Sunday, October 20, 2002

From Vivienne in Wellington to Angela (and 'bump') back from Orkney to Brixton

From: Vivienne
To: Angela & Mike
Subject: How's it Going?
Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 12:42:34 +1300

Got your post card, Angela, displayed on the fridge: wasn't Orkney fascinating? We only had a couple of days there, but managed to get around all the main sites, if briefly. We were very impressed with the degree of preservation, and as there were very few other tourists, you got a haunting feeling of life and times of the original inhabitants. Though when we were there, the weather was perfect - warm sunshine and no wind - and perhaps we didn't get a true impression of how they really lived with the wind howling and the sleet blasting through the winter dark!

We are waiting for spring to arrive: it's mid October and still the Wellington weather continues windy, wet and cold (John had to chip the ice off the windscreen on Tuesday). Today is Walk the Kids Home from School day, and of course it's raining and blowing a gale. It's not looking good for a hot summer... Not that we care: John's used up his holiday allotment, and we're broke. Might manage a couple of nights in the tent up the Wairarapa in a DoC (free) area but nothing more.

While I remember: your birthday and Christmas presents are in the post (as of last Friday), and should be arriving imminently. They are for this year, so you can open your birthday gift (only 9 months late!) and not wait until February. You never know, I may get something into the post in time (but don't hold your breath!). 

How's "Bump"? Thrashing and kicking? Names sorted yet? Got the moses basket / cot? Bath? All those 101 things you need for a new baby? And that's just the nappies! Are you going to antenatal classes? Guess it's a bit early to pack the bag... What's your due date? Not that they ever do the decent thing and arrive when they're supposed to...

Well, guess I should stop procrastinating and Do Something like sort the laundry...

Love from
Vivienne :)

From: Angela
To: Vivienne
Subject: RE: How's it Going?
Date: Sun, 20 Oct 2002 

Hi Vivienne, John and Benjamin!

Orkney was great fun!  I got to see the major tourist sites on Mainland and will definitely take Mike there next summer.  The only things I missed were puffins (all out to sea already) and Mine Howe (a relatively recent site to open to tourists but not so recent archaeologically speaking)!  So I still have an excuse to go back.

Our weather was slightly wintry.  Summer ended the day we arrived (and we arrived too late to notice it that day!).  I was hoping for the aurora but it was quite cloudy the whole 2 weeks.  They had a good display two weeks before we arrived though.  Still, I have seen it with Mike in Iceland.  But the marvelous thing was our two crossings of the Pentland Firth were calm!  With stormy weather either side of both of them.  In fact, the new ferry from Orkney to Aberdeen took 16 hours instead of its 5 hours one day and generated a huge amount of complaints from angry Orcadians!  Made reading the letters to the editor entertaining for a while.

Bump is thrashing around a fair bit.  And having been away in Orkney for three weeks, Mike has noticed a change in size while I was away!  Mike had to go to our first antenatal class by himself, but we both got to last night's one together (albeit late because of a landslip north of Berwick on Tweed that meant my train home was a bus replacement service from Edinburgh to Berwick - at least I got to see your old street on the way past!).  The class was actually quite good.

We have inherited a few baby items from friends here.  But we do need to go shopping soon.  Bag packing may become important in about a week or two. Due date is December 7th (day after wedding anniversary).  If it arrives on wedding anniversary we will be happy as Mike may have someone (eventually) able to help him finish a celebratory bottle of wine each year.  Hehheheheh.

My Mum arrives Nov 22nd or thereabouts.  So maybe we can plan a bit of shopping then before heading up to Scotland for the birth (well, that's the idea - whether bump co-operates or not remains to be seen).  I'm looking forward to seeing her.  She's just cross it's going to be winter!  She thought she was going to avoid Scottish winters for the rest of her life! ;-)

Ok.  I also have to get going.  Give Ben a hug from us!  And John too. Although they both may squirm a little.  Enjoy your birthday in a couple of weeks too!  I must get onto Mike about that (his family - his responsibility - I just nudge a little).  I have an arrangement that means no birthday presents to my family - just phone calls.  And just have to remember Christmas that way!  So I'd better get onto that!  I won't have time to sort that out soon.  Oh dear.

Take care.  Hope the weather breaks soon in Wellington and summer appears.

Love,

Angela (& Mike) xxxx (one for Nuisance)

Monday, October 14, 2002

14 October 2002 - Bruce Springsteen Plays Paris


(pics From http://candysroom.freeservers.com/bruceweb213.html)

If you know us even a little bit, you’ll no doubt know about our Bruce Springsteen obsession. That we first got to know each other by comparing the 45’s that we’d bought to get the unreleased B-side tracks. That I (Mike) went to a concert in Melbourne instead of going to Angela’s birthday party – and that we’d both flown over from Wellington to Melbourne for this tour, and scored scalped tickets at the then-ridiculous sum of thirty quid each (it sounds a lot more in aussie dollars, and even more in kiwi!)

So, when we heard that Bruce was touring Europe in October 2002, we had to be there. It was a real whistlestop tour – seven dates, seven countries, two weeks. Including Wembley Arena. So at the minute that tickets came on sale, we hit the phones, the web, the wherever! But all to no avail. We didn’t even get onto the phone exchange, let alone get an engaged tone, let alone get into a phone queue. Angela had a frustrating time of getting almost fully through a more obscure website selling tickets, before it crumpled under the weight of people just before the visa validation step. Tickets were sold out within 35 minutes, and already appearing on auction sites for £250 and up. Disaster!

There’s quite a good website, http://www.badlands.co.uk, that runs tours for not too extortionate a price. So Angela hit them. These guys are a ‘claytons’ online operation – as in, you e-mail them with what you want, and they get back to you. They reckoned that they had tickets to the Paris concert, Monday 14 October, cover price €40 or £30 – with one night in a £35 Ibis Hotel. For £120. A pretty hefty profit, but not stupidly hefty. So Angela sent them an order. And never heard back. Ah well.

