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Portsmouth

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    • Day 11

      Kanonendonner und weiße Segel

      June 23, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Nachdem mein non sense Text gestern eine sensationelle 30% Like Quote erzielte, fällt mir das Schreiben jetzt schwer… ;-)
      Aber es war Touri Tag und wir haben das historisch maritime Flair aufgesaugt, wo immer es möglich war. Die Möglichkeiten sind endlos... Früh nehmen wir die Fähre ins Zentrum von Portsmouth, wo neben den Zuggleisen auch gleich die Schnellfähre nach Ryde startet. Spannend, die erste Seebrücke Großbritanniens (1814). Damit ihr wisst, was Engländer unter SEEBRÜCKE verstehen, man läuft da 681 m bis zum Strand, kann aber auch mit dem Auto und DER HAMMER: auch auf Gleisen bis zum Brückenkopf fahren. Großer Bahnhof… Daneben starten und landen die Hovercraftboote, die in den 1950er Jahren auch auf der Isle of Wight erbaut wurden. England kann man nur lieben, wenn man kein Problem mit alten Dingen hat ( dazu später oder im Video mehr). Alles ist alt, alles hat eine Patina und einen Charme, den man wohl nur hier toll finden wird. Wir nehmen zunächst den Bus, das heißt Linie 9 nach Newport und Linie 1 nach Cowes, dem maritimen und Regatta Segelzentrum der Insel. Hier wurden und werden die großen Regatten gestartet, mitunter auch von her Honesty, der Queen, herself, bald vielleicht vom King. Früher segelte man hier um den Americas Cup, heute kommen in der COWES WEEK 1000 Boote und zum Fastnetrace über 300 Rennyachten (auch schon mit Seglern und Booten des Greifswalder Yachtclubs). Und tatsächlich konnten wir die Kanonen des world famous Royal Squadron Yacht Clubs heute sogar in Aktion sehen. Es matchten sich ein paar Segelklassiker auf dem Solent. Was für eine Freude, die wir gleich mit 1 1/2 Pint local Beer und unseren ersten Fish and chips gefeiert haben.
      Das war übrigens das „Dinners special“, englischer Humor hat…
      Dann ging´s per Bus zurück. Der hatte Verspätung. Habt ihr mal ein Busfahrer erlebt, der die Verspätung wieder rausfahren will und alle auffordert, ohne Fahrscheinkontrolle schnell einzusteigen? Wir schon, auch wenn es unseren TagesTouriGesamtpreis nur um 4 Pfund linderte..
      So ungewohnte Tätigkeiten wie sight seeing setzen uns auch ziemlich zu, dennoch müssen wir noch das Flaggschiff der Royal Navy besichtigen. HMS Victory wird gerade aufwendig saniert und ist auch für Nichtsegler ein Muss der Bootsbaukunst des 18 Jh. (genau wie die Wasa in Stockholm, deren Schicksal aber deutlich blamabler war). Admiral Honratio Nelson übernahm das Kommando, nachdem andere Admiräle meinten, die Victory taugt mit ihren fast 50 Jahren nur noch als Gefängnisschiff. Er gilt heute als größter Held der Royal Navy, nachdem er vor Trafalgar die spanische Flotte vernichtete, indem er einfach quer in einer Doppellinie durch sie hindurchfuhr. Auf diesem Schiff will keiner von uns zu See fahren, drei Decks voll mit Kanonen, „Stehhöhe“ 1,55 - 1,75 m. Nur eine Innentoillette für den Admiral… die er nach seinem Sieg über die Spanier nicht mehr nutzen konnte …
      Auch heute ist HMS Victory noch „im Dienst“ als Flaggschiff der Royal Navy. Und damit darüber keiner lacht, haben die Briten gleich dahinter einen ihrer zwei Flugzeugträger platziert. Man hätte noch U Boote, den Tower und zig andere Dinge besichtigen können. Aber für heute sind beide Sachsen ferddschhh…
      Und morgen zeigt sich ab nachmittag ein Windfenster, das wir für den langen und etwas trickreichen Weg nach Torquay, vorbei an 3 Gebieten mit sog. Overfalls (das sind durch Tidenströme entstehende chaotische Wellenbilder) nutzen wollen. Insofern schaffen wir nur noch eine von Tom´s Empfehlungen und gehen dann mit ablaufender TIDE gegen 17 Uhr wieder raus aus dem Solent, um uns auf den nächsten langen Schlag bei guten Bedingungen einzulassen.
      Was sonst noch passierte? Boris is back in the race, führte sogar ganz kurz. Und leider nehmen die ORCA Interaktionen weiter zu und treffen auch Boote der Ocean Reace Flotte..
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    • Day 46

      Today portsmouth to Port Solent

      June 6, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

      Two buses and a bit of a walk later our cousin Jean and I met at Port Solent...it was a fabulous first meeting, we didn't stop talking for four hours, so so good to hear more about our extended large family.

