BBC news Morris Dancing
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
19th November 2024
BBC news Morris Dancing
Monday, November 18, 2024
18th November 2024
Small treasures: I had a sort out over the weekend, and unearthed the following two prints by Em Parkinson, not on blogger anymore I think. The first is of my beautiful Moss, long gone but always remembered for his sensible character. The second one is of course the two magpies, a favourite bird of mine, I love their playful nature.
Those are knitting needles |
Friday, November 15, 2024
15th November 2024
Thursday, November 14, 2024
14th November 2024
Well words jumble in my mind but two words have just come to the fore. In an article by John Naughton - IA slop and enshittification. I suppose you could describe it as the manipulation of writing and creating imaginative truth. I have become aware of my increasing tendency to question all I see in photographs because there are plenty of clever people out there ready to play with Peruvian temples in the jungle and animals that don't exist. But of course, that is not the only thing turned on its head. With everyone taking to writing podcasts and blogs - where is the truth going?
Andrew our computer expert in the household says AI is exciting, so does Zuckerberg and Musk, do I want my life dictated to by those two though? I notice that Microsoft through Bing when asked a question will always show me the nearest thing I can buy in that name and not the actual question I asked. Google is much better. My granddaughters should a question arise will consult their phones before anything else.
Musk of course is also under scrutiny for his use of Twitter/X to put forward his 'dreams' of the future, he also can manipulate the actual threads to his way of thinking - scary, yes?
There is a lot of talk about Bishop Welby in the news, he has resigned over the scandal of John Smyth. Abuse of young children is a scandal, it thrives in secret and perhaps now needs a washing in public.
My first husband had scars on his back from being whipped in his public school, we do not accept it today but probably from Victorian times it allowed males (and maybe females) to carry out their wretched business. Whether in posh schools or children's home. Why we may ask did the wider community of people such as the churches, councils and police see it best to hide these crimes?
It still happens, two Catholic colleges in North Yorkshire have had the same charges brought against them. The government report only came out last year.
I am only going to stick (mostly) with the BBC for news and The Guardian who has given up on social media. And I never joined X but will still keep my F/B account for all the beautiful roses and paintings that go through ;)
Child abuse inquiry: School 'reputations put before victims' - BBC News
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
12th November 2024
Saturday, November 9, 2024
9th November 2024
I have been looking through links on Bensozia's blog (thank you so much) page and came across this one on the Brothers Grimms. I remember having a book on their folktales. Rather cruel of course the stories, I am still haunted by the girl who had to dance even as her feet bled. Perhaps that is why as a child I read all the grown-up ghost stories at the library that influenced my taste in prehistoric burial cromlechs but what came out of the article was how the brothers influenced such writers as C.S.Lewis, Tolkien. Beatrice Potter and George Lucas of Star War fame. I find the last slightly puzzling but did love the films - childish I know.
"Without the labors of Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, there would be no Peter Rabbit, no Middle-earth, no Narnia, and definitely no Star Wars."
We read history through the narrow focus of our own background and subjectively the German Grimm brothers could be seen as a bit of a catalyst towards the Nazi regime later on. But never forget we pick up on things through time, the Swastika for instance has been used symbolically throughout the centuries in many religions as a peace loving sign. The crude and easy way we use words to bring down other people is the fault of the person using it.
Bensozia has also written about his understanding of the most recent event to hit our keyboards, which has left some rejoicing whilst others weeping in despair. Take your choice on Trump;( Why Trump Won. This paragraph puts it down to the price of eggs..............
Human Nature. If you want a negative lesson from this election, it would be that most people are selfish, insufficiently moral, generally unthoughtful, and don't give a damn about people not like themselves. The average Trump voter didn't care about his bursting closet of scandals, his rancid rhetoric, or his constant lying, because the price of eggs was too high.
I am going to pick up on the words 'insufficiently moral' to describe another person who struck me as very similar. I had watched "The Post Office Scandal" recently and of course Paula Vennells CEO of the PO from 2012 to 2019, who so vehemently denied any knowledge of what had gone on in the terrible campaign against the poor sub-postmasters, many of them driven to financial ruin by a computer system called Horizon that did not work. But the real crime was the manipulation of the same system secretly by a team of operators who altered the information on the sub-postmasters computers.
I watched her tears as she was questioned by the committee and thought (a profound swearword here) how can she talk this gobbledy goose nonsense that she was unaware of what was happening through her chairmanship. It was established of course that she did know and she was stripped of her CBE. She was also a woman of the cloth!!