In the meantime, Ron and Helen Bichan were firming up their plans for visiting us. They wanted to do a big trip around the Scottish Highlands and the Orkney Islands. Since Angela wasn’t working, she put her name into the hat for the trip. And an awesome trip it was too! We both resigned ourselves to our fate, and comforted ourselves in the knowledge that Bruce was back in Spring for a much bigger European tour.
But then, about 2 weeks before the 14th of October, we got a letter in the mail. From Badlands! “Dear Mrs Gilbert, as requested we’ve reserved your tickets, booked your hotel, and taken payment off your credit card.” Aargh!! Angela was going to be about as far north as you can get in the United Kingdom on the 14th of October! There was just no way of getting from there to Paris in a reasonable time. It was a choice between Bruce, or a fascinating and eventful 3 week holiday. But what if we couldn’t get our money back?

I was quietly thinking, £240 was not too much to pay for a Bruce Springsteen concert and a weekend in Paris to boot.

But it all worked out. I rang my mate Mike – Harun Michael, who we know through Greg. And through rugby – he’s one of the 14 punters going to see the All Blacks thrash the hapless English in November. And we knew that he was as much of a Bruce Springsteen fan as we were. So what would it be, Mike – £120, plus Eurostar tickets, plus another 2 nights in a Paris hotel, plus a day off work… to see Bruce Springsteen? To Mike’s credit, he didn’t say ‘yes’ straight away. He said he’d see how the finances would work out, and he’d ring me back. Which he did. After about 120 seconds or so…

The Badlands people were happy to change the name on the ticket, with the only proviso being that we’d probably have to share a double bed, since that’s what we had booked! Then I booked the Eurostar to leave on Saturday lunchtime, and return very early Tuesday morning. The plan was to have a weekend in Paris, go to the concert Monday night, and then get back to London in time for work on Tuesday morning.

Since the Badlands hotel was fully double the price of Hotel Saint Pierre, our favourite family-run Montmatre hotel, I gave Hotel Sainte Pierre a ring and booked the Saturday night and the Sunday night with them. This is always something I approach with a little bit of dread. My French has got very rusty since those heady days of playing boule on sand that our mad French teacher had piled on the carpet at Alliance Française, in Wellington. It seems to come back a little bit when I actually go to France, but a cold phone call to Paris to book a room is a nightmare. So with a little trepidation, I picked up the phone. And got the maid. Who was Spanish. When she came up with, "Parlez-vous en Espagnol, s’il vous plait Monsieur?" I realised that my booking was a bit of a lost cause. I think she spoke about as much French as I did. But not to worry, I got the Manageress later in the day and she was very helpful – and easy to understand, and I even got away with a little bit of conversation. All sorted!

Saturday morning, I headed off to Waterloo International train station. I gave Mike a quick ring from the station, since my keenness meant I was quite early. And just as well. Mike was still in bed! He’d got the departure time and the arrival times mixed up. I had the Eurostar tickets but he had the concert tickets! So our adventure nearly ended there and then if not for my call.

After a hurried pack, Mike arrived, in plenty of time. We jumped on the train and headed off, along with the Spunk Tour group, a Japanese company who unfortunately took the lowest translator’s quote when they decided on their logo.


After an uneventful 300km/h ride, we arrived at Gare Du Nord late afternoon. A quick twenty minute walk to Montmatre – which should have been more like five minutes, but I headed us off completely in the wrong direction at first – and we arrived at Hotel Sainte Pierre. Alas, in spite of our booking pour un chamber avec deux lits petits, the Manager did not have a twin room for us. A double room was the best he can do. I have a feeling that he doesn’t talk to his wife very much! But I was all prepared – after the potential for the Badlands hotel to be a double bed, I’d come with my sleeping bag all packed. In the end we got a twin room on the Monday night, but I’m glad I brought the sleeping bag!

This was Mike’s first time in Paris, so after we’d dumped our stuff, I took him on a walk through Montmatre – just about my favourite wee bit of Paris, and nice and close to the hotel. We went up to Sacre Coeur and looked at the view, then wended our way across and back down the hill through Abbesses, narrowly missing Pigalle…! Then we wandered back up into Abbesses for dinner. We found a nice looking restaurant about 8:00, that was completely full but a table freed up within a couple of minutes of us arriving. Which was lucky – within about 5 minutes, a queue built up that quite quickly was going out the door and into the street. Obviously a popular place! Since we were crammed in, we were almost sharing a table with a 4-place table (there was all of about a 2cm gap between us) so we chatted briefly to the people beside us – firstly a French family, and then another family speaking a strange, unrecognisable but vaguely Dutch/Flemish sounding tongue. So I asked them (in English) where they were from – Holland, perhaps? Turned out they were from Switzerland, and were speaking Swiss German. Now, I’d had a glass of wine by now, and of course I am completely fluent in German whenever I have had something to drink. But I couldn’t recognise a word these people were saying – or even hear anything vaguely German about their language. No, I did get one word – just one. When the meals arrived, one of them pointed to his steak and pronounced it Verrucht (mad!). Suissedeutsch is really different to German German, unlike Swiss French which is probably closer to French than US English is to British English.


After dinner we wandered around the café/bars that were around and about, and ended up in an allegedly Japanese bar (exactly in what way it was Japanese, other than the sign out front, we couldn’t work out at all. It was just like every other bar on the street). And we got chatting to the locals. Well, one local and lots of foreigners (though most of them were living in Paris, not tourists). Remember my blundering conversation with the Spanish maid? Well, worse was to come. I got talking (in French) to a Portuguese bloke, who spoke a little bit more French than the maid, but with the weirdest, strangest accent I’d ever heard. But I did okay I think. I figured out that he was working in Paris as a bus conductor, that he liked to go hunting Boar in the forest near his home town in Portugal, that you could use dogs to hunt but it was a little bit dangerous to do that sort of close-up hunting, and that he had a pit-bull in Paris that had already killed four people but was only dangerous if you went into its territory (I think – hope! – that our communication had broken down by this point!!). Then we got talking to a couple of Irish girls, one of them’s black French boyfriend Val, and Jim, a fellow tourist hanger-on from Boston. Now Jim was – and I’m really not exaggerating here – The World’s Most Stupid Man. He had no clue. None. He was one of these people that no matter how hard you try, you end up teasing. For example, at one stage he was leaning against a wall… for quite some time… until he ended up asking us to please free him because he’d managed to hook his trouser belt onto a door handle behind him, and couldn’t get free!! And it was all downhill from there.