      We both agreed our lives could have been so much richer had we known each other growing up. If the brothers had known each other they would have been great support for each other. Our mums would have gotten on like a house on fire as well, they had a very similar look about them too, and to all intents and purposes similar beliefs and values.

      We are meeting again tomorrow with our other girl cousin Gill, then on Thursday with the two brothers John Mackie and. Philip Mackie and their wives, and at John's son, David Mackie's restaurant !! Honestly we had such a lot to talk about, I will try to capture more on Thursday.

      The wee travels I had today reminds me how big our world is and how many relatives we probably have!!

      Ps have you all seen the routes I've been on? If you look at the top photo it usually says to press on the right for the route white lines all over the place!!
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    • Day 26

      Arundel castle

      April 11, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

      11/4 – Part 2 – Arundel Castle – afternoon tour from Portsmouth
      Many years ago my sister Kaye and I read a series of books by Elsie J Oxenham, the ‘Abbey School Series’ published by Collins with distinctive pale blue or red binding, and by other publishers with bright pictures of jolly schoolgirls having adventures on their covers. They followed the lives of cousins Joan and Joy Shirley, their family and friends, and were set in an old abbey (based on Cleve Abbey in Somerset which we’ve visited), a manor house and………a castle. The castle in the book is called Kentisbury and it’s based on the beautiful Arundel Castle which is 45 minutes away from Portsmouth so I wasn’t going to pass up a chance to visit.

      Off we went, a group of 25, to the home of the Howard family, the Duke of Norfolk, most senior non-royal duke, who is busy in his hereditary role as Earl Marshal of England, currently responsible for planning King Charles’ coronation – he’s had a busy time lately with the Queen’s funeral, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s before that. The castle build was started in 1067, has been in the same family since 1138, has had many alterations and additions, is open to the public from April to September (too hard to heat for the rest of the year), and the family lives in houses around the estate, not actually in the castle itself.

      At the gatehouse there was a pretty display of tulips and spring flowers, they are getting ready for the annual tulip festival and all around the grounds and on the slopes below the castle walls are apparently 100,000 tulip bulbs, what a sight that’ll be in a couple of weeks, there’s a bit of colour already coming out. There are also beds of daffodils, I’d never seen white daffodils before, and pink blossoms coming out.

      We started in the huge private chapel, the start of a feast of beautiful stained glass throughout the house, I love all the colours and stories in the windows. The chapel is used by the family for special occasions, and the family christening gowns are in a display case. We were able to visit several rooms, too many to detail, but included an enormous ‘great hall’ which had a couple of lion skin rugs in front of the huge stone fireplaces, and even two beautifully painted snow sledges and an old and well-used sedan chair but even so you could see the lovely silk lining. It wasn’t very big so the users were either quite small or very squashed.

      There was a picture gallery stretching the whole width of that part of the castle, little seating nooks looking out onto the ‘motte and bailey’ castle keep on top of the original hand-built ‘hill’ now in the midst of the gardens, a beautifully set up dining room with the family china and silver displayed, a billiard room (once a bedroom) with a huge billiard table taking up almost all the room, Queen Victoria’s bedroom (specially decorated for her three-day visit). My favourite room was the library, the photo shows only half of it, very ‘Harry Potter-ish with dark wood and sumptuous upholstery, glass-fronted book cases, cosy seating areas along one wall, some with fireplaces. It was lovely. We could only look around one main level, then down to the servants area though not in the kitchens. There were big solid black radiators on the walls and the castle was surprisingly warm, the heating bill must be horrific, no wonder they close in winter.

      We had two hours to look through the castle, the extensive gardens if we wanted, and had time to visit the second chapel which is unusual in that half is a Catholic chapel on the castle side, and there’s a huge semi-opaque glass window in the middle which divides it from the Anglican parish church on the other side, no way through for tourists. It dates back to the 1300s and is partly a mausoleum for the family with stone effigies, but also has a huge stained glass window and beautifully carved seats. I took a photo of the ceiling, very detailed carved faces looking down on us.

