And another thing:
These are just fleeting thoughts from the heartland of the UK's colonial dustbin somewhere beyond the wall of sleep. Odd bits of music and so-called worldly wisdom may creep in from time to time. Don't expect too much and you won't feel let down. As ever AI and old age are to blame. I'll just leave it there ...
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Sugar Related
And another thing:
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
Coffee & Biscuits
Monday, August 11, 2025
532 People
532 people, mostly middle aged, were arrested in London on Saturday for holding placards that read:
The current Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper* says she has good reasons to continue to suppress such protests. I doubt that these reasons, whatever they are, will ever be clearly explained ...
*Her father Tony Cooper was a very senior officer in the Trade Union IPCS. A union that I once belonged to, back in the day. Nepo babies eh? I resigned from IPCS long ago because I thought they'd let their members down, I can't even recall the actual issue that triggered me. A bare patch of meaningless history now.
Sunday, August 10, 2025
Burry Man / FOPP
Friday, August 08, 2025
Live at FOPP
Thursday, August 07, 2025
Links
Yesterday's post about Terry Reid contained the short sentence "Another broken link" to described his passing. That phrase just arrived out of nowhere. As I thought about it a little I saw that life may be seen as a series of links, joining up to form bonds, chains, whatever. Some links stay a long time, through strength, persistence, accident, necessity, family and of course love. Sometimes the links break quickly, without warning because of argument, distance, change or death. How many links have I had? How many have survived? How many broke because of me and the things I did? Did I fix some on the way? Are some links unbreakable? Predictable and common reflection passes the time in an odd but satisfying way. Ho hum ...
This small stream of thought was not inspired by Linked In or the actual wider landscape of social media - nothing against it but I'm not a member. Only when I'd thought about the word "link", somewhat in isolation, did I make the obvious connection with our corrupted and manipulated socials. These modern "links" are a bit different from those we might have made just a few years ago.
Wednesday, August 06, 2025
Terry Reid
A little sad to hear that Terry Reid's passed away at 75. Another broken link. He was famous for not really being famous enough. We live in a peculiar and perverse world. This album (River) is, I think, his best. I still give it a listen now and then. Not sure why but it fills some kind of space when I need whatever it is I need. It does ramble on a bit though. A lot of the music I listened to as a younger man hasn't really aged so well and rests in the shadows, it's brilliance faded, wandering over the hills or lost into the distance. But this album still stands up, fifty years on, in my own critical and dodgy opinion.
Tuesday, August 05, 2025
Windy/Rainy Day Thoughts
Odd jobs you should avoid doing within someone else's property/house:
Clean out the dishwasher filter.
Clean the underside of the toilet rim, (if you know you know).
Clean out the tumble drier's second filter - the one deep inside.
Clean out the washing machine's bottom filter (flood warnings have been issued).
Clear out fluff from the back of the couch - you'll never eat another peanut.
Clean the shower head or (worse) the shower drain (potential horror show).
Don't even look inside the air fryer.
Clean out their Dyson vacuum cleaner. These are, contrary to popular belief incredibly difficult to remove fluff and debris from and are truly a shit piece of design. Style over substance etc.
Anything involving a mattress.
Car boot clearing out.
If they have a log burning stove or cooker you're probably in the wrong house.
So these are some windy/rainy day thoughts,
In the real world they amount to naught.
Illustrations for this item were considered unnecessary.
Monday, August 04, 2025
Aberdeen Daily Photo
Friday, August 01, 2025
DVLA
Three score and ten: Everybody sing! "It's fun to correspond with the DVLA". An unsurprising early birthday notification arrived the other day. As you approach 70 orbits of the sun they kindly remind you that perhaps you should reflect on your driving future. They do this by cancelling your existing driving licence. Then you fill in an online form and naturally (and truthfully) list the various ailments and impediments you may have been hiding from them over the years. Things can creep up on you when you least expect it.
Turns out I've got nothing to declare, mainly because they don't ask about lifelong personality defects or any knackered belief systems that by now have been worn thread bare; so I passed with flying colours. Fortunately it's all free and with a bit of luck a new licence will be posted out to my older self eventually. Phew. I'm going to consider this new licence to be an award for good behaviour and faithful, long service over the years.
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Everyone ...
