Friday, October 17, 2008

Moving on

In moving out of the hotel, I had a lot to reflect on:

  • I checked in May 25, with a 2-week reservation, and stayed for 5 months
  • I read 12 books (My Year Off, Angela's Ashes, Time Traveller's Wife, How To Be a Brit, 'Tis, A Monk Swimming, Shantaram, Poems on the Underground, The Little Prince, Dummies Guide to Prince2, the Highway Code, and now the complete works of Sherlock Holmes)
  • I've studied four chapters of my Italian book, and can say "I have a ski mask" in Italian ("ho una passamontagna")
  • I joined a gym for 3 months, took 3 yoga classes per week, and lost 20 pounds
  • I ate salad and hummus for two months (which probably contributed more to the weight loss than the gym)
  • I found two tennis partners online, both of whom happened to be American.
  • I joined a vegetarian meetup group, and met a lot of weird people.
  • I've wandered around fifteen parks (Holland Park, Hyde Park, Kensington Gardens, Regents Park, Primrose Hill, Hampstead Heath, St. James's Park, Shoreditch Park, Battersea Park, Alexandra Park, Highgate Woods, Queen's Wood, Cherry Tree Park, Parsons Green, Jubilee Gardens)
  • I've gone to seven concerts (Rufus Wainwright, Diana Krall, Moody Blues, Royal Philharmonic [twice], Mozart Festival Orchestra, and a classical pianist at St Martin's-in-the-Fields)
  • I've seen six shows (War Horse, Blood Wedding, Brief Encounter, Cirque Surreal, Ballet Trockadero, and some play in Camberwell)
  • I've watched seven films (Indiana Jones, Dr Zhivago, Buster Keaton, Wall-E, Rocky Horror, Somers Town, the Visitor, and the Pope's Toilet)
  • And three DVDs (Eddie Izzard, Bellevue Rendezvous, This is England)
  • I've watched six hours of TV, not including the Olympics
  • I've been to seven museums (Natural History, British Museum, V&A, Tate Britain, Tate Modern, Science, and National Portrait Gallery)
  • I've ridden the tube 212 times (estimated)
  • I've attended dozens of free performances at National Theatre, Trafalgar Square, Hyde Park, and the Scoop
  • I've journeyed three times outside of London (Trowbridge, Crawley, and Warwick)
  • I've watched two fireworks shows (Shoreditch festival and Thames festival)
  • I've seen one comedy show, one carnival (Notting Hill), one poetry reading, one Thai festival, and one gorilla run
  • I've visited two cemeteries (Brompton and Highgate)
  • I've gotten my NHS (National Health Services) card, my library card, and my provisional driver's license
  • I bought a long rain coat, a sweater, two scarves, and a stripey shirt, so I could blend in.
  • I've whiled away ten afternoons at the laundromat
  • I've met Jessica's parents five times (and they took me to two of those shows)
  • I missed the Duck Race at Mosely Lock, and have not yet been to the Doctor Who exhibition

Of course, I still have much to look forward to:

  • I am going to see an animated movie about worms on Saturday, and a classic British cult film (Withnail & I) on Sunday
  • I am going to a (free) New Orleans festival next weekend
  • The Lord Mayor's Parade is in two weeks
  • I have tickets to see Steve Winwood early November
  • In mid-November, I am having dinner with some of Jessica's co-workers, and attending her friend's wedding (not related)
  • I am returning to California for a week in early December
  • I am running out of money mid-December
  • I am seeing the "Pitmen Painters" mid-January

Here are some photos of the flat. Only two complaints: When I looked at the place (twice), I did not appreciate how loud, how often, or how early, the airplanes flew past; and I can't get the wireless to work, but just having a reliable Internet connection is fantastic. I may even hook up Skype again and call some people in the US! Here's a map to my new place.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

A Tale of Two Interviews

"Severe delays due to an earlier person under a train." That was a warning I saw on the Underground a week ago. (Jessica suggested the person was probably no longer "early" but now "late.") It was interesting, but not really relevant, and I didn't think about it again.

