30 April 2025

Thirtieth

Shepherd's Hut at Upper Hurst Farm

We have reached the end of April - the thirtieth to be precise. The spring weather here in northern England remains most splendid. A big blue sky and fresh green leaves. No need for a coat or jacket.

I had two mugs of tea this morning - neither with sugar. An early lunch of tuna chunks from a can and frozen mixed vegetables heated in the microwave. A glass of tap water and a handful of delicious red grapes from South Africa. Yes - South Africa! More confirmation that we live in a mad world.

Then I jumped in Clint's cockpit and set off for Bamford Moor - about five miles away. I had a three mile circular walk in mind. After parking, I donned my walking boots and smeared any exposed skin with Nivea Factor 30 suncream. Then with my stylish faded sunhat on the bonce of your intrepid explorer, I set off.

Hurstclough Lane

As per usual it felt good to be alive. One foot in front of the other - over and over again - propelling me steadily through my selected corner of north Derbyshire. How green was my valley. How delightfully sunny too.

Street sign in Bamford village

I decided to rest for a while in the village of Bamford itself, choosing a shady spot beneath the arms of a native oak. I had my current book with me and read twenty pages, drinking cold water from my "Chilly's" steel flask before getting ready to tackle the half mile slog up Leeside Road. 

Eventually, it meets New Road that skirts rough moorland high above the village and was probably "new" two hundred years ago. That is where Clint was parked and it was good to get back to him, ready for the short drive home.

Tomorrow we welcome May back once more - though she has probably already arrived in Australia.
By Leeside Road - one of the Bamford "touchstones". This one represents air.

29 April 2025

Diabetes

On Saturday morning, just as we were leaving home for the journey to London our postman gave me an official-looking letter. I ripped it open to discover that it was an invitation to arrange a diabetic eye screening test. What the...?  

Though nobody at my health centre had told me or even discussed the possibility, it seems that my HbA1c score has tipped over the line from pre-diabetes into the Type 2 category. Ironically, a likely cause of this nudge up is the blood pressure medication I am on.

If it isn't one thing it is another these days.

Anyway, home from London I arranged one of these special eye tests at our local hospital  - The Royal Hallamshire and went there this very afternoon. I attended the eye clinic where I was dealt with by two nice young ladies - one from Kerala in India and the other from Iraq.

The first young lady put special drops in both of my eyes to enlarge my pupils. The second young lady photographed my eyes for signs of diabetic retinopathy. Apparently, the results will be sent to both me and my health centre within three weeks.

In the meantime, I need to start making a few personal changes to lower my HbA1c level - down from the 50 score that I am currently on and back out of the Type 2 category.

One small aim is that I am going to try to stop having any sugar in my hot drinks. All my life, I have added sugar to both tea and coffee. When I was growing up in East Yorkshire, every member of my family had two spoonfuls of sugar  in hot drinks. About forty years ago I went down to one spoonful of sugar and today I started to find out if I could manage with no sugar at all. After all, plenty of other people are sugarless - including my two grown up children.

There are a few other things I plan to do - small adjustments that should help me to turn the corner - that's if I can stick with those changes.

After the eye screening test, I donned sunglasses before venturing out into the sunshine once more. What a lovely day and warm too. I dropped on to Park Lane and followed the long curve of Collegiate Crescent down to Ecclesall Road where a number 81 bus appeared almost immediately. In my cool shades, I guess that other bus passengers might have imagined that I was Roy Orbison even though he died in 1988. He was only 52.

28 April 2025

Multitude

Ian in his blue vest crossed the finishing line with a woman 
in an orange vest and a man riding on a unicorn

I usually bristle when observers refer to an "amount" of people. After all, people can be counted and therefore you should use the term "number". However, yesterday in  London the use of "amount" would have seemed perfectly acceptable.

The city was thronging because of  the forty fifth London marathon. To start with, it had the biggest ever field of runners for any marathon anywhere - with 56,640 entrants managing to cross the finishing line. But for every runner there seemed to be ten spectators. If my theory is correct, that would mean a crowd of half a million. I can well believe that is true.

