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Sunday, November 20, 2016

For whom the bell tolls

After a number of years of good and faithful service my IPhone (a 4S for connoisseurs) has finally expired after an unscheduled bath in a rucksack during one of our walks last week. Fortunately it lasted long enough for the IT department at work to download all the relevant data, contacts, photos etc. So I made the trip to Dubai Mall (by metro - my second time since it was opened....) to purchase the latest IPhone mobile telephonic device which is no less than 3 versions up from my last phone (which various colleagues have suggested shows that my last phone should have been in a museum rather than in use....).

Whilst it is all very whizzy the one thing which neither I or the IT department or my son can yet make it do is to persuade it to ring when I have an incoming call. To some this might be regarded as a disadvantage. I am undecided on the issue and will give it a little more time to sort itself out.

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Greatest show on Earth.....

That is the greatest show on Earth golf course where the Race to Dubai golf extravaganza is being held this weekend! This is one of the highlights of the Dubai sporting calendar and Dad always makes the effort to come out for it given its close proximity to the Rugby 7s which is the weekend after next.

My own sporting day started of with football in Safa Park (with the newly opened canal in close proximity - hopefully we will have a chance to explore shortly) and for the first time A. came along too as his Mother kindly rescheduled their Spanish lessons to start a little later so that he could do both. It was a good introduction to our our "jumpers for goalposts" (in fact cones) Saturday morning footballing endeavours and he acquitted himself well scoring a goal and putting in avoid all round performance. I also managed to score a couple of goals so we both I think felt it was a a satisfactory start to the morning.

After a quick shower Dad and headed off to the golf where we were treated to a lot of sunshine and excellent golf by Messrs. McElroy, Stenson, Dubuisson and Cabrero Bello who scored an excellent 63 for the day. It is always good fun to watch such great players in close proximity and we also struck lucky with lifts in the golf buggy from the entrance to the golf village and back again at the beginning and end of the day (as well as scoring some clubhouse passes from the driver in the morning) so our walking whilst still fairly substantial was not completely exhausting.

We were home in time for a roast lamb dinner with the family and a very entertaining game of rugby where Wales just about shaded the Japan team by 3 points. An excellent sporting day!

Friday, November 18, 2016

Magical Beasts.......

Another busy day in Al Safa. Having picked up my Father from the airport last night we launched ourselves into a Winter season of visitors and fun with JG joining us next weekend and P an L - old friends from HK days also visiting us from Zurick just before their move to London.

I had an early start today with a walk around the block in an attempt to maintain my 100% record this week of 10,000 per day. This was followed by Church School and then a trip to the cinema for to watch the new JK Rowling film after which this blog post is named.

Although V and E bailed out shortly before the end when it got quite scary it was a very engaging film. Very much in the HP tradition although probably aimed at an older audience. There were some very funny set pieces as well as some serious messages and everybody enjoyed the spectacle.

After a trip to Spinneys to pick up some food for our Friday night BBQ we enjoyed some prawns, sausages and quizzing although England's cricketers contrived to put a slight dampener on the evening in the test match against India.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Summer Holiday 2016: Part 3 (return to Dxb)

Whilst E and the kids enjoyed the first part of their Summer down in Bristol, I returned to Dubai for 5 weeks of work and sunshine (or more accurately, intense heat!). Actually, it was not all work as I also invested in a fitbit (basically an exercise tracker)and managed - with the exception of one day, to hit the "recommended" 10,000 steps per day that seems to be the benchmark for "proper" exercise in the 5 weeks or so I was back in Dubai on my own.

This was actually no mean achievement given my almost exclusively sedentary working environment which makes achieving even half that figure a real challenge. I was however assisted by the fact that we moved office in early July so that we were much closer to the WTC with its cavernous - and more importantly air-conditioned - conference halls which were perfect for lunchtime walks designed to increase the number of daily steps.

Even with this facility on my door step, hitting 10,000 steps a day was not possible unless I also planned a walk (which increased to a fast walk and then a fast-ish walk with intermittent slow jogging as July wore on) either around the streets of Al Safa near our Villa or on the running track down along Kite Beach/DOSC. Given the heat and humidity, even a relatively short walk gave rise a decent sweat. This coupled with a very close eye on my diet - the Fitbit dashboard allows the recording of all foods as well as related calories so I was able to eat reasonably healthily, and the avoidance of too may after work drinks (which is a major feature of HK and Dubai expat life when the families are away for the Summer holidays!) meant that not only did I feel about as fit as I had in years but also I had lost around 4kg by the time I headed back to UK for the rest of the Summer holidays in early August. Part 4 to follow shortly.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Summer Holidays 2016 - Part 2 (London/Maidstone)

After a relaxing weekend in Brighton we have a slightly more stressful trip up to London when the train unexpectedly terminated at Gatwick and we were forced to get on a Victoria train and then get a cab across to Clerkenwell to the apartment we were staying in. The apartment was just off Clerkenwell Road and whilst entry was somewhat complex, once in it was exactly what we needed – two bedrooms and a big lounge/kitchen in a quiet location very close to my old office on Clerkenwell Green and handy for the City.

After dropping our bags we headed off to the British Museum near-by where we had booked timed tickets for the Sunken Cities special exhibition – it included artefacts and a couple of huge statues recovered from the lost cities of Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus which lay at the mouth of the Nile and had disappeared into the Mediterranean a thousand or so years ago. The kids seemed to enjoy it as well as our quick look around the Egyptian gallery and also a visit to the Rosetta Stone which I always enjoy.

