Sunday, August 29, 2010

One, Two, Three, Four ........ Scott Pilgrim

Yesterday, Louise had to work so Molly and I had a Saturday to ourselves and Molly decided that we were off to the pictures. The choice we had, according to Molly, was Grown Ups or Diary Of A Wimpy Kid.

Grown Ups I didn't fancy - it seems to me that it's one of those films where every ounce of funny in the film is already in the trailers, and two minutes of funny in a 90 minute movie didn't fill me with joy at the prospect of the £15 it costs now to get to the cinema. Wimpy Kid was the one we decided on.

Except I headed online to find out times whilst Molly was out getting her hair done - and if £15 for two cinema tickets seems extortionate, try £25 for getting an 11 year old's hair done. Wimpy Kid was on too early and there was no way we'd make it in time. The prospect of seeing Grown Ups wasn't something to look forward to.

And then I realised something:



Why the hell not? The timing was right, it was only a 12A, and as soon as I suggested it to her she was so up for it. Even better, it was on at City Screen - the lovely cinema in York that's somewhere between indie arts cinema and old fashioned local cinema.

We had a fantastic time. I'd heard enough about it to know it was going to be fun, and very true to Bryan Lee O'Malley's great graphic novel series. But I didn't think I'd enjoy it quite as much as I did. Almost everything was pretty much perfect. In fact, up until the very end, I don't think I could fault it. For some reason, the last 15 minutes just seemed a bit flat and not as exciting as it should have been, but apart from that - wow. And Molly absolutely loved it all.

So much so that we listened to the soundtrack all night when we got home and we're already planning on a second trip to see it sometime.

The strange thing is, it's possibly the first grown up movie I've ever gone to see with Molly. Before this, everything was either animated children's stuff (even if, like Toy Story 3 recently, there's a lot for me in it as well) or older child/teen movies like Harry Potter or Twilight. To me even Twilight still counts as a Molly film, possibly because it's not something I'd choose to go and see on my own.

But Scott Pilgrim was something different, a grown up movie that both of us wanted to see - and yes, that's just one more sign that she's growing up. Wonderful but still a little saddening.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

11 years ago today - Happy Birthday Molly!


It really does seem like no time at all. One day we're holding her in our arms for the very first time, the next, suddenly, amazingly, wonderfully, she's 11.

Off to secondary school in a couple of weeks, grown up, ready to face the world. Yet still, always, always, our gorgeous little girl. And much to her embarrassment, she always will be.


(Molly perfecting that grumpy teenage look - but the hint of a smile ruins it!)



Happy Birthday Molly. Love you.

Oh yes, we got presents, shouldn't forget about the presents (Molly certainly hasn't! She may be all grown up, but that doesn't stop her getting all hyper excited the night before her birthday before eventually collapsing, alarm clock set for 7am, into bed at 11pm). The slightly sad thing about this years present haul is that I realised as we were wrapping them that this was the first year ever that Molly didn't have any actual toys. Wii games, dvds, books - but no actual toys.

[sob] growing up is hard for the parents to take [sob]


Friday, August 13, 2010

Bruton Family Summer Holiday 2010 - Adventures in Wales and Dublin - PART 2

Tuesday saw family Bruton head to Dublin.

Holyhead ferry at 1pm, Dublin at 5pm, spend the night and away again to Dublin ferry at 7pm Wednesday, eventually getting back to Holyhead in the early hours of Thursday. I've been to Dublin just once before, Louise and Molly never. Molly was incredibly excited, not least because she'd stropped a few months back that she'd never been abroad and as she pointed out "Scotland doesn't count" (sorry Scottish friends, but you know what she means).



Personally, having not been on a ferry for a long time, I was a bit disappointed that they've changed the layout (at least on Stena) and you can't get to the front or the back anymore - that was always the best bit, seeing the land disappear one end and then the destination get closer and closer hours later at the other. Instead you get a very restricted view along the sides.

But Molly was very happy with it anyway - the ferry crossing was just one long fun thing for her, finding lots and lots of things to do all over the ship.




We got in, headed into town, and off to O'Connell Street for the hotel. Having Google mapped it before we left I had no problem finding it - seeing as it's almost directly opposite the 121m gleaming spire thing:

Our hotel (Lynam's) was a cheap boutique hotel. The photos had looked lovely and Louise and I were looking forward to spending a relaxing night once Molly was asleep enjoying the atmosphere of what looked like a lovely little hotel bar. Sadly, Lynam's, although lovely and boutique-y, is also a little tired and the bar no longer opens. But it was merely a minor inconvenience (for me at least - more on that later) and the hotel bedroom was lovely - clean, comfortable - everything you need from a room you don't intend spending more than a few hours asleep in.



Off out we went to the Dublin night. O'Connell Street, Temple Bar, seeing all the sights. Unfortunately, as Molly later pointed out very succinctly, Dublin seemed to consist of far more than it's fair share of "fighting, homeless people and drunks". Oh dear. It hadn't helped when we stopped off for tea at a lovely Pizzeria and then walked out almost right into the middle of a group of chavvy kids having a fight over something or other. It was a proper fight after a fashion as well - once the requisite round of shouting, squaring up and pushing were done with, chav #1 decked chav #2. There was blood. Molly was most unimpressed. And Louise and I started to feel a little bit unsettled.

