Wednesday, November 26, 2025

26th November 2025

 The Baboon in the Ruins

A sparkling essay from Rebecca Solnit,a message maybe not of hope but a gallop through what is happening in America and that maybe things are about to change, not necessarily for the better but a fundamental underground current of the large wave that is holding up all those many, many people who have stepped forward and protected their neighbours from the cruelty of the ICE gangs.

So let us put forward that little hope as the flame of defiance against a crooked, misogynist creature who considered kingship as his crowning glory but was in fact mocked by the greatest crowds probably ever seen in America.

The mock king definitely had no clothes on and should be removed from office immediately but then those standing in the wing are definitely just as scary.  I find it interesting that the demolishment of the East wing of the White House could be seen as an act of a baby throwing his rattle out of the pram and punishing the American people for not recognising his need to become a king.

Please, please America just get rid of him.

The Baboon in the Ruins.


Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Quakers

Photo from Geograph and taken by Paul Glazzard

Shewbread Quaker Burial Ground

Taken from Root Web.
Well I have to start somewhere.  I noticed this in drafts.  Andrew had been out walking last week and had gone up Shoebroad Lane past the Unitarian Church's graveyard, up a steep slope and come across the Quaker's cemetery.  There is a little video below.  Shewbread is the biblical 12 loaves set upon a golden table in a Jewish Temple for the priests to eat through the week.  Notice how the name has turned into Shoebroad.
Dissenters in the 17th Century were quite a feature of England, Catholics were persecuted and the religion we hold today Protestantism had become the flavour of the day.  On actually looking up Dissenters and you find there is an enormous amount of smaller religious sects starting up.  Sometimes different interpretations of the bible, or baptismal ways.  They represent cult ideas I suppose of how religion should be worshipped in their representations.

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Trivia

 

The weather is shifting from its Artic displacement mood into gentler rainy weather but the cold mood is promised from next Tuesday. All a bit of a shock, especially as the boiler refused to work yesterday.  Problem has hopefully been solved and a plumber won't be needed.  The Aga is a valuable resource when such things fail.



Things to amuse: Have you met Kelly Boesche and her wondrous videos, move over Salvador Dali.  The one on 'Ageing' is beautiful.

Alvin the little white Shetland pony who dances and gallops around with such joy

Apart from that nothing much is happening I shall be trying to get my head around the Green Party this weekend.  Andrew is a paid up member and has even offered his help to them.  He is a fan of Zack Polanski, I like him to of course but haven't you noticed that the whole theatre of media is concentrated on him and nowt other in the GP and I would dearly like to see other speakers.  

The Red/Green aspect of the party is interesting as well.  The socialist aims of Zack are good, I have no problem there but I would like to see other issues addressed as well. Which obviously means reading their manifesto, not sure if I am a fully paid up member though, was for years and still get emails from them for zoom meetings.  Which was one of the things I hated most, the endless discussion but it seems to have paid off.  They are taking votes off the Labour party, who seem to have done a right turn,  Taking jewelry from incoming immigrants...isn't that stealing and leaving them more poverty-stricken as well?
.

Friday, November 21, 2025

Flooding videos

 Flooding.  The following video on flooding is perhaps the most informative take on what happens during a flood in the towns that occupy the Calder Valley. Mytholmroyd and Hebden Bridge.  It is over an hour long but worth the watch if you live in the valley.

I know this year we have had a drought but that doesn't mean heavy rainfalls due to Climate change won't happen over the winter.  What I have taken from it is the fact that local understanding of the place they live in is far more important than the approach of government with their large scale schemes. And as for computer modelling, less said the better.

I don't expect people to watch it though it is interesting.  Artic Fox if you are reading this, the great banks of Himalayan Balsam thrives on the mounds of silt that is thrown up by the rivers when in flood.

The government wants to throw money at big schemes, so the wolves descend fighting for contracts, when it seems that proper housekeeping of the rivers and upland drains is the key for the water to run freely within the path of the river.


The other video I am noting is the 'Dark Moors' video on flooding.  This is historic but interesting.




