Saturday, January 16, 2010

Model Virgin

One of my coworkers at Double Negative landed a really cool Commercial Modeling gig. She has a very cool 1940's retro look about her. She is a very sweet girl, and we are all thrilled for her. She's appearing on TV, on-line, and in tube stations as seen here.

ICE!

It's been a beautiful snowy and icy week. I expect that the Brits are quite tired of this weather however as it really messes up their transportation systems. I've enjoyed it. It makes for a a very pretty and unusual experience for this Angelino. The Canal by the apartment is frozen! and there are Icebergs floating around in it.



One morning on my bikeride to work, the roads were a bit icy, and when I stopped to take the above picture, a guy behind me hit a large patch of ice, slipped, and spun out. Thankfully, he was okay.


One good thing about dogs is that they get you up early. The bad thing about dogs is that they get you up early. My dogs rouse at 6:30 either in LA or in London, and want their walk. Jetlag never seemed to affect them by the way - they're always good to sleep.

This week, when I went to take the dogs for their morning walk, I was treated to 1.5 " of fresh snow. It was beautiful, and there was a wonderful quiet about walking around the streets with it gently falling. Just beautiful.\

The only bad thing about snow today, is that in London, it will be ice tomorrow. . .

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Snow!

They say it never snows in London, but leave it to me to move here the year they have the coldest snowiest winter in 30 years. It is pretty to see the streets lined with snow, and having the two dogs has led me out to the parks in the early hours of the morning to witness a lot of fresh powder.



Now when I say snow, I'm not talking Mammoth snow, I'm talking about a couple inches. Just enough to make it look pretty, and enough to make everything icy. I was carrying home a Christmas pudding, and took a great fall on a dark, lamp lit, incredibly Dickensian ICY alley. I consider myself lucky as my coworker, Paul, slipped and twisted his ankle.

It has been a very dramatic time for the UK as there have been airport closures due to snow, and train service failing all over the place. Even the Eurostar Chunnel had trains that for some reason, when going from the exterior cold sub 0 Celsius weather to the warm interior channel tunnel, broke down. Some people were trapped in the tunnel overnight, and then had to be carried out using a service passageway. There were delays for days with people trapped in both the UK and on the mainland.

There have been shortages on a material they spread on the ground to both speed melting and to allow for better traction. They call it simply enough, "Grit". It is made up of salt and some sort of gravel that is mined in the exotic country of Egypt. It is strange to think that we use a common place material that comes all the way from there.

Tony and I went to IKEA yesterday, and were on a train that was delayed due to some sort of signal relay failure. It was freezing when we got to the station, and were then waiting for the shuttle to get us to the store. Thankfully then were giving out free espressos and hot chocolate as you entered the store. Our trip home was equally dramatic with yet more line closures. OY!

It's crazy to think that we have just entered snow season, and still have around 2 more months until we get to March and spring at last.



With the most snow in 30 years, and the French and Italian Alps so close, I can't wait to go skiing.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

A Lovely Winter Poem

My Parents sent me this lovely winter poem. As the UK is locked in the coldest winter in 30 years, somehow it seemed appropriate.


Sunday, January 3, 2010

Our First London Christmas Tree

Prior to the arrival of the container, Tony and I bought a Christmas tree. All of our ornaments were being shipped, and we hoped that they would arrive in time for Christmas.

With the classic movie quote, "build it and they will come" in the back of our minds, we walked up to Essex Road, and bought a cute fat tree. The trees here are not at tall as in the states, but they are a lot bushier. I carried it back to the apartment, and we bought some lights to put on it.

The following Wednesday 2 days before Christmas, the container arrived, and we decorated the tree on Christmas Eve. We couldn't fit all of our ornaments on the tree, but we pulled out a bunch of our favorites as well as most of our Nutcracker collection. In the end, we had a nicely decorated apartment in time for Christmas.

In our tiny kitchen, Tony cooked a wonderful Ham with Marmalade Glaze, and a Pecan Pie. I made my signature Spicy Yams as well as the British staple Brussel Sprouts (I sauted them with butter, bacon, dried cranberries and onions, which made them actually taste good).

We had our friends Jeff and Damien over for dinner as they own a car - All public transportation shuts down in London on Christmas so if you don't have your own means of transportation, you are stuck wherever you are at. It was very nice being able to at last cook and host a dinner for friends for the first time in months, and what better time to do it than Christmas.

Our Stuff Arrives

Almost 7 weeks after our stuff was picked up in Los Angeles on November 9th, it arrived in London on Dec 23rd. The container that everything was transfered into in Long Beach Harbor pulled up to our flat in London at 10:30am.

There was some drama in that the bolt used to seal the doors had been bent in transit, which made it difficult to use the bolt cutters to unseal the container. After some work, the bolt was finally removed, and the container opened. It was very exciting as the container doors were opened for the first time since it was sealed approximately 5 weeks earlier.

We had 3 guys from the Shipping company on the UK side to help haul all of our furniture up the 3 floors to our apartment. There were so many boxes. As quickly as the boxes of furniture came in, I worked to unbox and unwrap. It sprinkled rain off and on while the furniture was unloaded, so we had to unload items in batches. This was good in that if we had to bring everything into the apartment before unboxing, we'd have never been able to move inside the apartment. We kept equating the unpacking as a game of Tetris, where you had to move a box over, step around it, move the box to unpack, and then carefully remove the box from the apartment. The rooms were filled from floor to ceiling. Even now, there are still boxes we have yet to unpack.

The shipping company did ship all of our US food, so we should be pretty good for the next while with "good" American Food.

It appears that only a couple items were damaged in the shipping. The one framed movie poster, Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone, had it's glass broken. Also, our steel fliptop kitchen trashcan was dented. All and all, we felt very lucky. I also ended up paying almost $1000 in insurance, so we should be covered. The biggest challenge now is finding places for everything and getting the apartment in some sort of order in time for Christmas in 2 days. YIKES!

Friday, January 1, 2010

Christmas in London

London is pretty magical at Christmas.

As I've been told many times, it was Charles Dickens that defined our modern perceptions of what is a traditional British Christmas.









His tale, "A Christmas Carole", set the standard in regards to serving Christmas Goose, and Christmas Pudding, and cold snowy Christmas Nights singing carols around a fire.



In modern London, it is the street faires and the twinkling "fairy" lights that illuminate the streets and the faces of families.

The idealized notions of John Lennon also pervade the nation as one of its most favored sons.

There is a dark side to the British and their view of Christmas however as the tv talent show, "X-Factor" has presented the song that has gone on to be the #1 Christmas song each year for the past few years.





In response to this new "tradition", the people running Facebook in London started a campaign to have the #1 Christmas song be "Killing in the Name of" by Rage against the Machine.








And it was. . .