The Daily Blog experiment – Vermontasaurus

Last night I started reading WITCHCRAFT THERAPY by Mandy Em, and I was a timely reminder (again) that I can change myself, my habits, and my circumstances. And the best sort of physical magic is effort. Ain’t no magic gonna happen if I don’t do my part.

To that end, I spent some time wondering what I could put in place instead of an automatic slide into Facebook first thing each morning, which then leads to doomscrolling, and a 9.30am start to my day. Despite a 7.15am wake up.

I discovered the short podcast Atlas Obscura, and it’s a joy to listen to an episode. This morning’s was about Vermontasaurus, a roadside structure in Vermont, USA. A guy invited people to come along with off cuts of wood and help erect a dinosaur. He evaded fines for an illegal structure by calling it art.

He was also an enthusiastic experimental hot air balloonist, until a fall from his balloon ended his life age 71.

There is not a thing about the episode that doesn’t delight me.

I’m so happy I found this podcast.

Vermontasaurus

The Daily Blog experiment – Australia Zoo

Even though it wasn’t on my bucket list, I ticked off a bucket list item, yesterday. (And yes, I know it’s not a daily blog if it’s not daily, but I’m with my grandkids, so shut up). Australia Zoo.

ThirtiesGirl and her family have been Queenslanders for five years. While I secretly hope they will come to their senses and move back to Victoria so I can get weekly grandkids doses, I know they love the Sunshine Coast lifestyle. I have to say, it’s enticing. Warmer weather, slower life. I’d have moved already if it wasn’t for my parenting-caring-guardian responsibilities with ThirtiesPerson. Who DOES NOT WANT TO MOVE NORTH, THANKS.

Here are: PizzaBoy, myself, Miss J, Logie B, and Super C.

We hit the ground running with an early soccer game for Logie B, then off to the zoo.

Cheetahs, tigers, and lemurs, oh my!

I haven’t been to any zoo in years, so it was good to get amongst wild animals again, and see some up close that I’d never seen before. The lemurs are just as cute as you think they are. Those long fluffy tails – why can I not have one of my own. And if you’ve ever thought something similar, go read ‘The Conglomeroid Cocktail Party’ by Robert Silverberg. I don’t care how that story turns out, I still want a lemur tail of my own.

As you can see, it rained. Welcome to northern Australia and monsoon season. It was still warm, but the lemurs and many other animals were moving towards their heated shelters. And yet, we humans were waking around, buying up cheap plastic ponchos. (@Australia Zoo, how do you justify the plastic ponchos when you’re all about reducing plastic use in the world, especially one-use plastic?)

The giraffes, zebras, and rhinos live together in a large communal enclosure. This giraffe seemed to be going out of his way to bug this zebra, continually breathing on, nibbling, licking and nudging. I guess your older brother can be from another species, and you can bug him like the brat you are.

The croc show in the Crocoseum was headed up by Bindi Irwin’s husband, and two young women. This pale croc is called Casper, and ‘always brings 110%’. Must’ve been a slow day, because he shlumped around. Then again, this show must be a bit like a sushi train. If you don’t fancy the rats and chickens today, meh, because you’ll have another opportunity in a few days.

Even so, I cheered and yelled ‘Crikey!’ with the best of them.

Super C and I kept commenting on the ‘excellent bin chicken show’, whenever some wild ibis landed and poked around. “This is what I flew north to see,” I told him.

“I moved here for this!” he replied.

And I don’t care what species these snakes actually are. Miss J and I called them the Stacks On snakes.

By the end of the day, we were all chilly, and worn out, so home to dry couches, soft blankets, and down time on iPads.

I’m really happy to have had this day with my family, and to have made some new memories.

The Daily Blog experiment – bucket list item

What to write about today?

Well, we had an NDIS(National Disability Insurance Scheme) meeting with our NDIS coordinator, and a lady from My Second Home, a housing supplier, to do with my offspring ThirtiesPerson. Anything to do with anything like this, I get tremendously triggered. Years and years of awful Centrelink(social security) meetings about disability stuff, employment, and the right to survive in Australia. Years of drama with NDIS funding. Disability, disability this, disability that. Pfft. Nah, one paragragh is all that deserves.

I could write about Couples Counselling. I had an individual session today, and bubbled over with anger that has little to do with PizzaBoy and everything to do with growing up an undiagnosed, underrated, underestimated, mostly ignored neurodiverse, smart girl in the 60-70’s. But that’s stuff that I’m not ready to share.

