I actually work and live nearly in the shadow of Windsor Castle!
I understand about Stonehenge, I took the chilkdren there last year and
they
were totally under-impressed, shame. I'll take them again when they are
older. The boys do enjoy going round Windsor Castle though. My little
girl
is
still too young really to know what is going on. I worked in Edinburgh
for
two years some time back and have great memories, lovely city.
Glad you had a good time.
All the best
DeanH
:
Our last full day there was Sunday. It was *glorious*--a shame we
spent
so
much of it inside: at church, in the car, in the State Apartments at
Windsor
Castle. But we did enjoy walking around Windsor, across the footbridge
to
Eton, etc., and got lots of good pictures. It was balmy when we got in
the
car at 5:30 Monday morning to leave for Gatwick.
We also had a very nice day in Dover last Thursday but regrettably
spent
an
hour or so of the best of it underground, in the Secret Wartime
Tunnels.
Again, though, the photos taken outside had blue sky and fluffy
clouds--quite a contrast to our gloomy photos of Trafalgar Square (and
London generally) the previous Saturday and everything in York,
Edinburgh,
Oxford, etc. At least it wasn't *actually* raining when we were
climbing
up
to Arthur's Seat in Edinburgh. The absolute worst was at
Stonehenge--biting
cold, pelting rain, and gale-force winds--which did nothing to allay
our
general disappointment over Stonehenge itself (apparently a typical
tourist
reaction, though we would doubtless have been more charitably inclined
on
a
milder summer day).
It is steamy here now, making us rather nostalgic about the bracing
weather
we left behind.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
I hope you got the two days when the weather was - OK.
:
Well, I actually just got back from "across the pond." <g>
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
If only that were the case!
![Smile :) :)](/styles/default/custom/smilies/smile.gif)
Considering how much I have gleaned from Ms Barnhill's gems over
the
years,
just imagine what can be learnt from a personal appearance!
Alas, being "across the pond", the chances are as likely as
everyone
knowing
what the Pilcrow represents! <g>
All the best
DeanH
ps. Also thanks for your 'modest' contribution as well.
:
I thought maybe Suzanne had logged in on someone else's
computer.
--
JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"
Sorry, this is DeanH, I forgot to top'n'tail the copy of
Suzanne's
message
with the explanation so hopefully the OP will see this message
this
time.
Apologies for any offence caused.
DeanH
:
Suzanne - did you change your name to Dean H?
--
JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"
You won't see them in Word's File Open and Save dialogs if
you
have
the
file
type set to All Word Documents rather than All Files. I
don't
think
you
can
hide them in Windows Explorer (except perhaps by hiding
Hidden
and
System
files, though I think that affects just the temp files).
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
:
i asked a question before about how to hide backup files.
someone
posted
a
reply but when i went to open it, i got a blank page (and
it
said
"done").
another blank pagea when i clicked on trying to reask my
question.
what
gives???