Ecuador blog #3: So hard admittin’ when it’s Quit(o)in’ Time

Viernes 30

And now, to the very ugliest part of the trip; the foulest, cruelest, most miserable part…that is to say, our (very, very) early ferry back to Santa Cruz: I cannot, dear reader, stress to you enough how mesmerically ghastly this final ferry proved to be. Absolute torture, so it was; a quintessentially awful experience, for which, to think, just two days ago I had been so, so happy to pay $40. The sea sickness generated by the hell-craft’s violent pitch and sway was weapons-grade, and the back seats, so often salvation for those so-afflicted, spent most of the trip practically underwater. I sat back there for a while, snorkel mask on my face, letting each wave batter me, hoping against hope that my nausea could be washed away…but no such luck. Eventually, like most folks on board, I sat ­facing the other unfortunates inside, hideously perpendicular to the direction of travel, our bilge-hold filled with the foul stench of gasoline. To say ‘never again’ would be to sugarcoat it. One day I will purchase that boat and, in front of its mugging previous owner, scuttle it and burn it in the harbour.

Anyhow, we survived. Just. We staggered the short way back to Las Ninfas, where we shortly check out after ‘chilling poolside’ for a bit, knitting ourselves slowly back together. Fabulosa pops off for some brief souvenir shopping…but even this proves too much for me. While she purchases us splendid matching Beatles-themed Galapagos t-shirts, all I can do is weep softly for my sanity, left behind in the choppy waters of this wretched (wonderful) archipelago.

Getting back to Quito would involve taxis (both land-based and more watery) another bus and, of course, an expensive plane – all of which (praise be!) go mercifully smoothly…though the lack of any ghastly ferries in this afternoon’s voyage was always going to make it a comparative dream-ride. Our final lodgings for the trip, the Friends Hotel & Rooftop in Central Quito, proved to be a very friendly spot indeed – perhaps, pound-for-pound and dollar-for-dollar the best place we stayed. Things were, as they say, looking up.

High in our top floor room, we take in the wonderful views of a sprawling, ferry-free Quito and, channeling our inner El Escocés, we book ourselves a day tour for the ‘morrow. After this, we meet Ana, an MBA lass (for her sins) from the wedding, for some colourful drinks and a tasty dinner at Hula Restaurante. Fabulosa and I are absolutely beat, so we hit the hay early – as for the more youthful Ana, who’s to say where she headed, post-pulled-pork.

Sábado 1

Yet another early rise, as we are off to Quilotoa Lake…though our 7am pickup arrived at eight on the dot, meaning we skipped breakfast and/or an extra hour of the dreamless for no good reason. Let it be known that ‘Ecuadorean time’, very similar to ‘island time’, leaves a little something to be desired….

Enough carping though, for now it’s time for a really rather epic drive up into the volcanic highlands south of Quito. Saying that…the stops en route might best be filed in the (seldom-opened) ‘somewhat underwhelming’ cabinet: first, some sort of service station with ideas above its…er…station, and then the ‘ancestral house’ of some impecunious highland folks, an awkward twenty minutes which put me in mind of some of the very questionable Han Chinese ‘poverty tourism’ I’d witnessed years before, way out east. Next is Tigua village, where we peruse, but do not buy, some pretty decent ‘local art’. The final stop before our destination, happily, was something well-worth looking at – the Toachi River Canyon, only 800 years young and very beautiful indeed. Some splendid snaps are taken, and then we trundle on to Quilotoa.

Lunch will be at Hostal Chukiraway, though first we hike, all the way down to a stunningly beautiful crater lake, formed within a vast and dormant (for now) volcano. The going is treacherous and slippery, and Fabulosa’s balance is famously sub-par, so progress is slow. We opt for a mule ride for part of the difficult way back up, but I prove too heavy for my poor beast and, to spare him a beating and to save us some subsidiary, beating-related coin, we trek up the entire second half of the trail. This thin atmosphere assent damn-near kills us, but Fabulosa and I are made of tough stuff. After some cursing and quite a lot of weeping (mostly me), we finally reach the top. Once back up, we find the Chukiraway local fare to be well-priced and very filling, though at this altitude, almost anything other than the air might be considered ‘very filling’ – I cannae e’en finish me over-large Pilsener beer!

A final looksee over (and many more photographs of) this quite literally breathtaking lake, and then back in the bus we go, taking with us a vague melancholy that it would be a fair while before we look upon anything quite so beautiful again (the lake, not the bus). Aha…the reason behind all those questionable stops on the way to Quilotoa is only now revealed – it is going to be about three whole, dang hours back to town! Time, one thinks, for some well-earned kip and for happy dreams of breathing oxygen-rich, sea-level air once more. Sea-level, but without ferries. Ah…now that would be…would be just the ticket…

Waking up back in central Quito, we shower off our broken sleep and the dust of a mighty dusty, slippery trail. Venturing out, we find our barrio of the city mostly shut down, due to an incredibly popular Quito 10k rattling through the streets of the old town. After trotting about watching the runners for a spell, amazed that they could manage such swiftness at this wearying altitude, we manage to find an open, nearby spot for a final Ecuadorean repast: Frank Cevicheria & Restaurant.

Despite the place’s auspicious name, for once ‘ceviche’ did not seem to be on the menu (that is to say, pictured on the wall). Instead I went for a portion of ‘seafood rice’, the size of which damn-near ended me. It honestly could have fed a football team, or the twenty-or-so runners who all popped into the joint, mid-race, asking to use the loo (and being brusquely turned away).

And then, it was bedtime, for the final (bed)time in Ecuador, and no cruel and screeching alarm needs to be set – what a genuine treat! That being said, it is all somewhat tinged with rare regret…for, of course, it means that tomorrow, when we awaken, the long (oh so, so long) journey home will have to begin…

Domingo 2 & Lunes 3

Finally, a lie in! We hop from our bed when we choose to and not a moment sooner, to finish up the packing and begin readying ourselves mentally and spiritually for over twenty-four hours ‘on the road’. We then enjoy the guesthouse’s ‘breakfast with a view’, which we unduly skipped yesterday – and very pleasant it was too, even for those of us who consider breakfast among the least important meals of the day.

We next have one last Sunday wander around a bustling Quito, to pick up a final few bits (and, indeed, bobs). It has been a cracking city to visit, and I feel we have done it decent justice. Then we hail a fated final taxi, driven by a fittingly fatalistic fellow, to take us all the way out to the (as ever, somewhat understaffed) Quito airport. We arrive in good time and avoid the worst of the ever-lengthening queues. We sneak our ‘hand luggage’ baggage, now full to bursting, through security. We are now – after ten-or-so wonderful, ah just wonderful, Ecuadorian days – ‘out of this bitch’, as I believe ‘da kidz’ are currently saying.

This time around, our change at Panama is far less fractious, with madcap sprints replaced by some civilised cocktails and a spot of local grub. The flight back eastwards is all fine and dandy, with, if anything, even sillier films – however, while Fabulosa sleeps like an ornate log of expensive, imported wood, I slumber not a wink. Accordingly, with me being the team’s cartographer-in-chief, once off the plane we have a rather stressful, sleep-deprived stumble across northwest Paris: In short, we make innumerable errors and land ourselves in the always-unpleasant Gar du Nord Eurostar queues at a time which genuinely risked Ol’ Tom being stranded and abandoned in the post-Brexit line…

…and yet, that I’m now finishing up the notes to this here blog while sliding under the good old English Channel confirms that, yes, we made it in the end! Aye, I’m feeling as sleepy as sleepy can be, and aye, there are at least another hundred-and-twenty of our fifteen hundred minutes of travelling yet to go…but going back over all the once-in-a-lifetime highlights I’ve set out above, one can only, only conclude that it was all, so very, very worth it. Even the Galapagos ferries. Those hell-damned, wretched Galapagos ferries.

Ecuador blog #2: Coolin’ off wit dis hotty, Galapagosh oh golly

Lunes 26

After finishing a last bit of packing, we grab a final San Jose de Puembo breakfast, very much abuzz. We’re off to the airport, you see…for today is Galapagos day! Some would say that this, rather than the wedding, was the main draw of the entire Ecuadorean endeavour. Surely, they would be wrong…but not very wrong. Not very wrong at all. Almost entirely correct, in fact…

It’s all slightly manic at said airport, as there are multiple hoops for us all to jump through in order for the Ecuadoreans – natural and glacial bureaucrats, so it seems – to give us the ‘okay’ to head over to the islands. Many dollars change hands, none in what I’d call ‘the correct direction’. However, all things pass, and, despite everything, almost all of us get on the plane on time, sat down in the fabulous ‘extra legroom’ seats we’d been obliged to purchase at gunpoint.

A quick hop over a tiny fraction of that there Pacific Ocean later, we land. We’ve made it. The Galapagos. Incredible. Here we, of course, pay the tourist tax, have a hound jump all over our bags, happy in his work, then get the bus across the wild and arid landscape of Isla Baltra to the waiting water taxi to Santa Cruz. Immediately once aboard, we see some amazing birds, ducking and diving and swooping away, enough to make El Anciano, back home in Blighty, keel over with jealousy. After this mini-ferry there’s a (land) taxi to Los Ninfas hotel, organised in advance by the ever-diligent El Escocés. Here we unpack, mill around, hand over vast largesse to the grasping hoteliers, have a beer by the pool, and generally thank all of our lucky stars that we’re here.

Fabulosa and I, having itchy feet and hungry stomachs, split from the herd at this point to go grab a cerviche and cerveza at TJ’s by the seafront. We then go a-wandering through Puerto Ayora to the Charles Darwin Research Centre to get our passports stamped, as one does. We then accidentally stroll the wrong way around the Centre grounds, illicitly seeing giant tortoises or various stripes (more on these tomorrow) without securing the necessary (paid) guide. Guides, it seems, are somewhat indispensable on these islands, just in case you damage any wildlife, or go ten minutes without handing over some cash. ‘Off’ we are ‘told’ and ‘away’ we are ‘ushered’; but ’tis too late – we have seen everything.

After the ol’ CDRC, we head to the nearby playa and have a gander at all sorts of crabs, birds and iguanas, enjoying the surf with the rest of us, before skipping back to the hotel the long way round town, as a happy night falls. But where for dinner? Sol Y Luna is the place, or so our revived WhatsApp messages claim, on the bustling Charles Binford Street. Here, finding the gang, we share in some large, grilled fish and large, chilled beers. Some of us also get around an ice cream, as is the custom of the time and place. The last stop of the day is The Rock, along with some of the MBA cohort, for saxophone music, more beers and very slippery caipirinhas. A fine first Galapafternoon, for sure – but believe me, even better Galapadays are yet to come.

Martes 27

We breakfast early at the hotel, an idea very much instigated by Fabulosa, who enjoys such things and has been, so it seems, sent by God to punish those who might rather sleep in. That morning El Escocés, who has been doing some ‘desktop research’, suggests we go grab ourselves a Las Gritas tour. He’s a Scotsman who regularly knows his cebollas, so we readily agree to the notion.

This scheme starts with a short water taxi across the bay and then, once a guide has been bought-and-paid-for, winds us afoot through cactus forests and mangrove…groves. Our guide, Gandy (no relation), is a friendly, knowledgeable fella and this good walk was far from spoiled. We finish up with some snorkeling in great, collapsed lava tunnels at the very end of the route, the cool waters proving most pleasant, as are the large and iridescent fishies that flit about below us. A morning well-spent indeed, the only blemish being some rather unwise, high-UV beach fun following the tour, which pinkened me up right royal.

We luncheon well at Bahia Bar, enjoying beautiful views and, for those of us who chose correctly, some truly delicious fish in a coconut sauce. This provides the necessary energy for an excellent ‘Highlands tour’ – again sourced by the Scotch one – where we take in massive rainforested craters, exciting (and this time intact) lava tunnels and a truly wondrous giant tortoise sanctuary with innumerable ancient beasties just strolling all around, looking most Jurassic. An absolute highlight – I had no idea there were so many of these glacial giants knocking about! Attempts to explain the difference between tortoises and turtles – especially to those whose first language has but one word for the pair of ’em – are only middlingly successful.

Having hung around, rapt by the reptiles, Fabulosa, La Gata, El Escocés and I take the final taxi back to town, piloted by a fella who, after discovering we (almost) spoke Spanish, proved to be wildly talkative. He suggested that his mate ‘Dan’ could sort Fabulosa and me out with some ferry tickets for later in the week – but we (in our gentle ignorance) believed these might be easy to come by later, at cheaper prices. Ah hubris, it’s been too long, old friend…

Dinner that evening (with all the crew) was at Midori Sushi, which appeared the most happening joint in all of Puerto A; and rightly so – it was an A+ place and a genuine treat. We opted for the tuna taster menu, all of which was splendidly delectable, as were the cocktails and all those other good things coming to us. The matire d’, having already ingratiated himself with a reasonable bill and a handsome aspect, further rose in the esteem of all right-thinking people when he asked me, having clocked that I was English, whether Oasis were ever going to get back together. Proof, were it needed, that even those living their lives in paradise, still dream of unattainable heavens.

Miércoles 28

This fateful Wednesday morning saw the first of several Isabella Island Ferry Ticket Panics (IIFTPs), the very thought of which still brings a cold sweat to my brow as I type. Heading to the dock with the others to grab our tour boat to Santa Fe island, Fabulosa and I stopped at a ticket office to sort out our Thursday/Friday ferries to Isabella, the largest and most wild of the islands. To our dismay, the fella in the kiosk informed us that, while he had plenty of Thursday tickets to Isabella, there were none left to get us back the morning after. This was An Issue.

This all precipitated a mad panic around the other travel shops in the locale, all while our tour ferry pilot waited very, very impatiently for us. With mere seconds remaining, I managed to buy our way onto a likely return ferry, hopefully not at the expense of two other unfortunates whose names were crossed out (but in this cutthroat world of Galapagos ferries, you have the quick and you have the dead). Speaking of ‘quick’, I then sprinted back across the port and made our tour…just. There had been no need nor time to stop to purchase tomorrow’s outbound ticket: there were plenty of boletos left for that after all…or so yer man had suggested…

Our tour to Santa Fe began with me, for only the second time in my life, feeling very seasick indeed. The ‘ferries’ they have between islands out here are no larger than middlingly small fishing boats or a moderately wealthy American’s pleasure-craft, and when the Pacific waves hit them they stay properly hit. It took all my willpower and a lot of ocean spray to keep me from seeing my (thankfully, very small) breakfast again in short order. These salty agonies were well worth it, however, as before too long we were by the rocky shore of Santa Fe, and the snorkeling could begin!

And what snorkeling it was – first with shoals of beautiful fish and then up close and personal with several large and playful sea lions. One of the heftiest took exception to me hanging around their favourite rock and made straight for Old Tom, nipping my flipper as I beat a polite retreat. Other than that, everything was very pleasantly cordial between man and sea-beasts. After this, the next stop was a stunning reef-shielded bay, where we all completed a wonderful, leisurely lap, searching for turtles and finding them too. Truly the best snorkeling I’d ever enjoyed…albeit snorkeling that may or may not be eclipsed in only twenty-four hours’ time!

Back on the bobbing boat we were presented with a tuna steak lunch – which I just about managed to stomach, but which the others wolfed down gratefully. There was then a longer boat ride back across to a hidden beach on the upper side of Isla Santa Cruz. Thankfully, by this point, I’m now bearing out much more manfully, and I even managed a postprandial kip. Once at this ‘hidden’ beach, tucked behind strings of mangroves and sharp looking rocks, we dodge the angry sand flies and spot ourselves a few fabulous marine iguanas, swimming about the surf and appearing as relaxed as they do upon their basking banks. After but a short frolic a la playa, alas, it was time to go home. And yes, I began to feel a wee bit queasy once again, as we hugged the dark shoreline and made our way back through the choppy swell to Puerto Ayora. And this queasiness, I’m afraid to say, was only about to increase…

You see, as was trailed oh-so-subtly above, the first ferry ticket slinger man had overstated the boundless nature of tomorrow’s tickets to Isabella. It was time for IIFTP #2, as we were now told by various glum travel agents that each and every ticket had now been taken for the next morning and that the pair of us were, in so many words, buggered. We eventually wandered, bereft, up in the vague direction of ‘Dan’ (the ‘mate’ of the talkative driver we had endured the previous day) to see if, by any chance, he had kept two tickets aside for us. We were, of course, unable to find his spot. Disaster had struck us, and continued to strike, even after the referee had finished his ten count and towels were flung endlessly from our corner. Our Isla Isabella sueño had died.

But then, a genuine miracle: Walking down the main shopping street, looking mighty forlorn, we’re hailed by a wonderful woman by the name of Marta, who asked us if she might help with anything. I sung our sad song and, would you believe it, she pointed to a gentleman (surely named Gabriel or Michael or perhaps Uriel) in her shop and said that he had just arranged another boat for tomorrow, due to exceptional demand. What is more, as luck (such luck!) would have it, he had three spots left! Two of these berths were swiftly bought and paid for, and my warm words echoed around her store, the weight of a two-hundred-year-old tortoise lifted from my soul. What a mujer, Marta; what an ángela!

Spirts thus immeasurably lightened, we opted to join the extended wedding party and our travelling companions up at Isla Grill, just offshore from the main town, for the final group meal of the trip. The sea-fare offered there was delicious, but verily I could barely manage more than a bite or two, such were the rigours, emotional and otherwise, of the day. Goodbyes were shared and water taxis sought, and then, at last, the quiet rest of some much, much needed slumber was achieved.

Jueves 29

We board our miracle ferry to Isabella Island (very) early the next morning, following a large number of queues, $1 and/or $10 charges, and the general feeling that the whole tourist population of Santa Cruz were off to some other island, but weren’t entirely sure how they’d be getting there. Once aboard, our crossing to Isla Isabella was lengthy, windy and exceedingly bumpy, sat as Fabulosa and I were, up at the top of the craft, right behind the captain. However, the gale in one’s hair and the relief in one’s heart held at bay the forces of nausea this time around – bumps or no bumps, truly, at the time, on this leg of the voyage, I knew not how lucky I was…

Once we landed on this vast, outpost island, laden with sea lions and grumpy iguanas and adventure, we find the Pahoehoe Tours building in the baking heat, almost collapsing across their wooden threshold. We nibble at our packed lunch like birds, then summon up the will and head off on Pahoehoe’s quite superb Los Tunneles tour (recommended to us previously in the strongest possible terms by the usually stoic El Scomarido). Throughout the remainder of this wonderful day, we go swimming with a whole bevvy of huge and ancient sea turtles, and seek out all manner of amazing wildlife, which surrounds these collapsed lava formations; be it sharks, rays or seahorses beneath the waves, or Galapagos penguins and blue-footed boobies above them on the curious and unforgettable rock formations. It was all really rather sublime – thank goodness (and thank Marta!) we were able to make it!

