Monday, 12 December 2011

December 12th - Oh Dear - Still not finished!


So sorry everyone!  We posted out the Christmas letters promising to have the blog updated with our latest news, but we have been so busy moving BACK into Hassall St after 4 months in New Farm that we have not done it yet.

Here's a photo of us all taken in October, nearest thing to a Christmas photo this year!



The Kaye Family, October 2011
Check again in about a week for the latest news and more photos!

Merry Christmas

Ian and Jane

Saturday, 3 December 2011

Day 111 - It's Over - Singapore and Home

I know it been months since we posted (sorry) but it's time to finish the travel blog and get us home to Brisbane.  I left us sitting in Abu Dhabi Airport awaiting what turned out to be an excellent flight to Singapore, Jane bagging a row of 4 seat to lie across and grab some sleep while I watched Citizen Kane, again, on the movies.  Singapore at midnight, and a short taxi ride to stay with an old friend. Bianca was as welcoming as ever and we talked for a few hours about life and our dearly missed Martin, before a wonderful bed and sleep.


Dinner at Keppel with Bianca and Judy.

We have a free day and Singapore, so what do you do - go shopping! Try a laksa in Tangs, not as good as it used to be, later a swim and great chinese meal at the soon to be demolished Keppel Club, and then back to sit for an hour in the awesome massage chair.  Sunday the next day, so off to church, hundreds singing in a packed new catholic church.  After breakfast we go to look at the new casino / shopping complex, massive and busy.  View from the roof terrace was worth the $20 entry charge!  And one of the sights just below, was Marina Square, where I learned about project management the hard way in the 1980's when we were living an working in Singapore. See bottom photo below.
Singapore  Casino - the viewing deck is the nearest pointy end!

Home, shower, pack and off to the airport for the last of the 15 flights, and still no lost bags!

 Bye Bye Singapore - Hello Brisbane.......hello Duty Free, last chance for all the usual beer and fags and lipsticks - then staggering through Immigration (but I did get my passport stamped to prove I had been away.....)


Singapore vista, with the Marina Square hotels towers nearest.

 Then via the sniffing hounds of Customs and into the arms of Tom who was there to pick us up - and take us on to the "next new thing" - apartment living in New Farm.

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Friday 19th August - Abu Dhabi


We are sitting in the old green mushroom dome transit lounge in Abu Dhabi airport killing 3 hours between planes from London to Singapore - yes, we have started the journey back home to Australia.
Jane holding up the roof in Abu Dhabi!
After nearly 4 months away we are making tracks back east to the hopefully sunnier climes of Brisbane - we have seen lots of rain in Scotland over the last few weeks. Edinburgh had its entire average August rainfall in just 2 days. In the week since the last blog we have seen more friends and family and been to a few more shows in the Festivals.

Highlight of the main festival shows was to sit in the "organ gallery" seats in the Usher Hall for a performance by the Montreal Symphony Orchestra.  These are the seats "behind" the orchestra where the choir would sit for a choral performance, looking out over the orchestra into the auditorium.

View from the Organ Gallery seats.
We were just behind the percussion section and I felt that I should have had a drumstick in hand, so when the conductor looked up at us, we could have joined in.


We also went to see a show with some friends performing in about a fictitious meeting between J S Bach and Frederick Handel set in period costume, over a vast real meal, and performed in Rosslyn Chapel, which those of you who have read the Da Vinci Code will perhaps know of.   A most intriguing place; the private chapel of the St Clair family dating back to the 14th Century and full of amazing carvings. No photos were allowed inside - but Jane failed to see the signs - what a pity!
Sculptured column in Rossyln Chapel.


Two ET victims on an Edinburgh street corner.
Also had a last minute chinese banquet with our old friends, the Starks, and were amazed to discover that John has Essential Thrombocycemia, the same relatively rare blood disorder as Ian. This photo of the 2 of them looking alike is more to do with the workers caps and the cold weather gear, than the blood disorder!


Cheers Zarah!