Yes, everyone has probably seen this already but for me it only just appeared in my orbit via tiny screens and fat devices a few days ago. I might be suffering from slow connections or not indulge in enough exploration or doom scrolling here in the slow lane of lazy finger troubles. These things have lives and invisible timelines and their sources, often clever, even ingenious, are hidden and uncredited. So that's just the way it is, inner space junk and mind pollution.
Some things are now set in motion and, certainly in my lifetime, unlikely to stop. They will live on and be returning like comets and perverse reminders of a hazy past every few years. We may begin to worship them as celestial portents eventually. This is the future nobody planned.
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Edinburgh Daily Photo
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
Floss & Rocket
Monday, July 28, 2025
Nature's Masochist
All by Andy Goldsworthy.
Being artistically uneducated and a cultural dipstick I've managed not to pay much attention to Mr Goldsworthy's art over the last 50 years. Twigs, leaves, stones, ferns, rivers, dead animals all figure in his strange, huge and brutal works. Often they are quite beautiful and disturbing but I'm still not a fan though. The slavish effort to gather and cut and twist, to line up and to build and unbuild doesn't quite work for me. All those machine and man hours and the hard labour. I don't really understand it but I respect that there's a lifetime of toil and expression invested in there, pushing out deep but obvious messages. Perhaps he should've built sleek ocean going wooden boats or elaborate log cabins in the wilderness instead of this relentless and wild artwork.
It's impressive and expansive but as empty as a ploughed field, neglected woodland or an unkempt lawn; he fights nature within a self made arena, looking like he's winning but it's all just some kind of fake wrestling match. Romantic and aggressive Victorian follies spring to mind, populating an artificial reality for effect and perspective and then slowly crumbling away. All the resource, diesel fumes and sweat whispers what we already know, life is tough but art isn't really as tough as it thinks it is when it tries to improve on what nature does easily, just by being itself - left alone.
Now it's all curated and on display in the grand halls of the National Gallery in Edinburgh via photographs, film and examples. Nobody has to get their feet wet or their boots muddy. That in itself is quite strange.
Friday, July 25, 2025
Who are the Baddies?
Queensferry Daily Photo etc. I know it's a bad photo but it shows Greenpeace activists (the tiny red blobby things) hanging from the Forth Road Bridge with banners critical of Ineos and their fracking operations. One of their oil tankers headed up stream earlier today. I was struck by reading some of our "local" social media comments about how bad it all was that people were protesting in this way, closing the bridge, making a fuss, taking up resources to gain attention for what are quite a complex set of issues.
Just who are the goodies and who are the baddies here? Are Ineos good? They just closed down Scotland's only oil refinery but still manufacture loads of single use plastics worldwide. They are the big boys in the chemical industry. Is Greenpeace bad for causing disruption and affecting traffic? They also represent a set of views I tend to agree with but fail to live by. Is the right side of history theirs when it comes to fracking?
Is it a simple and binary matter or just another shitty mess that none of us can quite get our heads around? All I know is that if there are rebels of any kind, I'll tend to take their side as a default position. Also when I see very strange government agency vehicles (not police, military or fire) screaming around the town with blue lights and sirens I tend to start to worry. There's something happening here, what it is ain't exactly clear ...
Out and Aboutery
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Is This Normal?
Unfortunately nothing is new in the present day's hot mess, but this is a simple and articulate summary of an increasingly common and worldwide situation with which many of us feel truly powerless and frustrated. Sometimes a serious meteor strike looks like the only credible solution to mankind's way of being. More from The End of Illusions can be found here.
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Monarchs of the Glens etc.
Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Stones
I found this small painted stone in the grass on the banks of the River Dee near Crathes Castle. If I was any kind of writer I'd maybe use this as a spur or jumping off point for some kind of short story or other. I'd extrapolate out and away from it and just keep writing. I'm not though, so I won't. I've just photographed a stone and then left it where I'd found it. A lost keepsake, a memorial, a precious item thrown away in a moment of anger or betrayal, something else? I'll never know.
Monday, July 21, 2025
South Queensferry Daily Photo
We've gone full fibre on our internet infrastructure links, the incoming outside line has been rerouted. It happened a few days ago while we were all sleeping in nearby undergrowth. The view is no longer complimented by various crossed and suspended wires. A bit of an unexpected bonus but confusing for the pigeons. I presume that these birds have now moved on to some other less changeable wires. "The soft and cheesy salmonella cruise ship in the middle distance is definitely there, but only for scale" - said nobody ever.



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