Little Nothings

Pieces of a discrepant diary

Pigeons in the Parliament

I struggle to take the Scottish parliament seriously. After destroying what little credibility they had by spending all of my money on a completely mis-managed comedy theatre for politicians, they are now arguing over pigeons.

Back in April of last year, this article reported that pigeons had been piddling on the parliament: "droppings and feathers have landed on their (MSPs) desks after getting through window and air vents", "Pigeon poo is very unsightly and it's causing a bit of a niff in some parts of the building."

Yet today I read that after spending unspecified monies on "anti-roosting spikes" (sounds quite painful), they are still there - and it might cost the taxpayer £250 per nest to ship them off for a holiday on the west coast.

"Spokesman Ross Minett said: We believe the general public would be supportive to these animals being taken to a wildlife centre rather than killed unnecessarily."

For once I completely agree. I don't believe in unnecessary killing of politicians. Maybe the pigeons could be left to poo all over the Parliament in peace and safety if anti-roosting spikes were installed in MSP seating areas!!

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Just a wee note on links

Just a wee note this one. You may or may not have noticed but I almost always title my links. If you already know what titled links are you can ignore this post.

If you don't, I'll explain.

Titles only work in some browsers: Firefox, Internet Explorer for sure; maybe Opera and Safari? And it needs a mouse so I don't know if it will work for you.

If you hover ... no I don't mean go clean the living room carpet ... hover your mouse over this link (but don't click!) then you should see a message. It might appear similar to a long bubble or maybe something in your status bar. You could also try here and here.

These examples are a mite playful but I do always try to qualify links by adding titles. It's simply to give you more information if you're reading.

Sometimes I also do it with plain words and abbreviations like USA and ephemeral

That's it, I'll stop boring you :-)


Listening to: Lisa Gerrard, "Persian Love Song"
Wondering: whether anyone ever looks at my titles

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an opinion of Blogger Beta

Note: *this* is a Blogger Beta blog

Just going to say this provisionally, in fact I can't believe I'm actually doing it.

I quite like the new Blogger beta!

It's not like me to like anything remotely related to Google. Why? Well not because I've got anything against Google as a run of the mill business, but because I don't like restricted marketplaces. In other words, monopolistic practises and markets which are run by huuuuge corporations.

If a particular market has no small to medium size players then I immediately distrust the services provided and I object to the aggregation of knowledge about the nitty gritty details of what's being provided to me.

Google is no worse than Yahoo, AOL or Microsoft in this regard, they're all pants!

So I don't want to, but I quite like the new Blogger beta! Well maybe, perhaps, conditionally ...

this is why:

  • ad supported only if you want it to be
  • almost completely customisable templates
  • complete control over whether your blog gets 'Googled'
  • comments can be disabled for specific posts if needed
  • comment Preview so you get to edit your spelling blips before leaving your comment
  • optional comment moderation (I don't care for this but it's here if you want it)
  • categories, tags, labels or whatever you want to call them, they're here
  • an audible version of the spam captcha code for those who can't read the letters (not sure if this actually works, but at least it's going in the right direction)
  • integration with Flickr for one-stop photo hosting and posting
  • I can use it without having JavaScript enabled (though it's more functional if you do)
  • instead of the mush dished out on some other platforms, proper HTML or XHTML pages (your choice), irrelevant to most people but important to me
  • feed control: if you hate 'em you can switch 'em off
  • comment feeds (I don't hate them)
  • unlimited numbers of blogs
  • team blogs
  • private blogs (restrict the ability to comment or even view if you want)
  • oh and it's free
  • and it's under active development

and ... and ... guess what ... their support helpdesk actually replies to emails. Admittedly not superfast but at least there's a voice there.

The old Blogger had one serious failing which has been resolved in the new beta, specifically:
the old static pages have gone, all that manual page refreshing is a thing of the past, everything is now updated in real time.

They have a new blog Layout system where you simply drag things around on a screen, no need for any HTML fiddling at all. This should make it easy for plain ordinary humans who just want to write a blog.
Funnily enough it makes it harder for HTML twiddlers like me because there's a whole new set of template tags and they're not trivial to understand, but hell I'm not complaining. Just means I have to twiddle more.