After another bumpy ol’ ride back to Puerto Villamil (damn these boats and damn those waves), we staggered happy but exhausted to Cartago Bay, our humble hostelry for the night. Dropping our tiny bags and (eventually) sourcing the keys to our room, we take a warm evening walk across to PV’s main drag. We eat (mostly drink) at El Velero and look across the square to where there’s a live band getting their act together upon a temporary stage – though one could not entirely tell whether they were rehearsing, performing, or merely sound-checking. We never found this out for certain, as our meal, such as it was, was fated to be followed by a phenomenally early night – chiefly because we were utterly knackered, but also because we knew, deep down, what would soon be in store…

Ecuador blog #1: Andean misbehavin’

Miércoles 21

‘Vamos chicos’, my alarm clock cried. ‘The day’s a-wastin’ and it’s time for an adventure…’

That the ‘time’ in question was 4.15 AM meant that not much of the day had, thus far, been wasted. However, the cruel alarm cared not a jot, instead screeching on and on, so we were obliged to wrench ourselves out of bed and bung it at the wall.

Keeping up this groggy momentum, Fabulosa and I were out of the gaff by 5am, on the first tube shortly after that, and then comfortably caught our Eurostar to the soon-to-be rioting Paris with the practiced ease of the metropolitan elite of which we surely, one day, would be a part. Under ‘la Manche’ we went and, following a smooth-as-silk Parisian change, we’re over at Charles de G. Airport, ready for our cheap-as-pommes-frites flight to Quito and to glory (albeit via Panama).

Feeling particularly smug, I settle down, champagne-in-hand (champagne, in ‘pauper’s class’, zut alors!) to watch some aggressively silly films. (For those keeping note, they were Ticket to Paradise, Field of Dreams, Shaun the Sheep – each pleasantly ridiculous in their own way). Air France proved themselves to be the best of the Gauls, and I’m sat right at the front of the cattle class herd, with legroom to spare, sniffing at the wafts of rarefied air coming from premium economy. High times in the high skies, my friends.

This smug peace shatters once we land, a touch behind schedule, at Panama Airport, where it turns out we have precisely zero minutes to sprint across two vast terminals to flag down our connecting flight to Quito. I, an athlete, make it, just, and hold open the doors for an equally agitated but slightly less fleet Fabulosa. The rest of our fellow Air Francers, one must assume, are left behind to make new lives on the banks of ‘The Canal’. A poor business, and flight #2 was fresh out of mollifying fizz to boot…

But now, oh yes, this long-awaited holiday could at last begin in earnest. We were but an hour-or-so out of Quito now, crossing the equator, with no further impediments. Eventually, through the glacial passport checks (if you ain’t Andean, you ain’t shit, so it seems) we heave ourselves into an Uber and barked, in perfect Portuñol, ‘Chakana Boutique Hotel, agora, por favor e obrigado!’ Three-quarters of an Ecuadorean hour later, we’re there, and fall immediately into a warm and babbling pool of slumbering exhaustion.

Jueves 22

A relaxed and mildly jetlagged morning in the hotel is the first order of Quito business, punctuated with a spot of Incan-style breakfast and the completion of some much-needed ablutions. We then have a wander into the historic centre of the capital and I source myself a very fetching hat – the first of many vain attempts made to a.) look sharp as a whetstoned tack and b.) keep off the fierce equatorial sunshine. We pop into one of the many beautiful churches for a spot of accidental mass, pick up a few local sweets and biscuits, and generally get a feel for the place. All in all – Quito feels pretty good.

Back to the hotel after this for a beer and a regroup, before we take an unnecessarily long, upsettingly uphill walk under the angry sun to the northwest of the city. I, a fool, had assumed that this area around the university would be alive with bars and restaurants and the beautiful youth of the city. I was wrong; there was tap-all there. Eventually, and only after many cruel words and sighs, did we manage to find some (very) late lunch at the slightly prosaic but blessedly open Fritadas de la Florida. Wolfing down some soup with mystery meat, along with some well-earned cerveja, we paid the (tiny) bill and then taxied it up yet another hill to the TeleferiQo Cable Car.

Here, candy floss in hand, we wait for La Arquitecta, La Raj, and young Osito. We almost give up on them too, having missed their message that they would be, true to form, splendidly late. Just as we were heading up to jump aboard the ol’ teleferiqo, however, this trio arrive and our reunion is sweet indeed. Then up, up, up the cable-car we go. Fabulosa immediately realises she doesn’t at all like heights – alas, too late. What is more, once up at 4,200m the altitude proves too much for wee Osito, who takes in the views but then heads back down to thicker air with a madre dele, La Raj. The rest of us go for a short, breathless wander around the mountaintop. We see a handsome caracara, which a wandering Frenchman misidentifies as a condor (assumedly one that’s been off its feed) and we swing on a swing, taking in the genuinely awesome views of the long and slender, valley-wrapped city below. All good stuff, despite one’s favored oxygen molecules being somewhat hard to come-by.

A second cable-car, then a longer taxi, take us back down to aforementioned valley-wrapped city, and we head east and grab a very happy hour on Av. Isabel la Catolica, potentially at a pinkish place called ‘Taconazo’, but who can say for sure. We then meet up with El Scomarido, La Gamujer and a whole host of their travelling MBA crew at a fabulous restaurant called Urko. Here we all enjoy an out-of-this-world, ten (10!) course meal. Sublime fare all the way through – particularly difficult to put into words, just tiny explosions of flavour with great value wine pairings and significantly excellent ‘vibes’. We head to bed exhausted but replete, after something of a ‘carta roja’ day.

Viernes 23

As will prove a theme of this wonderful adventure, Fabulosa and I are never fated to stay too long at one particular joint, wearing out no hotel carpet and outstaying no receptionist’s welcome. Instead, we pack up the (strictly carry-on size) bags this morning and leave them with the friendly folks at the hotel, before heading up north to a spot called ‘Monobolon’ for breakfast with the crew. Alas, here they go heavy on the ol’ bananas (plantains…if such a thing exists), but I managed to pick out an edible, Christian meal amidst all the sin and iniquity.

After breaking our fast, we all hop on the Quito City Bus, now joined by plenty of tomorrow’s wedding’s (non-Ecuadorean) contingent. Spirits are high, despite the questionable quality of the tour – “…and on your right, you will see a large building” – and the sun beats down upon wisely purchased hats of all sizes and shapes. Eventually, we cannae take no more, and our sub-set of the crew get off at la plaza central and grab drinks in the lovely garden of the highly salubrious Casa Gangotena. Osito and I go exploring for eggshells and birds, and the cokes – delectable Latin American cokes, no less – are pleasantly ice-cold.

After exploring the centre of the city for a spell, La Arquitecta suggests we head up to ‘Cafe Mosaico’ for some amazing views and (if we’re lucky) some chilled beers. This we did and these we eventually received, though what was not flagged beforehand was that a life-threateningly exhausting slog up one of Quito’s (many, many) hills was required to get to the darn place. I won many a brownie point for carrying Osito, who for his part was unimpressed by the speed of his steed; La Arquitecta won very few brownie points for not clocking that an automobile would’ve been the ticket here.

After an adequate lunch, an adequate cooldown, and some more than adequate vistas, Fabulosa and I left the trio to go grab our bags. We then headed way out northeast to our second hotel of the trip, the San Jose de Puembo, where the rest of the wedding gang had already pitched camp and run up the flags and standards. It’s a lovely, leafy spot with plentiful llamas, perfect for corporate retreats, should you be a man or woman of serious Ecuadorean and/or llama-related business. Once checked-in and sorted out, we hailed yet another taxi, or at least attempted to, for we were invited to La Gamujer’s parents’ villa over in uptown Quito for a most splendid pre-wedding reception. In the end, having a powerful thirst, I shamefully ditch my comrades and jump in a car with El Scomarido’s family, and, leaving the others in our dust, we shoot major Suffolk breeze regarding the wonders of the Freckenham/Worlington area.

Said Gamujer family villa was a spectacular spot for a shindig, with gorgeous views across the whole city. Being an Englishman, whose home is famously his castle, I was most impressed that it was not just electric gates and private roads, but sparkling portcullises, fluted bridges, plunging gorges and private promontories that kept these sprawling homesteads safe and separate from ‘the hoi polloi’. The gun turrets were a bit much, but when in fancy East Quito, do as the fancy East Quitonians do.

Anyhow, drinks and canapes knocked around the place and the conversation sparkled, even from the MBA graduates (when they paused from their sustained weeping, lamenting their wasted money, prospects and youth). My own pals had, eventually, made it safe and sound across the drawbridge, and all within the palace walls was sweetness and elegant light. The night ended a mite less elegantly, with a cacophonous minibus, chock-full of this varied and eccentric crew, taking us back for ‘just a few’ final beers in the San Jose hotel bar.

Sábado 24

Aha, es el dia de la boda, amigos! It’s the wedding day we’ve all been waiting for! And would you credit it, just in time, at breakfast no less, we were at last joined by La Gata & El Escocés, who have had themselves quite the back-and-forth journey and are now shorn of all their bags and glad-rags. Never the less, we doll them (and ourselves) up to the nines, and then all bus our fine, fine asses over to the green and gorgeous wedding venue, just down the bumpy way.

I am happy to relay, to absolutely nobody’s surprise, that it was an absolute barn-snorter and rip-burner of a wedding: The ceremony was short, touching and heartfelt, the food uniformly sensational from nuts to late-night soup, the bar free, varied and well-stocked, and the masses of cheese were massive beyond all reckoning. There was riotous dancing, led by both a tightly blue-clad pop-group and some helmeted vibe-merchants, for these ‘ere tunes started early and kept on pumping. The day’s fierce sun was cooled by gentle, sifting rain, just when it was needed, before a beautiful early evening broke out to welcome the happy couple into happy matrimony. Even the speeches, so often a blemish on such days, were more than acceptable – especially that of La Gamujer’s auld man, translated for the anglosphere by her sister (‘a fine-lookin’ woman’ – anon), the poetry and sentiment of which left nary a dry eye in the house (tent). Ten out of ten, diez de dieze, no notes.

All that was left of a fabulous Saturday upon the equator was a drunken minibus ride back home to the trusty ol’ San Jose. There was, as ever with these things, large talk of an after party. A ‘pool party’ no less… though, alas, at the humble bar’s pool table, rather than in either of the (very-much closed) swimming pools. Fortunately for our morning heads, Fabulosa and I opted to hit the hay.

Domingo 25

Despite our sagacious sidestepping of any ‘afters’ that might be had, there was many an ‘adult headache’ at breakfast the next day. A few of us attempted to fix things in a hot tub down by the swimming pool, to little avail. More drastic measures would be necessary, lest we let one of our precious Ecuadorean days slip lifeless through our fingers…

No, no – this simply would not do. Fabulosa took the lead, and hired us a van and a man. This man was Marcel, a born tour guide, and his van was a people carrier, perfectly sized to take her, me, La Arquitecta, La Gata & El Escocés, and La Raja & Osito up to the gorgeous Papallacta Hot Springs, an hour-or-so across the mountains. It was a bittersweet journey, truth-be-told, encompassing great and sweeping natural beauty as well as, so it appeared, some unexpected roadside tragedy – let us just say that we were most thankful for Marcel’s steady hand on his steady wheel, as these roads, so it sadly seemed, were far from the safest.

Once at the springs, thank goodness safe and sound, we take Marcel’s advice and firstly go to stave off the wolves from our doors with some lunch – this time of grilled trout and expeditionary beers. Feeling a little better, we then waded into the thermal pools, surrounded by gorgeous mountainsides, the steam rising up into a perfect blue sky, whisking away our hangovers and further raising our spirits. Certain pools were too hot for some and one pool was too cold for humans, though this didn’t stop a few mad Ecuadorans dropping anchor therein. It truly takes all sorts, etc. etc. yada, yada.

Eventually, alas, it was time to meet good Marcel again and head back to the hotel. That evening, Fabulosa and I hopped across to Cumbaya (my Lord) for dinner with the newlyweds and those MBA crew members still standing, following Saturday night’s revelries. La Arquitecta (who was barely standing but who suffers FOMO like Prometheus suffers from periodic liver pain) insisted on coming along too. Once at ‘Latitude Cero’ – a craft beer and pizza joint which had recently run out of first pizza and then craft beer – she promptly felt the need to return to the hotel, thereby providing us with a valuable lesson in something-or-other. In truth, the rest of us followed suit not-so-long after: we needed the sweet sleep of the just, for on the ‘morrow, you see, an even more fantástico adventure was due to begin for us.

Un grand (blog) de Meursault

Vendredi 9th Septembre

Another blog bourguigon? Ah, mister ambassador, truly you are spoiling us!

But why not, eh? Why Ever Not. The mind-melting temperatures of the European summer have now faded into comfortable clemency. The ancient vines lie there freshly picked and the wine sits snug in Burgundian bottles, just waiting for right-thinking Englishmen to get in their cars, point ’em south and drive.

So yes, we leave gentle Freckenham for climes Francais, the very morning after Good Queen Bess has brought a sensational innings to an august close, and the whole country is plunged into deep and in no way performative mourning. The Old Man and I saunter down to Redhill – devoid, before you ask, of vermilion promontories, scarlet hillocks and even so much as a humble maroon knoll – to pick up Si-Moan de Beauvoir, now of Woking (nine to five, not a way to make a living). The famous Channel Tunnel is ever-so-slightly delayed for us, but no matter, mourners such as we are in no real rush. Accordingly, we have time to wolf down an unprepossessing but actually very edible cooked breakfast, then head underground for a brief spell beneath the brave bobbing boat bashers of Suella (nee Priti).

Once up and across in (ever glorious) France, we shoot down the ol’ Rue d’Anglais towards delightful Reims, where we would be breaking our southerly march that evening. Stopping only in St Quentin (I’m sick to death of you) for some unpatriotically cheap ­gazole and ever-so-British ice creams in the teeming rain, we made this ‘sacral city’ in double-quick time.

Finding our mystery parking spot was hindered by several cultural misunderstandings, but eventually we switch off the old internal combustion and access our light and airy chambers – three good-sized rooms and elegant, comfortable living quarters. This flat was the THM contribution towards the holiday accommodation, so I’d slammed down the additional twenty (seventeen) Airbnb dollars and said ‘make it so’.

Dinner then, at the Bistro d’Anges – a hostelry L’Aigle, Argent and I had once visited while hanging like absolute hounds, earlier in the year. An excellent bottle of (inevitably) local champagne was drunk and toasts ‘a la reine’ and ‘au roi’ were made. We wolfed down various French foods, all while being regaled by the anglophile proprietor regarding his previous life in the fabulous west end of distant Londres. We then enjoy a champagne-y digestif on the main square, overlooked by the sensational Reims Cathedral, lit up like a vast, gothic dream against a thundery French sky. The heavens open and clouds roar, just as we make it back to the flat and hit the proverbial hay.

Samedi 10th Septembre

South then, south I say: An easy drive down smooth, open roads. Before heading into numinous Mersault, we stop in my happy place – that is to say, the Nuit St Georges Carrefour. There I dropped many a happy franc on vittles and affordable wines, getting the crew well-stocked (for the moment at least).

Into Mersault we go, driving through the beautiful, albeit offputtingly narrow, streets, to meet with ‘Nadia’ of the Charles V hotel/wine bottlers/general good things conglomerate. She books us in for one of her own wine-tastings on Mardi then shows us to our new and sprawling Mersault HQ. Mr Nadia is there out back, tending to a very pleasant pool looking over, of course, vines upon vines upon vines.

The property itself is a strange creation – an old farmhouse sitting on the southernmost edge of the village, wrapped around a small stone courtyard that traps the sun like a noose. I’m planted in a converted ‘mini-barn’, backing onto a much larger, unused barn around the same size as the eccentrically arranged ‘main house’ – the upstairs bedrooms of which can only be accessed via the courtyard. The kitchen, that is to say, the most important chamber of the whole dang chateau, is large, light and well-appointed, and between my garret and the main building sits a covered section of smoke-darkened real estate, complete with a large wooden table and quaintly old-fashioned barbeque, fated to be well-used by the end of the week.

We crack open a bottle of the common-garden Charles V white – very, very nice, especially when enjoyed by a pool complete with stingray robot thing that’s partial to spray the unsuspecting with rare and mischievous humour. A quick feast on cheese and ham, then The Old Man and I are taught ‘Catan’ by Si-Moan, who never seemed happy in her work but whose natural talent for the game was already shining through. A spot more wine, then off to bed and accompanying cheese dreams.

Dimanche 11th Septembre

L’Aigle et Moan of Arc arrive in Lyon at lunchtime so, noble ferrymen that we are, we hop back in la voiture and motor down the trusty A26 (‘but I haven’t seen A1-25 yet!’). At the city’s eccentrically designed aeroport, we pick up this pair, laden now with an unborn bairn, rather than much other carry-on luggage, and into la centre we hasten.

This was my first time in France’s third largest and second most celebrated city, and what I saw I liked. Spacious avenues and lofty rows of neat, French buildings, with the occasional unnecessarily massive parade ground and hilltop basilica. There’s no time for any real sightseeing that this juncture, however, for we all have a hunger, and we head instead to ‘Rue Mercière’, where significant restaurant choice paralysis sets in. In the end we opt for an outdoor spot at the popular ‘Mozzato’, which – just for a modicum of variety – focuses on (Italian) cheese dishes. One by one though we wilt in the fierce sun, retreating into the cowardly shade, cheese in hand.

L’Aigle is then keen to wander across the Rhone (or was it the Saone?) to visit the ancient Roman amphitheatre. This involved much walking uphill, which enraged les Sœurs Moans – as did the fact we forewent the funicular railway, which was very much there for the riding. We did take it back down, however, post-culture and post-multiple mini tantrums. A slow and sleepy drive back north to Wine Country then followed, with multiple changes of somnolent chauffeur. Wines and snacks were the order of the evening, and The Old Man was roped into a second Catan-ing in two days, after the labours of the day had worn down the Moans, for L’Aigle and Ineeded grist for the board game mill. He did not win – but doubtless learned many a valuable lesson.

Lundi 12th Septembre

Lazy day – at least, for those of us who weren’t L’toiling Aigle. Pool times, wine times, reading books of varying quality – all the good, holiday things. At one point Moan of Arc and I roused ourselves sufficiently to head to the local supermarché for further fine things, and L’Aigle popped round the corner to the local chàteau – while on a work call, of course – to pick up a trio of very exciting looking wines.

Once L’Aigle finally extracted himself from The World of Business, the great pentaque rivalry is rejoined, down on the uneven but personality-rich pitch at the foot of the garden. Wines are attempted, and succeeded, either side of a fine BBQ for dinner – one conducted in the dark, as the outside lighting seemed to attract a swarm of friendly wasps. The wood-fired feast was a great triumph, if one does say so oneself, with lamb steaks, Toulouse sausages and curious turkey kebabs that may or may not have been properly cooked. Si-Moan feasted on flame-licked vegetables, as is her curious wont.

This particular evening, no grist could be found, so L’Aigle and I ventured across France to fabled Carcassonne, while we tidied up the wines like the well-brought up fellas we are. And then, as they say, to bed, and some scarcely-earned (for this writer at least) rest.

Mardi 13th Septembre

Mardi proved a day when we all looked to be garcons de la ville – even the girls – with varying levels of what one might call ‘success’. Things started relatively well, with a somewhat ruinous butchers trip and then short jaunt around the main drag with L’Aigle et Moan of Arc, in preparation for guests (guests!) coming tomorrow. Matters then improved still further, when we headed over to Charles V HQ for an excellent wine tasting put on by Nadia of Belgium. Despite the sun only just going over the ol’ yard arm, the measures and selections were generous indeed, and the vintages very much ‘on point’ – and unsurprsingly this was all followed by some judicious and necessary purchases.

