Cold up there

30 11 2009

Tonight I go back to work. 1400km North of here, in Antwerp. Today there are blue skies and 18°C in Barcelona, 8°C in Antwerp. Rain expected this week. This is far more mild than the -30°C they see in Canada or the -10°C Jurg and Rahel signed up for this winter. Crazy, the lot of them. So I’ll not complain.

I’ll do that in a few days.





Wise

21 11 2009

So now I am wise. Or I was. Or I am was. At any rate, the annoying teeth are gone.

I was quite stressed going into the surgery, I don’t like pain delivered via scalpel. But the operation (in the dentists chair) was brilliant. You see: I can’t remember any of it. The anaesthetist had me under “conscious sedation”, which apparently means I was conscious for the whole thing, responded to simple instructions, but I don’t remember a single thing. As soon as I woke I had a brief memory of some part of the procedure, but now I can’t remember a thing (only that I remember remembering something – if that makes any sense).

As my father said: Oh, so why do you need the anaesthetist? That sounds pretty normal to me.

Well. Yes, I guess it does really. Sometimes I keep vague fragments of memory though. At least for a few hours.

And thank goodness Kinda, my flat mate, came to collect me from the surgery. She ran out and bought half the pharmacy that the surgeon requested, and bundled me into a cab. I was fully awake, but clearly not too steady on my feet. 12 hours later and the story is the same.

Awake that is. In my drug induced haze I took all the tablets presented to me.
An antibiotic (A Spanish version – good thing these things are almost in Latin). Fair enough.
Some Paracetamol/blah blah hidrochoruro. Guess that’s for pain. Sounds strong. Lonts of warning labels. Better get that into me!
A huge box of Ibuprofeno – that’ll last the rest of my life.
Various mouth-wash and toothpastey things for the next few days.
And something called Zamene. I had to ask the internets for help. Apparently it’s an immuno suppressent. Why? Is my immune system going to reject the absence of teeth? Or did he put something else in there? I guess it is to reduce the swelling, but I kind of like my immune system, and until I get cancer I’d prefer it continued operating.
Anyway, one of the listed side effects is insomnia.

Yep. That parts correct. It’s now 10am, and despite being promised a good nights sleep by the anaesthetist, didn’t sleep a wink last night. Plus I haven’t slept much the last few days working and being stressed about how horrible this was going to be, and I’m not tired. I guess it’ll hit eventually.

Anytime now would be good.

Stupid drugs. I knew they wouldn’t help (but don’t take away the pain killers just yet).





M+M

16 11 2009
maurice+miranda

Maurice + Miranda and the front/side/corner/dingsbumbs of their (huge!) house. plenty of room for the Australian. And some sheep

Well, that was fun. 24 hours with Maurice and Miranda. Talking South America, talking bikes, talking bike trips, talking places to live, talking religion, talking politics, talking, talking, talking. Lucky they speak such good English. We could also talk while they showed me around where they live. Pretty views and lots of mud. Need boots next time.

I can’t tell you all of what we talked about. That’s a secret. An Iceland secret. But this has been talked about for 10 years apparently… It may also be a Norwegian secret. That could also be fun.

M+S virgin mary

Kneel Maurice! you can do it!

Good, honest people. I like them. Hope to see them again some day. I’ll try harder to get Maurice to kneel in front of his own statue of the Virgin Mary.





No more fingers

16 11 2009

That’s it. I will soon have to take off my shoes to count all these kids. I am full on one hand, and well into the second.

Steve + Kim gave birth to Thomas in September (my word, that is almost 2 months ago already!)
And Stu and Bec have just had Caitlin.

Actually the women gave birth, and the men stood around doing whatever it is that men do on these occasions (although Bec hardly gave Stu time to turn on the TV!). I’m going to have to get ready to cuddle lots of kids over Christmas! Before at least one of them zips off to Japan. Starting the frequent flyer account early.





Photos

12 11 2009

Stuck on a train, 20 minutes from my destination. Some problem on the track. Whatever.

2007_11_12 12_47_24

Featureless Altiplano expanse, Somewhere, Bolivia.

I have roughly 9000 photos from South America (not all mine, but some of me). I thought I should take out a hundred or so that I can show people, especially those in Aus. Problem is, I can’t remove very many… Almost all still remind me of something. Even if it is featureless expanse, it’s featureless expanse at 3000m, and I remember how it was hard to breathe. And do cartwheels on the road.

Warning: If you ask about the trip, be prepared for 30seconds * 9000photos ~ 75hours of listening to me talk about how great I am. I really have to make a smaller set…





Lucky

12 11 2009

That is the first good laugh I’ve had in weeks.
I am on the train now (behind bicycle, my preferred method of transport). Just.

I finished a (rather tiring) few weeks in Antwerp. I found the city utterly uninspiring. That could be partly because I was working night shift and only managed to grab a glance of the city on a drab, grey morning I wasn’t working. That and the refinery, which although interesting, is hardly a tourist destination. Miranda and Maurice have resigned to me turning up one day, neither of us knowing which day it was going to be (for those back home, I met Maurice and Miranda twice, randomly, in South America. Yes, more cyclists). They said come and visit. They’re great people. I got close, so I am.