      Having spent nearly 90 minutes in the castle we had about ten minutes in the chapel and when we came out it was raining so headed back to the bus and were back on the road by 4pm. We walked back through the ‘dry moat’ (actually a bit sticky underfoot with the rain), could see some of the gardens but it would take a day to see everything in and around the castle and town. Maybe we’ll get back here one day.

      And I have to say that Kaye still has the books and I dip into them every now and again, more than 55 years on. Maybe we never really grow up?
      https://www.arundelcastle.org/castle-history/

      Back on the ship we just made it to the daily ‘Port Talk’ giving information about our next destination, we were looking forward to Wednesday 12th, a full day ‘In the Footsteps of Monet’ taking us to his house and garden in Giverny (and the famous waterlily ponds) and on to Rouen .......BUT…….the announcement was that French ports were closed due to strikes, and we would have to spend the day at sea as there were no other ports to take us, plus the weather wasn’t great, so we would aim for a whole day in Bruges on the 13th rather than arriving at 1pm. Great, and having been to lovely Bruges in 2004 we chose a morning tour to a coastal village, confirmed our afternoon tour outside of Bruges to a castle and that was Thursday sorted.

      The evening’s entertainment was a pool party: the two Filipino nightclub singers, the four resident singer/dancers and the resident band were all in top form, had a couple of songs from Francesca (classically trained/crossover singer) the assistant cruise director. We even had a bit of a dance, the music was great. Finished around 1130pm, oldies go to bed early.
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    • Day 2

      Isle of Wight

      June 6, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Wir hatten Glück und durften trotz späterer Buchung schon eine Stunde früher auf die Fähre.

      Unbedingt merken als ♿: man muss anmelden, dass man Rollstuhlfahrer ist. Da wir das nicht gemacht haben, stand unser Auto eingezwängt zwischen den anderen und ich durfte ausnahmsweise im Auto sitzen bleiben. Die Aussicht war trotzdem schön.Read more

    • Day 3

      Kurzer Abstecher nach Portsmouth

      April 3, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

      Unser nächstes Zimmer hatten wir in Axminster gebucht. Auf dem Weg dorthin faszinierte uns schon die Natur immer mehr. Aufgrund eines Staus entschlossen wir uns, an den Hafen von Portsmouth zu fahren und dort ein bisschen Sightseeing zu betreiben. Ich habe nicht erwartet, dass diese 2 Stunden dort so schön werden 😊. Die Gegend am Hafen war diese Reise auf jeden Fall wert! Es war einfach wunderschön! Tja, und wenn man schon mal da ist, darf die Fahrt mit dem Hochgeschwindigkeitsaufzug im „Spinnaker Tower“ natürlich nicht fehlen. Mit seinen 170m ist er der größte Aussichtsturm in Großbritannien. Wir haben einen traumhaften und unvergesslichen Ausblick über die Südküste erleben dürfen 😊😊! Bis jetzt das schönste Erlebnis für mich 🥰Read more

    • Day 8

      “V” for (Vegemite) Victory

      May 4, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      It’s taken one full week, poking our heads into at least a dozen different supermarkets of all different types based on the ‘London Vegemite map’ I had found online. No luck - plenty of Marmite, but no Vegemite.
      Neither Fortnum and Masons nor Harrods could help either. Getting desperate, we turned for guidance and help to Kiri Scott (née Mansfield) and as a savvy expat Aussie she was able to provide the direction we needed- ASDA supermarkets stock Vegemite.
      Sure enough, when we finished our day here in Portsmouth and realised there was an ASDA supermarket nearby (is it just a coincidence that our Vegemite Victory was gained at said supermarket located on Winston Churchill Drive ?😉), we walked there after dinner - and viola! - the iconic Aussie spread that had been purloined in SIngapore was now replaced.

      Our day started well and ran much more smoothly than I had anticipated.

      The first task of the day was to pick up our hire car. I was just a little anxious about the whole thing as I was not dealing with one of the major rental companies. I had found a company online called ‘EasiRent’ who were WAY cheaper than the others and as they had only 50% more negative reviews than the major rental players, I thought ‘what could possibly go wrong?’

      The collection point was at Marble Arch at an underground car park - where no one would be in attendance. The whole transaction would be done via an intercom link to ….. Romania …. Or Kazakhstan . . . Or somewhere similar. The emailed instructions I had received were reasonably clear (once I had used Google Translate to decipher a few of the Cyrillic words that had slipped through) and the ‘excess’ was a very reasonable sum
      equivalent to the GDP of a small Pacific Island nation. Still, the rental price was right - and they had been very consistent in answering my queries via email - they had totally ignored them.
      On top of all this, I had been chatting to Andrew Ward about our impending trip a few months earlier, and he had mentioned HE had used a dodgy rental car company last time in the U.K.
      “Oh, who might that be?”
      “It was a company called ‘EasiRent’ - the vehicle pick-up was nightmarish etc etc…. I think they should change their name to ‘Not-So-EasiRent’ “

      Hmmmm.

