Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Tondonia.

Tondonia - Another Country
I have had little acquaintance with Spanish wine. (No laughing at the back please!) The delicious wine that came out of a barrel in a bodega in our pueblo in Cantabria was unbranded and retailed at about 100 pesetas a litre. Perhaps 110 if you were after the good stuff (50p at the time). I have since graduated to an upper limit of a fiver a bottle, or thereabouts. The kindness of family, friends and strangers sometimes takes me into deeper waters. Let me share the tale of such a gift which secured a great deal of affection in my heart for the parties concerned, they know who they are!


The bottle, Tondonia, Cosecha de 1985, Gran Reserva, was placed in my hand with the strict instructions to drink and enjoy over the holiday period. (Will you please stop laughing at the back! Thank you.)

The wine comes from the Bodegas R. Lopez de Heredia in Haro, in the Rioja Alta. The link gives details and they have been making wine for 140 years so perhaps they know a thing or two.

The bottle was sealed with wax the colour of the stuff that comes out of the mouths of mafiosi and sucklings when they have been shot in the lungs, in glorious Technicolor. Could I open it? It wasn’t a screw top. Would it be corked or oxidised? Would I be able to tell? I applied the waiter’s friend, double pull, with shaking hands. (Now then!) The wine was fine, no sign of taint and, of course, I just had to have wee sip to clarify the position on oxidation, ahem. It tasted very young and fruity. I decanted it and got on with the business of cooking my goose, which was in fact a free range chicken! About an hour later I had to have a further sip to make sure it hadn’t oxidised, evaporated, or suffered some other terrible mishap. (Sniggering is not allowed either!)

Of course it was fine and when I sat down to my meal later I was able to enjoy the wine. I do not have the language to describe it in expert terms but it was smooth, had lots of fruit, complex but pleasing flavours and no hint of rough treatment from the barricas that they use. If you are interested there is a man in an anorak who seems to know what he is talking about and who am I to disagree.

Strangely enough I did not finish the bottle. (Watch it!)

I left half for the following dayand I had my meal after Brenda, god bless her, had given her address to the nation. For any youngsters or diehard republicans this is like a You Tube that has been going on for 50 years, before You Tube was either profitable or popular, just a Glaswegian insult.

The wine was a revelation. A good wine, a very good wine, was transformed overnight. It was like seeing a pretty baby one night and finding a beautiful 22 year old the day after. A flower grown from nothing in a day’s turning.

I decided not to risk a third day and gave it the coup d'état, as Des would have said.

Muchas gracias!

Monday, December 24, 2007

The Worship of Conies.

The eve of the big day and a quick stomp up Hut Hill at Knettishall.

I am starting my celebrations after the festival of 9 lessons and karaokes.

I wonder if it will begin with the well known ‘Once in Royal Dave’s City’ This is only fair given the rise in the prominence of certain members of an undergraduate drinking club!Happy Holidays!

A grey day at the stricken tree but I am intrigued later by the appearance of red and green conies. Obviously this is prime evidence for the lost tribe of Athapascans that turned left at Siberia rather than right.Yellow conies are go!

I have heard stories from old boys in Suffolk pubs with greasy flat caps that fit into ridges in their heads. Their trousers are belted with bailer twine and coats held fast by hemp rope tied in a knot that requires a specific gene to understand how to secure it. They have mentioned ‘ogans, sweat lodges, blessed ways, and then looked furtive, glancing to either side.

I return home to the watery, winter, Anglian sun setting across the winter Anglian fields. Still the glass is now half full and rising.

An aside for those brave enough to attempt the festive XWD.

Additional clues, it being the season of good cheer, cryptic parts only.

12 – Woody plant with child, soldier?

18- It’s difficult to blink

20 – You may be on the right lines, sounds like it.


Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Shortest Day.

A great time of the year for me! Perhaps that is why I am wide awake at 5 am. Better than xmas for a kid, the shortest day of the year. Dear god! East Anglia is such a terrible place.

The view on the way home with papers, crosswords and other comforts at the years turning.god's own terrible country

A trip to Titchwell to avoid the ‘Xmas Thang’. I am greeted by a pair of swans heading straight for me like F16s. Having checked me over they wheel away, satisfied that I am no jihadi. Following the line of telescopes I catch a Marsh Harrier, I think. Then to the beach!

The twitching of partsTwitchers snapped!

Do you want to see my mussels?

pretty little muscles

Plodding towards the car I am struck by the skeins of geese, flights of ducks and swans looking for a night’s bed and breakfast. Clouds of smoke, long and twisting against a grey sky. When they wheel the line of sight changes, the birds disappear from view. Turning again, they reappear to take their place in the great order of things. Lagyalo!

Friday, December 21, 2007

Sherry and minced pie charts!

Just when you thought it was safe to break out the sherry and mince pies.

Open Democracy has a very scary article by Ann Pettifor.

Globalisation: Sleepwalking to Disaster!

One of the least understood, but potentially most lethal financial products they have engineered - away from the regulatory scrutiny of central bankers and finance ministries - is called a credit default swap (CDS). In reality, they are not "swaps", but a form of insurance.....
The International Swaps and Derivatives Association, in its most recent biannual survey (covering the second half of 2007) assessed the total notional amounts of CDSs outstanding at $45.5 trillion. This staggering figure is about twice the value of the United States stock market, and three times the value of the gross domestic product of the US ($13 trillion).

If you find these figures difficult to believe, let alone understand, I would suggest some holiday reading:- Cityphylia in the LRB by John Lanchester. (Thanks to John Naughton's blog for the link and suggestion)

Damn! I've just had my first mince pie and I thought it was Xmas.
Wrong again!
Very scary numbers.
Now where is that sherry?




Monday, December 17, 2007

Boiled Head

It’s a long story but the moans of this particular boiled head (slap head is so…violent!) reminded me of the time when the old ticker gave us all a fright. In the middle of Cantabria I was dispatched to see an ancient Spanish cardiologist at the local polyclinic. Excellent service! We chatted about this and that and he asked some questions and gave some advice.

Did I drink?

