Spider on the Road

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Location: British Columbia, Canada

I'm a thirty-something girl who wants to see at least a thousand more amazing things before I die. I live for travel, good books, and amazing conversations. I'm a sometimes belly-dancer, a perpetual junk merchant, and spiders like me a lot. I have fooled myself into thinking I have a green thumb in the garden, but I do at least take some amazing photographs of flowers if I do say so myself. I used to be a "goth" but I'm way too cheerful nowadays, not that it's a bad thing but it's sometimes hard to reconcile skull-collecting and liking Martha Stewart in the same lifetime. I started out wanting to be a mortician and here I am a preschool teacher. You just never know how you'll end up. Oh yeah, and one of these days I'll retire in a little villa in Italy or France with Jeff and a couple of cats.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

London Natural History Museum

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

When in London, I highly recommend you pop out of the South Kensington tube stop and have a good long visit at the British Natural History Museum.

I had a fabulously interesting afternoon here today and Jeff and I vowed that we'd come back here again before we leave.

We had dinner at a little fish 'n' chips place called "Seasons" on Cromwell Road and spent the rest of the evening relaxing and catching up on laundry and email. Our B&B gives us free internet access: we love these guys! :)







































St. Tommy's in London

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Yesterday afternoon after finishing at Hillingdon Hospital and familiarizing ourselves with our new neighbourhood near Victoria Station, we finished up the day visiting the British Museum for the second time on this vacation (we visited the day before leaving for Nairobi).



Alas this time, as I wandered through wondrous artefacts and the stolen treasures of the place that is with good reason sometimes called the Attic of the World , I felt so under the weather and slightly nauseous I couldn't really appreciate the things I was looking at. Feeling like quite the party-pooper, I asked Jeff and his mom if they'd mind returning to the B&B.

Aside from another venture to the local supermarket called Sainsbury's for some groceries for dinner, that was it for me today.

The first photo on this page is the view from our room at the Luna & Simone B&B , a really nice place to stay. We were on the second floor. Jeff's mom had considerably more stairs to climb as her room was on the top floor, two flights up from us.

This morning Jeff's mom chanched the oozing dressing on my arm. I was rather glad I was travelling with a trained nurse as the job was almost impossible with just one arm. She noted that my arm was getting red and swollen above the burn and worried about the red line creeping above it towards my shoulder.

I decided that there was nothing for it but to seek out some antibiotics somehow and I went down to consult with the two friendly desk clerks about the best pharmacy to visit. Their names were Mark and Peter and I believe they were brothers who owned the hotel.

Their very helpful advice included:

*Don't go to the pharmacy without a prescription--antibiotics would be very expensive for a traveller. Instead go to the hospital. Especially as they noticed the ominous creeping red marks on my arm.

*They also recommended St. Thomas Hospital and gave me directions (take the #24 bus to Westminster Square area), starting from a very convenient bus-stop directly across from the Luna simone .

So, on a big red London double-decker bus I rode to yet another British hospital. This was the one where Heather's friend Muriel worked for years apparently, Jeff's mom told me excitedly.

St. Tommy's was directly across the river from Big Ben and the Parliament buildings so while I checked myself into Emergency, Jeff went for a walk to see the nearby sights.

After a short wait I was seen by the very noble-looking Dr. Abdul Said. He was a very thoughtful and soft-spoken doctor from Eritrea who observed that even though he was African he'd never get something like henna done in Africa. Sigh. Yes, in hindsight it seems rather dodgy.
It turns out as well as the second-degree burn, the henna had also given me a case of cellulitis/blood-poisoning. It was a good thing I returned to a hospital.
He was extraordinarily helpful and gave me an amazingly light plastic material to lay over the burn. It felt about a million times better than the rubber dressing.
Like the other hospital, he gave me a generous bag of medical supplies free of charge, as well as a antibiotic prescription that I got filled at a futuristic pharmacy downstairs with a complicated-looking robotic dispensing-arm that was displayed behind a plexiglass wall in the lobby. The sign said something about it being one of the few of its kind in the world. It reminded me of one of those perpetual motion machines at Science World.
The antibiotics cost me six pounds fifty--very inexpensive. Everything else was free. And they hadn't even seen my passport or my insurance or anything. I felt very grateful. From here on in, although my stupid arm continued to annoy me, I was no longer worried that it would become more serious.
Just for interest's sake I'll mention that a BBC film crew happened to be filming in the emergency room where I was, so who knows maybe one day I'll see myself in some obscure medical documentary. The photo here shows St. Tommy's with a double-decker bus crossing on the bridge in front of it.
Jeff and I left the hospital by noon (after a quick lunch in the hospital cafe called "Tom's") and ventured out into London. We could see five or more helicopters hovering in the skies over London from our vantage point near the London Eye.
Apparently we are here just in time for a major media event! There are 75,00 people gathered in Trafalgar Square today...after eighteen years England has finally won "The Ashes" trophy back from Australia! They get really excited about cricket around here. The British people we travelled with in Africa kept us quite up to date about the state of the matches the last two weeks.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Flying Nairobi to London and an English Ambulance Ride

Monday, September 12. 2005

The four of us flew all night long from Nairobi to England.

