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Posts tagged with "holidays"

Term 3

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I have a policy of not discussing exams until one week after they have taken place. So I'll only very briefly mention the added interest that my first exam as a university student had. With "typical" luck, the building for the exam had suffered a power failure and all the lights were out of action in the hall, so we were all treated to the stress of waiting for half an hour while alternative accommodation was arranged. It might not seem like much, but when you have been preparing for an exam like that, having it postponed, even for a short time, is not a nice thing. But aside from that, I'm not going to speculate on how I did. There's just no point.

I have been doing a lot of fun Green Party campaigning over the Easter Break though. I helped Mark Ballard with some leaflet stalls around the Lothians, and I'm also assisting in keeping his campaign blog and website up to date. Hopefully it will all pay off in the elections on the third of May. I think we are probably going to do quite well, but this election looks as if it might be a bit unpredictable.

Carrying on with the green theme, I also managed to get a short "holiday" to Cornwall in. I say "holiday", because it was the only time I really got to relax and not do anything academic or work related. I even turned off my mobile email! We stayed in a youth hostel, which is green in that it sources its food and drink locally and treats its staff well; and we paid a couple of visits to the Eden Project. It was nice to be able to see it at a different time of year from usual. On the second visit, we were there particularly early, so the photos I took had hardly any people in them. I think I may have gone a bit too arty with this one:



There is a full gallery in my photos section. I'm looking forward to going back in summer. It is great the way that it is open all year round. It lets you see the plants in lots of different ways.

From Our Own Correspondent

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I'm now in the penultimate week of term (translation: one week to go before Easter break) and I was thinking how it has been, adapting to life in Manchester. For a start, there is the natives strange insistency on calling bread rolls "Barm Cakes". Putting aside bread related differences, there are other things that have been really strange. To totally further a stereotype, there is Wilmslow Road as it passes through Rusholme. Along the stretch known as Curry Mile, there is a definite hint of the sub-continent. The smell of curry, the traffic chaos, and the general atmosphere, all shout Asia. Then, before you know it, you are in utterly middle-class Didsbury, with its poulterers, fishmongers and provision merchants. I suppose the real difference is the diversity in everything. Edinburgh has diversity, but not like Manchester.

The other main difference that I've noticed, is the relationship that most Mancunians seem to have with their cars. The way that people would walk along a footpath in Edinburgh, is the way that Mancunians drive. It is not uncommon to have to dodge out of the way of a car as it mounts the pavement so that the owner can park and go to the ATM, or buy a hot-dog. It gets worse if you happen to want to cycle anywhere. Then you have to contend with the busses. There is this thing in Manchester called the 'bus wars'. Basically, in the name of free trade and capitalism, the bus service is highly unregulated. Therefore all of the bus companies in the city are engaged in trying to outdo each other in terms of cheap fares and frequency of service. Sounds good? It is not. The result is Oxford Roads status as the busiest bus route in the whole of Europe, and very lax standards in training and safety from the operators. One company was recently taken off the roads because one of their poorly trained drivers knocked a man out of a cherry-picker on a pavement. Even without that company, the standards of driving are very, very poor. A couple of days ago, I was cycling through Rusholme, and a bus stopped on my right hand side to let passengers off. As a result, I had to sit there, unable to move on, as all of the passengers tried to leave the bus and walk around me. No trained driver should act like that.

But to leave the rant behind, I have only one week and two assessments between me and a three week holiday. As usual, I have offered to do some volunteering work in the first week of the break, so I'm looking forward to that. I think it will be leafleting and other campaigning stuff for the Scottish Parliamentary elections in May. I should also, all going well, be embarking on a week long placement at the Scottish Executive, in the Scotland-Malawi Development Team.

Speaking of international issues, my blog has now had visitors from fourteen different countries. Most of it was sparked by my number one position on Yahoo! Search for the Cumbria train derailment, so I doubt it will mean repeat visitors, but the dots on my visitor map of the world are building up. Still no one from South America or Africa has visited, but hopefully it is just a matter of time!
December 2009
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