Friday 30 August 2013

No 16 - Take A Trip to The Achensee In Austria

This is probably one of my longest held ambitions - dating back as far as primary school when I first discovered Elinor Brent-Dyer's Chalet School stories. If you are unfamiliar with her work I don't suggest you wade in now; there are loads of the books (of increasingly diminishing quality) and most of the main characters are decidedly tiresome from an adult perspective. Just to give you a taste, the main character, Joey Bettany, begins the series as the frail younger sister of the founder and first headmistress of said school and ends it as the mother of 11 children (one set of triplets and two sets of twins plus stray singles) and guardian to an assortment of orphans. She is a respected writer, sings like an angel, swims like Rebecca Adlington, dispenses advice to all and sundry at the drop of a hat, and has the ability to adjust her clothing like a Frenchwoman (no, I never worked out what this means either). The singing is important because, in Chalet land, health is very important. The school is partnered by a TB sanatorium. Every female character worth her salt  (including Joey and her sister, the headmistress) marries a doctor, usually after they have been plucked from peril. There is a lot of peril - but it is ok, they either get rescued by one of these handy doctors or a kindly cowherd (but no one ever marries them). And, where medical science fails, singing to an invalid is an infallible cure for most known ailments.Also drinking milk and going to bed early. I may sound cynical, but for many of us who discovered the Chalet School in our formative years, these books are as addictive as crack and I retain an inexplicable passion for them to this day.

You may be wondering what this has to do with my trip to the Achensee. Well, the first dozen or so of the books are set at the fictitious Tiern See in the Austrian Tirol in a little village called Briesau. There is lots and lots of detail, which eventually enabled clever readers to identify their real life counterparts. Ever since I discovered that Briesau is really Pertisau I have hankered to go there, hence the inclusion of this trip on my Bucket List. And so, when it came to choosing a holiday to mark my half-century, there was really no competition. And although Philip is immune to the charms of the Chalet School he is very keen on doing strenuous things in the great outdoors, so he didn't take much persuading.

We flew to Salzburg on the 21st August at silly o'clock - although Charlotte had, once again, nobly offered to chauffeur us. However, the early start meant we arrived in Pertisau in time for a (latish) lunch. I was ridiculously excited for my first view of the Tiern See (oh all right then, the Achensee) and by the time we had checked into the Hotel Post - recommended by several people, but mainly chosen by me because it actually appears in the books - I was almost overcome by the view from our balcony. Seriously, I had a big lump in my throat.

It looked exactly how I had always imagined it. The photo doesn't do justice to the colour of the lake which is a dark turquoise, crystal clear, and supposedly clean enough to drink. The hotel was excellent  and our room was huge and just on the second floor, which meant not too many stairs to negotiate after the gargantuan meals. As well as great food, good accommodation and a fab location, it also had a "wellness suite" with free sauna, jacuzzi, pools etc. plus a range of spa treatments.

We bought an Erlebnis Card, costing just under £50 each, which gave us 7 days access to the local boats, buses, cable cars, train and museums, and we definitely got our money's worth.It didn't take us long to realise we would be consuming thousands of calories per day, making a spot of damage limitation essential. It turned out to be an energetic holiday.

That first afternoon we took the Karwendel cable car to have a little mosey around higher up. I am not entirely comfortable with heights, but it wasn't too terrifying and I did eventually manage to open my eyes and enjoy the view, although I retained an iron grip on my seat. The next day I was even braver and went up the Rofanseilbahn - a bigger, scarier cable car although I was so hemmed in by fellow travellers that I couldn't actually see the view. We did one of the most popular hikes in the area - to the Dalfaz-Alm. It was an amazing walk, with spectacular views and although the local tourist board rated it as "easy" it was pretty vertiginous in sections (later in the week we did some "moderately difficult" walks which I didn't find as alarming). I was also very excited to meet cows wearing real cow bells.