End of rant hopefully...........
But then Murr can say it so much better
Friday, November 8, 2024
Trevethy Quoit
Pulling things out of the past. Trevethy Quoit is probably one of the strangest cromlechs in Cornwall. Sitting in a field by a row of houses with a hole in the capstone and a squared entrance maybe, reminding you of similar Russian holed cromlechs. Roy Goutte is an amateur archaeologist to his very bones. Turning over a problem in his mind till he eventually found a solution,
I have walked round a stone circle with him, and noted the triangulated shape of some stones, could they be female?
It is called a Portal Dolmen because of the 'doorway' and is one of those strange burial places of the Neolithic age. The following photos I took in 2014, and no I wasn't drunk at the time, as I definitely thought odd angles would bring out the weirdness of the stones.
Trethevy Quoit: Cornwall’s Megalithic Masterpiece | The Heritage Trust
If you go to The Cornish Bird website you will find further explanations of how the word developed for quoit.
Thursday, November 7, 2024
King Arthur's Hall news
There is also good news!!! Tom Stephenson has been ill and is now recovering, thanks to his partner for keeping us up to date. Whilst wishing a Happy Birthday to a long ago friend from the prehistoric side of my past. I stumbled on the great news that King Arthur's Hall on Bodmin Moor is prehistoric in its date. So to an old friend who I feel is no longer around, Roy Goutte. Roy it was your nagging that did it and I remember the wonderful time Paul and I had when you took us around your part of Cornwall. See here for the Heritage Trust article.
King Arthur's Hall |
Bodmin Moor King Arthur site five times older than thought - researchers - BBC News
Of course King Arthur's Hall was prehistoric, the arrangement of a square was unusual, may have in fact been rearranged in medieval times but those stones had a reason to be there, with a tor of course always in sight
Roy, Paul and Paul's cousin and husband |
Me being pulled up? Note one of Roy's sheepdog at his side. Roy trained sheepdogs and I think one even went out to Australia Andrew! |
I remember being so excited about this place |
Apples
Sifting through my photos on Flickr I came across photos of some of the fruit I grew. Each apple tree planted with a certain amount of hope and now probably uprooted. There is nothing quite like apple blossom in the spring. As a child I grew up in a garden with large fruit trees probably planted in the late Victorian time. We climbed those trees my brother and I, settled in their large branches and saw the apples stored in golden coloured large baskets down in the cellar. The sweet smell always hitting your nose when you raised the latch to the cellar.
So the Bath garden which was a good size and went across a small valley was ideal for the fruit trees. we have lost the great apple orchards of this country, especially Kent. Nowadays go into the supermarkets and buy sour foreign plums, or pay a price for the Pink Lady apple but the great variety of English apples have been lost to the orchards being 'grubbed up' as not profitable.
Even the famous Bramley apple original tree of which its many cuttings went to be planted in many an orchard is now dying of disease, but at least we have its children.
May King |
Deacon Pears |
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
5th November 2024
The Peace Of Wild Things
When despair grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting for their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.
Wendell Berry
Why that poem? yesterday I was hunting around my books for the Welsh vicar R. S. Thomas gloomy poems. A favourite of both mine and Weaver of Grasses heart. But I could not find the one I wanted. Today of course has brought a different set of circumstances, the beginning of the voting in America, so perhaps an American farmer will do equally well.
So as dawn struggles to emerge through the cloudy grey skies and I wait for the geese to come in to their daytime quarters. I will recommend another video to listen to. Again it is a historic look back through the history of Russia and the Soviet Union but Professor Tim Snyder is seemingly an academic well read, so you will find him here. Also, if you go to Youtube he has is own space in which he talks. I will not plead mercy for it being political, or topical and should not be on a blog. Unless we get politics and history firmly learnt about there is no point to grumbling about our own British small history.
So having girded up my loins today ??? Well the last few weeks I have been nervous of putting my quilt together, but after breakfast I cleared the kitchen table and once the shopping is done with, will lay the three layers together and pin them.
And small fact learnt from watching Alice Roberts the other day on her travels round the East. Turkey was unfolded in full beautiful colour and that glorious blue, turquoise colour tiles that I love so much. Of course, turquoise/Turkey, though the word meandered through the French as well.
Saturday, November 2, 2024
2nd November 2024