Travels to the pub and back

Sunday, September 26, 2004

The week

has been notable mainly for the stuff I didn't do, which has all been pretty wicked. Here are some of the exciting things I didn't do:


  • win at poker on Tuesday
  • write an instantly catchy, Libertines-esque pop tune on Wednesday night
  • go to a party composed entirely of enthusiatic, nubile undergrads on Friday
  • go to Vegas on Saturday

Now look at that list and tell me that I didn't not have an exciting time last week. What I did do instead, was:

  • come second (again) at poker on Tuesday. Incidentally...
  • inadvertently plagiarise the bass line from the Soup Dragons' cover of I'm Free on Wednesday
  • see a worthy but partying-free film on Friday night
  • wimp out unacceptably early on Saturday

Rock.

Today was good, in a relaxed kind of way: I dragged Kate to Glasgow to help with a bit of shopping, had lunch in Bar Ten (an excellent place, by the way. Glasgow seems to have much better bars than Edinburgh. Also, is it just me or does having a pint at lunchtime feel like the sort of thing mums in general would disapprove of?) and picked up bass #1 from Doug's.

I'm worn out again. Despite failing to exactly live life to the full this week, I'm still shagged out. Getting old...

Friday, September 17, 2004

The Belgians have pretty much all arrived.

Along with the Kiwis and Germans.

Not content with buying the company I work for, we now also have a Belgian installed in the flat's box/server room*. Fortunately Vanessa softened the blow by bringing with her some astonishingly potent beer and some chocolate. Not sure how potent that is yet.

Jeff's NZ cousin arrived here on Thursday, and Louise turned up on Friday. We've had a fairly standard weekend of eating and drinking in different venues, albeit with a bit of an international flavour. Not much to report, really, apart from that Josh is in Munich and hence missed the opportunity to hobnob with our ready-made bevy of jet-setting young ladies.

Actually, given that they're all here for at least the next year, he hasn't.

Possibly I could write a more inane entry next time. Or not.

* Go on - try to guess which profession the majority of the flatmates work in.

Wednesday, September 15, 2004

Midway through a retox week:

holy heck. The company I work for has just been sold to some Belgians. Waxy, take note: perhaps you can aid me in navigating the treacherous waters of international relations with our new Flemish overlords. After talking at us in a Belgian accent ("I feel we haf shynergiesh with you guysh"), they plied us with ham, cheese, Belgian beer and chocolate. And it was good. I have no idea whether our hippie enclave of sloth will change much, but they got off on the right foot anyway.

I rolled home to blunder into second place - again - at poker.

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

I was sitting in the Phoenix on Sunday night,

having a drink with Kate.

"I was going to go to London to meet up with Chris and Leyla before they go back to Oz, but since I'm going out there in February I'll maybe give it a miss," I said.

"Why not go up Aberdeen and meet them there?" said Kate. "You can stay at my parents' house. In fact, I haven't been up there for ages. We can both go."

"Because-" <pause, grinding of mental gears> "Actually, I can't think of a good reason why not."

Cue trip to Aberdeen after work last night. Kate's excellent parents fed and watered us, and we met up with C&L in a local boozer. I'm really glad we went - it was well worth the trip to see them both before they leave again, and I got happily drunk and emotional.

My hangover is only now abating. A week semi-off the sauce has turned me into a laughable lightweight. We got the train back at 8.55 this morning, and it was a distinctly quiet journey.

P.S: I did the Water of Leith 10K on Sunday in 49 minutes - my fastest time thus far, which is rather pleasing - and it was a particularly nice way to get some exercise. The stretches running through Dean Village and Stockbridge are about as picturesque as Edinburgh gets, and I think I might make a Sunday run along the river a regular thing...

Thursday, September 09, 2004

Midway through a detox week:

holy heck. Possibly I am an alcoholic. True, after last night's old skool Tiny Monkey practise chez moi, Martin and I did have 2 (two) pints but I'm going to discount them because I want more. Supposed to be going to a party on Saturday night - it'll be interesting getting through that one without throwing sobriety and propriety to the wind.

