Saturday, February 29, 2020

Poetry Practise With Author Angela, Teacher, Alison and Writers Weekend Organizers, The Hobbs Family





Angela Lansbury, author, performer of comic poetry, with Alison Chisholm poetry teacher and author, at Fishguard Bay Hotel in Wales. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.



Angela Lansbury, author and poet, reading three of  her short poems from her laptop. you can see I am looking down when I should be looking at the audience.



Angela Lansbury, author and poet, reciting from memory and improvising a rap poem about being 'Busy as a bee', in Fishguard Bay Hotel, during the annual Writers' Holiday.

Angela Lansbury, author and poetry performer, with another poetry performer, Scottish Fiona. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.




Fishguard Bay Hotel, Writers' Holiday, family of organizers and a regular speaker. From Left, Gerry Hobbs, his son David who drives us to the station, daughter-in-law and supporter, Speaker and course leader and author Stephen Wade, Gerry's wife Anne Hobbs, who gives the opening night welcome speech. She says: 'They only rule is there are no rules. Actually, there is one rule: Enjoy yourself.'

The next Writers' Holiday is February 2021.

Useful Website

About the Author

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author, speaker, teacher of English and other languages.
Please share links to your favourite posts.

Turkish Delight and Egyptian Delight to delight visitors to London, & Dark chocolate


The pretty box.

Celebrations. You choose what to put in your box, like the old Pick n Mix at Woolworth's.

We cut open the orange one to share it. Strong flavours. strong colours. Dark orange curled around white soft nougat. Not just boring plain jelly.

The pink one was strong and totally different, with a nut in the middle.The strong jellly overwhelmed the nut flavour.

The strong fruit flavour made everything else taste stronger, too. We had black grapes afterwards. The sugar left in my mouth from the sweet enhanced the flavour of the grapes.

Also look for peera, an Indian fudge made from home made evaporated milk, boiled slowly to reduce and thicken it, added sugar and cinnamon for flavouring. Popular for Diwali, weddings and to celebrate the birth of children.

Also in this area, several Indian restaurants and curry houses, a French restaurant, Whitechapel art gallery which has a shop and restaurant, the old Synagogue where Disraeli's father attended until he fell out with the others and converted from Judaism to Christianity, which enabled his son Benjamin to became Prime Minister and Queen Victoria's favourite.

Useful Websites
aipackaging.co.uk

Rajmahal Sweets, 57 Brick Lane, Shadwell, London E1
Near Aldgate East tube station.

Two more branches.
Long opening hours, from 9 am to 11 pm, seven days a week.


Tasty Turkish delight. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Travel writer and photographer. Copyright.


Maybe you'd prefer chocolate?
My family tried that, too, a few steps away.

A cup of Espresso for two pounds, and chocolate covered orange peel at six pounds eighty four pence. (We took one piece out of the bag to go with the coffee.)

I would describe the East End of London, the West End of London, the whole of London, as English delight.

Dark Sugars Ltd Main store
124-126 Brick Lane, London, Greater London, E1 6RU.

About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please bookmark and share links to your favourite posts.

Friday, February 28, 2020

Best Bagels - from Brick Lane in London


Bagel
Bagels from Brick Lane. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

Are the best bagels from Brick Lane in London? My family bought sesame bagels in Brick Lane, East London.

Heated them up next day. Not in the microwave. Better in the oven. Served sliced with butter, melting butter. Delicious.

I used to buy bagels in packets from Tesco Express, especially when going cheap after 6,7 and 8 pm in the evening. I used to freeze them.

I must admit the latest Brick Lane bagels got up votes from two members of the family. Crunchy outside. Slighly sweet outside. Soft inside.

Salted butter would probably enhance the flavour and counteract the sweetness.

The Brick Lane area is nowadays no longer the Jewish area it once was, but has been taken over by the next influx of refugees, so expect to see lots of 'Indian' continent restaurants and snack bars, offering foods from around the world.

You could read a book whilst eating a bagel, but I would rather concentrate on each one without the distraction of the other.