So, after a night of fun, chatting and Jim, we headed back to our hotel at about 5am. Our Host let us back in – hmm, I think we woke him up!! Oops – and it was off to our cosy double bed. Lucky about the sleeping bag ay?

Sunday dawned a little too early and a little too soon. But we were in Paris! So we had to explore. Of course, one of the most important things you can do in Paris is to sit in a little café and drink espressos and eat croissants for breakfast, so the morning’s tourist activities were not too hard. But first we needed to move rooms, since they had a twin room for us for the Sunday night. And we got room 30! Which is the room that Angela and I end up staying in every single time we go to Paris. It’s got two single beds that are usually pushed together and made up as a double, but of course were separated out for Mike and me. I’m starting to suspect that they don’t actually have very many rooms, if we get the same one every time we stay.


 
So after a little coffee we headed into the city. We had to do all the touristy things – Arc de Triomphe, Champs Elysses, and the Louvre (the outside of it). (I’ve never yet made it into the Louvre – the place’s sheer scale always means that we feel that we don’t have the time to do it anything like justice. One day…). Interspersed with coffee and food. The French do coffee, particularly espresso, like nobody else, arguably even including the Italians and the Americans. It doesn’t strike me as particularly hard to buy the right beans and then force the water through them in the right way – but for some reason the French have it down pat, and nobody else comes close. Maybe it’s the ambience associated with the whole French coffee experience, but I don’t think so – my first post-Paris espresso in the Mayfair Pizza Express was a sore disappointment. They’re only worth drinking in France.


By now it was getting late. The walk down the Champs Elysses from Arc de Triomphe to the Louvre is surprisingly long. So we hopped onto the Metro and headed to the other ‘been there done that got the t-shirt’ place, the Eiffel Tower. I hadn’t been up the Eiffel tower for a few years, having been there and done that and got the t-shirt the first time we visited Paris. I was pleasantly surprised. Most phallic high things are generally of the ‘go to the top, stare aimlessly at the view, go back’ variety. But we bought the walking ticket (less queues and cheaper than the lift ticket) and the walk up the structure was a fascinating one. First of all, you’re in amongst the steel and iron – it feels like being a flea inside a watch or something like that. It’s all so big! And on every landing, they had a little plaque with a little ‘Eiffel tower’ story – little vignettes such as the first person to fly a balloon over the tower, first broadcasts from the tower (to Paris, to England, to America…), other famous aviators using the tower as a navigation point, crazy Frenchmen climbing it to hoist the tricoleur during the war, and so on. Then on the three main levels, there were all sorts of other things to see and do. And of course the view! The view is different from the three levels, and you have to stop and look at it each time. Plus because it was getting late, and it was winter, we timed it just right to get sun, dusk and finally night views. All in all we were there for the best part of a couple of hours.


Next on our itinerary was a Badlands warm-up party. We had an address ("café les autres") and a time (8pm) so we thought we’d bowl along and see what all the other Bruce Springsteen fans looked like. It was also in the southeast part of Paris which I’d never been to before (admittedly because there isn’t much there – but a chance to see non-touristy bits of a city are always good). But, alas, the party wasn’t up to much. First of all the venue was far too small – there were probably 200-300 people packed into a café/bar that would comfortably fit maybe 50, and spilling out into the street outside. There was a bloke on an acoustic guitar doing Bruce covers, and in a little intimate bar he would have been quite good – but not enough volume to play to 300 people, most of whom were in the street outside and couldn’t hear much of anything. We stood around for a little bit with the other knots of people awkwardly standing outside. It seemed more like a wake than a build-up to a once-in-a-lifetime concert! So pretty soon we decided to check out the local restaurants and go back to see if things were going to get better – either more lively, or if half the crowd got sick of it and left. We found a little Chinese restaurant that had a little chilled deli type arrangement of Chinese meals, and was spooning them onto plates and then microwaving them to order. That sounds pretty gross I know, but it was actually very good food. Bet’ya that’s what most of them do – just out back so you can’t see how well prepared and kept they are. And it’s got to be better than the other way of doing it, which is to keep the food just above blood temperature instead of chilled.

So after a pretty good Chinese, we wandered back. It was all the same. Only maybe the crowd outside looked a bit more awkward and a bit less lively. Nobody was smiling. So deciding discretion was the better part of valour, we headed home for an early night in preparation for the big one the next night.

Monday morning saw us up and away – we were moving out of the warm family atmosphere of Hotel Saint Pierre and into the corporate professionalism of Hotel Ibis Porte de Bercy. (Ibis hotels are the midrange chain of the Accor hotel group. You know the Formule 1 McHotels we keep going on about? Well, it goes Formule 1, then Etap, then Ibis, and finally Novotel). This hotel was way out near the outskirts of Paris, but only about a km from the stadium that Bruce was playing. Badlands had provided us a freebie Paris map, a map grid reference, an address and a nearest metro station. So off we headed. We got out of the metro station to find ourselves in amongst arterial roads, TGV train lines, and the main autoroute out of Paris and on to Lyon. Hmm. So we asked a friendly French local where we should go. He sent us off down a busy arterial road, and told us to turn left when we got to the second main intersection. Easy enough! So off we trotted. This road was a busy multi lane affair – think the London North Circular, or Mt Alexander Road in Melbourne, or the Old Hutt road in Wellington. (Or… er… no, they don’t have that many cars in Dunedin!). But it all went bad when we got to our intersection. It wasn’t really an intersection – it was a spaghetti of on ramps and off ramps and overbridges and underpasses, linking this arterial with the Lyon autoroute. The really annoying thing was that we could actually see the hotel by now, and there were even signs on the various offramps directing traffic to parking for it and its associated shopping mall. But on foot? Short of running across multi-lane ramps carrying open road speed traffic, and climbing over concrete barriers, and such like, we were out of luck. (Later, travelling by bus from the hotel, we found that we were literally about 20m from the hotel’s front door. So near and yet so far…)