Our Ian set out for Greenwich Park - the starting point - at eight in the morning but his particular "wave" did not get going until 10.30. At that time, Shirley and I were on the tube system (American: subway). At Westminster, we changed from the District line to the Jubilee line which took us south of the river to Canada Water tube station. Every carriage of the train was jam-packed. We were like sardines in a jumbo tin.

And when we reached the nine mile marker on the race route, the pavements (American: sidewalks) were four or five deep with people hanging out of windows and standing on street furniture. Runners were already going past, cheered all the way with whistles trilling and drums beating. "Go Nigel! You can do it!" "Come on Sally!". Occasionally a novelty runner passed by - a cow, Big Ben, a chicken or a chunky tattooed man in a pink tutu. The atmosphere was electric.

But somehow we missed our Ian running by the observation point we found at one of the crash barriers. Shirley checked her app and after half an hour he had reached the Mile 10 point. It would have helped if somebody had told me he would be running in a light blue Great Ormond Street Hospital vest and not in his usual black T-shirt.

Then we got back to Canada Water tube station with three thousand other spectators. Crushed up together, we edged into the station and down the escalators to the rail tunnel level where again we squeezed into a tube train carriage that was already full.

We were carried  north of the river to Green Park where we alighted like toothpaste squeezed out of a tube. It had become the warmest day of the year so far and  people were out and about in shorts and T-shirts. 

With difficulty, we proceeded through St James's Park to Birdcage Walk that leads on to The Mall and Buckingham Palace where the marathon ends so we were now past the 25 mile post.  We saw many runners struggling and two being carried in big yellow bags to a nearby St John's  Ambulance recovery station. An older runner threatened to torpedo into the tarmac as his legs started to fail him. Fortunately two other entrants had the presence of mind to grab his arms and save him.

I stared under the trees and down the course for forty minutes and then I spotted our beautiful lad.

"Ian! Ian!" I yelled in my loudest Hull City supporter's voice and he heard me and came over briefly to say hello before carrying on to the end where he received his finisher's medal and a T-shirt.

In the warmth of the day and with so many thousands of other runners in his way, he had struggled after sixteen or seventeen miles, feeling cramps in his legs and had had to walk some of the way home. In spite of that, he achieved a time of  4hrs 44mins. Not bad for a forty year old bloke who only took up running a year ago. We were and are immensely proud of him.

Afterwards, we passed through Trafalgar Square where the multitude milled like a vast shoal of sardines then down to the famous river where we besieged the Embankment tube station with thousands of others before squeezing on to another packed tube to head west to Earl's Court.

Shirley and I felt that we deserved medals too!

 

26 April 2025

Marathon

No proper blogpost today. Shirley and I travelled down to London on Saturday morning by train. We came down to the capital for a special reason - to support our son Ian who will be tackling The London Marathon on Sunday morning. He hopes to run the course in around four hours, raising money for The Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital. Last year The London Marathon attracted 54,000 runners!  Spotting him will probably be like finding a needle in a haystack!

The afternoon is expected to be pretty warm - the warmest day of the year so far. Not what marathon runners generally want.

Home on Monday when I will write a proper blogpost. But not too "proper"!

25 April 2025

Alarm


Thursday April 24th 17.40

So there I am in the kitchen. My famous bolognese sauce that has simmered since two thirty in the afternoon is ready as are the roasted mushrooms, the courgette slices and the garlic bread. The parmesan cheese has been grated. I am draining off the wholewheat spaghetti. Frances has just got here from work but Phoebe has been with us all day. Stewart arrived with Margot half an hour ago.

The telephone rings and Shirley brings me the handset, telling me that it is a call from the health centre. I am speaking to a receptionist.

ME Hello!

RECEPTIONIST Are you Mr Yorkshire Pudding?

ME Yes I am.

RECEPTIONIST Can you be available to take a phone call from a doctor tomorrow?

ME Yes I can.

RECEPTIONIST Would you prefer morning or afternoon?

ME Afternoon please. I have got something on in the morning.

RECEPTIONIST Okay. I have put you down for an afternoon call.

ME Do you know what this is all about?

