highlights in the cast are:
eleanor: a college student from yale, with whom i was briefly assigned to share a room. she was camped out in this hostel for a month total and had let her things mildew so intensely that the stench in the room was unbearable and maybe even permanent. i was moved, happily, and i think they even stopped putting others in with her entirely after that - can't be good for business.
martin & james: the ambleside backpackers hostel managers, who took to my company and both treated me royally, printing me out maps and directions for walks
shirley: a middle-aged manchesterite who, in a testament to the region's lasting romance, has a five-year-long tradition of spending one weekend per month in ambleside and at this hostel specifically to go out fell-walking; she had a perfect northern accent and talked up a storm.
dee & celeste: two americans who adopted me in my second hostel, taking me out to a very nice dinner in a middle-of-nowhere pub called the mortal man. dee is a history professor at one of the california public universities, over in the uk researching some early abolitionist brit who was friends with the wordsworths, and celeste, her niece, is a rising senior in a new jersey high school who is obsessed with the beatles and talked constantly of herself and her self-seriousness (daughter of two education lawyers, wanted endlessly to discuss college applications). they were so chatty and self-important and truly terrible listeners - just waiting for their turn to speak, as some do - and though kind to me reminded me well how i feel that americans can be well-meaning but still very unpleasant, even while i do share some of these fibers. most of all they were fascinatingly without curiosity about exploring the land of the lake district.
charlie pitts: a mostly deaf and certainly ancient patron of the mortal man who thought i said my name was sheila and told me how boring the picturesque
the mountain goat shuttle driver: a kindly man who took me personally out to see a distant country house from the arts & crafts movement in britain called blackwell, and returned to retrieve me for free; his other part-time job was a door-to-door mobile librarian to the elderly and families living in the rural lake district, which was such a wonderfully old-fashioned notion to me - 3,000 books a month out on loan.
not even beginning to mention the bustling towns , as completely overrun with summertime's tourism, which i avoided most of the time and certainly tried not to document, this is all in addition to the million and twelve sheep/cows/birds/slugs and the dozens of other walkers with whom i shared variously toned but requisite "hello"s. though most of my time in the hills was very private and remote, and extended solitude is certainly interesting in its effects - well, you see for yourself, via postings of a plethora of pictures and this small video effort:

1 comment:
very nice and green! Definitely another world.
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