So, bucket list items it is. One of my bucket list items is swimming with whales in Tonga. My term deposit is coming due soon, with interest on it. I looked at the interest. The responsible mother/carer/guardian/wife would reinvent that wad and be grateful that my nest egg is growing. That I’m a white woman in a first world country that values white, and I’m very comfortable as a near-Boomer. Thanks Mum for the inheritance. Thanks PB for making life financially easier for me, or I’d have none of that money left by now.

But….there are other parts to me than mother/wife/carer/guardian/near Boomer. There is a curious black cat who wants to be a hippie and travel and smell of jasmine and experiences.

I emailed our pet travel agent TallThinYogini and asked if my interest was enough to get me to Tonga, accommodated, fed, swimming with whales, and home again.

I’ve discovered a blog and possible travel website that detailed everything to do with this, so I quoted large chunks of it at TallThinYogini and gave her likely dates.

Judging by the prices quoted for the swimming(it’s Tonga’s main form of income), my interest might not be enough for everything. But surely there’s something wonderful I could do. It might not cover PizzaBoy and I going to Monkey Mia to do the volunteer dolphin programme.

But it would be enough for me to have some time away from everyone and everything in Byron Bay, off season. And judging by today’s therapy session, I need that time away to decompress myself. I am not a very good full-time mother/carer/guardian/wife/housewife/little brown sparrow/responsible adult. Sometimes my hippie trippie self needs new age wankerism for a couple of of weeks, when I start thinking that Circus Skills is a perfectly good university course, and that full-time surfing and weed smoking is ‘well, whatever mate, you do you’, rather than ‘ffs, get a job, or create one’.

Anyway, the research ball is now in TTY’s hands, and I await her response.

And yes, I know, extreme privilege right here, right now.

The Daily Blog experiment- Bruno’s Sculpture Garden

Last time I visited Bruno’s Sculpture Garden in Marysville was a couple of weeks before the deadly Black Saturday bushfires in 200o.

The fires burned through Marysville, and devastated the Garden. Some of the terracotta sculptures survived, but huge trees fell on others.

Sculpture salavage

Bruno always vowed to rebuild, and I think I sent him $200 towards that goal.

I’m so happy that, today, the Garden is recovered, many of my favourite sculptures are resurrected, and there are plenty of new friends to encounter around every corner.

A beautiful Autumn day, with early morning fog giving way to warm sunshine, as as I drove us through the Yarra Valley, some trees were brilliant red.

We stopped in Healesville for morning tea, and headed off again through the twisty turns around the Black Spur.

We were listening to Seanan McGuire’s book INDEXING, and that kept me from getting overly anxious about the drive.

We stopped in Marysville for take away sandwiches, and drove the extra 500m or so to the Garden.

This ‘poor poet’ is rich in my opinion. However, ask me again if I’m up here in the depths of winter.

PizzaBoy and I ate our sandwiches in the shade, sitting on a wooden bench, and listening to people’s reactions to their surroundings. One man didn’t have any reactions – he was intent on solving his Rubic’s Cube. I guess if that’s what it takes to get your husband to come with the family on an outing…

“Look through the wizard’s eyes, and get a surprise”

I noticed many more fantasy characters, rather than the ones that sprang from Bruno’s travels. He doesn’t show any sign of slowing down, and was out in the garden, pointing things out, and telling stories of the bush fires.

The Sadhu.

Of course, when I see an amazing life’s work like this, the urge to follow suit comes over me. “Get a bit of land, take some sculpture lessons, erect stuff to the fae folk.”

Sure, just like that. Maybe, Satya, you could start with some pottery classes and making a few terracotta lumpen things for your own small garden… (My ADHD pouts, because for a moment, it thought it spotted a new hyperfixation)

I guess we left the Garden around 2pm. As always, I debate with myself over buying a copy of the photo book Bruno has produced of his garden.

I know I’d end up cutting pictures out for art and to use on my altar and it seems a shame to destroy a beautiful book like that.

I’ll settle for printing some of my photos out and using those.

The drive home was tiring. I’d had gluten, a lot of sugar, and barely any fruit and veg all day.

I’m now flopped on my bed, and processing the day.

