The Name is Bond

Well, it’s not actually – it’s our friend and neighbour Alan – and today is his birthday. Having recently finished a private commission, my time has been freed up to do other things like… making a personalised birthday card for a dear friend. It wasn’t hard to choose a character to suit Alan’s image; although advanced in years, Alan is still an elegant man with a good physique and debonair good looks. Even sixteen-year-old Miri, daughter of my friend Catherine (at number seven), thinks he is “extremely handsome” and refers to him as “my Alan” owing to the fact that once, when she had forgotten her home key, he saved the young damsel from hours of boredom by inviting her in.

Besides all that, Alan is also one of the old school, one of those who regards his word as his bond. As if I needed any reasons for having digital fun…

Britannia Rule the Waves

It is about eleven-thirty on Sunday morning and I’m in our bedroom on the ground floor. I hear the whistle of a steam train approaching. I want to run upstairs to grab my new phone (with the good camera) but I can hear the train is coming fast and there is not enough time.

“Steam train coming, Darling!” I call up from the doorway to Chris who is in the lounge room.

“I know, it’s the Britannia coming from Bristol Temple Meads, going through Western-Super-Mare, Taunton, Exeter – it doesn’t stop at Newton Abbot but it does stop at Totnes – then it carries on to Dartmouth….I’m pretty sure it’s Dartmouth….” said Chris from the top of the stairs.

“Blimey,” I think to myself, “How does he know that? I didn’t know he was a trainspotter!”

I look out of the bedroom window and see the train speed past below on our famous railway line built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. I cannot forget its most recent claim to fame – the line’s partial destruction in the bad storms last year – because the sea wall repairs are still underway. The line, however, was up and running again only a couple of months later.

“Don’t worry,” says Chris when I come upstairs, “you can take photos of it on the way back from Dartmouth. It will be here at twenty to six.”

“What a mine of information,” I think to myself.

“How do you know that?” I ask.

“I checked it out on the computer, of course,” he says in a kind of patronising way.

Inwardly, I marvel how it is that I can have been married to Chris for seventeen years and not realise that he is a train buff, if not an actual trainspotter. I’m slightly disturbed by this, but only because this facet of Chris is alien to me. I have never felt the need to check out information about old trains on the computer so why should he? I used to think we were similar (apart from a few peculiarities on his side) and now there is a small gulf opening up. Why does he need this unusual interest? Am I not enough for him?

Later on we are sat out on the balcony over at Alan’s house, two doors up (or two short dividing walls to jump over in this case). We hear the Britannia blow her whistle before going through the tunnel before Dawlish. This time I have my new camera phone at hand, and Alan’s daughter Caroline runs down to the garden to take a film at close quarters. I lean over the balustrade and wait for the moment for the perfect shot… Unfortunately, I’m a bit too eager and click when the train is still quite far away and, when I recover from my disappointment and go to click again, the train is rolling by directly below the terrace.

“I didn’t get a good shot. How did you fare?” I ask Caroline as she comes onto the balcony.

“Missed it!” she says showing me the first frame of the film depicting an empty railway line.

We laugh.

Now I am going to attach the photographs taken on Sunday. Luckily, my new phone camera is so good that I was able to zoom in close and you can actually see the train rather well. My train-loving husband will be pleased! And, for your information, I have been to Wikipedia and checked out some facts about the Britannia. No doubt Chris will be pleased again. But please don’t tell him that I haven’t personally read all the interesting facts… well, I am trying. I believe that is exactly what Chris might say.

BR Standard Class 7 70000 Britannia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
BR 70000 Britannia
Britannia at Severn Tunnel Junction, September 2012.jpg

Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder British Railways Crewe works
Build date 2 January 1951
Specifications
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Career
Operator(s) British Railways
Class Standard Class 7
Number in class 1st of 55
Number(s) 70000
Official name Britannia
Retired 1966
Current owner Royal Scot Locomotive and General Trust
Official Website – Britannia on Icons Of Steam

British Railways (BR) Standard Class 7 (also known as Britannia class), number 70000 Britannia is a preserved steam locomotive, owned by the Royal Scot Locomotive and General Trust.

British Railways[edit]

Britannia was built at Crewe, completed on 2 January 1951. She was the first British Railways standard locomotive to be built and the first of 55 locomotives of the Britannia class. The locomotive was named at a ceremony at Marylebone Station by the then Minister for Transport Alfred Barnes on 30 January 1951.

