Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Monday March 2nd 2026 "Friends, have YOU got somebody who can make a game-changing improvement to YOUR life?"

Yes, Friends, have you got some special somebody who can turn YOUR life around for, say, under £100 a "pop"? Local sad man Tom Etheridge is in luck, according to this morning's Onion News for East Hampshire - did you "catch" the story today?


Kudos, that woman! And the story brings a knowing smile to the faces of my wife Lois and me this morning in rural, semi-autonomous Liphook, Hampshire, as we tramp through local Radford Park indulging in another 30 minutes of "squelching" through the mud on our daily walk, listening out for the lovely birdsong. Lois says it's excitement over the start of the mating season that's making the local birds so vocal, so it's all immediately understandable.

Poor birds - they've waited long enough haha!!!!


Never mind the birds, for Lois and me our own excitement is palpable today too - people are saying you can "palp" it for miles around haha!

The reason? Well, just like sad local man Etheridge, who's on the brink of having a birthday with lots of game-changing gifts from thoughtful girlfriend Alessa, my own daily "routine" is about to be changed for the better, with a much-discussed "game-changing" new slot in my afternoon, which is nice, using the book of exercises I originally bought on my retirement, 20 years ago this month, if you can believe that!

(left) flashback to March 2006, my 60th birthday and the day Lois and I both retired,
and (right) me yesterday with the exercise book I bought at the time, now still looking 
as shiny and untouched as when I first bought it, an incredible 20 years ago this month!

From today, I'm debuting my new daily 45-minute "exercise slot" starting at 3:30pm, immediately after our 90-minute "statutory afternoon nap slot", which is exciting! And Lois thinks it will be a complete game-changer for me, seeing as how my current exercising regime currently has had no fixed time-slot

And this fact, in tandem with my justly-famous "busy busy busy" lifestyle, leads to the exercising being, perhaps conveniently, "forgotten about" most days, she hypothesises, and I think there may be something in that argument, to be fair!

some typical exercises from the book

So watch this space! There is provision, which I've had "written into" my new contract with Lois, that the exercise slot can be called off, if I feel I haven't had enough time for a completely satisfying nap, which may turn out to be a dangerous loophole, but we'll see! Your views welcome - postcards only haha!!!!

Certainly, now approaching 80, both Lois and I most days feel like "complete ruins" (!), so it's nice this evening to see some other, even older ruins, in the latest fascinating programme in Alice Roberts' new series "The Roman Empire By Train".


The Romans liked their towns planned on perfect grids, meticulously aligned to north, south, east and west, something which our Anglo-Saxon ancestors didn't bother to do, which is a pity, Lois and I sometimes think (!). 

Lois and I didn't know, however, that Roman fastidiousness in trying to create towns perfectly aligned with the universe, has enabled historians to use astronomical data, combined with archaeological data, to determine more or less the exact date that many Roman towns were founded, And this is the case with Turin, in the north of Italy - on the basis of the ever changing night sky, Turin's foundation has been dated to January, 9 BC, which is when its street grid would have been perfectly aligned.






But here's another "stinker" of a question.....

Did a herd of African elephants come this way, even further back in time, in 218BC? Well, "maybe" is the only answer it's possible to give to that old "chestnut" (!).

As we're told in tonight's TV programme, way back in the 2nd century BC, when the world's two superpowers of the time - Rome and Carthage (in modern day Tunisia) - clashed in the second Punic War, the the Carthaginian general Hannibal invaded Italy, coming through the Alps, bringing all his forces, including his fighting elephants, with him. 

But exactly what route did Hannibal take for his epic journey? Frustratingly that's one question that's proved just too difficult to answer, as Alice explains:





Fascinating stuff, isn't it!!!!

Will this do? Or is that question just another case of "Hannibalism"? I think we should be told!

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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

Monday, 2 March 2026

Saturday February 28th - Sunday March 1st 2026 "Do YOU dread babysitting - it's more difficult than people think, isn't it!!!!"

Yes, Friends, do YOU dread baby-sitting a neighbour's child or maybe even your own grandchild? It isn't exactly "child's play" is it, as this story in this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire, makes crystal clear!

Poor Rachel!!!! And let's hope she gets things back into shape before little Cameron and little Liam's parents get back from their evening out!!!