I know it's not that we're some country bumpkin family just in from the sticks. Pocklington may be a sub 10k market town, but Louise and I spent years in Birmingham and I'd regularly wander through areas of the city that most people avoided. But something about the vibe in Dublin when the lights go down just seemed a bit too threatening. Shame.

Anyway, onto the nice bits. I'd already decided it was time for a Guinness. Louise and Molly headed off to a lovely little ice cream place in Temple Bar for dessert so I headed off to the Temple Bar. Now I may be doing the typical tourist thing with the Guinness but at least I wasn't being really bloody annoying in the Temple Bar like the group of students in front of me and taking pictures of the bloody pints they were having. It's not so much that I minded them taking pictures, after all, they were students and if there's ever a time to be annoyingly young, it's those years of studenthood. No, what I minded was that they decided to do it at the bloody bar, in my bloody way.

But nevermind. That first sip of Guinness soon took any irritation away. It really is so deliciously light and goes down so quickly. Or mine did anyway. Still had the taste on my lips 20 minutes later when we all met up to head back to the hotel. I know the old adage about it being better in Ireland isn't necessarily true - the stuffs the same all over the world, but the fact that more of it's drunk in Ireland, so the kegs are fresher, the lines are cleaned more regularly and the barstaff know how to pour it all makes a big difference.

And here's where the bar would have been a great boon to Louise and I. Because it was already 10pm, Molly was knackered and was going to go to sleep fairly quickly. Since Louise is so nice and since I'm the one who doesn't mind sitting in a strange pub on my own and had some reviews to write up, I got to head out whilst the girls went to bed.

I can't remember the name of the bar, but it was suitably good. Not too many tourists, got busier as the night wore on, had a great barman who remembered everyone's drinks, no matter how long they'd been in the bar. Guinness #2 was just as smooth and lovely as #1. Guinness #3 was the same. Then I decided to not push my luck, remembering how heavy Guinness could be and what a Guinness hangover felt like, I switched to good old reliable G&T. A lovely, lovely night out in Dublin for me.

Wednesday morning we were all up early, breakfast in the hotel, off out shopping and sightseeing. Molly was determined to visit one of the crappy Irish shops that pump out trad music, sell every manner of green tat and generally exist just to sucker in the tourist money. And bless her, Molly loved it. Tacky and 10 just fit so well. After going round the shop at leasrt 5 times, she decided that she was going to get herself a T-shirt. And thankfully, she picked a pretty nice one.


(The GPO building is well worth a look - a beautifully maintained, old fashioned post office, all gleaming marble and gold fittings)

(The Oliver St John Gogarty pub - Molly just liked the flags)

After that we had a very nice, although very tiring day round Dublin, which we all agreed was a damn sight more hospitable and better natured during the day than it was at night.

We did the tourist things:


Lunch was traditionally Irish. Sheehans Bar off Grafton Street. Or at least the drink was. And after me telling Molly and Louise about my annoyance with the tourists photographing their Guinnesses she insisted on this......


Then we wandered some more. We have a habit of seeing someone famous every time we go away. It never fails. And this time, as we wandered around a lovely deli, we realised the very lovely man buying stuff at the counter was Neil Hannon, he of The Divine Comedy.

Afternoon treat for tired legs was Murphy's Ice Cream Parlour. Absolutely gorgeous ice-cream, fantastic coffee and brilliant service. We'd popped in earlier to be greeted by a lovely guy. "Can I get anything for you?" he says. "No thanks, we're just looking" say we in our best uptight English manner. "Oh, there's nothing worse than looking at ice cream - would you like to try a couple of flavours?". It was lovely, and we made a definite resolution to go back. But I get the impression that he wasn't necessarily doing the hard sell, more that he just did it anyway, just to be nice. That's customer service, and I'm gladly recommend Murphy's Ice Cream parlour to anyone who happens to ask.



And that was pretty much Dublin done. We did some more walking, some shopping, some starring at places. But come 6pm we were all absolutely wiped and just wanted to get the bus back to Dublin Harbour and get on the ferry. So another cup of coffee was sought and eventually we found ourselves on a mostly empty ferry.

But because of the terrible discrimination against foot passengers that Stena operate, even with very few people on board, we still couldn't get a seat where Molly could stretch out and get some sleep. Every sofa, every comfy bench - all taken up by the car passengers. It had struck us as strange when coming to Dublin that foot passengers don't actually walk on board. Instead, we get to wait in a passenger lounge, get on a bus and the bus drives onboard the car decks. Car passengers can get onboard up to an hour before departure. Foot passengers can't. We have to wait until the bus goes. And it was 10 minutes before departure when the bus pulled onto the ferry, by which time all those car passengers had settled down in every single comfy seat/lounger/sofa/bench and had stretched out for a nap. Damn them all.

