Looking back over a few old blog posts, whilst trying to
find inspiration, reminded me how normal it was, until just a few short weeks
ago, to be able to jump on a train for a visit to the coast, or an unfamiliar
town, and similarly being able to jet off somewhere in search of good beer.
Admittedly the latter takes a lot more planning and
organisation, but such a trip was in the offing for this coming May. That’s
obviously gone out the window now, but the trip in question was a short,
three-day stopover in the Czech city of Pilsen (Plzeň). Pilsen
is famous the world over for being the home of Pilsner-style beers, as it is
the city where this golden style of lager was first developed.
Son Matthew and I were flying out to join a
group of fellow beer enthusiasts, most of whom have present, or past
connections with Maidstone CAMRA. Three years we accompanied the group to the
Rhineland city of Düsseldorf, whilst
two years ago Bamberg was our destination. I had also joined the group, on my
own in 2015, for a visit to the Czech town of Jihlava on the border
between Bohemia and Moravia.
These trips have always
been good fun, well-organised and have normally included a few brewery tours.
You can imagine then the sense of disappointment that has pervaded the Bailey
household, as we watched with horror, as the insidious Corona virus spread
itself around the globe.
Then in mid-March, the
UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office, advised against all travel to the Czech
Republic, as the Czech authorities had closed the country’s borders, in a bid
to halt the spread of the virus. The closure extended through into April, but
whilst the tour organiser suggested waiting, realistically I can’t see the UK’s
own lockdown being lifted for at least another six weeks, and it is likely to
take much longer before restrictions on international travel are lifted.
None of this matters in
the general scheme of things, especially when we are facing a crisis the likes
of which we have never encountered before. My grandparents, who would have just about remembered the Spanish Flu pandemic which followed the end of the Great War,
are long departed, and with them and their generation, the experiences of that
particular scourge has vanished from living memory.
It’s a case now of
bunkering down and isolating ourselves from contact with our fellow citizens by
staying indoors as much as possible. I am switching to working from home as
much as possible, although most of the workforce at my company has been
instructed not to come in next week. This will make things easier and safer for
those occasions where I do have to go into the office to deal with
things that can't be managed remotely, or electronically.
For some reason I was incredibly organised towards the end
of last year, so instead of leaving things until later, I booked a second
holiday, also for May. This was a short cruise for Mrs PBT’s and I to Hamburg, on
the Queen Mary 2. The voyage hasn’t
officially been cancelled, but it will be, and given the experience of
passengers quarantined on cruise ships, for weeks on end, because of Corona
virus, being confined to quarters is something neither of us wish to
experience.
As with the Czech trip, cancelling or postponing the cruise
is not a problem, particularly if all these small actions help speed up the end
of the crisis, and anyway, even if it was to end tomorrow, there would still be
a mountain of work waiting in order to put things right and restore a semblance
of normality.
These then are my thoughts on a very cold and blustery Sunday evening,
as we enter week two of the lock-down. I’ll sign off for now, but not before saying, keep well and stay safe.
2 comments:
Yes, our ideas of "normal" are being well and truly recalibrated, Paul, and that can only be good in some cases.
I mean, can you believe now, that as a country, people were seriously arguing, about whether Big Ben should be made to go "bong", to mark the fruition of some bygone election gimmick?
And when they could instead have been following WHO advice, to make provisions urgently for an approaching public health emergency?
Not only has this pandemic been a dramatic wake-up call Etu, it's also something that we always knew could catch us out. We were lucky with SARS, MERS, Swine Flu and all the other respiratory ailments induced by Corona-type viruses, but for Covid-19 to come from nowhere, and catch us unawares, in the way it has, surely is a sign that things are wrong with our human societies.
Yes, the Big Ben "bong" debate was particularity pointless, but putting such trivialities aside, if countries like the US and China spent a fraction of what they spend on arms on healthcare instead, the world would be a healthier and safer place.
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