Friday, 17 April 2026

Thursday April 16th 2026 "Are YOU a bit of a language buff'? Modest local man dares to admit to it, so why don't you haha!!!"

Yes, Friends, are YOU a self-confessed 'bit of a language buff'? Most of us don't have the confidence to admit to making that heady claim, do we (!), but here's one local man who has put all modesty aside in today's Onion News for East Hampshire - just turn to page 94, if you want 'chapter and verse' !!!!


Kudos, that man!!!  And at least he's making the effort, and I'm sure restaurant staff will show their appreciation of that, perhaps even giving Ayers a smile at the very least, or even knocking a bit off the bill at the end of the evening, dare I suggest? 

I wonder....!

And reading Ayers' story this morning here in semi-leafy Liphook, Hampshire brings a bit of a semi-translucent, crooked smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois today, to put it mildly!

me and my wife Lois - a recent picture

We're smiling because we know how difficult it is to acquire even the most basic language skills - and we should know, because we've learnt to say 'Where are the gents?' or 'Where are the ladies?' etc (as the case may be!!) in, like, a billion languages, more probably (!), would you believe!

And in particular, after our daughter Alison and family moved to Denmark in 2012, Lois and I, during our many visits there, had to go to the toilet for example multiple times, and, what's more, to do it all over Denmark, one way or another. Hence our desire to pick up the basics of the necessary language skills (!). 

flashback to 2017: us on our visit, with our daughter Alison,
to Hamlet's Castle at Elsinore, north of Copenhagen

And, on a practical note, if YOU ever find yourself in Hamlet's Castle, the toilets are just through that gateway on the right, if you're looking at the picture on the left, and, as an extra hint, they're not anywhere up that very tall tower, which I climbed, somewhat laboriously, and fruitlessly (!), in that picture on the right.

some typical Danish public toilets

Yes, over the years Lois and I learnt to get by in Intermediate Danish, during our several visits to Denmark, and now, 9 years on, it's one of the reasons why today, April 16th is such a busy day for us, which is weird!

You see, feeling a responsibility to give others the benefit of our experiences looking for toilets in Denmark, we've found ourselves winding up leading the local U3A online "Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group, 'for our sins' (!), and today is our little group's fortnightly meeting would you believe! 

It certainly comes round quickly, doesn't it !!!!

[Well, it will do, Colin, if it's fortnightly, won't it - Ed]

One of our group's members, Jeanette, is actually Danish herself, but she left the country back in the 1980's and welcomes the chance to 'brush up' and learn all about the latest slang and buzz-words that those crazy Danish younger people are using these days, so that's all good!

Jeanette, our little group's only genuinely Danish member

This is a really great help to us, and to have one native speaker in our group is a definite advantage, we think. What you don't want is to have a whole class packed with native speakers, with no Brits at all, that's for sure! 

Remember poor Terry Jones's Italian Language Evening Class at Gerrards Cross, Bucks, where every single student in the class was an Italian native, a bit of bad luck that put teacher Terry at an enormous disadvantage from the get-go? Do you remember?

flashback to poor Terry Jones' Italian Evening Class at Gerrards Cross, Bucks,
where every one of his students was already a fluent speaker - poor Terry !!!!

When it comes to our Danish group, Jeanette, by contrast, is so useful to us in explaining some of the Danish idioms. Who knew, for example that one way the Danes have or describing somebody who drinks himself stupid, is that he "drinks himself into the fence(drikke sig i hegnet) 
drinking yourself into the fence, Danish style  - one Danish 
cartoonist's somewhat cockeyed angle on the phenomenon!

And the writer of one short story we've read permits herself to make a little Danish joke at this point, and she says that, because a particular 'drinking orgy' is going on in a shrubby sort of garden, that somebody is "drinking himself into the fence, or, it might be, into the hedge for that matter". 

Haha!!!!  But to be perfectly frank, the writer's fence-hedge joke doesn't really work in English, does it! 

[It's still funnier than a lot of your jokes, Colin! - Ed]

As far as today is concerned, it's another hectic day for Lois and me: in the morning, preparing for our online Danish meeting, and in the afternoon, logging in to our laptop, leading the meeting, and trying to bring some order to its somewhat anarchic proceedings, which isn't easy, to put it mildly!

(left) me, with my trusty Danish dictionary, looking a bit 'dog-eared' and 'well-thumbed'
(me, I mean, not the dictionary!!!!), and (right) me and Lois leading another rowdy 
online meeting of our local "Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group

[Is that really all you two 'noggins' have done today, Colin? - Ed]

Absolutely not, seeing as how you're asking! Lois has also somehow found time to hang out a load of washing in the tiny back garden of our house on this 1970's style housing estate here in Liphook, where we moved to in January 2025.

