from a windswept hillside
Observations on life and living from the Staffordshire Moorlands.
Tuesday 12 October 2010
Wednesday 7 July 2010
What is it about this house and Black Cats?
Every time I leave a door or window open he's in - and scarfing down my trio's nosh. And in this weather keeping the house shut and cat proof is not really an option.
His size may indicate a number of ‘feeding’ stations around the neighbourhood are being visited by this critter. He is just, in the words of a highlander of my acquaintance, a wee chancer.
Yesterday I came out of my study to answer the door - and there he was curled, up on the landing carpet, fast asleep. He scarpered as soon as I yelled at him— but really. Its getting too much.
He has a collar so must belong to someone - and is V large and sleek so not a stray. So it must be this house. Is there some sign only felines can detect saying "BLACK CATS WELCOME HERE" ?
I have tried shouting at him, squirting him with water pistols, even on one occasion throwing my flip-flops at him – little varmint just will not take the hint that he’s not welcome!
Never had this trouble when old Crunchie was here. Tiny, aged and frail— but indomitable!!! The old girl kept all comers at bay with merely a look!
Saturday 30 January 2010
eBooks are a-comin'
As the margins on books in general are pared down by the likes of Amazon and Tesco on even the biggest of sellers like Ms Rowling so the big houses get more and more nervous about taking a chance on publishing any titles not written by a 'celeb'.
Thus we will no doubt see a huge rise in specialist and author-based presses, many of whom will understandable be taking the eBooks route through basic ecomomics.
FaceBook and the like do make it easier to publicise titles for either eBooks or PODs – and I know it makes sense.Yet I feel it would be a shame to go forward into a world where ebooks will have taken over to the exclusion of the traditional paper book.
Yes I see the fiscal advantage, and even the ecological ones. I cannot help feeling, that it will see the inevitable cut in longevity of many stories. They will vanish without trace as the small publishers come and go and so the eOriginals of various publications cease to be.
We can still buy a book printed 50 years ago - but will that be said of eBooks? I doubt it, at least so far as Specialist Press titles are concerned. Does that matter? we may ask. The past is past and we should be looking to new stories. And to some extent maybe that is true.It would be a shame for so much good fiction to just evaporate into the cosmos. In theory digital storage will last for ever. Yet microfiche was once cutting edge – and now increasingly irrelevant and fast vanishing from libraries. Though the race is on to translate much of it into digital you have to wonder how much will be lost forever because it was forgotten or dismissed as unimportant by then conservator.
Yes eBooks are coming, no matter now much we bemoan the fate of printed tomes. I, like many people, hate reading large amounts on screens, and the eReaders I have seen thus far do not allay my fears on that score. Given this small but important factor it may take a while – at least until technology has come up with a screen that dioes not give us all raging eye strain. But they will come as society becomes increasingly technology-dependent and shrinking world resources make paper-based publications en masse fiscally impossible.
Could this see a rise in the Ultra-Special editions of slip-cased, signed and limited editions?
Do we see the possibility of a return to a time when books become a true status symbol - valued and protected as the Art-form that it trult is?
For future generations of fantasy readers to be denied the excitement of browsing a second hand book stall and uncovering a first publication of some gem by this author or that would be a tragedy.
Only time will tell how these particular dice will fall
Thursday 20 August 2009
York is proud of its spiritual reputation and quite rightly so. The Minster dominates the skyline, overlooking many other churches and chapels along ancient streets, and all bounded by even more ancient city walls. In fact, there are no buildings taller than the Minster in the city; no other building is allowed closer to heaven.
York also has more pubs per head (allegedly) than any other city in England, serving spirits in liquid form.
And York prides itself on the quantity and quality of its ghostly spirits. Which, judging by the quantity of ads for ghost walks, haunt every available street corner. I lost count of the ghost-walk pamphlets I was handed.
Peter and I didn’t take up any of these offers but we did visit ‘York’s Most Haunted House’ at 35 Stonegate. This is the house made famous on TV’s Most Haunted show, where the ghost hunter, Derek Acorah, was once ‘almost strangled’ by a spirit. Well, hmm…
After collecting leaflets with a £2.00 off voucher (per booking, not per head!) we saw no reason why we should have to pay as a couple. So naturally we decided we didn’t know each other – never met before! – and paid our separate admissions with separate leaflets.
Inside the tiny entrance hall, a very small, and very tearful, boy of maybe seven or eight, sat on a wooden bench, red eyed and pale cheeked, twisting a paper hanky round and round in his fingers and sniffling quietly to himself. I kid you not: the child was visibly trembling.
The matronly figure at the pay desk told me that his mother had taken him into the Haunted house, and the poor wee scrap had been so terrified by the dark and the atmosphere, and his over active imagination, that he had just panicked and run. His dear sweet mother, having seen her offspring out into the light, had promptly vanished back into the house to finish her tour – leaving this wide-eyed and trembling infant to the kindness of strangers.
