Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Notice anything wrong???

Yep I'm getting old.  We had to go to the grocery store and as we are walking down the isle of the store my hips begin to hurt and I feel like I am walking off kelter.  I look down and this is what I see.  Both are black shoes but one is higher than the other.  Now you ask how could I possibly get all the way to the store before noticing???? Well to be truthful the roads and sidewalks here are very uneven so I am use to walking on uneven surfaces.  No excuse for how come I didn't notice that the shoes looked different.  Like I said I'm getting old.  Just thought I'd share one of our funniest moments.




Our words for this post: take out= take away,  pick up = collect,  carpenter= joiner,  windshield = windscreen,  master bedroom = en-suite,  living room = lounge

internet FINALLY!!!!!!!



April 28,2014

Finally..... after being in Scotland for two months as of today, we finally have the internet.  We have had to run to the church every time we have needed to get online. So I have not had the time to blog while at the church.  I will play catch up a little at a time. We finally found a new flat. We moved in a week ago this past Friday. We got internet this morning. Took the provider two weeks to get to us. Luckily we signed up as soon as we knew where we would be moving to or we would still be waiting.
To start off with I will post the pictures of our first flat.  It is typical of most flats in Scotland. The difference in the flat that were were in and the really typical Scotland flats is that we had two bathrooms, the master bath is called an en-suite here. Most flats only have one bathroom. Bathrooms/Restrooms are called Toilets here. In homes and business's alike. No one uses the terms bathrooms or restrooms. Toilet is still a hard word for me to use. But I am corrected often by the young adults we work with. It is a bit funny when they correct me. Anyways. I digress, as I was saying its typical for flats here to only have one toilet. Also the rooms in our old flat were a bit bigger than normal. I think at one time the flat were were in was in an upper crust neighborhood. It is on a golf course. Now it its in a kind of cruddy neighborhood. It was 700 sq feet. It also had room in the kitchen for a small table to eat at, also not common here. The kitchens are tiny with just enough room for a couple of kitchen cabinets a sink, a small workspace worth of counter top, an oven with a hob (stove top) over the oven and generally a fridge that sits underneath the counter.  We did have a taller fridge with a freezer in our first flat, also uncommon. Not many flats have freezers. Washers are also in the kitchen and sit under the counter. Our washer was a washer/dryer combination. Also uncommon. Most flats here do not have dryers. They hang their clothes either in a drying green, which is a place outside with a clothes lines or they hang them on drying racks in their flats.  Because the dryers ruin your clothes the only thing that can be dried are towels and sheets. EVERYTHING else has to be hung. I hang all our clothes on drying racks so we generally have clothes hanging in our flat as it takes a long time to dry here because of the humidity. The kitchen in our first flat is typical in that it had little to know cupboards. Here everyone shops for food about every other day because they do not have the space in cupboards or fridges to put much in the way of food. Because this blog is also our picture journal then you all will have to endure all of our memory pictures.
This is our car. It's a Vauxhall Meriva, it runs on diesel. We have gotten use to sitting shoulder to shoulder.







The top picture is out our front window, that sidewalk was always busy with people walking to and from the buses because the bus stop was just over the hill from our complex.
The middle picture is out of the side of our flat overlooking the parking lot and you can see the bridge that leads over the fast train tracks and to the trolly tracks. Over the tracks are the bus stops. A fast train passed by about every 10 minutes, it was electric and was pretty quite for a train although we could hear it from our flat it was not annoying, It traveled to other cities in Scotland as well as to England. There was about 21 trains that went to London everyday from Edinburgh. The city trolley was also electric, it ran on its own tracks even tho a lot of the trolley tracks ran right along side of the fast train tracks. The trolley only covered Edinburgh.Then down on the roads were the bus stops, you can get to anyplace on the buses, you just need to learn which number of bus takes you to what part of town. We just downloaded the bus schedule and route on our I pads so we can figure out our route before we get on the bus.There is a bus stop on both sides of the streets about every block or two. there are several buses of the same number and a bus pulls into the stops every 10 -20 minutes depending on where you are going. If you are riding the bus at night then you have to be sure and check to see which routes run a night bus and you may have to change buses a time or two to get back home since all buses do not run a night route. We have a mission car of course, but since the parking downtown is almost non existent and very expensive, we ride the bus when we go.
The bottom picture is out our back window.  We over look the Carrick Knowe golf course.  At one time I am sure that this was a upper class complex. The Flats that are on both ends with the bigger wings like the one we were in are bigger than the average flat here even tho it was still only 700 sq ft in size.








 This is our lounge(living room) those pictures of the men in kilts above the couch,  in the center picture are the only pictures we had in our entire flat.




This is the kitchen. You can see in the picture at the top all the cabinets the kitchen had. that white appliance with the round window is the washer/dryer and the fridge sits just this side of the oven/hob' as you can see in last picture.
Its a small kitchen, but bigger than normal here.


this is the 2nd bedroom.






This is the master bedroom with the en-suite. There are only three bed sizes in the UK  single(our twin) double (a bit smaller than our double) and a King( smaller than our queen). We sleep in a double. We have learned to sleep in tandem.



The shower unit is how most all showers get hot water, except the newer flats.
They are called electric showers but we know them as on demand water heaters. You have to flip a red switch outside of the bathroom to turn on the unit so that you will have hot water. The water in bathtubs are heated with the water from the main water heater in flat. I really like having the on demand hot water, we never run out of hot water in the shower. Toilets (bathrooms) here have no electric outlets. Drives me crazy. Have to blow dry hair, etc  in the bedroom. Showers and tubs have no shelves in them.  No storage in bathrooms. Some have a very small cabinet for medicine. Lots of wasted space in these flats that could be better used especially considering how small the flats are.





This is the foyer of the flat. All flats front door open into either a foyer or a hallway where all the rooms branch off from there. All rooms have a door and all rooms have doors that close automatically. 
We americans come over here and block the kitchen and lounge doors open.  You always enter into a flat that is backwards to us.  The front door generally comes in by the bedrooms and sometimes the kitchen.  The lounge is generally at the far end of the flat from the front door, very strange to me. This flat has the kitchen right through the first door as you come into the flat then you pass the master bedroom then the lounge and 2nd bedroom are side by side on far side of flat. The foyers always seem like such a waste of space to me considering how tiny the flats are,  but because most Scots generally heat only the rooms that they are in then each room has its own radiator and a door to keep the heat in.
This is what the radiators look like that are in each room.  they are heated by water and can be run by a central thermostat but they can also be turned off manually on each radiator
Well I guess that's it on our first flat.