Trying to find a downside:

  • You need a Google account to use it. These are free but I don't particularly like their terms and conditions. To be honest though, they're not significantly worse than any other humungous corporation.
  • They did have a problem which intermittently broke commenting between Blogger and Blogger beta blogs but this has reportedly been resolved (I can't confirm that yet).
  • I've seen it break a couple of times. This is less likely to be Blogger and much more likely to be me, down here in the engine room, fiddling, trying to take it apart and make it do exactly what I want - I'm getting close.
  • There is a downside if like me, you come from 20Six. That's a part of the blogsphere where the local blogging community finds you. At Blogspot, you have to go out and find your own community so it's a different kind of place. I keep a version of this blog on 20Six - makes it easier to keep touch with other 20Sixers.
  • Now I really don't like, 'liking' Blogger so I'm still looking for other bad stuff.

Blogger still doesn't beat the flexibility, control and design freedom you get from hosting your own Wordpress blog but for those who don't want the hassle or who need greater anonymity it provides an interesting alternative.

There are conditional bits to what I've said here: I've only used it with Mozilla Firefox, not Internet Explorer; it is still called beta which means it's still changing but what I see looks pretty finished; can't say how reliable it is because I've only been using it for a few weeks.

By the way, I'm picky and hard to please so I reserve the right to completely change my mind if it all goes poo!

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a book to read?

A voice inside my head is telling me to go find a book to read. This isn't an easy task for a literary troglodyte.

Sure I normally read Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit and perhaps this makes me one of 'those' (whatever 'those' are).

But the voice is saying regular fiction about real things.

My most recent attempt to read serious fiction was Jean-Paul Sartre, "Nausea". This failed dismally, I managed a few pages but his words carry no meaning for me. When this happens I have quick naps during sentences. I'll start with good intent but before the arrival of the first full stop, I'll have nodded off. Usually sleep reading for a page or two then something will happen, a car might go by, a change in tempo of the rain, a lawn mower snagging on a root, causing me to wake and realise what's happened ...

Managed it!!! This Lilliputian speck of insignificance is an achievement. My spell checker's cheering because it saw me write 'happened' the right way first time. It's fine when I handwrite but the two-fingered, keyboard tapping autopilot produces 'happended' every time. Even when consciously thinking about it, it comes out wrong. Why is that? I've taken a half hour timeout now to type it out 50 times. Well maybe not 50, but lots, and its paid off. Got 10 wrong then 40-ish right. I've treated myself to half a square of Fruit and Nut chocolate.

... realise what's happened and have to go back and find the dreary sentence where I lost the plot and begin reading again, each sentence twice.

Oops, I'm rambling ... anyway, you get the message that I'm struggling with Sartre. In my favour though, I did read and enjoy Andrey Kurkov, "Death and the Penguin" and even managed Albert Camus' "The Plague" and I love reading small snippets of Milton's "Paradise Lost". But the last thing I really enjoyed reading was a blog ... oh, what ... hmm it seems the voice is telling me that's not allowed, it has to be a book. Okay then the last book I really enjoyed was Philip Pullman's "Northern Lights" because it's got layers, different but complimentary stories woven between the words.

I need something that makes me think. It's your fault. If you're reading this and have a blog and if I've been there, then you've made me think. I hold you completely responsible for waking me from my brain-dead slumber.

It mustn't have lots of complicated sub-plots or too many characters because I can't remember things like that. Politics, science or anything 18-19th century (Jane Austen is out) are a struggle. I like stories and people and gritty things rooted in the today.

So now I have to find this book and it's quite hard because there are lots of books and most of them ... no offence to the authors ... but they send me to sleep ... and I can't spend more then 4 hours in the bookshop choosing ...


Listening to: Janis Joplin, "Mercedes Benz"
Wondering: why there's no Fruit and Nut left ?

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a blog that cuts

just stumbled on this blog, which i am adding to my bloglinks

i don't normally go for award winning blogs ... and even if you catch me peeking at the odd one here and there, i don't normally go linking to them ... cos for me, awards and popularity and media exposure are all just clutter ...

but this is a blog that cuts through all that shite ... cuts clean right through ... cos it's just a blog that someone's written ... and it talks about food ... and it's given me new music to play ... and in a way it's wonderful cos it asks questions ... but see, they're difficult questions

i'm not saying anyone else should read this blog
that's your choice to make

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Whaaat????!