The Onion story, which was later picked up by some of the "nationals" and also even led the BBC's Six o'Clock News tonight, I notice (!), certainly brings a sympathetic and slightly bemused, smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois  this Saturday lunchtime, as we try to cope with an overgenerous "BLT" at the popular Darnley's eatery in nearby Haslemere, just over the county line in Surrey today, to put it mildly!!!!

my wife Lois and me, tackling an overgenerous 'BLT' at the popular
Darnley's eatery in nearby Haslemere, 10 miles away over
the county line, in Surrey, this morning

We're officially in Haslemere because we're "babysitting" our 15-year-old grandson Isaac this weekend, but we're not anticipating any "won't put my pants back on" tantrums of the kind which catapulted poor local babysitter Rachel into the nation's headlines, that's for sure!!!! Isaac's parents and siblings are all 300 miles away up north for the weekend, visiting Isaac's older sister Josie at Durham University, where she's in the first year of her maths degree course.

(left) our daughter Alison and husband Edward, in Durham today, and (right)
Alison with their eldest offspring, Josie (19) - pictures they send back today

12:00 For us, the weekend has started peacefully enough, we reflect, as we sit and eat part of our BLT's this morning (we get them to "box up" the rest, which we can have for breakfast tomorrow - waste not, want not, as we always say!!!! We've already picked Isaac up from his home at 10:30am and delivered him safely to Haslemere Hall for his music-and-drama class under the auspices of LAMDA (London Academy of Musical and Dramatic Arts), where various ideas for their 2027 production are being "kicked around" - possibly "Nine to Five", a musical version of the 1980 Dolly Parton film. 

Their 2026 production was the musical version of  "Legally Blonde", in which Isaac played two roles, a Harvard law student as well as a "hunky", girl-pleasing, UPS delivery guy. Budding male actors are always heavily outnumbered by budding female actors in these amateur musical-and-dramatic efforts, that's for sure, which is nice for Isaac !!!!

flashback to February - (right) us, the proud grandparents watching Isaac (left, standing) 
singing a song in the LAMDA production of Legally Blonde in the local Haslemere Hall

13:30 We pick Isaac up after his rehearsals, and take him back to the family's temporary home in nearby Churt, amidst acres of quiet woodland and the only neighbours are the occasional deer, which is nice! Lois and I are here now for the weekend, so we now spend some time unpacking our literally "billions of suitcases and bags" (!) that we somehow always find necessary to take with us (!). 

Before leaving for Durham early this morning, our daughter Alison has got ready for us the bedroom with its massive emperor-size bed (7ft x 7ft) with ensuite bathroom that she shares with husband Ed, so we're hardly "slumming it", to put it mildly!!!!

Alison and Edward's 7 ft emperor-size bed, which Lois and I 
will be borrowing for the weekend - it's got an en-suite bathroom
and a window overlooking acres of woodland, where deer run

Our "job" this weekend, will be to be temporarily "in charge", while Isaac gets on with doing revision for next week's GCSE "mock" exams, providing meals and kind-of keeping half an eye on the family's two dogs and two cats, as well as a tankful of tropical fish.

The fish are neatly "trapped" in their tank, and we don't see much of the cats except at feeding time, which is nice. And Sika, the older of the two dogs is no problem either - he's an "old man" now, happy to curl up in his basket: he's a bit like me, in other words, although I don't have a basket to do it in - an idea for Christmas present of me here, though, maybe? 

I wonder....!

our grandson Isaac "marshalling" the family's menagerie 
of two cats and two dogs, as they queue up, always on 
the wrong side of any door they encounter - what madness !!!!!

The main problem for Lois and me is the younger of the two dogs, Bjorn, who, for the first couple of hours is "all over us", although eventually he seems to realise that we're just a couple of "old codgers", and not worth getting too "worked up" over, which is something of a relief, to put it mildly!

(left) Lois giving the two dogs "a good talking-to", and (right) Lois 
with the now elderly Sika - poor Sika !!!!!!!

(left) Lois with young Bjorn, finally calmed down, and (right) me with Otto the Cat

Isaac himself is no trouble at all, just getting on with his school revision work. He's very easy to chat to, also, but we don't need to make special efforts to entertain or amuse him. At our advanced age (!), there's absolutely nothing that Lois and I can do to entertain or amuse a normal 15-year-old boy - and quite right too! - so we can just get on with entertaining and amusing each other in our semi-palatial "suite", which is nice!

