Contributors

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Trenton 27 July

After an early lunch on Thursday Maureen drove us down to Trenton about an hour from Kingston. We met up her brother and his wife then headed of to the Trenton Aircraft Museum along side the Trenton Air force Base.  A hot day as we discovered when getting out of the air-conditioned car at the Museum.

On walking inside you come face-to-face with a four engine Halifax bomber. A bomber that crashed and sunk in a Norwegian lake  back in April1945. It lay 750 feet under water until 1991 when it was brought to the surface, restored and had the museum building built around it at Trenton.

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Both inside and outside the buildings there  were many interesting aircraft, stories to read, engines to see, and plenty of aircraft associated items. And just for Gary a Hercules Bristol Freighter engine.

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Outside you can go from WW11 aircraft to the Korean War, the Vietnam and later. I even walked around and early Hercules that reminded me of flights out of the Antarctic in the sixties.

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After walking around the aircraft outside, getting very hot, and spending some time sitting down in the shade we returned inside and the air-conditioning.  Inside we all took advantage of the lift to the mezzanine floor.

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The day finished with a salmon meal in one of the local restaurant and an interesting drive back to Kingston.

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Hotel and monorail

Off the plane at Terminal 1 and quickly through immigration and customs I was in the Arrivals Hall. Turn right follow the signs then a hard left and through a set of automatic doors I am standing in the UP and monorail station. The UP, the fast train into Toronto’s Union station, that I will be taking tomorrow, and the monorail linking the terminals at Pearson International Airport. It is free, quick, and has something like a five minute schedule. Within minutes the monorail pulls in, I climb aboard and sit down in a bright blue décor, and cool atmosphere which is a relief from the extremely hot terminal.  A few minutes later at Terminal 3 I head up the escalator turn right and through the automatic doors, first trying the exit without success. Through the doors and I am the reception desk of my Hotel.


The monorail is a set of two trains operating in opposite directs, on separate tracks, powered by cable like a cable car. The following shows the single track with the drive cables and the glass doors opening into the station.20170724_102404

Then the train as it came into the station.

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Back at terminal I walked along the platform to find the UP train ready to leave for Union Station in central Toronto. A twenty minute ride and I step out of the UP  and cross into the main station ready to board the VIA train to Kingston.


Monday, July 24, 2017

The Toronto Flight 23 July

My seat had slight problem with  adjusting the Back, but everything else was fine. There is an adjustable air vent and fold out table that could be adjust to give me at least 6  cm clearance. The two previous flight, Air New Zealand and Cathy Pacific had my stomach hard against the table even when fully adjusted. Thank you Air Canada.


Then a good a breakfast, much appreciated as I had been on the go since 4 a m. Sorry I  ate it all before taking the following  the photo.

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Half way over the Atlantic and is ice cream and pretzel time. Then an hour out Toronto an Italian Meatball Hot Wrap and tomato juice. Sorry again I have just eaten it.

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Excellent flight, straight through emigration and custom. Took the monorail too next Terminal 3 and my hotel. Sat down with my feet up enjoying the cool air and silence

Sunday23 July

Alarm and wakeup call 4 a.m. Up dressed, finished packing, and down for the Hopa Bus to terminal 2. Into a lift at the airport and off to Departures on the fifth floor. Checked in using using a kiosk and after a couple tries it asked me if I wanted to upgrade--yes please just what I wanted. Now all set everything turned to custard. I had to go to the check in desks and shuffle along in long in long queue I handed over my passport only to be told I needed an ETA to enter Canada. Back to the lifts and down to Arrivals on level 1 to access a set of iPads to register online. There are lifts a plenty but always several lift-loads of people and baggage pushing to get in. At the iPads I couldn't get past first screen @#$%& Apple. Eventually I found some help, and after a half hour headed back up to fifth floor and up to check in. They needed my ETA number that had been emailed to me. I left the check in and looked for my email on my mobile. No sign of it, but happily after 10 minutes it came through then back to check in and this time successful. After 1.5 hours of pushing case around Terminal 2 I entered security with just carryon bag. After setting off the alarms, going through the body full body Cray standing on the yellow footprints and my hands on my head in "surrender mode" then being padded down I was off to find Gate B39  just a 15 minutes walk away. I flagged down one of those small golf carts and got ride most of the way. As the cart moved along it developed its own wind. Much appreciated in the hot terminal by hot sweaty traveller. The final leg, up a steep escalator and another 5 minute walk where I grabbed a bottle of water before continuing my trek to Gate B39 to find the plane loading. Eventually in my seat after a 2.5 hour ordeal I sat down, relaxed, took my morning pills, sent text to Jane, and started to write this blog

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Monday and on to Wednesday 17–19 July

Woke this morning feeling extremely grotty. Checked on Google maps for location of a GP.  Rang the nearest and couldn’t get an appoint for two days. After ringing several more and being told I needed to go to the nearest GP and register for the NHS.

