I Never Want To Live Here

Home

Pictures

I Never Want To Live Here, including i never want to live here in my blog, and i never want to live here in Folkestone.

Blog / forum etc:

Our actual first day in Key West

May9
Recommended / related

I realise that my previous post about our first day in a) didn't contain any info, b) had things from our second day on the map, and c) has slipped down the page and no-one will read it. So here at last is the first part of our journey. Clare did I miss anything?

So, back from then and trying to write up all my thoughts from the position of a desk, an office, England, very far in space and mind from where we were. We travelled to (Florida, USA) for Clare's bro Kevin's wedding to Guiselle, the wedding was on a Sunday, and we had a few days either side for a holiday. We settled on six nights instead of seven or more to save money, as we couldn't find a package (where two weeks can be the same sort of price as one), you never can find a bargain when you want one can you? I'm not much of a traveller these days, and generally like to come home after a week anyway, but we had a really great trip and I could have done with it lasting a bit longer.

The holiday started extra early for me, while Clare was off on the Wednesday, I had to be all packed Tuesday night, to take my bags into work, and head to Gatwick right after. A busy day at work and a hastily called 4pm meeting meant I just scraped out at half past, meeting Clare at where she even had a beer waiting for me, lovely! We were staying overnight at the Moat House, Gatwick, booked through work, and of course I HEARTILY RECOMMEND IT! We were intending to go for the on-airport Hilton but the savings were enormous on the one we picked, so that's that. Tea and a few pints of real ale in the nearby Ye Olde Six Bells were great, that's something we could not have walked to if we'd stayed on airport. I don't think I ever go near an airport unless I'm actually at an airport, so it's good to find there are real villages and things nearby, it's not just acres of car parks. Nice hotel, nice room, the bar was open, what else do you want from an airport stop? Our transfer the next morning was free, and while it could have been quicker (by not going via other hotels in the area) nothing to complain about at all there. We got to the airport, checked in, and went for a civilsed cooked breakfast, with no booze, lordy!

The flight there was uneventful. It wasn't comfortable or fun, I would not fly Delta again if there was another choice at about the same price, but we went for the cheapest deal we could find this time so we paid our money and we I took our choice. The plane didn't have seatback TV's, just little screens suspended every so often from the ceiling. We were too far away from these, and Clare could not hear anything through the supplied headphones, man was she furious! She didn't miss much though, daytime flight, shared TV, of course they're going to show only childrens films, pretty poor. I didn't bother with The Water Horse or some half cartoon fairy princess movie, but I did quite enjoy National Treasure: Book Of Secrets. I'd not seen the first one, but will now, it's The Goonies meets The Davinci Code, and I quite liked both of them. I don't think I slept on the flight over, I read a Lovejoy Paid and Loving Eyes (nice and light for packing purposes, and I've got two copies of it for some reason, so intended to leave it there) and ate my airline snacks; they remembered my vegan-ness. Almost no free booze though. Free soft drinks, with $5 upgrade to a cocktail if you wanted. A free glass of wine with our meal, and because I probably looked like a desperate wino, the stewardess gave me two, lovely. I prefer free drinks all the way though!

To increase the cheapness, we had to change planes in , though you have to change somewhere to get to . The rest of the family were flying to and driving down from there, but we opted for the more awkward flight but more time in . We had to reclaim our bags here, basically just moving them from one conveyor belt to another though, no security or anything. Then came the security... we shuffled round queues for a couple of hours I'm sure, this was the big immigration moment that you get every time you go to the US though. Atlanta airport is huge, we had a bit of a sprint round looking for food and beer, I heard there was a brew pub on site, but it was just a Sam Adams bar, not much cop. We settled on Sweet Georgia Brown instead, also not any good but we only had about an hour to kill, then on to our tiny little plane to take us the last eighty minutes or so to Key West. This plane was small, and a bit bumpy, but I think I'm getting better at flying, I hardly cried at all. There was a hen party in front of us, and some chap being mysterious about his bar, I think it was this one, trying to get the hen party along. No food on this flight, nor TV, nor any free booze, but before you know it we've landed in Key West.

Clare had joked that Key West airport would be one small shack with a man who'd have to stop selling his mangoes outside to come and do immigration and passports and things; not far off at all. As there are no external flights from Key West there's none of the delay and paperwork, the plane parks up next to the terminal building, you step inside, your bags come in, and you step out the other door to a waiting taxi. I didn't even have time to check out the mango stall. There's a special rate for taxis from the airport, and as we were heading from one end of the island to the other that's the maximum fare of $7.50 each. We ended up sharing a cab with two other people and dropping them off on the way, I think this fixed fare is quite common in the USA from airports. A quick peek at the hotel, drop the bags off, and out on the razzle dazzle!

