Sunday, September 25, 2011

St. Andrews

Our journey today took us to the far reaches of the Kingdom of Fife, to the city of St. Andrews. St. Andrews is known of course as the birthplace of golf, but its also the home to the famous University of St. Andrews, an 11th-century cathedral, key moments of the Protestant Reformation, and the beach where they filmed the opening scene of Chariots of Fire! All that other stuff is fine, but Chariots of Fire is my favorite movie, so making a pilgrimage to the famous opening scene (you'll be humming the song for days!) was an absolute must.

Its just like I was there, only 100 yards behind them, lungs burning, wishing I had a plate of fish & chips.
The movie still from the running scene.
my shot (pretty close considering it was from memory)
This plaque is right near the beach (self-explanatory, huh?)
Ok, we also saw that other stuff too. It really was a beautiful day to spend at the beach, and St. Andrews is a stunning town to go sightseeing. I'm sure we will be back before the end of the year.


On Sundays the Old Course at St. Andrews is open for the public to walk on the grounds. We all checked out the 1st, 2nd, and 18th holes of the most famous golf course in the world. I tried to instill the same sense of awe in the kids, but got a lot of "yeah dad I know, you told me already. Its really old". Anyway, here we are at the 1st fairway with the club house behind us.

Undergraduate students from the university in their scarlet robes. 
St. Andrews University (not the whole thing)
Holy Trinity Parish Church
Both Kate and William went to St. Andrews.
St. Andrews Cathedral (well, the ruins at least)

For everything we did today, I think the kids had the most fun rolling down a grass hill. 

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

East Neuk

Hay bales on the way to East Neuk
 Our Sunday drive this past weekend was the region of East Neuk ("neuk" is apparently a Scots word for corner). This area is a series of small, picturesque fishing villages just southwest of St. Andrews. Most notably for me, one of these towns is Anstruther- home to the award-winng Anstruther Fish and Chips Bar. After waiting patiently for a table, we were able to sample this legendary specialty. Sure enough, it was excellent. The fish itself was about as fresh as could be, and the batter is nothing like back home, it was very light and not at all greasy. After lunch, rain and general fatigue kept us from visiting as much of the villages as I would have liked, but we did have a nice walk around Anstruther and Crail. Visiting these little villages made me want to book a bed & breakfast and spend a week just reading, walking, and eating fish & chips. If only we had a babysitter......or a doctor for my inevitable heart attack. 

You can't forget to order the mashed peas.

The one and only!

Downtown Anstruther
Anstruther
Crail harbour

Crail

Christa and Will in Crail

Pars Follow-Up

Here is a little update since the last Pars post. The team's website has posted an article about Will's visit to the team. Below are two links that will take you to the official website and article.

Dunfermline Athletic Football Club main page (look for the picture of Will)

Direct link for the story

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Come on ye Pars!

Will and the Pars
Today was our first Scottish Premier League football game, with our local Dunfermline Pars battling Hibernian of Edinburgh. When we arrived in Scotland I signed Will up for the Young Pars, a youth fan club for the team. Christine, the person in charge of the Young Pars, arranged for a special pre-game tour, complementary tickets to the game, and player introductions for Will. It was quite the VIP tour, as Will and I saw the team room (meeting and hang-out space with television), and most importantly a visit to the locker room to meet the team. It was about 15 minutes before their pre-game meeting and the team was nice enough to visit with Will and take a group picture with him. He got to meet every player and many coaches, even spending a little extra time with Pars' star Martin Hardie, who was getting some medical care before the match. Will even got an autographed ball from the team. A huge thank you to Christine and the Pars, it was extremely kind of them to let us behind the scenes before their match. As far as the game went, Dunfermline rallied from an 0-2 deficit in the first half to tie the match 2-2 on two terrific second-half goals.
First half action v. Hibernian

2nd-half corner kick as Dunfermline try to take the lead
Post-game applause for the fans

Will and I on the pitch after meeting the team.


Monday, September 12, 2011

Auntie Em, Auntie Em!

 You should hear the howling wind right now (place your ear against the computer and listen carefully).  There is quite a storm bearing down on us right now.  In California, this would be headline-type weather.  While rain and wind aren't new to any of us- experiencing it to this degree in September is unusual.  I have heard that you lucky folks in Sebastopol are enjoying 80 degree weather today. 

Here are a few local headlines from today, as well as pictures and a story about picking up the kids from school.

Yahoo News (UK/Ireland)

BBC News

This is us after walking home from school today.  Ainsley doesn't look too wet- but walked behind me most of the way so I could block the wind and rain.


No, it isn't a new style of denim- I'm soaked!  6 hours later and my jeans are still wet on the drying rack.  My coat actually goes near my knees, but the water crept up- ridiculous!

