Thursday, 25 October 2007

Who Could Resist ... ?


On Wednesday night we headed to the Cambridge Theatre in London to see Kelly. Mike doesn't have kids at school this week (an inset week), and has next week off. I have this week off and go back to school when Mike has time off, so it hasn't worked out too well, but it's okay. Anyway, we went into London, found a pub for an hour or so, then saw the show. Believe it or not, Kelly appeared to be quiet talented.

Other than that, not much has happened this week. We went to dinner tonight with the year 3 teacher Mike works with, Sara and her husband Will. What could be better than a tradition English meal, in a traditional English pub?

We hope you're all thinking of us while you're enjoying 30 degree days. We're lucky if it's hotter than 10 degrees, and Mike has noticed cars are having a layer of ice form on the windscreen in the morning.

Friday, 12 October 2007

HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAD!!!

I know that technically it's not the 12th in Australia anymore (because you're soo far into the future), but HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAD!!! Hope you can get your present off Mum every once in a while!!

We were speaking about Dad's this evening whilst at a pub in London with Coraline (our housemate who can't drink with the Aussies!). A little back story, Paul very generously gave us some English currency at the airport and said wisely "tuck 20 pounds in the back of your purse in case of an emergency". This advice was taken and 20 pounds has remained in the back of the purse every since... with the exception of 2 times. Two emergencies in the time we've been here!! One: no wine in the fridge on a Friday night! Completely outrageous! And two: at the pub for lunch today with no money for drinks! We've been at pubs for lunch and dinner, drinking for a cause. Cheers Dad!!!

On the way home Michael commented that so far nearly all the good English experiences have involved a pub. ie, London Dungeon was crap ... the pub we had lunch in; good. Bad day at work is directly related to a good night at a pub. Thank god for 'Thank God It's Friday'!

**WARNING** Our post are officially crap because our lives are no more interesting than they were at home (we just drink a little more). We officially love our housemate Coraline because "she no speak no English no good" but she knows how to say #$%@!!!

Thursday, 11 October 2007

Life's More Fun When You're Driving A Mini!!

Well some of you know by now, but others don't. Mike and I have recently purchased one of the coolest cars in Britain. We searched high and low for a warm, non leaking, reliable care and ended up with this:







It's sooo cute!! We're currently accepting name suggestions cause nothing seems to fit just right.

Monday, 8 October 2007

Home Sweet Home!

I've been meaning to put some info up about where we're living since we arrived... Basically our house is a little like the Big Brother house (minus the cameras). We vote people out, we get surprise housemates and certain topics cause heated discussions (like what to watch on tv, and more recently how we should kill the mouse that has appeared in the kitchen).

Jim and Jan own the house we live in, but they live in the country. Their adult children live with us. Katie (their daughter) and Ben (Katie's partner) are permanent housemates, Geoff (Jim and Jan's son) is another permanent housemate. For the first month we were here the youngest daughter Maria also lived here, but she'd been evicted to university in Leeds. Jo, a friend of Katie's was also here for a few days, but she's gone back to Devon. Jack (Jim and Jan's cat) also resided here, but he's since gone to live in the country with Jim and Jan. Confused yet? Katie and Ben are in their mid 20's, and expecting a baby in February. Geoff is 23 (I think) and runs a building maintenance company that he's just started.

The next housemate (who arrived about 3 weeks after us) is Nick. He's a thirty-something, P.E. teacher. We've recently found out he's leaving at the end of the year to move back to Wales. It's too expensive for him to live in London as he's driving back to Wales every weekend anyway. He and Mike love talking sport just to annoy everyone else!

The next arrival was Coralina who arrived last week. She's from France and is over here to work as a language assistant at the same school as Nick. Two days after Coralina's arrival was Agnetha who's from Germany. She too is working as a language assistant at the same school. Both Agnetha and Coralina are 22. Elsa, Coralina's cousin, was here for a few days and will be back to visit every couple of weeks.

Everything's pretty good and we all get on reasonably well. We can also go a few days without seeing people too which helps. Last week we had a French Crepe night where Elsa cooked dinner for us all. We followed dinner with a French film, can't say I'm too fond of subtitles. We all headed to the pub one night for Coralina's birthday one night which was nice too.

There's 8 of us at the moment, and most night's dinner is spread over three sittings. The washing machine never seems to stop and there's never space to dry clothes if it's raining outside. You practically need an appointment if you want a shower before 9am as we only have one shower.

This was taken at O'Gradys, our local pub;






Next to Mike is Agnetha and Ben. Opposite Ben is Geoff, Katie, Coralina and Elsa. Nick couldn't make it.



Mike and Jack (don't show Monty mum!).

Photo's of our room:

Living room:

Kitchen:

Backyard:

Sunday, 7 October 2007

Let's see how this blog thing works and the London Dungeon suck!!

The title sums up the theme of this post. This is my first time at posting and all I can promise is I won't write as much info as Krystle, or be anywhere near as entertaining. Krystle has obviously done all the posts so far, while my role has been a participant and spell checker. But I'm off the bench now (footballing metaphor cause I'm currently watching the Premier League preview for today's games, so much football not enough time!) and ready to play a starring role. I don't know how to do photos though and I don't think we took any anyway.

So my job is to report on our trip to the London Dungeon and it was without a doubt our most disappointing experience so far. We had seen it the previous week on our bus tour and thought it sounded interesting. We booked our tickets on-line during the week for a 3.30pm time and what was labelled Fast-track and headed into London on the day with the sun shining after a fair bit of rain during the week.