Two of our other grandchildren, the ones in Australia, are a bit younger, however, and we can sometimes raise a smile with them still, which is gratifying! And next morning, Sunday, Lois and I get up early for our weekly "catch-up" whatsapp call with our other daughter Sarah, who lives 9000 miles away, in Perth, Australia, with husband Francis and their 12-year-old twins Lily and Jessica. 

our 12-year-old twin grandchildren, Lily and Jessica
in the garden of the family home in Perth, Australia

The twins last month started "big school", a private Anglican grammar school in one of the city's northern suburbs, and they've already started learning Japanese, which is something I can help them with, "for my sins", having studied the language myself a "mere" 60 years ago (!).

flashback to last Sunday: one of our weekly whatsapp "catch-up" calls
with our daughter Sarah, and granddaughters Lily and Jessica, in Perth, Australia

The twins are complaining today that the Japanese word for "pleased to meet you" - yoroshiku - is nothing like its English equivalent, and so quite difficult to memorise. 

I explain that this kind of thing is a drawback with Japanese, and, that, by contrast, the French equivalent word "enchanté" sounds a bit like the English word "enchanted", and so comes more readily to mind. However, their feeling is that to say you're enchanted, when you meet somebody new, is a bit "over the top", and I can see their point!

To provide a quick-fix solution to the problem, I then suggest that, if they're ever introduced to somebody in France, they should qualify their excitement, and say "un peu enchanté" (literally I'm slightly enchanted to meet you), which they agree is probably more realistic, so fair play to them!

10:00 Leaving Isaac to his own devices for the rest of the weekend, I drive Lois 17 miles down the A3 trunk road to Petersfield, Hampshire, so she can take part in her church's Sunday Morning Meeting. And after the meeting, we stay on, with many of the church-members, for the monthly "shared lunch" where members bring along a plate or dish or two, to contribute to the meal. 


It's a special "shared lunch" this month, partly to celebrate the 90th near-birthday of church-member Myrtle, who had the bad luck to be born on February 29th 1926, which is a classic! Only gets a real birthday every 4 years, which is a pity!

Myrtle, at the head of the table, with her 90th birthday cake, 
summoning up the "puff" to blow out the candles!!!!

Poor Myrtle!!!

It's ironic to me, that these shared lunches at the church are the only time I get to eat some really "sinful" food, which is ironic! When we're at home, Lois has to keep to a low-sugar diet for health reasons, and as she's the meal-provider 99% of the time (to my shame!), it means that effectively, I myself am on a low-sugar diet too, which is certainly to my ultimate good, but can be a bit frustrating at times, to put it mildly!!!!

When it's shared-lunch Sunday, however, I finally get to gorge myself on cakes, chocolate, meringues galore, with "lashings" of cream - yum yum!!! And after the lunch, feeling properly "stuffed" (!), I drive Lois home to Liphook, for an afternoon in our own dear bed, something which we need, if just to recover from all the excitement - well, we are 79 you know, although incredibly, still "marvellous for our age", according to "reports" at least haha !!!!!!

the monthly "shared lunch" after the Sunday Morning meeting - my only chance
in the month to eat some really "sinful" food, which is ironic!!!

What madness isn't it!!!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Friday February 27th 2026 "Are AI 'chatbots' getting a bit 'above themselves', do you think?"

Yes, Friends, are these awful AI 'chatbots' getting "above themselves", do you think? A lot of people are getting a bit frustrated by them, that's for sure, when you read front-page stories like the one in today's Onion News, that's for sure!

Poor human !!!!!

But reading that human's story brings a bit of an unusually anxious smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois this morning, to put it mildly!!!!

me and my wife Lois - a recent picture

We're not exactly worried about 'chatbots' ourselves - not yet, at least! But the day may soon be coming, as we find out to our dismay on opening up Lois's copy of her "The Week" magazine, which gives us a digest of world news over the last 7 days, and which "plopped" through our letterbox earlier today, that's for sure!

It seems that, according to Lois's magazine, the socialist Albanian Prime Minister has appointed a chatbot as his Minister for Public Procurement: her name is Diella, and she's been created to look like, and sound like, the country's leading stage and film actress, Anila Bisha, even though the actress has not given permission for her face and voice to be used.

What a crazy world we live in !!!!

(left) me opening up our copy of Lois's "The Week" magazine,
and (right) the headline that caught my eye this morning, to put it mildly!