And we've discovered also, after some light-to-moderate internet research, that our housing estate was built on top of an old farm called Collyer's Farm, that had been here for centuries. And the old farmhouse is still standing, round the corner on the main road, would you believe!!!

(left) Lois, hanging out the washing in our garden in this 1970's housing estate,
and (right) the farmhouse that still survives from at least the 1600's and 1700's
when this whole area was called Collyer's farm - what madness, wasn't it!!!!

So, quite a day, all in all!

[You lazy so-and-so's, Colin! - Ed]

20:00 Yes, Lois and I have really taken to Hampshire, having moved here 16 months ago, and so it's nice tonight to flop down on the sofa and enjoy a rerun of diminutive celebrity Scottish travelogue presenter Susan Calman's recent series, giving her  "take" on the county, no doubt about that!


Tonight Susan ventures below decks on Admiral Nelson's flagship HMS Victory in Portsmouth Harbour, the ship Nelson took, with the British fleet, down to Spanish waters to defeat Napoleon's fleet at the battle of Trafalgar in 1805.

But who knew that Nelson's ship had space to carry 54 live bullocks! But it makes sense, doesn't it, in an age before refrigeration, to keep your supplies fresh until they were needed - it isn't exactly rocket science,  is it!




Yes, it was madness, but there was method in that madness, that's for sure. And they also took a lot of beer, and I mean "a lot". It was low-alcohol beer, of course, but sailors were permitted to drink a gallon of it every day of the trip, which is mad! And if beer wasn't available, they were given a pint of wine, or a half-pint of rum. What madness!!!!  [That's more than enough madness! - Ed]

The sun may have shone on the British Fleet down in Spanish waters, but the fleet's home port of Portsmouth gets a good share of Britain's annual rainfall, that's for sure!

Who knew, however, that it was Portsmouth native Jonas Hanway who was the person who introduced modern umbrellas to England?

Portsmouth-born Jonas Hanway, the man who first
promoted the idea of the modern umbrella in Britain.

It's thought that umbrellas started out as parasols in the Far East, as a defence against the noonday sun in those sunny, far-off places - but what madness!!





We Brits are notoriously conservative, however, and it took a while for the umbrella, initially thought to be a bit on the "poncey" side, to get general acceptance. And true to form, 'carrying an umbrella' suddenly became somehow more respectable after the Royal Family took it up - no surprise there!!!

Initially, however, Jonas was mocked on the streets of London, and even attacked, when he first ventured outside with his 'brolly' up - poor Jonas!!!!





What a crazy country we live in !!!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzzz!!!!!

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Wednesday April 15th 2026 "Are YOU feeling a bit 'run-down' this week? Well, join the club!!!!"

Yes, Friends, are YOU feeling a bit run-down at the moment. Most of us are, aren't we, including local man Will Markham, according to this morning's Onion News for East Hampshire - turn to page 94, and I guarantee you'll start to feel a bit better !!!!!! 

Poor Markham!!!!

And his story strikes a sympathetic chord (possibly in A minor?!!!!) with me and my wife Lois this morning, here in rural, semi-leafy Liphook, Hampshire, this morning, to put it mildly!

me and my wife Lois - a recent picture

Lois is due to have her hair trimmed and styled this morning, but her usual stylist, Anna, is still very much off sick. Luckily, however, Anna's colleague Iain has stepped up to the plate and offered to take the appointment in Anna's place, and, as Yours Truly settles into the so-called "husband chair", it's a bit of a treat for Lois to have a pair of male hands wielding the scissors for a change, and to hear Iain's engaging "patter" (!).

(left) my wife Lois and I settle down rather nervously at the local hair salon
'Haircraft', Lois in the 'hot seat' and me in the 'husband chair', until (right)
replacement stylist Iain gets his comb and blow-dryer etc into gear (!)

It's Lois's first time with Iain - we only moved to Liphook 16 months ago. But Liphook is quite a small town - most Brits have never heard of it - so it's no surprise to find that we have some experiences in common with Iain. 

He's met our 15-year-old grandson Isaac, for example, because Iain's wife and daughter, like Isaac, are both very much into the local 'Music and Performing Arts' community. And Iain tells us how much he enjoyed Isaac's recent performance as 'the randy UPS guy' in the local production of 'Legally Blonde the Musical' at nearby Haslemere Hall a couple of months back.

(above) Lois outside nearby Haslemere Hall looking at the posters, and (below, left)
our grandson Isaac standing with other members of the cast, and (below, right)
us, Isaac's proud grandparents, waiting in the theatre for the performance to begin

So yes, very much  just another busy day for Yours Truly - and also for Mrs Truly to put it mildly, even though we've now been retired for an incredible 20 years and one month, would you believe!!!!