I've just been over to my thesaurus to look up the word, 'people'. I have to go there all the time you see, for the simplest things.

I looked up the word, 'people' because I was talking about 'people' and I got tired of calling people, 'people'. There's no other word for people in my small head (actually it's a big head but it echoes a lot in here), so I had to look it up. Right!! (sorry but I'm in a mood)

Anyway, while I was there I found this entry listed under Roget's New Millennium Thesaurus:

Main Entry: beautiful people
Part of Speech: noun
Definition: wealthy fashionable people
Synonyms: aristocracy, beau monde, café society, cream of society, crème de la crème, cultured class, elite, famous people, glamorous people, glitterati, ... blah blah ...

So, "Roget's New Millennium Thesaurus" ... exactly how do you get off on defining beautiful people as wealthy and fashionable, hmm????! Exactly what happened to plain ordinary beautiful people? The ones who don't need money, fame, culture or creamy bits to be beautiful!

Come on, before I take my chewing gum and lodge it half way up your left nostril. Let's have an answer!

You're supposed to be a shiny thesaurus, a reference for the english speaking world, a reliable place, but this is just complete pants. In fact it's a pile of REALLY ANNOYING NONSENSE!!!!!!!! Now I'm so mad I'm going to write the words millennium and Roget and poo and ugly, all on a piece of paper, crumple it up then jump up and down on it until I run out of puff ... then ... well then I'll just flush it down the loo ... OK!!


Needless to say, I didn't find a better word for 'people'.

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Shiny stations

I wonder if this is enough to make London dwellers feel slightly better about going to work every morning?

There's certainly a visual difference between these metro stations and most London Underground tube stations. But would you still find them attractive with several thousand commuters scurrying and jostling around? Would you spend time admiring them after stumbling off a crammed, hot, morning train smelling of stale clothes, sweat and half consumed egg breakfasts?

I love the process of art and have a lot of respect for any architectural expression that helps us feel better our workday environment. I wonder though, how others would rate design alongside safe trains with air conditioning, that run at sufficiently frequent intervals to allow seating for all passengers?

I'm frustrated that safety and service don't have art's good looks. Is that why we don't pay them as much attention?


Listening to: David Bowie, "Station to Station"
Wishing: that I could roller-skate

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Wellingtons and Waterproofs

A day in the Lakes

The road sign said "1,295 deaths in the last five years" (or thereabouts). Perhaps this might explain why I saw 4 police cars pulled up sneakily in hidden driveways, within a 5 mile stretch of the A595 between Thursby and Carlisle. Crummock Water and Rannerdale Knots I'd popped up towards Carlisle to visit a cemetery. Thankfully I didn't see any accidents along the way.

The Lake District is a very beautiful place, but it's not at it's best in inclement weather. Fortunately I know the place quite well. On an evening when it's wet, muddy and steeped in dense cloud it's like an old friend, I feel quite at home here.

Two Umbrella Mushrooms Damp weather does make tent erection a little harder though, especially in the dark. I've hardly been out this Summer and it took five minutes longer than normal to pitch, poles in the wrong holes and feet tangled in the guys, Mr Magoo in charge of a tent. One advantage of night-time pitching is that your camping neighbours can only hear you grumbling and grunting. In the morning they'd have to puzzle out which of the new arrivals had been the incompetent oaf who tripped over their guy rope. Eventually, I threw in my camp gear, dried off and I was in a cozy, warm and dry heaven.

I just love camping out.

Asleep by 10 p.m. - this is a puzzle. I wasn't very tired after the drive and it really only took 15 minutes of struggling to get the tent up. When I'm playing the role Faerie House of the little worker stuck in a concrete ghetto of little workers, I suffer from insomnia, sometimes getting less than two hours sleep in a night. In bed by 10? It would be less of a challenge to be strapped down and to have my little hairs slowly pulled out. So why am I out like a light at 10?

And what a great night's sleep! 9 hours uninterrupted snoozing until the pitter patter of rain on the outer tent shell woke me. Like an orchestra warming up, the gradual awareness of a cacophony of little sounds. The wind in the trees, birds singing, a sheep nibbling, the tom-tom-splat rattling of larger drops of water falling on the tent. I undid some zips - five in all, camping always seems to involve lots of zipping and unzipping - poked my head out and noticed that I hadn't quite cleared the farthest branches of a nearby tree when I pitched last night. The tree that was now dripping heavily into my eye. I was about to go back inside my tortoise shell pit when someone, fully kitted in waterproofs suddenly appeared, "Tent fees please". Almost forgot that I have to pay for all this freedom.

