Storbritannien
New Town

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    • Dag 14

      National Gallery

      14 maj, Skottland ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

      I’m very fond of paintings. Mostly the impressionists so I always hunt around for viewing museums. Today took me to the National Gallery, not the portrait gallery or Modern 2, which I’m saving for another day. Made up of two buildings connected below grade, the 5-story building is old on the outside and beautiful on the inside.

      Sauret, Monet,Poisson, amongst many others. I really enjoyed the art created by Scottish artists with Scottish themes. Men in kilts, dancing girls, wild scenes of the highlands, only in Scotland images.

      I also discovered a new trick. With my headphone in one ear, I could listen presentations on YouTube about the art, while I was looking at it in person. Also, the Audio Description (for visually impaired folks), provided by the museum, was another new (to me) way to look at the paintings.

      And it was free!!
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    • Dag 15

      Bubble Tea

      18 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Ich hatte als Belohnung für Gottesdienst und Museum mir einen sehr niedlichen Donutladen am anderen Ende der Stadt vorgenommen, der war nur schon ausverkauft und deswegen einfach zu. 👀🫢
      Ich war dann stattdessen in einem süßen Buchladen! 📚 Und dann habe ich einen Bubble Tea gekauft und bin durch die Stadt fröhlich wieder zurückgelaufen.🧋 Natürlich nicht ohne in mehrfacher Ausführung den Bubble Tea zu dokumentieren. ☺️ Ich hatte dieses Mal auch wieder Hilfe! 😂

      Abends habe ich Tagebücher geschrieben und dann mit den beiden Jüngsten einen Fernsehabend gemacht und jetzt bin ich sehr müde und freue mich aufs Bett. 😴
      Morgen dürfen wir wegen der Bank Holiday wegen der Beerdigung der Königin lange ausschlafen! 🥳
      Ich wünsche euch allen einen guten Start in die Woche! ♥️✨🫠
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    • Dag 20

      Dean Village

      23 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Nach einem sehr leckeren koreanischen Mittagessen bin ich dann zur Dean Village gelaufen. Das ist ein wunderschönes, malerisches, altes Dorf, was inzwischen halt Teil von Edinburgh geworden ist. ☺️
      Die unglaublich hohe Brücke wurde gebaut, um Dean (ursprünglich Dene, und das heißt dann tiefes Tal) mit der Stadt zu verbinden - von oben und unten sehr beeindruckend! 🫢

      Und dann habe ich da meinen Nachtisch am Wasser genossen und das Wetter natürlich auch!☀️🍩
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    • Dag 25

      Deutscher Konsul Empfang

      28 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

      Eigentlich hätte ich dann heute auch schon genug erlebt an sich. ☺️ Aber… nach der Zugfahrt ging es weiter und zwar mit dem Empfang des deutschen Konsuls! 🫢 Ich durfte mit Thomas dahingehen während Verena einen anderen Termin hatte.
      Wir haben uns zuerst verschiedene Hymnen, also die deutsche, britische und europäische Hymne, angehört. 🎶
      Danach gab es zwei Reden und dann wurde sich unterhalten. Ich bin noch nicht sonderlich gut dadrin, auf Menschen, die vielleicht sogar wichtig sind, einfach zu zu gehen, aber ich habe mich dann doch insgesamt sehr gut unterhalten. 🫡☺️ Es hat auch nicht sonderlich geholfen, dass ich mich ein bisschen ‚underdressed‘ gefühlt habe. 🙈
      Es gab auch ein paar Snacks, aber wir waren noch hungrig und haben zu Abend gegessen. Aber jetzt geht es gleich ins Bett. 😴 Euch auch eine gute Nacht und bis bald.
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    • Dag 4

      Edinburgh Day 4

      23 september 2023, Skottland ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      The highlight of our day was walking through the Royal Botonic Garden. Of course, the fall blooms found me right away. There are so many familiar plants, with a similar climate as the Northwerst. After a rainy walk home, Stan and I went to the National Museum of Scotland. Starting in the basement, we found Scotland used to be near the south pole. I learned Scotland is moving north at the rate of fingernail growth and will end up at the North Pole!!! The museum helps to understand the various waves of "invaders" that affected Scot Culture, beginning with the Romans and Vikings.