Shuffle, cringe, squirm. Yes I did! What did I drink.? Red wine…

Of course, no, but did I drink alcohol. Whisky, spirits…? No. Good.

I must walk, yes it is cold in the winter but I must walk. If it is very cold I must put a newspaper between my chest and my shirt. It will be fine. El Pais is usually good!

Saturday, December 15, 2007

The tastelessness of wolves.

Homelessness and housing!
Haven't we come a long way since Cathy came home

We all know the story of the three little piggies.

So, to take the curly tail further.

Along came a man, with a wolf. He answered to the name of Al. He had a stocky frame and a broad nose. Occasionally, but not in polite company, he grunted. In polite company he merely sighed! The wolf was a sweetie with big yellow teeth and a wicked sense of humour.

The first pig offered to introduce Al and his wolf to Little Red Riding Hood’s (LRRH) granny. She had a room in her home; for 400 sovs they could have the room, a bath once a week and go outside in the woods if nature called. There was no access to the kitchen but there was a McOndos at the entrance to the forest. Al took it; he had no choice. He did have the 1600 sovs deposit for the month, and the deal was done.

Granny got weaker and weaker because of the pollution from the pig factory in the heart of the forest. Al and the wolf looked after her as best as they could, after their 16 hour shifts at the pig factory, but to no avail. She faded away and eventually Al and the wolf were evicted by the property developers who offered LRHH 1 million sovs to allow them to create a rustic holiday village. Naturally enough this had a value in excess of 100 million sovs from the word go!

Al said what do we do now, the wolf smiled, LRRH said "Jings I canna be doing with this." and went off to the bank.

So, the second pig offered Al and his wolf a room. 600 sovs a week, fair share of the kitchen and bathroom, outside loo, lovely views of the municipal recycling dump, and all the methane you can breathe. Al took it; he had no choice. He did have the 2400 sovs deposit, after a fashion, and the deal was done.
Al worked to get the money for the rent. An uphill struggle as they say.The wolf watched and waited as wolves do, it’s in their nature.

Times were good. Al had enough to pay the rent, feed himself, the wolf and go down the pub. Time marched on.

Along came a pig called Credit Crunch (CC) he was wild wacky and lotsa fun. He offered Al ‘A DEAL’ 2000 sovs! A little bit extra for the holiday, festival, wolves…...

The wolf growled, CC jumped, but he clinched the deal! So, Al now had the uphill and a little bit more. Well you can imagine; not a happy story.

Especially as the pig factory had to close. Damn those economic cycles! Don’t you just hate it when they do that?

So, there’s Al. Nowhere to go, no home, nothing to do and no sovs to do it with. The wolf still looked pretty sanguine, as wolves do, even though it is going to be a hard winter.

As they shuffled through the woods, somewhat downcast, Al and the wolf met Da Guy!

“Hello!” said Al.

“WHATEVER !” said Da Guy.

Al said he was sorry and the wolf grinned, after a fashion. No! Da Guy said that it was 13 down, eight letters,

‘Where VAT is applied regardless’

nice one.

The wolf said that Bunthorne can be such a bugger!

They moved on quickly, Al had other things to think about.

Da Guy called after them and asked if there was anything he could do.

“Not unless you can dig me, and the wolf, out of a hole, give us some sovs, and put a roof over our heads!?” said Al.

“Sorry,” said Da Guy, “ain’t got a shovelbut. How about an affordable loan and an affordable place to rent and a place for you and woolfie to work?”

“Don’t patronise me.”

said wolf.

Al asked how he could pay for this. Did it involve signing away parts of his body, the rights to his first born plus 16 hours a day of hard labour?

“No. Just work down at the community woodland coop.”

“Think about it!”

“We’ve thought about it.” said wolf.

“Where does he sign?”

“On a piece paper, usually at the bottom.” said Da Guy.


The wolf thought humans could be such a pain.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

In praise of Capitalism?

Sometimes, even wild eyed, hate filled, pinkos like myself have to stand back and mutter, sotto voce, that capitalism is awesome. In the midst of dreadful conflict it does restore one's faith in inhumanity!

An article in Open Democracy makes this point very clear with the following claim-
In 2001, the last year of the Taliban government in Afghanistan, the production of heroine was seventy-four metric tonnes; in 2006, under the nominal control of the US-led "coalition of the willing", the production of heroin in Afghanistan reached 6,100 metric tonnes.
Faced with such productivity what can one say but 'Our Ford'!

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Better 2 - Do Things Better

I mentioned that I had started reading a book by Atul Gawande

Better. A Surgeons Notes on Performance

Worth ordering from the library, at least if you think about what you do and want to do it a bit better without too much effort, ehem, maybe not the last bit!

In an afterword he suggests that becoming a positive deviant is a good thing and you can make a start by:

- Asking an unscripted question;

- Not complaining;

- Counting something, something you are interested in;

- Writing something;

- Changing - look for opportunities to be an early adopter.

So I expect to see you Do Things Better! (DTB)

Your pre-Christmas resolution.
Why wait to the New Year, it’s so middle of the bell curve.

From mice to pigs.

The best laid schemes o' mice an' men

Gang aft agley

You’ll forgive me if I sound like Chris out of Northern Exposure groaning away on the good old kay-Bear but 'The Rabbi' (Burns) did appear to have an insight here.

I was hooked by the link to the Open Democracy article.

As a practising moneylender and property speculator I was shocked to learn that the fruits of such positive activity could be used to such ill effect. But then why should I be.

Hey, if de big guys can do wrong den why can’t de liddle guys.

More evidence of the ripe fruits of capitalism, if any were needed, in a Grauniad article on banks' use of charitable trusts. I particularly like the idea that when caught with hands in the cookie jar the big, bad, old bear told the charity one thing and the newspaper another, allegedly!

And finally a suggestion for a tank without taint!

Saudi free petrol! Is any other particularly clean? You've got to start somewhere.

Not sure if it is possible or even if it would be popular but I still enjoy a good old campaign.

I (think) I remember reading Hunter S. writing about a campaign organised by LBJ to discredit a fresh faced, honest looking, clean as a whistle, young opponent in Texas.

Let’s put it about that he f**** pigs!