The west side of the lake is only accessible by footpath, and it is another gorgeous walk. I was particularly keen to do this one as it features in the books on several occasions, being famous for a landmark called the Dripping Rock. I was therefore very excited to be dripped on by the Dripping Rock, although the tin roof erected to stop the drips eroding the path isn't exactly picturesque.
This was one of the paths marked "moderately difficult" as the path is narrow and is a sheer drop to the lake. I think my level of vertigo largely depends on how dangerous things feel - up on the Dalfaz Alm I was convinced I would plummet to certain death if I fell off, whereas here the prospect of falling into the lake didn't seem too terrifying. We spent most days alternately walking and using the big lake boats, but on the Saturday we decided to borrow some of the free bikes from the hotel and explore slightly further afield. I haven't ridden a bike for yonks so I was a little trepidacious but it appears that it is just like riding a bike, and after wobbling round the car park for about five minutes and trying to remember what gears are actually for, I was well away and it was so much fun that I am going to try and carry on at home. I was a touch saddle sore by the end of the day, although a swim in the lake helped. The water temperature is famously bracing, but we swam at the shallow Seespitz end and having holidayed extensively in the UK I can report it is no colder than the average bucket and spade seaside.


 That night the weather took a turn for the worse, so we spent Sunday visiting a museum and taking a trip on the little mountain railway which has been running since 188-something and has apparently never broken down. It was once a vital means of transport for locals and visitors alike, bringing people and goods up to area but now it is a  tourist attraction and hugely popular. The one downside is the fact that it travels down to Jenbach, which is not much of a place. There are a couple of Chalet School associations but Philip was pretty unimpressed. Good cakes at the station were a bonus, although we were surprised that the cafe had no restriction on smokers - surprising how quickly we have grown to take non-smoking indoors for granted.The little train was fab though.

On Monday we climbed an actual mountain called the Feil-kopf. We didn't make it right to the top because, in best Elinor Brent-Dyer tradition the cloud started to descend, and we felt it would be unwise to rely on a passing doctor or herder coming to our rescue, even though I assured Philip that we would be offered respite and smoky milk and a bed of hay in a mountain hut.  We had done all the difficult bit though, so I still felt very impressed with myself. And we did meet an extremely cute goat.
For our last full day we went to Innsbruck, which was gorgeous. We saw the House with Golden Roof and the Hofkirche with its amazing statues (including some by Durer) and ate Sacher-torte at the Sacher Cafe. I thought it was a touch underwhelming compared to my own Devil's Food Cake (she sa modestly) but not bad. The architecture was lovely and, even though it was August, the crowds were surprisingly small.

And then it was all over. There are lots of other places to visit on my Official List, but I will be very sad if I don't manage a return visit to the Achensee before I am 60. Even without the Chalet School connection it would still have been an amazing holiday. 

Friday 16 August 2013

No 31 - Celebrate Our Silver Wedding Anniversary

 



So, it was 25 years ago this week that Philip and I tied the knot and on Monday we had a grand day out to celebrate. Our proper Silver Wedding treat is a holiday next week (of which more will follow as it is also one of my Things To Do) but of course we had to do something special to mark the actual day.

We are both greedy people so what the Dandy and the Beano always referred to as "a slap up meal" was the obvious choice. We had heard good things about Paul Kitching's 21212 and it turned out to be the  perfect venue for a romantic celebration. But first of all we rattled our way up to Edinburgh on the bus and forced our way through the festival crowds on the Bridges and down to Royal Terrace for a pre-lunch stroll to work up an appetite. There are some very lovely flats on Royal Terrace and I do enjoy a good nose into people's houses - I got a severe case of Library Envy outside the flat with a book lined study with proper library steps and enjoyed peering into the mini basement gardens which featured everything from proper plants in pots to artificial grass. And then it was time to eat.



It is a gorgeous Georgian townhouse - very traditional on the outside, but some nice contemporary quirks within. The dining room was beautifully stylish - we were next to one another on a very comfortable upholstered seat , separated by a bolster shaped cushion, at a table for two, which gave  a feeling of intimacy. The tables are all round the edge of the room, and there is an open kitchen at one end, although there is a glass screen so there is no noise. Although there were 8 people working in a not-very-large space we were really impressed by their calmness; no Gordon Ramsey shouty sweariness for Mr Kitching. The staff were even more impressive than their surroundings - so friendly and welcoming. There was a card wishing us a happy anniversary on our table and the waitress won my heart by saying "We were worrying that we'd got the wrong table when we saw you; you look far too young to have been married for 25 years." The maitresse d' came up and said , "She wasn't joking - there really was a bit of panic!" I bet they say that to all the anniversary girls, but even so we were flattered.


