Codeshare: my trip to Bletchley Park

Looks like a nice AirBnB but why do they only take a photo of the top of the shower - I want to see how big the step is to get in and out
Normally I'd take some shots of my own, but for some reason I didn't and after a little while it was all cluttered with cables and rechargers and so on. As I recall, there was either no lip at all, or one of modest proportions, just enough to stop the water getting out. Not that this was a problem with the shower cubicle being rather long with the getting in end and the shower end about two metres or more apart.
 
Interesting observation with the Apex suites… while it’s true they are 6 abreast they still take up around a 20% more room than any other type of seat. Very popular with pax, not with airline bean counters!

Yeah, the tap on is brilliant in London. And automatically caps your daily and weekly spend per the rules!
Just got to remember to keep using the same credit card all the time. I have three in my wallet, and while they all work with the system, they do not make for efficient use of resources if used haphazardly. Looking at my accounts, two trips to and from Heathrow and two days of gadding about on the Tube worked out to about AUD150 plus international transaction fees. Cheaper than taxis or hiring a car, and certainly worth a lot for the reduction in stress that forren public transport always brings, but still …
 
Bletchley by Bus

BC SA Day 03 Corner window.jpg
BC SA Day 03 Corner window RB.jpg


I had been keeping my BookCrossing friends informed of my movements. Others were coming in from North America and all over Europe, and if there was a chance of sharing a journey with a mate, I was all for it. It didn't work out, but the Whatsapp channel was full of little bulletins from those arriving. The luggage saga was also being broadcast. There were all sorts of little gifties in my bag and if it didn't arrive there would be some long faces and it wasn't my fault!

BC SA Day 03 England AirTag.jpg

Good news on that front. My bag had bypassed Manila and was in the same land as I. I obsessively checked the location during the day. More on this later.

Coffee!

My Delter coffee press was in my baggage, so I couldn't make my own, not unless I settled for some horrid instant brew, but luckily there was a Starbucks only a few metres away and they opened at 0730.

BC SA Day 03 England Mug.jpg

I told the lady barista that she had just saved a life and that there was a Facebook group devoted to the collectible mugs. She was fascinated. As, indeed, am I.

In fact, Routebear in the photo above is perched on the handy little cardboard travel box that the Manila Starbucks mug came in. And under that is the flat cardboard amenity kit Oman Air gave me with nothing terribly exciting or exotic in it. If my bag didn't arrive, though, the socks might come in handy.

On that note, the bus group for Bletchley assembled at 0945 on the other side of Verulamium Park, a fifteen minute stroll away. I could squeeze in a few errands before then.

Up to the Premier Inn at the other end of the market place, to check in with the BookCrossers who were staying there and let the staff know that Qantas might drop off a bag of mine in the next week or so.

Stop by a chemist for more headache tablets (this may have some relation to the bag business).

Rummage through any opshops opening at nine. I needed a wide-brimmed hat, some walking shoes, and anything else that looked good. Preferably a t-shirt bearing the logo of a marathon – any marathon – from several years back that I could wear without comment.

Marks and Spencers opened at eight, and I got some fresh undies, a poloshirt, and a lovely soft cotton tee.

Oxfam had a ridiculously wide-brimmed floppy hat for a couple of quid that I bought and days later accidentally on purpose left behind in the unit.

Not as ridiculous as the even wider-brimmed floppy hat adorned with flowers that my mate Janice found in Cancer Research when I looked in there and found her browsing the bookshelves on my behalf.

Janice is a BookCrossing mate I first met in New Zealand when we both attended the Christchurch convention in 2009. She lives in a quintessentially charming English village, knows everybody in it, has an MBE, keeps chooks, is delightfully mad, is amazingly wonderful with kids, and I love her utterly.

I slipped away to my digs, changed into my new purchases, hastily threw a fresh powerbank and an Oman Air waterbottle into my now lightened backpack, and galloped off to the meeting point as fast as my flight slip-ons and fresh socks would allow.

The BookCrossers, at least the earlybirds, as the convention itself didn't start until Friday evening, and it was now Thursday, were assembled beside the bus, with people checking off names against a list, swapping hugs etc.

Every convention is different. The regulars, the newbies, those who can make it from the other side of the world, those who can get time off from work. We all know each other from past events and the various forums, but massive in-person gatherings are rare.