We then enjoyed some pool times until the sporadic rains arrive, before then braving said sporadic rains in a spectacularly unsuccessful attempt to get some dinner in town. In the end, poor leadership and (imagined) choice paralysis results in us returning home empty-handed (or empty-stomached) to mange the (assumedly famous) bird L’Aigle (no relation) had purchased for tomorrow at eye-watering expense. It was, however, quite expertly cooked in some sub-par demi-sec by the befeathered one. Crisis averted, the evening ends happily, back in Catan.

Mercredi 14th Septembre

Another morning trip to la bouchere, this time for the Old Man, and this time during a quite sensational thunderstorm that damn near flattened the place. My humble barn-based abode sprung not one, but two sizeable leaks – one very much in the smallest ‘room’ and very much as I was making good use of it. However, the rest of the property seemed to survive the onslaught pretty much intact.

Man like Thor having now toddled off for a spell, George and Jill Assam arrive in budding sunshine, and I hit up the BBQ once more, again to far from insignificant effect, with sausages, pork steaks and very succulent bavettes-cum-sirloins the order(s) of the day. How much the smiling lady-butcher took the Old Man for when he purchased these beauties, quite simply doesn’t bear thinking about. But only the best for the Chai Lattes, they being very old friends of the family from eons past.

Loving Mother Sun is now officially back with a passion, so we lounge by the pool and then play some molkky – with yours truly stumbling over the line in the singles, but those famous Lapsang Souchongs triumphing in the pairs round. It seems my eccentric skill cannot be constrained by so-called ‘teamwork’.

After we bid Earl and Lady Grey a warm goodbye, and with the gallons of wine we (well, some of us) had consumed beginning to take their toll, the rest of the afternoon and evening were somewhat lethargic. Some games, some grazing, some gentle sipping, then relatively early nights were the order of this particular evening. All for the better, as tomorrow L’Aigle would at last be able to fly free.

Jeudi 15th Septembre

I wake at a reasonable hour and wander into town to purchase some rudiments for rustic soup making. The end result seems something of a hit, once certain folks have been persuaded into eating something somewhat wholesome…

Wine tastings in the afternoon were attempted, though the Château de Meursault proved wildly expensive and the Domaine Jean Monnier et Fils was open only for pre-bookings. At the latter spot, the ‘Fils’ proved a lot less personable than Monnier Snr. had proved back in 2016, when we first visited this same spot. Like rouge, bleu, but not, in this instance, blanc, this lad was on a spectrum or another and no mistakin’… didn’t even enjoy my Jurgen Klopp jests, the spoon.

Regardless, instead of overpriced formal tastings, once the necessary purchases had been made, L’Aigle and I conducted our own, personalised tasting at La Place, drinking a couple of their exceptionally reasonably priced 1er Cru out in the sunshine, which had proved victorious after a series of violent bouts with unwelcome rainstorms. How many working folks’ spots in the UK might boast 1er Cru by the glass? Not so many, I might wager, were it not for my eternal fear of ‘talking Britain down’.

Back to HQ and a spot of petanque, watched eagerly by the aged gentleman who lives next door, who was clearly mightily impressed. We then got changed for a ‘fancy’ meal round the corner at Au Fil du Clos – an exceptional eatery which wowed all comers, be it with beef bourignon, snails and bacon, filets of hake and beef, and even a selection of top-rate vegetarian options for S-M de B. Top, if you will (and I know you will) hole.

Back home, we enjoy the final bottle of the trip – a cut-price but high-quality Mon(t)rachet purchased by L’Aigle that very afternoon, after my poverty-sharpened eye spotted the tell-tale yellow sticker of value. As lovely as it was, there followed a broken and troubled night’s sleep for yours truly, as my liver filed for divorce, citing ill-use.

Vendredi 16th Septembre

L’Aigle et Moan of Arc have to head back to Blighty for not one, but two weddings, so are dropped off at Beaune to find themselves a slow train down to Lyon, then a fast plane over to Londres. Alas, their journey is fated to be ill-fated, but let us leave their cruel travails for another tale and another day – this, after all, is a happy account; comedy not tragedy. Weep not for L’Aigle et Moan, for they, much like your one’s boats beating back endlessly against the shore, are past now.

And happy were we, the remaining three, you see, for would you believe it but we’re invited round this fine, fine day to Domaine Alain Zorninger, a small wine-makers right next door to HQ, owned and run by Alain, the petanque aficionado from the day before! The Old Man and he had hit it off, so over we went and down into his sprawling cellars, to enjoy a history lesson of significant interest which spanned several half-remembered languages, and to enjoy (x2) a few of his choice vintages – despite the protestations of my liver. We were kind enough to take a few bottles off his hands at the end of the personal tour, bringing up our total haul to ‘a truckload’.

Desperate to at least pretend to be moderately healthy, I run twice around the vines, reminding the battered frame the meaning of a least one of ‘cardio’ and/or ‘vascular’. Almost dying, I then draw and take a lazy bath, seeing out much of the afternoon beneath the suds, as a gentle pottering ennui descended on our final hours within this fabulous Meursault abode. And what is left to do, dear reader? Well, for starters, vingt et une bouteilles need to be secreted away to various bottle banks to hide our shame, then bags must be packed and Burgundian dreams put away for another year at least.

There’s time enough, however, for one final barbeque, cooking up the remnants of The Old Man’s mighty haul from Wednesday, along with all those other victuals that must be victimised. The coals take their sweet time to warm, so it is dark as the tomb by the time we’re done, the stars above twinkling a fond and Gallic goodbye.

Samedi 17th Septembre

An early start and a long, long drive ahead – no Reims-based stop-off for these seasoned travellers on the way back north. And a good job we did leave in (aggressively) early time – for a little way past Paris one of the trusty automobile’s tyres, having spent far too long in France, decided to go on strike. No matter how much air we pumped into the damn thing, it really wasn’t having… a bar of it. On we limped, however, battered and bruised but with our hearts full of faith, catching our tunnel by the proverbial whisker.

And that brings us to a conclusion, my friends. Ah, Burgundy, what a place. Now to start lobbying The Old Man in persona and in print that really, when one thinks about it, Mersault is the only place to which a gentleman of taste and standing might retire…

Un retour bourguignon – encore!

Lundi 13th Septembre

Well, well and, if you will, well. Les Blogs Français have made a triumphant post- (mid-) pandemic return! After a lengthy absence which admittedly, despite my 2018 predictions, was not entirely down to Brexit, I am once again sitting down to bash out another blog bourguignon – the sole Breton blog of 2018 proving but a passing phase. Yes indeed, it is fair Burgundy were once again we lay our scene. Northern Burgundy, admittedly, a decent poke away from our habitual Côte-d’Or territory, but Burgundy nevertheless!

But wait, we get ahead of ourselves – first we’ve actually got to get to the darn place, and this will involve your narrator visiting his very first ‘airport’ since October 2019 – i.e. just before a Chinese fella woke up with an overwhelming but ill-fated hankering for a fillet of bat…

It was at Clapham Junction where I met my traveling companions for the voyage – L’Aigle and Moan of Arc – now both wearing wedding rings, proving that my writings are not completely devoid of character development. One train ride and a Corona-prompted vigil at check-in later, and we are skipping around the World Duty Free with stars (well, whiskies) in our eyes. Here I buy a bottle of ‘The Chita’, chiefly as I feared L’Aigle’s own whisky purchase would taste of burning soil, but also because I purchased the very same bottle back in October 2019, the last time the duty was free for Ol’ Tom. We then rushed down a beer (/ beer and a half) and a spot of grub, before we hustled aboard our ‘Vueling’ plane, just as the gate was closing.

The flight was agreeably uneventful – not a bad short-haul carrier, Vueling, truth be told, though maybe this was down to the plane being fabulously empty. We are picked up at Paris Orly but a short while later by The Old Man, and away we drive towards distant Sens. The Old Man (wrongly) fears that we’ll run out of diesel ‘at any moment’, and we stop a few hundred yards from the supermaché to get ripped off by a mustachioed petrol slinger who has seen us coming. At said supermaché, just as L’Aigle had loudly and repeatedly predicted, there was ample diesel fuel at rock bottom prices. L’Aigle, in fairness to the bloke, celebrates his profound rightness by buying up half the shop.

A wise man once noted that ‘the smell of a French supermarket is quite unmistakable and not nearly as bad as you think it is’. That wise man was, of course, me, back in the midst of the proceeding decade. It is always good, as I may well have mentioned before, ‘to listen and bear witness to one’s own eloquence, to learn from it, and use it to keep oneself grounded and humble’. That the same wise man also noted that ‘were you to liquidize egalité, fraternité and the other one, put it in a small glass bottle and charge through the nose for it, it would surely taste like Orangina’ proves this point still further. I therefore made ‘damned sure’ that plenty of that fine nectar was placed safely in the trolley.

Goodies and vittles thus secured, we later arrive in Voisines – a pleasant enough village, if a little short in the way of ‘shops’ or ‘anything useful or diverting’. It boasts one bar/café which never seems to open, and an exceptionally loud medieval church that gives it the big ‘un on the hour every hour – a cacophony which sends the local hounds completely spare, adding a fine canine layer to the village’s singular din.

The house which we’ve rented, very much adjacent to said clamorous church, is equipped with a swimming pool, barbeque, somewhat curious interiors and an undeniable family feel, with 1970s toys and aging family photos being rather abundant. There’s even a signed letter from J.R.R Tolkein(‘s assistant) in the smallest garderobe – what more could one ask for? A bit more space, perhaps…it was potentially a bit smaller than planned, especially given that we’ll be up to seven burly adults for some nights…would we all fit? Only time would tell…

Anyhow, within these august environs, Si-moan de Beauvoir was nobly and hungrily holding the fort, awaiting the house chef (L’Aigle) to pitch up and get his fine ass to work. And work he did, firing up the BBQ and slapping down the steaks (alas, not the huge côtes de bouef we’d been looking at lovingly back at the shop) along with some sausages and some aubergines for Si-moan herself, who was still fitting a losing battle to be a vegan en France. The sun, there to greet us on our arrival, and even permitting a brief preprandial lounge by the pool then deserted us, and we fled under cover as epic and rolling thunderstorms begun to roar away. We played a few hands of cards before bed – and it seems I must have lost quite badly, as I was relegated to a narrow bed in the children’s nursery room (for now at least). Oh well, with the continental storms going like the clappers that night, I was never fated to get too much of the dreamless in any case…

Mardi 14th Septembre

Our first petit déjeuner of the trip was sourced from a middling-at-best bakery in Souchy, then munched down at HQ before we headed to Sens, to meet Argent and Plage Ensoleillé, who’d be joining the family party for a couple of Burgundian days.

Once we were fully quorate, we had the first of many beers in the aptly named Café de la Halle 100 Bieres, right on the main square by the cathedral. Making our way steadily through the proffered century, we note that nothing in any way useful seems to be open during a Gallic lunchtime. We then attempted to find somewhere for a late lunch, and realised that nothing in any useful was open post-lunchtime either. We therefore all slope back to ‘CdlH100B’ and their humble menu, just in time to order a chastened and last minute minute steak (and a non-vegan salad for the vegan).

Finally and fortunately sated, we wandered around the fabulous Sens cathedral for a wee while and then went outside to watch some French firemen do…something next to the cathedral…no real purpose, no water sprayed, lots of ladders extended; all very odd – perhaps just practising with a fancy new crane recently gifted by the mayor? Either way, they seemed to be enjoying themselves so we left them too it. While the other four drove back, me, Argent and Plage Ensoleillé were obliged to wait an age for one of the fourteen Sens taxi drivers to summon up the blood and deign to drive us across to Voisines. Eventually one was summoned (and exceptionally well paid for his troubles) and we were at last home, ready for relaxation.

The sun, happily, was now ‘out out’, so we try the pool (cold) and drink a few beers (also cold). L’Aigle has fired up the barbie in the meantime, and a frankly gargantuan amount of marinaded duck breast is soon flambéd. Lots of wine follows – the oddmakers once again taking a beating – then the duty-free whisky is breached, alongside (rather ghastly) cigars and (less ghastly) cards and games. All this, understandably, makes folks a little sleepy. The Old Man, never much one for Virginia Woolfing, turns down the offer of ‘a room of his own’ and rushes back upstairs to his quarters from the previous eve like a misunderstood teen. He sorely regrets this, however, as space constraints mean that I myself am forced to ‘crash’ with him (a good bit later) that eve. Neither of us sleep well that night.

Mercredi 15th Septembre

While The Old Man gave up the quest for further slumber mighty early the next morn, preferring to sit down in the kitchen, lamenting his lot – for the rest of us Wednesday started late. The rain has returned, so we opted against fighting the elements and took it nice and easy. Argent did threaten a run, but wiser heads prevailed.

Something must be achieved with our precious French day, we eventually conclude, so I drive Argent and Plage Ensoleillé over to a damn fine hypermaché the other side of Sens, to pick up more red wine (which had somehow vanished from our stocks) and a pre-dinner ‘cheese board’ – apparently a particular preoccupation of Plage. The sun comes out for our return, albeit briefly, so we eat and quaff outside. I, saintlike, abstain on the (b)rosé. I’m on driving duty today, alas; but I suppose it’s always better to get one’s ‘round in’ early doors – much like in ‘da club’, people are always more likely to remember your sweet, preemptive sacrifice and reward you warmly later on.

Accordingly, I ferry the folks out (in two trips) to the outskirts of Sens and a well-reviewed restaurant named Le (Fresh Prince of) Martin Bel’air. They turn The Old Man, Moan of Arc and L’Aigle away at the door (for French reasons) so they go off to La Bar Celtic without cash for a free round of small beers. Second and first carloads then reconvene at the restaurant, fashionably late for our reservation, thereby ‘showing them’. The food is fantastic, one has to say: I had a beef tartare as big as une tête de bébé, followed by some rather excellent cod (dory being the choice for the fancier folks). Argent, sharing no chromosomes with Si-moan de Beauvoir, risks her wrath by ordering frois-gras. He doesn’t regret it. I try some in secret. It’s delicious.

After the food is enjoyed and the not insubstantial fare paid, The Old Man bails out to a (seemingly closed) hotel on the way back to the homestead – being far too wise/cowardly (delete as appropriate) to risk a second night in a row with this particular bedfellow. Has to clamber over a wall to gain ingress, and loses prized umbrella in so doing, but he doubtless considers it a price worth paying. I then completed a second trip for the youngsters left behind, who I find roaming the streets, carousing, begging and singing ribald ditties.

Back at the house, I take my inevitable reward for good-blokery in the form of many wines and superior cigars, attempting to catch up the others in the indulgence stakes. There are then some cards, some Carcasonne, then more spacious slumber. High times, high times, high times indeed.

Jeudi 16th Septembre

Wouldn’t you just know it, but it’s another lazy morning for us…Argent excepted, who both swims and runs before the sun hits the yard arm, curse him. Once I’ve had my cup of English breakfast, I then take said Argent, along with Plage Ensoleillé, back to Sens, where we meet The Old Man for a coffee/small beer/fond goodbye at the old faithful, CdlH100B. The pair then take a train to Paris, where further feasting awaits them, while The Old Man and I, health-conscious to a fault, have a large salad and then hit up the excellent boulangerie on the town square.

The sun is very much out now, so we remaining few make the very most of it. A game of petanque on the village’s bespoke boules courts, with large amounts of (b)rosé sounded just the ticket, and so it proved…even if The Old Man was narrowly victorious over the vigorous youth. ‘Scenes’ as they say. ‘Absolute scenes’.

I then finally start my huge book about both light and mirrors, while L’Aigle, as is his wont, cooks up a storm – this time a big ol’ ratatouille.  More wines follow, along with an unnecessarily complex game called ‘Ticket to Ride’ which proves most controversial, but not by any means terrible.

I, at last, have claimed a decent room out in the annex and Si-moan de Beauvoir, quite rightly, is now relegated to the children’s room. Is the moral arc of the holiday at last bending towards justice? Quite possibly. Nevertheless, my sleep, I’m afraid to say, is fitful, troubled as it was by curious and prescient dreams of idiot British bureaucrats…

Vendredi 17th Septembre

At last, a productive morning: I finally booked an inane ‘Day #2 test’ from a drive-in test centre up in Warrington (wherever that is) just so I have something, anything, to put on Her Majesty’s Government’s asinine ‘passenger locator form’. I also start writing this nonsense – so yes, a productive, yet undeniably pointless morning.

While I was bitching about the internet and the forms she contained, Moan of Arc and The Old Man went and found the best boulangerie yet, from a packed quarter of (yes, you’ve guessed it) Sens. They bring back fine fair, including a wildly alcoholic panettone style thingy. L’Aigle was then forced grunting and farting from his pit in order to make the 12.30 ‘shuttle’ to Chablis, and we drive for an hour through villages much prettier than our own, with wine country on the distant horizon.

Once there, we drop off a cranky and ravenous L’Aigle (with the ever-enabling Moan of Arc) to find a late lunch, while the rest of us go and park la voiture very much in the wrong place – the ‘William Fevre’ winemakers owning more than the one property in this fine little town, it seems. We’re escorted across Chablis by a helpful, if a little irritable, WF employee in a Citron, and find that the other two have found a sunny courtyard right next door to the assigned spot for wine-tasting. Sequestered there in Le Bistrot des Grands Crus, don’t cha know, they have ordered themselves expensive dishes, as is their wont, alongside a very nice bottle of Chablis, just to ease us into proceedings.

A few yards down the road then we went, so see this Billy F. chap and ask about his wines. It turns out he (or she – they might just self-identify as a William) sold many a vintage, and the ever-helpful fella behind the counter let us taste a fabulous percentage of the stock to hand. We were interrupted briefly by some friendly Danes, prompting something of a Faulty Towers interaction with The Old Man:

‘Aha, English! We Danes and the English have always gotten on well’

‘Not in the mid-900s.’

‘Ah. Yes, sorry about that…’

An apology for the Danegeld finally exacted, The Old Man then went and bought a celebratory box of the good stuff. L’Aigle, not to be outdone, purchased a full mixed case – though this did include two for me from an old pal who, on these pages, has gone by many names: The Satsuma, The WWG, El Peor Novio del Mundo) – it’s all the same coat, and what a fine coat of many colours he is too.

So yes, many a victory was won over the future forces of thirst and sobriety. Such was the generosity of the William Fevre fella doing the tasting, in fact, he threw in two extra bottles ‘for free’ – including, of all things, a rare local sauvignon blanc, ‘for the ladies’.

Time for a final Chablis beer in the warm Chablis sun, then Si-moan de Beauvoir, freshly insured on the motor and ‘taking one for the team’ today, drove us all back nice and slowly to HQ (via the fabulous Carrefour I’d visited on Wednesday, so we could pick up strictly necessary ‘supplies’). L’Aigle, ever the chef supreme, fancied some coq au vin that evening, so that, not entirely coincidentally, was what he purchased and what he made.

Given the labours of the day, it did not prove quite as boozy a Friday night as it might have been. Additionally, horror of Covid-related horrors, a few of the party were now feeling a little under the weather, The Old Man chief amongst them…and with our Gallic ‘Rona tests tomorrow booked for the next day and all…

Did this bode? It may well have boded. I, made of stern and manly stuff, was fine, however – and L’Aigle’s ailments were strictly those of his own indulgent making, so the pair of us stayed up late, playing the pestilential train game and sampling conservative amounts of the new Chablis stocks.

