Tuesday, 29 December 2009

Just Pictures


Tracy's visit


Temple Newsome Garden


Petrifying Well


Knaresborough


York


Bolton Abbey


Scarborough


Plumpton Rocks


Bonfire Night

Lindy at the Light








Christmas Wrap-up


Sorry I’ve been so completely horrible at this blogging thing. Grad school keeps me pretty busy all the time. Since its Christmas though I thought it would be nice to catch everyone up on what I‘ve been doing for the last four months. The MA program I’m doing spans two departments, English and Political Science, International Studies. I take classes on using theatre with different groups of people and on development theory. It’s a lot of reading and writing but also lots of practical stuff. We’ve had a whole series of workshops run by various applied theatre practitioners from around the area. After New Years we’ll spend two weeks working with a theatre company for the mentally disabled and in the spring we pair up with different community organizations and run our own series of workshops in pairs. So far the course has been everything I’d hoped and more. It’s been a little bit of a challenge going back to school after more than ten years out—the first tiny paper I wrote took me FOREVER, but I think I’ve got the hang of it again now. In addition to my school work I’m also involved with a local theatre group called Urban Sprawl that deals with issues surrounding homelessness and is made up of a mixed group of volunteers and clients of various services. It’s been really fantastic to have that hands-on experience right away. Everyone in the group does a bit of everything so I’ve had opportunities to do tech stuff, lead exploratory workshops, and do some singing and playing the tambourine with the band.


There isn’t much lindy hop in Leeds compared with Seattle, but because of that I’ve had the chance to explore dancing from new angles. I’ve finally been learning how to lead—something I should have gotten around to long ago! I’ve also been started doing some teaching. I had never really had any interest in doing it before but it’s been a fun new experience. A couple weeks before Christmas I participated in an all day dance fundraiser for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. It was a really fun event! We did dance performances every half hour all afternoon in the middle of a shopping area and collected money from people to stopped to watch. It was a nice way to start the Christmas season and I did one whole routine as a lead :)


I spent Christmas here and actually got to do quite a lot of holiday stuff. For the two months leading up to Christmas there’s a very festive German Christmas market with all kinds of sausages and mulled wine and stuff. I ended up there pretty frequently, because it just seems to be on the way to everywhere. I got to go to several Christmas dinners, do some carol singing, and pull lots of Christmas crackers--paper party favors that you pull apart that have paper hats and jokes and presents inside. I watched the Queen’s annual Christmas speech. The biggest difference between Christmas here and at home seems to be that they don’t have nearly as much rich food--chocolate and cookies and pie and other special stuff. Here there’s mince pies, Christmas cake and Christmas pudding but they’re all just made out of raisins—so not really very exciting and you can really only eat so much raisin stuff.


I managed to explore a bit of Yorkshire while the weather was still fairly warm. There must be a million lovely places to visit right in this area—lots of natural beauty, quaint little villages, and ancient ruined abbeys and castles. I've spent a couple of very frustrating hours trying to add photos of places I've been etc but after managing to erase everything multiple times I'm just giving up. If I can figure out how to add a slide show they'll be there.


Saturday, 5 September 2009

First Few Days

Hi

As most of you who are reading this probably know, I'm spending a year in England doing an MA program in Theatre and Development Studies at the University of Leeds (which incidentally is in Leeds, not London). I'm here on a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship so in addition to studying hard I'll also have th opportunity to meet Rotarians and get involved with some of their service projects here.

I've been in the country for about five days now. I'm renting a room in a house with an artist and a music student. I was able to arrange that much before I got here so mostly I've just been getting settled in, learing how to get around, registering for classes, etc...

So far the biggest challenge has been crossing streets. Yes, really. Several people warned me about this in the month before I left and I thought they were being ridiculous. I mean, how hard could it be--you always look both ways before crossing a street anyway, right? Actually, you probably don't and have never realized it because your instincts tell just you whether you're crossing an on-ramp or an off-ramp and from which direction the semi will come hurtling by. I've spent the last few days walking all over the city crossing many, many very busy streets but still every time I get to the curb, especially if it's near a corner, I sort of panic, make a desperate attempt to randomly guess which way the traffic will come from--look both ways about 8 times and sprint across.

Today I had my first out of town adventure. I took the bus to Fountains Abbey. It's a world herritage site that contains the ruins of a huge 12th century abbey and corn mill as well as an Elizabethan mansion, water garden and deer park.


The corn mill and mansion.
Fountains Abbey




After exploring grounds I had tea and scones on the terrace overlooking a lake with swans. On the way back I decided to walk the four miles back to the bus stop rather than take the shuttle bus. I asked for directions at the entrance and was half expecting the woman to give me a funny look and tell me that there was a shuttle but instead she happily suggested two different routes, a direct one and a longer one. It's so nice to be in a place where walking is in acceptable mode of transportation.

The route back took me through the deer park. I had asked my roommate the night before what a deer park was exactly and what was the difference between a "deer park" and any other wilderness area that has some deer in it. She couldn't really say. Probably she just thought it was a ridiculous question because clearly a random wilderness area where you might see a deer or two is very different from an area that's completely packed with deer running around in giant herds like sheep. It was bizzare. There were at least a hundred of them roaming around right by the road with cars going by.
I walked on through a picturesque little village and through the countryside on a convenient little foot path. When I got back to the town of Ripon I stumbled on to a cricket club and stayed a while to watch the game. I had just started making a list earlier in the day of things I want to make sure to do while I'm here and already I'd accomplished three of them, riding on top of a double-decker bus, having tea and scones, and watching a cricket match. As I continued on I saw a random castley looking thing in the distance and decided to check that out too before bussing back. It turned out to be a fancy old cathedral. I walked all the way around and I was going to have just a quick look inside but there was a choir practicing--a really amazing choir with an orchestra doing traditional music. I love choirs like that anyway and to hear one in that setting is just unbelievably beautiful.

Sorry about the wonky layout. I think I've maybe finally figured out how to not lose my photos over and over but I haven't quite got the hang of making them stay where I want them.