The best and worst of Weasel's Hols

I am not great on holidays. That is to say, I am very attached to home comforts and consequently, my ideal holiday is one that replicates the habits and mores of Weasel Hall. The strict requirement for me is sunny, preferably warm, weather. Anything else is a bonus. Some of the best times I had were when I went Interrailing or the time when me and a couple of mates went down to the South of France in a Triumph Herald convertible. That was over 30 years ago, but I remember it in detail, particularly meeting up with the glamorous French friend of a friend with whom I became quite besotted at the time, and still keep in touch with, though that has now faded to a bi-annual exchange of emails.  I think, on balance, the best hols and the worst, were with the young Weasels, who have always added to the fun and made everything an adventure. It even made our camping hols bearable, especially when we had something called a Camplet, and the weather was kind to us.

It is not difficult to remember our worst holiday. We had booked a "luxury" gite in the Rhone Valley in summer. Oh how wonderful it looked in the tiny picture, but it was a nightmare. Nothing worked, after four hours the oven had failed to brown a chicken, the open fire had no source of fuel and it was cold and rainy. We tried to eat out and ended up a a terrible restaurant that served us a chicken leg on a plate of white sauce for about 15 quid. One of the Weasels got a nasty cut from the dishwasher hinge and we had to find a doctor on a Sunday. That was the highlight - the French doctor got up from his lunch, took us into his surgery and examined and treated the cut, and then waved us away with a smile and no bill. I damaged the car whilst reversing after an eight hour journey and on our return, tired and somewhat pissed off, the customs did not like the look of us and had everything out of the car. We were there for hours and had everything up to (but not including) the anal probe.

These days we seem to divide our time between Scottish islands with a few Weasels and just the two of us in Switzerland.

5 comments:

Dave said...

Hi WW. My overworked (and much in need of a holiday) wife has asked me to look at booking a week somewhere in the UK in March.

Having been virtually house bound due to the inclement weather since before Christmas I quite fancy the idea of a week somewhere warm, that doesn't involve planes or boats (She's petrified of both)but I fear the prospects of finding somewhere that ticks the boxes will be hard.
I took her to North Wales last year. She hated it. Full of Welsh people.
Looks like Cornwall again.

Jim Baxter said...

Dave is right about North wales. I've noticed that too.

Ullapool can be surprisingly tropical - Gulf Stream and all that - in summer. The Ceilidh Place is a fine hotel with a fine restaurant. I met its founder - the late Robert Urquhart, actor, 55Days in Peking, Pathfinders and all that. I was cutting the grass and he was rehearsing while jogging for the play he was in (Ane Satire on the Three Estaites) while staying at the place where I cut the grass. He complained, as he passed, good humoredly, about the noise my vintage Allen haycutter made as I ploughed through the hemlocks. I complained that I couldn't hear my haycutter for his proclaiming. A good man.

But be sure to stay in the hotel itself - not the 'Bunkhouse' across the road which is for skint, drunken backpackers. The hotel is for drunks with money.

But - there are midges, many many billions of midges...

Jalopy said...

Midges love feasting on smokers - they enjoy the nicotine. I went to the highlands about five times last year and only got about three midge bites in total :-D

Clams Linguini said...

'I went to the highlands about five times last year and only got about three midge bites in total :-D'

I'd take a billion hits for you dollface.

Wrinkled Weasel said...

Llandudno used to be alright, but that is because it has a lot of English in it. My experiences in North Wales are best left unmentioned, since I have nothing whatsoever that is nice to say. Midges. My advice: glare at them and look menacing.