      We had dinner at a Spanish Tapas place, lots of fun small plates. I also finished a wee weaving on my wee loom.
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    • Dag 3

      Gladstone's Land

      17 juni 2023, Skottland ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Gladstone's Land ist das älteste erhaltene Wohngebäude Edinburghs. Es wurde vom National Trust liebevoll restauriert und nimmt mich mit auf eine Zeitreise. Jedes der drei Stockwerke repräsentiert eine andere Epoche des Hauses und super freundliche und motivierte Freiwillige erklären und berichten.
      Ich beginne im "Boarding House" (eine Art Gastarbeiter-Hostel) von Mary Wilson im Jahr 1911.
      Es folgt ein Stoffhandel aus dem Jahr 1766 und schließlich der Gemischtwarenhandel aus dem frühen 17. Jahrhundert.
      Das Haus bietet einige interessante Informationen. Ich entdecke abschließbare Teekästen - weil Tee damals sehr wertvoll war - und vollkommen isolierte Gewürztresore, die den Inhalt vor Feuchtigkeit und Ratten schützen sollte. Im Zement des Gebäudes sieht man eingearbeitete Schalen von Austern. Die Muscheln waren damals beinahe eine Plage an der Küste, ihr Fleisch galt als Arme-Leute-Essen und die Schalen wurden als Baumaterial verwertet.
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    • Dag 12

      tag 12 drimsynie - edinburgh

      22 juni 2023, Skottland ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

      🚘 120 meilen / 193 kilometer
      👣 21'300 schritte

      unsere letzte fahrt mit jane ging heute über einen pass durchs grüne nach edinburgh.
      für den frühstückshalt legten wir einen stopp im but&ben ein. hübsches café mit leckeren speisen und fabelhaftem kaffe.
      hier lernten wir 2 sehr nette damen kennen, mama und tochter. die tochter lebt bereits 22 jahre hier in schottland, ihre mutter kommt sie mindestens 1x jährlich immer noch besuchen, trotz ihren bereits 85 jahren. fanden es richtig schön, dass ihre tochter ihr das immer noch ermöglicht! viele tipps haben wir erhalten, die wir uns bestimmt für unsere nächste schottlandreise merken werden.
      alle die in ca. 6 wochen nach schottland reisen, erkundigt euch unbedingt welchen mückenspray ihr kaufen müsst, sie meinte die schlimme zeit der midges kommt erst mit der 2. brut, die wird dann erwartet🤣
      sie hat uns auch gesagt, dass wir ultimativ viel glück mit dem wetter hätten. normal sei das nicht. wir mussten schmunzeln, denn dasselbe hörten wir schon 2018&2022 in irland und 2019 in niederlande/dänemark. wir ziehen wohl einfach das schöne wetter an🤷‍♀️🤣

      gestärkt ging es dann weiter nach edinburgh. es stand ein trauriger moment bevor, die reise geht nun ohne jane weiter.
      jane war eine sehr treue und zuverlässige begleiterin, dank ihr haben wir bestimmt auch sachen gesehen die sonst gar nicht möglich gewesen wären. DANKE JANE🙏❤️

      neues transportmittel ist nun das tram.
      ÖV fahren nervt mit sack und pack ja schon etwas. das nerven wurde aber schnell vom staunen abgelöst. OMG what a city😱😍 wir waren schon nur von der sicht auf die stadt vom tram aus geflasht.
      bevor diese erkundet wird geht es jetzt zuerst aber in die unterkunft.
      hoppla was haben wir dann hier gebucht😅😍 eine richtig geile wohnung, unser kleiner palast für die nächsten tage.
      frisch machen und ab in die stadt.

      hier hat es einige menschen mehr auf den strassen als in glasgow, wir fühlen uns aber sehr wohl hier und sauber ist es auch.
      irgendwie ist man anfangs etwas überfordert, es hat so viele schöne dinge anzuschauen, man weiss gar nicht wo man zuerst hinsehen soll.
      wir können es einfach nur nochmal sagen, diese stadt ist wahnsinn, überall diese wunderschönen bauten.

      lecker abendessen gabs im paolozzi. italienische küche✌️ richtig richtig geile pizza! das personal ist sehr freundlich und zuvorkommend, das ambiente auch sehr nice.

      nach dem essen gabs nochmal einige schritte durch die stadt und etwas live musik durfte natürlich auch nicht fehlen.
      ultimativer unterschied zu dublin: hier ist viel weniger party angesagt. hier sind die leute einfach zum geniessen in den pubs (stand donnerstagabend).
      auf dem rückweg zur unterkunft wurden wir von einem wunderschönen sonnenuntergang begleitet.

      total erledigt gings dann ins bett, morgen gibt es nochmal einiges zu sehen 😊
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    • Dag 21

      The three night curse

      16 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

      A note to my future self: do not book a slew of three night stays in a row. Make sure you have a six night stay somewhere in there. Because after three nights in Nottingham, three in York, three in Newcastle, the thought of three in Edinburgh, three in Glasgow, two in Inverness, and three in Bristol is super depressing.

      You can't really unpack for a three night stay, but you can't really keep everything in the bag either.

      I almost feel like I'm running a restaurant, and putting the tables and chairs out every morning, and putting them all away again every night. Sure, there's a romance in the ritual. But it can be a little deadening too.

      We were both tired as we packed up the Sherman Tank and got it out of the mousehole to take up north. The drive to Edinburgh seemed straightforward, and we picked a nice halfway mark for a coffee stop: Berwick-Upon-Tweed.

      This place was a surprise: a seaside cobblestoned nook, full of boutique stores and quaint village ways. It was like a medieval Nelson Bay. Stuart and I had an adequate "elevenses" in a sad quiet pub with Tudor beams, before we had an electrifying walk across the Tweed river, taking photos of the centuries-old buildings. Every street corner and every lane had something historic and picturesque in it.

      We walked past a cafe called "The Mule on Rouge" to go to a bookshop called "Interesting Books and Zines," a queer oriented counterculture bookshop curated by a handsome man named Ben. Stu and I bought some weird stuff - thrillingly weird stuff - and walked out of there feeling upbeat.

      The drive into Edinburgh was especially high pressured because we had piles of dirty laundry and we knew that with Queen Elizabeth's funeral, finding a place to get this done (within that oppressive three night window) would be difficult. We ended up finding a place in filthy-rich Stockbridge where we might get it done Express for a hefty cash gratuity. We'll do that tomorrow morning so we aren't complete derelicts by the time we hit Glasgow.

      Edinburgh is grotesquely fashionable. And all the buildings in our neighbourhood are posh Georgian manors and mansions. The people in the street are young, thin, and with disposable income that they are disposing off in Edinburgh. I am absolutely intoxicated with the luxury and the glamour. Hampstead was bad, but this is worse. I think I might have picked up a superiority complex in the queue at Waitrose. (One child saying in Heightened Received Pronunciation outside as we exited, "Mummy I can't remember the last time we even went to a Waitrose."

      We are settled in our AirBnB, but both a bit weary of all the moving on. It's hard to get attached to places you keep leaving according to a strict metronome rhythm. Ten cities in four weeks was too much. Never again.

      However, I am excited to have a bath tub again, which I will go and use now.
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    • Dag 23

      I hated Edinburgh Castle

      18 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      Let the record forever show: I hated Edinburgh Castle so much.

      I hate feeling like a mere corpuscle in a larger tourist body, coralled into a small area, plugged into a money extraction machine, and then dazzled with ticky tacky and glimglam. Does my hating it mean other people should hate it too? No.

      But does the fact that other people have a special connection to this place mean that I have to feel special too? No.

      I didn't feel special here. I felt absolutely unspecial. And after walking the block after block of the Royal Mile, and seeing the same ethnic themed shops (Fudge, Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, Fudge Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, Fudge, Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, etc) I felt bludgeoned by the time I got to the seething shoal of tourists at the gates of Edinburgh Castle. Ugh. I hated it SO much.