Until this morning, when that same person apparently climbed under the train I needed to get to my interview. Yes, interview! After a two-month dry spell (mostly self-inflicted), I finally had not one, but two interviews today! (And, oddly, both were with online marketing firms.) The first was 2 miles away, I had 45 minutes, I was wearing a suit, and there was a person under my train!

A reasonable person would have hailed a cab, but I've taken a cab two miles in London and it cost US $30! After paying the security deposit and one month's rent on my new flat (which I'm moving into tomorrow), my bank account is looking pretty anemic, which is why I was hoofing it through Kensington Gardens, arriving two minutes early, soaking wet.

Still, I must have made a favorable impession, as they invited me to a second interview, and asked to check some technical references. My second interview of the day was a phone screen, but they also asked me to come in for a face-to-face, so I was feeling pretty good. However, the reality remains that I only applied for these positions out of desperation, and there's no way an online marketing firm doing web pages and video animations is going to hire a conservative old-school Unix practitioner like me.

But in the end, I couldn't help but feel I was still better off than my friend under the train. Unfortunately, I couldn't find any information on him over the web, except for a generic blurb in a BBC article from 1999.

"[The Jubilee line has] glass platform doors that match perfectly to the position of the train doors, making it difficult for passengers to fall in front of or under a train. 'The primary aim was to do with ventilation, and litter and human hair - we get tons and tons of human hair down the tunnels and it can take hours and hours of cleaning time,' [a spokeswoman] said. 'But of course there is the added safety benefit that it stops people committing suicide.'"

I also found that there are about 50 suicides per year (plus an undisclosed number of fatal accidents), the peak hour for tube suicides is 11am, and people who commit suicide by throwing themselves under a train are called 'one-unders'.

Thursday I should have photos of my new flat, but for now I've attached a picture of the marina right outside my flat. (That's the moon in the photo, although most days the sun looks about the same.)

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Flats of fancy

As I've previously mentioned, renting an apartment -- sorry, "letting a flat" -- is completely different in the UK. Instead of landlords advertising in the classifieds, flats are registered with letting agents (similar to real estate agents, in that they're one step above used car salesmen) who advertise primarily via index cards pasted to their shop window.

If you're a typical renter, who knows where he wants to live, can commit for at least a year, and is willing to pay US $4,500 per month, this works out reasonably well--you call an agent and he does all the legwork for you. But if you're only willing to commit for 3 months, don't know the area, and are only willing to spend US $2,000/month -- ie, me -- then you're pretty much screwed. Agents won't talk to you, and there are no classifieds to check, and I wasn't about to go around checking every agent's shop window.

In early September, I stumbled upon the local version of craigslist -- called gumtree -- which did have some "short let" listings, though that was open to interpretation. (Many had a 6 month minimum, although one advertised rooms by the hour.) The pickings were slim, but I found a guy who was working abroad for three months and looking to rent his flat while he was away. In the US, that's called "housesitting," and you get paid to live in someone's home. Here, you pay them, but he only wanted US $2,000/month so I thought I was in business.

And it was a nice flat -- on the ground floor, with one bedroom, a small living room but big kitchen, and a patio in back. The only drawback was that he wasn't leaving until the end of September, and I didn't want to wait that long.

Fast forward to October, and I've looked at a dozen more places, talked to at least 50 owners or agents, travelled the length and breadth of London, spent a small fortune on phone calls and tube rides, and still haven't found anything as nice as the first place. I came close in Canary Wharf, which was tiny but was on the water and had floor-to-ceiling windows. I would have taken it except it was so far from Jess (and everything else) that I knew she'd never visit.

In fact, it was that realization -- plus the horrific studios I was seeing in central London -- that made me even consider Brentford, which was equally far from central London but in the opposite direction, close to where Jessica works. A woman was going to Africa for three months, and so was renting out her beautiful one bedroom flat overlooking water on both sides. I loved it immediately, but was concerned about how far it was from the city. (It's only 5 miles from where I'm currently staying, but remember that the average speed here is 5mph.)