      We got ourselves and our luggage onto a bus from Euston station at 8.15am that went directly to Marble Arch, found the underground car park and followed the CyrillicoEnglish instructions. I pushed the intercom button and waited - an accented voice came out of the speaker - and once I had identified myself to his satisfaction by giving him all my passport and driver’s licence details as well as bank account passwords, it was ‘G’day maaaate . . . can I interest you in an upgrade at a VERY reasonable rate?’
      Even though I declined his kind offer, I was then instructed to push another button on the panel - and a magic little door opened to reveal a car key - for a car that actually existed!
      The car seems to be in quite good condition - and the airconditioning even sort of works once you get the speed above 80km/hr.

      We were pleased to leave the increasingly busy London behind as we travelled south to Brighton on the Sea. I had warned Loss not to have expectations set too high for this ‘Riviera’ of the south coast of England. Sure enough, Brighton beach (river stones) and the Pier (tired and neglected) were somewhat underwhelming. We walked to the end of the pier and back, found a place to have a coffee and snack indoors away from the windswept, deserted beachfront and then headed for Portsmouth.

      We checked in to the motel then walked down to the harbour front area which was much livelier and more inviting than Brighton’s. We took a ride up to the top of ‘Spinnaker Tower’ and enjoyed the view across to the Isle of Wight which we are due to visit tomorrow. We found a local Nandos and enjoyed quite a reasonable meal. A further walk to ASDA to achieve the Vegemite victory then back to the motel and our ‘V for Victory day’ is done.
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    • Day 11

      Portsmouth

      September 25, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      "Historisches Winchester" stand auf dem Programm. Absolut sehenswert! Auch Portsmouth selbst hätte mehr Aufmerksamkeit verdient. Next Time.
      Zum Abschluss gab es eine großartige Akrobatik-Show im Theater an Bord.Read more

    • Day 3

      Portsmouth und die Historic Dockyards

      January 17 in England ⋅ ☁️ 3 °C

      Kalt ist es, es geht mit dem Shuttlebus zur historischen Waterline mit alten Schiffen und viel Geschichte, sogar das alte Wrack von Heinrichs Lieblingsschiff - die "Victory" liegt hier. Eine schöne Stadt, die Altes und Neues miteinander verbindet.Read more

    • Day 11

      Portsmouth

      January 11 in England ⋅ ⛅ 39 °F

      I’m loving this part of England. Portsmouth is their Annapolis with an extra 1000 years of history. From here, Henry VIII watched his royal navy fight the Battle of the Solent in 1545. They managed to halt the French invasion of the Isle of Wight but he famously lost his flagship the Mary Rose in the process. Charles Dickens was born in Portsmouth. Also Sir Arthur Conan Doyle lived and wrote here for a while and served as the first goalie for the Portsmouth football club. Lots to see and explore as I wait for tonight’s ferry to Jersey.Read more

    • Day 2–3

      Queens Hotel Portsmouth

      October 23, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Queens Hotel Portsmouth und nein, da fehlt kein Apostroph. Die schreiben sich so.
      Ein altmodisches Gebäude mit einer Überdachung, unter der früher Kutschen hielten.
      Leider ist der Aufzug defekt, aber ich hatte zum Glück ein Zimmer im 1. Stock reserviert.
      Das Bad - neu aber herrlich altmodisch.
      Das Zimmer zum Reisen mit Nähmaschine eingerichtet.
      Die in Ashford abgeholte Bestellung bei Marks&Spencer gesichtet.

      Meine Mitreisenden haben es sich schon mal mal gemütlich gemacht im Bett.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Portsmouth, POR, بورتسموث, Portsmut, Горад Портсмут, Портсмът, পোর্টস্‌মাথ, Портсмут, پۆرتسموت, Πόρτσμουθ, پورتسموث, פורטסמות, Պորտսմութ, ポーツマス, Портсмунт, 포츠머스, Portus Ostium, Portsmutas, Portsmuta, पोर्टस्मथ, Porchémue, போர்ட்ஸ்மவுத், พอร์ตสมัท, پورٹسماؤتھ, 樸茨茅夫, 朴次茅斯

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