RECEPTIONIST It's about the stool sample you provided.

ME My stool sample? But that was ages ago. This sounds quite ominous.

RECEPTIONIST The doctor will explain everything tomorrow.

I continue to plate up the evening meal but now I am distracted and not a little worried. Have I got bowel cancer?  After blood was found in my stool sample, I had a colonoscopy which I blogged about here. Did they find something at the lab? Oh my God! I should have not have ordered those new shoes from the Clarks online store.

Friday April 25th 12.40

After a fitful night's sleep, I travelled into the city centre for an interview I had arranged with my bank. I had a full English breakfast at The Moor Market before catching an 88 bus back home. I am home before 11.00 whereupon Shirley tells me that a doctor has already phoned even though my call was scheduled for the afternoon.

This must be serious! Never mind, I have had a pretty good life - I cannot complain. There were a few places I still wanted to go and maybe I should have written a novel or two but hell, it was basically okay. I hope that Phoebe will remember me. Margot is probably too young. 71 is not a bad age to die.

At 12.15 the phone rings again. It is a locum doctor that I have never met.

As half-expected, it is not long before I realise that the doctor I have never previously met has either failed to track back through my computerised notes or has no record of my colonoscopy on March 31st. There was no need for me to be anxious at all. It's basically a communication issue. I know more than the doctor knows but helpfully she asks me to phone the consultant gastroenterologist's secretary to get follow-up findings.

I tell the doctor that I am very relieved and that I will be able to sleep soundly in my bed tonight.

Much ado about nothing.

24 April 2025

Francis

Above Pope Francis's happy and mutually respectful meeting with the 44th President of the USA. Below, Pope Francis waiting to meet the 45th/47th President of the USA...
There are roughly 52 million Roman Catholics in the USA  - around 20% of the population. Under normal circumstances, it would of course be right and proper for the sitting president to attend a pope's funeral on behalf of  those many American Catholics. However, this coming Saturday one cannot help speculating that  Trump will have ulterior motives for his attendance. After all, he is a deeply irreligious man. He might be there principally to network with other political leaders or to bolster his sinking popularity back home.

For his Easter Sunday address, Pope Francis's words were spoken by another, “I appeal to all those in positions of political responsibility in our world not to yield to the logic of fear which only leads to isolation from others, but rather to use the resources available to help the needy, to fight hunger and to encourage initiatives that promote development. These are the ‘weapons’ of peace: weapons that build the future, instead of sowing seeds of death!”

He was very obviously thinking about the current occupant of The White House and probably Vladimir Putin as well. Back in 2016, Pope Francis had said of Trump:-

"A person who only thinks about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian."

23 April 2025

Rate!

These days we are customarily invited to rate a plethora of things from clothes we have bought to restaurants we have visited and from our electricity suppliers to our holidays. Well, I thought it was about time we brought this rating trend into blogging. I invite you to rate the following opening to a novel I have written specially for this blogpost.

⦿

Howard Boreham opened his curtains. They were the beige ones he had purchased at "Dunelm" ten years earlier. He seemed to recall they were reduced by 50% and that he had paid for them with his Halifax bankcard. He could still remember his old card number: 4452 9431 6000 5139. That was before he moved his current account to Santander.

Outside it was pretty gloomy. The sky above was grey. His bedroom window overlooked an abandoned factory car park where a pair of scavenging crows were pecking at some litter. On the main road, the Number 81 bus trundled by on its way to the sprawling suburb of Dore.

Howard was wearing his striped pyjamas - the ones he had inherited from his late father. He scratched his bottom and headed for the bathroom where he brushed his teeth with "Signal" toothpaste and combed his hair with the black comb. He preferred it to the red one. As it was Saturday, he did not fancy having a shower.

Back in the bedroom, he got dressed. He picked his favourite grey polo shirt, his black "Lee" jeans, black socks and his "Umbro" trainers. Then he looked in the wardrobe mirror and smiled approvingly at himself before heading downstairs for his breakfast. 

As usual, he ate a bowl of "Bran Flakes" and drank a cup of weak tea before heading out to the street. It was bound to be another action-packed day in the life of Howard Boreham.