The other surprise meeting was with Zarah, Robin's ex, and our dear friend. Having finished her degree she's come over to UK and is looking for work in Scotland.

Despite recent announcements of 20% youth unemployment we're sure she'll find something. And it was nice to spend a day with her in Edinburgh and take her to a show.

 And so we have now packed our bags and are on the way home, via a few days in Singapore - so not the end if the trip quite yet!

       






 

Monday, 15 August 2011

DAY 100 - Thursday 11th August.

Ian here.
Sorry, it's been some time since we have blogged.  Once we had arrived in the UK it's just been go - go - go.  

Old friends, not seen often enough.
It's been wonderful catching up with loads of old friends and family up and down the length of the country. It has been a different sort of "holiday" for the last three weeks as we have not been traveling around England and Scotland viewing things through the eyes of a tourist but as returning expatriates!



English garden inspections - they have real grass here
We arrived at Heathrow, the dreary hub of UK air travel, pushed a wonky trolley along miles of potholled footpaths to a pickup point for our hire car. In the rain.  Piled the luggage into a car and headed out onto the worlds biggest car park, the M25 motorway!




Joanna's cosy cottage in Burford.
This was the wet start to a great week when we linked up with the Fallaces (thanks for the wonderful hospitality Steve and Jane, and insights into X Box land, Ollie and Will) and then on to Joanna's fab house in the Oxfordshire countryside, where we were able to enjoy short and long visits from lots of dearly missed friends.  Thanks everyone for making the efforts to come and see us - we hope the trip was worth it for you - it certainly was for Jane and me. 
 
Jane inspecting Mitford graves in Swinbrook
We made day trips to a wonderful garden at Hidcote, and a local garden centre like "Garden Way" on steroids, everything from plants to rocking horses to real chickens! The local churches were very old and rightly famous for their history and occupants, including most of the Mitford sisters, except for the one not dead yet!



Jane and cousin John following in the footsteps of St Columbus.
Then we flew up to Scotland to Jane's old family home in Rosyth, to see the renovations that her sister Judy has recently completed. 

In the last two weeks up here we have seen all the local family and driven up to Oban to see aunt, cousins and pet ferrets, and have a great boat trip, in the rain, to visit an early Christian settlement island up the Firth of Lorn that predates Iona.



My godson's wedding -note the sun is shining.
A delightful coincidence of timing enabled us to make the wedding of one of Ian's godsons, so it was back down to Yorkshire on the heaving motorways in the pouring rain, which fortunately stopped for the big day, which was a lovely family event.

 Back in Edinburgh, the rain, the Fringe and now the main International Festival have all started.  It's too good to miss; at last count we will have seen 7 Fringe shows, 2 art exhibitions, a ballet and 2 concerts. But there's the chance we'll slip in a few more shows before we start our flight back to Australia via Singapore on 18 August.  Today was Sunday lunch for siblings, partners, next generation, and glasses raised to family. We are truly blessed.


And cheers to absent family and friends!




Friday, 29 July 2011

Day 84- Tuesday, 26th July

Hi all, Ian here, (cough cough) in bed, (sneeze), at Burford, UK, (wheeze, cough!)

And we had been so well so far! But today I succumbed to a Russian cold and had to take to my bed to try and shake it off.  Damned man sat next to me on the plane from St Petersburg and sneezed and coughed all the way to London!

The front entry to the New Hermitage museum.


The last few days in St Petersburg were great.  We went to the Peterhof - the summer palace of the Tzars from 1715 onwards.  As Jane noted in the last blog, it was, like most of the big cities in Poland, completely rebuilt following the devastation of the War.  However in St Petersburg, (then Leningrad), the Germans never actually took the city - but the 900 day siege did mean half the population died anyway.

The authorities at Peterhof are recouping their rebuilding costs by charging the throngs of tourists a fee for every room/building you can look in - there were 20 different "sub-palaces" to see. 

And "no photographs inside" was the rule there too! But it was worth it in most of them - and the contents were generally original, all having been taken away and hidden before the Nazis arrived in their tanks.