His campaign manager, who presumably was forever washing his hands when he wasn’t handing out dollar bills and promissory notes, could not understand it. Even given his personal powers of persuasion and a large war chest, no one, not even Ladybird, was going to believe said opponent f***** pigs. LBJ’s reply was classic.

Course they ain't but we're going to have ourselves some fun watchin' him deny it!


Don't even think about it

Friday, December 07, 2007

Better

If you had told me even 2 years ago I would be inspired by a book subtitled :-

A Surgeons Notes on Performance

I might have demurred.

However, the book by Atul Gawande has given me a bit of a lift and a few things to think about in the money lending and property speculation business!

Have a look for yourselves.

Of course there are prescriptions.

Three things, (Tres cosas, siempre tres cosas!) which influence performance in medicine.

Maybe they apply elsewhere!

-Diligence

-To do ‘right’ (like that one, easy peasy!)

-Ingenuity.

Cooking the tea, ok dinner to you folk, tonight I was inspired by brother Bach’s sonatas and partitas. I suggested to goodladywife (GLW) that although the man himself might be regarded as a bit of a dry old stick, cerebral, mathematical, repetitive and so on, he could touch you in the humanity department! It is something I have come to gradually over the years. Glad I did too.

Pre-Christmas Shopping

Scooting about in Big Market Town, which is really quite small, I had to go into Waterwell's Bookshop. I am much more a creature of libraries as our many regular readers will know! However, needs must and the devil drives.

Having made my purchase, a present for a colleague, and secreted it about my person I was hovering by the door waiting for the tide of pre-christmas shoppers to subside so I could limp from the building. A woman of uncertain age and social background flounced into the shop and demanded at the top of her voice,
'Ave you got any funny books about, er, er, senior moments!
I slipped out of the door and jotted down the statement verbatim. My memory is not what it was.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Our friends in the north

Christopher Harvie has an interesting piece in Open Democracy

"Choosing Scotland's future": a compressed history.

I leave you to ponder that from the man who used Deep Fried Hillman Imp for a book title.

He has, in the article, used the phrase sub-prime minister. I’m sure that Gordy finds it very wounding! I’ve not seen it previously. Who knows it may catch on!

For all I know, one of the cabinet wags may have attached it to Gordy's back on a post it note

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Rock of Ages

Two men sit in a bunker somewhere underneath Whitehall.

Fu….g TNT!

Christ Gordon where?

No you bampot. No the explosive, the so called fu….g ‘ Logistics Facilitator’

Oh thank God for that!

It’s god actually in here Tony. You’re a wee bit twitchy since you came back from Palistan or wherever it is.

You’ve no idea, Gordon. It’s like surfing on sewage full of land mines.

Well that must be a new experience for you.

Ok, ok I can live without Mr Sarky. Ms Manzanilla is bad enough. Anyway how about some devil’s buttermilk as the Baroness would say.

Right I’ll get one of the little people to rustle up a few bottles of Glenn Miller.

Glenn Miller?

Disappeared into the wide blue yonder just like those disks.

Yes, I heard about that. Did I tell you I met this guy in Gaza, great sense of humour, dreadful personal hygiene, said he had leads on 25 million potential terrorists, two generations worth, convenient format, can play on any i-Pod; are you interested?

No thanks Tone, no just at the minute. Here we are. Give us your glass. I must say I’m impressed at the cellar in this place since I took over.

Yes lots of good vino and such; quite a few bodies as well, if I remember correctly, Ha! Ha!

Speaking of which have you seen La Mandleson. Are you sure he’s not wearing a syrup these days along with the pallor of the recently undead?

Now Gordon!

Ok Tone, just can’t resist it. It’s ma flawed nature te he he….

You’re right Godron, it is good stuff this Glenn Miller. God bless him wherever he is.

Ok Tone, I’ll give you the capitalisation at the beginning of a sentence.

Speaking of which, Godron, I don’t suppose there is any chance of slipping me the date of the nationalisation of the Old Rock! You know, Rock of Ages cleft for me for a slightly higher fee! Ms Manzawhatsit is whinging about the lack of the old spondoolicks in the communal kitty, meow, meow!

No chance Tone! We have to be squeaky clean. Jings, Rock of Ages, you are shome pieceh of work Tone you know that. Iztha two bottlesh already.

Yezz! I haven’t laughed so much sinceh the old queen died!

Yesh Tone! But which one?

Now Godron!

Friday, November 23, 2007

Capitalism 101 and jokes!

It has been so hard not to comment about the Rock. So many things to say! My amazement is that so many of us fail to understand the mechanisms of oh, capitalism. Damn! There, I have said it!
You invest in an enterprise, it is successful, it pays a dividend, its shares increase in value.
Off you go to the pub to realise some disposable income!
You invest in an enterprise, it is unsuccessful, it does not pay a dividend, its shares decrease in value, it goes tits up. Off you go to the pub to drown your sorrows with some borrowed capital. Nuff said; no whingeing.

Yes the weak business, if it is a failing bank , can have catastrophic effects on ' business sentiment'. If depositors in a bank are constantly worried about getting their boodle when they need it, bad news. Seeing people queue for their money is so 1920s. Not to mention the poor sods who work for the bank and don't have 2 mil. in shares! (Not sure Baroness Dagenham was too worried about decimating the mining communities either!) So where am I?

2 Jokes.

- How can you distinguish stoats from weasles.
Weasles are weasily distingused from stoats which are stotally different.

Thanks to a colleague, with children, for that one.

-Are there any Jews in Northern Ireland?
Yes of course!
But are they Catholic Jews or Protestant Jews?
Protestant Jews of course.
Why?
Don't we all have Orange Jews for breakfast!

Doh!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Birthdays

So if you get to be 91 what do you do to celebrate; well I guess you celebrate with the village and those members of your family that are around. Not sure I will get near that age at all but good luck to those that do. In the meantime, a snap of a Mum and two loving daughters.

Oh; and a really nice bit of NT real estate in the background.



Sunday, November 18, 2007

An exceptionally simple theory of everything.