I'd had such a good time in Africa, but now with my arm in pain all I wanted to do was leave it behind and get to England. It was a long and miserable flight. I felt tired and nauseous.

Drat it all, this was my thirteenth wedding anniversary and I didn't want to feel this bad. Sigh. My arm felt like a dead weight. I kept trying to peek under my bandages to see how high the blisters were getting. Jen asked to see, but got a horrified look on her face when she did.

The bright moment in this laborious flight was Jeff's mom presenting us with tickets for a Andrew Lloyd Webber musical in London for our anniversary present. It was a lovely surprise! I hoped fervently I'd be able to go to the show on the 14th.

We landed at Heathrow at around six-thirty in the morning. As usual there was a zoo of people milling around to get through passport control. We hurriedly waved goodbye to a few of our safari group (Andy, Pauline, and Graham) as we all hurried off in separate directions. While Jeff and Jen and their mom got in the enormously long lineup, I scooted off to see if I could spot someone to help me.

I approached an airport security fellow in an orange vest and meekly asked him if there was a way I could get some medical help.

It was amazing how fast things happened after he got a look at my arm and found out I was coming in from Africa.

We were all whisked to the very front of the passport line-up and our passports were barely glanced at. An ambulance was called. Apparently I was going straight from Heathrow to a nearby hospital.

The airport security fellow waited with my family for the ambulance to arrive. At one point he jokingly said, "Oh, don't worry luv, they'll just chop it off and it'll be fine." Alas, his attempts to cheer me up didn't go over well. I burst into exhausted tears. "Oh dear", he said, "Just a little gallows humour there. Sorry about that."

Around about this time Jen had to leave for her flight to Canada. She looked ready to cry herself when she gave me a hug. Geez, I was such a downer at this point in the holiday.

The airport fellow told us that he'd seen quite a few people in his time coming back from holiday from places like Spain with injuries of this sort. Black henna had a well-known bad reputation apparently--wish I'd known that. It was illegal in England, and lots of other places too.

Anyway, I got in the ambulance by myself as Jeff and his mom had to stay behind with our luggage and take a taxi to the hospital. I rode to Hillingdon Hospital in Middlesex with a very cute paramedic named Maurizio. He tut-tutted over my arm a little but did a much better job at cheering me up than the well-intentioned fellow at the airport.

He also told me that once on vacation his wife had wanted to get a black henna tattoo from some gypsies on the beach and he had talked her out of it fortunately. Maurizio grinned and said. "I'm going to go home and use you as a shining example of why I was right!"

I was still waiting in Hillingdon's emergency waiting room with a stack of British tabloids when Jeff and his mom found me. Ambulance rides are free for travellers in England, but taxi rides are fabulously over-priced. I cringed at how much they had paid for the short ride here.

A nice nurse named Claire Picton looked at my henna burn and pondered aloud how best to treat it. At last she decided the best thing was to drain the blisters and loosen the pressure. Jeff's mom wasn't so sure this was such a good idea (blisters protect), but I was wildly happy at the idea of getting rid of that horrible tight feeling.

When the blisters were opened it felt like somebody was pouring a large cup of warm water over my arm. Ugh. It felt better instantly but my arm wasn't going to win any beauty contests.

Heather brought out her camera and I asked her to please not take a picture for posterity. Now I wish I'd let her. The photo in this blog taken three weeks later is nowhere near as gory. At the time I really didn't think I'd want to look at that later, but it would have been an interesting souvenir of sorts---here's me on vacation in the hospital. :)

Next nurse Claire fitted some sort of awkward rubber-like sleeve over the burn and then re-bandaged it. She also gave me a big bag of sterile gauze, bandages and the like free of charge to take with us.

Unlike a Canadian hospital, they did not ask to see my identification, my insurance, or indeed anything. It was all free. Heh, except for the taxi ride.

We left Hillingdon by mid-morning and made our way by bus to an Underground station where we rode to Victoria Station. The Bed and Breakfast we'd reserved was apparently within walking distance and we set out to find it.

It was in walking distance but we'd come out the wrong exit of the station and got a little confused finding it. What should have been a ten minute walk was half an hour.

I'd never felt so glad to finally find a place in my life.

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