      And I've noticed something happening with the way Scottishness intersects with Australianness. Many white Australians feel that Scottish ancestry somehow exonerates them from the white supremacy of Australia. They feel that Scottishness marks them as colonised people. As a result, the Scottish aesthetic has become deeply alluring to whites. Did Edinburgh Castle and the Royal Mile interrupt or challenge that nexus between whiteness and Scottishness? Not in the slightest. In fact the crowd was as replete with bigots as it was with progressives, and we were all equally enchanted.

      What is it about stone that promises authenticity? I would say that Edinburgh Castle is proof that stone can be synthetic too. I hated it. And I refuse to dismiss my insights as the curmudgeonly condescension of some spoiled narcissist; the tourist industry can be a complete shit sometimes.

      So let's draw a perimeter around that locus of capitalist infestation and mythopoetic bigotry and let me share with you some of the joys of an Edinburgh day. Because when Stuart and I were out of the river of tourist desperation, we both found the place properly enchanting, and not in a McDisneyland way, but because of its intelligence, its style, its coherence, its manners, its pace, its beauty.

      Our day started at a laundrette where Leith local Alison took two giant bags of washing from us and told us she would have them washed, dried, and folded by midday for twenty five pounds. She was all smiles and reassurance. A coffee and pain-au-chocolat underneath Penhaligon's Perfumery and we were ready to walk to the Royal Mile.

      Our journey took us straight to the Scottish National Gallery. We have a queer connection to this place: the best exhibition we have ever seen at the Art Gallery of New South Wales was "Treasures of the Scottish Galleries," when great paintings (Like John Singer Sargent's "Lady Agnew") came to Australia. It was astonishing how much we enjoyed that exhibition, so we had a fair idea that we would like Lady Agnew's home base.

      And the Scottish National Gallery is perfectly sized, perfectly staffed, perfectly curated. I don't see how the experience could have been improved upon. Stuart and I restricted ourselves to the early moderns - a passion for us both - and saw some Titian, some Raphael, and some lesser known artists. I was excited to see work by Hubert Robert ("Robert des Ruines") with one of his rococo ruin paintings after reading Susan Stewart's "The Ruins Lesson." Another coffee on the Royal Mile before...

      [this account of Edinburgh Castle has been redacted for obscenity]

      ...by which time we were exhausted. We picked up our washing and went back to the flat, ready to cry or collapse. My feet were killing me.

      Stuart and I made peace with each other and the unhappy visit to Edinburgh Castle, and went to buy some Eau de Parfum from Aesop - it smells so sexy on Stuart. This happens in same-sex couples a lot, you know, you try to buy a perfume for yourself and it turns out to work brilliantly on your partner's skin chemistry. This happened with Versace Pour Homme, too.

      We sat at Caffe Nero next to two Trans women, a man who looked like Santiago Cabrera, and a dog breed ending in -doodle, and I wiped down the table the Wet Wipes I carry everywhere, then stole some sugar and came home. We had a Waitrose Quiche for dindins and then watched an episode of Sandman on my mobile phone because our landlord didn't provide a television.

      I finished the night making art, taking paracetamol, and wondering if I had been too hard on Edinburgh Castle.

      I hadn't. It sucked.
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    • Dag 22

      Edinburgh

      17 september 2022, Skottland ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      We both slept well after a less than relaxing introduction to the city of Edinburgh, what with our washing and all that. But Edinburgh is not about washing, despite its immediacy and importance.

      Today, we planned two things. We ended up doing three, and completely overdid it, both becoming tired, tetchy and very out of sorts. We settled, but it took some hours to get there. Tomorrow is a lay day, and boy do we need it. Nothing planned at all. We'll just stop.

      We had a 12.30pm tour of Edinburgh Castle booked, so that meant we had some hours to kill before the tour. We also had to get back to the laundrette before it closed at 4pm till the day after the Queen's funeral, by which time we'll be in Glasgow. So, time meant everything and we had to be careful. Stress number one.

      We walked into the city from our apartment in Stockbridge. I don't know whether this was wise, because Chris' sore foot starting acting up about ten minutes into the walk. His limp became more and more pronounced and I knew that he would not last on it all day. As for me, I have a perennial sore foot due to the use of orthotics and I can't last a whole day either. Stress number two.