You thought it was 42 didn’t you, well it seems like it could be E8 according to A. Garrett Lisi. (original paper) No, that’s not a part of Hackney but the E8 Lie algebra…

perhaps the most beautiful structure in mathematics.

I can hear the groans already but hang on to your hats this could be a fascinating trip.

You know how all the forces in the universe, nuclear, electowhatsit, gravity and the like are all described by pretty little equations of course you do, so far so good.

In his introduction to the paper Lisi sketches his mathematical approach to describing the universe.

Although It is interesting to consider that the universe may be the physical instantiation of all mathematics, there is a classic principle for restricting the possibilities… A successful description of nature should be a concise, elegant, unified mathematical structure consistent with experience. Hundreds of years of theoretical and experimental work have produced an extremely successful pair of mathematical theories describing our world. The standard model of particles and interactions described by quantum field theory is a paragon of predictive excellence. General relativity, a theory of gravity built from pure geometry, is exceedingly elegant and effective in its domain… Any attempt to describe nature at the foundational level must reproduce these successful theories, and the most sensible course towards unification is to extend them with as little new mathematical machinery as necessary. The further we drift from these experimentally verified foundations, the less likely our mathematics is to correspond with reality. In the absence of new experimental data, we should be very careful, accepting sophisticated mathematical constructions only when they provide a clear simplification. And we should pare and unite existing structures whenever possible…By considering these two theories and following our guiding principles, we will be led to a beautiful unification.

He’s off then on his merry way. The first subheading draws me in

A connection with everything

My kind of pizza. You may have a certain reluctance to follow the next few pages if your maths is a wee bit rusty but I defy you to ignore Figure 2 on page 17. The E8 root system, with each root assigned to an elementary particle field.

After a few more equations Lisi summarises his conclusions

The theory proposed in this paper represents a comprehensive unification program, describing all fields of the standard model and gravity as parts of a uniquely beautiful mathematical structure… Some aspects of this theory are not yet completely understood, and until they are it should be treated with appropriate skepticism. However, the current match to the standard model and gravity is very good. Future work will either strengthen the correlation to known physics and produce successful predictions for the LHC, or the theory will encounter a fatal contradiction with nature. The lack of extraneous structures and free parameters ensures testable predictions, so it will either succeed or fail spectacularly. If E8 theory is fully successful as a theory of everything, our universe is an exceptionally beautiful shape.


Now men, and it is usually men, who think they have the secret to the universe, and if you just let them have 4 hours of your time and provide them with lots of paper, will write out the equations in a very small hand in green ink. They are not uncommon. They are not quite as common as men who think they are the son of god, or even god! However, I don’t think this is in the same league.

Two points really:-

In an article in the New Scientist

Lee Smolin at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (PI) in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, describes Lisi's work as "fabulous". "It is one of the most compelling unification models I've seen in many, many years”…

A not inconsiderable achievement as one our prime ministers used to say. As I have mentioned before Lee Smolin seems to be a sharp cookie with a good overview

There is also testability. Those three letters LHC, the Large Hadron Collider, it is a big machine for hurtling particles at high energy towards each other. A very sophisticated way of finding out what stuff is made of. Just like kids bashing toys on the ground to see what’s inside! There are great hopes of finding the Higgs.

Now there is a theory, needs a bit more work and there is no guarantee guv, but it could be tested! So let's get bashing those poor old hadrons.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

On a Winter’s Afternoon.

Listening to the Goldbloom Variations after a bowl of soup and hand wrought onion bread I feel a little like Chris in Northern Exposure.

Great temptation when away from home comforts to philosophise.

It is grey, cold and miserable out there. Still, I passed my MOT last week, alive but overweight was the verdict. I wonder if the car will be so fortunate this week. Can you have an overweight car?Hiding in winter

Meanwhile hiding in winter! This from a hide last year.

From the Forest of the Dead. Maybe not!

Trees

Memento homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris! Or not as the case may be.


Thursday, November 15, 2007

Luz

Hay Luz!


Y despues?

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

A Prodigious Talent 2

A trip to London and a visit to Hampstead Heath gave me the chance to go and see the “Fancy Woman”.

Shock! Horror! Phwat are you talking about? Have you not plighted your troth, whatever that might be, to the goodladywife, your partner of some(mumbles indistinctly) years!

Of course! However, I am only human and I am very taken with the works of a certain Mr. J Vermeer, one of which is permanently on display at Kenwood House, when it is not being stolen by various gobshites.

There she is and I try to see her as often as possible.

Not the gurl with the pearl

or the the gurl with the red hat (and no kn..…. stop it at once!)

A master of light. Would that there were more! Ojala!

A Prodigious Talent

A trip to London and a visit to the Grauniad Newsroom which currently has an exhibition of the “Unknown Bown”, a photographer of Prodigious Talent.

I was convinced after seeing it that my memory only graduated to colour from black and white (as far as I know she only worked in this medium) after about 1965. The Gypsy Child, Maidstone ’61 is a real stunner. By-election, Rochdale, ’58, is an interesting storyboard of politics at the time. I think the name of the candidate on the leaflets carried by the people in the shot was Jack McCann. If it is possible go and see it. Be shocked at how parts of England in the 50’s and 60’s looked like a failed communist state.
If you’ve got it you can plough a singular furrow to great effect!

Hampstead

Visits to Hampstead Heath and Anglesey Abbey convinced me that, even if you have no talent, a dodgy, digital, daguerreoista, with a bog standard point and shoot can hardly fail in decently lit, autumn arborial surroundings.

Lodemill

And of course it was too tempting to miss a snapper snapped.

The Snapper Snapped

Apologies to the woman whoever she is.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Glasgow Games

Many of our non-co-respondents complain about my lack of interest in sport, notwithstanding my goodladywife's passion for beefy men throwing an odd shaped ball around. Now, to set this matter to rights.
Glasgow is due to host the Commonwealth Games in 2014. Hooray!