So back we tracked. At this point our map’s limitations were becoming a bit more plain. Not only was it lacking in detail – the intersection we were trying to cut through was simply shown as a blob – but there was a big advertisement right over the precise point we wanted to get to. And since we were having to navigate around arterials, autoroutes and train lines, we needed something a bit better than that. But, we were trying to do two sides of a square to get where we were going, and we’d just done the bottom and right sides of the square. So we figured on heading back to the metro station, and doing the left and top sides of the square. This proved more successful. We found ourselves on the main street of a little absorbed village, with cheery signs pointing to where we wanted to go. However our map again let us down – we ended up overshooting the top side of the square (a bit tricky to judge where to go to wend through all the concrete). But we found a Novotel, so we wandered in to ask directions (since being a Novotel everybody would speak English, and being an Accor hotel they’d know where their sister hotels were). Surprisingly, nobody spoke English – I’m not being jingoistic by being surprised, more that if I was an English businessman paying a hundred quid a night to stay in a hotel, I’d expect English speaking staff for my money. (Or German, or Dutch businessman – English is the lingua franca in Europe, especially in the central or eastern European countries). But no matter, we got directions in the end and off we went. After wending our way through some side streets, and over a huge long foot bridge over about a hundred train tracks, we at last found ourselves at the hotel. What should have taken 15 minutes took us an hour and a half. Whew! A gentle suggestion to Badlands – next time, a better map and better directions would be appreciated. The grid reference we got for the hotel was just plain wrong which made things quite tricky!

Stunning Porte de Bercy - The panoramic views from our hotel window 
We were planning to drop our stuff and head back to Paris proper for another day, but by now we were quite tired and we’d lost a lot of time anyway – plus the walk and tube back would have meant we’d only get a couple of hours before it would be time to return. So that plan got shelved – time to check out the delights of Porte de Bercy instead. Porte de Bercy doesn’t feature much on tourist guides to Paris, so I should give you a little background. Nestled picturesquely beside the Seine, with fine views of the power station on the opposite bank, Porte de Bercy is well catered for transport links, with multi-storey carparks, elevated freeways, train shunting yards and cargo boat piers all close on hand. Porte de Bercy features a fine shopping mall, that would be very fine if it had a little more shops. But as long as you want to buy a CD or two, and eat steak or burgers, all your needs are accommodated. In short, Porte de Bercy is to Paris what Slough is to London (the Geelong of Melbourne, the Upper Hutt of Wellington, even the Mosgiel of Dunedin!) And to be fair, as industrial satellite towns go, Porte De Bercy was surprisingly pleasant. The streets were all new and well maintained with flower boxes and ivy, and it didn’t feel unsafe or dirty. French flair shows again, even amongst the warehouses and light industrial parks.

So off to lunch in the Porte De Bercy shopping mall. We had a choice of McDonalds, Q (the French equivalent), or a little chain steak restaurant type place. We both chose the set-meal of the Tartare de Boef with a starter, chips & salad, and dessert. This gave me the chance to learn a new, now very memorable phrase:

Excusez-moi, mon etranger stupide, vous connaissez que le Tartare est cru, oui?
You do know that you’re ordering the raw mince, don’t you?

Unfortunately at the time, I had no idea what our waiter was on about (he was speaking very quickly and with a funny accent – well, that’s my story!), so took the option of looking wise and comprehending, and smiling and nodding. Then I suddenly remembered what ‘cru’ meant, long after our order had been placed, but in time to go through the various emotions of trying to work out what we were going to do when this stuff turned up. Do a ‘Mr Bean’ and try and hide it in the pot plants? Not eat it and suffer the sneering of our waiter? Or just grin, carry on the sophisticated air that of course was what we were expecting, and tuck in with gusto? Well, we opted for the latter. When it arrived, we had the added bonus of a big raw egg yolk on top – so if the campylobacter didn’t get us then the salmonella would finish us off.

Turns out, if you kind of tried to forget what you were eating, it was very, very nice. The meat was absolutely top-notch, freshly ground and delicately flavoured, with seasonings and pickled things as extra flavourings. (All we needed was a grill and we’d have had the makings of a pretty good hamburger!) The tricky bit was forgetting that we were eating raw meat. Especially after I did the sums and figured out that the explosive vomiting should start just about in the second song of the night, this evening.

So having downed our Tartare de Boef, and now feeling psychosomatically a bit queasy, we wandered around the rest of the shopping mall for a couple of hours. To be honest there wasn’t much to see. A Virgin megastore that was more milli than mega, but had a few CDs and DVDs to look at … a couple of knick-knack type shops with stuff where price made up for taste … well, that was about it really.

Finally we went back to our room and surfed the TV for a bit while we got ready. As usual, the best thing on the 10 or so channels we had, was RTL the German channel. I already had this figured from past experience – in North London we had one French channel, TV5, and one German channel, RTL. One for me and one for Angela. But while RTL had a diet of dubbed Hollywood blockbusters, sports, talkshows, Grundy Soapies (who can forget that quality drama, "Guter Zeiter, Schlechter Zeiter"?!) and magazine current affairs type programmes, TV5 had a diet of elderly farmers driving tractors, earnest painters and potters talking about their contribution to culture, and dumpy presenters discussing the latest zero-rating French drama. So while the French channels had specials like “cheese makers’ weekly”, RTL had everybody’s favourite, "Der Bundes courte" – The Peoples’ Court. The German version. Trash TV at its finest! In tonight’s episode, a stepdaughter was trying to sue her (wicked) step-mother for providing an unsafe house (she nearly drowned in the swimming pool – something to do with a rake that I couldn’t follow but sounded pretty gory). Unfortunately my knowledge of German is quite specific and targeted, so the only other thing I could work out is that one of the defendants had been drinking heavily. Ah well, quality entertainment nonetheless.

