Some people can move from place to place with nothing more than a backpack and sleeping bag. I always had the suspicion that I was not the type to travel light, but now I can say with experience that this is definitely not me.
If you're talking as the crow flies (straight line distance), I'm about 300 miles from 'Home'. By roads (and a boat across the Irish sea) it's nearer to 400 miles.
I took two cars full to wheel arch bending capacity, my mum and one of my closest friends and we set off at 10.30pm. I had booked the night ferry from Dublin thinking in all my wisdom that; 1) I would save myself over £100 on the more expensive day ferries, and that 2) we could sleep through the crossing and be ready and refreshed to start out when we docked at 6am for the road portion of the travelling...
The three of us slept a combined total of 45 minutes.
So having not slept since the previous night, we then embarked upon an 8 hour road journey. Let me tell you, there is no amount of coffee can make up for not sleeping an entire night and then travelling. I now understand why my mother hates travelling with a passion.
We stayed at a friends house that night, and after a hearty BBQ we discovered that even a couch with a odd shaped cushion can feel like paradise when you haven't slept for 36 hours.
The next morning I got the keys to my new place and discovered England's love for parking tickets. In the 10 minutes that it had taken for us to be shown around by the estate agent and receive the resident and visitors parking passes, both mine and my friends car had been ticketed.
Luckily we got it sorted. But it did put somewhat of a dark cloud over our heads on what should have been quite an exciting day.
With a little help from the friend who we had stayed with, we unpacked the car with surprising speed. Then it was off to the shopping center to buy an airbed while I waited for my Ikea delivery at the end of the week. After a hectic day of shopping, unpacking, parking officer arguing and cleaning, it was time for a well deserved sit down, pizza and a cold beer. We ate off boxes and decided to decorate our makeshift table with a few odds and ends that could be easily released from their cardboard prisons. If I never see another piece of bubble wrap again it will be too soon.
Three weeks later I'm still moving odds and ends, and there is considerably more furniture, but it has been all entirely less interesting than those first few days. Have you any interesting stories of when you moved house? Any disasters, or happy discoveries?
Sarah