Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Monday March 16th 2026 "Friends, do YOU have a somewhat unfortunate nickname?"

Yes, Friends, do YOU have a somewhat unfortunate nickname? 

It can have strange effects, can't it! William I of England acquired the somewhat unfortunate "moniker" of "William the Conqueror", perhaps in primary school, which blighted his life, leading him to spend time conquering England and most of Britain in his later years, which was a pity. What might he have become, but that bit of childhood "bad luck" - I wonder......!

And William's other epithet, "the Bastard" caused him to be an especially mean conqueror, historians believe!

William, unfortunate victim of a possible school 
playground nickname, here showing his softer side,
belying his reputation as "conqueror" and "bastard" (!)

So be careful with kids and nicknames, it can colour their lives! Like this local man whose picture is all over this morning's Onion Local News for East Hampshire! 


And, for my wife Lois and me, it warms the cockles of our heart to get news of "The Dumpster" and his softer side, especially the knowledge that he's been keeping a rooftop herb garden - he's been keeping that little nugget a secret, hasn't he, neighbours! 

He's obviously got "hidden depths", or should I say "hidden heights" [No! - Ed} , considering where he's chosen to grow his little herbs - awwww, bless !!!!!!

my wife Lois and me - a recent picture

Lois, whose veins are already coursing with thoughts of springtime and of the coming planting season, tells me this morning she's got to stock up on herbs herself, hence our trip to nearby Headley to visit the Luff's Garden Centre, the trip that you've probably heard something about, already, if only on the local grapevine (no pun intended!!!!). 

flashback to earlier today: (above) our sally into Luff's Garden Centre,
where we buy some potted herbs and a bunch of seeds, and (below)
us later, back at home, gloating over our "sagacious" purchases of sage (!)
and other plants and assorted seed packets - what madness!!!!

And if you know Luff's Garden Centre, you'll know that it's right next to the local Coopers of Ilkley Second-Hand Furniture store - the so-called "Furniture Hospital", which gives Lois a chance to cross another item off her bucket list - a "proper woody" miniature dining table for our sitting room, to replace the plastic garden table that we've been using "temporarily". Well, we only moved to our current home in January 2025, and our lives have been so "busy busy busy" for the last 14 months that we haven't had a moment to breathe, let alone buy a proper dining-table.

What a madness it all is !!!!

(above) the local Coopers of Ilkley second-hand furniture store, and (below, left) 
Lois dusting it off and making it look nice, after its delivery two hours later

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

[Is that all you two "noggins" have done today, Colin - bought a few plants and herbs and an old table? - Ed]

Well, seeing as how you're "gagging" to know, yes it was all we did today actually, but in our defence, may I say that we're both 79, although "being still quite marvellous for our age" haha (!!!!). 

[I'm still waiting for some independent evidence of that statement, Colin - just saying! - Ed]

Tired out after this morning's "shopping madness" (!), we decide reluctantly to spend the afternoon in bed and then "plop" down on the sofa this evening to watch the rerun of an old BBC documentary about the landline phone, which, for us as fully paid-up "old codgers" is nostalgic no end, you would not believe!

Poor us haha !!!!!


Oh those wonderful old landline telephones! Conveniently, we all had one in our homes, plugged into the wall on top of a table or something, somewhere near the front door, in the hallway, at the bottom of the stairs, so you could even hear it from upstairs if it rang!

Happy days!!!!





Astonishingly, however, not everybody welcomed the device whole-heartedly, in the beginning, like this miserable "old codger":


Fabulous stuff, isn't it! 

I have to confess, though, that Lois and I, being a couple of poncey "clever clogs" and "smart Alecs", knew a lot of the stuff in this programme already - but there's no point in being modest at our time of life haha!!!!

We didn't know for instance that the bright red colour of the K6-model public phone box wasn't popular in all rural areas, and that some rural communities demanded something "less red" - what madness!!!