Crummock Water Got up and dressed, wellingtons and waterproofs, then did a tent check. I was far enough away from the tree to avoid any electric shock treatment in the event of a thunderstorm, but close enough to suffer a mild crushing effect if it decided to topple. I examined the tree. It was very old and resisted my attempts to push it over. I thought I probably had time for a pee, a wash, breakfast and a whole day's getting wet before there was any significant danger. More problematic were my training shoes, I'd forgotten to put them inside the tent outer last night. They were like sunken boats in the mud. I lifted one up and slowly poured the water out. I looked up, no sign of any good drying weather on the horizon ... no sign of the horizon.

Rainy camping breakfasts aren't really things you want to savour. I actually like soggy muesli, dried fruit and bran flakes for breakfast, but there's a definite time lag An Upstanding Mushroom between the pouring on of the milk and the development of just the right degree of sogginess to make a really good soggy muesli breakfast. I was therefore quite a proud little squirrel because I'd remembered to do pre soak my nuts and seeds last night.

(By the way, you're not allowed to have naughty thoughts about this particular mushroom!!)

Visits to the hills often involve scrabbling around on steep rock, looking for for elusive footholds. It was clear that today, the rock would be wet and slippery so I decided to leave my scrambling boots behind and spend the day in wellies. This was a good decision because once I started out, it decided to rain properly!! I bravely looked up into the clouds covering Grassmoor's summit then wimpishly turned tail and headed down to the shelter of Crummock Water's wooded shores.

Three Umbrella Mushrooms You'll be wondering by now, why all the pictures of mushrooms. Well it really wasn't a good day for mountain panoramas. While I was being dripped on by what may have been an oak, I noticed an umbrella mushroom growing out amid the moss on a tree trunk. There wasn't much light so a tripod was needed to keep the camera still during slow shutter speeds. If you've ever wondered what kind of very odd person stands around in the pouring rain for two hours trying to get the right light for a photograph of mushrooms ...

Further along the shore were some rocks in the lake, sheltered under a large roof of long tree branches. It seemed more like a dark cavern than a lake shore. Again low light here and again I needed a tripod. This time I only spent an hour and a half, but myself and my three-legged camera support were standing in just over a foot of water throughout that time. I was trying slow shutter speeds, experimenting with the moving waves over rocks and pebbles. Two lots of people stopped and puzzled silently over what I might be doing. I smiled and tried to look like a complete fruitcake.

The good news is that I got six shots. The bad news is that when I got back, I found they'd all turned out fuzzy.

After a few more strange looks here I thought it best to become a land dweller again. I headed round the lake and got a couple of shots of the water. Crummock Water Gale The cloud had lifted a little but it wasn't possible to stand straight in the face of the wind. Every now and again, it would whistle down from the hills and whisk up a series of water spouts across the Lake. Quite hard to photograph without camera shake.

I decided to give the camera a break then. There's a place at the north-western end of Crummock water where you can sit on the lake shore (it's safer than standing), face the full brunt of the gale and gaze all the way past Red Pike and High Stile to Haystacks and beyond. A while back, I posted about one of my places. Well in quite a different way, this is another. A majestic but also strangely peaceful place, somewhere to expire and have my remains seep into the soil. If I had to become a tree, this is where I'd choose.

Trees I spent quite a while here, conversing with the wind, waiting for my legs to turn into roots and for leaves to sprout from my fingertips. It was most annoying when this didn't happen. Clearly it wasn't my day to become a tree after all. Instead, I pulled myself up, headed out into the wind and slogged up gravelly paths into the cloud to get my late afternoon's worth of exercise.

It pretty much rained for the rest of the day and it was almost dark when I got back to the campsite. After a bite to eat, I put my head down and was dead to the world in an instant. Dreaming of mushrooms.


Note: the images here link to larger versions at Odd Photo, my new photoblog and from there you can get to even bigger ones at Flickr.

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oops, I fixed the comments now

What a twit I am.

