Author Topic: Best place you've ever been?  (Read 9665 times)

Fyodor

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #60 on: February 27, 2010, 10:13:21 AM »
Emma Thompson is a bighead. Remember that one-woman series she had where she was supposed to be everything from a stand-up comic to an opera singer, or whatever? She wrote gags, wrote the feem toon, sang the feem toon... She has a big fat stupid face, I hate her and she is totally rubbish.


Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.

Offline Diane CBPFC

  • .
  • Posts: 4538
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #61 on: February 27, 2010, 04:38:20 PM »
Good god! Fyodor can only speak in two word sentences since the heart op.
People will come from strange lands to hear me speak my words of wisdom. They will ask me the secret of life and I will tell them. Then maybe I'll finish off with a song. The Nomad

Malc

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #62 on: February 27, 2010, 05:06:29 PM »
...and in yellow.

Offline The Peepmaster

  • .
  • Posts: 5845
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #63 on: March 08, 2010, 12:26:23 AM »
Having just come back from an overnight stay in Fort William, I have to say some of the most outstanding scenery I've seen in the UK is Glencoe, in the snow and sunshine.
Nostalgia is not what it used to be. 😟

Joan

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #64 on: March 08, 2010, 05:25:33 AM »
Great topic, Roger, loved reading all the posts, at least the ones about best places.  ;)  Note to self:  try very hard not to get on the wrong side of Malc.  I've never seen Tutti Frutti and am ambivalent about Emma Thomson - like some of her films and loved The Magic Roundabout.  Peeps, you're just jealous because Lucy thinks Malc's pic bears a resemblance to George Clooney - if you say George is ugly, you're simply telling an untruth.  You should go further up the West coast to see some really spectacular scenery. Glencoe gives me the willies - purely psychological: my Mum was a Campbell.

My first overseas trip was to Lebanon in 1968 before the troubles started.  I was only 14, but it made a big impression on me – a beautiful country, full of history.  Stand out memories are having “mezze”  on the terrace of a restaurant looking out over the Mediterranean in the ancient village of Byblos, visiting the Cedar mountains and seeing the ballet “Romeo and Juliet” performed in the Roman ruins of Baalbek.

With working on the camping tours in Europe and having an interest in architecture, I’ve been in a lot of churches and cathedrals around the world and they tend to blend into collections of types of architecture and historical significance.  When I walked in to St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, though, it was almost a spiritual experience – nothing to do with the religious aspect for me, purely the building.  The huge dome seems to float above.  It was awe inspiring for me.

Bearing in mind that I haven’t been to Europe since 1984, my favourite places were Paris, Amsterdam, Geneva, Dubrovnik, northern Italy, especially Venice, Florence and Sorrento, Lauterbrunnen in Switzerland and the Spanish Pyrenees.  I’ve skied there and Trevor and I stayed in a beautiful Parador (Paradors are state run hotels in historical buildings) in the western Pyrenees on our way to France.

New Zealand would have to be right at the top of best places I’ve been to.  My first big trip was a 7 month working holiday there.  Started my camping tour career there, so saw lots of it four times.  The whole of it, although the South Island has the most impressive scenery.

Tasmania – haven’t seen all of it, but what I have, I loved.  Australia’s Red Centre – standing on top of Ayer’s Rock looking out over the red earth towards the horizon – first time I’d really seen the curvature of the earth; the Olgas, Stanley Chasm, Katherine Gorge, which is a bit further north.

The island of Islay in the Inner Hebrides - spent four summer holidays in Port Askaig from when I was about 7.  Fishing off the pier, riding on the back of the little luggage "train" when the ferry came in - this was in the days when everything was taken on and off the ferry by crane in nets, including the cars – eating chips and coke iceblocks made by the cook on the "Loch Fyne", a cargo ship which came in regularly, going in the boat with the lighthouse keepers when they were taken to the lighthouses at either end of the Sound of Islay, spending hours in the surf on the west coast (can’t remember the name of the beach) on our li-los (lucky we didn’t end up in America) and one memorable trip to Colonsay  in the lifeboat with the shepherds and sheepdogs going to the Sheepdog Trials.  Much as I loved those holidays, I was still madly jealous of my best friend who got to go to Butlins every summer.

Agree with everything said about the far north of Scotland – just beautiful – and I remember spending a weekend in a hotel just outside Aviemore with a couple who were friends (I went for the skiing), going for a walk by myself and thinking “I could live here."

Love the two places I've lived the longest:  Galloway in South West Scotland, family lived just outside Castle Douglas and of course, Sydney and where we live right now, on the edge of a national park, with the beaches and ocean ten minutes away by car.
 
