more about our voyage later... we are now moving along the coast of england
Monday, April 27, 2026
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Four Dinosaurs and a Giant Sloth
Today we visited the Victoria an Albert Museum and the Natural History Museum which is across the street. I especially enjoyed a visit to the dinosaur section.
| A dinosaur |
| Another dinosaur |
| Another one. |
| One more dinosaur. Of course I have their names, but it’s too much trouble to add them. If you want to identify dinosaurs, ask a 4-year-old. |
A Giant Sloth
| Skeleton of a Giant Sloth from South America |
My Previous Encounter with a Giant Sloth
| Our visit to the cave of the Giant Sloth in Patagonia in 2017 |
The Milodon, or Giant Sloth, whose bones are found throughout Patagonia, was hunted by early people, who probably contributed to the extinction of this one-ton beast. The bones of this animal were found in the cave where the statue now stands. For a while, it was hoped that this beast was not yet extinct.
The British Museum Part II plus dinner
Artifacts from three burial sites in Britain and one Horned Helmet
| A glass vessel from a Roman grave in Britain |
| A pair of shoes from one of the graves. |
“The three cremation burials whose contents are shown here are of different dates and were excavated in very different circumstances. The late Iron Age grave from King Harry Lane, St Albans, demonstrates that Roman artefacts and customs were already familiar in Britain before the military conquest in AD 43. The grave from Elsenham, Essex, though so disturbed by ploughing that precise recording was not feasible, is important because it contains a very rare and interesting type of enamelled vessel, and is dated by pottery and coins. The other grave-group, from Southfleet, is an early discovery from an important site, and includes another exceptional find, the elegant pair of shoes.”
Horned helmet
Found in the River Thames at Waterloo Bridge, London
150-50 BC
Originally this helmet would have been a gleaming golden colour and decorated with red glass studs. The helmet is unlikely to have been used in battle and was probably a form of ceremonial headdress. The helmet is a very rare find, it is the only Iron Age horned helmet to be found in Europe. The helmet is made from sheet bronze sections held together with bronze rivets.The raised decoration is repeated on the back and front of the helmet.
Dinner with our friends Sheila and John
| It had been 10 years but when we got together it seemed much less time. We started with a drink (sparkling water for all). |
| The four of us at the table before dinner. |
| Our meals: lamb chops, bouillabaisse, and curry with rice and salad. |
Friday, April 24, 2026
The British Museum, Part I
Horses from Halikarnasos
Horses from the Parthenon
Morning in Russell Square
Our hotel in London is across from Russell Square. We took a brief walk this morning before out day’s tourist activities begin.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Night and Day
Overnight to London
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| Detroit last night: waiting for the overnight flight to take us to London. Despite having expectations for a pleasant flight, our seats were uncomfortable and the food was icky. |
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| Heading out of Heathrow Airport by taxi to our hotel in London. If blogger and web access will allow me to do it, I’ll be posting more as our trip continues. |
The National Gallery, London
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Women in the Kitchen
| Women in the Kitchen by Anne Willan, published 2020. |
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| Illustration from Women in the Kitchen. Note that there is a book open on her table while the woman works at the fire — no doubt a cookbook! |
Cooking at our House
Friday, April 17, 2026
After the Storm
Earlier this week, a violent storm tore through town. Our immediate area was very lucky, but there was quite a bit of damage in a few other areas. The front wall of a skating rink a few miles from here was ripped off by the strong winds, and quite a few cars were crushed by falling trees.
Rain has continued on and off. The weather hasn’t stopped the flowers and flowering trees from continuing their spring blossoming.
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| An azalea blossom covered with raindrops. |
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| A fallen tree around a quarter-mile from our house. (Woman walking dog for Eileen’s Critters!) |
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| Cyclists pass by a fallen branch. Photos in the paper show vehicles crushed by much bigger tree limbs. |
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| Ephemeral blossoms on a weeping cherry tree a day ago. By now most petals have fallen. |
© 2026 mae sander — shared with Sunday Salon at Readerbuzz.
During the Storm?
Thursday, April 16, 2026
A Monster worse than Hitler
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Reading this Week
An old book by Ursula Le Guin
images from the real trip around the moon that took place last month. I picture the story by imagining the view of the earth from near the moon in this live photo, transmitted by the astronauts. However, I didn’t really enjoy Le Guin’s carefully composed details of 1974 era space fiction, and didn’t finish reading it.
A New Book by Francis Spufford
Nonesuch: A Novel by Francis Spufford interests me because I enjoyed one of this author's earlier books, Cahokia Jazz, which is an alternate-history-detective novel. At the time: December 2024, I wrote a very brief review: "What would the area around St. Louis (where I grew up) be like if all post-European-arrival history had been different? Here's a speculative -- and suspenseful-- fiction about the answer." Now I’m reading Spufford’s next book, and it’s amazing and quite different. I’ll post a review of it when I finish reading.