Sunday, November 16, 2025

Things I pick up along the way


 Well Storm Claudia has certainly helped the water situation with parts of England flooded out. It started for us when my daughter phoned on Friday evening from Manchester that her train had been delayed, tree on the line.  They had sat on the train for a while then got off to get on another train but no go.  Karen phoned for an Uber to Tod, and a girl standing by her said 'no I am not stalking you' but could she come as well.  Whereupon a couple standing near said the same.  So the brave Uber driver drove through flooded roads and delivered  all four safely in Tod.  We weren't really expecting it here, the rain definitely and the wind but not the breakdown of the train services.  

Also Tom and Ellie were coming for the weekend, but can't make it from Macclesfield, although we might see them for lunch, if the train situation clears, The table is already booked in Tod.

Tom is beginning to look like Owen Jones!

Ellie pretty as ever

The view from the window


Apart from that life goes on quietly and as you can see both turned up.  Settled happily in their new home and recent jobs.  Tom who works for a publisher has to read books for them.  But strangely enough his home reading is the first two books of the Phillip Pullman 'Dust' trilogy, so that he can read the last one 'The Rose field' which I am listening to at the moment.  Although I have become a bit lacklustre as to finishing.  Perhaps I should have read the first books to, I find too many characters popping up and various scenarios becomes confusing in the end.

The meal was delicious, though we waited a long time for it.  Roasts for the Sunday tradition, mine was a nut roast with sweet puddings afterwards.  Slightly off-putting was the child being sick across the road, he seemed to have come from football in the park.




Friday, November 14, 2025

Interlude

 A favourite vlog of mine is 'The Mindful Narrowboat'.  This week Vanessa takes off to Whitby for a few days.  And boards the 'Flying Scotsman' at Grosmont.  It is only a short time and occurs round 15 minutes into the video.  The video itself is of course a nature ramble through the countryside.  And the first redwings have arrived in the country from places such as Iceland, there should be plenty of berries for them this year as also for the fieldfare arriving at a similar time, both belong to the thrush family.



14th November 2025

 

the Storseisundet road in Norway.

I start with this road that travels across water bumping on land that zig zags across, a marvellous feat of engineering.   I may be anonymous this morning because the computer or at least blogger refuses to acknowledge me.  Hey-ho.

Just had a deep discussion on whether the bread in the freezer is mine or not.  I win and will eat the bread but which is not mine.  But am not going down to Lidl because rain is expected all day.  Actually I quite like the rain.  Also because Andrew goes swimming I have to be in for our cleaner Sam.  But will she turn up I wonder?  Sam comes one morning every fortnight and cleans the main rooms of the house.  But last week went on holiday to Turkey.

Yesterday we had the first of the builders come to look round to give a quote on the work of transforming this house.  The plans have gone into the council and it will probably be 8 weeks before we hear anything back.

The following poem by Australian poet and writer Frederic Manning (1882-1935) captures both Autumn and the first world war.  Found in The Guardian.

A frail and tenuous mist lingers on baffled and intricate branches;
Little gilt leaves are still, for quietness holds every bough;
Pools in the muddy road slumber, reflecting indifferent stars;
Steeped in the loveliness of moonlight is earth, and the valleys,
Brimmed up with quiet shadow, with a mist of sleep.

But afar on the horizon rise great pulses of light,
The hammering of guns, wrestling, locked in conflict
Like brute, stone gods of old struggling confusedly;
Then overhead purrs a shell, and our heavies
Answer, with sudden clapping bruits of sound,
Loosening our shells that stream whining and whimpering precipitately,
Hounding through air athirst for blood.
And the little gilt leaves
Flicker in falling, like waifs and flakes of flame.



Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Zero Waste

 

13th century scroll of 6 persimmons

A living force resides in all things.

Some of the videos I watch are Japanese.  This because Paul my late partner lived and worked in Japan for many years in Kyoto.  We never went to Japan together and I had a sketchy idea of what it is like.  Paul always thought I would be scared of the hustle and bustle of the towns.  My nature belongs in the countryside, his nature was urban.

