Fridge Thieves, Part 2

Someone has kidnapped the bases of both the electric kettles from our communal kitchen. Not the kettles, mind. Just the bases. So we have two kettles sitting on the kitchen counter which can be used as pitchers, if you really want an unnecessarily heavy pitcher, but that cannot heat water. You can imagine my delight …

Aberdare House Rules, 1885

Quick crash course in Aberdare history: Sometime in the early 1880s, Lady Aberdare asked the Cardiff University administration why the university didn’t admit women. They told her it was because they didn’t have anywhere to house them. She was like, “Well, then.” Until the current building was finished in 1895, “Aberdare Hall” was a smaller …

Even 19th-Century Technology Is Beyond Me

My room was so hot I couldn’t sleep last night. I opened both my windows, accidentally admitted a spider, closed the windows, slew the spider, and spent the rest of my night tossing my covers off my bed and then dragging them back on (until adrenaline ebb finally knocked me out, at which point I …

Rugby Foils A Quest For Fish And Chips

My friend Rachel (singer/songwriter, fellow UBC student) proposed a fish-and-chips-motivated field trip to Cardiff Waterfront this afternoon. Google Cardiff—just do it. I guarantee 90% of the results you’re looking at are the Wales Millennium Center—the bronze facade with the words “In These Stones Horizons Sing” cut out in English and Welsh—and the Pierhead Building (the …

Something Is Dripping

I don’t know where this water is coming from. I can’t even see the water. I just hear a plop every minute or two. My windows leak (this is the price you pay for beautiful original leaded-glass windows from 1895), but usually they just drip down my wall and blister my paint. These plops aren’t in the …

Locusts

Aberdare’s refectory, being a rather nice turn-of-the-century high-ceilinged hall with much of its original woodwork still intact, plays host for various catered dinner events, sometimes quite formal. When this happens, they pull a wooden screen shut across the middle of the room. They host the event in the half closer to the foyer, and shuffle …

Professor Wood-isms, Part 2

Some highlights from today’s lecture on the ties between Welsh geography and mythology (remember, these must be read in the plummiest possible British accent): “Giants’ mothers tend to be normal-sized. You have to be careful about applying too much logic here.” “The Northern Welsh have a word for the Southern Welsh which translates basically to …

I Hit The Academic Jackpot

The snow has finally melted enough for the library to reopen. I figured it’s high time I actually start working on the Digital Museum Project for my Cleopatra class. My topic is basically Rick Steves’ Guide to Alexandria (I will come up with a more academic-sounding title). I looked at the class reading list and …

Good News/Bad News/Chocolate Cake

The good news is that classes were cancelled today. The bad news is that so was train service in and out of South Wales. To console myself at the unexpected postponement of my York trip, I bought myself a chocolate cake at Lidl to share with Anna and company over movie night. I took a …

Bunker Mentality

The snow/salt ratio on the sidewalks is now about 50/50, and the city has shut down. They’ve closed all buildings and cancelled all university operations for today and tomorrow. This includes meals at Aberdare. The snow won’t kill us, but starvation might. If they don’t think we can walk to class, why do they think we …