Tuesday, May 24, 2011

A big wee lass in the highlands

The first night we were in Scotland Annabel was brought to tears of joy when the barman handed over our beers and said, "Will there be nothing for the wee lassie?"  She's kind of got a thing for David Tennant, like the thing I've kind of got for Mike Myers.  As for Alex, she's reading a series of Scottish time-travel romances.  I think she was actually nervous for a moment when she first stepped into the stone circle at Tomnaverie.



But Alex did not disappear into a time vortex when she crossed the stone circle (thereby leaving her true love (me) behind), so all was well.  Nor did Annabel manage to navigate this phone box to another dimension.  We had to content ourselves with a different kind of time travel, the kind in which one visits castles.




Just a handful of the many options in Aberdeenshire if one is looking for castles.  The only one currently being lived in is the one in the middle, Balmoral, where the Queen (yes, that Queen) spends six weeks every summer.  We had the privilege of driving our car onto the grounds because the golf tournament  I was playing in (the Royal Deeside Golf Week) in nearby Ballater had wangled the privilege of letting tourney participants play at the extremely private Balmoral Golf club.  The twenty-odd of us who took advantage of the opportunity were the only people on the course that day, and I experienced several intensely British moments.  I didn't take my camera on the round, but here's a shot over the first tee.


"Please wash hands after playing"???  I may never wash my hands again.  Or maybe I'll just settle for never cleaning my spikes again.  The card leads off with a section called "Etiquette":

* Members should dress smartly.
* There is no golf permitted until 1:00pm on Sundays.

Ballater Golf Club, where my tournament was held, was not quite as posh, but it was still pretty strait-laced.  No spikes, hats, or cell phones in the clubhouse, for instance.  I was admonished more than once on the course to restrain my enthusiasm (generally expressed for my playing partners' shots, but once for my own eagle).  They take their golf very seriously here.  I shot my best round of the week at Balmoral (where it didn't count towards the tournament); back at Ballater I was humbled by a wide assortment of men and women, some of them considerably older than I.  Here are pictures of everyone on the first morning, teeing up for the Texas Scramble.  (My group is about six rows down.)  This format allows you to use anyone's drive.  Perhaps you'll have a clue to how I was playing that week when I tell you that we used more tee shots by each of these women than by me.  I don't understand--doesn't this look like a fine swing?


That link is the only access I have right now to pictures of the man who invited us to this event, Bill Bennett, his son Bill Jr.,  and his friends Kjel, Theo, and Vangelis from Athens.  The best meal we had all week--indeed, the best meal I've had in a long time--was prepared by Chef Bill (Jr.), and the whole Scottish-Greek contingent were wonderful sponsors and supporters of us all week.  We'll have more pictures of them, and of Annabel as well, as soon as we get a batch from Theo, the man with the Big Lens.

When I wasn't busy with my fellow duffers, losing balls in the gorse and the Dee, I joined up with my girls for some motoring about the countryside...on the wrong side of the road.  We were pretty worried about that part of the adventure, especially when our car rental company emailed us two days before we left Oviedo to say that they didn't have any automatics available.  Neither of us wanted to add shifting with the wrong hand to driving on the wrong side.  But when we got to the desk, they had graciously arranged to pass us on to another company who even offered us a slightly better rate for a slightly bigger car.  Thus we had plenty of opportunities to admire the bright yellow fields of rapeseed crops, the "hairy coos," the pheasants, and most of all the gamboling wee lambies.



Sheep everywhere.  And not a few bunnies.  We learned to recognize some of the more common and striking birds, such as lapwings, oyster catchers, wagtails, and blackbirds.  

And when we'd had enough nature and culture tourism for the day, there was always the whiskey.  Alex determined to educate herself regarding Scotch whiskey, with an eye to cultivating a regular libation that is not exceedingly girly or dependent on whatever mixers were available.  Why not Scotch, since that's my drink of choice anyway?  We visited the distillery on the Balmoral estate, Royal Lochnagar, where we missed the formal tour but were entertained by one Gordon Muir (the second of that name to come up on Google, if you're wondering), an extremely loquacious Scotsman who talked about whiskey and the contemporary Scottish poet Norman McCaig, among other things.  He recommended another tour, in the direction we were heading on our last day, and that tour at Fettercairn was most satisfying.  




