Holiday write-up: Part I

This is the first of several posts about what I did on my holidays, initially covering the first four days, with photos. Future posts will have the rest of write-up.

Thursday 26th June

Photo of a fountain in Reims

Reims

Reims (pronounced ‘remm’ but most English people say ‘reams’) was the first of our two overnight stops on the way down to the south coast. Having overestimated the delays on the roads (despite heavy traffic on the M11 and A14), we turned up at the motel at 4pm, giving us a whole 3 hours before dinner was served at the restaurant. Instead of vegetating in the hotel room, we went into the centre of the city, since it’s been a while since we last visited, apparently (I have no recollection of ever visiting it, but there you go).

Photo of the cathedral in Reims

Reims is regarded as being the capital of the Champagne region of France, home to that expensive fizzy alcoholic drink of the same name, so obviously there were a few champagne shops around. However the prices were about the same as we’d pay in England (and probably more than the Calais hypermarkets and wine warehouses would charge) so we passed on the opportunity to stock up. The city itself is nice, with many of the streets in the centre having been pedestrianised partially or entirely, so you don’t spend the whole time dodging traffic. The main square is quite pretty, and includes a fountain and a statue, along with shops and bars, most of which had tables out on the street as is customary in France (and increasingly over here too). It’s here that we stopped for a biere pression (beer from the tap) to recharge our batteries.

Reims is also home to a cathedral and various large department stores, which I had a brief dabble in, however I didn’t buy anything.

Friday 27th June

A photo of a giant steel chicken at le Poulet de Bresse service station in France

Touron and Tain l’Hermitage

Having left the motel in Reims, we headed down the motorways towards Valence, calling off at the amusingly named le Poulet de Bresse service area on the way – literally translated it means ‘the chicken of Bresse’ and this fact was reinforced by a large steel sculpture of a hen overlooking the picnic area. Bresse, by the way, referred to the nearby town of Bourg-en-Bresse.

Photo of Tournon and the bridge across the river Rhône

After lunch, we pulled off the motorway (having sneakily avoided Lyon on a new motorway that had only been open 6 days), we arrived at Tain l’Hermitage and its sister twon Touron. These two towns are located either side of the river Rhône, one of the widest in Europe and one of only a few to end in a delta. Tain l’Hermitage is the smaller of the two, and is home to the Crozes Hermitage wine variety. Stocking up with 6 bottles of the stuff from the Cave Cooperative is the main reason for stopping here, but Touron is a nice town to spend a short amount of time in. There is a wooden footbridge linking the two towns, and Touron has a castle and a few older timber framed buildings. Again, we made use of the bar facilities, before heading south to Valence for our second overnight stop.

Saturday 28th June

A photo of the town of Sète in France

Sète

We ended up at Sète after visiting probably the largest hypermarket I’ve ever seen in Avignon. We didn’t intend to go to Sète today but we got fed up of the slow-moving traffic on the motorway around Montpellier and pulled off onto the older coast road, which happens to pass through the town.

Sète can be best described as the French equivalent of Scarborough, a rather jolly British seaside town just up the road from my home town of York. Except Sète has nicer weather and a canal running through it, and it has water jousting.

A photo of some water jousting at Sète

Now, anyone who has seen films about Camelot, or has been to the British theme park with the same name (I haven’t), will know that jousting is usually two knights in armour on horseback with long poles and shields, and the aim is to ‘poke’ the other knight off his horse as the two approach each other. Now apply the same principle, but remove the armour, change the horse into a boat and slow the whole process down somewhat, and you have water jousting. And being a Saturday afternoon during the early part of the tourist season, the locals were out doing it. It’s quite fun to watch, particularly when one of the jousters falls off in a ridiculous way, or, as sometimes happens, they both lose. The activity is obviously part of the town’s heritage as there’s even a prominent statue up in the middle of the town heralding the sport.

While this occupied most of our time here, we did have a brief wander around the rest of the town, which is mostly home to posh holiday flats and seafood restaurants. And some very large seaward pleasure boats.

