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Quick Stop-Over in London
Monday 7th - Thursday 10th October 2024.
Summary:
Back y.
First Night in Brentford. (Monday, 7th October)
In Schiphol airport in Amsterdam I was making my way back to blighty again to meet up with Leb and then continue our adventure into new territories.
Once through customs and security, I had a maccers and caught up on the interweb until it was time to board my "easy" jet flight back to blighty. That all went well and I arrived at sunny Gatwick where it was quite warm and pleasant.
I was pleased to discover my new senior rail card gave me a significant discount on the price of my ticket and before I knew it I was getting off at Brentford.
First priority... find a chippy. I noticed one near my 88th accommodation which was also close to the old site of Griffin Park (thanks Klax!), Brentford FC's historic home ground. It always saddens me to see the site of an ex-football ground. A bit like going to a cemetery.
The Albany Fish Bar looked a bit neglected and its two Chinese staff overworked and underpaid... but never mind.. The promise of proper fish and chips must be fulfilled.
The portions were big for the price and I did like the chips even if the ratio of thin over fried ones to big thick ones was a bit too high for me. The mushy peas were standard and the fish (cod) was well fried but I must say it wasn't very fresh. Altogether 7/10.
It was then a matter of walking four minutes by a nice looking pub, The Black Dog, to the Premier Inn and checking in.

After a bit of chilling, I popped out to the pub for a couple of pints and then went back to my room, missing Leb, but looking forward to a good night's sleep.
So, where was Leb? She was spending some quality time with her dear, poorly, friend, Toots, near Woodstock.
Tourist Destination #88 - Crawkley. (Tuesday, 8th October)
Day 214 (28 to go) Having arrived at Gatwick yesterday the plan was for me to stay close by, for as cheaply as possible, while Leb saw a couple of friends in and around London.
I found a single room in a house in Crawley with a 40m bus ride to the airport, that seemed to tick the most important boxes.
First, I had to check out from the Premier Inn in Brentford and find the train station. I headed into the town center and bought a big pork pie from Morrison's as the rain started to come down. I caught the train to Crawley via Clapham Junction, again using my seniors rail card, arriving about 1pm with no pie left in my pocket.
Immediately upon arrival in Crawley, you are greeted with an overwhelming sense of bland ordinariness. As I walked towards the town center there was nothing interesting or unusual architecturally. Everything looked from the 60s and rather dull. I spotted a sports shop and managed to find a new pair of cheap swimming trunks, which I think I might need in Morocco.
You could almost sense ChatGPT struggling to answer the question: What should I do or see if I have a day in Crawley? When you throw in... and it's raining, the three "go to park x, y, z" recommendations disappear. I helped it a lot when I said "I like old pubs, fish and chips, and football."
It recommended going to the White Hart pub which is on the High Street, the only part of Crawley that seems to be older than 1945.
I had a nice pint and worked out the bus route to get to my accommodation. The #10 took me almost to the front door... and the next it took me straight to Gatwick airport.
The local bus service is very good and was packed with people going from school or work or whatever. Everyone seemed very friendly and I couldn't help earwiging on a few conversations. The word "bless" seemed to figure prominently.
"I've been with Terry five years now. He has his trains and I have my tely. He usually drives me wherever I want."
"Aw. Bless him."
"I was a single mum. The first had ADHD, the second diabetes, and the third, I just can't stand him."
"Aw, bless 'em."
My place for the night was just a bedroom in a terraced house but it did me. After dumping my bag, I told my host I was off to "explore Crawley". She didn't seem to sense any irony when I said it.
I walked towards my destination for later in the evening... Broadfield Stadium, home of Crawley Town Football Club. Now ChatGPT did recommend I visited this (when I told it I was a football fan) but I was way ahead of it. I'd spotted their EFL trophy, Southern Group B, fixture at home to Wimbledon weeks ago and it had long become my planned compensation for staying a night... in Crawley.
For an owd bugger like me it's still difficult to think of Crawley as actually being a league club - and a third tier one at that. For the vast majority of my football filled life they were not even on the radar.
When I completed the 92 (having been to a game on all 92 English football league grounds) in 2000, the idea I might need to go to Crawley Town to top up my number (back to 67 after this) would have been a joke. They finished 12th in the Southern League alongside Halesowen Town and Havant & Waterlooville having been put into administration with huge debts a few months before. The club's recent history is, in fact, full of dodgy deals but they amazingly rose to the Conference (5th tier) in 2004 and then, seven years later, won promotion to the football league for the first time in their history. They got promoted again immediately to the third tier and stayed there a few years before getting relegated again. And to complete this fascinating history, they won promotion again earlier in the year. In fact I saw some of their Wembley (Crawley's first appearance there) play off win against Crewe when we came to blighty for the first time on the trip back in May. Among the famous names vaguely and/or very transiently associated with "The Red Devils" are Harry Kewell, Sean O'Driscoll, Dougie Freedman, Steve Evans and Steve Coppell.