Canada is definitely on my list of want to sees, been to Vancouver for three days, but that wasn’t enough.  Also Alaska, various parts of the USA, South America and possibly even Antartica, Vietnam, in the UK,  the western counties of England, Wales and Yorkshire.  So much world and so little time (and money!).

I forgot Ireland – spent another great family holiday in Donegal and stayed with my aunt in County Wicklow.  Also Fiji is lovely – been there 3 times.

Good God! No wonder that took me so long to write!  :o



Offline Roger Kettle

  • Roger
  • *
  • Posts: 5008
  • Ho! Ho! £$%^&* Ho!
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #65 on: March 08, 2010, 09:19:40 AM »
You got around, girl! Nicw memories for you, Joan, and a great read for us.

Offline Tarquin Thunderthighs lll

  • .
  • Posts: 5847
  • They call me Tarqs... and other stuff.
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #66 on: March 08, 2010, 09:57:52 AM »
I have a great, great uncle who was a McDonald, Joan, but let's put aside our differences...

I'm very envious, despite not having ever suffered greatly from the wanderlust, and I'd love to have been to a quarter of the places you've travelled to in your lifetime (I can match County Wicklow, but that's about it).

I can, however, make one recommendation that is well worth the effort if you've not seen it before, and although I am generally far more impressed with Mother Nature's creations than man's, Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria has to be one of the most awesome man-made structures on the planet, both from the outside and the inside. Designed by barking mad King Ludwig, who met his end under very suspicious circumstances (drowned in shallow waters alongside the psychiatrist who had declared him mad a few days beforehand), probably bumped off to prevent him bankrupting the country further through building ridiculously OTT castles, Neuschwanstein was the inspiration for Disney's Sleeping Beauty castle, and the building itself was used as a location in 'Chitty Chitty Bang Bang'. You may well have seen it on jigsaw puzzles, but it's far more impressive in the flesh...




I apologise, in advance.

Tom

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #67 on: March 08, 2010, 11:00:40 AM »
Great post, Joan... you've given me some thoughts as to where I want to visit!  :)

Joan

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #68 on: March 08, 2010, 12:02:02 PM »
Sorry, TT, been to Neuschwanstein twice - forgot about that.  First time was on my last tour with Contiki in Europe.  Visiting the castle wasn't normally part of the tour, but it was the last tour of the season and some of the campsites were closed, so we varied the itinerary a bit.  There was no English speaking guide the day we arrived at Neuschwanstein, so I ended up translating for the German guide, not well, I'm sure, but as you say, it's a fascinating place and well worth a visit, even just to see the outside and the view.  The second time was with Trevor when we "did" Europe and I discovered just how much I'd slept on the Contiki buses.  ;)

Offline Tarquin Thunderthighs lll

  • .
  • Posts: 5847
  • They call me Tarqs... and other stuff.
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #69 on: March 08, 2010, 12:23:45 PM »
 :(

Mold! Bet you've never been to Mold...
I apologise, in advance.

Vulture

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #70 on: March 08, 2010, 12:34:59 PM »
:(

Mold! Bet you've never been to Mold...

I have..... I have..... !

Offline Diane CBPFC

  • .
  • Posts: 4538
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #71 on: March 08, 2010, 03:15:49 PM »
I've been to Mold but not to Bavaria.  There was a great red, round cast iron post box in Mold. Pitty you missed it Joan.
People will come from strange lands to hear me speak my words of wisdom. They will ask me the secret of life and I will tell them. Then maybe I'll finish off with a song. The Nomad

Jack

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #72 on: March 08, 2010, 07:12:31 PM »
I went to Cleethorpes once.

In all the excitement, I forgot to mention Skegness.

Tom

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #73 on: March 08, 2010, 07:55:31 PM »
That Neuschwanstein castle looks very familiar to me (not from Disney or Chitty Chitty Bang Bang - which I don't think I've seen) I'm sure I've had dreams about it - that or something very similar.

Joan

  • Guest
Re: Best place you've ever been?
« Reply #74 on: March 08, 2010, 10:34:55 PM »
You've got me there, TT - never been to Wales, although I did try to make a detour off the M6 round Birmingham once and turned back when the signs started appearing in Welsh, so maybe I have briefly.  Definitely never been to Mold, but I do know two people who live near there.

Darn, Diane!  Another addition to my must sees.  ;D

I lived 30 miles from the border between Scotland and England for the first 18 or so years of my life and had never ventured into England.  I don't count Heathrow in transit.  Never been to Carlisle and my first (and only so far) visit to the Lake District was in 2003.