Holiday Reading
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monica_Ali#Brick_Lane
https://www.jack-the-ripper.org/jewish-east-end.htm

Getting There
Choice of two tube stations at different ends of the main street.
Shoreditch.
Aldgate. (Which means old gate.)

Useful Websites
https://m.facebook.com/beigelbake/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick_Lane

About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please bokmark and share links to your favourite posts.

Painting, Poetry and Writing Holidays - What You Could Learn


Yellow Daffodils, water colour painting and photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

I painted this watercolour on the Art course at Writers' Holiday in Wales in February 2020. I had attended all the writing course over twenty years, the poetry and novel writing, romance, crime, travel writing, non-fiction courses, when Writers' Holiday ran a whole week in summer. Now they only organize the weekend in springtime. 

I originally took the art course in order to illustrate my poems and books of poetry and other fiction and non-fiction books.

This large A4 picture which fits most A4 frames was meant to be an illustration of flowers in the wild, or rather in a garden. Larger daffodills with smaller flowers around them.

 I had no room for my signature, so I added it in the middle, like a gift tag on a bouquet.



I also painted a small A5 size version. this time I outlined the flowers in black. I prefer the orange outline. Susan showed me how to do the white circles to fill in space under the flowers.


I recall visiting England's Lake District buying a postcard with the text of Wordsworth's poem 'I wandered lonely as a cloud' with a frame of Daffodils. I kept it framed in my kitchen where I used to live for several years. I could write my own seasonal poems and illustrate them.

You could take a photo of your holiday destination and write a poem at the time or later. And paint from a photo.

At Fishguard Bay Hotel there is a lovely view of the bay. 

In a previous year I had painted the bay. Two other ladies painted the bat. Susan stood with us by the window and she pointed to the sky and clouds, and the light on the water, the waves, where the sea met the cliff, the dark colour of the nearby trees and the colour of the further trees. 
The course is suitable for beginners or advancing.




At Writers' Holiday, Susan Alison, the art teacher, showed us:
1 What sort of paper to buy and how to remove it from a block.
2 How to use different types of brush to create different effects.
3 How to mix colours, which 7 colours to buy, 
4 How to try out colour on a practice paper. 
5 How to remove paint and start again. 
6 How to start with a distant background colour.
7 How to leave white paper to contrast with the foreground for a moon.
8 How to use the base of a wineglass to create a perfect circle moon.
9 How to create clouds. 
10 How to find a cheap bowl or two for water - why you need two bowls. 
11 How to buy a cheap palette
12 How to create the effect of distance with different colours and shades and sizes.
13 How to create birds in the sky at different distances.
14 How to use different widths of black pen to outline your flowers and other objects.


I had read about all these painting technique subjects previously. But it's like reading about swimming or riding a bike. You need somebody to show you, watch you doing it, and advise you how to practise and do it better. 
Susan is a very patient teacher and very encouraging and complimentary. She kept telling us that it was a delight to teach keen would-be-artists like us, rather than people who had to be in an art class and didn't want to do it (such as pupils at a school).

By trial and error - yes, error, I learned how to leave space for the inner white frame.
How to leave space for my signature.

The Fishguard spring weekend holiday starts with dinner on Friday night and ends with lunch on Sunday. You can extend your stay by a day and see the area or continue practising what you learned. Or arrive a day earlier. 

Why Arrive Early?
That way there's no risk of delays making you miss the first night dinner or the first day of the course.

Two people who had expected to arrive in Fishguard and Goodwick on the ferry from Ireland were unable to join us because the weather was so bad that the ferries were not running.




Angela Lansbury (left) with poetry writer and teacher, Alison Chisholm.







Meeting up with friends year after year. Fiona from Scotland who reads Burns poetry at a Scottish National Trust property on the Burns trail area.


The organizers of the Writers Holiday and a speaker. From the left: Gerry Hobbs, organizer; his son, David, who drives to collect guests from the nearby station and returns them. David's wife, and supporter. Steve Wade, author and poetry performer and often teaches courses on crime research and writing. Anne Hobbs, organizer alongside Gerry.

