Sunday, 22 March 2026

Saturday March 21st 2026 "Friends, why not take a ride on a bus today? It's more fun than you think!!!!"

Yes, Friends, why not take a nostalgic ride on a bus today?!!! It can be "very fun", as young people say today (!), if you believe this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire, that is! See page 94! 


Poor sweaty, kneeling-man!!!! 

However, reading that Onion story this morning, here in rural, semi-leafy Liphook, not a million miles away from Basingstoke, might I add (!), brings a semi-precious smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois as we take our near-daily walk, which today takes us over the green pastures of nearby Old Man Lowsley's Farm, just outside town, to put it mildly!

flashback to this morning: under blue skies, but battling a chilly wind, 
my wife Lois and me on our near-daily, mud-affected walk, amongst 
the saplings and mega-puddles (!) of nearby Old Man Lowsley's Farm

The Onion story is certainly amusing in its own right, but it's also a timely reminder to us, next time we're running for a bus, to take our shiny-new kneeler with us, you know, the one we bought recently at nearby Rake Garden Centre, to aid Lois in her almost daily gardening work in our tiny front- and back-gardens? 

It's quite a "high-tech" kneeler, as kneelers go, and has a range of two possible positions - sound familiar? And it takes us a bit of head-scratching to work out how you move easily, and seamlessly, from Position A (kneeling) to Position B (sitting).


The multi-lingual instructions look complicated at first, till we realise that, in order to change from Position A to position B, you just have to turn the whole device upside down, which is something even two "old codgers" like Lois and me can manage, albeit with a lot of huffing and puffing (!).

flashback to earlier this week: Lois reading a typically 
complicated, micro-font, and multi-lingual, set of instructions

So "simples" after all, which is a relief!

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

In sum, quite a busy morning for us, "unpacking" (literally!) yet another hi-tech device to add to our "armoury" (!),  as well as somehow managing to somehow (again!) fit in our near-daily walk, would you believe! Yes, once more it's been "busy busy busy" without a break, and so it's particularly nice to spend the whole afternoon in bed for "statutory nap-time", which is a bit of a life-saver, to put it mildly!

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

20:00 And this evening, as we finally get to fully relax on the sofa in front of "the box", there's a sweet reminder of a simpler times, when life wasn't just one long process of trying to understand one high-tech device after another - happy days!!!

Yes, it's our weekly Saturday night "wallow in nostalgia", with a re-run of a 1970's edition of "The Good Old Days", the series which recreated the old-time world of the Edwardian music hall.


And as a couple of "old codgers", one particular sweet old song takes our fancy tonight - Mike Reid's "When I Leave The World Behind", about a poor but happy man, realising how lucky he is, compared to the millionaire who's weighed down with care approaching "the final curtain".

                                 "I haven't any gold, to leave when I grow old, somehow it's passed me by...
                                I'm very poor, but still, I'll leave a precious will...."


                                "...I'll leave sunshine to the flowers, I'll leave the springtime to the trees...
                                And to the old folk I'll leave a memory of a baby upon their knees..."






Poor Mike - awwww, bless him haha!!!!!

As a keen vegetable-growers, however, Lois and I give the award for Mike's best song tonight to the old classic "Oh What A Beauty!".
                                






They don't write songs like that any more, do they! [Something to be grateful for there, then! - Ed]

flashback to September 2020: Lois and me enjoying a bit of home-grown marrow
and beans with our minced beef and baked potato - yum yum!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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

Saturday, 21 March 2026

Friday March 20th 2026 "Have YOU ever 'morphed' into a beautiful bird for YOUR seduction attempts?"

Yes, Friends, have YOU ever 'morphed' into a beautiful, graceful bird for YOUR seduction attempts?

I'm guessing the answer to that question is a flat 'no' - that is, unless you're, like, a Greek god, or one of their more sober Roman equivalents! Am I right? Or am I right!

Even for a god, however, it's not all 'plain sailing' if we're to believe this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire - turn to page 94, if you dare haha !!!!

Poor Zeus !!!!!

The Onion story, however, despite its echoes of Greek tragedy (!), brings a bit of a semi-wonky smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois this morning, at our home here in rural, semi-leafy Liphook, not a million miles away from those naughty goings-on by the riverbank over in nearby Fordingbridge, to put it mildly! 

me and my wife Lois - a recent picture

As Lois and I both know, the art of "seduction" can take many forms - just like Zeus himself, which is spooky! - and not just the forms practised by Greek gods and the like!

