Saturday, 20 July 2013

More international Brum :-)

Just to show what a wonderfully international and diverse place Birmingham can be, we were sitting in a city centre pub around 5 o'clock, waiting for the EDL idiots to be escorted back out of Brum, when a colourfully dressed folk group from Alicante (we asked) came in and cheered us all up.
You can't see the instruments in this picture, but you get the idea! :)





Location:Birmingham

Peace in multiethnic Brum

I'm sitting in a peaceful café in Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter where people of different ethnicities and probably nationalities (at least two Germans, I'm married to one :-) ) are enjoying their coffees. 10 minutes walk away the extremists of the so-called English Defence League are vocalising their inability to cope with living in a country where not everyone is exactly the same as them. Sad, and stupid, and dangerous if they're given any leeway.
There have been a number of attacks on mosques reported since the awful killing of Lee Rigby. It's all so wrong. Most people want to live on peace, to enjoy an afternoon off without violence and hate-filled demonstrating or attacks.
Birmingham is made by its mix, of peoples and cultures and backgrounds, it always has been, it'd be so much poorer without. Extreme groups want to damage and destroy the mix, reduce all to one narrow strand, to their narrow minded view of what makes us who we are.
No way.
Extremists, you are not my England, and I don't want your defence. Count me out of your league, of hate and violence and phobia.
Leave us to live in peace with our diversity and variety and the rich mix that makes Birmingham.

Location:Birmingham

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Scotland

In the Elephant House café -




The mighty Forth Bridge at South Queensferry -




Inchcolm -



A lone gull in flight (the rest were on the island) -




Location:Scotland

Scotland tour

Returned from beautiful land- and seascapes, sleepy coastal towns, seals, (two) dolphins and many gulls.
Day 1: flight to Inverness from Birmingham, met at airport by friendly hosts. Strolled by the River Ness and found an excellent restaurant, not too pricy, with local ingredients for example the wild boar sausages on mashed potato with some really juicy vegetables. Beers include St Mungo's - from Glasgow - the only beer in the UK recognized as being brewed according to Germany's famous Purity Laws (Reinheitsgebot). The Black Isle beers, Red Kite and Blonde, are more local to Inverness and smooth and enjoyable.
Day 2: very tasty breakfast with attentive hosts in their guest house (where they live too). Morning service at the local Episcopal cathedral, a little slow with the music and we left early. A walk along the river and a boat trip along the Caledonian canal - built to connect lochs along the River Ness - into Loch Ness itself, gentle and relaxing. Another evening meal at the Corner restaurant, salmon for me this time. Andy Murray won Wimbledon today! Great win, but not much sign of excitement up here - still, seems that people aren't prone to over-effusiveness, but are friendly and welcoming.
Day 3: Off to Cawdor Castle, actually built well after Macbeth's time so nothing to do with him or Macduff. A stately home more than a castle, lived in too, so actually rather, er, homely! Witty info boards in each room, work-style phones where you can transfer people, select piles of books. Outside the lovely gardens and nature trails through a wood. A café in the courtyard in the continuing sunshine (it hardly stopped all week :-) ). German coach party of seniors, various countries on the tourist bus we got each way between the castle and Inverness.
Day 4: bus trip to Rosemarkie via Fortrose and a trip to a Whale and Dolphin Centre at Kessock first, with sighting of two dolphins playing in the water ... then the Groam Museum with a video and Pictish crosses and history. Sleepy coastal town and a bus once an hour on to Cromarty, which has some historic buildings including a courthouse with a grim note in the court scene recreation of the (actual) story of an 18th [?] century man involved in a petty brawl who later deserts the army, which had possibly mortal consequences in the punishments handed out.
Day 5: bus again out to the town of Elgin with the Johnston cashmere factory and a free tour. The Cashmere goats are farmed in Mongolia and the fine hair is combed from them and transported to Scotland. Intriguing to see the people and machinery working on the processes to turn the raw material into yarn and to weave and warp the yarn into beautiful cloth to be used for scarves, or to be passed on to another factory in Hawick for knitting. The Vicuna's hair has only been recently available again, as sustained farming methods have been developed (not killing the animals ... ) : a jumper was on display, list price £1,500 ...
Not to forget Lossiemouth, really based around the RAF base there - two fighter jets thundered past as we looked out to the wonderfully blue-and-green sea stretching out - and a bus ride from Elgin.
Stuck in Elgin for a couple of hours as the trains aren't that frequent. Quiet town but a coffee shop kept open till 7.
Day 6: Early start and, thanks to our hosts, breakfast despite the early hour and a lift to the station for the train to Edinburgh. Beautiful sunlit scenery before greyness and sleepiness set in. Edinburgh itself is always worth visiting, such dramatic buildings, the hilly setting, international but particularly European in feel, more so than the vast worldwide and hyperactive London. Welcome at a smart, clean modern flat in a new development by the Meadows and south of Greyfriars and the Royal Mile. Walked through Holyrood Park and almost needed refuge from the heat! The Holyrood Palace art gallery had an exhibition of photographs taken on the then Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) 's tour of Egypt and the Middle East mid-19th century. It was also air-conditioned :-)
Evening with some Scottish folk music in a pleasant if increasingly crowded pub near the flat.
Day 7: Booked onto another boat trip, via South Queensferry and just underneath the massive and rather awe-inspiring Forth Bridge, the one being constantly painted ... Seals lazing in the sun. Plenty of gulls on Inchcolm island with a break to stroll round the church ruins (once a religious community) before returning on the boat. Booked onto another tour for the evening, literary pub tour of Edinburgh which was quite a find amongst the various tours of Edinburgh on offer. Plenty about Scott, Stevenson, Burns, MacDiarmid, Fergusson who died tragically young, and various others with selections of their works and colourful summaries of their lives by two actors who entertained and informed and stopped us off at excellent pubs en route - Beehive in Grassmarket, Ensign Erskine, Jolly Judge and another!
Day 8: Back to Birmingham on the train, 5 hour journey but at least we had an air-conditioned carriage and a refreshment trolley passing regularly. Still had time before that to go to the new Peter's Yard cafe and J.K.Rowling's old haunt the Elephant House on George IV Bridge.

Location:Scotland!

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

More

Lossiemouth and Elgin













Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Out and about in Scotland

Cromarty, north of Inverness




Pipe Band in Inverness




The River Ness at the Ness Islands




Cawdor Castle, far too homely for the Macbeths (and built three or four centuries too late).




Gardens in the beautiful grounds of Cawdor.




A view from the loo .. Window on board a Jacobite Cruises ship along the Caledonian Canal into Loch Ness




Cheers! Black Isle brewery is just north of Inverness.




And another view





Thursday, 16 May 2013

Art Bus

A couple of times a year or so, special buses run between Birmingham galleries staying open late. A small version of something that happens in major cities such as Berlin on holiday weekends.
A really enjoyable evening and I used it as an opportunity to visit smaller galleries, starting with the wonderful Barber Institute, then a short hop to the ikon Gallery and colourful patterns as well as traditional costume and decorations from ...
Eastside gallery space off Digbeth High St, up to the Musueum and onwards to the RBSA in the Jewellery Quarter.


Location:Birmingham