ve recently started using

I’ve recently started using Intellisync for yahoo to synchronise my palm to my yahoo calendar, address book and todo list, and so far it’s working really well. It means that when I do a hotsync from my Palm rather than synchonising with the palm desktop, it syncs with the yahoo software making my calendar etc available to me over the internet. What I especially like is the fact that I can choose which applications to sync with yahoo, so at the moment I have the calendar and to do list synchronising all the time that way. The Memos and Addresses I sync with the Palm desktop (at the moment) as they are more likely to be changed from home rather than on the fly. So far everything is going smoothly, and I’ve even got it working from work – so that my Outlook account exports calendar and synchronises task list data to yahoo (I’m only exporting calendar data rather than synching it because I don’t really want everyone at work to know what my social calendar is like…). This means that for finally I have my personal appointments and my work appointments all on the palm, but without having to type the work ones in.

This is of particular use at the moment as I haven’t found a new PDA yet and so am using a PalmPilot Professional. To be honest, PalmOS doesn’t seem to have changed much in the 4 years since this was bought (which is a bit dissapointing) but I find that the grafitti recognition is now too slow to be practical on this old machine. So, being able to update events in my yahoo calendar is a much bigger advantage.

Middle Wallop Kite and Buggy Festival

We headed off to Middle Wallop airfield on Saturday afternoon, and spent a great hour or so playing with our delta (before the rain set in) and watching lots and lots of buggiers and mountain boarders enjoying the vast space available at this festival. This is the third kite festival we’ve been to and this was undoubtedly the best. It wasn’t the most informative (the Dunstable one probably was), however, there was a huge amount of space available to play in and just watching such a large number of buggys and boards was great.

I also spotted some team fliers practicing their routine in a manner I hadn’t seen before. They all had small sticks with cut-out kites on and were using those to run through their routine. I thought that this was a really good idea and was quite fun to watch.

We plan to return next year and spend a bit longer there. We may even have our own buggy by then!

had my driving licence

I had my driving licence sent back to me in the post yesterday. It’s a bit torn but at least that’s one thing less to replace. It was sent in a Royal Mail envelope with a return address of the Surcharge Unit at Gatwick Mail Centre. There was no note or anything inside, so, if someone from the Gatwick Mail Center happens to stumble across this. THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

We headed off to

Buggy
Sky candy
Kites waiting to fly

We headed off to the Dunstable Kite Festival today, on probably the hottest day of the year so far and had a really good afternoon out. Lots of people were around and about, and there were lots of different kites on display. Take a look at our photos.

We went for wander

We went for a wander down Tottenham Court Road yesterday to look for new gadgets to replace my stolen ones. We didn’t buy anything, and to be honest I was a bit dissappointed with what was on offer.

After the trouble I had in the first place choosing which mp3 player to buy (read the blog) I’ve decided to try and find a good, small, digital radio. Whilst this may sound like an odd choice, my reasoning is that in around a months time I wont be spending as much of my travelling time underground (assuming the move to Brighton goes ahead) and so will get radio reception for the majority of the time. I was looking at the RDS models (so that I wouldn’t need to re-tune on my journey) but they are quite large, so I’ll probably go for a small, standard digital radio insead with a good supply of pre-sets.

We also took a look at new PDAs, and they are really uninspiring. All of the Palm OS ones are still the same old thing, nothing much seems to change from one release to the next. The Visor Edge is a nice looking machine, and I also had a play with a Sony Clie – I’ll be interested in looking at the colour one when it is released over here – but other than that, nothing of interest.

Probably the most inspiring things we saw were some prototype Japanese phones that a shop was using to get opinions. They were really small, light and yet had a large screen diplay. Oh and they were colour. They should be on sale over here in about a years time.

had my bag stolen

I had my bag stolen from the Hogshead pub in Cowcross street, near Farringdon station in London yesterday. It’s a really nasty experience and I lost everything, cash, cards, tube pass, keys, phone, visor, mp3 player, headphones, eyemodule. The most annoying thing is that the pub has CCTV, and it has a camera which was pointing directly at where I was, but they don’t bother to put tapes in and record the pictures. They just had the picture of the bar visible so they could see how busy they were. The police weren’t very impressed when they found that out. They recommend not bothering to drink there again, as there are many other pubs to choose from.

