Love reading your TR.
btw - are you able to disclose now who your famous authors were or is it a secret (if not are you able to send them privately)
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My last trip to Hong Kong (not in a typhoon) also resulted in a go-around. It was my third, and I manged to call it (in my head!) before the engines roared.No -- I like your FlightRadar graphic. Please don't delete!
thanks I am not familiar with them but will put them on my ever increasing things I want to read and wait with bated breath for your bookThanks for your kind words @VPS
The first author (Alexander Masters) I actually disclosed at the beginning of this TR becasue I finished reading his book A Life Discarded on the SYD-BKK flight.
The second author was Christie Watson. Her book The Language of Kindness is amazing.
Very late to the party, am impressed with your project and on board with you @HumanAt this stage my itinerary looks like this:
MEL-SYD Qantas Economy
SYD-BKK Qantas Economy (operated by Finnair)
Overnight in Bangkok
BKK-HEL-CDG Finnair Business
3 nights in Paris
CDG-MAN Air France Economy
Overnight in Manchester
5 nights at the writing workshop in West Yorkshire
Overnight in Manchester
MAN-HKG-MEL Cathay Pacific Business
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That’s not a bad itinerary given I’m using points for every flight and it was only booked 4 weeks before departure! Obviously the 10 or so hours in Economy SYD-BKK won’t be amazing, but at least it’s a daytime flight and here’s hoping I’ll be able to snaffle an empty seat next to me.
Why 3 nights in Paris on the way? Firstly, because there were no later award flights available that would still get me to the workshop on time. Secondly, because my sister and her family live there, so I can crash with them for a few nights. Having free accommodation in Paris as a fallback if the dates didn’t quite work out certainly made planning this trip a lot easier — and cheaper!
I have done the same with the TBR additions and shall also await your book - no pressure to produce it. None whatsoever.thanks I am not familiar with them but will put them on my ever increasing things I want to read and wait with bated breath for your book
(Yes, yes, this is the second time in two Trip Reports that I’ve written that line. But it’s a great line. There’s no law against that, is there?)
Qatar’s cabin crews can be hit-and-miss. When they’re great, they’re fantastic. But they’re not always great.
So enjoying your trip report and particularly this post. My Wheelhouse ancestors are buried in that cemetery at St Thomas'. They were wheelrights there from 1790. I have visited the UK several times but haven't yet made it to Hebden Bridge. Hoping to rectify this in '27 when we head back for the Ashes. Thanks for your beautiful photos. Can't wait to see it with my own eyes.Eventually there was a gap in the wall. I’d survived! “Free at last!” I thought. I walked along the path just as it started to rain heavily. I just had time to put on my trusted Kathmandu Gore-Tex jacket, when the rain stopped.
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I emerged to see some signs of civilisation.
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I continued on another path, before arriving at the Church building.
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I found its cemetary.
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And within a few minutes I’d found this grave. I have a colleague at work, an English teacher, who would have killed me if I hadn’t come here and gotten these photos.
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One thing for sure: I was most definitely not returning via the same path I came! I walked through the village, and along the road, before arriving at the familiar and welcome path back to the house.
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On the minus side, I didn’t make it to the shop. On the plus side. I did not slip and plunge to my death. That’s a win in my book.