Sunday, 7 January 2024

7th January 2024 - Crisp Morning for Folk Stories

Thought for the day :"If I tell dad jokes, but I don’t have any kids, am I a faux pa?"

Rain 6 : Dry 1

But Cold !!

Brisk walk to get the Chicks and Ducks out this morning 



View from the Patio

Fabio enjoying the sun..

Zsa Zsa waiting for Brah to come and chat 


Fabio Sunbathing


Steam from the springs


Toby breaking the ice in the lower quarter


My Tulip bed - nothing showing yet 


But first sighting of daffs 


Blue Bell woods showing some Daffs




Lower Quarter

Springs

Ffynnon Wen

In the Sun

Looking over Moilyn Fields




A good morning for a walk ...

In other News - I saw a commentary regarding things that can be learned from Folk Songs..

(The subject matter of pretty much every folk song, (almost) without exception ! : )

*Don’t ignore warnings. If someone tells you to beware of Long Lankin, friggin’ beware of him.

* If someone tells you not to go by Carterhaugh, stay away. Same goes for your mother asking you not to go out hunting on a particular day. 

*Portents about weather, particularly when delivered by an old sailor who is not currently chatting up a country maid, are always worth heeding. 

*If someone says that he’s planning to kill you, believe him. 

*If someone says he’s going to die, believe him. 

*Avoid navigable waterways. Don’t let yourself be talked into going down by the wild rippling water, the wan water, the salt sea shore, the strand, the lowlands low, the Burning Thames, and any area where the grass grows green on the banks of the great North Sea. Cliffs overlooking navigable waterways aren’t safe either. 

*Broom, as in the plant, should be given a wide berth. 

*Stay away from the greenwood side, too. 

*Avoid situations where the obvious rhyme-word is “maidenhead.” 

*If you look at the calendar and discover it’s May, stay home. 

*The flowing bowl is best quaffed at home. Don’t drink with strangers. Don’t drink alone. Don’t toss the cups or pass the jar about in bars where you haven’t arranged to keep a tab. Drinks of unusual or uncertain provenance should be viewed askance, especially if you’re offered them by charming members of the opposite sex. Finally, never get drunk and pass out in a bar called “Cape Horn.” 

*Members of press gangs seldom tell the truth. Recruiting sergeants will fib to you shamelessly. They are not your friends, even if they’re buying the drinks. Especially when they’re buying the drinks. 

*If you’re drinking toasts, mention your One True Love early and often. 

*If you’re a young lady, dressing yourself in men’s array and joining the army or the navy has all sorts of comic possibilities, but you yourself aren’t going to find it too darned humorous at the time. 

*If you are an unmarried lady and have sex, you will get pregnant. No good will come of it. 

*If you are physically unable to get pregnant due to being male, the girl you had sex with will get pregnant. No good will come of it. You’ll either kill her, or she’ll kill herself, or her husband/brother/father/uncle/cousin will kill you both. In any case her Doleful Ghost will make sure everyone finds out. You will either get hanged, kill yourself, or be carried off bodily by Satan. Your last words will begin “Come all ye.” 

*Going to sea to avoid marrying your sweetie is an option, but if she hangs herself after your departure (and it’s even money that she’s going to) her Doleful Ghost will arrive on board your ship and the last three stanzas of your life will purely suck. 

*If you are a young gentleman who had sex it is possible the girl won’t get pregnant. In those rare instances you will either get Saint Cynthia’s Fire or the Great Pox instead. No good will have come of it. 

*New York Girls, like Liverpool Judies, like the ladies of Limehouse, Yarmouth, Portsmouth, Gosport, and/or Baltimore, know how to show sailors a good time, if by “good time” you mean losing all your money, your clothes, and your dignity. Note: All of these places are near navigable waterways. In practical terms this means that if you’re a sailor you’re screwed (and so are any young ladies you happen to meet). See also: Great Pox; Doleful Ghost. 

*If you are a young lady do not allow young men into your garden. Or let them steal your thyme. Or agree to handle their ramrods while they’re hunting the bonny brown hare. Cuckoo’s nests are right out. And never stand sae the back o’ yer dress is up agin the wa’ (for if ye do ye may safely say yer thing-a-ma-jig’s awa’). 

*Never let a stranger teach you a new game. No good will come of it. 

*Sharing a boyfriend with your sister is a bad plan. 

*Having more than one True Love at a time is a non-starter. 

*If you’re a brunette, give up. 

*Not that being a blonde will improve the odds much. 

*If your name is Janet, change it.

From "Things I Learned from Ballads" by Jim Macdonald

Cheers !