It was a half hour or so on the bus, and we chattered all the way. Normally there's a pre-convention tour of various local attractions, wineries, lunch at some convenient spot, a tour of a mansion, bookshops, whatnot.

This time there was just one destination – Bletchley Park – and straight back.

BC SA Day 03 Welcome to BP.jpg

Bletchley Park, for those not full-bottle on history, is where the UK gathered its codebreakers during WW2 and set them – among other things – to the task of breaking the German codes, focused on the fiendishly complex Enigma machines.

The country home of Sir Herbert Leon, it was purchased in 1938 by the government when Sir Herbert and his wife died, as a suitable location for the government code school away from London and expected bombing attacks. Almost from the moment of purchase the estate began accumulating extra office accommodation in the form of wooden huts and brick blocks where the eventual 9 000-strong mainly female workforce shared three eight-hour shifts a day. Nobody actually lived there; everyone was billeted in the homes of locals.

Post-war, the place was used by various government and private groups, with many of the buildings falling into disrepair. There was no public recognition of the historic value of the site, as every worker there had signed the Official Secrets Act and, even decades later, most did not discuss what they had done there.

In fact, this devotion to secrecy, not just of the thousands who passed through Bletchley Park, but the locals who may not have known the details but surely knew that something important was taking place in the old Leon property, is one of the astonishing details of the enterprise.

As the story became public knowledge beginning in the mid-70s, a push to restore the buildings and honour the workers gained momentum and the site is now a museum on a grand scale.

Most of us had signed up for a guided tour and we had a couple of hours to have a quick meal, look through some of the displays, and browse the gift shop.

BC SA Day 03 BP cap.jpg

An extremely well-stocked gift shop, I might say, with some pertinent souvenirs, especially guidebooks and reference works. And novels; the romantic possibilities of thousands of young women in close proximity to a few men have not escaped the eye of fiction writers.

I seized the chance to buy a flat woollen hat. It might not protect my ravaged ears from future skin cancers, but it is comfortable in a way that my more usual headgear is not.

BC SA Day 03 BP Mansion.jpg

Fortified by a ham hock and salad sandwich washed down by a very welcome English cider, I looked through the various displays and even the old mansion – a hideously ugly pile – before gathering with the rest of the group for a tour led by a young lady who hadn't actually worked there, but knew quite a few of those who had. The most recent veterans' reunion managed three attendees, down from thirteen the previous year and hundreds in earlier years. No repointing and restoring aging woodwork can save these folk, I'm afraid.

BC SA Day 03 BP house.jpg

BookCrossers are 90% female, it must be said, so there was a deal of sympathy for the wall of photographs in one building that showed platoons of young women labouring over various machines, desks covered with file cards, translating messages and so on, with "over in the corner you can see two men chatting to one another."

It was a brilliant day, clear and hot, and I was grateful for the protection offered by my own hideously ugly floppy hat of which no photographs have survived. In front of the old mansion, lawns, a lake, huge old trees and deckchairs gave welcome relief. It was easy to imagine off-duty cryptographers soaking up some much-needed Vitamin D before commencing another eight-hour shift in some cramped wooden hut.

The work done by those people is generally acknowledged to have shortened the war by at least two years and in the process saved millions of lives – and many of those would have been German and Japanese as well as Allied.

Italian and Japanese codes were broken here as well, and one of the no-longer-secrets that doesn't get quite so much coverage is that post war, many other nations began using Enigma or similar machines for their private correspondence and the British and Americans happily read that traffic as well.

It was a massive thrill to look into Alan Turing's recreated office, complete with tea mug padlocked to the radiator, where this eccentric genius had worked. In fact the whole museum complex was incredibly interesting. It is not too far a stretch to say that the age of computers began here, with the electromechanical "bombes" that used cribbed phrases to determine the day's code settings, and later the vacuum tubes and punched paper tape of the "Colossus" device that worked even faster.

Every vestige of these machines, every scrap of paper, every hint of the work done here was destroyed after the war. The whole establishment became rather plain and uncomfortable empty offices.

I wish I could go back and see more. Alas, we were herded back onto the bus and set off back to St Albans.

I'd been tracking my bag, watching as it made its way out of Heathrow in a van, stopping here and there. Eventually I received a call from the driver, letting me know that it was delivered.

One last hurdle to climb. I had to fill in a customs declaration form sent to me by the UK Border Force. A PDF form. On my phone on a bus.