More details from 
https://www.susanalison.com/drawing-painting-classes/

About the Author
Angela Lansbury

See my other posts on

Thursday, February 27, 2020

How And Why To Translate Languages Such As German from the news





I keep reading that a way to learn to speak is to listen to the news. I have been learning German. By accident I clicked on Facebook on a link to a live broadcast of questions about

One suggestion I found on the Facebook polyglots page was to have the German (or other language your learning) news or radio paying in the background when you are doing something else, to get used to the intonation, reinforce the words and constructions you already know, and expand your vocabulary with similar words.

German - English
(note that in German the nouns have capital letters)
aber - but
aus - out
diese Minute - this minute
ersten - first
Bürger - citizens
diese - this
dramatisch - dramatic
gut - good (often used in surnames, as in the English Goodman)
kontakt - contact
kranken - ill/sick (think of the English word kranky)
krankenhause - hospital
Flugzeug - plane (add e on the end for plural)
Flüge - flights
frage - question
frangen - to ask
heute - today
informationen - information
influenza - flu
international - international
Kindergarten - kindergarden
lage - long
Maschine - machine (in German pronounced machine-er)
menschen - people
Muss - must
natürlich - naturally
nicht - not
noch - yet
funfzig - fifteen
Reise - travel
Spektrum - spectrum
sprechen - speak
statistiken - statistics
szenario - scenario
zu - to

I managed to finish the German basic course in Duolingo and I am now on the Spanish.

Useful Websites
www.google.com/search?q=google+translate+english
https://www.wordreference.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/polygotcommunity/
duolingo.com
memrise.com

About The Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author, speaker, teacher of English and other languages.
Please share links to your favourite posts.

Snow - How to prepare for the cold when travelling and avoid or find snow

One year I was booked on a walking tour of East London. The weaterh was really cold. Why was I so cold? In the USA at ski resorts I had walked around in snow and not felt so cold. The reason was, I was wearing padded ski jackets.

I hunted in the clothes cupboard. I found a ski jacket. It was dayglo colours. I looked absurd.

I arrived to join my group. They were all normally dressed, neat suits and coats and jackets. I felt silly.

However, at the end of the tour, an American lady said to me, "You were the only person dressed suitably for the occasion!" I was so grateful to her for saying that. I wished she had told me earlier.

So get out your ski clothes. One year I arrived in New Zealand with everything except a ski jacket which fitted. The shops were out of my size, had ridiculous prices, or were a bus ride away from my family's hotel. I walked around the shopping centre and found a second hand shop. Just the thing. Not as cheap as I wanted.

I took it to the counter. The assistant looked at it. He said, 'Sorry, it's missing a button, and this zip on the inside pocket is stuck, and there's a stain on the inside of the arm - nobody else will see it, but you might not like it. I could make a reduction, if you really want it."

I was so happy!

Feb 27 2020 It was snowing in London but not laying on the ground. The online newspapers showed white snow in the north of England. What does that mean for travellers?

It's good for ski resorts, if it's the right kind of slow, not turning to slippery slush which you sink into, nor freezing into slippery ice. Shoes with gripping soles are an advantage and you can buy overshoes and carry small slippers to wear indoors to protect floors from spikes and melting snow.

Food And Drink
I always like to have something to eat and drink with me. It cheers you up if you are waiting an hour for a train or bus or in the cold at a bus stop or on a draughty railway station.
If you are in a car you can stock up with food and water.

One year I made the mistake of putting it in the boot (Americans say trunk) of the car. Food, drink, and umbrella were all in the back. If you are in pouring rain you don't want to have to get out and get soaked fetching your umbrella and food and drink.

Emergency Toilet
In major motorway upheavals sometimes a toilet bus will go along the hard shoulder. Do you want to get out, in bear country, or after your car is cornered by an elephant in a safari park?