On Sunday night Ruth and I and a couple of her mates went along to Inverleith Park to watch the illuminated fog above the castle marking the end of the festival. We stood in a 20,000-strong sea of neds and watched a large amount of money being used to light up a bank of cloud to classical music, and went home.

...and then went back out, independently, to meet our respective chums at The Outhouse for a couple of drinks. The combined chat was good, the night was just cold enough to make it feel like autumn and it was a pleasant way to wind down after a hectic but otherwise top weekend.

Now, though, I'm making a conscious effort to get back into training in advance of the run on Sunday, so I played badminton on Monday night - rather badly, to be honest - and went for a run on Tuesday night. My good intentions to go running three times a week have suffered at the hands of rock n' roll living for the past fortnight or so, and at the moment I tend towards wheezing collapse rather quicker than is useful when required to run 10,000m.

Bring on Sunday, I say. Not for the run, clearly, but for the street-long row of pubs that awaits at the finish line.

P.S. Michelle was in Kyoto a while back as part of a work trip to Japan. She visited the same temple on the mountainside outside the city as I did when I was a kid, and she's just posted a load of photos of it. It's an incredible place: pagodas sticking up through a steep, green forest covering the hillside and all connected by shadowed walkways, gardens and staircases.

Barnaby also has a few shots from another work visit to Japan, taken with his bizarro hippie Lomo camera.

Sunday, September 05, 2004

Normal service has been well and truly resumed.

Friday night saw some hot three-way action, with Chris and Leyla's arrival from London coinciding with pre-birthday drinks for both Dom and Kate. It was absolutely fantastic to see Chris and Leyla again; the last time I saw them in the flesh was almost exactly a year ago in Brisbane's balmy spring. Happy days, happy days. Roll up to see the 25-year old me gape at strippers and take to the water like a duck. To water. Ah. Bit of synchronicity with the rafting last week, but I digress.

We drank the night away in the Barony and then the City Café, and the craic was mighty.

Doug organised a Coba Fynn practise/jam/mess about session at the Brill Building on Saturday, so Chris and I got the train to Glasgow with my bass and some Irn Bru in tow. With Charlie living in London and Neil opting for a quiet, un-rocking life, it was just Chris, Doug, Davis and I. Despite my protestations of musical incompetence, it was in fact genius. CF's staple fare is bluesy rock - handy for me, because I can come off sounding good playing only 3 different notes per song - and we ran through some of their old stuff. Locomotive Blues, Glasgow Girl and Super Shuttle: I'd heard these played a few years ago in the Pleasance, and it was excellent fun to be able to join in this time around.

We met up with Kate and her friend Claire for some post- and pre-rock food: Kate, Doug and I had tickets for PJ Harvey at the Carling Academy* later that night. Claire wanted to come along but didn't have a ticket, so she tagged along in the taxi and we managed to exchange our 3 standing tickets for 4 seated ones on the door.

The gig was pretty good. I hadn't listened to any PJ Harvey beforehand; she's one of those artists/groups that I think I should know more about but never really get round to. Our new tickets were for seats in the mezzanine area, so we had a good view of a diminutive PJ Harvey dwarfed by her rather nifty Firebird guitar, belting out some nicely melodic punky songs.

Unfortunately, we shared the good seats with the exhaled breath and airborne sweat of everyone else in the place. It was a deeply...moist experience up there. I'd rather have been in the sway-gently pit**.

We caught the train back to Edinburgh to meet up again with Chris and Leyla. Neil and his harem came along and I stumbled home after walking Kate back to her flat (must start dealing with this 19th century politeness I seem to be afflicted with) to find them rocking out to Led Zeppelin in our kitchen. I rocked out with them for a while from a supine position on the floor and went to bed about 4.30 am.

God, what a rambling entry. I am completely knackered - still completely knackered, in fact; the knackeredness has been stalking me since poker on Tuesday and I think this coming week will be something of a detox for me ahead of the 10K on Sunday. So basically, don't be expecting any incidents involving hilarity/incompetence at pulling/rocking to be reported for a few days.

