Sunday, February 22, 2026
Home Again
Here's one more picture from Spain, showing a tray of Easter cookies at the bakery down the street from our hotel in Málaga. I went there yesterday morning for a coffee and a pastry before we left for the airport, and snapped this picture. The guys with the hoods look a little scary to our American eyes, but in Spain those pointy hoods are known as capirotes and are traditionally worn in processions during Lent.
We got off to the airport with no problem yesterday morning, simply wandering out to the Plaza de la Merced to pick up one of the dozen or so taxis waiting. Our check-in was smooth and the flight was fine -- there were a few periodically screaming kiddies but nothing like our journey a week ago. Apparently taking small children on vacation to Spain is something that people in the UK commonly do. When I was a little kid we never went anywhere that required an airplane, unless it was to see grandparents -- and even then, we usually drove.
I did have one scary moment in the airport. We were sitting at the gate, waiting to board our plane, when I went to a vending machine to buy a bottle of water. I punched in the number for the water and inserted my bank card in the ATM-like slot, only to realize that the slot was for cash and not for cards -- and the card was pushed so far in that I couldn't grip it to pull it out. Holy crap, I thought, I'm either going to have to leave my card here or miss my flight! I had visions of frantically calling the bank to cancel it before we took off.
Fortunately, I have a very thin leather wallet, and I was able to insert the edge of the wallet into the slot and push the card askew, so that its corner stuck out. I then gingerly grabbed that corner with my fingertips and worked the card out of the machine. Whew!
Back home again, the house and garden were just as we left them. The hyacinths are up and one of them is blooming -- these are the sparkly bulbs we got years ago for Christmas. They just keep coming.
Remember how I trained the garden cam on the bird feeder, to see if any rodents climbed the pole during our week away? Well, I skimmed through the footage last night. I didn't see rodents at all, which is good -- apparently to whatever extent they're around, they're staying on the ground where they belong. But I did get some good footage of birds, including some showing them throwing seed out of the feeder -- which in turn, of course, attracts the rodents.
Maybe I'll post a bird video at some point, but first...
...on our train journey from Gatwick back to West Hampstead, we passed over the Thames bridge at Blackfriars station, which offers a spectacular view of the river and the city beyond. I made a very quick video to show you what that view was like from the Thameslink train.
Oh, and at the airport, we ran into a group of about ten senior students from our school, coming back from a ski week in Austria. They seemed unaccompanied by any adult, though they must be 18 themselves, or close to it. I guess by that age they are capable of traveling on their own, and indeed they all seemed alive and in one piece. Dave and I run into students all the time when we travel, but usually they're with their families.
Today will be all about settling back in, doing laundry, that kind of thing. Gotta get ready for work tomorrow!
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We used to change trains quite regularly at Blackfriars Station. I always loved that view from the platform.
ReplyDeleteIt's not your typical train station, for sure!
DeleteWelcome home! Good to have a smooth journey back altogether, and how nice to find a blue hyacinth in bloom. Daffodils here are pushing hard but not yet flowering.
ReplyDeleteThat hyacinth is ahead of the others, which are showing buds but not yet opening.
DeleteThe view from Blackfriars station is exceptional.....especially at night when everywhere is lit up!
ReplyDeleteI'll have to make a night video one of these days!
DeleteGreat views from Blackfriars. I think you had a nice holiday and a time away to ensure you appreciate your home. Straight back to work, not so good, but then not for too much longer.
ReplyDeleteYes, and I'm off to Florida again next week! (Not really on a fun trip, but still, it will break up an otherwise solid month of work.)
Delete¡Bienvenido a casa! I love the video. What a view. The hyacinths are stunning. I was looking for glitter. Those cookies look delicious. But it would be strange biting the head off a penitent, no matter how cute and happy he looks.
ReplyDeleteThe glitter still sparkles now and then in the soil, in the right light! Most of it came off when I took the rubber "balloon" off the bulbs.
Deletehow ironic that the garb for a penitent was misused elsewhere...