I just noticed a problem with the "POST A COMMENT HERE" link on my individual posts after switching this blog from Blogger to Blogger beta - the link broke as a result. I hope it's now fixed, but there's a possibility that it may have stopped at least one person from commenting. I can only offer my sincere apologies.

It wasn't Blogger's fault, just my own bungling failure to update something in the blog template.

I wasn't trying to stick my tongue out at anyone, honest. I feel terrible now. I'm sending myself down to wash the dishes and scrub the floor.


Feeling: quite embarrassed.

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Black tie and sh---

I've had a couple of days of an embarrassing and unsociable mini-ailment that's kept me mostly indoors.

... okay then I've had the shits.

Feels like a family of miniature Alien life forms, battling it out to see which will be first to rip open my stomach and pop it's little head out. And there's this racket coming from my music speakers - a chant by some Buddhist monks. I have a lot of respect for Buddhism but this isn't a good day for inner peace, in fact these particular monks have become so annoying that I've now given them the day off and switched to very early Tangerine Dream: mildly chaotic but soothing.

Yesterday I had to wear my black tie and funeral face. They're odd things funerals, it's hard to associate all the ritual and ceremony with the person who's gone, much easier to say goodbye to the spirit, alone and in private. I'm probably alone in this feeling though, the others seemed to need the event and the presence of the body to help them say their goodbyes. In this case, a faulty body for what had been an alert mind.

On a much brighter note, I'll always remember him with a smile. A kindly, bright and friendly soul.

He would have laughed, me going to a funeral with a stomach rumbling intermittently like an old style coffee percolator. Quite a challenge in the silent moments.


Feeling: physically unsettled.

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Mulish

It's a new day. I realise now that I've been squeaking. I have to moan from time to time, it helps pacify parts of me that ... need pacifying. Little Holes are indiscriminate snippets of a life. They include the sweet and the sour and also sometimes what's in the dog bowl.

You can see that I'm going to be mulish and not apologise, can't you.

So where are the sweet bits? Well I am trying to write up my Lakes trip but it's a slow process. If it takes too long some silliness may have to fill the gap.

Talking of the latter. What would happen if, on your wedding day, you were walking up the aisle and suddenly James Bond parachuted in to rescue you?


Listening to: Cat Stevens, "Hard Headed Woman"
Feeling: like a mushroom, why is it such a dark day today?

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Blogging Meme

This life has just had another small stitch: I've been tagged again. This time by The Goldfish. An interesting tag, this one so here goes.

Why do you blog?

Okay, I'll tell you exactly why I blog.

Because it's hard work. I've said before that my educational achievements with regards to the English language are, well, complete poo. I can't write and I certainly shouldn't be in charge of a blog. If any of these words make sense, it's because I've been learning from other blog writers.

I do have feelings and opinions, and having been around on this planet for a while now, I've seen some things. I'd like to write about them.

Okay, I'm squeaking now but converting the chaotic cloud of thoughts inside my head into written language is very hard for me. This is a foreign medium, it's like learning a new language. I'm quite dependent on my dictionary and thesaurus but much more so on the blogs of people who can write, for reference and inspiration.

I'm simply too embarrassed to tell you how long it took me to write this entry. I'm sitting here with 30 odd other draft posts, each of which contains bits of writing and bits of gobbledygook. I've also listed 23 other things that I want to talk about. if you're a telepathic editor who's prepared to work for free then mail me.

Of course there's more to it, but if I carry on down that route, you'll throw me in the doghouse as an out and out moaning git. Lets just say I have problems with thinking (IQ? what's that?) and memory recall. And I'm self critical to a degree that is debilitating. Oh and there is something else but I can't go into that right now.
But what's most gruelling is that I can't even gripe with any justification. It's not like I'm ill or have a physical disability.
Okay, okay, I'll stop.

So, look, this is a challenge for me. I really should drop it and go back to studying the curious patterns on my wallpaper, but I'm stubborn and I like to test myself.

I used to free climb pieces of rock. Why? because when you're hanging off an overhanging cliff, either 100 or 1000 feet off the ground, you learn some things about yourself like how you react when you take yourself to the edge, how far you can push yourself, how to manage fear, how to overcome obstacles.
For me, writing is equally challenging, but something inside me is hammering away telling me that it's essential I keep trying, so I will.

