Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Altered Plans…

We missed out visiting Andy and Jodie due to family issues, but we used the Friday afternoon we had booked off originally to travel to Shropshire, to visit the RHS Hampton Court Flower show instead. Even though it was an afternoon ticket and on a weekday it was still busy and we ambled around the many gardens, pausing at a few stalls, bars, and tents to take in the sights of the show.


We did manage to spend some time in our own garden on the weekend (planted the wasabi plant bought at Hampton Court). But the main plan was to visit Terry and Gill.

Muck & Bullets…

As a contrast to the refined and well-groomed wedding we have just attended the following day was more informal and messier. On our way home we saw signs for the Capel Military Vehicle Show and we thought we would give it a go. The rain we had had over the last few days and the number of vehicles and visitors had turned the site into a quagmire (putting us somewhat in mind of a battle ground). It is not an enormous show but there a few impressive tanks, trucks, guns and other military paraphernalia around. The highlight for me was a battle re-enactment actually using tanks, armoured cars and field guns along with assault troops with plenty of smoke, explosions and churning mud. 

Friends Crazy Big Wedding…

Friends of ours, Paul and Lorraine, final got hitched after ten years of being together. It was a big affair that was made successful by the assistance of so many people. St James church was where the ceremony was held and special permission had to be obtained from the Archbishop which came on a lovely scroll. It and the tea rooms used for the reception are associated with the Titsey estate where Paul works as a gardener. The owners were very welcoming and supportive. Much of the decorating was done with the assistance of talented friends and the whole place looked transformed into a wonderland. The couple also put on entertainment in the form of a circus act for the kids (big and small) and a disco for the evening. One of Lorraine’s brothers, Ian, organised a caricature artist to sketch people, Paul organised a surprise bagpiper to escort the couple from the church to the house, and there was also a hog roast, a fabulous cake, a late night pizza van and much more. Many of stayed the night at the lovely Lingfield Park.

Being the best man meant I felt buttoned up in the unfamiliar suit and on duty until after my speech, which went down well, when I could relax a little.


Although it all was wonderful and the bride and groom were happy as clams, I was quite glad when it was all over. 

More of wot I have heard…

Wide Lying Smiles by Nick and the Sun Machine

Saw Nick Stephenson play solo one evening up at B&Bs, one of our local pubs, and really liked his passion and energy and were impressed with his natural ability. We bought one of his albums on the strength of his performance.


We went with Terry and Gill to see the Budapest CafĂ© Orchestra perform at the Hastoe Village Hall and we were thoroughly entertained by their expertise and skill and the comic links and musical jokes they used to lighten up the evening.  

In the afternoon we had visited Aston Abbotts village fete where we saw the Aldbury Morris perform and before the show we had a lovely meal at Da Vinci’s in Tring. The next morning we rounded of the weekends pleasantries with a delightful walk up Ivinghoe Beacon.

We were at a table with a couple of guys from Fishwife’s Broadside a punk band with a folk twist and their music is interesting too if you like it a bit shouty and politically charged

More of wot I have read…

  
This was an interesting take on the time travel, life re-do theme that explores how you decisions can change your life or not. I like that the science behind the rebirth is not explored or even explained, and that the main character is not conscious of why she decides to change her actions, and the ending is very neat and tidy. It does allow the author to delve deeper into the main character and you get a real sense of who she is by the end as you see her cope with her choices.


‘What if you had the chance to live your life again and again, until you finally got it right?

During a snowstorm in England in 1910, a baby is born and dies before she can take her first breath.

During a snowstorm in England in 1910, the same baby is born and lives to tell the tale.

What if there were second chances? And third chances? In fact an infinite number of chances to live your life? Would you eventually be able to save the world from its own inevitable destiny? And would you even want to?

Life After Life follows Ursula Todd as she lives through the turbulent events of the last century again and again. With wit and compassion, Kate Atkinson finds warmth even in life’s bleakest moments, and shows an extraordinary ability to evoke the past. Here she is at her most profound and inventive, in a novel that celebrates the best and worst of ourselves.’



The Long Utopia by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter
  
The fourth book in the series that reveals more about the origins of the stepping ability and also makes a good attempt at describing the Long Earth, the soft places and how it could get tangled up in other planetary strands. It lets the characters develop a little more and allows the world to move on so that we can see how it is evolving. It is an easy read without too challenging themes but it held my interest all the way through.


‘It is the middle of the twenty-first century. The cataclysms of Step Day and the Yellowstone eruption have sent humanity out into the Long Earth. Society, on a battered Datum Earth and beyond, continues to evolve. And new challenges emerge.

In a far-distant world, a cantankerous and elderly Lobsang lives with Agnes in the community of New Springfield and endeavours to lead a normal life. They even adopt a child. But there are rumours of hauntings, strange sightings in the sky. On this world, something isn’t right.

Millions of steps away, Joshua receives an urgent summons from New Springfield. Lobsang believes that what is blighting his Earth now threatens all of the worlds of the Long Earth.


To counter this will require the combined efforts of humankind, machine and the super-intelligent Next. And some must make the ultimate sacrifice…’