Samedi 18th & Dimanche 19th Septembre

The final full French day of our most pleasant French stay is nigh! Accordingly, we have a table booked at Au Crieur de Vin in Sens, potentially for a last supper (well, last lunch) before at least a handful of our number are heaved off towards the Covid bastille…

Troops assembled, we drive across to the bright lights of the ‘big’ city – stopping en route to retrieve The Old Man’s prodigal umbrella, which has somehow turned up, covered in cheap cologne. And once we reached our destination, following the occasional wrong turn and muttered aside, one is happy to report that Au Crieur de Vin is a triumph! Despite being superbly busy and somewhat under-/inexpertly staffed, it really did prove a lunch to end at least a good few lunches: Starting with an impossible to define ‘beefy foam’ entré, the main is a sensational chicken dish that surmounted even L’Aigle’s mighty offering the previous evening (both of these were the daily ‘inspirations’ from the head chef – an inspiration we wisely followed). A classic chocolate bomb offering exploded for desert, and it was all bookended by a couple of clever amuse-bouches which amused a fella greatly. All in all, seriously fine.

The Old Man, however, didn’t seem to enjoy it nearly as much. He lamented the glacial (but charming) service from the sole pair of waiters (one old and overburdened, the other – potentially his son – clearly cosmically useless) and chuntered away all the while, pausing only to fill his hungry maw. His day of Corona judgement loomed large, you see – and he had already found himself guilty of premeditated and aggravated ‘Rona, dooming himself to the Covid gallows. ‘It’s just a cold,’ said we, but he wasn’t having a bar of it…busy rewriting his will and jotting terrible, tear-sodden poetry on restaurant napkins.

Bill paid and au revoirs au revoired, we strode like true Britons across town to face the music; music that was being played down a back alley behind a pharmacy, within obvious earshot of the fell Sens bells which tolled away, potentially for us. A nurse there threw small sticks up our nostrils with a sadistic and almost arousing fury, giggling like a milkmaid all the while. We then went at sat at our usual spot – ‘CdlH100B’ – to enjoy the sun, drink some beers, and await our fate…

Si-moan de Beauvoir, then Moan of Arc, then myself, then Moan of Arc again – we all got the emails – all clear! We breathed again.

Nothing, however, was forthcoming for L’Aigle and nothing for The Old Man. The time tick, ticked away and small rivulets of condensation ran from our warming beers, drip dripping into the wooden slats of the outdoor table. Around us patrons chattered and ate, but silence gripped a section of our own little gathering.

Eventually, never much of a stoic, The Old Man could bear it no longer, and he marched into the pharmacy, demanding an immediate release from this medical purgatory. At last, he returned, a stay of execution held tight in his hand – his test was negative, despite all evidence to the contrary! If the nose swab don’t fit, you must acquit, as they (don’t) say. L’Aigle was also given the all-clear, but he’d already known that, not ever being a bird given over too easily to undue worry.

A celebratory trip to the boulangerie was in order, and then back home for yet more unnecessary online bureaucracy, a bit more petanque, and a spirited attempt to drink and eat all the remaining vittles in the house. Tomorrow morning, we ride – and it wouldn’t do to leave good men (that is to say, good wine and cheese) behind.

*

A restless slumber, some final packing and away we hasten. Dropping off L’Aigle at Sens train station, The Old Man runs over his foot, just for old time’s sake – as it wouldn’t really be a proper jaunt on the continent without some automotive idiocy on his part. He’d clearly aimed to get both me and L’Aigle, but fortunately I had proved too nimble to be trapped beneath his wheel. Very much for the best, I’d say – as writing blogs with a liquefied pied distracting you all the while doesn’t sound much fun to me.

Anyhow, with our chef supreme now limping off to catch a train to Stratford via Paris (in many ways the Stratford of the Île de France) all there was for us four to do was drive and drive and drive some more. Did they check our lovingly curated online Covid papers once we’d reached the channel? Did they hell. But the French blokes did, eventually, let us claim our VAT back for the eighteen bottles of wine we’d stashed in the boot…albeit after making us jump through a few more customarily Gallic hoops.

But ah well, friends, ah well: if that’s not as close to a Brexity success story that you’re likely to read on these pages, then I’m really not sure what is! ‘Believe in Britain’, I say, and away from Calais, letting the shackles of our once free movement fall heavily upon the Folkestone floor!

Nippon blog #2: “Oh-oh, Kyoto – the shrines so sweet with the sun sinking low”

Friday 27th September [No games, only trains] 

We all arise bright and early – both to prove that it can, in fact be done, and also to tidy Stacey of Arimathea’s flat, wash Stacey of Arimathea’s sheets etc. – before braving the city’s vast subway system one final time, across to Tokyo Station to pick up our all-conquering JR passes.

Our first act, once these invaluable documents were locked and loaded, was to grab a swift bullet train, with an accompanying Peregrine Took, south by west-west to lovely, sylvan Hakone.

The much-vaunted Shinkansen took a moment or two to get properly motoring, but it certainly moved along at a fair clip once it did. ‘Tis only the third fastest train I’ve ever been on, mind: the Chinese, as is their totalitarian wont, have grabbed the top two spots in the Mansfield list of locomotive sprinters.

Once off the bullet, it was a bit of a puzzle re. how one actually gets to bloody Hakone from Odawara Station, where our Shinkansen had gently deposited us. I ended up muddling along with Peregrine Took via a mixture of local trains and surprisingly ruinous tourist buses, while Soshiteumi-san and Beteran-chan, being fancier folks, opted to wait for the shuttle-bus to their distant Hakone hotel, where they would be onsen-ing it up that evening.

Once (finally) at Hakone proper, Peregrine and I were presented with a damn fine tree-ringed lake (Lake Ashi, for those interested) and a gentle breeze. Going for the #1 local attraction first up, we climbed along to Hakone-Jinga Shrine, skipping up stair after stair and avoiding the lengthy line for the classic ‘Lake Gate’ photograph, as only the loved-up or the foolish would even consider it worth the wait. We then indulged in a decent and well-deserved bit of lunch in the lakeside Box Kitchen, mocking those fools no doubt still queuing for their one ‘perfect shot’.

*

Luncheon completed, we bumped straight into the comely pair of Soshiteumi and Beteran, who had indeed waited for the aforementioned, gated photo and who were feeling pretty chuffed with themselves for so doing. This reunion, while sweet, was fated to be but temporary: they were hopping aboard a round-trip sightseeing boat across the lake and back, while we (Peregrine and I) were off to take a gander at the grand cedar trees of the old Hakone Road.

Our own, slightly later ferry (NB – not one of the mightily kitsch fake golden pirate ships you might’ve seen in the tourist brochures, you understand, just a standard, run-of-the mill, working man’s sightseeing ferry) motored us, post-cedars, one way up the lake. Past the shrine gateway and fancy hotels, we went, all the way to the portion of the Hakone Ropeway which volcanic gases haven’t cruelly suspended.

Apparently, so they say, the views from this cable-car approximation were not to be missed – and if one is very lucky distant Mount Fuji can be glimpsed above the hills. However…

The motherless bastards lied to us! The last cable car of the day left at 15:15, not 17:00 as had been fraudulently claimed by all and bastard sundry! Rage overwhelmed me. I know not what I did in those subsequent minutes, but I can only assume it rhymed with ‘urd-degree urder’.

Instead of the vertiginous and splendid ‘Ropeway’, it would be, for us, of course, another lengthy, winding and overpriced bus back to Odawara Station – a bus on which I cursed and muttered almost without pause, turning the air blue, blue electric blue.

It was only at Odawara, however, that I discovered I was just, just in time for the final express train of the evening to Kyoto – a Shinkansen I would have almost certainly missed had I been allowed on said vertiginous and splendid Ropeway.

Well played, intransigent cable car oafs, well played indeed…

*

After a swift farewell with Peregrine Took then, I enjoyed a smooth ride all the way across to Kyoto, sped up even further by a good book, and then survived an easy enough bus journey to the Marutamatchi Crystal Hotel, where I’d be spending the next four nights.

Decent air-con, decent WiFi and a decent miniature Japanese bathtub meant the room got a decent thumbs up from me – and, despite it being a Friday night, I opted to make the most of it with a lazy, relaxing evening – a mini onsen of my own, if you will – after a long and sweaty day.

Besides – there was to be serious drinking in my near future, and I needed to be at my best…

 

Saturday 28th September [Argentina 28 – 12 Tonga; Japan 19 – 12 Ireland; South Africa 57 – 3 Namibia] 

Having slept particularly well and rising only slightly late, my first stop was the sprawling Nijo-jo Castle, just a couple of hundred yards away from my Kyoto HQ. This gaff proved well worth a visit, with high stone walls and beautiful painted partitions, as well as a singsong nightingale floor. More than most of these ‘heritage’ spots out in the Orient, it told a decent story too, despite the necessity of a reproduction here and a modern facsimile there.

And then, castle done and dusted, it was time for the meat (and drink, so much drink) of the day: Culture be damned, damn it, it was time for The Hub (yep, another one) and rugbyrugbyrugby!

Being the first to arrive, I secured a prime spot near the telly and watched the Argies best the Tongans in the day’s opening content, before in came the masses, including Soshiteumi-san and Beteran-chan, straight off the train from Hakone, as well as Googlers aplenty, all pooling together in a tight corner of the heaving pub for the main event: Ireland vs Japan. Always likely to be sensational clash, washed down with towers, yes towers, of beer.

*

When the dust at last settled and Japan (as you, of course, already know) had triumphed in a famous victory, Soshiteumi-san, Irish as the driven peat, must have registered between 4.0 and 4.5 out of 10 on his anger-meter, higher than I had ever thought possible. The rest of us were simply amazed. The crowd, it barely needs to be said, had ‘gone wild’ a long time beforehand, and were in no danger of returning to civilisation any time soon.

Pizza Salvatore Cuomo, directly below The Hub, was our next stop, and not a moment too soon, for quick and immediate sustenance. I, now quite merry, started things off with a very bold four cheese number and the people made mock of me. I won the people over shortly after though, through ordering impromptu, additional rounds of the round food for the table. Bread (pizzas) and circuses, my friends – that’s how you win the mob.

One must confess, it all gets a little hazy at this point…we may well have gone back Hubwards before jogging along to another sporty bar…there were definitely more drinks…that much we know for certain. Either way, and ironically enough, I, me, old Tommy M., am the one who ‘Irish exits’, so it seems. I remember a brief breather by the river before finding my way miraculously back to my hotel. The others may have found some club or another. They claim to have danced. Them, aye, but for me, who’s to say? Much like the Irish XV, Japan gave me a good and sustained beating that evening.

 

Sunday 29th September [Georgia 33 – 7 Uruguay; Australia 25 – 29 Wales] 

The day started at a nice enough joint called Kifukuan up in Northwest Kyoto for udon style noodles.

That the day started with a 3pm lunch is neither here nor there. Seek ye for it ‘there’ and seek ye for it ‘here’ – you shall not find it, sir. You shall not find it at all.

Following this forced but very necessary feed, it was just a few minutes round the corner for perhaps Kyoto’s most famous tourist attraction: Kinkaku-ji, the Golden Pavilion. This unforgettable spot proved just as beautiful (and just as crowded) as it was some eleven years before, when last I had walked its gardens. Chock-a-block it may well be, every day and every hour, but if you find yourself in Kyoto, friends, believe me when I say that it is simply indispensable.

After giving said temple a big, golden ‘tick’, it was back to (yes, you’ve guessed it) The Hub for more (much more sober and abstemious) ruggers – Wales vs Australia: perhaps the pick of the group stage clashes, and hangover or no hangover, not a game to be missed.

Pushing through the throng, we three, somehow, found a perfectly positioned table, ‘reserved’ but without occupants – that the place was perhaps even busier than the previous day, if possible, made this nothing short of miraculous. Wales, for their part, did their duty well, and edged another great game of rugby union – one which, I must say, left me a nervous, slightly nauseous wreck.

*

Beaten, battered, but still standing, we wandered gingerly around Kyoto’s various covered markets, taking in the sights and smells. While we very much failed to find presents – perhaps due to many of the stores shutting up shop, proprietors glaring at me with justified disdain – ideas were beginning to stir, my friends. Soon, very soon, I would purchase something Japanese for deserving folks back home. Aye, ’twasn’t that day, but the day was comin’, ladies and gentleman, it were rollin’ round the bend.

A place called Musashi had been suggested to us by one Googler or another for sushi – and one must say that it proved both good fun and great value; a proper old-school conveyor belt set-up, with different priced options from <£1 up to the highest quality of fishy dishes, all whirling around, veritably begging us to whip them off the belt and stack the empty plates high. Soshiteumi, of course, stacked the highest tower, but this was to be expected.

Post-binge, and now more fish than man, it was to be an early night with me book for me – one which would, Inshallah, see off the remnants of a sumo wrestler of a hangover.

 

Monday 30th September [Scotland 34 – 0 Samoa] 

Early to bed, early to rise, as they say – and a good job too, for this here day would prove to be a seriously ‘temple heavy’ day. Pre-prandial shrines visited included:

  • Toji Temple: a genuine classic, with the largest Pagoda in all of Japan, a tidy, leafy little garden and buddhas aplenty;
  • Yasaka-jinga Shrine & Pagoda (and geisha district): all very lovely, with plenty of domestic tourists sporting colourful, rented kimonos and yukatas adding to the general aesthetic of the area wonderfully; and
  • Ginkaku-ji (the Silver Pavilion): an undeniably beautiful spot this, but, for some reason, wildly, crazily humid! Walking around its manicured gardens and myriad carefully raked pebbles, a fella soon became more sweat than man(sfield)…

Wandering around temples, especially Japanese ones, are a sure-fire way to whet one’s appetite, and we had it on good authority that Katsukura was the go-to place for a late lunch of tonkatsu. However, after climbing right to the very top of the impossibly humongous Kyoto Station only to find the flagship joint inexplicably closed, we were obliged to schlep all the way to its southern branch, many an inner-city metre away, wasting valuable temple time.

Once there, however, it was clear that this was the ‘real deal’ – a veritable feast of crispy, breaded pork and self-mixed, deliciously sweet sauces. What is more, once fed and watered, we were in prime position to strike out for Inari-okusha Shrine and for all the multitudinous red-orange gates one could possibly require. Genuinely, there were thousands of the buggers knocking about, seemingly set out by the ancients to secure infinite Instagram ‘likes’.

The snaking, gated paths took us all the way along an unexpectedly lengthy mountain climb – and while Beteran-chan bailed out halfway through in order to explore Kyoto’s western bamboo forests before nightfall, I’m proud to say that Soshiteumi-san and I conquered the bastard and no mistake.

*

That evening, after wandering for a fair while searching keenly for a place open for drinks on a Monday (not as quite easy as all that, here in Japan) we finally came across Sanjo Madobe, a small and markedly eccentric Belgium beer bar (rather than a fabulous Senegalese winger, currently signed for the mighty LFC). Here we watched an impossibly sweaty Scottish team see off the haphazard and ultra-violent Samoans, and drank a selection of rather strong beers, all alongside a comedy barman, notably ‘high on his own supply’.

Once extricated from Sanjo Madobe (almost #5 in FIFA’s Balon d’or voting, 2019), the last stop of a busy ol’ day was a joint named Yakitori Daikichi, just on the main road up to the castle for (no prizes for guessing) yakitori, along with further beers and all-round good times. Here we conversed happily with fellow RWC travellers and guzzled down the grilled meats like we’d all bought shares in a.) a chicken farm; b.) a charcoal company; or c.) both.

As I say, ‘a busy ol’ day’ – but a dang fine one, no doubts about it.

 

Tuesday 1st October [No games, only trains] 

I woke up feeling sick as a dog, and for once this was nowt to do with my regularly sky-high levels of consumption – rather the trusty ‘traveller’s lurgy’ had grabbed me by the scruff and grabbed me hard, almost at the last.

However, there being little-to-no rest for the wicked, depending on who you ask, I checked out of my faithful hotel and headed back nice and early to aforementioned huge Kyoto Station complex, only to find its shops shut and its WiFi down. These things, I know, are sent to try us – but to what end, dear readers, to what end?

A internet-less miscommunication meant that I ended up on a different train out west to my travelling companions – though we both, eventually, managed to squeeze onto the same absolutely jammers (JR pass-friendly) bullet train to distant Hiroshima from Osaka (them) and Kobe (me). Very much standing room only, it must be said – like the Bank branch of the Northern Line, but at a million miles an hour.

Upon arrival, we immediately queued up and booked our seats for the Osaka journey tomorrow, as we are not making that mistake again. ‘No reservations, no party’, seemed to be the golden rule here, and once bitten, much like my boy George, we were twice shy.

*

After a good deal of confusion brought about by some ropy old directions, we eventually found our cosy but well-appointed Hiroshima flat, where we were finally able to throw down our bags and (briefly) cool down. Then it was back out towards the station and to Doug’s Burger for lunch and a beer. I’m still not sure who this ‘Doug’ character is, but he makes a lovely tuna burger – this much cannae be denied.

It was then time for eine kleine Kultur und Geschichte, walking along the river beneath the plain trees to Hijiyama Park. However, despite its impressive Skywalk, this was not, in fact, the park we were looking for – that would be the ‘Peace Memorial Park’, in very much the other direction. Was this error my fault? Who’s to say? Me, in this blog? Ah, yes, well…er, yes it was indeed my fault. Moving on…

Once we were at the PMP proper, as nobody is calling it, a brief moment of sombre reflection took hold, as we walked quietly around Ground Zero of the Hiroshima A-bomb, taking in the preserved ruins and silent monuments. This muted stroll took us all the way to the impressive recreation of Hiroshima Castle, itself completely destroyed in the infamous August 1945 blast.

So yes, if ever a trio of tourists needed a drink, by this stage, it was us. And a very cheap drink it was too, during happy hour at ‘810’, an odd Jim Beam place in the city centre, its existence only explained by the Beam-Suntory merger a few years back which must’ve made a good few folks either side of the Pacific filthy rich. Good to see that at least a few of the Yanks and the Japanese have put their uncomfortable history aside to make some of that real scratch, eh? Well…for a given value of ‘good’, perhaps.

Dinner, such as it was, came in faux-Italian form at MaNo MaGiO (their capitalisation) followed up by a far superior pancakey desert at a likely looking crepe place at the Panorama Food Court. Up on the eleventh storey, it commanded tasty views over the city’s lazy river, and proved as good a spot as any to finish off quite a quiet, peaceful day.

 

Wednesday 2nd October [France 33 – 9 USA; New Zealand 63 – 0 Canada] 

It’s a leisurely start when one is very much pre-booked on the 10:54 to Osaka, I can tell yer that for free. Incomparably more pleasant are these bullet trains, when one has both a seat and a sandwich to one’s name.

Once in Osaka, our very final stop, we find our flat, this time with a little bit more ease, but this time in a notably less salubrious spot. We barely give the place the once-over, however, before dropping off our bags and heading on up to the famous Doutonbori Street – a very busy, popular place with impressive animal animatronics and vast plastic beasts adorning the sides of bustling restaurants, displaying high camp variations of the once-living wares they offer up.