So now it was time to go. We loaded ourselves onto the bus to the stadium – we had a bit of trouble figuring out the European method of paying your bus fare, until we remembered that the idea was that you just didn’t pay. After a short ride – going right through the junction we spent blundering around earlier in the day – we found ourselves at the stadium, quite early. What should we do for an hour or so? The answer immediately came up as we walked past a bar with Bruce’s latest album blaring at full volume from the PA. In we piled. This is what last night’s Badlands gig should have been like! After a couple of seize-cent-soixiante-quatres we wandered across the road and into the queue at 6pm. Now, this queue was moving slowly, but it was growing at a very fast pace – you actually had to walk quite quickly to join it, to keep pace with its tail! Once we were in it, people really started to pile onto the end of it. Lucky for us.

We got in about 40m from the stage, and managed to wiggle in to about 20m from the front, dead centre. And what an awesome gig it was. Why are we over this side of the world, riding smelly dirty tubes and paying NZD 12 for a sandwich and a coffee for lunch? This is why. There aren’t many places in the world you can have a weekend like this one.

Chatting to people around us, everybody was speaking English. Far as I could make out there were no French people at the gig at all. There were a sizeable number of people from North England and Scotland, but the majority would be Belgians, Dutch and Germans. All speaking English of course, even to each other (when in doubt about the other person’s nationality, just speak English – and if two Germans happened to be talking to each other, why switch back?). I don’t think that Bruce Springsteen is really to the French people’s taste. Other than Johnny Ideal and French Rap (which is probably France’s best contribution to the music scene) what have the French given the world? Nana Maskouri (even under her Luxembourg flag of convenience). The likes of Michael Boulton would probably get a fair crowd in France I reckon – not the likes of Bruce.

So buzzing after an awesome gig that went 10 minutes shy of three hours, we decided to walk back to our hotel (we figured we’d covered just about every road in the neighbourhood by then). We found a little café/bar on the way home, and grabbed a bite to eat and a couple of drinks. It was a nice wee bar with a very friendly proprietress, and some Tunisian types playing pool (the proprietress got a bit vocal when they sent the cue ball onto the concrete tile floor, which they did a fair number of times!). Still buzzing when we got back, we found the MotoGP on the TV, followed by a replay of another Bruce Springsteen concert! But eventually we had to admit defeat and go to sleep.

But not much sleep it was. After 3 hours sleep we were up at 5am for our train. We decided that blundering about looking for a metro train wasn’t the best approach so we splashed out on a taxi – a nice E-class Mercedes – back to Gare du Nord. A bite to eat at the station, another 2 hours sleep on the train, and I was groggily at work by 9:45am. I’d like to say that I had a productive day that day… but the pace had been too much for me and it was very difficult indeed to get through the day. (Me and Angela have done similar silly things before – the best one was probably a red-eye flight from New York, just in time to get the Tube from Heathrow straight into work the next morning) but this was A Night Without Sleep Too Far I think. Straight after work I was home, crawling into my bed, and slept about 14 hours.

This story has a post-script though. Bruce played Wembley Arena two weeks later, when Angela was back in London. So me, Angela, Mike and Mei all showed up there on the offchance we could get tickets, or to listen outside in the rain and the cold if not. We didn’t fancy our chances. Tickets had been trading on the internet for minimum £200, and up to £1000. There wasn’t any way there’d be any around the venue. We all got there late, too, because the tubes and trains were broken; and the weather was awful which meant a cold night listening to a faint bit of bass booming through the ground was going to be a pretty miserable one. But… the scalpers where there and either they’d overestimated demand, or everybody had decided like us that it was a hopeless task and stayed away. Tickets with a cover price of £45 + booking fee were going for £75, a pretty reasonable price if you ask me. So in we went for another awesome event. The irony is, if we’d have known we’d get to Wembley so easily, we probably wouldn’t have bothered getting ourselves to Paris. So everything worked out very well indeed.
  

Links

Badlands
Candy's Room - Set lists, pictures and links to more pictures
The official Bruce Springsteen tour site
All my pictures (index)

Friday, August 9, 2002

The London summer with pregnancy, Tennis and Royalty (from the Archives)

Mike and I are both keeping very well, although I did get very sick Monday through to Tuesday this week.  I have recovered now.  Mike thinks it was 'The Vomiting Bug' which has been going around here.  My symptoms did seem to corroborate that!

Mike has redefined my size recently as 'barrel'.  Not very complimentary I would say!  But, he has felt the baby kick and was very pleased!  I feel it nearly every day at the moment, but still very lightly.  The last scan (10 days back) showed everything going well.  Measurements all seem to be on the median line.

I have been to Mothercare already, and it is a good store.  Do they have it in NZ too?

We had the first baby scan photo at 13 weeks.  I have since had the 20 week scan and got a photo from that too. There is just one baby on the scans - unless the other one is very good at hide and seek!  We don't want to know the sex until it pops out, but I haven't detected any 'dangly bits' on any scan so far.  Mind you, I can hardly tell hands and feet, so how I would recognise anything else is stretching things somewhat!

Mike is working as a normal contractor again now, after being in a startup for about a year.  He seems very happy with his new job.  He comes home happier every evening now.  And I was speaking to our friend's partner, who also left the company when Mike did, and she said the same about him.  And Mike's happiness is what counts the most anyway.

I have finished my study, but I suspect I should be starting some more to keep any boredom away.  I may do some database work, as I only have one exam that covers that, and it doesn't date as fast as other IT skills.

