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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  3. We’re on our way to England tonight for three weeks.
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

We’re on our way to England tonight for three weeks.

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    wrote last edited by
    #1

    We’re on our way to England tonight for three weeks. Not gonna burden you with grumbling about how we got to the gate. Blighty here we come…

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    • ? Guest

      We’re on our way to England tonight for three weeks. Not gonna burden you with grumbling about how we got to the gate. Blighty here we come…

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      Blighty - Wikipedia

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      #2

      After a more or less sleepless night we arrived at Heathrow. Getting through Passport Control was a breeze (due to biometrics😬) but the airport is so vast that getting to the train station took longer than the express train from Heathrow to central London.

      The nice thing about the train was that it dropped us in Paddington Station, just a ten minute walk from our hotel.

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      • ? Guest

        After a more or less sleepless night we arrived at Heathrow. Getting through Passport Control was a breeze (due to biometrics😬) but the airport is so vast that getting to the train station took longer than the express train from Heathrow to central London.

        The nice thing about the train was that it dropped us in Paddington Station, just a ten minute walk from our hotel.

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        #3

        Our hotel may be the least swanky option in quite a swanky neighborhood just north of Hyde Park. The room is very small, but it has everything we need, and the people who run the place are sweet.

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        • ? Guest

          Our hotel may be the least swanky option in quite a swanky neighborhood just north of Hyde Park. The room is very small, but it has everything we need, and the people who run the place are sweet.

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          #4

          On our first day walking around in London, it was hard enough getting used to cars coming at us from the “wrong” side. But on top of that, English drivers have a disorienting habit of parking facing both ways. This is something you never see in supposedly chaotic NYC.

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            On our first day walking around in London, it was hard enough getting used to cars coming at us from the “wrong” side. But on top of that, English drivers have a disorienting habit of parking facing both ways. This is something you never see in supposedly chaotic NYC.

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            #5

            It doesn’t matter if you’re circling the drain as long as you maintain an indomitable stiff-upper-lip attitude.

            Note: this isn’t intended as a comment on post-imperial, post-Brexit Britain — it would hardly be appropriate for a Trump era USAian to get haughty that way.

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            • ? Guest

              It doesn’t matter if you’re circling the drain as long as you maintain an indomitable stiff-upper-lip attitude.

              Note: this isn’t intended as a comment on post-imperial, post-Brexit Britain — it would hardly be appropriate for a Trump era USAian to get haughty that way.

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              #6

              Bayswater Rd, London: I’m grateful that London has taken responsibility for helping me, a humble tourist, live to see another day.

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                Bayswater Rd, London: I’m grateful that London has taken responsibility for helping me, a humble tourist, live to see another day.

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                #7

                Kensington Gardens, London: Sorry to say, London has outclassed NYC beyond dispute on one dimension: a Rolls Royce ice cream truck.

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                • ? Guest

                  Kensington Gardens, London: Sorry to say, London has outclassed NYC beyond dispute on one dimension: a Rolls Royce ice cream truck.

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                  #8

                  London, north bank of the Thames: From a distance you see this gilded monument on an impossibly high plinth—compare the humans at the bottom of the photo for scale—and you assume it was erected to celebrate some military triumph.

                  Draw closer so you can read the inscription? Nope, it commemorates the 17th century fire that wiped out most of London. I don’t think there’s anything like this in Chicago or San Francisco. I just don’t know what to make of this.

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                  • ? Guest

                    London, north bank of the Thames: From a distance you see this gilded monument on an impossibly high plinth—compare the humans at the bottom of the photo for scale—and you assume it was erected to celebrate some military triumph.

                    Draw closer so you can read the inscription? Nope, it commemorates the 17th century fire that wiped out most of London. I don’t think there’s anything like this in Chicago or San Francisco. I just don’t know what to make of this.

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                    #9

                    We spent the day mostly rambling around London’s parks with our tea friend K.

                    We took an hour or two for a gongfu session at Mei Leaf in Camden Town. K went low and slow with a green from Habian County in Sichuan: low temperature, slow drip of hot water into the gaiwan, slow decanting. The first steep had a crazy thickness of texture, almost like matcha.

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                    Babelcarp

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                    @tea

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                    • ? Guest

                      We spent the day mostly rambling around London’s parks with our tea friend K.

                      We took an hour or two for a gongfu session at Mei Leaf in Camden Town. K went low and slow with a green from Habian County in Sichuan: low temperature, slow drip of hot water into the gaiwan, slow decanting. The first steep had a crazy thickness of texture, almost like matcha.

                      Link Preview Image
                      Babelcarp

                      favicon

                      (babelcarp.org)

                      @tea

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      > We flew overnight. I basically didn’t sleep a wink, but the next day I was as good as new.

                      Jetlaggadocio

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                      • ? Guest

                        > We flew overnight. I basically didn’t sleep a wink, but the next day I was as good as new.

                        Jetlaggadocio

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        London, south bank of the Thames: when someone says something like “well, you won’t be seeing him for awhile—they threw him in the clink”, now I know where the expression comes from.

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                          London, south bank of the Thames: when someone says something like “well, you won’t be seeing him for awhile—they threw him in the clink”, now I know where the expression comes from.

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                          #12

                          The wastebaskets in London’s royal parks are so swanky, I’m not sure my litter is worthy of them.

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                            The wastebaskets in London’s royal parks are so swanky, I’m not sure my litter is worthy of them.

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                            #13

                            London’s Tube vs. NYC’s subway (provisional):

                            Tube’s more expensive.

                            Subway, unlike Tube, runs all night.

                            Tube has plush seats vs. subway’s hard plastic.