Okay, sorry that took a while, but the meme did ask.

How long have you been blogging?

Since June 2006. I'm a mere youth.

Self Portrait

a wee me
circa mid-sixties

Why do readers read your blog?

I haven't the faintest idea, in fact it's quite a puzzle for me. It's very welcome and I really appreciate it when people pop by but I don't understand it.

What was the last search phrase someone used to find your site?

early black radio shows/actors

Which of your entries gets unjustly too little attention?

I haven't been measuring and I'm quite pig-headed so the knowledge probably wouldn't make very much difference to how I blog.

Your current favourite blog?

Diary of a Goldfish

I know this meme came from The Goldfish but that's not why her blog is listed here. Her diary is a wonderfully diverse collection of observations, thoughts and opinions. It's very witty, sometimes odd but never dull and it challenges me in many ways. Any blog that uses the phrase "a pile of poo" gets a spot on my Glorious list, but don't be fooled, this diary is written by a very intelligent fish.

Which blog did you read most recently?

Dagoth's Domain, looking for information about the new Blogger Beta. While I was there, I found he'd written some interesting things.

Which feeds do you subscribe to?

I recently trimmed my feeds down to 29 though that's likely to increase again. There's one for each link on my Blogroll (excepting Vincent, sadly) and five that seem to be defunct. Ignoring these, I have feeds for the following sites (in no particular order):
My coComment feed.
BBC News
the Erudite Baboon
A Word A Day
Random Acts Of Reality
Coin Operated Girl
Belle de Jour
Aberystwyth Mon Amour
Simplelsie
Balancing Act
Student Nurse
and 3 others. Two are feeds for my own blogs so I can check for feed errors and one is for a feminist oriented site whose author writes in a style I like.
I do also read a number of other 20Six blogs via the 20Six blogroll, but not as feeds

What four blogs are you tagging with this meme and why?

Sketches because she likes a challenge and she's got a super blog.

I'm going to be an awkward sausage now and reserve my other three tags because I'm still a young blogger and I haven't decided who to tag yet.


Listening to: Cat Stevens, "On The Road To Find Out"
Needing: a coffee, a biscuit and probably a good seeing to.

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Burnt Soup

It's just happened again. This is becoming an unfortunate but regular habit. I like soup. I know it's in a can but it's fairly healthy and is easy and quick to make. I've found that if you leave it on a very low heat, from cold, for about 33 minutes, it cooks perfectly (I don't like Microwaves).

The only thing is remembering when the 33 minutes are up. There is a timer I use for various things but I keep it in my den, not in the kitchen. The problem is that during the 20 second walk between kitchen and den, I forget to set the timer. I've tried hurrying, leaving the kitchen repeating the word, "soup", over and over, and tying a little piece of red cord around my finger.

Sometimes I get back to my desk and find a curious thing, a little piece of red cord tied around my finger. No idea why it's there, so I generally untie it and put it in my pocket.

I can smell it now. that smell of soup that's been burning for over an hour.


Listening to: Faust "Its a bit of a pain" play this music
Wondering: how I'm going to clean the pan

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Breaded Cod

Lavender Leaf was doing Sunday lunch and called to invite me. Leaf is someone I have to spend time with every so often. Not more frequently than once a week but at least once every six weeks. These are my time-scales, not hers although she does seem to have tuned into them. On Sunday we were just over the three week mark.

I know Leaf about as well as I can know a person, helped along by the fact that she isn't that hard to know, by which I mean that she's consistent, at least I think that's what I mean. Conversely, Leaf has a much more difficult job.

I'll start again: Lavender Leaf had bought all the ingredients for a Sunday lunch for her family and needed someone to cook it, so she called me. She cooks exactly four things in quite an exact way. Sunday lunch isn't one of those four things. Naturally, the invite also meant 'joining in' with some gardening and DIY.

I went round hoping to get some exercise by trotting struggling up a nearby hill but I made the silly mistake of turning up first, to ask Leaf if she wanted to come along, "We can do that after Lunch but seeing as you're early, you can fit my new letterbox and there's a Butler sink in the garden that I want mounted on some bricks."
I asked where the bricks were, "You can just use the ones from that old wall but you'll have to knock it down first".