So, I leave the house at 2:30 to pick up the kids.  It's windy and misty but not rainy.  I stopped by the office to ask a few questions, among them, "how do people get their kids to school when the weather is really bad?"  I should back up.  Everyone here walks their kids to school.  There is not a line of cars dropping kids off in the morning, and there is one bus that brings kids in who live over 2.5 miles from the school.  So at 9am and 3pm it's like ants descending on a sugar cube.  Parents, grandparents, babies, dogs, strollers, bikes, scooters, etc. all come out of the woodwork and then vanish again as quickly as they came.  Only a few follow the path that we take.  There is no circular drop-off like at Apple Blossom and no parking area for parents dropping off- well there is small one, but it's mostly filled with staff cars.

So, back in the office, the lovely secretaries giggle politely and gently inform me that, "Well, Mrs. Forslund, there is really no such thing as bad weather.  Only inappropriate clothing".   I leave the office to find it is now raining in earnest.  You know the kind of rain I'm talking about, sideways, trees and grass blowing, wind howling.  Again, not shocking if it's winter- but it's SEPTEMBER!  I prefer Earth, Wind and Fire's September where there was never a cloudy day.

As I wait for the bell to ring, here are some things that I see.... strollers with rain shields and little rain boots sticking out at the bottom;  giant golf umbrellas inside out;  a man holding a puppy;  people in crocs and peep toe sandals;  some standing out in the weather rather than under an awning; many in very light weight rain jackets;  some without a jacket or coat and very few with hats or boots.  I overhear someone refer to the weather as "horrendous".  When I pick up the kids, Will is asking, "will our house still be there when we get there?"  And he says, "I wonder when the lightposts will blow off?".  Ainsley comments that her hair looks like she just got done washing her hair.  We found ourselves laughing on the way home just because the whole scenario was SO ridiculous.  All I can think is that, "it isn't even winter yet".

Once home, we have hot cocoa and chocolate chip cookies to warm up.  Tomorrow I'm shopping for water-proof pants! 

Saturday, September 10, 2011

"Freedom!!!"

Stirling Castle
For all you Braveheart fans, today we visited Stirling Castle and the William Wallace monument. Once again, rainy skies cleared just in time for us to do a little sightseeing. The first record of Stirling Castle dates back to the 12th century, but it's most notable for its role during the Scottish Wars of Independence (William Wallace/Robert the Bruce), and the reign of of the Stewart Dynasty (King James IV-VI, Mary Queen of Scots). Wake up! Wake up! Sorry, done with the history stuff. The kids seemed to enjoy themselves, as there were more "hands on" type of activities throughout the castle. The views of the city from the castle were amazing and we were reminded once again that "its good to be the king".

Will with Robert the Bruce

Outer wall overlooking the city of Sterling
Will hanging out with the jester
The Queen's chambermaid explaining what chores are really like.

Will looking very "Royal"

I know, I shouldn't have bought it for him.

Overlooking the king's garden, plus Bannockburn off in the distance.
Passageway leading down to the munitions storage.

William Wallace monument
Boy if I had ten pence every time I saw one of these.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Sunday in Culross

Coming off the euphoria of our trip to Braemar and the Queen, we took a Sunday drive to Culross. Known as a well-preserved example of 16th century Scotland, Culross is sort of like stepping back in time, albeit with a kids playground and homemade crisp (potato chips) stand. Its a lovely village that is about a 15-minute drive from our house, and a perfect place to spend a sunny afternoon by the river. I think the kids are becoming a bit numb to my excitement about how old some of the buildings are, in fact I'm starting to feel like the dad from Calvin and Hobbes who wants to take Calvin camping. I might need to mix in an occasional "crazy golf" to keep things balanced.



Culross Palace (built between 1597 and 1611)


Private garden below the Abbey
Culross Abbey (founded in 1217)



Note: The answer to the pronunciation question from the previous post is (Keer-knee).

Sunday, September 4, 2011

We Saw The Queen!

We saw the Queen! I know the majority of this post is about the Braemar Gathering Highland Games and all the unique Scottish events, but we saw the Queen! Christa was about four feet away when she snapped this picture of the Queen leaving in her motorway and we can't get over how close we were. The kids could have given her a high-five, but I'm happy to say they didn't reach out suddenly and try.

The games themselves had traditional events such as sprinting, tug-of-war between branches of the military, tossing the caber, hill racing, long leaping, throwing the hammer, putting the stone, and highland dancing.  One thing that makes the Braemar Gathering so popular is the fact that the Royal Family is usually in attendance (did I mention we saw the Queen?). As the luck of the Scots would have it, the rain cleared just as we arrived to the games and we had beautiful weather throughout the day.

Relay races
Royal tug-of-war (Air Force Team)

Ainsley overlooking the games
Ainsley picking heather.
The Queen arriving at the Royal Box.
Tug-of-War Championships (Queen looking through her bag)
The Queen presenting the trophy to the Caber Toss champion.
The winning toss
Weight over the bar competition
Cairngorm National Bark (home of Braemar Gathering)
Cairngorms National Park

Who would have thought Christa would be the first to try Haggis (veggie-haggis that is)


Gillian (Scottish Teacher Club), me, Noreen (Edinburgh exchange), Nicole (England exchange), and Jennifer (Crief exchange)