Posts Tagged: ‘England’

Yes, you can do this! A newish Web site called Campinmygarden.com enables you to connect with folks who’ll let you pitch a tent in their yards for a small fee.

It’s the same online community concept established by sites like Airbnb.com and Couchsurfing.org — only you’ll sleep outside the house, rather than inside.

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What if, one day, you discovered a grotto in your backyard?

This has not happened to me. But in 1853, it happened to a kid named Joshua Newlove in Margate, England. When a hole in the ground appeared during the digging of a duck pond, Joshua’s father, a school headmaster named James Newlove, lowered Joshua into the hole to see what was below.

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So what if you’re not in college anymore? You can still study abroad in England at Oxford and Cambridge. Here’s the scoop:

Oxford offers a program called the Oxford Experience. For about $1,818 (1,335 pounds), you’ll take a one-week course in something like …

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Doing this podcast on literary landmarks was a labor of love.  I love to read and I love to travel so what could be better than combining the two? We had so many other writers that we had to leave out, that I thought I’d provide a list in case you’d like explore some other [...]

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This 70-foot-tall tree is found on the grounds of Stowlangtoft Hall in Bury St. Edmund, UK, a hall built 1859 for the Wilson family. Evidently the Prince of Wales, who later became King Edward VII, hung around the house in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The stately property was turned into a nursing home in 1969, and in the nearby Stowlangtoft Estate, you’ll find holiday cottages, from which you may visit the scary beech tree.

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The media have been talking about how some rioters in London have been using smartphones and social media sites to coordinate their movements to avoid being caught by the authorities. Zack Whittaker at ZDNet wrote that while some people are using Facebook and Twitter, one of the tools of choice is the BlackBerry Messenger, which encrypts messages so they can’t be read by third parties.

For its part, Research in Motion (RIM), BlackBerry’s parent company, said it would cooperate with the authorities to identify people alleged to have participated in the riots, though according to the BBC the police have to prove they know the identities of the phones’ owners under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act before they can acquire the records, rather than searching messages for people using riot-related keywords in text messages, e-mail and social media posts.

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If you go the English Lake District to hunt tarns (as you should), you might walk by one of these: a Herdwick sheep. It’ll probably just stand there and stare at you like this.

There are lots of sheep in the Lake District, but Herdwick sheep are indigenous to the area — so they’re the special ones.

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Here’s a sport I can get on board with: tarnbagging.

A tarn is a “smaller, remote lake” found in the Lake District of England, according to the BBC — a “little blue spot” on the Lake District map, if you will. Some tarns are tiny pools hidden between rocks, and some are larger, legitimate ponds.

The question is: How do you bag one?

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There’s a new pepper in town.

Former security guard and sauce maker Nick Woods, of Grantham, England, crossbred some chillis and came up with the infinity chilli, which has a record-breaking Scoville Scale rating of 1,176,182, according to the BBC. Are you familiar with the Scoville Scale? It’s my favorite of the scales because it measures the harmless agony peppers cause. For example, a jalapeno scores between 2,500 and 8,000 on the scale. The ghost chili pepper (bhut jolokia), which the India military uses for grenades to aggravate terrorists out of their hiding places, used to be the hottest pepper in the universe at 1,041,427, according to Discover. But not anymore.

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One of the reasons I love reading Victorian novels during the winter is that they feel cold. How many of the stories feature a protagonist huddling in some drafty flat? Or a forgotten opium eater who’s frozen in his garret apartment? It makes me feel cozy by comparison when I’m curled up with a blanket in a well-insulated, well-heated home.

But perhaps I could read modern British fiction and catch a similar chill.

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