I find that Japanese people can be very spiritual, they are very polite and mostly their customs are simple.  Paul had part of his soul within the Japanese culture, little gods lay around the house and he loved to collect weird things.  When I left the house in Normanby leaving it to his two boys I did not take much, the odd little god from the kitchen.  But the scary hangings of gods were not for me, in fact when I come to think about it there was a lot in Japanese culture that frightened me.

Like most Japanese people Paul was absolutely very neat, this came from his work as a conservationist of scrolls.  He was probably only one of a few Westerners who took up this work in a Japanese studio.  There was in the studio at Chelmsford a photo of him kneeling at the work bench with Japanese colleagues and the Emperor and his wife coming to view their work.

He was immensely proud of what he did and I think this ruffled a few feathers of some people.  I know that he was attacked on the internet by a particularly loathsome person.  In fact I will let you into a secret, this person used to live at Hebden Bridge, but luckily moved up to Scotland, but I was actually scared of coming to Todmorden because of him.

But Paul was brave, he left Swindon after studying at the art college, boarded a plane to Japan and arrived there with very little money. Bewildered on the Tokyo train station at midnight and not knowing what to do he was rescued by the rail people who called the police and they took him to a hostel.

He had come under the auspice of an American lady, you can find her here - Ruth Fuller Sasaki.  Who had married a Japanese priest, who died within one year of the marriage and she herself became a priestess at the Daitoku-ji temple.

A wiki outlines her life

Paul stuck it out for a year as a Buddhist monk, he had a hut in the temple gardens, and his father would send some money out but he claims he only survived on apples and peanut butter.  He joined a studio and after 10 years apprenticeship was fully qualified and worked in the Kyoto National Museum. Paul married and had two sons but eventually decided to come with his family back to  England where he worked at the British Museum.  In fact he created the space for the repair of scrolls - the long working tables, tatami mats. All the tools, brushes and tissue papers that went into renewing the scrolls.

I use the word renewing in the sense that these old scrolls had a history unto themselves. They may have become dark with age or had a stain on them but that was part of their history and just like the adding of gold paint to highlight the cracks in broken china, or as it is called kintsugi, you kept the object in its broken form but with protection.

I will quote here from Paul's word some of the work involved when he is asked by an interviewer 'what happens if you go down as the man who destroyed a priceless national treasure?'

"Of course there are stages when that can happen - at the beginning when a painting is turned on its front and the backing layers peeled off, it is in a completely wet stage, with the original silk adhering to the base paper.  Finally, all the fragments of silk are in position.  Any false move at that time and it is finished.  That's probably the most frightening part of the work.  Fortunately that has never happened".

Funnily enough I sat down to write this after watching a video of a Japanese gardener.  He had a yard full of plants, 3000 I think, these were trees and shrubs  from people's gardens.  The people may have died, or moved on but rather than allow these plants to face the unknown happenings of the world, they ended up in his yard where occasionally they were found permanent happy homes ;) just like homeless cats and dogs.  

I will finish with the 'Six Persimmons' 13th century work painted by A Chinese monk, which seems to be a puzzle.  Someone, an orientalist called Arthur Waley long since dead said of it.....

(6 Persimmons is) passion... congealed into a stupendous calm.  It reminds me of the puzzle in only clapping with one hand.

Gary Snyder on Persimmons



Tuesday, November 11, 2025

11th November 2025

Good bye Autumn, and welcome brown, slithery muddy leaves. Constant rain is already turning their golden tones to the brown of decay. Look on the bright side the reservoirs are filling up.

Family are back and forth, Lillie back to London and Andrew also went up to London yesterday for business. Tonight my daughter and Andrew are going to see Lucien play in his band in Manchester, I hope it is a success, think their band is doing a tour.

Someone on F/B put up Riveaulx Abbey and Byland Abbey up, on a misty morning, well I shall put up my sunny photos of these two abbeys.

Riveaulx Abbey


Bylands Abbey

How the mighty have fallen and yes I am talking about the BBC and its fall from grace.  Yes the conservatives will be in there swinging left and right trying get rid of the old elephant.  They won't win of course, the BBC is an institution around the world. So a couple of idiots screwed up a factual documentary with splicing two bits of a conversation together and annoying the orange one.  So he immediately demands a billion (dollars or pounds I don't know).  Now the BBC can give a very apologetic answer to him and hope that it will work.