It was all there – the pathos! the fear! the anticipation! As an example of all that the ‘Haunted’ experience could promise it was hard to beat. But ideal parenting? Not for me to say. It’s probably not an ideal place for sensitive kids – so be warned.
We had a short wait before we could enter the house and spent it watching infra-red images on the security screens of bewildered people already inside wandering through darkened rooms, stopping to stare around them and not a word passing between than that I could see.
Every few moments the camera showed tiny white blobs streaking across the room; some slow, some fast, some in straight lines and others weaving around. Well I’ve watched Most Haunted. I know all the terminology. I know that those are ‘orbs’ according to the ghost hunters. Or moths, depending on your perspective…
I am open to new ideas and experiences. I can and do sense many things that are not easily explained. Yet when it was our turn I was in two minds on how to approach it. Clairvoyant? Or sceptic?
Once inside that decision was made for me when an over-loud voice-over began its monologue on the house and its history. For most of the tour I was struggling to tune out that piped voice. I wanted to ‘sense’ what was around me. To soak up the atmosphere and let the imagination run riot.
Yes, there was a spot in a small room full of pictures where I could detect a tremble, and in the séance room a faint, intermittent, chill played on the back of my right hand. I am sensitive to atmosphere, and know for sure there are more things in the world than can be explained, but I failed to get anything like the sense of menace or sadness that I have in other times and places. I was left feeling that the very thing the venue promotes is being razzamatazzed out of existence.
Entertaining, yes, and the tales were sad enough, and tragic enough, but the radio-theatre style re-enactments were just a little too stage-managed to create any genuine sense of verisimilitude.
But don’t be put off making the trip yourself, however. It is entertaining, and I could see how it was ‘spooky’ enough to cause a small boy to run screaming. It’s a great way for any devotee of the ‘unexplained’ to while away an hour.
Tuesday 7 July 2009
Pilates Madness
For those of you not familiar with Pilates it is a holistic exercise that involves body and mind.
A calming and strengthening process where quiet is not just preferred, it is essential.
But this week?
Madness ensued!
For some inexplicable reason the Centre Manager swapped the classes round (local politics we are led to believe) - so that the Pilates class (18 people) was swapped from the dance studio to the Dojo – and the ball and step aerobics class (6 people) was put into the Dance Studio.
On the face of it that sounds fine – except that the Dojo is half the size – being an old undersized badminton/squash court – and thus has room for just 15 yoga mats – meaning 3 of our number were out in the corridor!
Plus... the Dojo also has short walls. I.E. they do not reach the ceiling – an open plan ceiling if you will – and every sound from the weights room on a mezzanine directly above; from the new squash courts; from main hall where both badminton and bowls club were meeting, yes, EVERY sound, echoes through every section.
It - was - noisy.
Now... there we were in an ancient padded cell - it had padded floor and half padded walls (the other half being peeling paint effect). The Dojo's floor was also filthy because some lovely person had walked round it in muddy shoes (even though footwear is, of course, forbidden in the dojo).
You get the picture?
Conducive to relaxation this was not.
But nothing ventured we began the class.
Then... rattle, rattle, rattle. Where was that coming from?
Was it the ratchetts on the weights? No. Far more rhythmic than accidental.
Was someone trying to wind us up?
One of our happy band raced up to the mezzanine to ask the weight jockeys to shut the **** up...
But these poor muscle mules are innocent!!
Unbeknownst to us a band of guerilla toddlers had occupied the crèche in the next door room.
Now we had a handful of hyperactive toddlers – complete with entire percussion section. Xylophone, drum, triangle – you name it – bashing away at full pelt.
Then the rain began – in the way it can in the Peaks – onto a corrugated metal roof.
No amount of turning up the volume on the new age cd can get over the wall of sound – especially when it's competing with howls of laughter from the class.
And the Leisure Centre had one last spoke to stick into the proceedings.
Or to be more precise into the Leisure Centre's own roof!
It leaks. Like the proverbial...
Class was finally not so much dismissed as dissolved.
But laughter is also good therapy you know.
Monday 22 June 2009
It’s Not Easy Being Green (or safe)
I don’t have an especially large veg patch.
But currently I do have a glut of green sprouting broccoli. Loverly!
Nothing wrong with that.
Pick ’em, cook ’em, eat ’em is great for the most part. The flavour of really fresh veg is so very different from the tired specimens in any supermarket; and its home grown organic veg at that (she adds – piously)
And as for having a glut of fresh grown veg? No problem. After all - we do have the technology (a newly purchased chest freezer) specially bought for the expected excess.
No. My problem is not with the quality or quantity of the garden’s bounty.
It’s more with the zoology.
Firstly - the cat problem.
Getting anything to exceed 2 inches in height with 3 cats digging around is not easy. My barricades of canes and nets and birch twigs is a testament to cat-proofing ingenuity.
Getting anything grown under the onslaught of the pigeons is like wise a matter of sticks and string and old cds set to flutter and clatter and deter these feathered vermin. (In this sphere the cats actually come into their own – or at least young Oberon does - he being the relentless hunter).
So what else is there?