Hmmm. I have the Claude AI app installed on my phone. I copied the PDF file in, supplied a few answers to questions, and Claude was able to fill in the fields neatly, even adding in some answers off its own bat, given that I gave it access to my Gmail and it has all my secrets. Claude pumped out a completed PDF file and I sent that off to HM Government.

Once the bus arrived in St Albans, I shot off to the Premier Inn as fast as I could shuffle in my slippery footwear, retreived my big green rolling duffel, and wheeled it happily home. Over the cobblestones, slowly and as quietly as I could manage.

I was able to put a load of laundry on in my AirBnB – one of the main reasons I choose such places over hotels – unpack, put on some fresh clobber, and walk over parkland down to "Ye Olde Fighting coughs Inn", where I had a meal of solid pub grub in the beer garden with a couple of German friends who had also been on the tour.

BC SA Day 03 Cathedral.jpg

And then I floated home – in comfortable high-stack Brooks running shoes – past the glorious old cathedral that transforms this town into an official English city, set the washing machine to "dry", and tumbled into bed with the benefit of sleeping attire.
 
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This time I'm at 14K, directly behind the old First cabin, now renamed Business Studio.

Sorry to interrupt this excellent TR, but did you mean 10K? I'm into WY at the moment and I was in row 10 recently MCT-LHR, directly behind the Business Studio (and I agree not worth bidding for).
 
Bletchley by Bus

View attachment 515264
View attachment 515265


I had been keeping my BookCrossing friends informed of my movements. Others were coming in from North America and all over Europe, and if there was a chance of sharing a journey with a mate, I was all for it. It didn't work out, but the Whatsapp channel was full of little bulletins from those arriving. The luggage saga was also being broadcast. There were all sorts of little gifties in my bag and if it didn't arrive there would be some long faces and it wasn't my fault!

View attachment 515271

Good news on that front. My bag had bypassed Manila and was in the same land as I. I obsessively checked the location during the day. More on this later.

Coffee!

My Delter coffee press was in my baggage, so I couldn't make my own, not unless I settled for some horrid instant brew, but luckily there was a Starbucks only a few metres away and they opened at 0730.

View attachment 515266

I told the lady barista that she had just saved a life and that there was a Facebook group devoted to the collectible mugs. She was fascinated. As, indeed, am I.

In fact, Routebear in the photo above is perched on the handy little cardboard travel box that the Manila Starbucks mug came in. And under that is the flat cardboard amenity kit Oman Air gave me with nothing terribly exciting or exotic in it. If my bag didn't arrive, though, the socks might come in handy.

On that note, the bus group for Bletchley assembled at 0945 on the other side of Verulanium Park, a fifteen minute stroll away. I could squeeze in a few errands before then.

Up to the Premier Inn at the other end of the market place, to check in with the BookCrossers who were staying there and let the staff know that Qantas might drop off a bag of mine in the next week or so.

Stop by a chemist for more headache tablets (this may have some relation to the bag business).

Rummage through any opshops opening at nine. I needed a wide-brimmed hat, some walking shoes, and anything else that looked good. Preferably a t-shirt bearing the logo of a marathon from several years back that I could wear without comment.

Marks and Spencers opened at eight, and I got some fresh undies, a poloshirt, and a lovely soft cotton tee.

Oxfam had a ridiculously wide-brimmed floppy hat for a couple of quid that I bought and accidentally on purpose left behind in the unit.

Not as ridiculous as the even wider-brimmed floppy hat adorned with flowers that my mate Janice found in Cancer Research when I looked in there and found her browsing the bookshelves on my behalf.

Janice is a BookCrossing mate I first met in New Zealand when we both attended the Christchurch convention in 2009. She lives in a quintessentially charming English village, knows everybody in it, has an MBE, keeps chooks, is delightfully mad, is amazingly wonderful with kids, and I love her utterly.

I slipped away to my digs, changed into my new purchases, hastily threw a fresh powerbank and an Oman Air waterbottle into my now lightened backpack, and galloped off to the meeting point as fast as my flight slip-ons and fresh socks would allow.