And do YOU remember that golden era, when if you didn't know the time, or "couldn't be bothered" to look at your watch, you dialled "the Speaking Clock woman", who told you the time to the exact second


Lois and I certainly remember going through all that "palaver"! But one thing Lois and I didn't know was that the young woman they picked in a special competition to tell you the time, London telephone operator Jane Cain, was selected more for her 'breeding' and her looks (logically enough (!)), than for her voice - which was a pity, because Jane had an unfortunate slight speech impediment, which the judges hadn't noticed.

Oops!!!!

When Eugene Wender, who had devised the optical disc set-up used by the Speaking Clock system, first heard competition winner Jane's voice, he said, "Can't we use the runner-up?". However, he was told, unfortunately, in no uncertain terms, that there had already been so much publicity about Jane in the press and media that that was out of the question - oh dear!!!!







What madness !!!!!

Lois and I didn't know, also, that in the austerity era after World War II, a time of acute shortages, many would-be telephone subscribers were encouraged to "go party-line", which meant that they would have to have a shared line, a system whereby they shared the same phone number as a close neighbour.

Not everybody, however, wanted a system where your calls might be answered by somebody else, in the next house down the road, say, to put it mildly, as this former telephone engineer recalls:







What a crazy country we live in !!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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

Monday, 16 March 2026

Sunday March 15th 2026 "Friends, spring is here - isn't it time to sort out your old garage and shed haha!"

Yes, friends, spring is almost here, and time to dust off those spring-cleaning plans you never found time to implement last year haha!!!!

And if your mind has gone blank, why not take a leaf out of local family the Westins' book, whose story was all over this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire. Thumb your way through to page 94 - you'll be glad you did haha!!!

Poor Dad Westin!

But kudos, the Westins, for keeping local neighbourhood friends "up to speed" with their plans, and I see the story was later picked up by "the nationals", the Times and Telegraph etc, and even the stuffy old BBC World Service led on the story in their early bulletins today, so fair enough!

And, speaking personally, reading the story this morning in the Onion News print edition, here in leafy, semi-processed Liphook, Hampshire, not a million miles away from the Westins, might I add (!), my wife Lois and I are feeling an unmistakeable trace of a smile developing on our lower face muscles, to put it mildly!

me and my wife Lois - a recent picture

We know that our own daughter Alison and husband Edward, unlike Dad Westin (see Onion Story above!) are being particularly brutal with their own "problem shed" this morning - the one they call "the wonky shed". 

"But why the name "wonky shed", Colin?", I hear you cry!

Well, seeing as how you're gagging to know ("), Alison and Edward need to differentiate the shed with that special name, because, on their 7.5 acre wooded "estate" which serves as their back garden (!), they have, like, a billion other sheds - more probably! And, to be fair, they're fed up to the back teeth with their "wonky shed" which can't even stand up straight - a minimum requirement for a shed, in my humble opinion (!), so today that shed is "getting ready to meet the saints", as the old song has it!

But plese note, however, that the family's current "wonky shed demolition project", is just one tiny part of the family's massive refurb of their crumbling Victorian mansion and grounds, work which is still in progress after at least a year.

(above, left) our daughter Alison and husband Edward's crumbling Victorian mansion,
still undergoing massive refurbishment, and (below, left) our son-in-law Edward inspecting 
the family's "wonky shed", which today is being demolished to avoid causing further 
embarrassment to family, friends, and even to itself, to be brutally honest (!)

Poor shed !!!!!

And the wonky shed's sad demise is just one of the many topics Lois and I discuss with Alison, Edward and family when we all meet up for a 3-course UK Mothers Day lunch today at Liphook's iconic "Links Tavern", to put it mildly!

(left) our son-in-law Edward, our daughter Alison and Yours Truly,
and (right) Lois with 2 or Alison and Edward's 3 teenage offspring,
Isaac (15) and Rosalind (17) - and as it's Mothers Day, Alison and Edward
are paying the bill so what's not to like haha!!!!

Yes, the "wonky shed" is just the opener - but we've got plenty of other items on today's agenda, that's for sure! 