The BBC has been our background to life since it first began in 1922.  Did you believe everything it told you? of course not.  Two heads have offered up their resignations, one always has to have heads on the chopping block don't you know;) A certain justice has taken place.  The BBC had to wend its way through an equally disturbing matter of the Palestine/Israel war, it may or may not have got it right because of political pressure.  But if you want to be informed just read around, or at least listen around, there are plenty of podcasts out there strumming the "truth" and facts don't alter, though death figures might.

What came out of those abbeys so needlessly destroyed in their times? Firstly beauty, a dedication to craftmanship.  A community spirit, the monks also looked after the poor.  Calm oases, a belief system that marked their lives.

Definitely not the mayhem we see today in our society.  The thing is there is no mayhem in most towns, mostly we see community spirit.  It is only the media trying to drum up reading figures that blow up every  scandal out of proportion.

Who can resist the logical quote from Shelley.

And on the pedestal, these words appear:
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away

North Stoke: Book

Rebecca Solnit in the Guardian

Saturday, November 8, 2025

8th November 2025

 Times are quiet and dark, by dark I mean the way afternoons get darker and darker faster each day.  We wait for the 21st December when the turnaround happens and then once more we shall surge towards the light and growth.  I suspect that was why Xmas was devised a whole event of light and present giving.  I miss actually going to the garden centre near Chelmsford, the place sporting displays of coloured baubles and lifelike animals that clustered in unreal tableaus.  Books to read, candles to buy and tea to sit down to after you had saturated yourself with the gaudiness of the season.

It is 7.30 I hear music somewhere in the house, my daughter has been haunted over the last few days by a Melanie song, which I used to play when she was young.   Melanie did not have a very good voice but she had that raw energy of the day.  The song - 'Look what they've done to my song ma'  Finding it on YouTube, the next song is from 2009 and it is Peter Seeger and co singing 'This Land is My Land'. Obama sits in the audience.  Somewhat ironic  16 years later.

Knitting wise, having put down my needles for a few days, picked them up and knitted the second fingerless glove for myself. I have one in black and the other in grey.  This is because that at this time of year with black wool it is difficult to distinguish the stitches.  The black one caused me much frustration. I tried because Matilda wanted a pair but I thought to myself she will probably lose them anyway.  And the saga of my lost suitcase still haunts me.  Childish of course but I only used it once and then she went off to London with it.  Last time I asked she just waved her hand generally and answered - it's somewhere in London ;)

Lillie is back this weekend, she arrived late last night, there is of course a parade of the scouts in Todmorden on Sunday which is tomorrow for Remembrance Sunday.  I reckon she will be up for an OBE in 30 years time for service to the scouts.


One other thing, you may, or you may not know that Ted Hughes ex-wife Sylvia Plath is buried in Heptonstall.  Many people make a pilgrimage to her grave and at this moment it is covered in plants and looks respectable.  But there are some who have taken it on themselves to judge Hughes for the unhappy marriage and try to remove his name which appears next to Sylvias. All to no avail, because the name is recut again.  It is vandalism of course, as is the need to put your mark on someone else's history.

Even amidst fierce flames the golden lotus can be planted

This also is written on her gravestone, it means resilience and hope and is taken from the Bhagavad-Gita.

The Calderstones in Liverpool

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Solsbury Hill and honey

 

Solsbury Hill

My mind goes back to Solsbury Hill so often that sometimes I think I should have my ashes nestled in the ground up there.  Up the steep hill one walked, the lane came to a dead end and there was no space for parking a car.  I once walked  up on a Good Friday and found a local community of people carrying a cross on the hill, it seemed so weird this place which was once an Iron Age settlement.
It was situated just outside Bath, near Bathampton and  of course a song by Peter Gabriel always pulls me back to these hills around Bath.  This particular version is a montage of the times he played it and how he grew old over time.  He lived in Box a few miles away and had his studios there.


