Travels in Europe

One of the perks of speaking at conferences is that I get to travel to new and interesting places. I’d say that most of my travel over the past couple of decades was thanks to conferences. Recently though, I’ve been going places for non-work related reasons.

A couple of weeks ago I was in Spain, making my way to the beautiful medieval town of Cáceres for a traditional Irish music festival there. This was the second year that Jessica have been.

It’s kind of perfect. Not only is it a beautiful location—the stand-in for King’s Landing in House Of The Dragon—but there are non-stop sessions late into night, often outdoors. And of course the food is great.

A flute player and a fiddle player have their backs to us; between them we can see a woman playing fiddle on the other side of the table. A group of musicians playing bodhrán, fiddle, concertina and flute playing at a table outside a bar. A hand holding a fiddle in front of a young woman playing fiddle and another woman playing tin whistle. Loads of musicians playing around a table in a medieval courtyard.

It’s not easy to get to though. Last year we flew into Madrid and then took the train to Cáceres the next day. This year we did it slightly differently and flew into Seville instead. Then we took the four-hour train journey the next day. After the festival, we did it all in reverse.

That meant we had two evenings in Seville to sample its many tapas. On our last night in Seville, we had local guides. Blogger Dirk Hesse and his parter took us to all the best places. Dirk had seen that I was going to be in town and very kindly got in touch with an offer to meet up. I’m very glad we took him up on the offer!

Going to Spain in mid September felt like getting a last blast of Summer sun before returning to Autumn in England. The only downside was that the trip involved flying. But we’ve been on one more journey since then and that was done the civilised way, by train.

Jessica went to a translator’s conference in Strasbourg. I tagged along. We got the train from Brighton straight to Saint Pancras, where we got the Eurostar to Paris. From there it was a super fast connection straight to Strasbourg.

While Jessica was at her event all day, I was swanning around the beautiful streets, sampling the local wine and taking plenty of time to admire the details of Strasbourg’s awesome cathedral.

Looking up at the intricately detailed carvings on the main door of a cathedral. A cathedral door surrounded by intricate carvings of statues. Looking down the aisle of a cathedral at a magnificent rose window flanked by towering columns. An astronomical clock in a cathedral with vertical layers of circular mechanisms piled up in a tower.

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Previously on this day

3 years ago I wrote Knowing

The curse of knowledge of cryptobollocks.

11 years ago I wrote When Jeremy met Jason

Presentation Inception. BWAAAAAAAMP!

14 years ago I wrote One Web, transcribed

Listen, watch or read the presentation.

14 years ago I wrote Analogue

Reading in the sky.

17 years ago I wrote London to Boston

Another day, another conference.

17 years ago I wrote Geode

Where am I?

18 years ago I wrote The password anti-pattern

It’s time we took a stand: let’s stop teaching people how to be phished.

23 years ago I wrote Wired News: A Site for Your Eyes

Wired News has switched over to an all-out XHTML/CSS layout.

24 years ago I wrote Dan Brown

All that talk of Baltimore has prompted me to do something I’ve meaning to do for a while. I want to direct your attention to the website of my best buddy in Baltimore, Daniel Brown.

24 years ago I wrote The Science Behind the Song Stuck in Your Head

A bouzouki playing researcher (the best kind) is investigating the phenomenon of "cognitive itch". You know: when a song gets completely stuck in your head.

24 years ago I wrote New skin for an old ceremony

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you a brand new skin to wrap around the Adactio website. I give you: