Wednesday, 22 July 2015

We had to when in Brussels

Sarah said when in Belgium we have to have a waffle. This one had every extra topping they had in the shop. €5.50. Not bad, but boy was it messy to eat, we enjoyed it though!

Number 25 Please! 

The chocolate looked good but this was even better.............

This shop was right next door to the 'Manakin Pis' the exact translation is man urinating. It's a fountain,  we were expecting a large fountain in a square but no it was a piddle little thing in a corner by two houses. 

However, just along the road was Brussels 'Grand Place' which is a magnificent town square with decorative stone buildings, gold leaf, flags and oodles of stately grandeur. 


This was a view from one of the alleys leading to the square. You can see the Town Hall tower in the background

A couple of days earlier in the Netherlands we peddled our bicycles along the coast and saw our first windmill. We were both surprised latter to find our faces sunburnt, Sarah's now pealing. 


The same night had a warm hue in the sky even at 10:40pm. This is a little seaside village near where we camped. 


Thursday, 16 July 2015

Birthday greetings

Happy birthday Sinead. Hope you have a great day and enjoy your holiday. Fingers crossed the weather is good, we're having a mixed bunch rain yesterday, sunshine today and rain tonight. Suppose you had this before us. Again have a lovely birthday xxxxx

Back Up and Running Again

Thanks for a great party the other weekend. It was fab to see everyone and spend the day and following morning together. 
We're now on the road again for the next 6 weeks in our little car "Ocho"! We are not absolutley sure he'll make it around northern Europe but here's to hoping. Currently in the Hook of Holland and moving onto Brussels tomorrow to have a look at the beautiful market square in the city centre. 

Photo of our little car pulling off the ferry in Holland, in a queue waiting to show our passports



Friday, 26 June 2015

New England and then home!

Lovely architecture, great coast line and beautiful Apalatian mountains. Some of the locals are a little brusk though. We sampled lobster, Daves first one ever. Odd weather with one day bright and hot the next rain all day. Acadia National Park sits on an island joined to the mainland US via a thin spit of land. Rugged coast line made of hard granite, waves smashing against the land especially following a day of rain. We visited the Thunder Hole at dusk, this isn't an Aussie toilet although that's what the Aussies call it, waves crash into a ridge under the rock face and make a thundering sound followed by a mass of splashing water straight upwards. 

The Apalations are beautifully wooded mountains stretching for several hundred miles along the eastern side of the U.S. Around a hundred miles inland. The people are different from the big city and suburb bruskness, friendly and nothing is to much trouble with lots of advice and help. The only sad thing is this is our last post before returning home for a couple of weeks. It marks the end of this part of our adventure. But Europe is beckoning!

See you all over the weekend, we will need a little time to shake off jet lag. 

Lots of love Dave & Sarah
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 

Sunday, 21 June 2015

When We Get Back!

Everyone's invited to our homecoming party 4th July (coincidence only) in the garden, from 2pm onwards.
Sarah & Dave 
PS we'll probably bore you with our first 7 months travel stories and photos. 

Happy Birthday Mum

Wishing you a very happy birthday hope you have a lovely day. We'll see you soon.
Dave & Sarah
XXXXXXXX

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Vancouver Island and beyond

We have been getting a bit behind with our blog so here's a quick catchup of everything we have done since last we posted. 

On our way to Whistler there had been a major car crash and we had to overnight in the middle of nowhere, well somewhere near Lilloet and Seton Lake. Whistler was wet and very commercial, much more than the last time we visited with the boys in 2001. We then crossed the water over to Vancouver Island. Wow what a beautiful place. After our trip across some fantastic places and scenery here in Canada the weather and the island itself have made it a real pleasure to spend time here. The climate on the island is very temperate the temps got up to 30*C. On the island we stayed at a few campsites the nicest one was called Jinglepot in Nanaimo. The island has some beautiful places, we visited Cathedral Cove with 800+ year old red woods, Little Qualicum Falls, Ucluelet with its wild Pacific shoreline (we stood on the other side of the Pacific diagonally facing this point in New Zealand), beaches where we collected Sea Dollars from the shoreline at Qualicum Beach (I'm smuggling these back home), Victoria with its lively arts scene music on every corner great fish and chips and an interesting self guided city history walk/ tour courtesy of my guide Sarah, finally the Pacific Marine Drive along the south coast including Port Renfrew (Botany Beach, Botanical Beach), Otter Point, French Beach and Sooke. 

Wild Beaches 


We have added to the list of animals we have seen; -
Top of the list was a breeding pair of bald eagles, Sarah spotted the male caching a fish in the sea just off shore, Brown Otter and California seals (lots of them), No whales though (unfortunately). 

Pair of Bald Eagles just off the coast near Sooke (we know the picture isn't the best)

Over to Vancouver and I went out to take some photos of Lions Gate Bridge and the city skyline. On the way back across the bridge I passed a guy climbing over the edge. Unsure if he was a jumper, it's about a 300 foot drop to the sea below, or whether he was going to do some adrenalin thing I'm not sure anyway when I got to the bridge control office the officer was calling the police so I didn't hang about to see what happened but no jumper was reported the next day. 

Lions Gate Bridge at dusk

Vancouver skyline

Granville Island is another arts area we spent time walking around in the morning, visited Costco for a cheap lunch come tea and spent a time walking around Stanley Park. While looking at the totem poles in the park a First Nations family started talking to us about one of the exhibits which had just been erected by a member of there family. 

Sunday morning we took the greyhound bus to Seattle. Then visited the famous Pike Place Market with beautiful flower stalls ($10 for enormous bouquets), the fish stalls provided entertainment as they sold by throwing fresh fish out to the vast number of customers watching and once again loads of street entertainment. 

Pike Place Market - Seattle


Dave in a water fountain - very wet when he got out!

Yuk! But interesting an alley next to Pike Place Market. Everything on the walls is used chewing gum.....


We saw another one of those circular rainbows in the sky above Seattle. That's two now!


OK nearly done, we flew over to JFK then drove to Cape Cod and after a couple of nights on to Boston, that's where we are now. Cape Cod, quintessential New Engalnd shaker homes. This little spit of land is the first place the pilgrim fathers touched down in the New World before moving further up the cost to Plymouth. 

Shaker Customs house in Cape Cod



Boston today we walked the Freedom Trail through the city seeing some of the original 1600's buildings and finding out about the American founding fathers. I think the most interesting one was the Old Corner Bookstore now a Chipotle Mexican Grill, formerly Dr. Thomas Crease House, 1718, is notable as the launch pad for publishing in the Americas.  Set on the corner of School and Washington Street this Anglo Dutch-styled colonial building sits on the site which was originally Anne Hutchinson's home. It was destroyed in the fire of 1711, and rebuilt by its owner Dr. Thomas Crease. In 1829, Timothy Harrington Carter converted the building to house seven presses, and went about printing and selling books. In the 1840's, the team of William Ticknor and James Fields established the royalty system, which for the first time bound authors to publishers, and rewarded them both a signing fee and a ten percent portion of sales. The greatest writers of the era including Charles Dickens and William Thackeray, Henry David Thoreau, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Nathanial Hawthorne established Ticknor & Fields as a leading book publisher. Around this time other American & British publishers pirated the works of those authors.

Origional Publishing Royalty Building

Massachusetts State House circa 1800

Tomorrow we start our final 6 days before returning back to the UK for 2 weeks and then Europe. So these last few days in the U.S. are going to be spent in Acadia National Park. So we'll be back in touch just before we get home.