Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Monday April 6th 2026 "Got any 'old friends' in YOUR wardrobe? Text 'yes' if you have haha!!!!"

Yes, Friends, have YOU got any 'old friends' in your wardrobe? Most of us have, haven't we, and it doesn't cost anything to say hello to them now and then, like local man Oliver Roberts, whose whimsical face was 'all over' page 94 of this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire, to put it mildly!


And, on a perhaps somewhat 'slow news day' (!), this local story was quickly picked up by many of the 'nationals', like the Times and Telegraph, and was even the lead on the BBC World Service's early morning bulletins, which was a nice tribute to local man Roberts!

Kudos, that man !!!!!

And the story brings an ironic smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois today, here in Liphook, Hampshire, not a million miles away from Roberts and the somewhat eccentric 'characters' in his wardrobe (!).

my wife Lois and me - a recent picture

It's a story that resonates with us today, because, with the improved weather, I make the decision to discard one of the three sweaters I routinely wear - a difficult choice but I decide put 'Duke Redsweater' back on his hanger in the wardrobe today, so let's hope he doesn't sulk about it all day, like he normally does (!).

And, in fact, it's so nice and sunny this morning, that Lois even dares to go outside without a coat to hang out the washing in our tiny back garden, which is as good a 'barometer' or 'weather report' as you're ever going to get from us, so no complaints please!

a sudden improvement in the weather (left) emboldens my wife Lois
not to put a coat on, when she hangs out the washing in our tiny back garden,
and (right) I decide to dispense with one of the 3 sweaters I routinely 'don' over winter

Lois and I know it's going to be another busy day for us today: we've got our daughter Alison and family coming tonight for a big Easter Monday dinner: lamb, roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding, veg - the complete works, with a choice of tiramisu or cheesecake for dessert. So this morning we've got to dust and vacuum the house, and make it look uncharacteristically 'respectable' (!), and somehow create the illusion that Lois and I don't 'live like pigs' when left to our own devices (!).

And it's going to be a bit of a 'family day' all round for Lois and me, because we also get a nice zoom video call this morning with our other daughter Sarah, who lives 9000 miles away from us, in the northern suburbs of Perth, Western Australia, with husband Francis and their 12-year-old twin daughters Lily and Jessica.

The twins want to thank us today for the Easter eggs and chocolate bunnies etc that Lois and I paid for, and Sarah, our accountant daughter, has some great news on the career front: she suffered a bit of career disruption recently, after her company 'moved her sideways' 3 weeks ago, from a job in a leafy suburb to a job in a more congested area near the city centre. 

flashback to 2018: Lois and I, on our last visit to Australia, pick up our 
daughter Sarah from her office in the leafy Perth suburb of Osborne Park

Sarah, three weeks ago, reluctantly accepted this move to the inner city, although she wasn't happy about it. Then this week, her old boss, the one in the leafy suburb, resigned and left the company, and so now Sarah has been asked to move back to her old office and take over her old boss's job. So in effect she's getting a promotion, with more money, longer holidays etc etc. Plus she'll be working in a nice leafy suburb again, and much nearer home.

What's not to like haha!!!

18:00 Well, it's Easter Monday, so now we can relax and have a nice Easter Monday dinner with our visitors, arriving from nearby Churt, just over the county line in Surrey: our other daughter Alison, plus husband Edward and their three teenage offspring Josie (19), Rosalind (17) and Isaac (15). On the table we have roast lamb with roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding and vegetables, and for dessert there's a choice of tiramisu or cheesecake.  What's not to like (again!) !!!!

Yum yum !!!!

our 2026 Easter Monday dinner: (left to right) Isaac, me, Rosalind, 
Lois, Alison, Edward and Josie 

The talk is non-stop, which is especially nice for Lois and me, who normally just rattle around in this house like two peas in a massive drum (!). A lot of the chat is all about our grandkids' revision work for upcoming exams: Josie, a first-year student at Durham, has some 'mid-terms' coming up this summer; Rosalind has her A-Levels in view, and Isaac his GCSEs. So it's busy busy busy!

And the mood is further lightened when Edward, as a special concession, finally gives the go-ahead for the public release of the lyrics of the special AI-generated song, "Lemongrass and Lime", that he commissioned in honour of my recent 80th birthday meal at a Thai restaurant in nearby Haslemere, Surrey, which is nice!

Flashback to last week's birthday meal, when the song was first "broadcast" (just in the restaurant (!)): 


And here, finally, are the complete lyrics for my special song, Lemongrass and Lime, which is nice!

I showcase my 80th birthday Thai spring roll - yum yum! 


a typical crowd response to the song's anthemic chorus:
"Happy Birthday, Poppa, eighty years of being true...."

And that, in brief, is how you do your 80th Easter Monday - simples!!!

[Not brief enough, Colin! - Ed]

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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

Monday, 6 April 2026

Sunday April 5th 2026 "Friends, do YOU already have an escape plan ready, if ever you're wrongfully imprisoned?"

Yes, Friends, do  YOU have an escape plan ready, if ever (Heaven forbid!) you become wrongfully imprisoned for a crime you didn't commit?