Both Isaac and Rosalind are in the middle of their "mock" exams, GCSE for Isaac, and, for Rosalind it's her mock A Levels, not to mention all the mind-boggling choices due to come up this year as she ponders which university to go to in the autumn. Decisions, decisions! 

And Isaac tells us more about his trip to UCL London to discuss possibly studying for a Mandarin Chinese degree there in a couple of years' time, plus the latest on Isaac's boy-girl pop group New Horizon's forthcoming appearances - busy busy busy!!!!

Isaac's band New Horizon will be opening up this summer's Chiddstock Festival, to take place at the nearby village of Chiddingfold. "Chiddstock" is South West Surrey's answer to the iconic Woodstock Pop Festival of the 1960's, needless to say!

(left) our grandson Isaac, rightmost, at UCL London with fellow Mandarin Chinese 
students from his school, and (right) leftmost with his boy-girl pop band New Horizon,
chosen to open up the iconic Chiddstock Pop Festival in nearby Chiddlingfold, Surrey


Yes, decisions, decisions! 

Lois and I feel a bit out of it, when it comes to decisions! 

And after today's lunch, the biggest decision Lois and I have got to take now is... what time-slot to choose for our afternoon in bed for "statutory nap time", would you believe! 

We've taken the decision to do it [What a surprise! - Ed], but the time-slot is up for grabs, and, seeing as how we're feeling totally "stuffed" by today's generous 3-course Mothers Day lunch, we opt for the little-used 3pm to 6pm slot - we won't be needing much in the way of food for the rest of the day, that's for sure!!!!

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

20:00 So, hard to believe it, but UK Mother's Day is over for another year. 

It's also hard to believe that Alison and Edward's beloved "wonky shed" is no more, after all these years. 

However, the shed's demise gives me an idea of how to cheer up our other daughter Sarah, who lives in Perth, Western Australia, with husband Francis and their 12-year-old twins Lily and Jessica. Earlier today Lois and I had our regular Sunday morning "catch-up call" with them on whatsapp.

flashback to this morning, and our regular Sunday morning catch-up 
whatsapp call with our daughter Sarah and her 12-year-old twin daughters 
Lily and Jessica 9000 miles away, in Perth, Western Australia

Sarah needs cheering up tonight, because tomorrow (Monday) she starts her new accountancy job in central Perth, so she'll have to cope with all the rush-hour traffic, not to mention getting to know her new boss, her new "team" etc etc, which isn't nice for anybody, is it, to put it mildly! Still, by next Sunday, those awkward "teething troubles" should be over, and we're expecting her to be her usual perky self by next Sunday - so watch this space!

Australian Mothers Day isn't till May, which is troubling, because Lois and I will have to somehow remember it without all the reminders about our own Mothers Day from TV commercials etc!! Nevertheless Sarah was very good, and remembered to send Lois a card and flowers, which arrived yesterday by Royal Mail, which was nice.

flashback to yesterday: Sarah's Mothers Day flowers for Lois
delivered by Royal Mail from Australia, which was nice!

It's a worrying time for Sarah, which her new job starting tomorrow. But during our whatsapp call this morning, I had made the obviously stressed Sarah laugh by telling her about her sister Alison's "wonky shed", now very firmly an "ex-shed" (!). 

And tonight I send Sarah the notorious interview from that disastrous 1970's edition of the BBC's then flagship arts programme, "It's the Arts". You know, the famous one when interviewer Eric Idle embarrassed "poncey" modern composer Arthur "Two Sheds" Jackson with the rumours surrounding his alleged "second shed" - remember?

The "shed" issue unfortunately hi-jacked the show and completely overshadowed discussion of Jackson's latest symphony, which was a pity. And it all ended particularly badly, when Jackson had to be forcibly ejected from the studio by TV staff.



the famous edition of the BBC flagship arts programme, "It's the Arts",
where discussion of "poncey" modern composer Edward "Two Sheds"
Jackson's new symphony became overshadowed by the scandal
of Jackson's alleged "second shed" - see slide at the back of the set

What a crazy world we live in !!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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