The large toad population, as well as our local hedge-pigs, are waging a sterling anti-mollusc campaign.
No. My current problem is harder to spot with my bumper broccoli bonanza.
We pick the florets, we (carefully) wash the florets, we cook the florets, we eat the florets…
We find two beautifully sautéed green caterpillars in the bottom of the cooking pan…
And I can’t get the image out of my mind!
If there were two small green corpses at the bottom of the pan… how many stayed in the broccoli… that went onto the plates… that… aaaaargh!
Camouflage is a wonderful thing… in moderation.
Tuesday 16 June 2009
Cats Hate Water (?)
When I settle anywhere in the garden why do my cats seem to see it as their cue to show off?
So – its a tranquil June evening and I am sipping tea in my favourite spot for a sunny evening - beside our ‘tiny’ garden pond - and I am watching the red and blue Damsel Flies flitting across the water - the scene is set.
Enter stage left and right; Oberon and Dilly Dumpling.
They flounce and bounce, tails curled into furry question marks, and play endless rounds of ‘tag’; rushing back and fore - closer and closer to where I sit as they dash from one hedge to the other – rolling around the grass in a hairy ball for a few seconds in pretend fights.
Yes – getting closer with each pass – to the water.
Cats are supposed to hate water. So why do my three seem hell bent on sampling its delights?
Oberon catches up with Dilly, leaping two feet in the air before crashing down on her head to clout her round the ears. They tussle, rolling over and over…
And sploosh!
Oberon has over-egged his jump and tail and bum are sub merged for… oh – a nano-second at the very least - before he is air-born and legging it into the hedge. Highly indignant he peers at me from under the hawthorn – sneezing and blinking his embarrassment.
But it’s a short lived recess. In a few minutes they are back to their unending tag.
Closer and closer – skirting the edging stones on the pond - jumping over my outstretched legs.
Oberon hides behind a large flower pot waiting for Dilly to rush by. He crouches. He wriggles. He leaps – executing one of his more enthusiastic ‘Tigger’ bounces with at least two feet of clean air between him and the ground...
But Dilly is wiser to him than he knows. She swerves. She dodges. She turns in her own length – so graceful and so fast. Confident in her skills of evasion! She is a cat! A supreme being! She can do anything! She can walk on water…
Wrong!
Two strides across the duck weed – and then…
Sploosh!!
Dilly's rear end plummets beneath the greenness. Before I can even begin to giggle she performs a perfect vertical take off – taking tips from Tom and Jerry – out, across garden, and in through the window - strewing duck weed and pond water in all directions.
Floorshow over for the evening? Not a bit of it.
Enter the heavyweight contender - Betty Poop. Regal - bulky - and none too bright.
She strolls into view – sees Oberon rolling in the dust on the edging stones – and tries a tentative, elephantine, gambol. She pats his tail. Oberon is up and dancing! The contender in his sparring ring. He pats her chubby bum - leaps over her – she rolls – trying to catch him as he glides over head … and…
Sploosh!
Betty slides gracefully into the shallow end of the pond.
Here the traditional pattern of sploosh-and-sprint is broken. Unlike her more agile - and more aware - pals Betty does not run on contact with that despised element 'water'. No. She sits, leaning against the sedge grass, blinking, looking around her, totally perplexed…
Sorry to say – I could only sit and laugh - in rib busting howls - as she sits, top leaning into the undergrowth and gazing down at her submerged bottom half. You almost hear her - 'What happened? How did I get here?'
After a good twenty seconds she finally heaves her podgy body out of the pond, and, pausing only to shake each sodden leg in turn, stomp, very slowly and deliberately, back down the lawn to the window from whence she had come just a minute before.
I am laughing at the crying stage now - and she pauses at the window to glare at me., Because the one thing cats hate more than water? Being laughed at!!
Head up – tail erect – haughty distain spoiled only by the duck weed clinging to soaked and bedraggled fur – she hops through the window to sulk for an hour.
Oh yes – Cats and water J The cats may disagree – but from where I am sitting? Hours of endless entertainment.
Tuesday 19 May 2009
Assorted Flavours? Sorted!
Recently a combined team of chemists from the Royal Society of Chemistry and
Why?
To carry out a taste-test on Cadbury's and Hershey's chocolate bars, as part of the Royal Society of Chemistry's ‘Food 2009’ survey of food production, transportation, storage, consumption and waste.
300 members of the public from around the world, (almost 200 of whom were raised outside of the
Results showed that 74% preferred Cadbury’s and 26% preferred Hershey's.
And of those raised in
Go Cadbury!!!
Monday 18 May 2009
Under Seige - or - The Battle of the Greenhouse
But the war raging over possession of the Greenhouse is as nothing compared with the veritable siege being waged on the house.
Every evening, for the past few weeks - come rain or shine and way into the wee small hours - these poor old codgers sit outside the back door peering into the kitchen and looking pathetic – half standing if I go near them in the hope that at last I will finally relent and and let them into the warm.
(sigh)… but no, no, no – I can’t have 5 cats… I mustn’t!!!