31 October 2016

Bad night!

I have had a bad night! I woke, looked at the bedside clock, noted it was 7am, got up, went to the iMac, but the clock was the wrong way up and it was nearer 2am! Socks wanted to get up, having had a bad evening with the fireworks during which he hid behind the washing machine. Back to bed after replying to a couple of emails.

I then had one of my recurring nightmares, this one featuring Redbridge Magistrates’ Court. David Keller, former Deputy Clerk to the Justices, rang to tell me they were desperate and would I sit with Shirley Rudge and Richard Hoskins in the Fire Enforcement Court. Justices smiled as we entered the retiring room - in a sort of sympathetic sort of way as if to ask why these old codgers had been brought out of their care homes! 

There was only one appearance so we committed him to the Old Bailey, much to the amusement of David Keller, but Michael Faraway, Clerk to the Justices appeared and told us not to be so silly - so we sent the defendant home with a slapped wrist while Mr Faraway gave David a sound kicking where it hurt. 

David took us outside the courthouse where a man ran up to say that I should not be sitting as I was retired but - quick as a flash - David told the man that I had been elevated to the House of Lords and could therefore sit. The man got down on his knees, but Shirley told him not to be ridiculous - as Shirley would, of course. Richard suggested we had lunch but we walked the length of Barkingside High Street and found nothing that was suitable - then I woke up to find that Socks really did want to go out!

Have a good day and an even better week! Outside the 'season of mist and mellow fruitfulness' is with us for I can barely see down the garden.

28 October 2016

Picklers at work!

This shot of St. Peter's Picklers appears in this week's ILFORD RECORDER - the gang were peeling onions ready to be pickled for sale at the Christmas Market on 19th November. Great if you can stand the onions. One member cried all afternoon!

20 October 2016

The wheelchair experience

The wheelchair experience

Yesterday I had my first experience of spending some eight hours with a wheelchair user in London – and what an experience it was indeed,
First, we had to transfer the wheelchair from the boot of my friend’s car to the boot of my other friend’s car. Right! This may well mystify you but stay with me. And just to make it more interesting, the wheelchair was in pieces – wheels, foot rests, body, cushion.
At Hainault Station – the nearest Central Line station with lifts – we parked in a nearby road. Nearby! About 300 wheelchair pushing yards away! Here we assembled the wheelchair and the wheelchair user – Wheelchair Lady or WL for short – climbed aboard, whilst WPL (Wheelchair Pusher Lady) started to – yes, you’ve guessed – push.
At the station we asked a kindly station man which platform the next train for London would depart from – for you could go all the way up in the lift only to find you have to come all the way down and all the way up again if you got it wrong. Two lifts – and here I made my first (of many) mistakes for WPL told me off for not holding the button down as we ascended.
Now have you ever tried to push a wheelchair onto a Central Line train? If not, you may not have appreciated that the floor of these trains is higher than the platform. WPL knows all about such matters and I was told (firmly, but politely) to keep out of the way as the manoeuvre was made without mishap – for WL could well have found herself tipped unceremoniously down the gap between the train and the platform – which, a lady told us as we approached every station, you must mind or woe-betide you mate. And this lady told us this so many times that I would have happily strangled her if only I could find out where she working from.
Getting out of the train was equally daunting, but WPL knew how to do this so I kept out of the way for I did not want to be told off for not doing so – politely of course. Mind you, some fellow passengers had to be asked to move their great lumbering bodies elsewhere for they did not allow WL to go forwards and back until she was safely stowed away with the brake on.
The District Line trains were so much easier because the floors are level with the platforms. Perhaps one day the men at Transport for London will equip Central Line trains whose floors are likewise, but I am not holding my breath for those same men spent £4.5M digging out lifts at Newbury Park in 2009 and a further £1.5M filling them in when they ran out of money – but if they ran out of money where did they find the £1.5m I ask myself?
Blackfriars station was a dream. Modern. Clean. Lifts where you do not need to hold down the button – although I did and was told off into the bargain, but again politely.
The push to St. Paul’s Cathedral was mainly uphill and although I offered, WPL insisted on doing the job herself, clearly believing that you needed a wheelchair driving licence to do so and she had one but I did not. I arrived at Café Rouge puffed but in a reasonable state of mind and so did WPL and WL as far as I could tell.
I should draw a discrete veil over what happened inside Café Rouge. Suffice to say that a smart, good-looking, waiter had an afternoon he will long remember. Mistaken by WL for being French, the young man told her that he hailed from Argentina and from that moment on there were going-on between him and WL – with WPL lady joining in fleetingly – the like of which I would doubt Café Rouge has seen or is likely to see for some time to come – until WL returns when the young man is on shift which she promised to do and he (to my amazement) encouraged her to do!
After a late lunch or early dinner, we trundled over the St. Paul’s, first viewing the front steps and looking for the holes where the rails are place for The Queen, who does not use them in any case, being a bit like WL in that both of them are independent minded Ladies and the fact that there is a hand rail means they would not use it just to show ‘em!
Round to the side entrance where we rang a bell. A security guard opened a huge wooden door to let us in to take the lift. But first our bags had to be searched – by the men at the top of those steps, which would mean that I would have to carry my haversack and two ladies’ handbags all the way there and back. I must have looked distraught for the security man made a snap decision to do the search himself. Wow!
Inside the Cathedral we found that we Honoured Guests (yes, me too) were to sit below the Dome with the VIPs and that WL had a notice affixed to the floor telling her to park there.
The Service to mark the 150th Anniversary of Barnardo’s was inspiring but will have to wait for a description for another day as I am late setting off for my weekly shop as it is a Thursday.
Suffice – again – to say that the return journey was much the same and uneventful, except for a young man who was badly drunk and used words that made me blush but did not appear to have the same effect on WL or WPL, although I may be wrong for the train was shuddering as Central Line trains do (TfL please note!).
I would just mention that when transferring the wheelchair in pieces back into the first car, WL spotted that a cushion was missing. It cost £40 I was told as WL put an older one inside the boot. We searched and searched in the dark and feared we might have to retrace our steps – until I fell over it resting against the wheels of WL’s car!

