Sunday, August 14, 2011

Cambridge Colleges and Fitzwilliam Museum pics

Spent the day walking around the various Cambridge Colleges taking pictures, and going to the Fitzwilliam  Museum...here are the pics! http://www.flickr.com/photos/donnahorning/sets/72157627431295100/

King's College main gate

Brasserie Gerard - awesome French restaurant

Interior of the Bridge of Sighs

St John's New Court from the Backs

Gate of Honour, Gonville and Caius College

Peterhouse College chapel

Awesome tree in Emmanuel College

Cricket players on Parker's Piece

Trinity College court (largest college court in Europe)

Trinity Hall entrance

Jesus College

Peterhouse College - pink flowers!

Fitzwilliam Museum entrance

Fitzwilliam Museum atrium

Fitzwilliam Museum oculus

Fitzwilliam Museum gallery

Week 6 highlights

Not too much went on last week except for work, but here goes:

1) Pub quiz! Lots of fun and our team did quite well. Categories included art (we were given six paintings and had to identity the artist), geography (excellent trivia fact - Uzbekistan and Liechtenstein are the only two double-landlocked countries in the world), science, celebrities, and name that song (they actually played five second clips of the intro and we had to guess).

2) Tennis, which turned out to be a debacle because the group left without us and one of the PAs led us all over Cambridge to find them, and then when we finally arrived I was stung by a wasp. All in all not a very fun experience! Ah well. At least I know I'm not deathly allergic to stings now.

3) Dinner at The Anchor pub. Great view of the river, and wonderful atmosphere! My second favorite pub (after The Eagle) I have visited so far in Cambridge. Had a ploughman's board with delicious cheese too :)

4) Dinner at Sala Thong, a very popular Thai restaurant here in town. Excellent pad thai, and I am difficult to please coming from Bainbridge!

5) Dinner at Bill's, a funky free trade/organic restaurant here in town. Had butternut squash risotto, which tasted amazing after all the heavy/bland pub food. I guess I went to a lot of restaurants this week!

Random pictures:

Scene of the wasp sting. (Jesus Green)

Hogwarts outfitters!

The Anchor pub

More punts

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Weekend in Yorkshire

This weekend I went to Yorkshire! Beautiful country :) Highlights:

1) National Coal Mining Museum. Yes, we went down into a real working coal mine! Very intense. We got in a rickety lift and went ~175 meters down straight through rock, and then walked around a circuit underground where there were dummies demonstrating old mining techniques and examples of the equipment used to blast and drill rock. Now more than ever I appreciate what a dangerous job it is - I'm sort of surprised they let us down there frankly! I suppose the part where we went was a very stable environment, or they wouldn't have risked it. Our guide was hilarious - he had worked in the mines since he was 15, and had a very thick Yorkshire accent made even less understandable by his full set of fake teeth. He was having a lot of fun asking everyone where they were from, and imitating the way one of the girls said "Missouri." He also made a joke about how he had gone to the University of Exeter...to protest when the miners went on strike a couple of years ago! It's obvious that there is a pervasive sense of gallows humour among the miners - it's probably the only way to cope. Anyway, very interesting experience!

2) Haworth and the Bronte Parsonage Museum. I haven't read any of the Bronte books so I wasn't able to appreciate the experience as much as others, but the house itself was fun to look at (almost perfectly preserved the way it was in the late 19th century) and the town was adorable. There were lots of cute shops, pubs, and charming B&Bs with beautiful views of the countryside all around. Check out the pictures!

3) The Fleece and The Black Bull pubs. Had Yorkshire pudding for the first time, and it was very good! (though probably best to not know exactly what was in the sausage...!). After hanging out for a while we went for a walk up onto a nearby hill at dusk, where we took pictures with some cows and saw the twinkling town lights at night.

4) Hike in the Yorkshire Dales (the next day). Potentially the most scenic hike I've ever been on except Mt. Rainier in WA state. I don't even think I can describe it adequately - the pictures should speak for themselves. Also, see if you recognize the limestone pavement from HP7P1! (where Harry and Hermione apparate right after Ron leaves, and then they have the inspiration to go to Godric's Hallow based on a clue in the Beedle the Bard book).

Pictures: http://www.flickr.com/photos/donnahorning/sets/72157627378675108/ and http://www.flickr.com/photos/donnahorning/sets/72157627254485181/

National Coal Mining museum dummy

Bronte Parsonage Museum

Charming doorways in Haworth

Views of the Yorkshire Dales

Youth Hostel where we stayed (MUCH nicer than I expected!)

DPORT DPORT WE ARE HERE

The Fleece pub where I had Yorkshire pudding

The Black Bull pub

Moon at dusk

Cows by night

Yorkshire

The beginning of the hike...

