An afternoon at the pub

We spent our last Sunday afternoon away in a pub in London and had a drinks and snacks “drop in” session with friends in the London area. The pub – chosen for sentimental reasons and its proximity to Waterloo Station – was Auberge, and we sat outside on the rooftop terrace, amid the delicious noise and clutter of central London.

It was perfect.

The place itself was pretty quiet, although I can imagine it being quite different on a weekday.
On a weekday, for example, I can’t imagine that there would be space for one of the older patrons to finish his lunch and then choose to have a sleep on the couch while his wife patiently read her book.

But as I said, this was a Sunday.

OK. OK. I know what you’re thinking. But it’s just the position of his arms and the flower on the table that make it look like he’s shuffled off this mortal coil. After more than a whole hour later, he woke up, put his sandals back on and went back into real life.

The manager of the place wasn’t entirely happy about the situation when we chatted about it, but truth be told, the sleeping man wasn’t really doing anyone any harm, and reminded ourselves that we have to try to respect older people…

‘Cause one day you’ll be older too
You might need someone who can pull you through

…even when they fall asleep in your bar.

He let it slide when he heard that we weren’t bothered by it.

I’ve seen a lot of people fall asleep in pubs before. I’ve had to wake them up, help them outside and put them in taxis home on several occasions, when I’ve been working in various drinking establishments. But the clear forethought and preparation of this one was certainly different from those.
There’s almost a certain amount of respect due for his chutzpah, even if he himself was being rather less respectful to those around him.

Anyway. It made for a blog post.

It’s been a while…

It’s been a while since we did a pub quiz. 4 years was one estimate. I’m not sure that it was quite that long, but it was certainly pre-pandemic – BTV.

And so we re-mortgaged our houses and headed off to the Fireman’s quiz last night.

Fireman’s markets itself as a true English-style pub, and I had always thought of that being more because of the traditional ambiance rather than the ridiculous prices for beer and food.

Now it’s both.

Thankfully, it seems that we haven’t lost it. Some good general knowledge, a shot of educated guessery, some excellent groupthink moments and a couple of fortuitous gambles:

Oysters?!? Wrapped in bacon?!?! Oysters??

Related.

…and we finished in a creditable second place out of the 30+ teams playing on the night, a mere 1 point behind the winners.

And we couldn’t really fault ourselves for any of the three questions we got wrong on the night.

So that’ll do, pig. That’ll do.

Will we head back again soon?
Probably, but we’ll need time to save up a bit before we can buy another pizza.

Dublin big thing

It’s called the Spire of Dublin and I’m surprised that there isn’t more publicity around it – it’s an elegant, yet dominating structure.
Costing €4,000,000 and erected 20 years ago, it stands 120m tall right over the city centre.

It’s quite something:

That’s a photo from a local hotel website. I couldn’t really find a decent angle to get a similar shot when we were there (and I didn’t want a pic with 74,000 Spanish schoolkids in it anyway), so I went really close up and did this instead:

This is from the 10m diameter base, looking… well… up.

I have a couple of others which are respectively less and more abstract than this one, but I think this happy medium is probably the best of the three.

The structure being made of silver steel and the sky being steel grey make for nicely camouflaged boundaries.

Dublin big thing. Coming soon on the blog: London big things.

Rest day

Yesterday, I went to the gym to see if I could survive a workout and therefore pronounce myself fit to play football in the evening. The workout went very well, thanks for asking, and so I pronounced myself fit to play football in the evening. I then played football in the evening.

Dream day.

It was only after playing football in the evening that I realised that I had done a gym workout that morning. 20000+ steps. 600 (or at least the equivalent of 600) Discovery points. All in just under 10 hours. This is what is known in gym/football circles as “a bit much” for one day.

Consequently, today I am feeling battered and I did not want to get up.

I will not be exercising today. I feel that I have earned a rest day.

There is still plenty to be done around the house though, so it’s only a rest from actual exercise, not from life. And that’s sad, because with dark grey skies up above and disappointingly chilly temperatures, I’d honestly rather be in bed.

The Incline

This looks like fun (depending on your idea of fun). It’s the Manitou Springs Incline: an ex-funicular railway track in Colorado which has become a… “thing”. It’s about 1.42km long, and gains (or loses) an incredible 613m in height over that distance.
(c.f. Winnat’s Pass 188m over 1.6km; Constantia Nek to the dams: 473m elevation over 6.6km; Platteklip Gorge 680m over 2.8km. I think that’s all the major reference inclines covered.)

So basically almost twice as steep as the front of Table Mountain. Yeah – it’s mental.

This excellent video sums up what it was, what it is, and documents the odd community (are we allowed to say “cult”?) which has grown up around it:

As a one-off visit or as part of a regular exercise regime, I guess that it’s all good. And yeah – I get the speed thing, because there are records for speed in everything (the record for this 1.42km is 17m25s). But then middle aged men came along and because they couldn’t break the speed record, they invented a new record: they had to do it more than other middle aged men. And this is where it gets a bit obsessive and weird. Because that record is (obviously) the number of ascents in a single (365 day) year, and that figure currently stands at 1,825 (that’s 1,100,000m of ascent). When each up and down trip takes at least an hour… that’s at least 5 hours a day, every day. Plus getting there, getting back and (hopefully) some shower time.

Nope. I mean, well done, and each to their own, but that just seems like a colossal waste of time over 12 months when you could have been sleeping or drinking or blogging. Or, quite plausibly, all three.

Still, I guess that if I lived there, I’d also be using it as a free gym (and people have moved there just to do this). Can you imagine your calves after a few weeks? Bulgy.

Given that it is unique, it’s obviously going to be difficult to recreate something similar here in Cape Town (or anywhere else), but it does seem like the sort of challenge worth trying at least once.