Lois herself is being seduced at the moment, not by a Greek god, I'm happy to say (!), but by the sudden, totally weird, spring-like weather, and she's taking every opportunity to "get out there" in our tiny front and back gardens, to start the gardener's year off with a bang, which is nice! Just yesterday the temperature hit a high of 63F (17C), would you believe, which is totally mad for March!

seduced by the sudden spring-like weather, Lois is taking every chance
to "get out there" in our tiny front- and back-gardens to "sort things out"
and get the 2026 growing season off with a spectacular bang, which is nice!

Yes, it's a big change for Lois, and a big change for me too, even! Our winter regime of daily walks in and around semi-leafy Liphook, with its advertised target of "4000 steps a day minimum ",  is now officially "out of the window", which is nice. Instead Lois is spending the day mostly in the garden, while still finding the time to do her 4000 steps inside the house in the evenings, during TV advert-breaks and the like, which is amazing. What a woman I married!

And this change of routine is good for Yours Truly, because it also gives me time to do more reading (!), and also to plan major changes in our life together, like our much-postponed "move to using electric toothbrushes", as recommended by our dentist. 

flashback to last June: (left) Lois, with me in my stylish "countryman's cap" in our 
dentist's waiting-area, waiting to see dentist Jose (centre) and his hygienist Lisa (right)

Luckily, however, Lois can take a break from her gardening work to help me out on this one, when I find that once again, I'm totally bewildered by the instructions that came with our shiny-new electric toothbrushes, which "plopped" through our letter-box a "mere" 3 months ago, I have to shamefully admit!!


And would you believe, somehow, BOTH sets of instructions are baffling us - (1) the jaunty, but essentially, in the end, meaningless colour diagrams which come without any words, and also (2) the pages of no pictures but just verbal-only instructions, in micro-microscopic font, and in, like, a billion languages - more probably!

It's all "as clear as mud", as we used to say! For example, there's supposed to be something in these electric toothbrushes that alerts you if you brush too hard, which sounds handy, and it would be handy if they explained what that alert was, exactly, to put it mildly!

Be that as it may, we're both determined we're going to "just do it" tonight and see what happens. So watch this space!  

[I can't wait! - Ed]

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

20:00 People often say that artists Edvard Munch and Vincent Van Gogh were crazy, but he wasn't as crazy as all that, according to a fascinating documentary tonight on the free-to-view Sky Arts Channel.

And mine and Lois's own bewilderment when faced with the brave new world of electric toothbrushes pales into insignificance compared with the changes that were taking place in their lives, to put it mildly!

[You don't say! - Ed]


Living through the rise of industrialisation, Norwegian artist Edvard Munch witnessed cities expanding, technology accelerating, and modern life becoming increasingly alienating.





In many ways it was a time of optimism, hope for the future, but it was also a time of rapid change, the rich getting richer and, often, the poor getting poorer. A period of tension, with the younger generation coming up, and the feeling that the old is staid and traditional and that new ground needed to be broken and that the old should be giving way to the new. And Munch was on the cusp of all that: the development of "modernism", not just in the world in general but also in art.







The amount of stress in life just changed completely, if you think about the difference between pre-industrialisation and post-industrialisation.




The world was changing. People were experiencing a new sense of alienation. However, this wasn't entirely negative, because this change also sparked a new movement in the art world, that of expressionism. Edvard Munch was at the forefront of this shift, his work embodying the very essence of expressionism before the movement even had a name.

By contrast to Much, Vincent Van Gogh sought refuge from the new world in the beauty of nature. And on tonight's programme, this critic says she finds his "Starry Night" incredibly joyful. 



The painting is almost a homage to nature, she says, and when you know how much Van Gogh loved nature, it makes this even more pertinent and poignant.





Fascinating stuff, isn't it!

Perhaps Lois and I should take up painting - it could be that our trauma with our shiny new toothbrushes could maybe be harnessed in a more positive way, through brushes of a totally different kind, do you think, which would be ironic, but in a way, as equally optimistic as "Starry Night".

I wonder....!

Will this do?

[Oh just brush your teeth and go to bed! - Ed]

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