We then had a quick dinner on Holborn at a very nice Italian restaurant and then back to the apartment. I then went off to Highgate to meet up with OF to watch England get beaten by Iceland in the Euros. The less said about that the better although it was good to catch up with OF.

The next morning I was working in the London Office. There was very subdued atmosphere when I got in - a combination of England’s defeat in the football the previous night and the continuing somewhat stunned reaction to the Brexit vote. The mood was not exactly helped by the pouring rain. We were due to go to the theatre in the evening but had to change the date because V had not been feeling well. We were lucky enough to change the tickets to Wednesday and so were able to make a trip to Chinatown that evening where we indulged ourselves in some Chinese food and the crispy duck that had been such a hit last Summer.

I was working again the following day and also decided to buy myself some shirts – my collar size seems to have increased! In the evening went to Gaucho off Piccadilly and then went to the Criterion Theatre to watch “The Robbery that went Wrong” – the kids absolutely loved it – English slapstick at its best and everyone had a great time!

The following day I met JH for lunch and then took the family down to Maidstone where we stayed with my Father. On the Friday E and I went off to a big Dinner with senior management in Pennyhill Park – training HQ for the English Rugby Union team and a lovely hotel although getting there around the M25 was a nightmare. We caught up with R and S as well as some of my colleagues Dinner where the topic revolved again around Brexit.

On the Saturday we had a leisurely morning and then headed back down to Maidstone where we picked the kids up from their sleep over with their cousins at M and B and then we all headed off to D’s 40th at Maidstone Football Club. A live band and a chance to catch up with the family made for a pleasant evening and on the Sunday I headed back to Dxb and the Kids and E. headed to Bristol for the start their Summer holidays proper. Stand by for the next instalment of our Summer adventures after my month back in the sandpit.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Summer Holiday 2016 Part 1

Slightly belated round up of our adventures during the Summer. Things kicked off with the Kids and E flying back to UK for the Summer holidays towards the end of June. I was able to go back with them as I was working in London the following week and we had chosen the day after the Brexit referendum to travel.

Because of flight timings, we were up with the lark on the Friday morning so were able to see the early voting returns and things were not looking terribly promising for the Remainers - and of course this was borne out by the time we landed in London when the majority in favour of Exit was confirmed shortly before touchdown.

Our trip to the UK also coincided with the Euro Football finals and England had already shown signs of things to come with a rather laboured draw in the first game.

We had flown into Gatwick and had decided to revisit old haunts down in Brighton at the weekend with the kids - staying at the Renaissance Hotel on the sea front. We had a great room with partial sea views and great views over the rooftops of Brighton town and the Pier.

After unpacking, We had lunch in Harry Ramsden's and spent the afternoon walking along the pier, sitting on the beach and eating ice creams - very pleasant indeed. After such a huge lunch we had an early night and were up bright and early for a great breakfast in the Hotel and then a quick mooch around the shops before meeting an old friend JG who had travelled down from his Mothers in East Grinstead and who worked at Sussex Downs College. It was good to see him again and we spend a very pleasant couple of hours having lunch at Café Rouge and then wandering the beach-front (including taking advantage of the photo opportunity afforded by the giant donut statue next to the pier....) followed by a visit to the Aquarium - a very well-renovated version of the 19th Century original.

JG and I then decamped to the pub in the evening to watch some of the football which was a real through back to times past when we regularly used to do that of a Saturday when he lived in London in the late 1980's (that makes me feel old simply writing it .....).

Sunday got off to a slower start as we did a bit more shopping and then met up with some old friends from HK days (K and W who will be recalled from my previous blog (http://taitamtales.blogspot.ae) and their son J. The kids were delighted to see J and we had a lovely meal with them at the Dome next to Brighton Pavilion (a restaurant E and I used to frequent back in the days when she lived in Brighton) and we then had a pleasant stroll with them down to the seafront (where a seagull nicked part of my doughnut - one of the fresh ones made before our very eyes on the pier which E and V took a real fancy to).

The sunshine of the Friday had been replaced by more changeable weather by the Monday but all in all it was a pleasant break which was only slightly disrupted by the challenges of getting up to London by train due to the problems with Southern Railways - tune in for the next instalment tomorrow!

Monday, November 14, 2016

Piano confusion

The more eagle-eyed of you will have spotted that A. has been preparing for his piano exam over recent weeks (Grade 3) and has been busily practising the various pieces, exercises, scales/arpeggios and aural/Musical knowledge sections of the syllabus (and I have been swotting up on my rather ancient musical knowledge to try to help).

The exam was yesterday and A. had been very diligent in his preparations - no mean feat given how packed his schedule is with school work, ECA's etc. There aw therefore a great deal of consternation yesterday afternoon after he arrived at the exam venue only to find that, whilst the time and venue were correct, his teacher had in fact entered him for the Grade 3 exam of a different exam board - he had been practising pieces for the Trinity exam whereas the examiner was from ABRSM!

They let him play the pieces (I think one of them may have overlapped with the ABRSM syllabus) and he went through the scales/arpeggios and the aural exam (again one or two parts overlapped between the two music boards). Unfortunately there was no musical knowledge section - only sight reading which he had not prepared for this time (he did it for Grade 2 last year) - Trinity make it one of 4 options whereas ABRSM seem to make it compulsory.

Despite the rather disconcerting turn that events took for him yesterday afternoon, A. did not seem to be too downhearted - probably relieved that he would not have to put up with my nagging any more to practice! We will have to wait and see whether ABRSM allow the examiner to take into account the pieces he had prepared. It is obviously very frustrating that this has happened and we are keeping our fingers crossed that everything works out OK and he does not end up having to do it all over again.