Jane under a huge vase in the Winter Palace!
Secret photo in a Peterhof palace!
The no photos rule was a bit odd really as the Hermitage / Winter Palace and Russian Museums did not have the same ban, as you will see with the pictures of the artworks below, just "no flash".

Whist there I  bought a bit of light reading - "Crime and Punishment" by Dostoevsky.  Its a ripping yarn, but not a lot of laughs so far. It is set in St Petersburg, so you can trace the places he names - makes it all a bit more real.

Other highlights during this week were Russian Museum, mostly fabulous artworks from 12th C onwards, including 20thC Soviet Realism and well as the most fabulous Kandinskys and others artists like Kazimir Malevich, (think Black Square).
Do you think it is big enough for the dining room wall?

And other pictures so big you could live on them if they were laid on the floor!


Also a "small world" moment when I ran into Russell D, a colleague from Brisbane, in the Russian Museum, and then again in the square in the front of the Hermitage Museum the next day.  What's the chance of that!!!
Kandinsky -


An early Da Vinci, one of 2 in the Hermitage

We also visited the St Peter and Paul Cathedral in the original city fortress on an island in the Neva River.  Again, built 250 years ago - and home to the graves of most of the Tzars of Russia from Peter the Great onwards. It is now a post-Soviet shrine to the history of the Russian empire and its leaders, with thousands paying their respects each day to those buried there.

Peter and Paul Fortress from the River Neva. The Tzars are buried here.
They have even moved the remains of the last Emperor / Tzar, who was executed with this family by the Bolsheviks in 1918, to the cathedral in the last few years.

We did go back into the Hermitage Museum for a second time on the last day, as it is such a huge and wonderful place. On this trip we did a special extra tour of the "Treasury" which was wonderful - but no photos allowed there.  There were the most intricate Greek and Byzantine pieces of gold jewelry, not like anything I had ever seen any museum of those cultures before.  Incredibly fine and detailed workmanship, some only visible under a magnifying glass.  And then going onto gifts given and received by the Tzars and some pieces by Faberge - but no eggs - they are now all in Moscow - darn!

I loved St Petersburg as a place to visit, easy transport, even mastered the buses.  Car drivers seem to have precedence on most streets, and there were no particular  laws related to car parking that we could see, you could park anywhere, on pavements, double park on the side of streets, across pedestrian crossings.  The weather was fine for us - hot even a few days, and as Jane said before, life on the street continued to midnight and beyond. 

kerbside dining - Gastronome
We ate some good meals out too.  Russians love their meat as much as the Poles, but there was a curious lack of vegetables in the shops during the middle of summer.  However one of our best meals out was in a vegetarian restaurant, The Idiot.  Highly recommended!


But all good things have to come to an end - so after 9 days we again packed our suitcases and set off to the airport for the flight to the UK.

After battling our way out of Heathrow, surely the world's ugliest airport, we picked up a hire care and set off for a trip around the M25, that world renowned 125 mile long car park around London!  For what happened next see the next blog.










Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Monday 18 July; Jane's post

Our apartment is on left somewhere
It has been a lifelong dream of mine to come to St Petersburg, and I don't know why. Maybe the big angst-ridden novels I read in my teens, maybe the great music written here. Who knows, but here we are, and it's all I hoped of it.  After the accommodation glitch alluded to in the last post, all has worked out very well. In fact, we are possibly better off. The back of our apartment opens, via a courtyard, onto this canal.  And if I hang out of the kitchen window,  I can see the Hermitage, or rather one end of it, as it's an absolutely massive museum consisting of several vast palaces. We have had a day there with a private guide, and we are going back tomorrow for another day; might cover 50% of it.


The Winter Palace bit of the Hermitage
Us inside it
















Then there's the Russian museum and a host of other smaller ones. And the churches! They just keep getting bigger and more lavish. This was a country that enjoyed great power and huge wealth for a while, and wanted to show it.