The BR Locomotive Naming Committee were determined not to use names already in use on other locomotives. They tried to observe this by not selecting the name Britannia for use on 70000 because it was already in use on one of the ex-LMS Jubilee Class locomotives, but Robert Riddles overruled them and the Jubilee had to be renamed.[1]

Britannia was initially based at Stratford (30A) in order to work East Anglian expresses to Norwich and Great Yarmouth, but was also particularly associated with the Hook Continental boat train to Harwich.[2] Subsequently, the loco was based at Norwich Thorpe (w/e 31 January 1959) and March (June 1961) before spending the remainder of her career on the London Midland Region: Willesden (1A) (w/e 30 March 1963), Crewe North (5A) (w/e 25 May 1963), Crewe South (5B) (w/e 19 May 1965) and finally Newton Heath (9D) (w/e 5 March 1966) from where she was withdrawn w/e 28 May 1966,[3]

The locomotive pulled the funeral train of King George VI from King’s Lynn, Norfolk to London following his death in February 1952 at Sandringham House, Norfolk.[4] For this task, Britannia had her cab roof painted white, as was the custom with royal locomotives (B2 61617 Ford Castle, which pulled the train from Wolferton Station to King’s Lynn, was similarly liveried).Britannia has also worn the white roof in preservation.

Britannia was withdrawn in May 1966, after 15 years of service.[5]

Preservation[edit]

Britannia on a charter train onWhalley Viaduct in 1994

Initially destined for the National Railway Museum because of her cultural significance, she was stored. However, due to her prototype design and construction differences, the NRM chose standard sister 70013 Oliver Cromwell, instead. Britannia was eventually bought byBritannia Locomotive Company Ltd.

After a series of moves, she was eventually returned to steam on the Severn Valley Railway, where she remained for a number of years in operational but non-mainline condition. With the society wishing to make more use of the locomotive, she was moved to the European gauge Nene Valley Railway in Peterborough, where she was also fitted with an air-brake compressor. Britannia made her return to the main line on 27 July 1991, successfully working enthusiast trips until 1997, and was featured in an episode of London’s Burning.

Britannia at Canterbury West, April 2011.

With an expired mainline boiler certificate, due to the high cost of refurbishment, the locomotive was sold to Pete Waterman in 2000. Stored at Waterman’s workshops at the Crewe Heritage Centre, after initial assessment the amount of work resulted in Waterman selling her to Jeremy Hosking. The locomotive underwent restoration at Crewe which involved a newly refurbished cab, a new smoke box and major work on the boiler; replacement steel sides, new crown stays, new front section barrel section, new steel and copper tubeplate, repairs and patches to door plate and major work to copper firebox.

Transferred to the Royal Scot Locomotive and General Trust (RSL&GT), the locomotive was returned to main line operational condition in 2011, initially out shopped in its prototype black British Railways livery (where it did not have nameplates fitted, as was thus known by railway convention as 70000). After a running-in period, in 2012 the locomotive was repainted in British Railways Brunswick Green, but with an early BR crest (unlike her sister 70013 Oliver Cromwell which carries BR’s Late Crest). On 24 January 2012, the loco hauled the Royal Train with Prince Charles on board to Wakefield Kirkgate, where he rededicated the locomotive. For the trip the loco again had a painted white cab roof, removed after the engine’s appearance at the West Somerset Railway‘s Spring Gala.

 

The Country Girl Goes to Hospitable – A joke

Thank you Roland.

The Country Girl 

A young woman from the outback town of Charleville (over four hundred miles south-west of Brisbane, Queensland) takes the train to the state capital and makes her way to the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital. She goes to reception where there are three ladies and a man behind the desk. The country girl waits until the oldest of the three female receptionists is free and beckons her to one side so that they may have a private conversation.

“G’day. Excuse me, Mrs, but I need to see an out-tern,” whispers the girl.

“An ‘out-tern’?” queries the receptionist. “Surely you mean an intern?”

“You can call them what you want,” answered the girl, “all I know is that I need a doctor to contaminate me.”

“I expect you mean that you want a doctor to examine you,” the older lady fights the urge to laugh and tries to maintain her cool composure.

“That’s what I said. I need to be contaminated. Could you please tell me how to get to the fraternity ward?”

“Oh… do you mean the maternity department?” asks the receptionist.