⦿

So yes. Now it's time to rate this story opening using the Yorkshire Pudding scale of boredom. Where would you place it with "0" meaning not boring at all and in fact  I would very much like to read on to "10" meaning exceptionally boring and I was pretty much bored to tears.

22 April 2025

Bookpath

 
"The Return of Phoebe" itself sounds like the title of a children's book. They all made it safely home from Australia where they had had a great holiday. Nothing went wrong apart from getting a puncture in one of the tyres of their hire car.

They drove up from London Heathrow on Easter Monday and were back in their house before midday. They came over to our suburban mansion in the afternoon.

Little Margot was delighted to see us - smiling like the cat who had got the cream. Not too long ago she would grab roughly at my face without grace or decorum but yesterday her touch was gentle. One finger on my nose or a soft little palm on my cheek. It was noticeably different.

Of course they were all rather jet-lagged, only just beginning to tune back in to British Summer Time.

Phoebe seems to have grown. She was already quite tall for her age.

She gathered all the children's books she could find and began making what she called a "bookpath". It snaked from the bay window in our front room, through the hallway and through the kitchen to our back door. She invited me to walk along it, taking care not to put my feet on the floor where there might have been stingrays and sharks.

I love that new word - not a footpath but a path made of books - a bookpath!  I am sorry I did not take a photo of Phoebe's bookpath so instead you will have to make do with the AI image I created.

When authors get their books published, I doubt that many of them imagine that their proud creations might become mere paving stones for a bookpath.

21 April 2025

Poem


I

Scanning the lost horizon
Keeping our eyes on
A place called Hope
Hoping to see a distant sail
Praying that fair winds prevail
To take us there
Where
There might be roses.
Or delving inside
Nowhere to hide
In the reed-bed worlds
Of our being
Seeing
Shadows slide
No place to hide
At the blind bends
We are fleeing.

II

Concrete dust
Blowin’ in the wind
Agony upon agony.
Tears like blood
Streaming.
Huddled children
Dreaming
Of quiet bedrooms
And plates of food
At a place called Hope
Still screaming.

III

The iceman cometh
Immaculately dressed
With waxen skin
Who can tell what lies within?
Resentment festers like sepsis
Padlocks secure the exits
Does he care a fig
For the lads now gone?
Cannon fodder every one…

And where oh where is Hope?
Gone to heaven
Like The Pope.

20 April 2025

Facetime

How we have missed our little granddaughters! They have been away for almost three weeks - down in the south west of Australia but they are on their way home now. As I write, they are probably high above Iraq on their way back to London Heathrow.

Earlier this evening, our daughter Frances "facetimed" us from Changi Airport in Singapore. They had a four hour layover to endure. And there was Phoebe, bouncing on a trampoline in the children's play area. "Look at me Grandpa!" as Margot staggered around looking very pleased with herself.

Where there is good WiFi, family and friends can communicate with each other from anywhere in the world. Not just exchanging words but seeing each other on little phone-camera screens too. It is almost beyond belief.

The first time I encountered "Facetime" it was twelve years ago in the back of a taxi in Bangkok. My friend and teaching colleague Jennifer was talking to her mother back in England. It seemed quite surreal.

So yes. There the girls were in Singapore. They should be back in Sheffield early on Monday afternoon. I hope that their father drives them all safely home. It's one thing picking up your car after a three hour flight from Portugal but after almost a full day of travelling from Perth, Western Australia - well that is a different kettle of fish entirely. It would be so easy for any driver to succumb to tiredness. 

My fingers are already crossed for their safe return.

19 April 2025

Bag

An old  bag sits in the boot (American: trunk) of my silver South Korean car (Clint) . I do not use it for shopping. It just sits there with an assortment of stuff in it. Sometimes I bring it in the house when I need the boot space but mostly it just remains there from week to week, season to season.

To tell you the truth, I had never given that bag a moment's thought until the day before yesterday. Then I chuckled to myself, "What the hell is in that bag anyway?" 