Waterfall

Another waterfall (no, we did not climb up it!)

Yorkshire limestone

Views

limestone pavement (HP site!!!)

Sign of the Deathly Hallows on limestone pavement

Me on limestone pavement

Friday, August 5, 2011

Weekend in London #2

Last weekend I went on the one-day London trip sponsored by PKP - very eventful!

1) Houses of Parliament tour. FASCINATING! It has an incredibly different feel than the US Capitol - imposing Gothic rather than austere Classical, a much longer and much more troubled history (the building was twice destroyed by fire and bombed during WWII), filled with portraits of kings and queens, an emphasis on class differences between the House of Lords and the House of Commons, and no separation of church and state whatsoever. We entered through the oldest part of the building (from Norman times, still with stone statues of Norman kings along the walls) called Westminster Hall (remember, the name of the building is Westminster Palace!), where Obama had the privilege of addressing Parliament when he was inaugurated. Many royals have also lain in state in this room, including George VI of The King's Speech and the Queen Mother. We proceeded through grand corridors to the queen's dressing room, where she freshens up before delivering her annual Opening of Parliament speech to the House of Lords. On this side of the building the motif is dark red, the colour of royalty and aristocracy. We were able to enter the House of Lords, under strict orders that we were absolutely not to take a seat on any of the benches - apparently it would be a gigantic breach of protocol and tradition. There is a ridiculously ostentatious throne in this room (paid for by British taxpayers!), where the queen sits to address the House of Lords. There is a slightly lower throne for Philip, and seats on either side for Charles and Anne (though reportedly she prefers to sit on the steps leading up to the throne). Other people allowed to sit on the steps of the throne include the Church of England bishops from the major parishes (again, very little separation of church and state). Members of the House of Commons are not allowed to enter the House of Lords under any circumstances - they crowd around the door to hear the Queen's Speech. There is a practice (dating back thousands of years) that the Gentlemen's Usher of the Black Rod walks through the rotunda to the House of Commons to summon the MPs for the Queen's Speech, and the door is customarily slammed in his face (to symbolize the chamber's independence from the sovereign). He then knocks on the door with his staff three times and walks back to the House of Lords, with the House of Commons following behind. You can see the dents in the chamber door! On the House of Commons side, the motif is green, symbolic of commoners. Conversely, the queen is not allowed to proceed one step down the corridor to the House of Commons; the last monarch to do this was Charles I (who did so to arrest two members of Parliament and execute them for treason), resulting in his beheading and the abolition of the monarchy under Oliver Cromwell. Apparently, the United Kingdom is very, very keen for that not to happen again! The Commons benches sit across from one another, encouraging a very adversarial form of politics. Another interesting feature is that the MPs vote with their feet - they literally walk through doors labelled "aye" and "nay" and are counted as they walk through (origin of the term "head count" I suppose!). The Member's Lobby (origin of the term "lobbyist!") immediately before entering the House of Commons is very similar to its American counterpart - filled with statues of major political figures (the largest being Churchill and Thatcher, of course). The door to the House of Commons itself is made of pieced together fragments of stone, meticulously put back together after the entire chamber was blown apart by German bombs in 1941. Many, many more fascinating details too, of course! See wikipedia for more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houses_of_parliament#Peers.27_Lobby

2) Trafalgar Square and National Gallery. Fabulous museum, of course. This time around I especially enjoyed the room entirely filled with Rubens (including "Samson and Delilah"), other Italian painters e.g. Caravaggio, the Dutch masters, and the Impressionists. Check out the collection here: http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/collection-overview/

3) All's Well That Ends Well at the Globe Theatre! Believe it or not we were all groundlings with 5 pound tickets - so we stood the entire time! A little rough (especially when exhausted) but totally worth it - the actors were great and the show was highly entertaining, despite the fact that this play is not considered one of Shakespeare's best (it's somewhat dated). One of the best aspects was the music/dance mini-performances before and after - very fun. And the weather held up! No English "liquid sunshine," as my Gothic Architecture professor liked to call it...Performance info and reviews here: http://www.shakespearesglobe.com/theatre/on-stage/alls-well-that-ends-well

And finally, the pictures! http://www.flickr.com/photos/donnahorning/sets/72157627348649712/

London Eye and the Thames in the sun

Big Ben (very photogenic)

Statue of Oliver Cromwell outside Westminster Palace (Houses of Parliament)

Henry VII Chapel of Westminster Abbey (abutting Houses of Parliament)

Westminster Palace

Lion statue below Cromwell

Westminster Hall

National Gallery

Nelson's Column

Fountain in Trafalgar Square

St Paul's Cathedral

Shakespeare's Globe

The Globe stage

The Globe