Saturday, January 9
Friday, January 8
Hamster Nibble
While in Bath for New Years, Monty (who cost £12) escaped from his Habitrail and gnawed the cable connecting our 50-inch flat-screen TV to the media box (all of which came with the house), pictured. The television still works, but without display. The cost to replace the cable: £395.
at 21:47
Compost Happens
Here is our little island from above (Nasa satellite). It is freezing - in fact, the coldest winter in thirty years the BBC and everyone else reckons. Or at least since the winter Sonnet was in Shefield, Silver reminds her. I get my weather history from the black cab drivers who all have some story about snow packed up to your chin. They love talking about the weather and the Congestion Charge. It used to be Ken Livingston, who they felt no better than the gum on the sole of your shoe, but now he is gone. London hits -3C degrees and -22.3C in the Highland village of Altnaharra, poor bastards. The snow has now turned to packed ice shutting airports and making the local roads treacherous. I fell off my bicycle. The BBC reports that councils have had "tons of grit" stolen - yes, the bad weather brings out the worst in everybody. Especially now that the holidays over.
at 21:36
Wednesday, January 6
Thames Mortlake
The Thames at Mortlake and how gloomy it is. I bike here before work to take this photo. As we can see, the tide is out - otherwise the water rises to the toepath or the height of the small peer. The daily volumes unimaginable unless seen. Mortlake otherwise not to be trifled with - the blue collar village appears in the Domesday Book, and the manor belonged to the Archbishop of Cantebury until Henry VIII, when it passed to the Crown. From the early 17th century until after the civil wars, Mortlake celebrated for its tapestry, founded during the reign of James I/VI. Sir Richard Burton buried here.
at 14:47
Snow
Eitan: "Dad, I am going to make you some tea."
Me: "Thanks, but it is warm."
Eitan:
Me: "Ok, do you know how to make boiling water?"
Eitan: "Of course!"
Me: "So what are the ingredients?"
Eitan: "Uh, water?"
Me: "What else?"
Eitan:
Me: "It begins with 'b'"
Me: "Can you guys name something that kids have that we adults don't?"
Eitan: "A sense of humour."
at 13:41
Tuesday, January 5
Bring It On
at 17:54
That Girl
at 12:51
Sunday, January 3
Burj Dubai
at 19:09
China New Year
at 13:36
Wednesday, December 30
Practice And Goals
at 09:17
Tuesday, December 29
Richmond Park Fog
at 20:02
Sign 'O The Times
at 19:48
Into The Hoods
at 19:25
Web Brands
at 11:15
Monday, December 28
Blackfriers Bridge
at 15:14
Sunday, December 27
Model Train
at 20:44
Saturday, December 26
Hampton Skates
at 19:35
BD 09
at 12:29
National Treasures
at 11:59
Friday, December 25
Gherkin, Dude
at 18:45
The Monument
at 18:10
Tower Bridge
at 17:30
Christmas Massacre
at 16:14
Christmas in London
at 11:52
Thursday, December 24
Cranberry Mousse And Martini
I listen, as I blog here, to Diane's Christmas CD, which she produced some years ago to raise money for charity. Diane has recently moved from Albany, where she was the morning anchor for Fox News, to South Carolina where she informs a bigger audience - a Top 30 market, in fact.
"The martini: the only American invention as perfect as the sonnet."
--H. L. Mencken
at 18:36
Goose
at 13:01
Wednesday, December 23
Another View Of Richmond Park
But back to the black labs- Madeleine wants one. I want one. And we came pretty damn close over the summer with the house and all. Our problem the 9 to 3, or when the house empty while the Shakespeares in school. And holidays - kenal costs £25 a day and that adds up. Maybe one day yet.
Madeleine watches the home decoration channel. Me: "Why on earth are you watching that?"
Madeleine shrugs: "I don't know."
at 17:04
Upper Pen Pond
All this about the pond makes me investigate the park. During King Edward's (1272-1307) reign this area known as the 'Manor of Sheen' and we, of course, East Sheen. The name chaged to Richmond during Henry VII. In 1625 Charles I brought his court to Richmond Palace to escape the plague and turned it into a park for red and fallow deer which he and his compatriots hunted for sport. The King's decision, in 1637, to enclose the land was most unpopular with the locals, but Charles did allow pedestrians the right of way, God bless. The walls remain BTW and paralleled by the toe path, which I often run. Today Richmond Park the smallest National Park in the UK but the biggest park in London. Weird factoid: All houses backing on to the park pay a feudal fee known as "Richmond Park Freebord" ranging from £2 to £200 per annum. Go figure.
Katie catches me up on her business, The Op-Ed Project, which is going great guns and employing a number of staff and over 60 volunteers. More to come.
Madeleine: "Can I have a Jammie Dodger?"
Me: "What do you think I am going to say?"
Madeleine: "No, like you always do."
Me:
Madeleine: "But it is the holidays. And you said we can have anything for the holidays."
Me:
Madeleine: "Seriously, Dad. You said you can never say 'no' to me."
Me: "Ok, have a Jammie Dodger."
at 16:44