As for honey.  Well I have been on a search for genuine honey these last few weeks.  Basically it did not have to cost a lot.  This doesn't mean I am mean, I will pay a good price for decent food but Manuka Honey not...  The cheese stall in Tod market had local honey but it seemed to have been sold out.  So yesterday when I went to buy my favourite cheese at the moment - Cranberry Lancashire cheese (£7 for 200 grams!). 
They do it cheaper at Aldi but of course the real crumbly cheese is much better.  And also someone has got the wording wrong at Aldi, Granberry Cheese! So I wandered down the aisle and there was the olive stall.  I spied honey and the two men were seemingly a father and a lovely camp lad were very talkative and friendly.  So I specified what I wanted from  honey, his £12 jar was too much but they produced a smaller jar at £8.  I had some this morning, it was delicious, Greek and from  oak and chestnut trees.  The boy added up the two items and said with a grin 'that's £10 precisely' rounding it up no less, which made me giggle inside.  Bet he didn't do his timetables when growing up Tasker.

Note:  I like the montage over time of Gabriel singing this song, he ages well but the fun, singing and dancing do not age.  And as a reference there is no eagles sweeping over this last part of the Cotswold Hills, neither are there vultures. 

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

A Happy Face

 New York's new mayor  Zoran Mamdani.  O dear he is a socialist democrat says she dancing with delight.  Is the great liner of America slowly starting to turn towards a more humanitarian outlook.  In the voting of several states Democrats seem to be winning.  Let us just hope that it is the beginning of a sensible course.



Monday, November 3, 2025

Turner Prize 1 - Artists.

 

Artist - Mohammed Sami



Turner Prize my photos - 2

Indian Garden at Cartwright Hall

 

Nnena Kalu

A permanent Lowry there was also an early drawing by Hockney there


The phone just about gets the very vivid red of the tape



The quiet space


I
Artist Zadie Xa this was my favourite artist.  Description later, A reflective floor

It is a shame I did not take more photographs of this art installation by Zadie Xa

but the floor had motion in it and I felt rather sick.  You have to wear cloth shoes. It was a very waterish effect in the green shimmering light and great, in the sense of large, paintings on the wall.  One was warned as a female when you booked a free entry time not to wear a skirt so there was no 'upskirting' going on!

Trip to Bradford

We went to Lister Park in Bradford and the gallery there yesterday to see the Turner Prize. Karen and Andrew had not heard of the man that ran amok on the train the day before near Cambridge and were completely innocent as far as the attack was concerned.  It was of course a stand down from a terrorist act more a young man acting on his own motives.  I have just been listening to 'Thought for the Day' on the radio, and the person expresses his gratitude to the men who unflinchingly tackled the man with the knife, one now who is in hospital dangerously wounded.
Yet our train both ways yesterday was full of people, chatting away or consulting their oracles of knowledge - yes the phone, for which no one shall say a wicked word against them!
Below you will see the photos I managed to snatch out of my phone, when I had not inadvertently hit the wrong spot and gone to video.  

At the old Odeon, we could not not get in to see Andrew's friend Adam Goodfellow's work on the restoration but trail a little further down the road to the Albramha and the place was alive with the excited chatter of the little ones going to see Matilda. Dresses sparkled, feet danced in gold shoes as they joined the queue.  Slightly funny, to me of course, was the couple of bouncers to organise the crowd, I mean how do you quieten down 5 year olds as a bouncer?

As you wander through the city of Bradford and wonder how the money was spent on this 'City of Culture' this year, you will see it in pedestrianised streets, large flowerbeds everywhere, even a very long bed of wild flowers. 

We were going to the market but only one floor was open which was the restaurant area so that idea had to be given up and we caught an Uber to Lister Park.  I am greatly impressed by Ubers but could in no way actually get one.  They arrive within a few minutes of you calling for one in the immediate area.  Mostly run by the friendly Asian people, sometimes they are chatter boxes other times silent.
As we drove down the avenue of trees in the park it was absolutely beautiful the Autumn colours, our driver said he came to the park to find peace and also to bring his boys along to play cricket.