Soshiteumi-san was keen for a final rotating sushi feast, so, after a dedicated search, it was into ‘Daikisuisan’ that we bundled. The ‘whole tail of tuna’, in this writer’s opinion, would prove very much to any gourmand’s taste – ’twas my first and only ‘golden plate’, after all. The unexpected but highly appreciated soft serve ice cream also ticked all the T.H.Mansfield.com boxes.

From here we ankled over to Shinsaibashi Shopping Street, where I at last, at long last, picked up some birthday presents for Moan of Arc and Si-Moan de Beauvoir. Were they worth the wait? Well, you’d have to ask the ladies in question – though let it be noted that Osakan ladies and gentlemen of taste and style were quite figuratively applauding me down the bustling Osaka streets for the rest of the afternoon.

*

So yes, after breaking my cardinal, nay ‘capital’ rule and actually purchasing goods/wares that afternoon, I needed to gaze upon something beautiful and ancient and free to air. We therefore tubed it swiftly to and from Osaka Castle, to spend our remaining allocation of daily sunlight wandering up to, and taking myriad photographs of, this mighty edifice, thereby ticking an undeniably impressive, splendidly touristy item from the Japanese list.

Soshiteumi-san had some final presents-cum-tat to pick up, and I agreed to provide him with emotional and spiritual support – so together, arm-in-arm, we headed back off to Doutonbori to brave the accursed tatlands. After arguments and duels, and with tat at last acquired, we met back up with a furious Beteran-chan at our filthy Airbnb, which we found to our horror had not been cleaned a jot, leaving us in wrathful squalor to which we had no intention of becoming accustomed.

Beteran, such is her way – even whilst enraged, swiftly secured us a full refund, and pretty much just around the corner (first left, second left, then up on the right for those playing along at home) we stalked into yet another ‘Crystal Hotel’.

Having appraised my room and having found it literally and pleasantly identical to that which I enjoyed in Kyoto – and giving my weary and still seething fellow travellers the final night ‘off’ – I took to the Osaka streets alone, wandering over all of the Doutonbori area ‘stag’, using my final night to ‘soak up’ just a little more of the bubbling riverside atmosphere. And then…well then there was only time enough for a quick snack and an early night – for early (far too early) the next morning I would be leaving the Land of the Rising Sun (before said morning sun had the decency to rise, in fact).

 

Thursday 4th October [Georgia 10 – 45 Fiji; Ireland 35 – 0 Russia] 

‘Home James, and don’t spare the horses’, cried my corporal frame at unholy o’clock on my final Japanese morning. The rest of my being resisted, but to no avail: It was home time – so ‘home’ surely I must go.

So up I got and me bags did I pack, leaving other, weaker souls to their slumbers and their rest and their lie-ins. Eyes set square upon future and horizon, albeit with my mind still swirling from the bustle of Tokyo to the temples of Kyoto, I set off through the aforementioned (yet much more subdued) Osaka streets, only getting mildly lost on my snaking way across town to distant Kansai Airport.

‘Aha, reversible seats, I will miss you most of all!’ I cried aloud to the swivelling thrones, much to the alarm of the full to bursting airport train. People, in fact, went as far as to shuffle away from my manically grining, overtired fizzog, and I even managed to gaijin my way into a much-coveted seat – a fitting way, perhaps, to finish off my splendiferous Japanese travels.

Additional ‘fittingly final Japan acts’ included, at Kansai, making a final set of local enemies by hopping, smiling, straight into the front of the check-in queue to join a surly Soshiteumi-san and Beteran-chan; then clearing out the Mansfield ‘Pasmo’ on a final crisp lettuce sandwich; and then, finally, spending slightly over the odds on some interesting looking Japanese whisky for the Isabella House liquor cabinet.

And then, my long-suffering friends, silence.

Well, Air China silence. So not silent at all. Time to stick the headphones on, sink a Tsingtao or three, and write myself a blog.

Nippon blog #1: “Oh-oh, Tokyo – if you’ve never really been then you’ve sure gotta go”

Thursday 19th September [No games, only planes]

Being thirty-one now, and classy as all hell, I walked past the Heathrow Weatherspoon’s with barely a sideways glance. Classic remoaner behaviour, I know, but ‘it is’, as the kids say, ‘what it is’.

Not one-and-a-half, two pints later, into the non-‘Spoons airport pub came the dashing and newly engaged pair of Soshiteumi-san and Beteran-chan. [Soshiteumi (the taller one) has previously cast his lengthy shadow over Straight Down from Chicago, as well as Los Blogs de Beetha, which – I’m sure you remember – also included Beteran (the one with hair) amongst its sprawling cast.]

Together, we travellers three wolfed down some final English stodge before jogging over to the gate and hopping aboard our Flugzeug. Why so stodgy? Well, where we were going, my friends, pie would be in mighty limited supply.

*

Our Air China flight to Beijing took place on a plane so old I was surprised it boasted only one set of wings and that said wings weren’t constructed of canvas, spruce and hope. I watched unchallenging superhero movies and napped, as is my wont on these long-haul trials. The food was bad, as was the cask-strength flatulence seeping out from one of by neighbours.

A lively market for Rugby World Cup tickets began to break out amongst the various giants who had squeezed onto this orient-bound, malodorous cocoon. Perhaps 80% of the passengers were bouncing on to distant Tokyo, you see, and they already had ruggers on their mind.

Sadly, my spare ticket for Argentina vs. France received little-to-no love on the trading floor, so I returned moodily to Wakanda and its glistening abdominals, sipping a warm and morose Tsingtao, whispering soft curses.

*

My mood, already lowered by my failings as a sky-bound horse trader, was not improved by Beijing Airport doing Beijing Airport things and almost making us miss our precious connection.

‘You want me to re-scan my coins?!’ asked an incredulous Beteran-chan, once we’d finally made it to the (completely pointless) mid-transfer security numbskulls.

‘Shi,’ confirmed the numbskull.

‘And my phone charger?’ I added.

‘Shi.’

‘And you particularly object to my umbrella?’

‘Shi.’

‘But the kilo and a half of delicious black tar heroin Soshiteumi here has crammed up his sweet Aris’ is fine?’

‘Shi.’

Once released, we were instructed to sprint umpteen hundred yards round to our gate through an oddly deserted airport, just in time to make final call. We then, of course, stood in a packed and stationary bus for 15-20 minutes, for no known reason other than simply ‘China’.

The second plane, once aboard, was, in fairness to Air C., at least built this century. My new Scottish neighbour, Shortbread-san, was the recipient of ‘bland’ then ‘kosher’ meals, as his mischievous friend had called ahead, listing a host of fictional dietary requirements, just to vex him. Looking around, I was, in fact, completely surrounded by Celts – a feeling which I was to become more and more used to as this Tokyo trip took shape…

 

Friday 20th September [Japan 30 – 10 Russia] 

Success – we arrived safely in Tokyo.

Balls – we are on completely the wrong side of the city, and not a small city at that.

Our first stop was the post office, of all places, as Beteran-chan, ever organised, had ordered herself a ‘pocket wifi’ gadget, for without internets, we are lost. Meanwhile, Soshiteumi-san, playing the role of Teenage Asian Girl #7173, dashed into the nearest Starbucks for a sweet potato golden Frappuccino.

Cooking now with gas, we plotted out our four-train route to distant Wakabadai, where we would be squatting in an apartment ever-so-kindly lent to us by Beteran’s uni pal, Stacey of Arimathea: First, The ‘Skyliner’ took us into the city proper – a craft notable because its seats swivel 180 degrees between trips in a way which struck this observer as, frankly, showing off a bit.

It was on this speedy little train that old Soshiteumi discovered that his state-of-the-art 195-country Google adapter does not, in fact, work in Japan. He was unamused. I was much more amused. Beteran-chan was asleep, so was unable to cast the deciding vote.

*

Traveller’s tip #1: a number of different companies run the Tokyo area tube system, and tickets for some lines will not, curse them, work on others. Be ye, therefore aware.

Traveller’s tip #2: When you make mistakes with your underground tickets (and you will) the barriers which close upon you are surprisingly puny, and it is perfectly possible, with sufficient western aloofness, to ‘gaijin smash’ your way through regardless.

*

At long last, multiple changes later, we finally arrived at Wakabadai Station and met Tokyo Josephine who, saint-like, showed us round the corner and unlocked the spacious lodgings which would serve as our HQ for the coming week. Why such kindness from this stranger? Well, Stacey of Arimathea’s husband, y’see, is a professional rugby player here in western Tokyo – for the might Suntory Sungoliaths no less – and Tokyo Josephine is a fellow (smaller) Sungoliath employee.

Sungoliaths forever, my friends. Sungoliaths forever.

With the flat’s usual occupants away in New Zealand for the birth of their second wee teammate, we had the full run of the place – a perfectly appointed and spectacularly gratis place to base oneself, all told. Once might go as far as to say, ‘a right touch’.

Wakabadai itself, it must be noted, we found somewhat wanting: exploring around we discovered sprawling supermarkets and precious little else – certainly nowhere to watch the Rugby World Cup’s opening (miss)match between the Brave Blossoms and lowly Russia. In the izakaya joint we found near the flat, for example, World Cup fever had quite clearly failed to erupt, though the beer and gristle was plentiful, keeping body and soul together.

With no further bars in the immediate vicinity, we toddle back home, whereupon the jet-lag descended like a thick, dark cloud, and within mere moments all within were dead to the world.

 

Saturday 21st September [Australia 39 – 21 Fiji; France 23 – 21 Argentina; New Zealand 23 – 13 South Africa] 

I slept well, albeit in two distinct chunks, as is so often the way with me ‘out east’. Either way, once showered and groomed I was very much ready to go seize the virgin day.

A swift Keiō line eastwards to Chofu drop-kickstarted this first of two splendid ‘rugby days’. It was here that I reunited with The Old Sensei (he of Les blogs bourguignon et breton, Shanghai nights, Borneo days, and Thai Times fame) – over for the weekend from China to celebrate his 60th with his firstborn. (That he actually turned 60 in early July is neither Japan-here nor Japan-there my friends.)

Together we wandered round this Chofu gaff, having a wee explore and comparing it, not always favourably, to his current borough of Shanghai. We soon found ourselves in the RWC official ‘fanzone’ and found it rather uninspiring– though, once again, few other rugby watching spots presented themselves.

Passing up on a fine looking pizza parlour due to Beteran-chan having haughtily maintained previously that she lusted not for overtly western cuisine while way out east, we opted instead for the adjoining (and excellent) tapas-style restaurant, ‘Pep’. Low and beyond, however, after investigating some familiar voices in the next-door pizza p., who did we stumble upon but Soshiteumi-san and Beteran themselves who, now up and dressed, had indeed made for the cheesy, sliced stuff after all.

Rank culinary hypocrisy? Perhaps. Yet this, I’m afraid to relay readers, would become a familiar pattern as the trip wore on.

*

The four of us ended up watching much of Aussie vs Fiji in what seemed like a non-aligned late-1990s church hall-cum-cinema, up at the very top of an eight storey ‘cultural centre’ – as you do.

Here the moderately sized, chiefly Japanese, crowd clapped politely every so often at some very fine Fijian play; the smattering of Aussies watching looked mighty confused at both their surroundings and the scoreline, but still appeared confident that their side would pull it back…which, indeed, they did, damn their hides…

Following this rather surreal episode, we taxied over (NB – try not to taxi anywhere in Japan, they want your money and they want it bad) to the Chofu-located ‘Tokyo Stadium’, where we would be supporting the Argies lustily against the accursed French.

Splitting into two pairs and heading to opposite sides of this elegant rather than humongous arena, The Old Sensei and I quickly made friends with a group of broad-minded Argentines who didn’t mention the Islas Malvinas even once. Together, pre-kick-off, we all made enemies with a trio of Frenchies equally swiftly, one of whom owned trousers which simply did not fit his Aquitaine-sized rear, much to the dismay of all behind him.

It was, I’m happy to say, a genuinely great game of ruggers which went right down to the wire – albeit, worse luck, with the French triumphant once said wire was reached. This exhibition was then followed by a far superior fanzone to that which we’d suffered before, with readily available (overpriced) Dutch beers and a giant screen, which displayed all eighty minutes of an inevitability/tediously impressive All Blacks side’s victory over the much-fancied Saffers.

*

Still thirsty, post-game(s), we hopped a singsong-filled train across to Shinjuku, where we strolled over to ‘Golden Guy’, where one finds numerous tiny, dodgy bars and numerous large, drunken foreigners. The dive we dove into was, truth be told, a bit of a hole, but they had a table free and served beer (alongside very questionable snacks) so I, for one, two and three, was not complaining.

The Old Sensei, a wise head on only slightly wizened shoulders, bailed out at this point, back to his overly luxurious hotel. However, he was almost instantly ‘replaced’ by a half dozen new companions, mostly Googlers, who we knew from London Town – they too over for the RWC and also keen for good times by the sackful.

We ended up, as we were always fated to, in a random karaoke joint, to sing the night away. Your correspondent here received surprisingly good reviews, though the competition was far from strong.

Such were the revels that we (the Wakabadai trio) ended up comfortably missing the last Keiō back home, so the day ended for us fast asleep in the back of a lengthy and reassuringly expensive taxi home, dreaming of Keating and bottles of beer.

 

Sunday 22nd September [Italy 47 – 22 Namibia; Ireland 27 – 3 Scotland; England 35 – 3 Tonga] 

Sometimes, boys and girls, it is acceptable for a weary fella to sleep in.

Therefore, I felt no shame, aye no shame at all, that I was awoken at 11.30am by Soshiteumi-san banging upon me chamber door, cursing my name. We had to head south to Yokohama, post-haste, you see, to pick up our rugger passes for the afternoon’s all-Celtic clash. The fellow was as excited as I’d ever seen him. That is to say, a solid three or four out of ten.

Plenty of rattling trains and a short walk later, we were at the foot of the looming International Yokohama Station, a good bit bigger than the Chofu/Tokyo equivalent, and swimming in a green sea of Irish. Somehow, The Old Sensei managed to met us there, despite the myriad barriers and checks, and despite me having his ticket grasped in my paw…

This time we all sat as a quartet, and much to Soshiteumi’s (mild) delight, Ireland bossed the game from the very off, scoring three swift tries and effectively ending the contest. Pouring Tokyo rain put a bit of a…dampener on the second half (I’m here all week, folks), slowing the game down appreciably and ensuring that the wretched Scots could gain no foothold in the match-up whatsoever.

All in all, then, it seemed to bode rather well for Ireland – though the smart money remained on them exiting, as per, at the quarterfinal stage.

*

The monsoon had set in in earnest post-game and the much-moistened scrum to get away from the stadium was a little bizarre, given the Japanese reputation for infrastructural efficiency. Three of our number sheltered safely beneath the bar, but The Old Sensei was, to his horror, swept away in the crowd towards Shin-Yokohama, having foolishly stooped to retrieve his mackintosh and gotten caught in the green, inebriate current.

We only found the aged fella, sodden and bedraggled, perhaps an hour later, telling wild and raving stories of Hibernian depravity and feeling pretty darn sorry for himself.

That every establishment in this quarter of Yokohama, be it a bar, eatery or ‘Club 7/11’ was simply heaving with Irish did not improve his mood. However, just as the rainstorm began to border on the ridiculous, we found sudden salvation at a very serviceable Chinese joint, which Google Scanner unreliably informs me was called ‘Cha Ita’ or ‘Italian tea’ or something curious like that. Whatever the name, the food was flavoursome, the Guinnesses questionable, and soon spirits were improved no end.

*

Now well-fed and slightly dried, we bid a fond farewell to The Old Sensei, who now had to hasten back to Shanghai and his (occasionally) honest toil. Worry not, blog-fans, I daresay he’ll be back for another one of these overseas absurdities at some point in the future.

Our remaining Tokyo triumvirate then waded around the corner to a dive called Ajito for many, many beers with the Google lot, who had also scored tickets to the game and who were, by now, several sheets to the typhoon, challenging all-comers to street-corner line-out battles.

Beteran-Chan, she who shuns western cuisine with her tongue but devours it apace with her maw, insisted, after this extended session, on one final stop before we return to HQ. A world-famous stop. An infamous eatery: The Golden Arches.

I watched in helpless horror as she and her lofty fiancé put away a Trumpian-level Maccas platter, with nuggets and chips and double cheeseburgers flying in each and every direction. One thousand, two thousand, one trillion calories came and went, and still the pace remained ‘deliriously breakneck’.

‘Why didn’t you just eat more Chinese?’ I wailed, but, alas, truly, they could no longer hear me. The clown Ronald had got ‘em tangled beyond salvation in his red and yellow snares. All that was left was the sound and the fury. And the ketchup.

 

Monday 23rd September [Wales 43 – 14 Georgia] 

Classically jet-lagged slumber all through a Monday morning resulted in us leaving the flat at a scandalous two o’clock in the afternoon. Looking to make up for lost time, we headed apace to the celebrated Shibuya area, where we searched for a spot of late lunch.

Having found the joints at the top of the very fancy Tokyu shopping mall to be, well, very fancy, we hopped into a nearby, orange-fronted ramen place, ordered (unsurprisingly) ramen from the handy machine outside, and then hugely enjoyed the stuff upon arrival, guzzling it down without pause or mercy. Flavour, truly, thy name is ‘cheap Tokyo ramen’.

Ramen-ed now to the gunnels, we rolled north to Yoyogi Park, where dogs bundle happily about in strict weight classes and leafy trees are apparently innumerable. Then, a short stroll from this happy spot, the famous and colourful Harajuku shopping area could be found – a district which proved well worth an explore, even for folks who habitually never, ever buy things (like your humble narrator here).

*

Back after this to Shibuya proper, for the indispensable ‘Lost in Translation’ crossing photographs, before a swift tube took us back to Shinjuku, where we met up with Kobe (beef) Bryant – a good and undeniably Aussie pal of mine from back in London town – at one of the innumerable ‘Hub’ pubs one finds dotted here there and every-damn-where. Together, beers in hand, we surveyed the wondrous Wales and their comfortable victory against the spirited Georgian ‘Leos’.

Dinner, post-rugby, was enjoyed at a really rather excellent ‘yakiniku bar’ named ‘No Meat, No Life’, where we sampled delicious self-barbecued beef, including some truly sensational wagyu cuts. The mouth waters just writing about it and, by the time we were replete, it had cemented itself firmly at the very top of our ‘Japanese culinary charts’.

 

Tuesday 24 September [Russia 9 – 34 Samoa] 

The lovebirds decided that it was now high time to gaze upon a temple of some kind, so off they hastened, seeking out culture with a capital C. I, on the other hand, opted for a chilled morning of reading and writing and generally ‘chill-axing’. This rubbish doesn’t pen itself, after all, and if I didn’t do it, who would? Someone with talent? Ah, bitte schon.

Once I’d scrawled down a few days’ worth of the overwritten stuff, I cleansed and garbed myself and grabbed an afternoon train, again to Shinjuku, to have an explore, find a snack and get a bit lost. Here I met up with a certain Peregrine Took (AKA Mrs. Kobe beef Bryant) to sink a drink or two, to chat concernedly about how our mutual pal The Jane Janey keeps all her dead hair for making up underwear, and to guzzle down some choice yakitori near Shinjuku station.

We then took a stroll down the horribly named ‘Piss Alley’ (which I will refer to henceforth by its less popular, but much nicer secondary nickname, ‘Memory Lane’) for further beers and yakitori.