And the food was amazing. The sort of food where there is something new to discover with every forkful. After the hugest ever green Spanish olives and tiny cornichons we both had to go for the same starter. Although we always try to choose different dishes when we are eating out (because I always want to taste EVERYTHING - and 21212 is brilliant for this because the menu is tiny) we made an exception with this because it sounded so good. It was a nugget of salmon, mackerel and haddock with baby vegetables and beads of pasta like giant couscous but softer, all with a hint of smokiness. It was topped with crispy wafers of beetroot and parmesan, and a scattering of cashew nuts. On the side was a little dish of a savoury custard with red pepper, flecked with caviar. And it was yummy. For our main course I had slow cooked chicken which was the most juicy, succulent chicken I have ever tasted, which came with little discs of haggis and black pudding and sausage, oyster mushrooms, cubes of baked egg, and  crunchy caramelised apple and sage in a lettuce sauce. The only remotely duff note was a little circle of rather soggy puff pastry . Philip had sea bass with spiced prawns accompanied  broad beans, aubergine, celeriac and hazelnuts in a light creamy seafood sauce. He said he could have done without the hazelnuts but everything else was fabulous. There was a lot of ecstatic moaning, and urging one another to try delectable little morsels. Philip had the cheese course next which was ginormous - a plate with about 10-12 different cheeses which ranged from the familiar (Manchego and Doddington's Admiral Collingwood, which we used to sell) to the new to us - and sadly I have failed to retain a single name. There was a selection of biscuits, some home made (my favourite was like a big varnished Dorito) with water biscuits and crackers, and dried fruits. And even though it was just Philip who had ordered it I was given a knife, plate and dried fruit too, which was just as well as there was far too much for one person, even one as devoted to cheese as my husband. And then it was my dessert, which again helpfully arrived with two spoons and I grudgingly allowed him a share because it was our anniversary after all.
The trough contained a layer of cherry and chocolate compote, topped with crème brulee, a cherry and a little chunk of a nutty kind of fridge biscuit. The purple "string" was chewy and intensely cherry flavoured. There was a piece of chocolate on the side and then the glass pot contained a warm honey foam with fudgy chocolate at the bottom, with a cinder toffee wafer. I am drooling at the memory of it.

If you are looking for a special place to eat in Edinburgh I really recommend 21212; it isn't wildly expensive either for the Michelin-starred standard of cooking - two courses at a midweek lunch starts from £20. As I said the menu is tiny - hence the name (2 starters, 1 soup, 2 mains, 1 cheese, 2 puds) so I would check if you are veggie, or have food allergies. It was friendly and relaxed enough to be truly enjoyable, but posh enough to feel like a proper treat.

The rest of the day was lovely too. We moseyed along Rose Street and had a drink sitting outside a pub in the sunshine, with Ian Rankin and an unidentified literary chap sitting beside us. If you know me in real life you may be aware that I am constitutionally incapable of recognising well known people (I once thought Sally Gunnell was an old school friend because her face looked so familiar) so Philip had to explain who it was, but then I thoroughly enjoyed eavesdropping on their bookish gossip. We went to the Book Festival in Charlotte Square to lounge in their stylish deckchairs and meet Polly (our oldest daughter by five minutes) for her tea break. We had made vague plans to go to a Festival event but in the end we decided to have a final drink in the Café Royal before catching the bus to the Park and Ride from where Charlotte  (Polly's twin) had nobly volunteered to chauffeur us home in comfort. At home she had flowers waiting, and we had a glass of fizz with her and the boys to round off our wonderful day.

It was great to have a day just to talk, and laugh, and remember and celebrate being us - and to be glad that after 25 years we still love being together.

Friday 12 July 2013

Oooh it gets dark .....

Well, I can now tick Wuthering Heights off the book list and blimming glad I am to have finished it. My reasons for neglecting to read it back in the Upper Fifth are now lost in the mists of time but I daresay it had something to do with the total unpleasantness of all the characters, who appear not to have a redeeming feature between them. What I do remember is getting very muddled by the relationships and wishing I had some sort of family tree to help sort them out, what with all the women being called Cathy and all the men's names beginning with H (OK, I am exaggerating slightly but only a bit).