The chart in the middle is a handy tool for sorting among some of the more widely available whiskeys.  Makes a handsome dish towel, don't you think?  "Ladies' whiskeys" are in the lower left-hand quadrant.

Our home base for wide-ranging expeditions in search of castles and distilleries, and the sanctuary to which I returned each day after being mauled on the links, was the Inchgeal Lodge, a fabulous bed and breakfast in Ballater, walking distance from the course, once the home of Queen Victoria's doctor while she was staying at Balmoral.  Our hostess was an utter sweetheart, taking on such above-and-beyond tasks as looking up the broadcast time for Dr. Who and doing a load of our laundry.


That's our room on the top right, the best in the house.  We were Diane and John's longest-staying guests to date, and everything about our highland home was delightful.  Ballater is actually inside the Cairgorms National Park, the largest national park in the U.K., and the landscape ranges from quaint and domestic down in the valleys (especially here on the Deeside) to considerably wilder in the highlands, which were everywhere up there on the horizon.

Note the blue sky in that picture, and in one or two others.  We were amused at the end of the week to be told by several of the golfers, "Well, at least you had good weather."  I suppose we had what passes for good weather in Scotland in mid-May, meaning it never actually snowed, although it was freezing cold most of the time, and rarely rained harder than a drizzle, although it did that often.  It was impossible to predict exactly what the weather would be doing thirty minutes on, but through all the changes it remained windy and cold.  I played a total of four holes of golf in my shirtsleeves over the course of the week, perhaps another thirty-six holes in two layers, and for the rest of the time I was wearing three layers.  I don't believe I'd ever in my previous golfing life worn three layers while swinging a club, not even on a chilly August Alaskan day.

Speaking of Alaska, much of the high country reminded us of home, particularly one sunny day when we took off after golf to investigate the "Spittal of Muick."



Annabel chose the high road and Alex the low road.  I followed Annabel, of course, since given a choice I always go up, and my daughter seems to have taken after me in that respect. Alex took the smooth path down to the loch and filled her bottle with the cold water.  Annabel and I scrambled about in the heather.  We don't have pictures from the longest excursion the two of them did without me, to Loch Ness.  But I imagine the country around there looks not unlike these pictures of the loch at Glen Muick.

The rain held off for most of our last day (the only completely golf-free day), which we spent on a loop over the mountains to the east coast and back.  Just driving through the country was an adventure we never tired of all week, and the fact that everyone spoke English, sort of, was a bonus.  For instance, the signs.




The top one is at the St. Cyrus Nature Preserve on the coast; unfortunately we didn't actually see any toads.  The middle one is in Stonehaven, a beautiful town a bit to the north; how can you argue with the slogan "...because every day is different"?  The bottom one was not lying or exaggerating in the least; Dunnottar was indeed impressive, ruined, and a fortress.  We'd saved the best castle for last, as it turned out.




Isolated on its rock, it held out against Cromwell and preserved the Scottish Crown Jewels.  It's a warren of wonderful walls and windows looking down sheer cliffs.  It also has my new favorite men's room in all the world.


A truly world-class "Gents W.C." must  have a whiff of danger.  This one perches on a corner of the rock, such that I couldn't even get around the back to take a picture of how close it is to the edge.  Surprisingly to me,  this place is privately owned, but at five pounds it was the best deal of the whole trip.

We could have spent a lot more time there, but as you can perhaps tell, the weather was deteriorating.  Annabel had gotten a little beach time earlier, at St. Cyrus, as you can see below, and we also beach-combed a bit in Stonehaven.  But my most vivid memory of the Scottish coast will be the gulls and murres in the water and on the sheer rock walls surrounding Dunnottar Castle.


All flights went smoothly, once we made it through the thunderstorm at takeoff in Oviedo, although changing terminals between flights at De Gaulle was interesting once again.  On the way there we landed from Oviedo, took the winding shuttle bus from 2G to 2E, found our gate, checked in, boarded another shuttle bus, and rode that bus back over the winding route to 2G where we boarded our plane to Aberdeen just a couple hundred feet from the plane we'd landed on.  On the way back we had a very long hike through 2E and out of security to yet a different shuttle bus, and then back through security again to the by-now familiar lounge in 2G where we awaited word of our gate.  At least we didn't have to send anyone on ahead to hold the plane for us, as Julie had in De Gaulle on our return from Athens.