Gave that idea away, took my laptop out of my shoulder bag to lighten the load, and headed out for  SPRI. Just a 1/2 km I was at a corner, to the left was SPRI and to the right the Doctor.  I headed right with the intention of registering for the NHS and making an appointment. Eventually I got there, registered, and they took pity on me and I saw the doctor. He sent me off with letter to A&E at the local hospital and here I stayed until late Wednesday afternoon. Over the next few days I had ECGs, x-rays, a CAT scan, many blood tests, several sessions with a nebuliser, and lots of oxygen. Finally on Wednesday afternoon I went back to my digs with course of steroids and antibiotics.

Turned on my laptop to check my mail and I had one from my landlady, and one from the archivist at SPRI. They both were checking up on me. Curious, there were none from the kids at home. I skyped my daughter and although she had noticed I stopped writing my Blog, I think she thought I was being a bit lazy.  I did not have my laptop, mobile phone or my address book with during my hospital stay so I couldn’t contact anyone.

Once back at the digs I contacted my Travel Insurance people and sent off my discharge report and other items they needed. At that time I was looking at cutting the trip short and heading for home

No pictures this time but you got one of my Hospital wrist band in the last post. Not my ‘last post’ but the Blog’s.

Saturday and Sunday 15, 16 July

I am back to my Blog after over a week. Many things have happened since I last wrote and most have to do with the little band below.20170722_114033 (1)

But more of that later.

On Saturday I walked up to shopping area in the centre of Cambridge, about 3 km. Visited the permanent city market and went into Marks and Spence and got a couple of shirts. While there made good use of their Grocery Department and stocked up some food, especially pork pies.

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Nothing really exciting happen, only the 6 km return journey and the additional walking around the town. I got very tied and woke Sunday feeling a bit the worse for the exercise, so spent most of the day reading, writing, and preparing for tomorrow’s visit to the SPRI.

Not very exciting weekend



Saturday, July 15, 2017

Thursday 13 July

About 9 p.m. on Wednesday night I climbed into the Hotel’s shuttle and headed out to the airport. Dropped off at the Cathy Pacific check-in I got my boarding pass and proceeded through security. As I walked through the checking portal I was greeted by an alarm bell. My braces caught me out even though I had asked and been assured they would be OK.
Inside the departures I called into the Spaghetti House for meal and cold drink.  I needed the drink because of the high temperatures inside the terminal. The same man as last year showed me to my seat. He didn’t smile and still had the attitude of bored indifference. I had a pizza and cold drink which cooled me a little but I was amazed to see all the staff wearing jerseys.
Then off to gate 33. This part of the terminal was a long wide section, like an open tunnel with regularly spaced sets of small buildings housing toilets and air conditioning units. The direction sign read “Gates 20 to 80”. I had only 13 gates to go but with my bag on a small trolley, a bit like walking frame, and multiple moving walkways it was no trouble.
At 1:10 in the morning the AIRBUS A350-900 rose into the air for the 12 hours 35 minute flight to London Gatwick airport. The flight was uneventful as I slept most of the way until about 4 hours from landing. I checked the in-flight map to find we were somewhere over Russia. Landed about 6:20  a.m. British time and left for Cambridge on the 9:25 a.m. National Express bus. Yes I did look for my hat that I left on their bus back in February 2016 and no it was not there. The bus trip included all the London airport terminals. From Gatwick South Terminal to the North terminal, then Heathrow Terminal 2, across to terminal 4, and around the airport to Heathrow central bus station. Fromt here to Stanstead airport and on to Cambridge. The bus finally stopped in Cambridge at Parker’s Piece a large park area boarded by Parkside and Gonville Place. A short walk along Parkside and Mill Road then a right into Mawson Road then down to number 112 and I was at my digs--the Annexe that I booked through the Internet site Airbnb. The footpath was narrow most of the way but once in Mawson Road it was not much wider than my suitcase. Several times I had to go onto the road, about one car wide, to pass the occasional rubbish bin or parked bicycle.
My accommodation is good and in easy walking distance to the shops and SPRI. The landlady had stocked the unit with fruit, apples and pears, and in the fridge milk, orange juice, butter, honey, and bagels.