The Leader of the Scottish Government, a Mr Salmo Salmar, is quoted in the Grauniad as saying
... the city would "make these games the greatest sporting event our country has ever seen".
The same article quotes a Mr Godron Broon, the Leader of the English Government,
"It's looking like a great sporting decade for our country," he said.
It was alleged that he
called many Commonwealth heads of government to bolster Glasgow's bid last week
Hats off all round. Nice to see the old chums getting on so well and being so effective. See what you can do when you work together as a team lads? No nasty sniping about all that (Scottish) lottery money being smuggled over the border for the (English) Olympic Games. You'll be whinging on about the (Scottish) oil next.

As the workperson once said when they were demolishing the roof of the Rector's office at Edinburgh University( I believe the Rector was one G Broon Esq. at the time)
It's no polical, pal!
Fun and games in the years ahead!

Reading Bad Science, see side panel, I was reminded of the Glasgow sobriquet common in my time in the north - YOU TUBE. - Maybe it persists to this day and is still a term of affectionate banter, as well as being something to do with the interweb. However, I would be vary wary of calling anyone a copper tube.
Thanks to Ben Goldacre for the link, possibly.

Friday, November 09, 2007

Crunchy and good!

Nice explanation of the little local difficulty in the wonderful world of wonga (WWW?) which I might have mentioned previously.

Thanks yet again to John Naughton and his contact. I missed it too.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Resolutions.

Panic over

Cloth hats –
Rep = cloth
Tiles = hats!

Doh! Useful little site for xwders.

Araucaria can be a real bugger!

Ben Hammersly had a very naughty link

Suggested that the Scots might want it fried!

There we go then!

So, that’s alright.
Amazing what people get up to.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Cautionary Tales

I am aware that this could become a theme.

However, an aside. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of the answer to the following question is implored to email to prop.for.06@btinternet.com.
What is the connection between cloth hats and lizards, monitors and/or reptiles? We solved the prize Araucaria in the Grauniad last week, despite not being able to make the connection between 'cloth hats and lizards, monitors and/or reptiles'.
All contributions gratefully received and acknowledged.

Moving on, a fine autumn afternoon for a bimble.

http://explore.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/os_routes/show/683


I am deeply grateful that the OS feel obliged to contribute something back to the little people just because they are a Treasury Trading Fund!

But, my god, are the ducks prolific in this part of the world; it's November for heavens sake!


Yes. That is a brood of ducklings!
Feckless buggers.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

A Near Perfect Autumn Day

Yet another local holiday for the season!

For Everyone For Ever, Amen

The National Distrust does provide a beautiful backdrop for the odd day out with the family.

Pink  pProud and been around

A bit delicate for some sensibilities. There is something about the colour and composition of this. Nuffin to do wiv me guv 'onest.

Not quite 'Ackney Marshes

A late afternoon view from the balcony!

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

To a mouse.

Here live beasties

First thing today, as I filled the kettle, I saw a wee beastie being bullied by the spadgers. The following came to my mind.

Wee, sleekit, cow’rin’, tim’rous beastie,

Oh, what a panic’s in thy breastie!

Thou need na start awa sae hasty,

Wi’ bickering brattle!

I wad be laith to rin an’ chase thee

Wi’ murd’ring pattle!

It was a feeling that persisted.


Nice one Rabbi!
Burns that is.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

A Walk in the Woods

Bogey Fungus

It is surprising what you find in our neck of the woods.

A pleasant little dander from the Grauniad’s Bumper Book of Bimbles for Boys.

Sweet little pigs. Are they Chipolatas?Chipolatas

We ended up on the river Alde and there was the Spritsail Barge ready to take us off into the sunset!Sailing By

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Didn't we do well?

So an interesting series of matches at the weekend!
I am surprised, but why should I be, by the domestic disharmony that the sport of Rugby can engender in households. Our East African co-respondent reports some contention about the England Oz Match!
Life in our neck of the woods has been little better. However, I don't think it was my comment about the Scots defeat. I, who would normally support the Scots against all but the English, opined that I could not bear to see them win as the thought of Frank Haddon smiling would drive me to an early grave!

A real senior moment, screaming for the French! C'mon Thumpy. Eh!

He came on late in the match but almost his first intervention was turnover ball!
A gallic shrug, a foul smelling fag, the reek of garlic in the air, a discussion of the post modern structuralist position and oh, we seem to have won! Mon dieu! All Black, what is zis All Black. Do you 'ave a position on existentialism? Mais Non! Steve Bell why do you spend all your time crucifying politicians they're not worth it.

More later!

Thursday, October 04, 2007

A quiet week in Buddhist Pizza Land!

Thanks, once again to John Naughton for dredging up the dark corners of humanity that lurk about us. We used to worry about the Military Industrial Complex - what about the Mercenary-Evangelical Complex. Read all about it - Blackwaters run deep and deadly.

Again from John
quoting reports -

Last week–after images of the beatings of Buddhist monks and the killing of a Japanese photographer leaked out via the Internet–Burma’s military rulers took the ultimate step, apparently physically disconnecting primary telecommunications cables in two major cities, in a drastic effort to stop the flow of information from Burma to the rest of the world. It didn’t completely work: some bloggers apparently used satellite links or cellular phone services to get information outside the country.

While some of our media concentrate on complaints about bananas in Norwich!

Good to see that the ingenuity of the human spirit is still able to confront the barbarians.

Ojala!

A happy and a blessed weekend to you all!

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Don’t F… with the Buddhists.

In a far off land that changed its name more often than its borders, the hand of his chief bodyguard rocked the General’s shoulder as he slept. The General was leader of the military government by the ageless and venerable constitutional instrument known as Buggin’s Turn. He struggled with consciousness and what was to become a monster hangover. He growled, pointing to the naked body lying next to him. The Political Advisor stepped up to the bed, folding a sheet over the human form, shaking it roughly, and dragging it away.

The Political Advisor advised that the people had taken to the streets.

He was instructed by the General to have the army shoot them.
The General stood next to the bed scratching his balls and then headed for the bathroom calling for coffee as he went. He returned in a robe and grabbed the coffee hungrily.

The Political Advisor cleared his throat and indicated that it was not just the people. It was the monks and nuns. He painted a picture of the river of saffron running through the streets surrounded by a human chain, white shirts and sarongs defining, containing and protecting the violently coloured flow.