The Prime Minister's idea was that a chatbot minister for public procurement would rid the post of the nepotism and corruption that previous human incumbents had become embroiled in, and at last enable the country to join the EU. But it hasn't worked - investigations into the current batch of large Albanian infrastructure reports have shown that corruption is alive and well, and as rife as it ever was. The Diella saga, according to the Tirana Times, is "a classic case of governance by appearance, where innovation is used to mask rather than to confront corruption".

What madness!!!!!

top Albanian actress Anila Bisha, seen here talking to the chatbot 
created in her own image, who's now Minister for Public Procurement
- what madness!!!!

At least for Lois and me, this latest chatbot scandal provides a moment of quiet amusement (!) in another frantic day this Friday here in Liphook.

Yes, and "frantic" isn't too much of an exaggeration today, to put it mildly!!!

First and foremost, we're having to get ready for our weekend away, when we'll be "keeping an eye on" our 15-year-old grandson Isaac. His parents - our daughter Alison and husband Edward - plus Isaac's older sister Rosalind (17) will be travelling 300 miles up to Durham in the far north of England to visit their other daughter Josie (19), who's in her first year at the university there, studying for a maths degree. And Lois and I will be spending Saturday night at the family's home 10 miles from here, in Churt, just over the county line, in Surrey.

flashback to January: our daughter Alison, with husband Edward, 
and their 3 teenage offspring Josie (19), Rosalind (17)
and Isaac (15) on their skiing holiday to northern Sweden

And if that wasn't enough (!), in addition to packing suitcases, Lois and I have also got to somehow fit into our already busy day, (a) the puzzles at the back of next week's Radio Times, as well as (b) going out for one of our daily walks.

our frantic day - (top left) me trying to squeeze a mountain of belongings
into a tiny suitcase for our weekend away, and trying to get through
a set of challenging puzzles in the new Radio Times - it's complete mayhem!!!

And we're trying desperately to keep up our daily walks, if we can get a spare half-hour, that is!

As a pair of classic "boomers" - both born in 1946, would you believe, although still, incredibly "marvellous for our age" (!) - we're using our daily walk to try to stay healthy. A recent report sent us by Steve, our American brother-in-law, says that the world's wine industry is dependent on boomers, who are the most enthusiastic consumers of wine. So somehow Lois and I have got to stay fit and healthy to keep the poor wine-growers in business, which is another worry!!!!


Jon Phillips, owner of Californian winery Inspiration Vineyards, and a "boomer" himself, at 65, says that younger people, i.e. Generation X and Millennials just aren't into wine enough. And other factors, such as tariffs, wildfires and negative imaging of alcohol haven't helped, he has told the New York Post. 

So we "boomers" have somehow got to take up the slack, apparently, and keep drinking the wine that Phillips and others produce. 

More stress - just what we don't need!!!!! What madness, isn't it !!!!

9

us on our walk today, over the "hallowed turf" of local soccer giants Liphook United,
currently "languishing" in the Hampshire Premier League's relegation zone,
with us just trying to stay healthy and keep the world's wineries going (!)

Busy busy busy!!!! 

[You lazy bastards! - Ed]

Even the birds are busy today - see bird song data above! Lois says they're all building the nests they're planning to mate in this year.

Will any of us ever get any peace?!!!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzzzz!!!!!   See you on Monday, when the "mayhem" will be starting all over again!!!!

Friday, 27 February 2026

Thursday February 26th 2026 "Don't you just hate having to take your shoes off when visiting a friend?"

Friends, don't you just hate it, when you're asked to take your shoes off before entering a friend's house? Especially if your socks are in less than premium condition, like so often the case with Yours Truly - I like to get maximum value out of my socks, to put it mildly!!!!

But there are other concerns than socks, according to this morning's local Onion News for East Hampshire - see this shock report on page 94 !!!!

Poor McDonough!!!!! The story, however, brings a moment of amused relief, and a smile or two, to the faces of me and my wife Lois this morning, here in leafy, semi-detached Liphook, Hampshire this afternoon, that's for sure!!! 

my wife Lois and me - a recent picture

And later the story gets "picked up" by some of the "nationals", and is even the lead story on tonight's BBC News, which is heartening! Perhaps now, at last, something will be done, and not before time (!), about Grant's "no shoes" rule, which is a "national" disgrace by the sound of it - no pun intended!!!!