Saturday, 6 January 2024

6th January 2024 - Transporter Return and Squeak Pea

Thought for the day: "5/4 of people admit they’re bad at fractions."


Rain 6: Dry 0

Small panic first off as I realised that I had not collected the keys for Nancy's car yesterday when I was with Tom and Jay  paying for the car work ...  and that it was Saturday and with the weather it was highly unlikely that they would be at the workshop....

Luckily Tom's mother was in and remembered me as I looked through the keys looking for a flick key that had a missing VW section - and  luckily it worked so we dropped then transported back to her - she was a happy kiddo !






Dodged the showers and got back but not in time to walk the dogs, well that was my excuse !

Moved the cars around and found I could park the Vectra neatly to the side in the drive leaving plenty of room for other cars if needed. Put the cover on the Volvo as it seems to be getting a water leakage into the boot - could be the leaves in the seals - but thought it was a good idea anyway and covered the Landie as well - Had a deluge 20 minutes later ...
 
Put the girlies away this evening and took the opportunity of taking a couple of photos of Squeak Pea who is really growing well now - fingers crossed we may keep this one ..



In other news

Born on this day 1905 in Rhymney,
Idris Davies, miner, schoolmaster and poet, described as the voice of a generation, who is perhaps best remembered for ‘The Bells of Rhymney’ from his debut collection, which became well known after being set to music in 1957.
Davies, whose poetry was inspired by mining disasters and the depressed South Wales coal mining communities, began writing poetry after being made unemployed as a miner following the General Strike of 1926.


The Bells of Rhymney

The Byrds 1964

Cheers !



Friday, 5 January 2024

5th January 2024 - Clearing the Back Steps to the Greenhouse

Thought for the day :"Don't bother walking a mile in my shoes. That would be boring. Spend 30 seconds in my head. That'll freak you right out."


Rain 5 : Dry 0
But the rain held off for most of the day and Sarah popped around with all her equipment and we attacked teh hedgerow that is overgrowing the steps downt ot he Greenhouse.

When we got here - out first attempt to use the Timberwolf 5 in one extension tool with 2 stroke engine, and we cleared a headroom section to allow us access down the stairs. When I say we - it was Stuart who got it working and tried it out. But the bottom line is that we cleared as high as we could reach at the time and we have been here 3 and a half years since then - which means that it was getting completely out of control.

I had been looking at it for over a year - and to be fair did not really know how to approach taking the top off the hedge - I have been able to keep the bottom 6 ft behind the fence - but it is still getting over the top..



It is a truism that having the correct tools makes a job much easier - though I will freely admit that Sarah did all the skillful work  - I picked up the branches and took them to the Gully.
Of course - the answer is having the hedgecutter that can eat inch thick "twigs" and an extension chain saw - which in fairness is on the Timberwolf but I have never really managed to get it working ..


making progress

Tine for a Fag and a Coffee

And so in the space of four hours - with a few coffee breaks and a breakfast / lunch stop we get to the end and trim the edges..

Gully Foyle  is Full


Job Done


Just cleared a few branches around the camelia - hasn't had much light on it recently..

So, is it the 12th Day of Christmas or not - actually I do not care. We take our decorations down tomorrow whether it is right or not. Actually most people are wrong by not putting their decorations up on Christmas Eve - so there !!

Cheers !

 
 


Thursday, 4 January 2024

04 January 2024 - Sunsets in the rain

Thought for the day :"When you do squats, are your knees supposed to sound like a goat chewing on an aluminium can stuffed with celery? Just Asking"


Rain 4 : Dry 0
(Granted it was not pouring - but certainly wet)

Lazy day - aren't they all?
Walked the dogs - um not much else. 
But as I put the chickens away this evening - there was a fine sunset over the hill..



In other news:

Born on this day 1940 in Cardiff,
Professor Brian Josephson - Nobel prize-winning physicist and 'pioneer of the paranormal'. and whose motto is 'nullius in verba' - take nobody’s word for it.
Josephson was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 for his discovery of the “Josephson Effect” which explains how an electrical current can flow between materials with no electrical resistance, even when an insulator is placed between them. It is used for making immensely sensitive scientific instruments that are capable for example, of measuring the magnetic field around a mouse’s brain.
In the late 1960s, he began to explore paranormal themes, such as the relationship between music, language and mind and in the early 1970s started practising transcendental meditation and trying to find a scientific basis for telepathy.


