From: Patrick Dersjant <patrick@lspace.org> Newsgroups: alt.fan.pratchett Subject: [F] Cambridge invasion report Date: Tue, 3 Apr 2001 23:03:02 +0200 Message-ID: <MPG.153458d0b72f2b0d98971c@news.lspace.org> Hi afpeople, so here's the long awaited for report on the dutch invasion of Cambridge, a bit more than a week ago. First off all, a list of all the attendees at the meet: I. Invasion Crowd Patrick, Menno, Martin, Eelco, Kimberley, Uwe, Jos II. Home side: Nikki, Jay, Mole, Vickie, Ccooke, Sandriana, Rand, Thomas, Ben, Rachel, Colette, Eponine, Alan, Gideon, Jennifer, Tony, Brett, Paul, Liz, Keith, Elaine, Hippo, Jonathan, Barry, Helen, Tim, Karen (the vodka vixen), Kat, Simes, Kincaid, Miq, Susan, Livia, Allen with their babies zoë and the one only referred to as 'the quiet baby'. III. Local Furriners: Mike (ok, furrin local), Arwen, Tamarra, Tom That makes it an astonishing 47 people. Anyways, let me start at the beginning, and that was Friday morning. Due to the recent outbreak of FMD[1], border controls with Belgium were in force again, so travellers were advised to leave early. We did, picked up Eelco along the way and arrived at the border, only to find - no border control at all. Ah well, better safe than sorry. So we continued onwards to Oostende, where our ferry was already waiting for us. We had some stuff that was almost but not entirely unlike food (don't ask Kimberley about the baguette with scrambled eggs), then continued onwards onto the ferry. The journey into Dover was pretty eventless, though we were able to entertain ourselves with the coffee served on board. The bar served the coffee in three different sort of cups, and was inconsistent in the number of cookies you got with a cup as well - this ranged from a single cookie up to eight <g>. When we finally arrived in Dover, we continued towards Cambridge with just one wrong left-turn that would have sent us westwards. Two full rounds on the roundabout remedied that, and we went off into the right direction. About two and a half hours later we arrived at Rachels house, in time to order some chinese. As Martin had arranged a stay in the youth hostel, Rachel and I quickly dropped him off in the city center. I must get that sticker for the car - 'I drove in Cambridge city center and survived'. Shortly after we returned, the food arrived, and was devoured hungrily. Some more talking was done, but reasonably early we called it a day. The next morning saw us showering and then enjoying breakfast - crumpets, muffins and coffee. Some time was spent geeking, and I remember a crowd gathering around Ben playing Delta Force Land Warrior. Not too much later however, we started the walk into town, where we would meet a colleague of Rachel, who would take four of us (Flexor, Jos, Eelco & me) to see the most famous of Cambridge landmarks - the coffee pot. In the meantime, the rest of the crowd amused themselves in the local Waterstones, a book shop with section titles like, amongst others, 'Horror', 'Science Fiction', and 'Terry Pratchett'. The geek tour however went fine - not only were we able to see the coffee pot and determine that it was empty, we also got a look around at the NOC, having a peek at the more modern Suns and the most important machine (as determined by the number of spares present) - an old^Wvintage BBC microcomputer used to display status information all through the building. Anyways, back at the bookstore we went for the next part of the afternoon programme: a chem lecture - it was, after all, National Science week, and what else would a geek want - on how to blow up things. Yes, this was about gases - both the explosive and the non explosive things. One of the quotes I still remember was 'Now, let's see, what else can we burn?'. The cunning plan to get some Helium to the meet for general merryment was abandoned for some reason however. By the time we got out of the lecture, it had started to rain, and we walked briskly towards the meet pub, which was still closed. So we took the one across the street, where Tom, Mike, Martin, Sandriana and some more people where already waiting. Some darts was played, and the first bad puns were made. When the real pub opened about half an hour later, we went over, to occupy the first floor, where Rachel had optimistically reserved space for 'about twenty to twenty five' people. Quickly it became clear that the UK contingent wouldn't let us cloggies invade without heavy restistance, though. More and more