Mancunian Candidate

The bittersweet defeat of my unsuccessful attempt to hitch out of Ipswich has been tempered by the fact that I am again staying with some wonderful strangers.

Woodbridge was great, a nice break from the fast pace of London. I mostly just sat around, read and watched TV. One day I headed into Ipswich and checked out the museum and a place called Christchuch Mansion – essentially a really large estate that has a lot of old portraits and paintings. It was pretty cool. The Ipswich museum was pretty standard in regards to the natural history stuff. However, it excelled at giving me a brief history of England. It was also very cool to learn about how the area was affected by World War II. Because it was on the east coast of England, and a semi-important port to the ocean, it was pretty heavily bombed by the Germans.

Christchurch Mansion

Christchurch Mansion

A poster in the Ipswich Museum from WWII on how to identify friend and foe in the air. (Cory, I figured you’d like this).

A poster in the Ipswich Museum from WWII on how to identify friend and foe in the air. (Cory, I figured you’d like this).

Ipswich … hmm… yeah, this photo about sums it up.

Ipswich … hmm… yeah, this photo about sums it up.

I left Woodbridge early Friday morning and confronted the pissing sheet of rain with vigor — for about an hour and a half. I tried a couple different spots near the round-about heading onto the A14, the road that headed roughly in the direction of Manchester. I was armed with a good sized piece of cardboard with big black “TOWARDS MANCHESTER” printed on it. It was last seen on the side of the road, virtually mush from the rain, with a desperate “NORTH or WEST” on the back.

Admitting I was not going anywhere, and fast, I found a local bus and headed into Ipswich city centre. Finding the bus station (a.k.a. a church converted into a tourism agency), I stood in the queue for about 20-30 minutes, struggling with my backpack, and finally got to the front of the line. I was informed that the bus to Manchester, via Cambridge, had left at 9 a.m. (it was now about 11:30 a.m.). My only other option was to get the 3:10 p.m. bus to London and then a bus in London to Manchester, arriving at like quarter to midnight. The cost for the bus was about 34 quid, so I decided to take my new found information to the train station and see what they had to offer. A 10-15 minute hike later and I found out I had just missed the train. Godamnit! I was beginning to feel like I was in some sick British-version of a Steven King novel and was never going to be able to leave Ipswich. The next train was at 2:20 p.m., but would get me into Manchester at 6:30 p.m., which was exactly the time I was supposed to meet Dani. The train was ₤47, but weighing the extra 10 quid against arriving uber late and having to climb back up the hill to the bus station, I decided to pop a squat and wait for the rails to take me north.

The train ride, even with changes in Peterborough and a missed transfer in Doncaster, was pretty good. Definitely better than the 8 hours the coach would have taken – and god knows how long hitching would have taken. Luckily the weight of failure counteracted the lightening of my pockets… and balance was restored.

After being pointed in the right direction by a cute girl with a trumpet, Dani met me at Piccadilly Gardens and we grabbed a bus for Chorlton, the borough of Manchester that her flat was in. “Flat” isn’t really the right word, it is more a multi-level house with stairs I still haven’t seen the top of. Some of Dani’s flatmates are out of town (one in Blackpool and one in Prague), however the ones that remain are great! Claire is an Aussie in marketing, and works for a company that helps implement proper programs and facilities for people with disabilities. Willow is studying her Masters in Animal Behavior and is from New Zealand and John works with his dad in photography, and is quite funny.

We spent Friday night drinking some Bass beer I bought at the local Safeway, bustin’ out various riddles and watching hilarious British television – of which I cannot remember a single title. My memory of the night may be somewhat hazy due to the fact that Willow brought out a bottle of Absinthe. I have never been a big fan of straight liquor, and am usually tentative of shots of anything strong, but never, never have I watched three people swig back a shotglass full of liquid and then proceed to uncontrollably twitch for five minutes. You know that little irk you get when you take a shot of whisky or Jagermiester — like that, but continual. It was brutal.

Saturday Dani had to work, so I hung out with Claire all day. She is really cool — I’m really starting to have a very good opinion of Aussies — not that it was bad before. We went into city centre, walked around a Christmas Market, drank some mulled wine (basically warm spiced red wine), and just generally stared at Mancunian architecture.

Manchester’s town hall – if it looks remarkably like the parliament buildings in London, it’s not a coincidence. Same architect and designed to look the same … ah, the British, known for their originality the world over ;-) . I also like the giant inflated Santa, really brings out that ‘classic’ look.

Manchester’s town hall – if it looks remarkably like the parliament buildings in London, it’s not a coincidence. Same architect and designed to look the same … ah, the British, known for their originality the world over 😉 . I also like the giant inflated Santa, really brings out that ‘classic’ look.

Same buildings, better angle. This is where Claire and I had some mulled wine and browsed the little outdoor Christmas market – Mmmmm, cheese samples.

