Monday, June 23, 2008

Edinburgh tales

Edinburgh claims to be the most haunted city of the world with many spirits who suffered from the black plague still lurking in dark crevices and underground tunnels. Yesterday I visited Mary King's Close, a small section of a series of an old city which was decapitated to make way for a new city, which they built on top. The mazes of the old city are still intact, and it is hard to believe that a few hundred years ago there was a completely different lay out to the city.

I am impressed by all the old black buildings I see. Street after street, there are rows upon rows of apartment houses, castles, grand manors. The Edinburgh castle, of which the city is built around, casts an imposing imprint on my memory. We climb up jagged and beautiful crags, which are tall rocks and cliffs, in order to see the city from a bird's eye view.

I climb up 823 feet onto the city's tallest crag called Arthur's Seat. Uncertain about why the place has been dubbed so, I imagine it to be King Arthur from the old legends claiming the area for his own when he was blown away by the beautiful expanse of Edinburgh city. The rough wind whistles through my ears. The greenness and historical wonder of the city amazes me.







Coming from Australia, Edinburgh is nothing like I have visualised before. I have seen old buildings but not in this wondrous setting, with the crisp cool air and blustering wind from the top of the hill. The entire city looks like something out of a Hogwarts movie. I can see why JK Rowling mused and pondered over Harry Potter from Elephant and Bagel Cafe, which has a view overlooking the castle. It is no surprise that Rowling was inspired by the land she lived in.

In Edinburgh, Catherine cooked a haggis dinner feast for Jonas and I one night. (Definition: a steamed pudding made of finely minced sheep heart, lungs and liver, boiled in a sheep's stomach). It was not as revolting as I imagined.

A few days pass and my companions Catherine and Jonas travel to The Highlands to meet Ailsa, our mutual friend from China. Sitting on the train we pass increasingly dramatic scenery, with crags seemingly looming higher and higher as we journey north-west. When we finally reach her village, Glenfinnan, she meets us with her newborn Finn.

Ailsa, in her lazy Croc shoes, and a relaxed slingback to carry Finn, blends well into the pleasant scenery. She looks at home in a village where 60 people live, where everybody says hello to passerbys, where the peaceful lochs are just a few hundred metres walk away. We walk to an old church which is peeling paint and where the tired wooden pews are looking in need of more visitors, but there is charm with its stained glass windows- and when we walk out of the church, a view with unassuming beauty is laid out before our eyes.

The next day we adventure out to the Isle of Muck. We alight on the train upwards, and then catch the ferry Caledonian MacBrayne. It takes about two hours to reach our island destination, and my companions are the only ones to alight the ferry to arrive onto Muck, an island which can can boast a few cows, green farmland and one visible cafe. The rain patters away as we trod onwards, following the path that leads us to a beach. I can imagine that on a drier, sunnier day, the scenery might even be called gorgeous, but as it is, it is still beautiful in its wetness. It was fitting to experience rain in the wettest area of Scotland, and as we catch our return ferry, the sun mockingly shines upon us again.





Edinburgh gives me a taste of the coldest summer I have yet experienced. Perhaps my lack of appropriate clothing helped me to imagine that Scottish weather was like the beginning of Australian winter. However, a small reminder of home did beckon: The midgies find us in the Highlands (small mosquito-like insects that like to bite humans and suck blood) and like home, I meet their greeting with scratching.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Viral marketing at its best

I said I would post this up after I had a chance to check it out. But I haven't had the chance. So i'll post this up and you can check it out yourselves, if you think its worth it.

T

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I came across your blog and thought it would be a great opportunity to notify all the international students out there about this “It’s Not Cheating” offer. It is an amazing deal considering the fact that it consists of important programs that we need to use for our assignments and work, etc. The only thing is that we have to have a university email or an institutional email to be eligible for this offer. The RRP is over $1000 while we can now purchase it with $75 through just a simple process online. It’ll be greatly appreciated if you could post it up onto your blog to notify all students about this great offer that will be ending in June.

Please see below for more detail:

Get Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007 on the cheap for $75!
For a limited time only, you can buy the new Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007 for $25 for one year or $75 outright. Don’t delay - this offer has been extended to June due to popular demand.

With Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007; you get easy access to a set of powerful tools and resources to make your study life easier. For example, ever been about to email an assignment and realise you forgot your bibliography? Word 2007 has an amazing new bibliography feature to totally speed up the process and give you more time to work on your paper and less time fiddling with references.

Go to www.itsnotcheating.com.au
Don’t forget to enter the Golden Blog Awards and win great prizes!!
For more information:
Please speak with your institution IT department to access trial CD’s and installation instructions.

If you have any questions, please feel free in contacting me.

Thanks,
Viv