It's all doubly ironic tonight, because, as you know, Lois and I, "for our sins" (!), run the local U3A "Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group, as you do (!), and, during our fortnightly online meeting this afternoon, the subject of shoes unexpectedly dominates proceedings, which is a surprise!

(left)  Lois and me trying to control another rowdy online meeting of our local 
"Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group, and (right) the Danish murder mystery that
our group is currently reading, "Judaskysset" (the Judas Kiss), by Anna Grue (centre)

And what's the reason for the "shoes" fixation during our online session today, Colin?", I hear you cry! 

Well, to mine and Lois's frustration, the predominantly female members of our little group spend a lot of time arguing, rather too furiously, we think, about this at-first-sight innocent sentence from the Danish murder mystery that we're currently reading together!


And if your Intermediate Danish is a little rusty, not to worry! I've translated the sentence for you here (all rights reserved!):

English: "her choice of clothes, the awkward black pumps.. she dressed like a 60-year-old, her hair had lots of grey streaks, and her eyelids were already beginning to droop. Was she really only 33?"

Sounds harmless as a sentence, doesn't it, but our members are soon arguing that to wear "awkward black pumps" isn't a sign that a woman is 60 - quite the opposite, in fact, and would probably signal that she's a teenager! And it's only later that we discover that "pumps" in Denmark aren't what we call "pumps" in Britain, when I take a minute to "google" the word while all the shouting is going on (!). 

To my surprise, I discover that the word "pumps" means footwear of a totally different kind (1) in Britain and (2) in the US, and obviously in Denmark too. 

"Pumps" in Britain, also known as "plimsolls" and "daps" (depending on region) are what kids wear for gym lessons here, but "pumps" in the US (and also Denmark) are sophisticated shoes with heels - who knew !!!!!


Confused? You will be! 

And it's a distinction that, to our shame, Lois and I were completely unaware of, despite having lived in the States ourselves for 3 years, back in the early 1980's.

The British and Americans - "two nations divided by a common language" is what somebody once said - I think Oscar Wilde or George Bernard Shaw or someone similar (!). And it's unfortunate that our online meeting today gets "hijacked" further by discussions about sneakers/trainers, slides and sliders (???), whatever they are etc etc.

What madness, isn't it!


When Lois and I lived in the States, our own kids tended to wear either what Americans call "sneakers" (i.e. trainers), or what I call "Clark's sandals", a lot of the time, at least. I don't what Americans call Clarks sandals - but your ideas welcome - postcards only, as usual !!!!!

flashback to the early 1980's: (top left) us on vacation in the Blue Ridge Mountains
of Virginia; (top right) our kids Alison and Sarah standing by our street's communal postboxes
and (bottom) little Sarah's class photograph, wearing her British "Clarks sandals"
- what madness wasn't it !!!!

And as far as our little Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers group, with another online meeting totally hijacked again with yet another irrelevant discussion (!), it's no wonder that we're taking so long to read our Danish murder mystery novel!

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

And no matter what our kids, Alison and Sarah, were wearing in the States, or, after 1985, when we came home to Britain, Lois and I certainly took pains to encourage them both to "find their own style", both in shoes and in life generally, and I think the results of that are obvious, now that Alison and Sarah have reached the ages of, respectively 50 and 48, would you believe, and have given us 5 lovely grandchildren, which is nice!

flashback to July 2025: Lois and me with our two daughters,
two sons-in-law and five grandchildren - awwwww!!!!
all wearing a wide variety of footwear (!)

If only all parents had had our "laid back" and encouraging attitude, when their kids were growing up! Not all do, sadly, and who do you think was a prime example of this?

Step forward Mrs Elizabeth Lowry, mother of famous Lancashire painter LS Lowry, him of the "matchstick men" fame, no less, as we hear tonight in a fascinating drama-documentary about the much-loved artist, which is nice!


Lowry became famous in the 1950's for his "matchstick men" paintings of typical industrial towns in Lancashire, paintings of men pouring out of factories at going-home time, or going to football matches, or paintings of working-class families having fun at funfairs or at the seaside: exuberant pictures of "the old north of England", a world that has now largely disappeared, which is a pity!

some typical LS Lowry paintings: (left) men pouring out of the factory gates
and (right) having fun with their families at the seaside

You'd have thought that Lowry's mum would have been pleased to have such a talented painter of a son growing up in her house, but apparently not, according to tonight's programme (!).






Oh dear!!!!!!

Poor Lowry !!!!!!!

Will this do?

[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]

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