A large container with a sealable cover makes a makeshift toilet which can be emptied out later or immediately, from a door ajar if you are in the countryside and don't want to leave the car.

Yes, I was on a platform in Cardiff, Wales, recently, waiting for the train back to Paddington, London. I chose not to go into the waiting room, although that might have been warmer. Why?

Where To Sit
1 I wanted to keep away from others to avoid coronavirus.

2 The waiting room attracts people from both platforms. It is easy to sit tight because everybody else is doing so, when your train is going from platform one and they are all waiting for the train from platform two.

Years ago, in France, when I was a student, I snoozed in bed thinking that because I could hear the French girls talking, then breakfast had not started nor finished and my coach had not left.
When I eventually decided to get up, I had missed breakfast, and missing the day's outing, because they were not booked to go on the outing. They were the last half dozen friends of the previous week's course and were catching another coach home in another direction.

3 On the platform you can read the overhead signs. You don't have to rush out through a heavy door. You can rise and get ahead when the platform fills so that you are early onto the train steps and doors.

Dress warmly. My relative said, "I don't need to because I am going all the way by train."

Be prepared. As American Benjamin Franklin said, Prepare for the worst and hope for the best.

If you end up taking a replacement bus you could have a long walk in the cold along the platform and outside across the car park, standing in a chill wind, waiting for your suitcase to be loaded below the bus, then into the bus sitting by the open door.

Warm Clothes
Even gloves and a hat packed into a bag or pocket can keep off the chill without taking up too much room. I always look for jackets with built in hoods, the sort you buy at ski resorts and in sports shops and even second hand shops (in the USA look for 'thrift' stores).

Tube Station Toilets
If you need a toilet in a hurry, it's handy to know which stations have toilets.

Singapore Stations
In hot countries you drink more water, which means you need toilets more often. In Singapore life is easy. Almost every station has a toilet near the ticket office. Look for the sign. It's outside the barrier, so you can use it even if not travelling by train.

The toilets are outside the station. It's a good idea to go before boarding and after getting off.

If you are caught short, you could always try playing the tourist card, asking for the toilet and looking woebegone. Maybe the office clerk will open the ticket gate and let you out and in again so you don't have to pay a second fare. This happened to me the first time.

Now I know to go in advance.

In London, the tube maps mark which stations have toilets. The print is very small. I suggest getting a magnifying glass, writing a big t alongside the stations with toilets.

Changing Trains
If you have a ten minute change from a train to a replacement bus, you cannot risk leaving the group. The bus won't have a toilet.

Go to the toilet on the train half or two thirds through the journey. Take your laptop with you.

GWR
On GWR trains from London to the West and Wales, you have large toilets big enough for wheelchairs. Everything is clearly marked.

Save Your Seat
You might want to leave something behind to reserve the seat, unless you have a reservation card, or ask the person beside you or opposite to keep your seat in case anybody else tries to take your place.

Planes To Ski Resorts & Back
On a plane going from a ski resort to a warmer climate you may find it convenient to get out of your seat and removed your warm jacket. if there's no room overhead, on a regular large plane flight you might be able to ask the smiling stewardess to hang up the garment and give it back to you at the end of the flight. Set an alarm on your watch on a 13 hour flight from New Zealand or Australia back to Europe or the UK. By tomorrow morning you will have forgotten your jacket. If you change seats, the person who stowed your jacket might have trouble finding you. Allow time to get back into your outer clothes before your hear the announcements to sit down and fasten seatbelt and prepare for landing.

Garage Toilets
Driving from London west towards Wales, we stopped to fill the car up with petrol and I went to the toilet at the same time. But some places the toilet is outside the shop, around the back, which is colder.

Hotel Toilets
More chance of getting warm water.

And a warm hand dryer. This dries your hands and warms you up.

If you are a mother, a secretary, a tour guide, in charge of a group, a spare hat and pair of gloves and even spare hot drinks might come in handy.