ReplyDeleteBack home again....it is difficult to settle back into routine sometimes..just think what your routine will be when you've finished there?!
I wonder how the Klan even knew of those robes, assuming that's really where they got the idea. (It must be.)
DeleteWelcome home, weird you coming back without Olga to greet you.
ReplyDeleteLove the video of train departure. Very cool! Quick trip, glad you shared it!
It didn't seem quick -- in fact it was the longest true vacation we've taken in a while.
DeleteOne thing I like about London is the names of train stations and suburbs. Blackfriars is probably historic.
ReplyDeleteAccording to Wikipedia (which is never wrong): "Black refers to the black cappa worn by Dominican Friars. They moved their 1220s-founded priory from just west of Holborn bridge at the top of Shoe Lane (modern Holborn Circus) a few hundred metres south to be between the tidal Thames and the west of Ludgate Hill, a modest rise, but the highest in the city proper, in about 1276."
DeleteThe hooded cookies do look a little sKKKary but then I remembered the photos Mitchell often posts of them and I settled myself down!
ReplyDeleteWe are scarred by our American experience!
DeleteYahoooo000000 - Welcome Back Home - I Throughly Enjoyed Your Vacation
ReplyDeleteBuck Up This Week ,
Cheers
Glad you enjoyed it! I did too, most of the time. :)
DeleteWelcome back home.
ReplyDeleteThat tray of Easter cookies look colourful.
I enjoyed your video.
Happy settling back home.
All the best Jan
Thanks, Jan! Glad you enjoyed the video and the colorful cookies.
DeleteWelcome home. The easter cookies in blue and red, didn't have that trigger for me, but I know what you mean.
ReplyDeleteWhat about the green ones?! :) Seriously, the KKK is the first thing I think of, but then, I'm from the South. Maybe that makes a difference.
DeleteGlad you got home safe and sound.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ellen!
DeleteYour trip and break seemed to flash by in a minute. You crowded a lot of activity into this short period of time.
ReplyDeleteI guess it was relatively short, but we did a lot!
DeleteCould you ever have imagined as a little boy in Florida one day living in London, visiting places like Spain, coming back to your home to your own garden and where you and your husband live? Where you cross the Thames regularly, frequently see the London Bridge, and somehow have friends from all over the world?
ReplyDeleteAmazing, really.
It IS amazing. I never dared imagine this life. But I remember watching movies like "Auntie Mame" and seeing her globe-trotting glamorous existence, and thinking, "That would be fabulous!" (Not that I have nearly as much fun as Auntie Mame.) And of course I never imagined I'd have a husband. To paraphrase MLK, the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.
DeleteGood thing the cash slot didn't suck your card in like it does paper money. Welcome home but oof, work tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteWell, it SORT of sucked it in, but I guess it could tell right away it wasn't paper. It didn't spit it out, though!
DeleteWelcome to home and hyacinths! I like the train video. And what a scary CC incident! Love the cookies but then frosted sugar cookies are my favorites. I didn't fly on a plane till I was 17. Now you see kids on all the time!
ReplyDeleteI flew on a plane once as a small child, and I remember crying because the pressure changes hurt my ears. I don't think I flew again until I was 10, and then again when I was 12. All those trips were to see grandparents.
DeleteI loved the video of the city view. I always enjoy seeing the London skyline.
ReplyDeleteI think I was around 23 or 24 the first time I flew on an airplane. My family traveled a lot but we never flew. Dad always drove. I have some good memories of some of those trips.
That scary credit card moment would have had my heart pounding. Glad you figured out how to get it out.
Believe me, I was wiping sweat from my brow for an hour after that incident! The great American road trip was the way everyone traveled back then.
DeleteI love city views. Flying into them has been an incredible experience; I'm thinking mostly about NYC. The trains I've been on haven't had such an extensive view. You had such excellent adventures in Spain! Being home is great though too. I hate doing laundry after a trip though.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it's a drag to have to catch up on all the practicalities of life!
DeleteI'll never get use to the little Lenten "Klansmen" 😂 I'll take a bunny or egg cookie instead.
ReplyDelete