Codeshare: my trip to Bletchley Park

Skyring

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1280px-Bletchley_Park_Mansion.jpg
Bletchley Park – CC image via Wikipedia

Every year since 2005, I've attended (or tried to attend) the BookCrossing.com world convention. A grand name for a gathering that rarely exceeds a hundred attendees but these are friends, my tribe, my passion.

2023 was a small affair in Falkirk, Scotland: Journey to the Land of the Flying Barges
2024 was April in Tampere, Finland: Will there be PJs – Return to Finland
2025 I missed out on Wageningen in the Netherlands because I couldn't really justify leaving my wife with two rambunctious grandkids two Mondays in a row. Can't win 'em all.

2026 and the UK will once again host the worldcon, this time in St Albans, a cathedral "city " near London, north of Heathrow. If a town has a cathedral, it's a city, by law. Doesn't look like that big a place, but they can squeeze in a hundred BookCrossers and I'm the only attendee from Australia.

One of the highlights will be a trip before the gathering properly begins. To Bletchley Park, a place I've always wanted to visit, home of the Enigma codebreakers during the Second World War, the people who gave the UK an enormous advantage over the Axis because they could read a lot of the German secret traffic and arrange for countermeasures.

First weekend in July. As I speak, I have my flights and my AirBnB paid for. All I really need do is book a hotel in Manila and work out how I'm to get to and from St Albans. Realistically, I just need to catch an Uber to the airport and begin writing in the lounge.
 
Traditionally there's a fair amount of competition, with not just the locals but the Europeans and a few Americans wanting a place. Often there's a waiting list. I managed to get a ticket and unlike previous affairs, there's just me and a fellow Antipodean from New Zealand instead of the usual crowd of Aussies bearing Tim Tams.

We'll be pushing for the next convention to be held in Singapore as an alternative to getting Europeans to fly all the way to Australia. We've become quite adept at holding our own local gatherings at places where no BookCrossers actually live and organising things in advance. Stewart Island, Norfolk Island, Waiheke and so on.

Singapore may not be convenient to anyone, but it is certainly a grand holiday destination. I've lost count of the number of times I've flown in. Never actually left the airport, though.

We pulled in on a cruise in 2008, had a day tour around, so I'm not a complete novice. I'll be putting forward the case for Singapore in St Albans, for the locals to vote on and we have a team of Aussies who are Singapore experts assembling a package. With any luck, that will be my big 2027 trip report.

St Albans is a place I've never thought about, let alone visited. On the Thameslink line, so it shouldn't be too difficult to get to.

I want to arrive on the Wednesday so I can be on deck for the Thursday bus trip up to Bletchley, the convention runs Friday to Sunday, and on Monday morning I'll head off home. Five nights without too much of a scramble, and I'll be wanting an AirBnB because that gives me access to kitchen and laundry facilities for about the same price as a hotel, and certainly a lot more space to spread all my books and electronics around.

Just me this trip. sometimes my wife accompanies me, but not this time. She'll be at home with the grandson one day a week (his elder sister is now in school} and it's an order of magnitude easier to look after one kid than two at once.

My criteria for selecting an AirBnB this trip are:
1. Proximity to venue
2. Proximity to transport
3. Proximity to parkrun
4. Kitchen, laundry, a reasonable amount of space and privacy.
5. Cost.

I find a place right in the middle of town. An older building with some quirk about it. Not terribly convenient to the venue, the Thameslink station, or parkrun, but within ten to fifteen minutes' walk, and let's face it, my options for that weekend are limited. I don't mind a bit of walking (or running, for that matter) though I'll likely get a bus or taxi to and from the station if 'm hauling my bags.

One potential problem is that the middle of St Albans might prove a bit noisy in the evenings. The AirBnB reviews don't report this as a deal-breaker and the nature of these BookCrossing events is that my own evenings will be spent having dinner with fellow attendees at a variety of pubs and restaurants, so a place in the centre of town should be convenient for my own genteel carousing.

I put flights to one side for several months. A seat at the convention and a convenient AirBnB are limited commodities, but it shouldn't be too hard to find flights.

Besides, there's always the chance of a DSC window.

And so there was.

This time around, I handed the task over to Flat Beds because I wasn't finding anything that really jumped out at me through my usual channels. They came up with two options:
1. Finnair via Hong Kong and Helsinki, with SYD-HKG on QF
2. Oman Air via Manilla and Muscat, with CBR - MNL on QF

Much as I love Finnair, it worked out more expensive, yielded fewer SC, and the timings didn't really work for me. I had to make a choice quickly and I went for the Oman option.

Combined with an upcoming Japan trip booked during last year's DSC promotion, I should return to the cheerful realm of WP. Do it again next year and I'll be within spitting distance of LTG. Gute Laune einfach überall!


I get to leave at a reasonable time in the morning, a Dash-8 flight out of Canberra at 0830, three hour transit in Sydney, and an evening arrival at Manila. Early morning departure the next day to Oman and I arrive at Heathrow in the evening.

On the way back, it's J all the way via Brisbane, albeit with a 24 layover in Manila.