A photo of the sea view from our apartment window in Cap d'Agde

Cap d’Agde

And, finally, we had arrived. It took us some time to actually find the apartment block that we were booked into as, in the typical French tradition, the signs for it disappeared just as we started to get close. Well, okay, they didn’t disappear but were positioned such that you only saw them once you’d turned to go in the wrong direction. But, anyway, we arrived.

Photo of the Mail de Rochelongue

The ‘residence’, as it is known, was called Les Rivages de Rochelongue (Rochelongue being the ‘suburb’ of Cap d’Agde that we were staying in), and to be honest, we’d have been hard-pressed to find a better place. The photo I’ve included here is the actual view from our balcony, which is certainly a par with the view we got when we were in Barbados three years ago. As you can tell, the beach is within staggering distance and the pool is even closer. There’s also a good variety of shops, bars and restaurants literally next door in the Mail de Rochelongue, which is the main street in the area. It also has a most superb ice cream stall, with something like 90 different flavours on offer, including a very nice lavender flavour which I’d never seen anywhere before.

Sunday 29th June

Not wishing to exert ourselves too much after such a long drive down, we spent the morning exploring the town and the afternoon slouched out on the beach.

Going Away

This will probably be my last entry before I go away on my holidays. Just about everything is packed up now (and in fact it all fits in the car remarkably well), so we’re all set for an early start tomorrow morning. We’re due to leave here at about 4:30am so that we can be in Folkestone for a 11am crossing through the Channel Tunnel. The AA reckons it’ll take us 4 hours and 23 minutes, but bearing in mind we’ll be travelling through rush hour, and will probably need to stop off for breakfast (usually at Bishop’s Stortford on the M11), we’re leaving some extra time. Admittedly we’ll hit rush hour while travelling on some rural stretches of the A1, but still, there’s the M25 and the Dartford Crossing to negotiate. Glad it’s not me that’s driving, but then I can’t drive, so that really is a good thing 🙂 .

Andy will hopefully pop in occasionally to review and publish any comments you guys leave. All that’s left to say is: see you in 2 weeks!

My first Amazon purchase

The cover of the book 'Just for Fun' by Linus Torvalds.

Call me strange, but despite having been an internet user for over 4 years now, I have never bought anything from Amazon (sponsored link). Until now.

I ordered the book “Just For Fun(sponsored link) by Linux creator Linus Torvalds last night, and it’s due to arrive tomorrow morning. I’ve read bits of it in bookshops (although nowhere in Bradford appears to sell it) and decided to go out and buy it. After all it is my birthday on Sunday.

Talking of money, now that I can get back into my PayPal account (after my two week hiatus), you can now donate money to me, if you are feeling generous. Although I’m on track to finish the year with at least £600 in my current account, any extra will be gladly accepted.

Okay, I’ll stop begging now 🙂 .

Paypal Hiatus

I’m on an enforced break from PayPal. As you may or may not have realised, the old blog has deceased, due to a hack attempt which saw almost all of the data on the host server being deleted. It’s also deleted my account information, so I have no FTP or email access to that account. And my PayPal account was with that email address.

What’s more, it wouldn’t accept my password. I’m sure it’s correct because it’s worked before, but PayPal was having none of it (I’m hoping that didn’t get hacked too). But, there is hope. I’ve gone through the password recovery system, giving over my Switch card number, and a new password will be sent by snail mail. Unfortunately, being based outside the US means that the password will take 10-14 days to arrive, and it will be sent to my home address, so I’ll have to phone my parents when it arrives.

It’s annoying, but I am relieved that even if you can’t remember your password and have a duff email account, there’s still a way out.

Back from Cambridge

Man, I’m exhausted. Six trains in one day is a lot 🙂 .

The meetup went well – I got to chat again to some of the editors I saw last year, and also got to meet some new faces who I’d previously only known by their user names. It’s always fun when you first meet people and meetings like this trying to work out who people are.

There are a couple of photos: 1 and 2 – regular readers will probably recognise me.

Plan for this evening are to catch up on a day’s surfing, possibly play Worms, and then sleep. Not very interesting but I don’t feel capable of doing anything else.

Off to Cambridge

I’m going to Cambridge for the day to meet some people from the ODP, like I did last year in Birmingham. It should be fun, but I only have just over half an hour to get ready 🙂 .