And now we're in pack-up mode for the return to Fairbanks.  We've calculated that by the time we get back to Fairbanks, we will have taken twenty-two separate flights since we left home on Sept. 1.  We're ready to stay put for a while.  Goodbye to Scotland, and soon goodbye to Europe.


Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Ends and somewhat odds

Off to Scotland day after tomorrow, then back here with just a few days to pack it all up.  An odd kind of limbo we're living in, not unproductive as Alex and I are both getting good work done on our research, but still a kind of frozen moment, suspended between our year's adventure in Europe and the long trip home.  What to do in the meantime?  Why not haul a few pictures out of the vault?

We had a fun afternoon a couple of weeks ago with our friend Helio, father of Annabel's friends and schoolmates Roma and Flavia.  He drove the three of us out to Cabo de Peñas, the northernmost point of the Spanish coast, directly north of Oviedo, to show us his old stomping grounds, including the big nature preserve that encompasses the cape itself, the village he grew up in just alongside the cape, and the two largest towns in the area, Luanco (where he and his girls live by the beach in the summer) and Candás.



These shots are out on the point itself.  Some of you may recognize that strip of blue blowing out from Annabel's head.  Yes, the blue hair she had glued on at the Tanana Valley Fair last August is still, incredibly, hanging in there.





The first one above is the beach in Luanco where Roma and Flavia will be hanging out once school ends in June.  The next three are in Candás, a town that has clearly used its public art opportunities to assert its traditional connection with the sea.  Annabel was impressed by the large anchor.  I as impressed by the odd statue, which kind of reminds me of an overweight Gollum, naked with a fish in one hand.  I can't figure out exactly what it's saying about the locals.  Something I neglected to mention in the last blog that I'm going to miss is the architecture in Asturias, the colors and shapes of the beautiful buildings.  I gather that both of these coastal towns are going through hard times, but they're certainly preserving their civic spirit, Candás somewhat more vividly than Luanco.

What else besides that fun outing?  I never did get pictures of the penitentes in León--there are still some on Annabel's camera, I think--but here's a shot of some Easter candy in the KKK-shape of the folks in the procession.  Followed by another of some more traditional American Easter candy (giant chocolate chicken) and my personal favorite, a gummy pulpo.



Did you ever get to see any pictures from Annabel's science assignment, the parachute designed to preserve an egg uncracked from our third-story window?  She took pictures of all the prototypes, starting with a handkerchief, progressing to a cut-up shopping bag, and ending with a cut-up garbage back from which was suspended a rubber swim cap and an egg padded with paper towels.  It did finally work, and below is a picture of the successful model.  Annabel did the tests with chocolate eggs to help solace her for failures.



When I posted on the nice walk we took a couple of weeks ago, I neglected to include this fine shot of bug stuff.  Tiny rock homes, once underwater, and this carapace of something insectoidal that graduated to bigger and better things.  Almost but not quite the dragonfly larval exoskeletons Annabel likes to find in Fairbanks.  Like I've said before, it's not really a post without a bug shot.

Another thing I should have mentioned in the blog about what I'll miss:  performing goats outside our window.  Or rather, "performing" goats, since as far as I could tell this goat was simply being its normal goatlike self while on the end of a leash.  The accompanying music was quite loud, luckily, since otherwise I might have missed the show (and not gotten these pictures for you).



Time to go meet Annabel's bus for the second-last time.  I'll leave you with a picture of all but one of Alex's students, mugging it up with my girls on the last dinner we made for them, and a shot of Annabel and Woody, a teaser for a future post with even more fabulous local sculpture.  Hasta luego.



Monday, May 2, 2011

What I'll miss...and what I won't

It's May and we have less than a month left in Europe.  It's hard not to be thinking ahead.  We're doing our best to stay in the moment, doing stuff we've been meaning to (this weekend we finally saw the fabulous new archeological museum and made our pilgrimage to the Oviedo cathedral museum), and looking forward to the upcoming week in Scotland.  But nostalgia is a powerful thing, and sometimes won't even wait until the appropriate moment.  I think someone has defined "kitsch" as pre-emptive nostalgia, and in that vein I present a very kitschy post.  You can join me in your choice of an appropriate soundtrack, which for me is the album Paul Simon that Alex just downloaded for me.  Sweet, self-indulgent nostalgia.