* Saturday was Kate's birthday - happy birthday, Kate! - and her present from me was the ticket for the concert.

A while back, the morning after going to see Buddy Guy, I'm recounting to Martin that I feel a small degree of pride in getting Kate into Snow Patrol (re humming of Chocolate and insistence on calling it Final Straw), and he mentions that he's going down to Birmingham to see them play the next weekend. This then makes me think hey! That'd be a great birthday present for her. So I check the website for Scottish dates. There are some in December. They're all sold out already.

Bah.

It is typical that the first decent birthday present idea I've ever had is crushed a month before the birthday in question! Seriously, ask Jeff. I'm shit at birthdays. I gave a friend of mine some tennis balls once, when I was about 15.

Tennis balls.

It's gone downhill from there.

** Indie kids don't really know how to mosh, you see.

Thursday, September 02, 2004

Knackered.

Tuesday's poker match went fairly well: I got to the heads-up at the end with Peter, and managed to throw away a reasonably commanding chip lead with a few unbelievably close hands*. Unfortunately, I managed to drag out this process until 1.45 am.

Second thing dragged out was myself from bed at 8.30 the next day. Jon (another poker player) had organised some whitewater rafting for Wednesday, and Kate and I were getting a lift there with Eliza and Mark. Apparently when he suggested the rafting trip at a poker game, the responses went:

Guys: <non-commital mumbling>
Girls: "Woohoo!"

Way to assert your thrill-seeking manliness, guys. Clearly I would have replied "Woohoo!" had I not been elsewhere, rocking my fucking socks off with TM during that particular game. I did in fact reply "Woohoo!" via the medium of electronic mail sometime later, hence this exciting little story.

Once we were all kitted out in wetsuits and lifejackets and had run through the safety drill, we headed off down the river with two guides in the back of the raft. A fair amount of the trip was on relatively pedestrian stretches, so we were required to do some 'challenges' transparently designed to result in some or all of us falling in the drink.

Don't listen to all that crap about wetsuits being warm once you've been in the water. Complete rubbish. I'd agree with 'just about bearably tepid', but 'warm' is just taking the piss. Coincidentally, Mark urged us all to urinate in our suits to warm us up. Thank God no-one did. A raft full of voluntary incontinents wearing spongy, porous clothing doesn't bear thinking about.

The rapids, once we got to them, were good fun but pretty tame. I had been expecting something a little more exciting, but fair enough; the Tay isn't exactly Amazonian. Still, it was good fun, and the day away from work was a welcome relief.

That night, TM convened for a practise at Lighthouse Studios in Granton. We'd never played there before, and I suspect we won't be going back. While the kit was good (the Marshall bass amp was the best I've played with), the room was tiny, and soundproofing was limited to a square of carpet on the wall beside the door. A twenty-times life-sized poster of a baby's head staring at us with dead, dead eyes didn't lend much of a party atmosphere to the place either.

I think it's been a fairly exhausting couple of weeks for all of us. Couple this with a tiny, dim practise room designed around psychological stress tests and you have the Practise Of Which We Do Not Speak.

We went to the pub and got drunk.

* For the poker-inclined among you, at one point I was dealt A-3 off suit - not great, I'll grant you, but I could have sworn that Peter had something worse and I jumped at the chance to take him out.

"All in," I said.

5 minutes later, my eyes glazed over from watching MTV in the background, he replied: "Okay. I'll call."

We flipped over our cards. He also had A-3 off suit. Un-fucking-believable.

Neither of us came up with anything near a flush on the community cards, so we split the pot, ending up with nigh-on exactly the same as beforehand. Almost every hand that came to the flop after that point was just as close. I think I finally lost on a hand where I had K-Q suited, and he had A-10 off suit. To trot out an old cliché, it really did come down to the luck of the draw.

Next time, I will be the master now. Er. You know what I mean.