Same buildings, better angle. This is where Claire and I had some mulled wine and browsed the little outdoor Christmas market – Mmmmm, cheese samples.

Last night (Saturday) was another night of drinking, this time (the safer) red wine and Pepsi with Malibu rum. I also brought out the Crown Royal and reminded Dani what she’s missing living over here. We stayed up until about 4 a.m. trying to solve riddles from the riddle book Sue and Gino got me for my birthday. We also played a killer game of Asshole – but seeing as Willow changed all the rules and kept calling the Asshole a Bastard, I think we’re changing the name to Bastard. Really, I wouldn’t mess with Willow. She’s like 6’1” and a kickboxer… I made her demonstrate her kick on the punching bag in her room … deadly mate. Ironically, she denies that her parents were hippies, even with a name like Willow, and the fact that she’s been a vegetarian since birth (puts my eight years to shame).

Me in a park in Chorlton by Dani’s.

Me in a park in Chorlton by Dani’s.

ani in the same park, just slightly to the left. Can you tell I’m spending LOADS of time on these captions?

ani in the same park, just slightly to the left. Can you tell I’m spending LOADS of time on these captions?

This one is for Gino. I’m sure you’ve all heard, but Bush came to visit London last week. There were TONS of protests and these signs are all over the place.

This one is for Gino. I’m sure you’ve all heard, but Bush came to visit London last week. There were TONS of protests and these signs are all over the place.

This is John. “Wud you lye-ke me to rube ma nipples?”

This is John. “Wud you lye-ke me to rube ma nipples?”

Oh! Also, I got my first solid taste of Rugby. For everyone in North America, where I’m betting it barely made the news, England beat Australia in the World Cup of Rugby yesterday morning. Essentially, over here, this was the equivalent of the Super Bowl. It was also the first time in a LOT of years that the Cup came back to the Northern Hemisphere.

Well, after checking my e-mail yesterday and having an e-mail from a guy that runs a hitchhiking site, I’ve renewed my resolve to once again try my hand at hitching. Basically his e-mail pointed me to a very current message thread on a board that was talking about hitching in the UK. The messages basically said that hitching from rural south-eastern England (read: Suffolk or Ipswich) is useless. It also said that the further north you get, the easier it becomes – the people are friendlier. Plus, hitching from major cities is a lot easier. So, I’ll give it another go, and see what happens, as I’d REALLY like to skip on parting with more money.

And one final note – I got in contact with the editor of the travel section of Canoe.ca, and he’s agreed to publish some article ideas I have for Scotland. With that I contacted Hilton Hotels and I may be staying in a nice room when I get to Edinburgh. I haven’t heard back about comp. transportation yet – which is really what I need.

The Manchester Crew (minus Pete): Willow, John, Me, Dani and Claire.

The Manchester Crew (minus Pete): Willow, John, Me, Dani and Claire.

9 Responses

  1. Scotland

    Hey Ry, good luck with the hitching to Scotland. That is awesome news about writing or giving idea’s for an article for the Scotland. The pictures that you took of the crowds in the streets and people drumming and stuff reminds me of New York City (maybe a little less packed). Can’t wait to hear about your adventure into Scotland. Take Care.

    Luv Ya!
    Crystal

  2. tea time

    Another very amusing post 😉
    Love the pics:P
    Sorry you had to pay to get there, but I am also glad that your chopped up remains didn’t make the local news, sorry you mentioned stephen king so I am all in morbid mode.
    Sounds like you are having an awsome time, keep it up and keep posting.

  3. but what does it look like from the top?

    I LOVED the poster, that is too kewl for words. I hope you train trip was better then the one train i rode and got over booked and had to spend it all in the dining car. Have you had anyone try to sneak into your backpack yet?

    • Re: but what does it look like from the top?

      Dining car… pishaw! I spent 90% of the trip huddle like cattle in the small piece that connects the two traincars together where the doors are… some guy actually went into the out of order bathroom just to sit down. The scots drinking Stella were amusing though (it was a train that was going to Edinburgh).

  4. Makin it quick cause my connections a bitch

    Hey, congrats on the Canoe.ca oportunity! That’s wicked, I was waiting to hear about if the editor had gotten back to you as of yet, so that’s great! Mind sharing a few of your ideas for Scotland? Keep us posted on your journey to being published (and reaping all of the benefits that go along with it, of course). Hope you have better luck this time round with the hitch hiking or else this journey may be a little more costly than first expected. BTW: Ipswich seems very uh…exciting? I’m very fascinated by the various cities. I’m sure I’m not getting the entire picture, and my opinions will be biased towards the pictures I’ve seen, but it’s neat to see what each of them offer. Hope to hear from you again soon! (And just a hitch hiking tip from Vee: Try showing some leg…the drivers usually find that appealing…oh gawd, you should’ve seen this desperate girl by the 406 yesterday…):)

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