Sunday, March 30, 2008

A walk on the South Bank

We have Corbin and Tonya Graber here visiting from Colorado along with their kids Natalie, Andrew, and Emma. On Sunday we ventured to Central London as it was a really pleasant day.
While Ed, Corbin and the kids went to the play ground in Highgate Woods, then to the transportation museum, Tonya and I went to Spitalfields Market, Petticoat lane market, Covent Garden Market, and topped it off with a walk along part of the Thames on the South Bank. Here are a few pictures of some buskers. There were many more that I didn't get pictures of.
As this guy was playing music, he was pumping a control behind the curtain with his right foot which made all the puppets move around like they were dancing and playing instruments.
I'm not sure what this guy is trying to say.
This picture was actually on Petticoat Lane which is a very large market of textiles. This is a man roasting chestnuts over a fire. They didn't really look good but did smell good.

This is a skate board area along the South Bank.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Easter Morning....The Lord is risen...He is risen indeed!


After practically no snow for our first year in London, we were greeted Easter morning to fluffy snow flakes slowly falling to the earth. For the whole of the morning the snow remained on the ground, not enough to measure but enough to give it the look of a layer of cotton balls. It was quite beautiful even though most Easters for me are associated with warm weather.
By the time our church breakfast, Easter service and tea were over, the snow was gone. It seemed appropriate somehow to have this blanket of white snow covering everything on the morning we celebrate our risen Lord. A new, fresh beginning of life.




I hope you all had a good Easter time celebrating the miracle of our risen Lord with family and friends.

These pictures are from our flat: The first is the view from sitting at our desk in the living room. The second picture is looking out of our kitchen window and the last is the view from the window just outside of the door to our flat.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Prayer Hut Project

The LMC Prayer Hut was constructed about 20 years ago by volunteers to be used by pastors and church leaders or anyone needing it as a place of solitude and contemplation. It gets used at least one day a week and the users value the time they spend there.

When it was constructed they placed the Hut on a wooden foundation - which has now rotted away along with some of the other lumber at the base of the building.

Here is Jim placing a jack to lift the Hut so we can dig new footers. We lifted it up about 6 inches and removed the rotted lumber (2nd pic) which used to be the foundation. The building was surprisingly rigid and stable. I expected it to creak and groan as we lifted but it didn't.

There was some serious spider activity under there, but UK does not have termites, so the damage was only from normally rotting wood. (PS from Phyllis) Not only does the UK not have termites but of the spiders they do have, none are poisonous... and they have no snakes! Although since a Brit told me these facts, someone else thought there may be some snakes in places but not like I was used to in my back yard in Harper, KS.


With the Hut all jacked up we were able to build some forms to pour into. The concrete we used was "post mix". It sets VERY quickly and we never got the first batch out of the mixer before it set up. I spent an hour chipping hard concrete out of the mixer which set us back on our schedule and we didn't get done in one day like I had hoped. In the end we simply mixed the cement in the forms by adding water and cement together and mixed them with gardening trowels. It was clumsy and time consuming, but I think we got a good pour.
Next we replaced the rotted plates at the bottom of the walls and measured for new siding to replace the bottom row on each wall. I'll lower the hut into place in a few days when I know the cement is hard enough.
That should last another 20 years or so.
Special thanks to Jim Bare and Ed Sirett for all their work.

Monday, March 10, 2008

The following pictures are out of order. The picture of Alexandra Palace and the dogs were to be first as that was the first place we went. Then we went to the Farmers Market. This blog isn't always blogger friendly.

Farmers market

After walking around the palace, we went through a farmers market on the way home. Here Ed is getting a cup of Jo.











I choose some "savory flat bread" from an African food booth.

A walk to Alexandra Palace

Last Sunday we took a walk to Alexandra Palace which is just north of where we live. It's set within 196 acres of parkland. First opened in 1873 as the people's palace & provided a recreation centre. 16 days after opening there was a large fire. It reopened in 2 years but had financial problems. In 1900 it came under the Park Trust which makes it available for the free use & recreation of the public forever. It houses an ice skating rink, cafes, areas to rent for receptions plus other uses. In 1935 the BBC leased part of the building which is where the first public television transmissions were made.
We walked around the palace outside then fairly close by there was a farmers market. Here are a couple of shots of dogs along the way. There were plenty more but we didn't always have the camera ready.



These guys were really "meaty" looking.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Weird mail & 'taking on' not 'giving up'

This piece of mail came in the post the other day. What about this envelope looks different to you? Is there something about a certain way to handle mail that I don't know about?
It's Lent and for some that means a time when you 'give up' something, a time of penitence, an introspective period during which we take stock of our lives. In years past, I've tried to give up something, but I've not been very good at it. Here at the Centre, we've talked about doing something different. Instead of giving up something, we are taking on something. The Thiessen family and Dora-Marie go to the Archway tube station every Wednesday over the lunch hour and pass out fliers asking for an end to the occupation and war in Iraq and Afghanistan. I have decided to take on reading something other than fiction in my spare time. So this is my choice out of our library. It's going well, and now some of my spare time is spent taking on something which helps me think more about worship.
So what are you doing during Lent this year?

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Charing Cross Bookshop

Saturday we took the tube to Leicester Square (sounds like Lester) to go to a photo gallery. Sharon went with us. The gallery was good but most of the pictures were quite depressing. One section was a slide show of pics taken across America during the 60's of extreme poverty situations. Another was pictures about life for women and children in India. There was written commentary which was about how women are often beaten if they don't produce boy babies and how often girl babies are killed just for being a girl. So we were needing a little of a boost. So after a coffee in an Italian cafe, we went to a quaint little bookshop on Charing Cross road. Charing Cross is famous for it's bookshops. This one is really old and it was like going through a maze once you were inside. It continued to weave down to the basement where we found books for 1/2 off the marked price, and often the marked price was already 1/2 off. The floors were old and dipped and creaky. And I found a book for only 3 1/2 pounds. ($7) So I had something to read on the way home on the tube. Here is Ed and Sharon in the basement looking through all the deals.


It had a real musty smell to it which made it feel even more like an old shop.
If someone would come through the hall, you had to either squeeze up against the books or find a little nook to step into so they could pass by.