Or perhaps more accurately, poke it inquiringly with a stick.
I'm house and dog-sitting for one of the college tutors at St. Chad's, which means that I'm staying in her cottage in Bishop Auckland, a mile outside of town, surrounded by farmland and Roman archaeological sites. I am accompanied only by a very old German shepherd and a giant bumbling mastiff.
It's pretty great, not gonna lie. Highlights have included:
- Getting up close and personal with a squirrel that was stealing dog food out of the shed
- Talking to fellow dogwalkers who I can only half-understand because man, are the accents thick out here
- Finding a giant spider in the sink first thing in the morning and shrieking like a damsel in distress
- Actually learning how the bus system works
- Listening intensely to Radio 3 since there's a radio in the kitchen, which means everything from my favourite Brahms piano quintet to a John Cage celebration at the Edinburgh festival to excerpts from Dr. Faustus and Richard III and various others accompanied by Black Sabbath and Liszt. Seriously awesome programming that I was not previously aware of.
- Fresh baked bread, because there is a bread maker so I don't have to actually do any work to make it.
- And the very best, chatting with people camped out on the Roman fort area outside the house who are dressed as Romans for some sort of yearly get-together and re-enactment. Yes, I am totes serious. They had shields! And capes! And some of them drove up from Manchester just to hang out and entertain children! Awesome.
Also, have a spam of pictures taken while walking the dogs:
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Dweeg no. 1 |
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Dweeg no. 2 |
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Archaeology! aka Binchester Roman Fort, approximately 30 seconds away from the house. There's a more cleared up bit over to the right, but you have to go through the mini-museum to get to it proper. |
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Sheep! Also 30 seconds away, and Suzie (the shepherd) likes to fantasize about chasing them. |
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Auckland castle! I haven't figured out how to get there yet, but it's very close, and technically owns all the grounds from it to the fort, so we're technically neighbours. |
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Pretty fields. Usually there are pinto ponies grazing there, it's very picturesque. |
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Speaking of picturesque... |
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Following the same wall... |
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...up to a badass Victorian bridge! Man, I love these things. |
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FAVOURITE KIND OF LANDSCAPE. |
I will take pictures with an actual camera next time I'm there, seeing as I'm doing more housesitting at the end of September after I get back from London. These are all ipod photos, so apologies for the crappy quality.
So yes, now I'm off to London to meet up with Hannah and tool around being touristy, then back to Durham, then back to London again to do intellectual history summer school, then back to Durham again, and then it's time for the
NENC Symposium! And then back to housesitting, and then teacher training for the coming academic year.
Phew. This summer has been way busier than expected. But I can't say that I mind. I am much better at being productive if I have more things to do.
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