At this juncture, Kobe beef Bryant joined us down Memory Lane, and the orders got bigger and brasher almost immediately. The experience, all told, gave a fella a whole new meaning to the phrase ‘If Memory serves’ – for yes, yes it does, my friend.

*

A (second) dinner of very good tonkatsu proved to be just around the corner, of course at Kobe’s suggestion. Indeed, the food here at Tonkatsu Niimura (possibly – it may well have been another, similar joint) really was really worth writing home about, if you choose to travel sans blog.

[Though, as I’m only 55% sure that ‘Niimura’ was the name of the place, were I to write home about it, blog or no blog, I may well be guilty of  spreading that #fakenews I’ve read about in the broadsheets…]

Anyhow, we rounded the evening off at Kurand Sake Market for sakes warm and cold – though not without drama, as the waitresses wronged my friend Kobe beef Bryant and ol’ Kobe ain’t the kind of Australian who takes these things lying down!

Soshiteuni-san and Beteran-chan met us there for a nightcap, before the three of us all bid the antipodeans farewell and headed back Wakabadai-wards. It turns out that my sake tastes differed from the norm (I enjoy it cheap and warm) which meant that I often seemed to be drinking our various samples and medium/small measures alone. This perhaps, would explain how they stood much more steadily on the surprisingly heaving tube than I. Or perhaps it was a cruel conspiracy. History, I am sure, will decide.

 

Wednesday 25 September [Fiji 27 – 30 Uruguay] 

This was the day I finally bit the bullet and got around to purchasing a ‘Pasmo’ card for the metro, ending my promising gaijin smash career. Now fully and cravenly ticketed, it was off to the Google offices in Roppongi for lunch and for some cask-strength Soshiteumi-san networking.

Great views from the panoramic windows and plentiful free food abound up here in Google Towers. I perhaps overindulged slightly, but when the price is right the price is right, and a fellow can always purchase bigger belts.

By the end of our time there though, Soshiteumi-san was not quite sold on transferring over, chiefly, in his words, because his ‘Mommy don’t live near Tokyo’. A fine and true sentiment, I’m sure you’d agree – though a mega-Yen move to the biggest city around surely still held certain charms? We’ll put this one down as a ‘maybe’ and get back to you with further developments.

*

Somewhat stuffed, we then headed up towards the Imperial Palace, though, once there, much of it seemed shut up tight in unsightly scaffolding. Instead, we wandered around the adjoining gardens, soaking up the late summer rays offered by an absolute scorcher of an afternoon.

Sticking with the ‘shoe leather’ theme, we kept wandering along, up through Akihabara and what can only be dubbed ‘the ubernerd district’, stopping only to grab a swift and cooling ‘Hub beer’ before exploring a temple rich and reed-filled park in historic Ueno.

Dinner, that night, was to be at Uomaru Honten, a tight and bustling covered food market, stuffed to the gunnels […what is a gunnel, friends? I should really stop using the word until I nail this down…] with innumerable izakaya joints and assorted miniature restaurants.

Here we feasted on some lovely little titbits, including a round or two of ‘deep-fried oyster sushi rolls’ and some curious Soshiteumi-ordered croquettes. The choice was, truth be told, somewhat overwhelming, but I feel we acquitted ourselves rather well, and supped that eve from the amongst the choicest of cooking pots.

We felt, perhaps oddly, perhaps not, like milkshakes for desert – and the most likely joint in the environs proved to be ‘Shake Shack’ – a shack, if you will, almost perfectly designed for dispensing shakes.

Now, I would oh-so love to report that an additional, wildly unnecessary cheeseburger was not ordered by the fallen pair with whom I voyaged; that they were not, in fact, bonded slaves to their western, glutenous indulgences. But I took an oath – a thrice-damned oath I tell you! – to impart only the truth and nothing but the t. upon these online pages. And so, alas, I cannae report ye this. The cheeseburger in question lasted, at most, 7-13 seconds.

 

Thursday 26 September [Italy 48 – 7 Canada; England 45 – 7 USA] 

Skipping the morning as unnecessary, away I went at noon for a lovely Thursday lunch with Mr & Mrs Kobe beef Bryant at their favourite Ramen joint, again near mighty and oft-visited Shinjuku. If memory serves, it was a place by the name of Tatsunoya Ramen – and believe me when I say that it is well worth a visit, should you find yourself nearby and if don’t mind a short queue for tippity-top quality ramen.

After a final cup of (very questionable) tea and a bittersweet goodbye with Kobe beef Bryant, that unquestionably steadfast Aussie gourmand, I wandered on my merry way, via the Hanazono-Jinja Shrine, to the beautiful and sprawling Shinjuku Gyoen. A genuinely gorgeous, if mosquito-rich, slice of tranquillity, I managed to while away much of the afternoon exploring its peaceful gardens and hidden secrets.

Following this top-quality garden time, I journeyed on through the (surprisingly lovely, dark and deep) inner-city woods to the rather impressive Meiji Jingu Shrine, replete with high wooden gates and sweeping, carved roofs. Only then, filled up to the hat-brim with natural and cultural delights, did I seek out some local station or another to grab a Keiō which might spirit me westwards.

*

Soshiteumi-san and Beteran-chan, up to their own adventures that day, managed to mess up their own trains royally, and, as they were the ‘key-holders’ that day, I was obliged to hop into a nondescript Wakabadai coffee house for another tea-based tribute act. I toyed with the idea of a personal izakaya session, but we were Out To Dinner that evening, so I behaved myself, attempting to verge upon contentment with a cup of low-quality warm nonsense.

Once quorate again, back at HQ, I washed and dressed for Gonpachi restaurant and some fancy-pants Shibuya dinner. The food here was objectively great, as might befit the sister restaurant of the famous spot where Uma Thurman slew the Crazy 88s in a fabulous yellow jumpsuit: All sorts of lovely delicacies came our way and went post-haste, with melt in the mouth sushi and skewered morsels of the very highest quality.

Such was the tone of the occasion, a minor UK celebrity even came by to sit at the neighbouring table – young Beteran-chan ‘losing her chill’ somewhat, but just about holding it together. In short, a successful binge, and a damn fine way to bid farewell to a sensational city.

An Englishman(sfield) in New York

As I flew down to New York town, some fair maids I did meet…

Being a fella who likes to play der Holidaytagensystem at work like the proverbial stringed instrument, I popped into the office on the morning of Tuesday 16th to punch the Mansfield card and set the old Outlook ‘Out-of-Off.’. However, that morn an office-wide power cut forestalled even my most humble professional ambitions.

“Mansfield,” the universe seemingly sang. “It’s time to do one.”

“Right now?” I whispered.

“Now,” the universe confirmed.

“I’ll be awfully early…”

“Potter about the terminals,” the universe intoned. “Try on some aftershave.”

“Righto, will do!”

And one I did do, down Fleet St. to the train station and then south to numinous Gatwick and my flight to distant NYC. Wherefore New York? For that was where the storied wedding of one Marcia Clark and one Sam Seaborn (of We go to a land down under fame) would be held, and somehow, by some excellent stroke of luck, I’d managed to snag an invite.

I was indeed ‘awfully early’ to head to the airport, but this was fine, as I’ve long made my peace with drinking alone. Thus, a relaxed span later, a gentle Australian lilt – if such a thing exists – woke me from a beery stupor:

“Hello, Tommy!”

It was The Jane Janey (formerly known on these pages as The WBB and La Mejor Novia del Mundo) who had snuck off from the city, strung out on lasers and slash-back blazers. Together we enjoyed a refreshing pre-plane cocktail, looking to find that optimal level of insobriety which obliged one’s eyes to slam shut just as the pilot fires up the airplane’s engines.

The airplane in question today belonged to the famously no-thrills Norwegian Air. My expectations were relatively low, but, as the flight went on, were mildly exceeded. I slept a good portion, woke to browse the film selection, then dozed again, confident I wasn’t missing much. And then we landed. All in all, ikke så ille.

But ah…JFK Airport. Now here my expectations were mesmerically low and were very much met: A ghastly place, with unhelpful staff and every queue much larger than the space apportioned to it – leading, inescapably, to regular bouts of ultraviolence.

One such queue was for the well-known yellow taxis, one of which The Jane Janey hailed (all while talking about Monroe and walking on Snow White). This chariot spirited us east-by-northeast, to and across the Williamsburg Bridge and then to Wildair restaurant, where we meet our old friends a Gay Arctic Monkey (Oz & Beetha) and Z-Unit (just Beetha). Here we enjoyed a pretty darn fabulous, tapasy, seafoody meal together, accompanied by a curious orange-tinted white wine with the Pi symbol on the bottle and a taste vaguely reminiscent of cider.

Post-meal, after the typically awkward experience of non-Americans attempting to navigate an American ‘tipping’ set-up, this newly formed quartet moseyed through New York’s East Village towards our home for the night. En route, we stopped, perhaps foolishly, for a dessert of ‘Stuffed Ice Cream’. While I’m moderately proud to say that I didn’t quite finish mine, I’m ashamed to relay that, yes, I ordered a ‘Cookie Road’ ice cream stuffed donut and, yes, I demolished the bulk of it in record time.

Our Airbnb, upon arrival, proved nice enough – airy and light, with functional (if somewhat cacophonous) aircon, an icy cold shower and a view across town of the Empire State Building. The toilet, however, was found outside the flat itself, on the floor’s shared landing…

‘An unnecessary precaution’, I reflected, while falling into an uneasy slumber. ‘The Eagle (yawn) won’t be landing until later in the piece.’

 

…they asked me back to see their place, just off 11th street.

Jet-lag, as is its wont, got me up at 5.30am, a little before sunrise on Wednesday 17th. Impatiently did I wait for the day to begin in earnest – for there was plenty on the menu today: We’d be going up to ‘The Top of the Rock’ and exploring the much-vaunted Tenements Museum – hopefully with plenty of good old-fashioned U-S-A calories ingested before, during and after these touristy interludes.

The Jane Janey was second up and, as New York’s a go-go and everything tastes right, we went to enjoy an early-doors (chai) latte in the Australian-owned Saltwater Coffee just around the corner. We then returned to rouse the crew, for the day was now very much ‘a-waitin’.

As a foursome, we walked across Midtown to the mighty Rockefeller Centre, right past the previously mentioned Empire State Building. [Top tip – try as you might, you can’t actually see much of the ESB from the top of the ESB itself, so go up a different skyscraper if you’re after the highest quality NYC vistas.] Before taking the somewhat trippy lift up-up-up, I inhaled pizza slice #1 of the trip from Roberta’s, burning my mouth off my face rather spectacularly.

The views up top were, it has to be said, spectacular – though the roasting heat meant that the fairer-skinned members of our party were unable to stay in direct sunlight for overly long. Yet there was ample time for us to grab some choice snaps and go butterfly spotting. A Gay Arctic Monkey, for example, seemed more struck by the fluttering yellow red admirals (on reflection, they may not have been red admirals…) which came by to say ‘Howdy’ than he was by the wildly impressive architecture which surrounded us:

“I never knew they could fly so high,” GAM would trill.

“Yes, yes…damn but my mouth hurts…quite…”

“So high, so high they fly!”

“Riiiight…have you noticed the Chrysler Building mate, just over there?”

“…but look how she flutters by…so pretty…pretty little flutter-by…”

“The poor sod’s got heatstroke, let’s get him downstairs.”

Back at the bottom we tied a gastronomic ribbon around our Rockefeller visit with a tasty round of frankly quite superb ‘Miami Vice’ bagels from Black Seed. This proved important fuel for wandering round beautifully air-conditioned shops that afternoon. I, myself, have never seen the attraction in going around and purchasing things, but I wasn’t here to cause a fuss, so along I went with my acquisitional companions.

GAM and I eventually split off from the ladyfolk, across to the neon coolness of the seven-floor Nike store. Here I tried my damnedest not to look shocked and appalled as GAM pulled on a selection of increasingly ill-advised and colourful garments.

“What do you think of this one?”

“Er…”

“It’s yellow – just like the pretty flutter-by!”

“You sure you’re feeling okay?”

“I’m getting it.”

“Righto.”

Purchases made, we all reconvened for refreshments in a baking hot Bryant Park, before subway-ing it over to the old tenements, not a stone’s throw away from Tuesday night’s Wildair.

[I should note at this point that, while it’s nice and cool once onboard, the New York subway is bad. The trains are infrequent, the tickets rarely work, and it laughs in the face of ‘contactless’. It seems a system unchanged since the seventies, and it made this fellow feel mighty blue on at least a couple of occasions. I can now see why the poet Seinfeld once wrote, ‘If you’re in your thirties and you’re taking public transport, you’ve gotta ask yourself some questions.’]

At the Tenements Museum, much lobbied for by Z-Unit, we opted for the ‘Hard Times tour’ and joined a group wandering through a mostly unchanged turn-of-the-century apartment block. Inside, we cooked at a fan-assisted 180 degrees, while Lynn, our fearsome guide, fielded questions in the style of a mildly despotic politician. Plenty of things which one might’ve (incorrectly) assumed where knowable, were proved to be complete mysteries, and ‘No one can know for sure’ quickly became a favourite catchphrase. GAM was a particular victim of the Lynn ire:

“So how would this electricity meter have worked then?”

“Oh, no one can know for sure.”

“Ah, okay – I only ask as I work for the third biggest energy supplier in…”

“You got heatstroke, kid? Read my lips: No. One. Can. Know. For. Sure.”

“Hey, who d’you think you are, speaking to my boyfriend like that?

“No one can know for sure.”

All in all, a truly wonderful woman; long may she reign.

We retreated from the white-hot heat of learning to ‘The Grand Daddy’, ironically the only joint in the immediate vicinity without working aircon. The next spot, the Spring Lounge, proved much more to our tastes, and here we enjoyed some pretty good beers and some pretty problematic debates.

A spot more Soho-area shopping-cum-browsing was, apparently, again a necessity, before we sourced some high-quality cocktails in a bar called Attaboy – a seriously trendy joint hidden behind a closed-down tailors on Eldridge Street, don’t cha know. We were joined at the table by a friend of Z-Unit’s, as well as some cask-strength firewater – one of GAM’s cocktails, in fact, made for him off-menu by a tame mixologist, was so potently undrinkable I felt the need to warn the waiter:

“It tastes like burning topsoil! Has anyone ever died drinking this stuff?”

“No one can know for sure, sir.”

“Waaaah-hey!”

Feeling quite boozed, we managed to shed the newcomer and march, once again as a tight four, to Vanessa’s Dumplings – a cheap and popular place which chiefly served dumplings, made, no doubt, to the recipe of a dame named Vanessa. Here, admittedly while I drunk the rest of the wonton soup straight from the container, The Jane Janey (lives on her back; loves chimney stacks) began throwing food at me (she’s outrageous, she screams and she bawls!). Either way – time, we thought, to go home.

 

And hooray, Sammy, my dear Marcie; oh you New York girls, can you dance the polka?

Great success, on Thursday 18th I woke up at seven, jet-lag defeated at my feet, begging for mercy.

Sans Z-Unit, who was making herself look divine for a glamorous work meeting, we enjoyed a light breakfast at Saltwater Coffee (who seemed to find us less amusing than they had the previous day). We then all checked out of Flat #1 and headed up through the summer rain to the Upper East Side and Flat #2 – a grander, more spacious affair, with inside toilets and all the mod-cons.

Bags dropped and keys secured, we bid ‘ta-ta for now’ to business-mode Z-Unit and then wolfed down an only marginally necessary slice at Gotham Pizza, en route to the Guggenheim. Now this right here was a properly impressive museum. While not all the ‘art’ was to this bloke’s taste (and if it were, then what a terrible collection it would’ve been!) there are some splendid pieces, and the building itself is an undisputed masterpiece in its own right.

Cultured up to the eyeballs, the three of us then jogged down to just outside the mighty ‘Met’ to meet The Satsuma (formerly known as The WWG and El Peor Novio del Mundo). With this untamed Australian now in tow, we walked across a shadow-dappled Central Park to the famous Ray’s for yet more pizza. One day I’ll have had my fill of this prince of foodstuffs; but it was not that day, my friends.

With the husband and wife team of The Jane Janey (let yourself go, oh-whoah!) and The Satsuma off back to the flat to get the newcomer settled in, I strolled downtown with a Gay Artic Monkey, firstly through Central Park and then along Seventh Avenue, to take in the wildly chaotic Times Square. At one point during the perambulation I ditched GAM abruptly and without warning, for reasons potentially connected to the previous night’s wonton soup – no can one know for sure. Either way, we did eventually reach Times Square and then the nearby Juniper Bar, which was an odd spot, teeming with rather severe waiting staff.

Here, of all the bars in all the world, we reunited with Marcia Clark and Sam Seaborn, the bride- and groom-to-be, for many drinks and much reminiscing. Arriving shortly after us, The Satsuma laughed loud at the classic Seaborn gags and The Jane Janey, sitting like a man and smiling like a reptile, introduced her diabolic friend Lucifer Jones into our NYC proceedings.

The only minor fly in our companionable ointment was that Graeme Gage (of the Graeme Gage Quartet) managed to miss Sam and Marica by, as The Satsuma might put it, ‘a bee’s dick’ – the pair having a train to catch, and the Gage plane having been just a wee bit too tardy. He, like The Eagle, would have to wait until the wedding day itself to give them the old GG magic.

With Mr Seaborn and Ms Clark safely on the train upstate, and with our party getting a little Hank Marvin, Lucifer Jones suggested ‘Black Ant’ for dinner. Credit where it’s due, it proved to be one of her rare good ideas: very tasty Mexican food indeed, washed down with pitchers of margaritas. Here too, for the first time in many moons, we broke bread with Richo Richardson, another old pal from varsity. In short, dear reader, the party had begun to ‘kick off’:

Black Ant was followed by ‘Burp Castle’, with delicious beers and a pleasant, soft quiet only occasionally broken by Lucifer Jones and a cacophony of resultant ‘SSSHHHHH-ing’. Burp Castle was followed by ‘Sake Bar Decibel’, where we drunk (unsurprisingly) quite a lot of sake, where we met shady, nerdy NYC ‘weebs’, and where I found my uncanny cartoon doppelganger posted on a toilet wall. Sake Bar Decibel was followed – for me, Richo Richardson, The Satsuma and (sigh) Lucifer Jones at least – by ‘Lovers of Today’, where we indulged in a final, completely unnecessary pre-bedtime cocktail. A serious evening then, and the New York festivities were only just beginning!

 

And when I got inside the house, the drinks were passed around…

Almost a lie in on Friday 19th, my friends! Very much almost nearly a lie in. A good thing too, as a couple of us were feeling a wee bit dusty after the previous night’s overindulgence.

It is decided by the tyrannical leadership that today we must walk across the Brooklyn Bridge, despite the wild and merciless heat. Z-Unit and I were…unsure about this ruse, but were outvoted/shouted down.

Sensing the dark hand of NYC local Lucifer Jones behind this (who, laying the pitchfork aside, had left the firepits to join us for the day) the fine lady Z and I formed a single-issue political party, dedicated to halting the nefarious spread of her antipodean influence.

