Our retreat from Rhodesia to the UK, and the knowledge that we could not return as it was spiralling downwards into a bitter civil war, was a huge setback for us, for we had hoped to make our lives with its beautiful people in a country which had huge potential.
It was good to see the family. While my parents had been out to visit us in Rhodesia, Mrs MW had seen none of her relatives.
To re-set my 'career', we spent three years in England, the first....
in Bristol where we lived in a damp, pokey ground floor flat. It wasn't ideal as our eldest daughter was born during our time there, while I completed my teacher qualifications at the university.We made friends in Bristol but we were there for too short a time for these friendships to endure, so the most important were those we had formed before our Rhodesian expedition, in particular....
....Brian and Val Jones whom we had first met while we were students at the University of Keele. While we lost touch with Val, for many ears we heard irregularly from Brian: the last we heard of him he was happily settled in Spain.In the next two years I gained teaching experience and a full teacher qualification in the UK system at the grammar school in Ludlow, Shropshire. There we met many good people to some of whom we extended a warm invitation to come and visit us in our next relocation - to the West Indies - but only one couple took us up on the offer.So, out of the many friends we made during those three years, we remain in touch with only one couple. In some ways, I suppose, we could not expect to stay in touch with many as we chose a very peripatetic lifestyle - but that does not prevent us wondering what happened to all those we knew well.