I went to Wimbledon and I'm holding out hopes for a visit to the French Open next year, just to round things off.  A trip to Lords is also something I want to see.


Mike and I went down to Buckingham Palace for the Tuesday of the Jubilee long weekend.  We were in a crowd of 1,000,000 other people!  It was worth it just for that experience!



Sunday, July 14, 2002

Sachsenring 2002


We were delayed taking off from Heathrow for our annual German Motorcycle Grand Prix trip by about an hour. As we were due to get in late originally, Mike had visions of us sleeping under the car rental counter waiting for it to open the next morning. He probably thought this, as Germany is the scene for our many unusual sleeping locations in the past. Another one this trip would not be out of the ordinary. So far we have had cornfields, windmills, Hilton car parks - to name the first that spring to mind.

One good thing about flying from Britain to Germany is the “alien” queue is very short, as most people are travelling on European passports of some description. So we hurtled through immigration. I stayed to collect the luggage as Mike ran to the rental car counter to try and find it. Turns out our counter was the only one still open - especially for us. Mike had already primed the Opel station wagon and we shoved in the bag, yelled out a “Danke Schoen” to the sleepy man at the counter, took in a toilet stop and disappeared onto the Berlin ring road.

Mike was feeling cocky, and didn't wait for me to:
1) Learn how to operate the GPS
2) Learn how to defog the windscreen
3) Find a map, that may have solved both problems above (navigation aid and useful for waving at windscreen if desperate enough)

… and he promptly hurtled out of the airport into the dead traffic that was Berlin on a Friday night around 12am.

Of course, Mike's bold moves driving are often the portent to him coming down to earth rather fast. People familiar with Mike's now legendary 'I scoff at judder bars' statement as he drove around Kelburn in Wellington with two bicycles on the cycle rack will know that. The second judder bar encountered by the mighty Mirage that day in Kelburn almost threw both bikes off the back. Mike looked appropriately sheepish as he hefted the bikes back on the rack.

So, I was a little bit worried that 'We'll find the right autobahn without any maps or any idea at all' was a bit too similar. His bold navigation stance could have signified the end of a quick, easy drive to the comfortable bed in the ‘Formula One’ hotel, 180 kms down the autobahn. But, on this occasion, he was right. It was easy to follow the signs to Leipzig and end up on the right road. Let's hope the rush of success doesn't go to his head, and the memory of the result of scoffing at judder bars starts to dim. That would be a bad thing.

Meanwhile, I now had time to contemplate the complicated computer that controlled the GPS, the radio and the ventilation. Mike suggested the Owners manual, and can I just say that it made no difference whether I read the English or the German instructions. Nothing made any sense. Opel have a lot to learn about making a system that is intuitive and easy to use. When the passenger struggles to work the beast, how is the driver supposed to cope alone? Mike eventually found the steering wheel controls, but they needed too much of an eye on the system’s little TV screen to be entirely happy about even changing radio stations while driving. Also the screen was positioned so close to the steering wheel that you couldn’t see the screen, and keep both hands on the steering wheel at the same time. We happily rate the Mercedes and BMW systems over this Opel version.

Having a degree in computer science, it was only about 1.5 hours worth of fiddling to eventually hit upon the vague idea Opel engineers must have had in mind when the designed the console, and soon we had better music than ABBA on the radio. Actually, even when I found the ABBA station, I could only make it play for 10 seconds before it would switch itself off. And I could only get it back by manually selecting the station again. After 1 minute of interrupted 'Fernando' (which some might say is the only way to listen to that song) I finally hit upon the menu option that selected a station permanently. I selected ‘Rock Music’ as our preferred category (or I think I did, as although I had switched GPS woman into English, all the text on the screen was still German) and we found some decent music to drive by.

But, by then we were almost at the Formula 1. Mike swiped his credit card – a lot of times, since the card reader in all Formula 1’s is a bit hit and miss, but with eventual success – and we had a room for the night (1:30am meant it wouldn't be a long night) plus breakfast for 28 Euro. Not bad.

Up at 8:30 for some breakfast. The woman in the breakfast room switched to English immediately (how do they know?) and when I told her the room number said that we were the automatic people (that is, the ones mad enough to turn up at 1:30am without a reservation, and swipe and hope!). I could only agree. Yummy bread rolls (and passable jam - left the marmite at home) and coffee later, Mike was awake and we packed and left.

Arriving at the campsite about 1 more hour down the track, we found to our immense pleasure that the camping was free this year. This was a pretty good discount from the 80 Deutschmarks (about 80 kiwi dollars) it cost to pitch the tent last year. We were very pleased. And besides, Mike had decided that we shouldn't bother with the tent and sleep in the back of the rental car - being a station wagon.


We sorted out a daypack for the day and wandered off to the circuit. We had to pass through the tent city on the way to the circuit. It is always fun to look at what people are doing to their tent sites. One year we saw picket fences and pot plants. Another year there was a site with rousing East German socialist music blaring out of the speakers quite early in the morning. And this year, one tent site had a blow up doll hanging about 30m in the air from 5 big helium balloons. It was quite popular as every so often she would be hauled down and then released again. Fortunately we couldn't see what was happening at ground level from our particular vantage point. I was loath to get any closer.

Now, before we left London I had memorised the German for words such as 'invalid', and 'fake' and 'You're not coming in here with those tickets'. Why? Because the ADAC Sachsenring website had a new online ticketing system where you actually printed out your own tickets after buying them online. And the page was all in German so I could only hope I was telling Mike the right thing. They looked okay, but I still wasn't entirely convinced. However, looking around as we approached the turnstiles I could see lots of people clutching similar printouts to ours. And what's more, the turnstiles had signs over the top of them saying 'E tickets hier'. Excellent. Our tickets were scanned and in we went.