      Once coffee-ed, we decided we would go to the Scottish National Gallery, there to look at their early works. This was a great decision. We both enjoyed it immensely and got to see the work of many masters and of course, Scotland's beloved Monarch of the Glen.

      I was taken by a work by Vermeer based on the biblical story of Mary and Martha. I also loved a portrait of Achilles in despair at the death of his lover Patroclus, a rare rendering of same sex love in the art world of the time. And finally, I was quite taken by a painting by Raphael in 1506-07 of the Holy Family and a Plam Tree, where Joseph is unusually given some prominence. Raphael painted it in the round, which format Chris uses very frequently in his art, and for which I learned a new term today. A painting painted in a circle is a tondo. A national gallery like this is a special place and is worth more than one visit, but alas, we were on the clock. A lovely morning.

      After the gallery, we walked past the towering Scott monument, reputed to be the largest, tallest monument to a writer in the world. The Scots love Sir Walter Scott. He promoted the romantic ideal that we have of Scotland today more than anyone.

      Thence up the hill to the Royal Mile. This 1.8km stretch of road has a history of kings and queens processing up and down it for all manner of important occasions. Today however, it is a throng of people walking past touristy shops and inns. It's famous, but it's not great. It starts at the base of Edinburgh Castle and ends at the monarch's offical royal residence in Scotland, Holyrood House. I would have enjoyed going through Holyrood, but it was closed due to the Queen's passing.

      Chris and I decided we would not finish the Royal Mile so turned around and put our backs into the incline having seen about twenty minutes of it on the decline. Our stress levels were by this time pretty high. Literally thousands of people surrounding us, our feet in pain, tired and sore, and a bit over it frankly, we ducked into the Deacon's House Cafe to sup on good coffee, a shortbread and some lemon drizzle cake, and to give our feet a rest before the challenge of the castle.

      Finally, it was off to Edinburgh Castle, a castle more prominent in the city than probably any other castle in any other city in the world. It sits, perched atop an extinct volcanic escarpment and has views over the city in 360° and out to sea. It is monstrously big. It's a bit like a fancy wedding cake, with layer upon layer just going up and up.

      We had also booked a guided tour of the castle that down loads onto your phone. Problem was that the app downloaded onto my phone in a few seconds flat, but not onto Chris'. Oh my goodness. He tried and tried, and the damn thing would not download. It sat infuriatingly at about 4.1% for about ten minutes. Chris had had enough. He needed time out, so went off through the castle just to look at things. I went off and did my own thing for about an hour and then met up with him again.

      I saw the Scottish crown jewels, the crown and two sceptres, and a scabbard I think. I also saw the Stone of Scone, called the Coronation Stone down south, upon which all Kings and Queens are crowned. It sits in a special cavity underneath St Edward's Chair, which we saw in Westminster Abbey and upon which King Charles III will be crowned in due course. I saw the Great Hall, and a war memorial. I saw the canons pointed out out over the city, I saw the history of the Stuarts and Mary Queen of Scots, and I saw the inside of the gift shop at which I bought a tea towel and a fridge magnet. Very warrior-like of me, don't you think.

      We walked back to the laundrette, quite a jaunt, our feet on fire and falling off our legs, collected the laundry from a very helpful and cheery Scottish woman who said 'okey dokey' in her lovely accent, which despite all, did make me happy. We returned home, and set out for a local drink and a coffee.

      It was one of those days you have when travelling. The Gallery and the Castle were both wonderful places to visit. I will never forget them. But right now, we're happy to stay in tonight, drink some wine, eat some chocolate, and have nothing planned at all for tomorrow.
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    Du kanske också känner till platsen med följande namn:

    New Town, Ciutat Nova dEdimburg, Ciudad nueva de Edimburgo, Edinburgheko Hiri Berria, Baile Ùr Dhùn Èideann, העיר החדשה של אדינבורו, エディンバラ新市街, Cidade Nova de Edimburgo, Новый город, New Toun, 愛丁堡新城

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