(more to come)
and if you're into hot chocolate Knoops below you are great
 
and if you're into hot chocolate Knoops below you are great
I had noted the rave reviews, and indeed it looked good. But I was after caffeine, mostly. To tell the truth, I was absolutely surrounded by places to eat and drink and if I'd had a sip and a morsel at all of them I'd be twice the man I am today. It took quite a bit of willpower to walk past some of these eateries and the tempting aromas wafting out into the street.
 
Sorry to interrupt this excellent TR, but did you mean 10K? I'm into WY at the moment and I was in row 10 recently MCT-LHR, directly behind the Business Studio (and I agree not worth bidding for).

BC SA Day 02 Manila passes.jpg

14K it was. The other plane equipped with the comfier seats must have a different numbering system. TBH, I was kind of hoping that one of my flights might have mapped into these seats, or beeped happily with an upgrade, but no …

Not to worry, I was comfortable enough. Lying flat for a sleep instead of being tortured in Y is what I pay the money for.
 
14K it was. The other plane equipped with the comfier seats must have a different numbering system. TBH, I was kind of hoping that one of my flights might have mapped into these seats, or beeped happily with an upgrade, but no …

Interesting. Might be a 1-off in their fleet. All the seat maps (Aerolopa and seatmaps.com) have row 10 behind Biz studio. Good to keep an eye out for next time I'm trying to select the front row of J!
 
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much-needed Vitamin D
Is it really possible in the English Isles?:p

Claude pumped out a completed PDF file and I sent that off to HM Government.
Have you found it to be accurate?
 
I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned this before, but this book is an excellent read



The author herself is amazing woman and what she has achieved with the start she had in life is mind blowing
 
Interesting. Might be a 1-off in their fleet. All the seat maps (Aerolopa and seatmaps.com) have row 10 behind Biz studio. Good to keep an eye out for next time I'm trying to select the front row of J!
My recollection could be flawed. In fact it probably was. On the flight back to Muscat I had 10A and I remember it was just behind the big seats. So that's where my memory is coming from.

You are quite correct. I must have been five seats back in 14K. Well spotted!

I'm getting old and writing this a week or so in arrears now. Probably best to discount my stories as wild and unreliable fantasies.

Which, on occasion, they are.
 
The convention kicks off in the evening. Normally I spend the Friday bumming around, looking at bookshops, catching up on sleep or writing, maybe having a long lunch with other earlybirds.

I'd left the option open. I'm getting old and no longer quite as inclined to be up at dawn with a camera or three photographing the golden hour on the mediaeval city.

Another option for today had been to take the train into Heathrow if the luggage delivery hadn't gone as planned and I had to collect it in person.

But it was the third that ruled the day. My mate Esther – a psychiatrist who is my writing partner, a firm friend and either the nuttiest or the sanest person I've ever met, but definitely great fun to hang out with, had invited me to look through the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Exhibition at the Natural History Museum in sunny South Kensington.

We had done this some years earlier, 2007, I think, and it had been fabulous then. Now I know a little more about photography – but not as much as Esther, who shoots black and white film – I am looking forward to this immensely.

Once I've made some coffee – ground coffee from the Coöp just down the street, along with milk, juice and painkillers had been my first grocery shop – using my freshly arrived Delter, I make up my backpack for a day in the city.

BC SA Day 03 AirBnB pan.jpg

Pausing to take a pan of the market place – Cathedral tower poking up on the left, Clock Tower a little closer, and Marks and Sparks at the far end of the street – I hike up to the station.

BC SA Day 04 Station.jpg
BC SA Day 04 Thameslink.jpg

Thameslink trains to London and beyond are plentiful, and not tooo crowded. I have a little time before I have to meet Esther, and I want to pay a visit to Baker Street, where although the museum at 221b is said to be poor value, I want to look into the gift shop there.

BC SA Day 04 Baker St.jpg

I was last here in 2005. I hadn't poked my nose outside beyond looking into Boots for some cold and flu tabs, but I'd contemplated looking for the famous address.

BC SA Day 04 Baker Starbucks.jpg

But wait! There's a Starbucks here. Let's see what they do to a flat white.

Not bad. Plenty of caffeine and the foam is nice and tight. And another little mug for the collection.

BC SA Day 04 Sherlock.jpg

The man himself awaits outside, shoes neatly polished because only an orangumatan could reach up to rub his nose.

The museum and gift shop is a saunter away. Nothing for the serious student of Holmes, but full of pleasant enough souvenirs at not-too-bad prices. I make one or two little purchases before working out the right tube for South Kensington. I sling my backpack on my shoulders and on the way down the escalator I am pickpocketed.