I remember a black and white TV moment from my childhood when a boy was asked to empty the contents of his pockets. It seemed as though the items in his pockets would speak of him - reflecting his character and interests. As I recall, the items included three or four low denomination coins, a barley sugar sweet still wrapped, a rubber band, a short length of string, a found military button and a white mouse (living).

Today I brought my bag out of the car to examine the contents and I took four photographs to share with you...

EXHIBIT ONE
A dirty old rag, a map of the Barrow-in-Furness area, a Co-op shopping receipt, some sunglasses, a  car sponge wrapped in chamois leather, a pink highlighter, a "Sharpie" pen and an old "Somerfield" shopping bag (N.B. "Somerfield Stores" shut down in 2011).

EXHIBIT TWO
My old faded sunhat that I bought in Malta in 2012, my fairly new Hull City beanie hat, a pair of thin socks, a pair of grey fingerless gloves, a pair of thick woollen walking socks (never worn).

EXHIBIT THREE
A map of the centre of Barnsley, a flattened toilet roll, a Hull City programme v Nottingham Forest 2023, half empty pack of baby cleansing tissues all dried up, a Tom Paxton CD cover but no CD inside, an unopened pack of heel inserts for my walking boots.

EXHIBIT FOUR
A one litre water flask, an empty "Smart" water bottle, an empty windscreen de-icer spray, two bottles of "Nivea" sun cream - both factor 30.

⦿
You could think of my bag as a kind of survival kit.  If  Clint broke down on some inhospitable moorland track miles from anywhere, I know that I would be okay because that old shopping bag contains everything I need in an emergency.

18 April 2025

Chosen

 
It had been a while but a couple of weeks ago, one of my photographs was chosen as the Geograph photo of the week. My prize, as usual, was to pick the next week's winner from a shortlist of fifty images published by the nominated selector.

That task didn't take me long. Very soon the image shown above sang out to me and became my winner for Week 13. The judging process is proudly subjective.

The winning picture was titled "The Mould Maker" and it was taken in The Gladstone Pottery Museum near Stoke-on-Trent. In England, we refer to that area of the Midlands as "The Potteries" for it has a long history of creating all manner of pottery from fine tableware to ceramic drainage pipes.

Standing in the old mould room, the man in the photograph belongs to a group of actors called The Ragged Victorians who try to add an air of authenticity to the museum experience by playing the roles of Victorian workers.

I appreciate the way the light streams in from the right and the uniformly grubby appearance of the various moulds on  display. And I also like the fact that the actor was obviously not saying, "Cheese!" In fact, he looks distinctly disgruntled.

By the way, this was my own winning image, taken at an old quarry just outside Sheffield by the Hathersage road...

17 April 2025

Quiztime

 
This episode of "Quiztime" requires you to look at ten pairs of eyes. To whom or to which animal do these eyes belong? A clue is given for each pair. As usual, answers will be give in the comments section

⦿

1) If only he was still in power....

2) This fellow just keeps on rocking...
3) A songstress from Canada...
4) I believe that Elton John sang about her...
5) Icon of the silver screen and once interviewed by Bruce Taylor...
6) A well-known blogger from Wales....
7) An animal (Multiple choice)
(a) buck rabbit (b) grey seal (c) harvest mouse (d) silverback gorilla

8) If you think it is a lion then you are wrong but it is African...

9) This cartoon lady seemed keen on seafaring men...

10)  Around 4500 years old...

⦿

That's all folks ! How did you do?

16 April 2025

Pillow-talk

 
Bert's real name is Albert. Not Bertrand nor Gilbert or Hubert but Albert. Born in east London in 1936, I guess that many baby boys were called Albert in those days.

Over the last two months I had been round to Bert's house several times. Either he wasn't answering or he simply wasn't in. Each time I bellowed through the letterbox, "Bert! It's me - Neil!" but nothing stirred within. Previously, the door had always been unlocked.

Yesterday, in my frustration, I decided to see if the next door neighbour knew what was going on. She told me that the heating system had broken down in Bert's house so he and his grown up son Philip had gone to stay with his ex-wife Pat in another suburb of Sheffield.