The odd thing about me cooking "Leaf's Sunday Lunch", is the meat. Now if I were a meat eater, I might feel dubious about having my food cooked by a fish eating 'vegetarian' who hasn't eaten breast, rump, leg or indeed any other body part, for almost 20 years. Her family however are quite a trusting lot. Leaf had catered for me by buying some fish that I could cook for myself, so in amongst the roast beef, gravy, Yorkshire pudding, crispy roast potatoes, mash, asparagus, carrots and peas ... was a single piece of breaded cod.

So I didn't get up my hill. I did get fed though and I did see Leaf, both of which are quite important really in the big scheme of things, well at the present time anyway.

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Refreshed

I'm back and feeling a little refreshed. Had a great time in the Lakes and even managed a 'perfect day' that I must try to write up. Took one or two photos which are still in my camera, not sure yet whether they're any good.

Meantime life has been busy, not least here in blogland and lots of things are queuing, waiting to be posted but as always with me, the 'goings on' in my head have to be prised out and translated into written language, a slow process at best.

Before I can get on with that, there are some things I have to do. First off is to say that I'll miss Arete's blog and her thought provoking writing. Arete is moving on and moving forward and I wish her the best.

I also need to do a few other bloggy things, catch up on some practicalities, such as drying the tent, then find the time (and words) to write. Back soon.


Excerpt from the Little Holes dictionary:
Soon - Within a short time but possibly extending to longer depending on brain capacity, energy levels and how much chocolate has been consumed.

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Cracking name for a blog

"Daddy! Take the banana! Tomorrow is Sunday!"


(that's not the name by the way, it's a lyric from something I'm listening to)

Less than a year old and my hard disk wobbled this morning. The poor thing had an identity crisis, thinking it was nothing more than a useless lump of metal. I unscrewed and gently dusted it, smiled and softly said that it was a nice hard disk, and I didn't really mind the humming and chattering and whining. 40 minutes later, it’s feeling better so I can blog.

Just thought of a cracking name for a blog. One of those simple names that jumps out and tells you something straight away. Versatile enough to be used for humour, intelligent writing or slightly off-the-wall stuff. Could probably spin a few pennies too.

And guess what, the www. name hasn't been taken yet and neither have the Blogger or Livejournal URL's

Of course anyone could use it in their blog title (maybe someone has?) but it's very tempting to grab the domain, and register the blogging accounts. I think I'm just being silly (you can see that I'm not a writer), and grabbing it would be like keeping it from someone who could do it justice. On reflection I think I'll just leave it to be 'discovered'. Shame though.

I feel such a tease for not saying.

I'm not heading to the Lakes until the end of the weekend. Better to work while the crowds are out on the hills. The Met Office report the weather being better Monday and Tuesday anyways.


Listening to: some of the most diverse, inventive and funny rock I know (but then I do have some very unusual tastes)
Feeling: in-between a hill and a boring place

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Critters

Saturn and Venus were visible together in the night sky last weekend. I wonder if this is what's been causing me to feel quite uppity all week. Astrology is not one of my strengths (I do actually wonder whether it's all just a pile of poo).

All this uppity-ness has been caused by some little critters living in my head who have been at loggerheads. Normally I can shepherd them all together and get them to work as a team, but the last few days have seen constant battles and fisticuffs.

Trying to take charge, has been 'paranoid me', who jumps at the sound of a hard disk chattering unexpectedly and some days walks around in camouflage hoping no-one will even see him. He's been out in force, analysing things to death.

There is undoubtedly a Mr cheeky in here too, a brash character who does better in the pub with a climbing or rugby crowd. I have problems with this Bunny. He's hard to control sometimes and I have been trying to kick him into touch. You can see I don't like to think of him as me. It's not that I want to evade responsibility, but I do need to see him as a side of my character that should be tamed. He's been responsible for frequent feelings of bitterness since the little big bang.

And of course, there's 'silly me'. When the world is going wrong he's the one I bring out to stop the other me's going potty. Right now with Lebanon teetering, Iraq about to plunge into civil war and a certain new western religion trying to spread the gospel across the globe, I need a lot of silliness to stay sane.

My limbs are stiff and the mountains are calling, so it's time to take all these guys off for an enforced team building exercise. Most likely, I'll head down to the Lakes for a few days, get some fresh air and do some critter bashing.

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