Christ what a mess. The geriatric neo-fascists in Peking would be phoning all day long about the negative impact of unconsidered and hasty action on their Olympic Games. The PLA had treated Tibet as their own private turkey shoot for the last 50 years. Must have bagged a few red ones in that time!

Sweet Jesus, Bush would be on the phone in that Christian fundamentalist whine dropping malapropisms about right’s abuse, turrism and demanding the development of a culture of democracy and all that it entrails!

It was going to be a long hard day, his head was about to split asunder, his stomach was fluttering like a Tibetan prayer flag and if he didn’t get rid of these morons he would kill at least two of them.

He roared, they left.

The Political Advisor had prepared a plan by the time the General had emerged, almost sub-human, from his quarters and entered the presidential office.

1. Arrest and torture the usual suspects.

2. Isolate some of the people from the monks and nuns.

3. When the snatch squads were sure no western cameramen were around beat the living shit out of the people and shoot some.

4. Make sure the locals know what happened and that it would happen again until this crap stopped.

5. The Abbots of the local monasteries would be cordially invited to join the General for tea and biscuits to discuss the life of the Buddha, possible economic and legal sanctions against their institutions and the hope that they would join the national council of faith and reconciliation in an advisory capacity.

6. Oh! There would be a photo opportunity with the world’s press for the old saffron slapheads to smile broadly with the General and chuckle in that self deprecating way that Buddhists have. They would not be required to say anything. Who spoke the language in any case.

Very good. These Harvard and Gollyburton graduates could do a lot of the heavy lifting when it came down to it.

The appropriately sanitised military orders were signed by the General and the troops dispatched.

Dwight Pratt was sitting cross-legged in the monastery, uncomfortable in his rough saffron robes. He was facing his tutor Tam who sat in stillness wearing his robes and his consciousness lightly. Tam had been in the monastery for twenty years and was used to the spiritual questing of the few foreigners who made it to this part of the world. What he lacked in English he made up for in intelligence and a willingness to barter enlightenment for western sweets, to which he was addicted, the occasional joint which helped to go with the flow and the sexual advances of his male or female charges, which he could take or leave. Spiritual exercises were interrupted by the director of novices who summoned all to the courtyard where they were told of the Abbot’s dream and the great river of saffron that would flow through the streets and cleanse the country of much agitation and desire.

Dwight thought the whole setup bitchin. It was amazing. He would be there in the thick, his camera phone was charged to the full and he had enough credit to send 6meg Jpegs of every position in the Karma Sutra home to his girlfriend Kelly Ann Stringer who worked on the Akron Ohio Journal. Bring it on!

The demonstration, protest, river of consciousness, whatever, set off on its journey from the monastery. It was quickly coated in a white protective shield of the local population. It flowed on into the city.

Under careful management the elite public order troops shielded the local goons from the few cameras in the square while they delivered points 1 to 4 of the Gollyburton inspired plan.

Stripped of its protective shield the mass of monks and nuns smiled beatifically and exuded warmth and humanity in a non threatening way.

This can be a real bummer if you are an underfed, underpaid eighteen year old grunt in the local forces of law and order. If you are turbocharged on testosterone and plagued by acne such a pacific disposition is a positive incitement. A certain amount of verbal abuse and shoving was suffered by the monks but in tribute to their respected position in society it was relatively restrained and of course the chanting of the supplication to the compassionate Buddha does have a calming effect on those doing it and most of those hearing it.

Unfortunately Ky was near starvation, he was being pursued by the loan shark who serviced the police headquarters and he was a martyr to piles and a variety of STDs. He was sure the monk in front of him was not from hereabouts. He was a head taller, he smelled much worse than the local monks. Ky shoved Dwight. Dwight yelled imprecations that involved Ky’s mother rather than the compassionate Buddha and shoved back. Being an offensive football specialist and about 50 kilos heavier than Ky, Dwight had the edge! Ky landed on his arse with little ceremony. Adrenalin, testosterone and the insult to his mother, who he had never known, propelled Ky back onto his feet and coiled his body about the baton in a position which promised to deliver Dwight a fractured skull, at least. With the naivety and simple belief that goes all the way back to the Transylvanian silver cross, Dwight raised his cameraphone as a powerful talisman; red rag to a bull really.

A gentle, perfectly balanced hand moved Dwight to one side just as he was taking his ‘snap’. Tam stepped smiling in front of Ky. He stood in contemplation as the baton descended on his skull. It appeared to witnesses that, as the baton broke over his head,Tam blossomed like a flower. It was this picture, captured by the cameraphone digital delay, which passed around the world to Kelly Ann and made Dwight a millionaire several times over in an instant. He and Kelly Ann retired to a beach house in Carmel which they called, Kahma, and lived relatively happily ever after on the proceeds, chat shows, merchandising and royalties.

The compassionate one ensured that Tam was reincarnated and his spirit moved to a puppy that was born at the same instant the baton cracked on his skull. Well all those boiled sweets, pan drops and sherbet lemons had to be atoned for somehow.

The General’s hangover had not improved.

He did what?

The picture went where?

They captured the pictures and put tits on the monk?

They didn’t stop it?

Jesus Christ on a bicycle am I surrounded by morons?

The Political Advisor had a plan….

The General brushed it all aside.


This idiot Ky will be tried for murder, child molestation and not respecting his community elders!

His village will be burnt!

He will disappear!

The General directed that a memorial will be erected to the monk Tam and the worlds religious and secular leaders will be invited to participate in a ceremony of dedication to encourage peace love and friendship amongst nations.

What a f….ng day. The General was not to be disturbed. His 22.30 appointment should be shown into his quarters with two bottles of Bowbank after the usual body search.

He would review the situation in the morning.

ONE YEAR LATER

The General moved to the podium. Since the discovery of oil and uranium in the north of the country a few of the morally unbending westerners with broom handles stuck up their arses had agreed to join him in celebrating the life and spirituality of a man of peace. Tam was the embodiment of humanity, self sacrifice and all that shit. So he was about to unveil the monument. It was a crap piece of bronze in some contorted way meant to symbolise something, whatever, really the General just wanted to get through to the end of the year when Buggin’s Turn would mean he could enjoy the 100bn dollars he had prudently invested in ah… that would be telling!

