Yes, Friends, are YOU an off-the-wall scientist often frustrated by rush-hour snarls-up on your way into work in the morning?
A lot of us are, aren't we, with the two honourable exceptions of Yours Truly, and my wife, a.k.a. "Mrs Yours Truly" (a.k.a. Lois!), who will both have been retired, both from off-the-wall science (and all other jobs!!!!), for an incredible 20 years next month, would you believe!!!!
flashback to March 2006: the day we both retired
However, if you're not as lucky as us, there's some good news for you this morning in today's local Onion News for East Hampshire - turn to page 94 for details, but here's my brief summary here. Health warning: the original goes on for some 10 pages, what with the diagrams and all, so here's an opportunity to save yourself some time with my much-abbreviated "take" on this subject!!!
Madness isn't it, while at the same time making perfect sense!!! But I don't know - rocket-powered roller skates certainly not something for youngsters to try, I would say, on reflection!
09:00 And Lois and I breathe a sigh of relief this morning during our weekly Sunday morning"catch-up" call with our daughter Sarah and family, 9000 miles away in Perth, Australia, when it becomes clear that our lovely 12-year-old twin granddaughters Lily and Jessica are still using the old-fashioned "manual" roller-skates on their trip to their local skating rink "earlier today", which is nice!
our weekly "catch-up" call with our daughter Sarah, and her 12-year-old twins
Lily and Jessica, who live 9000 miles away in Perth, Australia
It sounds crazy but although it's only nine o'clock here in idyllic, semi-transparent Liphook, Hampshire, it's already 5pm over there, and the day is drawing to a close, which is mad! Poor Sarah, a chartered accountant for a big Australian heating firm, talks to us from her bed - she developed back problems this week during a flying business trip to the firm's Melbourne HQ.
It was a trip that Sarah didn't even mention to Lois and me during last Sunday's "catch-up" call with us, so routine these types of trips have become to her now, would you believe! What madness, isn't it!!!! And it was husband Francis who has had to "entertain" the twins today, as Sarah is "laid up", and they had a lovely time today, reportedly, at the skating rink with their friends.
our twin granddaughters Lily and Jessica at the skating rink today
with friends, in Perth's northern suburbs
The twins started "big school" just a couple of weeks ago, a private Anglican grammar school in Perth's northern suburbs, and they're both "buzzing" today, telling us about their new experiences with their new teachers, fellow-students, and lessons.
"Food science and technology", whatever that is when it's at home (!) (or plain "cooking" to you and me!!) is already a firm favourite, apparently, and this last week, the twins brought home some of Jessica's group's "pikelets", after Lily's group's efforts were confiscated, and disposed of, by staff for being "grossly undercooked". What madness!!!
Puzzled? Well, here's what Google's AI says.....
What a crazy world we live in !!!!
[That's enough madness! - Ed]
Incidentally, although the Google AI claims that pikelets are a favourite, not just in Australia and New Zealand, but also in the UK, Lois and I think that in the UK it's mostly "a northern thing", so you might end up getting frustrated if you're looking for them in East Hampshire, for example - just saying !!!!!
some typical pikelets - in the UK it's mostly "a northern thing"
Pikelets will be freely available, however, to one of our other grandchildren, Josie (19), because, since September last year, she's been a first year maths student at Durham University in the far north of England, where pikelets abound (!). No doubt she's doing a bit of maths from time to time (!), but Lois and I have been hearing much more about her non-academic activities than about her maths work - probably a healthy sign!!!!
"Ladies' soccer" is one of Josie's out-of-class passions, and today she sends us these delightful pictures of herself and her soccer buddies, which is nice!
our 19-year-old granddaughter Josie, pictured here with soccer buddies
from her college ladies' soccer team - Josie's the one carrying the ball. Go Josie !!!!!
10:00 It's ten o'clock and Lois and I have to leave to drive to her church's Sunday Morning Meeting, just outside Petersfield, 10 miles to the south-west of us, down the mighty London to Portsmouth A3 trunk road. Lois, bless her, has recently volunteered to join the "sisters' rota for preparing the emblems" - i.e. the food and wine. Today is her first time, so we have to get there super-early before the meeting starts at eleven, so that she can get everything ready for the communion part of the service.
Before we leave home this morning, Lois cuts up the bread into individual bite-size mini-portions. The bottles of wine, together with mini plastic cups, are kept in a cupboard in the village hall where meetings take place, and after the meeting she has to bring the little cups home for washing.
It's a special Sunday today at the meeting, because a new member in his twenties, Joel, is being formally welcomed and inducted into fellowship - he was baptised by full immersion in Southampton yesterday, at a ceremony which Lois watched online.
the Sunday morning meeting at Lois's church today: a new member, Joel is being
inducted and welcomed into fellowship: standing at the back of the hall,
he's the young man with the beard and glasses visible over Lois's left shoulder
So, in other words, it's busy busy busy for us again today: no peace for the wicked haha!
21:00 Wicked though we may be, Lois and I need our sleep, when we're not being wicked (!), that's for sure!
And what better way to drop off to sleep at the end of a busy day [???? - Ed], than to count sheep - it's a no-brainer - so we go to bed on the first programme of Julia Bradbury's new travelogue series on the world's "Frozen South", specifically the Falkland Islands this episode, followed by South Georgia and Antarctica - brrrrrr!!!!
Sheep farming has shaped life in the Falklands for nearly two centuries, presenter Julia tells us. The very first British settlers here brought sheep with them from Britain, both for clothing and for meat. And the wide-open landscapes of the islands proved perfect for grazing them.
Here, Julia's being driven to a massive sheep farm on East Falkland - the farm's massive, but, to be frank, the sheep are pretty massive as well, for sheep, at least, although they look a lot smaller when they've been shorn. Of course, presenter Julia has to "have a go" at doing it - what madness !!!!!
Lois and I didn't know that the pure naturally white wool from Falklands sheep is revered all over the world, apparently, making the islands a global player in the wool trade. Falkland Islands wool is the whitest wool in the world, pretty much. Who knew!!!!!
And who knew, either, just why it's so white!!!!
Of course! An almost completely bare landscape, with no bushes for sheep to struggle through and get their fur littered with little twigs and leaves. Now it makes sense!
It's a lot of work though, with the average sheep-shearer shearing around 400 sheep a day. And it has to be done - it keeps the sheep warm in winter, but if they're not shorn in the spring, these sheep would have trouble even walking about, apparently. What madness, isn't it!!!!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzz!!!!!