 
Fashionable benches everywhere

Andrew was such a hero as he caught me every time I stumbled ;)





Always like the detail B/W photos produce

I think the large building facing the camera was the Town Hall



The Gallery in Lister Park

To be continued

Saturday, November 1, 2025

1st November 2025

History in the making - 2007

Does anyone remember Trinny and Susannah - Women Undress.  An ITV show which featured these two fashion women dressing poor females who thought themselves as dumpy or ill wardrobed.  That maybe cruel but then light hearted entertainment is all about that sort of thing.

Wilmington Long Man.  Taken from Wiki - Cupcake kid

Well the two women committed a crime against one of the precious monuments of England - The Wilmington Long Man.  For historic evidence go to the Wiki here, but it was a medieval figure marked out by chalk.  The idea was to turn the 'man' into a 'woman'.  Good thing they did not try it on The Cerne Giant, getting rid of his penis might have been a problem! 

Cerne Giant taken from Wiki - Peter Harlow

But they came up against the Druids who were angry at this desecration of the monument and who protested at the site. You can see the disagreement in the video below.  The video by the way is old and a bit of jumping around is probably needed, it is 9 minutes long.  We must have covered it on Heritage Action and I wrote about it here.

It is the sheer silliness of it all that still makes me giggle, what were those hundred women, dressed in their white suites, thinking about.  Was this women's liberation gone batty, or was it the fault of a producer that had hardly left London to think up this silly prank.  The dignified Druids turned their backs on the women as they came down the side of the hill away from the monument.

All this came back this morning when I was thinking about the chalk giant in John Hooker's poem.  At least it has stopped raining now.  It was a gentle sound though noisier on the Velux windows in the attic.


The Cerne Giant Wiki

Friday, October 31, 2025

31st October 2025 - Ben Edge

Ben Edge at Avebury

I haven't had much to say the last couple of days.  Been listening to the new book by Philip Pullman the last of the trilogy about Lyra it is called 'The Rose Field'.  Pondering on shadows/spirits and dust and material beings and maybe avenging angels in the black space. 
But the 31st October has arrived, and as long as you don't open your door to that knock then visitations from the graveyard should be far and few.

So what turned up this morning?  Ben Edge an artist of the folklore of this island of Albion and his rather wonderful interpretation of the weird and wonderful that lies behind our folklore.  I know Liam will dismiss this artist as childish but at least it gives us a break from you know who, that orange topped man with the red tie.
But as someone who has watched the Druids parade around the stones in their white gowns his paintings  makes me smile.
Here is his 'Children of Albion' at the Fitzrovia Chapel,  the exhibition of which opens in November.  In the short video below you will see the rather large crowd who have gathered together to clean The White Horse of Uffington, who probably does stretch far back into prehistory, the token animal of a tribe.



 Happy Halloween everyone xxx

And as always a poem to be found.   John Hooker on the Soliloquies of a Chalk Giant.

Chalk

A memorial of its origins, chalk in barns and churches
moulders in rain and damp;petrified creatures swim
in its depths.

It is domestic, with the homeliness of an ancient
hearth exposed to the weather, pale with the ash of
countless primeval fires. Here the plough grates on an
urnfield, the green plover stands with crest erect on
a royal mound.

Chalk is the moon's stone; the skeleton is native to its
soil. It looks anaemic, but has submerged the type-sites
of successive cultures. Stone, bronze, iron; all are assimilated to
its nature;
and the hill-forts follow its curves.

These, surely, are the works of giants; temples
re-dedicated to the sky-god, spires fashioned for the
lords of bowmen;

Spoils of the worn idol, squat Venus of the mines.

Druids leave their shops in the midsummer solstice;
neophytes tread an antic measure to the antlered god.
Men who trespass are soon absorbed, horns laid beside
them in the ground. The burnt-out tank waits beside
the barrow.

The god is a graffito carved on the belly of the chalk,
his savage gesture subdued by the stuff of his creation.
He is taken up like a gaunt white doll by the round hills,
wrapped around by the long pale hair of the fields

**********************************
Edit.  The Children of Albion.  Article in the Guardian 28th Oct.2025