We're Back and travelling! In 2019 we visited relatives in Portugal, UK and Ireland. Julie sang Carmina Burana with the 'Noteworthies' at the Royal Albert Hall. We did lots of walking, writing, sketching, reading and relaxing. This year we start our adventures with four days in Hanoi, Vietnam.Then time to catch up with friends and family in Taddinton, Derbyshire, Seville, Spain and Gibraltar! Phew! A 3 week holiday in Morocco before heading back to Saigon and Sydney. Adventures await ...
Read about these adventures on our dawsonsoverseas blog
Click here to read about these adventures on our dawsonsoverseas blog
Saturday, 30 July 2016
Friday, 29 July 2016
Derbyshire Dawdling
There's nothing quite like walking in Derbyshire, so green. Came across our first "Robotic Milking Shed.' Cows just wander in whenever they feel like it - are milked, given a special treat and then they wander off again!
Rokeby Cottage, fantastic, great views over the hillside. Quiet, pub down the road - everything we could want really!
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Monday, 18 July 2016
The Question is AkademiK
The
Question is AkademiK
I gaze lazily
out of the porthole. Deep waves of
silence lap through my brain. A seal floats
by; its dark fur stark against the pristine white of the iceberg. It gently lifts its head in silent
acknowledgement. The iceberg dips and
flows, its whiteness disappearing into echoes of turquoise, aquamarine and
deep, deep blue.
‘Good morning
folks, Good morning. Leopard seal to the
port and Minke whales off the bow and its time to zodiac! Gangway in half an hour. Be ready
to board.’
I leap out of
my reverie. Getting ready to zodiac is
serious business. I grab great handfuls
of clothing. M.S.D. I think. (Merino,
Synthetic, Down) First layer: merino thermals.
Second: synthetic, thin long sleeved top. A down vest comes next, topped by a woolen
jumper, then two pairs of socks, first one merino and then synthetic. “Now for the enormous rubber ski pants.” By now sweat is pouring down my face. The trick is to dress quickly and get down
onto the outer deck where the freezing wind will bring cool relief.
“Dammit!” I
can’t have forgotten. Hurriedly, I peel
off the heavy pants. No toilet stop for
the next three hours - a pit stop is something I just can’t put off! Back into the waterproofs and with my down
jacket and the ship’s huge waterproof jacket swinging from my arm, I make the
treacherous journey down the stairs to the mudroom.
The mudroom is
full of bulky figures who like myself are trying to pull on oversized gum boots
and fit yet one more jacket, scarf and tuque under the enormous red waterproof
jacket supplied by the ship. With a
final effort I struggle into the life jacket, two pairs of gloves, (you’ve got
it first layer merino and second synthetic) and looking like the Michelin man,
I tumble out onto deck and with relief, breathe in the icy cold air.
A line of
bulky, red jackets and nervous smiles greet me.
We are all a little unsure about our clothing – too few layers and you
freeze, too many and you get sweaty which can lead to hypothermia. These petty fears make us jittery as we look
down at the kayaks and the small black zodiac boat riding the waves.
Memories of
last night’s rough crossing of Drake Passage which prevented our first landing,
are too close for many and there is a sense of queasiness in the air. Three at a time we approach the rickety
stairs. With a quick tug, the crew
member checks my life jacket, smiles and sends me on my way, down into the
black, bobbing zodiac, to join the other nine adventurers. Relief floods my face as I make it safely on
board. Immediately, we hear the call of
“Whales ahead!” I hold on tight, wrap
the scarf around my mouth and we are off.
This first
zodiac trip opens Antarctica up to me. A
different planet emerges. I feel,
breathe and know the cold. The icebergs
entrance me. In a struggle to describe
their unique glow and colour, I invent the term ‘Computer Blue’. The scenery is spectacular but there is
nothing like the noise and sight of a whale surfacing a metre away from the
zodiac. I sit, awestruck watching a
majestic barnacled head gasping for air.
I’m mesmerised as its graceful body arcs through the water until
finally, its huge fluke bids farewell and disappears into the deep, black water
of Antarctica.
I feel
insignificant next to this magnificent creature and in awe of the vast expanse
of wilderness that stretches in front of me.
A wilderness with an iceberg stretching half a kilometre into the
distance and only one single penguin, walking from one side to the next.
On board this
Russian ship, thank goodness, there are about twenty scientists and explorers
from around the world, including John, a great storyteller, who at 22 years
old, freshly graduated from Cambridge, wandered by chance into the British
Antarctic Survey Office and thereby started a 50 year relationship with
Antarctica, that still thrives today.
Also David an intrepid Australian writer, photographer and adventurer,
who among other things has explored all seven continents by motorbike, and more
importantly lives to tell the tales.
Over the next
four days as we emerge from our cabins, rattled and shaken by Gale Force 8
winds and tumultuous seas, we look to these fearless explorers for
reassurance. Those of us who can rise
from our beds stumble down to the Presentation Room to hear their stories of
Antarctica past and present.
Eventually, the
weather maps turn from violent red to peaceful green and we are able to put the
churning waters and howling wind behind us and set off in wobbly zodiacs to
actually set foot on Antarctica. A
landmark moment for Roger and I as we have now visited all seven continents,
together.
Each expedition
reveals a world of spouting whales, noisy penguins stealing stones, gliding
skuas stealing eggs, lonesome yachts, silent mountains reflected in glassy
lakes and overwhelmingly a sense of the thin line between life and death.
It’s impossible
to visit Antarctica and not think of our world and its future – the life and
death of our planet. However, the
scientists we travel with, choose their words carefully when they describe the
changes that they see. More than one
passenger has loudly and openly declared climate change to be a complete load
of rubbish. The scientists may be
reticent but the rest of us passengers aren’t and we give Tony Abbot and Donald
Trump a real drubbing!
Over eleven
days, seventy passengers glimpse another view of our world, a planet of
extremes and survival, scarred by political rivalries. The abandoned, rusty cabins adorned with
national flags expose the world’s political jealousies and tensions for all to
see. Many of us struggle to understand
how this can be happening, especially at such a critical time. The final night, however, sheds a little
light.
For some
extraordinary reason, Roger and I are chosen to sit at the Captain’s
table. A mixed honour as neither of us
has thought to bring anything “dressy” and we don’t speak a word of
Russian. As we are lead, rather grandly
through the dining room an echo of low rumblings can be heard in our wake. ‘How come the Australians were chosen?’ I
find myself smiling. It really doesn’t
matter where you are political jealousies are obviously alive and well.
We travelled
with One Ocean aboard the Russian
research ship Akademik Sergy Vavilov,
January 2016.
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2016
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July
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- Music, music, music
- Derbyshire Dawdling
- Henderson relish and Howard pipes
- Hello mum
- To be or not to be?
- Stars, hide your fires; Let not light see my black...
- In the footsteps of Brunel
- Like a Rolling Stone!
- Walking Hackney Wick
- Oh Fortuna!
- Emirates - Here we go again!
- Celebrating the Dalai Lama's Birthday
- Get Up and Go!
- The Question is AkademiK
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