“Listen, I don’t know why you’re being so obstetructive. If you must know all my business, okay, I haven’t remonstrated for two months and I think I’m stagnant!”

“Come this way, deer,” says the receptionist.

The Three Belles

The band had stopped. Perhaps the group went to wet their whistles after playing their repertoire of old favourites (including “You are my Sunshine, my Only Sunshine”) – you know the sort of thing that people expect, and love to hear, when attending village fetes. Suddenly some different music – not the type you would necessarily expect at a country fete – surprised the visitors and villagers gathered on Mamhead green.

“Hello,” I said to myself, “that sounds like belly dancing music!” (I used to go to classes years ago so I should know.)

I and probably everyone else at the fete turned towards the bandstand as three ladies in voluminous skirts and big bras like metal sculptures (worn on the outside over their tops – in superhero fashion) made a grand entrance onto the grass arena. For some unknown reason to me I fancied the belles had stepped out of a Bulgarian comic opera. I wondered if they were going to sing but they remained tight-lipped and serious as they treated us to a most unusual and entertaining routine of belly dancing.

The belles looked like no other belly dancers I had ever seen before (or will again, no doubt). They were tall and they were grand (in the French sense); they weren’t young or exactly beautiful but they were stunning in their own particular way. A little girl from the audience was mesmerised, as you can see from my photographs…

From a Dog’s Eye View

For a change I thought I’d let you see photographs from a dog’s eye view. You will find yourself on a green by the village hall in the little country village of Mamhead just a few miles from my hometown of Dawlish. The occasion? It is a fundraising fete, the proceeds of which will go to the upkeep of Mamhead Church, one of the prettiest churches you could imagine (and it has been the subject of one of my paintings).

There were a few stalls, including my own – I took along some prints and a few originals; also games and tombolas, a hog roast, two llamas (alive and well, not roasted!), live music (the heavy metal band didn’t go down too well with the oldies but the following band got everybody’s feet tapping on the grass); and, perhaps most surprising… a troupe of unusual belly dancers. Sorry, but you will have to wait until my next post for photographs of the incredible belly dancers. For now I’m concentrating on the dogs at the fete…

Italian Lessons and a Horse?

Whilst I was concocting my own (unauthentic) version of spaghetti and tomato sauce for dinner tonight I was thinking about two quite disparate things on my wish list – my desire to speak Italian and my fancy to own a horse. Perhaps you imagine that I want to be in a “Spaghetti Western”? Not really, not unless Luca Zingaretti (who shares my birthday) or Cesare Bocci  are in it; they are my favourite Italian actors from ‘Montalbano – The Italian Detective’, the brilliant subtitled detective series.

Quite often, when checking my blogsite statistics, I see the Italian flag of my solo Italian blog reader (I guess it is the same person). I can almost hear the happy notes of the Italian National Anthem (Inno di Mameli (Mameli’s Hymn) and I have a little thrill as I envisage Luca or Cesare dipping into my blog to see what’s on my mind. It has never occurred to me that my Italian visitor might be the mother to one of my heroes! Ah non importa. Amo tutti i miei seguaci! (Google has just helped me to learn a bit of Italian – I love all my followers!)

Now about my wish to own a horse… I can just imagine what Chris would say if I told him…

– “But you aren’t even a horse-person!”

– “How dare you say that! Horse-riding used to be my favourite sport!”

– “Yes, when you were a little girl. When did you last ride a horse?”

– “That’s beside the point, my interest has been revitalised and I want a horse.”

– “Since when?”

– “Since last Friday, when I was farm-sitting…”

– “Sally, did you see that handsome young farrier again?”

In truth, I did see that gorgeous farrier who I met last year when I visited Mary on the farm (see my old blog post entitled “Lady Chatterley’s Lover?”). Sadly, being on the farm and not expecting to see anyone except for old Tony, who wouldn’t mind how I looked (he likes buxom women), I was dressed for farm work and painting. I wore mauve knee length pants, a pink short-sleeved top with a yellow dress over the top, and over the top of that I wore one of my mum’s aprons. If that wasn’t odd enough to behold I also had on socks and trainers. My hair was in a high pony tail and I had two pink flowers in my hair. Make-up? Not much – the animals’ love is not so shallow. On reflection I think looked a bit peculiar – darn it!

