Time to catch up. Dan's parents came mid last week. The kids had attached to them and have not let go ever since.

On Friday we worked from London. We went there with Dan's parents and then they took a very long walk around visiting the British museum and Westminster Abbey along the way. We based ourselves initially near St. James theater and after lunch North West of St. James park. It is a very luxurious area with lots of posh hotels around. Less competition for Wi Fi @ the local Starbucks. Lunch at Sakura was refreshing.
We miss Japanese food. There is only a handful of restaurants in Kingston and prices are not where they should be. We took a long walk too after work stopping at Viet Cong for dinner and spotting the marvelous Amorino across the street. After dinner we stopped by there to confirm whether it was as good as the one in Lisbon. And yes, it was. To close off the topic of food on that day, on the way back to the Waterloo station there was a large outdoor market of different food stalls. If only we have not eaten already!!

On Saturday we did the shortened version of the Southwest route. The first stop was Cobb Farm. We were expecting to find some apples but instead found black and red currants, raspberries and baby corn. The berries looked exactly how they did two months ago. Black currants completely covered the bushes. Some had started to dry up or ferment. If you eat a handful you get a mix of flavors. Incredible. We could not understand why no one is picking the berries. The parking lot was full but everyone was in the store. People were buying same fruit that was growing outside. We also tried raw corn cobs. Very interesting taste.

The next stop was the Stonehedge. I think this is now the fourth time we are going. I really like this place. Traffic is a lot smaller now too. They are continuing to built a new visitor center and one day it will be even a better place to visit.
The final stop was Salisbury. We stopped by at Weatherspoon hotel for lunch. Good place. At the Cathedral we saw that apparently you can take a tour of the tower. But you have to sign up in advance. Only 12 people allowed every 15 minutes. Will do it the next time.
On Sunday we walked to Richmond stopping on the way to check out the harvest of apples. Very very nice. Pears are about ready too. Richmond café was disappointing. This Thai place had such high ratings. We were ravenous after our long walk and not only did we have to wait about 45 minutes for our meal, but the waitress had missed 3 out of our 6 dishes and brought wrong ones at that. How can you do it? Not to worry, we have a fridge full of Lithuanian nibbles to keep us going :)
At night Dan and I had a special date over at Hampton court Palace. They have an evening tour called "Salacious gossip." They started us up with some champagne and then a lovely lady in red dress and corset took us around the dimly lit rooms sharing some juicy secrets of the place along the way. Slightly gasping, in dramatic whispers she told us the dark tales of adultery, incest, and other activities. Apparently the place has seen some more dark activities recently in the likes of Johnny Depp in Libertine. The tour was very entertaining.
Finally, on Monday we went to the office. Every time we go we wonder how people can be excited about working in the dark rooms, walking through a maze of staircases, and where honeybees who work in the offices on the second floor never mix with the soldier ants below. I have not seen enough offices to comment on whether it is typical to the UK or business world in general. We've appropriated the empty meeting room on the ground floor for our trips to the office. It has a window, more importantly, it is next to the break room :)
Georgia is reading Molly Moon, the contemporary take on Charles Dickens immortal stories of orphans and a female character competition to Harry Potter. I read it too so we could discuss it. Very mixed feelings about the book. The prevailing one is that of a dirty mop cloth with a characteristic smell they've made Soviet kids use to take turns their classroom. I guess I'll have her finish. It is considered a very popular book and kids should be exposed to different kinds of literature. Very tempted to move on to Alice in Wonderland. Incidentally English Roses series that we read in Russian were fairly uninspiring. Preachy and gray. I expected more from a lady who can express herself.

More on the subject of books. I am trying to keep Georgia on par with US school program and so we got Greek Myths written by Heather Alexander. It comes with a poster with the family tree of Greek Gods. Georgia wanted to know where Jesus was. Although we explained to her that it is from a different mythology book, she elected Zeus to serve as a Greek representative of Jesus.
A note about Isabella. She is very funny. The other day I was laughing at something and she said "Keep quiet - the guy downstairs is trying to fish." We live on the third floor if you don't count the ground floor.
On Saturday we did the shortened version of the Southwest route. The first stop was Cobb Farm. We were expecting to find some apples but instead found black and red currants, raspberries and baby corn. The berries looked exactly how they did two months ago. Black currants completely covered the bushes. Some had started to dry up or ferment. If you eat a handful you get a mix of flavors. Incredible. We could not understand why no one is picking the berries. The parking lot was full but everyone was in the store. People were buying same fruit that was growing outside. We also tried raw corn cobs. Very interesting taste.
The next stop was the Stonehedge. I think this is now the fourth time we are going. I really like this place. Traffic is a lot smaller now too. They are continuing to built a new visitor center and one day it will be even a better place to visit.
The final stop was Salisbury. We stopped by at Weatherspoon hotel for lunch. Good place. At the Cathedral we saw that apparently you can take a tour of the tower. But you have to sign up in advance. Only 12 people allowed every 15 minutes. Will do it the next time.
More on the subject of books. I am trying to keep Georgia on par with US school program and so we got Greek Myths written by Heather Alexander. It comes with a poster with the family tree of Greek Gods. Georgia wanted to know where Jesus was. Although we explained to her that it is from a different mythology book, she elected Zeus to serve as a Greek representative of Jesus.
A note about Isabella. She is very funny. The other day I was laughing at something and she said "Keep quiet - the guy downstairs is trying to fish." We live on the third floor if you don't count the ground floor.