The walk across this famous span, however, actually proved to be quite a pleasant experience. Given the mission-creep endemic in ‘The Anti-LJ Club’ – i.e. with Jones scepticism already well-wedded to a reactionary anti-bridge sentiment – the quality of the views alone proved fatal to the nascent cause: A Gay Arctic Monkey, who had briefly become a junior member, went as far as to heave his membership card into the East River; and even faithful Z-Unit toyed with resigning from her position of Club Treasurer. Lucifer smiled her devil smile, and the warm breeze spirited the slightest hint of brimstone to my trembling nostrils.

Aforementioned bridge took us to the unoriginally named ‘Brooklyn Bridge Park’, where we paused momentarily, taking in the vistas and hiding in the broken shade. We then headed across on the subway to Williamsburg, for hip and happening vibes and a very enjoyable spot of lunch at a joint called Allswell.

Much like a casual visit to one’s local mosque, that afternoon saw the gentlemen and the ladies part company for a time; though unlike said casual visit to said local mosque, the fellas in the group went off for beers. The location this time round, the rooftop bar of the Whyth Hotel – an implausibly hot suntrap with views right across glorious Manhattan. The clientele here were amongst the campest in the land, and much mirth was gleaned from conversations which touched upon a night “like, best described as ‘Super Mario Sunshine meets Luigi in the K-hole’,” and on their respective discontent with their respective jawlines. The lives others lead, my friends.

The girls joined us soon after for cocktails and views, before the bill had to be paid and our group’s paths diverge: The Jane Janey (she love him, she love him, but just for a short while) was off to see yet another New York pal; Graeme Gage was already away on a mysterious rendezvous; and Lucifer Jones needed to go make sure Astaroth & Azazel had remembered to feed wee Cerberus.

[Confession – the rest of us didn’t go straight home, as we’d planned. We (The Satsuma, Z-Unit, GAM and I) stopped instead at Emack & Bolio’s and ordered a selection of ice-creams which could only be described as ‘extra’. My waffle cone was made, for example, chiefly of Oreo cookies. Madness.]

Dinner that night was to be at La Mercerie – a genuinely ace French restaurant, seemingly placed at the intersection of a smart Parisian café and a particularly high-end furniture store. ‘Come for the flatware, stay for the food’ etcetera, etcetera. While it was passing odd that furniture shoppers occasionally sauntered past our fine repast, the service was exceptional and the food rich and fabulously tasty. A grade-A start to the evening, I’d wager.

Once we paid the ever-so-slightly ruinous bill of fare, we went around the corner to Sel Rrose, where at long last The Eagle landed, bringing our team up to full strength. Cocktails a plenty, a late dinner for the feathered one, and a wildly eclectic playlist made for a very high time – a very high time followed up by a brief but enjoyable dance at Mercury Lounge, a nearby Indie bar with DJs of limited ability and a clientele as white as the driven snow. ‘Whitey’s on the moon’, as they said in the late sixties. ‘Whitey’s on the moon.’

 

…the liquor was so awful strong, my head went round and round.

Saturday 20th July, 2019: It’s wedding day, my friends – and it’s an absolute fooken scorcher!

It’s important to eat heartily pre-wedding, so it was (substantial) bagels for breakfast from nearby ‘Tal Bagels’, before a horribly, awfully, hellishly hot journey up to Fordham University in the Bronx. Besuited in Harlem Train Station on the warmest day NYC’s seen in seven years may well be the most miserable I’ve ever been – a literal hades on earth, with one working ticket machine and no working fans.

This sweaty trial, however, proved to be the day’s early and absolute nadir. As soon as we staggered across the college’s green and leafy campus and bundled into the welcoming cool of the comely university church, everything got significantly more pleasant. The ceremony proved an agreeably liberal mix of Catholic and Protestant, with the best lines reserved for Rev. Lothrop, the father of the bride: “I prayed for the sunshine; the Father here brought the heat!” Boom, and if you will, boom.

Once the thing was done and dusted and Mr Sam Seaborn and Miss Marcia Clarke had become Mr Sam Seaborn and Ms Marcia Clarke, we were all bused upstate, without too much incident, to a midway Crowne Plaza Hotel, where we hit the bar and waited for the wedding party to finish off their wedding party duties. Then it was back onto the buses which ferried us, this time with a good deal more incident (minor crashes, major wrong turns, etc.) to the reception proper at Falkirk Estate & Country Club.

Now it’s a strict policy of mine to enjoy weddings to their fullest (as was doubtless at least partially conveyed in my earlier account of the nuptials of our fine Aussie mates, WBB and WWG). Accordingly, my subsequent accounts of said shindigs are regularly found wanting in both the structure and the detail departments. This here retelling, true to form, is no different. There was, in no particular order and with no particular punctuation, a great deal of the following:

Food, food, piles and plates and platters of a whole universe of fabulous food, with open bars and hotdog stands, and with pastrami and prawns and delicious pulled porks, and beers switching to shorts and longs with ginger ale meeting thirsty lips, while canapes are slung about and hands wrung and sweet speeches made and laughter and early-doors dancing, and wines arriving with jests and smiles, both fizzy and flat, red and white and pink, and more speeches and sweet sentiments and moon rivers and rockets soaring high and the food keeps arriving, each morsel tastier than the last and then the tastiest morsel of all arrives at this time, as the tenacious MC kept saying, ‘At this time’ the bride will do this, and ‘At this time’ the groom might do that, and then we’re back up to the bar and out on the terrace and at this time the searing heat of the day has abated in the dusk and the fireflies dart and the music swells and suddenly, at this time, it’s time to go, off to the buses with us all, our stomachs full and hearts still fuller and the sprawling manor behind us fades into the stately New York darkness.

There was lots of singing sur l’autobus de retour – that much I remember, through a haze of softly spoken words and gentle gestures and pleasant, transient companionship. Once Crown Plaza-ed, we, the foreign clan, decided against the distant train, opting instead to wait our turn for lengthy, peaceful taxi rides back home.

Upon arrival, the foolhardy and the brave sunk a final round of recap beers – it had been one hell of a wedding, after all, and there was plenty for us to discuss and digest, late into the humid night.

 

Yes away, Sammy, my dear Marcie; aye you New York girls, you can dance the polka!

My final USA day, Sunday 21st, was ushered in without much warning by a peeved cleaner knocking upon our door, apparently expecting us out 15 minutes previous. A swift and hasty and melancholic packing session later, we were all out on the streets, feeling, shall we say, ‘interesting’. A Gay Arctic Monkey and Z-Unit had left at sparrowfart am, and The Jane Janey, scratching in the sand and not letting go of his hand, was now dragging The Satsuma to that most dreaded of all Sunday pastimes – brunch.

That left Graeme Gage (sans quartet), The Eagle and I to fend for ourselves for a wee while. The first stop, accordingly, was The Eagle’s (s)wanky new eyrie in Soho, where bags were dropped, and where cold water was poured upon faces and beaks. We then strolled, like the mad dogs and Englishmen we were, across to Katz’s Delicatessen in the midday sun. Here, The Eagle and I started things off with completely gratuitous chilli dogs before (just about) taking down between us a massively vast Rueben sandwich. Graeme G. ordered a quartet of potato pancakes, which, to this day, strikes a fella as a curious ol’ order and no mistake.

Across next to Queens, for the final act of this particular Yankee stage-play. We kicked things off at ‘The Gantry’ with starter beers and a nice, relaxing cool down, and then it was onwards to ‘Fifth Hammer Brewing Company’ for the official post-wedding beverages. Sam Seaborn, his parents, his best man and, most importantly of all, his brand-new bride were all here, along with assorted other family and friends. Aye, it was warm in that open-air hangar, but the beers were fresh and assorted and free-flowing, and the conversation tippity-top.

A ‘hardcore’ of this group began to emerge; one which included The (now returned and thoroughly-brunched) Satsuma and Jane Janey – who, incidentally, says she’s a beautician and who’ll sell you nutrition. This fine cohort popped next door together to ‘The Gutter’, a bar/old-school bowling alley, for pitchers of lager and markedly edible hotdogs: that is to say, a wonderfully fitting NYC swansong for this ol’ lump of coal.

The Satsuma and I, after many a tearful goodbye, had ‘at this time’ to pick up our bundles and hop on the slow train to JFK. Once at that pauper amongst airports, there was time sufficient only to sink a couple of Terminal One Tsingtaos, before falling asleep as soon as we’d been shown to our seats dans l’avion.

We only discovered that our departure had been delayed by two full hours when our wheels hit the Gatwick tarmac, such was the depth of our post-NYC somnolence. Not that this postponement mattered a fig in the wider scheme of things – for I would have much greater reasons why I failed to make my France-bound flight, a half dozen hours later…

But that my friends, is a lamentable tale for another time…for now, let me simply luxuriate a while in a wildly successful New York jaunt. A short trip, true, and inordinately dear, but truly, truly one for the ages.

Could it have possibly been bettered? No one can know for sure.

Thai Times II: Koh Tao & Bangkok

Friday 8th February

Chicken Tikka and I said our fond farewells over breakfast, with tears falling into muesli and with hugs heartier even than the full english on the plate of The Eagle. You see, the rest of the gang had another lovely Koh Samui day to endure, whilst CT and I hightailed it on a boat up to distant, paradisal Koh Tao.

A chugging minibus to the bustling port on the west of the island was our first stint, followed swiftly after by bote numero uno to Koh Pha Ngan, something of a ‘hub’ for the Chumphon Archipelago. Not a bad craft, all-told: air conditioned, swift across the water, no dramas at all. On our second boat, this one to Koh Tao, we were sat on flimsy plastic stools on the middle deck, sliding around as we took in the wide blue views. A longer poke, this one; I very much doubt I could’ve swum it.

And then, at last, rising from the seas like the head of a giant, glorious turtle with a thick green and rocky thatch, Koh Tao appeared before us. It truly is a very beautiful spot indeed, the water even clearer than Samui’s and the tumbledown boulders a lighter, almost Mediterranean grey. Once ashore, we taxied over to our first port of call, Beach Club by Haad Tien, a superb looking hostelry, tucked down in famed Shark Bay with its white sands, gleaming rocks and swaying palms.

Here we snacked and sipped away the rest of a wonderful afternoon, before taking a quick dip in the warm blue waters just as dusk began to fall. It was then back to the room to rest up and change for an excellent dinner at the InSea Restaurant, where we very much enjoyed a selection of three unspeakably delicious fish-based Thai dishes. There was even a rather charming, stumbled proposal a few tables over to watch and enjoy!

In rhymed and overly comma-ed summation, KT you see, seems, for me, to be the very place to be.

Saturday 9th 

After Friday evening’s feast only the lightest of light breakfasts was required that morning – the Mansfield rig had taken a bit of a battering already, so there was no pressing need to gorge much before noon.

Perhaps with this in mind, I jogged (slowly) around the headland, uphill and down, to see if an easy path could be found to our next-door next stop, the fabulous looking Jamahkiri Resort. In short, after much sweat, I found that said path could not, in fact, be found – not by me in any case. Still, exercise is its own reward, yes? Yes?! Yes.

Regardless, Chicken Tikka and I, feeling active, headed down to the bay and enjoyed an hour or two of high-quality snorkelling, waving a friendly ‘Howdy there’ to a whole gamut of large and colourful fish, busy munching on the small reef which sits happily beneath the bay. While I may, perhaps, have seen a wider variety of tropical poisson before, I cannot for the life of me remember seeing the blighters in such impressive numbers as I did in Shark Bay. I particularly enjoyed the territorial wee buggers that give your feet a solid headbutt if you come too close to their favourite piece of coral, as well as the hefty, wildly iridescent clownfish which swum around lazily, well-aware of the spectacular impression they made.

Alas, our visit to this watery Shangri-La could only last so long – for at 1pm sharp it was time to mosey next door. Thankfully, the good folks at Jamahkiri had been good enough to send around a motor, saving us a great deal of hassle. Round the headland we then drove, and up to the very top of a steeply sloping cliffside, onto which, it seemed, clung a vast and sprawling mansion.

Now, while we thought the previous gaff was pretty darn good, Chicken T and I had simply no idea what lay in store for us…for this place, this place of places, was really quite sensational.

If anything, there were too many fun things to do: exploring the bright rocks and precipitous gleaming staircases of the resort; swimming in and drinking delicious milkshakes by the Best of All Possible Pools; wandering down to the hotel’s private jetty to explore the rocks and coves around the gorgeous headland. Our room itself was also rather marvellous, with wonderful views across Shark Bay and, curiously, our personal collection of finely carved and polished Buddhas.

Dinner too was excellent, up in the shoeless opulence of The Terrace, a joint which looked half like a temple, half like a multi-tiered Chinese tea house. I ordered a red snapper and Chicken T had rock lobster – both eminently edible…one could get used to living like this!

I mean, one couldn’t, as one’s meagre funds would scarcely permit it. But, theoretically speaking at least, this, this my friends, was living.

Sunday 10th 

Sadly, our stay on ‘Turtle Island’ was an all-too brief one, and necessity dictated that we had to leap, weeping like bairns, onto the back of the 8.30am truck back down to the jetty – a truck-ride which commenced a full day of somewhat arduous voyaging:

  • Boat #1, taking us back to Koh Pha Ngan;
  • Boat #2, right across the western Gulf of Thailand to Surat Thani;
  • Bus #1, on the slow roads to the airport; and
  • Plane #1 to Bangkok.

Infants began screaming midway through Boat #2 and continued their emotional songs with an almost operatic, Wagnerian bent. The airport had an air-side off-license, however, and I had noise-cancelling headphones, so it wasn’t all bad, given the long and short of it.

Once at last in Thailand’s vast and smoky capital, a speedy and refreshingly good-value taxi took us downtown to Emporium Suites Chatrium Hotel – our stay funded courtesy of ‘someone’ tenuously connected to The Old Man (it’s often best not to ask, my friends).

Leaving Chicken Tikka to convalesce at our new home and order copious room service, I toddled off round the corner to dinner at Kebabs & Kurries (the #1 joint in town, according to Australian Trip Advisor). Here I met The Old Man & Katzenjammer, who had both made across via direct flight and who had, it seemed, endured a great deal less fuss than us. Some quality Indian fare and a great deal of Kingfisher beer was very much enjoyed, and we rounded the evening off nicely, watching England smash the French in the rugby at The Robin Hood English pub, just opposite our hotel. Bangkok first impressions: very good indeed, more of this, please!

Monday 11th 

Breakfasting as a quartet high up within those imperious Emporium Suites, we sketched out a vague plan of action for the day: a nice, chilled morning, as per, then off to the much-vaunted Grand Palace, where we could gaze upon Emerald Buddhas, fluted towers and Chinese tourists aplenty.

And so it was – not a bad tourist trap, as they go, if a wee bit hot crowded [Spoiler Alert: I preferred Tuesday’s temples.] We didn’t spend too much of our afternoon among the betempled throng, deciding instead to stroll about central Bangkok slightly more aimlessly, stopping off for milkshakes at a curiously European coffee shop and wandering around various market alleyways: Katzenjammer, it seemed, had garments to buy and The Old Man, as always, had embarrassing haggles/Pyrrhic victories to win.

Shopping, that crippling and global disease, is clearly infectious for, before I knew what was happening, Chicken Tikka and I had taken a taxi over to the MBK Centre to look through a host of knock-offs and nonsense. Chicken T, following a preparatory afternoon snack, displayed some impressive haggling techniques of her own, sourcing gifts and souvenirs for herself and all her sisters; I went one better, by purchasing nothing at all. Mine is a talent which simply cannot be taught – one is either born with it, or one buys things.

Heading back to the hotel, we got caught in amusingly terrible rush hour traffic coming back – congestion so bad that even the taxi driver himself seemed notably disquieted by it all, loudly lamenting his lot and his foolish career choices. By the time we returned to the hotel we sorely needed to cool down, taking a highly indulgent evening dip in the seventh-floor outdoor pool and stealing a handful of The Old Man’s french-fries.

Said Old Man, that eve, had an unswayable hankering for Italian food, so, accordingly, we strolled across to the nearby Bella Napoli, an establishment very highly-rated by the slightly strung-out American fella smoking a dart outside. And lo and behold, he was absolutely correct! Here at BN we enjoyed some really rather fantastic and authentic food, including a pizza recreation of Venice (yes, really) and the restaurant’s last portion of a delicious beef stew served with saffron risotto. Full marks and ten points to Hufflepuff.

The time had then come, apparently, according to the lasses, for a couple of rooftop bars: Firstly, we tried out the next door Compass Hotel’s 35th floor Vanilla Sky Bar for a tasty cocktail and, in my case, a mild attack of vertigo: Why were the barriers transparent, readers? And why, oh why, were they so damn low?!

And then, no sooner than we’d settled up at Vanilla Sky and ignoring my childish whimpering,  Chicken T decided that ‘we must go higher’. Thus, she and I trekked right across town to Lebua’s famous ‘Sky Bar’, sixty-five (six-tee-five!) floors up. Firstly, we were ushered into the north-facing ‘Distil’ whisky bar for a delicious but eye-wateringly expensive cocktail and unbeatable views over the old city; then, having given the grinning barman unto half my kingdom, we wandered across, underneath the ‘Dome’ atop the tower, to Sirocco Restaurant and the Sky Bar itself, for many a photo and a second attack of justifiable vertigo. This bastard was high. Fabulous, undoubtedly impressive, but very, very high. Much like Bowie in the seventies, or The Beatles when they went all Sergeant Peppery.

Tuesday 12th & Wednesday 13th 

A chilled Tuesday morning with a chilled Tuesday breakfast was made better still by some sunny lazing by the hotel pool and (huzzah!) Chicken Tikka and I managing to check into seats next to each other for our flight the next day. This buoyancy quickly turned into despair, however – as it signified a single, fell thing: we had but 24 hours until we flew back home!

There was nothing to do but make the best of it: after another pleasant year spent in Bangkok’s ridiculously bad traffic en route to the city centre, we explored the wonders of Wat Pho, a fabulous temple complex near the river housing the famed Reclining Buddha – a serious golden unit, practically a league in length. Around every corner there was a new temple or tower, ornate in beauty and surrounded by much sparser crowds than the previous day’s attraction. All told, this joint got an untrammelled thumbs up from both me and Chicken T.

We then took our first and only tuk-tuk of the trip around the corner to The Old Siam Shopping Plaza, for a quick snack and a potter around. No purchases were made this time however, so a perfect shopping trip in my book.

A full-blown, traffic-sparked existential crisis for our afternoon’s final taxi fellow meant we jumped out halfway back to the hotel for a drink at Beer Republic (exactly the wanky western beer joint which The Old Man loves, by the by). This was followed by a hot and sticky stroll past the endless, stationary traffic back to headquarters, stopping only for Chicken T to make her penultimate purchase of the trip at a chic, little children’s clothing store.

The store was little, not the children…though they were too; almost by definition, you see? Oh, never mind, on with the damned blog…

Early that evening Katzenjammer and Chicken T went off for some pampering and nail painting at a nearby Thai spa, so The Old Man and I walked leisurely around the locale, stopping off at Pennina for a few Ashais, a truffley Italian snack and some quality father-son conversation, that is to say, a number of polite and respectful arguments.

We re-joined the ladies at the ‘superfly’ Kenshin Izakaya for some lovely, well-warmed sake and a selection of excellent Japanese fare. Booked onto a 2.30am (!) flight, Katzenjammer and The Old Man went off to pack, watch terrible films and chill out in our room before their ordeal. The night, for Chicken T and I at least, being ‘but young’, we instead went off in search of ‘mango sticky rice’, it being the last chance for the budgie to get outside this favoured delicacy before we too shuffled off home. This we found, at last, at the middling Ruan Songnaree Thai Restaurant (I ordered ice cream instead, as I’m a wee bit dull), thus ticking off our final Thailand ‘to-do’ from our Thailand to-do list.