We have been on boats and buses with commentaries, we've taken the hydrofoil out to the Peterhof, the over-the-top Baroque summer palace, which is even more extraordinary for having been completely rebuilt since its sacking, bombing and burning by the Germans in 1944.

Peterhof with fountains starting
St Isaac's Cathedral
















All of this has been wonderful, but there have been other, previously unplanned, highlights to this visit. We mentioned the Sacred Music concert. To that we have added a trip to the Mariinsky Ballet, formally the Kirov, and a concert of Opera excerpts by the State Capella that had us in raptures. The standards are so high, whatever we have seen. And, of course, some of the venues so evocative too. I have to admit to using not only my iphone camera, but my 'voice memo' feature, a lot on this trip. I'll bore some of you with sound bites!

Opera excerpts. Still light at 10pm!
Mariinsky curtain from 1920s







 





So, what else has surprised? The amazing metro stations which are vast, efficient and highly ornate, with the most spectacular light fittings and monuments to brave and fallen comrades. So clean too. London, eat your heart out.

Metro


And to finish now because it's bedtime....a note about just that! We have been amazed by living in this time of "midnight sun". We missed the really crazy week that they call White Nights, but even now, it's not 'dark' till 1.30am and it's fully light again at 3.30am. We find ourselves eating at 11.00pm, and then the night is puncuated by all sorts of shenanigens from drunken revelers to bike races to roller bladers and the aforementioned horses and carriages.

It's got a fun feel about it. I'll try and get to sleep now; last day here tomorrow. Then UK. That bit feels too familiar!

Saturday, 16 July 2011

Day 73 - Friday 15th July.

Ian here.

What a few days we have just had.  After all the emotional excitement of meeting the family in Poland we have now come to Russia.  I can so well remember the fear that was instilled in us in the UK , (and presumably also elsewhere in the western world) in the "Cold War" days from the '60s to the '80s, by the propaganda about the mighty Soviet Russian State, and the perils of Communism.

Well with the hindsight of history, and from visiting firstly East Berlin, then Poland and now St Petersburg, it is clear that not many of the general population that had to live under those regimes was particularly keen on it, and most welcomed its demise in the early '90s.  But in Russia they did survive the Nazi aggression, under the dictatorship of that paranoid, Stalin, and in St Petersburg, at least some of the locals survived the 900 day siege.  Dogged  determination.  But then wait for the Warsaw story.......
Monika waves goodbye from Poznan 

So we left the new family in Poznan on Monday morning, taking a train to Warsaw, a few hours away to the east.  We arrived, took a taxi to the hotel, The Le Regina in the New Town (only founded in the 14th C!) and settled in.  Beautiful hotel, highly recommended, best bed I have slept in since I left home!  We went for a stroll around the New and Old Towns.

 They have both been completely rebuilt since the War, as, on Hitler's orders, the Nazis systematically blew up all of the buildings in Warsaw after the Polish uprising in 1944.  Mind you, the uprising started then because the Russians promised to help the Poles if they started an uprising in Warsaw....  and then they failed to turn up to help -- I wonder why?  So a pre-war population of 800,000 were reduced to half by the end of the War, including 160,000 Jews taken from the Jewish Ghetto to the death camps.  Warsaw was not a lot of fun in 1944......

The Old Town Market Square, totally rebuild after the War
But we did have fun. A bus tour and many wanderings through the New and Old town and the Jewish Ghetto, and past the magnificent '50's Soviet Realism style "Cultural Centre" showed that Warsaw is alive and well, and well worth a longer stay if we ever come back this way......

Ian's beer!
Jane had a massage, I swam for my first exercise for a week, we walked, and ate local food, including a huge meal of "farmyard kill" on the last night in a Czech "bierkeller" bar.

Half eaten!








We had our first travel hiccup, when the St Petersburg agency gave us 24 hours notice that our carefully chosen apartment had "a plumbing problem" and so they wanted to rebook us into another one, of unknown quality. Time lost sending emails back and forth, and some fretting, which has turned out to be unwarranted; we are probably now in a better location.