Manny, many hours later, with Molly wired and hyper through lack of sleep we arrive in Holyhead and drive home. I appear to have a slight sniffle, a bit of a sore throat and a throbbing headache.

And it just got worse from there. Nothing bad, just a shitty cold, sinuses burning out, nose running/blocked/running, sore throat, shivers, hacking cough, and a pulsating, eye straining headache. Pretty much the sort of thing that always gets described as "man-flu". Except I don't get "man-flu". I fight and struggle and keep going, dosing myself up with olbas oil, painkillers and alcohol, refusing to let it beat me down.

Maybe it was the holiday that did it, maybe the actual relaxation, the winding down? No matter. I spent Thursday sprawled on the sofa, snuffling, dosed up, olbas stinking. Molly and Louise went down to the beach after tea and had great fun. I lay on the sofa. Molly went to bed. I lay on the sofa. Then I started to feel better. Then I got up and realised I only really felt better when I was lying down. Repeat for the next four hours until bed. I did try sitting down and writing some things, but trying to concentrate just didn't happen at all.

Bah. Holiday sickness. Not good. Repeat on Friday. Louise and Molly had a great time, off to the beach, lunch, ice creams, relaxing playtime. I lay on the sofa.

But I wont moan too much (or have I already?) - we went home on Saturday, I still felt like shite, but it didn't matter, 2/3rds of the Brutons had an excellent week in wales and Dublin, and me, as the remaining third, had had a blast right up until Thursday.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Bruton Family Summer Holiday 2010 - Adventures in Wales and Dublin - PART 1

A week ago now we got back from our lovely summer hols!

The plan: Have a most enjoyable week in Anglesey thanks to the ever generous hospitality of Molly's favourite auntie and uncle with an extra overnighter in Dublin. In actuality, a great most of week that ended with me going down with some nasty cold thing. But all in all, a very nice holiday, thank you very much.

We had originally just planned to do a day trip to Dublin, but then someone (me) pointed out that since I'd have to drive to Holyhead and then drive back to the holiday house, it would mean I wouldn't feel that good about having a pint or two of Guiness. And yes, I realise it's a terrible cliche, going to Dublin and then banging on about how Guiness in Ireland tastes so much better than in the UK, but I'm warning you now - I'm going to.

So we found what looked like a rather nice hotel (cheap too) in the centre of Dublin, booked the ferry and off we went.

Saturday we got to Anglesey and settled in. The first surprise was waiting for Molly as we pulled up - Uncle David had delayed leaving so he could see her (it's been far too long since we went down to Birmingham to see them all, and Uncle David's 50th party was inconveniently placed the weekend before Molly's SATs exams started). Delight turned to amazement turned to hysteria when she realised that the Jag in the driveway was Uncle Davids and that he was going to take her for a spin in it. It's Uncle David's mid-life crisis car - I'm sure he wont mind me saying that - but it's a beautiful car and he made Molly's day with the spin down to the beach and back. That's why he's favourite uncle.

Sunday was Molly's choice so we upped and offed to The Welsh Mountain Zoo, famous in Bruton family legend for the time we took Molly's Grandad there in his wheelchair. The mountain part of the name should tell you about some of the slopes you have to walk up and down - even funnier when Louise wheeled him down the hill and was genuinely concerned they were going to lose control. or the image of Louise pushing him up the hill with Molly in front, pulling him up by holding onto his walking stick.

Anyway, the zoo itself is a lovely place:





Monday it was my choice (sort of - my real first choice was Portmeirion to relive my love of the Prisoner, but I was outvoted).

So off we go to Beaumaris and a trip out in a boat to Puffin Island. Or at least Molly and I went off in a boat. Louise doesn't do boats all that well. The ferry was going to be okay, but the last time we got her on a small boat was on a half hour trip round the bay in Whitby. Molly and I had a great time up top but Louise spent the time under decks sitting down with a glass of wine to calm her nerves. (She would have had a second but couldn't muster the courage to get up and walk the 15 feet to the bar. Bless her.) Another much loved holiday memory.

Just like the one Louise and Molly remind me of whenever we're in Beaumaris - one year we were sat down quite happily having an ice cream when a lovely seagull managed to crap with magnificent accuracy right down my sleeve as I went to lick the ice cream. Every time, every single time we pass the spot in Beaumaris, Louise and Molly can't help but collapse in fits of giggles as they remember it.


(Image of Puffin from UK Coastline - this was what one of the ones we saw looked like!)


(A Puffin - we got nowhere near this close! Image from Puffinpalooza)

Puffin Island - sadly, following an infestation of rats years back, there aren't actually all that many Puffins there, but we did see 2 on the way round the island. Plus at least 7 seals and 2 Harbour Porpoises (Molly was keeping count). Brilliant trip, choppy, splashy and lots of fun.


(Puffin Island in the distance)


(A little closer. According to Molly this was a picture of one of the seals. No, I can't see it either)


Monday, August 09, 2010

They're not meant to be doing this......

One problem with rats. When you get them out for a bit of a runaround and set up a series of boxes/runs/obstacles for them, they will always go where they really aren't meant to.....