First impressions of (my second visit to) - it's pretty hot, and it's night time (about 9pm local time when we got there I think). It was the week of the Conch Republic independence celebrations when we arrived, so perhaps there were more people out and about, but to be honest there's always something going on. This was the 26th anniversary of Key West seceding from the rest of the union (for about one minute, after which they surrendered to the navy and then demanded one billion in aid). There were events planned for all over the weekend, starting with a big parade this day that we'd just missed, doh. The streets were still full of people though, which was to remain the case all week. We had a bit of a scoot around town, getting our bearings again, and went in Captain Tony's for a drink. Sloppy Joes' is probably the most famous bar in , it was one of Hemingway's favourite hangouts; the name moved to a bigger premises on Duval Street at some point but Captain Tony's is the original spot. There was live music (there was live music in every bar now, not sure this was the case on our last visit, good place to go live if you play guitar I think), a big old tree in the middle of the bar, and hundreds of bras hanging from the ceiling. It's not that this was too much to take in, just that we'd been travelling a long time, were tired, and headed back to the hotel after this.

[map]2008-04-25[/map]

Hmm, no map action for the 24th actually. Onward and upward, more to write, coming soon!

Comment / reply

How I am the best at IPOD / genres / tagging / etc...

Mar8
Recommended / related

A valued chum just posed these questions by email, and it fired me off in a huge response, so I thought I'd whack it up here too...

1. When you have a CD what are you using to rip the CD, what bitrate and what codec are you using?
2. what is the minimum bitrate you will allow in your collection?
3. How are you dealing with a collection larger than your ipod ie do you sync or do you drag or do you semi sync???
4. What would you use to clean up the collection (make sure it is labelled correctly, has nice pictures where appropriate, and even dedupe record (this would be nice)


My collection is bigger than my 'pod, what you want to do is set up a load of smart playlists in itunes... Then you can just sync certain playlists. I use the "My Rating" quite a lot on mp3s, so I have a smart playlist where my rating is higher than two stars, then sync that playlist... I sync a load of other playlists, including 100 random tunes, and all the most recently ripped stuff, plus new books and podcasts I've not listened to yet, you can do all this with smart playlists.

I have a range of bitrates, though everything is MP3. When I rip something myself I do it at 192k, but I don't suppose I can hear a difference with 128k (definitely not now with this ear infection). I have a load of audio books at 16k, and other things at various rates, as a lot of it's downloaded.

I'm not using any tools to tag things or add artwork, I do that by hand, mostly I'm good at doing it when I acquire a new choon. If you have an itunes account, that can grab cover art automatically, or there's a yahoo widget (you need yahoo widget engine) that supposedly does it, it kept stalling on me though so I gave up on it.

Someone gave me a DVD with 40 years of the top 100 billboard charts on it, that boosted my collection in one hit, but it's mostly crap that I don't listen to... I don't tend to delete mp3s though as you never know when you might want a tune, so I use the "my rating" thing again - 1 star means I don't like it, so all my playlists have a "and my rating is not one star" rule, then 2 - 5 stars are for rating how good it is, and 0 stars just means I've not rated it yet. Another tagging thing that I think I invented and am the best at (...) is being sly with the genre tag. I put in the genre as things like "Rock / Funk / Live / Bootleg / Instrumental" divided up by slashes. This means that I don't browse by genre any more, but I have a smart playlist for every tag instead, ie "Where genre contains 'rock'" and so on. One day a music player will catch up with me and make genres by dividing up the genre tag by slashes automatically (I hoped to extend the ipod linux player, ha), but until then my way works for me. I really don't have many funk rock
instrumentals, that was just for illustrative purposes.

While I'm indulgently prattling on about this (hey I'm going to repost this on my blog, can't go wasting content like this) I wish the player knew to divide up artists by some delimiter or other, so that if I have a track by it would be listed under and under when browsing by artist, instead of adding a new artist called "Super Furry Animals & GLC", that's just annoying. Probably "Album by artist" is the tag for this... Also I wish I was consistent with my delimiters, slashes are good for dividing things up, except for artists, I don't want it messing with my vast library.

How do you use your ?

:: Comment / reply

RE: How'd you get on in London?

Pictures

I got on too well - lots of drink and girls (and learning of course, brushed up on the latest User-centered Design).

Although I always seem to start my breaks in London thinking "I should really live here" and leave thinking "I never want to live here". I think I'm too old to move down there now anyway, leave it to the young people....

FYI - lots of javascript bugs in IE so had to swap to FF

:: 22 Nov :: :: Comment / reply

Also there's an xml feed of i never want to live here, a JSON feed, and a KML feed of i never want to live here .

Hope you found what you're looking for, if not please leave a message about "i never want to live here".

Add i never want to live here as a venue here, help me out, and the next person.

Google the site here

Google
Web this site