Sunday, 26 April 2009

The Eden Project


The Eden Project is at the southwest tip of England and is a set of 'biomes' - domes designed to simulate the climate of different parts of the world in order to grow and study plants. The focus is understanding the relationship between plants and people.
The largest dome, the jungle environment, is the largest greenhouse in the world and could fit the Tower of London inside. It has a waterfall and a flowing stream. The focus is on the future, studying about recycling and botany. The location is even about recycling, it was a spent China clay mine that they reused. The flowers were beautiful!

The robot is built of all the electronics one person would throw away in a lifetime. (check out the teeth, they are computer mice)


The teaching center is called 'The Core' and in the center of 'The Core' is a round room with 'the seed' in it. It is the largest sculpture in the world made from a single piece of stone. It is a gigantic piece of granite. It represents the beginning of something special at the Eden Project to help the world.



Sunday, 19 April 2009

The LaRoques Come and Visit - April 2009

Barbara, George, Webb and John-Luke decided to come and visit us. They flew to Paris on Sunday (12th), spent three days there and then took the train to London on Wednesday (16th). I met them at St. Pancras station and brought them home to stay with us a few days. They flew home this morning after a whirlwind week of siteseeing in London.


Buckingham Palace on a rainy day - they did the changing of the guard, but pretty boring without the band who do not perform on bad weather days (messes up their hats)


We rode the hop on / hop off open top, double-decker buses around London.


The Windsor Castle trip


Pizza after the castle

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

Uffington White Horse


England has a series of giant white figures, most are horses but a few men, in several places around the country carved in chalk on the side of hills. Most of them are 200-300 years old, but a few are much older. The Uffington White Horse is the oldest - and coolest looking - and is estimated to be 3,000 years old - similar in age to Stonehenge.
The interesting thing is, you can't really see it to appreciate it from the ground. The picture at the top of this post is an aerial shot stolen from Wikipedia. So whoever built the thing, did it to be seen from above. Hmmm.

We climbed the hill to get a close look. These are taken standing beside it.

This is the head.


The left picture is a rear leg. The right is a front leg.


This is the tail.



This is looking from the top of the hill down on Amanda and John.



The best shots we could get of the whole thing from the ground.

Sunday, 5 April 2009

AFA - Corfe Castle (April 2009)

Corfe Castle is one of the most impressive castles in all of Europe - except we arrived 400 years late to see it. Sadly it is in ruins. Over and over we've seen these incredible strongholds, placed in perfect defensive positions, castles that withstood many attacks, always, always were betrayed by someone inside. The picture above is taken from the train station in the town below the castle. The town is served by a restored steam locomotive that we rode to Swanage beach.


But nearby in the village, a craftsman painstakingly recreated the castle and surrounding village as it would have looked 400 years ago. So you get a sense of how amazing this thing would have been. An outrageous modeling job. The little church has bells that ring and a choir that sings - or at least that is the way it sounds. The houses have people in their courtyards, and sheep and cattle in their fields. And notice the little trees - they appear (without exhaustive scientific testing) to be real. They must be groomed like bonzai trees.



The center shot is cool because you see the kids in front of the model, and behind the model in the distance on the left you can see some of the actual remaining castle walls. We are probably a mile from the ruins, so you get a sense of how huge the thing was.


Amanda and I played a game of giant checkers. I kicked her butt - however, impartial observers might say that it was a draw because we gave up the game before I actually kicked her butt. (now I will find out if she reads the blog)

AFA - Brownsea Island (the beginning of BSA)


Back during the first week of August 1907 Lord Baden-Powell was looking for a place to try out his experimental program for young boys. He settled on Brownsea Island, an island owned by a friend of his. There he brought 22 boys and did activities to train them in skills such as camping, woodcraft and lifesaving. The program was a massive success. A year later Scouting For Boys (a re-write of his military manual on outdoor skills) was published and the international Scouting movement took off. A few years later Lady Baden-Powell created the girl version of the organization, and it has been growing since - in 2007, the anniversary year, it was estimated that there are 38 million Scouts world wide.
The island has gone through several owners eventually owned by the British National Trust. In 1963 49 acres - including the original Scout area - were given to the Scouts and was dedicated by Lady Baden-Powell. In August 2007 (one month before we got to the UK - rats!) they celebrate the 100th anniversary of Scouting on the island.

A bust of, and poster about, Lord Baden-Powell on the walk to the Scout center.


John and I standing on the very site of the first Scout Camp.

The Scout Stone - monument commemorating the founding of Scouts

A life sized (?) statue of Lord Baden-Powell on the dock where you catch the ferry to the island. He is actually wearing a pocket knife and Wood Badge beads.

An interesting sight from the ferry. The Haven Hotel is where Marconi lived when he perfected the wireless telegraph and transmitted over water the first time - from this hotel to a receiving point across the harbor.