The Daily Blog experiment – travel lust

A quite day today, which has meant an opportunity to wrangle the ever-tall email mountain. You know the drill: delete some out of date shit; unsubscribe from 3 more newsletters; answer a few pertinent things; once again fail to update my writing records to show 2 poems rejected, 1 acceptance.

I do subscribe to the JourneyWoman newsletter, and they just posted a few of their 2025 trips. JourneyWoman are women-only travel. Group travel mostly, and I’m always leery of that because the itineraries can be brutal. “Get up, get on the bus(optional whip cracking noises), get off the bus, appreciate these rocks, stop appreciating them, visit the gift shop, get back on the bus.” That sort of thing. But JourneyWoman notes that most of their tours are ‘relaxed’. They posted Morocco, Southern America, and the autumn leaves in New England. All 3 on my bucket list.

There’s no harm in looking through the itineraries, and drooling, and thinking ‘yes to this, and no to bourbon tasting, and why would I want to make an inconvenient something I can’t get through Australian customs?’

Now, PizzaBoy and I have Egypt in our sights next year, and we are limited to one international trip per year….but. Oh look, there’s no buts, Satya. That’s how it is. One international trip until our circumstances change dramatically – like ThirtiesPerson housed; we’ve downsized; I stop spending money on crap.

We are hoping that Wyld Tribe run their Egypt trip, and we can both lob onto that. But in case they don’t, we are occasionally doing homework on who else we might travel with. I’m so set on doing this Egypt trip next year that my Noom(diet and health app) goal is to lose weight so I look fantastic in Egypt travel pics next year.

Goblin Brain is chanting ‘NewEnglandMoroccoNewOrleans’ in my head.

Random tourist pic from the Wyld Tribe ‘Return To Avalon 2023′ trip for interests’ sake.

Daily Blog Experiment – Bucket List

This afternoon, RedHatter and I convened at The Coffee Club, armed with Tombow pens, Quirky Cup Collective biros, notepaper, and brand new Bucket List journals from Officeworks. We were ready to imagine the crap out of our afternoon.

With the help of Google, we set off into the lands of “I’ve always wanted to” and “Hey, that’s a good idea.

Lunch was eaten, drinks drunk, and still we dreamed on.

Some Google-found bucket lists were…um…well, let’s say ho-hum. Grow a herb garden; do some colouring in; do a crossword; cook a meal – um yeah. We’re both over 60. Let’s presume we’ve done that stuff.

As for have a baby; get married; adopt a child; start a company; buy a house. Yeah, sure snap decision I’ll pop in my bucket list, for a day when I’ve nothing else to do. Besides, done it, done it, fostered a child, started numerous businesses. Have not yet bought a house. Nor, given my finances, am I likely to.

Anyway, we were at it for 3 hours and both of us came away with first drafts of lists. Mine…er…goes for 7 pages. I may need to curate it a bit. Some items can be incorporated into others. If I’m in Iceland, I can see volcanoes, the northern lights, and swim in the Blue Lagoon.

I may also have to start selling body part pics on OnlyFans to afford all these items. They do assume a certain level of wealth.

Some items cannot have dates put on them. Russia and the Trans Siberian Railway will have to wait until Putin isn’t being a maniac. Ditto a visit to Ukraine.

But there are plenty of other items to keep me busy, and I haven’t yet sat down with my husband PizzaBoy to see what shared visions I’ve missed.

Now, all I have to do is start filling in the book, and picking out my first items to tackle.

Learning to crochet is an easy one, I hope. And cheap. Unless the ADHD kicks in, and hello new hyperfixation….

The Daily Blog Experiment

Or should that be Bog Experiment.

The Japanese kawaii Unko (poo) museum is in Melbourne, much hyped. MidWife and I, on a constant search for the weird, thought we should go.

We were a little late for our session, so were flushed into the next one, which begins with a young lady urging us to yell POOOOO! It’s a morning out for kids, that’s for sure.

Then, into the first room, where groups of 8 had to sit on pastel-coloured toilets and make strained faces. A plastic poo emoji toy then drops into the toilet bowl, and you get to put your poo on a stick.

“You get to make your own poo!” we are told.

“Did that this morning!” I muttered to MidWife.

I sat on a pastel orange toilet and got…a grey plastic poo.

“Too much fat in your diet!” MidWife diagnosed.

My poo was meant to be silver I guess, but it looked steel grey to me.

