Bay Tree House Bath
12 Crescent Gardens Bath, Somerset, England, BA1 2NA, United Kingdom
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Farewell California, Hello England
... experience. First of all, KT and I embarked on this journey in a limo bus full of strangers, which suited us just fine. With a couple of glasses of champagne, we made fast friends and were on our way to a swell time. I have decided that Temecula is the fast food of wine country, being very much geared towards no frills wine "tasting". There's no wine-ucation (see what I did there?), but many trips to Napa has afforded ...
Birthday Boy Crumble
... washing up.
English chocolate even in Mars bars, is fantastic.
We came upstairs - Sarah is going to see her new niece today - and we sang Happy Birthday outside Nik's door. We realized he in fact isn't home - likely out to uni handing in his eassy - and felt we looked a bit foolish for it but he'll come home and we'll have crumble tonight at some point.
I came upstairs and finally wrote out the history while of course also watching ...
Homemade Bread
... be more than done season 1 by the time I leave on Friday.
I spent an abnormal amount of time watching House in the afternoon and going through the two Kits I've made: I think both are mostly done, they just need a test run to make sure they're as complete as I can make them. Actually, I should consolidate them with my notes on TCM world building originally. That'll take a while.
Sarah came home. Her sister had the baby, a healthy ...
What is it about guitar players?
... with a splice of writing a reply to my grandfather. I won't actually send it till I get to London to make sure I haven't missed anything, but I'll get most of it done I think.
At lunch today I made my chicken curry soup, sans actually chicken, a little more liquid than usual but equally as tasty. Nik came down to keep me company for a bit of it as he gathered a bunch of ice to keep his drink cool. Lots of ice. Out ice cube tray isn't the best of ...
Phase 6 Day 1
... Fort at a height of 192 metres. It had covered a large area and was also used by the Romans. Below the Fort an old Manor House with stone buttresses and a heavy oak shutter to the door had stood the test of time. My next stage was along a footpath to Horton and then a road to Horton Court, a grand old house owned by the National Trust although not open at the moment. I reached Hawkesbury, a very small village with a few houses and church tucked into the hill. I ...