Best way to get there: train (I don’t have my bike, and I do have my work clothes). So I got dropped at the train station. Buying a ticket, the seller tells me I’m super lucky, a train is just leaving, and has a tight connection in Brussels giving me a fast journey. But I have to leave. Now.
So I did. I rather sprinted to the platform, suitcase wheels sliding on the corners. Got to the train and the doors wouldn’t open. I could hardly notice the train was actually leaving (since I was still moving when I was pressing the open door button). Turns out I’m not so lucky after all :(
Oh, but I was. A new timetable suggested that I would have about 45 minutes in Brussels. Boring… But the train station is in the city centre, I’ll just go for a wander (suitcase and all). I saw a spire, figured there’d be a cathedral underneath it and headed that way. Lucky for me, and my appreciation of Belgium. To be honest, I don’t know if I’ve visited Brussels before, but it takes a lot for a city to make me say “wow” out loud. Ok, not that much, but the old square is impressive, anything but uninspiring. Old, large stately buildings, intricate stonework, gold leaf, statues. A castle visible above the roofs. A palace on a hill… What an old city should contain. No wonder the politicians of Europe like it here.

So that was good. If I’d thought about it, I should have planned a longer stop over, even the central section could take a few hours of exploring. I snapped a few photos, marvelled at the buildings. Heard French again. Made a mental note to come back. But ~30mins later I thought I should head back and try to find my platform, I don’t want to cut it too fine. Still ten minutes ahead of the time I was given when I got the ticket in Antwerp and just as I enter the station, I hear announced the train I want to catch. A glance at the sign and I realise the time of the train is… Err, now?. More sprinting. Stairs. Train pulling up as I get there. Didn’t want to cut it too fine? How about 20 seconds? For some reason I found that hilarious (not sure what people thought of the laughing running Australian with suitcase sliding around the corners)

Lucky once. Lucky twice. Now if Miranda remembers that I’ll be at the station, I think I can call it a [good] day.

Update: 10mins from the station, and the clouds are lifting. The sun is, while not shining, at least trying to break through. That may be three. I’ve got buckleys of meeting Miranda at the station now.





Ergh

12 11 2009

Eek. Ergh. Blurghf. About the best I could come up with after spending several nights awake.

Going to visit Maurice (good name!) and Miranda in Belgium tomorrow. Or they could be in the Netherlands. Somewhere around here. Hopefully somewhere out of the rain.

Good thing I have friends everywhere (actually I don’t but Europe is so relatively small…)





Doubter

9 11 2009

[insert your own topic]

I had doubts.

I read pages on the internet.

I am again a believer.





exit, stage left

7 11 2009

My mind is a horrible place to have to exist in (often, but especially after a night shift).

How do I get out of here?





Driving

6 11 2009

Since it was legally allowed I’ve been driving, as almost all do in Australia. Of course through my twenties I was a great driver, and I can back that up by the lack of crashes and the fun times I’ve had in and around cars. Yes, you can get an early model Pajero airborne, and a Sigma going the wrong way around a roundabout, in reverse, will indeed make you feel sick from the car fumes. But only after about 10 laps of the roundabout.

But since I left Aus I have decided to try and do without a car. And that’s easy when you live in the middle of a city like Barcelona. In fact to have a car is slightly insane. To park is a nightmare, and getting anywhere in the city is much easier accomplished by foot/bike or public transport (I choose foot). Which means I don’t drive all that often. In fact in can be 6 weeks between driving. Which means…

I don’t quite know how to say this. I’m trained not to acknowledge this kind of thing publicly.

Imnotaverygooddriver

Ok, there, said it. Maybe it will come back with practice. Maybe I don’t want it to. I can ride the bike reasonably well. Perhaps I’ll just leave it at that. Watch out if you’re on the roads…





Switzerland

6 11 2009

So last weekend I managed to visit Jürg and Rahel at their ‘home’ in Switzerland. I say ‘home’ because they are effectively homeless still, and preparing for another winter in Norway. Crazy. Weather that is negative [some big number] with [another big number] meters of snow. Apparently hibernation is the favourite activity. Well, I hope they enjoy it.

It was super good to see them again, talk about the trip and a bit about what they’ve done since / have planned. Meet some of the people they talked about. Experience some of Switzerland, A walk in the mountains, Cheese Fondue in the forest, big meals with friends and Röste (described to me as Swiss Hash browns, but much better). Unfortunately I was still ‘jet lagged’ from working night shift in Belgium, so I managed to fall asleep at almost every dinner table. A little embarrassing (but it was hard to stay awake after a big meal, of excellent but heavy food, and everyone around me talking Swiss German). But Denise and PB (Rahel’s sister and partner) spoke excellent English so they kept me entertained when I wasn’t dozing off. Actually Denise loves Australia, she has several Aussie flags around the apartment. Good one!

Jürg has some photos of the cheese fondue gathering (after riding there in a horse and cart), but I was too busy eating to take any. Yes, I ate cheese fondue (I normally avoid cheese like the plague).