We then wandered through a display of a plastic tea party, complete with poo cakes, a room containing large plastic ‘flying poo’, and a room where you ran around trying to stamp on all the poo computer-generated poo images you could.

The most popular thing was a room where you measured ‘how tall’ your scream was. MidWife managed ‘giraffe’. I managed ‘baby chicken’. I can dance like a mofo, but screaming is not my forte.

The fluffy poos could be patted, and if they weren’t all out of electrical charge, or on the blink, the tails moved. And here I thought I’d encountered the world’s only furry teapot.

We were done in about 30 minutes and found the experience underwhelming. We mused on the $30 we could have spent elsewhere (like booking to see yet another retro band), but I said: “Well, at least we won’t be on our death beds thinking ‘aw shit, shoulda gone to the poo museum’.”

Upon reflection, the toilet room could have chosen better flooring, now that I look at the photo again. Looks like every toilet leaks. Or maybe it’s meant to look that way.

Anyway, I would rate it 2/5. A few laughs, but lacking substance. The souvenirs do not include poo emoji earrings. Bad show, Unko people.

The day looked up when we visited Spellbox(both stores), had lunch at the Tea Rooms, and browsed Dymocks. Hello new book (Anna O, which is, alas, not about Freud’s patient).

Next week: Seeing Picnic At Hanging Rock for Valentine’s Day.

Tales From The Tor – England Tour Day 11

Breakfast in the King Arthur Arms pub. Good to know King Arthur did something in his spare time – opened a pub in his home town. Other than the name, and a set of shiny medieval armour(how did Dark Ages Arthur get his hands on it?), it was a bog-standard English pub. Lots of dark wood, small windows, and standard breakfast fare. There’s not a lot of gluten free options in most pubs, but I made do. At least I wasn’t having to exist on eggs every darned day, a fact that everyone in bus must have been thankful for. No cracks about ‘oh gods, farty Satya is here’. At least, none that I heard.

We piled our luggage into the bus, and Narcissia played Tetris with getting it all in. Then we were off a whole two miles down the road. We walked about a kilometre along a sometimes slippery pathway to the ruins of Trewethett Mill. The ruins are overgrown with moss and flora and it’s a gloriously fae place. It had rained the night before, so underfoot was muddy, but we still managed to conjure up enough rain jackets and plastic ponchos to sit on in a rough circle and do a meditation. As we sat, we all felt our hair being played with, and tiny gentle tweaks to our faces, arms, and legs. Midges? Maybe. I like to think the fae were with us, and playing. I’ve had the experience before in various circles. In one particular circle, the facilitator said it was like watching people with physical tics. We were all smoothing back our hair, rubbing or scratching at various vague itches, or smacking at ourselves to fend off invisible mosquitoes.

Of course, a few people have carved their names into rock walls, and there’s the inevitable Fred Loves Evie business, but mostly, people have left offerings rather than desecrated the site.

The mill was used to manufacture woollen textiles. It nestles in a valley carved by the Trevillet River, and we heard it rushing past off to the side of us.

After the meditation, we were free to wander around, take photos, experience the place. Two small labyrinths are carved into the rock face – one modern, one ancient, and we were invited to trace both with our fingers. I did so. At first, all I thought about was my aching hips as I crouched, but I told myself to drop out of physicality. I dropped into a more liminal space where there was nothing but my right forefinger(Jupiter finger in palmistry) and the slightly rough surface of the rock as I followed the grooves of the labyrinth. I got no more out of it than that, and didn’t know if I was tracing out the modern or ancient one. But that was enough, that small opportunity to go beyond ‘this aches, that aches, why am I so fat, I hope I don’t fall over, am I doing this right’.

The ruins were soft, covered in moss, fern fronds, and some places were so squishy underfoot that I didn’t go into them.

Beyond the mill was the river, and the water beautifully clear and cold. I wondered to MidWife if it was like the river in Scotland where, if you dipped your face in the water, you were blessed with eternal beauty. We did it in Scotland, and I decided to do it here, but instead of dipping right down, because there wasn’t really a place to do it, I splashed the water on myself, and it was welcome after the closeness of the meditation space, and heat of the morning.

I’m thankful I was with a group who didn’t feel the need for constant chatter, and screaming ‘look at me’ photos. Oh don’t get me wrong, we did a bit of that, too, but not everywhere, and we had the sense to know when places were special.