A couple of links for the morning: not only can you rent Chris Pirillo’s chest, you can rent his mind, too. Payment via PayPal.

And Jake has linked to a SearchEngineWatch article telling you how to do well on Google. I don’t necessarily agree all with it (not mentioning your company name in the title tag is silly in my opinion, as it defeats the point of having that tag in the first place), but there are some good tips, so it’s well worth a read.

And now if I don’t get a shower, I’m sooo going to miss my train. Toodles.

Only a minor feat

Minotaur, the Mozilla-based stand-alone mail client, finally reached the stage where a public build could be released this week (which, by the way, can be downloaded from ftp.mozilla.org). It’s only at version 0.1a, and currently only available for Windows, but it’s a start.

Seeing as Mozilla Mail is my email weapon of choice, I thought I’d check it out. It weighs in at a hefty 12MB – the size of Mozilla itself – and as yet has no installer – you download a zip file, extract it to a folder and then run it, like you do with Phoenix (or whatever it’ll be called). It also uses your existing Mozilla profile, unlike Phoenix which keeps its data separate – this is a bad thing because it may mean that you not only mess up a minotaur installation, but your Mozilla one too.

I fortunately had Mozilla running at the time so I was asked to create a new profile (since Moz blocks access to the settings). After adding an email account, it was up and running. And then something dawned on me.

It looks exactly the same as Mozilla Mail. In fact, other than a slightly more streamlined Preferences dialog, I couldn’t find anything unique to it. What’s worse is that you’re stock with the ‘Classic’ theme, which I can’t stand – give me Orbit 3+1 any day. You can see how it looks in the screenshot. It did also seem a little slow at loading, and there was no splash screen to divert my attention…

Of course, it’s early days yet, and much work has been promised. Hopefully it will become as good as programs like Ximian Evolution or Outlook Express (or Lookout! Distress! as I’ve seen it referred to). Like Phoenix, its aim is to be cross-platform, so expect Linux and Mac OS X builds to arrive eventually (unless someone goes and creates Camino Mail or something), and I gather that some Phoenix features, like customisable toolbars, will make it into minotaur at some stage. Anyhow, I’ll give the developers the best of luck.

For a little linkage, try the minotaur Help site (from the people who brought you the excellent Phoenix Help) and reviews from bloggers Chris Gonyea and jorge. There’s also the Talkback discussion at MozillaZine, and it even has its own set of MozillaZine forums.

While we’re (sort of) on the subject of Phoenix, ‘duck’ seems to be the most popular name so far, with the least number of votes. However, the MozillaZine Forums seem to suggest that a name has already been chosen. Now, to update my Phallus Extensions…

Happy Birthday Blog!

It’s exactly one year today that I started the old blog with this entry. During the past year, I have

  • Changed hosts twice
  • Changed blogging tool once (from Blogger to MT)
  • Made a major change to the design 6 times
  • Posted more entries than I’d like to think
  • Gained several regular readers (hi Kim, Richy, Andy, Quanta, Ciaran, MODatic and everyone I’ve forgotten 🙂 )
  • Inspired at least one other person to start blogging

All in all, I’m happy with my blogging, and hope to continue it for as long as I can. Thanks for reading – after all, a blog is nothing if no-one reads it.

Ho ho ho…

Merry Christmas everyone!

The screenshot is from one of my presents – the Hornby Virtual Railway. It’s a CD-ROM game that allows you to build your own virtual train set, based on the real Hornby Railways kits. It doesn’t have Hornby’s full range, but I imagine it could be useful for people wanting to build their own layouts from scratch but not wanting to buy loads of track that they don’t need. Indeed, the initial planning of where to put the track is difficult as not all pieces go together; you have to get the angles and lengths correct. A little frustrating but fun once the final layout is ready. It’s quite quick – the layout I built took me the best part of half an hour to do.

I also got the Epson Stylus C42Plus printer that we bought on that expensive day in November, along with chocolate and several items of clothing; 3 t-shirts, 2 shirts, a sweatshirt and some ‘karaoke king’ socks (it wouldn’t be Christmas without socks, now would it?). I also got a mousemat, a portfolio wallet and a FiloFax diary, which was nice.