Some time ago, Pat had given me her mobile number but I think she got a digit or two wrong so I asked the neighbour if she had Pat's number. Kindly, she wrote it down for me.

Pat was 85 a week ago. Although she is a natural born worrier, she still possesses all her marbles as we say in Yorkshire. In other words, her brain is in good working order.

Married life with Bert had become impossible thirty five years ago. They split up but always stayed in regular contact. After all they had two sons in common. She has told me how nasty Bert could be in the confines of their own home. He was never physically abusive but often got angry and lashed her with his tongue. She couldn't stand it any more so escaped from the pressure cooker of their marriage.

Soon after I got back home, I dialled Pat's number and she apologised for not having kept me informed about the temporary house move. I also got to talk to Bert whose part in the conversation was quite hard to follow. The truth is that he really is losing his marbles now.

Though I have never been there, I know that Pat lives in a small terraced house with two bedrooms. I was curious about the temporary sleeping arrangements.

Pat was happy to explain that she and Bert are sleeping in her double bed but head to toe or top to tail. Imagine that! A spouse you split from thirty five years ago lying next to you in a double bed but the wrong way round. I doubt that it was ever something she imagined happening but she seemed quite cool about it. It isn't stressing her out.

Life is filled with odd twists and turns. I might drive over there some day soon and see how they're getting on. Besides, I need to give Bert the two cans of Bacardi and coke that I bought for him.

15 April 2025

Beauty

 
Thinking about today's world, we need to experience peace and beauty to soothe our souls. Take us away from tales of the madman in The White House. Take us away from images of the obliteration of Gaza. Push news about Sudan and Ukraine into the background. Blank out personal worries closer to home about health and family and money. Yes beauty can be a kind of medicine. Healing, sedating, a prism.

And so in the vast  Google library I sought a picture that would speak of beauty. I came up with the one shown above. It is in the Saatchi collection and it's called "Old But Beautiful". It was created by J.S. Ellington who is a resident of Abilene, Texas. She was born in 1948 and worked as a pharmacist for thirty seven years before pursuing her real passion - painting.

Of "Old But Beautiful" she said this, "The landscape features an old barn I have painted before from different angles and in different seasons. I am so attached to these old structures. I imagine that one was made by the hands of the rancher that owned the land long ago, but it has remained standing, no longer useful but beautiful. I hope the viewer will feel a sense of solitude and peace and will be lost in reverie about a time when there was more activity and life around this old structure."

Abandoned and tumbledown buildings also inspire me as many of my past photographs have shown. Such buildings speak exquisitely, beautifully, silently of those who went before and the lives they lived there.

Okay, so that's visual beauty but what about aural beauty?

When I was sixteen or seventeen, I heard an album by Vashti Bunyan. She was an almost legendary hippy figure who travelled to a commune on Scotland's west coast aboard a gipsy caravan  pulled by a horse. Along the way, she wrote the simple songs that would later form her first album.

The title track was "Just Another Diamond Day". It is a short and simple song that speaks of innocence. You can almost hear the horse trotting and the caravan's wheels trundling along. Back then in 1970 I thought it was such a pleasant song - disconnected from mainstream music. In fact, I suppose that I longed to be riding in that caravan with Vashti, strumming my guitar or holding the horse's reins as a rainbow arced above the hills.

14 April 2025

Praise

This year I have had more personal connections with The National Health Service than ever before. These engagements have been in relation to my blood pressure, my urethra, my mouth, my colon and lately the possibility of Type 2 diabetes. 

In this blogpost, I do not wish to get into the nitty gritty of my medical issues or any actual treatment I have received, I just want to praise the professional people I have encountered along the way. 

At a rough guess, I would say that I have had interactions with around fifty people. These include receptionists, nurses, pharmacists, nursing auxiliaries, doctors and three consultants.

I am happy to report that every one of those people has dealt with me in a kind and respectful manner. Each one of them has shown professional expertise, patience and commitment within the bounds of their particular roles. Communication has been good, appointments have happened punctually and there have been warm smiles and a few jokes along the way.

To tell you the truth, it has been both amazing and uplifting. I have not got a bad word to say about any of the people who have dealt with me.