                            The Tube map doesn’t give you enough information to know how many places you can get to directly from a given station. Instead, it shows you what line(s) your station is on. But “line” in London isn’t as granular as in NYC; it’s more like, “is this station on the IRT, BMT or IND” (if your NYC subway memory goes back far enough.) That is to say, the Tube is confusing in a way that NYC (and German transit systems too) aren’t.

                            When an NYC subway line goes out of service they run free shuttle buses shadowing its route. When a Tube line goes down, you need to figure out how to get where you’re going using regular buses.

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                            • ? Guest

                              London’s Tube vs. NYC’s subway (provisional):

                              Tube’s more expensive.

                              Subway, unlike Tube, runs all night.

                              Tube has plush seats vs. subway’s hard plastic.

                              The Tube map doesn’t give you enough information to know how many places you can get to directly from a given station. Instead, it shows you what line(s) your station is on. But “line” in London isn’t as granular as in NYC; it’s more like, “is this station on the IRT, BMT or IND” (if your NYC subway memory goes back far enough.) That is to say, the Tube is confusing in a way that NYC (and German transit systems too) aren’t.

                              When an NYC subway line goes out of service they run free shuttle buses shadowing its route. When a Tube line goes down, you need to figure out how to get where you’re going using regular buses.

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                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              If you’re an ordinary American and you learn that English people say “sort it” to mean “take care of it”, you say to yourself, “oh, that’s interesting.”

                              But if you’re a USAian who’s taken a CS fundamental algorithms course, at the moment you find this out, your mind temporarily disengages from the external world entirely.

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                              • ? Guest

                                If you’re an ordinary American and you learn that English people say “sort it” to mean “take care of it”, you say to yourself, “oh, that’s interesting.”

                                But if you’re a USAian who’s taken a CS fundamental algorithms course, at the moment you find this out, your mind temporarily disengages from the external world entirely.

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                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                Thus far, my favorite Tube station name is Barking.

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                                  Thus far, my favorite Tube station name is Barking.

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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  This morning we set out for Kew Gardens, the great London arboretum, to use an inadequate term: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kew_Gardens

                                  It was to have been a 3-hop Tube journey, but when we got to Notting Hill Gate, the first transfer point, we learned that the lines for the rest of the way were inoperable till 11 AM.

                                  So: bus to Hammersmith, then another to Kew, a much slower journey. On the ride to Hammersmith, a voluble guy from Marseille sat down next to us and undertook to tell us his life story. He’s lived in England with his partner for 6 years, most of which time he’s been studying to become a London cop. And he’s finally achieved his goal! No matter he doesn’t have a British and does have an extremely thick accent.

                                  Anyway, now we can deal with London buses too.

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                                  • ? Guest

                                    This morning we set out for Kew Gardens, the great London arboretum, to use an inadequate term: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kew_Gardens

                                    It was to have been a 3-hop Tube journey, but when we got to Notting Hill Gate, the first transfer point, we learned that the lines for the rest of the way were inoperable till 11 AM.

                                    So: bus to Hammersmith, then another to Kew, a much slower journey. On the ride to Hammersmith, a voluble guy from Marseille sat down next to us and undertook to tell us his life story. He’s lived in England with his partner for 6 years, most of which time he’s been studying to become a London cop. And he’s finally achieved his goal! No matter he doesn’t have a British and does have an extremely thick accent.

                                    Anyway, now we can deal with London buses too.

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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    On a warm late spring day, it’s paradise to wander through the meadows and woods, and just hang out on the grass or a bench when you feel like it. There are many, and varied, huge old trees. And you certainly wouldn’t want to neglect the flowerbeds, not with roses in bloom.

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                                      On a warm late spring day, it’s paradise to wander through the meadows and woods, and just hang out on the grass or a bench when you feel like it. There are many, and varied, huge old trees. And you certainly wouldn’t want to neglect the flowerbeds, not with roses in bloom.

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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      Kew has a number of huge glass houses hosting plants from around the world that aren’t especially fond of English weather.

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                                        Kew has a number of huge glass houses hosting plants from around the world that aren’t especially fond of English weather.

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                                        #19

                                        But for me there was one disappointment in our visit to Kew Gardens. I was hoping to find some trace of Robert Fortune, the buccaneering botanist who got away with massive industrial espionage against the Chinese tea industry in the mid 19th century, bringing many of the spoils back to Kew:

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                                        Robert Fortune - Wikipedia

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                                        Apparently ordinary visitors could look at his stuff in the Economic Botany collection decades ago, but it isn’t open to the public anymore:

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                                        Rediscovering 174 years of Tea - Tea Journey

                                        The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew houses a remarkable cache of tea leaves and tea material culture collected over the past 174 years.

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                                        Tea Journey (teajourney.pub)

                                        @tea

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                                        • ? Guest

                                          But for me there was one disappointment in our visit to Kew Gardens. I was hoping to find some trace of Robert Fortune, the buccaneering botanist who got away with massive industrial espionage against the Chinese tea industry in the mid 19th century, bringing many of the spoils back to Kew:

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          Robert Fortune - Wikipedia

                                          favicon

                                          (en.m.wikipedia.org)

                                          Apparently ordinary visitors could look at his stuff in the Economic Botany collection decades ago, but it isn’t open to the public anymore:

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          Rediscovering 174 years of Tea - Tea Journey

                                          The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew houses a remarkable cache of tea leaves and tea material culture collected over the past 174 years.

                                          favicon

                                          Tea Journey (teajourney.pub)

                                          @tea

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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          I don’t think I could prove that English gallows humor is different in some specific way from, say, the German or Jewish varieties, but I like it a lot.

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