Warsaw's 2nd favorite son, Chopin.  Pope John Paul ll was the first!

So we flew in on Wednesday lunchtime, setting foot in "enemy territory" for the first time.  Impressions so far, we love it! Another cultural heritage - different,  again.

Just 'cos they can now buy Coca Cola and Subway does not make them any less Russian than 200 years ago when they bought in Italian and French architects to design their buildings and they married Prussian Princesses and so became mostly a German royal family, (interestingly, just like the British monarchy about 50 years later with Queen Victoria and Albert Saxe Coburg ....).

Sitting on the Neva River embankment at 11.00pm
And so to St Petersburg.

 Oh, this could be a long blog.  It's now midnight, just getting dark (we are 60 degrees north here, about the same latitude as Iceland)  and I hear a horse and carriage passing in the street below, and hundreds of cyclists seem to have taken to the streets outside, I know not why.
The Church on Spilt Blood at 10.30pm



Every square inch of wall and ceiling is covered in mosaics in the Church - and fabulous acoustics,
Highlights so far are the strolls along Nevsky Prospect, the Oxford Street of St P, with thousands of tourists and locals out for the shopping and the sights, a boat trip along the river and canals passing sights such as the Strogonof Palace and the Winter Palace, and last night a "to die for" concert of sacred choral music in the "Church on the Spilt Blood", built on the spot where Tzar Alexander ll was assassinated in 1881.

Today was a full day in the Hermitage museum, which has one of the finest art collections in the world, housed in a fabulous Palace, built for Catherine the Great in 1745 and extended many times thereafter to house her ever expanding collection.  AND a night at the ballet tomorrow, the former Kirov, now the Mariinsky. More photos will follow....

Tomorrow the Kirov Ballet!

Sunday, 10 July 2011

Day 68 - Sunday 10th July. Poland.

Poznan, Poland, with family found
Ian and Jane.

From Germany, we (Ian, Jane and Tom) have travelled to Poznan in western Poland, from where Ian's father departed for the U.K. in 1939, at the outbreak of the 2nd World War, never to return.

For reasons that even now we do not fully understand there was not very much communication between the older generations of the families in Poland and England for most of the last 50 years.  But now we are here, and have had a wonderful reunion with 2 half nieces that we knew of, and their mothers, their partners and some children we had no knowledge of! It's been a wonderful 4 days full of introductions and sign language and marvellous shared meals.  The traditional Polish hospitality has been very generous.  We have spent many hours (and bottles of wine) going through old  photographs recovered from parents' bottom drawers and sharing family stories.  Many new friendships made. A emotional time for Ian too, as he puts into place the Polish half of his family tree that was missing.

Poznan, Old Town Square
Poznan was Ian's father's home, and where he, at the age of 15, along with the entire top class at his High School, enrolled in Polish Army for the uprising of 1918, which resulted in keeping this city within the borders of the reformed Poland, on the carve up after World War One. We now have a great picture of him with his first medal pinned on his youthful chest. As a reward the boys were allowed to smoke in class when they were sent back to school!

One morning was spent traveling to three different local cemeteries to see the tombstones of some of the family.  And Simon will be pleased to know there are at least three generation of actors in the family.  Great Grandfather and his(more acclaimed) wife are buried in the "Distinguished Persons Cemetery". And we hope to see the great great great grandfather - Jan Krolowski's statue in a park in Warsaw.
The husband and wife actors tombstone.
Poznan was badly damaged by fighting during the Russian advance during World War Two, so, rather like Berlin, there is a mixture of the old, the rebuilt to look like the old, and the new side by side. We saw the Old Town Square, some beautifully restored medieval churches and the 15th C. Town Hall, with butting headed goats appearing from the clock on the tower, making the city a tourist centre, as well as being famous for universities and international trade exhibitions.  The churches also contained treasures recently returned from Russia to where they "disappeared" after the war.  A familiar story, like the museums in Berlin.

