Yes, Friends, have you heard the latest golfing news from the States? Astonishing, isn't it, but, what with this week's inclement weather, the US golfing powers-that-be have been thinking "outside the box" in their response to "the meteorology", and doing it with "drive" - no pun intended!!!!
Today's Onion News has more...
Kudos, that man!!!
And reading this story brings a half-arsed smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois this morning, here in partly-picturesque Liphook, Hampshire, no question about that!
my wife Lois and me, pictured here on our near-daily walk, which today
takes us over the 'hallowed turf' of local soccer heroes, Liphook United
And there's an extra spring in our step this morning, because, after a few minutes of 'havering', we've made the decision, a wise one we think, given the horrendous weather forecast, not to join Lois's fellow-church members in their scheduled outing this afternoon to stately home Mottisfont House and Gardens in the far west of the county.
Even the local birds seem to approve our decision, to judge from the number that have turned out specially to greet us with their joyful songs!
us this morning as we pass the iconic 'clubroom' of local soccer giants Liphook United,
taking time to note the birdsong of local birds, who seem to approve our plans for today!
It's a great pity that we won't have the company of church-members today, but, with those thunderstorms now literally on their way over the Atlantic to the UK, according to the horrendous forecasts, we think it would be sheer folly to attempt the 50-mile over to Mottisfont, and then spend our time in Mottisfont's justly-famed Rose Gardens dodging about with umbrellas and the like, just for 30 minutes of 'squelching', through all the accumulated mud (!)
(left) the 50-mile route we had planned to take to Mottisfont, which is almost as remote
as faraway Salisbury, Wiltshire, and (right) the house with its famous Rose Garden
It would be total madness, no doubt about that!!!! And so much better to just 'hunker down' under the bedclothes, while the storms rage outside - a 'no-brainer' if ever I heard one!!!!
(left) today's horrendous weather forecast, and (right) the obvious solution
- to just 'hunker down' under the bedclothes, while the storms rage outside!
It'll also be a pity to miss seeing the old grand old house at Mottisfont, but Lois and I tell each other we can go and see it some other time, on our own, which is a comfort!
Mottisfont House was founded as an Augustinian priory in 1201, in the reign of 'bad' King John, and since Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries as part of the Reformation, the house has gone through many cycles of re-design and refurbishment, eventually being bought in 1934 by wealthy art patrons Gilbert and Maud Russell. The Russells brought the house back from its state of disrepair, turning it into a social and artistic hub, and hosting famous artists and writers including Ian Fleming, creator of the James Bond spy novels.
Fleming became especially friendly with the lady of the house, Maud Russell.
(left) Mottisfont's "Lady of the House", Maud Russell, and (right)
Maud seen with Ian Fleming, author of the James Bond books
Fleming is believed to have become Maud's lover, which was a bit naughty, but without their affair, during World War II, the James Bond books might never have been written.
Meanwhile, hunkering down under the bedclothes for 3 hours, and listening to all those thunderstorms raging outside, we've, in any case, after all the excitement dies down, very much got 'a lot on our plate' to 'chew over', to put it mildly!
Number one, we've got to plan arrangements for Lois's 80th birthday coming up later this week - our daughter Alison and family, who live 10 miles away over the county line, in Churt, Surrey, have kindly offered to take us both out for a birthday meal on Friday evening, at the Miso Asia oriental restaurant at nearby Petersfield, Hampshire, which will be nice!
And the following day, Saturday, when Alison's husband Edward will be away busy with his Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme coaching work for local teenagers, Lois has offered to host Alison and kids to a slap-up 'tea' at our house, so we have to plan the food for that, and also put in a massive Ocado order to come on Thursday, as well as some CookShop items, including the meal's planned centrepiece: CookShop's notoriously 'wicked' chocolate cake! Yum yum!!!
Poor young people!!!!
the Miso Asia oriental restaurant at nearby Petersfield, Hampshire,
where our daughter Alison and family plan to take us for Lois's 80th birthday
CookShop's 'naughty' Chocolate Cake - yum yum!!!
Also in bed this afternoon, Lois somehow finds time to tell me all about the article in her this week's copy of The Week magazine, an article that explains why young couples all over the world are having less sex and, thus, fewer babies, which is a pity - and so great is the trend so that even 'randy' tech billionaires like Elon Musk won't be able to spawn enough children to make up the difference, would you believe!!!!
Birth rates in the developed world have been falling for a long time, but now the trend is being followed, even, by couples in the so-called "Third World", and it's mainly due to the spread of technology, especially smartphones, this article claims.
Apparently, over most of the world, there are now fewer couples, and fewer couplings, especially among the least-educated and the lowest-income young people.
A Cincinnati University study published last month has shown that in the US, UK and Australia, smartphones have, since around 2007, transformed how young people spend time with one another, sharply reducing in-person socialising, and leading to the collapse in their fertility. The same slide occurred in other countries soon after, e.g. France and Poland (2007), Mexico (2012), and countries in Africa between 2013 and 2015, all coinciding with mass adoption of smartphones in local markets, as measured by Google searches for mobile apps.
To meet a person you are going to want to have children with, the authors say, requires coming into contact with a lot of possible candidates before you settle on 'the right one', and if you socialise less, it takes you much longer to find a match, if you find one at all. And there are other factors - Stanford University's Alice Evans says that Instagram and TikTok often raise young women's expectations for a relationship, which their male counterparts are not prepared for, and unable to provide, which doesn't help, to put it mildly!
Studies like this go back through the decades, the article recalls, with, in simpler times, studies that showed that just watching TV had had a bad effect on birth rates and population growth.
However, as Lois points out to me, TV and films aren't necessarily solitary pleasures, like smartphones are, and you often find yourselves watching something on TV with your spouse, or with your current "squeeze" or partner, and that can sometimes help, rather than hinder, your fertility, to put it mildly (!).
This week, Lois and I saw a TV programme in which former newscaster Angela Rippon, on her travels through Vietnam, was talking to a young woman. The woman had been watching, with her husband, a sexy film "L'Amante" (The Lover), about a scandalous affair in Saigon between a local Vietnamese young man and a French student in the 1920s, in French colonial times.
Oops !!!!
Well, Lois and I had a jolly good giggle over that one, but there's a serious point here too, isn't there.
Is that 'randy' Vietnamese husband's reaction the way forward for the world at large, perhaps?
I wonder....!
Will this do?
[Oh just go back to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go back to bed - zzzzzzzzz!!!!!














































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