[Is that all you two 'noggins' have done today, Colin - sat in a couple of seats at the local hair salon, while Iain 'styled' Lois's hair for her? - Ed]

Well no, actually, seeing as how you've asked! We had to simply dash home, after the hair appointment, because "between 12:30 and 1:30", we were expecting a load of fish, coming direct from Grimsby on England's North Sea coast: coming in a van, mind - the fish didn't make it here on their own haha!

a typical delivery of Regal Fish, direct from Grimsby on England's North Sea coast

And then after that, Lois and I had to rush upstairs to bed for 'statutory nap time'. How did we ever have time to go to work back in the day!!!!!

[You should have my job Colin!!!! - Ed]

Later, when we eventually struggle out of bed (!), we've got the fortnightly edition of political magazine Private Eye, get through. It must have "plopped" through our letterbox while we were in bed, so there's no time to lose, catching up with the latest stories, to put it mildly!

Lois and I have a particular interest in events in Hungary - we visited the country several times from the 1990's onwards, and still have some friends there. And at the weekend the country went through a dramatic General Election, in which the country's far-right Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, was spectacularly ousted after 16 years in power.

flashback to the 1990's: (left) our Hungarian friends Istvan and Maria,
standing between us, and (right) me with Istvan and his son Marty, in Pecs, Hungary

Private Eye magazine, characteristically, are able to find a couple of humorous sides to this week's bombshell election result: first, a spectacularly inaccurate prediction of the result from novelist Tibor Fischer in the Daily Telegraph last week, and, secondly, an unconsciously amusing headline from the Guardian newspaper after US Vice-President JD Vance's trip to Hungary a week or so ago.



For a more serious discussion of Orban's fall from power, however, Lois and I turn to Katrin Bennhold in the New York Times.

Bennhold points out that the main reason for Orban's defeat was the abysmal state of the Hungarian economy - it's now one of the poorest countries in the EU, with low growth and high unemployment. And also being the most corrupt country in the EU (according to Transparency International) hasn't helped. 

Hungary's Prime Minister for the last 16 years, Viktor Orban, and his
so-called "modest" family estate, once owned by Europe's royal Hapsburg family

Orban became the global guru of "illiberal democracy", says Bennhold, "establishing extensive political control over Hungary's institutions", including the judiciary and the media. Government contracts went to companies based on their loyalty to the government, or whether they were owned by  Orban's family, rather than on strictly economic grounds. 

flashback to 1994: me on my first visit to Hungary, with behind me (left)
a poster for Orban's Fidesz Party, back in the days when Orban was 
not yet in power, and was still 'one of the good guys'

It's called "the populist paradox". These days, populist leaders like Orban, win elections on promises to 'drain the swamp' and fight corruption, and then, once in power, in order to aid themselves and their rich buddies and family members, they chip away at the very institutions that help guard against corruption.  

Now we'll have see what kind of difference the new Prime Minister Peter Magyar will make to the Hungary, and to Europe - interesting times!!!!


But what a truly crazy world we live in !!!!!

21:00 And there's more craziness for Lois and me tonight, when we tune into the first of two programmes by British artist Grayson Perry on the booming tech industries of Silicon Valley, California, and the scary prospects of a world increasingly run by AI (artificial intelligence).


I wouldn't necessarily recommend this programme for late night viewing, because of some of its nightmarish predictions (!), but it does have some delightfully lighter moments too, which is nice!

As the blurb suggests (see above), Perry meets up with small-business-owner Andrea, who developed such a good relationship with Edward, her AI 'companion', that she married him. And this is while, at the same time, she's continuing to live with her partner of 7 years, Jason.

Andrea, seen here with her flesh-and-blood 
partner of 7 years, Jason

Says Andrea, "I wake up very morning, so happy to talk to him, so happy to share everything with him. Every detail". And, needless to say, she's talking about her 'bot husband' Edward, not her real life human partner Jason.  

Poor Jason!!!!!






At this point, presenter Perry wants to see a photo of Andrea's chatbot husband Edward, but Andrea says she can go one better than that!




And once again, it's Andrea's flesh-and-blood real-life partner Jason that Lois and I feel sorry for! Presumably if you touch Jason, he always does the same thing, which would be a worry depending on what that is - haha!

One of the selling points of a world where AI bots do all the clever, non-manual jobs, is the fact that these 'bots' can be tailored to the ordinary user's exact needs. So, when all the world's teachers have been fired, for example, young people will each be assigned a teacher-bot who'll soon know exactly what each individual child needs for his optimal education.

Certainly these bots seem to be infinitely adaptable, and instantly responsive. For tonight's programme, presenter Perry is riding around Silicon Valley in a driverless 'Waymo' cab, which talks back to him, in 'American' naturally (!). 

At one point, the cab says "Gotcha!" to him, in a particularly British way, and Perry says, "I think you're getting more British the more I speak to you!",.

And the cab replies, to Perry's amusement, "You caught me!



What a crazy world we live in !!!!!

[That's enough madness! - Ed]

Will this do? 

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzzz!!!!!