Back then, to the hotel, to see off The Old Man and Katzenjammer, thanking them most warmly for a trip for the ages. The hour was then upon us to pack up our own suitcases as, early the next day, our trip too would be coming to an end: Have you ever seen a thirty-year-old man bawl like a babe as he stuffed socks into shoes and shirts into holdalls, readers? Well you would have that evening, had you been in Room 2928, Emporium Suites Chatrium Hotel, Bangkok.

*

A restless night was followed by a pleasantly stress-free morning, making it to the airport in good time for Chicken Tikka’s final purchases (odd vegan treats for close vegan friends) and to sit down for a wee cup of wildly overpriced tea.

As I sipped my mug of builder’s a nasty thought kept attempting to barge its way into the damp and misty caverns of my mind:

Work tomorrow morning

Work. The office. A computer stuffed to the gills with emails requiring immediate action. A grey sky outside the window. Colleagues asking me where I’d been, I look so tanned…

I began to panic. Post-holiday blues already setting in and I was still in blasted Bangkok! There was only one thing for it. It was time, high time, to start writing this here blog, and remind oneself immediately of one’s myriad, uncountable blessings!

Right, where should we start, my friends? Hmm…ha, why not, eh? February 1st, back in the office: it’s as good/bad a place to start as any, I suppose…

Thai Times on Koh Samui

Friday 1st February

Having watched the office clock all morning like a particularly work-shy hawk, I ‘did one’ from King’s apace around noon and grabbed myself a westbound Piccadilly all the way to Terminal Five. The day was finally here; my Thailand times were at last upon me!

At Heathrow I convened with me second sister, one Si-Moan de Beauvoir. She was sitting, as is so often her wont, rather gloomily upon her oversized suitcase, glaring at her phone like it owed her money. Hailing her over, I tried to work my undeniable magic on various matronly BA staffers, attempting to get our gang all seated together. In this quest I failed – but the thought, my friends, the thought was undeniably there.

After wandering without incident through security, flushed with the excitable idiocy of one amongst the sunlit foothills of a famous adventure, I permitted Si-Moan de B to choose where we lunched. Suddenly we were in Wagamama’s, of all places, ordering off the vegan menu…

There was no time for my rage and despair to crescendo, however, as we were almost immediately joined by a five-foot vision of loveliness, the third and final member of our flying party: the delectable and always delicious Chicken Tikka.

“Wagamama’s?! Really Mansfield? You know we’re going to East Asia, right?”

“I…but…ah, well…”

“I couldn’t change my seat either, by the way, so you’re going to have to ask someone to move for us.”

“Ah, right. Great.”

Chicken T – it should be noted at this point – hates flying much like Indiana Jones hates Nazis; that is to say, an appreciable amount. It was, therefore, unthinkable that I, her strapping stalwart and her shining moon and stars, would not be sitting nearby during the upcoming eleven hours to Bangkok.

Inside the fuselage, cobwebs hanging from the concave ceiling and the air smelling of old paper, it seemed, at first, like there was nothing doing vis-à-vis switching seats. Both of us, leagues away from each other, were placed next to separate, smug and ghastly couples, rejoicing in their nefarious ploy to ‘book their tickets together’ like the slatterns and harlots they were. However, after a painful episode of musical chairs, I managed at last to source us seats either side of the aisle, so our loving hands could reach out to grasp each other tenderly, only for them to be routinely mowed down by high-speed drinks trolleys. Such are the mountains young lovers must scale, my friends. Ain’t no valley low, etc. etc. amen.

Despite the zero inches of late January/early February snow which had, that week, ground much of the UK’s infrastructure to a halt, we got away from LHR without too much hassle. The European atmosphere proved a little bumpy at first [Insert Choice Politics Gag Here] and Chicken T was clearly unimpressed by this turbulence. Personally, I found myself quite calm and contented, drinking cheap red wine, eating mini pretzels and watching a supremely silly Tom Hardy movie. As we crossed from Friday into Saturday, dining on the middling vegetarian option of ‘cauliflower mac and cheese’, I found that all memory of London and of honest toil had slipped away. I had shifted, already, into ‘full-on holiday mode’.

Saturday 2nd 

The BA number nine plane touched down in at Suvarnabhumi Airport in good time, despite being a craft so old it was practically made of bronze. I’d barely grabbed a nanosecond of the dreamless all flight, alas, but these setbacks surely make us stronger men.

A slight issue arose with the good folks at the Bangkok transfer desk, which, in short, ended with me ditching young Si-Moan de Beauvoir and giving it the old David Rudisha all around the joint, dashing through immigration and breaking the sound barrier through security, all the way back to departures. Here, a-panting and a-sweating, I bumped into The Old Man and Katzenjammer for a sweet, if brief, reunion.   

Due to the vagaries of overbooked southeast Asian flights over Chinese New Year, this pair, along with Si-Moan de B, were on the 11:30 to Koh Samui, while I was on the noon flight and Chicken Tikka, still rechecking her baggage in over the other side of the airport, languished on the 12:45. I, therefore, flew alone, on time and beset with attentive airhostesses giving me much complimentary ‘stuff’, including a portion of impressively spicy shrimp. Again and again I would bat them away, as I was, at this point, positively desperate for some slumber – yet sleep, alas, that fickle mistress, simply would not come.

Koh Samui airport is unlike any plane station I have ever seen before, all fluted wooden buildings and grass-lined pathways, with no observable security whatsoever – more like a Thai-themed Centre Parcs swimming pool than an international airport. I promptly found a changing room-sized salle de bains and changed out of my English vestments and into my tropical ensemble, instantly feeling and looking a million baht.

I wandered back ‘air-side’ – as one can when security also double as cleaners, travel agents and taxi-wranglers – and met the fair Chicken T as she landed. A short while later, we’re in the back of a minibus, heading south towards the Shiva Samui Beach Resort, where The Old Man had sourced us a tasty villa for the week. The drive down took a lot longer than I had expected, testament to Koh Samui being a great deal heftier than this old lump of coal had thought, but eventually in we stumbled: Office to temporary new homestead in a casual twenty-something hours. A drink was now needed. A stiff one.

The villa itself was rather excellent, with generously-sized rooms, a pleasant little pool and aircon which gave it the beans. It was here that The Eagle and Moan of Arc manifested – these young scamps having arrived on Koh Samui a few days previous to get even more island for their pound sterling. It was also here that Chicken T met The Old Man, the first occasion in almost a decade that he had been introduced to any paramour of his firstborn. The oddsmakers took a beating and he avoided any cask-strength faux pas. I breathed again. It was still, as the youths would say, ‘on’.

This splendid septet, now at full-capacity, walked the handful of yards to the beach bar, sampling a few tasty beverages, many of which resided in ‘young coconuts’, before we ankled a few more paces over to the resort’s humble but serviceable restaurant. The staff, as is apparently common in Thailand, were terrifyingly friendly, the food received fine reviews, and good times were had by all.

Plans that evening to frequent the ‘Samui Shamrock’ in the town of Lamai up the road in order to watch Ireland play England in the Six Nations proved, quite literally, to be so much ‘pub talk’ from the group’s menfolk. Rather, it was early nights for all – and hopefully, God willing, a good few hours of restorative slumber.

Sunday 3rd 

Chicken Tikka and I awaken very much in the middle of the night, awake as the noble Massai, battle-ready, spears sharpened. We watch, of all things, a documentary on the much-maligned British band Coldplay. Sleep, mercifully, eventually returns, and it is not until way past noon that we wake again.

This proves to be, as was always likely, a famously lazy Sunday: Incidents included a pair of notably sub-par club sandwiches, a Thai beer or two, and catching up on the splendid rugby missed during the night, using a handy VPN. All the teams I would’ve cheered for, had I been man enough to stay up and watch ‘em, managed to secure famous Ws. ‘Hala!’, as they say in the Gulf. ‘Hala, hala, hala!’

That afternoon, The Eagle, Chicken T and I ventured north to the nearest major settlement on a brave and admirable supermarket run – not for our own glory, you understand, but for the commonweal. Lamentably, it transpired, the King of Thailand’s licensing laws dictate that no booze can be sold between the hours of 2pm and 5pm, not even for ready money. To cheer myself up, I suggested to The Eagle that he claimed his VAT back for the shop from customer services. Two weeks later he re-emerged, an infinitesimally richer bird, with anger in his heart.

Back at the beach, a wee swim in the warm and lapping shallows preceded a flavoursome Thai dinner. My previous, fragile orders up to this point had been somewhat western in nature, so this was an awakening indeed: Delicious stuff, with chillies which seldom ‘messed around’. Evening drinks at the beach bar turned into (strong) cocktails, (rude) card games and (heated) debates at the villa. It ended up being a rather late one for some of us – a 2.30am finish in fact. Jet-lag, my friends, is a very curious lady, with unknowable tastes and a wicked sense of humour.

Monday 4th 

The day, for most of us at least, began with a criminally early breakfast (read: 10.30am). For those with heavy heads this was a cruel beginning indeed.

The myriad pains of sober reality melted away soon though, sunning ourselves by the poolside bar, a spot of sea swimming and a couple of restorative drinks making everything just dandy. Chicken Tikka and I then set out for a late afternoon explore. Our first attempt was only middlingly successful, going via a supremely sketchy zoo-cum-aquarium and accidentally taking us in one giant loop:

“Say, that bald bird playing beach volleyball sure does look like our friend The Eagle.”

“…that is The Eagle, Mansfield. How have you taken us back to our own *&%*ing beach?!”

“It certainly does look similar, look at all the sand…”

After a short sojourn watching The Eagle exhibit his trademark aquiline athleticism, we made a second effort to strike out to pastures new, northwards this time, along the palm-lined sands of the beach. While we certainly found a ‘new’ locale, it was, truth be told, far from the nicest of spots, with rotting fish heads and feral island cats abounding. Eventually we clambered off this fetid span of beach into a slightly less rundown, but still far from salubrious, village, before making our way back towards HQ, our desire for exploration now very much quenched.

As night fell, we popped into the rather swanky X2 restaurant at the 4K resort for a drink or two or three. They were, that evening, putting on some rather curious Chinese New Year ‘entertainment’ for their oriental guests, with a suitably embarrassed Thai lass doing some kind of bizarre Mandarin dance. The music, even Chicken Tikka agreed, was bad – and this is a girl who voluntarily listens to Ed Sheeran. Mercifully, it stopped around eight/eight-thirty, and sweet sanity slowly reclaimed her throne.

The Eagle, Moan of Arc and Si-Moan de Beauvoir joined us at X2 for dinner, and together we enjoyed some of the very loveliest food of the entire holiday: sea bass for me, lamb shank massaman for others; all damned good. We then waddled villa-wards along the deserted, starlit beach, for some more cards, further beverages, and bed.

Tuesday 5th 

‘Breakfast’ proved an easier proposition on this particular morning, evidencing significant spiritual and moral growth. It was followed, in true holiday fashion, by an impossibly chilled morning of reading and napping.

At 2pm sharp we younger folks got on the shuttle to the fabulous Lamai Beach. While ‘our beach’ was an undeniably beautiful affair, all stretching sandbanks, clear shallow waters and breaking waves far, far away, nestled below the horizon – this beach was ‘proper Thailand’: tall palms, low bars, white sand and hundreds upon hundreds of fat, sunburnt tourists.

Down this sun-drenched new Mecca we wandered, ignoring the strangled pleas of scores of proprietors, hungry for our trade: The Eagle had a set place in mind, and would not, this day, be swayed. Following his mighty lead, we settled at last on the loungers of the No Stress Beach Bar and ordered many drinks.

Leaving the others to their cocktails and their lounging, I attempted a wee snorkel between the rolling waves, finding nothing worth seeing. During this brief period of absence, however, the girls had managed to get themselves hustled out of their hard-earned baht by some aged Thai crones peddling eye-wateringly expensive foot massages. As they say, there’s one (or in this case, three) born every minute, my friends.

A little while later, Chicken Tikka, The Eagle and Moan of Arc went go off to buy some, quote-unquote, “tat” from Lamai town, leaving Si-Moan de B and I to hold the fort – that is to say, drink a couple more cocktails then pay the entire ruddy bill. Just as we were getting a wee bit poor and restless, who would arrive but Katzenjammer and The Old Man, searching for a beach-side joint for some early evening supper.

Fresh from relieving me of much of my worldly wealth, and spotting a big fish just crying out to be reeled in and grilled, a nearby waiter informed The Old Man that the No Stress Beach Bar could just as easily, for him, if the money was right, become the No Stress Beach Restaurant. Very much liking the cut of this young fellow’s shorts, The Old M readily agreed, and instructed him to ‘get the Changs in’. Chang the beer, you understand, not the Changs who live down in number forty-two and whose daughter plays the cello.

The dinner we were upsold, praise be, turned out to be really rather excellent, with my ‘BBQ Big Fish’ proving the pick of the orders. I was slightly put out by the aforementioned waiter lad, flushed with victory, questioning my capacity for spice in front of my family, my friend, and the present Mrs. Mansfield, but into each life some rain must (con-)descend.

Our bellies replete with splendid fish stocks, we strolled up to the main ‘strip’, for want of a better term, of metropolitan Lamai, looking for a digestif or two. We popped down an extremely sketchy ‘KK Street’, then swiftly popped back out, away to safety, our immortal souls still just about intact. Moan of A suggested, incorrectly, that we should go to ‘Outback Bar’ ‘as it was there’; instead we opted, correctly, for the next-door ‘One O One 101’ – a rather eccentric cocktail bar, serving interesting drinks of variable quality, with nary an Australian in sight.

Following these colourful offerings, The Old Man, Katzenjammer and me sisters grabbed a taxi back, with Chicken T, The Eagle and I opting to stay for ‘just one more’. We went, purely ironically of course, to the Samui Shamrock – the dive which would’ve hosted us blokes on the very first night for the Ireland England game, had we not been so cowardly/jet-lagged.

And it was here in the SS (unfortunate acronym that one…) that I met, to my knowledge at least, my first ‘ladyman’ of the trip. This was quite exciting, especially for the waitress in question, as I am a ravishingly handsome fellow, full to the brim with ‘witty banter’. Forgoing the terrible Guinness and sticking to the Changs and Changs alone, here we listened to a game five-/six-piece band of no little ability, which all took it in turns to provide lead vocals, in a pleasantly socialist set. A wildly expensive taxi then took us back home for a private pool party with the impatiently waiting sisterhood, where laughter was prince-regent and all souls attending were, from time to time, sent directly to Dunktown.

Wednesday 6th

Namung Waterfall was the chief attraction of the day, meaning that the morning could be, for a change, nice and lazy, with a spot more pool, a spot more beach and, of course, a generous spot o’ lunch. Around two-ish, the car arrived to take us all into the island’s interior, and in we seven hopped, unaware that this vehicle ferried one of our number to their violent and unfortunate doom.

All told, Koh Samui’s Namung Waterfall #2 was a wee bit touristy for my august tastes, with far too many solemn looking elephants knocking about the place, seemingly a bit bemused by their lot. Once we’d climbed high enough, however, up to the ‘waterfall proper’ and away from the waterfall-themed amusement park down at the bottom, the scenery improved markedly. There were pleasant wild pools in which to take a refreshing dip, and large and craggy rocks to clamber over and all was pretty darn lovely, with the sun high in a cloudless sky and the birds singing smooth jazz numbers in the tall and slender trees.

One bird which abruptly stopped singing, however, was The Eagle, who, looking for superior shots for his ‘Insta’, took an almighty header down a steep drop and broke his wing between two unyielding boulders. Accordingly, a trip west with Moan of Arc and The Old Man to a rather serviceable hospital on the far side of the island somewhat coloured the rest of his day!

That evening, once we had all reconvened, we decided that we needed some good, old-fashioned ‘cheering up’, given that one of our brave number was now crippled, mayhaps for life. We therefore strode, licking our lips expectantly, back to the 4K Restaurant for an evening of feasting. The Eagle, his wing in a sling, called to the waiting staff in a brave and unbroken baritone to “make with their best” and “go get out some bottles from the oldest bin”, and we plonked ourselves down on a long table beneath the a weird, silhouette lamp, ready for a gastronomic treat.

Alas, much like the current English test XI, this glossy establishment proved unable to string two decent performances together, with the head waiter/maître d’ having a bit of a personal shocker: Informing Chicken Tikka that the dish she was now presented with was the exact same meal as that she had ordered 48 hours previously, despite it being a patently different construction, was certainly a low point, demonstrating a neck so brass he could probably get a gig in the Home Office (had he been born white, British and Protestant, of course).

That being said, credit where cr. is due – fabulous, spicy cocktails and a selection of appetisers which really came to the party kept 4K from truly troubling our bad books that evening, and by the time we stumbled back along the gloomy beach for a few drinks at the villa and a few more midnight games, spirits were generally pretty high. In short, despite everything, it had been another groovy and most excellent day.

For most of us…

It probably didn’t make The Eagle’s Top 5.

Thursday 7th 

This, dull as it may seem dear readers, was a bit of an admin-y morning for young Chicken Tikka and I. It was, you see, our very last full day on the fare isle of Koh Samui, and things, my friends, needed to be ‘done’.

Accordingly, post-breakfast we went and booked our ferry passage across to Koh Tao – island #2 of our trip and one about which I was particularly excited. We then, after some ingenious shampoo/deodorant lid improvisation, managed to throw a heaving load of sweat-soiled laundry into the wash. It transpired, most tragically, that various offending items of mine were not fated to survive this violent process; and while Chicken T was the sole suspect, she avoided jailtime due to lack of evidence and a stacked jury. Goodbye, ratty old linen shirt. This world was too cruel for one so pure as ye.

Various pool-times at various Shiva Samui waterholes were the order of this final day. Over a drink or two we all shot a little eight-ball pool (I lost) and played a wee bit of table tennis TT (I reigned supreme, bestriding the arena like a colossus). Slices of pizza and occasional coconuts with pink straws punctuated the day quite nicely, whetting the appetite nicely for a delicious Thai curry for dinner, with a starter and desert of Mansfield-brand vodkamelon.

For posterity: Si-Moan de Beauvoir and The Eagle conducted themselves like true Britons in the destruction of this fabulous and succulent creation; the other members of our party, not so much. Cries of “Mansfield, this is pure vodka!” and “This tastes horrible, you’ve messed it all up!” did those who proclaimed them precious little credit, and brought shame on themselves and their sainted mothers.

That night the resort was hosting a ‘Beach Party’, complete with a spirited ‘fire show’ and live DJ. Being fun-loving folks, we gave the binge every chance, with Chicken T and Si-Moan de B even getting their faces painted with luminous, fluorescent designs…but the puppy just failed to ‘bark’. Be it the clientele, the midweek date or simply the notion itself, Shiva Samui, that evening, was just not ‘kicking off’. Instead, we headed back to the villa one last time, to arrange a drinks party of our very own, pouring scorn upon the humbled rind of the defeated melon and generally seeing our time on Koh Samui off ‘right’. It had been the best of times, it had been the vodkamelonist of times.