Kind of. I felt someone behind me and realised I was on the wrong side. "Sorry," I muttered, swinging my elbow back and encountering someone's crotch. A guy hurried past me and went off to the other platform.

I realised that one of the compartments of my backpack was flapping open. The one where I store pens and minor odds and ends. Nothing serious. Nothing seemed to be missing, the only valuable thing in there was a sixpack of Sakuras but I looked sharply at the guy who had most likely attempted to rummage through my property.

Anyway, my train arrived, I got onto it, but still it was a reminder to be on the lookout. As, I suppose, this chap had been.

BC SA Day 04 Whale.jpg

It took me a while to line up for a free entry. I could have scored a ticket online but I was a little early and I figured I might as well save myself the trouble of working out how to do this. Perhaps I could have farmed the task out to Claude Cowork.

Esther arrived, checked her bag in, dragged me up to the Members' lounge and we had coffee while catching up.

I was her guest for the photography exhibition and we spent a couple of hours – broken after exploring half the gallery by a light meal and a crisp cider up in the lounge – looking throughbthe stunning variety of photographs. Some, the captions declared, had been the result of serendipity, but I could spend a lifetime with my finger on the shutter release and never capture anything so magical.

There's planning and equipment. A good long and fast lens seems to be the way to go for getting good wildlife shots.

BC SA Day 04 Gifties.jpg

Exit through the gift shoppe. A barrow load of reductions for the gallery gear, and twenty percent off for being a member, or at least, piggybacking on a member discount. I collected some trinkets for the grandkids and we made our way home in comfortable companionship.

I won't bore my readers with the minutiae of the BookCrossing convention. There were books, BookCrossers, author presentations, plenty of lunches and dinners and ciders and fun. It's what I travel around the world for.

IMG_9509.PNGI gave a presentation on behalf of the next convention. We Aussies are organising an event in Singapore, on the theory that it's a lot easier to get to Singapore with an abundance of direct flights from just about anywhere, than it is to an Australian or New Zealand city.

OK. Next instalment describes an event in my other passion.
 
I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned this before, but this book is an excellent read



The author herself is amazing woman and what she has achieved with the start she had in life is mind blowing
Thanks! I've just downloaded a copy. Will jump into it.
 
Have you found it to be accurate?
It's been a while since I've caught Claude in a hallucination. Most AI is more reliable than me these days. I won't use Grok or anything Chinese, where the results will omit certain things or emphasise others according to some agenda.

I used Claude Fable 5 for some research and planning earlier today and it is mind-blowing. Honestly, we human beings are going to eating AI dust from here on out. I'm beta-testing a foreman app to run my agentic publishing house. The days of being a one-man studio are well and truly here.

Or a no-man studio. This thing will run a Paperclip organisation for me.
 
Ahh timely post. I've been listening to the BBC Radio comedy "Hut 33" that is set in Bletchley Park for the past few weeks (admittedly on repeat because its funny!)
 
Ahh timely post. I've been listening to the BBC Radio comedy "Hut 33" that is set in Bletchley Park for the past few weeks (admittedly on repeat because its funny!)
Oh nooooo! You rotter! I shall get no work done at all. That is right up my alley, as Mrs Best might say.
 
One bonus of travel, I've recently discovered after my initiation by @Bundy Bear, is parkrun, a worldwide 5K run held every Saturday morning and definitely not a cult, as they keep drumming into us at the weekly sessions.

Run, jog, stroll, walk a dog, whatever. It's not a race – another mantra – just a time trial over 5 000 metres, where nobody comes last and all are welcome.

Even runners of mediocre ability such as myself. I can generally manage a time under forty minutes and occasionally under thirty-five if I really push myself on a flat course with a favourable wind.

One registration works world-wide. Just turn up at the start, head off with the pack, and the only time you show your credentials is at the finish, when your time is recorded.


Here's a recent start at my local event, Mount Ainslie, Canberra's best trail course, a simple out-and-back run along rough gravel fire trails through the bush. One medium hill and a lot of "undulations".

St Albans has a parkrun, as does any British town or village, really. Naturally, it's a priority for me, and I skip some of the BookCrossing fun so that I can notch up another event, another nation, another statistic on the page.

More to come.
 

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