The weather had been overcast the night before, and Mike had printed out the 4 day forecast for Leipzig in London, which indicated rain for the next few days. So, we dressed warmly and carried jackets and umbrellas, prepared for the deluge. As soon as we were inside the circuit we realised the error in trusting the weather forecast on The BBC Weather Site. It was hot and sunny. Continental summer hot! We made our hot way to the grandstand at the other end of the circuit, where we had tickets for the weekend.
Our tickets were for Grandstand Number 12, so Mike asked a bratwurst seller if the grandstand next to him was 'Tribune twolf' (Dinglish if ever I've heard it – something between ‘twelve’, the English, and ‘zwölf’, the German). The sausage seller said yes, so we came in and showed the usher our ticket, and they waved us to a few rows in front. Mike and I were mystified as to how anyone could find their seats when the row number did not match the seat number on the ticket. Our row was 16, and our seats 437, and 438. But, those seats were in row 12. It didn't make sense.


But, we sat down and enjoyed a hot day's qualifying. We chatted to our neighbours - to our right were Jurgen and Lars (possibly father and son) and in front the 'Binocular man' and his son. He lent us his binoculars to watch some of the action. Especially when a roller-blader came off on a steep downhill path opposite us and had an awful spill. Last we saw of him was being driven off in one of the on-course ambulances.

We both got a bit of sun. Mike got a lot - because he didn't slip, slop, slap - well - he did slip on a shirt but that was about it. His hat wasn't in the daypack and he scoffed at the sunscreen (remember those Judder Bars, Mike!). Now that we're back in London we both look quite well compared to the pasty white locals – and this is in the middle of an okay English summer. I was able to pull up my flared jeans and enjoy relief from the heat with my hat to keep off the baking sun. Mike just cooked (and grumbled about me misreading the weather) and we could not find his cap in the bag under the jackets or umbrella. The qualifying was good fun. We lived on German bread and weisswurst (well, I did anyway) all day. A great diet (for three days it was ok).

Being so hot we needed a lot of water. Trouble is, most of the water in Germany has fizz added. Mike could only get fizzy water for us to drink, and we were so thirsty that we had no choice. Mike quite liked it by the end. I still suffered it. The bartender told Mike it was ‘Power water’. Ok. Reminded me of a few years back in Munich when we were buying der Bus. We bought six 1.5 litre bottles of water for camping in der Bus, only to find that they were sparkling water bottles. I can tell you that toothpaste and fizzy water do not make a great combination. Mike and I were frothing at the mouth every night and morning!

That evening Mike said we should stroll into town to eat. The closest village is Hohenstein-Ernstthal and is quite small. We'd never been in there on foot so it was time to explore. It was a pity we had no idea where to go (Mike wanted to find the Alt Markt area as there was supposed to be a party on) as I was soon getting tired and finding the industrial area beside the railway lacking in inspiration.

Mike was still determined and asked a friendly German policeman where the middle of town was. He replied I was not far and waved behind us somewhere. His colleagues got the giggles – I wasn’t sure why. Perhaps his German accent was funny?

But, his directions were fine and Mike found an ATM to get some cash and a very nice café where I had a lovely salad and Mike had some ‘Putenbrust’ (like chicken but smaller than a turkey). After a yummy meal, that cost only 22 Euro (we like Euros – so much cheaper than pounds and bearing no resemblance to an Aussie or Kiwi dollar so we have no idea – the DM was nearly a kiwi dollar in value so everything smarted in Germany before) we found a party in the Altmarkt and a Kylie impersonator having difficulty getting something out of her head. She got a great round of applause and said she’d be back after The Clogs. We left and retired to the comfort of the car for some sleep!

This town, and the whole area where the GP is held is changing every year we go. The GP was running very smoothly and getting bigger every year. House prices around seem to be on the increase too. Lots more English being spoken too (although that is a shame for me, as I like to practise German a bit).

I had a fitful sleep, unlike Mike who was snoring 10 minutes after we switched the light off. I had some pleasure when he woke up at times during the night to ask me why I wasn’t sleeping well. But, he went right back to sleep each time. I must have had some sleep, as I wasn’t too bad the next morning. Up at 6am and pestering Mike to get up too.

It was another beautiful day, and after Mike complaining about having to carry umbrellas, jackets and jerseys yesterday, I left everything warm at the car. Guess you know what was in store for us, despite our conversation that went something like ‘Continental weather patterns are so much more stable, so it’s likely to remain hot and dry today’. Yeah, right.

We wandered round to our grandstand and had breakfast before taking our seats for the warm up laps. About now Mike started browsing the program he bought yesterday. Looking at the circuit map I realised it was highly likely that this was in fact grandstand T13 and not our ticketed T12. Doh!

As the races loomed ever closer, the grandstand started to fill. We had merely fluked the only two seats no one wanted as places around us started to fill. Finally, amidst a string of German numbers uttered by someone at the end of our row, we figured out one of our seats was being claimed. Time for our quick disappearing routine. We had to shift grandstands just before the 125 race kicked off. Oops. Stupid tourists - can't read their tickets right. We were slightly wrong last year too, so we're not doing too well on the ticket-reading front. Maybe there's an inherent German technique taught from birth that allows the natives to intuitively discern grandstands from each other despite having no markings that appear to the naked (obviously untrained) eye. And why couldn’t the sausage seller understand Mike’s German?

Funny thing was, when we got to our place in T12 there was hardly anyone around us. We were in a space to ourselves.

The racing was excellent and we had a good view of a fast section of track with a fantastic curve. Valentino Rossi loves passing there and we were treated to some exciting passing during the motogp race. Perhaps T12 wasn’t quite as good a view as T13, but it wasn’t bad. We had a big screen to watch as well, so we saw the critical moments that happened away from our section of track (such as Barros taking Jacque out three laps from the end when they were leading – ouch!).

The 250cc race was cut short, just as Melandri fell off because at that moment the heavens decided to open. As people rushed away or fished out jackets, Mike and I looked helplessly at each other. The raindrops were huge, and any sort of prolonged exposure to such rain and we would be soaked very quickly. Uh oh. But, as the break between the races came, the weather improved and we were soon dry again and the 500cc race ran without rain interruption.