After banging my head against the computer for about two hours, however, I discovered that with a monthly "season ticket" I could take the train for the same price as the tube, and it would only take 12 minutes longer! In fact, even though I'm further away, it takes the same amount of time to get to Jessica's house. (I'm still not really sure how that works.) So I took it. Now I just have to prove I can afford it, and I can move in 12 days.

Here is a map of London with placemarkers for every place I've considered. Light blue indicates where I'm currently staying (south), and where Jessica lives (north). Green are the two places I liked -- Brentford (west) and Canary Wharf (east). Note the big "hole" in the center -- those places go for £500-£800 per week, and my budget was £250.

The ones in dark blue I never even looked at -- they wanted 6 months minimum, or jacked up the price by 50% for a "short let," or in many cases they were already taken by the time I responded. (I read September was the worst time to be apartment hunting because 100,000 kids were flooding into London for college, all looking for apartments.)

In red are places I looked at that I wouldn't let a dog stay at. One place was so disgusting, I refused to even look at any other flats in that entire borough. Another place reeked of cigarette smoke, primarily because the owner was sitting on the sofa smoking! Most of the places didn't even have enough space to turn around, and almost none of them had an oven, never mind a washing machine. One had a shower between the bed and the kitchen, and the toilet was down the hall! (Funny how they forgot to mention that in the ad.) Almost all of them had a view of a brick wall, or a busy high street, or just didn't have any windows at all. (One was literally a hallway, with two bare bulbs hanging from the ceiling.) In other words, it was the most depressing bunch of places you've ever seen, and they cost as much as my 1200 square-foot loft in downtown LA!

The ones in purple were just scams. (And no, I didn't wire anybody any money.)

Yellow were places I was interested in, but didn't get a chance to look at, usually because the agent didn't return my call despite me leaving messages every day for the last three days. I had appointments with three places today, but decided to cancel them and take Brentford because they were too expensive, too inconvenient, or -- at Holly Lodge Estate -- too "soulless," as Jess described it. The buildings were lovely, the streets were wide, there was plenty of green, it was just a few minutes walk to Hampstead Heath on one side and the tube on the other, and it was only 2 miles from Jessica's -- in other words, ideal -- but it had such a "Stepford Wives" vibe, with absolute conformity, that I knew I couldn't stay there. (Interesting side-note, Wikipedia reports it was built in the 1920s for single women only.)

Anyone who remembers my dilemma in Los Angeles -- the nice, safe apartment vs. the raw, funky loft -- may see similar overtones here, but that's not the case. The flat in Brentford is lovely--who knew I had the exact same decorating taste as a British woman in her 50's? There is nothing raw or funky about the place: the ceiling is finished, the floors are wood, not cement, and the kitchen is not in the middle of the living room. And best of all, it comes fully furnished, and is filled with plants. There is a large private garden nearby, and Kew Gardens is just across the Thames. I think it will be a little awkward staying in somebody else's place -- since I obviously can't personalize it very much -- but I suspect that come January, when she returns from Africa, I will be very sorry to leave.

Heck, I'm sorry to be leaving the hotel I'm at. I know that sounds crazy, but this is a small, family-run place, and I've gotten to know the owners (and the four chambermaids they've gone through) quite well. They've given me a free hand, trusted me completely, and even asked me to man the phones occasionally. They've fed me, helped me, and are even trying to teach me Italian. (Imparo lentamente.) They have been my surrogate family, and good friends, and I will miss having them around. (I will also miss them making breakfast and cleaning up after me.) Ma la vita continua...

Oh, more British-isms:

  • torch = flashlight
  • jumper = sweater
  • till = cash register
  • way out = exit
  • full stop = period
  • hash = pound sign
  • hob = stove
  • trousers = pants
  • cuffs = shirt cuffs
  • turn-ups = pant cuffs
  • mange-tout = sugar snap peas
  • dustman = garbage collector (or "sanitation engineer")
  • rocket lettuce = arugula
  • basil = basil (yeah, they're spelled the same but pronounced completely differently)