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The front door into the Annexe with side board including fridge, coffee and tea making facilities, and TV. Then around to French doors opening onto a garden and a the view of neighbours.
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Inside again and small two-seater table, the bed and one of the two easy chairs. The bottom section of the bed pulls out to form a double. Continuing around is the door into a bathroom with a shower wash basin and toilet. To finish is a double size wardrobe with a full length mirror.
Tomorrow I start work!





Friday, 14 July

My first full day in Cambridge and my first day in the archive reading room at Scott Polar Research Institute, and my first day, for a long time, sitting at a desk writing for seven hours.

Woke early, beating the alarm, had breakfast, showered and then had to fill in some time before leaving. The walk took me twenty minutes and I soon learnt that cycles were the danger here. Everyone seems to ride bikes or catch buses. Bikes are like mobility scooters back in my retirement village—you can’t hear them coming.

The reading room hours are from 9:30 a.m.  to 1 pm and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. with a compulsory break for morning and afternoon tea. During the hour for lunch I walked down to the corner of Lensfield Road and Regent Street to a Chinese restaurant for meal of stewed pork belly and rice. Next week I will venture further up Regent Street and try  Italian, Greek, Thai or an English pub meal.

Today I went through two of Campbell's field note books extracting some of his survey data. Each day, either at lunch time or at their camp at night, he took a round-of-angles to local features. These angles fixed their position and will allow me to plot their route during their sledging in South Victoria Land.

After sitting all day I got a sore bum and was glad when the bell tolled 5 p.m. Yes the bell did toll on the reading room clock at 5 p.m. and every hour and half-hour. On the walk home I called into Tesco Express and bought some beer, a bottle of Dr. Pepper and some fruit. Before going to my Annexe I called into the owners and got the WIFI password. Now I am connected to the world.

Since leaving home I have had some communication problems. I forgot to buy my mobile roaming before leaving and had not been able get it as all the WIFI connections were unsecured and Spark won’t let you purchase items over an unsecured network. Also since arriving in Cambridge I couldn’t connected with the WIFI in my accommodation. Now that all is rectified, the connection is secure, and Spark will sell me my roaming. These problems have resulted in the Blog posts jumping from Wednesday to Friday. Thursday will turn up sometime, possibly over the weekend.

Now all is well, I am connected to the world and after one day at work I have the weekend free.


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Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Wednesday, 11 July

Arrived at 7.30 a.m. (11.30 NZT). A quick trip through emigration and customs then a long walk to terminal 2, bay 29 where my hotel transport was located. An easy walk as terminal 2 was down two levels and the route I took was a gentle downward slope. No stairs!
The Novotel Citygate  being just outside the airport as was there and checked in by 9 a.m. Unfortunately my room was not ready until 11. Soup the escalator for a coffee and a look at the shops in the Citygate complex. Yes to the coffee but no to the shops. I forgot nothing starts in Hong Kong until after 10 a.m.
Citygate  a large multi-storied complex across the main highway into Hong Kong and joint to the Hotel by large shop lined enclosed bridge. The photo is of the section of the walkway over the highway.IMG_0221
At eleven I got into my room, medium size and standard layout with the bathroom on the right and wardrobe on the left as you walk in. However the bathroom is different. The wash basin and mirror are open to the room with two doors leading to the loo and shower.
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Starting my Cambridge and Kingston 2017 trip

Monday 10 July

The start of my 2017 overseas trip. A couple of weeks in Cambridge, UK, to finish collecting data for Scott’s Northern Party’s sledging in South Victoria Land, Antarctica. Then a time visiting  friends in Kingston, Canada. Both being in the Northern Hemisphere gives me a chance to escape from some of our Kiwi winter.

Jane arrived at 3 p.m. to take me to the airport for my connecting flight to Auckland. Just before she arrived there was hard rain downpour and while listening to the rain on the roof I checked the weather on my mobile. Yes it was raining in Auckland and in Hong Kong, my next stop. However I noted the temperature there was 320C. A bit warmer than our current 120.

My check-in using one of those automated kiosks was flawless. Easy as pie, especially when the nice lady operated the machine and all I had to do was answerer her questions. All this while Jane parked her car. While waiting she took this photo of me showing that I am bit older and heavier than my last trip. I guess it doesn’t matter much as these modern planes can carry extraordinarily heavy loads!


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Finally it was time to go and Jane took this last photo of me going through the doors to my aircraft.

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In Auckland,  after a 6 hour wait, I flew by Air New Zealand to Hong Kong. The wait was too far too long but I couldn’t do much about it as I had taken the last plane out of Palmerston North and the Hong Kong flight flew out at midnight.

I finished my book on the Kindle and got three-quarters the way through the next one. Watched the waiting passengers - a lot of Britishers going home after the rugby series. Eventually I boarded, got settled down and the trip had started.