New Years’ Is Just Around the Corner

Or so it seems. It’s about time to buy those tickets, book those hotel rooms, otherwise you might be out of luck and stuck at home with a bag of Doritos again.

Whatever happened to spontaneous traveling you say? Got me. I guess you can’t be spontaneous and go to “it” places at the same time.

To get you motivated, here is Editors’ of Sherman’s Travel Top 5 Places to Ring in the New Year:

  1. Aspen, CO, US
  2. Bangkok, Thailand
  3. Barcelona, Spain
  4. Edinburgh, Scottland
  5. Goa, India

I can’t really comment on that because I haven’t spent New Year’s in any of these places although I am putting all of these on my list. I made a commitment to spend the New Year in a different city every year. For the last 13 years, I have managed to do that. My favorite one? Perhaps in Batopilas, in the Copper Canyon region of Mexico a few years ago.

Flood Update From the UK

It appears that the flood is spreading closer to London. Here is a map of the currently affected areas. Today, some 250 people were evacuated from Oxford.

Friends in the UK tell me that the weather in London has been better in the last few days, so hopefully the Thames will remain tame. Although London has some of the most sophisticated flood wall system in the world, let’s hope they don’t have to use it.

Shoes for the British Summer

I got this photo from a friend in London and thought it was too witty not to share. I wouldn’t normally make fun of another country’s unfortunate weather but since I got this from a London resident, I figured I could.

Although the UK is not exactly known for their sunny summers, this year has been especially wet. As you probably know by now, Central Britain has been swamped by rain and flooding. Tens of thousands have even been left without electricity and running water, thousands fled their homes. Even London (some 80 miles from the areas hit hardest) is not an ideal destination right now – wet, wet, wet! If you are planning to go to London, you might consider rescheduling (or prepare yourself for spending your vacation in a pub.)

South Wales, Custard Pie and World Records

Here’s an event I found out about that looks like it would have been a blast. It reminds me of Justin’s post on cheese rolling. On June 24 folks showed up at Margam County Park in South Wales to try to break seven official Guinness World Records. They succeeded at four of them. All world breaking activities happened at a day long community fundraising festival

During the world’s largest custard pie fight, 70 people threw pies at each other for three minutes. Next 735 people bounced on space hoppers for the most people bouncing on space hoppers at the same time catagory. Space hoppers are also called hoppity hops. After that was the world’s longest locomotion dance. That took 1752 people. Finally, it took only one person to do the most squat thrusts in one minute. A guy named Craig De Vulgt did 70.

Even though it’s too late to be a part of this world record breaking event, Margam County Park is a place that would be great for a day outing. There’s a castle, miles of trails, a narrow gauge railroad, a playground and more.

Reactions to World’s Biggest Smoking Ban: Londoners Fired Up

London–the alleged smoking and drinking capital of the world by sheer volume of alcohol and cigarettes consumed–put its smoking ban into effect, kicking and screaming, on July 1st. Although other cities, such as New York or Paris, have gone through similar labor pains, London’s is the biggest smoking ban yet: it affects 3.7 million businesses, including 200,000 pubs, bars and restaurants.

So far in the last two weeks, smokers have reluctantly gone outside to smoke, but the government is not stopping there. It is planning to change the law so that, among other things, employers can be fined if they fail to stop workers dropping cigarette butts on the street.

The Independent offers a glimpse into the London smokers’ sentiments by quoting a few “influential” ones:

  • ‘I am appalled at it. They are treating us like children. I’m not a schoolboy. Mr Brown thinks he’s a prefect’. David Hockney, Artist
  • ‘We’re suppressing everyone these days, not allowing adults to make their own minds up’. Antony Worrall Thompson, Chef
  • ‘The alleged danger of so-called second-hand smoke is so phoney it stinks to high heaven’. Joe Jackson, Musician
  • ‘You would have to search the world very hard to find a single government that would say it was abolitionist’. Paul Adams, British American Tobacco
  • ‘Smokers should not be discriminated against simply because they smoke’. Chris Ogden, Tobacco Manufacturers’ Association
  • ‘I’m inventing bike sheds to attach to buildings so it’s somewhere people can go to smoke’. Joanna Lumley, Actress

Hmmm, I am a semi-militant non-smoker myself but I realize that smoking bans do raise important questions about personal liberty in civilized societies. Makes you wonder, what’s next?