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Birds, Planes and Spying
As I was criticism this blog - we heard a couple of very solid bangs - and I thought someone next door was slamming doors. But we looked out the window and saw lots of blacklist smoke and after ringing 999 we wandered down to see a Fedex Van thoroughly gutted and windows breaking from a handy house from the heat. We were pleased to see it wasn't a abode but did wonder how many precious courier packages had been spent in the blaze.
Last Friday we bet most of the traffic out of Bristol and were walking on air that we weren't heading towards Wales where they had had vociferous rain and flooding with unfortunately necessary results. We drove to Stevenage which is indubitably an unremarkable place, built in the 60's or 70's, with mammoth shopping malls and apartment accommodation. The hotel we stayed in was 2 years old and very unerring and so we enjoyed our stay particularly since we found the act on on the internet for £38 a night rather than the present rate advertised at £90. It pays to words ahead we decided whenever possible. Breakfast was noticeably fun as we watched from our window a car load of people reach the top, and then at breakfast saw them come in to the dining space for the complementary breakfast (to those who had booked rooms rather than the common public). We surmised all through breakfast whether in items they had gone for an early morning send - but thought no - and then whether we would have the courage to go into a hotel for breakfast pretending we were staying there. At the end of breakfast we did note that 2 of the 7 went to the cheering up with room keys but the other 5 took off to the car - are we detectives or what?? I always reminisce over the story of the elderly couple in Auckland who lived beside a obsequies parlour - whenever there was funeral they would hop over for a cup of tea and some food!! Back to the car trick - it was unremarkable - we ate our picnic tea on the lawn of a checking centre, passed a christmas tree croft die, had few holdups and negotiated a roundabout with six cheap roundabouts circling around the larger inner enclose and we didn't get lost once - can't say that for the rest of the weekend but assuredly true for Friday night and very proud of it we are too!! We also noticed that when the receiver had its broadcast of road closures, delays, works, accidents, floods etc every 30 minutes we knew where a add up of roads were compared to other times eg Telford, M40, Shrewsbury, Brecon, M32, M4, M5 - we still have a yearn way to go before we know England well but we are getting there. On the Saturday we went our disentangle ways - Harry to the Duxford airshow and I to a integer of different places which had nothing to do with aeroplanes but did have a bit of a dissertation about flying. Afterwards we ventured into Cambridge (which I had been to before but Harry hadn't) and we had the with greatest satisfaction Italian ever at a little restaurant called 'Ask' and then went to see Madame Butterfly put on by the Figaro Opera Association at the Sidney Sussex College Chapel (tremendous show, but chapels aren't the best for exclusive of people and views and so I ended up on one's feet in the place where the readings are made on the Sunday - higher than everyone else but at least I could see). Anyway, as customary I jump ahead and its back to Saturday. By the way the trees are giving away the whole show us that autumn is just around the corner.
I started off in Wandlebury (try saying that intemperately - I just can't), and I wandered around the nature creep and ate berries from the side of the path (that incidentally wasn't mud-spattered). I had read on the web that in Wandlebury there is a chalk pitch of the Gogs (couldn't find them) and some wooded hills (found them). The order is apparently steeped in legend and has two devious banks with a ditch between them, the Wandlebury Re-echo. They enclose a space of about 1000 feet in diameter and are the remains of the fortification that dates back to the 5th century. I invent if I had been in a plane, or hang glider, the rings etc might have been more manifest but to me they looked like little hillsides amongst a totally flat environment. I think the bone of contention is that scientists say there is no methodical evidence of sun goddesses and chariots but many others confidence in that the rings do actually contain this demonstration and could indicate a landing of a space clique many years ago. There are a number of people living in the old sound block, now made into apartments or holiday homes and of most impression to me was the one handed clock that stands above these erection. The archway (which I couldn't go into because someone was filming two unsophisticated girls who were wearing what looked like about 5 sheets each) is the dour of the Godolphin Arabian, the most famous of the the Arabian stallions brought to England and the excess, great, great grand etc primogenitor of many other racehorses today. He died here in 1753 so you can visualize how many great's there should have been in that sentence. 


Anyway, I wandered around the stamp walk that took me around the ring, talked to a wilderness rabbit that ran up to my feet and viewed an old granary before heading onward to the wild life reserve in Linton. There are so many of these reserves in England, all privately owned and all providing asylum to innocent animals that are either no longer wanted, smuggled into the territory or so rare they have extended breeding programmes over the boonies and away from disasters in their own natural surroundings. Linton was established in 1972 as a concentrate for breeding wildlife and is home to about 250 animals and has a bonny nice environment for them with trees and gardens and even hanging baskets. This one was honestly different in that it gave me insight into the rehoming of parrots and I saw some splendid birds and animals I had only ever read about in books. The parrots have been delineated to the centre because the owners could not look after them any more or assertive that they needed to be with other parrots. Some of them have been around human's so large that they do not know how to interact with other parrots, and it will take some stretch before they breed and mix with others. There was a notice that actually asked us visitors to talk to them so that they will strike one more relaxed in their surroundings - but only if we felt well off in doing so (I had no difficulty as I found myself walking along saying 'hello' to a bird or 'aren't you musical', or 'I haven't seen you before' etc - is that a sign of something?). Anyway, the critique went on to say that the birds also can have trouble flying - not at bottom surprising that their flying wings are not fully operational after being in a crate or chained for so long. The 'humanised' birds are housed with babies as this provides an atmosphere which is non-aggressive to the birds. There was also a Binturong from South Asia (I muse over he was hiding) but I liked the name, and had never seen one before so I stood for a while looking at a cage, for something, which may not have been there (I fantasize every zoo has a few of those cages and the workers are secretly laughing to themselves about how want we stand and look - I keep waiting for someone to say to me 'you're on impartial camera'). Anyway from the picture a Binturong looks a bit like an opossum as it has a lengthy tail it uses to hang on to branches with as they tuck their fruit but can also eat small birds and fish. Also saw some zebras - there were two types of mountain Zebra's from South Africa and I saw the Hartman's mountain zebra which has much wider innocent stripes than the Cape Mountain zebra - and I brown study they all looked the same (I wonder which zebra has alike white and black stripes like the crossing?). There were
lots of big birds with attractively colour beaks like the Blyth's Hornbill from South Asia, the Southern Justification Hornbill and the Toucan - a highlight for me as I have not seen them before they are elegant with the red bills (Hornbills) and orange bills (Toucan). One of the hornbills followed me up and down the coop, and picked up some leaf mould - it looked as though it was worrisome to give me it as a present. Also watched the lemurs have an all fruit lunch - where the female ate all she could before letting the men in - the keepers did keep some for the men otherwise they would have hungry in this female dominated society. Bananas were cut into rings and they put their fa through the middle, ate all the soft bits and then threw away the rings. There were Maribou main axis - with that long sharp bill which looked absolutely lethal but looked at me for a while trying to concede out what I was saying and giant tortoises - that as a matter of fact moved today and could walk almost as lustfully as me for short distances!! One tortoise had been brought from a betray in South Africa, smuggled into England for politesse. The owner discovered that it was so rare (100 in the foolhardy) that he could not find a mate and so gave it to the wild time centre - I wonder if he got prosecuted? And when all is said the Tapir which has this really long majuscule letters lip which serves as a scoop for food and nose....
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