Tiny Canape Cutlery
I found some old small cheap metal spoons and tiny three prong canape forks which my family had discarded and were about to throw out. I rescued one set of tiny knife, spoon and fork, not to heavy to carry. This enabled me to cut up a sandwich and eat half later, cut an apple. Even cold food warms you up when you are feeling chilled.

Avoid Snow - Down Under
To avoid snow, go south, to the equator or beyond. Australia or New Zealand at Christmas and Easter.

To Find Snow - Indoor Slopes
To find snow in summer, we go to New Zealand (via tropical, hot all year Singapore).

Finally, you can practise your skiing at indoor slopes in the UK and in Singapore.

Happy travelling. Keep warm. Take care of yourself.


Useful Websites
UK
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakerloo_line
https://tfl.gov.uk/tube/route/bakerloo/
https://www.gwr.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Western_Railway_(train_operating_company)
https://www.visitlondon.com/london-app
https://www.skimagic.co.uk/the-top-10-dry-ski-slopes-indoor-snow-centres-in-the-uk/

SINGAPORE
https://www.sportquest.com.sg/pages/snowcity
singaporeair.com

USA, EUROPE & WORLDWIDE
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indoor_skiing

About The Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please bookmark and share links to your favourite posts.

Turkish Delight To See, types To Try, Buy And Make, On Paddington Station, London and worldwide

Turkish Delight and other sweets at Taste the best, Paddington Station, London, England, UK. Photo by Angela Lansbury.

Turkish Delight was made very popular in England with the brand Fry's Turkish Delight.

You will also find it in many other Mediterranean countries and Arabic countries under different names.  Most names are variations on Loukoumi, which comes from Arabic. In Greece the sweet is called Halloumi in Greek and in English Greek Delight and in Cyprus as Cyprus Delight which is a protected name and it must be made there to use the name.

I looked at the numerous confections on the huge oblong kiosk. As I loitered, without buying, the stall holder reached down and lifted a tray of tiny pieces for me to try. I tried one. It was pleasant enough. Not bad. Not so good that I just had to buy.

I did think that everything looked interesting. But I did not want to chat at length with no intention of buying. I was in a hurry to get home after several hours on a train from another country.

I found an online reference to TasteTheBest at Brent Cross Shopping centre with a photo. I could not find a website.

Whilst shops normally stock boxes with sweets cut in dice shape, this attractive display has them in long ropes, presumably cut up into pieces for the customer, as well as variations shaped like large Scotch Eggs ((boiled eggs covered in cooked meatball with a crust of oatmeal or toasted bread) halved to show the colours of the filling contrasting with the outside.

I looked on Wikipedia and found this Egyptian style bought in the USA.




Description
English: Turkish delight surrounded by layers of nougat and dried apricot, a confection from Egypt.
Date21 June 2010
SourceOwn work
AuthorGrammarFascist
Imported candy purchased at a shop in Connecticut, USA.

My favourite flavours are lemon and rosewater. I shall definitely go back and try and buy.

Useful Websites
See lots of pictures on
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Lokum

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_delight
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_delight

RECIPE
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cookbook:Turkish_Delight

Travel
https://www.gwr.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Western_Railway_(train_operating_company)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakerloo_line
https://tfl.gov.uk/tube/route/bakerloo/

https://www.visitlondon.com/london-app
singaporeair.com

About The Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author, speaker, teacher of English and other languages.
Please share links to your favourite posts.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Brunel Statue on Paddington Railway Station, London, England

Brunel Statue showing seated Brunel - as if waiting patiently for a train.

Statue of Brunel on Paddington station, London, England, UK. Photo by Angela Lansbury. copyright.

This statue of a relaxed Brunel honours the man who built the railway from London to Wales, the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol across the valley in Wales, and even the boat SS Great Britain taking passengers on to Ireland or, in those days, to the USA. His ship was the biggest in the world at that time. You can still catch the train from his station, along his line, see his bridge, and catch a ferry to Ireland.

Young engineer Brunel was working with his father when his father died. Young Brunel took over and completed the projects.

In the north of London is Brunel University, named after Brunel, which has an engineering department.