Medieval and Baroque churches, fabulous interiors, and treasures recovered.


And so after 5 full and rich days we are packing our bags and preparing to move to Warsaw for a day before flying to Russia, the 9th country we will have visited for more than 45 minutes (and 2 for less - very tight flight transfers!).

The Krolikowskya  (but not all of us!)
We have had such a warm welcome from the new family here in Poland. Thank you all. And best wishes to those in the family who are currently facing some health challenges, we send you our best wishes.


Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Jane writes on 5 July

Ian and Alix(sister) in France on Friday
Ian in East Berlin on Saturday
The amazing thing about travel is how things can change in such a short time. We left a heatwave of 38 degrees in France and found ourselves within the space of one day in another country, in 14 degrees and pouring rain. Away with the sarong and out with the rain jacket. Berlin hasn't exactly got the same beauty as South Western France, but it certainly has its attractions. I love this City. It's exciting and vibrant and full of art and music and exhibitions. The curious thing has been seeing all the things that were plundered/saved from the places we have just been to in Turkey. We've seen the framework in its original place, now we're seeing the contents in other places. What we don't see here, we can catch up with in St Petersburg, probably. Or in London. or Edinburgh....

What's left in Turkey!
Pergamon rebuit in Berlin









I guess that more people get to see these amazing constructions and carvings in major Western cities. But, I wonder if they will ever be returned home?

We  have loved our 4 full days in Berlin. Our apartment is in the old GDR and the area still looks very Eastern Bloc, but inside the makeover is fully brand new Ikea. We bought the 5 day public transport pass and we've been everywhere. Our fascination has been not only with the antiquities, but also with the 20th Century events in Berlin; the rise and fall of the Nazi party, the Wall and Reuinification. This is a city well worth visiting. Tom has joined us, and has encouraged us to visit some more esoteric museums including the Bauhaus. We will go on to Poland together tomorrow. To encounter Ian's relatives there for the first time. Exciting.








Thursday, 30 June 2011

Day 52 - Friday 24th June

Ian here.

The last few weeks in France have been such a contrast to the first month in Turkey.  There we were all about being tourists and seeing all the sights.  Here it has been more staying put in a peaceful countryside setting -  and letting the tourists come to us!

Anti clockwise from the right, Ian, Jane, Tom, Jan, Loren, Larry.  Alix took the picture!



We have enjoyed the Aussi contingent and the UK family, and now we have the USA team over from Florida.  Photo show us at (yet another!) wonderful meal at a great restaurant in Bergerac.  Alix and Larry have come over from Florida, and Jan and Loren are friends from Canada who now live up the road in France.  And Tom has flown in from Aussi for the celebrations, thanks!

And all the time Jane's 60th birthday is celebrated with good food and wine and tales from the past and talking about plans for the future, particularly for all the cousins who are now in their 20's and some in early thirties.  The older generation, (that's me and Jane) bemoan the lack of weddings and grandchildren, and the nephews and nieces smile and change the subject, to the next job or last promotion or good holiday.

Tiny, tiny bowl of soup!
We have ventured into some more Grottes and seen more prehistoric art from 25,000BC this time, as well as looked around some so, so, pretty French villages such as Beynac.  Had another great meal here, see soup photos.....
St Cirq La Popie.  Picture perfect, perched above the Garonne River. I'm going to make this into a jigsaw!


  Harvest time has started, and the sunflowers in the fields look quite fabulous.  Wimbledon is on the TV, the nearest winery is 2km walk away and the temperature is warming up finally, 28C today perhaps 35C but NO HUMIDITY, on Monday.  And the pool is more inviting each day.

A gate to the medieval city in Bordeaux.


Jane has had two birthday meals so far with one more to come, and we are all looking a little more plump than when we arrived, but we have the rigours of Russian cooking to come so we have to prepare ourselves.

Son Tom has been here too which is great, although Simon and Robin could not make this trip.

May add some more photos  soon.







Bordeaux Place in the mirror pond - invert to see right way up.