Brian David Josephson FRS (born 4 January 1940) is a Welsh theoretical physicist and professor emeritus of physics at the University of Cambridge.
...director of the Mind-Matter Unification Project of the Theory of Condensed Matter Group at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, a project concerned primarily with the attempt to understand, from the viewpoint of the theoretical physicist, what may loosely be characterised as intelligent processes in nature, associated with brain function or with some other natural process.


So There !!!

Cheers !



Wednesday, 3 January 2024

3rd January 2024 - Saga of Autoglass completed

Thought for the day :"Last night my partner was complaining that I never listen to them… or something like that."


Thought we may get away without rain - but not to be...
We are on Day 3 Rain - Day 0 Dry...

But got up early enough to finally get around to clearing the ducks and chickens and Squeak Pea the pea chick ..   took a fair period of time as there was a lot of muck out there ...

Walked the dogs and got up to Tom and Jay to finally put the problem of Nancy's windscreen to bed - Autoglass phoned at 10am saying that they could not do the work if it was raining as the canopy they have is too small 
Tom removed the roof rack and we all kept our fingers crossed and luckily stayed dry long enough to get the old screen out - once that was done - he was committed to putting back.


In other news...

Born on this day 1892 in Bloemfontein, South Africa,
JRR (John Ronald Reuel) Tolkien, the author of The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion.
Tolkien, whose fiction is influenced by Wales, is known to have loved the Welsh landscape and its language. For example, the Elvish language, Sindarin, sounds very much like Welsh and many of his place names have similar Welsh equivalents e.g. Crick Hollow (Crickhowell).

JRR Tolkein

Cheers !


Tuesday, 2 January 2024

2nd January 2024 - Rainy Days and Sun - no Tuesdays

Thought for the day :"I'm at that awkward age between birth and death"

Rain day 2 out of 2 - and I mean "rain!!"

But they say there is no such thing as bad weather - only bad weather garments - and actually my anorak leaks now - but the lumberjack shirt is pretty warm and takes a long time to go through ..




















In other News

Drowning the Valleys

The drowning of rural Welsh valleys in order to provide English cities with water, often by compulsory purchase and without compensation, is a controversial subject which over the years has led to many protests.
On 2nd January 1982, The Welsh Army of Workers claimed responsibility for a bomb explosion at the Birmingham headquarters of the Severn Trent Water Authority. An hour later a second bomb was found and defused at the main complex of the International Development Corporation (IDC) in Stratford-upon-Avon. No one was hurt by the bombings, which were part of a campaign for local authorities from Birmingham and the West Midlands to pay for the water they receive from the Elan Valley reservoirs.
1880's - Lake Vyrnwy in Montgomeryshire was the first reservoir in Wales and at the time, it was the biggest man-made lake in the world. It was built to supply water to Liverpool and Merseyside and involved flooding the head of the Vyrnwy valley and submerging the small village of Llanwddyn.
1890s - The City of Birmingham Corporation bought 180km² of land in the Elan and Claerwen valleys in Powys, as there was an increasing demand for water in Birmingham for public health reasons and for industry.
1904 - The Elan Valley reservoir was opened to supply water to the City of Birmingham. The three dams opened there were - Craig Goch, Pen y Garreg and Caban Coch, with a surface area of 500 acres.
1907 - Llyn Alwen near Betws y Coed was constructed by the Wirral Water Board.to provide 9 million tonnes of water per day to Birkenhead.
1923 - Welsh MP's prevented the Corporation of Warrington drowning the Ceiriog valley near Wrexham.
1952 - Claerwen reservoir and dam in Elan Valley was opened and the area was leased by the Midlands for 999 years for a sum of 5 pence a year. It provides 75 tonnes of water per day.
1965 - Consruction of the Llyn Celyn reservoir in Gwynedd involved the drowning of the village of Capel Celyn, to supply water to Liverpool
1967 - Llyn Clywedog near Llanidloes was built to supply water to Birmingham and the English Midlands, following an Act of Parliament ordering its creation, despite strong local opposition.



Cheers !




Monday, 1 January 2024

1st January 2024 - Happy New Year

Thought for the day :"Stop blaming yourself or others, learn Fen Shui and blame the furniture"


Happy New Year

Bit of a quiet and admin day really - walked the dogs and got wet ...  
Day one - Rained once . (Gonna count how many days rain we are getting !) 

In other news :

New Year Customs in Wales.
Calennig.
The ancient custom of calennig can trace it roots back to the middle ages and is still active in some areas of Wales today. Children would go from house to house, singing rhymes and wishing the occupants a healthy and prosperous new year. In exchange for this goodwill, they would receive money, food or the calennig apple, which is an apple standing on a tripod of twigs and decorated with holly.




Cheers !