We’ve just returned from a trip to London and France and It’s no surprise that our two-week itinerary looked a lot like a genealogy research plan. Priority #1 was to meet the newest leaf on our family tree and spend time with the big brother and parents. And like any careful plan, we discovered unexpected surprises and new adventures along the way.
It’s been a very long time since Mr. Curator and I traveled without a genealogy research agenda. Last year at this time, after a New England research trip, I was writing 10-12 hours every day on my new book and nursing a fractured elbow. It seems like one thing rolled into another and now here it is December once again and finally time to step back and take a breath. I do remember a time when a vacation included a break from mail, phones, and daily routine, and I miss it sometimes.
For this trip we decided to forgo the wonderful travel apps on our iPhones and use the devices in wireless mode to retrieve email and as handy unobtrusive cameras. Limited cell-phone coverage also meant limited blogging, and and days filled with playing firefighter, snuggling baby, and exploring the neighborhood shops and parks gave new meaning to “social” network.
“Unplugging” technology, even minimally to wireless-only, sounded a little scary, but it added so much freedom to our travels that I’m thinking it would be worth doing more often. Instead of shooting out a quick tweet or status post as an instant reaction to sights, and events, pocketing your cell phone gives you time to sit back and reflect on an experience and spend some time thinking about what’s going on around you.
St. Luke’s Church, London
As it was, it took about a week for that “aha” moment to occur when I realized a particularly unique feature of our itinerary. Each night we went to sleep within earshot of church bells, whether we were in a London neighborhood, a Paris hotel, or the Cathedral square of Strasbourg. What a treat to begin and end each day hearing chimes and bells calling out the hour. That doesn’t happen at home, but it did make me think of how so many of our ancestors’ lived within a parish where everyday life was directed by the sound of church bells. (I think there is a post for The Catholic Gene in here, too.)
We also experienced a taste of ex-pat life as we celebrated a traditional Thanksgiving dinner in the midst of London’s Christmas preparations. I was surprised to see that the local grocery store sold turkeys and all the fixins from fresh cranberries to Libby’s canned pumpkin pie mix. Turkey is a more traditional Christmas dish in England, so there weren’t too many to choose from and they were rather small. Size was vital, we discovered, because the range oven was smaller than American ovens.
Mr. C carefully measured the oven and went back on the streets out to stalk our Thanksgiving bird. He didn’t have to go far, just around the corner to the local butcher who took the order for the next day — 5.44 kilos (12 lbs) “dressed” to roast. When I unwrapped that bird I knew it was going to be delicious. Unlike our U.S. grocery store turkeys that arrive in plastic and emerge gooey and messy, this bird was wrapped in white waxed butcher paper, trimmed of excess fat, cleaned of bit of gore, washed, dried, and tied with twine. The “innards” were neatly wrapped in a separate package for the stockpot.
Behold: The Bird! Why doesn’t my U.S. supermarket prep poultry like this?
We didn’t need to do more than season the turkey and slip a little butter under the skin. Our daughter-in-law mixed up her grandmother’s special dressing using local sausage in place of Italian, and we made another grandmother’s signature sweet potato and apple dish. The only thing we missed was Auntie’s Cranberry Jello dish (that hardly anyone eats anyway). In her honor, we made orange finger jello (brought from the U.S.) which was a huge hit with the pre-schooler. It was a wonderful meal. When family members can’t be present at a holiday table, food is the next-best way to savor a memory of the past.
Ex-Patriot Thanksgiving founded on family recipes.
Thanksgiving isn’t exactly much of a holiday in Britain, and we emerged from our turkey coma to see that the countdown to Christmas was in full swing along the streets of London. Twinkle lights cascaded down storefronts, illuminated trees decorated lampposts and starry banners crossed the streets.
London Holiday Decorations
The Story of Dick Whittington and His Cat,
as told in Fortum & Mason’s Chrismas window displays
We trekked to the local tree lot and brought home a tall fir to decorate. Grand-boy was more interested in the salesman’s hatchet than the tree, and decided that every fireman needs a yellow hatchet in his pack.
Grocery shopping, cooking family recipes, celebrating traditional holidays with a new generation was an early Christmas gift. We had time in Paris and Strasbourg for our own adventures, but it doesn’t get much better than chasing descendants around the walls of the Ding Ding Church.