I actually had high hopes for this book; there are some on the list I am really rather dreading but I quite looked forward to this one. It started promisingly enough and I was actually quite gripped for the first few chapters, but it soon wore off once I realised how unsympathetic they all were. Not only did the characters lead miserable existences, but there were also hanged? hung? puppies and tortured kittens and it was all unremittingly grim. I had vaguely thought of Wuthering Heights as a love story, probably because of the Kate Bush song, or a dim memory of an ancient film version. But it isn't a love story at all - it's about vengeance and cruelty, and from a modern perspective it feels too melodramatic and unbelievable . I don't mind a villain, in general, but I prefer a bit of swashbuckle or the merest hint of humour to offset violence and viciousness. There really wasn't much I liked about it - except perhaps the houses and the moorland setting and the small glimpses of domestic life.

Why is this book so well regarded? I can, I suppose, imagine readers being intrigued by the plot or being attracted by the romance of the whole Bronte/Haworth story, but I really can't see it as a novel to inspire affection in the way that Jane Eyre (for example) does. For me, it became a slog - constantly checking the Kindle statistics to see how many minutes of reading I had left; oh, the relief when I realised the end was nigh. And even that was a disappointment, what with Heathcliff simply stopping eating and dying (sorry if this is a spoiler) instead of meeting a suitably gruesome end.

Wednesday 12 June 2013

Oliver Twist

I have finished the first book on my list and can now stop feeling guilty about Oliver Twist. I no longer remember why I didn't read my o'level set books, but I didn't . I can only assume that I thought a working knowledge of the plot, based on the musical, would be sufficient. And even though I went on to read several of Dickens' other novels, and would include Great Expectations in my Desert Island Reads, I never got round to revisiting Oliver. So what did I think of it, after all these years? Well, I thought it was pretty good actually. The eponymous hero is bit of a drip, the casual anti-Semitism jars from a modern perspective and the coincidences are a bit of a stretch, but there are some wonderful scenes and some terrific characters. There's plenty of Dickensian squalor, lashings of Victorian sentiment and the plot is a pageturner, even though I knew what was going to happen. It also made me laugh out loud a few times - I always forget how funny Dickens is. I would have preferred a stickier end for the dastardly Noah Claypole  and it's a shame we don't find out what happens to the Artful Dodger after his  splendid court appearance ( and in my mind's eye he still looks EXACTLY like Jack Wild) but most of the characters get what they deserve. So - 1 down, 59 to go.

Monday 6 May 2013

The Official OSTTDBIS Book List

So, before the 17th August 2023 I am going to read the following books, and write a review of each one on here. I am still thinking about the order of reading but I may just work my way through the list to stop me cherrypicking and leaving myself all the ones I am least enthusiastic about. It shouldn't be too difficult; if I manage one a month it will only take 5 years. I am really looking forward to some of them, a bit dubious about others and dreading a couple, but I am hoping it will be an interesting experience.

Thank you to everyone who has made suggestions. I haven't been able to include all of them, mainly because of the one book per author limit, but even if they are not on the list I will still read them too. I am now considering a companion list of films I should see. Despite the list below I like to think I am reasonably well read but I cannot pretend to be well viewed. I'll be asking for suggestions soon.

1. Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens

2. Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte

3. Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel

4. Moll Flanders - Daniel Defoe

5. Zuleika Dobson - Max Beerbohm

6. The Heart of Midlothian - Walter Scott

7. Life of Pi - Yann Martel

8. Casino Royale - Ian Fleming

9. Barchester Towers - Anthony Trollope

10. Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy

11. The Mysteries of Udolpho - Ann Radcliffe

12. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - Anne Bronte

13. The Dispossessed - Ursula le Guin

14. The Crow Road - Iain Banks

15. Baba Yaga Laid An Egg - Dubravka Ugresic

16. Ridley Walker - Russell Hoban

17.  Hawksmoor- Peter Ackroyd

18. What Was Lost - Catherine O'Flynn

19. A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry

20. The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver

21. The Summer Book - Tove Jansson

22. Dracula - Bram Stoker

23. Wyrd Sisters - Terry Pratchett

24. Possession - AS Byatt

25. Year of Wonders - Geraldine Brooks

26. Tristram Shandy - Laurence Sterne

27. The Girl With the Pearl Earring - Tracey Chevalier

28. The Vicar of Wakefield - Oliver Goldsmith

29. A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth

30. The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas

31. Vanity Fair - William Makepeace Thackeray

32. Human Traces – Sebastian Faulkes

33. Two Serious Ladies – Jane Bowles

34. The Catcher in the Rye – J D Salinger

35. Evelina – Fanny Burney

36. Howards End – E M Forster

37. Anna of the Five Towns – Arnold Bennett

38. Mr Norris Changes Trains – Christopher Isherwood

39. The Name of the Rose – Umberto Eco

40. Black and Blue – Ian Rankin

41. The Death of the Heart – Elizabeth Bowen

42. The Go Between - LP Hartley

43. Atonement – Ian McEwen

44. Beloved – Toni Morrison

45. A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur’s Court – Mark Twain

46. The House of Mirth – Edith Wharton

47. The Thirty Nine Steps – John Buchan

48. To Kill A Mocking Bird – Harper Lee

49. A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khaled Hosseini

50. The Daisy Chain – Charlotte M Yonge

51. Stalky and Co – Rudyard Kipling

52. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys

53. The Best of Everything – Rona Jaffe

54. My Brilliant Career – Miles Franklin

55. The Edwardians – Vita Sackville-West

56. To Bed With Grand Music – Marghanita Laski

57. The Making of a Marchioness – Frances Hodgson Burnett

58. Brighton Rock – Graham Greene

59. The Bell – Iris Murdoch

60. Under the Greenwood Tree – Thomas Hardy

 

 

 

 

Saturday 27 April 2013

debodiddley : The Official 60 Things To Do Before I'm 60 Blog

debodiddley : The Official 60 Things To Do Before I'm 60 Blog: The Official 60 Things To Do Before I'm 60  (OSTTDBIS) list is my version of a bucket list. It is still something of a work in progress ...

Sunday 21 April 2013

I think it's time for some bread-and-butter reading

I have started to compile a list of 60 books I should read before I am 60 and have come up with some rules.

I want this list to include ought-to-read books so I'm inclining towards the classics here. The sort of books that have enhanced people's lives, or are regularly selected as all-time favourites, or are acknowledged masterpieces. The sort of books, in many cases, that I feel I have read because the stories are so well known but that I have inexplicably never got round to reading.  I'm only going to include fiction, so no poetry, plays or biographies; only one book per author; only books I have never read in their entirety before (regrettably this means I will be revisiting various books studied in my youth which I only skimmed - my O'level essay on Oliver Twist owed more to the musical than to Dickens and I think Kate Bush was as much of an influence as Emily Bronte when I thought about Wuthering Heights). I am thinking only adult fiction as I feel I probably have read the majority of the children's classics. I would like to include some more recent books - I am thinking about 25% should have been published in my lifetime, but I also need to expand my pre-Victorian horizons.

Having said that I am reasonably well read - by the time I got to university I had got the hang of actually reading my set books.  But there are gaps. Books I have just always thought I wouldn't enjoy. Books I have been put off by being told too many times that I must read them because I will love them, which makes me feel stubborn and resistive. Books I have ignored because they are written in the present tense and it gets on my nerves (I am calling this Wolf Hall syndrome). The time has come to embrace them all.

I would love a bit of help with this. I do want to stretch myself but equally I would like there to be a fighting chance of enjoying the book and it not feeling like a total and utter chore. I have come up with the first ten, which should give you an idea of the sort of thing I had in mind, but I would love some recommendations.

1. Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
2. Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
3. Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel
4. Moll Flanders - Daniel Defoe
5. Zuleika Dobson - Max Beerbohm
6. The Heart of Midlothian - Walter Scott
7. Life of Pi - Yann Martel
8. Casino Royale - Ian Fleming
9. Barchester Towers - Anthony Trollope
10. Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy

So. What else should I be reading?

Wednesday 17 April 2013

no. 25 - have my graduation photo taken (achieved 25 Ocober 2012)

As a matter of fact I only partially achieved this one, because I didn't have an actual, official, me holding my rolled up degree shot. However, I did at least go to my graduation and have photos taken, which was more than I managed the first time I got a degree. So I am totally counting this one, not least because there is absolutely no chance of me graduating again.

My degree was a Bachelor of Nursing in Mental Health (a change of career from my One Thing To Before I Turn 50 list) from Edinburgh Napier University. I loved being a student again and made some wonderful friends. Here I am with my lovely chum Beth just after we collected our gowns. The gowns were great and we had a lot of fun pretending to be dementors later on.