We arrived at London Bridge station and walked past the Dungeons where the queues seemed reasonable and went to find our obligatory pub lunch experience. I'll digress briefly to comment on how good we have found the pubs here. Foods always been good, enjoyable atmosphere and bottles of wine with prices that make buying it by the glass inconceivable. The pubs here don't believe in ice buckets so you find yourself drinking quite quickly to finish the bottle before it gets warm.

After we had our lunch we walked back to the Dungeons to find a massive queue for the Fast-track line. We had to wait a good hour in this line despite having paid for fast entry. We tried to get our money back rather than wait but the staff were unfriendly and unhelpful. Once inside (with more queuing) the exhibits ranged from mildly entertaining to just plain dull. For a place that bills itself as being scary, it wasn't really. Having people jump out at you and shout at you gets a little tedious after a while. Krystle was a little more jumpy than I was but I don't think she was that scared either. The exhibits finish with one of those rides that lift you up and then suddenly drop you, which is supposed to simulate your head being chopped off or something equally tenuous. It was actually scary though because they drop you in complete darkness, but we left very disappointed and a little more wary of visiting lame touristy attractions.

The next day we had lunch with our landlords, Jim and Jan, and the rest of our housemates, which was quite nice. Later we went into Leicester Square and saw a movie (that Chuck and Larry one). Tickets were over thirteen pounds each, so again seems aimed at taking as much money from tourists as they can. Great cinema though, with the only comfier seats we've experienced probably being in Gold-class.

That's it from me then, normal transmissions will resume soon!

Tuesday, 25 September 2007

Harrods!




Last weekend we didn't really set out for Harrods, but somehow ended up there while doing an open top double decker tour around London. I finally found a multilevel store and I couldn't afford a damn thing in it! I was extremely unprepared for the Harrods retail experience, where shopping is an extreme sport and we were merely spectatators for the most part. There were various emotions experience through the experience. Shock whilst looking at price tags, envy/jealousy whilst walking through the jewellery department, delight in the Christmas section, outrage that there was a VIP entrance that we weren't invited in. Last but not least there was pure joy and elation at finding the one thing we (ok, maybe I) came to London for: a Harrods bear! After a long month we've finally started our travelling bear collection.

Love Mike and Krystle

P.S. If anyone has any family news send it our way. We'd love to hear how everyone's going.

Friday, 21 September 2007

Top Ten

There are so many great things about living in London (or on the borders of) that we thought we'd compile a list of our favourites so far. And the good news is there aren't too many dislikes (except crowds!).


  1. Alcohol being readily available in supermarkets, newsagents, corner shops etc. And for once it's actually cheaper to buy bottled wine than cask. Given that the Aussie's consume more alcohol per head than any other country (or so the English news said), we could learn a few things from the Brits.
  2. With the booze flowing freely, it's great that nobody has to drive. The buses are frequent enough that it isn't really a hassle not having a car.
  3. Home and Away and Neighbours are screened twice a day.
  4. Shopping! Cheap clothes, cheap books, cheap foods. Note: only cheap if spending pounds.
  5. Football. This has been Mike's only contribution so far, and truth be told I'd be more inclined to put it on the 'Things I Hate About London' list. Let's just say there's no shortage of sports coverage in the news. Having said this I almost feel a little bad when foreigners comment about Australian teams and I haven't a clue what or who they're talking about. For a split second last week I thought about taking an interest in rugby.
  6. Eddie's newsagency. This is our local newsagent/corner shop/bottle shop and it's run by the friendliest little Indian man in Ilford. Sometimes Mrs Eddie works there too and we're already very loyal customers. Always try to top up our oyster cards (used on the tube) and mobiles, and buy papers from there even though we can get them from Tesco.
  7. Not to get stuck on the alcohol theme, but pubs being on every corner is incredibly handy (just in case you need a loo or something).
  8. Cheap musicals. The current list consists of; Dirty Dancing, Chicago, Grease, Buddy, Cabaret, Footloose, Fame, Monty Python's Spamalot, Mama Mia and the Lion King. The good news is we've ticked We Will Rock You off the list.
  9. Commuting. Yes, you've read it right. I'm currently travelling out of London in the morning so generally speaking I'm heading in the opposite direction to the crowd. This means I get a seat and can relax for the journey. I'm spending 2-3 hours a day and get to catch up on podcasts, do a couple of Sudukos or read a magazine or book. The only slightly disappointing things is that I can't read for too long or I start to feel a little motion sick.
  10. The internet. Although this last one isn't specific to London, it makes life easier in term of living abroad. We're on Skype now, we can email family, download Hinchy's podcast (currently my fave), check Aus news to read about things like Andrew John's incident which I didn't even see on any UK news. I think it'd be different if we couldn't call home as often, or had to wait for letters.

So that's our favourite stuff so far. We've also learnt lots too. Like keep an umbrella in your handbag, along with antibacterial wipes. I can't believe how dirty our hands feel after catching a bus or tube. Another thing we've found is that you come to accept and not worry when an Arabian looking guy with a backpack gets on a bus. Muslims, Indians, Lebanese etc are everywhere. That said, I got off my first train this week. I could handle the race, backpack, but the rocking, sweating and chanting was too much. I've discovered how incredibly untalented I am at identifying accents, I completely missed an Aussie accent today and have accused South Africans of being Kiwi's and Germans.

Kind of a pointless post, but that's our frame of mind after nearly a month. We're well and having a good time, although we miss Murphy!

Edited to add: I know it's a top 10 list, but Mini's and 3 wheel cars should be on the list! We 'mini-spot' everywhere we go.