Not ideal, but affordable and no long flights in Y, which with my frame and age are pretty much extended torture nowadays.

I'll work on transfers and layover accommodation, but I have three and a half months to prepare.

Oman Air will be a new experience and the Philippines a new stamp in the passport.

The only real problem is how the middle east will play out. I'm expecting it to run out of puff by then and if it doesn't we'll likely all have bigger problems.
 
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Well, it's done. I've yet to write up the saga, with the disasters and the delights, but long story short, as I stood at the luggage carousel after the final leg of the eight flights, I checked my Qantas app and there it was. The forty SC from the BNE-CBR had pushed me over the WP attain.

The power of DSC. Earlier today I cheerfully hit the bonus 50 SC button, and there are another 160 to come from the doubled points of the last two flights. P1 is out of the question this year but next year LTG is a goal.

Bletchley Park was fabulous. Wartime history buff here, but gosh what a thrill to stand in Alan Turing's office. I'll have to read more books to understand what I saw. Some buildings are in their original state (or recreated, I guess) and others have been totally refitted, such as the cafe, gift shop, and welcome centre.

More to come.
 
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I've also visited Bletchley Park and like you really enjoyed it and appreciated just how valuable the work done there was for the war effort.
 
I've also visited Bletchley Park and like you really enjoyed it and appreciated just how valuable the work done there was for the war effort.
It was way better than I expected. I re-read a book about Enigma on the flight(s) home and got some extra value out of it after I'd seen the place.
 
Monday: packing and preparing

I had the whole of Monday to prepare and pack. I was pretty much still in travel mode from the Japan trip last week; I hadn’t even put my bag away in the garage.

The Australian BookCrossers were organising next year's world convention, and as the only Australian in attendance at this year's convention, it fell to me to make a presentation in support of the bid.

For our proposal needed to be approved by the members of this year's convention, BookCrossing being a ground roots democracy quite distinct from the American firm who actually ran the show as a commercial enterprise.

So long as nobody else put up their hands to host the 2027 convention, I was reasonably confident that our thing would go forward.

The twist was that we Australians were planning to hold the gathering in Singapore, on the theory that it was a lot closer to Europe, if not America, and while Australians (and New Zealanders would fly to the other side of the planet at the drop of a hat, the rest of the world wasn’t quite so adventurous.

The organising team had scoped out Singapore, teed up a venue, a swag of local material on accommodation, sights, food, transport and so on, made a website, a promotional video, and a flyer for me to hand out at the convention. With a QR code to allow instant signups.

That was my major task of the day, apart from putting stuff in bags. To get a hundred of those printed up. Officeworks at Belco would let me upload the graphics and do the printing for me for me and all I had to do was collect it a couple of hours later. And give them some money, of course.

While I was there, I looked around their warehouse full of stationery and electronics. I really wanted a universal travel adaptor to replace the solid unit I’d left behind in Tokyo. The clever little cube that pokes out prongs on one side and accepts them on the other, as well as having a couple of USB ports.

No luck. They had one-to-one travel adaptors, or Australian sockets with a set of UK, Euro, or US prongs but I’ve found with the latter that the little gizmos all differ from one brand to the other and invariably get lost.

I tried a couple of other places. JB Hi-Fi was more of the same, as was Kathmandu, in a different direction. I shelled out for a set of crew socks which I’d be needing for walking around in the hi-stack Brooks runners that had worked so well in Japan, and a handy container of wool wash for same.

National Museum of Australia on the way home for some gifties. Some uniquely Aussie gear, including some Indigenous designs.

A lot of such art is just dotty tatt, but once you learn how to decode the patterns, there is some genuinely brilliant and exciting work around. I love the inventive and thrilling work of Chern'ee Sutton, for example.

Being BookCrossing, of course, a lot of my weight allowance would be books. I got everything packed securely and still had enough play in the straps that the big zipper on my LL Bean rolling duffel wouldn’t be under strain. Recipe for disaster, that, given the way the baggage navvies throw things around once they are out of view.

Anything of actual value went in my backpack and “personal item”, a clever Coccoon bag that holds my passport and travel cards, essential cables and plugs, an ipad or two. My backpack carries the heavy stuff: laptop, power bricks, camera(s), medications, backup toiletrry bag, spares socks and jocks, more cables and plugs, and a little room for anything I might gather along the way. If need be, I can live with hand luggage only for the two days it will take for me to get to my AirBnB in St Albans.

Travel documents – booking confirmations, itineraries, maps, insurance certificates etc. – go in a transparent sleeve. I also have a book full of about twenty plastic sleeves and each day on the road I stow receipts, boarding passes, tickets and so on in there, so I don't lose anything I might want later but it isn't bulging out my essentials.

Medical documents including prescriptions, documents relating to recent procedures and so on in another plastic sleeve in my backpack. If anyone queries some of the pills I'm taking, I have the documentation right there.

For a wonder, I'm pretty much ready to go before going to bed. All I really need to do in the morning is have a shower, get dressed in the stuff I've already laid out, shut down my computer, and call an Uber. I set three alarms and close my eyes.
 

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