Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I was dismayed today to hear an interview on the radio with a blood bank official who mentioned that in the near future persons who had traveled in the U.K. would be excluded from donating blood because of Mad Cow Disease risk. Are many of us feeling a bit uncomfortable? Also, KPeter, it isn't too late to plan a nice trip to Paris or Warsaw. I spent the Summer of '96 in the U.K. on a NEH Grant Program. We were based at University of Nottingham. The Americans all declined to eat any beef products at the dining hall, or elsewhere, because that was the height of Mad Cow hysteria in U.K. and on the Continent. Steakhouses in London were truly deserted. The British Government practiced denial and falsification of facts around the issue. Now, it appears the blood bank professionals have a serious concern. Hmm... (I was "declined" this month because I had traveled in malaria regions within a year.) So, with that little caveat, go to England, eat mutton, fowel, fish and Indian food for sure. Feel well advised by the excellent remarks from members of this list. I will add a few of my own suggestions. British Museum-a must. Try the door around back if lines are too long. Camera stores in the Museum/Bloomsbury district have nice used and collectibles but no Leica bargains, IMO. Take the light rail through Canary Wharf to the pedestrian tunnel under the Thames to Greenwich. See Naval Observatory and Museum, the Cutty Sark and have cider or ale in the local pubs. Return to heart of London by boat. War Museum is good. Steam engines (stationary) are demonstrated all over the country on Steaming Sundays in summer. Also, the Rail Museum in York is very good. Consider taking the train from London to some outlying city, perhaps Oxford or Cambridge, and renting a car there to explore village life. Drop into any Anglican Church about 5:00 in the afternoon for the Matins prayer and hymn service. The Matins at Kings College Chapel in Cambridge is a world-class production. Bon Voyage, Bill Lawlor