The sunlight was dappled, and much of the place shaded, which I liked. Cheers to all redheads who can burn on a winter’s day.

From here, we walked back to the bus, uphill of course, because isn’t everything in England up a hill, or up stairs, and trundled off to St Nectan’s Glen. The day warmed up, and so did I.

My next post will be my St Nectan’s Glen experience. Photos will be added to posts soon, I promise.

Tales From The Tor – England travel blog Day 10

Today, I just couldn’t. No matter how much I wanted to see local sites, and St Michael’s Mount, I needed another day out. We can talk all we like to Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis, to autism, to ADHD, to postmenopause. Whatever we like. It’s me. I need time alone to reset, rest, indulge how ever I want without anyone else’s time table.

After the group left, I read a little, and did what I thought was a favour to everyone. I took our big bags of shared laundry to the local laundrette. I gave the laundry lady my unscented washing sheets. When I returned later in the afternoon, she’d washed and dried everything with the heaviest scented whatevers in the world. Seriously lady, how are you not dead? I hung everything up in our lounge area, and rotated putting stuff on the outside stairs bannister to air. Holy crap, but that shit was strong.

(I made sure I wore all that laundered stuff first, so I could wash it again quickly and not have the scent infest my suitcase.)

I spent my day pottering around Tintagel. In and out of shops, down side streets. I met the Queen of Tintagel. A local black cat who is owned and cared for by a family, but considers the whole high street, every house, and all shops to be hers. Cars stop for her as she crosses roads. I fully expected drivers to leap out and throw down a cape for her. I met her first on the footpath, and a little later in a shop. She strolled in to roll all over the floor and rest in a patch of sunshine. Later, she was in another shop. She owns Tintagel in a way Igraine never did, and Morgaine didn’t want.

In the mid afternoon I took myself up to Camelot Castle, a hotel that heavily features the art of Ted Stourton on the walls, and in coffee table books. I got some pics of the ruins of Tintagel from the side of Camelot and some fine view of the Atlantic Ocean. I took afternoon tea in the dining room. People, it pays to be nice, and chat to waitresses and waiters, and ask them about themselves, and how they came to be working where they are. I got the nicest alcove in the place, an extra biscuit with my tea, and all the dining room coffee table books were placed on my table. Not a work said when I took photos of various pages. I even got recommendations of the best places to sit outside to watch the ocean. All of which I took advantage of, and my lovely waitress, Mairie, enjoyed seeing my Australian change purse and the ‘exotic’ coins. I gave her a five cent piece which she said she was going to turn into a small pendant. Little things go a long way.

My day in Tintagel was full of fun. I tried on felt hats, held dresses up against myself, had a lovely chat with the waitress in the tea rooms, and generally pottered about. I even got time to make some brief travel notes, and read a bit more of TO SIR PHILLIP, WITH LOVE. I’m not much of a one for Regency romances, but I have watched the first two seasons of BRIDGERTON, and Eloise and Penelope are my two favourite characters. So I read those two books.

When the group got back in the evening, I joined them in the pub downstairs for dinner and heard about their day. I had some Regret of Missing Out, but on the whole, I was content with my own day.

That Atlantic Ocean is incredibly blue in a way the Pacific isn’t. As for the Great Southern Ocean and Bass Strait – I refuse to qualify their murky depths.

(Gossip: upon approaching Camelot Castle, there were two young people trying to selfie with some flag or other, so I offered to help them out. Honestly, young people, take some interesting pics. I made them jump in the air with the flag, and that made a much better pic than the static one they wanted. Camelot Castle in the background, and their bright yellow peace bus to the side. They told me they swam through Merlin’s Cave at high tide. I was impressed. Later, I talked to a woman who said that the assistants who stand at various points around the Tintagel site were put on high alert when they’d seen the couple go down to the caves, and not come up again and the tide came in. The local rescue team were alerted and about to be deployed when the couple reappeared. They said they had a right to experience the caves in an authentic way. Dickheads. Upon reflection, I don’t know how they’re supporting themselves as they travel the world in their yellow peace bus, but it’s an endless tour, and somehow peace will come to the world as they take Instagram pics of their peace flag in various locations. I roll my eyes at this. I think of myself working three jobs and paying taxes, and get off my lawn.)