A few words from the guests…. people moving into position and here we go.

The Abbot of Tam’s monastery had been invited and characteristically provided a cheerful smiling photo for the world’s press. He moved back when the first flash went off. He stepped on the tail of the dog that housed Tam’s spirit. The Tam dog barked and set off towards the chief bodyguard. The guard drew his side arm and aimed at the dog. The dog hit him midriff and the resultant shot severed the femoral artery of the Political Assistant.

A phalanx of lesser bodyguards formed round the podium and fired at the Abbot. The worlds press and television captured the sight of the smiling Abbot having his chest ripped apart by a fusillade. The general was captured on live feed being bitten by a nondescript dog and trying to shake the mutt off.

The dog lived out its life happily enough after escaping in the confusion.

The fact that it was infected with a new form of CJD only found in Asian dogs meant that on reincarnation it became a butterfly.

The General was not so lucky. His mind began to disintegrate within a month of the bite, and within the year he was to be found wandering the streets muttering and drooling….!

So the great wheel turns.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Speech Day at St Columba's Academy

The strains of the School Song echo over the pa system as Headmaster Broon approaches the podium. The words resound in the mind of every person in the Assembly Hall.

The staff, old boys and guests sing–

Sacred the trust that has been placed in thee

The boys, hum(the dirty wee buggers) and sing the words –

Sacred the crust that has been dipped in tea

But quietly!

Broon, newly released from the hospital for rhetorical diseases, rallies the assembly with a speech

Predecessors – tribute - one school under…

There will be

A tuck shops market

Deep cleaning of the sick bay

Every boy will be able to see the prefect of his choice…

It is a privilege to serve this school….

I will stand up for this school…

I will stand up for education…

I will stand up for Jesus…


I will stand up for you!

A lone voice, Salmo Salmar Senior, shouts from the back;

Sit doon the bugger at the back cannae see!

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Celtic Promise

Two men sit in a private dining room in Storemont. They appear to be relaxed and despite the fact that there is no wine or beer on the table there is a definite air of conviviality. The green lawns seen on two sides of the room reflect a warmth into the conversation.

So, Ian, it’s a wee while since we had a good natter.

Indeed it is Martin. The Good Lord has showered much upon us!

Not as much as on some poor buggers!

Now Martin, you know I abjure profanity.

Sorry Ian, but I am a keen student of the interweb and times have been hard for many. I am aware, also, that you may have had a few problems yourself up at the Kirk. Thank god we don’t have that kind of problem with the Army Council.

That would be a capital G Martin, if you don’t mind, and I think it will all blow over soon enough. I have been here before many times and with the help of My Saviour and herself the Baroness we have weathered many storms.

Ian let’s get stuck into the cheese, it was my shout and I think I have come up with a real stoater!

Good gracious, you certainly have. I must get the Baroness to order some of this.

Ian, I’m sorry to do this to you but it is ‘Celtic Promise’.

Ah Martin I’m lost. If herself or the Kirk ever find out; I’m completely lost.

Not so Ian, not so at all. Your secret‘s safe with me like so many others.

Well maybe just a little more and then some of that red Leicester.

Now you’re talking Ian.

The meal comes slowly to a companionable conclusion and each man feels that progress has been made. The stink of Celtic Promise cocoons them from the harsh world of ‘foot in mouth’, nuclear proliferation, pending eco-doom or the ravages of sub prime warriors.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Crunch

Well don't say I didn't warn you.
Not being entirely at one with capitalism it did give me a mild frisson when I heard about the guy who took over 150k of his savings out of Northern Rock, allegedly, yesterday! I wonder if that was in used fivers?
No it is not the 'credit crunch' that caught my eye it was 'super crunchers'; people who process a lot of data.

Within the linked article is a nasty little tale.
Ian Ayres, Yale Law School professor, Forbes columnist, and data fanatic, has now written a book on data mining, Super Crunchers: Why Thinking-By-Numbers Is the New Way to Be Smart.

On determining the presence of racial discrimination in auto loan rates:

While most consumers now know that the sales price of a car can be negotiated, many do not know that auto lenders, such as Ford Motor Credit or GMAC, often give dealers the option of marking up a borrower’s interest rate. When a car buyer works with the dealer to arrange financing, the dealer normally sends the customer’s credit information to a potential lender. The lender then responds with a private message to the dealer that offers a “buy rate” — the interest rate at which the lender is willing to lend. Lenders will often pay a dealer — sometimes thousands of dollars — if the dealer can get the consumer to sign a loan with an inflated interest rate …

In a series of cases that I worked on, African-American borrowers challenged the lenders’ markup policies because they disproportionately harmed minorities. [Vanderbilt economist Mark] Cohen and I found that on average white borrowers paid what amounted to about a $300 markup on their loans, while black borrowers paid almost $700 in markup profits. Moreover, the distribution of markups was highly skewed. Over half of white borrowers paid no markup at all, because they qualified for loans where markups were not allowed. Yet 10 percent of GMAC borrowers paid more than $1,000 in markups and 10 percent of the Nissan customers paid more than a $1,600 markup. These high markup borrowers were disproportionately black. African-Americans were only 8.5 percent of GMAC borrowers, but paid 19.9 percent of the markup profits….

Now doesn't that just give you confidence in the ability of the market to screw you and your friends and relations.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Obese Kids

another fat one!


OK! So there has been some discussion at the village school about children who are a tad overweight! The local education authority has made provision to accommodate such kids coming in off the school run.

Obviously it has not been adequate.

Back to the drawing board.

Doh!

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Magdalen Nabb

Magdalen Nabb

Died recently, obits and probably elsewhere give a flavour of her work.

I am pleased to share a birth county, Lancashire, and a birth year with her, 1947. However, the real joy for me is her creation of Marshal Guarnaccia. He has given us so much pleasure. Italian crime before it was either profitable or popular, pace Leon and Dibdin. I really appreciated his ability to get into the humanity of the criminal and the crime.

Sic Transit Gloria Mundi; as old mother church would have it!