I'm going to miss being just a bus ride from the sea.  More often a tram ride in Athens, but always just right over there any time I wanted to see it.  There are few things in life I enjoy more than beach-combing, but maybe one of them is watching Annabel frolic in the ocean.  Of course, the ocean is only six hours or so from Fairbanks, but not a lot of frolicking or beach-combing in the freezing, silt-coated waters of upper Valdez Sound or upper Cook Inlet.

I'm going to miss being able to walk everywhere, stop in anywhere, eat at a different restaurant anytime we want (although the food is likely to look very familiar).  The eating and the walking go together, of course, because if I wasn't doing as much walking as I am, I would be enormously larger from doing the amount of eating I am.  I think my sister Lauren and her husband were a little horrified at how much Alex and I ate at our meals together in Spain.  And we still didn't manage to clean our plates very often.  Don't want to insult anybody's food, right?  And it all sounds so good on the menu, and is relatively cheap, compared to Fairbanks prices, if you don't actually pay attention to the exchange rate--how can you not order too much and then eat too much?  It'll be interesting to see how our eating patterns settle out back home.

I'm not going to miss tiny bathrooms.  In the last eight months I've discovered an amazing variety of ways to cramp one's style in the bathroom.  The hotel we stayed at in St. Jean de Luz with Lauren's family required a Pilates-style swing of the knees to sit down.  On the other hand, what am I going to do without ready access to a bidet?  Suffer through, I suppose.  We have two bathrooms in our apartment in Oviedo, both tiny, and I wish I could trade them both (and throw in the bidet) for one bigger one.  On the plus side, it's important to be able to stand close to the mirror considering how dark all these bathrooms have been.

I'm going to miss all those museums that Annabel has suffered through, especially the natural history museums.  There's something about all that old stuff that takes me away, seizes my imagination like a good science fiction novel.  Despite the suffering, Annabel still includes "archeologist" on her list of desirable future occupations, and asked us yesterday if Alaska had any archeological digs.  We assured her that it did.  We've got a pretty darn good museum in Fairbanks, but I'll miss Bronze Age implements, cave paintings, medieval icons, not to mention some of those painters they have in the Prado and Louvre that the Museum of the North hasn't managed to acquire.  It's fun to visit a little art museum like the one in Oviedo and see the odd Picasso or Dali among all the lesser-known artistic luminaries of Asturias.

I'm going to miss good cheap wine.  Need I say more?

I'm going to miss mild, humid weather.  Yes I am.  We may be looking at a solid week of rain in the forecast today, but we know it'll be changeable, blue skies (like now) alternating with gray (like an hour ago), weather I remember fondly from my college days in Seattle (more nostalgia).  Of course, the humidity was a little daunting in that tiny bathroom in the center of our apartment in Athens, and the rain four out of every five Sundays since we've been in Oviedo has weighed on us.  And we'll be getting back to Fairbanks at the perfect moment in the seasonal cycle, first of June, ready for some clear blue skies and twenty hours of sun.  But come the cold and the dry, me and my skin will be hankering back to the air in Athens (Grecian Formula H2O) and Oviedo (on the Costa Verde).

I'm going to miss all the generous people that have adopted us in Greece and Spain, taken us in, shown us around, spoken slowly and clearly for my sake, given us a glimpse of their lives and of real life in these places.  It would have been a colder and darker year indeed without the open arms of Rosemary, Michael, Jorge and Merche, Helio, Carmen, and everyone else who has been kind to these American strangers.

I'm going to miss all the time with Alex and Annabel, our sense of being three adventurers together, the in-jokes and tag-lines, references to particular people and places and poor translations and generous gestures.  It's not like we won't see a lot of each other in Fairbanks.  Or that we haven't gotten on each other's nerves now and again (and maybe again) over the last eight months.  But this whole adventure has been a lot more powerful because I've had two smart, funny, observant people to share it with.

And we've still got three weeks in Oviedo, a week in Scotland, a couple of days in Seattle, and the adventure of the return trip itself--it's entirely too soon to be wrapping things up.  Let's get outside while the sun is still shining and enjoy this May Day holiday.  Be seeing some of you soon.  But not just yet.