Hear Brunel Here. Photo by Angela Lansbury, copyright.

Great Western Railway goes from Paddington to Fishguard and Goodwick in Wales and other destinations in England such as Reading.
Reading is also marked on the London tube train (underground) map.

Another statue of Brunel, standing, is at Temple station, 


The family monument is in Kensal Green Cemetery.


I recall that it is said that when somebody in St Paul's Cathedral, London, asked for the monument to architect Sir Christopher Wren, the reply was: "If you want to see his monument, look around!"

I feel the same about Paddington Station. The overhead arches seem to have a Burgundy red glow. New shops and restaurants have been added on an upper terrace out of the way of passers by. The icing on the cake is the serene statue of Brunel. The man who made it all happen. He had the idea. He organized and supervised. He built for the present and for the future.  

Useful Websites
Brunel

Bakerloo Line
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakerloo_line
https://tfl.gov.uk/tube/route/bakerloo/

Great Western Railway GWR

Visit London
https://www.visitlondon.com/london-app
Travel to the UK
singaporeair.com

About The Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author, speaker, teacher of English and other languages.
Please share links to your favourite posts.



Tuesday, February 25, 2020

How To Learn Greek and Add The Greek Alphabet To Your Keyboard


Greek flag


Why learn Greek? Ancient Greek is useful for mathematical symbols. Greek words are used in medicine and science and every day. You already know lots of Greek words.


Map of Greek mainland and islands

When I visited Greece, the guide on our bus from Athens going north to the second city of Thessalonika, read to us a speech given to the United Nations by a Greek man, using Greek words, dozens of them (except for and and the).

We all come across Greek food such as rice rolled in vine leaves. We holiday, or dream of holidaying in Greece or Cyprus. Greek is also one of the languages of the European Union.



Cyprus Flag

Cyprus
I am on the first stage of learning Greek, in preparation for a trip to Cyprus.




I am using Duolingo. That website is free and allows me to read the words.

I can also hear them. If I click my mouse on the sound symbol on the Duolingo website.

And if the sound is turned on for my laptop. I tried pressing the keys with the megaphone symbol at the top of the keyboard on my laptop. No luck. No sound.

I started clicking on other symbols. On the lower right of my screen is a symbol for people. Next right of that is an up arrow. I hover over it and read show hidden icons. I am shown a pop up of six items. One is the sound.

We are back in business.

A few Greek words a-z:
zoon - animal (zoology, zodiac)

Food to Remember
Moussaka (mincemeat, eggplant and white sauce)
Baklava (honey and nuts in flaky pastry)

Useful Websites
To learn modern Greek
duolingo.com



For how to get the Greek alphabet on your keyboard:
https://www.duolingo.com/skill/el/ABC/tips-and-notes

Enhance Your Vocabulary
http://www.enhancemyvocabulary.com/word-roots_greek.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greek_phrases

Travel: Greece

https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Greece
Official Greek Tourist Board website
http://www.visitgreece.gr

Cyprus
https://www.visitcyprus.com/index.php/en/

Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, teacher of English and other languages.
Please share links to your favourite posts.

Christmas isn't over yet! Prepare for Easter, Valentines, Halloween and next Christmas

Problem (I wrote in January)
It's New Year and the Christmas decorations look so limply last year. (Not simply but limply!) Shall I clear Santa's red hats and the green plastic tree and the Christmas crackers with Santa in a red nose ready for New Year's gold and glitter?

I think I should not clear Christmas decorations until the 12th day, which is January 6th. Why? In order to get maximum value and the maximum number of hours of pleasure from the effort I put into buying or saving the Santa decorations. Do you agree?

My idea of an agreeable person is a person who agrees with me.

Solutions To Saving And Preparing From February Onwards
If you are shopping early for next Christmas, try the Christmas shop in the UK which has a website for shopping online. In addition to Christmas they have seasonal goods for Easter, Valentine's Day and Hallowe'en.

Lots of clearance items are under five pounds and even under a pound. The website choices are neatly divided into categories such as for the table and for the tree (Xmas tree).