So, I guess in the short term I’ll be fishing the old PalmPilot Professional out of the loft again to make my journeys to work less boring, at least with an electronic gadget I can catch up on the news, read emails etc. I’ve got a bit used to the 8MB of storage I get on the visor so shrinking back to 1MB might be a bit tricky. But, I guess I’m in the market for a new PDA, not sure which to go for so I’m planning to do some research and find out which are the best to be had now.

Parakarting/Kite buggying

Richard
Jane, Jono and a Buggy
How it's supposed to be done

We’d been toying with the idea of trying out kite buggying for a while, and wondered if we could find a course anywhere in the UK. After a bit of internet research I found Paraventure an “air powered activity” company based in Wales. I found out a bit more about it, and then we booked ourselves and Jono onto the one day Parakarting course.

The course was held in the Pembrey Country Park which has one of the longest and cleanest beaches in Britain (it reminded Jono of New Zealand), and our instructions were to meet Steve and Nick (our instructors) near the cafe at 10.30am on Sunday. There were 5 of us in our group, and we drove in convoy to Car Park 2, the car park with the best beach access. Our first task was to find a helmet to fit, and then to choose, and help adjust the buggies themselves. Once we all had a buggy which was sized about right, we packed our stuff onto our buggies and headed off along the beach to gate B (the start of the buggy zone). We set up a base camp, and Steve started to tell us all about power kiting. The first kite he unpacked had tangled cables (apparently Nick’s fault for not packing it away properly) and so we unpacked a second one and all had a go launching it and bringing it back down again before Steve kitted us all out with our own kites. I started off with a 1.9 metre sq Advance Janus, as Steve wasn’t sure how strong I’d be, Rich got a 3.1 metre sq kite, and Jono got an Advance Tethis. We all played with out kites for a while, and were given harnesses to ease our arms a bit, and then after more instruction Steve swapped me onto a 3.1 metre sq Advance Janus. I got on okay with this, and got a bit more pull out of it (which was great fun).

I had a bit of familiarisation time with this new kite, and then Jono, Richard and I got instruction from Nick on how to ride a buggy. We listened, and then tried one at a time with Nick keeping a careful eye on us.

We all thoroughly enjoyed it, and had great fun. Richard and I both got pulled out of our buggies a few times – I fell out mostly when I suddenly realised I was going a lot faster than I really wanted to be, and panicked… We all took a break, a chance to rest our arms, and Richard and I swapped kites. I didn’t get on very well with that kite, it wasn’t as forgiving as the Janus, and was a bit of a handful for me. I tried to buggy with it, but it has a much smaller window for flying, and so every time I tried to turn a corner I either came to a halt or fell out. Not the kite for me. Richard on the other hand, seemed to adjust well to the Janus and so it’s a possibility that a 3.1 metre sq Janus might be finding it’s way into our posession (I notice that the only UK retailers are Paraventure themselves).

Fortunately for me, Richard came back in with the Janus, and so I got to have another play in the buggy (I was feeling a bit fed up with myself – I’m not good at failing at something when I’d done alright not that long before). I did alright this time, and had some quite good runs up and down the beach and even controlled my speed a bit better before deciding that my arms really hurt and I needed to stop. Unfortunately, I couldn’t bring the kite down this time as my arms were just too sore and so Richard came to my rescue.

We all packed our stuff up, and headed back to the car park dragging our buggies behind us, discussing what a fantastic day we’d had. And it’s true, it really was great, but today, oh boy do my muscles hurt. Oh, and my face… I have had to endure people staring at my lobster red face, with very well defined sunglasses marks on it (this wasn’t sunburn, this was windburn…). Don’t forget to check out the photos.

If you want to learn to power kite or parakart, then check out Paraventure as they were really helpful and knowledgable and were worth the £65 that the course cost us.

Well after having been

Well, after having been back from our trip to New Zealand for 6 months, we finally got around to capturing the video we took onto the PC. This means that as well as having 10 Gigabytes of avi files to edit, we’ve also got some new photos to add to this site. So, we’ve now got a re-designed New Zealand section on this site, complete with loads of photos.

We re hoping to

We’re hoping to go the Brighton Kite Festival later on this month, and I was having a look at the event website this morning. One activity of the festival that really caught my eye was The Bearly Made It Skydive Squad. This sounds like lots of fun, and I particularly like the footnote:
“BMISS operates an equal opportunities policy: as long as it’s a cuddly toy, we’ll parachute it – monkeys, cows, rabbits… even pigs might fly! You name it – we’ve ‘bunged’ it!!