I remember I was looking for Malachi, who had disappeared, so I left my painting (I was working on my latest commission) and walked up to the stable. A van was parked outside and as I approached a male voice called out:

“Hello Sally!” the smiling familiar face beamed.

“Oh!” I suddenly felt self-conscious, “I wish I had dressed less oddly.”

“You look fine – just like an eccentric painter,” he said and he gave me a kiss.

“I hope your wife didn’t mind me writing that blog about you,” I queried.

“My mother was over the moon,” he laughed showing his perfect set of white teeth.

 

Well, that was a week ago. I hasten to add that I’m not one of those frightful “cougar” women I have heard about – the older women who prey on young men. I’m happily married and it wouldn’t occur to me to go for a younger man, no matter how handsome and charming (even if he had to wear those sexy chaps every day). No, I definitely don’t want a new man, I just want a horse….

For the Love of Animals

No, I’m not on the farm this week. I’m in my studio, which is my private world for painting and thinking. I’m sad, not least because I received the news yesterday that Bella – my “Beautiful Bella” (of whom I wrote and published a short story of the same name) – passed away. It’s hard not to cry every time I think about the demise of the most intelligent, faithful and lovable dog I have ever met, who, in fact, turned me into a dog-lover.

To cheer myself up I looked at some of the photographs of Rosie’s animals, taken when I was farm-sitting last week. And then I thought of Harry the pig – the smiling pig – who loved nothing better than a nice fresh raw egg on top of his breakfast pellets; and I remembered that the farm didn’t seem quite the same on my last visit, not without poor Harry who met his maker the week before… Oh dear, I feel sad again…

Daisy, Daisy…

At least the cold north wind was with us on the way home yesterday morning. It hadn’t become any warmer while we were cycling (as Chris had predicted – when I asked if he thought I should wear a jumper over my thin summer top) and when the sun hid behind the clouds it was even colder.

We were coming up the coastal bridle path, past The Langstone Cliff Hotel, when the sun appeared briefly and drew our  attention to the opposite field; it was a veritable sea of daisies sparkling white in the sunshine! I was already off my bike (it’s rather steep there) so I parked it against the fence and checked to see if the gate was locked. I turned to Chris for his approval.

“Don’t be long,” he said shivering in his polo shirt and shorts.

I was a little longer than expected. I had to take some photographs for my blog and, well, there were so many of them… and who would begrudge me a few daisies? Chris was a bit frosty but he thawed out once he saw how pretty they looked at home.

They are still alive and beautiful, like of bursts of sunshine on a cold day.

The Frazzled and Exhausted Housewife (A Joke)

It’s no joke being a frazzled and exhausted housewife…. except in this instance. This came to me by way of Roland, the “Birdman from Brisbane”, who knows quite a lot about birds of all descriptions.

The Frazzled Wife

A distressed young woman, who after twelve years of marriage had lost the bloom of youth, also had become extremely tired both physically and mentally.

“I, I don’t think I can… I can’t… sorry… take it anymore,” she sobbed and burst into tears at her doctor’s surgery.

“Sit down and tell me all about it,” soothed the middle-aged doctor and he patted her shoulder as he directed the poor wife to the chair opposite his, “now what is it you can’t take?”

“I hate my life,” she began, “I can’t stick the kids – they are noisy, disobedient, lazy, obnoxious and selfish. At eleven, eight and six, they know their Human Rights and choose to ignore mine. They spend most of their spare time on PlayStation or playing games on their phones and the television is blaring constantly. It’s like being in a nightmare!”

“Why don’t you turn the television off?” asked the doctor.

“My husband loves sitting in his ‘Captain Kirk’ chair and watching television, especially football – which is why we had to have Sky – and he has it up loud to block out the noise of the kids,” she replied.

“Oh dear,” said the doctor softly, “of course your husband has a bad back if I remember rightly?”

“Yes, but it doesn’t stop him from doing anything… apart from all chores to do with the house or garden,” she raised her eyebrows before continuing, “I have to do everything! My life is one long round of servitude from the moment I wake up at five o’clock in the morning until I go to bed at nine – and no, I don’t have time for a social life. I don’t even have time to sit down to eat my own breakfast, let alone read a book – I used to love reading…”

“There, there,” said the doctor patting her arm.

“Oh Doctor, “I’m so exhausted, stressed and on edge – my nerves are shot through – is there anything you can give me to help?”

“My dear,” said the doctor, “you need something for yourself, outside of the family, something to give you an interest or make friends.”