Lots of British themes pop up, too, taxis, red letter boxes, and Pooh (Winnie the Pooh) and Piglet pencils.

Items for Valentines day include loads of hearts.

What an entertaining website to read.

Useful Websites
About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please share links to your favourite posts.

Monday, February 24, 2020

Bakerloo Line Bother For Passengers in London, England - What To Do

Bakerloo Line Bother For Passengers. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.
Bakerloo line, underground and overground in London, England, was suffering from strike action.

On Sunday -
A member of my family was told instead to go south to link to the overground. But the overground was not working last weekend.

Now other lines are threatening to take action.

Before setting off, check alternative train and bus routes. Also find out if your family will meet you at an alternative nearby railway station.

Some of the Bakerloo line runs parallel to the Metropolitan line.

If you are delayed on Paddington Station, look at the Brunel statue.

Update Wednesday 26 Feb - keep checking the websites of tfl. You can get sent updates on your phone.
Parts of the overground were closed or subject to delays.

Update on Tuesday
https://tfl.gov.uk/tube/route/bakerloo/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakerloo_line
https://www.gwr.com/

About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer. Author and speaker. Please share links to your favourite posts.

Listening When Travelling - the entertaining characters I have met

At Writer's Holiday in Wales I was entranced by true stories from other people's lives. Writers won't tell you about their novels. They say, "You'll have to read it!" However, they have countless true tales from their own lives, with just as many causes and effects, characters, sorrows and joys, and twist endings. 

Several times I have found that the person I wanted to sit next to was already with a group of fellow writers (poets, novelists, whatever) or with their own husband and family. So I have sat down beside a stranger or acquaintance, hoping to make the best of it. Only two or three questions very quickly lead you to what they care about, the tragedy of a sick child or dead spouse, and who the speaker blames, sometimes they blame themselves, sometimes they regret the victim 'didn't look after himself, sometimes it's the fault of the government or the health service, "Don't get me started!"

US PR
I remember three specific characters who looked unpromising but had me entranced. The first notable occasion was the plain woman who was PR for a small American town which had few unusual attractions. They ended up kidnapping a tourist family. (First advertising for a family of four who wanted to be mock-kidnapped, forced to visit attractions of the tourist boar's choice, an all expenses paid holiday in a town which almost nobody every visited. They got great publicity nationwide. By the end of the evening I was entranced by this story. I thought I had struck lucky with my conversation companion.

When a fellow journalist asked, "Who was that dull looking women you were so entranced by?" I felt quite enraged that he thought her looks were unpromising, although I had felt exactly the same before I got to know her.

Abraham Lincoln said it exactly: "I do not like that man. I must get to know him better."

UK Writers
On my Writers Holiday and Writers Summer School I have often found glum people who brightened as soon as you engaged them in conversation.

What sort of person? The balding, badly spoken man who turned out to have written comic lines for all the world's great comedians in the UK and the USA.

WWII Sotries
The man in the wheelchair told rivetting stories about being in WWII prison camps.

Forte
The short man, at the Forte press conference. Who was he? Who invited him? I met several hangers on.

Was the PR person getting desperate? No. The short man turned out to be the VIP, Mr Forte.

Princess Margaret Reception
I was a student at a conference at a building in Windsor Great Park. We had an unexpected treat. Princess Margaret was coming to meet us. We dressed up. At least I did.

One or two strangers appeared, mostly staff for the catering. One woman wore a plain shirt dress, when I was in rainbow striped shirt in honour of meeting Princess Margaret. The woman in the plain shirt dress was Princess Margaret.

Robert Maxwell's Wife
The older lady in plain clothes at the talk by Robert Maxwell's wife. I met the visitor in the ladies toilet. She admitted she was not a journalist, just married to one. Only later, when she was introduced did I discover she was Robert Maxwell's wife.