They still have a dodgy reputation today, being owned by a cryptocurrency broker.
Anyway, their ground was only about 18 minutes walk away from my room (no coincidence there) but as I had plenty time I carried on back into town, past a chippy ChatGPT also recommended, but that was, unfortunately, closed.
So, I walked back to the High Street and into The Brewery Shades where I had a very adequate pint of Timothy Taylor's Landlord. Again, unfortunately, their kitchen was closed so I had to grab a burger from the nearby McDonald's.
Scoffing as I went I soon approached the ground and took my place in the East Stand near the half way line.
There was a decent turn out for a match on a cold, wet evening in a cup competition that few know about and even less care. 1,428 was far more than I was expecting and they got an absolute treat.
The game started in a high tempo with the reds of Crawley on top in the early stages. Their lively winger Russian Hepburn-Murphy caught the eye with a dazzling run that almost ended in a goal but Wimbledon settled down and started to press for a goal themselves. As the half wore on they looked ever more likely to score and it inevitably came just before the break.
I had a hot Bovril at half time for the first time in decades. It certainly warms you up.
Wimbledon carried on where they left off and within 15 minutes of the restart seemed to have killed the game off with two goals in two minutes.
The partisan local support kept backing their side though, and urged them forward. With only about twenty minutes to go a lapse in the Wimbledon defence led to a penalty being rightly given. It was blasted in. Now Crawley had hope and within minutes seemed to have made it 2-3 but the goal was ruled out for offside.
The reds kept surging forward though and with ten minutes remaining, Hepburn-Murphy rose in the box to head home and clinch his man-of-the-match award. The atmosphere was great now as the rain lashed down and thunder and lightning was seen in the distance. The vocal Crawley fans were ecstatic when Flint scrambled home the equaliser in the 87th minute. Could they now even go and get the winner?
As the game went into injury time both teams decided to go for it. It was end to end stuff.
Then, in the 6th minute of injury time, Wimbledon sub Joe Pigott found he had the ball at his feet on the edge of the box and unleashed a beauty which crashed in off the underside of the bar. 4-3 to Wimbledon.
What a game!
The fans trudged away into the rain and I eventually found a bus stop that would take me in the right direction too.
So a very dull wet day was turned into a sparkling one ... only through football.
Glum grind at Gatwick. (Wednesday, 9th October)
Day 215 (27 to go) Glum grind at Gatwick.
Right now, I'd go home in a flash but instead I have to wait another seven hours here at Gatwick for another flight. With the benefit of hindsight (and to be honest it's not behind me yet, there's still about 1/3 of this to go) It perhaps wasn't such a good idea to save money by crashing at the airport instead of booking some sort of hotel.
Last time we were here we noticed the comfy sofas in the departure lounge. "We could get some sleep on one of those" was the idea. The flight tomorrow morning was the cheapest available because it left at 5am (only fools would get on a plane that early) and what was the point of booking a room for the night if you had to leave it in the middle of that night.
Actually, thinking about it, perhaps it's not such a bad idea after all. At least I'm having a pint of real ale in Wetherspoons.
Anyway, I woke up in deepest Crawley in my rather cold bedroom and did some interwebbing. I was desperate to go for a pee but it was nice and warm under the duvet so I delayed until... shit... someone else went in. I tapped away on my phone checking in to our flight but there was no noise from the bathroom. After a a while I got up and tried the bathroom door. No good. Someone was still in there. Back to my computer. I had to update my English league grounds visited chart... 67 now.
Still no noise from the corridor outside. Maybe he/she had fallen asleep in the bath. What to do? I tried the door handle again... a bit more forcibly so as to make some noise this time. Still occupied.
By now the thought "sod it" entered my mind and I got up, got dressed and started to pack. I wouldn't bother with a shower but I really needed a pee. By the time I'd packed, the person had vacated the bathroom so that was a relief in more senses than one.
I left the house with little regret and walked 4 minutes to the #20 bus stop. One came immediately and I was able to have a long relaxing bus journey back past the Crawley Football Ground, through Crawley Town Center and on to Gatwick.
The flight is from the south terminal but, of course, I didn't check that until I got off the bus at the north terminal stop. Good job I wasn't in a hurry. In fact I had 19 hours to wait.
There didn't seem to be much to do or see in the North terminal so I caught the shuttle to the South and immediately bought a pork pie. (What else?)