I had a stiff mug of cocoa after an amazing day with a wheelchair and so to bed.

17 October 2016

Just me!

I am told - often - that I should not keep using a head and shoulders photograph of myself taken about ten years ago. Graham took this shot on Saturday when Heather and I paid a flying (driving) day visit to Bransgore to spend the day with Graham and Danielle and their family - visiting the New Forest Cider Festival and Carphone Warehouse to set me up with an iPhone to go with my iMac. I now on a steep learning curve - again.

16 October 2016







On Saturday 15th October Heather and I drove to Bransgore to Graham and Danielle’s home - thence to the New Forest Cider Festival and Burley. Here are a few shots from the afternoon!

13 October 2016

Now here is an odd thing!

Now here is an odd thing. Today is Aldi and Pets at Home Day. I walk to the bus stop, catch a bus, shop and have a Radio Cars Mini-cab home as I am heavy laden. Sometimes I go to B&Q as well for it is nearby. And I am looking forward to the day's outing!
For 57 years off married life I went to a supermarket once, perhaps twice a year with Yvonne. Now I go every week. I would not say that I disliked going but it was a chore. Today - I love it! I go to Sainsbury's once a month for the things Aldi do not stock (Glowhite for my handkerchiefs and tea towels and towels, Berocca to give me daily energy - and sometimes I might treat myself to something naughty to eat but I am not going to say what it might be!).
I mentioned this to Heather when my daughter rang me early this morning on her way to her office - as she does every work day. Heather said it is because it gets me out of the house and I talk to people. Yes, I do talk - to the lady in Pets at Home who insists I wait for the cab inside the shop if it is cold. Kindly lady indeed. I also talk to the ladies in B&Q when I go there, but the staff in Aldi are far too busy to stop for a chat as they load the shelves with a variety of things I will never buy, such as felling axes (in Newbury Park?), extending ladders, a variety of clothing that seems to have been knitted for oversized ladies and skinny men, and so many other bits and pieces the like of which you would not see anywhere else.
But the food is good quality. After all green bananas are green bananas, cheese is these and washing up liquid is the same the world over. I buy my meat at the friendly butcher in Leyswood Drive, where the Irish proprietor gives me superb service and reasonable prices with a merry twinkle in his eye!
Hey Ho! Oft Aldi we go! And Pets at Home too, of course.

7 October 2016

LOL!

From time to time I receive emails with LOL at the end. I cannot recall what they mean - is it LOTS OF LOVE? Perhaps not! So I went to GOOGLE (how did we cope without Google!) and this si what I found:
· :LLaughing
· ALOLActually Laughing Out Loud
· BAGLBust A Gut Laughing
· CBLTHCan't Breathe Laughing Too Hard
· CREASINGLaughing
· CSLCan't stop laughing
· DOFLDying On Floor Laughing
· FOCLFalling Off Chair Laughing
· FOFLFalling On Floor Laughing
· FOMCLFalling Off My Chair Laughing
· HAFLHeart Attack From Laughing
· IALI Ain't Laughing
I Actually Laughed
· ICSLI Couldn't/Can't Stop Laughing
· KMLKilling Myself Laughing
· KMSLKilling Myself Laughing
· L2MSLaughing To Myself
· LALLaughing A Lot/Little
· LALBLaughing A Little Bit

So now we know!