kept working there. And I'm sure they were governed - as Bob Dylan says, "You're gonna have to serve somebody" - but I don't know who by.

      Hadrian's Wall was a pleasure. There weren't many other tourists, and not much other traffic. The gift shop was anticlimactic, which is just bizarre to me because I arrived here with plenty of tourist dollars and a lifetime of dreaming. But a 60 pound jumper with a bland screen print of Hadrian's face on it? No. A cheap Chinese notebook with a wrapping paper pattern of no clear meaning on the front for 10 pounds? No. A 30 pound tee shirt that will fade within 5 washes? No. And as to the ten pieces of meretricious jewellery that one could find at a Boots Pharmacy? No, no, no. I bought a plastic cylinder of freckles (called "Jazzies" here in Cumbria) and left happily.

      That afternoon we walked down to Quayside for a beer (for him) and coffee (for me) and found a ridiculously pretty Art Nouveau building called "Baltic Chambers" across the river from the famous Baltic Flour Mill. The centre part had been turned into a cafe called "CatPawCino" and the corner had been turned into a "funky wee bar" called "The Hooch," which we entered. Stuart ordered a pint of Estrella (which the waitress mispronounced, making us adore her), and I had a Fentiman's Testosterone-Busting Rose Lemonade.

      But after that, I had reached my limit of TimeFocusEnergy. We went home and relaxed for the rest of the night, eating a Waitrose Quiche, listening to jazz, and doodling. This morning we move on to Edinburgh! But it's impossible that we should have better accommodation than this. Newcastle has been very kind to us; it is in fact a very kind place - cultured and honest too.

      I will come back here.
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    • Day 5

      Museum of the North

      August 17, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Es ging nur 20 Minuten nördlich von unserem Aufenthaltsort in eine Freilichtmuseum wo mit viel liebe zum Detail verschiedene Zeiten dargestellt wurden.
      Man kann hier mit alten Fahrzeugen wie Busen, Zügen oder Bahnen oder per Pedes sich auf die Zeitreise begeben. Immer völlig freie Wahl.
      Wir gingen in ein echtes Bergwerk und machten uns klein bis auf 1,40m.
      Wirklich interessante Einblicke.
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    • Day 3

      Newcastle; across the city to Quayside

      October 23, 2022 in England ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      Newcastle is a city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear and located on the River Tyne's northern bank.  Originally dependent on its port and, in particular, its status as one of the world's largest ship building and repair centres, the city today is much more diverse. 

      The first recorded settlement was Pons Aelius ("Hadrian's bridge"), a Roman fort and bridge across the River Tyne; it then became part of the powerful Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria.  Newcastel is named after its castle; originally a wooden castle in the Norman times, it was replaced by a stone castle and then rebuilt again in 1172 during the reign of Henry II.

      We start the walk across the city at the West Walls section of the Newcastle town wall, which was built during the 13th and 14th centuries to help protect the town from attack and occupation during times of conflict.  We then walk up towards St James' Park, the home of Newcastle United FC; this is close to Chinatown, one of five in the UK, and we walk through this and pass the Catholic Cathedral Church of St Mary.  We reach Newcastle Central Railway Station; outside of this is the Stephenson Monument, a memorial to George Stephenson who developed the 'Rocket', an early locomotive, with his son Robert and pioneered rail transport and the development of the first passenger railways.  There is a good view of the Newcastle Castle Keep from the station car park.

      As we carry on east we pass the Rutherford Memorial Fountain - a distinctive red sandstone drinking fountain is located at the top of the Bigg Market - and enjoy another view of the Castle from the road here before reaching Newcastle Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Nicholas.  We pass the historic Black Gate, originally the castle’s fortified gatehouse or barbican; this is close to the Moot Hall which was commissioned as a courthouse to replace the facilities at the Castle. 

      We now descend to walk along Quayside and see the magnificent and iconic bridges that cross the River Tyne from Newcastle to Gateshead on the other side (see photo captions); these are beautiful both by day and night.

      A brief visit to Newcastle, but "I'll be back".
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Gateshead, Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead, GAT, Municipio de Gateshead, District métropolitain de Gateshead, میٹروپولیٹن بورو گیٹسہیڈ

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