Tales From The Tor – England travel blog Day 9.2

As we drove, the weather closed in, and we pulled into the car park in Tintagel to persistent but fairly light rain. Out we got, umbrellas and rain jackets at the ready, and it was 4pm. We were just about the last people to get tickets and walk across that long bridge that replaces a thin spit of land linking the mainland to the now-island of Tintagel castle ruins.

This is where, it’s said, Uther Pendragon came to Igraine, wife of the Duke of Cornwall, under an enchantment of disguise, a glamour, cast by Merlin. From that night, the future King Arthur was conceived, and the next day, all was revealed. Duke Gorlois was killed in battle, fighting against the High King, and Uther married Igraine shortly afterwards. Arthur was born in wedlock, but everyone knew he was conceived from adultery, casting a shadow over his eventual right to rule.

So, an important part of our Return to Avalon.

I’ve visited Tintagel once before, five years ago, but I was recovering from a nasty virus and didn’t have the energy, in hot summer sun, to climb up all the steps to the summit, and see Gallos, the 8′ tall sculpture of a ghostly man wearing a crown, and holding a sword, looking out to sea, as if guarding the coast against invaders. English Heritage says it’s not meant to represent a single person, but represents the general history of the site as a medieval fortification and trading post with the Mediterranean.

However, if there’s a person in the world who doesn’t think it represents Arthur, I’ve yet to meet them.

I worked slowly and steadily, treading carefully on wet steps and gravel, making my way through the ruins, wondering at each ‘room’ or wall. Someone had left a bottle of body lubricant in the chapel. I removed that. I didn’t find it funny. To me, Tintagel is a meaningful place, and even though I’m a pagan and witch, not a Christian, perhaps some of my ancestors worshipped there. Besides, I have a committed Christian husband and have been aware, this whole trip, of doing right also by his belief system. PizzaBoy would have removed that. So I did too. Also, pollution – plastic bottle.

Ever upwards, and every now and then, I paused. But, the past five years have seen me change naturopaths, acquire an integrative doctor, get a Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis diagnosis rather than a fibromyalgia diagnosis, fully transition through menopause and stop having hot flushes mostly(spicy food, too much sugar, and too much caffeine still set me off), and have my autism and ADHD diagnoses. Armed with all that, and understanding myself so much better, I’ve much more stamina and strength. I made it all the way up, and knelt before Gallos/Arthur.

To one side, a young Asian lass was having an Instagram photo shoot, with no indication that she was anywhere but on some anonymous cliff top. No Tintagel, no Gallos, no ruins. Just her and the wind and rain, and the mainland behind her. It was very hard to get photos without her poncing and posing in the background.

There she was in pale pink wafty clothes, and the bland, smooth face of stacks of make up, and pore-disappearing creme, and her beleagured photographer/boyfriend trying not to step in puddles. Sitting and posing, one hand to her face. Change half a centimetre, 20 more shots. And then off they went, back to the mainland, while I’m kneeling in a puddle before Arthur, saying: “I am your liege woman.”

The rain and wind picked up as I made my way slowly down the stairs, holding on to the wet metal railing all the way, and sometimes almost climbing down steep steps. My knees creaked like old dunny doors.

How Igraine must have felt, married off to Gorlois, an older man, when she was a young woman, still really a girl, and brought to Tintagel. Lonely, cold, windswept. Her husband away defending the coast most of the time. She suddenly mistress of a whole castle, and household, with the village beyond. Cold, bleak winters with the chill seeping into stone walls. Grey sky, steel grey ocean stretching out to the horizon, and enormous gulls crying along with her. She likely didn’t fear Hell, she probably thought she was already there.

Loneliness exudes from the very rocks and land, with the Atlantic biting at the cliffs every day.

The Lady Morgaine, or Morgana Le Fey was born there to Igraine and Gorlois, half sister to Arthur. Did she have sea magic in her veins? Did she send enchantment on the howling winds?

Below the castle ruins, at low tide, are a series of caves, one of which is dubbed Merlin’s Cave. It’s quite the popular destination. I have visited it before, but when we were there, it was high tide, and under water. Low tide was midday and our timing just wasn’t right.

We arrived at our pub Bed and Breakfast in Tintagel, all chilled, slightly damp, and ready for a hot meal and bed. I never thought I’d be sick and tired of chips, but honestly, by this stage, I’d had enough of them.

We all fell into bed, for the next day we’d be up and at ’em again.