Most of us do, don't we! But one local prisoner's prison term came to grief as a result of one simple mistake he made - see this morning's Onion News for details!


Oops!!! And of course the plan was discovered by prison staff during the routine weekly prison beauty contest (round 1: prison 'togs', round 2: swimsuit etc etc) and as a result he was moved to a cell with no windows, which was a bit harsh, my wife Lois and I think, as we read the story in Onion News' print edition here in leafy Liphook, Hampshire, to put it mildly!

my wife Lois and me - a recent picture

The story makes us smile, because this morning we've come up with our own 'escape plan', would you believe! 

We're not in prison (yet!) but we may have to make a quick getaway at, or near, the end of the Sunday Morning Meeting today at Lois's church - and with good reason: if this week's preacher's exhortation address is longer than usual and the meeting is prolonged, we may have to slip quietly out through a side entrance - because we have an important lunch invitation to get to today, and we mustn't be late, our hosts have warned us, in no uncertain terms!!!

details of the daring  "escape plan" that my wife Lois and I have worked out
if we have to slip away early from this morning's Sunday Morning Meeting:
the 'X'-es mark the approximate position of our seats, next to a little-known
side-door which we can push quietly open to make our escape - simples!!!!

Luckily, this week's preacher, local man John, keeps to his allotted 30 minutes, and we can get away as normal, in time to 'scoot' up the mighty A3 dual carriageway to our daughter Alison and family's temporary home, 16 miles away to the north, just over the county line in Churt, Surrey.

And, as it turns out, we're, if anything, slightly early for our invitation so no worries there! And we arrive just in time to see our son-in-law Edward carving the meat for the special meal he has laid on, for this year's Easter Sunday lunch, which is nice!

our Easter Sunday lunch of pork, Yorkshire pudding and vegetables, with our 
daughter Alison's family: (left to right) Isaac (15), our son-in-law Edward, Lois, me,
Rosalind (17), Alison, and Josie (19) at Churt, Surrey today: (middle left) our
3 grandchildren showcasing the chocolate Easter eggs Lois and I have bought them,

And, as you can see from the photos above, Bjorn, one of the family's two dogs, delights Lois and me by finding time in his schedule, on another of his very busy days, to pose for a charming selfie with us on the family couch, which very much puts the icing on the cake for us, and makes the visit especially memorable, which is nice! 

Kudos Bjorn!!! 

16:00 I drive Lois and me home to Liphook with that 'pleasantly full' feeling - no meal to cook tonight, but possibly we'll just find room to have more of Lois's delicious home-made Easter hot cross buns, with a cup of tea or two, or three!!!

flashback to Friday: Lois unveiling her 2026 buns, to my obvious delight, to put it mildly!

And, with no evening meal to prepare tonight, there's more than enough time to discuss some of Lois's classic hot cross buns of past years, which is nice!

flashback to two of Lois's classic hot cross bun batches for 'Easters Past':
(left) Easter 2021 and (right) 2017, at our former home in Cheltenham - yum yum!!!

Happy times!!!!

20:00 Feeling pleasantly relaxed, but thinking about a possible early bed, like a couple of old 'ruins', we decide to wind down on the sofa tonight with one of Lucy Worsley's tales of another 'old ruin' (!) - Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire, the ruined former home of 17th century playboy William Cavendish.


Yes, 17th century hell-raiser William Cavendish was a bit of a naughty boy, no doubt about that! But there's evidence in the castle he built, up north in Bolsover, Derbyshire, that he was also a bit morally conflicted. 

Did he sometimes regret his hedonistic life-style, and long for something a bit more virtuous now and again?

The jury's still out on that question, because, inside his castle, Cavendish had installed two halls for his personal moments of contemplation, called 'closets' in those crazy, far-off times, with William dedicating one 'closet' to virtue and the other one to vice.





The other 'closet' where Cavendish did his 'contemplating' was quite different, however, as presenter Lucy explains:






But did Cavendish favour one 'closet' more than the other one, for his contemplation hours? Lucy thinks she knows the answer: the 'vice' closet, which Lucy says, seems much more 'personal'.

And not only that, but there's an intimate little motto there, over the window:






The clincher, however, is that 'vice closet' was the one with the nice view:




Cavendish's statue of Venus, overlooking his garden fountain, has been criticised, however. Although supposed to be based on a slender, elegantly turning, classical figure of the goddess, it was obviously modelled, instead, on some local, rather dumpy Derbyshire lass.




But, rather than sneering at this dumpy Bolsover Venus, Lucy thinks that we should celebrate her as an example of British classicism.



Naughty Cavendish!!!

It's all a bit sad in a way, because Cavendish's big hobby, apart from vice, was horses, and he desperately wanted to be appointed King Charles I's Master of the King's Horses. He even went so far as to invite the King and Queen to his castle for the weekend, as a "sweetener".

Perhaps King Charles wasn't impressed by Cavendish's "Closet of Vice", because the king never gave Cavendish the job, perhaps, also, influenced by the growing wave of puritanism sweeping the country, prior to the Civil War of 1642-1651.





Poor Cavendish!!!!!

Fascinating stuff, though, isn't it!

And what a crazy world they lived in, back in those far-off days!!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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