Of course, my wife Shirley worked in the NHS for 45 years and my best friend, Tony was also an NHS professional for a long time. I know lots of other people who are or were NHS workers. However, to see the NHS from the point of view of a "customer" is a very different matter.

All British people know that nowadays the NHS is under great pressure in terms of funding and staffing and only yesterday fellow blogger John Gray reported on the very long wait he had endured in his local general hospital. However, in spite of that difficult context, I must say that the people who have dealt with me these past few months have all been brilliant and I bow my head in heartfelt honour of them.

13 April 2025

Cottage

 
A shepherd's pie involves lamb mince but a cottage pie contains beef mince. Fresh from the oven and pictured above, that's a cottage pie I made over two weeks ago before Phoebe and Margot flew to Australia with their parents.

It was carefully constructed. There was grated Cheddar cheese on the top surface and below that, something a little different from mere mashed potato. It was a 50/50 mixture of mashed potato and mashed swede (American: rutabaga).

The meat layer beneath  required 500 grams of good quality beef  mince, a chopped onion and a large diced carrot. There was also half a tin of kidney beans, three cloves of chopped garlic, salt and pepper, a teaspoonful of dry mixed herbs, an "Oxo" cube, a dollop of tomato puree and half a tin of chopped tomatoes. 

These ingredients bubbled together on a low heat for ninety minutes before I was ready to spoon the mince mixture into our largest casserole dish.

When the mash and the cheese had been layered on top, I popped the casserole dish into our oven at 200°C for half an hour. The cottage pie was eaten with tenderstem broccoli - cooked for seven minutes in our microwave.

The end result was a  wholesome and tasty meal which you can see reviewed below:-
"That was yummy Grandpa!" - Phoebe.
"Oh I'm stuffed!" - Stewart.
"Mmm. That was really tasty!" - Frances.
"Is there any left?" - Shirley.
"Mnamnamna!" - Margot.

12 April 2025

Shhhh!

In this post I want to begin by stating unequivocally that I am not antisemitic. No way. Anybody who thinks that after reading what I shall write here will be making a bigoted judgement that says more about them  than it says about me. 

Let's start by going back to October 7th 2023. What happened that day in southern Israel was wicked and unjustifiable.  Hundreds of Hamas fighters spilled over the border from Gaza and killed 1200 Israeli nationals - including many young people who were attending a joyous music festival. Over 250 innocent Israeli civilians were kidnapped, later to be used as bargaining chips - hostages. Although this cruelty did not happen in a vacuum - there was of course a historical context - it was nevertheless very, very wrong and an affront - not just to Israel but to humanity as a whole.

When a family, a community or a country is wronged, the quest for vengeance is very natural. Consequently, it came as no great surprise when Israel with its military might sought their revenge. Hamas had to pay for what it had done.

Yes - that is perfectly understandable but here's the rub. Israel's vengeance appears to have had little restraint. They have bombed the Gaza strip to virtual destruction. It didn't seem to matter if Palestinian fatalities were young or old, men or women, members of Hamas or ordinary citizens. Spokespeople for The Israeli Defence Force have repeatedly justified every fatal attack - usually by claiming - frequently without evidence - that they were targeting members of Hamas or Hamas fighters or Hamas command centres.

The killing and the destruction goes on. It is now calculated that 50,810 residents of Gaza have been killed including over 500 children. The Israeli bombing has targeted schools, hospitals and refugee camps as well as residential blocks and aid workers. No mercy has been shown in spite of attempts at establishing lasting truces. And under the current American presidency, it is as if Benjamin Netanyahu and his right wing cabinet have been given licence to simply carry on. Not "Drill baby drill!" but "Kill baby kill!"

The revenge figures are too high, far outweighing the initial horror of October 7th. Where will this all end? History should have taught us many lessons about revenge killing and wanton destruction. You cannot obliterate ideas with bombs and bullets and so it will be with Hamas.

The current American president thinks of the Gaza Strip as a nice piece of Mediterranean real estate with great potential for development - perhaps hotels, casinos, an airport and a golf course or two. But it is not - it is the home of two million displaced people who had nowhere else to go - people with hopes and dreams just like you and me. Now they dwell in a ruinous wasteland that smells of death and nobody seems to care very much.