“That’s a joke, I’m either taking one or other of the kids to their activities, or I’m too tired to think of having any activities or classes of my own,” she said despondently.

“I have it,” said the doctor, “I really think you would benefit from running ten kilometres every day. Would you give it a go? You might want to start by doing less and build yourself up to more.”

The frazzled wife acquiesced for she was desperate to do anything to help her appalling situation.

“Listen,” said the doctor, “begin straight away and I’ll give you a call in two weeks to see how you’re getting on.”

Two weeks later the doctor saw the memo in his diary and was prompted to call the patient to whom he had offered the extraordinary advice.

“Hello,” he said, “This is your doctor calling to find out how you’re progressing.”

“Hi Doctor!” the young wife sounded full of the joys of spring. “Thank you so much for your good advice. Because I was in such poor condition it was quite hard at first but I followed your suggestion and took it easy. Now I feel strong, fit, capable and even happy – I’m a new woman!”

“I’m so pleased I was able to help,” the doctor smiled to himself as he spoke, “and, if you don’t mind me asking, how are things at home now?”

“How in the heck would I know Doctor?” the wife replied surprised, “I’m over a hundred and forty kilometres away!”

 

 

In Short

At length, we had nearly come to the end of our bookclub meeting (and a very jolly gathering it was – so good to see everyone again after a four month gap!). My brother-in-law Geoff, who is not one of our bookworms returned home and joined us in the lounge room for a cup of coffee.

“Oh Sally, I met an old boyfriend of yours and he mentioned you and Mary – he knew Mary too,” Geoff said looking across to where I was sitting on the arm of the sofa, next to my sister.

“”Who was that then?” I asked.

“Do you know I can’t remember his name? But I think he was something to do with the Teign Valley Stompers.”

“I never went out with anyone in the Teign Valley Stompers,” I protested, “Mark Whitlock’s brother was in the Teign Valley Stompers but I never went out with either Mark or his brother!” I looked at Mary for support.

“No, Sally didn’t go out with either of them,” said Mary, “and neither did I!”

“Who are the Teign Valley Stompers?” asked Reuben, our handsome bookclub leader.

“A traditional jazz band,” answered Geoff.

“They won ‘Opportunity Knocks’ years ago,” added Mary with surprise but then she nodded her head as if to acknowledge that Reuben was originally from Plymouth, and he’s a bit younger than us.

“So I wonder who it could have been? Don’t you even remember his Christian name?” I fixed Geoff with my gaze.

“No, but he lives up Hazeldene Road.” (Geoff is a part-time taxi driver, therefore he remembers addresses more readily than names.”

“That rings a bell,” I said. (In Geoff’s case it would have been a door bell!) “Hold your horses, I think Chris Hutchence lives up there. Now I did go out with Chris for six months when I was just eighteen and he was thirty. Is he bald?”

“He doesn’t have much hair… and it’s white!” Geoff, who doesn’t have white hair, added gleefully.

“And does he have a moustache?” I looked at the bookworms and gestured a big moustache. “He used to have a big moustache and long curly hair although last time I saw him he was going bald.”

“Yes, he has a moustache,” confirmed my brother-in-law.

“And is he rather short?” I asked.

“Yes,” Geoff nodded.

“Oh, I don’t like short men,” said Jo, our newest bookworm.

“He was a ‘Medallion man’ too,” I continued – for Jo’s interest – and she pulled a face.

“Nothing was his scene,” I began and for a few moments I got lost in a reverie, thinking about Chris Hutchence. “Every time I suggested we do anything like play a game, go dancing, hiking… anything, he would always answer, ‘It’s just not my scene’.”

The expressions on the faces of the bookworms urged me on.

“Well, one day I wrote him a letter – it was in the days when people still used pen and paper – and I I wrote, ‘Dear Chris, I’m sorry but you’re just not my scene.”

Everyone laughed and Geoff said:

“He is pretty short. I expect it is him.”

“He used to wear built up shoes,” I looked at Jo before turning to Mary and adding, “of course, I was taller in those days.”

“But you were only about five-feet six,” Mary raised her eye-brows.

“Yes, I know,” I laughed, “but when I had my platform shoes on I was about six feet tall!”

 

And that’s the long and the short of it! (Incidentally, the book we were discussing was The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, whose writing often included the transitional expressions, “At length” and “In short”.)