You can tell, from this narrative, how exciting the day was. With the boarding pass handy I went upstairs to departures but first, why not have breakfast at Wetherspoons? Sod's law meant I missed it by a minute but of course they do an all-day brunch which is pretty much the same thing. Refillable tea and coffee too.
So, finally time to go through security. I wafted my boarding pass at the machine with confidence but I was immediately rejected. "Wrong Day. Seek assistance" it said. So I did.
The lady almost laughed when I told her our cunning plan. They won't let you through until about three hours before the flight. You might be lucky if you try again after midnight but I wouldn't bet on it.
So that was it. I've just spent the last nine hours rotating between the recharge zone, the loos and Wetherspoon's either to plug in my laptop to their power sockets or not, but three times to have a pint.
I've listened to music, podcasts, Christopher Hitchens' "God is not Great", read books, surfed the web. I've also walked up and down the corridor here like a zombie. What I'd really like to do is have a kip but I can't do that till Leb joins me. AND HURRAY!! I've just learned that she's on her way. Wonderful. I hope it all went well there.
Only 3-4 more hours and we'll be able to go through to departures.
Back to Africa. (Thursday, 10th October)
Day 216 (26 to go)
Hello Morocco (Country 69)
مرحبا بالمغرب
The night at Gatwick Airport was pretty rough. We had assumed that the departure area would be busy all night and so we'd be able to go through and doze off there. In fact it closes every night and only re-opened at 3am, just a couple of hours before our flight to Marrakech was due to leave. So we spent three hours or so trying to get some "shut eye" on the airport side of security on uncomfortable wooden benches or on the floor.
The slight consolation was that when they finally did open up the departures area, we were ready and were the first ones through. As we already had our boarding passes it gave us another hour to get a few more winks (even it was much less than 40).
Then it was time to board our Wizzair flight to Morocco... and that is much easier than doing so with "easy" jet. This was our 25th flight and it took me to my 69th country (4 over par on the Jodie curve... I've been to four more counties than my age.
Despite Leb sitting next to a right bloody chatter box and in front of a row of loud, rude and precocious teenagers, I was out like a light... only to be woken by a glorious sun rise over Morocco.
It was nice to land at 8am and feel warm already. Any wishing this holiday was over - and I definitely have done that a few times in the last three days or so - evaporated in the dry sunshine of Marrakech. Even a ridiculously long queue (I reckon it took about two hours to get through) to pass immigration didn't put us off. The problem was clear to us: it was only at the very last minute, when you were about to be interviewed by the border guard, that you were told to get your flight boarding pass out again and have the address of the hotel you were staying at ready. If they'd have made this clear at some point earlier, during the two hours of queuing, everyone would have been prepared. Instead pretty much every passenger going through the system fumbled and struggled to find the things they needed. The accumulation of these two extra minutes for each visitor must have slowed the whole thing down unnecessarily.
Anyway, once through we picked up some more cash ($10 aud = 60 Moroccan Diram) and booked a taxi to take us to our 90th accommodation: O'Loft. The taxi driver was great and proudly told us how Morocco will partly host the 2030 (centenary) World Cup.
It was a 15 minute or so ride to our very nice quiet hotel in the southern outskirts of Marrakech. We had Moroccan tea by the pool while we waited for our room to be made ready.
The temperature apparently reached the high 20s but it felt much cooler than that. I had a nice swim in my new trunks anyway. It's a very pleasant pool.
Then we ordered a dinner for later: Tagine beef with plums, and set off for a walk across a very busy main road to the nearby village of Lagouassem. There, we stopped at a café for a tea and a coffee before popping into a shop to buy a bag of crisps and a bottle of water and then returning.
The dinner by the lit up pool was truly wonderful. I had a vegetable soup starter, Leb had a salad. Lovely, soft, freshly baked bread too. For afters we had a selection of Moroccan biscuits. I'm off the booze this week so I had a banana juice. Very nice.
Back in the room, I booked our buses for the next leg of our Moroccan adventure to the coast on Saturday.
In the world of football, I was pleased Tony Popovic got off to a wining start in Australia's Asia Championship qualifier against China. 3-1 was pretty emphatic. But I was shocked that England screwed up at home to Greece, losing 2-1. This puts their promotion back to tier A in serious jeopardy.
Anyway... we're truly back in holiday mood again now. Woohoo!!



































































































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