With a name like that of course she had to be a left footer.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Let me count the days!

You might like to count the days.

Its official or backwards! Otherwise I guess there are thousands of them out there.

One thought occurs to me and the counters in their precision demonstrate it. Some parts of the country will be celebrating before others! Party Party!

In the meantime -

I know they are meant to be satirical but not unkind; what the hell!

Alberto Gonzales thought liberty
a touch flibbertigibbety.
He allowed the use
of torture lite and rights abuse.




Sunday, August 26, 2007

It’s Official!

We took advantage of the sun, the official holiday weekend, and the fact that we were in the same location to avail ourselves of LEEZURE consisting of the viewing of gardens, peg looms, churches, paintings, pubs and drinking beer, being accosted by school chums, wine tasting, a Lebanese rosé which I must return to and George Thomas and all his works and pomps. Here he is in his glory.

We saw him in a small messuage in a local village. Look it up! You surely have a dictionary?

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Cautionary Tales for Young Economists

A hot and sticky day spent in the middle of England in the company of moneylenders and lawyers.

Remember, I am an altruist and wish to make the world a better place for me to live in!

Paul pulls Steve's leg about default rates. Emotional temperature in room rises by about 500 degrees Kelvin. Its a boys' thing. It looks a bit stickier.

A flash in my mind, I know not from where, and in the stentorian strains, which I can do occasionally, I enunciate clearly:-
"Let him who is without default cast the first stone!"
We've all been there. Emotional temperature in room falls by about 500 degrees Kelvin.
Back to work.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Dog Police!

So another trip to the coast on the whim of a locally declared holiday.

Coastguard Cottages

Great day. Sun, sea, paddles and a picnic taken in the shadow of the old coastguard cottages.
A bimble down to the beach and we were all in a stupor of pleasure at the newly arrived summer.

Dog Woman approaches the beach. Sign says this stretch of beach is family friendly and the National Distrust politely and inoffensively requests that you do not take your dogs on it.
Dog Woman ignores sign. A muffled, collective, gasp of outrage and incredulity from those families assembled on the beach. Of course no one does anything! I raise myself from under my hat and pound after Dog Woman. If she had been a 300lb Biker with a Rottweiler I might not have done so. I hesitantly and politely cleared my throat and said firmly, 10 times, excuse me. Dog Woman looked at me eventually as if I was something delivered to the bottom of her shoe by said dog and proclaimed she was hard of hearing. I then pointed out the sign and alerted her to its contents. There was an explosive and abusive comment about the National Distrust. She also added that she could not see and had great difficulty with reading. At this point I had made my point and returned to the fold feeling like a Bateman Cartoon: the man who challenged Dog Woman.

There then ensued a period where she darted about the beach seeking support for her and condemnation for me. Everyone true to form mumbled and hummed. Her dog, a real comic of a mini poodle, had the last laugh. It went up to the post on which the notice was firmly planted and crapped at its base! This caused huge hilarity in our camp. Madam, your dog is a surrealist critic!

Obviously my assertiveness and apparel suggested I was Ranger Bob for the National Distrust.
She accosted me and asked for my name, rank and number, as well as what authority I had to challenge her. I replied that I was for my sins a member. Surely she could see the brown shirt and the insignia of the Dog Police on my hat!

We later saw her on the beach at a point above the Dog Patrol, transgressing Dog Ordinances with abandon.

Cups of tea and ice cream along the coast led to decision to enjoy an alfresco supper of fish and chips by the Harbour. Our little circle of 3 generations were tucking in. Who should appear in a car, apparently untroubled by failing sight, Dog Woman.

She was about to make herself at home, plonking down in one of our chairs and no doubt harranguing us about this that and the next damn thing. Too much; maybe it was chance, maybe she was a sad, batty old dear who loved her little poodle more than anything in the world. Some very firm, assertive, but civil words were said to encourage her to take herself off. She did.

You couldn't make it up!

Monday, July 30, 2007

Wildwood


A weekend of visits, family, friends and over indulgence.

I am sufficiently moved by the experience to declare a public holiday tomorrow. Get in quick you might enjoy it. So the link to walnut trees, see below, it kept me alive through the planning business!

My joy for the past few weeks has been a book by Roger Deakin published posthumously. I really enjoyed ‘Waterlog’ and decided to order ‘Wildwood’ from the Suffolk County Library Stakhanovites.

Page ix of the introduction states –

“It is through tress that we see and hear the wind……”

“…and the falling raindrops ripple out into every tree ring.”

Know a practitioner, learning by doing, someone who can set knowledge in language which captures the imagination.

The first section of the book gives a very strong sense of place, Suffolk. This is Deakin’s place of work, love and life. The naming of parts has never interested me. What we may forget, and others not know, is that there is such a joy to understanding, at whatever level. The skills of the hunter gatherer applied to knowledge bear fruit only after they have been assembled like an unruly flock of wild animals. Field trips to the New Forest with an inspired teacher probably lit the fires laid by Deakin’s home, family and its history. After this we pass through bluebell woods for a picnic and sleep under a rookery where, in the late watches of the night, he claims that the fledglings can be heard in the nests. There follows a minor discourse on the vocalisations of these birds. His conclusion is that for all the understated faint praise in literature for the sound of rooks the nearest approximation in human terms he can think of is ….

“If you found yourself across the fields from a Somerset pub, late at night, at cider pressing time you might hear something like a rookery.”

And so it goes. Cobbett is there of course, and easy references to Hughes and other native species. The Observer review by Tim Adams claims that his travels afield in Australia and Kyrgyzstan are less sure footed and result in less close observation than the native jaunts. I would defy anyone to read the idyll of Deakin’s perambulations in the walnut forests of Kyrgyzstan and not believe they had been granted a vision, in detail, of paradise. His view of the black hand gang is not without its appreciation of the fragility of eco systems and the difficulties they face.

So home to Suffolk which, strangely enough, is where we find ourselves. I do not feel I have to know trees as individuals, or to hug them, they will get along just fine without me. However, I have been inspired by this book. It’s a great pity he never got round to seeing the forests of Cedrus Libani. He might have thought they would be worth a word or two.