End of the racing, and Mike and I decided to leave with a lot of other people and walk back to the car. It took quite a while, as we were almost exactly opposite the campsite in our section of circuit. So, when we got back to the car it was a two-hour queue to get out of the car park.

Eventually I headed Mike onto an A road, hoping to avoid any ‘Staus’ (German traffic jams, which the autobahns seem plagued with) and we meandered north in a vague Berlin direction. We were hoping to get to Senftenburg where we had stayed at a lake last year in a very nice hotel. But, with a stop for a dinner along the way it was dark by the time we arrived. And do you think it would be easy to find a lake next to a wee town in country Germany? No! Turns out we almost circumnavigated the lake before Mike got sick of looking. So, we found a quiet car park away from any traffic and fell asleep in the back of the car once more.

Next morning, Mike woke up and drove to find the elusive hotel and lake, while I rolled around in the back cocooned in my sleeping bag. It was very easy to get there in the light of day – we’d been on the right road but had overshot the side street that the hotel was on. Mike’s plan was to have a morning swim to invigorate ourselves, and to placate me as I was hoping for a shower by this stage – two days sleeping in a car isn’t conducive to spending time in a plane cooped up with an unfortunate passenger that happened to be allocated the seat next to some smelly tourists. But, as we walked over to the lake shore (me in my pyjama short bottoms and T-shirt and Mike in his shorts and T-shirt) and felt the strong, cold breeze blowing off the lake, and looked at the murky, unsettled lake, we hastily decided to hurtle back to the car, get dressed and continue our drive towards Berlin. Our sympathies for any fellow passengers on the flight later that day evaporated with the wind that also sucked any warmth from our unwashed bodies! I was glad I had packed the ‘Wet Ones’ by this stage!

The rain fairly pelted down during the day, but there were some brighter moments. It had stopped raining by the time we drove into Gubin, a town on the border of Germany and Poland. We wanted to pop over to Poland just to say we’d been there, given we were so close. I had my light trousers on with a fibre pile vest, as it was a little cold. I asked Mike if I looked silly in this, and he just laughed! Which I took to mean an emphatic ‘Yes’. So I changed into my jeans, rolling around in the back seat for the third time that day (yes, I was muttering a bit while I did so!).

Mike and I strolled up to the border crossing, which neatly divided this town into two parts (with the map showing the Polish side to be bigger). Well, the guards at customs thought it was mighty odd that two New Zealanders wanted to cross at this border. They asked us why we wanted to go to Poland and I said we wanted to have a coffee (lucky I didn’t mention that I also wanted a) the toilet and b) a shower ) and that just confirmed their opinion that we were slightly mad. They took our passports to the Polish office (does that mean our passports have been to Poland???) and then told us New Zealanders needed a visa in advance, but that Germans could come and go as they liked. Oh well. We could see Poland clearly. Mike wanted to video, but I was worried about videoing border crossings after we’d been turned away. My German doesn’t run to ‘Please don’t confiscate our holiday video footage!’

So, back to the car (after finding the toilets) and on the road to Berlin again. Not following Reich Highway 1 as the Russians did in 1945 but a parallel road, nevertheless. Mike has just read about the fall of Berlin and the Russian advance, so he was clued up on the events surrounding that campaign. We drive through some picturesque parts of Germany, before arriving at Berlin airport in plenty of time. Plenty of time for a shower! Hooray!

Mike stocked up on Mozart Balls (chocolate we discovered during the Christmas ski holiday to Austria and subsequently found were sold all over Germany) and we flew back to London after another successful German motorcycle race weekend.

Saturday, July 6, 2002

Wimbledon

That time had come around again. After such a successful time last year, I was determined to visit Wimbledon again this year. And drag Mike along too.
Week one, and Wednesday morning was absolutely gorgeous here in London. Mike and I postponed a visit to some friends with a new young child and planned to head out around 4pm and try our luck in The Queue. Such a beautiful day was simply too hard to pass up.

By the time we got into the end of the queue, it was about 4:55pm and even after only 15 minutes, about another 50m of queue had formed behind us. The queue was slightly shorter than the two queues had joined the previous year after work. I guess I was about 20 minutes earlier than last year. We were prepared for hours of boredom in the queue (followed by the distinct possibility of not getting in due to the exceptional weather) – armed with newspapers, magazines, water and ham and cheese croissants from the best French bakery this side of the channel.

However, Mike was surprised by the speed of the queue and 1 hours and five minutes after joining the end of the queue, we were paying our 8-pound general admission fee and getting through the gates at SW19.

I showed Mike the souvenir shop (was thinking about more towels – I bought two last year) then we headed off to court 18 where I hoped Andy Roddick was still playing. But, he had cleaned up his opponent in straight sets (unbeknownst to us) and we ended up waiting for a British ladies doubles match to start. We had a good view of another ladies doubles match on court 17 so we watched that. Eventually the crowd dispersed from court 18 when it became apparent that the match wasn’t going to happen that night.

So, Mike and I headed off to an outside court where a men’s doubles match was just starting between an Aussie pair (Eagle and Stolle) and another pair I had never heard of at all. The Aussies were doing quite well, and were amused by the chants of ‘Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, Oi, Oi, Oi’ that went on from time to time. There was also a mad older man that would hold up an Aussie flag after one game and yell ‘Aussie’ and the next time it would be a Dutch flag and he’d yell something of uncertain origins. It didn’t help that we didn’t know who the Aussies were facing (Rogier Wassen [Netherlands] and Robert Kendrick [USA] - whoever they were).

I think Mike appreciated the tennis a bit more live than the hours I watch on TV. And the weather and atmosphere at Wimbledon more than made it a fantastic evening. We wandered back (via the souvenir shop where Mike bought me a dressing gown) to the tube station and we got home by 10:35pm. Brixton was very lively when we hopped off the tube and waited for a bus. We jammed ourselves onto a bus and headed home up the hill.