people turned up, making this a densely populated meet. From this point onwards my memories blur, so I really hope people chip in with their own stories and memories - I for my part talked to loads of people, did a round with Martin at one point to get a list of all attendees, didn't get to talk to everybody I wanted to talk to, organized the Hannover meet three days later with Uwe, Jenny and Kimberley (see other post), had loads of great ales (why don't they have any of them over here?), and a great stilton burger. Ah yes, the stilton burger. It seems, that from the people who ate this, at least seven have confirmed food poisoning. Two definitely had the burger without any consequences - Eelco and me. Could that be because of the bottle of Irn Bru-Vodka Arwen so kindly provided us with, and which was finished by the two of us later that night whilst filking 'AFP ga ga'? Anyways, the meet was great, but due to the UK pub regulations (luckily they don't have *them* over here...) finished too early. A lot of goodbyes, and after a brisk walk we returned to Ben and Rachels place, to do a bit more talking, and in Eelco and my case, filking (yes, that one will be posted, but requires a finishing touch). Finally, all became quiet as sleep set in. The next morning (sunday) saw the people who crashed at Tom's place (Mike, Jos and Kimberley) return for breakfast. As both Flexor and me wanted to take some Irn Bru with us to the Netherlands, we ventured down to the local supermarket - which didn't stock it. So we did a quick trip with Menno's car to the local Tesco, and took Martin with us, who sprinted out of the showing of 'The X-Men' to get his own shot as well. Unfortunately, there were only two bottles left on the shelf, but a helpful assistent came back with a sixpack of 2l bottles, which we requested he put directly into our cart. He looked at us a bit funny, then. Anyways, the shopping done, we returned home, to unpack the bottles and put them in my car boot. Though, on reflection, it was a mistake to put the car keys temporarily into the boot as well. Of course, I only noticed *after* I closed it, and stood there without the keys, in front of a locked car. Bugger. And only two hours before we'd have to leave to catch the ferry. Luckily I'm a dutch AA member, and the AA arrived quite quickly - within twenty minutes if I remember it correctly. The guy unpacked his stuff, then the first thing he did was look into the manual. Mmm, good thing. The first approach (the coathanger one, I'm sure you know it - else there's probably a web page describing it - try googling) failed, but the second approach, featuring some pieces of plastic and some good old yarn did the trick. Of course, in the meantime the service man asked us what we do for a living - and sure enough, the moment you mention computers... Anyways, we got back into the appartment again, and were able to watch the last fifteen minutes of the X-Men. Then it was time to pack up, exchange hugs, say goodbye, and leave. The trip back was not as uneventful as Fridays trip to Cambridge. All went well until we hit the M25, where a large transport blocked the way for three exits. When we were finally allowed to pass, my car had to catch up with Menno's as he was in a different lane and got past the obstacle much faster. It wasn't until far beyond the Dartford tunnel that we caught up. However, time wasn't an issue, as it appeared the ferry had a half hour delay. It was about an hour when we left, in high seas - boarding was really difficult; I've not yet had to drive onto a ship that's going up and down at least a meter. Anyways, with that delay, and a pretty stormy crossing ('free roller coaster ride with every second crossing'), we arrived in Oostende pretty late, and back in Leiderdorp even later - at about 3am local time. Dropped off Jos and Kimberley at their place, and left Martin, Uwe and Eelco to sort themselves out, as they didn't have anywhere else to go anymore <g>. All in all, a very good weekend, definitely worth the effort. A pity the meet wasn't longer, but then CCDE is also coming up - I'm looking forward to it. Patrick, patting the sig monster for an appropriate quote. [1] Foot and Mouth Disease, for those unfamiliar with the abbreviation. -- 'If Jack Straw wants to limit immigration he'd make a good start by closing down afp...' -- Orjan Westin, on same channel.
The L-Space Web is a creation
of The L-Space Librarians
This mirror
site is maintained by A.H.Davis