Our B&B set us up with a great "British" breakfast each day we were there. It was particularly appreciated on our last morning, as we had a 10-12 hour drive ahead of us. In addition to ham, sauteed mushrooms, eggs, and a cooked tomato, we had oatmeal, yogurt, juice and milk. Awesome. Couldn't fit it all in the picture.

Just to give you an idea of how remote the Isle of Skye is, this is the two-way road in and out of Portree the largest city.


Also on the drive down to England, is Glencoe, a beautiful glen (or canyon) that was the site of a brutal massacre back in the day between the Campbells and MacDonalds (if I'm not mistaken). My Mom always likes to point out that we have both Campbell and MacDonald blood in our line. I don't know what kind of symbolism she is alluding to (diplomacy? familial strife?).






It was high noon. We decided that we would play it safe. We went from Buckingham Palace to the Sainsbury's grocer near our EasyHotel. We stocked up on supplies: drinks, oranges, couscous, croissants, and a bunch of magazines to pass the time. The larger predicament was that we had no tent, no sleeping bag, and nothing to really keep warm with. I had brought a rain slicker, jenny had purchased a sweatshirt in Amsterdam, and we had bought a towel with anchors on it at a gay resort in Spain. That was about the extent of protection we had from the elements, for two nights. We decided that was enough, and we would figure it out.



One view of the queue. Over 2000 people camped out for Wednesday's matches, and we were 15th and 16th in line - the first Americans in line as well.


Everything played out perfectly, and we were able to see Roger Federer (#1 in the world) play against Ivo Karlovic, and the British star, Andy Murray (#3), play against Juan Carlos Fererro. Both matches were on center court.








All in all, Wimbledon was one of the absolute highlights of our trip. The queuing, Center Court, Federer and Murray, etc. It all came together nicely. My only concern throughout the day was that we had a play scheduled for that night. If any of the matches were too good (i.e. went into a fifth set), we would have to either leave Wimbledon early or arrive late to the play. Fortunately everything worked out, and we made it to Les Miserables on time. Never a dull moment. That play was also awesome, and tied into a lot of the things we had seen in France.

There was an exhibited that showed all of the pills that two separate people had taken throughout their lives. It had everything from the first doses of medication taken as children, to the birth control that the woman took, to the nicotine pills that the man took, etc. There was some crazy figure like, "the number of pills you take in the last twenty years of your life is more than all the previous years put together." It was awesome. Much better than the Tate Modern.




...visits to the mainstays such as the Big Ben...


...and Westminster Abbey...


