This morning, I found my 2 year old son, Ashton, holding my cell phone singing, “where is the cow?” over and over. It took me a second, but then I remembered my alarm is set to the song from this cartoon:
Archive for the 'Fun' Category
So, I meant to write this entry about a year ago when we went to England last March. I wanted to write about cool things I saw and tips about traveling out of the country.
1. My debit card was the cheapest way to pay for things.
I’m not sure if this is the case for everyone, but I made purchases on 3 different cards (American Express, Chase Visa, and my Visa Debit Card). American Express and Chase both charged about 3% on top of the exchange rate (which was around 1.95 USD to 1 GBP at the time). When I used my debit card, I was simply charged the exchange rate my bank currently offered.
2. A lot of electronics actually work with a simple outlet converter (i.e. - not transformer).
I noticed my laptop power supply listed a voltage range of like 110-240V, so I used an outlet converter and plugged in my laptop to the 220V outlet, and it worked like a charm. I left it plugged in for nearly a full week, and was even able to log on to the Internet from an access point at the flat. My external hard drive also had no problems (and anything else with that wide of a voltage range).
3. Some buskers are awesome, you should tip them occasionally
Especially if they’re as hot as Natalia Tena (who plays Nymphadora Tonks in the Harry Potter movies, and who claims to have performed in the London Underground).
One day during the trip, I had a Shins song (Young Pilgrims) stuck in my head the entire day. That same day while we were traveling on the Underground, we heard a man playing and singing that same song; and he was pretty dang good, too. I only had enough to tip him like 50p, though (about $1).
4. Never rent a car to drive in London
First, traffic inside London is horrible, and is not fun to drive in (even if you have experience driving on the left side of the road on the right side of the car). On top of that, if you even so much as happen to cross into Central London (about a square mile in size right in the middle of Greater London), you have to pay congestion tax of £8. And, you don’t pay it to actually drive in Central London, they have cameras that track your license plate, and you get fined £100 if you get caught not paying it (from the people I’ve talked to, it’s near impossible not to get caught, so I just payed it so England would still let me visit them in the future).
5. Besides, public transportation in London is super awesome
It seemed like we could get anywhere we wanted to be within a half hour (except that I was cheap and only paid for the tube in zones 1-3, and buses in zones 1-6, so it was really only fast for us within the first 3 zones. There are 6 zones total in the whole London area, laid out in rings). Oh, and the Oyster cards they have are pretty cool, too; you just touch your pass to their automated machines, and it determines if your fare is paid (you can preload cash on the card, or pay for unlimited use per day/week/month). I’m pretty sure Becky thought it was neat when she saw Harry Potter and Arthur Weasley use Oyster cards, and actually knew what they were. Or maybe I’m retarded; it is pretty late right now.
6. Eat at Nando’s
If you like spicy food or chicken (note the key word, “or”), you should eat at Nando’s. Not only is the food good beyond all belief, but it’s actually affordable, even for the price being in pounds. I really like the PeriPeri sauce, especially the extra extra hot one. Anyway, Becky was in her first trimester of pregnancy with Kaelyn, so she was feeling great on this trip, especially in the mornings. She had specifically told me one day that she did not want to eat chicken, but I couldn’t stop craving Nando’s and talking about how I like their food more than a lot, so I took her there anyway (I had somehow missed that she said she didn’t want chicken).
She took one look at the menu and gave me a mean scowl, but decided to order a chicken pita, and asked for it not to be toasted. Luckily, she had just ordered a chickn pita from Chili’s the day before that was toasted (and hated it), otherwise she’d have never thought to ask. Anyway, she made me get her that same pita again another evening when she was having some pregnancy cravings.
7. If I think of anything else, I’ll write a new post; oh, by the way, I have pictures of our trip in the photos section of this site.
I have a couple of confessions today: I really like Sudoku, and I really want a pair of Heelys; yes, the shoes with wheels on them, and, in case you were wondering, I’m 28. Anyway, I just recently starting playing Sudoku (I was introduced to it months ago, just never got into it until now); after I had played a few puzzles on the easiest setting, and beating the average player’s time the majority of the time, I decided that I was so awesome I could jump straight to the hardest setting — I was only able to get this far without guessing: evil puzzle.
After about 3 days of being retarded (off and on, total time spent was about 3 hours), I just decided to use the scratch system the game provided to solve the puzzle, by eliminating patterns that didn’t work. In other words, I solved it through trial and error (here’s the solution); though, I was under the impression that was unnecessary to solve any Sudoku puzzle (if you happen to know any tricks to get further than I did, please let me know). After I had solved the puzzle, I decided to go back and try using the built-in hint system; this at least made me feel a little better, because the hint system wasn’t even able to get as far as me.
If you’ve never played Sudoku, I highly recommend it; you can even find a few free versions on sourceforge.net. The screenshots I provided earlier were from the free windows version of the game on Sourceforge; and it’s extremely more functional than it is attractive, though it is possible to change the colors (I’m too lazy/busy writing dumb online journal posts).
So after I had decided to find a pair of Heelys, I checked a couple stores in St. George to see if they had my size. The sales person at the mall just laughed, then said no. The sales clerk at the next store at least replied with, “No, because I’ve checked.” He then said they could order a pair in, it’s that they just don’t keep a men’s size 12 in stock. I didn’t want to order them there, so I just gave up looking for my size, and actually forgot about them completely for the next few days; that is, until I was checking one of my favorite, extremely-poor-designed sites (though it does often list incredibly great deals), hot-deals.org. They listed that Heelys were on sale on buy.com for only $40 after Google checkout. I’m still waiting for them; and hopefully they get here before Christmas. Yum.