But shhhh! Let's not talk about it.

11 April 2025

Backbone

In Llandudno, I finished reading "I  Belong Here" by Anita Sethi. I must confess that from the outset it had become a love-hate reading experience. Anita Sethi has an Indian heritage though she herself was born in Manchester, England. The book was published in 2021.

I imagined that it would tell the story of an urban dweller walking in The Pennine Hills - the very backbone of northern England. She would marvel at nature and history and tell readers about the places she visited. The book took me back to several areas that I know. However, the writer kept coming and going. It wasn't one long consistent walk and there were buses, trains and cars involved.

Before the time period of the travelogue, Anita Sethi was racially abused by an ignorant male passenger on a train. She complained to the guard and the man was subsequently arrested. He was taken to court and found guilty of racial harassment. It must have been a horrible experience for the writer but the authorities dealt with her complaint pretty effectively.

There are sixteen chapters in the book and in each one Anita Sethi harks back to the incident on the train. I found this annoying as I just wanted her to crack on talking about her explorations on foot. She went to some pretty wild places on her own and I rather admire her for doing that.

The title "I Belong Here" is about claiming ownership and the right to belong even though the author is from a minority community. In some senses she was wrestling with herself, trying to secure a foothold, nurturing the confidence to say, "This is my England too".

Sometimes her thoughts are wise and well-expressed and at other times they seem like adolescent moans. She observes nature in the form of birds, geology, plants and weather and clearly this aspect of the book was  partly lifted by research.

She met some very nice people along the way. They weren't all like that ignorant racist on the train. Many of them were kind and helpful.

Of course I am not an immigrant in this country and I have never walked in Anita Sethi's shoes. Through several generations, I can trace my ancestry back in time to Yorkshire - the very county where I was born and still dwell. I am very confident that I belong here but for Anita Sethi the sense of belonging must be different and despite the various irritations contained in her book it was ultimately enriching to see things from her point of view.

Here's a sample of her reflective writing:-
I keep walking along the course of the river as it flows throughout the limestone landscape that flashes diamond bright in  the sunshine. How strong and bright the river is as it swells and flows, and yet how soft it is too. I think of how much of the earth's surface is made up of water, almost two thirds, and how much of our body is made of water - up to 60  per cent of the human adult body being water, the brain and heart composed of 75 per cent, the lungs around 83 per cent and even the bones being 30  per cent water.
Anita Sethi

10 April 2025

Losehill

 
Yesterday I was left on my own. Shirley had headed out to a regional meeting of The Women's Institute in which she is quite involved. 

The sun was shining again and I was ready for some exercise. I didn't wish to travel far so soon I was back in the village of Hope. I parked Clint by the primary school and laced up my walking boots. My target destination was the summit of Losehill - often written Lose Hill. It stands 1,562 feet above sea level.

The last time I aimed for the top, snow was covering the entire Hope Valley. Beyond Lose Hill Farm the snow was compacted and very slippery so sensibly I turned back. This time the land was dry and new lambs were frolicking in some of the green fields.

Three men - presumably volunteers - were installing a brand new gate on the pathway and I complimented them on their work. 

A good thing about solitary walking is that you can pause whenever you want to without having to apologise or explain to anybody else. You find your own pace and yesterday afternoon I was very much in the mood for an easy ascent.

On the way up, I met Rod and Eleanor from Norfolk. They were in Derbyshire on holiday. At the top, they asked me to take a photo of them using Eleanor's smartphone. I am useless with those things. The camera has an on-screen "button" but whenever I press, the camera seems to refuse to click. This time it took three gos before I actually registered an image.
It was much easier coming down - no need for little stops to catch my breath. I had been away from Clint for two and a half hours but I had had a good workout. Blood had pumped through my veins and I felt righteously tired. There was a flask of water in Clint's boot (American: trunk) and I poured half of it down my neck before returning home to make a chicken stir fry with boiled rice for our tea (Elsewhere: dinner or supper).

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