American Woman's Lunch In Singapore
The elderly lady with the empty chair beside her at the American womens association in Singapore. I arrived seat and the young immaculately dressed Americans were all chatting away. The only vacant seat was by the old lady. I sat down and, after a few second's pause, introduced myself and asked here who she was. She was the widow of my hero. the first prime minister of Singapore, David Marshall, whose life story I had just read. It was said that he was every case. I asked her - but that's another story.

Another surprise and delight, the woman with the lop-sided face, damaged from birth. I thought the only empty seat beside her was because strangers were avoiding her. I quickly discovered she is the most intelligent and interesting. She is a prolific writer or articles and books. She always asks about my problems and comes up with to the point questions. I remember on one occasion, I said, "I've  always wanted to ...," She immediately asked, "What's stopping you?"

Now when I see her in the distance, I dash straight across the room to talk to her.

“When people talk, listen completely. Most people never listen.”
― Ernest Hemingway

“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”
― Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change





Listening Quotes


Quotes tagged as "listening" Showing 1-30 of 716
Ernest Hemingway
“When people talk, listen completely. Most people never listen.”
― Ernest Hemingway
“Don't Just

Don't just learn, experience.
Don't just read, absorb.
Don't just change, transform.
Don't just relate, advocate.
Don't just promise, prove.
Don't just criticize, encourage.
Don't just think, ponder.
Don't just take, give.
Don't just see, feel.
Don’t just dream, do.
Don't just hear, listen.
Don't just talk, act.
Don't just tell, show.
Don't just exist, live.”
― Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart

“Listen with curiosity. Speak with honesty. Act with integrity. The greatest problem with communication is we don’t listen to understand. We listen to reply. When we listen with curiosity, we don’t listen with the intent to reply. We listen for what’s behind the words.”
― Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart
“Sometimes all a person wants is an empathetic ear; all he or she needs is to talk it out. Just offering a listening ear and an understanding heart for his or her suffering can be a big comfort.”
― Roy T. Bennett
Stephen R. Covey
“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”
― Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change
Leo F. Buscaglia
“Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around.”
― Leo Buscaglia
Sarah Dessen
“This is the problem with dealing with someone who is actually a good listener. They don’t jump in on your sentences, saving you from actually finishing them, or talk over you, allowing what you do manage to get out to be lost or altered in transit. Instead, they wait, so you have to keep going.”
― Sarah Dessen, Just Listen
Criss Jami
“Listen to God with a broken heart. He is not only the doctor who mends it, but also the father who wipes away the tears.”
― Criss Jami
“7 Effective Ways to Make Others Feel Important

1. Use their name.
2. Express sincere gratitude.
3. Do more listening than talking.
4. Talk more about them than about you.
5. Be authentically interested.
6. Be sincere in your praise.
7. Show you care.”
― Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart
Brené Brown
“If we can share our story with someone who responds with empathy and understanding, shame can't survive.”
― Brené Brown, Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead
Zeno of Citium
“We have two ears and one mouth, so we should listen more than we say.”
― Zeno of Citium, as quoted by Diogenes Laërtius

“7 Effective Ways to Make Others Feel Important

1. Use their name.
2. Express sincere gratitude.
3. Do more listening than talking.
4. Talk more about them than about you.
5. Be authentically interested.
6. Be sincere in your praise.
7. Show you care.”
― Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart



John Wayne
“You're short on ears and long on mouth.”
― John Wayne


The best apology is changed behaviour.

Mother Teresa
“Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin.”
― Mother Theresa


Rick Warren
“We are products of our past, but we don't have to be prisoners of it.”
― Rick Warren, The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here for?
Useful Websites
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/listening

The most basic of all human needs is the need to understand and be understood. The best way to understand people is to listen to them.     
Ralph Nichols
Almost everybody will listen to you when you tell your own story. Billy Graham
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/search_results?q=listen

Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember, and remember more than I have seen. Benjamin Disraeli
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/benjamin-disraeli-quotes


My idea of an agreeable person is a person who agrees with me.


Nobody is forgotten when it is convenient to remember him.
Benjamin Disraeli.

Useful Websites
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goodreads
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About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer. Author of Quick Quotations.
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