Oh my goodness, yesterday was NOT good. I thought I had sleeping sickness. I just could NOT stay awake. I slept for an hour in the morning (having woken up for good at 5 a.m.), another after lunch, then at 5 I fell asleep sitting upright, managed to have curry for a meal, and then fell asleep on the sofa again and didn't wake up until 8.50 p.m. I took myself off to bed then. I slept until 2 ish, came downstairs for a cuppa and to read, then after a couple of hours, went back to bed and slept on until just before 6 a.m. My body was clearly wiped out. I feel just a tad more with it today.
Penguin display at the Antarctic Centre, where Rosie took me on the Monday before I flew back. It was a guided tour, and very good. I passed on going into the cold room, where they gave you an arctic jacket and turned the temperatures right down for 5 mins or so. Rosie had 3/4 length trousers on so her calves and ankles felt that bitter cold!
A couple of the real penguins. These are all rescues - one has a damaged tongue so could never hunt as they use their tongues to get the fish turned around and down their throats; and another had lost a leg.
Two of the huskies on display. They were really relaxed! We saw two different varieties of huskies outside. One, the Malamute, was very heavy boned and as the guide explained, pretty thick in the head!!
We went round the Haaglund course - these are the tracked vehicles used in the Antarctic which cope really well with snow hills, slopes, slabs of broken ice, crevices etc. I was elected co-Pilot, which meant I had to tell the driver when the road was clear so he could do the circuit and I sat in the front.
The crevice we went over.
I took a video, but am being told it is too big so will have to wait until Tam is here at the weekend, and she can talk me through it.
I found this lovely little puffin in a charity shop this week and of course it came home with me. When Rosie was over here last (in 2004), we all went to Skomer Island, off the beautiful Pembrokeshire coast. There the Puffins are so unbothered by people, they would walk around your feet. When I saw this, I was instantly taken back to our visit.
This morning I was determined to try and avoid a morning nap, so went off to Brecon, over the Epynts (as the other road in town is closed for roadworks at the moment.) I got cat food and Christmas place mats from B&M Bargains, and then went to Morrisons for a couple of things, including a Steak and Kidney pie for my tea tonight. I had a wander round the town and got stamps for the first lot of Christmas cards, and another two packs of C/Cards from the Red Cross charity shop (they were on a half price special). Another stop at the Tenovus charity shop, where I found a good quality navy cotton mix jumper by the Crew Clothing Company. £7.99. Price new is £49.
This afternoon I have been relaxing watching Ruth Mott's Country Christmas (1995) and JUST up my street. Then The British Christmas Desserts No-One Makes Any More. Well, I have never even heard of anyone eating Sticky Toffee Pudding prior to the year 2000 although apparently it was a "thing" from the 1970s onwards. NOT in 1950s Britain at Christmas though. No more was something called Tunis Cake. As for Blancmange (he pronounced the C, for heaven's sake!), that was a Sunday teatime thing, rather than a Christmas treat and Queen of Puddings was something we had at School. Ah well, the screen didn't mind me shouting at it.
I am now hoping to stay awake till gone 9 p.m. before taking myself off to bed. Let's hope I am over the worst of the jetlag now.





















































