Honeymoon
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Honeymoon, including honeymoon in my blog, any mentions of h0neym00n in my family tree and honeymoon talk in Folkestone.
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Sep23
Just setting up a place holder here where I will post the next part of my holiday honeymoon writeup... on leaving San Francisco we went to Monterey, before heading to Santa Barbara and Los Angeles.
First we had to get out of San Francisco, which meant going and picking the car up - we'd decided to leave it at the airport, so as not to have to pay for parking for our four days in San Fran. Some reports have it that our hotel has free parking for guests, but this is not how it seemed while we were there. We thought we'd grab a shuttle back to the airport, but a porter at the hotel told us they only take people one way, don't fret, he'd get us a car and it'd cost about the same. Bastard, it was double what the shuttle would have been, and the driver had NO IDEA how to get into the airport. Dealing with these two guys lowered my expectations of service in America - people are keen to try and help you, but only because they're expecting a tip, and if you're not prompt with your tipping some people get a bit funny. Not keen on that way of doing things at all. When we FINALLY got our car, it was alright, the smallest car the rental company did, but still an 1800 Nissan something or other, with air con and cruise control and things, not too shabby at all. I think the drive from the airport was alright, despite my lack of recent driving experience (hadn't really driven in the previous ten years), and my lack of ANY foreign driving experience. Some of the signs on the freeway were confusing, it takes a little while to get used to exits being on both sides of the road, but we just about got to where we wanted.
Monterey is a bit rubbish. I know I thought this at the time, it was a bit of a sleepy town, too many things seemed to be shut / shut down, so I'd not recommend going there. However, we were only there for 3 days, and now I come to look back on it there were highlights. First off though, our hotel was the Embassy Suites, actually in Seaside, a few miles outside of Monterey. So we weren't even in the middle of the sleepy town, we were a cab ride away from it, not a promising start. The hotel is very nice though, as the name suggests you get a suite, with kitchenette, lounge etc. The place is twelve stories high and the centre of the building is open all the way up. The ground floor has a restaurant and bar and breakfast room and things, and we were delighted to find that "happy hour" started just as we got there, which meant entirely free booze for the next two hours. Also the parking was free for the length of our stay. Good work!
Heading into town was a disappointment. As I mentioned most things seemed to be close, it felt disctinctly out of season. There weren't too many places I could have much choice of what to eat, even if they were open. We ended up in a grubby English style pub again and ate chips.
We went back to Cannery Row, the main stretch of Monterey the next day, and it wasn't much more exciting. Bit tacky, not so much as Fisherman's Wharf, but still not thrilling - seems to be aimed more at retired folk. We went to a bar called Blue Fin because it had pool tables and a dartboard, but then didn't play darts or pool in there at all, we mostly sat at the bar playing interactive quiz games against other pubs. I remember this from the Chav Monkey in Fareham, when it was called The Bugle - seems to have caught on the US of States now, about 15 years later. It's distributed by www.ntn.com have a look out for it, it was fun.
We also went to the ]world famous aquarium, not really my cup of tea but I found the jellyfish quite fascinating and took quite a lot of pics. We also went through 17 Mile Drive - it's a toll road much bigged up by guide books, but really you're just paying to subsidise a swanky gated community. We did see some very cute squirrels, but apart from that it's not really worth going through.
The best thing about Monterey was our day out in Carmel, that's a nice town. It's hard to believe that it's a real town where real people live, as it only seems to consist of galleries, antique shops, and restaurants. We had a lunch at a great place called Forge in the Forest, that's where I had my first meal that was how I expected all the food to be, a plate piled high with all sorts of extras, very nice indeed.
We came back into Carmel on our way between Monterey and Santa Barbara, to stock up on lunch provisions, as we had a five hour drive ahead of us...
2005 :: Comment / reply
Sep19
Pictures
Bah, back to work today... sorry not to ahve updated, couldn't be bothered over the weekend while we were catching up on real life. Got some honeymoon pics here, though they're not captioned up yet and might not make a lot of sense. Yes, lots of squirrels and otters and jellyfish, not too many of us. Full rundown of how each bit of California was later when I have more time, catching up on why popex horribly underperformed in terms of ads while I was away. Please go there and click around, so I don't have to look for another job.
BARELY time to report on our first weekend back, let alone the holiday... Got a lift back from Heathrow, the father in law collected us and raced back to Folkestone. Mostly we drank English tea and did washing, but we stayed up long enough for a curry. Went to The New Delhi, and they were FULL, but squeezed us in. Great meal there, and we met a couple on the next table who were on a nostalgic trip to Folkestone - they'd spent their honeymoon here fifty one years ago. Popped to Chambers for a cheeky pint after, and it was also great. Not been going there as much recently as we used to, but this time was particularly great. It was good feeling so hazy (the jet lag you understand) we were giggling and wobbling like we were on medication.
Saturday we shopped and recycled and things, and unpacked some new furniture. Then went to The Jackdaw for another GREAT meal, pies all round, really good. Then just home (significantly before closing time) and caught up with our DVD's, West Wing mostly. We've missed a few episodes of Lost, and we're unlikely to catch up on them. Nearly bought the series on region one DVD while on holiday, but decided just to gamble on one DVD box set in this way (as we don't have a region one player) and we went for Frasier... SO, how do I change the region of my DVD player, to make it play any region? Seems I can hire a disk from this site for 20 quid to do it, can I not just cheekily download something for free? www.dvdcodes.net don't have free details. The model is the LX3950, so please tell me where I can get LX3950 DVD region unlock codes...
Where was I? Hmm, I think that was the end of my weekend. Oh, Clare's brother and his NEW FIANCEE made us a blackberry and apple crumble, and we ate it. It was very nice, end of weekend, honeymoon report to come.
2005 :: Comment / reply
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