 

The degree ceremony was at the Usher Hall in the centre of Edinburgh - here we are on the steps before we went in. We had just been sitting outside the pub in the sunshine, which shone most obligingly.
There now follows a small boasty paragraph where I tell you that not only did I get my degree with Distinction, but also I was awarded the class medal.

 
 

There are no photos of me getting my degree although there is a video somewhere on the university website. After the ceremony we went to Napier's Craicklockhart campus, where we had most of our lectures in first year, for drinks and nibbles and patting ourselves on the back and celebrating our utter brilliance. Here I am with my husband, Philip and my daughter, Charlotte.
We finished up meeting my other children for a meal at Chop Chop in Leith, which seems to have become a family favourite. My daughter, Polly, had come down from Aberdeen to surprise me. We very rarely manage to have all six of us under the same roof these days so it was the perfect end to a great day. And a pretty good start to my bucket list. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 



The Official 60 Things To Do Before I'm 60 Blog

The Official 60 Things To Do Before I'm 60  (OSTTDBIS) list is my version of a bucket list. It is still something of a work in progress and I reserve the right to tweak, edit and add to it as I go along. There's no rush - I'm not even 50 yet so there's plenty of time. As long as I have achieved 60 personal triumphs by 17th August 2023 I'll be happy.

The current version of OSTTDBIS will follow shortly. However Thing One on the list is to start an OSTTDBIS blog so this seems like the place to start.

In no particular order, before I am 60, I want to:


1.      Keep a Bucket List blog                                                        (achieved 17 April 2013)

2.      See the Cirque du Soleil again

3.      Climb a Munro

4.      Learn to play the flute and perform  in public

5.      Write a novel

6.      Go inter-railing in Europe

7.      Walk the West Highland Way

8.      Keep chickens again

9.      Do the Moonwalk in Edinburgh and raise at least £500

10.  Visit Cape Breton and Prince Edward Island

11.  Join a choir

12.  Stay at the Hotel Levant in Llafranc, Spain

13.  Learn to hoot like an owl

14.  Finish my tapestry

15.  Run a 5km race

16.  Take a trip to the Achensee in Austria (achieved August 2013)

17.  Go ski-ing

18.  Ride in a gondola in Venice

19.  Make a patchwork quilt

20.  Buy a house

21.  Stay in a castle

22.  Make a list of 60 books to read before I am 60 (and read them)

23.  Go to the Louvre in Paris

24.  Own a pair of Dubarry boots                                      (achieved 17 August 2013)

25.  Have my graduation photo taken                                ( achieved 25 October 2012)

26.  Throw a coin into the Trevi fountain in Rome

27.  Visit the Bronte Parsonage at Haworth

28.  Have a holiday on a narrowboat

29.  Have my fortune told by a gypsy at St. Boswells

30.  Do the Four Abbeys Cycle Path

31.  Celebrate our Silver Wedding Anniversary                      (achieved 13 August 2013)

32.  Skim a stone so it bounces at least 3 times

33.  Go on a spa day with Polly and Charlotte

34.  Stay on a houseboat in Amsterdam

35.  Go to a Christmas Market in Europe

36.  Appear as an extra in a film

37.  Learn to play bridge

38.  Go to the opera

39.  Have a teppenyaki meal in Newcastle with the family

40.  Go to the Museum of Witchcraft in Boscastle

41.  Go on the London Eye

42.  Go to a live sporting event, preferably gymnastics

43.  Cook a roast suckling pig for a family celebration

44.  Visit the Outer Hebrides

45.  Go to New York and eat pastrami on rye at Katz’s deli

46.  Take a boat trip to the Farne Islands and see puffins

47.  Sing karaoke

48.  See a play at The Globe Theatre in London

49.  Go on a cruise through the Norwegian fjords

50.  Visit Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona
 
51.  Have another tattoo

52.  Be debt free

53.  Go to Moominland in Finland with some Moomin fans (you know who you are). 

54.  Have my nose pierced (achieved 3rd July 2014)

55.  Crochet a Granny Squares blanket

56.  Watch this space

57.  Watch this space

58.  Watch this space

59.  Watch this space

60. Watch this space.