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Expat Vagabonds "Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow mindedness." Mark Twain

United Kingdom

There are [330] photos and [43] stories about United Kingdom


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Saltaire, One Man's Dream

Sunday, 14 Aug 2011 | Views [1577]

Titus Salt had a vision for a utopian town built around his textile mill.  Today Saltaire is an example of a mid-19th Century industrial village highlighting the importance of the textile industry and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.... Read more >


A Day at The Races

Saturday, 13 Aug 2011 | Views [946]

As any fan of Dick Francis, author and former steeplechase jockey, would know, horse racing is a big thing in the UK.  Attending the sport of kings at Ripon Racetrack seemed like the perfect way to spend a Saturday afternoon. We were separated from ... Read more >


A Monk's Tale: Mount Grace Priory

Friday, 12 Aug 2011 | Views [647]

Just when we think we have it all figured out, they threw us a curve.   Take monasteries for instance.   We have visited the ruins of Cluniac and Cistercian abbeys and priories and know the difference between them.   We have learned about ... Read more >


Back on the Heritage Trail

Wednesday, 10 Aug 2011 | Views [628]

We are back on the Heritage trail in Yorkshire and our first stop was Pickering Castle.   It wasn’t much to look at today but William the Conqueror himself built the first “bailey and mote” castle on the site in 1068 to encourage obedience to ... Read more >


Gone to the Dogs

Tuesday, 9 Aug 2011 | Views [733]

Stephanie is the last of the Uganda group we wanted to look up.   She is the one we knew best, because for six months she was our boss at the Jane Goodall Institute despite being half our age.   Her new passion is dog agility training ... Read more >


Blind Date in Scotland

Sunday, 7 Aug 2011 | Views [1242]

Visiting with Paul and Wendy was more like a blind date than an actual reunion.   When we received their email inviting us to stay, we actually had to consult our journal to recall when and where we had met them: last year in Peru on a bus ... Read more >


The Holy Island of LIndisfarne: Proceed With Caution!

Thursday, 4 Aug 2011 | Views [1640]

“There once was a comely young lass          Who stood in the sea to her ankles” It doesn’t rhyme now but it will when the tide comes in! This old limerick stuck in my mind as we traversed the mudflats on our way to ... Read more >


Summer

Wednesday, 3 Aug 2011 | Views [613]

It rained yesterday and the forecast for tomorrow is more of the same.  But summer, glorious summer, arrived in northeast England today.  The temperature topped out at 20 C, that's nearly 70 degrees F!  And the sun shined all day long. We were at the ... Read more >


Newchurch Treasure Hunt

Saturday, 30 Jul 2011 | Views [795]

We have been staying with friends in an 18th Century cottage in Barley, a small hamlet in Lancashire.  Everyone in England, it seems, claims to live in a cottage but theirs is the real deal. The ceilings are low, the creaky stairs are steep and ... Read more >


Going Underground

Wednesday, 27 Jul 2011 | Views [1380]

Simon must have thought us daft when I asked if this would be a dry cave or a wet cave.   Our experience in South Dakota and New Mexico has been in dry caves.   They were still formed by water, and you might get a little muddy but Wind ... Read more >


The Elusive Razorbills of Bromley Cliffs

Tuesday, 26 Jul 2011 | Views [764]

Connie woke me at the ungodly hour of 5:45, understandable if not excusable, since it was to be a 300-mile day.   We left the perfectly wonderful weather of Barley for the cold and windy cliffs of Bromley on the east coast of England.   Once ... Read more >


English Misconceptions

Friday, 22 Jul 2011 | Views [1231]

I confess ignorance on many fronts.   My misconceptions about things British are the most recent example.   Take “Britain” for instance.   I believed that Britain, England and the United Kingdom were interchangeable.   England, I have since ... Read more >


Stott Park Bobbin Mill

Wednesday, 20 Jul 2011 | Views [2445]

With all of the Roman, Saxon, Norman, and Medieval castles, priories, abbeys and such (which a friend annoyingly refers to as "rubble") we sometimes forget that England was the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution.   The first mills ... Read more >


Ugandan Reunion

Tuesday, 19 Jul 2011 | Views [1252]

Richard Goldsmith was the first person we met at the Kinyara Sugar Works near Masindi, and it wasn’t long before his girlfriend, Kara March, had volunteered to help us with our program.   This was back in 2006 when we were volunteers with the ... Read more >


Wenlock Priory and Hailes Abbey

Thursday, 14 Jul 2011 | Views [1524]

In medieval England, before Henry VIII, when being Christian meant being Catholic, nearly every town had an abbey or a priory. No matter to which order the monks belonged – Cistercian, Cluniac, or other; black, white or gray – they followed the ... Read more >


Goodrich - Everything a Castle Should Be!

Monday, 11 Jul 2011 | Views [956]

There are castles . . . and there are castles! Tintagel has its King Arthur myth, thanks to Geoffrey of Monmouth.   Berry Pomeroy is haunted by not one, but two, ghosts.   The story of Farliegh Hungerford is one of intrigue, murder ... Read more >


Roman Baths of Bath - or How Bill Bryson Saved The Day

Sunday, 10 Jul 2011 | Views [2610]

The Roman bath and spa in Bath was expensive and crowded with tour groups.   The audio guide wasn’t nearly as good as the one at the castle, I have seen nicer baths in Turkey and Israel, and I was getting bored.   Then I discovered a series ... Read more >


Quaintness By Any Other Name

Friday, 8 Jul 2011 | Views [1783]

The names of English villages are as interesting as they are. Barleythorpe; Gigglesweek;   Adwik-upon-Deane; Hare Hatch; Leighton Buzzard; Roan of Craigoch; Barnby-in-the-Willows; Sheepwatch; Watton of Stone; King’s Bromley; Milton-... Read more >


Homeless At Last

Wednesday, 6 Jul 2011 | Views [914]

We have been quiet for fear of jinxing the deal but our house has been under contract for several weeks.   The deal was done yesterday! I am not sure what other “homeless” people feel but we feel fantastic!   No more worries, no more ... Read more >


British History, One Castle at a Time

Sunday, 3 Jul 2011 | Views [1166]

Our British friends half-jokingly tell us what Americans consider history is actually current events.   As we travel through Cornwall, the southwestern part of England, we can’t argue the point.   Its history pre-dates the Romans and the landscape ... Read more >


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